Deu

 

Deudney, Daniel.

1. "The Case Against Linking Environmental Degradation and National Security." Millennium 19 (1990): 461-476.

2. "Environment and Security: Muddled Thinking." Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Apr. 1991, 23-28.

3. and Richard Matthew, eds. Contested Grounds: Security and Conflict in the New Environmental Politics. New York: SUNY Press, 1995.

[GenPostwar/NatSec/Environment]

Deutch, John.

Deutsch, Harold C.

1. "Clients of Ultra: American Captains." Parameters 15 (Summer 1985): 55-62.

The author discusses the attitudes of major U.S. commanders toward the Ultra intelligence. Patton may have made the best use of the material.

2. "Commanding Generals and the Uses of Intelligence." Intelligence and National Security 3, no. 3 (Jul. 1988): 194-260.

Deutsch surveys the use made of intelligence during World War II by nine commanders, eight Allied and one German. This is one of those articles that should be on the "must read" list of anyone interested in the use of intelligence.

Deutsch, Harold C.

1. "The Historical Impact of Revealing the Ultra Secret." Parameters 7, no. 3 (1977): 16-32.

2. "The Influence of Ultra on World War II." Parameters 8, no. 3 (Dec. 1978): 2-15.

These two articles should be read together, as they deal with two aspects of the same problem: assessing the impact of Ultra (and intelligence generally) on World War II. Deutsch makes clear his belief that the intelligence factor must be an important factor in discussing the history of the war. He wrote at that time that the then-new Ultra revelations would be more likely to impact the "why" questions of the war than the "what" questions. Twenty years later that still looks like a good analysis.

Deutsch, Harold C. "Sidelights on the Redl Case: Russian Intelligence on the Eve of the Great War." Intelligence and National Security 4, no. 4 (Oct. 1989): 827-828.

This presents a few stray "facts" concerning the Russian spy in Austria-Hungary in 1913. The information comes from the author's interviews with "leading First World War figures in 1938."

[Russia/Historical]

Deutsch, James I. "'I Was a Hollywood Agent': Cinematic Representations of the Office of Strategic Services in 1946." Intelligence and National Security 13, no. 2 (Summer 1998): 85-99.

"In 1946,... three Hollywood feature films were released that dramatized the agency's operations during World War II: O.S.S. (Paramount Pictures[)], 13 Rue Madeleine (Twentieth Century-Fox), and Cloak and Daggers (Warner Bros. Pictures). Although officials in the War Department w[e]re often disturbed by many of technical details that these three films revealed about the military, the intelligence establishment generally benefited from the the largely positive publicity and box-office success that these films received."

[GenPostwar/40s]

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