Become a Member
Books

Untold story of our double-cross spy

February 26, 2015 13:49
Fearless: British soldiers attacking among the smoke and dust on the front of El Alamein, 1942

By

Nigel West

3 min read

This is the remarkable story of Renato Levi, an Italian Jew born in 1902 in Genoa, where his mother, the actress Dolores Domenici, owned the Hotel Select. She also owned the Hotel Miramare in Rapallo. He held a British passport, was educated in Switzerland during the First World War, later travelled to Sydney, and his family owned a boat-building business in Bombay. He was married to an Australian, Lina, and had a son, Luciano.

He was recruited in 1939 by German Intelligence (Abwehr), but reported the approach to the British Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) which arranged for him to work as a double agent in Paris. Meanwhile, he was in contact with the Italian intelligence service, and was known to his German handlers at V-Mann 7501 and code-named Robert, but to SIS he was always known as Cheese.

The Espionage

In June 1940, Levi reported to SIS that he was to be sent by Abwehr on a mission to Egypt. He visited SIS representatives in Belgrade and Istanbul on his journey. He was briefly imprisoned in Turkey in December 1940 on charges relating to counterfeit currency, but SIS obtained his release so he could continue to travel to Cairo.