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Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
It's March 1904 in Port Arthur, Manchuria, China. A Russian naval fortress rises out of the dark above the harbor, all concrete walls and iron gates. Searchlights rake slowly across the outer yard, then move on. Beyond them, warships sit at anchor, their guns pointed out to sea. At the base of the wall stands a slim man in a long dark coat, collar turned up against the cold, his hat pulled low. He looks like an officer who belongs here, which is exactly the look he's trying to achieve. Waiting in the shadows, he counts the seconds between patrols, waiting for the perfect moment to strike. Out in the darkness, a bell rings. Aboard a ship. He takes a breath, checks the coast is clear, and makes his move. Stepping into the moonlight, he maintains an even pace as he approaches the service gate. The latch gives with a soft click, and he slips inside. The corridor beyond is narrow and poorly lit. A single electric bulb hums overhead as he strides towards a door, which he finds unlocked as he was assured it would be. Closing the door behind him, he crosses to a desk, sets his hat down carefully, and opens a drawer in which he finds a roll of confidential plans. As he spreads them across the table, the Russian Pacific Fleet reveals itself laid out in front of him in precise lines. He memorizes what he can the gun placements, the firing arcs, the fuel stores, then opens a small notebook and swiftly sketches it all in his neat, economical shorthand. He is a man used to working under pressure, but now he hears a Russian voice in the corridor and footsteps approaching. There's nowhere to hide, but he doesn't rush. Instead, he calmly folds his copies, slips them inside his coat, and straightens the original plans. When the door opens. He is standing ready, irritation written plainly on his face. Surprised, the Russian demands to know who he is. The intruder answers calmly in a local accent, that he's a courier here on late orders. He gestures at the paperwork as if it bores him, as if the delay is the greater crime. There is a pause as the Russian takes him in. The outfit is plausible. The accent too. Finally, the guard nods and apologizes for disturbing him. Only as the door closes does the man smile. Briefly, he replaces the plans, retrieves his hat and leaves. Climbing swiftly through an open window, he drops lightly into the yard below and walks away. Later, far from this harbor, men will read his notes and move fleets, money and lives because of them. But for now, the man disappears into the dark. His name, when it is finally spoken, will sound like something from a novel. His name is Riley. Sidney Reilly. In the early years of the 20th century, long before James Bond stepped onto the page, one man was at work as a new kind of spy. He crossed borders as easily as he changed names, slipped between governments and criminal networks, and dealt in secrets that could mobilize armies and shake empires. To some he was a genius. To others, a liability waiting to be exposed. That man's name, or so we're told, was Sidney Reilly. He's often described as the real James Bond, the man whose nerve, charm and audacity helped shape the modern image of the spy. But was Sidney Reilly truly the world's first modern super spy? How much of his legend was built on real intelligence work and how much on stories he told about himself? And in the end, did Riley master the world of espionage? Or did it finally turn his own methods against him? I'm John Hopkins from the Noiser Podcast Network. This is a short history of the real James Bond. It's often said that Ian Fleming drew inspiration for James Bond from the exploits of a real life spy called Sidney Reilly. This is undoubtedly the case, but the truth, as with so much in the Sidney Reilly story, is hard to pin down. By the time Fleming begins creating James Bond, Reilly has already been dead for over 25 years. Though his legend still circulates widely, his story has been told in newspapers, memoirs and even in a popular cartoon strip. He is presented as an irresistible loan operator, charming allies, deceiving enemies and living dangerously, but lavishly. At a time when intelligence work has so far been the slow, serious domain of diplomats and bureaucrats, the legend of Sidney Reilly suggests something far more glamorous. And for Ian Fleming, one day a famous author, but for now, a frustrated office worker, it is the perfect inspiration. Andrew Cook is the author of Ace of the True Story of Sidney Reilly.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Who's the real James Bond? Well, despite what anyone says, Ian Fleming is the real James Bond. James Bond was just a fictitious alter ego that he created himself because he was bored to tears being stuck behind a desk in Whitehall during World War II working for naval Intelligence. He wanted to write a novel, or more than one novel, and ideally see that novel become a film. What he wanted to do was to create a spy superhero like the one he saw in the Evening Standard. And that strip cartoon that he saw on a regular basis was called Master Spy and it was the Sidney Reilly strip cartoon and that was portraying Riley almost as like a Bond figure. If it wasn't for Riley, and more importantly, his fictitious alter ego, the Master Spy series in Beaverbrook Papers, Fleming might not have twigged on trying to create his own Sidney Reilly. And that's all James Bond was.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
The comic strip may have exaggerated Sidney Reilly's exploits, but it did not invent him entirely. Reilly himself cultivated the image of the enigmatic master spy to perfection. But his life was a series of reinventions, aliases and half truths. Very little that we know of him can be taken as absolute fact. Only long after his death, as Cold War dossiers were declassified and new archives opened, has a clearer picture begun to emerge. Sidney Reilly is almost certainly born near modern day Ukraine under the name of Shlomo Rosenblum sometime around the 1870s. From the very beginning, the facts blur. Even his parents, religion and education are contested, with some claiming he is the product of an affair and that his biological father was not Russian Orthodox, but Jewish. Though Reilly himself tells different versions of his early life at different times, what is clear is that he comes of age at a time of deep unrest. These years in the Russian Empire are marked by poverty, political tension and waves of violence.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Life for folk in those days wasn't great, and it was even worse if you were Jewish. An awful lot of Jews left the Russian Empire in the late 19th century and went to Germany to escape pogroms. Basically when mobs of Russians descend on a Jewish village and literally kill everybody.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
By the time he seeks safety by slipping out under a false name in the 1890s, it appears young Rosenblum has already learned that when things get dangerous, a new identity is a good form of protection. He arrives in London, having Germanified his name on his way through Europe.
