Carf - Caro

 

Carius, Alexander, et al. "NATO/CCMS [Committee on the Challenges of Modern Society] Pilot Study: Environment and Security in an International Context -- State of the Art and Perspectives, [Excerpts from] Interim Report, October 1996." Environmental Change and Security Report 3 (Spring 1997): 55-65.

[GenPostwar/NatSec/Environment][c]

Carl, Leo D.

Carlisle, Rodney. The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Spies and Espionage.  Indianapolis, IN:  Alpha Books, 2003. 

Peake, Studies 47.3, calls this book "an encyclopedia of errata.... While the identification of organizations and events is useful, the details are suspect."

[RefMats/Encyclopedias/Gen]

Carlisle, Rodney, ed. The Encyclopedia of Intelligence and Counterintelligence. 2 vols.   Armonk, NY:  M.E. Sharpe, 2005. 

According to Tomchyshyn, Booklist (quoted at Amazon.com), this "encyclopedia presents more than 420 entries on people, places, and organizations" arranged alphabetically.... Articles are signed by their contributors and include see also references and a bibliography of resources." Also included are an alphabetical list of articles; a "Timeline of Intelligence" from 1294 B.C. to the present; a "Resource Guide" listing books, articles, and Internet sites; and an appendix with extracts from The 9/11 Commission Report.

Peake, Studies 49.3 (2005), finds that compared with the author's Complete Idiot’s Guide (2003), this "is a much improved, more scholarly effort, whose entries have greater scope and depth.... While the principal focus is on ... American intelligence, the encyclopedia covers other countries and their services as well." In terms of errors, there is an "unrivaled collection of misstatements in Carlisle’s entry for Cambridge spy Donald Maclean." Nevertheless, this "is a good place to start when readers, students, or analysts look for historical background. Nevertheless, as a matter of prudence, check other sources where particular facts are important to the case at hand."

[RefMats/Encyclopedias/Gen]

Carlock, Paul G., Steven C. Decker, and Robert E. Fenton. "Agency-Level Systems Engineering for 'Systems of Systems.'" Defense Intelligence Journal 9, no. 2 (Summer 2000): 63-74.

This article offers one approach to achieving a unified SIGINT system, based on a top-level strategic plan.

[NSA/SIGINT]

Carlson, J.R. "Undercover Guide to the War." Saturday Review of Literature 28 (25 Aug. 1945): 13. [Petersen]

[WWII/Reference]

Carlson, Peter. "International Man of Mystery: The Ex-CIA Agent and Current Convict Has Many Stories To Tell. Some May Even Be True." Washington Post, 22 Jun. 2004, A1. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]

Interview with Edwin Wilson at Allenwood Federal Prison Camp. Wilson "looks surprisingly good for a 76-year-old man who has spent the past 22 years in prison, much of it in solitary confinement.... Wilson is scheduled to be released from prison Sept. 14."

[GenPostwar/80s/Wilson]

Carlton, David, and Carlo Schaef, eds. International Terrorism and World Security. New York: Wiley, 1975.

[Terrorism]

Carlton, Eric. Treason: Meanings and Motives. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate, 1998.

[SpyCases/U.S./Treason]

Carlucci, Frank C. "Former Defense Secretary Comments on Significant Events in USSR." Periscope 15, no. 2 (1990): 1-4.

Petersen: "Former DDCI covers intelligence matters in an address of June 4, 1990."

[GenPostwar/90s]

Carlucci, Frank C. "Testimony before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence on S. 1721." Periscope 13, no. 1 (1987-1988): 6-9.

Petersen: "DDCI 1978-1981."

[GenPostwar/80s]

Carmel, Hesi, ed. Intelligence for Peace: The Role of Intelligence in Times of Peace. Portland, OR: Frank Cass, 1999.

Kruh, Cryptologia 24.2, calls this an "important collection of articles by distinguished experts in intelligence and security." It "provides insights to the role of intelligence in times of conciliation and political process and offers an insider's view of how intelligence and secret diplomacy serve in times of peace."

[Overviews/Gen]

Carment, David, and Martin Rudner, eds. Peacekeeping Intelligence: New Players, Extended Boundaries. London: Routledge, 2006.

From publisher: "This is a new evaluation of the role, dynamics and challenges of intelligence in peacekeeping activities.... It assesses the role of coalition forces, law enforcement agencies, development institutions, and non-governmental organisations who have become partners in peace support activities."

