
Hitler’s South African Spies – Part 2
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Last episode, we met Rooseboom and the Radleys—Germany’s early spy recruits in South Africa, whose operations leaned more chaotic than covert.
This time, the spotlight’s on a man with a much better spy name: Felix. Real name—Lothar Sittig. The one the British couldn’t quite pin down. After escaping internment, he linked up with the Trompke network in Mozambique and was smuggled back into South Africa to help build a direct radio line to Berlin.
Evert Kleynhans walks us through how the Ossewabrandwag backed the effort, how the transmitter was built using stolen medical gear, and why British intelligence already knew what was coming. We also get into the kind of intelligence they passed along—some of it credible, some of it questionable, and some of it just… potatoes.
Part two of a three-part series on Nazi espionage in South Africa.
Evert’s work
Hitler’s South African Spies by Evert Kleynhans – https://amzn.to/43u79jp
More from Underground Strategy
Discover Number 788 – https://amzn.to/3BQGmm7
Join the mission – https://undergroundstrategy.com
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