#hitlersspies - Evert Kleynhans
#jonathanball
The author was a lieutenant in the enquiries section of the Department of Defence Archives in Pretoria. His discovery of the documents pertaining to Operation Eisbär (Polar Bear) paved the way for his doctoral dissertation in Military History in 2018 and this book was born as a result thereof.
Back to Operation Eisbär (also the opening scenes in the book) for a minute. In the spring of 1942 three German U-boats left Lorient in the Bay of Biscay. Their destination: the South African Coast. (Along the way they attacked and sank the British troopship Laconia near the equator.) They arrived in the Cape Town harbour in October 1942 and sank at least six Allied merchantmen (33 000 tons of shipping).
To understand how that was even possible, one has to return to pre-war Germany. In 1936 Hans van Rensburg, then a senior official in the Union’s Department of Justice, attended the Olympic Games in Berlin where he met Hitler, Goering, Goebbels and Von Epp. In 1941, after the resignation of Colonel JCC Laas, Van Rensburg became the leader of the Ossewabrandwag and immediately set to work to turn the cultural organization into a political one with a paramilitary wing, the Stormjaers. Their aim: an Axis-victory to swing popular opinion against the Smuts Government.
The history of the ‘contacts’ tasked with providing and transporting military and political intelligence from the Union via Luitpold Werz’s Trompke Network in Lourenço Marques, started with Will and Marietjie Radley (South Africans trapped in Germany at the outbreak of the war); transferred briefly first to Robey Leibbrandt (eventual archenemy of Ossewabrandwag) and then to Hans Rooseboom before, finally, to Lothar Sittig, who was, according to a MI6 report dated 1943, ‘the most important of Trompke’s agents in the Union’.
Sittig would become the chief architect of the Felix-network. The latter aimed to succeed in transmitting intelligence directly to Berlin via a wireless link, but to build a sufficiently strong transmitter required components found only in so-called diathermy machines utilized by hospitals. With the assistance of a Dutch National, Reijer Groeneveldt, employed at the Post Office, they not only stole the machine, but smuggled it all the way to Vryburg; an Ossewabrandwag stronghold that would become the centre of their intelligence transmissions.
The book also covers the post war hunt on those suspected of treason, Hans van Rensburg in particular. In spite of the efforts of men like Lawrence Barrett, the deputy Attorney General, and George Visser, a member of the SAP Special Branch, the Smuts Government was reluctant to charge Van Rensburg prior to the 1948 elections and the ‘German Papers’ (the complete Barrett report and supporting documents) disappeared shortly after Malan and the National Party came into power. Van Rensburg was never charged.
This book provides a fascinating look into long buried and almost forgotten history - secret agents and the intelligence war in Southern Africa 1939-1945 and deserves 5 stars from #Uitdieperdsebek