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The Good Assassin: How a Mossad Agent and a Band of Survivors Hunted Down the Butcher of Latvia Kindle Edition
The untold story of an Israeli spy’s epic journey to bring the notorious Butcher of Latvia to justice—a case that altered the fates of all ex-Nazis.
Before World War II, Herbert Cukurs was a famous figure in his small Latvian city, the “Charles Lindbergh of his country”. But he was soon better known as the Butcher of Latvia, a man who murdered some thirty thousand Jews. By 1965, a statute of limitations on Nazi war crimes threatened to expire, potentially absolving ex-Nazis like Cukurs of their crimes. Jacob Medad, the misfit Mossad agent who had previously kidnapped Adolf Eichmann, knew if Cukurs was not captured soon, he may never be brought to justice. In a thrilling undercover operation, Medad traveled to Cukurs’ new home in Brazil in an elaborate disguise, befriended him, and earned his trust, while negotiations to extend Nazi innocence neared a boiling point.
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“What a wonderful book. Stephan Talty’s fast-paced account of how Herbert Cukurs, the Latvian aviator turned Nazi war criminal, was eventually brought to justice by Mossad operatives is as gripping as any novel. Hard as it is to read the details of Cukurs’ horrific crimes, the outcome is both moving and uplifting, with the Latvian’s demise helping to bring other perpetrators of genocide to justice. Talty is at the top of his game.”—Saul David, author of Operation Thunderbolt and The Force “Part Holocaust history, part detective case, part spy operation, The Good Assassin is an enthralling book. Stephan Talty paints vivid, often chilling, portraits of its vengeful hero, Mossad agent Jacob Medad, and the war criminal Herbert Cukurs he pursued to the bitter end. It’s a stunning, you-are-there kind of read.”—Neal Bascomb, New York Times bestselling author of Hunting Eichmann and Faster “Stephan Talty’s The Good Assassin is a gripping chronicle of one of the most brilliant operations launched against an escaped Nazi war criminal, and a fitting memorial to the victims of the Holocaust in Latvia and to the brave Israelis who traveled halfway around the world to punish one of the key perpetrators of those crimes. At a time when Latvian ultranationalists are trying to rehabilitate Cukurs as a national hero, Talty explains why such a step would be a grave miscarriage of justice.”—Dr. Efraim Zuroff, chief Nazi hunter, Simon Wiesenthal Center “Stephan Talty masterfully recounts how the Holocaust engulfed the Jews of Latvia and how the architect of that genocide was hunted to his death by Israeli spies. It’s a page-turning account of a little-known episode of the Shoah and how justice was brought to one of its key perpetrators.” —Peter Bergen, author of Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for bin Laden and Trump and His Generals: The Cost of Chaos “Stephan Talty has crafted a fast-paced account of an overlooked part of the Holocaust—and its broader impact on the postwar hunt for its perpetrators.” —Bill Geroux, author of The Ghost Ships of Archangel and The Mathews Men “Talty efficiently mines archival records for vivid details and tracks the complexities of Medad’s undercover mission with flair. The result is a captivating and gruesome real-life spy thriller.”—Publishers Weekly “Compelling . . . Talty remains true to his technique, delivering thoroughly researched, engrossing nonfiction in a thrillerlike narrative style . . . As anti-Semitism surges once again, this page-turning history reminds us of the sanguinary consequences of unchecked hatred.”—Kirkus Reviews “Thrilling . . . A fast-paced, recommended work that enthralls, edifies, and reveals the disturbing extent to which Latvians and others participated in genocide.”—Library Journal “The author brings his usual attention to detail, excellent research, terrific storytelling, passion, and dedication to this suspenseful recounting of a shadowy facet of the Holocaust, which continues to haunt the world.”—Booklist —
About the Author
Stephan Talty is a critic and journalist who has contributed numerous pieces on race and American culture to publications such as the New York Times Magazine, Vibe, George, Chicago Review, the Irish Times, and Playboy. Originally from Buffalo, New York, he now lives in Brooklyn.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Prologue: The Apartment on the Avenue de Versailles
MIO WALKED INTO THE LOBBY of the building on the Avenue de Versailles and called out 'Bonjour!' to the concierge through her tiny window. Not waiting for a response, he went quickly up the marble stairs. Puffing by now'he was a bit out of shape'he reached the wooden door of Yariv's apartment and pressed the bell. He was confident he hadn't been followed; he'd stopped in front of the gigantic Radio France building a few blocks away to check for tails. It would have been unfortunate to bring one to a meeting with Yariv, who was touchy about such things.
