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The Lost Women Spies S01E04 (2025) [Full Movie] [Vertical Drama]Full EP - Full
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00:07April 1945, the war is entering its brutal final stages.
00:17The Nazis are surrounded as the UK and US advance into Germany from the west
00:26and the Soviets lay siege to Berlin from the east.
00:33As the Allied forces sweep through Europe, liberating the citizens,
00:41they begin to uncover the horrors of Nazi concentration camps.
00:50In London, the Allied advance brings news for Vera Atkins
00:57as one of her lost women spies, Yvonne Bazden arrives back
01:04at Euston railway station, but many of her agents remain missing,
01:10presumed dead, like Violet Sabo, who left her one-year-old child to fight the Nazis,
01:20or headstrong Noor Inayat Khan, who many said was unsuitable to be an agent.
01:26Are you ready?
01:27Yes, Miss Atkins.
01:29Vera begins the hunt to find her agents, dead or alive.
01:37Answer me!
01:38But she can't do it alone.
01:42So she turns to Britain's elite fighting service,
01:49the S.A.S., the S.A.S., and specialist Nazi hunter, Major Bill Barkworth.
01:57это сна, можно только в России.
02:11Аминь, Кнэс, коль-класс.
02:15Аминь!
02:20Снепр!
02:20Аминь, Криво.
02:22Аминь!
02:25Аминь.
02:31It's the 28th of April, 1945, the Ravensbrück concentration camp for women in northern Germany, 90 kilometers north of Berlin.
02:45SOE agent Odette Sansom is in solitary confinement.
02:50Where is she? Come on, I need her now!
02:54But the camp is about to be overrun by the Soviet Red Army.
02:59At this point in the war, the Germans are completely on the back foot.
03:03They've got the Russians attacking from one side, the Red Army, and they've got the Americans and the British from
03:07the other side.
03:10Himmler has given the order that all witnesses to the horrors of the camp must be killed.
03:20The man who has come for Odette is Fritz Surin.
03:26Get up!
03:28Move!
03:30Yes! Up, up, up!
03:33Yes!
03:35Out! Out!
03:38Fritz Surin was the commandant of Ravensbrück concentration camp.
03:42It was a women's-only camp, and Surin had complete control of everything that went on within it.
03:47So the forced labor programs that the women would be sent out into, the roundups for the executions, and also
03:53the medical experiments that were carried out at Ravensbrück.
03:56He would oversee those and have an understanding of what that meant.
04:01Move! Come on!
04:03Odette is about to see daylight for the first time in six months.
04:08But her life hangs in the balance.
04:33As the Red Army and the Americans get closer to Ravensbrück, the commandant, Surin, panics.
04:41Because at this point, he knows he is going to get captured by one army or the other, and he's
04:47going to make that decision himself.
04:49He's going to pick a side, and so he goes for the Americans and the British.
04:53This is who he aims for.
04:57Surin takes Odette with him, believing she is the perfect bargaining chip to win him freedom.
05:06When Odette was captured, she gave the surname of her network chief, Churchill, as her own surname, convincing Surin that
05:16she is related to British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
05:19Hands up!
05:22But Surin is about to get a nasty shock.
05:32Don't fire!
05:35Identify yourselves!
05:37This is Odette Churchill!
05:39Don't shoot!
05:40Get out!
05:42This is Odette Churchill!
05:44The niece of Winston Churchill!
05:46Don't fire!
05:48Who are you?
05:53My name is Odette Sanson.
05:57I'm a member of the British Special Operations Executive.
06:04This man is a war criminal.
06:13Can you imagine what Surin would have thought, because immediately Odette announces that not only is she not Churchill's niece
06:20or any relation to him, but she's an SOE agent, and she just confesses everything, this key information that he's
06:27been after for ages.
06:27It must have been incredibly frustrating and also humiliating for him.
06:33Odette's final act of humiliation is to steal Surin's bag containing his personalised pistol.
06:41She hands him over to the Americans, watches while he's taken in, takes his bag, which has a pistol and
06:48his other belongings, and hands it over in London to Vera Atkins.
06:53It would have been a huge relief to finally get to safety.
06:57It would also be crucial, because she knew about other agents.
07:00She could then give crucial information to Vera Atkins.
07:078th of May, 1945.
07:11The Nazis surrender.
07:17Victory in Europe.