Historian/Expert Commentator
When he comes to the uk, he's Sigmund Rosenblum. He sets himself up as A company director, He's a trained chemist. Whether or not he completed his degree is open to question. Probably not, is the answer. But he came over to this country and he got into what we call these days, or back in the day, patent medicines, and he did very well.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
The patent medicine trade sits somewhere between science and salesmanship. Remedies for any ailment are branded boldly, tested lightly and sold on confidence. Rosenblum, with his training in chemistry and his gift for persuasion, proves adept at both.
Historian/Expert Commentator
He could talk the hind leg off a donkey. And it wasn't just that he was extremely articulate. He was a manipulative person, almost to the extent that people wouldn't realize they were being manipulated. Some people have gone so far as to say he was a sociopath. He may well have been, but he was a very able person intellectually and in his ability to get what he wanted from people.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
In London, he becomes close to a well connected English clergyman, the Reverend Hugh Thomas, and his much younger wife, Margaret. Reverend Thomas suffers from a serious kidney condition called Bright's disease. Rosenblum, presenting himself as medically knowledgeable, frequents the household, often administering treatment to the Reverend, while growing increasingly close to Margaret. At the same time, Rosenblum is moving in another circle altogether. London at the turn of the century is crowded with Russian exiles and political dissidents. Some are simply critics of the Tsar, but others are suspected of more extreme, even terrorist, ambitions. William Melville, head of the Special Branch at Scotland Yard, is tasked with monitoring them. And it's at this point that a young exile by the name of Rosenblum draws his eye.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Rosenbloom, as he was at the time, was actively and almost openly associating with people that Scotland Yard were a bit concerned about. Rosenblum was recruited by Melville effectively as an informant, keeping an eye and informing on people in revolutionary and radical circles. In London,
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
Charismatic young recruit proves himself observant and discreet, qualities that make him very useful to Melville. Meanwhile, in the Thomas household, the Reverend's condition now deteriorates rapidly, almost certainly thanks to the ministrations of Rosenblum, who may be aided and abetted by Margaret herself. Just after writing a will bequeathing his entire estate to his wife, he dies, though the circumstances and timing have prompted speculation ever since. Rosenblum swiftly marries the widow. Despite the uptick in wealth and social legitimacy, in 1898, he finds himself in trouble over some dubious business dealings. He needs to leave Britain quickly and turns to his contacts at Scotland Yard for assistance. Melville comes up trumps even going so far as to provide him with a new state sanctioned identity.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Melville found a birth certificate for a child who died at birth almost and that was Sidney Riley. He was given a passport and off he went with his new wife. At the end of 1898, Sigmund Rosenblum
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
disappears and Sidney Reilly leaves Britain with Margaret and her inheritance at his side.
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Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
With his new passport and name in hand, Riley begins building his reputation in the early years of the 20th century. He operates internationally in ports, rail hubs and industrial centers across Europe and Asia as a broker and entrepreneur. And increasingly, he deals in information. Later, when establishing himself as a spy of note, Reilly will tell dramatic stories of this period of slipping behind enemy lines, infiltrating naval installations, and playing dangerous games on the fringes of rival nations. As ever with Riley, the legend is embellished but not entirely invented.
