Cam

 

Cambone, Stephen. A New Structure for National Security Policy Planning. Washington, DC, 1998.

Stan A. Taylor and David Goldman, "Intelligence Reform: Will More Agencies, Money, and Personnel Help?" Intelligence and National Security 19, no. 3 (Autumn 2004): 432 fn. 12, note that "Cambone makes a case that too many national security agencies" were then "operating without sufficient central direction and proposes a reduction and restructuring." Yet, as Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence, "he now heads a new such entity."

[GenPostwar/NatSec/90s]

Campbell, Anthony. "Canada-United States Intelligence Relations and 'Information Sovereignty.'" In Canada Among Nations 2003: Coping with the American Colossus, eds. David Carment, Fen Osler Hampson, and Norman Hillmer, 156-179. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003.

[Canada/PostCW; Liaison]

Campbell, Dan. "FBI Celebrates Centennial with Web Site." Government Computer News, 7 Apr. 2008. [http://www.gcn.com]

The FBI "has updated its Web site with pages devoted to its first 100 years of existence. The Web site covers the 'Bureau of Investigation's' history since its inception..., and includes a section that details each of the bureau's directors through the years.... The site also includes a 'Hall of Honor' dedicated to the FBI agents that have been killed in the line of duty, as well as a detailed history of the bureau's seal."

[FBI/00s]

Campbell, Duncan. "Careful, They Might Hear You." The Age (Melbourne), 23 May 1999. [http://www.theage.com.au]

Campbell reports on remarks made to Channel 9's "Sunday" program (see Ross Coulthart, reporter, "['Sunday' program:] Big Brother Is Listening.") by Martin Brady, Director of the Australian Defence Signals Directorate, relative to cooperation with United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, and New Zealand in Sigint collection. There is also additional discussion of the role and activities of Sigint sites in Australia.

[Australia/99]

Campbell, Duncan. "Hiding from the Spies in the Sky." The Guardian, 4 Jun. 1998. [http://www.guardian.co.uk]

Over five years ago, retired CIA analyst Allen Thomson "wrote a detailed study showing how the US strategy of depending on a few, expensive satellites for reconnaissance was flawed.... Thomson warned that 'the presumption that reconnaissance satellites can operate covertly is obsolete'.... 'Tracking US reconnaissance satellites can provide valuable support to a hostile country's concealment and deception programmes,' says Thomson, echoing his words of five years ago." The Indian nuclear tests have "spectacularly vindicated" his warning.

[CIA/90s/98/IndianNukes; Recon]

Campbell, Duncan, and Linda Melvern. "America's Big Ear on Europe." New Statesman, 18 Jul. 1980, 10-14.

Petersen: "Critical of U.S. policy."

[NSA]

Campbell, Helen J. Confederate Courier. New York: St. Martin's 1964.

Petersen: "Booth conspiracy and trial of John Surratt."

[CivWar]

Campbell, James B. Introduction to Remote Sensing. New York: Guilford, 1987.

[GenPostwar/Issues/Psychic]

[Campbell, John.] "Speech by John Campbell, Lt Gen USAF (Ret,), Associate DCI for Military Support, CIRA Meeting -- October 2, 2003." CIRA Newsletter 28, no. 4 (Winter 2003): 3-10.

This is a more interesting speech than most of its kind, and includes the Q&As after the speech. General Campbell said, among other things, that "[a] lot of lessons were learned in Afghanistan on how we [the CIA and DoD] can work together, the kinds of teams we can put together, the relationships in the field. We took all those to the bank in Iraq. We did a lot of preplanning in Iraq to try to figure out the right kinds of relationships."

[CIA/00s/03/Gen]

Campbell, John P.

1. Dieppe Revisited: A Documentary Investigation. Cass Studies in Intelligence Series. London: Frank Cass, 1994.

The ill-fated Dieppe raid was codenamed Operation Jubilee.

Greenhous, I&NS 9.4, says that Campbell "conclusively puts to rest the old canard[] that the Germans were ready for the raid as a result of information supplied by an agent.... [He] unpicks nearly all the legends of Dieppe and lays bare the underlying fabric."

2. "The 'Ultra' Revelations: The Dieppe Raid in a New Light as an Example of Now Inevitable Revisions in Second World War Historiography." Canadian Defence Quarterly 6 (Summer 1976): 36-42.