The door opened and Yosef Yariv, the head of Caesarea, the special operations arm of Mossad, nodded at Mio. With his honking beak of a nose and thick pelt of unruly hair, the forty-year-old Yariv resembled a predatory desert bird. Now his piercing blue-gray eyes studied his friend.
'I'm glad you made it," he said.
Mio said nothing, only nodded and walked past. Yariv locked the door, then turned. "From this moment onwards," he said, 'your name is Anton Kuenzle. You'd better start getting used to it.' Mio showed no reaction; he was an introvert, raised in Germany as a Jew in the early thirties, which encouraged, if not required, certain kinds of masks to be worn. And besides, it was Mio's stock-in-trade to become different people, sometimes for a few days, other times for much longer. Inside Mossad, where he was one of the great, perhaps the greatest, undercover operatives, he was known as 'the man with the hundred identities.' Back home in Israel, his family lived in a house that sat behind a steel gate, through which the agency sent a car every time he was leaving on an assignment. His son would later say that when the car drove off if you woke Mio in the middle of the night, he would immediately begin speaking in the language of his false persona. On those days when he was driven to the airport, he never looked back to wave to his children because, in his mind, he had no children.
The two walked ahead into a small guest room. Another operative'mio called him Michael, though that wasn't his real name'sat at a small table with cups and saucers and a pot filled with coffee. A 'fairly thin' file sat next to the cups. Mio nodded at Michael and took one of the empty chairs. Yariv followed suit. He looked at the other two, his eyes cool.
'You must be wondering why I summoned you here," he said.
The two men said nothing.
'Well, it all begins with the final confirmation we received about a Nazi war criminal who lives in one of the South American countries."
Michael looked at Mio, who glanced back, remaining silent. Yariv explained that in eight months, on May 8, 1965, the world would mark the twentieth anniversary of the end of World War II in Europe. German politicians and ordinary citizens were calling for an end to the hunt for Nazi war criminals and for a statute of limitations to be applied to their crimes. Mio didn't react, but, as someone who avidly read the newspapers, he must have seen the headlines. Germany was preparing to enforce an 1871 law that mandated a twenty-year limit on murder prosecutions. Two other amnesties, for assault and for manslaughter, had gone into effect in 1955 and 1960 with little protest around the world. Charging any Nazi officer or soldier with those crimes was now forbidden inside Germany. But soon the killers themselves, the very worst of the worst, the men and women who'd physically pulled the triggers on the machine guns and the rifles and the pistols and smashed in the heads and strangled and bludgeoned their portion of the six million, could emerge from their hiding places and walk free in the sun. It seemed utterly fantastic, but there it was.
The statute, Yariv said, was popular in West Germany. Every poll showed solid majorities in favor of it, and the governing party, the Christian Democratic Union, had thrown its weight behind the law. Only the Bundestag, the feisty German parliament, could delay the amnesty by passing a bill that would push the deadline a few years into the future, allowing the remaining unindicted National Socialist murderers to be found and prosecuted for at least a short time longer. But Yariv told Mio and Michael that Israeli leaders were increasingly pessimistic about this possibility. 'the chances of accepting this proposal are small . . . There is no guarantee that the politicians are prepared to extend the Statute of Limitations, not by four years, not by ten years, and, for that matter, most probably not at all."
Mio noticed his friend's voice starting to rise in the quiet room, though his face showed no change in expression. "It is absolutely inconceivable," Yariv said, 'that tens of thousands of Nazi war criminals, who never paid for their heinous crimes, should now be able to crawl out of their hiding holes and spend the rest of their lives in peace and tranquility . . . It's been only twenty years since the release of the survivors of the death camps, and we owe it to them, and to the six million who did not survive and are unable to avenge themselves'we must thwart this shameful process."
