collection of this intelligence. The intelligence required would be of a highly specialised nature and he suggested that the Departments concerned should earmark parties of officers and officials who after the armistice would be attached to S.H.A.E.F. for the collection of this intelligence. These parties would work with corresponding American parties, except where it was agreed to pool the results of investigations. There would still be the problem of preventing overlap and of deciding priorities.
- Collection ID
- CAB81
- Conflict
- Second World War
- Countries
- Austria Germany Hungary Iceland Ireland Nazi Germany
- Document Reference
- CAB 81/92/22
- Document Types
- Summary
- File Reference
- CAB 81/92
- Identifier
- 10.1080/swwf.cab81.0092.022
- Keywords
- Oil Aerial Reconnaissance Effects Of Bombing Photographic Reconnaissance Intelligence Gathering Post-war Planning Military Observers Operation Overlord German Government Occupied Germany Non-british Agents Invasion Threat
- Languages
- English
- Organizations
- Chiefs of Staff Foreign Office Intelligence Section (Operations) Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee Joint Intelligence Staff Ministry of Economic Warfare Security Service
- Pages
- 4
- Persons Discussed
- Denis Capel-Dunn Victor Cavendish-Bentinck Dwight Eisenhower Francis Inglis Edward King-Salter Edmund Rushbrooke John Sinclair Geoffrey Vickers
- Published in
- United Kingdom
- Themes
- Surveillance Intelligence Operations Intelligence Organization