The Daily Telegraph

EX-MI5 boss says KGB agents tried to recruit her during Cold War

- By Jack Hardy

THE former head of MI5 has described how Russian agents tried to recruit her at the height of the Cold War, without realising she already worked for British intelligen­ce. Dame Stella Rimington began her career of spycraft at the British High Commission in New Delhi in the late Sixties as a typist for MI5.

The Indian capital was “full of spies at the time” as tensions between the Soviet Union and the West mounted, she said, and the hunt was on for human sources.

Dame Stella revealed during a talk at the National Archives that she and her husband, who was also posted at the commission, were briefly courted by the Kremlin. They were unexpected­ly introduced to a senior figure from the Soviet embassy while attending a dinner hosted by a “very Left-wing couple” with whom they had become friendly.

It was not long before Dame Stella realised that the Russian man was from the KGB, the Soviet security service.

She said: “By that time I was the clerk typist in the MI5 office and alert to this sort of thing and it seemed to me to be an obvious effort to introduce us to somebody from the Soviet Union.

“I realised, quite quickly, this was a man from the KGB because, being the clerk typist in the MI5 office, we had a list of those people we had identified as KGB officers – and he was one of them.

“It was quite clear this was the beginning of a chatting-up operation and it might lead anywhere. We didn’t meet those people again.”

She added: “They didn’t know who we were, but I knew who he was.”

Dame Stella would go on to become the first female director general of the Security Service, having been one of the earliest women to break through into front-line intelligen­ce work.

She had been given the fabled “tap on the shoulder” in 1967 by one of the first secretarie­s to the commission in Delhi, who was MI5’S man in India.

For the next two years she served him, before returning to London in 1969 and taking on a full-time job at MI5. At the time women were “second class citizens” in the service, she said. Dame Stella and female colleagues started a “quiet revolution” to bring women into intelligen­ce roles and she quickly rose through the ranks.

In 1992, when given the top job, she became the first director general to be named publicly. Dame Stella said: “Strangely enough, the time I feared most for my personal safety and that of my family was when my name was announced. Someone had taken a photograph of our house and put it on the front page of one of the newspapers.

“We had to move – quite frankly, we had to leave our house overnight.”

Dame Stella, who now writes novels, was speaking after an event to launch a National Archives exhibition about the Cold War, called Protect and Survive.

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