I have a book on Agent Garbo, his life and work are fascinating, the XX system didn't merely manage the double agents but helped them to fabricate and 'manage' whole networks of imaginary informants, providing scraps of fake intel such as falsified sightings of ships in docks, troop movements, "the newspapers say General Adams is inspecting several regiments in Portsmouth" etc. Characters had to be carefully kept on-script and little pieces of life drama like deaths, marriages, etc were woven into an almost soap opera narrative which was then fed to the Nazi's hungry intelligence apparatus.
The best thing about Garbo is the British didn't want him at first, so he became a Nazi agent and then went back. They then took him on as he had something to offer. He was that desperate to help he became a Nazi spy.
If anyone here is interested in a deeper dive on some of the individual spies that were part of this and other WWII capers, I wholeheartedly recommend the Spies and Ties series by Timeghost History, makers of the World War Two Week by Week series. They're a great way of getting a bit more detail on some of these crazy events.
Absolutely fantastic video, now begins my journey to see just how much of an effect spies had in WW2, always assumed they played a huge role but never knew any specifics Safe to say I was amazed! The course of the Second World War in Europe really was guided by their diligent work and the sacrifices of the soldiers and the spies alike to defeat the Third Reich Many thanks to you Simon and the Into the Shadows team
I once saw drawings of a lot of the ideas put forward that were rejected in the end and my absolute favourite and extremely British was a sketch of a man sitting on a deck chair sunbathing but this deckchair was on stilts in deep water to make it look shallow the idea being that the German landing craft would let all the soldiers out too early where they would sink, I believe the flaw was along the lines of who in their right mind would be sitting on a deckchair with a knotted hanky on their head in the midst of a full on invasion.
I cannot remember where I saw these sketches and after this video reminded me I even went on a brief Google search but could not find anything if anyone knows where I can find them please let me know.
The sheer level of genius that British secret intelligence had with tradecraft always boggles my mind, they were mostly 4 steps ahead Edit for the editor: the audio and video is out of synch
Yes, British Intelligence had some high points during the war. But they also dropped the ball severely at others, like the spies that were sent into occupied France. For example; Despite using code words that indicated capture the British just assumed the radio operator was being careless.
@@theblackgreninja2237 i aint no family guy, its closer to thunder/thor but its not thor...scandinavia dont got alot to name you after so big bang it is
Hey Simon and your team. I don't usually comment on your videos. Just wanted to thank you for your videos on Pilocki, the Polish soldier who volunteered to infiltrate Auschwitz. I read the book and it was a great experience. Thank you for your extensive research.
My family emigrated to the US from Poland in the 30s (for obvious reasons) and I’d sadly never heard of him. Always makes me proud to learn about people like Pilecki and Wyszyński.
Funny you should post this after I recently started reading Defence of the Realm. Highly recommend for those interested in the history of British intelligence.
Bletchley Park's breaking of the Enigma Code was also hugely important to shortening WWII by several years. An enormous debt is owed to British Intelligence in general.
Simon, I love you and your team's content and infotainment so much, whenever you upload I watch ASAP. I know I am just a dorky college student, but one day I wish to write a script for your series on diseases (kind of a dream haha don't judge me). Just wanted to express my gratitude :) wishing you and your family good health
This would make a great movie, not just a documentary with a narrative voice, and not with the "Hollywood" embellishment and changing the facts for ticket sales, but a true portrayal of the what we really know is the story. Thank you again Simon for such informative and interesting content
I went on a tour of Bletchley Park, definitely recommended. The tour guide explained the XX system, X was a spy and XX was a Double Agent, and this led to the term Double Cross, XX
I just finished binging the "internets biggest mysteries" videos where Kevin (pretty sure it's Kevin, maybe Danny?) writes several stories and leaves it to Simon to decide whether or not it's true. Based on time between the other releases, should be time for another one soon! Fingers crossed, I love that format, commission it Factboi 😂
Going from the Blaze to Into the Shadows and seeing the quality increase and the production value increase I'd have to say good on you Simon. My wife asked if this was 60 minutes and I yelled "Right Peter!" She was not amused.
