After rapidly and non-coercively eliciting a confession from Fuchs, Skardon acquired a reputation as a very skilful interrogator. However his own report of the Fuchs interrogation indicates that Fuchs – apparently in a condition of considerable mental stress – volunteered his entire confession with very little prompting. Peter Wright also claimed that the success of that interrogation depended mainly on the detailed brief supplied to Skardon, plus the "listeners" who picked Fuchs's lies to pieces. Skardon's subsequent record in interrogations was considerably less successful, and his success with Fuchs led to these negative results being given too much credence. Some of Skardon's subsequent failures include:
Kim Philby – interrogated ten times without result (although Skardon was apparently never given a free hand).
John Cairncross – interviewed and cleared in 1952, despite strong circumstantial evidence being found in Burgess' flat. Left the country very soon after the interrogation but returned in 1967 and confessed when confronted with Blunt's confession.
Jim Hill – liaison officer in the Australian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, access was restricted to classified information in 1949 on the basis of Venona project material, interrogated three times by Skardon in 1959, cleared and access restored. Almost certainly an NKVD agent.
^West, Nigel (2 September 2009). The A to Z of British Intelligence. Plymouth, United Kingdom: Scarecrow Press. p. 497. ISBN978-0-8108-7028-4.
^Wright, Peter (1987). Spycatcher: The Candid Autobiography of Senior Intelligence Officer. Stoddart. p. 50. ISBN978-0-7737-2168-5.
^Brinson, Charmian; Dove (31 March 2014). "The spy who was caught: the case of Klaus Fuchs". A matter of intelligence : MI5 and the surveillance of anti-Nazi refugees, 1933-50. Manchester Scholarship Online.
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