Bar - Barj

Barakat, Matthew. "Former Pentagon Analyst Gets Almost 5 years in Prison for Passing Taiwan Secrets to Chinese." Associated Press, 11 Jul. 2008. [http://www.ap.org]

On 11 July 2008, Gregg W. Bergersen was sentenced in U.S. District Court to 57 months "in prison for giving secret information about U.S.-Taiwan military relations" to a New Orleans furniture salesman who was also a Chinese spy.

[SpyCases/U.S./China08]

Barbash, Fred. "Short Suggests Britain Eavesdropped on Annan." Washington Post, 26 Feb. 2004. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]

Clare Short, the disaffected former secretary for international development, suggested on 26 February 2004 that "intelligence agencies eavesdropped on U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan in the run-up to the war in Iraq."

See also, Michael Evans, "Don't Be Surprised by Short Claims." Times (London), 26 Feb. 2004; and Telegraph (London), "Short Adds to Government's Woes," 26 Feb. 2004.

[UK/PostCW/04]

Barber, Ben. "Albright Shifts Duties After Computer Loss." Washington Times, 25 Apr. 2000. [http://www.washtimes.com]

On 24 April 2000, Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright "reassigned two officials and stripped her main intelligence advisers of their security duties.... She said that after consulting with the head of the CIA she was shifting the task of protecting national secrets at the State Department to the Diplomatic Security Division.... She appointed the assistant secretary of diplomatic security, David Carpenter, as her senior adviser on security issues."

[OtherAgencies/State]

Barber, Ben.

1. "CIA Media Translations May Be Cut: Users Rush to Save Valuable Resource." Washington Times, 30 Dec. 1996, 1.

"Concern is rising in academia and on Capitol Hill over an expected end to the translations of daily world media broadcasts over the CIA-run Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS), which has served as America's window on the world for 50 years."

2. "Scientific Set Celebrates Survival of CIA Service." Washington Times, 7 Feb. 1997.

"A group of scientists, including 40 Nobel laureates, [on 6 February 1997] applauded a CIA decision to preserve the U.S. government's monitoring and translation service covering 3,000 foreign newspapers and broadcasts around the world."

[CIA/C&C/FBIS][c]

Barber, Ben. "CIA Rejoins Mideast Peace Bid." Washington Times, 6 Jun. 2001. [http://www.washtimes.com]

On 5 June 2001, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher announced that DCI George J. Tenet will leave for the Middle East on 6 June 2001 "to meet with Israeli and Palestinian security officials.... Tenet's new mission is to report on the security situation and to encourage the two sides to cooperate on ending violence."

[CIA/00s/01/Gen; CIA/DCIs/Tenet]

Barber, Ben. "Iran Increases Funds for Terrorist Activities." Washington Times, 18 Aug. 1999.

"Iran has stepped up funding for Islamic terrorists in Lebanon, Syria and Israel to sabotage the revived Middle East peace process and distract Iranians from problems at home, Israeli and U.S. officials say. A weekend report said $5 million was sent to Hamas bank accounts in Syria last month."

[OtherCountries/Iran]

Barber, Charles H. "Some Problems of Air Intelligence." Military Review 26 (Aug. 1946): 76-78. [Petersen]

[MI/AF]

Barber, Josh. "An Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) Vision for the Canadian Forces." Canadian Military Journal 2, no. 4 (Winter 2002): 41-46.

[Canada/PostCW]

Barber, Laurie, and Cliff Lord. Swift and Sure: A History of the Royal New Zealand Corps of Signals and Army Signaling in New Zealand. Auckland, NZ: New Zealand Signals, 1996.

[OtherCountries/NZ]

Barber, Tony. "Russians Expelled in NATO Spy Storm." Financial Times, 30 Apr. 2009. [http://www.ft.com]

On 29 April 2009, NATO "ordered the expulsion of two Russian diplomats ... in retaliation for a spy scandal in which a senior Estonian official was jailed for passing top-level secrets about the western alliance to Moscow." According to alliance sources, the two expelled diplomats "were attached to Russia's mission to NATO and are said to have worked undercover as intelligence agents.... The Estonian official, Herman Simm, was convicted of treason in February by an Estonian court and jailed for 12 years for passing NATO and other defence and diplomatic secrets to Russia."

[Russia/00s/09]

Barber, Willard F., and C. Neale Ronning. Internal Security and Military Power: Counterinsurgency and Civic Action in Latin America. Columbus, OH: Ohio State University, 1966.

[LA/Gen; MI/SpecOps]

Barbier, Mary Kathryn. D-Day Deception: Operation Fortitude and the Normandy Invasion. Westport, CT: Praeger Security International, 2007.

According to Kahn, Intelligencer 17.1 (Winter-Spring 2009), the author concludes that the Allied deception operation was "not as vital as often claimed."

[WWII/Eur/D-Day]

Barbosa, Roberto. "The CIA and the Press: Foreign Reaction to Disclosures of Media Manipulation." Atlas World Press Review 25 (Mar. 1978): 22-25. [Petersen]

[CIA/Relations/Media]

Barch, Dorothey C., ed. Minutes of the Committee and First Commission for Detecting Conspiracies. New York: New York Historical Society, 1924.

American counterintelligence efforts in New York were conducted under the auspices of the "New York State Committee and Commission for Detecting and Defeating Conspiracies," headed by John Jay until mid-February 1777. Rose, Intelligencer 11.2/12.

[RevWar/Overviews]

Barger, Deborah G. "It Is Time to Transform, Not Reform, U.S. Intelligence." SAIS Review 24, no. 1 (Winter-Spring 2004): 23-31. [Marlatt]

[Reform/00s/04]

Barghoorn, Frederick C.

1. The Soviet Cultural Offensive. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1960.

2. Soviet Foreign Propaganda. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1964.

3. Soviet Image of the United States: A Study in Distortion. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1950.

[Russia/Dis&Dec]

Bar-Joseph, Uri.  

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