To Peake, Studies 51.1 (Mar. 2007), while they may define the problems well, none of the 14 contributions to this work offer practical solutions to solving the complex nature of the relationship between UN peacekeeping operations and their use of intelligence.

[GenPostCW/Peacekeeping]

Carmichael, Scott W. True Believer: Inside the Investigation and Capture of Ana Montes, Cuba's Master Spy. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2007.

From publisher: The author "served as the lead case agent for the DIA on the Ana Montes espionage investigation." Montes is "the only member of the intelligence community ever convicted of espionage on behalf of the Cuban government."

Peake, Studies 51.2 (2007), comments that "many of the details one would like to know -- just when and how she was recruited, precisely what was it that made DIA security and the FBI think she was an agent -- have been omitted, probably for security reasons.... There is more to be said about the Montes case, but True Believer is a worthwhile start."

To Chesser, American Spectator, 3 Jul. 2007, this work "shows that catching spies within our own intelligence structure is a painstaking process." The author, "as much as he is able..., walks readers through each step of evidence gathering and case development, while illustrating the challenges in convincing his higher-ups that Montes was a problem."

Harter, Intelligencer 15.3 (Summer/Fall 2007), finds "three glaring deficiencies" in this work: "the author fails to fully portray the role of the FBI in the investigation; define the damage done by Montes' espionage; and provide a meaningful explanation of her recruitment by the Cuban Intelligence Service." (footnotes omitted) Although the book "is a good overview," it "remains an incomplete treatment."

For Prout, DIJ 16.2 (2007), "aside from a glimpse at the bureaucratic organization of DIA, this book provides very little 'inside information'" on the Montes case. The author's "commentary on the modus operandi of well trained professional espionage agents could have come from spy novels and Grade B movies."

Goldman, IJI&C 21.2 Summer 2008), expresses strong disappointment with this work, declaring it to be "a bad book for many reasons." The author manages to tell as more about himself than he does about Montes. The author has replaced the presentation of facts with "what if scenarios" for which "he provides no evidence or information."

[SpyCases/U.S./Montes]

Carmichael, Virginia. Framing History: The Rosenberg Story and the Cold War. Vol. 6, American Culture Series. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 1992.

Accompanying blurb by George Lipsitz, series editor: "[P]rovides one of the most fully realized explanations for Cold War anti-communism that I have encountered."

[SpyCases/U.S.]

Carnes, Calland F. "Inside Soviet Naval Intelligence." Naval Intelligence Professionals Quarterly 6, no. 2 (Apr. 1990): 7-11.

[Russia/Overviews/MI]

Carney, Donald J., and Thomas C. Indelicarto. "Indications and Warning and the New World Environment: The Drug War Example." Defense Intelligence Journal 3, no. 1 (Spring 1994): 89-105.

Drug trafficking is not a traditional threat nor one that "fits into the traditional forms of warning -- strategic or tactical." The authors posit other such "ambiguous warning environments" in the future.

[Analysis/Surprise][c]

Carney, James. "If You Don't Have Time to Read It ...: The 9/11 Report Is a Riveting -- and Dispiriting -- Read." Time, 25 Jul. 2004. [http://www.time.com]

"The 9/11 Commission Report ... has produced one of the most riveting, disturbing and revealing accounts of crime, espionage and the inner workings of government ever written.... The narrative of what happened [on 11 September 2001] and in the months and years leading up to it will enthrall readers.... The chapters on how the government tracked and dealt with the threat from al-Qaeda before 9/11 fascinate and dispirit."

[GenPostCW/00s/04/CommissionReport]

Carnier, Carmer, and Javier Marcos. Espias de Felipe II: Los servicios secretos del Imperio español. [Spies of Philip II: The Secret Services of the Spanish Empire] Madrid: La Esfera de los libros, 2005.

According to Kahn, I&NS 23.2 (Apr. 2008), "[t]his sumptuous book, with its numerous color plates, lays out the intelligence activities" of Philip II. The authors call the late 1500s "the golden age of espionage."

[OtherCountries/Spain]

Caroz, Yaakov. The Arab Secret Services. London: Transworld, 1978.

Wilcox: "Covers the intelligence services of the major Arab powers."

[OtherCountries/Arab]

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