Shanghai Conspiracy

The Sorge Spy Ring, Moscow, Shanghai, Tokyo, San Francisco, New York

Nonfiction, History, Germany, European General, Military, United States
Cover of the book Shanghai Conspiracy by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby, Verdun Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby ISBN: 9781787202467
Publisher: Verdun Press Publication: October 27, 2016
Imprint: Verdun Press Language: English
Author: Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
ISBN: 9781787202467
Publisher: Verdun Press
Publication: October 27, 2016
Imprint: Verdun Press
Language: English

Originally published in 1952, General Willoughby’s book Shanghai Conspiracy, which includes the story of Richard Sorge, is of the gravest importance because it presents a clear delineation of a worldwide pattern of Communist sabotage and betrayal which was still being practiced at the time of publication in 1952.

During [the U.S.’s] Occupation of Japan, military intelligence exercised limited civil functions in collaboration with the modernized Japanese police, in an alert against national and foreign communism. The story of Richard Sorge, Soviet master spy, falls into this category of security surveillance. It represents a devastating example of a brilliant success of espionage—its evolution, techniques, and methods. Elements of this Soviet-inspired conspiracy actually ranged from China and Japan into the United States, in the period 1931-50.

Over a period of years, there has been filed with Washington a most extensive documentation on the case, aggregating over a million words with hundreds of plates, photostats, and illustrations. Enormous efforts in translation and research have gone into it. It has been reviewed and authenticated by American lawyers, and is now being brought into focus by the Senate and House Committees on Internal Security and Un-American Activities.

Sorge’s story did not begin or end with Tokyo but was only a chip in the general mosaic of Soviet Far Eastern strategy. It deals with a sinister epoch in the history of modern China and must be viewed against the vicious background of world conspiracy. Shanghai was a vineyard of communism for men and women of many nationalities who had no conceivable personal stake in China, but an almost inexplicable fanaticism for an alien cause—the Communist subjugation of the Western world. Here were sown the dragon’s teeth that have since ripened into the Red harvest of today.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Originally published in 1952, General Willoughby’s book Shanghai Conspiracy, which includes the story of Richard Sorge, is of the gravest importance because it presents a clear delineation of a worldwide pattern of Communist sabotage and betrayal which was still being practiced at the time of publication in 1952.

During [the U.S.’s] Occupation of Japan, military intelligence exercised limited civil functions in collaboration with the modernized Japanese police, in an alert against national and foreign communism. The story of Richard Sorge, Soviet master spy, falls into this category of security surveillance. It represents a devastating example of a brilliant success of espionage—its evolution, techniques, and methods. Elements of this Soviet-inspired conspiracy actually ranged from China and Japan into the United States, in the period 1931-50.

Over a period of years, there has been filed with Washington a most extensive documentation on the case, aggregating over a million words with hundreds of plates, photostats, and illustrations. Enormous efforts in translation and research have gone into it. It has been reviewed and authenticated by American lawyers, and is now being brought into focus by the Senate and House Committees on Internal Security and Un-American Activities.

Sorge’s story did not begin or end with Tokyo but was only a chip in the general mosaic of Soviet Far Eastern strategy. It deals with a sinister epoch in the history of modern China and must be viewed against the vicious background of world conspiracy. Shanghai was a vineyard of communism for men and women of many nationalities who had no conceivable personal stake in China, but an almost inexplicable fanaticism for an alien cause—the Communist subjugation of the Western world. Here were sown the dragon’s teeth that have since ripened into the Red harvest of today.

More books from Verdun Press

Cover of the book August Storm: Soviet Tactical And Operational Combat In Manchuria, 1945 [Illustrated Edition] by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book Field Marshal William Slim And The Power Of Leadership by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book Soviet Defensive Tactics At Kursk, July 1943 by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book Operation Stalemate II by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book United States Army in WWII - the Pacific - Campaign in the Marianas by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book Wake, War And Waiting… by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book Russia Fights by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book The Scots Guards in the Great War 1914-1918 [Illustrated Edition] by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book Island Victory: The Battle Of Kwajalein Atoll by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book The German Army In War by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book Timoshenko, Marshal Of The Red Army: A Study by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book Marines In World War II - The Marshalls: Increasing The Tempo [Illustrated Edition] by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book The Cross Of Iron by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book United States Army in WWII - the Pacific - the Fall of the Philippines by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
Cover of the book Myron Herrick - Friend Of France by Maj.-Gen. Charles A. Willoughby
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy