PUBLIC TEXTS IN INTELLIGENCE
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' 47 marcn .4743x
TO:
Mr. Dulles
ROOM NO.
BUILDING
REMARKS:
Per your request. This is the latest
bibliography.
FROM:
WALTER PRORZHEItviER,
ROOM NO.
BUILDING
EXTENSION
1
CADS en et A I
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A selection from the most broadly
informative books on intelligence
operations and processes available
in English.
PUBLIC TEXTS IN INTELLIGENCE'
The professional professional intelligence officer does not disdain the
study of the overt literature of his profession. Authentic pub-
lished accounts or analyses of intelligence processes and tech-
niques, case histories, and operational experiences are valuable
sources for the enrichment of professional knowledge. Much
can be learned through the study of this literature, not only
in background information, but also for application to cur-
rent problems.
The following bibliography has been confined to books avail-
able in English, with emphasis on the most broadly illuminat-
ing of these. Viewed as a symposium on intelligence inethods or
as a composite history of intelligence, selections from public
:literature cannot of course tell the whole story; many of these
are at best of uneven quality, but they do offer material that
should be part of the intelligence officer's basic equipment.
Some items of supplementary reading are suggested in a few
of the annotations, and foreign editions are noted for the con-
venience of the reader abroad.
The selections fall into the following categories:
The Intelligence Process?theory, procedure, organization
Operational History:
From the earliest times up to World War II
Activities of the Western Allies in World War II
Organized resistance against the Nazis
German intelligence in World War H
The Soviet Services
EVading Capture and Escape from Imprisonment
'November 1963 revision of original Spring 1961 edition.
5.1-1),L 1_5 144.
1 ) _ 5 ii /Luc, 4-e, het.) i,?01 AL3, 4,2_
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THE INTELLIGENCE PROCESS?
Theory, Procedure, Organization
DULLES, Allen W. The Craft of Intelligence. (New York: Harper
and Row, 1963. 277 p.)
Here the former Director of Central Intelligence, after touching on
some of the early history of intelligence, examines many current as-
pects of intelligence requirements, collection, and production, describes
the Cominunist intelligence services, and explores the. uses of intel-
ligence. With the authority of his own experience he expounds the
role of Central Intelligence and the intelligence community in the
U.S. Government.
[An expansion of the author's article which appeared with this title
In the Britannica Book of the Year, 1963. A shorter version under the
same title was published in Harper's Magazine, April 1983.]
FARAGO, Ladislas. War of Wits: The Anatomy of Espionage and In-
telligence. (New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1954. 379 p.)
A comprehensive essay covering both the organization and proce-
dures of world intelligence agencies and their activities in the espio-
nage, counterespionage, sabotage, and propaganda fields. Marred by
doctrinal crudities, factual inaccuracies, and uncritical journalism, it
nevertheless is useful as a composite of the most important informa-
tion ow intelligence doctrine publicly available in 1954. With source ?
citations and index.
[Published in the following foreign editions: War of Wits (London:
Hutchinson, 1956) ; Det Tysta Kriget (Stockholm: Lll.is Forlag, 1956) ;
Les Secrets de l'Espionnage (Paris: Presses de la Clte, 1955).1
HILSMAN, Roger. Strategic Intelligence and National Decisions.
(Glencoe, Ill.: Free Press, 1956. 187 p.)
An academic study of the theory of intelligence, with emphasis on
its relation to policy. Valuable for its provocative thesis that policy
Is likely to go its own way in disregard of intelligence, while intel-
ligence tends to turn scholar, gathering and piecing together facts for
their own sake. The author later became director of State Depart-
ment's Bureau of Intelligence and Research.
KENT, Sherman. Strategic Intelligence for American World Policy.
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1949. 226 p.)
Foresighted early work on the theory and ideal operation of national
Intelligence production, by the present Chairman of the Board of Na-
tional Estimates. Lays down many principles which have since be-
come established in practice.
