Review: The Sigint Secrets–The Signals Intelligence War, 1900 to Today–Including the Persecution of Gordon Welchman

4 Star, Intelligence (Government/Secret)
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4.0 out of 5 stars History Plus Insight = Future Themes,

April 8, 2000
Nigel West
Nigel has given us a lovely history, and also drawn out a number of themes that have meaning for the future. For instance, the superiority of amateurs from the ham radio ranks over the so-called professional military communications personnel, in the tricky business of breaking patterns and codes; the many “human in the loop” breaks of otherwise unbreakable technical codes, from the Italians with hemorrhoids (not in the code book, spelling it each day broke the code) to the careless Russians. He also touches on security cases in both the U.S. and England. In his conclusion, one sentence jumped out at me: “The old spirit of RSS, with its emphasis on voluntary effort, has been replaced by a bureaucracy of civil servants who preferred to stifle, rather than encourage, initiative.” As the current Director of NSA has discovered, NSA today is in mental grid lock, and its culture is oppressive in the extreme.
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Review: Merchants of Treason–America’s Secrets for Sale

5 Star, Impeachment & Treason, Intelligence (Government/Secret)
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5.0 out of 5 stars The only real “catalog” of American traitors during Cold War,

April 8, 2000
Norman Polmar
Roughly 100 American traitors, most of them within the U.S. defense establishment, are itemized in this book, the only such over-all review I have encountered. As I have said on several occasions that I believe we have at least 500-750 additional cases of espionage to discover, at least half of them controlled by our “allies”, this book is for me a helpful reminder of the true pervasiveness of betrayal in a Nation where opportunism and financial gain often outweigh loyalty and principle.
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Review: Blowback–The First Full Account of America’s Recruitment of Nazis and Its Disastrous Effect on The cold war, Our Domestic and Foreign Policy.

4 Star, Intelligence (Government/Secret)
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4.0 out of 5 stars We Have Met the Enemy and He Is Us….,

April 8, 2000
Christopher Simpson
Very scary stuff. The bottom line is that for the sake of enhancing national security and national competitiveness, the U.S. Government, with approval from the highest levels, funded the wholesale introduction into U.S. citizenship of both Nazi scientists and Nazi participants in genocidal programs who were viewed in many cases as “essential” to our anti-Communist endeavors. The loss of perspective among selected senior intelligence and policy officials, and the long-term influence of this program on our obsession with Communism, give one pause.
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Review: Blond Ghost

5 Star, Intelligence (Government/Secret)
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5.0 out of 5 stars Spend Money, Get Lots of Folks Killed, Lose Anyway…,

April 8, 2000
David Corn
Although Ted Shackley was a line case officer, this book is placed within the paramilitary section because his entire career encompassed a series of wars where the CIA played a very tragic and unproductive role. As Shackley's deputy in Laos is quoted on page 163, speaking on Shakley's accomplishments in Laos, “We spent a lot of money and got a lot of people killed,” Lair remembered, “and we didn't get much for it.” For those seeking to understand the bureaucratization of the Directorate of Operations, both in the field and in Washington, this is essential reading.
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Review: In Search of Enemies–A CIA Story

4 Star, Intelligence (Government/Secret)
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4.0 out of 5 stars Clay Feet, Wrong Bullets, CIA's African War,

April 8, 2000
John Stockwell
By the former Chief of the Angola Task Force at CIA, this book is a classic on the Keystone Kops aspects of paramilitary operations as run by the CIA”s Special Operations Group within the Directorate of Operations, as well as the lack of contextual judgment that accompanies the CIA's decisions to “get into” local conflicts that are none of our business. Ammunition from the warehouses that doesn't fit the weapons in the field is just the beginning.
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Review: The Phoenix Program

4 Star, Intelligence (Government/Secret)
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4.0 out of 5 stars We Can Learn From Our Murderous Mistakes,

April 8, 2000
Douglas Valentine
This is as good an account I have found of how the CIA got into the business of helping Vietnamese kill each other off one by one. It is a disturbing and valuable book, and I took from it several lessons: 1) CIA puppies with no military background, and military detailees with no law enforcement background, have no business getting into the gutter with foreign thugs; 2) if we support indigenous arrest, torture, and assassination programs they need to have some serious multi-cultural analysis and counterintelligence support lest we simply give one faction the means of killing off the other without regard to our interests; and 3) our general approach to interference in the internal affairs of other nations is corrupt and increases local corruption. We throw money at personalities rather than insight at institutions. We train and equip local units to inflict covert violence, and then wonder why the situation destabilizes further.
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Review: Friendly Spies–How America’s Allies Are Using Economic Espionage to Steal Our Secrets

4 Star, Intelligence (Government/Secret)
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4.0 out of 5 stars Essential Reference on Our Allies Spying on US,

April 8, 2000
Peter Schweizer
One hundred billion dollars annually is one White House estimate of the cost to U.S. businesses imposed by economic espionage carried out predominantly by our allies-France, Israel, Germany, South Korea, and Japan being among the top culprits. Peter Schweizer was the first to really put this issue on the table, and he deserves a lot of credit. Neither Congress nor the Administration are yet prepared to take this issue seriously, and this is a grave mistake, for in the 21st Century information is the seed corn of prosperity, and our allies are eating our seed corn.
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