Introduction
The
first half of the Czechoslovak 20th century, with its twists and turns,
affected the lives of tens of thousands of our fellow citizens. Given the
events of the time, this is particularly striking for members of the armed
forces. The Czechoslovak soldier, intelligence officer, resistance fighter
and political prisoner of Hitler’s Nazi Germany and the post-war member of the
Ministry of the Interior, František Fárek, were firmly among the men whose life
reflected all the turning points of the first half of the 20th century.
In
a way, he is not a completely unknown person. Two years after his death in
1975, he became more widely known with a publication called Traces Disappearing
in the Archive, in which, as a former officer, he recalls his career in
military intelligence and the espionage cases of the time. This is not the
only work describing Fárek’s dramatic life. Based on the said book, a
television production of The Daubner Bank House was filmed in 1988, describing
an ingenious news event from Fárek’s workshop.
The
publications Traces Disappearing in the Archive are not the only evidence of
military intelligence from Fárek’s pen. During the 1960s, he captured his
memories of that turbulent time for his family in detail in hitherto
unpublished materials. Although these sources are in a way subjective,
they are the only possible source of information for us in cases where the
official source base is absent. The mentioned personal sources thus became
one of the bases for writing the following text.
Youth
and World War I.
František
Fárek was born on August 10, 1894 in Lipník nad Bečvou into the family of the
butler František Fárek and his wife Jana. He attended primary school in
his hometown and also in 1906 he joined the Czech high school.1
He
graduated from high school in the first year of the world conflict. It was
certain that the war would affect his young life. In June of the following
year he joined the Austro-Hungarian army as a so-called one-year volunteer to
the Czech Infantry Regiment 57 (KK Infanterieregiment Nr. 57). In February
1916, after graduating from the school for officer waiters and a continuing course
in Opava and Olomouc, he was expelled as an aspirant cadet, and then trench
battles awaited him on the Carinthian front. After the war, he recalled
one of his first deployments: “In February 1916, our marching battalion rode in
cattle wagons to the Italian front. I got a platoon and soon suffered my
first injury. The Italian sniper tried his hand at me and immobilized me
with a clean blow to my right leg. This happened at Freikofel in
Carinthia.
In
June of the same year, however, he suffered another and more serious injury,
the consequences of which he basically struggled for the rest of his
life. He also returned to this moment after the war: “Suddenly, on
the other side, the Italians flashed and the characteristic crackling of
mortars echoed overhead. I threw myself on the ground. I woke up from
it to the dock. I couldn’t feel the left side of my body. My head
rumbled, a shard of mine struck me above my left ear. It is said that
there was almost nothing left of the bachelor who stood behind me. ”3
Subsequently,
he stayed in hospital until July 16. From May 1917 to October 1917 he
underwent a strike course and a special combat course, and basically until the
establishment of an independent republic in October 1918 he served on the
Italian front in various ranks and functions (from platoon leader, aide
battalion commander and company commander) Battalion 94 (KK Sturmbataillon Nr.
94) .4
Establishment
of a free republic
The end of the war and the revolutionary days of František Fárek caught during
his vacation in his hometown
1
VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Military personal files, Military personal file of
František Fárek, Curriculum vitae.
2
FAREK, Frantisek. Documents for a Million (unpublished manuscript held by
Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 9.
3
FÁREK, ref. 2, s. 9.
4
VÚA-VHA, Sb. Qualification documents, Qualification document of František
Fárek, Application; VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Military personal files,
František Fárek’s military personal file, Questionnaire for officers and
sergeants – Place for biography; Original qualification certificate – Part
1.
Lipník
nad Bečvou. As he later recalled, his vacation was to end on October 20,
1918, but the then crew commander in Lipník, Slovenian Col. Prašnikar, was
apparently well informed about the beginning of the disintegration of the
Austro-Hungarian monarchy, and willingly complied with Fárek’s request
about
its extension.5
Lieutenant
Fárek enlisted in the new Czechoslovak army at the end of October 1918. He
first served in the guard company in Lipník nad Bečvou in May
1919. However, the establishment of a free state did not go
smoothly. The young republic was essentially threatened by its neighbors
from the very beginning. A particularly critical situation prevailed in
the areas of southern Slovakia, where Fárek volunteered in the summer of 1919.
In the rank of lieutenant, he was assigned to the 67th Infantry Regiment (later
the 14th Infantry Regiment), with which he participated in battles against the
Hungarians at Tornaľ, Plešivec and Rožňava. Although he earned the War
Cross of 1919 with division praise for his participation in the fighting, he
had to spend the next three quarters of the year in various hospitals, first in
Ružomberok, Slovakia, and then in Olomouc. Because he was in convalescence
and unable to serve in ordinary service, began to hold the position of
rapporteur of the Standing Disciplinary Committee in Olomouc. František
Fárek began discussing the applications of former Austro-Hungarian officers
here for the Czechoslovak army. In Olomouc, in a way, for the first time
ever, he came across the issue of military intelligence, a field that was to
influence his career until his departure from active service. After
completing his convalescence in 1921, he returned to Slovakia, where he began
service with the 14th Infantry Regiment in Košice.6 which was to influence
his career until his departure from active service. After completing his
convalescence in 1921, he returned to Slovakia, where he began service with the
14th Infantry Regiment in Košice.6 which was to influence his career until
his departure from active service. After completing his convalescence in
1921, he returned to Slovakia, where he began service with the 14th Infantry
Regiment in Košice.6
Military
correspondent in Slovakia
Even
at the time of Fárek’s return to Slovakia, the international situation was not
the best for our young state. Hungary did not accept the post-war
territorial changes, and Czechoslovakia saw it as a major danger throughout the
1920s. Because the nature of Fárek’s injuries did not allow him full service,
he first served as commander of the 14th Infantry Regiment, then as an arms
officer, and finally became a Category I intelligence officer – a reporter in
charge of a portion of the state border.7
In
the October mobilization of 1921, against the efforts of the Habsburgs to
return to the Hungarian throne, his regiment took up position south of Košice,
while the regiment’s headquarters were stationed in the village of Barca near
the city. As an intelligence officer, František Fárek spent most of his
time exploring the border. Many years after World War II, he generally
stated about intelligence activities in eastern Slovakia: “At that time, none
of us had the appropriate experience or practice in this special field, and our
intelligence methodology and technology might not be able to stand up to
criticism from experts today. But we did it the way we could, and we
didn’t lack courage or goodwill. We had a good friendship and helped each
other as best we could, and the situation demanded it. ”8
Thanks
to Fárek’s memories, we can also look into the issue of material equipment of
the then intelligence bodies. Specifically, the 2nd (intelligence)
department of the 11th Infantry Division, which included Fárek’s regiment, was
not initially equipped with any means of transport. All its members had to
use bicycles or simply hiking to travel to the border and to meet with agents
outside the city. There were no major problems in the summer, but
especially in the winter a long train connection had to be used
5
FAREK, Frantisek. From the history of our intelligence service
(unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 10.
6
VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Qualification documents, Qualification document of
František Fárek, Qualification document – Original.
7
FÁREK, ref. 5, pp. 11–12; VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Qualification
documents, František Fárek qualification certificate, Qualification document –
Original.
8
FÁREK, ref. 5, s. 11–12.
and
then on foot. In really urgent cases, a motorcycle was sometimes borrowed
from the author, or the car was provided by the division commander. This
was not an exceptional phenomenon. The intelligence departments of the
other divisions were not much better off. The situation with the division
improved only after the arrival of a new commander, General Josef Šnajdárek.9
In
August 1925, the 11th Infantry Division began to be subject to the newly
established Provincial Military Headquarters (ZVV) in Košice, whose commander
was also appointed the current commander of the 11th Infantry Division
Gen. Šnejdárek. The head of the newly established 2nd Department at
the Košice ZVV became the later important head of the intelligence headquarters
in Prague, Lt. Col. gšt. Šimon Drgáč and, in Fárek’s opinion, gained
considerable credit for the organizational and technical equipment of the 2nd
ZVV department. In addition, he should have had a relatively lucky hand in
choosing his co-workers.10 Drgáč later acted just as well at the news
headquarters in Prague.11
He
remained at the headquarters of the 11th Infantry Division Fárek until the
autumn of 1928. After that he was called to the ZVV in Košice as the head of
the search service of the 2nd Department. On November 1, 1927, Lt.
Col. gšt. Šimon Drgáč left as head of the 2nd Department of ZVV in
Prague and his successor in Košice became Maj. gšt. Antonín Hvížďálek
and after him Lt. Col. gšt. Jan Třebický.12
A
major turning point in Fárek’s career occurred in 1929. In October of that
year, he was transferred directly to the 2nd Department of HŠ in
Prague. Fárek should have guessed the assignment to Prague from the time
of the August visit to the advantages of search group B of the 2nd Department
of the HŠ Col. Mojmír Soukup in Košice. As he later recalled, calling
the capital was an honor for him, but there were mixed feelings. In almost
ten years of operation, he merged with Košice, so to speak, and had the
opportunity to get to know the Hungarian opponent perfectly. At a time
when he could make full use of his experience and knowledge, he had to leave
his well-known intelligence field against his Hungarian opponent. After
entering Prague, Fárek, thanks to his experience, took over the Hungarian
department of the intelligence section P-1 of search group B of the 2nd
Department of the Primary School under the leadership of Maj. gšt. František
Dastich. But a drastic change was to come in the near future.13
At
the 2nd department of the primary school in Prague
When
we outlined the beginnings of military intelligence in the 1920s in eastern
Slovakia, it is also necessary to mention the situation at the highest level of
the intelligence hierarchy, as František Fárek recalled after the war: “until
1930, only one older intelligence department owned the car with the driver and
the marginal components were only emergency equipped. It did not have a
photographic laboratory or a chemical one, and one silicon lamp for examining
various fals or secret inks, and several common reagents for developing
sympathetic inks. ”14
Fárek
came to the department at a turning point, which was soon to affect his
intelligence activities. After the conclusion of the Rhine Guarantee Pact
in October 1925, the borders in Western Europe stabilized, but not the borders
with Germany’s eastern neighbors. Just
9
FÁREK, ref. 5, s. 21 a 69.
10
During the Drgáč era, for example, a then unknown lieutenant joined the
intelligence department. Tomáš Houška (1896–1939), who after graduating
from the War University a few years later became the head of the German section
of the Study and Planning Group A of the 2nd Department of the Primary
School. VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Qualification documents, Qualification
certificate of Tomáš Houška, Qualification certificate – Part I.
11
FÁREK, ref. 5, s. 79.
12
Tamže, ref. 5, s. 82.
13
FÁREK, ref. 5, pp. 93, 97; VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Qualification
documents, František Fárek qualification document, Qualification document –
Original and Authorized guided interviews with František Fárek from 1968
(unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 5.
14
FÁREK, ref. 5, s. 127.
15
STRAKA, Karel. Reconstruction of the Czechoslovak agency network and their
results from 1933–1939. Intelligence headquarters. Prague MoD CR,
2017, pp. 43–44. ISBN 978-80-7278-709-8.
this
situation created ideal conditions for the convergence of the security
interests of Poland and Czechoslovakia, and it was cooperation in the field of
intelligence that has made the most progress.15
In
the spring of 1930, Františkek Fárek registered frequent visits of the Polish
intelligence expert Maj. Jerzy Krzymowski at his superior,
Col. Soukupa. Interestingly, Krzymowski was not spared from Soukup’s
frequent hobbies of giving people in the area various nicknames, and soon a
Polish officer at the ward was known as Pšoncek. At that time, Soukup
himself had already made several visits to Poland, where he was introduced to a
certain novelty for the Czechoslovak side – Polish advanced agency exchanges on
the border with Germany. Here it is necessary to keep in mind that this
was a relative novelty for the Czechoslovak side. The former 2nd
department of the primary school was, for organizational and financial reasons,
controlled considerably centrally.16
The
possible adoption of the Polish model was seriously discussed by
Col. Soukup with Maj. Dastichem and it is indisputable that both
officers laid the foundations for the construction of advanced exchanges
outside the Prague headquarters. The actual decentralization of
intelligence activities eventually took place through intelligence support
points in border areas. In the beginning, only two were created. The
first figured as a group against Lusatia with a location in Liberec, where the
management of Soukup checked on Captain František Fárek, and the second as a
group against Saxony with a station in Litoměřice. In principle, these
were the future standard Advanced Agency Exchanges (PAU) of the 2nd Department
of the HŠ.17
Due
to his new destination, František Fárek made a several-week study trip to
Germany, during which he had to notice everything that could be useful for him
in his next task, such as how to obtain railway tickets, passenger transport
tariffs, passport and customs control, ticket control. platforms and on the
train, types of hotels, boarding houses, formalities for renting rooms and
filling in registration tickets, how long it takes for passengers to report to
the police and what attention foreigners enjoy in Germany.18
Liberec
itself was chosen for several reasons. Apart from the proximity of the
state border, the presence of the police directorate and gendarmerie department
also played a role here. Due to secrecy, Fárek moved in the city under the
cover of the identity of insurance officer František Steiner. However,
Liberec became a rather symbolic seat, a certain refuge, because it was
constantly in motion within the scope of service.19
The
case of Franz Dobianer’s bank house
It was Fárek’s work in Liberec that is connected with one ingenious
intelligence event of Czechoslovak intelligence.20 As usual, the birth of this
intelligence company was essentially a coincidence. At the end of 1931,
Capt. Fárek was alerted to the Reich German, who often traveled to the
city with a briefcase full of documents. After a fake appearance at the
police, Fárek also got acquainted with the contents of his luggage – with the
German Germans’ applications for money loans. He testified that he was a
financial broker of a certain Dobianer, which provides loans to persons in
Germany.21
16
FÁREK, ref. 5, pp. 118–119; STRAKA, ref. 17, p. 35 .; GEBHART,
Jan. Notes on Czechoslovak-Polish intelligence contacts until March 15,
1939. In Slezský sborník, 1996, vol. 94 (52), No 1, p. 34.
17
STRAKA, ref. 17, s. 35–36; FÁREK, ref. 5, s. 120–122.
18
FÁREK, ref. 5, s. 123.
19
Authorized controlled interviews with František Fárek from 1968 (unpublished
manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), pp. 10–11 and FÁREK, ref. 5, pp. 141–143.
20
In his publication Footprints Disappearing in the Archive, the mentioned
intelligence event is not mentioned only by František Fárek. And
In
a highly fictionalized form, it also got into the memoir work of the then head
of the search group B of the 2nd Department – MORAVEC, František. A spy
they didn’t trust. Prague: Rozmluvy Alexandru Tomského, 1990, pp. 77–78
and over time and in the same form to non-fiction, eg HOLUB, Ota. Trumps
of Commissioner Geissler. Ústí nad Labem: Severočeské nakladatelství,
1988, pp. 108–115.
21
FÁREK, ref. 5, s. 159.
The
aforementioned Franz Dobianer22 worked in Liberec as a businessman with a
temporary residence permit. It was even known that he had illegally got
his girlfriend to Czechoslovakia. Fárka was fascinated by this man, and
although he did not yet have a clear idea of the possible use, he decided to
meet him. As he stated after the war, Dobianer figured out what it was all
about, and himself, probably also due to his rather fragile position vis-à-vis
the Czechoslovak authorities, offered himself as useful. It was by
guessing among the applicants for the Dobianer loan that the Czechoslovak
correspondents were to acquire their collaborators in Germany in the near
future.23
Fárek’s
superior, Col. Soukup and Maj. gšt. Dastich welcomed this
opportunity. In April 1931, Dobianer moved to Podmokel. He procured a
car and at the same time bought a representative villa in Gartenstrasse in
Děčín, where his private banking plant – the so-called Deutsche Kreditververtung
– started operating. At the same time, he had advertisements in the
Reich’s German magazines offering loans on favorable terms. In a short
time, hundreds of letters began to arrive through Berlin intermediaries… .24
František
Fárek sorted the applications and logically he was mainly interested in a loan
from the circle of state administration employees and the armed
forces. These were given separately and the rest were handled according to
Dobianer’s usual habits. The final recruitment took place
individually. The owner of the bank was waiting for the loan applicant
together with the intelligence officer. The final phase itself varied,
depending on the situation and nature of the individual. Sometimes an
offer of by-earnings was enough, sometimes small and at first glance innocent
efforts were required.25 It should be noted that the Czechoslovak side had a
certain psychological advantage in the negotiations, because those interested
in the loan were determined to do virtually everything under the pressure of
the situation. Of the important agents that managed to get those
recruited, for example, the head of the German Grenzkomisariat (passport
control) at the Bruno Kurt Ulbricht common railway station in Děčín. From
the beginning, he was an unconscious co-worker, when he arranged for various
people and their luggage for a smooth check-in at the border for a fee.
He
became a conscious collaborator only later. However, with his costly life,
he soon drew attention to himself by the German secret police.26
In a similar way, the North Bohemian advanced exchange under Fárek’s management
has acquired a police inspector from Leipzig, Johann Gast, and a captain from
the military stud farm in the town of Militsch, Otto Dempwolf.27, 28
22
Originally a Czech German, František Dobianer was born on October 1, 1886 in
Miroslav (Znojmo district). After enlisting in
During
the First World War he served in the Vozatajský Division No. 2 (KK Train
Division Nr. 2) and in the Ersatzabteilung der KK Kraftfahrtruppe in
Vienna. In June 1917 he was superarbitrated. After the war, he left
Vienna for Berlin, where he found a job in a factory for agricultural
machinery, which he sold to Russia, where he stayed for a long
time. Subsequently, he returned to Germany with the money he earned and
began earning money by providing financial loans. Apparently, his
activities were not entirely based on a legal basis, so the criminal police
became interested in him. Dobianer had no choice but to take refuge in his
old homeland. However, he did not resign from his financial activities and
continued to carry them out, but from Czechoslovak territory under the
leadership of military intelligence. After the occupation he fled to
Poland, but subsequently returned to Prague. He was arrested by the
Gestapo at his address in Prague in February 1940. On June 8, 1943, he was
sentenced to death by the People’s Court in Berlin and executed on September 8,
1943. ABS Prague, f. German courts in the Reich (f. 141), sign. 141-70-6. In
the Name of the German Volkes, page 52 and VÚA-VHA Praha, Sb. Tribal
documents, Tribal document of Franz Dobianer.
23
FÁREK, ref. 5, p. 160; NA Prague, f. Police Headquarters Prague II –
Intelligence Center at the Police Headquarters Prague (f. 200), sign. 200-69-36,
Dobianer František Josef; SOKA Liberec, Residential applications (series
1900–1938), Dobianer Franz Josef.
24
FÁREK, ref. 5, pp. 163, 166–167; ABS Prague, f. Report maps prepared by
the study institute of the Ministry of the Interior (f. Z), sign. Z-6-
314-1 / 75–77 and SOKA Liberec, Residence applications (series 1900–1938),
Dobianer Franz Josef.
25
FÁREK, ref. 5, pp. 168, 177–179; ABS Prague, f. Report maps prepared by
the study institute of the Ministry of the Interior (f. Z), sign. Z-6- 314-1
/ 75–77.
26
FÁREK, ref. 5, pp. 186, 194–195, 202; ABS Prague, f. Report maps prepared
by the study institute of the Ministry of the Interior (f. Z),
sign. Z-6-314-1 / 78.
27
Under the cover of the C-2023, he provided, for example, reports on the Militsch
crew and information on the organization and training of the repair
squadron. VÚA-VHA Prague, f. VZ I, k. 4, Subject: Activities of the Aunt –
defects, May 26, 1937.
28
ABS Prague, f. Report maps prepared by the study institute of the Ministry of
the Interior (f. Z), sign. Z-6-314-1 / 79.
