John le Carre, author of 'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy', dies aged 89
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[December 14, 2020]
By Guy Faulconbridge
LONDON (Reuters) - "Tinker Tailor Soldier
Spy" author John le Carre, who cast flawed spies on to the bleak
chessboard of Cold War rivalry, has died aged 89.
David Cornwell, known to the world as John le Carre, died after a short
illness in Cornwall, southwestern England, on Saturday evening.
He is survived by his wife, Jane, and four sons. The family said in a
brief statement he died of pneumonia.
"Very sad to hear the news about John le Carre," said Richard Moore, the
chief of Britain's MI6 foreign intelligence agency. "A giant of
literature who left his mark on MI6 through his evocative and brilliant
novels."
By exploring treachery at the heart of British intelligence in spy
novels, le Carre challenged Western assumptions about the Cold War by
defining for millions the moral ambiguities of the battle between the
Soviet Union and the West.
Unlike the glamour of Ian Fleming's unquestioning James Bond, le Carre's
heroes were trapped in the wilderness of mirrors inside British
intelligence which was reeling from the betrayal of Kim Philby, who fled
to Moscow in 1963.
"It's not a shooting war anymore, George. That's the trouble," Connie
Sachs, British intelligence's resident alcoholic expert on Soviet spies,
tells spy catcher George Smiley in the 1979 novel "Smiley's People".
"It's grey. Half angels fighting half devils. No one knows where the
lines are," Sachs says in the final novel of Le Carre's Karla trilogy.
Such a bleak portrayal of the Cold War shaped popular Western
perceptions of the rivalry between the Soviet Union and the United
States that dominated the second half of the 20th century until the
collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
The Cold War, for le Carre, was "A Looking Glass War" (the name of his
1965 novel) with no heroes and where morals were up for sale - or
betrayal - by spy masters in Moscow, Berlin, Washington and London.
Betrayal of family, lovers, ideology and country run through le Carre's
novels which use the deceit of spies as a way to tell the story of
nations, particularly Britain's sentimental failure to see its own
post-imperial decline.
Such was his influence that le Carre was credited by the Oxford English
Dictionary with introducing espionage terms such as "mole", "honey pot"
and "pavement artist" to popular English usage.
British spies were angry that le Carre portrayed the MI6 Secret
Intelligence Service as incompetent, ruthless and corrupt. But they
still read his novels.
Other fans included Cold War warriors such as former U.S. President
George H. W. Bush and former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
SOLDIER, SPY
David John Moore Cornwell was born on Oct. 19, 1931 in Dorset, England,
to Ronnie and Olive, though his mother, despairing at the infidelities
and financial impropriety of her husband, abandoned the family when he
was five years old.
Mother and son would meet again decades later though the boy who became
le Carre said he endured "16 hugless years" in the charge of his father,
a flamboyant businessman who served time in jail.
At the age of 17, Cornwell left Sherborne School in 1948 to study German
in Bern, Switzerland, where he came to the attention of British spies.
After a spell in the British Army, he studied German at Oxford, where he
informed on left-wing students for Britain's MI5 domestic intelligence
service.
Le Carre was awarded a first-class degree before teaching languages at
Eton College, Britain's most exclusive school. He also worked at MI5 in
London before moving in 1960 to the Secret Intelligence Service, known
as MI6.
Posted to Bonn, then capital of West Germany, Cornwell fought on one of
the toughest fronts of Cold War espionage: 1960s Berlin.
[to top of second column]
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"Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" author John le Carre, who cast flawed
spies on to the bleak chessboard of Cold War rivalry, died aged 89
on Saturday (December 12). Bryan Wood reports.
As the Berlin Wall went up, le Carre wrote "The Spy Who Came in from
the Cold," where a British spy is sacrificed for an ex-Nazi turned
Communist who is a British mole.
"What the hell do you think spies are?," asks Alex Leamas, the
British spy who is finally shot on the Berlin Wall.
"They're just a bunch of seedy, squalid bastards like me: little
men, drunkards, queers, hen-pecked husbands, civil servants playing
cowboys and Indians to brighten their rotten little lives."
By casting British spies as every bit as ruthless as their Communist
foes, le Carre defined the dislocation of the Cold War that left
broken humans in the wake of distant superpowers.
'MOSCOW RULES'
Now rich, but with a failing marriage and far too famous to be a
spy, le Carre devoted himself to writing and the greatest betrayal
in British intelligence history gave him material for a masterpiece.
The discovery, which began in the 1950s with the defection of Guy
Burgess and Donald Maclean, that the Soviets had run spies recruited
at Cambridge to penetrate British intelligence hammered confidence
in the once legendary services.
Le Carre wove the story of betrayal into the Karla trilogy,
beginning with the 1974 novel "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy" and ending
with "Smiley's People" (1979).
George Smiley seeks to track down a Soviet mole at the top of
Britain's secret service and battles with Soviet spy master Karla,
ultimate master of the mole who is sleeping with Smiley's wife.
Smiley, betrayed in love by his aristocratic wife Ann (also the name
of Cornwell's first wife), traps the traitor. Karla, compromised by
an attempt to save his schizophrenic daughter, defects to the West
in the last book.
ABSOLUTE FRIENDS?
After the Soviet Union collapsed, leaving Russia's once mighty spies
impoverished, le Carre turned his focus to what he perceived as the
corruption of the U.S.-dominated world order.
From corrupt pharmaceutical companies, Palestinian fighters and
Russian oligarchs to lying U.S. agents and, of course, perfidious
British spies, le Carre painted a depressing - and at times
polemical - view of the chaos of the post-Cold War world.
"The new American realism, which is nothing other than gross
corporate power cloaked in demagogy, means one thing only: that
America will put America first in everything," he wrote in the
foreword to "The Tailor of Panama".
He opposed the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and his anger at the
United States was evident in his later novels, which sold well and
were turned into popular films but did not match the mastery of his
Cold War bestsellers.
But in a life of espionage how much was true?
"I am a liar," le Carre was quoted as saying by his biographer Adam
Sisman. "Born to lying, bred to it, trained to it by an industry
that lies for a living, practised in it as a novelist."
(Additional reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru, Editing by Ed
Osmond, Frances Kerry and Angus MacSwan)
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