Du - Dul

 

Dubicki, Tadeusz, Daria Nalecz, and Tessa Stirling, eds. Intelligence Co-Operation Between Poland and Great Britain During World War II: The Report of the Anglo-Polish Historical Committee. Edgware, UK: Mitchell Vallentine, 2005.

See Marek Jan Chodakiewicz, "England's Poles in the Game," Intelligencer 15, no. 2 (Fall/Winter 2006-2007):98-100, for a review of some of accomplishments of Polish intelligence during World War II.

[OtherCountries/Poland/WWII; UK/WWII/Overviews]

Dubois, Dorine. "The Attacks of 11 September: EU-US Cooperation against Terrorism in the Field of Justice and Home Affairs." European Foreign Affairs Review 7, no. 3 (2002): 317-335.

[Liaison; OtherCountries/EU]

Dubro, James, and Robin Rowland. Undercover: Cases of the RCMP's Most Secret Operative. Markham, Ontario: Octopus Publishing, 1991.

Hannant, I&NS 9.1: The authors are journalists. "Frank Zaneth was the first officer recruited by the RCMP to be a secret undercover operative." From the end of World War I into the 1940s, Zaneth worked first against the political left/labor, and after being compromised in that work moved into criminal undercover work. The book "bogs down occasionally in unimportant detail." Nevertheless, it is a "fascinating inside look at the RCMP during the first two decades of its security intelligence operation, revealing the extent to which criminal and political policing overlapped and the extent to which partisan political decisions guided the force and its actions."

[Canada]

DuCann, Charles Garfield Lott. Famous Treason Trials. New York: Walker, 1964.

Duckworth, Barbara A. "The Defense HUMINT Service: Preparing for the 21st Century." Defense Intelligence Journal 6, no. 1 (Spring 1997): 7-13.

The author is Vice Director of Operations, Defense Intelligence Agency. The Defense HUMINT Service (DHS) was activated in October 1995, with a mission of conducting HUMINT operations worldwide.

[MI/Humint][c]

Duff, William E. A Time for Spies: Theodore Stephanovich Mally and the Era of the Great Illegals. Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press, 1999.

According to Powers, NYRB (11 May 2000) and Intelligence Wars (2004), 99-100, Mally was "a Hungarian captured by the tsarist armies during World War I and freed by the Bolsheviks, who recruited him to the Communist cause and a career in the running of spies.... He performed his most important job during the two years (1935-1937) he spent handling the Cambridge Five in London.... Much of Mally's life is still unknown, but the character of the man emerges clearly in Duff's wonderful book."

Goedeken, Library Journal, 15 Oct. 1999, finds that the author is "at times overly detailed in his presentation"; nevertheless, "Duff provides the reader with a sophisticated analysis of ... Mally and his work as an undercover agent for Stalin."

Barron, IJI&C 14.3, notes that although this "well-documented treatise" focuses on Mally, it "is really an exposition of overall operations of Soviet Illegals during the 1930s."

[Russia/SovietSpies/Gen & Name]

Duffy, Brian, and Bruce B. Auster. "In from the Cold: The CIA's New Role." U.S. News & World Report, 2 Nov. 1998, 39.

Monitoring the agreement between the Israelis and the Palestinians "is dicey, but the CIA may be uniquely positioned to pull it off."

[CIA/90s/98/Mideast]

Duffy, Brian, and Sharon LaFraniere. "The Tamraz Connection." Washington Post National Weekly Edition, 24 Mar. 1997, 12.

CIA investigators want to know who at the Democratic National Committee contacted the Agency on behalf of Roger Tamraz, who in the Agency forwarded an intelligence report on Tamraz to the National Security Council staff, and why derogatory information was omitted from that report.

[CIA/90s/DNC][c]

Duffy, Brian, and David Makovsky. "The Spy Who Is Still Stuck in the Cold." U.S. News & World Report, 18 Jan. 1999, 22.

At a time when the U.S. President is reviewing Jonathan Pollard's continued incarceration, Clinton's "top national-security advisers are all still dead set against" a release.

