
Cracking the Crab
Russian Espionage Against Japan, from Peter the Great to Richard Sorge
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Cracking the Crab
Russian Espionage Against Japan, from Peter the Great to Richard Sorge
About this book
Richard Sorge is one of history’s most famous spies. This hard-drinking, womanising, motorcycle-crashing Soviet officer penetrated the German embassy in Tokyo during the 1930s and gathered intelligence credited with changing the course of the Second World War. It is an intriguing tale; but Sorge’s spy ring was just one chapter in a much longer history of Russian and Soviet espionage in and against Japan.
Cracking the Crab tells the extraordinary full story of Russian intrigue targeting Japan, from first encounters in the eighteenth century to the Soviet declaration of war in August 1945. Colourful episodes include Gojong, King of Korea, being smuggled into the Russian legation dressed as a woman in 1896; the 1927 ‘Tanaka Memorial’, an infamous forgery purporting to be Japan’s hidden plan for world domination; and the secret intelligence of ‘Nero’, a Soviet agent supplying invaluable insight into Japanese strategy during the Second World War.
From Russians murdered in broad daylight in Meiji Tokyo to Soviet honey traps and ‘white magic’ at the Battle of Nomonhan, this is a landmark history of the covert struggle between two great powers of the modern age.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Introduction
- 1. The First “Russian Spy” in Japan (1771)
- 2. Explorers and Castaways of the 18th Century
- 3. Captives and the Opening of Japan
- 4. Influence in Japan, Intrigue in Manchuria and Korea
- 5. Espionage and the Russo-Japanese War
- 6. Bolshevik Spies
- 7. Soviet Intelligence at Nomonhan
- 8. The Sorge-Ozaki Spy Ring
- 9. Sorge’s Contemporaries Conclusion: How to Spy on Japan
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Back Cover