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OverviewOperation Gold is one of the most extraordinary-and least believed-Cold War operations ever attempted: a secret tunnel dug beneath divided Berlin so Britain and America could listen directly to Soviet communications. It sounds like the plot of a spy thriller, yet it happened in real life, in a city where every street corner had eyes, every building had informants, and every shadow seemed to belong to someone else. This book takes you into that world, where engineering became espionage, and where the ground itself became a battleground. Set against the tense, brittle atmosphere of 1950s Berlin, Operation Gold reveals how the West tried to break the fog of Soviet secrecy by doing something audacious enough to feel impossible. Instead of relying only on risky human sources-so often turned, exposed, or quietly swallowed by East German security-the intelligence services reached for a technical solution. If the Soviet state needed to talk to itself, then its words had to travel through cables. If the cables could be reached, the Soviet world could be heard. And if it couldn't be done above ground, then it would be done below it. From the first spark of the idea to the final, humiliating discovery, this is the full story of the tunnel plan: the engineering challenges, the cover stories, the fake paperwork, the endless deliveries, and the exhausting labour of building a covert structure in a city saturated with suspicion. It follows the tunnel crews who worked in silence with ordinary tools, the listening rooms where tape reels multiplied into mountains, and the translators and analysts who learned a harsh truth about intelligence work-most of it is routine, repetition, and fatigue, punctuated by brief moments when panic takes over and everything suddenly matters. But Operation Gold is also a story of betrayal, and the betrayal was waiting long before the tunnel was completed. The George Blake factor casts a shadow over every stage of the operation, raising the most unsettling question of all: what happens when your enemy doesn't discover your secret-when your enemy is simply told? With that single breach, the tunnel becomes something more than an intelligence triumph. It becomes a test of counterintelligence patience, where the Soviets may have faced a choice more strategic than any simple shutdown: expose the tunnel immediately, or let it run, protect their mole, redirect sensitive traffic, and save the scandal for the perfect moment. The discovery, when it comes, is not just an ending. It is theatre. Cameras, headlines, staged outrage, and the strange sensation of being outplayed not only technically, but psychologically. The tunnel that was meant to give the West certainty instead delivers something more uncomfortable: doubt about what was real, what was managed, and how much control the West ever truly had. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Miles DunsfordPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 0.60cm , Length: 27.90cm Weight: 0.281kg ISBN: 9798242666801Pages: 114 Publication Date: 05 January 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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