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Ask for the names of female spies or intelligence agents in World War II.
During World War II, the British army recruited a beautiful spy code-named "Agent Madeleine". She is Princess Noor. Nur was born into a royal family in southern India. At the age of seven, he moved to France with his family and grew up in Paris. After that, he studied child psychology at the University of Paris. He is fluent in French and English. At the age of 25, she was already a successful children's writer. 1940, Nazi invaded France, Paris fell, and Nur fled to England with his family. Soon, the Special Operations Department of the Royal Air Force took a fancy to her good language quality and recruited her as an agent. However, the beautiful Noor is obviously not the "material" to be a spy. Noor is not only slow to respond, but also impatient to learn, and his grades in almost every training class are poor. At the end of this period of training, the Special Operations Department gave the female student the following evaluation: "Clumsy, excitable, afraid of weapons, not very good at protecting themselves." Almost every word in the comments shows that Nur can only be regarded as a "stupid student" in the spy training class, and being a spy is simply "in the wrong line". At that time, because the British secret radio station was destroyed in France, the Royal Air Force Special Operations Agency urgently needed to add new radio transmitters to the front line, regardless of the selection. So, in the case of shortage of personnel, in June of 1943, the young Noor was sent to an intelligence group in Paris to act as a radio transmitter. Her code name is "Agent Madeleine". Although he knew that the battlefield was full of dangers, it was a narrow escape for him to go here, but the brave Noor left England without hesitation and came to Paris under Nazi occupation. After Nur came to Paris, he made many mistakes in his work because he lacked the basic qualities of intelligence personnel. The first time she carried out the task of secretly transmitting information, she actually took the map of the German garrison obtained by the allied forces and went straight to the designated joint site without taking any anti-tracking measures. At the joint, she was too nervous to remember the joint code. In desperation, she simply unfolded the map and tested every passer-by, hoping to "bump out" the joint through the reaction of the other party. As a result, her strange behavior soon attracted a large number of people to watch. Fortunately, no one was there at that time, and two members of the underground resistance group who came to join arrived in time. Seeing this scene, they broke out in a cold sweat. They had to pretend to be the staff of a mental hospital and take Noor away in the name of finding the lost patient. On another occasion, Noor was ordered to take a transmitter to a hotel on the outskirts of Paris and send a long telegram to London. When she finished her task and left, she left the password book and workbook in the hotel room together with the list of all the underground resistance personnel in Paris. Fortunately, the hotel owner is a patriotic Frenchman who has always supported the underground resistance movement. He immediately contacted Noor through the phone in the workbook and informed her to take the roster in time. Nour's French colleagues were shocked when they learned about it. They really can't believe that this is the "professional" sent by London! More than two months later, for security reasons, Noor decided to move out of the newspaper's location, so he chose an apartment near Fauci Street in the center of Paris as his studio. But she didn't know that the new transmission site was across the street from the Gestapo secret headquarters. Noor sends messages at midnight 1 1 until 2 am the next day. Because the sound insulation in her room is extremely poor, and the way she presses the transmitter button is very heavy, she has no scruples about delivering newspapers at night, which often makes it difficult for her neighbors to sleep. Surprisingly, however, although this careless female spy almost "stuck to the Nazi's ear" to transmit secret information, the Gestapo headquarters across the street remained ignorant for several weeks. A few weeks later, because Nur's French superior Decote defected to the German Nazis, the allied intelligence network in Paris was destroyed almost overnight, and many allied journalists were arrested. However, the God of Wealth once again visited Noor, a confused "low-energy spy", and eventually became the only reporter left by the British intelligence organization in Paris. The declassified documents of the British army quoted Colin, a Paris newspaper reporter who fled to Britain at that time, as saying: "I was surprised that she could persist for so long, when our entire spy network was finished. The Germans know everything, and I miraculously escaped from Paris. But Nur, who is so poor in self-protection, can escape. I can only say that the goddess of luck especially likes her. " For security reasons, the British arranged for Noor to return to China, but she refused to leave because she knew that her work in Paris was too important. However, Noor's good fortune finally came to an end. In a later covert operation, Noor's French colleague Renee Gary was forbidden to participate because she was the sister of the traitor Decott. Renee, who was jealous of Nur for a long time, followed her brother's example and complained to the Gestapo in a rage, in exchange for a reward of 65.438+10,000 francs. Nur therefore became a Nazi prisoner. After catching Noor, the German Nazis were overjoyed, because as Noor's British spy, she must have mastered the key information left by the Allied spy network in Paris. Sure enough, when the German secret police searched Noor's room, they found a notebook from the closet. Moreover, contrary to the routine of espionage, this notebook actually records every telegram sent and received by Noor neatly! It turned out that poor Noor misunderstood London's instructions-the special operations department told her to handle the message carefully with the intention of destroying the manuscript in time, but she understood it as archiving the message. Subsequently, Nur was put into Paris prison. She tried to escape twice, but both failed. She remained silent throughout the trial. At this time, this female spy, whose work is not excellent or even quite bad, unexpectedly showed the firm quality of an excellent agent. According to the declassified documents, Hans Kaffee, the Gestapo interrogation director, was in charge of interrogating Nur, but from beginning to end, Nur only said one sentence to Kaffee. It was the first time he met the Gestapo leader, and the young Nur said disdainfully, "I don't believe you." Then turn your head away. Kaffee later said in a testimony: "She showed amazing courage after her arrest. We didn't get any information from her. " According to prison records, Noor was transferred to Kao concentration camp on September 1 1 944 to be interrogated by the notorious Nazi executioner Viham Lapas. However, despite suffering, she never confided any truth to the enemy. 1944 12 In September, La Paz took her to a remote forest outside Kao concentration camp, beat her up again, and then stripped her naked in ecstasy. Noor always gritted his teeth and didn't cry or talk. Angry Lapas finally pulled out his pistol, held Noor's head and threatened to kill her. Nur remained indomitable and tried his best to shout out the last sentence: "Freedom!" After a gunshot, she was only 30 years old and fell in a pool of blood. It was not until 15 years after Noor's death that her family finally learned from other released prisoners in the concentration camp that Noor had already been killed. To Nur's family's slight comfort, Rapas, the executioner who killed her, was hanged for war crimes in 1946. Nur's nephew David recalled: "For a long time after the war, we were all looking for Nur's whereabouts. I wonder if she is alive or dead. But it turned out that she had been killed in the war. I didn't quite understand what this meant when I was a child, but now I know that my aunt did a very brave and amazing thing. " Nur's fearless spirit won people's admiration. After the end of World War II, the British and French governments posthumously awarded her the George Cross and the French Cross in recognition of this "princess spy" for her perseverance.