<P> The main controlling body of SOE was its council, consisting of around fifteen heads of departments or sections . About half of the council were from the armed forces (although some were specialists who were only commissioned after the outbreak of war), the rest were various civil servants, lawyers, or business or industrial experts . Most of the members of the council, and the senior officers and functionaries of SOE generally, were recruited by word of mouth among public school alumni and Oxbridge graduates, although this did not notably affect SOE's political complexion . </P> <P> Several subsidiary SOE headquarters and stations were set up to manage operations which were too distant for London to control directly . SOE's operations in the Middle East and Balkans were controlled from a headquarters in Cairo, which was notorious for poor security, infighting and conflicts with other agencies . It finally became known in April 1944 as Special Operations (Mediterranean), or SO (M). Shortly after the Allied landings in North Africa, a station codenamed "Massingham" was established near Algiers in late 1942, which operated into Southern France . Following the Allied invasion of Italy, personnel from "Massingham" established forward stations in Brindisi and near Naples . A subsidiary headquarters initially known as "Force 133" was later set up in Bari in Southern Italy, under the Cairo headquarters, to control operations in the Balkans and Northern Italy . </P> <P> An SOE station, which was first called the India Mission, and was subsequently known as GS I (k) was set up in India late in 1940 . It subsequently moved to Ceylon so as to be closer to the headquarters of the Allied South East Asia Command and became known as Force 136 . A Singapore Mission was set up at the same time as the India Mission but was unable to overcome official opposition to its attempts to form resistance movements in Malaya before the Japanese overran Singapore . Force 136 took over its surviving staff and operations . </P> <P> There was also a branch office in New York City, formally titled British Security Coordination, and headed by the Canadian businessman Sir William Stephenson . This branch office, located at Room 3603, 630 Fifth Avenue, Rockefeller Center, coordinated the work of SOE, SIS and MI5 with the American FBI and Office of Strategic Services . </P>

Special name given for the allied invasion of europe