[Published in translation as Inteligencia Estrategica para la Politica
Mundial Norteamericana (Buenos Aires: Circulo Militar, Biblioteca del
Oficial, 1951), and in pirated Japanese and Chinese editions.]
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RANSOM, Harry Howe. Central Intelligence and National Security.
(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1958. 287 p.)
A scholarly inquiry into the development, organization, and problems
of the :U.S. intelligence system, with particular attention to the pro-
duction of national estimates. Includes a valuable bibliography.
WHITEHEAD, Don. The FBI Story: A Report to the People. (New
York: Random House, 1956. 368 p.)
'A laudatory account of FBI operations, both anticriminal and in the
maintenance of internal security.
[Published in the following foreign editions: The FBI Story (London:
Frederick Muller Ltd., 1957); Le F.B.I. (Paris: Morgan, 1957) ; La
Storia dello FBI (Milan: Sugar Editore, 1958) ; Historia del F.B.I.
(Buenos Aires: Editorial Sopena, 1958); Die FBI-Story (Munich: Paul
List, 1959).]
U.S. Commission on Organization of the Execlitive Branch of the Gov-
ernment. Intelligence Activities: A Report to the Congress.
(Washington: Government Printing Office, 1955. 76 p.)
The unclassified report of the intelligence task force of the second
Hoover Commission, under the chairmanship of General Mark W.
Clark. ? Considers problems of Intelligence at the national and depart-
mental levels, including those of personnel, security, administration,
and functional organization.
[Also published as House Document No. 201, 84th Congress, 1st Session,
1955.1
OPERATIONAL HISTORY
Through World War I
BAKELESS, John. Turncoats, Traitors and Heroes. (Philadelphia:
J. B. Lippincott, 1959. 406 p.)
The most nearly complete account of secret service 1?n/the American
Revolution, covering?in an impossible attempt at encyclopedic nar-
rative?both sides' activities on the American continent. The author
had experience in military intelligence.
BULLOCH, John. M. I. 5: The Origin and History of the British
Counter-Espionage Service. London: Arthur Barker, 1963. 206 p.)
A journalistic history of the British security service from its estab-
lishment in 1909 through the early months of World War II. In par-
ticular it describes the work and some of the methods of Captain
(later Major General) Sir Vernon Ken, Director of M.I.5 from 1909
to 1940, using as illustrative material many of the espionage cases,
largely German, with which the service coped during this period.
JAMES, Admiral Sir William. The Code Breakers of Room 40: The
Story of Admiral Sir William Hall, Genius of British Counter-
Intelligence. (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1956. 212 p.) .
Biography of Britain's Director of Naval Intelligence during World
War I, by the officer in charge of communications intelligence. Cen-
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ruolic iexis .
ters on the decipherment of German messages, including the notori-
ous Zimmermann telegram.
[Published in Great Britain under the title The Eyes of the Navy
(London: Methuen & Co., Ltd., 1955) .)
[For other reading on this subject, see Chapter IX, "Secret Intel-
ligence-1917-1919," in The Sky Was Always Blue, by Admiral Sir Wil-
liam James (London: Methuen & Co., Ltd., 1951); The Man of Room 40,
by A. W. Ewing (London: Hutchinson & Co., 1940) ; 400. B., by Hugh Cle-
land Hoy (London: Hutchinson & Co., 1932) ; and The Zimmermann
Telegram, by Barbara W. Tuchmun (New York: Vildng, 1958).)
ROWAN, Richard Wilmer. The Story of Secret Service. (Garden City,
N.Y.: Doubleday, Doran, 1937. 732 p.)
The best comprehensive history of espionage and its practitioners
from biblical times to the end of World War I. Often sketchy and
sometimes over-dramatized, the treatment is generally sound and at
its best illuminated by perceptive reflections on the ways of human
kind. ?
[Published in Great Britain under the same title (London: John Miles,
Ltd., 1938).1
STERN, Philip Van Doren. Secret Missions of the Civil War. (New
York: Rand McNally, 1959. 320 p.)
Integrated and annotated anthology Of the best accounts of clan-
destine operations undertaken by both North and South during the
American Civil War.
