Authors: Stephan Talty
The ambitious, alluring and volatile Araceli.
A poised and confident Pujol before the desperate years of the Spanish Civil War.
Translation of an Abwehr political questionnaire sent to Garbo.
Pujol in his uniform as a lieutenant in the Spanish Republican army.
The inimitable Colonel David Strangeways during the war.
An Abwehr letter containing a cipher table.
Tommy Harris in his days as an aspiring artist and art dealer.
A self-portrait of the young Tommy Harris in Spanish costume.
Garbo's famous June 9, 1944, message that declared the June 6 landings a feint. His German code name— "Alaric" — is clearly visible at the upper left.
Pujol after the war, when he was living in Venezuela.
The former spy's Venezuelan passport.
Pujol with his wife, Carmen Cilia, daughter Maria Elena and son Carlos, in Venezuela.
D-Day veterans surround Pujol on the fortieth anniversary of the landings, 1984.