Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Richard Sorge (Russian: Рихард Густавович Зорге, romanized: Rikhard Gustavovich Zorge; 4 October 1895 – 7 November 1944) was a German-born Russian journalist and Soviet military intelligence officer who was active before and during World War II and worked undercover as a German journalist in both Nazi Germany and the ...

  2. Daniel Finn. One man put a stop to Hitler’s march across Europe: not Stalin, Churchill, or Roosevelt, but a German Communist called Richard Sorge. Sorge was a real-life spy whose exploits surpassed any fictional creation, and one of the twentieth century’s great heroes. German Communist Richard Sorge, who spent nearly a decade in Tokyo ...

  3. Mar 6, 2019 · By William Boyd. (Photo By ) When Richard Sorge – reputedly the greatest spy who ever lived – was executed by the Japanese on 7 November 1944 his last words were: “The Red Army!”, “The International Communist Party!” and “The Soviet Communist Party!”, all delivered in fluent Japanese to his captors. Sorge was bound hand and foot ...

  4. Nov 7, 2022 · Richard Sorge was born in 1895. He was half German and half Russian. Despite his Russian mother, his mother tongue – Muttersprache was German. His father who worked in the oilfields of Baku, was a German nationalist, in the words of Sorge, pro-imperialist-minded. Richard studied at the Berlin school, volunteered to go to the front during ...

  5. Jul 30, 2010 · The seductive spy Richard Sorge, a German in Japan, paved Stalin's path to victory. by Stuart D. Goldman 7/30/2010. Share This Article. R ichard Sorge had just returned to Tokyo on June 22, 1941, when he heard the report, being shouted by newsboys in the street, that Germany had invaded the Soviet Union. Sorge, a prominent German journalist ...

  6. May 30, 2012 · But Richard Sorge was both these things, and many others as well. As such, he emerges as the most brilliant spy of the Second World War, and perhaps the most brilliant of all time. Indeed, it has been said with much truth that Soviet Russia probably owes its existence today to this Communist spy, who supplied Moscow with some of the most important German and Japanese secrets of the war.

  7. People also ask

  8. Oct 15, 2019 · Richard Sorge was a German enraptured with communism. In 1929, he became a Soviet spy in the Far East. Operating in Japan from 1933 until his arrest in late 1941, Sorge became a close adviser to the German ambassador in Tokyo and built a formidable espionage machine at a time when all foreigners were under close scrutiny from Japanese authorities.

  1. People also search for