Remarkable Historic Blunders these People Should be Embarrassed About

Remarkable Historic Blunders these People Should be Embarrassed About

Khalid Elhassan - October 12, 2021

Remarkable Historic Blunders these People Should be Embarrassed About
Prime Minister Peter Fraser in 1942. Library of Congress

26. Pure Luck Sets the Stage for a Blunder

On March 29th, 1942, just one day after he was released from prison broke, homeless, and without prospects, Sydney Ross met with the Minister of National Service, Robert Semple. He told the minister that a Nazi agent, recently landed by submarine, had tried to recruit him to join a sabotage cell, part of a vast network whose tentacles stretched across the country. Semple immediately took Ross to see Prime Minister Peter Fraser – apparently, it was really easy to meet New Zealand’s leaders.

Remarkable Historic Blunders these People Should be Embarrassed About
Reports that a spy network had been uncovered in Australia made it plausible that a similar network might exist in New Zealand. Radio New Zealand

By sheer luck, Fraser had just received classified reports from Australia, where real spy rings had been uncovered. He was thus primed to accept that his country could have similar rings. The prime minister referred Ross to Major Kenneth Folkes, and the head of the SIB saw the recently released felon as a godsend. Finally, here was a real threat and an opportunity for his men to round up real spies and shut up the critics. Folkes gave Ross money, a car, and accommodations, and set him up as an undercover agent with the alias “Captain Calder” to gather intelligence on the Nazi network.

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