Markus Wolf was a German public servant and intelligence officer who served as the head of the East German foreign intelligence service, the Stasi, during the Cold War. Known as "The Man Without a Face" due to his ability to elude Western intelligence, Wolf was one of the most effective and feared spymasters of his time. His work had a significant impact on the intelligence operations of the Eastern Bloc, and he remains a controversial figure in the history of espionage.

"I tried to instill a different motivation, to give them the security and the conviction that they were doing something good, something necessary, something useful - if you want to use a grandiose expression, that they were doing something for peace."



"Most of the results of using technical bugging devices were of little importance for my service. It may have been different in counter-intelligence, where bugs in flats, etc., were used to obtain a lot of information about what counter-intelligence was interested in."



"We planted bugs, microphones, in premises which interested us in the West. We weren't too successful - I would have said unfortunately in former years, but I don't care anymore now."



"There were some tragic cases of women whose love was abused, who for a certain time procured important documents or information, not knowing who for, what service they worked for, and for a variety reasons got jailed, were tried and sentenced."



"Making use of human weaknesses in intelligence work is a logical matter. It keeps coming up, and of course you try to look at all the aspects that interest you in a human being."



"At our college we were taught a universal approach to find out about a person: what problems the person has, what difficulties, what personal tendencies and likings."



"I feel that I, and the people under my command, tried to use all the traditional methods of recruiting agents which were also used by other intelligence services; adopting also means like pressure, money, sex - but that did not characterize my service."