@@archstanton6102 Another recommendation is the podcast World's Greatest Con. They did a season/5 episodes on operation Mincemeat and the 20 committee.
Can you please do a story on Nancy Wake who the germans named The White Mouse. She was so revered as a resistance fighter she was awarded medals of honour from 5 different Allied countries, thanks.
Thoroughly enjoyed this video. Like Simon said there is mountains of information and stories surrounding the intelligence services during WWII. For example, I believe Agent ZigZag (briefly mentioned in this video) ix the only person to ever be awarded both the Victoria Medal AND the Iron Cross! Would it be possible for Simon to do a greater length/in-depth video about this fascinating subject? I gave several books on the subject and would be happy to support with research
The head of German intelligence (the adbver) was a man called Wilhelm Canaris. He was working against the Nazis for most of the war in till caught very late on and died in a concentration camp. Hats off to him
You should tell the story (also from XX) on how a dog nearly brought down D-Day. (Ben Mcintyre's book, XX is also a good read for those who want more on the D-Day part of the story)
You will find the true story of the dog, Babs, in Peter Winnington's biography "Codename Treasure: the life of D-Day Spy Lily Segueiew", published in July 2023.
Evan - I’m swooning, well researched & eloquently written. Simon: thanks for slowing down your pace: taking in information when it’s at the speed of a G&S patter song is frustrating. I really appreciate & enjoy your content. Cheers from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada 🇨🇦
Reading Walter Schellenburg's autobiography as head of the SD he recruited forgers to make superb British banknotes and deceiving the British that his operation was in fact Free French resistance, paid for RAF airdrops of especially explosives which he admitted were far better than those of the Germans. Paying for them in forged banknotes...his enthusiasm, humour and sheer professionalism, loving his work shines through. One thinks of the Mad cartoon strip 'Spy versus Spy versus Spy'.
19:28 What I recall from my reading into XX was how agents fedback information that V1s were landing short. Which lead the Nazis to shift aiming point ... beyond central London.
Double Cross: The True Story of The D-Day Spies by Ben Macintyre is the much more detailed story of this story well worth a read/listen and have done on many occasions
I also highly recommend another book by Ben Macintyre, _Agent Zigzag_. While the book is primarily about Eddie Chapman (the titular Agent Zigzag, second only to Agent Garbo as the most successful British double agent during WW2), it does briefly mention the XX system.
If you want to know more about the XX Program, read Masterman's book called "The Double Cross System". This was actually a Government report but it was so good and so interesting that it was published as a book. Easily findable even today.
'Finally bring allied troops back to Continental Europe in 1944'? 14:53 in the vid. They'd been in Continental Europe since September 19:43? Or doesn't Italy count as continental Europe at that point? Also heavily assisted by The 20 group, as portrayed in the book and film Operation Mincemeat.
Unfortunately for the Brits the USSR had numerous highly placed agents inside British Intelligence. The russkis learned about the Manhattan Project among other things well into Cold War
Love the series, note to the editor; there is alot of screen flash fairly frequent making watching uncomfortable. I am talking about the transition with "old film style" from scene to scene. I made this a podcast witch is a bit of a shame of all the editing work done.
The fact that the Spanish fascist dictatorship is considered "neutral", while Franco was friends with both Germany's and Italy's regimes to the point where Germany was allowed to test their bombs in Spain first, will never stop amusing me. The world knowing every single detail of what was going on in western Europe and still believing Spain was some kind of haven aside of conflict has me in a permanent state of awe.
Simon, the researchers, and writers are doing a great job. Sadly cannot say the same thing for whoever is selecting the video clips. If they can’t do better than this - constantly using modern video for events that happened eighty years ago - just skip the video entirely.
1 minute 30 seconds in and Simons already taking shots. AM I RIGHT PETER!!!! 🤣 Edit: Anyone willing to ride that Tangent train across the Whistler-verse to find out why he picked out that specific name? What did Peter do to our beloved Facts Boy?
