¡Hay un traidor en la T.I.A.!

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¡Hay un traidor en la T.I.A.!
Date1983
SeriesMort & Phil
PublisherEditorial Bruguera
Creative team
WritersIbáñez
ArtistsIbáñez
Original publication
Published inSuper Mortadelo
Issues145-150
Date of publication1983
LanguageSpanish
Chronology
Preceded byBilly "El Horrendo", 1983
Followed byEl bacilón, 1983

¡Hay un traidor en la T.I.A.! (English: There is a traitor in the T.I.A.!) is a 1983 comic written and drawn by Francisco Ibañez for the Mortadelo y Filemón (Mort & Phil) comic series.

Publication history[edit]

The comic strip was first published in the Super Mortadelo magazine in 1983, issues #145 to #150.[1]

Plot[edit]

As of late, the T.I.A. operations' failure rate has suddenly increased exponentially because somehow their secret plans are becoming known to the enemy before they are even executed. When the latest undertaking - protecting a secret ambassadorial courier - fails because his undercover guardians are purposefully taken out beforehand, and the courier is subsequently massacred down to his left ear, El Super finally comes to the conclusion that there must be a traitor within the T.I.A.'s ranks. To flush him out, he assigns Mortadelo and Filemón to the case.

However, Mortadelo and Filemón have to find out to their chagrin that detecting a traitor in an organisation where handling secret documents is a part of every day's work is not as easy as it seems, and they end up running foul of several colleagues, including Ofelia, Professor Bacterio, and - at one point - even each other. Meanwhile, the T.I.A.'s field losses continue to mount; El Super loses even more of his already fragile patience and subjects Mortadelo and Filemón to a series of gruesome disciplinary actions in order to "dedicate" them to their assignment.

In the end, Mortadelo and Filemón begin to suspect El Super himself, and after some chaotic mishaps during their attempts to expose him, they finally think of asking him about what is done with the secret plans before they are implemented. El Super states that they are regularly delivered to the T.I.A. encryption department in the building next door, but since he distrusts the internal mail and the phone, he conveys the plans in what he considers a completely fool-proof manner: by leaning out of the window and yelling them, uncoded, across the street. (This method, of course, gives interested eavesdroppers ample opportunities to intercept the plans to their advantage.) Angered at having been ordered to clean up this self-inflicted mess, Mortadelo and Filemón lash El Super to a scoop wheel and a piece of cactus to their boss' rear side, marking him as the jackass of the day.

In other media[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Fernández Soto, Miguel (2008), El mundo de Mortadelo y Filemón. Medialive Content, 2008. ISBN 9788492506293 page 214.
  2. ^ Mortadelo y Filemón (Serie de TV) in Filmaffinity

Bibliography[edit]