07:24In London, thousands pour into the streets to celebrate, as Churchill announces peace across the continent.
07:34For the SOE, it appears much of their work is done.
07:41But for Vera, her hunt is just beginning.
07:47Odette arrives back in London.
07:49She meets with Vera to debrief her, and to see if she can help track down the lost women spies.
07:57It's so good to have you back.
08:08After they arrested me, I was kept in prison in Paris.
08:19Then the Gestapo came.
08:25Just tell us.
08:30I didn't tell them anything.
08:36They seem to know so much.
08:42About the circuits.
08:44Who was involved, where, when.
08:51And then they took me over the border, into Germany.
08:56Karlsruhe.
08:58With other women.
09:02Karlsruhe.
09:03Mm-hmm.
09:06And finally, Ravensbrück.
09:33Karlsruhe.
09:34Karlsruhe.
09:34You said there were other women.
09:46Odette describes seven female agents that she remembers from Karlsruhe.
10:00It's an important lead for Vera.
10:09Nora Nierkan was one of Vera's favorite agents, one of the people she seems to really have cared about.
10:14When she was in training, there was some question mark as to whether or not Nora was good enough for
10:19the job, because she seemed to be so kind.
10:22She said she could never lie.
10:23And yet Vera was really the one who gave the final approval, and said, no, you're going to go, and
10:28she'll be fine, and it'll work.
10:36And Vera seems to have had a very guilty conscience, a very sort of deeply felt question as to what
10:43had happened to this delightful young woman who she really had been responsible for sending to France.
10:53It's pretty, but no.
10:58Don't take my word for it, though.
11:01Ask the b**** at the prison.
11:04Becca.
11:06Fraulein Becca.
11:09She ran the place.
11:13If anyone knows, she will.
11:21I think Vera's reaction to starting to uncover the stories of these women and to trace them to Karlsruhe must
11:27have come as a real shock to her.
11:33To understand the dehumanizing process that they'd been put through right from their arrest, and now they're in solitary confinement.
11:43These women that she would have last seen on an airfield in England, full of life and full of hope
11:47and excitement for their missions, suddenly in this horrible world, having experienced some brutal things already, and just starting to
11:56unravel their stories, and wondering what became of them after they left this prison at Karlsruhe.
12:06Thanks to Odette, Vera has a major breakthrough in intelligence.
12:11It's important for Vera, not only professionally, but also personally.
12:18In a way, although Vera never had children herself, she does kind of have maternal qualities here in her investigation.
12:34Vera has the prison in Karlsruhe, in southern Germany, as the last location for at least seven women.
12:45Vera also knows about the Ravensbrück women's concentration camp, situated in north-eastern Germany.
12:54Ravensbrück was a concentration camp just north of Berlin, and unlike every other concentration camp, it was for women.
13:01It was particularly horrifying, for the sensibilities of people in the 1940s as well, where women are meant to be
13:08kept out of combat, out of war, and treated with some level of humanity.
13:12Ravensbrück was a particular horrific sight to end up in.
13:20It's from here that three agents, including Yvonne Basden and Odette Sansom, have come back alive.
13:33Ravensbrück is also the last known location for young mother and widow, Violette Sabo.
13:47But there is one of Vera's agents that has not been spotted at either a prison or a camp.
13:54Nor Inayat Khan.
14:01There's a generally held sense that Nor, amongst the others, might be alive.
14:10And so she realizes, too, that there's a tremendous amount of pressure on her, that if she's going to find
14:15her missing agents, she's going to have to do it fast.
14:20Vera can't travel to Germany and continue her investigations due to her low rank.
14:26So she enlists the help of an army unit, who are hunting Nazis across post-war Germany.
14:34A unit that was founded just a few years before.
14:39The SAS.
14:54The SAS, or Special Air Service, are an elite commando unit founded during the height of the war.
15:03The SAS were formed in the North African desert, and the concept behind their kind of operations were these fast,
15:09hit-and-run missions that they were deploying in these Willis jeeps, which were very maneuverable and nimble, and they
15:15were heavily armed with mounted machine guns.
15:17And the idea was to carry out these hit-and-run raids, largely targeting Italian and German airfields.
15:25And they were extremely successful in the North Africa campaign.
15:29So in those 18 months or so that they soldiered there, the SAS had destroyed 387 proven enemy warplane kills.
15:37That's a spectacular achievement.
