The Redoubtable Mr. Wake..... Includes Podcast

Gordon332
By -
9



🎧 Podcast: Australia's Secret Army


A left profile photograph of Lieutenant Colonel RFB Wake ffrom his Service Record

The Redoubtable Mr. Wake:
Australia's Rare Bird of Intelligence

The podcast above tells the narrative story of the Secret Army. The article below presents the forensic proof—the service records, surveillance reports, and tradecraft that reveal just how close Sydney came to a coup.

In the shadow world of Australian intelligence, where files remain classified decades after events, one name absolutely deserves to emerge from the darkness: Robert Frederick Bird Wake. His story is not fiction. Neither is it a romanticized spy story crafted for entertainment. This is the reconstructed career of a real man who took real and extraordinary risks during some of the most dangerous years of the 20th century, and whose courage later came at a profound personal cost.

The Story Begins..

Between 1918 and 1934, R.F.B. Wake served in Naval Intelligence, building the tradecraft and security clearances that would define his career. When he transitioned to the Commonwealth Investigation Branch, the precursor to ASIO, he brought sixteen years of experience in handling "Most Secret" internal security matters. By 1935, he had risen to Deputy Director of Commonwealth Investigation in Queensland. But what made Wake exceptional wasn't his rank or tenure. It was his ideology.

Historical analysis describes Wake as a 'rara avis', a rare bird, within the Australian intelligence community of the 1930s. While many of his contemporaries viewed right-wing paramilitary groups as potential loyalists and allies, Wake pursued what historians call an "unusual anti-fascist career." He didn't see these organizations as patriots preparing to defend Australia. He saw them as threats to the constitutional order. This stance required both moral courage and professional nerve. Wake was surveilling his own countrymen, many of whom were decorated veterans and prominent citizens. His contemporaries described him as "redoubtable," a man with a "phenomenal memory" and the steel required to conduct operations that could easily turn violent.

The 1930s Crisis

In the early 1930s, Australia faced an internal security crisis that has largely faded from popular memory. The New Guard, a paramilitary organization led by Eric Campbell, was not a political pressure group or a veterans' social club. It was an armed force preparing for civil conflict. The numbers were staggering: approximately 50,000 members organized into military units across New South Wales. They had divided their membership into "Shock Troops," mobile and ready for deployment, and "Essential Service Troops." They possessed wireless telegraphy systems. They were recruiting men with knowledge of explosives, mining, and demolition. And they were planning a coup d'état.

The government needed proof, not rumors or speculation, but documentary evidence that would justify action.

On September 3, 1931, a "Most Secret" memorandum crossed the desk of the District Intelligence Officer in Sydney. It proposed that Wake infiltrate the New Guard, noting that "a favourable opportunity has presented itself" for him to join the organization. The objective was clear: obtain "authentic information" regarding their strength, aims, and operational plans. The Director of Naval Intelligence initially hesitated to approve this specific proposal on September 7, 1931. The risk was obvious. Wake would be entering an organization of armed men who viewed government agents as enemies of Australia. Discovery wouldn't mean embarrassment, it could mean violence.

The Art Of Infiltration..

But Wake and other agents successfully penetrated the New Guard's inner circle. Intelligence history records that Wake executed a brazen theft to secure the organization's internal files. The tradecraft was elegant in its simplicity: he invited the New Guard's office secretary to lunch at a cafeteria on the ground floor of their headquarters building. Once she was safely distracted over the meal, Wake excused himself, stole up a back entrance, and rifled through the filing cabinets in the unattended office above. This wasn't a desk analyst reviewing intercepted communications. This was a man physically entering hostile territory, surrounded by potential enemies, gambling that he had enough time to locate, extract, and secure documents before discovery. One person returning early from lunch, one colleague wondering where the secretary had gone, one locked cabinet he couldn't open, any of these could have exposed him.

What Wake extracted transformed the government's understanding of the threat. These weren't vague organizational charts or membership rosters. The "Mobile Training" manuals detailed military drill, formation tactics, and discipline, proof the Guard was training as a regimented army, not a political movement. The "Street Fighting" protocols dated May 2, 1932, provided instructions on "cleaning up" areas, the deployment of "lachrymatory gas and grenades," and how to storm barricades. The document explicitly stated that "rifles will normally be carried at the TRAIL," ready for immediate action. "Field Engineer" establishment orders created units specialized in explosives, mining, and demolition, technical capabilities that went far beyond self-defense. The "Service Regulations" mapped a parallel military command structure dividing New South Wales into "Zones" and "Divisions," mimicking official Australian military organization. Wake's intelligence provided the irrefutable proof necessary for the government to act.