It can't be stated enough, that the intelligence services play such key roles in all conflicts, just look at Israel currently. Simon: please ask your competent team of writers to do more deep dives into intelligence operations and their successes or failures throughout modern history. Your teams writes these videos very well.
We as Germans experienced first hand that being good at something is not always good. I am very happy that the third Reich fell and that we live in a democracy now. Just saying.
2:10 Lmao... Dang, Brain Boy...Something I've noticed over the years: You guys don't mess around with the naming of your laws, do you?.. *THE TREACHERY ACT* --But, how do you Really feel about it, Mister (or Ms.) MP?..lol
"MI5's very real reliance on puns" sounds like a fantastic topic for a Today I Found Out video.
I would definitely watch that 😆
But Simon isn’t doing that channel anymore! So, how about an end into the shadows?
@@BallisticDamagestoo bad that isn't a channel Simon hosts anymore. It would make a better Brain Blaze anyway.
@@vickiewallace415nah, Brain Blaze. Gotta have the unhinged rants and tangents on that one.
I mean, the Brits have always had a love of wordplay.
Agent Garbo... the highest decorated agent on both the Axis side and Allied side. He was one heck of a character.
underrated comment. he fooled tf out the nazis .
@@thatsnaya7575 so good even the British had trouble finding him after the war
Iron Cross 1st Class and an MBE. His story is insane
I have a book on Agent Garbo, his life and work are fascinating, the XX system didn't merely manage the double agents but helped them to fabricate and 'manage' whole networks of imaginary informants, providing scraps of fake intel such as falsified sightings of ships in docks, troop movements, "the newspapers say General Adams is inspecting several regiments in Portsmouth" etc. Characters had to be carefully kept on-script and little pieces of life drama like deaths, marriages, etc were woven into an almost soap opera narrative which was then fed to the Nazi's hungry intelligence apparatus.
I would recommend read 'Es muss nicht immer Kaviar sein'.
Great ready and history!
@@sebastiend.5335 I enjoyed that book.
@@andrewallen9993 Nice!
The best thing about Garbo is the British didn't want him at first, so he became a Nazi agent and then went back. They then took him on as he had something to offer. He was that desperate to help he became a Nazi spy.
If anyone here is interested in a deeper dive on some of the individual spies that were part of this and other WWII capers, I wholeheartedly recommend the Spies and Ties series by Timeghost History, makers of the World War Two Week by Week series. They're a great way of getting a bit more detail on some of these crazy events.
1:20 - Chapter 1 - The backdrop
4:50 - Chapter 2 - Learning the hard way
10:05 - Chapter 3 - Spycraft & tactics
14:35 - Chapter 4 - Operation fortitude
18:35 - Chapter 5 - V1 ; V2 & VE Day
Simon can we get a pin? 📍
Absolutely fantastic video, now begins my journey to see just how much of an effect spies had in WW2, always assumed they played a huge role but never knew any specifics
Safe to say I was amazed! The course of the Second World War in Europe really was guided by their diligent work and the sacrifices of the soldiers and the spies alike to defeat the Third Reich
Many thanks to you Simon and the Into the Shadows team
Its harder to spy in wartime.
I once saw drawings of a lot of the ideas put forward that were rejected in the end and my absolute favourite and extremely British was a sketch of a man sitting on a deck chair sunbathing but this deckchair was on stilts in deep water to make it look shallow the idea being that the German landing craft would let all the soldiers out too early where they would sink, I believe the flaw was along the lines of who in their right mind would be sitting on a deckchair with a knotted hanky on their head in the midst of a full on invasion.
I cannot remember where I saw these sketches and after this video reminded me I even went on a brief Google search but could not find anything if anyone knows where I can find them please let me know.
The idea was to fool interpreters of reconnaissance photographs.
@@Dave5843-d9m That makes so much sense
The sheer level of genius that British secret intelligence had with tradecraft always boggles my mind, they were mostly 4 steps ahead
Edit for the editor: the audio and video is out of synch
Well I need to apologize to my headphones for calling them shit
I think they fixed it cuz I’m getting it fine?
Lmao, genius or generations of practice?
