XU

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Norway and World War II
Key events

Weserübung · Norwegian Campaign
Elverum Authorization
Midtskogen · Vinjesvingen
Occupation and Resistance
Camps · Holocaust · Telavåg
Martial law: Trondheim
Festung Norwegen
Heavy water sabotage
Post-war purge

People

Haakon VII · Nygaardsvold · CJ Hambro
CG Fleischer · Otto Ruge
Jens Chr. Hauge

Quisling · Jonas Lie · Riisnæs
Josef Terboven · Wilhelm Rediess
von Falkenhorst

Organizations

Milorg · XU · Linge · Nortraship

Nasjonal Samling

     Supported the
exiled legitimate
government
     Supported the
German occupiers
and Nazi party

XU was a clandestine intelligence organisation working on behalf of Allied powers in occupied Norway during World War II. Though its work proved invaluable for operations against German operations in Norway, most of its operations, organization, etc, were kept secret until 1988.

XU was established in July 1940 by Arvid Storsveen, and was originally based on recruiting students from the University of Oslo. As it grew, the group included professionals around Norway, within railroads, police and so on, and collected maps and photos of German fortifications and forces.

XU initially cooperated with Milorg, but split from the rest of the rest of the Norwegian resistance movement in fall 1941 to protect the cover and identity of XU operatives.

In the spring of 1942, the Gestapo became aware of XU's activities and initiated operations to identify and arrest its leaders. Several leaders from the Oslo cell, including Storsveen, fled to neutral Sweden in July 1942, and set up headquarters for the organization there. They continued to move in and out of Norway, and Storsveen was killed in a Gestapo operation in Oslo in April of 1943 without revealing his role in XU. XU continued its work under the leadership of Øistein Strømnæs and Anne-Sofie Østvedt, whose identities have remained secret until recently.

Strømnæs led XU from occupied Oslo for the rest of the war. Apart from supplying the allied forces with very detailed data about the state of German forces in Norway, XU also had connections within Nazi Germany. Several of their members were couriers for MI5 agent Paul Rosbaud who had vital information regarding German nuclear research.

By the end of the war XU had some 1,500 agents all over Norway and had developed a sophisticated courier system to the UK through neutral Sweden. The amount of information could amount to some 500 A4 pages supplied every day. The highly accurate and current intelligence enabled the Allied forces to maintain detailed information about the deployment and condition of German forces throughout Norway. This information proved vital in strategic bombing raids and would have been invaluable if an invasion had been necessary.

XU maintained strict discipline around its cell structure, and the courier system was based on anonymous transfer of information. In one case, it turned out that two operatives who only knew each other by each other's shoes were close friends outside the XU network.

After the war ended, confiscated Gestapo information revealed that the Gestapo in Norway had very little intelligence on the size, scope, members, and operations of XU.

The existence of XU was not revealed to the general public until around 1980, when the Norwegian government decided to decorate some of the XU members. The government was criticized for waiting for so long, especially since many double agents, otherwise sworn to secrecy, were convicted as collaborators during the post-war treason trials. Their names were cleared after 1980, and as of 2006, nearly all documents regarding the XU have been released to the public.