Historian/Expert Commentator
We can actually place him in most of the places he claimed he was at. So whether that's in Manchuria, whether it's in Japan, whether it's in St. Petersburg,
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
it's clear by this stage that Riley is comfortable moving in volatile regions. At moments of geopolitical tension. In Manchuria in 1904, Russia and Japan edge towards conflict as they struggle for influence over Korea and northern China. As tensions mount, Reilly moves among contractors, railway officials and naval suppliers, exploiting his access on multiple sides to study the details that will matter when war breaks out. Apparently in this time, he manages to secure sensitive information about Russian naval defenses and coastal positions, possibly even passing that intelligence to the Japanese. Even at this stage, Reilly understands the value of secrets, how they can be acquired, packaged and resold. By the early 1910s, he is spending significant time in St. Petersburg. He is also accumulating wealth not to mention an extensive Napoleonic art collection. Through both legitimate and nefarious means. He may have married into money, but now he's building his own, and plenty of it, as Europe slides towards war. In 1914, Reilly and his wife relocate to New York, where he begins to dabble in arms procurement, Although naturally, he will later claim to have played a very different role in the war effort.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Despite all his many stories about being behind German lines in the First World War, having met the Kaiser posing as a German officer, all this hullabaloo, not a word of it is true. The nearest he got to the front line in the First World War was when he was sitting in the cinemas of Manhattan watching the newsreels about what was happening in Europe. For most of World War I, he was living in the lapper luxury in New York, more money than he knew what to do with. He was an arms salesman. He made the modern equivalent of millions procuring arms for the Russians in the First World War, but all through the luxury of an armchair in a Fifth Avenue hotel.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
By 1917, Reilly is prosperous and well connected, moving in the same circles as financiers, diplomats and arms dealers. He is just as fluid in his private life, entering relationships with other women. Inevitably, his marriage to Margaret, a partnership that once offered security and legitimacy, begins to fray. Fed by the admiration of others, Riley begins to build a mythology around himself as a suave, confident, international man of mystery. But that confidence is ruptured when Russia implodes. 1917's February Revolution removes the Russian Tsar, but leaves a provisional government in place so business can continue as normal. At first, Reilly has no reason to panic. But eight months later, the October Revolution changes everything.
Historian/Expert Commentator
What happened? Well, Bolsheviks came along and seized power and closed down the country. You know, you couldn't get into Russia if you were an outsider. So all of a sudden, Reill is in panic mode. He's got an extremely valuable art collection and the Bolsheviks have just literally slammed the door in terms of Russia. How's he gonna get back and rescue his fortune or part of his fortune in Russia? The only way he can think to get in there is to go and volunteer himself to the British armed forces and suggest that, you know, he's fluent in Russian, of course he's Russian, but he's masquerading as an Irishman.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
His marriage to Margaret now fading from his story, he crosses without her from the United States into Canada and presents himself at a British recruitment station in Toronto. With the war entering its final phase, his offer to do his bit arrives late but when he casually mentions that he speaks fluent Russian, the paperwork finds its way onto a desk far away.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Now, that was music to the ears of people in London. They could count on one hand the number of reliable intelligence people they had who could speak Russian and could masquerade as being Russians themselves. If it came down to it, Britain
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
urgently needs men who can enter revolutionary Russia and discover what's happening inside the new Bolshevik regime. Reilly is ambitious, multilingual, already experienced in arms dealing and politics. He is exactly what they need. And of course, his name is not entirely unfamiliar in London. Some in the intelligence world, like William Melville, remember him as an effective informant from years before. Officials in MI1C, the forerunner of MI6, review his file and find a shady past, questionable business dealings and irregularities around his identity.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Under normal circumstances, you wouldn't have touched this guy with a barge pole, but they didn't really have a choice. They were desperate for people. They brought him over to London, he had a brief interview with C at Whitehall Court in London, and the next thing he knew, he was on the boat to Russia.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
Reilly is dispatched to revolutionary Russia with clear instructions to report to Moscow and find out what the new Bolshevik government is really thinking. He is given funds, a bag of diamonds for leverage and a simple brief to assess whether Russia really intends to pull out of the war. But he doesn't follow his orders. Instead of heading straight to Moscow, Reilly vanishes with his bosses, apparently clueless of his whereabouts. He detours to Petrograd, the former St Petersburg, to recover his Napoleonic art collection, which later resurfaces in New York. Even on his first official mission, Riley appears to place self interest above national service. Eventually, though, he does arrive in Moscow and gets to work. The task is intelligence gathering in its purest form digging around, talking to people, sorting truth from rhetoric. The Bolsheviks speak of withdrawal from the war, but are they serious or are they posturing? He operates alongside the British diplomat Robert Bruce Lockhart, who is attempting to answer the same questions through formal channels. Lockhart works the drawing rooms, while Reilly operates in the shadows, cultivating contacts, probing loyalties and testing who might be persuaded. By that time, the Bolsheviks knew secret police, the Cheka, are already active in the city. Suspicion is everywhere and foreigners are being closely watched. Yet, for all his self interest, Reilly does produce results.