Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/134799
Title: German Intelligence during the Second World War: The Canary Islands as a Case Study
Authors: García Cabrera, Marta 
UNESCO Clasification: 550402 Historia contemporánea
Keywords: Atlantic
Issue Date: 2024
Journal: German History 
Abstract: Between 1939 and 1945, the Canary Islands, an important region of nominally neutral or non-belligerent Spain, were a site of military planning, diplomacy, propaganda, naval supply, and intelligence. Most practically, the Third Reich utilized the islands as a supply station for ships and submarines. It could also draw on the National Socialist sympathies of the large and integrated German community. It established intelligence-gathering campaigns in four forms: (1) naval intelligence gathered by the secret supply service of the German Navy, (2) a network of espionage, information, subversion and sabotage operations organized by the Abwehr, which connected the islands with R & iacute;o de Oro, Ifni and Cabo Juby in Spanish Sahara, (3) a military radio monitoring and interception substation; and (4) surveillance and information-gathering undertaken by agents of police organizations. This article considers the role played by German intelligence in the Canary Islands as a case study of wartime intelligence operations
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/134799
ISSN: 0266-3554
DOI: 10.1093/gerhis/ghae045
Source: German History [ISSN 0266-3554], (Noviembre 2024)
Appears in Collections:Artículos
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