The
system of Czechoslovak offensive intelligence has undergone a number of
organizational changes in those years. The current head of the search
party and Fárek’s friend Col. Mojmír Soukup was replaced in 1934 by a younger
and more ambitious Lt. Col. gšt. František Moravec, with whose rapid
onset the focus of the group also changed. In contrast to the earlier
focus on information of the broader military-political context, a narrower and
distinctly military concept began to be promoted.29
It
is necessary to mention that, despite a certain animosity towards Moravec,
Fárek underlined his activity in connection with the reorganization of
intelligence, which significantly affected the activities of the Advance Agency
Centers. According to Fárek, it was generously established, purposeful in
every way and enabling the full development of the creative abilities of the
authorized bodies, their intelligence techniques and methodology. It also
encouraged competition between exchanges.30 The reorganization necessarily
affected both the existing advanced agency exchanges and the staff
themselves. After the changes, František Fárek appeared on the new and,
according to him, also better staffed PAÚ in Ústí nad Labem with the code name
Aunt, which was then preferred by Capt. Ludvík Novotný. At the
beginning of 1936, the Ústí nad Labem exchange was to become the new center for
organizing another loan event. Due to the reorganization of the German
army, the tipping was to be focused primarily on members of the armed forces,
railway employees, or employees of companies engaged in war
production. The time to provoke action seemed more than appropriate to the
Czechoslovak correspondents – in Germany there were expensive conditions and mass
recruitment awaited the army. The monthly cost of the event was estimated
by the rapporteurs at
3,500
CZK and a one-time investment of 500 RM.31
The
seat in Ústí nad Labem was not permanent and over time, the entire exchange
moved to Litoměřice for security reasons. Service in Ústí nad Labem and
Litoměřice except František Fárek and the head of Capt. Ludvík Novotný was
passed by other intelligence officers. The original intelligence work also
continued under the changed conditions.
For
security reasons, Franz Dobianer received a new identity in July
1936. Using false documents, he now acted as Josef Müller, director,
b. April 4, 1894 in Brno with affiliation to Brno, apartment Prague XIX
Dostálova street No. 18.32
The
available materials show that in March 1937 at the latest, the German Abwehr
gained some awareness of the activities of the Czechoslovak PAU on the North
Bohemian border.33 His attention was not lost on both the Ústí nad Labem
exchange with the places where the tipping operation took place and Franz
Dobianer alias Josef Müller. It was dangerous that already at the turn of
1936 to 1937, the real identity of not only František Fárek, but also Ludvík
Novotný was revealed. The Abwehr had a strong interest in these
officers. For example, he led their Prague residences, car license plates,
etc. In the end, the method of work of our reporters in the North Bohemian
border was revealed. In addition, a large-scale arrest operation between
Dobianer’s brokers was launched in Germany.34
29
FÁREK, ref. 5, s. 126 a STRAKA, ref. 17, s. 49 a 243.
30
FÁREK, ref. 5, s. 259.
31
VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Military Intelligence Command (Sb. 37),
sign. 37-382-2, Subject: Action for Acquisition of New Types – Proposal,
fol. 96 and Authorized Guided Interviews with František Fárek from 1968
(unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), pp. 10–13.
32
VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Military Intelligence Command (Sb. 37),
sign. 37-382-2, Subject: Legitimate
for
the house. 5037, fol. 92–93.
33
The German intrusion into the organization of North Bohemian advanced
intelligence centers remains the subject of the study of available archival
sources. In his memoirs, František Fárek mentioned škpt as the source of a
possible leak of information. Ludvík Novotný. For more on possible
revelations, see VYHLÍDAL, Milan. Franz Dobianer’s news tipping event. An
example of the work of Czechoslovak intelligence before World War II. In
Proceedings of the Faculty of Education, Masaryk University, a number of social
sciences (in press).
34
Federal Archives – Freiburg Military Archives, signed. RW / 49-627 / a,
The Secret Military Intelligence Service of the
Czechoslovakia
against Germany, fol. 20, 69-70, 86, 90, 91 a 97.
However,
the events on the other side of the border did not escape the attention of
Czechoslovak intelligence. She knew about the arrests of Dobianer’s
associates. For these reasons, the connection ceased to be established
under the old address and only the most promising ones were selected from about
400 tips. Head of the superior Prague Agency Search Center I Lt.
Col. At the same time, Václav Kopačka set new conditions for tying the
tips themselves. For security reasons, the event came under the
jurisdiction of the intelligence headquarters.35
In
the early summer of 1937, the Abwehr, together with the Gestapo, launched a
large-scale campaign involving the general German public. In August of
that year, an article was published in German magazines and newspapers entitled
“Achtung: Spione am Werk. Warnung vor landesverräterischen Agentenwerbern
‘, which drew attention to questionable financial institutions dealing with
intelligence recruitment. What was worse, the German press literally
warned against the activities of Franz Dobianer and appealed to all those who
came into contact with his company to contact the German police immediately.36
To
the displeasure of Czechoslovak intelligence, he became inappropriately lively
around Dobianer’s person. His further stay on the German border became
dangerous and he was granted police protection immediately after the article
was published. The intelligence headquarters finally decided to move it to
a more anonymous Prague, where it was further used for recruitment in Germany
under a new identity.37
At
that time, however, František Fárek had not worked at PAÚ Teta for several
months, because he was probably sent to the Prague headquarters in May
1937. After returning to the 2nd Department, he was in charge of checking
all monthly bills of advanced agency exchanges in section P-1. It is
interesting that František Fárek does not explain the reasons for his appeal to
Prague in his extensive written memoirs. His personal materials are also
silent, however, after his appeal to Prague, he did not come into contact with
his own agency.38
Back
to the 2nd department of HŠ
Shortly
after his return to Prague, František Fárek was transferred to the position of
company commander of the 5th Infantry Regiment, Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, in
Prague in September 1937 for unknown reasons.39 The decision was somewhat
surprising, especially given his health condition. It is certain that he
was very displeased with his new classification. More details are not yet
known, so we can only speculate whether the matter was due to possible tense
relations with František Moravec, or whether it was an echo of the affair with
the revelation of intelligence activities of Fárek’s agent Franz
Dobianer. In the post-war period, Fárek’s colleague Karel Paleček
partially returned to this episode: “I no longer remember the context in which
his replacement was made. Farek found it very difficult, because as a long-time
intelligence officer
35
VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Military Intelligence Command (Sb. 37), sign. 37-382-2,
Subject: Typařská akce – návrh, fol. 106–107.
36
NA Prague, f. Zemský úřad Praha – Presidium zemského úřad v Praze (f. 207),
sign. 207-609-63, Subject: Germany,
journalistic
articles on espionage in Czechoslovakia, folios 10–11 and KOKOŠKA, Jaroslav –
KOKOŠKA, Stanislav. Agent dispute
A-54. Prague:
Our Army, 1994, pp. 61–62. ISBN 80-206-0437-5.
37
NA Prague, f. Ministry of the Interior I – Presidium (f. 225),
sign. 225-1148-3, Article “Amtliche Warnung vor gentronter
Spionage” published in the magazine “Die Zeit” of 11 August
1937, no. 187, fol. 6–7 and ABS Prague, f. Maps of reports prepared by the
study institute of the Ministry of the Interior (f. Z), sign. Z-6-314-1 /
130 and VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Military Intelligence Command (Sb. 37),
sign. 37-382-2, Characteristics of an agent for the year 1937, fol. 97.
38
TITL, Zdenek. Reconstruction of the development of the organizational
structure and personnel of the Czechoslovak military intelligence
intelligence
(until 15 March 1939). Part 1 – Article. Prague: General Staff –
Inspectorate of the Military Intelligence Service of the Czech Armed Forces,
1995, p. 57 and Authorized Guided Interviews with František Fárek from 1968
(unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), pp. 20–21.
39
VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Qualification documents, Qualification document of
František Fárek, Qualification document Part II
Insert
1938.
lost
contact with the unit. At the urging of the old officers, he was taken
back to the ward just before the mobilization
Back
to the 2nd department of HŠ with škpt. Fárek did not return until April
30, 1938, shortly before the extraordinary measures in May. Subsequently,
he worked as part of a permanent emergency at the so-called O-service
(wiretapping service), which was in charge of wiretapping foreign embassies in
Prague. At that time, it was a temporary facility, but of a completely
secret nature, which was operated by selected officers with appropriate
language skills. The rapporteurs, of course, paid the greatest attention
to the German representation in Prague, whose wiretapping was also recorded by
a special device.41
Škpt. František
Fárek and the intelligence department also underwent a mobilization in
September, moving to Vyškov, when he and Capt. Alois Čáslavka is in charge
of the transfer of intelligence material and the cash register. He thus
experienced the tragic events of Munich at the 2nd Department of the Main
Headquarters, after which the offensive activity against Nazi Germany was
officially banned.42
Without
the knowledge of their superiors, however, the so-called Agency Search
Headquarters against Germany (APÚN) was organized at the end of 1938, but few
people knew about its existence. The activities and organization of the
original PAHs have also changed radically under the influence of the new
conditions.43
The
new Czechoslovak state entered the new year 1939 in a very uncertain
atmosphere. After the activation of Slovak political circles in March
1939, the Prague government began to slowly lose control of the eastern part of
its territory. As special observers, the intelligence headquarters sent
several intelligence officers to Slovakia on March 6, 1939, including František
Fárek. Within a few days, the situation in the east of the republic
escalated and the last day of his stay in Trenčín was Capt. Fárek has
already witnessed anti-Czech scenes, when typewriters and paving equipment were
thrown out of the branch office of the newspaper at gross insults to Bohemia
and the roar of the crowd.44
Finally,
on March 13, 1939, Fárek received a radio reception from Prague with an order
to return. His observation mission, the meaning of which he was not
entirely convinced from the beginning, was over. Another stay in Slovakia
no longer made sense. Fárek in Žilina picked up his colleague
Capt. Oscar Olmer. Armed civilians with belts on their sleeves were
already patrolling the streets. However, no major problems arose along the
way, until they encountered a more serious obstacle in the Vlr Pass near the
border. The road was guarded here by guards and gendarmes. Farek and
Olmer left nothing to chance and simply ran away from the patrol.45
Occupation
of the Czech lands
In
the aggravated atmosphere, František Fárek reported to the 2nd Department of
the Primary School on the morning of March 14, 1939. As he later said, no
one cared about his paper. A member of the search group,
Maj. gšt. Emil
40
ABS Prague, f. HS VKR (f. 302), sign. 302-57-2 / 67–68, Protocol written
to the MNO – General Staff with Brig. gene. Karel Paleček, folios
67–68.
41
TITL, Zdenek. Reconstruction of the development of the organizational
structure and personnel of the Czechoslovak military intelligence
intelligence
(until 15 March 1939). Part 1 – Article. Prague: General Staff – ACR
Military Intelligence Inspectorate, 1995, p. 45.
42
FAREK, Frantisek. 2nd Department of the General Staff for mobilization in
September 1938. – Journey to Vyškov. – Surrender of the Czech
koslovenska. –
Return to Prague. – Farewell to
us. hl. no. arm. gene. I’m a tailor. –
News. activity of the 2nd dept. around Munich.
