In the mid-1980s, Jonathan Jay Pollard, an intelligence analyst working in the U.S. Naval Investigative Service's Anti-Terrorist Alert Center, systematically stole highly sensitive security secrets from almost every major intelligence-gathering agency in the United States. Ronald J. Olive, the NIS assistant special agent who led the whirlwind investigation against Pollard, reveals how one of the most notorious spies in American history was brought to justice.
This book calls attention to the grave damage Montes inflicted on U.S. security--Carmichael even implicates her in the death of a Green Beret fighting Cuban-backed insurgent in El Salvador and the damage she would have continued to inflict ...
... Globalization Contained: The Economic and Strategic Consequences of the Container (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), 3–5. 39. Michael Richardson, “A Time Bomb for Global Trade: Maritime-Related Terrorism in an Age of Weapons ...
The footnotes in Renner's monograph , Small Arms , Big Impact : The Next Challenge of Disarmament ( Washington , D.C .: Worldwatch Institute , 1997 ) are a good source for the origins of various commonly cited statistics and estimates .
For overviews on the complexity of creating DHS, see Michael E. O'Hanlon; Peter R. Orszag; Ivo H. Daalder; I. M. Destler; David L. Gunter; James M. Lindsay; Robert E. Litan; James B. Steinberg, Protecting the American Homeland: One Year ...
When the name of admitted spy Jonathan Pollard is mentioned, fiery debate breaks out between those who believe he should have been shot,and those who contend that he was railroaded...
This book tells the dramatic story of the USS Hornet s recovery of the astronauts after the splashdown of their command module.
Within the intelligence community, Bob Hunter is known as the agent who caught master spy John Walker and brought an end to what many top officials call the most damaging...
The Historical Dictionary of Israeli Intelligence provides detailed information on the various agencies, operations, important leaders and operatives, and special aspects of tradecraft through a chronology, an introduction, a dictionary ...
The book tells the story, never told before, of Kidon--the super-secret operations unit that is like a Mossad within the Mossad.
Crossing the Rubicon examines how such a conspiracy was possible through an interdisciplinary analysis of petroleum, geopolitics, narco-traffic, intelligence and militarism—without which 9/11 cannot be understood.