Daily Mail

Revealed, Profumo’s affair with glamorous Nazi spy

- By David Wilkes and Claire Ellicott

Minister who rocked the 60s Establishm­ent had fallen for Hitler-loving model in 1930s ‘Exceedingl­y witty and companiona­ble’

JOHN Profumo had a long-running affair with a glamorous Nazi spy who may have later tried to blackmail him, according to security service files released today.

Long before the high-society sex scandal in the Swinging Sixties which now bears his name, Profumo met Gisela Winegard, a German model, at Oxford in 1930s and ‘got to know her well’, the previously top secret dossier reveals.

Diplomat’s son Profumo was then an undergradu­ate studying law at Brasenose College. Gisela, 16 months older and known by her maiden name Klein, made several visits to this country between 1933 – the year Adolf Hitler made himself absolute ruler of Germany – and 1938.

‘On the first occasion, she went to Oxford, ostensibly to learn English, and professed to be anti-Nazi,’ the newly declassifi­ed documents say.

Photograph­s of Gisela in the files portray her as a haughty, Teutonic beauty. Intelligen­ce reports described her as ‘a young woman of striking appearance’ who was ‘known to have made friends with a number of well-known young men in this country’.

Whether or not she was working for German intelligen­ce services when Profumo first met her is not clear.

But National Archive files show she was ordered to leave Britain in 1935 and 1936 for working as a model while on non-working visas, and was reported as being ‘on intimate terms with the German Military Attache in Paris’ in 1938. This led the Home Office to recommend she be barred from entering this country altogether.

She remained in Paris during the occupation of France. There, she was a German intelligen­ce officer’s mistress, having a child with him, and also became close to a German general.

After the Allies liberated Paris in 1944, Gisela was imprisoned along with other German agents and collaborat­ors.

Meanwhile Profumo, who was known as Jack, had been commission­ed into the Army in 1939 as a second lieutenant. The following year, while still serving, he was elected Tory MP for Kettering in Northampto­nshire at the age of 25 – making him the youngest MP at the time. He went on to serve with distinctio­n in the Second World War.

The files show that he remained in touch with Gisela until at least 1950.

In 1942 she wrote to him – the letter was intercepte­d by MI5 – from Switzerlan­d, where she had apparently gone for modelling work.

She said: ‘ Jack darling, I find it very difficult to write this letter as I cannot get used to the idea that I’m free to write to you without a censor’.

She was able to do so because Switzerlan­d remained neutral and unoccupied throughout the war.

She added: ‘Though I’m not nearly as happy as I used to be at 88 Seymour Street [where she had lived in Oxford].’

After her capture during the liberation of Paris she was held in Fresnes Prison but was later transferre­d to a jail in a basement in Paris’s Rue Suchet – which Edward Winegard was in charge of. He was an American citizen of German origin serving in the US forces.

The files say he obtained her release and shortly afterwards took her to Hamburg where they married. Sometime in 1947-8, while they were living in the south of France, the Winegards fell foul of the American Intelligen­ce Service ‘for having harboured one of the Chiefs of a German spy ring’. They moved

to Tangier in Morocco, where they worked for the ‘Voice of America’ radio station. But in April 1950, she was dismissed from her filing clerk job ‘when it was discovered that she had worked for the Germans during the war and was 100 per cent pro-German’.

The marriage came under stress – with Edward stating in September 1950 that his wife had left him because he had discovered that ‘she had been receiving endearing letters’ from Profumo. ‘These letters were written on House of Commons notepaper,’ the files, from the National Archives at Kew in South-West London, state.

Profumo had told MI5 about his relationsh­ip with Winegard, the archives reveal. A memo states that in 1941 he admitted meeting her in 1936 ‘and got to know her well’.

That was informatio­n he gave to one Major J J Astor – who, in a remarkable coincidenc­e, was the younger brother of William, 3rd Viscount Astor. The Astor family home, Cliveden in Buckingham­shire, was where the Profumo scandal would later play out.

A letter containing informatio­n from Major Astor in 1945 said: ‘Gisela Klein is described as exceedingl­y clever, witty and companiona­ble’ and notes that she had spent some time in Cairo and Alexandria where she was ‘said to have known every officer in both places’.

The Major also said his mother, Lady Astor, ‘expressed the opinion that she [Gisela] was a spy’. Profumo lost his seat in the 1945 Labour landslide, but was elected in Stratford-upon-Avon in 1950.

It was in the swimming pool at Cliveden that Profumo first laid eyes on Christine Keeler. Their affair was at the centre of the scan dal that took his name. After his affair with dancer Keeler became public, it emerged she was also in a relationsh­ip with a Russian military attaché.

Profumo lied about the relationsh­ip to Parliament but was forced to quit when the truth emerged. The scandal helped the government. The newly released files reveal that at the height of that scandal in 1963, MI6 sent files to MI5 investigat­ions head Arthur Martin about Profumo and Mrs Winegard.

The 1963 letter discusses a rejected 1951 applicatio­n by Mrs Winegard, by then reunited with her husband, for a UK visa.

At the time, the authoritie­s believed the Winegards had ‘recently engaged in blackmail activities and now think it possible their intended visit to the UK may be connected with this’. The papers do not say who the target might be. But the visa applicatio­n listed ‘Jack Profumo, MP for South Cattering (sic)’ as a reference.

Yesterday Richard Dunley, of the National Archives, said the revelation that Profumo was involved with a Nazi spy came as ‘a huge surprise’, thought it was widely known that he was ‘a bit of a ladies’ man’.

‘The things that come out most clearly are the extraordin­ary parallels between this and the later scandal – the connection­s with the Astors and Profumo writing to Gisela on Commons notepaper,’ he said. ‘In the later scandal, a note written by Profumo to Keeler on Ministry paper was key and there was a big concern about whether he could be blackmaile­d because of this letter.’

After the 1963 scandal, Profumo quit politics and devoted himself to charity work, going on to receive the CBE. He died aged 91 in 2006.

‘Extraordin­ary parallels’

 ??  ?? Christine Keeler: She met Profumo at Cliveden
Christine Keeler: She met Profumo at Cliveden
 ??  ?? Forced out: Profumo in 1963
Forced out: Profumo in 1963
 ??  ?? Gisela Winegard: The German model’s beauty won her a string of admirers
Gisela Winegard: The German model’s beauty won her a string of admirers

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