@@danielcurtis1434it changes part way through
Yes, British Intelligence had some high points during the war. But they also dropped the ball severely at others, like the spies that were sent into occupied France. For example; Despite using code words that indicated capture the British just assumed the radio operator was being careless.
the vibes on your videos are something else, keep it up man
I’m guessing you name’s Peter
@@theblackgreninja2237 i aint no family guy, its closer to thunder/thor but its not thor...scandinavia dont got alot to name you after so big bang it is
The year is 2024. Simon Whistler is 65% of youtube.
A follow up video about what happened to the double agents post-war would be interesting.
Probably they either were allowed to citizenship....or sorts (Brits are subjects, not citizens) or were allowed to return home.
Hey Simon and your team. I don't usually comment on your videos. Just wanted to thank you for your videos on Pilocki, the Polish soldier who volunteered to infiltrate Auschwitz. I read the book and it was a great experience. Thank you for your extensive research.
I can't seem to find a video from Simon on Pilocki, do you know what channel it was on?
@@evanblake5252 Warographics. Episode about Inmate 4859
@@Chris18o0 Thanks.
My family emigrated to the US from Poland in the 30s (for obvious reasons) and I’d sadly never heard of him. Always makes me proud to learn about people like Pilecki and Wyszyński.
Funny you should post this after I recently started reading Defence of the Realm. Highly recommend for those interested in the history of British intelligence.
Bletchley Park's breaking of the Enigma Code was also hugely important to shortening WWII by several years. An enormous debt is owed to British Intelligence in general.
And by British Intelligence to the Polish codebreakers for their work on Enigma that was the foundation for the Beitush codebreakers
I wish this video was twice as long so you could go twice as deep Simon. Absolutely fascinating. Also, please do a Blaze on the puns 😂
Simon, I love you and your team's content and infotainment so much, whenever you upload I watch ASAP. I know I am just a dorky college student, but one day I wish to write a script for your series on diseases (kind of a dream haha don't judge me). Just wanted to express my gratitude :) wishing you and your family good health
I need a video about MI5's extensive and very very real reliance on puns
This would make a great movie, not just a documentary with a narrative voice, and not with the "Hollywood" embellishment and changing the facts for ticket sales, but a true portrayal of the what we really know is the story. Thank you again Simon for such informative and interesting content
And I think this is where the epic James bond movies came from.
And Simon should be the the producer of course.
Been done several times since the end of WW2
11:00 Alright Brain Boy, no worries.
As long as you know that you now have to assign the story of MI5's puns to someone in the basement...lol
Great video as always and bring on the MI-5 puns
I went on a tour of Bletchley Park, definitely recommended.
The tour guide explained the XX system, X was a spy and XX was a Double Agent, and this led to the term Double Cross, XX
XXX, was the shop next door.
XXXX is an Australian beer. They know their priorities.
I just finished binging the "internets biggest mysteries" videos where Kevin (pretty sure it's Kevin, maybe Danny?) writes several stories and leaves it to Simon to decide whether or not it's true. Based on time between the other releases, should be time for another one soon! Fingers crossed, I love that format, commission it Factboi 😂
Yup that is kevin, great series and hope we get more soon.
That would have been on the BrainBlaze channel.
@@danielriley7380pretty sure it's on decoding the unknown
Going from the Blaze to Into the Shadows and seeing the quality increase and the production value increase I'd have to say good on you Simon. My wife asked if this was 60 minutes and I yelled "Right Peter!" She was not amused.
For more info, the World War 2 - channel has an entire show based on espionage during WW2 called Spies and Ties. Very educational and funny.
Am a patreon there. Excellent recommendation
@@archstanton6102 Another recommendation is the podcast World's Greatest Con. They did a season/5 episodes on operation Mincemeat and the 20 committee.
Can you please do a story on Nancy Wake who the germans named The White Mouse. She was so revered as a resistance fighter she was awarded medals of honour from 5 different Allied countries, thanks.
