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WWII Allied intelligence agency
The Allied Intelligence Bureau (AIB) was a joint United States, Australian, Dutch and British intelligence and special operations agency during World War II.[1] It was responsible for operating parties of spies and commandos behind Japanese lines in order to collect intelligence and conduct guerrilla warfare against Japanese forces in the South West Pacific. The AIB was formed in June 1942 to coordinate the existing Allied propaganda and guerrilla organisations. The first controller of the AIB was Colonel C. G. Roberts. At its peak the AIB contained men from ten individual services and controlled or coordinated eight separate organisations. The role of the AIB was to obtain information about the enemy, "to weaken the enemy by sabotage and destruction of morale and to lend aid and assistance to local effort to the same end in enemy territories."[citation needed] One member of the AIB was Alfred Deakin Brookes, who went on to become the first head of the Australian Secret Intelligence Service in May 1952.[2]
Structure
The AIB was divided into four sections; A, B, C and D. Each section focused on a specific area of operations:
A Section
A Section consisted of Special Operations Australia, which was later known as the Services Reconnaissance Department, and focused on information collection and commando operations. A Section was initially commanded by Major G. Egerton Mott.[3]
B Section
B Section focused on secret intelligence and was commanded by Captain R. Kendall, RN, known as Secret Intelligence Australia (SIA)
C Section
C Section gathered field intelligence through Coastwatchers, natives and civilians. C Section was commanded by Commander Eric Feldt, RANVR.
^Long, Gavin (1963). "Appendix 4: Allied Intelligence Bureau". Australia in the War of 1939–1945(PDF). Series 1 – Army. Vol. VII The Final Campaigns (1st ed.). Canberra, Australia: Australian War Memorial. pp. 617–622. OCLC671415046. Retrieved 13 November 2010.
Ind, Allison (1958). Allied Intelligence Bureau: our secret weapon in the war against Japan. New York: David McKay Company Inc. ISBN978-0-502-09048-8.
Powell, Alan (1996). War by Stealth: Australians and the Allied Intelligence Bureau 1942–1945. Carlton South, Victoria: Melbourne University Press. ISBN0-522-84691-2.