Israeli prime minister Levi Eshkol and his intelligence chiefs had secretly decided on a mission. A killing was required, a certain kind of killing that would reveal the Nazi monsters who'd escaped punishment and publicize the nature of their crimes. Unlike Mossad's kidnapping and subsequent execution of Adolf Eichmann four years earlier, there would be no trial, no lawyers or judges, no legal niceties, no essays by Hannah Arendt in The New Yorker. And the operation had to be completed before the vote in the German parliament, currently scheduled for sometime in the spring.
'the Nazi whose turn has come," Yariv said, 'is Herbert Cukurs."
It was a Latvian name; Yariv pronounced the 'C' in 'Cukurs' correctly, like 'ts," TSOO-krz. (It means 'sugar.') At a conference of Israeli intelligence chiefs in January, the names of potential assassination targets had been read out. When the speaker came to Cukurs, one of the men in the room collapsed. It was Major General Aharon Yariv'no relation to Yosef Yariv'head of the country's Military Intelligence Directorate. Cukurs had murdered several of Yariv's loved ones and friends during the war; his reaction was one reason why the Latvian's name had been chosen.
Mio had never heard of Cukurs, and he showed no emotion at the idea of ending his life. "Outwardly," he said, 'I kept a poker face.' If he was chilly in his personal life'and he was, to his children's eternal regret'he was even more clinical when working. A quickening of the breath, a raised eyebrow, would for him have been a breach of professional ethics. But inside, he was deeply stirred. His mother and father, a German patriot and a recipient of the Iron Cross for bravery in World War I, who'd believed that they'd be saved until almost the very end, had been murdered at Auschwitz and the 'model' camp of Theresienstadt. Despite his outward calm, when Mio heard the Nazi's name, he said, 'I felt my heart and my adrenaline level skyrocket suddenly."
'We are not dealing here with a desk murderer like Eichmann," Yariv went on. "[Cukurs] is personally responsible for the annihilation of at least 30,000 Jews in Riga.' And unlike more famous men like Dr. Josef Mengele, whom Mossad had been unable to find despite two decades of searching, Cukurs' whereabouts had been confirmed. He was living in a small house in São Paulo surrounded by guard dogs and a barbed wire fence. Yariv looked at Mio. "I propose that you . . . go to Brazil disguised as an Austrian businessman under the name of Anton Kuenzle.' Under this light cover, he would find the Nazi, befriend him, infiltrate his circle, and arrange his death. The execution would then be announced to the world, and (Mossad hoped) the news stories about the savage killer, his grateful victims, and his faceless assassins'forced to act as the authorities in Berlin and other European capitals dawdled'might just convince the Germans that going ahead with the amnesty was an impossibility. "I'm well aware that this is no simple task," Yariv said. "You will face a criminal who is, according to our reports, cunning, mistrustful, ruthless and dangerous, and is always prepared for the worst."
Michael began leafing through the file that sat on the table. "Will Mio actually operate alone," he said, 'or will we send a small stalking and protection unit with him?"
For the first time that morning, Mio spoke up. "I prefer to work alone," he said. 'me against the target."
Yariv nodded, then gestured to the file, a handful of pages in a manila folder that barely rose above the lacquered surface of the table. The slimness of the file was significant for reasons that only those intimate with the history of the Latvian Shoah would understand. It was so thin because so few Jews had been left alive to speak about Herbert Cukurs. Inside the folder were perhaps half a dozen testimonies'the exact number isn't known'that traced Cukurs' actions during the war, painstakingly collected from eyewitnesses living in several countries during the late 1940s and early 1950s. Some of the accounts were barbaric, others oddly moving. In one story, Cukurs speaks to a young girl in Yiddish; they have a short, pleasant conversation before the Latvian, for no apparent reason, pulls out his Russian handgun and executes her in cold blood. In another, he saves a woman he knew to be Jewish, at considerable risk to his own life. The collection, in fact, added up to a curiously fractal, incomplete portrait of Herbert Cukurs, whose life had been larger and stranger than Mio could imagine at that moment; it would take many years and the survival of one obsessed young Jewish woman to tell it in full. "Overall, I must say he is a fascinating historical figure," one survivor later wrote, 'full of tremendous contradictions.' Though they could not have known it that morning in Paris, the Israelis had chosen for elimination a symbol of the Shoah whose life would speak to the motivations of those accomplices in eastern Europe who had carried it out.