15:41But in the winter of 1942, Hitler fights back.
15:47His Nazi high command issues the so-called commando order.
15:53What the commando order said was that any parachutist, so any Allied parachutist, that could be SAS, it could be
16:00commandos, it could be special operations executive agents.
16:03Any of those captured behind the lines, whether in uniform or out of uniform, whether fighting or not fighting, whether
16:10trying to surrender or not, would be kept alive only for as long as it took the Gestapo and the
16:16SAS to interrogate them and find out what they knew, and then they would be shot out of hand.
16:24In other words, in other words, murdered.
16:28And what that meant for the SAS is if you were captured, it was a death sentence.
16:34Despite the order, the SAS continue their raids and are a key part of the Allied success in northern France
16:43that sees the Nazis defeated.
16:49With the end of the war, SAS Major Bill Barkworth and a team are sent to Germany to hunt down
16:56the Nazis who carried out the commando order and bring them to justice.
17:04Major Eric Bill Barkworth is an extraordinary figure in World War II, and especially within Special Forces history.
17:10He's eccentric, he's single-minded, he's a maverick, he's a rule-breaker, he's one of those very, very archetypal individuals
17:19who can think the absolute unthinkable.
17:22But the other thing about Barkworth as well, which is key to how he develops as a character during the
17:26war, is he's got this unshakable moral compass.
17:30His sense of right and wrong is absolutely inflexible.
17:37Barkworth has commandeered a private villa, the Villa Degler, in Garganau, near Karlsruhe, on the edge of the Black Forest.
17:51And he is here on a special mission for the SAS.
17:59On the 12th of August, 1944, an SAS team was dropped behind enemy lines in the Vosges mountains of eastern
18:08France to hit the Nazis before an Allied advance.
18:14But the team were tracked down.
18:18And 31 soldiers were captured.
18:26After months of interrogation, the soldiers were taken to the woods, stripped, and shot.
18:38Such a loss of life would have a profound effect on everyone in the SAS.
18:45When you are serving in a unit like the SAS in World War II, you forge these bonds of brotherhood
18:51with your fellow operators, which are extremely, extremely powerful and close.
18:56You read the accounts from people at the time, or you interview veterans, as I have, and you speak about
19:01those kind of relationships, they are very, very, very special.
19:05It's the kind of spirit that means you will lay down your life for your fellow brother-in-arms, and
19:11that's what so often happens.
19:20Barkworth is determined to find those responsible for the deaths of the 31 SAS soldiers.
19:30Chief among them is Hans Kiefer, the head of the SD, the Nazi intelligence agency in Paris.
19:45A man Vera also believes may know what happened to her lost women spies.
19:54So Vera shares the photos of her agents with Barkworth, in the hopes he can help her.
20:01Both Barkworth and Vera, their investigations led them to one name, and that was Hans Kiefer.
20:09He was in charge of the SD.
20:11He was responsible for all of the investigations that the Gestapo and the SD were doing in Paris.
20:16So he was responsible for the interrogation of what the agents and what the soldiers of the SAS went through.
20:26He was a spider at the centre of the web, issuing all these orders for interrogating,
20:31and this is the man that they were desperate to find.
20:35But as the atrocities of Kiefer and other Nazis come to light,
20:40people back in the UK begin to ask some difficult questions.
20:52Vera receives a letter, alerting her to the actions of Violette Sabo's father, Charles Bushell.
21:02Violette has a child called Tanya,
21:05and Bushell wants to know when the baby's mother will return.
21:33Bushell is talking to his MP and giving interviews to the newspapers about his mission.
21:43For Vera, and the SOE, this could be a major problem.
21:49Vera is in a very difficult situation because suddenly the war is over,
21:54and these young women who have gone off to serve somewhere,
21:58and their families don't know anything about what they really did in the SOE,
22:01aren't coming home.
22:07Violette Sabo's father, who's been left with her infant daughter,
22:11is starting to ask questions, is starting to push for answers.
22:14What's happened to my daughter? Why hasn't she come home?
22:16And there are others starting to step forward and say,
22:18listen, we've heard nothing. We don't know where they were serving.
22:21We don't know what part of the world they've ended up in.
22:23We don't know why they're not home.
22:25And so there starts to become this pressure from family members and friends
22:29and other acquaintances of these young women who've just suddenly vanished.
22:34And Vera has another problem.
22:38She has a new boss.