According to Sexton, the author contends that RAF claims of victory over the Luftwaffe during the Dieppe raid "should be reevaluated in light of ULTRA intercepts."

[UK/WWII/Gen]

Campbell, John P. "Operation Starkey 1943: 'A Piece of Harmless Playacting'? Intelligence and National Security 2, no. 3 (Jul. 1987): 92-113.

This article concerns a subsidiary operation, Starkey, of the larger Operation Cockade, designed to "conceal the actual state of Allied weakness in England" in 1943. Starkey was to simulate preparations for an Allied landing in strength on beaches between Boulogne and Le Touquet in early to mid-Sepember 1943.

[WWII/Eur/Deception]

Campbell, John P. "Roger Hesketh and the de Guingand Letter." Intelligence and National Security 15, no. 4 (Winter 2000): 131-142.

A letter dated 25 January 1944 from Maj. Gen. "Freddie" de Guingand, Chief of Staff, 21 Army Group, to Maj. Gen. C.A. West, of the Operations and Plans Division, SHAEF, "had a decisive and creative influence on the planning process" for Fortitude. But it was Roger Hesketh who "made 'Fortitude South' workable and then saved it."

[WWII/Eur/D-Day]

Campbell, John P. "Some Pieces of the Ostro Puzzle." Intelligence and National Security 11, no. 2 (Apr. 1996): 245-263.

Paul Fidrmuc (Ostro) was an Abwehr agent in Lisbon from the summer of 1940 until March 1945. The question is whether he really had the subagents in Britain and the Middle East that he claimed and whose information the Germans so highly prized, or whether he made it all up.

[WWII/Eur/Ger & Other][c]

Campbell, Kenneth.

Campbell, Kurt M., and Michèle A. Flournoy, prin. authors. To Prevail: An American Strategy for the Campaign Against Terrorism. Washington, DC: Center for Strategic and International Studies, 2001.

Bergen, FA 81.2, says that this work "presents a series of policy recommendations that, although they may make the book less engaging, should be of considerable interest to policymakers."

[Terrorism/00s/Gen]

Campbell, Matthew. "French War Chest May Have Gone on 'Dancing Girls.'" Sunday Times (London), 12 Nov. 2006. [http://www.timesonline.co.uk]

On 11 November 2006, French intelligence chiefs were facing "embarrassment after it emerged that £18m from a secret emergency war chest had gone missing and that some of it may have been spent on what one spymaster called 'dancing girls'.... The money was part of a fund established secretly" after the World War II. "It was maintained during the cold war to finance a French state in exile if the country were ever invaded by the Soviets." According to Le Parisien, "the money was controlled by a handful of agents. No records were kept and details of bank accounts around the world were passed to successors only by word of mouth."

[France/00s]

Campbell, Matthew. "Reborn CIA Dusts off Cloak and Dagger." Sunday Times (London), 14 Mar. 1999. [http://www.the-times.co.uk]

"After years of bemoaning their absence of purpose in a post-Soviet world, the CIA's agents have found a friend in [DCI George] Tenet.... Because of his appreciation of traditional methods of spying, he has developed a warm relationship with them.... In a move that has raised eyebrows among some critics..., Tenet has been quietly resurrecting the so-called Directorate of Operations, the clandestine branch responsible for espionage and covert operations around the world."

[CIA/90s/99/Gen; CIA/C&C/DO; CIA/DCIs/Tenet]

Campbell, Rodney. The Luciano Project: The Secret Wartime Collaboration of the Mafia and the U.S. Navy. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1977.

According to Pforzheimer, this book is "based on the official 1954 report of the New York State Commissioner of Investigation, William Herlands,... [which] was kept secret until 1976 when it was used as the basis of this accurate book."

Bates, NIPQ 9.3, notes that "Campbell does not like the Office of Naval Intelligence. He accuses ONI of a vicious campaign of denial and disinformation about the Luciano Project, as it was called. Nonetheless, the story is a good one, and convincing."

Constantinides says "Campbell does a fine piece of work in tracing events connected with this cooperative arrangement." Nonetheless, the author does not answer the question of what intelligence on Italy was actually produced from the partnership.

[WWII/U.S./Services/Navy]

Campen, Alan D.

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