The Scottish Mail on Sunday

How reporter who rocked British Establishm­ent by exposing Profumo affair was a secret Communist

And official files reveal he spilled UK secrets to same Czech spy who ran Labour grandee Geoffrey Robinson

- By JAKE RYAN

THE journalist who broke the Profumo scandal was a Communist Party member and an informant for the Czech secret police, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

Peter Earle was the chief crime reporter for the News of the World when he revealed that showgirl Christine Keeler had simultaneo­us affairs with both Secretary of State for War John Profumo and Soviet naval attache Yevgeny Ivanov.

The controvers­y triggered the collapse of Harold Macmillan’s Tory government and the introducti­on of Harold Wilson’s first Labour administra­tion in 1964.

Now, an extraordin­ary collection of Cold War intelligen­ce files held in Prague’s secret police archive cast a new light on Mr Earle, who died in 1997 aged 71.

Documents unearthed by the MoS show that he joined the Communist Party of Great Britain in 1947 and retained his membership for at least 20 years.

They also reveal that from at least 1966 to 1968, Mr Earle was a secret informant, codenamed ‘LON’, of Czechoslov­akia’s brutal StB (Statni bezpecnost) spy agency.

He supplied informatio­n on politician­s’ sexual predilecti­ons and details about the Profumo-linked femme fatale hostess Mariella Novotny, according to the files.

Mr Earle had regular meetings with his handler Karel Pravec, codenamed Comrade Pelnar, who was based in Czechoslov­akia’s London embassy.

The files show Major Pravec, then aged 35, first met Mr Earle at an embassy cocktail party in April 1966, before arranging a lunch meeting at Rules in Covent Garden, London’s oldest restaurant.

The files indicate they struck up a rapport, prompting Major Pravec to ‘recruit [Earle] as an asset and extract informatio­n from him’.

By their third meeting in June, Major Pravec was asking the reporter to gather informatio­n, including intelligen­ce on Harold Wilson’s trip to America, as well as details of meetings in Parliament.

He later supplied details of the gambling habits of politician­s after a request from Major Pravec, which Mr Earle ‘promised to satisfy’.

He also reported to his handler that an arrest warrant had been issued for a ‘gay man’ in Lisbon who allegedly ‘provided underage cadets and girls, among other things, to [Labour] MPs [Tom] Driberg, [Marcus] Lipton (only girls) and one Conservati­ve MP’.

It was at a meeting in Soho in March 1967 that Mr Earle spoke of his political affiliatio­ns and, according to the files, described how ‘he himself is secretly a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain and has been since 1947’.

Immediatel­y suspicious of the claims, the Czech agent asked his superiors to check out Mr Earle and a report came back confirming his party membership. But the StB’s HQ report also cautioned Major Pravec to be wary in case Mr Earle’s aim was to ‘unmask you as a spy’.

They also provided comments on how Major Pravec should approach another top target, former MP and paymaster general Geoffrey Robinson, then a Labour researcher.

The Mail on Sunday revealed in 2019 how Czech intelligen­ce files alleged that Mr Robinson passed on more than 80 pieces of informatio­n to Communist agents at the height of the Cold War – a claim he strenuousl­y denies.

Mr Earle spent the last 25 years of his career at the News of the World and in 1978 also revealed the poison umbrella assassinat­ion of Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov on Waterloo Bridge.

Described as an eccentric ‘who consumed 60 cigarettes and a bottle of Scotch each day’, he died of cancer in April 1997 and was survived by his four children.

Tom Mangold, a former BBC Panorama reporter who last year produced a BBC documentar­y on the Profumo affair, said: ‘I am surprised to hear Peter was still a Communist [in the 1960s], but my own feeling is that he was about as political as a dead log – I don’t think it was big for him.

‘It’s [1947] a very odd time to join the Communist Party and be a Communist, it’s a time when Moscow was beginning to show its teeth.

‘I don’t think that [Communism] was a big issue in the story [Profumo] but of course at the time we tried to make it a big issue because to have spies, Communists, CIA, MI5, MI6, and Christine Keeler – it was a dream.

‘That being said, the Czechs kept a close eye on all this and they must have been very good at picking up items that could be used for blackmail later on. The StB thing, we all knew they had the brief to run Fleet Street on behalf of the KGB.’

Last night, Mr Earle’s eldest daughter, Valerie Carrier, a retired primary school headteache­r, 67, from Sydenham, South-East London, said: ‘It had to have been a front – he was always a true-blue Tory.

‘If he saw anyone from the Labour Party on the TV, he would go crazy. To say he would do anything against his country would be untrue.

‘He always kept his family life and his work life separate, but he was a patriot and a royalist.

‘Any secret life he may have had was to protect king and country.’

‘They had the brief to run Fleet Street for the KGB’ ‘To have spies, CIA and Keeler – it was a dream’

 ??  ?? SCANDAL: Christine Keeler and News of the World reporter Peter Earle, who uncovered the Profumo affair, taking a taxi to court in October 1963
SCANDAL: Christine Keeler and News of the World reporter Peter Earle, who uncovered the Profumo affair, taking a taxi to court in October 1963

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