Volume 52, Number 2
Galileo 2007 Finalist
Language, Culture, and Cooperation in Scientific and Technical Intelligence [PDF 118.7KB*]
Lily E.
Johnston
Galileo 2007 Prize Winner
Needed: A National Security Simulation Center [PDF 171.8KB*]
Rachel K.
Hanig and Mark E. Henshaw
Commentary
Thinking About Rethinking: Reform in Other Professions [PDF 93.6KB*]
William
Nolte
Historical
Perspective
CIA’s Intelligence Art Collection
Commemoration of the Historical, Inspiration for the Future [PDF 1.1MB*]
Toni Hiley
The Spy Who Never Was
The Strange Case of John Honeyman and Revolutionary War Espionage [PDF 499KB*]
Alexander
Rose
From the Archives-1964
An Intelligence Role for the Footnote: For and Against [PDF 73.5KB*]
Intelligence in Public Literature
The Mighty Wurlitzer: How the CIA Played America [PDF 28.6KB*]
Reviewed by
Michael Warner
SPYCRAFT:
The Secret History of the CIA’s Spytechs from Communism to Al-Qaeda [PDF 30.6KB*]
Reviewed by
Hayden Peake
The Intelligence Officer’s Bookshelf [PDF 87KB*]
Compiled
and Reviewed by Hayden B. Peake
CONTRIBUTORS
Rachel K. Hanig and Mark E. Henshaw are analysts with the Information Operations Center of CIA.
Toni Hiley is the Curator and Director of the CIA Museum. She gratefully acknowledges the contributions to her article of CIA historians David Robarge and Timothy Castle.
Lily E. Johnston follows emerging biotechnology issues in the CIA’s Directorate of Intelligence. Ms. Johnston graduated from Princeton University, where she studied neuroscience, biology and psychology.
William Nolte is a member of the Studies in Intelligence Editorial Board. He has served in the National Security Agency and the National Intelligence Council. He currently teaches at the University of Maryland.
Hayden B. Peake is the Curator of the CIA Historical Collection. He served in the Directorate of Science and Technology and the Directorate of Operations.
Alexander Rose is the author of Washington’s Spies: The Story of America’s First Spy Ring (Bantam Dell; New York, 2006). He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and a member of the United States Commission on Military History.
Michael Warner is the Historian of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. He has served as an analyst in the Directorate of Intelligence in CIA and on the CIA History Staff. He is the author of several classified and unclassified histories of the CIA.
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