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Wednesday, Apr 02, 2025

Revelations Unveiled: The Royal Intrigue of Anthony Blunt's Espionage

Revelations Unveiled: The Royal Intrigue of Anthony Blunt's Espionage

Declassified MI5 Files Disclose the Decade-Long Concealment from Queen Elizabeth II of Her Courtier's Double Life as a Soviet Spy
In a revelation that unearths layers of historical intrigue and espionage, newly declassified files from MI5 have surfaced, detailing how Queen Elizabeth II remained uninformed for nearly a decade about one of her most esteemed courtiers, Anthony Blunt, who confessed to almost three decades of espionage for the Soviet Union.

Despite his prestigious position as the Surveyor of the Queen's Pictures, Blunt lived a double life, clandestinely serving Soviet interests—a truth that the monarchy learned only in the 1970s.

Anthony Blunt, an esteemed art historian, and a pivotal figure within the Royal Art Collection, was entangled in espionage activities tracing back to the 1930s.

In 1964, he confessed to MI5 his allegiance to the Soviets during the tumultuous times of World War II. Yet, the revelation of Blunt's espionage activities was withheld from the queen, only reaching her ears almost a decade later, when burgeoning pressures within Whitehall indicated the inevitable exposure of Blunt's secretive past, amid journalists' investigative endeavors.

Suspicion originally shadowed Blunt in 1951, when his close associates, Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean, absconded to the Soviet Union, igniting speculation around Blunt, one of the Cambridge Five, a notorious spy ring.

Throughout his tenure at MI5 during World War II, Blunt was interviewed multiple times post-1951, consistently denying espionage allegations.

The turning point emerged when American Michael Straight disclosed Blunt's recruitment as a Soviet agent to the FBI, prompting a confrontational interrogation by MI5's Arthur Martin in April 1964.

Blunt's prison of silence crumbled under the promise of immunity, leading to a full confession documented meticulously in the newly declassified files.

Notably, Blunt confessed to post-war communications with Russian intelligence and detailed encounters with a handler named Peter, though claims of imperative flight went unheeded by Blunt.

Despite Blunt's august affiliation, his confession remained tightly compartmentalized within MI5's knowledge circles.

The home secretary, alongside key civil servants, was discreetly informed, yet the queen's inner circle remained in the dark, a veil lifted only when Blunt's ailing health posed imminent risk of public exposure.

Documented in March 1973, a file note attests to the queen’s composure upon being finally briefed about Blunt’s wartime duplicity—a stoic detachment mirrored in her recollection of suspicions dating back to the aftermath of the Burgess/Maclean scandal.

Miranda Carter, biographer of Blunt, speculates on an informal disclosure to the queen post-1965, suggesting a deliberate curtain of plausible deniability wrapped around the monarch's awareness.

The full extent of Blunt’s clandestine life was later publicly illuminated by then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who named him in a 1979 Commons statement, leading to his subsequent stripping of knighthood.

Blunt died in 1983, but his story remains a notable chapter in Cold War history, highlighting the complex interplay of trust and secrecy at the highest levels of British society.

Further releases from MI5 illuminate broader aspects of espionage history, including disclosures about fellow spies like Kim Philby, and precautions around notable public figures, offering a glimpse into the clandestine world of intelligence during a pivotal era.

While MI5 retains control over its archival releases, these documents, partially available to the public and showcased at the National Archives, underscore a commitment to transparency in a domain often overshadowed by secrecy.
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