–
Departure of the head 2. Dept. Col. gšt. Hájka. –
Col. gšt. František Moravec new head of the 2nd
dept. headquarters
(unpublished
manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 6
43
STRAKA, ref. 17, s. 38.
44
FAREK, Frantisek. Members of the 2nd dept. hl. staff of
Maj. Bohumil Dítě, škpt. Frant. Fárek, škpt. Antonín Longa,
Capt. Josef Rybář, Capt. Oskar Olmer as special observers of the
March events of 1939 in Slovakia (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří
Fárek), p. 10.
45
FÁREK, ref. 46, s. 11–12.
Strankmüller
was only looking for another participant in the Slovak mission,
Maj. Bohumil Dítět. However, he had a breakdown in his car and had to
entrust it to a car repair shop in Brno. He stayed for a few hours and did
not arrive at the 2nd ward until March 14 around 3 pm.46
After
the war, Fárek remembered how strange the atmosphere prevailed after his return
to the 2nd Department. Reporters from colleagues who were secretly
selected by Moravec to go abroad generally encountered cold closure. It
was not until around noon that Fárek learned from Strankmüller about the
planned departure of selected intelligence officers. At the same time, he
handed Fárek a passport for Maj. A child who was to be taken to the
airport immediately upon his return.47
On
the day President Hácha left for a meeting in Berlin, the head of the
eavesdropping service, Capt. Alois Čáslavka secured the involvement of
Berlin at the long-distance headquarters in Žižkov. In addition, the
service intercepted telephone calls from all foreign legations and, in part,
normal traffic. On
On
March 15, at 0:35, we managed to record a telephone conversation with the
arm. gene. Jan Syrov on the forthcoming occupation of the Czech
lands. The entire headquarters was immediately alerted. At the same
time, intelligence material was liquidated, including material from conspiracy
sites in Prague, and extensive APS I documents were subsequently burned in
Podbaba, Prague.48
At
that time, it took over most of the materials arising from the activities of
the military intelligence service, and future historians and researchers thus
lost the opportunity to examine the issue of military intelligence before World
War II. At that moment, however, it was a necessary necessity, because the
first German troops appeared in Prague’s Dejvice as early as the morning of
March 15. The next day, Admiral Wilhelm Canaris and his entourage visited
the headquarters buildings. He visited the office of the newly established
Abwehrstelle and also the office of the interim head of the 2nd Department of
the HŠ MNO Col. gšt. František Havel, who was delegated to office
after the hasty departure of Col. gšt. František Moravec. He
stayed there for a maximum of ten minutes, thanking his officers for providing
offices.49
Otherwise,
according to memories, despite the occupation, there was an apparent calm
before the storm in the HŠ building:
“In
the offices of the 2nd dept. various issues related to the occupation of
Czechoslovakia were shaken, various military and police transports and bullets
were followed by various plans for the future. ”Work on the department did not
stop in a way. Intelligence analysts Col. gšt. Tomáš Houška and
Maj. gšt. Josef Zuska50, for example, was still editing daily
bulletins from the foreign press, which had been running smoothly before the
Gestapo put a stop to it.51
In
the anti-Nazi resistance
46
FÁREK, ref. 46, s. 12.
47
FAREK, Frantisek. Situation in the 2nd dept. Hl. staff on
14./III. 1939. – Farewell to Moravc’s group. – Departure
“Eleven”
to England and what preceded it. – Col. gšt. Havel appointed
head 2. – Return of Maj. Child from Slovakia (unpublished manuscript
held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), pp. 1–2. It is a certain interesting fact that
according to Maj. gšt. Emil Strankmüller was even to consider the
departure of Capt. Fárka and Longy. However, because both were
covered by their activities against Hungary, they were not included in Moravc’s
group. STRANKMÜLLER, Emil. Czechoslovak offensive intelligence in the
years 1937 to March 15, 1939. In Resistance and Revolution, 1968, vol. 6,
No. 1, p. 70.
48
FAREK, Frantisek. Hácha leaves on 14./III. to Berlin. –
Eavesdropping on a Hacha-gen phone call.
Raw. –
Destroy everything. – Group-1 liquidation procedure. – Problems with
burning file material. – Archive ag. search center in Podbaba. –
What was the case with the destruction of file archives in other ministries and
offices (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 1.
49
FAREK, Frantisek. Situation in the 2nd dept. after March 15, 1939. –
Admiral Canaris in the General Staff. – Colonel Longin.
–
Capt. Fárek and Maj. A child at the head of the Abwehrstelle. –
A member of the Abwehr wants to make a courtesy visit to
Capt. Fárka. – Visit to Maj. Child. – Characteristics of
members of the Abwehr and German officers (unpublished manuscript held by Prof.
Jiří Fárek), pp. 1-2.
50
For more on this officer, see KREISINGER, Pavel – VYHLÍDAL, Milan. The
life destinies of General Josef
Zusky
(1902–1978). From an artillery officer through the intelligence department
of the General Staff and the Nazi prison to Egypt. Part I. In History
and Military, 2015, vol. 64, No. 1, pp. 64 – 76. ISSN 0018-2583 and
KREISINGER, Pavel
–
He WATCHED. Milan. The lives of General Josef Zuska
(1902–1978). From an artillery officer through the intelligence department
of the General Staff and the Nazi prison to Egypt. II. part
(completion). In History and Military, 2015, vol. 64, No. 2, pp. 90 –
99. ISSN 0018-2583.
51
FÁREK, ref. 51, s. 5.
The
occupation of the Czech lands and the establishment of the Protectorate of
Bohemia and Moravia became a prerequisite for the establishment of the first resistance
movements. Former intelligence officers had certain preconditions by the
nature of their previous profession, and we really won’t be far from the truth
when we say that within a few hours and days, the first resistance units will
begin to establish themselves within the liquidated 2nd Department of Primary
Schools. However, it is not without interest that their origin and
functioning were often influenced by bad relations, which spilled over from the
pre-occupation period.
It
was to the beginnings of anti-Nazi resistance that František Fárek left a
number of valuable testimonies in his memoirs. According to them, on the
first day of the occupation, he met with his colleagues, staff captains Antonín
Longa and Alois Čáslavka, in a café on Veletržní třída. They mutually
decided that they would not follow their colleagues abroad, but that with their
abilities and skills they would be much more useful at home. At the same
time, František Fárek was the oldest to take over the leadership of the
incipient resistance cell, 52 which in the near future was known as the Three
Councils or just the Councils.53, 54
Although
the Three Councilors established themselves more or less as a separate group,
and it should be noted that they tried to maintain this independence throughout
their existence, after Fárek decided after consultation with Longa and Čáslavka
that he would try to get other suitable adepts for free cooperation in the
group. The choice fell mainly on Lt. Col. gšt. Tomáš Houška, a
former head of the German section of the study group and Fárek’s friend from
the intelligence service in Košice. Immediately after the agreement,
Houška began preparing reports on the German army for the needs of the emerging
foreign resistance. The already mentioned Maj. Cooperated with him in a
number of questions. gšt. Zuska.55
Ensuring
a quality connection with abroad was very important. On the basis of
Fárek’s order, Čáslavek contacted the exponent of the British intelligence
service in Prague on 15 March, Maj. Harold Gibson. He promised to
help him in arranging contacts for Col. gšt. Moravec to Great
Britain, but the whole thing went lost. Also, an attempt to contact a
Czechoslovak military attaché in France by post failed.56
In
terms of cooperation and connection with London, the French – Col. dʼAbord
and intelligence attaché Maj. Henri Gouyou. The three councilors sent
a letter through them to the Czechoslovak military attaché in Paris, asking
them to draw the attention of František Moravec to their activities. Subsequently,
they sent another letter with similar content directly to Moravc. In
response
|
|
|
52
In the first message from home, which Antonín Longa sent to František Moravec
into exile, it stated, among other things: “… there are three of us here, who
were on the 15th of the night. in the hands of taxes, we have promised
ourselves that we will not abandon one another, that we will not abandon the
families who are left alone, and that we will do our best to give birth to the
third, as we firmly believe, happy and eternal republics. ”KREISINGER,
Pavel. Brigadier General Josef Bartík. Intelligence officer and
participant in the first and second Czechoslovak resistance. Prague:
Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes, 2011, p. 60. ISBN
978-80-87211-55-7.
53
The origin of this designation can be found in the request of František Fárek
and his colleagues not to be in secret
pays
are referred to by their real names. From that moment on, the London
headquarters used the code name Three Consuls. It is not entirely clear
who exactly invented this designation. František Fárek stated in his
memoirs that the author could be Maj. gšt. Emil
Strankmüller. FÁREK, František. Fárek, Long and Čáslavek
retired. – First report from London. Gene. Ingr. –
Gen. Elijah. – Move the eleven families beyond the borders. –
Dr. Mountain from the middle row in Prague. – Fárek and Longa
“Counselors”. – Caslav’s report from London. – Čáslavek’s
biography. – Maj. gšt. Toscani (unpublished manuscript held by
Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 10.
54
FAREK, Frantisek. Situation in the 2nd dept. on 15./III.1939. –
Arrival of the Abwehr. – Major Abwehr asks Col. Freedom
on
the vacancy of offices. – Members of the Abwehr in P-1. –
Establishment of a resistance group. 2nd department. – Negotiations
with English voj. Attaché Gibsonem. – Visit to the French
embassy. – Cooperation with franc. voj. Attaché d´Abordem and
his seconded Maj. Henri Gouyou (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří
Fárek), p. 4.
55
FAREK, Frantisek. Ing. Alarm clock, its activities in the 2nd
Dept. hl. staff and in the resistance. – Major Child meets and
agent
A-54. –
Maj. gšt. Houška obtained for cooperation. – Lt. in the
bay. Truníček and his activity. – Prap. Šlégr. –
Strtm. Müller.
–
Cesta škpt. Longy to make contact with rural news. organs. –
Capt. Volevecký. – Pilots want to go abroad. – The end of the
Abwehrstelle era. – Last conversation, Capt. Parish with the head of
the Abwehrstelle. – The Gestapo is trying to get a cap. Farka to
cooperate. – Interrogations of Capt. Fárka on his intelligence
activities against Germany (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), pp.
9–10.
56
FÁREK, ref. 56, s. 5.
