laitimes

Lurking in the enemy camp for 7 years, after victory, he was beaten into a traitor, and after 12 years of imprisonment, he was re-issued with the highest hero medal

Lurking behind enemy lines for related work and combat is also an important part of war. According to the old news section of the German newspaper Stuttgart, in the 1940s, Russia (Russia is a general term for Western habits, not equal to today's Russia) and Germany infiltrated each other and carried out a "second front" bloody blood hidden under the fierce battle on the front line. In general, well-organized Russia was more dominant, while German infiltrators were often swept away by their opponents in the first step.

Lurking in the enemy camp for 7 years, after victory, he was beaten into a traitor, and after 12 years of imprisonment, he was re-issued with the highest hero medal

Gbieu officers in training

The article revealed the story of a Russian infiltrator behind enemy lines, code-named "Sturgeon." His real name is no longer available, but on the domestic document it is Konstantin. Born in 1912, Tishchenmov , or just call him , had an innate advantage — his father and mother were both German, but his family eventually settled in Russia. After joining the army, because of his outstanding performance, he was selected to receive special training in the GUBeu, the intelligence collection agency directly under the General Staff Department against the enemy. As the clouds of war grew deeper, Tyschenmov was given the task of infiltrating Germany under a false identity and infiltrating the SS Security Service, germany's most rigorous internal and external intelligence organization at the time, under the name of the infamous Gestapo. Through his tall stature and handsome face (the SS needed to distinguish the so-called bloodline according to appearance), as well as disguised loyalty and excellent ability to do things, he finally got his wish. However, the "sturgeon" is only a pawn in russia's entire intelligence network deployed in Germany, and it is up to him to how much he can play.

Lurking in the enemy camp for 7 years, after victory, he was beaten into a traitor, and after 12 years of imprisonment, he was re-issued with the highest hero medal

Schulenburg

Tishimov was very good at drilling camps within the Security Service, and soon established his own connections, began to move step by step towards the center of power, and even became the deputy head of a large region under the second bureau of the Security Service (this bureau was responsible for intelligence tasks against the enemy army, and the SS officers were generally younger in age, and there was no need to be too surprised that young people became high officials). At the end of the war, he was the secretary of the Deputy Director of the Security Service, Schulenburg! The intelligence he had helped Russia dig up many German infiltrators and obtain plans to evacuate and destroy important industrial areas in the east in the late German war, reminding the Russians to act early in the relevant areas.

Lurking in the enemy camp for 7 years, after victory, he was beaten into a traitor, and after 12 years of imprisonment, he was re-issued with the highest hero medal

Russian troops fighting on the front lines

After the capture of Berlin in May 1945, Tyschenmov, who had been lurking in the enemy camp for seven years, finally welcomed his own people. But his SS uniform almost brought him to death — many of the SS were shot directly at the front by combat units. He repeatedly identified himself, but the vengeful soldiers thought he was a lying German and were ready to bring him to justice with submachine guns. But before the execution, he was stopped by an officer: he vaguely felt that something was wrong, and that it was always right to slow down.

Lurking in the enemy camp for 7 years, after victory, he was beaten into a traitor, and after 12 years of imprisonment, he was re-issued with the highest hero medal

Target Berlin

After being escorted to Moscow, his identity verification went through a series of twists and turns. But after he regained his identity, he was not greeted by flowers and applause. In the tense air of the early post-war period, all Russians returning from the West: prisoners of war and intelligence officers, were strictly screened and distrusted. Tishshenmov was later sentenced to 20 years of hard labor for being branded a traitor for some of his last resorts during the mission. After 1956, Tishchenmov's case was retried and he was reinstated and released from prison early in 1957. A belated reward— the Heroic Medal, symbolizing the nation's highest honor— hung on his chest. By the time of Russia, public sources had revealed his general deeds, but his photographs— perhaps the most secretive for a worker behind enemy lines— could no longer be found.

Read on