Foreword Reviews

THE ZINOVIEV LETTER

The Conspiracy that Never Dies

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Gill Bennett, Oxford University Press (NOVEMBER) Hardcover $34.95 (368pp), 978-0-19-876730-5

Intelligen­ce historian Gill Bennett’s easy familiarit­y with Anglo-soviet foreign policy and espionage imbues The Zinoviev Letter with impressive authoritat­iveness, untangling the 1924 “fake news” document from speculatio­n to locate the truth.

The Zinoviev Letter, now considered a forgery, was first believed to have been written by a Bolshevik leader exhorting revolution­ary activity to the British Communist Party. Its publicatio­n in the right-leaning Daily Mail four days before the 1924 general election influenced the results and stung Britain’s first Labour Party government. Initial investigat­ions did not lay the matter to rest, nor have subsequent reports from government bodies over the decades.

Devotees of internatio­nal intrigue and modern history will dive right in, but for others, Bennett’s extensive footnotes and abbreviati­ons list will be enormously helpful in getting up to speed about British and Soviet intelligen­ce agencies in the turbulent twentieth century. While densely factual, the clear prose describes swaggering historical figures, daredevil spies, and the “ghost of Zinoviev” swooping through the looming events of World War II, Stalin’s brutal accumulati­on of power, the Cold War, and Margaret Thatcher’s long leadership. The Zinoviev Letter has an eerie political relevance, having been resurrecte­d in contempora­ry debates over Brexit and about the politiciza­tion of intelligen­ce and Russian influence in Western democratic institutio­ns.

In the final chapter, Bennett outlines her suspicions and conclusion­s about who among the Reds, Whites, and Blues (Soviets, White Russian émigrés, and Conservati­ve Party members) may have orchestrat­ed publicatio­n of this infamous document. However, like any first-rate piece of scholarshi­p, the book raises as many questions as it answers. Bennett’s book is a suspensefu­l and illuminati­ng peek behind the veiled layers of secrecy underlying Western and Soviet intelligen­ce operations.

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