YARDLEY, Herbert Osborn. The American Black Chamber. (Indi-
anapolis: Hobbs-Merrill, 1931. 375 p.)
Querulous history of the first modern U.S. organization for com-
munications intelligence, by its founder and director during World
War I and through the twenties.
[Published in the following foreign editions: Secret Service in America
(London: Faber & Faber, Ltd., 1940); Le Cabinet Noir Americain
(Paris: Editions de la Nouvelle Revue Critique, 1935) ; Amerikas Svarta
Kammare (Stockholm: Tidens Forlag, 1938).]
THE WESTERN ALLIES IN WORLD WAR H
ALSO?, Stewart and Thomas Braden. Sub Rosa: The O.S.S. and
American Espionage. (New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1946.
237 p.)
Fragmentary but authentic examples of OSS clandestine intelligence
and paramilitary operations in Europe, Africa, and Asia. The authors
were OSS parachutists.
[Published in Swedish translation as O.S.S. (Stockholm: Ljiis, 1947).]
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BABINGTON-SMITH, Constance. Air Spy: The Story of Photo Intel-
ligence in World War II. (New York: Harper, 1957. 266 p.)
Description by a leading RAF photo interpreter of the development
of photo intelligence techniques, first by British and then by Allied
personnel, and their use in the European theater. Shows the role of
? aerial photography in planning the D-Day landings, In targeting and
bomb damage assessment, in industrial analysis, and in learning the
secrets of German countermeasures, radar, and the new "V" weapons.
[Published in Great Britain under the title Evidence in Camera (Lon-
don: Chatto and Windus, 1958).)
HYDE, H. Montgomery. Room 3603: The Story of the British Intel-
ligence Center in New York during World War II. (New York:
Farrar, Straus and Co., 1963. 257 p.)
An anecdotal account of British secret intelligence operations in the
western hemisphere during World War II, by a member of the staff of
Sir William Stephenson, then Director of British Security Coordination
in the United States. Describes this organization's relationships with
the FBI, the support it gave to General Donovan in establishing the
OSS, and many BSC operations in intelligence collection, counter-
espionage and covert action.
[Published in Great Britain under the title The Quiet Canadian (Lon-
don: Hamish Hamilton, 1962).]
IND, Colonel Allison. Allied Intelligence Bureau: Our Secret Weapon
in the War against Japan. (New York: David McKay, 1958.
305 p.)
Kaleidoscopic scenes from the operations of the clandestine AIR
amalgamated from American, British, Australian, and Dutch personnel
under General MacArthur's command in the Southwest Pacific. The
author, AIB Deputy Controller, emphasizes the activities of the Aus-
tralian Coast Watchers concealed on Japanese-held Islands but also
devotes sections to guerrilla and agent activity in the Philippines and
to sabotage operations.
[For further reading see Eric A. FeIdt, The Coastwatchers (New York
and Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1946; New York: Ballantine
Books, 1959).]
PEERS, William It. and Dean BreIts. Behind the Burma Road. (Bos-
ton: Little, Brown & Co., 1963. 246 p.)
History of the operations of OSS Detachment 101 behind the Japanese
lines In Burma, by its commanding officer. Although the most spec-
tacular of these were paramilitary, they were intertwined with the
collection of important tactical Intelligence for the regular military
forces.
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IJI.J11t. ICAla
STEAD, Philip John. Second Bureau. (London: Evans ?Bros., 1959.
212 p.)
Wartime history of the regular French military intelligence service,
comprising the Deuxieme Bureau and its supporting organizations flit'
clandestine collection and counterespionage. Based on French-lan-
guage accounts and on conversations with many officers of the service,
it shows the difficulty experienced in maintaining operations after
1940 in double clandestinity, secret from both the Germans and the
Vichy Government.
WOHLSTETTER, Roberta. Pearl Harbor: Warning and Decision.
(Stanford Calif.: Stanford University Press, 1962. 426 p.)
