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Monday, May 29, 2023

The Indispensable Spymaster



 "There is nothing more necessary than good Intelligence to frustrate a designing Enemy, and nothing requires greater pains to obtain." George Washington


As commander in chief of the Continental Army, George Washington was much more than a general. He was the de facto leader of the United States with concerns beyond the usual mission of commanding generals, such as arming, equipping, and training troops. He was a figurehead but also influenced the Continental Congress and state policies through persuasion. His responsibilities included every aspect of those mandates, making him the Army's chief logistician, personnel director, organizer, and trainer in many ways. Additionally, he served as the chief strategist and operational planner for all the Continental Army's operations departments.



The Indispensable Spymaster


It must be remembered that military staffs were not the well-organized teams of skilled planners and officers that developed in the French and Prussian armies of the following century—just a few aides de camp and orderlies reviewed and prepared correspondence on a daily basis. For major decisions, Washington consulted with Congress and senior military leaders. However, the daily management, often through "Orders of the Day" and "General Orders," was handled by Washington and a small circle of men around him.

Planning operations 


So it is no surprise that Washington added to his burden by serving as the Continental Army's spymaster. It was a role he took very seriously. And why not? He was a trained and skilled surveyor, a profession that requires an understanding of terrain—knowing the land, waters, fields, forests, and mountains. He traveled deep into the American frontier and understood the importance of time and space when planning ventures. Most importantly, his career was started by a spy mission.

Surveying - the handmaiden of intelligence


In 1753, Virginia's Governor Robert Dinwiddie sent a young Major Washington to spy on the French outposts deep in the upper Ohio River valley. Washington honed his recruiting skills by engaging the services of experienced guides and interpreters, one of whom was an explorer named Christopher Gist. In the densely forested mountains near the French Fort Duquesne (today's Pittsburgh), he met a Seneca chief named Half-King, who guided Washington to a meeting with the French.

Robert Dinwiddie


Washington gathered a wealth of data such as fort locations, numbers of canoes and bateaux, etc. But the key piece of information was Dinwiddie's purpose for the expedition: uncovering French intentions. They aimed to control the entire Ohio Valley and surrounding territory to maintain a monopoly with the tribes in the interior. After eighty days of trudging through snow-covered mountains and paddling along icy rivers with Gist, the young spy arrived in Williamsburg and handed the governor a detailed written report.


Lieutenant Colonel Washington


Ironically, his professional work caused Dinwiddie to send him back the following year at the head of a military force to support Virginia's claim to the territory. Lieutenant Colonel Washington's second expedition was a failure that sparked the French and Indian War in America and the Seven Years' War in Europe. In fact, the French and Indian War gave Washington the opportunity to lead the Continental Army in 1775.


Washington's map of the Ohio Valley, 1754

By the time Washington took command at Cambridge, Massachusetts, he had the skills and experience to plan and carry out intelligence activities. He spent the later years of the war leading the Virginia Militia Regiment, which was tasked with protecting the Shenandoah Valley from French-backed Indian attacks.



Washington's Army's weakness throughout most of the war forced him to use a strategy known as Fabian tactics, which depended on accurate intelligence, military security, and tactical deception to level the odds against the British. The Boston campaign offers a good example of this.


The Continental Army outside Boston was initially weak


Upon taking command, he discovered that the Continental Army was critically short on gunpowder. Washington enforced strict security measures to keep the army's most crucial secret safe. He went to great lengths to hide this situation from the British until he secured enough supplies. He also sought intelligence on British activities in Boston, but his main concern was their awareness of the gunpowder shortage.


Low supplies of gunpowder threatened the Army


During that period, a spy was uncovered at the highest levels – Doctor Benjamin Church, Chief Surgeon of the American Army. Secret correspondence with the British commander, General Gage, exposed Church's double role. Church claimed he was actually trying to convince the British of the Americans' large stockpiles of gunpowder. If true, this could have been an effective deception operation. But a military court convicted him. Was that also a ruse? Church disappeared at sea after his conviction, but many years later, historians uncovered secret British files that proved his espionage. Yet, was it true espionage or just a clever double agent operation? This affair may have fueled his obsession with enemy spies within his own camp, a fixation that persisted throughout the eight-year war.



Doctor Benjamin Church


During the rest of the war, George Washington kept a tight grip on the spies and spy networks surrounding the Continental Army: Nathan Hale's difficult mission, the tactical collection efforts of Knowlton's Rangers, and later the 2nd Continental Dragoons. Others include Hercules Mulligan reporting from occupied New York, Lydia Darragh doing the same from Philadelphia, and of course, the Culper Ring in New York City and on Long Island. There were also many other spies and networks that remain undiscovered.



Counterespionage was another area of Washington's personal focus. He was highly annoyed by Loyalists spying for the British, such as New Jersey's James Moody. The Sergeant Hickey Affair led to the dismantling of a spy ring and a potential assassination plan. The most infamous espionage challenge was posed by British Major John Andre, who recruited what many considered America's greatest war hero—Major General Benedict Arnold. Washington was present when Arnold was caught and personally oversaw the response, which included a plan to exchange Andre for Arnold, sending a Virginia Sergeant named John Champe to kidnap the treasonous general, and initiating a court-martial for Andre with his death sentence approved.


The capture of Major Andre


Washington used deception and military security throughout the war. He had to mislead the British about his Army's strength and intentions. There were many successes and failures as both sides engaged in deception and counter-deception. The stakes were high – the war's outcome could depend on their successful efforts.


Military patrol in winter


The most notable of these activities was Washington's use of his well-known and long-standing desire (some might say obsession) to capture New York City. In the summer of 1783, Washington finally agreed to French General Rochambeau's plan to join a French fleet heading toward the Chesapeake Bay and attack General Charles Cornwallis's Army on Virginia's Yorktown peninsula. 


General Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, 
comte de Rochambeau 

For it to succeed, the British needed to be convinced not to send aid to Yorktown. He carried out a series of intelligence operations to create the illusion of an imminent Franco-American attack on the New York garrison. Fake troop movements, intentionally lost messages, and the whispers of spies persuaded British General Henry Clinton long enough to delay sending reinforcements to the besieged Cornwallis at Yorktown.


Spy at work


Even as the French and Americans moved south, their route was planned to look like an encirclement of the city until the very last minute. When Clinton realized he had been tricked, it was too late to help Cornwallis. By the end of October, the British had surrendered at Yorktown. Clinton's military options were running out, and the British government collapsed, installing a new administration more open to negotiations.


Washington's deception steals a march on Yorktown


The great spymaster succeeded in utilizing an early form of gray zone warfare. Most of these activities remained secret long after the war, and very few official records were kept— for obvious reasons. In a nation with divided loyalties, the lives of spies are always at risk. The 18th-century mindset that valued "honor" viewed spies with great disdain. However, Washington occasionally reflected on those who risked their lives and reputations for little reward or recognition. They couldn’t receive pensions or fame. The case of Nathan Hale is a possible exception, and that was for propaganda purposes.


Execution of Nathan Hale


The shadow war fought during the American Revolution was vital to its success. George Washington understood that. It is said he visited ordinary citizens for quiet talks during his post-war travels across the country while serving as President. In the end, all he could give them was his personal thanks. For the shadow warriors risking their lives and honor, a tip of the hat from the most remarkable man of the century was enough.


The Indispensable Man met many of his spies


 

 

 

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