cover image Cracking the Nazi Code: The Untold Story of Agent A12 and the Solving of the Holocaust Code

Cracking the Nazi Code: The Untold Story of Agent A12 and the Solving of the Holocaust Code

Jason Bell. Pegasus, $29.95 (352p) ISBN 978-1-639-36631-6

Philosopher Bell debuts with a gripping investigation of the secret role Canadian-born British spy and philosopher Winthrop Bell (no relation to the author) played in sounding the alarm about the Nazi threat—not once, but twice. The author learned about Winthrop in 2008 when he was doing research on German phenomenology and stumbled upon Winthrop’s archived records, including his diary. Working toward completing his philosophy PhD in Germany when WWI broke out and imprisoned as an enemy citizen for the duration of the conflict, Winthrop was recruited postwar by British intelligence due to his high-level connections within Germany. His first mission was to embed among Berlin political elites, and in 1919 he became “the first intelligence agent to warn about the National Socialists” and their plan to start a second world war—warnings that Bell shows were suppressed by fascist British politicians. Long bothered that his report had been buried, in the 1930s Winthrop returned to Germany posing as a Reuters journalist. He learned enough about the Nazi aspiration for “racial extermination” that was “global in scope” to issue “the world’s first published warning of Hitler’s plans for worldwide genocide” in a quietly influential 1939 newspaper article. Even readers well-versed on the war will be surprised by the history Bell has pieced together. It’s a significant new perspective on behind-the-scenes political machinations preceding WWII. (Apr.)