A painstaking study of the sequence of events in the months before
Pearl Harbor with respect to the acquisition and handling of intel-
ligence, especially communications intelligence, bearing on the attack
and its effect at the command level. It constitutes an exhaustive case
history of this classic warning situation, giving particular attention
to the uses and users of indications intelligence and tracing the in-
fluence of command organization, bureaucracy, security compartmenta-
tion, and incomplete communication on the effectiveness of warning.
[For further detailed reading see the Congressional Report of the Joint
Committee on the Investigation of the Pearl Harbor Attack. (Wash-
ington: Government Printing Office, 1946. 580 p.) The full text of
the Congressional hearings is contained in Hearings before the Joint
Committee on the Investigation of the Pearl Harbor Attack, Parts 1-39.
(Washington: Government Printing Office, 1945-46).)
RESISTANCE AGAINST THE NAZIS
BUCKMASTER, Maurice James. Specially Employed: The Story of
British Aid to French Patriots of the Resistance. (London: Batch-
worth Press. 1952. 200 p.)
The work of the French Section of the British Binds] Operations
Executive as described by its chief. Covers the organization of re-
sistance, many aspects of tradecraft, and the operations of a number
of individual agents in France.
[For further reading on this subject see Buckmaster's They Fought
Alone (New York: Norton, 1958; and British editions).)
COLLIER, Richard. Ten Thousand Eyes. (New York: E. P. Dutton,
1958. 320 p.)
Probably the best English-language account of the resistance agent
networks in France which, under the direction of Free French Head-
quarters in London, secured information on the beach and inland
defenses of Hitler's Atlantic Wall.
(Published in these foreign editions: Ten Thousand Eyes (London:
Collins, 1958); La Guerre Secrete du Mur de PAtlantigue (Paris:
Presses de la Cite, 1958) ; Tienduizend Ogen (Hoorn: U.-M. "West
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Friesland," 1958); Zehntausend Augen (Konstanz and Stuttgart: Diana
Verlag, 1960).]
DELZELL, Charles F. Mussolini's Enemies: The Italian Anti-Fascist
Resistance. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1961. 620 p.)
Part I of this scholarly work traces the clandestine political opposi-
tion to Mussolini from 1924 to 1943, Part II the armed partisan re-
sistance from 1943 to the end of the war.
HOWARTH, David Armine. Across To Norway. (New York: William
Sloane, 1952. 286 p.)
The story of Norwegian escapees assembled at a British base in the
Shetland Islands (where the author was deputy commander) to sail
their small boats back and forth as transport for saboteurs, agents, and
refugees. Also describes contacts with the Norwegian resistance and
evasion from capture by the enemy.
[Published in the following foreign editions: The Shetland Bus (Lon-
don: Thomas Nelson and Sons, 1951); Ste Fuhren den Shetland Bus
(Tffibingen: F. Schlichtenmayer Ind.]) .1
LAMPE, David. The Savage Canary: The Story of Resistance in Den-
mark. (London: Cassell, 1957. 236 p.)
High spots and personalities of the Danish resistance, with much
material on resistance tradecraft
[Published also as The Danish Resistance (New York: Ballantine
Books, 1960) and in Danish as Den Utaemmede Kanariefugl (Copen-
hagen: Gyldendal, 1957).]
[For an excellent short panoramic pamphlet on this subject see JOrgen
Haestrup, From Occupied to Ally: Danish Resistance Movement
1940-45 (Copenhagen: Press and Information Department, Royal
Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 1963).]
MONTAGU, Ewen Edward Samuel. The Man Who Never Was. (Phila-
delphia: J. B. Lippincott, 1954. 160 p.)
Account of a classic British deception operation which misled the
Germans about the coming Allied invasion of Sicily. The body of a
Marine officer was floated onto a beach in southern Spain with secret
documents indicating that Greece would be the point of invasion.
Illustrates exemplary intelligence planning with respect to documenta-
tion, both personal and official, and estimate of German reactions.
The author was in charge of this operation.