Moravec
thanked them and confirmed their future cooperation. He also asked them to
take care of the families of the fugitive intelligence officers. They soon
received another consignment from London with a report on the international
situation, the activities of the London intelligence group and messages for families.57
However, the cooperation began to stagnate and, according to Francis, the
French share was not commensurate with Czechoslovakia’s efforts. The
driver Josef Záruba was an important link with the French embassy. On
behalf of Maj. Gouyou personally delivered the incoming correspondence
from
The
2nd Department in London and several times also made courier trips abroad with
an ambassador’s car. What was worse was that correspondence with London
often lay on the embassy for several days before reaching the addressees. In
addition, Fárek’s people found out that their messages were being read by
someone from the embassy.58
Expulsion
of intelligence officers’ families abroad
In
addition to gaining intelligence, the expulsion of officers’ families became
very important at that time. It was their departure to safety beyond the
borders of the Protectorate that was to provide the Czechoslovak exile
intelligence center with the necessary peace of mind to work against Nazi
Germany. It is necessary to state that František Moravec did not arrange
anything for the family members to go abroad before he went abroad. In the
first months of the occupation, Moravec’s rapporteurs relied on the help of the
British and French authorities, which were still operating in the Protectorate,
regarding the relocation of families. But the long-awaited help from them
ultimately failed. Time and at the same time naive ideas of a group of
exile reporters about the situation in the Protectorate became a great enemy.
After
the failure of the first attempts, Čáslavka sent a very critical message to
London on May 15, 1939, informing him that he was taking care of the
families. He blamed foreign reporters in full charge for prolonging the
event, who he said had no idea about what was happening in the occupied
homeland.59
František
Fárek visited a long-time friend of the Police Council, JUDr. Jan Hora,
who secured him passes abroad. After another letter from Col. Moravec
from the beginning of June 1939, the councilors agreed on their own procedure
for the evacuation of families. Two variants were prepared – a legal
journey by train with special clauses, or an illegal crossing of the
protectorate border into Poland. JUDr. However, due to possible
interventions by the Gestapo, Hora insisted that the departure of the families
take place without delay and as quickly as possible.60
After
obtaining passports and passes, the final destination of their trip was to be
French, Swiss and Italian resorts. But the whole plan collapsed after some
wives literally tried to cross the protectorate on their own on June
22. The Germans, of course, returned them without a pass from the
border. The matter had a very unpleasant finish, when JUDr. Fearing
for fear of the Gestapo, Mount urged the immediate return of the issued
passports. There was nothing left but to try to cross the border
illegally. Out of fear of repression, it was decided that Alois Čáslavka
would also move to Poland with his family.61 After Čáslavka and his family
actually crossed the border on 27 June 1939, he provided everything he needed
and families of London intelligence officers finally passed through several
waves. At this point, the reporters around Col. gšt.
After
the successful evacuation of families, Fárek and Longa tried to open a new
communication channel
57
PROCHÁZKOVÁ, Klára. The lives of an intelligence officer and a military
diplomat, Colonel Alois Čáslavka. Olomouc, FF UP in Olomouc (Master’s
thesis), 2015, pp. 59–60.
58
FÁREK, ref. 56, s. 8.
59
KREISINGER, ref. 54, s. 66.
60
PROCHÁZKOVÁ, ref. 59, pp. 64–65; FÁREK, ref 55, pp. 5, 7-8.
61
The fact that Čáslavka’s wife Eliška, b. Steiner, came from the family of
a Jewish merchant. PROCHÁZKOVÁ, ref. 59, pp. 28, 65.
62
ABS Prague, f. HS VKR (f. 302), sign. 302-57-2 / 189–190, Protocol written
to the MNO – General Staff with Brig. gene.
Karel
Paleček, folios 189–190; FÁREK, ref 55, pp. 10–13.
through
Warsaw they began to focus on the Poles. Alois Čáslavka negotiated a
meeting with Fárek and Long in Poland according to an agreement from the Polish
consulate in Prague. In July 1939, the Poles were already very aware of
the dangers of Nazi Germany, and so they welcomed the reports on the status and
deployment of the Wehrmacht in the Protectorate. At that time, there was
also an offer to integrate the Consuls into the military resistance
organization Defense of the Nation. However, Fárek and Longa rejected this
offer after consultation with František Moravec.63
The
primary goal of the Councilors at this time was to satisfy the Polish side as
much as possible by passing on valuable intelligence regarding the threat of a
German invasion of Poland. Thanks to cooperation with railway employees,
they obtained valuable reports on the movement of troops from the Přerov
railway junction, Pilsen, Moravian Ostrava and Česká Třebová.64
The
Gestapo intervenes
As
already mentioned, the councilors worked more or less independently, refused to
merge with the resistance group Defense of the Nation, and also tried not to
involve more people in their activities than necessary. However, even the
rules set by František Fárek aroused only a deceptive feeling of
security. In order to be interconnected, the German secret police
liquidated one resistance group after another in the first months of the
occupation. The noose around František Fárek and his collaborators slowly
began to tighten after a large raid at the turn of August and September 1939
against the so-called group of Schmoranz press confidants, in which a number of
former intelligence officers worked. The investigative methods of the German
secret police have borne fruit. The Gestapo skillfully used brutal
investigative methods, in which the interrogated people brought other people to
the secret police.
As
Fárek stated in his memoirs, as far as other groups are concerned, the control
of Tomáš Houška in particular was very difficult. Already in the pre-war
years, he was considered an excellent expert on the German army, and so he
became indispensable for many resistance figures.65 In a way, Fárek knew about
Houšek’s contacts with other former reporters. Apparently, however, he did
not know about contacts with specific members of the Schmoranz group.66
After
an extensive wave of arrests from the summer of 1939, Houška began to suffer
from nervousness, and according to friends, he was physically and mentally
exhausted. His fears with the words: “Franta, if the Gestapo touches
my skeleton during the interrogation, I have serious fears that I will not
stand it and I will speak”, he also allegedly told František Fárek.67
At
the instigation of Fárka and Longy, a courier from abroad brought a letter of
appreciation from František Moravec to him to physically and morally resonate
Houška. However, according to the instructions, he did not destroy the
report after reading it and took it to his own apartment. In the near
future, this event was to have literally fatal consequences.68
The
members of the Gestapo obtained clues pointing to the illegal activities of the
Konšels and Tomáš Houška from interrogation protocols secured by members of the
Schmoranz group. It should be noted that
63
PROCHÁZKOVÁ, ref. 59, p. 71.
64
PROCHÁZKOVÁ, ref. 59, pp. 71–72; FÁREK, František. Cooperation of the
resistance group 2nd dept. with Polish news authorities (unpublished
manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), pp. 5–6.
65
According to some colleagues, Tomáš Houška was also one of the most
kind-hearted people with an effort to
meet
them. ABS Prague, f. HS VKR (f. 302), sign. 302-57-2 / 172–173,
Protocol written to the MNO – General Staff with Brig. gene. Karel
Paleček, fol. 172–173.
66
FAREK, Frantisek. Letter of Col. gšt. Moravce. – Government
army. – Maj. gšt. Salzer. – Capt. Novotný. – Conflict
Col.
gšt. Hájek
contra plk. gšt. Moravec. – Capt. No. – License plates of
Gestapo vehicles and him. authorities. – Cooperation with other
resistance groups. – Meeting with Col. gšt. Kudláček. –
Cover addresses to the Netherlands. – Václav Klabík and his
activities. – Press group. – Death of
Maj. gšt. Kleina. – Concerns with Maj. gšt. With a
stick. – Courier to London. – Message through Beneš to his
homeland. – Letter from Col. Moravce for Maj. Houška
(unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 4.
67
FÁREK, ref. 67, s. 10.
68
Tamže, ref. 67, s. 13–14.
there
have been serious doubts in military resistance circles since the beginning
about Schmoranz’s abilities. The thorough conspiracy of his group was also
hampered by the involvement of a large number of former officers and the
dangerous underestimation of the capabilities of the German secret police.69
These
words were confirmed in his memoirs, for example, by the former head of the
study group of the 2nd Department of the Primary School,
Col. gšt. František Havel. After his arrest and stay in custody
at Pankrác, he considered and came to the conclusion that nothing good was
waiting for them, because: “… there was a danger that Schmoranz’s group led by
conspiratorial illiterates (including Třebický Jan Třebický – note: author.
about the network of ‘printers’ and something warned us not to contact them. The
news smell told us that it would turn out badly. ”71
At
the end of October 1939, Fárek received a letter home containing a German
message in this sense: “Attention! The Gestapo is interested in you and
your work! ”The place of the signature is only indicated
Friend. Concerns
gradually engulfed Antonín Long as well. In all cases, it was necessary to
prepare for possible problems and reconcile the statements. In general,
they were going to deny everything and, as far as possible, to seduce everything
to Alois Čáslavka, who was already safe with his family. In the worst
case, give the Gestapo some help in relocating the families of the London
correspondents. 72
Over
time, Fárek gained a sense of security. Unfortunately, as we can see, they
are completely fake. He was arrested at his residence on 6
November. On the same day, he first visited the infamous Gestapo
Commissioner Oskar Fleischer. According to Fárek’s description, this
Gestapo man: “A man in his fifties, smaller, stockier, still frowning,
bulldog-faced and forever with a cigar in his mouth,” was one of the
dreaded investigators of the German secret police. The very entrance to
his office convinced Fárka that he must not indulge in any deceptive illusions
about his future. For not being greeted by a Nazi salute, he received a
sentence of one hundred squats in the doorway. He could not do this due to
a disability on his leg, so Fleischer “grabbed the rubber baton lying on the
table, knocked me to the ground with a sharp blow and started with his assistant
Herschelmann [Karl Herschelmann – note. MV
The
interrogation kept turning to the person of Minister Schmoranz and to a group
of his press confidants, with whom Fárek really had almost nothing to
do. Farek thus understood that the Gestapo has nothing specific
yet. The interrogation ended at about half past one in the
morning. He could barely stand on his feet, staggering drunk. He was
then taken to a cell in the Pankrác prison. 74
Until mid-December, Fárek managed to resist the interrogations
altogether. Fleischer found that he apparently had nothing to do with the
printer and turned in a different direction. However, the situation does
69
VAJSKEBR, Jan – SUSTROVA, Radka. German security measures in the
Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia at the beginning of the war. In Memory
and History, 2009, vol. 3, No. 3, pp. 103. ISSN 1802-8241.
70
HAVEL, Frantisek. Transfer of messages. fund 2nd
dept. hl. staff to the promotional office in Dušní street and the
connection
of
this event with gen. Eliáš (unpublished typescript held by Ing. Jiří
Havel), p. 4.
