Operation Jungle

Operation Jungle
Part of the Cold War and the anti-communist insurgencies in Central and Eastern Europe

Three German Silbermöwe-class motorboats, used during the last phase of Operation Jungle
Date1949–1955
Location
Result Soviet-Polish victory
• Overall operational failure
• Naval success
Belligerents
 United Kingdom
 West Germany
 Sweden
 Denmark
 United States

 Soviet Union

Commanders and leaders
Harry S. Truman
Henry Carr
John Harvey-Jones
Hans-Helmut Klose
Reinhard Gehlen
Gustaf VI Adolf
Fredrik IX
Viktor Abakumov
Lavrentiy Beria
Bolesław Bierut
Strength
2 E-boats
3 motorboats
Soviet patrol boats
Casualties and losses
3 agents killed
Several agents captured
Unknown

Operation Jungle was a programme by the British Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) early in the Cold War from 1949 to 1955 for the clandestine insertion of intelligence and resistance agents into Poland and the Baltic states. The agents were mostly Polish, Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian exiles who had been trained in the United Kingdom and Sweden and were to link up with the anti-Soviet resistance against the communist governments (the cursed soldiers, the Forest Brothers). The naval operations of the programme were carried out by German crew-members of the German Mine Sweeping Administration under the control of the Royal Navy. The American-sponsored Gehlen Organization also got involved in the draft of agents from Eastern Europe. However, the MGB penetrated the network and captured or turned most of the agents.