In Russia, the story remains a subject of great interest. In 2003, the Russian writer Yuri Kuznets held a press conference in the Foreign Intelligence ministry in Moscow to promote his book
Tehran-43. In 2007, a Russian television company promoted a documentary with the working title
The Lion and the Bear. It documented Long Jump and was to be presented by Churchill's granddaughter
Celia Sandys. British historian
John Erickson devotes four pages to the plot in the second volume of his history of the Eastern Front. The major players were Ilya Svetlov and Nikolai Kuznetsov. Svedlov, who was trained by the OGPU, was to take the place of Frederick Schultz and would move to Munich to join his brother Hans. The real Frederick would move to distant Novosibirsk with his fiancee. Then Erikson states that in Hamburg Frederick never arrived from Russia, and Ilya was given the name of Walter Schultz a younger member of the Hamburg family whose suicide had been hushed up. He studied at the University of Berlin and joined the storm troopers and the Nazi Party. He was sent to Tehran to arrange sabotage. His wife and a German SS officer Ressler became suspicious of him. So the crash of a German Ju-52 transport aircraft was arranged, perhaps by Soviet agents Vasili Pankow, and his wife died in a car crash. The first plan was to kill Stalin and Churchill and carry off Roosevelt.
Otto Skorzeny abandoned the first variant after a brief study. There was no
second variant but Stalin and Molotov got what they wanted – Roosevelt stayed into the Soviet compound. In his memoirs,
Pavel Sudoplatov brought up the details of how Kuznetsov recruited German officer Oster. According to Sudoplatov, the training of German saboteurs was taking place in the foothills of the
Carpathian Mountains, where the group led by the intelligence officer Kuznetsov, who was disguised as a Wehrmacht lieutenant, was working. Oster, who owed Kunetsov some money, offered to pay back the debt with Persian carpets after his trip to Tehran, which suggested that the plot about the assassination attempt during the Tehran conference was quite feasible. French journalist Laslo Havas wrote a book about Operation Long Jump after the war and claimed that Soviet intelligence had disrupted the German plot. British military historian
Nigel West wrote about the plot in the book
Historical Dictionary of World War II Intelligence. He stated that following the arrest in August 1943 of Franz Meyer, a German resident in Iran, only remnants of a German spy network remained. Between 22 and 27 November, six groups of parachutists under the command of a Rudolf von Holten-Pflug were dropped near
Qom and another eight groups, 60 people in all, under the command of a Vladimir Shkvarev, were dropped near
Kazvin. The NKVD quickly arrested the teams led by Shkvarev. Further units were led by SD agents Lothar Schollhorn and Winifred Oberg, but they did not suspect the Soviets knew about them because of Meyer. Stalin offered to let Roosevelt and Churchill stay in the Soviet embassy during the conference. However, Roosevelt insisted on staying at the
US embassy on the other side of the city, but the planned ambush of the Big Three was disrupted because the British arrested Holten-Pflug and his group on the night of 31 November [this date is incorrect; there is no Nov. 31]. On 2 December, six more German agents, who had been betrayed by
double agent Ernst Merser, were arrested. In his detailed monograph
Espionage and Counterintelligence in Occupied Persia (Iran), Anglo-Canadian intelligence historian
Adrian O'Sullivan has thoroughly reviewed the primary sources and secondary literature on Operation Long Jump and has placed the alleged plot squarely in the context of Allied security operations around the time of the Tehran Conference. O'Sullivan claims to have debunked the perpetuation of the myth in recent years by the KGB and the Putin-era intelligence services. The novel
Stormtroop Edelweiss - Valley of the Assassins, by
Charles Whiting (writing as Leo Kessler), presents a heavily fictionalized version of Operation Long Jump, substituting a unit of elite German mountain troops for Skorzeny and his party. Several English-language publications have addressed the plot. Book-length publications include
Operation Long Jump (2015) by Bill Yenne and
Night of the Assassins (2020) by journalist
Howard Blum. Stanley Lovell, Director of Research for the
OSS, devoted an entire chapter of his 1963 memoir
Of Spies and Stratagems to a very similar story. According to Lovell: OSS agent "C-12" was sent undercover into Iran. When a German commando team parachuted into the area, "C-12" got himself hired as their guide and translator. He escorted them to Tehran, where they planted explosives under a street used by Churchill and Roosevelt. Then he turned them in. Lovell admitted he had no official knowledge of this. ==See also==