[Available in the following foreign editions: The Man Who Never Was
(London: Evans Brothers, 1953); De Man Die Niet Bestond (Utrecht:
Uitgeverij Het Spectrum, 1954) ; L'Homme Qui N'Existait Pas (Paris:
JulMardi 1954); Mies iota Ei 011utkaan (Helsinki: Kustannusosakeyh-
tib Otava, 1954).]
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[For further study see: Ian Colvin, The Unknown Courier (London:
William Kimber, 1953); and Sir Alfred Duff Cooper, Operation Heart-
break (New York: Viking Press, 1951), a fictionalized version of the
operation.]
REMY (Gilbert Renault-Roulier). Memoirs of A Secret Agent of Free
France. Vol. I: The Silent Company, June 1940?June 1942. (New
York: McGraw-Hill, 1948. 406 p.)
The first of Remy's six volumes on his experiences. Describes his
escape from France and his joining the Free French Intelligence Serv-
ice in London, his trips back to set up an agent net, and his second
escape with his family.
[Volume II has also been translated, as Courage and Fear (London:
Arthur Barker Ltd., 1950). The other four volumes are: Comment
Meurt Un Reseau and Une Affaire de Trahison (Monte Carlo: Raoul
Solar, 1947); Les Mains Jointes (Monte Carlo: Raoul Solar, 1948) ;
. Mats le Temple Est Rai (Monte Carlo: Raoul Solar, 1950) .1
WOODHOUSE, Christopher Montague. Apple of Discord: A Survey of
Recent Greek Politics in Their International Setting. (London:
Hutchinson, 1951. 320 p.) .
An authoritative account of Greek resistance against the Germans
during World War II and the internal postwar struggle, with emphasis
on the political background. Col. Woodhouse commanded the Allied
Military Mission to the Greek guerrillas.
GERMANY IN WORLD WAR H
COLVIN, Ian Goodhope. Master Spy: The Incredible Story of Admiral
Wilhelm Cattails. (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1951. 286 p.)
Ambivalent attitude and pro-Allied activities of the head of the
German Abwehr, based on published documents and interviews with
many of his former associates. Climax is the Admiral's involvement
in the plot to assassinate Hitler on 20 July 1944, for which he paid
with his life.
[Published in the following foreign editions: Chief of Intelligence
(London: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1951) ; L'Amiral Canaris, Notre Ante
Secret (Paris: Editions de la Paix, 1955); Admiral Canaris, Chef des
Geheimdienstes (Vienna: Wilhelm Frick Verlag, 1955) ; Canaris (Bar-
celona: Editorial AHR, 1956) ; Mysteriet Canaris (Bergen: John Griegs
Forlag, 1952).3
[For further reading see: Karl Heinz Abshagen, Canaris (London:
Hutchinson, 1956); Allen W. Dulles, Germany's Underground (New
York: Macmillan, 1947) ; Paul Leverkuehn, German Military Intel-
ligence (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1954).1
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GISICES, Herman J. London Calling North Pole. (New York: British
Book Centre, 1953. 208 p.)
Story of a remarkable radio deception set Up by the Germans after
their capture of a Dutch officer parachuted into Holland by the British
SOE to work with the resistance: undetected for nearly two years, it
netted 54 agents and quantities of British weapons and explosives
parachuted in to the Dutch. Also contains material on other opera-
tions of the Abwehr's counterintelligence branch. The author was
chief of the counterespionage unit in Holland.
[Published in the following foreign editions: London Calling North
Pole (London: William Kimber, 1953); Abwehr III F (Amsterdam:
Ultgeverij de Bezige Bij, 1949); LondreS Appelle Pole Nord (Paris:
Librarie Plon, 1958); La Burla Maestro de la Guerra (Buenos Aires:
Editorial Americana, i954); Spione Llberspielen Spione (Hamburg:
Hansa Verlag Josef Toth, 1951) I
(For further study of this operation see Pieter Dourlein, Inside North
Pole (London: William Kimber, 1953) ; Joseph Schreider, Das War dos
Englandspiei (Munich: Walter Stutz Verlag, 1950).)
