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A.J.
25th March 2011, 15:21
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-12785695
(http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-12785695)

Nearly a century ago, Britain was accused of masterminding a failed plot to kill Lenin and overthrow his fledgling Bolshevik regime. The British government dismissed the story as mere Soviet propaganda - but new evidence suggests it might be true.
For decades what became known as the "Lockhart plot" has been etched in the annals of the Soviet archives, taught in schools and even illustrated in films.
In early 1918, in the final months of World War I, Russia's new Bolshevik government was negotiating a peace deal with Germany and withdrawing its exhausted troops from the front.
This did not please London. The move would enable Berlin - which had been fighting a war on two fronts - to reinforce its forces in the West.
Determined to get the Russians back into the war on the Allied side, the British despatched a young man in his 30s to be London's representative in Moscow.
His name was Robert Bruce Lockhart.

Red_Struggle
26th March 2011, 05:28
Why am I not surprised?

ComradeOm
26th March 2011, 12:37
Because its been accepted knowledge for decades now? Rabinowitch notes, in The Bolsheviks in Power that "evidence in the PCheka's hands indicated that the British Embassy in Petrograd was at the centre of Allied planning to overthrow soviet power there". Lockhart's role in these intrigues is well established. The only thing newsworthy about this story is that its been confirmed (well, sort've) by a British source and that it features in a new BBC programme. Which I must check out on iPlayer

Still, what I wouldn't give to browse these British archives...

Die Neue Zeit
26th March 2011, 18:10
It's more reason for Russians from Putin to the commoner to continue commemorating the Day of the Chekist (http://www.orange.mu/kinews/afp/people/107287/putin-issues-chekists-day-greetings-to-spies.html). :)

Rooster
26th March 2011, 18:32
I seem to remember a story about the SIS forwarding a plan to march Lenin down the streets of Moscow in his underpants. For the life of me, I can't remember where I got that from but I think it was from the memoirs of some intelligence officer.

A.J.
31st March 2011, 15:27
Why am I not surprised?

It's not suprising in the slightest. However, it does discredit the British attempt to always depict themselves as being whiter than white in matters of espionage.