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The Oxfordshire housewife who almost killed Hitler:
How undercover Soviet
agent who married her English recruit hatched plot to blow up the Fuhrer as he
ate before assassination attempt was called off at the eleventh hour
Ursula
Kuczynski, code-named Sonya, coordinated a plot to assassinate Hitler
With
agent Alexander Foote, they planned to blow the Führer up at a restaurant
Hitler visited Munich restaurant the Osteria Bavaria at least three times a week
But just weeks before the Germans and Soviets signed Molotov-Ribbentrop pact
By KATE DENNETT FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 09:38 BST, 12 September 2020 |
UPDATED: 14:28 BST, 12 September 2020
105 shares
59 View comments
Neighbours in the tranquil Oxfordshire village of Great Rollright knew housewife
Mrs Burton for the scrumptious taste of her scones in the summer of 1945.
But
they had no idea she was actually top Soviet spy Ursula Kuczynski, who came
close to blowing up Adolf Hitler before Joseph Stalin got cold feet.
Kuczynski, code-named Sonya, nearly averted the horrors of the Second World War
as she plotted to assassinate the Führer in a restaurant in the winter of 1938.
Her daring plan has now been detailed by Ben Macintyre in his new book Agent
Sonya, which has been serialised in the Times.
The historian delved into MI5
files and unearthed accounts from those involved in the mission, allowing him to
reveal one of the best-laid plans to slay the dictator.
Kuczynski, now
known as Ruth Werner, presented an idea to Moscow to assassinate Hitler as he
ate in one of his favourite Munich restaurants
The plot was hatched when one
of Kuczynski's agents Alexander Foote was dining at the Osteria Bavaria in
Munich when Hitler showed up at a private dining room he visited up to three
times a week.
Foote noticed the Führer's guards failed to react as his dining
companion reached into his jacket pocket for cigarettes when they walked past
the table.
The spy told Kuczynski it would be possible to plant a bomb in a
suitcase next to the partition in the main restaurant and the assassination
attempt was pieced together.
Kuczynski presented the plan to Moscow -
declaring it an 'excellent idea' - and agents were ordered to prepare an
operation to shoot Hitler as he walked through the restaurant or blow him up as
he dined.
It superseded an audacious idea to blow up the airship Graf
Zeppelin.
Foote noticed that Hitler's personal guards were lax on security
when the Führer dined at one of his favourite Munich restaurants, the Osteria
Bavaria
Kuczynski's plot to assassinate Hitler came to a halt just weeks
before the attempt as the Germans and Soviets signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact
Kuczynski moved to Oxfordshire in Britain and took up the identity of 'Mrs
Burton' after the war +5
The plot to assassinate Hitler came to a halt just
weeks before the attempt as the Germans and Soviets signed the
Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, a non-aggression agreement. Kuczynski moved to
Oxfordshire in Britain and took up the identity of 'Mrs Burton' after the war
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WHO WAS URSULA KUCZYNSKI?
Ursula Ruth Kuczynski, now
known as Ruth Werner, was a German-born Soviet spy and writer. She was born one
of six children of Robert Rene and Berta Kuczynski on May 15, 1907. Her father
was a distinguished economist who specialised in demography and labor
statistics, taught and worked in Germany, the United States and Britain.
The
Kucyznkis were considered 'progressive' and later some of them joined the
Communist Party. The committed communist operated as a spy for the Soviet Union
in China, Nazi Germany, Switzerland, and England beginning in about 1930.
Using the code name Sonya, she gathered and transmitted classified intelligence
to Moscow, including technical information supplied by the Germanborn British
physicist Klaus Fuchs about the Manhattan Project's research into the atomic
bomb.
Moscow broke off contact with her in the summer of 1946, with no
explanation and after World War II she settled in East Germany.
She took the
pen name Ruth Werner and became a celebrated writer of short stories, novels,
and an autobiography, Sonja's Rapport.
She was twice awarded the order of the
Red Banner, the highest Soviet military decoration, and also held the rank of
colonel in the Red Army.
Her only connection with the GRU after settling in
East Berlin was in 1969 when she was invited to a ceremony to receive her second
Red Banner decoration. She died in Berlin on July 7, 2000, aged ninety-three,
survived by her three children, five grandchildren and three sisters.
But
the latest plot was just weeks away when the Germans and Soviets signed the
Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, a non-aggression agreement that shelved Kuczynski's
operation.
Months later Kuczynski had divorced her German architect husband
and married her English recruit Len Beurton for a passport for the UK.
Macintyre believes her plot would have 'transformed world history' and and had a
better chance of success than any other attempted.
He said: 'Would there have
been a Molotov-Ribbentrop pact? I think almost certainly not.
'It's a real
''what if?'' but I can't help thinking also that the world would have been a
better and safer place, which was certainly the way Ursula thought about it.'
Kuczynski moved to Britain and took up the identity of Mrs Burton, whose three
children had three different Soviet spies as fathers.
She moved near the
atomic energy research establishment at Harwell and later settled in idyllic
village of Great Rollright, near Chipping Norton.
It was in England where she
became the handler of Klaus Fuchs, the Soviet Union's most successful thief of
nuclear secrets.
The physicist supplied information from the American,
British and Canadian Manhattan project to the Soviet Union during and following
the Second World War.
Kuczynski, now known as Ruth Werner, was only
interviewed by the secret services in 1947 after the defection of fellow agent
Foote.
And Fuchs was caught after spending 1944 to 1946 working with the
American Atomic Research department in Los Alamos.
He was put on trial in
January 1950 and the day before it started, Kuczynski left Britain and escaped
to East Berlin.
Here, she adopted the pen name Ruth Werner and became a
celebrated writer of short stories and novels.
She also penned her
autobiography Sonja's Report, which was completed in 1974 and published in East
Berlin three years later.
But under the conspiracy rules she never mentioned
Fuchs - who was still alive - instead writing about other clandestine
operatives.
Read more:
The housewife who nearly killed Adolf Hitler | News
| The Times
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8725005/Undercover-Soviet-agent-hatched-plot-blow-Hitler-assassination-attempt-called-off.html
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