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Yes, he did a good job. First and foremost, he worked for Mr. Sydney Riley, and secondly, he worked for MI1C. He did basically do what they asked him to do when he had a bit of spare time on his hands. And of course, he Sends back reports about people that he'd met that were working for Chekar, working civil servants, party members, people in Bolshevik circles about what was really in their minds. Were they really going to pull out of the First World War? If they did, would they actually still pick up a rifle? If the Germans nudged into Ukraine, for example,
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
London is getting answers out of their man in Moscow. But those answers are troubling. If Russia does pull out of the war, German forces can redeploy west and the balance of the war could shift dramatically. Though Lockhart continues to negotiate behind closed doors, something more radical emerges. What if this new Bolshevik government could be toppled before it consolidates power? Reilly embraces the idea with open arms. No longer merely gathering intelligence, he and his associates begin exploring the possibility of bringing about a regime change. They hope to replace Lenin's government with one willing to resume the war alongside the Allies and in doing so, reopen Russia to the West. The plot that takes shape is breathtakingly reckless. Guards are to be bribed and strategic buildings seized. Loyal military units will either be persuaded or bought. And if necessary, Lenin himself will be eliminated. Reilly throws himself into it, convinced that boldness will succeed where diplomacy has failed.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Books call it the Lockhart Plot. Lockhart was tenuously involved, but you might more accurately call it the Reilly Plot. So he was up to his eyes
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
in that by late summer 1918, the conspiracy is gathering momentum, but also drawing attention from potentially dangerous eyes. Then, in the dying days of the summer, everything accelerates dramatically. It is the evening of 30 August 1918, outside the Michelson engineering factory in Moscow. As another shift ends, weary workers spill from the building, heavy boots scraping across the yard floor instead of filing out through the factory gates. Tonight, however, the workers linger in the yard. They have been told that their leader, Vladimir Ilich Lenin, will address them here. And now they must wait patiently for his arrival. Fanny Kapler, a slight, frail looking woman in her late 20s, stands slightly aside from the rest. Her coat is plain, her face gaunt and her posture rigid. Noticeably, she doesn't push forward with the others as the motorcade arrives. As the door of his car swings open, Lenin steps down onto the gravel, compact and purposeful, his cap pulled low, his jacket buttoned tight. To most of the workers, he is the architect of a new world. To Fanny, he is the man who has strangled it. She was just 16 when she was first involved in a violent plot against a czarist official in Kiev, a representative of the old regime she believed was killing Russia. The years of Hard labor that followed her trial damaged her body, but sharpened her belief that Russia must be remade. When the tsarists fell, she thought her sacrifice had meant something. But these Bolsheviks have outlawed her party, silenced dissent and crushed rival revolutionaries. They have brought not freedom, but merely tyranny. With a. Now the crowd falls silent as Lenin hastily mounts a small platform to speak. Production must increase, he says. Discipline must hold. The revolution depends on factories like this one. The workers lean in to catch his words. Some nod, a few clap. When he finishes, his audience already dissipating, Lenin steps down from the platform and turns towards the waiting car. Fanny takes her cue, moving slowly, deliberately, like someone whose fate is already decided. She slips her hand into her coat pocket and grips the revolver. Heavy and cold. Her quarry is only a few paces away now, framed by workers. Shifting aside to let him pass, she raises the gun. The first shot splits the air, but for an instant the yard holds its breath, as if the sound has not yet been understood. Then she fires again. Lenin jerks his body, folding slightly at the waist. With the third shot, panic detonates across the yard. Most workers scratch at her, but others lunge towards Fanny, grabbing her arms, wrenching the weapon from her grasp before she can fire again. Lenin is caught. As he stumbles, blood seeps darkly through his jacket. He is pale but conscious, insisting through clenched teeth that he is all right. Fanny does not struggle as she is forced to the ground, wrists pinned, boots starting around her. And though she has not killed Lenin, the echo of her shots will travel far beyond the factory gates. Hers will not be the only arrest that comes from this. Lenin survives the attack, but by nightfall, Moscow already feels different. Sidney Reilly quickly learns what has happened as word spreads through party offices and factory floors alike that the revolution has been targeted. Within hours, the Bolshevik leadership frames the shooting as part of a wider assault on the regime. The Cheka respond with urgency, drawing on lists already compiled from suspicions long entertained and grievances carefully noted. In truth, Fanny Kaplan acted alone. She had no connection to the British or French missions in Moscow. But in the charged atmosphere that follows, the Cheka move against foreign nationals already under scrutiny for counter revolutionary intrigue. Among those detained is Robert Bruce Lockhart. He is taken to the notoriously brutal Cheka headquarters at the Lubyanka for interrogation before being held under guard in the Kremlin itself, the so called Lockhart plot, with Reilly at its heart, collapses before it can be launched. But once again, all is not as it seems.
