Vancouver Sun

SECRETS & DEAD-LETTER DROPS

- Spies, Lies & Deception runs until April 14 (visit iwm.org.uk) For Postmedia News

Start with the “house of secrets” in the sleepy northern suburb of Ruislip. It’s here, at a bungalow on 45 Cranley Dr., that Lonsdale met with the Krogers, who would use microdots hidden in books to export top-secret intelligen­ce to their KGB handlers. The house is still occupied — and so lengthy gawking is not encouraged.

But there’s nothing wrong with a little furtive recce; it’s what MI-5 agents did from an adjacent property as they gathered evidence to smash the ring. Lonsdale and two others were later arrested outside the Old Vic Theatre near Waterloo Station.

Northwest of Waterloo is Thames House. Located on Millbank at the end of Lambeth Bridge, it is the headquarte­rs of MI-5, Britain’s domestic spy agency. It’s a listed heritage building and was originally built on the site of slums swept away by a flood in 1928.

South of the river, at 85 Vauxhall Cross, are the “Legoland” offices of MI5’S internatio­nal counterpar­t, MI-6, or the Secret Intelligen­ce Service. Opened in 1984, its glowering presence does not invite lingering.

But then this is no ordinary building. It cost $255 million to build, with another $30 million splashed out on making it bomb resistant — which proved to be money well spent in 2000 when an anti-tank rocket fired at an eighth-floor window caused only superficia­l damage.

In the Olympia neighbourh­ood, meanwhile, is Blythe House, a Victorian-era red-brick structure hulking behind iron turnstiles that stood in for the MI-6 ‘Circus’ in the 2011 film adaptation of John le Carré’s spy novel Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy starring Gary Oldman.

Returning west, spycatcher­s will reach the modernisti­c Waterloo Bridge where Bulgarian defector Georgi Markov was assassinat­ed with a ricin-tipped pellet from an umbrella gun as he waited for a bus on Sept. 7, 1978. He died four days later.

Hundreds of Russian spies were believed to have been active in London at the height of the Cold War — and the Brompton Oratory, a magnificen­t Italian baroque Catholic Church in Knightsbri­dge, proved an ideal place for “deadletter” drops of microfilms and documents.

Situated close to the Russian Embassy on Kensington Palace Gardens, it was easy for agents to slink away from the church among the narrow lanes branching off Brompton Road, or amid the many exits and staircases of the nearby Harrods department store.

Not far away, in South Kensington, is the Cafe Daquise, London’s first Polish restaurant and another favourite spot for dead-letter drops. It was also a haunt for Christine Keeler, the call girl at the centre of the Profumo scandal of the early 1960s.

Fewer spies peer around pillars in today’s London — they’re more likely to be hacking at a keyboard — but as recently as 2006, the darker side of espionage was laid bare with the Alexander Litvinenko affair.

A former KGB officer who found asylum in Britain, Litvinenko met two Russian agents at the Millennium (now Biltmore) Hotel in Grosvenor Square, where he unwittingl­y sipped on green tea tainted with polonium-210, a deadly poison. He died less than a month later.

Grosvenor Square in Mayfair is significan­t in itself: General Dwight D. Eisenhower establishe­d his Second World War base at No. 20 “Eisenhower Platz,” as the square was nicknamed, and until recently it was home to the U.S. Embassy, now being converted into a five-star hotel.

Much of London’s espionage activity took place quite literally undergroun­d, in a series of 30-metre-deep tunnels first used to house up to 8,000 people sheltering from Nazi air raids.

The warren of passageway­s near Chancery Lane was later used by MI-6 as a telecommun­ications “hotline” between the Soviets and the Americans and was key in defusing the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. You can visit the decommissi­oned entrance on Furnival Street, off High Holborn, now part of a $350-million regenerati­on scheme that would see the site opened to the public for the first time in 70 years.

It’s tempting to imagine trench-coated spies consigned to history or Hollywood, but with sabres being rattled from Taiwan to Yemen, the threat of war is ever-present. And as the IWM’S exhibit reminds us, so is double-dealing, chicanery, subterfuge and surveillan­ce.

As wartime leader Winston Churchill put it, in a quotation at the museum entrance: “In wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies.”

 ?? PHOTOS: ANDRE RAMSHAW ?? Britain’s domestic spy agency is known as MI-5 and is based at Thames House, Millbank, a heritage house originally built on the site of slums that were swept away in a 1928 flood.
PHOTOS: ANDRE RAMSHAW Britain’s domestic spy agency is known as MI-5 and is based at Thames House, Millbank, a heritage house originally built on the site of slums that were swept away in a 1928 flood.
 ?? ?? The Spies, Lies & Deception exhibit is free of charge, and is running at the Imperial War Museum in south London until April 14.
The Spies, Lies & Deception exhibit is free of charge, and is running at the Imperial War Museum in south London until April 14.

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