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Comments
I remember the bedroom security techniques described in Dr.No as being quite revolutionary for their time and I'm sure there are many other examples of trade craft splattered across the novels.
That said, I've always thought of 007 as more of a 'secret agent' than a 'spy'.
Perhaps this is a bit of intellectual masturbation that I've dreamed up to differentiate Bond from the real deal that tend to inhabit the world's of Deighton and Le Carre. Both of whom litter their novels with the most detailed trade craft. As did the late, great Elleston Trevor (aka Adam Hall) with his delicious Quiller stories.
I think @Villiers53 makes a good point about perhaps distinguishing a 'secret agent' from a 'spy.'
Is Fleming's Bond really asked to spy that often? It seems to me anyway, that more often than not, he's being sent out on a mission which the goal of which isn't always (but sometimes is) intelligence gathering, but resolution. He's there to end or fix a problem.
There are exceptions, as noted by @007inVT, where Bond does good work in gathering intelligence in the course of the mission.
Is his effectiveness in getting results being questioned? I don't see how it could be. Whether he is being sent to gather more facts, or to simply end a problem, he's gotten the job done the majority of the time, against fantastic odds and opposition.
An agent, or secret agent, is the guy you sent in with an actual task, assignment, and/or goal to achieve. The dirty-work worker. You send a spy to snoop, an agent to kill. Bond is closest to a secret agent. He's sent in to both gather information, but also ultimately stop bad people and bad things.
Spies can be secret agents, and secret agents can be spies. I don't think we can strictly label someone like Bond. He's not strictly a handyman, but when the time comes, he has the right tools.
I haven't read all the books, but my take so far is that Bond is more of an agent than a spy. Even though he might be initially called upon to do intelligence gathering, it's usually anticipated that he'll need to use his skills as an agent at some point to stop the bad guys or keep something disasterous from happening.
In the Bond movieverse, I'd say he's pretty much an agent from start to finish as he does very little actual spying.
David Somerset in FRWL. Mark Hazard in TMWTGG.
You can always count on him.
Read the OP. Fleming, not Filming.
Right. Should have his own series
Bond also used the Mark Hazard cover name in the Daily Express comic strips that were original stories.