71
FAREK, Frantisek. Traces disappear in the archive… Prague: Vyšehrad, 1975,
pp. 211–212.
72
FAREK, Frantisek. September and October 1939. – Problems connecting to
London. – Gestapo activity reports. – Czech police staff in the
Gestapo service. – Crimea. assistant Emil Šíp. –
Vrch. polic. Secretary František Čmolík. – A few remarks on the
work of the group and the conditions in which it developed its activities
(unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), pp. 7–8, 10.
73
FAREK, Frantisek. First interrogation at Crimea. Commissioner Oskar
Fleischer. – Crimea. Assistant Karl Herschelmann. –
The
first night in solitary confinement in Pankrác (unpublished manuscript held by
Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 1.
74
FÁREK, ref. 75, s. 2–3.
changed
dramatically on December 14, 1939, when Long and Tomáš Houška were arrested,
among other things. 75 However, Houšek’s detention was the worst blow,
because the Gestapo found Moravec’s message from Great Britain during a house
search. Houška in particular was subjected to harsh interrogations by the
police, from which he had to be literally taken away. In the end, he made
a partial confession to Fleischer, but on December 21, he committed suicide by
jumping from the window of the Petschk Palace office in Prague. About the
death of his friend in Pankrác by “corridor radio”
František
Fárek also learned immediately.76
Unfortunately,
Tomáš Houška was not the first fallen of the former intelligence
officers. Already in October 1939, another member of Schmoranz’s group,
Major, committed suicide in prison. gšt. Bohumil Klein, former
intelligence analyst and military attaché in Budapest. On March 20, 1940,
Fárek’s superior from the time of intelligence work in Slovakia, Lt. Col., also
died in the Prague infirmary of the SS as a result of a stomach
illness. gšt. Třebický. Particularly in his interrogations, the
Gestapo used his serious illnesses in enforcing his statements in a literally
perverse way. 77
The
resistance group Three Councilors, or only Counselors, was conducted in the
investigation only as
Farek
Group. Today we already know that the resistance movement began to emerge
essentially spontaneously after the Nazi occupation, but Gestapo officials from
the beginning of the investigation operated with the construct that the germs
of the intelligence resistance movement were created before their departure by
František Moravec and František Fárek and Antonín Longa in the occupied
Republic to be one of his closest collaborators. 78
At
the People’s Court in Berlin
On
September 3, 1940, Fárka and Longa Fleischer were last summoned for
questioning. The day after, to their surprise, they put them and other
prisoners in a common transport cell, so they could recap everything they knew
and said during the interrogation. They were then taken to Dresden Prison
on Mathildenstrasse. 79
Within
a few days, Fárka and another prison train were transferred to the Chemnitz
Prison and in October 1940 to the Zwickau prison, where he was employed in a
button factory. According to post-war memories, the prisoners suffered
from the cold here, but on the other hand, the guards were mostly older and
decent people. In January 1941, Fárek forced to move to Moabit in Berlin
and in March, together with others, via Szczecin to Golnow. Here, as he
said after the war, he was shocked. He did not feel like in a prison, but
rather in a monastery cell. Perfect cleanliness everywhere, the parquet
floor shone, clean sheets on the bed, white blankets, plates and a cup on the
shelf. He could borrow a book here every week, and food was even served on
plates and cutlery.80
However,
this particular idyll did not last forever. On June 14, 1941, František
Fárek was transported
75
FAREK, Frantisek. December 14, 1939. – Capt. Long, Lt.
Col. gšt. Houška and Ing. Alarm clock arrested. – Ges-tapa
interrogations. – Medical examination in Pankrác. . –
Interrogations of Lt. Col. gšt. Houšky and his tragic death. –
Partial confession škpt. Fárka a škpt. Longy. – Hearings on the
activities of certain agents 2. before 15./
III. 1939
(unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 1.
76
FÁREK, ref 77, pp. 4-5; ABS Prague, f. German courts in the Reich (f.
141), sign. 141-63-1, pp. 75 and 81.
77
ABS Prague, f. German courts in the Reich (f. 141), sign. 141-63-1, fol.
75 and 81. BAREŠ, Arnošt – PASÁK, Tomáš. Zdeněk Schmoranz’s resistance
organization in 1939. In Historie a vojenství, 1968, No. 6–7, pp. 1027–1028.
78
FÁREK, ref 77, pp. 7-8; ABS Prague, f. German courts in the Reich (f.
141), sign. 141-63-3 / 95–96, Schlußbericht zum
Process
Schmoranz and others, fol. 95-96.
79
FAREK, Frantisek. Last interrogation at Crimea. Commissioner
Fleischer. – On the transport cell, Capt. Longou.-Departure to
Dresden. – Prison on Mathildenstrasse. – Interrogation with
Langerichtsrat Preussner. – Arrest warrant. – Transport to
Zwickau. – Departure to Berlin Moabit. – Transport to Golnow. –
To Berlin Moabit again (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek), pp.
1–3.
80
FÁREK, ref. 81, s. 4.
back
to Berlin Moabit. Here he was interrogated several more times for his
activities against Germany before 1939. It was not until the beginning of
November that he learned that he would have a court in Berlin on December 4.81
In the local solitary confinement, František Fárek spent time until his
conviction. From morning to evening he sewed buttons on military uniforms,
or glued leather wristbands to military caps.82
František
Fárek was involved in the trial together with his friend Antonín Longa and, in
addition, with the driver of the French embassy, Josef Záruba, who was
involved in the Council’s contacts with the embassy. František Fárek’s own
accusation blamed not only on the liquidation of intelligence materials, but
also on the fact that, together with Longa and Čáslavka, they took care of the
families of fugitive intelligence officers and later helped them to leave
Poland illegally. Much worse was that he was also blamed for intelligence
activities against Germany.83
In
an effort to acknowledge and shed light on at least some of the activities just
before the trial, Antonín Longa, in agreement with František Fárek, made the
following statement:
“I
declare that our activity was born out of a desire to help our former
superiors, friends and their families, whose pain we witnessed, and that she
also maintained this character until the end. We followed our personal
friendship help mainly, just as the other activity was entirely an initiative
of škpt. Čáslavky, whom we helped in the described way. ”84 Both Fárek and
Longa were well aware that these acts would eventually be judged more leniently
than their own espionage against Germany.
Fortunately,
the court saw Fárek, Longa and Čáslavka’s own activities primarily as illegal
assistance to the families of fugitive intelligence officers
abroad. According to the court, it was in this case that illegal
correspondence with foreign countries was to be conducted through the French
embassy. The success was due, among other things, to the fact that neither
the Gestapo was able to clarify the content of the reports abroad during the
investigation or the court during the hearing.85
The
People’s Court in Berlin finally sentenced František Fárek and Antonín Long to
ten years in prison. The two could partially rest because the prosecution
proposed the death penalty. The court even freed the driver of Záruba.86
However, he did not enjoy the acquired freedom for a long time. He was
soon arrested again by the Gestapo and sent to the Auschwitz concentration
camp, where he died.87
Already
on December 18, Fárek and Longa were transferred to the prison in Ebrach,
Bavaria. Fárka became the so-called Ledertrenner here, or a ripper of
leather belts, belts, riding saddles and bags made of loot equipment. He
then made mats and then spent almost two and a half years at Verpánek in the
shoemaker’s workshop. At the beginning of the year, after a
psychotechnical exam, he was assigned to work in a glass grinding shop, where
he worked almost until the end of the war.88
The
following period was relatively calm in light of previous events. As the
years progressed from outside, news indicating the end of German Nazism leaked
more. At night, the engines of crashing planes heading for various
destinations in Germany were heard more often. At the beginning of April
1945, with the approaching front of František Fárek, they were taken to a
common cell, where
81
FÁREK, ref. 81, s. 5.
82
FAREK, Frantisek. Solitary confinement in Moabit. – My
neighbors. – Capt. Jaroslav Gardavský sentenced to death. –
Capt. Fárek, škpt. Long and driver Záruba before the People’s Court
in Berlin. – Legal representative dr. Müller – Hof. – Judgment.
–
The end of the door frame. – Transport to the prison in Ebrach. –
Employment in a prison. – Sabotage. – Meeting in Hof. – Meeting
in Alex, Berlin. – Longa is leaving for Bayreuth. – Interrogations in
Berlin. – Christmas Eve 1943 in Bamberg (unpublished manuscript held by
Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 1.
83
ABS Prague, f. German courts in the Reich (f. 141), sign. 141-63-3 / 143,
Anklageschrift, fol. 142–143.
84
ABS Prague, f. German courts in the Reich (f. 141), sign. 141-63-3 / 180,
An das Volksgerichtshof, Gollnow, 4 November 1941, fol.
85
ABS Prague, f. German courts in the Reich (f. 141), sign. 141-63-3 / 212,
In Namen des deutschen Volkes, 4, pp. 211–212.
86
ABS Prague, f. German courts in the Reich (f. 141), sign. 141-63-3 / 196,
In Namen des deutschen Volkes, 4, fol. 196.
87
FÁREK, ref. 84, s. 10.
88
Ibid., P. 11-12.
met
well-known, mostly political prisoners, and was then transported south by train
to Straubing, Germany.89
At
the end of April, Allied aircraft also bombed Straubing. On April 25, they
were all expelled from their duties, each receiving a blanket and a cup of
food, and marching in prison towards Dachau. As they marched, they all
passed debris and saw many corpses from previous marches in the ditches by the
roads. Apparently, some of the guards correctly suspected that the war was
coming to an end and was slowly disappearing. František Fárek, along with
others, also broke away from the march. Subsequently, they managed to
contact the vanguards of the advancing US army. It was the Americans who
finally received proper food and medical care. František Fárek, along with
others, finally experienced his dream freedom.90
Post-war
period
On
May 15, 1945, František Fárek was transferred to Cheb and a day later he got
through Prague to visit his family. His friend Alois Čáslavka soon called
from abroad, but they waited in vain for the last Counselor Antonín
Long. He was liberated, but from April 12, 1945, when he was to perform
intelligence tasks for the US military, he was missing. In 1947, the court
officially declared him dead. His post-war destinies are thus shrouded in
mystery for the time being.91
Fárek
reported to the 2nd Department immediately after his return, but did not
receive an assignment immediately. In the given situation, it was equally
irrelevant, because his state of health still did not allow him to remain in
the army. However, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel of
infantry and for his resistance activities he was awarded the Czechoslovak War
Cross in 1939, the Czechoslovak Medal for Bravery and the Czechoslovak Medal of
Merit of the 1st degree.92
However,
he remained in the news when his pre-war colleague gen. Josef Bartík
called for cooperation in the so-called Department for Political Intelligence
(Department Z, later Department VII) 93 at the Ministry of the
Interior. At the end of May 1945, Fárek received the position of the
supreme trade union council and was in charge of registration and technical
issues (head of department Z of the 8th registration). It had nothing to
do with the direct performance of the intelligence service.94
|
|
|
But post-war Czechoslovakia was diametrically opposed to its pre-Munich
predecessor. As a result of the changing political constellation, it was
unrealistic for previously exposed people to remain in top positions. This
was especially true of former intelligence officers. It was Fárek’s friend
and at the same time introduced gene. As a result of this political
rivalry between the communist and democratic parties in the power departments,
Bartík had to resign in January 1946 and was replaced by Cpt. Bedřich
Pokorný.95 After leaving
89
FÁREK, František. Transport to Straubing. – Death march. –
Liberation. – Reunion with the Family (unpublished manuscript held by
Prof. Jiří Fárek), p. 1.