Thoroughly enjoyed this video. Like Simon said there is mountains of information and stories surrounding the intelligence services during WWII. For example, I believe Agent ZigZag (briefly mentioned in this video) ix the only person to ever be awarded both the Victoria Medal AND the Iron Cross! Would it be possible for Simon to do a greater length/in-depth video about this fascinating subject? I gave several books on the subject and would be happy to support with research
It's amazing this guy knows everything about everything.
The head of German intelligence (the adbver) was a man called Wilhelm Canaris. He was working against the Nazis for most of the war in till caught very late on and died in a concentration camp. Hats off to him
Please do a video on Garbo. It’s an insane story.
You should tell the story (also from XX) on how a dog nearly brought down D-Day. (Ben Mcintyre's book, XX is also a good read for those who want more on the D-Day part of the story)
You will find the true story of the dog, Babs, in Peter Winnington's biography "Codename Treasure: the life of D-Day Spy Lily Segueiew", published in July 2023.
"Bending the gun backward" LOL! Best analogy I've heard for a long time! 😂😂
Absolutely mind-boggling how complex the operation was.
This needs to be a movie.
Evan - I’m swooning, well researched & eloquently written. Simon: thanks for slowing down your pace: taking in information when it’s at the speed of a G&S patter song is frustrating. I really appreciate & enjoy your content. Cheers from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada 🇨🇦
Reading Walter Schellenburg's autobiography as head of the SD he recruited forgers to make superb British banknotes and deceiving the British that his operation was in fact Free French resistance, paid for RAF airdrops of especially explosives which he admitted were far better than those of the Germans. Paying for them in forged banknotes...his enthusiasm, humour and sheer professionalism, loving his work shines through. One thinks of the Mad cartoon strip 'Spy versus Spy versus Spy'.
This historical mission should be adapted into movie or television show.
You should do Alan Turing next..
Excellent presentation. Thank you.
At 13:44 there are single engined jet bombers ? In WW2 ?
All jokes aside
Very interesting presentation Simon & co.❤
1:28 Simon this is how conspiracies are started 😂 leave me and my vibes be
Am I right Peter???
I love when TangentBoi gets a wee Brain Blaze reference into his grown up channels
Some AV async is going on here in the 2nd part of this video. Looks the video is a few miliseconds behind the audio😅
1:30 Dang, Brain Boy...
It's starting to feel personal...😂
I want to see a video about this reliance on puns.
19:28 What I recall from my reading into XX was how agents fedback information that V1s were landing short. Which lead the Nazis to shift aiming point ... beyond central London.
The theme tune for 007 kept creeping in my mind while watching this
Nice one.
I DEMAND THE MI5 PUNS EPISODE!!
Thanks for the good & informative show.I asked for espionage to be featured & I kind of got it.
last time I was this early, it was World War II
1:28 stop saying my name's on all your channels it's scaring me haha and yes I am just here for the vibes
Double Cross: The True Story of The D-Day Spies by Ben Macintyre is the much more detailed story of this story well worth a read/listen and have done on many occasions
I also highly recommend another book by Ben Macintyre, _Agent Zigzag_. While the book is primarily about Eddie Chapman (the titular Agent Zigzag, second only to Agent Garbo as the most successful British double agent during WW2), it does briefly mention the XX system.
The British did such a great job tracking the Nazis that they were completely blind to Soviet penetration.
the underlying message of History when it comes to Britain, is do not underestimate them.
Loved this one ❤
If you want to know more about the XX Program, read Masterman's book called "The Double Cross System". This was actually a Government report but it was so good and so interesting that it was published as a book. Easily findable even today.
Why is the picture of the passport at 4:42 dated 20 APR 2013
The audio went out of sync towards the end of the video
Awesome . Haven’t heard a lot about this
There’s some very good books about the agents of ww2. Agent ZigZag (real name Eddie Chapman) and Agent Garbo by Ben McIntyre are well worth a read.
'Finally bring allied troops back to Continental Europe in 1944'? 14:53 in the vid. They'd been in Continental Europe since September 19:43? Or doesn't Italy count as continental Europe at that point? Also heavily assisted by The 20 group, as portrayed in the book and film Operation Mincemeat.