Historian/Expert Commentator
A lot of people would argue, and I'm pretty convinced of this myself. It was never a real plot. It was actually started by Dzhinsky, the head of the Cheka, and it was designed at a time of maximum peril to the Bolsheviks because they were on the edge. It could have gone either way for them. They could have been pushed out at that time. They'd only been in power a short period of time and their regime didn't have deep roots. So the quick solution is to create a number of fictitious conspiracies and plots and see how many anti Bolsheviks come running to sign up to it. And that's exactly what happened in 1918.
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Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
Whether Reilly is one of the architects of a reckless coup or the unwitting participant in a trap carefully laid by the Cheka itself remains a matter of debate. What is certain is that with the net tightening, Reilly's time in Moscow has run out. He slips beyond Russia's grasp by the skin of his teeth, but the world he leaves behind is changing Fast. In the aftermath of the failed coup and the deepening Russian Civil War, espionage begins to evolve. The improvisational, personality driven spycraft of the pre war years gives way to something colder and more structured. Intelligence services that once relied on colorful adventurers now prefer disciplined officers who follow instructions. And though Sidney Reilly has certainly never been one of those, for now he is too experienced and too knowledgeable to be discarded immediately.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Even after the war, they kept him on for two or three years, which was actually quite unusual. But Reilly stays on the books till about 1922. He does earn the King's shilling doing the job they pay him to do. But his number one concern is Sidney George Riley.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
Throughout the early 1920s, he drifts across Europe, inserting himself into emigre circles and anti Bolshevik networks. He cultivates wealthy backers and displaced Russian aristocrats who still believe the revolution can be undone. But as the Bolsheviks consolidate power and the Red army strengthens, Western governments grow cautious about further exploits in Russia. The political will to intervene drains away and with it goes the need for men like Riley. With the days of slipping across borders with diamonds in his pocket well and truly over, his decadent lifestyle is catching up with him.
Historian/Expert Commentator
By this time, by the way, he's got big debts. He made an absolute fortune in St Petersburg and he made an even bigger fortune during the First World War as an arms dealer in the States. But like a lot of people who make massive fortunes very quickly, he's not very good at looking after it. He spends it quicker than he earns it and he's living this luxury lifestyle. I mean, that's about the only probably tangible comparison to James Bond in that era. He's living in five star hotels, drinking champagne like it's going out of fashion, digging into caviar. He's got a luxury lifestyle that most people would just pass out at hearing about. So is it no surprise that he's not penniless? But he's got big money problems by the early 1920s.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
And so, despite never having officially divorced his first wife, Margaret Reilly looks again for an advantageous marriage. In Berlin, he meets a young woman calling herself Pepita Bobadilla. Seemingly glamorous, exotic and wealthy, in reality, she is as much a reinvention as Riley himself. Her real name is Nellie Chambers from Blackburn, Lancashire. Though it is true that she is a widow newly in possession of a good deal of money.
Historian/Expert Commentator
He was a serial bigamist. That was another one of his money making approaches. Sometimes he married or associated with women. From an intelligence point of view, But Margaret, who He married in 1898, almost certainly murdered her husband. He inherited an absolute fortune from her, indirectly from him, when he married Pepita Bobadilla. He marries her effectively because her husband, Hayden Chambers, has just died and left her a lot of money. And when he bumps into her in the Hotel Adlon in Berlin, he thinks this might be useful for his awful financial state.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
For a time, Pepita's money ensures the hotels remain grand and the champagne continues to flow. But by the mid-1920s, Riley is entangled in financial disputes with creditors, mounting bills and legal claims over failed ventures. The fortunes he once made so effortlessly are no longer being replenished.
Historian/Expert Commentator
He can't control his lifestyle. He's still spending money like there's no tomorrow. But there is no tomorrow because there's no today. He's not actually earning anything like what he was earning before. And if his legal cases go wrong, he's going to owe even more.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
But then word reaches him of something extraordinary. Inside Soviet Russia. An underground anti Bolshevik organization is said to be operating at the highest levels. Calling itself the Trust, it has a role for Reilly that could put him back on the map.
