BRIXMIS
The British Commanders'-in-Chief Mission to the Soviet Forces in Germany (BRIXMIS) was a military liaison mission which operated behind the Iron Curtain in East Germany during the Cold War.
BRIXMIS existed from 1946 – shortly after the end of the Second World War – until the eve of the reunification of Germany in 1990. Created by an agreement to exchange military missions, the stated object of BRIXMIS – and the Soviet equivalent in the British Zone, SOXMIS – was "to maintain Liaison between the Staff of the two Commanders-in-Chief and their Military Governments in the Zones".[1]
This liaison was undertaken by 31 members – 11 officers and no more than 20 others – appointed to each mission. These liaison staff were issued passes allowing freedom of travel and circulation, with the exception of certain restricted areas, within each other's zone. Such "tours", as they became known, were conducted in uniform and in clearly identifiable vehicles. Nevertheless, although never openly stated, this liaison role also presented an ideal opportunity for the gathering of military intelligence through reconnaissance and surveillance.
The opportunity to also conduct an intelligence operation was fully exploited.
History
Following the establishment of the four allied zones of control in Germany after the Second World War, it became clear that some mechanism was needed to facilitate liaison between the occupying military governments, particularly between those of the Western allies and the Soviet Union. The exchange of military liaison missions appeared to offer a convenient solution.
The British Mission comprised members of the British Army, Royal Navy and Royal Air Force who conducted uniformed liaison activities in marked cars and in two Chipmunk light aircraft – the latter ostensibly to allow aircrew to maintain crew currency while posted to the Mission.
BRIXMIS maintained a permanent presence in its nominal home, the Mission House in Potsdam, East Germany, but its actual headquarters and operational centre were in West Berlin. These were located in London Block, a part of the Olympic Stadium complex which housed the military government of the British Sector of Berlin. The original Potsdam Mission House at Wildpark was in fact damaged during anti-British disturbances in 1958, and a new one (34 Seestrasse) was provided by the Soviet authorities, together with a sum of money in reparation.[3]
While BRIXMIS formally disbanded on 31 December 1990, a small number of its staff remained to conduct similar operations covertly and without the quasi-diplomatic immunity of the Robertson-Malinin Agreement during the course of the next three years. The rationale for this 'son-of-BRIXMIS' unit is as curious as the paradox of the liaison-spying roles of the previous 45 years. In 1990, the fact remained that the West could not be certain that the Soviet Union would fully withdraw from the now united Germany.[5]
Liaison
Other than via the occasional formal message, most official liaison consisted of formal events attended by both sides. Such events included, for example, a parade on the Queen's birthday, receptions at the Mission House, and a Remembrance Day religious service at the Stahnsdorf War Graves cemetery, just south of Berlin. There were also regular wreath-laying visits to the British memorials at the former concentration camps of Buchenwald, Sachsenhausen, and Ravensbrück.[6]
Informal contact was maintained through parties – usually in celebration of some one-off event – to which members of SERB, the Soviet External Relations Branch,[7] were also invited.
Members of the Mission holding a full "touring"’ pass could also go on what were known as "cultural tours", in which tourers and their families could stay, usually for several nights, in hotels of some of the main cities of East Germany. Such trips offered excellent opportunities for getting to know those members of the armed forces (and civilians) who might not have otherwise been met in the course of normal duties.[8]
Intelligence gathering
The liaison agreement allowed staff to travel throughout the respective zones of control with only limited restrictions on movement. Some areas remained restricted on a permanent basis, whereas others were subject to temporary restriction, with processes established to notify respective missions when these were imposed.[9]This freedom of movement throughout East Germany allowed the collection of intelligence on Warsaw Pact forces, particularly those of the Soviet Union and East Germany, which included force disposition and movement, orders of battle, equipment and professional standards. The configuration of liaison teams was established in the initial agreement and remained in place throughout the life of the programme. These were made up of a tour officer, a tour NCO and a driver, all of whom in later years received similar training. Their ground operations tours were conducted in cars, reconnoitring either on an ad-hoc basis or as directed by Defence Intelligence in London. Such tours could take a number of days with the teams being entirely self-sufficient, cooking their own meals and sleeping in the countryside either in the vehicle, as the driver always had to, or, as the other two normally did, in bivouacs or one-man tents. Once they had left Potsdam, they were entirely out of contact with their headquarters, and therefore left to their own devices to deal with any unforeseen circumstances, whether they be problems or opportunities.
Incidents of open hostility to tourers – such as being physically attacked or shot at, or having the vehicle deliberately rammed – were infrequent, but they did nevertheless happen occasionally.[11] What was very common, however, was the tailing of crews by so-called "narks" – members of the East German State Security Service (Stasi). A combination of superior equipment, driving skills and the ever-increasing knowledge of the local terrain possessed by the BRIXMIS crews meant, however, that they could usually be shaken off.[12]
The British Mission was almost entirely overt, in that all personnel operated in uniform and in marked vehicles, although there were occasions when the officer and tour NCO would leave the driver in the vehicle and explore on foot, while deliberately concealing any obvious evidence of their military identity.[13] The reciprocal Soviet Mission to the British zone operated in a more covert manner, however, in that it also had an Agent Handling capability.[14]
Vehicles
BRIXMIS also exercised the British legal right under the Potsdam Agreement to use the airspace over both West and East Berlin, as well as the air corridors to and from West Germany to the city. Two De Havilland Chipmunk T10s were based at RAF Gatow and RAF aircrew posted to BRIXMIS had access to them for the conduct of photographic reconnaissance flights within the designated airspace; a radius of 12 nautical miles within the Berlin Control Zone (BCZ) from the Berlin Air Safety Centre (BASC) located in West Berlin.
