The Second Oldest Profession: Spies and Spying in the 20th Century (1986)

November 6, 2003 · 10 comments

in Books

The Second Oldest Profession: The Spy as Bureaucrat, Patriot, Fantasist and Whore, Andre Deutsch (London) and as The Second Oldest Profession: Spies and Spying in the Twentieth Century, W. W. Norton (New York) is a comprehensive and controversial history of espionage in our times.

The first permanent intelligence agency was created in 1909, and within a few years all the great powers had similar agencies. Concentrating on Britain, France, Germany, Russia, and the United States, the book reveals why these services are not worth the enormous sums they cost, are not effective in predicting enemy actions, and cause more trouble than they prevent.

It includes anecdotes of failed operations, and questions the official versions of such famous operations as Ultra, Magic, and the XX Committee. An updated paperback edition is available in the UK. Chosen as Book of the Month Club Alternative choice, 1986.


Buy The Second Oldest ProfessionUK | US


{ 10 trackbacks }

Of secrets and spies
11.25.08 at 1:53 am
The big secret of espionage is that spying doesn’t work
11.27.08 at 6:33 pm
A wilderness of mirrors
12.05.08 at 6:31 am
Spinning the spooks: a Downing Street disaster
12.06.08 at 7:54 pm
Was Diana under surveillance by MI5? Yes.
12.06.08 at 8:21 pm
So what made them swoop?
12.06.08 at 8:37 pm
Intelligence = imagination
12.06.08 at 8:53 pm
MI5, the police and the inside story of a raid that went wrong
12.07.08 at 5:51 am
Here, there and everywhere
12.19.08 at 3:29 am
Miserable failure leaves spies out in the cold
12.19.08 at 4:25 am

Comments on this entry are closed.