With the preliminary details settled, Mio and Michael began sorting through the pages; they each picked up a selection and began to read. The white china cups, the husky September light streaming through the window, a blurred car horn from the street below, the loveliness of a fall afternoon in the Sixteenth Arrondissement faded from their thoughts as the testimonies inside ushered them to the city of Riga in the black year of 1939.
Product details
- ASIN : B07T2G7RDG
- Publisher : Mariner Books (April 21, 2020)
- Publication date : April 21, 2020
- Language : English
- File size : 9.8 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 332 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #364,023 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #9 in Uruguayan History
- #211 in Intelligence & Espionage (Kindle Store)
- #272 in Espionage True Accounts
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Stephan Talty is the NY Times bestselling author of six acclaimed nonfiction books, as well as two crime novels, "Black Irish" and "Hangman," set in his hometown of Buffalo. He's written for the New York Times Magazine, GQ, Playboy, the Chicago Review and many others. Talty's ebook, "The Secret Agent," was a #1 Amazon Kindle bestseller in nonfiction.
Talty lives outside New York City with his wife and two children. You can visit his website at www.stephantalty.com.
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Customers find the book readable, with one describing it as an incredible story. The research quality receives positive feedback, with customers noting it is very well researched.
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Customers find the book engaging, with one describing it as an incredible story.
"...in the outcome is, standing alone, reason enough to read this compelling book." Read more
"...Once you start the book, you can’t put it down!! Excellent read!!" Read more
"Incredible story with absolutely chilling detail of pure evil, a must read book on the Holocaust even if you believe you've read it all." Read more
"Enthralling Read..." Read more
Customers find the book well researched, with one customer describing it as a thought-provoking read.
"A very well researched and written work. Talty describes the butcher of Latviac crimes against humanity...." Read more
"...Researched very well...." Read more
"Well researched and interesting for those who like the subject. Predictably gruesome as all holocaust stories. Ending was a little rushed." Read more
"Very Informative..." Read more
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Inevitable justice chronicled by an author who sweeps you into the action.
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2020This history recounts three very much related but, in a sense, also quite different series of events. Seeing the Germans as saviors from Communists occupiers, the people of Riga, Latvia not only welcomed the German army, but many, literally overnight, began to out-German the Germans in the brutality of their treatment of their longtime Jewish neighbors. Though it made no difference to their victims, the author notes that many Latvians were motivated more by greed and taking revenge on Communists than simply killing Jews because they were Jews, the latter the garden variety anti-Semitism pervading that part of the world. The barbarism demonstrated by so many otherwise inconsequential people living inconsequential lives in an essentially inconsequential country is difficult to read. The centerpiece of the barbarism, and of the book, is the oily Herbert Cukors, the “Lindbergh of Latvia”. (To the author’s credit, he avoids what must have been the temptation to draw parallels between Lindbergh and Cukors that involved matters other than long-distance solo flights.). Cukors appears to befriend the Jews of Riga before the Germans take over; he then goes on to himself murder and/or direct the murders of some 30,000 Jewish men, women and children; as the war ends, he trods a well-worn path to Brazil, with the help of some sympathizers in the Catholic Church, claiming on arrival to be a political refugee; he makes himself a good life there which ends later than it should have. That his family, despite all the evidence to the contrary, defended him throughout his comfortable life in Brazil as a good man being unfairly hounded is no surprise - such was the party line for the families many war criminals hiding out in South America and elsewhere, including in the US. What is surprising, and what is telling about Latvia today, is that Cukors remains something of a hero in that small country. In 2014 a musical celebrating the life of this basically subhuman character was well received in Latvia as evidence, as the author puts it, of Cukors being “only the latest Latvian victim of the Jews”.