SCRELLENBERG, Walter. The Labyrinth: Memoirs. (New York:
-illarper, 1956. 423 p.)
Political intrigues and intelligence accomplishments in the Third
Reich through the eyes of Himmler's chief of foreign intelligence.
(Published in the following foreign editions: The Schellenberg Memoirs
(London: Andre Deutsch, 1956) ; Le Chef du Contre-Espionnage Nazi
Pane (1933-45) (Paris: Rene Jullllard, 1957); Los Secretos del Servicio
Secreto Alenuin (Barcelona: Matey, 1958); Memoiren (Cologne: Ver-
lag fiir Politik und Wirtschaft, 1959); Den usynuge Front (Copen-
hagen: Skrifola [n.d.]).]
WIGHTON, Charles and Gunter Pets. Hitler's Spies and Saboteurs:
Based on the German Secret Service War Diary of General La-
housen. (New York: Henry Holt, 1958. 285 p.)
General Lahousen headed the Abwehr's sabotage section during part
of the war. This elaboration from his diary gives popularized case
histories of his agents in Great Britain, Ireland (in the British edition
only), and South Africa, and of the German saboteurs landed by sub-
marine on the U.S. coast who were rounded up by the FBI.
[Published in Great Britain under the title They Spied on England
(London: Odhams Press, 1958).)
THE SOVIET SERVICES
AUSTRALIA. Report of the Royal Commission on Espionage. (Syd-
ney: Government Printer for New South wales, 1955. 483 p.)
An excellent study of the Soviet espionage and subversion in Aus-
tralia brought to light by the defection in 1954 of MVD agent Vladimir
Petrov and his wife.
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[See also Official Transcript of Proceedings of the Royal Commission
on Espionage and Vladimir and Evdolcia Petrov, Empire of Fear (New
York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1956; London: Andr?eutsch, 1956).
Empire of Fear is also published in translations: //Empire de la Peur.
(Paris: Morgan, 1957) ; Imperio del Miedo (Mexico City: Ediciones
Zenit, 1957) ; Fryktens Land (Oslo: J. W. Cappelens Forlag, 1956) ; Sant
Vittnesbbrd (Stockholm: Sven-Erik Berghs Forlag, 1956).]
CANADA. Report of the Royal Commission . . . to Investigate . . . the
Communication . . . of Confidential Information to Agents of a
Foreign Power. (Ottawa: Edmond Cloutier, Printer to the King's
Most Excellent Majesty, 1946. 733 p.)
An important detailed review of Soviet espionage, subversion, and
agent recruitment in Canada uncovered through the defection in 1945
of Soviet embassy code clerk Igor Gouzenko.
[Published in the following foreign-language editions: Russiak Spio-
nage i Canada (Copenhagen: Schultz Forlag, 1947) ; Le Rapport de la
Commission Royale (Ottawa: Edmond Cloutier, 1946).]
DALLIN, David J. Soviet Espionage. (New Haven: Yale University ?
Press, 1955. 558 p.)
A scholarly historical study of Soviet intelligence activities in Europe,
Canada, and the United States, based on published materials, some un-
published documents, and interviews with former Soviet agents and
others.
(Published in the following foreign editions: Die Sowjetspionage (Co-
logne: Verlag fiir Politik und Wirtschaft, 1956) ; Espionaje Sovietico
(Buenos Aires: Agora, 1957) ; Al-Jasusiyyah Al-Shuyu'iyyah At-Duwatiy-
yah (Baghdad: Al-Ani Press, 1963).]
DERIABIN, Peter and Frank Gibney. The Secret World. (Garden
City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1959. 334 p.)
With its four appendices, the most detailed and factual compilation
available, for all its character as a defector's expos?on the organiza-
tion and activity of Soviet State Security from 1946 to 1953.
[Published in Great Britain under the same title (London: Arthur
Barker, 1960).]
