Target Tokyo: The Story of the Sorge Spy Ring
by Gordon W. Prange, Donald M. Goldstein, Katherine V. Dillon
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Mcgraw-Hill Book Co (Mm) (1985)
ISBN: 0070506787
Model research work (61 reference pages) on the ploys of Stalin's master spy Richard Sorge. Sorge penetrated the highest power circle in Japan and had excellent connections with the Nazi-party through the German Embassy in Tokyo. Prange proves that Sorge informed Stalin about the German attack against the Soviet-Union (operation Barbarossa) and that Stalin didn't believe him. That Sorge pinpointed the Pearl Harbor attack is for the author a myth. Sorge got caught by the Japanese when his spy work became careless. He hoped that Moscow would save him through an exchange of prisoners, but his friends let him fall as a burnt spy. He was hanged. Only twenty years later Moscow admitted that he was an agent of the Comintern. Excellent portrait of Sorge: a desperate soldier of WWI, who saw in communism the salvation of humanity, but also a hard drinker and a compulsive womanizer. The definitie book on Sorge. I agree with one of the rewiewers that this work is essential historical reading about WWII.