The expose of a despicable traitor
The story of Bhagat Ram Talwar, famous for his role as the organiser of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose's escape through Peshawar and Kabul to the Soviet Union en route to Germany in January 1941, is given the infamy he deserves in India through this book. Talwar was a communist, belonging to the Kirti Kisan Party (a minor communist outfit, but the main communist entity in Punjab); this was well-known to Netaji, but most left-wingers were happy to let Subhas Bose lead the 'United Front' of the left in India as long as the Soviets and Germans were friends (as they were via the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact). Netaji, leading the revolutionary movement against Britain's occupation of India, often had to align with forces whose loyalty to him was tenuous at best. Bhagat Ram and Uttam Chand Malhotra were two such people who were enormously valuable in January-February 1941, but later betrayed Netaji and the broader cause of Indian freedom.
Once Germany attacked the Soviet Union, the communists in India followed the Soviet command to become loyalists of the British. Bhagat Ram Talwar became a British agent (spy), working closely with Peter Fleming, head of Britain's "D Division" intelligence operation, based out of New Delhi's Viceroy's House (now Rashtrapati Bhavan) from late-1942 until the end of the war. Peter was a well-known writer himself, and the brother of Ian Fleming, the author of the James Bond novels. As a Pathan (albeit a Hindu) from Ghalla Dher in NWFP, Talwar was invaluable to the British and Soviet Russia as a spy operating mainly from Kabul (to which he made 12 trips meticulously reported by author Mihir Bose, who is quick to point out he is no relative of Subhas's -- and not particularly sympathetic to his cause either).
Through that time, Bhagat Ram (called 'Silver' throughout the book, as that was his British code-name) was pretending to be an agent of the Italians, Germans and (by late-1944) Japanese, successfully deceiving them to pass their intelligence on to the British. That his elder brother had been executed for an attempt to assassinate the British governor of Punjab gave Bhagat Ram the perfect revolutionary cover to continue his treacherous career. The Germans were duped throughout the war, the Japanese toward the end -- when Netaji's well-planned intelligence operation run by NG Swami was effectively thwarted by Bhagat Ram's flow of intelligence information to his boss Peter Fleming, resulting in the killing or capture of dozens of the INA's intelligence operatives soon after they arrived on Indian soil.
Mihir Bose is a British sports journalist, who has gradually branched into writing books on business and history (with a penchant for spy stories, including conjectures about those closest to Netaji who might have betrayed him, as laid out in his fine 1982 biography of Netaji Subhas, the 2004 edition of which I have reviewed for Goodreads). The main trouble with this book is that it is written from the British perspective, with Silver treated as a heroic figure who deserves a British medal for his service to that empire. But the author does point out that, in January-February 1946, Britain's empire (which all its leaders had expected to last a thousand years) was brought down by the revolutionary upsurge that followed the INA trials, and particularly the spread of anti-British feeling to the Royal Indian Air Force and Royal Indian Navy, leading to Attlee's promise on 20th February 1946 that Britain would leave India no later than 30 June 1948.
But the story of Netaji Subhas and the INA is incidental to the book, except for the photographs, which heavily focus on it as obvious publicity material. In several of the photo captions, "Chandra Bose" is the person mentioned -- a rather bizarre way for the author to distance himself from Netaji Subhas, who he has previously written a biography of. The book reads like a spy thriller, which of course it is -- except that it is a real-life one. That Bhagat Ram Talwar had no qualms about betraying his nation is clear. He did it with such gumption that he attended an International Netaji Conference in 1973, and brazenly lied his way through it, despite being confronted by a genuine Netaji follower, Santimoy Ganguli, who had worked with Talwar in 1941-42 but been betrayed to the British by him, and thence imprisoned. Talwar took ample fees from Germany, Italy and later Japan, giving most of that quickly to the Soviets or the British, and then doing the latter's bidding.
The book is worth reading, simply because it exposes this despicable traitor. To the British, he may have been a hero, albeit a covert one. His German handler, Witzel, remained convinced that (even after he learnt of Talwar's treachery) that Bhagat Ram was ultimately a freedom fighter. He was profoundly mistaken. We in India must call a spade a spade -- and a traitor the traitor that he was.