The Bureau - Season 3 - Episode 9
DGSE discovers that Debailly is using the stolen IDs of former agents to travel back to France. Nadia hears from her assistant's Iranian contact that Debailly is free, but DGSE refuses to tell her anything; they use Prune to tempt Debailly into making contact with her. Debailly uses burner phones to contact Prune, and then gets a message to Nadia. Meanwhile, the Mossad agent tells Marina that her mission is completed. Before he leaves he realises that Marina has not been telling him the whole truth about herself, and begins to suspect that she is a spy. He confronts her and holds her captive. Marina uses their agreed code to call for Simon's help.
About The Bureau

Title: The Bureau
First Air Date: 2015-04-27
Last Air Date: 2020-05-04
Status: Ended
Rating: 8.196/10 (from 184 votes)
Language: FR
Seasons: 5
Total Episodes: 50
Network: Canal+
Genres: Crime, Drama
Production Companies: TOP - The Oligarchs Productions, H Films, Federation Entertainment
Synopsis
Within the DGSE (General Directorate for External Security), a department called the Office Of Legends (BDL) forms and remote pilot the most important agents of the French intelligence services: Clandestine. Immersion in hostile country, their mission is to identify individuals who may be recruited as sources of information. Operating "under caption", that is to say in a fabricated identity from scratch, they live for many years in a permanent duplicity. Our hero just returned from a clandestine mission six years in Damascus. But contrary to what is required by safety rules, he does not abandon his legend and the identity under which he lived in Syria, thus putting in danger the whole system.
Cast

Mathieu Kassovitz
Guillaume Debailly

Sara Giraudeau
Marina Loiseau

Stefan Crepon
César dit « Pacemaker »

Zineb Triki
Nadia El Mansour

Florence Loiret Caille
Marie-Jeanne Duthilleul

Jonathan Zaccaï
Raymond Sisteron

Oleksiy Horbunov
Mikhaël Kharlov

Mathieu Amalric
Jean-Jacques, dit « JJA »

Louis Garrel
Andrea Tassone dit « Mille Sabords »

Jules Sagot
Sylvain Ellenstein