Historian/Expert Commentator
What's the offer? The offer is we're dissidents within Russia. We're fighting the Bolsheviks. The only problem is we haven't got a ruble to rub together. So they meet Riley and cut a very long story short, they say to him, there are an awful lot of works of art, priceless works of art in Russia. They're in galleries and museums, no security, all the rest of it. Why don't you come over here, Mr. Riley? You're a great leader. Come over here. Lead us. We'll break into these museums and we'll fence all the stuff to you. You auction it in America, obviously you're going to have a very large finder's fee, but you send the money back to us and we'll buy arms and ammunition and bribe people and all the rest of it with this money. So he was seduced by this amazing offer of literally the modern equivalent of absolute millions by pillaging Russian art.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
It is an extraordinary proposition. Priceless Russian art idling in museums with no security. A covert anti Bolshevik network waiting for leadership. Money enough to fund a counter revolution and to restore Reilly's own fortunes in the process. On paper, it is almost too good to be true. Now, Reilly is not a fool. He knows the risks. He knows Soviet Russia is no place for carelessness. And he knows that honey traps have been used in the past to lure other intelligence Officers to their deaths. This could be another example of that Soviet cunning. And yet Riley is not like other agents. He has spent his life believing that he can see the angles others miss and that he can navigate danger where others would falter. Besides, he's got out of tighter scrapes in the past. But perhaps the biggest factor clouding his judgment is that he really needs this to be real. He needs the money, but he also needs to feel relevant again. And right now, he's getting encouragement on the home front to take a closer look at the trust organization, too.
Historian/Expert Commentator
A couple of Riley's intelligence colleagues, or former intelligence colleagues were saying, well, we really need to find out a little bit more about this trust organization. We can't do it because we're now very short of staff. Government cuts in the 20s, and the government's mood isn't really, as I say, to go sending people into Russia and start prodding hornets nests and ruffling feathers. But you're not working for us anymore, Sidney. Why don't you do this?
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
Despite his reservations, Riley convinces himself that the opportunity outweighs the risk. And in 1925, he makes the decision to meet them. Initially, he is cautious. Reilly insists he has no intention of wandering blindly into Soviet territory where he could potentially be arrested or worse. He is a busy man. If there is to be any cooperation between them, it can be discussed safely on neutral ground. The trust agrees. They invite him to meet in Finland, near the border with Russia, for a discreet conversation. No risk and no commitments. It is exactly the sort of compromise a careful operator would offer. So, reassured, Riley agrees.
Historian/Expert Commentator
So he flies off to Finland. They wine and dine him and whatever. They sit around the table talking about him. And then they know him. They've read him, as it were. And in the last resort, they say to him, well, come on, just cross the border for a couple of days. What harm is it going to do? People have forgotten all about you now. And he says, no, no, no, I'm not going to do that. I'm not going to do that. And they said, hold on a minute. You're Sidney Riley. You're this superhero guy. Are you really telling us you're frightened to cross the border just for a day? And his pride gets the better of him.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
He crosses into Soviet Russia, still fearing the worst. But his contacts are true to their word and no arrests take place. Reilly spends a couple of days looking at the operation on the ground and meeting other members of the group. And by the time he's preparing to leave, he has seen enough to convince him that the Trust is a genuine group of anti Bolshevik dissidents intent on regime change. It is 25 September 1925, near the Soviet Finnish border. Sidney Riley steps out of the safe house into the brittle light of early autumn. The air is cool and crisp and he pulls his coat closer around him as he crosses to the waiting car. In the trees beyond, a crow calls, settling into the back seat as the vehicle pulls away from the house and onto the narrow forest road, he watches birch trees streak past in white and gold, and as they travel back towards the border with Finland, he lights a cigarette and reviews the past couple of days in his mind. His trip out here has unfolded almost too neatly. He's had meetings in dimly lit rooms with men introduced as railway officials, military officers, administrators. They've all been, they claim, quietly opposed to the Bolsheviks. In those meetings a plan has taken shape to liberate a number of precious artworks from Russian galleries with routes sketched in pencil and onward black market networks described with persuasive detail. It is all felt, organized, structured and reassuringly real. He's been on high alert for anything that might suggest he's being tricked, but with no evidence to that effect, he can only conclude that he's onto a very good thing indeed. Now, as the car approaches a small border settlement, Riley leans forward and asks the driver to make a quick stop at a post box. The car slows to a halt and Riley jumps out, strides over to send a postcard, then heads back to the car. Climbing in, he smiles. The border is minutes away and the safety of Finland lies beyond that. Then Berlin, then London. He waits for the driver to get moving again. But just as he's sitting back and thinking of home, another car pulls alongside him. The doors on both sides of the car are flung open and Reilly is hauled bodily from the vehicle by three burly officers of the Russian security services. Cold steel closes around his wrists, locking his arms together. He's bundled into their car, which accelerates away from the border and back down the road towards the interior. Riley sits in the back as the cold, inevitable realization dawns that his friends in the Trust group were secret police all along. It was nothing more than an elaborate trap, and he, Sidney Reilly, the great manipulator, walked right into it.
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Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
At the time of his arrest, the Russians believe they have caught the master spy who has slipped their grasp before. Worried that his connections in MI6 will send more agents to look for him if it turns out he has been taken in Russia. They put out a story that a couple of Westerners have been shot crossing the border.
