Intelligence Studies

Studies in Intelligence, 2000 (1) Summer

Unclassified Extracts from 2000 and earlier issues of Studies in Intelligence

Special Events

Conference in Germany

On the Front Lines of the Cold War: The Intelligence War in Berlin

Donald P. Steury

Conference in Texas

US Intelligence and the End of the Cold War

Henry R. Appelbaum and John H. Hedley

Historical Perspectives

Entangled in History

The Vilification and Vindication of Colonel Kuklinski

Benjamin B. Fischer

Tracking Nazi “Gold”

The OSS and Project SAFEHAVEN

Donald P. Steury

Mr. Current Intelligence

An Interview with Richard Lehman

Richard Kovar

An Impressive Record

The American Joint Intelligence Committee and Estimates of the Soviet Union, 1945-1947

Larry A. Valero

Intelligence Today and Tomorrow

Walter L. Pforzheimer Award Winner

Prospects for a European Common Intelligence Policy

Ole R. Villadsen

Are We Our Own Worst Enemy

Safeguarding Information Operations

Stephen W. Magnan

COMMENTARY

Samuel J. Watson

Cover

Image of This Issue’s Cover

The sculpture depicted on the cover, executed by noted Santa Fe artist Veryl Goodnight, is entitled ‚”The Day The Wall Came Down,” and symbolizes personal freedom, especially the moment of joy shared around the world on November 9, 1989, when the Berlin Wall collapsed. Two castings of the 14,000-ton bronze sculpture exist, one at the Allied Museum in Berlin as a gift to the German people; the other at the George Bush Presidential Library, located on the campus of Texas A&M University.