90
FÁREK, ref. 91, s. 2–7.
91
VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. 255, Personal file of the participant in the struggle
for national liberation Antonín Longa, Description – declaration of death.
92
VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Military personal files, Military personal file of
František Fárek, Curriculum vitae.
93
At the time of working on his memoirs in the late 1960s, František Fárek
apparently still saw his work at the Ministry of the Interior as a very
sensitive matter, and despite a certain political easing of the time, he was
practically not mentioned in his extensive memories.
94
ABS Prague, f. Central Office of State Security (f. 305), sign. 305-347-5
/ 3, Protocol drawn up on 15 March 1948 in the
State
Security Office in Prague with František Fárek, page 3; NA Prague, f. Petr
Zenkl (f. 33), sign. 33-11-1, Information on the situation in the Ministry
of the Interior and in some subordinate security forces, sheet 36 and VÚA-VHA
Prague, Coll. Military personal files, Military personal file of František
Fárek, Subject: Fárek František, Chief Trade Union Council at the Ministry of
the Interior – Lieutenant Colonel in the Bay. – making a decree.
95
HANZLIK, Frantisek. The case of Cpt. Adolf Püchler. Testimony of
an OBZ agent on illegal obtaining of funds
management
service of the Ministry of the Interior. Prague: Office for Documentation
and Investigation of the Crimes of Communism, 2006, pp. 152. ISBN 80-86621-21-9
and KREISINGER, ref. 54, pp. 101–102.
gene. Bartík
from the Ministry of the Interior, Fárek came under the inconspicuous control
of the security forces. Members of the communist-controlled 5th (defense)
department of the HŠ MNO suspected him of contact with another pre-Munich correspondent,
Gen. František Moravec. They were seriously concerned that Moravec
was trying to get some information from the Ministry of the Interior via
Fárka.96 Fárek’s contacts with gen. Bartík. Fárek himself probably
had a certain awareness of the control of his person, which was pointed out by
the members themselves.
5th
department. Fárek was in contact with Bartík about the so-called London
archives. František Fárek was to organize the archive, which still came
from the activities of political news in London. It is of some interest
that the Communists did not have a single person in Fárek’s department, where
all the files were concentrated.97
The
events of the beginning of 1948 affected the fate of František Fárek in
practically all aspects. First of all, the communist coup affected his
professional life. The events took a turn for the worse, and on March 10,
1948, František Fárek was secured by members of the StB and at the same time
they underwent a house search. Investigators were interested in his work
at the ministry and also contacts with Josef Bartík. A week later,
however, he was released.98
Fárek
also entered a year full of rapid changes with his deteriorating
health. The attentive reader will remember that he was physically marked
by the First World War. In addition, after liberation, he suffered from
severe heart disease. According to certain information, he was already
suffering from a myocardial infarction in 1943 in the Ebrach prison. In
connection with deteriorating hearing and general changes in society, he
applied for retirement and left the Ministry of the Interior on November 30,
1948.99
But
he did not enjoy the relative calm for long. He was arrested for the
second time in January 1949 and immediately transferred to the State Court in
Prague.100 According to the secret police, he was to be aware of the allegedly
planned emigration of his niece and her husband, a former member of the RAF,
Maj. František Fábera. The planned process fully fell within the
framework of the repressive campaign carried out against selected members of
the Czechoslovak army – ie against members of the army in the West and former
military correspondents of the democratic Masaryk Republic.
A
lawsuit filed by the infamous military prosecutor Lt.
Col. just. JUDr. Karel Váš blamed František Fárek for not
reporting the crime. Fortunately, the verdict of the State Court in Prague
acquitted him. However, his niece sentenced his court to a two-year-old
and her husband even to a five-year unconditional sentence.101
In
conclusion
The
political changes of 1948 affected the fate of hundreds of thousands of our
fellow citizens. For logical reasons, František Fárek also joined
them. In 1953, his military rank was adjusted to a lieutenant colonel of
the administrative service in the reserve. According to the then so-called
service-political characteristic: He does not manifest himself politically
in the place, he is not involved in mass organizations. He does not
participate in or participate in public life in the place
96
ABS Prague, f. HS VKR (f. 302), sign. 302-200-2 / 16, Maj. Fárek
Ministry of the Interior, page 16.
97
ABS Prague, f. Central Office of State Security (f. 305), sign. 305-347-5
/ 4, Protocol written on 15 March 1948 at the Regional Office of State Security
in Prague with František Fárek, page 4 and KREISINGER, ref. 54, pp. 100–101.
98
ABS Prague, f. Investigation files, arch. No. V-5508 MV, Record of detention of
March 10, 1948.
99
VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Military personal files, František Fárek military personal
file, Curriculum vitae; Certificate of illness (injury) no. 489.
100
ABS Prague, f. Investigation files, arch. No. V-5508 MV, Minutes of arrest
dated 3 January 1949, fol. 39.
101
ABS Prague, f. Investigation files, arch. No. V-5508 MV, Indictment of the
State Prosecutor’s Office in Prague; Judgment of the State Court in
Prague.
does
not even work on building the community, although he is invited to do such
work. … “.102 In full accordance with the above characteristics, the
amount of his pension was also adjusted accordingly… In the second half of the
1950s, the members of the StB also tried unsuccessfully to obtain it for
cooperation.103
Even
at the time of political liberalization during the 1960s, it was under the
inconspicuous control of the District Department of VB Roztoky,
okr. Prague West. In October 1965, František Fárek, apparently for
his former inclusion in military and political intelligence and possible
contact with persons abroad, even saw his inclusion in the register of enemy
persons.104
Nevertheless,
he managed to return to intelligence in a way when he began writing his
extensive memoirs of the pre-war years.105 In 1975, his memoirs entitled Traces
Disappearing in the Archive were published in book form. Just before the
fall of the communist regime, a screenplay for the television production Bank
House Daubner was written on the basis of his book, inspired by the activities
of Franz Dobianer with Jaromír Hanzlík and Viktor Preiss in the lead
roles. However, František Fárek, a retired lieutenant colonel and senior
trade union council, did not live to see her introduction. Despite his
turbulent life, he died quietly and peacefully on September 24, 1973, at his
home in Prague.
M.
VYHLÍDAL: DERERSTEVONDENDREISCHÖFFEN. NACHRICHTENOFFIZIER STABKAPITÄN
FRANTIŠEK FÁREK (1894 – 1973)
This
article is a biographical sketch of the Czechoslovak officer František Fárek.
In his career, all moments of fate of the Czechoslovak Republic were
reflected. Fárek, whose activities and fate are described in broad
contexts, thus serves as an imaginary guide through Czechoslovak military
history in the first half of the
20th
century. Documents were used as the source for this study and are stored
in the Military History Archive (VÚA-VHA) in Prague, in the archive of the
former Ministry of the Interior (archive bezpečnostních složek – ABS) in
Prague, in the Czech National Archive (Národní archive – NA) in Prague , to a
much smaller extent also the archives managed by the State District Archives
(SOkA) in Liberec and the Federal Archives – Military Archives in
Freiburg. The extensive estate of Fárek, which is still preserved by his
descendants, is also of great importance.
František
Fárek was born in Lipník nad Bečvou in 1894. During the First World War he
fought on the Italian front as a soldier of the Austro-Hungarian
army. After the establishment of the Czechoslovak Republic, he volunteered
as an officer and took part in the battles against Hungary in southern Slovakia
in 1919. After his wounding, he was assigned to the military intelligence
service (the so-called 2nd division) and initially worked in Slovakia. His
area of responsibility was intelligence work against Hungary. In 1929 he
was ordered to the headquarters of the military intelligence service (so-called
2nd division of the general staff) in Prague.
102
VÚA-VHA Prague, Sb. Military personal files, František Fárek military
personal files, Proposal for the adjustment of rank for a retired lieutenant
colonel of the administrative service; Official political characteristics
of the officer (general) in the reserve.
103
ABS Prague, f. Investigation files, arch. No. V-5508 MV, Subject: Fárek
František ze Suchdola – extract from MV archive
of
21 October 1958.
104
ABS Prague, f. Investigation files, arch. No. V-5508 MV, Farka František,
b. August 10, 1894, apartment. Suchdol, Havlíčková No. 659
investigation; Fárek František – inspection record; Fárek František –
proposal for registration in the register of NO.
105
In addition, he also prepared theoretical reports addressed directly to the
then Intelligence Administration of the ČSLA General Staff. More about
matu:
MEDVECKÝ, Matej – ZAŤKOVÁ, Jana – ONDRA, Hubert. CK Evidenz bureau – On
the development of the Austro-Hungarian intelligence service. In Military
History, 2016, vol. 20, no. 3, p. 111-126. ISSN 1335-3314.
He
was responsible for the offensive intelligence activity against Nazi
Germany. Fárek managed, among other things, the first so-called advanced
central intelligence agency (Předsunutá agenturní ústředna – PAÚ) in Northern
Bohemia. He managed to set up a pretended bank here, which, under the
guise of lending, looked for suitable candidates for the services of the
Czechoslovak military intelligence service. In March 1939, when the occupation
of the Republic was imminent, he became the initiator of an action aimed at
destroying the documents of the Czechoslovak intelligence service at the
headquarters in Prague.