22:43Head of SOE F section, Maurice Buckmaster,
22:47has returned to his civilian role of public relations manager at the Ford Motor Company.
22:54He is replaced by new broom...
22:57Vera.
23:03A man who comes from the SOE security section
23:08and whose main interest is in keeping things secret.
23:13But Mott doesn't help Vera very much.
23:16He doesn't see this as the sort of passionate necessity that Vera sees it as.
23:21And she's now started to get information about the camps.
23:27And she's pushing to see if she can get a chance to have some sort of contact
23:32or interrogate the heads of these camps where her agents might have ended up.
23:39And yet she's given the cold shoulder.
23:41She's really effectively told that this isn't of interest to the government,
23:46this is not of interest to her former colleagues,
23:48and would she please just leave it alone?
23:56So it's really tense for Vera.
23:58She doesn't know how much power she will have to carry on this investigation.
24:02She needs to find out if there are agents surviving in these camps,
24:06she has to find them before they are dead or gone,
24:08or any evidence of them is wiped out.
24:11So the timing is crucial, and she is basically racing against the clock.
24:17Vera has to fight to convince Mott and the war office
24:21to allow her to go to Germany and speed up the hunt for her missing spies.
24:30Letters from agents' relatives asking difficult questions
24:33puts pressure on the home office.
24:38And after months of lobbying, Vera gets her answer.
24:45Vera will be given the rank of flight officer in the Women's Auxiliary Air Force,
24:51allowing her to travel to Germany.
24:56But she is told that she has just four days to demonstrate she can get results.
25:14December 1945.
25:19Vera's destination is Berlin.
25:23A capital city in ruins.
25:28A city conquered by the Soviet Union.
25:34in among the destruction of germany vera has just a few days to prove her worth to the war office
25:46vera's first mission is to identify the grave of f section's male agent clement mark jumeau
25:53who is believed to have died of tuberculosis at a hospital north of berlin many women were sent
26:00to germany post-war but mostly in secretarial roles or in a way to assist with the men of the
26:07armed forces who were trying to reconcile germany but vera was there in a totally different capacity
26:12she had a mission that she wanted to fulfill
26:20and although she was probably very nervous and had a sense of trepidation she really had to mask that
26:26and to go forward with an air of confidence and to prove that she was the right person to uncover
26:32the stories of the missing agents but vera has a problem jumeau's grave is most likely in soviet
26:40controlled germany north of berlin after the fall of germany the country is split into zones under
26:48control of the us the uk france and the soviet union
26:56at a checkpoint in book vera is stopped by a soviet sentry and her progress is halted
27:17soviet is blocked from entering the soviet zone
27:26if vera fails here she knows there is no chance that mott and the war office
27:31would allow her to continue her investigations
27:36but then vera addresses the sentry in russian
27:43something the sentry would not have been expecting
27:48they come to a russian checkpoint and she speaks in russian and it must have been a real shock
27:53because for him she was a member of the waft you know she was a lady in a blue uniform
27:59and suddenly
28:00she's speaking russian which would have been something he would have been completely unprepared for
28:06vera somehow not only speaks russian
28:11but she does so with a level of fluency that the sentry lets them through
28:18vera is able to continue her journey into the soviet zone
28:21thanks to her unexpected ability to speak russian
28:35at the hospital vera questions the staff
28:44and they direct her to the location of jumeau's grave
28:51within the first day of her time in germany
28:54vera proves to the war office and to mott
28:57that her investigations get results
29:02now she can move on to the main reason for her journey
29:06ravensbruck
29:16ravensbruck
29:20the women's camp
29:2590 kilometers north of berlin
29:32ravensbruck is hideous camp
29:35which was set up specifically to hold women and tens of thousands of women died there
29:41i think over 50 000 women were imprisoned there
29:48ravensbruck is of particular interest to vera because she interviewed odette who'd come out of ravensbruck
29:55who had told her about her agents who were there so ravensbruck seems to be the place the concentration camp
30:02where a lot of her agents disappeared
30:05vera is here to interrogate the commandant fritz fritz suren ravensbruck camp is the camp which odette left alive
30:14it is also the last known location of vera's missing agent violette sabo along with two others lillian rolf and
30:24denise block
30:26suren holds the key to her agents
30:29suren holds the key to not just one but possibly the lives of three of her agents
30:34the pressure is on
30:39vera's not particularly experienced yet at interrogations and she knows he has information
