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Operation Stella Polaris was the cover name for an operation in which Finnish signals intelligence records, equipment and personnel were transported to Sweden in late September 1944 after the end of combat on the Finnish-Soviet front in World War II. [1]
Operation Stella Polaris Carl Jacob Karsten Petersén (18 April 1883 – 14 April 1963) was a Swedish Army officer. During World War II he served as head of the intelligence agency C-byrån .
[2] [3] Bonde was active in Operation Stella Polaris in 1944 before being relocated by the government to the National Swedish Office for Aliens (Statens utlänningskommission) [4] where he was a member from 1944 to 1945. [2] Bonde was promoted to colonel in the reserve in 1945 and retired from the army in 1957. [2]
A transfer of a small contingent personnel and materials, Operation Stella Polaris, was carried out over a couple of nights in September 1944. Stella Polaris gave Sweden access to a wealth of qualified materials and signals intelligence officers, some of which were also employed.
In the early 1960s, the secret documents from Operation Stella Polaris in 1944, were brought from Hörningsholm Castle and Rottneros Manor and burnt on the instruction of the then Director-General of the National Defence Radio Establishment, Gustaf Tham, and the now retired General Ehrensvärd. [11]
General What links here; ... Battles and operations of World War II involving Finland (3 C, 1 P) C. Continuation War ... Operation Stella Polaris; T.
Thorén was the first Director-General of the National Defence Radio ... His relationship with the Finnish intelligence was the key to Operation Stella Polaris. [2] [3]
Originally Operation Overcast sometimes called Project Paperclip. Surgeon (1945–) – Similar to Paperclip; program to exploit German aeronautical scientific advances. Stella Polaris (1944–) transfer of Finnish SIGINT, equipment, and personnel to Sweden following end of the Continuation war in 1944.