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Codename GarboGarbo was the British codename of Juan Pujol Garcia, (1912 – 1988), a Spaniard who was taken on by the Germans during World War II to spy on the British, after an initial overture to British intelligence had been rejected. Because of his dislike for Franco, the Spanish dictator, he double-crossed the Germans, and went to work for the British. He thought that an Allied victory would result in the deposition of Franco. Operating initially in Lisbon, he pretended to the Germans that he was in Britain. He fabricated reports about shipping movements, successfully convincing them. Eventually, he again made contact with British intelligence, and again offered his services. This time he was accepted. Garbo reached Britain in the spring of 1942, and operated as a double agent under the aegis of the XX Committee. He purported to have recruited a large network of agents, including a number of influential people with 'inside' information. In order to foster this illusion, Garbo supplied the Germans with a certain amount of collateral information. The Germans then paid Garbo (or Arabel, as they called him) a large amount of money for this misinformation. Garbo has the distinction of being one of the few people during World War II to receive decorations from both sides, gaining both an Iron Cross from the Germans and an MBE from the British. Garbo was one of the key players in the events that led up to D-Day. His misinformation was part of Operation Fortitude, an effort that successfully convinced Adolf Hitler and many of the German high command to believe that the Allied invasion was going to occur at the Pas de Calais, 150 miles east of Normandy. Adolf Hitler had personally ordered troops to be moved there against Erwin Rommel's protest. After the war Pujol moved to Venezuela, where he lived in anonymity. He died in Caracas in 1988. Garbo (Juan Pujol Garcia) Garbo (Juan Pujol Garcia)
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