30:47he knows everything that went on in the camp and if there were special prisoners considered to be agents
30:53he would have known
30:59how many english women were at the camp
31:06there were no english women at the camp
31:11odette is english
31:14she was a special prisoner
31:16for whom i had special responsibilities
31:20because we thought she was related to churchill
31:25so the other english women
31:29how many were there
31:32i already told you
31:35there were no others
31:38i have testimony that there were
31:48answer me
31:49answer me
31:53i have nothing else to say
32:00suren offers vera nothing
32:12without any new evidence
32:14vera leaves ravensbruck
32:16and returns to london
32:18empty-handed
32:29back in london
32:30vera gets some news that could prevent her from ever finding her agents
32:35have a read
32:36have a read please
32:40she is informed that f section is to be closed down
32:45permanently
32:48norman
32:49norman what tells vera that she's to wind down she's to close the office and really nobody's very interested in
32:55what's happening to these agents of hers
33:02there is no sense that there should be accounts from surviving agents such as what we see from other military
33:09intelligence departments so there's no accountability there's no learning from the mistakes of the past
33:18so we were so embarrassed by some of its mistakes that it was just going to hush everything up and
33:24close it down as quickly as possible
33:28if f section is shut down it would see vera without the mandate to find her lost women spies
33:36they would remain missing presumed dead
33:41but for vera this wasn't acceptable it wasn't fair it wasn't fair on them it wasn't fair on their families
33:47and so she was determined to find out what had happened particularly to the young women agents that she had
33:54personally sent to france
34:03what vera needs is new evidence that will shock her bosses into letting her continue
34:21vera receives word from sas major barkworth about evidence from a secret concentration camp
34:30a camp that has been liberated and filmed by u.s forces
34:37known as nazweiler struthoff the camp is hidden in the vosges mountains of eastern france close to the german border
34:52it is the only camp the nazis build in france a camp built to destroy the french resistance
35:05on the 7th of december 1941 hitler passes an order code named night and fog
35:14this secret order means anyone believed to be endangering german security can be abducted at night and without trial taken
35:23to nazweiler
35:26people would be according to nazi order turned into mist
35:33it's a way of punishing people that was more feared than any other
35:41but it's what barkworth includes next in his report
35:45that has the most shocking impact on vera's hunt for her lost women spies
36:01vera reads barkworth's interrogation report of a former prisoner at nazweiler
36:07france berg
36:27berg tells barkworth he worked in the prematorium as a stoker
36:34one day in july 1944
36:37one day in july 1944 berg and the other stokers are told to expect some english women
36:45from his crematorium cell he witnesses their arrival
36:56france gives a detailed deposition
36:58he describes these english women who come
37:02and on the night he says that the head of the crematorium has told him to light the fires
37:08and take it to the hottest point by 9 30 pm
37:12they are hearing that these girls are going to be killed by lethal injection
37:20they see three women being dragged these are the english women
37:24two are unconscious one of them seems to be moving there's groans and grunts
37:28and one even speaks and says purkwa
37:32they are then dragged into the crematorium they can't see anymore
37:35and they say later that one of the women was alive and had scratched one of the men who had
37:40come
37:42then they heard the crematorium doors being shut
37:44and they knew it was all being fired up
37:49after that there's silence
37:54it's horror at what these girls would have gone through
37:58there is no way when they prepared them for their training for the torture that might lie ahead
38:03they would have envisaged something like this
38:10after being shown vera's photographs of her missing spies
38:14berg says that he believes one of the women brought to the crematorium
38:19is noor inayat khan
38:25beera would have been absolutely horrified
38:27and the thought that this could have been noor as well
38:29i mean horrified for all the girls
38:35and the fact that maybe this is what happened to noor is something that really haunted her
38:52armed with berg's testimony from natsweiler
38:56vera heads to her superiors
38:59she will not give up on her women
39:11berg's testimony makes disturbing reading for the british security services
39:23whitehall be deeply troubled by the evidence that vera is actually gaining of the sheer horror of the concentration camps
39:31because let's not forget
39:32that the public don't know that women were sent behind enemy lines
39:39whitehall would not want this highly secret organization the soe knowledge of it to come out
39:45but even more sensitive and potentially a public outcry
39:50to hear that women had been dropped into these dangerous areas
