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Anglo-Russian Rivalry in Central Asia 1810-1895 by Gerald Morgan
Anglo-Russian Rivalry in Central Asia 1810-1895 by Gerald Morgan




Anglo-Russian Rivalry in Central Asia 1810-1895 by Gerald Morgan

Russians on the other hand have always had spies in their midst almost as part of their way of life: they have no need or inclination to read about them.

Anglo-Russian Rivalry in Central Asia 1810-1895 by Gerald Morgan

Bailey’s Mission to Tashkent would be hard to surpass, certainly in its Central Asian setting. A long line of writers from Kipling in Kim, through John Buchan, to the present day, shows the popularity of spy stories in British fiction whilst factually Colonel F. But if the British do not like spies they certainly enjoy reading about them, in fact as well as fiction. In his day Hobhouse illustrated the point very well in choosing, as the subject for his maiden speech in Parliament, to speak against their employment. On the whole the British do not like spies they regard their profession as a nefarious one and the less they know about their activities, at any rate of those who spy for Britain, the better. An initial difficulty arises from the characteristically different attitude to spies which has always existed in Britain and Russia. They have their reasons, but modern British writers have no excuse for repeating the old fallacies. The whole vexed subject merits examination even if only to clear up certain misconceptions which were general at the time and which are being resuscitated today by Soviet historians. Indeed at a stage in the present assessment yet to be described, alleged espionage was the direct cause of one of the more serious crises in Anglo-Russian relations.

Anglo-Russian Rivalry in Central Asia 1810-1895 by Gerald Morgan

In the atmosphere of mutual suspicion which continually manifested itself it is easy to see that charges and countercharges of espionage played their part.






Anglo-Russian Rivalry in Central Asia 1810-1895 by Gerald Morgan