Historian/Expert Commentator
And there is a rumor that Riley is one of the people who is shot crossing the border. Of course, he wasn't.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
In reality, he is taken to the Lubyanka where he is interrogated for weeks.
Historian/Expert Commentator
He's put in a cell, cell 73. For weeks on end. He's given some drugs and all the rest of it. We've got a pretty good idea. They were asking him because he kept cigarette papers and he wrote down in very, very tiny handwriting on these cigarette papers what he was being asked and allegedly what his replies were and all the rest of it. Now, he thought at the time, and it was very sad, I guess, in a way, but sentimentality. He genuinely believed that he just had to hold out as long as possible and good old Britain would find some way of rescuing him. But that was never, ever going to happen.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
Sadly for Riley, his time is up. Britain does not ride to his rescue. And on 25th November 1925, he is driven out to some woods where he is executed.
Historian/Expert Commentator
Quite a sad old story. You know, he'd manipulated more people than you could throw a stick at, particularly women. I mean, all the talk about the countless mistresses and women and vigorous wives and all the rest of it, it was the same sort of pattern and the same sort of seduction that he used when trying to get information out of people for intelligence purposes. And he was very good at it. But as I say, every dog has his day. And unfortunately, that was the 25th of November 1925.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
There is no formal announcement of his execution. Sidney Reilly simply disappears it will be decades before the Cold War thaws and documents get declassified that explain the truth. But eventually something resembling a clearer story emerges of his life. His operations for military intelligence, his arrest, interrogation, complete with those scribbled notes on cigarette papers, and his death. In the intervening years, without confirmation of his demise, rumors begin to build. Some claim he has escaped again. Others insist he is still operating somewhere in Europe under yet another name. Some even claim he has been turned and is now working for the kgb. The silence around his death gets filled with myth, as those who knew him or simply heard of him share stories and embellish the tales he had already polished in his own lifetime. The title Ace of Spies begins to circulate, half ironic at first, then becoming more admiring and reverent as it takes hold. His former colleague, Robert Bruce Lockhart publishes his own account of revolutionary Moscow, though much of his biography was drafted by another colleague who'd known Reilly in the early days and had taken his tales of derring do at face value. In Lockhart's book, Riley appears as a daring, shadowy figure, part conspirator, part romantic adventurer. Soon, in the Evening Standard newspaper, a comic strip called Master Spy dramatizes the exploits of a thinly veiled version of Sidney Reilly, a glamorous, resourceful spy outwitting enemies across Europe. Among its readers is a young naval intelligence officer named Ian Fleming. Fleming would later insist that James Bond was a composite character drawn from many men he encountered during the war. But the template for him was already in circulation in the shape of Sidney Reilly, the impeccably dressed lone operative, fluent in danger, always one step ahead. The truth, as ever with Riley, is less tidy. He was brilliant, opportunistic, manipulative, often self serving, at times courageous and at times reckless. But he was not the unflappable superhero of later fiction. He was a man operating in a chaotic world, exploiting its fractures for personal gain until the system he tried to outplay closed around him. James Bond survives every mission Sidney Reilly did not. And though the man has long since gone to his grave, the myth has proved harder to kill.
Historian/Expert Commentator
How do you describe somebody like Sidney Reilly? He was a one off. He was an enigma within an enigma. He wasn't a likable person, it was almost certainly a murderer several times over. And that wasn't in the field of combat or espionage, that was killing his first wife's husband. There was another death of a flatmate in St Petersburg, I think, in 1911, which enabled Reilly to get his hands on this guy's money. He's a confidence man, he is an espionage agent, but he is just 110% a fascinating and magnetic character. Without a shadow of a doubt. His story found its way into Ian Fleming's head and it never left Ian Fleming's head. And I think it inspired Fleming to create James Bond, and Fleming then went forward and hoovered up all kinds of stories and characteristics to graft into the James Bond character. But I think, yes, that's unintentionally Sidney Reilly's biggest epitaph that he more than possibly lit the flames when within Ian Fleming's very, very creative mind that led to the creation of James Bond.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
Next time on Short History of We'll bring you a short history of the Haitian Revolution.
Short History of Haitian Revolution Narrator
Anti poverty ensues, Instability ensues. And this is directly because of the punishments of the other world powers who did not want a free black republic. They did not want that in their hemisphere, whether that was the American hemisphere or the Western hemisphere in general. And he has paid the price and continues to pay.
Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
That's next time. You can listen to the next two episodes of Short History of right now without waiting and without adverts by subscribing to Noizur plus just hit the link in the episode description or head to www.noiza.comsubscriptions to unlock more episodes today.
