Although the Vice Consular system was brought into being, it
never seemed to work entirely to Redmond’s expectations, as in his
memos, he frequently asked for more resources, or complained that
the officers attached to the consulates were being used for more
mundane tasks such as passport control.
There was also a continual friction between different
arms of the intelligence community in Switzerland: In April 1917 he
wrote to a superior named Anson “The P[ontarlier] organisation has
never been used to full advantage” and, in another recurring theme
in his correspondence, he complains that he was being sidelined. “It
is hardly fair to delegate me, at the very moment when the
organisation is beginning to work efficiently, to the rank of a
simple instructing Agent.”(6)
It wasn’t just his superiors that were proving difficult
– Redmond found it “almost impossible to get the men of the
necessary qualifications out here” – “2nd Class” agents
were easy enough to find, but they weren’t reliable enough to be put
in touch with the Consuls direct, but were better suited to be used
as sub-agents.(7)
For the better class of agent, Redmond appealed for men
from England: “If a man has even a slight excuse of health, business
or other reason for being in Switzerland, it would be many months
before the Swiss begin to ask awkward
questions.”(7) |