Smiley, now fortified with new information, goes to confront Jim Prideaux, an old spy who long since came in from the cold and is now a school teacher. Control, in his last days, seemed to have confided in him and sent him on a mission behind the Iron Curtain to find out who exactly the mole in the Circus was, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Rich man, or Poor man.
The waiting has paid off and the traps closes on Karla's mole. It is agreed to trade him against several English spies who were captured by the KGB, but Prideaux is still not found and he has an open account to settle with the mole. With the command structure of the Circus hollowed out and containment in progress, Smiley cannot come in from the cold but remains to pick up the pieces.
John le Carré, the award-winning novelist, has disclosed for the first time details of his career as a spy in the intelligence and security services. In his first television interview for 15 years, le Carré admits he started working for the secret service when he was 16 and went on to become a senior undercover operative in West Germany at the height of the Cold War. It is the first time the author, whose books include Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, has explicitly confessed to having been a spy. Related Articles John le Carré donates cliffs to nation The interview features in John le Carré: The Secret Centre, a documentary about the author's life to be broadcast on Boxing Day on BBC2. In the programme le Carré, now 69, describes how he first became involved with foreign intelligence after running away to Switzerland to escape the influence of his father, a confidence trickster. While living in Berne he met an MI6 official from the British consul and began running errands for him. John le Carré, whose real name is David Cornwell, returned to England after a year but maintained contact with the secret services while studying at Oxford University and later, as a teacher at Eton, before joining MI5 full-time. He was transferred to MI6 and dispatched to West Germany, where, according to his first wife, Anne Martin, he spent several years "deep undercover". le Carré says his career in espionage came to an abrupt end in 1963 following the publication of his first spy novel, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. le Carré has always been guarded about his spying career, although it was understood to have informed much of his writing. Nigel Williams, the documentary's maker, said he thought le Carré had decided it was time to come clean about his past: "He is a highly patriotic Englishman and he hadn't talked about it before because he thought it wasn't right to do so. But he is almost 70 now and I think he felt he should set the record straight.