Georges Blun

Georges Blun (1 June 1893 – 1999)[1] was a French journalist and intelligence agent who was the Berlin correspondent of the Journal de Paris.

[citation needed] He returned to Switzerland in 1939 after having worked as a journalist in Berlin for a considerable amount of time.

[4] His loyalties were described by Nigel West as "always prioritizing" the Communist International and the GRU,[3] while the CIA assesses his group as having an "ambiguous" ideology.

[7] During his clandestine activities, he worked with figures such as Hans Bernd Gisevius, members of the 20 July plot, as well as Joseph Wirth (who had served as Chancellor of Germany).

[7] Blun survived the war, following which, along with Otto John and several others, he reportedly became a member of a political group led by Josef Müller.

A diagram depicting Georges Blun as the chief of an organization consisting of him and nine other resistance fighters.
Diagram of the "Long" Group, led by Georges Blun