The second and third parts of the book are to some extent written in parallel - they are the story of the extraordinary work of the Mossad agents who tracked Cukors down and played to his many weaknesses to lure him to his death alongside a race against time as German legislators were deciding whether or not to extend the statute of limitations on war crimes beyond 1965. The Cukors case, including the overwhelming evidence of his horrific crimes as well as his assassination by Mossad agents, was the subject of much press coverage in Germany and throughout the world as the legislators were deliberating the statute of limitations issue. That story, the story of the debate over whether or not the statute should be extended and how Cukors and his crimes may have been factors in the outcome is, standing alone, reason enough to read this compelling book.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2020A very well researched and written work. Talty describes the butcher of Latviac crimes against humanity. His bloodthirst of killing Jewish victims were heartless. His megalomania got the best of him in post war Brazil. Instead of seeking anonymity he consented to a widely read business magazine which led Mossad to send a team of assassins to exact vengeance.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2024Ordered this book after watching a documentary on the subject, and wanted to know more. Researched very well. People need to be aware that the blame for Nazi atrocities can not be solely laid on just a few high ranking individuals, as is the trend. A people can turn on another group of people in a heartbeat, a lesson that never seems to be learned.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2022As hard as it is to read, this is a story that should be told and should be read by everyone. It is impossible;e for sane people to comprehend such cruelty.
Very well written with excellent documentation. I particularly like that it follow up with many of the main characters after the “end” of the story.
There are, I am sure< other great books about the holocaust but it would be hard to beat his one.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2022I had already heard the podcast on The Good Assassin, but the book explained the assassination in more detail than in the podcast. Once you start the book, you can’t put it down!! Excellent read!!
- Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2020The author doesn’t overly sensationalize the operation to bring justice to this monster. The tedious details and less-exciting aspects of the endeavor bear out how motivated this group, especially Mio, was.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 11, 2022Well researched and interesting for those who like the subject. Predictably gruesome as all holocaust stories. Ending was a little rushed.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2020This book is strange in the approach that it took to the events being described. Although being touted as a book about the hunting down of a WWII Nazi war criminal in 1964-5 - that takes up only half (if that) of the book. In fact there was little "hunting" being done by anyone as Herbert Cukurs was living under his own name, and had already been outed as to who he was by locals in Rio.
A lot of pages are spent on the specific remembrances of a number of Latvians on the horrors of the Nazi and Soviet periods. Also many pages are spent on the 1965 German debate over the statute of limitations that was due to expire, and would have ended prosecutions of Nazi war crimes after the 20 year period ended in 1965.
Although these other stories and items are interesting, it is almost as if the author had all this additional information and just added it to this book. To me it made the book "choppy".
Top reviews from other countries
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Alain RAVOUNAReviewed in France on August 16, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Très bien
Très bien et rapidement rçu. Parfaitement conforme. Livre très bien emballé. Merci
- Virat SharmaReviewed in India on November 13, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Mossad’s revenge on behalf of the 30,000 dead Latvian Jews
This is an exceptional story of how Mossad assassinated a Nazi War Criminal- Herbert Cukurs in South American country of Uruguay.
Unlike the Kidnapping of Eichmann, in this case the target was not tried but rather assassinated. There is a reason behind that act as Germany was about to enact a law whereby amnesty would have been given to the Nazi criminals. Cukurs death was supposed to make headlines in order to expose his heinous crimes against the Jews and defer the amnesty statute.
Unputdownable book.
Virat SharmaMossad’s revenge on behalf of the 30,000 dead Latvian Jews
Reviewed in India on November 13, 2024
Unlike the Kidnapping of Eichmann, in this case the target was not tried but rather assassinated. There is a reason behind that act as Germany was about to enact a law whereby amnesty would have been given to the Nazi criminals. Cukurs death was supposed to make headlines in order to expose his heinous crimes against the Jews and defer the amnesty statute.
Unputdownable book.
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- James SmithReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 5, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars A real page Turner.
Cracking read from start to finish. ST has certainly done his research.