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・ Johannes Völkel
・ Johannes Skagius
・ Johannes Skar
・ Johannes Skraastad
・ Johannes Sleidanus
・ Johannes Sløk
・ Johannes Smemo
・ Johannes Sobotta
・ Johannes Soodla
・ Johannes Spech
・ Johannes Spielmann
・ Johannes Spilberg
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Johannes Steele
・ Johannes Steen
・ Johannes Steinhoff
・ Johannes Stenrat
・ Johannes Stert
・ Johannes Steuchius
・ Johannes Sticheler
・ Johannes Stikkelman
・ Johannes Streich
・ Johannes Stricker
・ Johannes Stroux
・ Johannes Stubberud
・ Johannes Sturm
・ Johannes Stöffler
・ Johannes Stössel


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Johannes Steele : ウィキペディア英語版
Johannes Steele
Johannes Steel (born Herbert Stahl, 1908–1988) is best known for his 1934 book ''The Second World War''.
The son of a German-Dutch landowner, Steel grew up in Elberfeld on the border of the two countries. He studied in Heidelberg, Oxford, Geneva, and Berlin, and then worked as a journalist. He fled to the France and then Britain when the Nazis took power and later emigrated to the United States. He continued to work as a journalist, writing for ''The Nation'' and the ''New York Post''.
His book ''The Second World War'' predicted the war based on an assessment of Nazi intentions and historical parallels. Though the book had the war starting in 1935 rather than 1939 as it actually did, it became highly regarded after the start of the war, proving him essentially correct. Because of his prescience, he became widely followed, with a popular radio commentary in the U.S. during the war.
He was alleged to have had a covert relationship with Soviet intelligence during World War II.
A deciphered Venona cable of Soviet intelligence traffic from July 1944, reveals Steel telling Vladimir Pravdin of the New York KGB that Roman Moszulski, the director of the Polish Telegraphic Agency, was secretly pro-Communist and told Moszulski that he should remain in place with the Polish Telegraphic Agency, which was aligned with the London-based Polish government-in-exile, and set up a meeting with the KGB. At the meeting Moszulski told Pravdin he believed Poland should have good relations with the Soviet Union and, "having thought over the full seriousness and the possible consequences of his step, he was putting himself at our disposal and was ready to give the Communists all the information he had and to questions concerning his activities." To prove his ''bona fides'' to Soviet intelligence, Moszulski conveyed a list of Polish exiles and Polish-Americans, including an evaluation of how they stood on Polish-Soviet relations.
Steel's cover name assigned by Soviet intelligence and deciphered by Arlington Hall cryptographers is DICKY, DICKI and DIKI.
==Bibliography==

*''Hitler as Frankenstein''
*''The Second World War''
*''Men Behind the War''
*''The Future of Europe''
*''The John Steel Report on World Affairs''

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