[For further study, see Deriabin's testimony before the Internal Se-
curity Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary:
Communist Controls on Religious Activity, May 5, 1959; and his testi-
mony before the House Committee on Un-American Activities: The
Kremlin's Espionage and Terror Organizations, March 17, 1959.]
FOOTE, Alexander. Handbook for Spies. (Garden City, N.Y.: Double-
day, 1949. 273 p.)
Classic case history of the operation of a Soviet wartime intelligence
net. The author was a senior member of a group of agents in Switzer-
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land collecting information from Germany and reporting to Moscow
by radio.
[Published in the following foreign editions: Handbook for Spies (Lon-
don: Museum Press, 1949) ; Les Secrets d'un Espion Sovietigue (Brus-
sels: Editions de la Pal; 1951) ; Handbuch fiir Spione (Darmstadt:
C. W. Leske Verlag, 1954) ; Manual Para Espias (Barcelona: Editorial
AHR, 1954).1
KAZNACHEEV, Aleksandr. Inside a Soviet Embassy. Edited, with an
Introduction, by Simon Wolin. (Philadelphia and New York: J. B.
Lippincott, 1962. 250 p.)
Experiences of the author as a junior intelligence officer in the Soviet
embassy in Rangoon before his defection in 1959. Creates an intimate
picture of Soviet intelligence life in relating episodes documenting his
development, training, and disillusionment and gives considerable in-
sight into the Soviet operational- system.
[Published in Germany under the title: Wegweiser flash Westen (Co-
logne: Verlag Wissenschaft und Politik, 1962).)
[For further study see Kainacheev's testimony before the Internal
Security Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary:
Soviet Intelligence in Asia, Hearing, December 14, 1959, and Conditions
in the Soviet Union, Hearing, January 22, 1960.)
MONAT, Pawel (with John Dille). Spy in the U.S. (New York: Har-
per and Row, 1962. 208 p.)
The only available account of Soviet Satellite intelligence operations
In the United States, by a former officer of the Polish military intel-
ligence service. Besides offering insight into Polish operational prac-
tices it shows how Soviet intelligence directs the activities of the Polish
services, not only by levying intelligence requirements but by indirect
controls.
[For further information along these lines see Monat's testithony be-
fore the Internal Security Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on
the Judiciary, Soviet Espionage through Poland, June 13, 1960.)
ORLOV, Alexander. Handbook of Intelligence and Guerrilla Warfare.
(Ann Arbor, Michigan: The University of Michigan Press, 1963.
187 p.)
A thoughtful and generally approving analysis of Soviet intelligence
doctrine, illustrated by case histories drawn from the author's high-
level service in the NKVD in the 1930's.
WOLIN, Simon and Robert M. Slusser, The Soviet Secret Police. (New
York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1957. 408 p.)
Historical development and philosophical bases of the Soviet state
security services from the establishment of the Cheka in 1917 until
1956, presented largely through the accounts of defectors and victims.
The editors have contributed documentation and an excellent summary.
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[Published in Great Britain under the same title (London: Methuen &
Co., 1957).)
EVASION AND ESCAPE
BLAIR, Clay Jr. Beyond Courage. (New York: David McKay, 1955.
247 p.)
Stories of American airmen who, shot down behind enemy lines in
the Korean War, evaded capture and returned.
[Published in the following foreign editions: Beyond Courage (London:
Jarrolds Publishers, Ltd., 1956); Met de Moed der Wanhoop (Utrecht:
Uitgeverij Het Spectrum 1955).1
CRAWLEY, Aldan Merivale. Escape from Germany:, A History of
R.A.F. Escapes During the War. (New York: Simon and Schuster,
1956. 291 p.)
The sanitized version of an official history prepared for the British
Air Ministry. Describes the escape intelligence organizations (one of
which the author headed) in the German POW camps and the pris-
oners' continual efforts, successful and unsuccessful, to escape.
[Published in the following foreign editions: Escape from Germany
(London: Collins, 1958) ; R. A. F. Te Woet (Amsterdam: Uitgeverij
Nieuwe Wieken N. V., n.d.).1
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