After the fall of the Berlin Wall, Chipmunk reconnaissance flights soon ceased and the two Chipmunks were flown to RAF Laarbruch, in Western Germany to await disposal action. Chipmunk WB466 was flown back to Berlin and was donated to the Allied Museum in Berlin, where it remains on display today. WG486 is still in RAF service with the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight.
Intelligence successes
BRIXMIS was also noted for many technical intelligence coups,[15] including:
- Secretly bringing a Yak-28 Firebar's Skip Spin radar and jet engines back to Farnborough for inspection after it crashed into the embankment of lake "Stössensee" on the river Havel enlargements [Berlin]
- Measuring the calibre of the gun of the then brand-new BMP-2 Armoured personnel carrier
- Stealing "reactive armour" from a Russian tank, for analysis
BRIXMIS was ideally placed to "test the temperature" of Soviet intentions from its privileged position behind the Iron Curtain. However, and perhaps more importantly, it offered a channel for communication between West and East via its secondary but significant role of liaison – the initial reason for its establishment.
Notes
- ↑ Gibson 2012, p. 223
- ↑ The terms of the Noiret-Malinin Agreement allowed the French Mission to hold 18 passes, and the Huebner-Malinin Agreement restricted the US to just 14.
- ↑ Geraghty 1996, pp. 74–75
- ↑ Gibson 2012, p. 198
- ↑ Gibson 2012, p. 199
- ↑ Williams 2006, p. 5
- ↑ SERB controlled the issue of passes and was responsible for the maintenance of the Mission House in Potsdam. It also acted as the clearing house and point of contact for all official business between the Chief of BRIXMIS and the Soviet armed forces.
- ↑ Williams 2006, p. 8
- ↑ The reasons for the imposition of temporary restrictions were always of great interest, and means were found to ensure that those already out on tour could be informed of their whereabouts whilst still being able to deny having had the chance to be told about them.
- ↑ As the Missions refused to acknowledge the authority of either the East German Army (NVA) or police (Volkspolizei or "Vopo") the tour officer always insisted on dealing only with the local Soviet Kommandant (garrison commander).
- ↑ Geraghty 1996, pp. 76–78
- ↑ Geraghty 1996, pp. 82–83
- ↑ When searching though rubbish tips for discarded items of interest, for example, they removed all badges from outer garments and left anything in the car which might be incriminating if dropped, including their passes.Gibson 2012, pp. 69–70
- ↑ Geraghty 1996, pp. 38–39
- ↑ Geraghty 1996, pp. 291–303
References
- Geraghty, Tony (1996). Brixmis: The Untold Exploits of Britain's Most Daring Cold War Spy Mission. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-00-638673-3.
- Gibson, Steve (2012). Live and Let Spy: Brixmis the Last Cold War Mission. The History Press, Stroud, Glos. ISBN 978-0-7524-6580-7.
- Williams, Peter (2006), BRIXMIS in the 1980s: The Cold War's 'Great Game', retrieved 27 November 2012
Further reading
British MLM
- Durie, William (2012). British Garrison Berlin 1945–1994: "nowhere to go...". Vergangenheitsverlag. ISBN 978-3-86408-068-5.
- Marsden, Roy (1998). "Operation 'Schooner/Nylon': RAF Flying in the Berlin Control Zone". Intelligence and National Security 13 (4): 178–193.
- Young, Ian (2006). "Behind The Lines". Military Machines International (November): 32–37.
United States MLM
- Fahey, John A (2003). Licensed to Spy. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-294-3.
- Holbrook, James R (2008). Potsdam Mission: Memoir of a US Army Intelligence Officer in Communist East Germany. Cork Hill Press. ISBN 1-59408-534-X.
- Vodopyanov, Anya (2004). Honors Research Thesis: USMLM. Stanford University. Retrieved 27 November 2012.
General
- Jan, Yves (2010), Keep the Cold War Cold, Artline films
External links
- BRIXMIS Association
- USMLM Association
- MMFL Association
- Alliierten Museum (The Allied Museum) – museum of the history of western forces in Berlin and Germany from 1945 to 1994 (in German, English and French)
- French Forces in Berlin (including MMFL)
- USMLM Documents from HQ USAREUR (Army)
- Report on death of Major Arthur Nicholson (USMLM)* Cold War Spies
- Western Allies Berlin site
- Photos taken in East Germany while serving with USMLM
- BBC Radio 4 – "The Brixmis Story". Broadcast: 11 June 2007. Content no longer available on BBC sites.
- Reconnaissance missions from RAF Gatow by Chipmunks (article includes photos)
- The ex-RAF Gatow Chipmunk in the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight
- In Plain Sight – USMLM Documentary on the military liaison missions in East Germany during the Cold War