Eric Longley-Cook

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Person.png Eric Longley-Cook  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(spook)
Eric Longley-Cook.png
Born6 October 1898
Died20 April 1983 (Age 84)
NationalityUK
Alma materBritannia Royal Naval College
Victim ofpermanent war mentality
Director of UK Naval Intelligence who told the government that "all-out war against the Soviet Union was not only inevitable but imminent"

Vice-Admiral Eric William Longley-Cook was a Royal Navy officer and Director of UK Naval Intelligence.

Career

Longley-Cook joined the Royal Navy as a cadet at the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth and was mobilised at the start of the First World War.[1] He saw action in the battleship HMS Prince of Wales in the British Adriatic Squadron.[1]

WW2

He served in the Second World War as commanding officer of the cruiser HMS Caradoc from July 1939,[2] as deputy director of Training and Staff Duties from October 1940 and as deputy director of Gunnery and Anti-Aircraft Warfare from July 1941.[3] He went on to be commanding officer of the cruiser HMS Argonaut from April 1942, Captain of the Fleet for the Mediterranean Fleet in January 1943 and Captain of the Fleet for the East Indies Fleet in January 1945.[3]

Director of Naval Intelligence

After the war he became Chief of Staff for the Home Fleet in November 1946 and Director of Naval Intelligence in May 1948.[3] In that capacity he warned the British Government that the United States "was set to bomb Russia first" and that "all-out war against the Soviet Union was not only inevitable but imminent".[4]


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