UK spy agency Mi5 reveals fruity secrets in the new show

KEW: For the first time in the 115 -year history of the MI5, the famous UK Spy Agency is revealing some of its secrets in a show in London, which has confessions from gadgets such as double agents and gadgets.
Karl Muller under Spotlight is one of the first major enemies occupied by the domestic intelligence agency in 1915, and their fruit is death.
The agents suspected to be a German spy, but it was a humble lemon, “Mi5: Official Raj” at the show at the show, which brought him down.
Muller claimed that he used the fruit found in his coat on his arrest to clean his teeth.
But he actually used his juice as an invisible ink on a simple letter intercepted by Mi5, informing his seniors of the British contingent during the war.
He was executed shortly after in the Tower in London.
The MI5 was established a few years ago amidst the possibility of a German invasion and Army officer Vernon Kel was the first chief.
Today, more than 5,000 people work for the agency, the famous MI6 Foreign Service cousin by James Bond.
“After working for Mi5 for nearly 30 years, I can tell you that the reality of our work is often different from imagination,” Mi5 director Kane McCallum said in the preview of the exhibition held at Kave, West London with National Archives, Kave, West London said.
He said, “Mi5 life is about ordinary humans who are doing extraordinary things to protect our country.”
‘A woman’s intuition’
The exhibition, opening on Saturday, is not far from some less spectacular episodes of the agency.
The Cold War Section features a passport and a personal briefcase, which since World War II, was released by a Russian double agent at the London Club by British Diplomat Guy Burges, which ran to Moscow in 1951 as the net was closed on it.
The exhibition also states that the private secretary of Queen Elizabeth II told The Monarch in the early 1970s that Anthony Blunt, his art advisor, were a Soviet agent.
The queen reacted “all very peacefully and without surprise”, read the note.
More recent commodities on the performance include the Prime Minister’s residence, 10 Downing Street, a mortar shell fired by the Irish Republican Army (IRA) in the Prime Minister’s residence.
The exhibition has been combined with comments from anonymous MI5 agents.
In 2024, one wrote, “Agents are the most important source of intelligence used by Mi5.”
But managing agents remain “complex”, he said, listing the necessary questions that need to be answered, such as “what is their inspiration?”, “Are they telling the truth?”, “How do you assess that they are working for the other side?”
While intelligence was highly male in its early days, in 2022, about 48 percent of Mi5 employees were women.
Famous agent Maxwell Knight was the first to suggest that women could make a good detective in the 1930s.
“The intuition of a woman is sometimes surprisingly helpful and surprisingly correct,” he wrote.
For the Mi5 career dreamers, the tests to answer the fundamental question are on hand: “Can you be a detective?”
One challenges visitors to find as much information as possible in 10 seconds, while another mission codes-bracing skills.
The free exhibition ends on 28 September.