Ah, good ol' Peter. He's always around for the vibe - AM I RIGHT, PETER???
These videos are pretty interesting
Thnx for your work im in all of your channels
Hell yeah. More spy videos!!!!
Funny use of that Wayne Gretzky footage
XX ... ah British humour - the best humor!
This might be the most upbeat Into the Shadows video to date.
Unfortunately for the Brits the USSR had numerous highly placed agents inside British Intelligence. The russkis learned about the Manhattan Project among other things well into Cold War
You are very good at what you do
Love the series, note to the editor; there is alot of screen flash fairly frequent making watching uncomfortable. I am talking about the transition with "old film style" from scene to scene. I made this a podcast witch is a bit of a shame of all the editing work done.
The lipsync in the second half of the video is pretty dodgy too...
I always watch Simon's channels as podcasts. Works really well.
Now that I saw this comment I can’t stop noticing the flashes lol.
My name is Peter, and I know stuff about World War 2, but I still love the vibes :)
British intelligence making someone look a fool:
Kim Philby: hold my beer
Peter finally gets a shout out @1:25
GARBO was amazing, btw. If you ever get the chance to hear his story, take it, coz it's fantastic!
You didn’t tell them why he was called “Tricycle”. 😂. Too spicy?
Chefs kiss for that thumbnail
The audio and video are slightly out of sync.
This is the earliest I’ve ever been 😳
Fascinating!
Excuse me but my name is Peter and you caught me off guard 😆😆😆
The fact that the Spanish fascist dictatorship is considered "neutral", while Franco was friends with both Germany's and Italy's regimes to the point where Germany was allowed to test their bombs in Spain first, will never stop amusing me.
The world knowing every single detail of what was going on in western Europe and still believing Spain was some kind of haven aside of conflict has me in a permanent state of awe.
Quite fitting that "Snow" was an informer...
Simon, the researchers, and writers are doing a great job.
Sadly cannot say the same thing for whoever is selecting the video clips. If they can’t do better than this - constantly using modern video for events that happened eighty years ago - just skip the video entirely.
I absolutely want a video about MI5's extensive use of puns. Probably not on this channel, but I watch all of them so if it goes out I'll see it.
Read about operation Mince Meat a very famous deception by MI5
1 minute 30 seconds in and Simons already taking shots. AM I RIGHT PETER!!!! 🤣
Edit: Anyone willing to ride that Tangent train across the Whistler-verse to find out why he picked out that specific name? What did Peter do to our beloved Facts Boy?
It can't be stated enough, that the intelligence services play such key roles in all conflicts, just look at Israel currently. Simon: please ask your competent team of writers to do more deep dives into intelligence operations and their successes or failures throughout modern history. Your teams writes these videos very well.
' Riley: Ace of Spies '. Great series and I'm told, fairly factual. For Sam Neill fans. ❤
that caught me so off guard lol, my name is peter 🤣
Simon, can you do a Megaprojects on the history of computing devices or computers, and did it start with the Bronze Goddaces and the Enigma Machines?
Peter is just here for the vibes 😂
So, on what channel will you be doing the pun video?
How do you reach Simon if you have a story for him?
I've talked to one of his writers, Kevin, in the comments of a video on Brain Blaze twice before, so I guess that might work.
Check the channels info, there might be a email address or something but I've not checked
Links to his social media are in the video description
Start a new YT channel. He'll turn up within 5 minutes.
Thanks for sharing. Who is Peter???
the 20 communities - Project mincemeat - was just fascinating to hear about..
We as Germans experienced first hand that being good at something is not always good. I am very happy that the third Reich fell and that we live in a democracy now. Just saying.
Poor Peter... 😂 Ge gets dunked on so much.
Can there be a video on mi5’s extensive use of puns?
2:10 Lmao...
Dang, Brain Boy...Something I've noticed over the years:
You guys don't mess around with the naming of your laws, do you?..
*THE TREACHERY ACT*
--But, how do you Really feel about it, Mister (or Ms.) MP?..lol