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MI5 ‘was too nervous’ to censor book on CPGB bug
COMMUNIST SPYING: Security Service ‘didn’t want to draw Soviet attention to its sensitivity’
REVELATIONS: The National Archives in Kew

THE Morning Star can reveal that MI5 declined to censor a book about its bugging of the British communists’ HQ, partly for fear of drawing the Soviet Union’s attention to the Security Service’s “sensitivity on the subject.”

In a letter — dated February 1968 and made public today by the National Archives — to Michael Stewart, the then Labour government’s first secretary of state, MI5 said it had “covertly” obtained a typescript copy of double agent Kim Philby’s memoirs.

It pointed out that, according to Philby, Roger Hollis — head of MI5’s F division, which monitored political groups — had the Communist Party of Great Britain’s (CPGB) office in central London under constant state surveillance.

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