Philips/Phillips

 

Philips, Alan. "Hotline Set Up for Traitors to Come in from the Cold." Electronic Telegraph, 5 Jun. 1997. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk]

"Kremlin spycatchers have opened a hotline in an attempt to lure Russian traitors into becoming double agents working for the motherland. Nikolai Kovalyov, director of the Federal Security Service,... appealed on television for agents who have worked with foreign intelligence services to come clean. He promised them full confidentiality and said they could keep the money they had acquired from hostile intelligence services."

[Russia/Since89]

Philips, Alan.

1. "Living with the Ghost of a Traitor." Electronic Telegraph, 17 Jan. 1998. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk]

The author reports on a visit to Philby's Russian widow, Rufina, who met Philby "in 1970, when she was 38, on a blind date organised by the Russian wife of the other MI6 double agent, George Blake.... He was a wreck: 21 years older than Rufina, lonely, unable to speak Russian and a drunkard." She has published a Russian memoir of Philby, entitled "I Did It My Way."

2. "Pimms and Marmalade Helped Philby Survive." Electronic Telegraph, 19 Jan. 1998. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk]

According to his fourth wife, Rufina, Kim Philby "kept homesickness at bay with regular supplies of marmalade, Pimms No 1, lime pickle and Gitanes cigarettes.... [T]o supplement her meagre Russian pension, [Rufina Philby] sold off some of his personal effects in 1994, raising £150,000."

[UK/SpyCases/Philby]

Philips, Alan. "Moscow May Soften Line on Expulsion of 'Spies.'" Electronic Telegraph, 9 May 1996. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk]

"A hint that Russia was ready for compromise over the case of nine British embassy staff accused of spying emerged [on 8 May 1996] as negotiations continued in Moscow on how to prevent the row degenerating into a round of tit-for-tat expulsions."

[UK/PostCW/96/Spy]

Philips, Alan. "Russia Nears Deal on British 'Spies.'" Electronic Telegraph, 13 May 1996. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk]

"Most of the nine British embassy staff accused of involvement in a spy ring in Moscow may escape summary expulsion under a deal being worked out between the Foreign Office and Russian authorities. It is understood from well-informed Russian sources that only those staff 'directly connected' with running a Russian 'mole' will be ordered out."

[UK/PostCW/96/Spy]

Philips, Alan. "Russians Throw out Briton in Spy Row." Electronic Telegraph, 4 Mar. 1996. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk]

The Russian Foreign Ministry confirmed on 3 March 1996 that a British citizen's visa had been "cancelled due to suspicions of 'activities incompatible with his status as a businessman'.... An expulsion had been feared since Britain ordered out a Russian TV correspondent in London, Alexander Malikov, on grounds of national security in July" 1995.

[UK/PostCW/96/Spy]

Philips, Alan. "Spycatchers Go Softly at Kremlin." Electronic Telegraph, 10 Oct. 1996. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk]

President Yeltsin has pardoned a diplomat, Vladimir Makarov, "who spied for the CIA for more than a decade" after serving "only three months of a seven-year hard labour sentence.... The Kremlin used to shoot spies in the back of the head. But the director of the Federal Security Service,... Nikolai Kovalyov, has adopted a softer approach to unmask more double agents.... It is understood to be the first time that a convicted spy had been freed so early in his sentence. In the past only those who had served more than half their terms were eligible for early release under conditions of secrecy."

 [Russia/Since89]

Phillips, Alan. The Living Legend: The Story of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Boston: Little, Brown, 1957. [Wilcox]

[Canada]

Phillips, Cabell. "Mr. Dulles of the Silent Service." New York Times Magazine, 29 Mar. 1953, 12 ff. [Petersen]

[CIA/DCIs/Dulles]

Phillips, Claire, and Myron R. Goldsmith. Manila Espionage. Portland, OR: Binfords & Mort, 1947.

Wilcox: "Account of clandestine operations in the [P]acific during World War II."

[WWII/FE/Pac/Phillipines]

Phillips, David Atlee.

Phillips, Lester H. "Canada's Internal Security." Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science 12 (Feb. 1946): 18-29.

Aronson, I&NS 1.3/377/fn. 18, identifies this article as "an overview of Canada's wartime internal security regulations."

[Canada/WWII]

Phillips, Thomas D. [COL/USAF (Ret.)] "The Dozier Kidnapping: Confronting the Red Brigades." Chronicles Online Journal (7 Feb. 2002). [http://www.airpower.maxwell.af.mil/airchronicles/cc/archives.html]

On 17 December 17 1981, "U.S. Army Brigadier General James L. Dozier, senior American official at a NATO headquarters in Verona, Italy, was abducted by Red Brigades terrorists.... This is the story of the actions taken by one small, isolated unit [Detachment 9, 1141 USAF Special Activities Squadron] to confront the terrorist threat."

[MI/

Phillips, William W. "The Ghost Army of World War II." 1996. At: http://www.laynor.org/articles/big-g01.htm [not found 11/5/04].

This article concerns the U.S. Army's 23rd Headquarters Special Troops or the "Ghost Army." The 23rd is "unique in the history of American warfare in that it was a battlefront battalion composed largely of artists, sculptors, architects, literary figures and others from the arts and humanities. Many of the new recruits were already famous; others would win celebrity stripes after the war. They included Olin Dows...; Bill Blass...; Elsworth Kelly...; George Diestel...; Art Kane...; and Harold A. Laynor."

This article was carried on the Laynor Foundation Museum site [http://www.laynor.org] dedicated to Harold A. Laynor (1922-1991), an American artist who served with the 603rd Camouflage Engineers, a unit of the 23rd Headquarters Special Troops, in World War II.

[WWII/Eur/Deception]

 

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