39:54and that some of them hadn't come back and had been horrifically tortured
40:00after seeing berg's testimony
40:02mi6 agreed to fund vera
40:04for another three months of investigations
40:07in the hope that vera can keep the story of the lost women spies
40:11out of the public eye
40:16vera heads back to germany
40:41vera is assigned to the war crimes unit at the british army headquarters in germany
40:48the war crimes unit was based at bad or in house and which was the headquarters of the british army
40:54on the rhine so it was a very important place and the war crimes unit was really trying to find
41:00high-ranking nazis people who would have been involved in what we would call war crimes so with executions with
41:07maltreatment of prisoners with the concentration camp system in general and the idea would not only be to find these
41:14officers but also to find every
41:17evidence about the evidence about crimes against humanity that they had committed so various murders or procedures that they had
41:25followed that were against the geneva convention
41:30vera will support the british judges in their evidence gathering
41:34vera will support the british judges in their evidence gathering
41:40vera's main role within the war crimes unit was to trace the missing soe agents and her job would be
41:45to trace them as best she could this was going to be exceptionally difficult for her as the prisoners were
41:52classified as nacht and naval night and fog
41:54so most records would technically have disappeared if they'd ever been kept in the first place but her job was
42:01to trace them through the various prison systems that they'd been through had they gone into camps and not only
42:06to trace them but to trace the people responsible for their imprisonment and murders if that was going to be
42:13the case
42:16vera begins by tracing back her agent's whereabouts before they get to the camp at natsweiler
42:24and her attention turns to a witness who could hold the key it's a name given to vera by odette
42:32sansam it is the chief warder of karlsruher prison frulein becker
42:43vera leaves the war crimes office headed for karlsruher prison in the hope that finding becker might give her the
42:51information she needs
42:56frulein becker would have been really important for vera to get her hands on she'd been identified in one of
43:01the affidavits of the surviving agents anyway and vera needed to go out and find her
43:07because as the chief wardress she would have received all new prisoners coming into karlsruher she would have met them
43:13personally taken away their personal effects made a record of what they were she would have also recorded their names
43:20so be they real names or their aliases she would have recorded the names of the soe women going into
43:26that prison
43:34on arrival at the prison vera discovers that frulein becker hasn't even left her post as chief warder
43:45vera can now begin her questioning
43:52karlsruher was technically a civilian prison so it wasn't really used for political prisoners which arguably the soe agents were
44:00when they arrived at karlsruher they were put into solitary confinement
44:09food would have been pretty grim and very scarce they would have only had the clothes they were standing up
44:15in and we know that the cells were quite sparse a single bed maybe a bucket for a toilet so
44:21it was a very grim place
44:26i didn't want them here this is a regular prison not for politicals like them they should never have been
44:32here
44:43I'm
45:08Yes.
45:12All of them.
45:16And they all left in July 1944?
45:21No.
45:23The one you mentioned, Adette.
45:25She left then.
45:27The others, it was later in the year.
45:31So these seven in the photographs,
45:35they didn't leave in July.
45:36That's what I said.
45:38They left later.
45:41I need to see your records.
45:43Now, please.
45:44We don't have any.
45:47I can't imagine that.
45:50The French.
45:52When they came, they destroyed everything.
45:54Smashed it all up.
45:58All gone.
46:08Thank you, Fräulein Becker.
46:11I'm sure I'll see you again soon.
46:17Vera doesn't have the written records she needs as evidence,
46:21but she does have something more important.
46:25Becker's testimony directly contradicts the evidence
46:29of the crematorium stoker at Natsweiler,
46:32Franz Berg.
46:34Berg stated that four women are killed at the Natsweiler camp
46:38in July 1944.
46:41But Becker claims that, including Noor,
46:44seven of Vera's lost women spies
46:46are still in Karlsruhe prison
46:49later than July 1944.
46:51So those women could not have been the ones killed
46:55at Natsweiler.
46:57Vera already has an eyewitness testimony
47:00from Natsweiler saying that Noor is dead.
47:03And now she has another eyewitness testimony
47:05saying, no, that is not true, she is here.
47:07She needs some sort of corroborating evidence
47:10to prove where Noor is, one way or the other.
47:15Vera leaves Becker and Karlsruhe
47:18with the chance that some of her lost women spies
47:22could still be alive.
47:54We'll see you next time.
47:57We'll see you next time.
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