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Narrator (Sidney Reilly Story)
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Podcast: Short History Of…
Date: May 10, 2026
Host: John Hopkins / Noiser
Main Expert: Andrew Cook (author, historian)
In this episode, "Short History Of…" uncovers the remarkable, shadowy life of Sidney Reilly—a real-life adventurer, international informant, and con-man often cited as the main inspiration for Ian Fleming’s James Bond. Through dramatic narration and expert commentary, the episode traces Reilly’s exploits across Europe and Asia, explores the blurred line between fact and myth in his life, and examines how he became a model—not only for fictional spies, but for the very image of 20th-century espionage itself.
Opening Scene: A cinematic, covert operation in a Russian fortress in 1904, establishing Reilly’s mythic status as a master spy.
“He is a man used to working under pressure, but now he hears a Russian voice in the corridor and footsteps approaching. … His name, when it is finally spoken, will sound like something from a novel. His name is Reilly. Sidney Reilly.” (01:47)
Bond Origins: The episode questions how much truth underpins his reputation as “the real James Bond”—and what is invention, embellishment, or outright lie.
“Was Sidney Reilly truly the world’s first modern super spy? How much of his legend was built on real intelligence work and how much on stories he told about himself?” (04:02)
“From the very beginning, the facts blur. Even his parents, religion, and education are contested…” (08:28)
“He could talk the hind leg off a donkey. … Some people have gone so far as to say he was a sociopath.” (10:43 – Cook)
“We can actually place him in most of the places he claimed he was at… whether that's in Manchuria, in Japan, in St. Petersburg...” (15:33 – Cook)
“The nearest he got to the front line in the First World War was when he was sitting in the cinemas of Manhattan…” (17:16 – Cook)
“All of a sudden, Reilly is in panic mode. He’s got an extremely valuable art collection and the Bolsheviks have just slammed the door…” (18:58 – Cook)
“Books call it the Lockhart Plot. Lockhart was tenuously involved, but you might more accurately call it the Reilly Plot. So he was up to his eyes in that.” (24:45 – Cook)
“It was never a real plot. It was actually started by Dzhinsky, the head of the Cheka… to create a number of fictitious conspiracies and plots and see how many anti Bolsheviks come running…” (30:19 – Cook)
“He spends it quicker than he earns it… That’s about the only tangible comparison to James Bond…” (34:25 – Cook)
“He was seduced by this amazing offer of literally the modern equivalent of absolute millions by pillaging Russian art.” (37:17 – Cook)
“You’re Sidney Riley! Are you really telling us you’re frightened to cross the border just for a day? And his pride gets the better of him.” (40:35 – Cook)
“He’s put in a cell... written down in very, very tiny handwriting on these cigarette papers what he was being asked… He genuinely believed that he just had to hold out as long as possible and good old Britain would find some way of rescuing him. But that was never, ever going to happen.” (46:18 – Cook) “…his number one concern is Sidney George Riley.” (33:26 – Cook)
“Sidney Reilly, the impeccably dressed lone operative, fluent in danger, always one step ahead. The truth, as ever with Riley, is less tidy…. James Bond survives every mission. Sidney Reilly did not. …The myth has proved harder to kill.” (47:40) “He was a one off. He was an enigma within an enigma. He wasn’t a likable person… He’s a confidence man, he is an espionage agent, but he is just 110% a fascinating and magnetic character.” (50:27 – Cook)
On Reilly’s Personality:
“He could talk the hind leg off a donkey… Some people have gone so far as to say he was a sociopath.” (10:43 – Cook)
On Reilly’s Loyalty:
“Yes, he did a good job. First and foremost, he worked for Mr. Sidney Riley, and secondly, he worked for MI1C.” (22:55 – Cook)
On the Lockhart Plot:
“A lot of people would argue, and I’m pretty convinced of this myself. It was never a real plot. It was actually started by Dzhinsky, the head of the Cheka…” (30:19 – Cook)
On Reilly’s End:
“…He’s not penniless, but he’s got big money problems by the early 1920s.” (34:25 – Cook) “Every dog has his day. And unfortunately, that was the 25th of November 1925.” (47:12 – Cook)
On the Bond Legacy:
“How do you describe somebody like Sidney Reilly? He was a one off. He was an enigma within an enigma… I think, yes, that’s unintentionally Sidney Reilly’s biggest epitaph: that he more than possibly lit the flames within Ian Fleming’s very, very creative mind...” (50:27 – Cook)
Sidney Reilly operated in the liminal space between fact and self-crafted legend—combining intellect, charisma, and amorality to navigate and exploit early 20th-century chaos. His larger-than-life persona and audacious exploits embodied the archetype of the secret agent later mythologized in popular culture. Yet, as the episode concludes, Reilly’s greatest legacy may be as the original template for James Bond: a blend of genuine nerve, myth, and human fallibility, a legend ultimately outlived only by the stories told in his wake.