Fascism On An International Scale..

As domestic fascism gave way to global war, Wake's operational theatre shifted from Sydney office buildings to combat zones. In 1941, he was deployed to Singapore and Hong Kong on intelligence work. His official "Officer's Record of Service" sanitizes this history, listing his overseas service as "Nil." But the reality, preserved in his widow's statutory declaration and related official documents, was far more dangerous. Wake was told to travel under civilian cover, in "mufti," carrying passports for the Netherlands East Indies and Thailand. This wasn't an administrative convenience. Under the Geneva Convention, a uniformed soldier captured by enemy forces becomes a prisoner of war. A civilian conducting intelligence work becomes a spy, subject to execution. Wake stripped himself of military protection to do his job.

His widow's account records that he was present in Hong Kong during "heavy bombing," forced to take shelter while his personal batman was killed nearby. He undertook reconnaissance flights with an American Intelligence Captain, reportedly sighting Japanese Zero fighters during the final days before the fall of Singapore. These weren't desk briefings. This was operational intelligence work conducted under fire, at the very edge of the Japanese advance, by a man who knew that capture would likely mean torture and death.

R.F.B. Wake survived the infiltration of the New Guard. He survived the fall of Singapore and Hong Kong. He returned to Australia and continued his intelligence work through the Cold War, eventually becoming a central figure in the 1954 Petrov Affair, the Soviet espionage scandal that rocked Australian politics. But survival is not the same as emerging unscathed.

Undeniable Truths

Wake's story matters because it's true. In an era when espionage has been romanticized by fiction, his documented career provides a corrective. Real intelligence work requires real courage, the kind that sends a man up a back staircase to rifle through enemy files, or boards a plane into a war zone under civilian cover, or continues serving even after the mind begins to fracture under accumulated stress. Wake was the rare bird who saw threats others wanted to ignore, who gathered evidence others were afraid to collect, and who paid the price others never had to contemplate.


The Tamam Shud blog is dedicated to uncovering the forensic realities of the Somerton Man case. Our mission is not to speculate, but to reconstruct the events of 1948 using primary documents, scientific modelling, and expert analysis. While the man's true identity may remain a mystery, our focus is on the evidence that reveals how he died and the networks involved. To ensure the integrity of this research, we rely solely on verifiable sources and citations, strictly excluding anonymous blog comments and forum speculation from our data.

Post a Comment

9 Comments

Hi
Welcome to the Tamam Shud Blog, widely regarded as the leading and most trusted fact and evidence-based blog on the Somerton Man case. We do not collect your login or address details

  1. An interesting photo of Bob Wake just added. Any questions about it?

    ReplyDelete
  2. He was taller than that, a big man over 6 feet tall. Are you sure this is the real Bob Wake?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Correct. In his detailed Service Records he was described as being 6 feet 2 inches tall. I have a number of photographs of him and he was a tall man. Why this photograph? I don't have an answer or you.

      Delete
  3. I've been trying to view this page on my cell phone but without success! The text is far too big and te audio link isn't working. Please look at it, there'll be others with the same problem I'm sure.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ah! Bear with me on this, when you open your mobile browser, click the 3 dots at the top right of your screen. You'll see a drop down list. Choose 'Accessibility' . You'll see a 'default Zoom' slider. set it to say 80%. Scroll down the page and make sure the 'Force enable zoom' is unchecked. Scroll up to the line that says 'Saved Zoom for sites', click on that and if you see the tamamshud.blogspot.com site address in there, delete it. That should fix your problem. Let me know f that works for you.

    ReplyDelete
  5. That worked! Looks great, great podcast and I can see how some people would use the audio for the story as well. Cool.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Good to hear, glad it worked for you.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Some Breaking News. The book, 'Somerton Secrets', is on schedule, first week of March will have the launch day. There will be some big surprises in the book and here's one to start the ball rolling. There is a proven connection between Lieutenant Alf Boxall and Lieutenant Colonel Robert Frederick Bird Wake, Commonwealth Investigation Service and Spy Master. The full story will be in the book and there will be another Post here in the next week or so again on the subject of 'Bob' Wake. The Somerton Man story is far from over.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thought you might like to know that Mr. Pelling has found hidden writing using one of the techniques you have spoken about. His find is in the Voynich Manuscript. Strange how things turn out dont you think?

    ReplyDelete
Post a Comment