Atha, Robert I. "Bombe! 'I Could Hardly Believe It.'" Cryptologia
9, no. 4 (Oct. 1985): 332-336.
Sexton: "Memoir of one who worked with Bombes at the naval annex on Nebraska Avenue in Washington, D.C. during World War II."
[WWII/Magic]
Atherton, Louise. SOE Operations in Africa and the Middle East:
A Guide to Newly Released Records in the Public Record Office. London:
PRO Publications, 1994.
Aldrich, I&NS 10.4: "This well-organized booklet is essential reading for anyone preparing to do extensive work on this subject."
[UK/Reference; UK/WWII/NAfME & Services/SOE]
Atherton, Louise. SOE Operations in the Far East: An Introductory
Guide to the Newly Released Records of the Special Operations Executive
in the Public Record Office. London: PRO Publications, 1993.
Aldrich, I&NS 10.1: "This publication is, on the whole, commendably thorough and knowledgeable."
[UK/Reference; UK/WWII/FEPac & Services/SOE]
Atherton, Louise. SOE Operations in Scandinavia: A Guide to the
Newly Released Records in the Public Record Office. London: PRO Publications,
1994.
Aldrich, I&NS 10.1: This group of "SOE material will be of interest to historians of the early Cold War as well as those working on the Second World War."
[UK/Reference]
Atherton, Louise. Top Secret: An Interim Guide to Recent Releases
of Intelligence Records at the Public Record Office. London: PRO Publications,
1993.
Aldrich, I&NS 10.1: "This publication overviews recent releases of records on the collection, organization and financing of British intelligence from the early eighteenth century to just before the First World War.... This is ... a very useful preliminary guide to well over 100 promising early intelligence-related files.... Atherton analyses the material thematically ... [which] has strengths and weaknesses."
[UK/Reference]
Athol, Justin. How Stalin Knows: The Story of the Great Atomic Spy Conspiracy. Norwich, UK: Jarrold, 1951. [Petersen]
[SpyCases/U.S./Bomb]
Atkeson, Edward B. "When Turfs Overlap: A Study of Organizations in
Collision." Army 30 (Nov. 1980): 38-43.
Petersen: "U.S. Army intelligence community."
[MI/Army]
Atkey, Ronald G. "Accountability for Security Intelligence Activity in Canada: The New Structure." In National Security: Surveillance and Accountability in a Democratic Society, eds. Peter Hanks and John D. McCamus, 37-42. Cowansville, Quebec: Les Editions Yvon Blais, 1989.
[Canada/Gen]
Atkey, Ronald G. "International Terrorism: The Canadian Response." In Cambridge Lectures, ed. Frank E. McArdle, 177-183. Cowansville, Quebec: Les Editions Yvon Blais, 1991.
[Canada/Gen]
Atkey, Ronald G. "Reconciling Freedom of Expression and National Security." University of Toronto Law Journal 41 (1991): 38-59.
[Canada/Gen]
Atkins, Charles. "Intelligence Transformation: Beyond Paradigm Shifts, Changes in Ethos." Military Intelligence, Oct.-Dec. 2000. [http://www.fas.org/irp/agency/army/mipb/index.html]
[MI/Army/00s]
Atkins, Don [LTC/USA], and George Crawford [MAJ/USAF]. "Reprogramming
Brilliant Weapons: A New Role for MASINT." American Intelligence
Journal 17, no. 3/4 (1997): 45-47.
"Brilliant" weapons are a technological step beyond precision-guided weapons, and will be more autonomous from direct human intervention. The authors argue that it will be up to MASINT collectors to provide "the signature data these brilliant weapons will use to detect and positively identify targets."
[MI/Deception & ElectronicWarfare][c]
Atkinson, James. The Edge of War. Chicago: Regnery, 1960.
Wilcox: "Accounts of various forms of psychological warfare, disinformation, destabilization."
[CA/PsyOps]
Atkinson, James. The Politics of Struggle: The Communist Front and Political Warfare. Chicago: Regnery, 1966. [Petersen]
[Russia/Deception]
Atkinson, Rick. "German Spy Chief Quits in Dispute over Scandal: Case
Involved Sale of Russian Secrets to U.S." Washington Post, 1
Mar. 1996, A20.
Concerns the resignation of Konrad Porzner.
[Germany]
Atkinson, Rick. "Special, Not Super." Washington Post,
4 Oct. 2001, A31.
The U.S. Special Forces "are among the best trained, best equipped and best conditioned soldiers of any army in any era.... [But] there are limits to what can be expected of these elite forces." In an unconventional campaign, such as they will be called upon to conduct in Afghanistan, "the ability of the U.S. military to think in unorthodox terms will be as important as valor, tenacity and firepower."
[MI/SpecOps; Terrorism/01/WTC]
Atlas World Press Review. Editors. "The CIA and the Press."
25 (Mar. 1978): 22-25. [Petersen]
[CIA/Media]
Attwood, William. "Former Ambassador Says: A Few Kind Words
for the CIA." Look, 18 Apr. 1967, 70-71.
Attwood was U.S. Ambassador to Guinea and Kenya in the 1960s.
[CIA/60s]
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