Normally I review movies and series that are based on or
about the Middle East. However, I did spend my
entire career as a professional intelligence officer – about half the time as a
signals intelligence officer and the other half as a clandestine human
resources intelligence officer, more commonly referred to as a case officer.
One of my pet peeves is the arbitrary use of the term spy. I
was not a spy – I recruited spies, foreign officers and officials who had
access to their government’s secret and sensitive information to provide that
information clandestinely to U.S.
intelligence services. They were the spies – I was an American intelligence
officer “running” or “handling” them on behalf of my country. Spies agree to
betray their countries for a variety of reasons, some honorable, some not – it
depends on which side of the equation you are.
Security Risk is a 1954 film by Allied Artists, directed
by Harold Schuster, and written by Jo Pagano and John Rich. The film stars John
Ireland, Dorothy Malone, Keith Larsen, Dolores Donlon, John Craven and Susan
Cummings. It’s just 69 minutes long, so it does not require a huge investment
of your time.
The write-up on several classic movie sites describes this
as an American action film. I would call it an espionage drama, but in terms of
the genre in 1954, it might also qualify as an action thriller. There is a lot
of action packed into just 69 minutes.
The story line: (I will avoid spoiling the film for those of
you who plan to watch it.)
In the early 1950’s as the Cold War between the two major
post World War II powers – the United States and the Soviet Union – heated up,
the Soviets were very interested in knowing what research and development was
taking place in the greater Los Angeles area. At that time, southern California was the
epicenter of American high-tech defense and aerospace research and development.
The film synopsis describes the scientist who is the focus
of a Soviet espionage cell as a nuclear physicist. I never got that from the
film – all we are really told is that he was a government researcher and was
working on an undefined “formula.” The cell was tasked with acquiring the
formula from the scientist.
The venue for the story is the Big Bear ski resort in San Bernardino County. The resort is 100 miles east of Los Angeles, about a
three-hour drive in 1954. The scientist, Dr. Lanson (we never hear his first
name), decides to take a short respite from his research by going skiing at Big
Bear. Obviously, the cell tasked with acquiring his research notes and “the
formula” had him under surveillance; at least three members of the cell follow
him to the resort.
There is also a support asset in residence at Big Bear,
which leads me to believe that the Soviets considered the area a popular area
for the defense and aerospace researchers and contractors in the Los Angeles area, and
likely similar facilities in Palmdale and Edwards Air Force Base.
As you would expect, the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) was concerned with the activities of Soviet and other hostile
intelligence services – the Bureau is the primary counterintelligence agency in
the United States.
As such, there is an FBI agent in Big Bear to make sure these hostile
intelligence services are kept at bay. You decide whether he is successful.
So as not to spoil the viewing experience for those who wish
to watch the movie, I will only say that the Soviet cell at some point in the
past recruited Dr. Lanson’s assistant at whatever research facility that employed
him. This sets up a series of events that are interesting, and yet a bit
implausible. It is the assistant who is tasked by the cell to clandestinely
acquire the research papers and “the formula” from Dr. Lanson’s personal
effects in the lodge suite that he shares with his assistant.
Okay, you see why I am baffled by this. If the cell has
already recruited Dr. Lanson’s assistant, there should be no need to even mount
this operation in Big Bear. Recruiting the assistant would have been a major
intelligence coup, providing direct access to virtually all of the doctor’s
research projects. Even if much of it was compartmented and not directly
accessible by the assistant, the chances of accessing at the main research
facility are far greater than a chance acquisition at a ski resort. Of course,
without that, there would be no basis for the movie.
Continuing, when the assistant gets a chance to search the
doctor’s desk, papers, and personal effects at the lodge, he pretty much
ransacks the place. This is counterproductive. The goal of a clandestine
intelligence operation is to acquire the information without anyone knowing
that the acquisition has even occurred. Tossing an office or room only tells
the security officials that something has likely been compromised.
Of course, this begs the question – why was Dr. Lanson in
possession of these highly classified papers while ostensibly on vacation?
Isn’t the purpose of a vacation to vacate your mind from the job? Merely having
the materials with him and working on them in a non-secure facility violates
virtually every security protocol there is.
The assistant is successful in discovering the research
papers, including “the formula.” As any good intelligence asset, he properly
photographed all of the materials. He is discovered while photographing the
documents, a fight ensues, and the assistant is able to make his escape.
Read this-> When the assistant leaves the lodge, he
leaves behind the documents out (he should have replaced them) and get this,
leaves his camera there. In other words, he left the very items he was sent to
acquire. Sort of like the current joke, “You had one job….”
The very first thing you learn at the Intelligence
Operations Course, Tradecraft 101, or just plain old “spy school” is GET THE
INTELLIGENCE. That’s why we do this.
Bottom line: It’s an entertaining story, especially if you
have any background in intelligence operations.
Watch it for free at the Russian classic film site Odnoklassniki:
https://ok.ru/video/1735416220340