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The chicken farmer who fooled the Nazis


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In this episode of pplpod, we explore the unbelievable true story of Juan Pujol García, the Spanish chicken farmer who became one of the most effective double agents in modern history and helped change the outcome of World War II without ever firing a shot. After surviving the brutality of the Spanish Civil War and developing a deep hatred for authoritarian extremism, Pujol volunteered to help Britain fight Nazi Germany. Rejected multiple times by British intelligence, he took matters into his own hands by convincing German intelligence that he was a loyal pro-Nazi operative living in Britain. Despite never setting foot in the United Kingdom and barely speaking English, Pujol built an entirely fictional spy network from a hotel room in Portugal using guidebooks, train schedules, newspapers, and pure imagination. The episode follows how his fabricated reports became so convincing that both Nazi Germany and British intelligence initially believed his network was real.

The episode also dives into how Pujol, later code-named “Garbo” by MI5, became a central figure in one of the greatest deception campaigns in military history. Working alongside British intelligence, he created 27 imaginary agents, fed Germany carefully timed truths mixed with strategic misinformation, and helped convince Adolf Hitler that the D-Day invasion at Normandy was merely a diversion. His deception caused Germany to hold back critical armored divisions that could have dramatically altered the outcome of the Allied invasion. Beyond the wartime espionage, the episode examines the psychology of confirmation bias and why powerful institutions often believe narratives that reinforce what they already want to hear. By connecting Garbo’s story to modern concerns surrounding misinformation, deepfakes, AI-generated content, and digital propaganda, this pplpod episode becomes not just a World War II story, but a cautionary exploration of truth, trust, manipulation, and the dangerous comfort of believable lies.

Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 5/3/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.

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