Immediately
after the breakup of Czechoslovakia by National Socialist Germany, he joined the
resistance movement (the so-called group of three lay judges) and, together
with staff captain Antonín Longa and Alois Čáslavka, his former colleagues from
the intelligence service, he passed on important information to the latter
Time-forming Czechoslovak military resistance movement abroad (the intelligence
branch grouped around Lt. i. Gst. František Moravec in Great
Britain). When his work was discovered, he was arrested by the Gestapo
together with Antonín Longa and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. He
brought World War II as a political prisoner of Nazi Germany.
In
April 1945, he was liberated by the US Army along with other camp
inmates. Already in May of the same year, he was admitted to the Political
Reporting Department at the Czechoslovak Ministry of the Interior in Prague,
where he was responsible for the evidence and technical matters. In this
position he witnessed the takeover of power by the communists in the country in
February 1948. In the period after the communist coup d’état he was arrested
several times and interrogated by the State Security (StB). However, his
conviction never came.
Even
after his involuntary departure from the Interior Ministry, he was closely
monitored by the communist secret police as a former intelligence
officer. At the time of the “thaw” in the ČSR in the 1960s, he wrote his
memories. He died in Prague in 1973.
List
of used literature:
FÁREK,
František. Documents for a Million (unpublished manuscript held by Prof.
Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Letter of Col. gšt. Moravce. – Government
army. – Maj. gšt. Salzer. – Capt. Novotný. –
Conflict Col. gšt. Hájek contra plk. gšt. Moravec. –
Capt. No. – License plates of Gestapo vehicles and
him. authorities. – Cooperation with other resistance groups. –
Meeting with Col. gšt. Kudláček. – Cover addresses to the
Netherlands. – Václav Klabík and his activities. – Press group. –
Death of Maj. gšt. Kleina. – Concerns with
Maj. gšt. With a stick. – Courier to London. – Message
through Beneš to his homeland. – Letter from Col. Moravce for
Maj. Houška (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Fárek, Longa and Čáslavka to retire. – First report from
London. Gene. Ingr. – Gen. Elijah. – Move the eleven
families beyond the borders. – Dr. Mountain from the middle row in
Prague. – Fárek and Longa “Counselors”. – Caslav’s report
from London. – Čáslavek’s biography. – Maj. gšt. Toscani
(unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Hácha leaves on 14./III. to Berlin. – Eavesdropping
on a Hacha-gen phone call. Raw. – Destroy everything. – Group-1
liquidation procedure. – Trouble
with
burning of file material. – Archive ag. search center in
Podbaba. – What was the case with the destruction of file archives in
other ministries and offices (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Ing. Alarm clock, its activities in the 2nd
Dept. hl. staff and in the resistance. – Major Child meets and
agent A-54. – Maj. gšt. Houška obtained for cooperation. –
Lt. in the bay. Truníček and his activity. –
Prap. Šlégr. – Strtm. Müller. – Cesta škpt. Longy to
make contact with rural news. organs. – Capt. Volevecký. –
Pilots want to go abroad. – The end of the Abwehrstelle era. – Last
conversation, Capt. Parish with the head of the Abwehrstelle. – The
Gestapo is trying to get a cap. Farka to cooperate. – Interrogations
of Capt. Fárka on his intelligence activities against Germany (unpublished
manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Last interrogation at Crimea. Commissioner
Fleischer. – On the transport cell, Capt. Longou.- Departure to
Dresden. – Prison on Mathildenstrasse. – Interrogation with Langerichtsrat
Preussner. – Arrest warrant. – Transport to Zwickau. – Departure
to Berlin Moabit. – Transport to Golnow. – To Berlin Moabit again
(unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. First interrogation at Crimea. Commissioner Oskar
Fleischer. – Crimea. Assistant Karl Herschelmann. – The first
night in solitary confinement in Pankrác (unpublished manuscript held by Prof.
Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Members of the 2nd dept. hl. staff of
Maj. Bohumil Dítě, škpt. Frant. Fárek, škpt. Antonín Longa,
Capt. Josef Rybář, Capt. Oskar Olmer as special observers of the
March events of 1939 in Slovakia (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří
Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Solitary confinement in Moabit. – My neighbors. –
Capt. Jaroslav Gardavský sentenced to death. – Capt. Fárek,
škpt. Long and driver Záruba before the People’s Court in Berlin.
–
Legal representative dr. Müller – Hof. – Judgment. – The end of
the door frame. – Transport to the prison in Ebrach. – Employment in
a prison. – Sabotage. – Meeting in Hof. – Meeting in Alex,
Berlin. – Longa is leaving for Bayreuth. – Interrogations in
Berlin. – Christmas Eve 1943 in Bamberg (unpublished manuscript held by
Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Situation in the 2nd dept. on 15./III.1939. – Arrival
of the Abwehr. – Major Abwehr asks Col. Freedom to vacate
offices. – Members of the Abwehr in P-1. – Establishment of a
resistance group. 2nd department. – Negotiations with
English voj. Attaché Gibsonem. – Visit to the French
embassy. – Cooperation with franc. voj. Attaché d´Abordem and
his seconded Maj. Henri Gouyou (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří
Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Situation in the 2nd dept. Hl. staff on
14./III. 1939. – Farewell to Moravc’s group. – Departure of the
“eleven” to England and what preceded it. –
Col. gšt. Havel appointed head 2. – Return of Maj. Child
from Slovakia (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Situation in the 2nd dept. after March 15, 1939. – Admiral
Canaris in the General Staff. – Colonel Longin. – Capt. Fárek
and Maj. A child at the head of the Abwehrstelle. – A member of the
Abwehr wants to make a courtesy visit to Capt. Fárka. – Visit to
Maj. Child. – Characteristics of members of the Abwehr and German
officers (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Cooperation of the resistance group 2nd dept. with the
Polish intelligence authorities
(unpublished
manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Traces disappear in the archive… Prague: Vyšehrad, 1975.
FÁREK,
František. From the history of our intelligence service (unpublished
manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. Transport to Straubing. – Death march. – Liberation. –
Reunion
with
the family (unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. September and October 1939. – Problems connecting to
London. – Gestapo activity reports. – Czech police staff in the
Gestapo service. – Crimea. assistant Emil Šíp. –
Vrch. polic. Secretary František Čmolík. – A few remarks on the
work of the group and the conditions in which it developed its activities
(unpublished manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. 2nd Department of the General Staff for mobilization in
September 1938. – Journey to Vyškov.
Surrender
of Czechoslovakia. – Return to Prague. – Farewell to
us. hl. no. arm. gene. I’m a tailor.
News. activity
of the 2nd dept. around Munich. – Departure of the head 2.
Dept. Col. gšt. Hájka. – Col. gšt. František
Moravec new head of the 2nd dept. of the main staff (unpublished
manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
FÁREK,
František. December 14, 1939. – Capt. Long, Lt.
Col. gšt. Houška and Ing. Alarm clock arrested.
Gestapo
interrogations. – Medical examination in Pankrác. . –
Interrogations of Lt. Col. gšt. Houšky and his tragic death. –
Partial confession škpt. Fárka a škpt. Longy. – Hearings on the
activities of certain agents 2. before 15./III. 1939 (unpublished
manuscript held by Prof. Jiří Fárek).
GEBHART,
Jan. Notes on Czechoslovak-Polish intelligence contacts until March 15,
1939. In Slezský sborník, 1996, vol. 94 (52), No. 1, pp. 34-37.
HANZLIK,
Frantisek. The case of Cpt. Adolf Püchler. Testimony of an OBZ
agent on illegal obtaining of funds by the intelligence service of the Ministry
of the Interior. Prague: Office of Documentation and Investigation of
Crimes of Communism, 2006. ISBN 80-86621-21-9.
HAVEL,
Frantisek. Transfer of messages. fund 2nd dept. hl. staff
to the promotional office in Dušní street and the connection of this event with
gen. Eliáš (unpublished typescript held by Ing. Jiří Havel).
HOLUB,
Ota. Trumps of Commissioner Geissler. Ústí nad Labem: Severočeské
nakladatelství, 1988.
KOKOŠKA,
Jaroslav – KOKOŠKA, Stanislav. Agent A-54 dispute. Dust: Our Army,
1994. ISBN 80-206-0437-5.
KREISINGER,
Pavel. Brigadier General Josef Bartík. Intelligence officer and
participant in the first and second Czechoslovak resistance. Prague:
Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes, 2011. ISBN 978-80-87211-55-7.
KREISINGER,
Pavel – VYHLÍDAL, Milan. The Life Fates of General Josef Zuska
(1902–1978). From an artillery officer through the intelligence department
of the General Staff and the Nazi prison to Egypt. Part I. In History
and Military, 2015, vol. 64, No. 1, pp. 64 – 76. ISSN 0018- 2583.
KREISINGER,
Pavel – VYHLÍDAL. Milan. The Life Fates of General Josef Zuska
(1902–1978). From an artillery officer through the intelligence department
of the General Staff and the Nazi prison to Egypt. II. part
(completion). In History and Military, 2015, vol. 64, No. 2, pp. 90 –
99. ISSN 0018-2583.
MEDVECKÝ,
Matej – ZAŤKOVÁ, Jana – ONDRA, Hubert. C. K. Evidenz bureau – On the
development of the Austro-Hungarian intelligence service. In Military
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MORAVEC,
Frantisek. A spy they didn’t trust. Prague: Rozmluvy Alexandom
Tomského, 1990.
PROCHÁZKOVÁ,
Klára. The lives of an intelligence officer and a military diplomat,
Colonel Alois Čáslavka. Olomouc, FF UP in Olomouc (Master’s thesis), 2015.
STRAKA,
Karel. Reconstruction of the Czechoslovak agency network and their results
from 1933–1939. Prague: Ministry of Defense of the Czech Republic, 2017.
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STRANKMÜLLER,
Emil. Czechoslovak offensive intelligence in the years 1937 to March 15,
1939. In Resistance and Revolution, 1968, vol. 6, No. 1, pp. 42 – 73.
TITL,
Zdenek. Reconstruction of the development of the organizational structure
and personnel of the Czechoslovak military intelligence intelligence (until
March 15, 1939). Part 1 – Article. Prague: General Staff –
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1995.
VAJSKEBR,
Jan – SUSTROVA, Radka. German security measures in the Protectorate of
Bohemia and Moravia at the beginning of the war. In Memory and History,
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Milan. Franz Dobianer’s news tipping event. An example of the work of
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