John Scott Peet (1915 – 29 June 1988) was a British journalist who defected to East Germany (the German Democratic Republic) in 1950.
Biography
Parental family
John Peet was born on 27 November 1915, the third child of Hubert William Peet (1886–1951) and his wife, Edith Mary, born Scott. He had two older sisters and a younger brother, Stephen. John's parents were Quakers, unlike his four grandparents who were Congregationalist. His mother's parents had served as missionaries.
His father was a journalist, who wrote religious news and also edited the weekly Quaker magazine The Friend from 1932 to 1949. He was also an absolutist conscientious objector, who suffered three terms of imprisonment for his refusal to obey military orders.[2][3][4]
Grenadier Guard
"For complex reasons", after Quaker school, Peet joined the Grenadier Guards. According to his brother, Stephen, he was bought out after three months.[5]
He travelled and worked in various European cities, until 1939, when he joined the British Army, serving in the British Mandate of Palestine. There he ran the news section of Jerusalem Radio, until he was recruited by Reuters news agency in 1945.[7]
After three years as a reporter in Berlin, Peet announced during a press conference in East Berlin in 1950 that he was leaving the West because of West German rearmament.[8][9][10]
From 1952 to 1975, Peet produced the Democratic German Report, a fortnightly newsletter targeting the left-of-centre public opinion in the United Kingdom. His positive portrayal of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) was among the GDR's most believable and powerful propaganda in Britain.[11]
He spent the last ten years of his life translating Marx and Engels into English.[12]The Times (London) published three of his letters to the editor during his exile.[13]
Many East Germans saw Peet as the archetypical Englishman, and he played this character in several East German films.[14]
Peet was married four times. In 1952, he married the Bulgarian Ravensbrück survivor Georgia Tanewa (1923–2012) and they had two children.[15][16][17]
He died in East Berlin on 29 June 1988, after a long illness.[18] He was survived by his fourth wife, Engelgard.
An autobiography, The Long Engagement, was published after his death, with an introduction by Len Deighton.[19] In these memoirs, Peet writes about his defection stating he "could no longer serve the Anglo-American warmongers ...". He also writes about his relationship with Soviet intelligence.
^Berger, Stefan; Norman Laporte (2004). "John Peet (1915–1988): An Englishman in the GDR". History: the Journal of the Historical Association. Wiley InterScience. Archived from the original on 5 January 2013. Democratic Germany Report, which he edited between 1952 and 1975, Peet had considerable influence among left-of-centre public opinion in Britain. His positive portrayal of the GDR was among the GDR's most believable and powerful propaganda in Britain. ...
^The Times 13 Jun 1950; pg. 3; Issue 51716. "From our own Correspondent: "British Journalist Joins The East"
^The long engagement: autobiography of John Peet. Fourth Estate, October 1989 ISBN0947795642 (published in German language as Der Spion der keiner war. Wien, Zürich 1991).
Other sources
Friendly enemies: Britain and the GDR 1949-1990, by Stefan Berger and Norman Lapole; Berghahn Books, New York and London (2010). Text available online (minus index)