[SpyCases/U.S./Pollard]

Duffy, Gloria. "Crisis Mangling and the Cuban Brigade." International Security 8, no. 1 (1983): 67-87. [Petersen]

[LA/Cuba]

Duffy, Gloria. "Crisis Prevention in Cuba." In Managing U.S.-Soviet Rivalry, ed. Alexander George. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1983.

Petersen: Soviet aircraft and troops in Cuba, 1978-1979.

[LA/Cuba]

Duffy, Michael. "British Intelligence and the Breakout of the French Atlantic Fleet from Brest in 1799." Intelligence and National Security 22, no. 5 (Oct. 2007): 601-618.

"The French had masked their intentions with some skill and the British agents had never been able to penetrate the secret. On the contrary British ministers had been led away on the false trail that the French had laid before them."

[France/Historical; UK/Historical]

Duffy, Michael.

Dufour, Paul. "'Eggheads' and Espionage: The Gouzenko Affair in Canada." Journal of Canadian Studies 16, no. 3&4 (Fall-Winter, 1981): 188-198.

[Canada/Gouzenko]

Dugan, James, and Carroll Stewart. "Ploesti: German Defenses and Allied Intelligence." Airpower Historian 9 (Jan. 1962): 1-20. [Petersen]

[WWII/Eur/Ger]

Duggan, John. Herr Hempel at the German Legation in Dublin 1937-1945. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003.

From publisher: Dr Edward Hempel was German Minister in Dublin from 1937 to 1945. This book "throws new light on Third Reich diplomacy which lacked unity and was subject to inputs from a proliferation of competing ... agencies." It gives a "picture of the relationship between the Dublin Legation and Berlin and its effects on diplomatic intercourse between Germany and Ireland and consequently between Ireland and Britain."

[OtherCountries/Ireland/WWII; WWII/Eur/Germany]

Duggan, Patrice, and Gale Eisenstodt. "The New Face of Japanese Espionage." Forbes, 12 Nov. 1990, 96.

"Japan's extraordinary corporate intelligence networks date to the days immediately following World War II." In their period of copycat technology (1960s-1970s), the Japanese focused on U.S. patents and other technology. Today, "much Japanese intelligence work has come to look more like market research."

[Japan/Postwar][c]

Dujmovic, Nicholas. "Extraordinary Fidelity: Two CIA Prisoners in China, 1952–73." Studies in Intelligence 50, no. 4 (2006): 21-36. [https://www.cia.gov/csi/studies/vol50no4/html_files/prisnors.html]

"Shot down over Communist China on their first operational mission in 1952, these young men [John T. Downey and Richard G. Fecteau] spent the next two decades imprisoned, often in solitary confinement, while their government officially denied they were CIA officers. Fecteau was released in 1971, Downey in 1973. They came home to an America vastly different from the place they had left, but both adjusted surprisingly well and continue to live full lives."

Ben Macintyre, "The Lost 20 Years of CIA Spies Caught in China Trap," Times (London), 21 Apr. 2007 [http://www.timesonline.co.uk], picks up on the Downey and Fecteau story from Dujmovic's Studies article (although he calls it "the CIA’s Journal of the American Intelligence Professional").

[CIA/50s/Gen; CIA/Components/DO]

Duke, Florimond, with Charles M. Swaart. Name, Rank and Serial Number. New York: Meredith Press, 1969.

Constantinides: This is the story of the ill-fated Mission Sparrow in which Duke and two other OSS officers parachuted into Hungary in March 1944 to attempt to arrange a Hungarian surrender.

[WWII/OSS]

Duke, Simon. "Intelligence, Security and Information Flows in CFSP." Intelligence and National Security 21, no. 4 (Aug. 2006): 604-630.

From abstract: "This article traces the growth of the intelligence support role that a number of relatively small bodies have assumed within the European Union's Common Foreign and Security Policy [CFSP].... The article concludes that a new type of intelligence capability is gradually emerging at the European level."

[OtherCountries/EU]

Dukes, Paul [Sir]. The Story of "ST 25": Adventure and Romance in the Secret Intelligence Service in Red Russia. London: Cassell, 1938.

According to Constantinides, "Dukes was the British SIS representative in the Soviet Union in 1918-1919," and this book "is the exciting and hair-raising story of Dukes's life of hide and seek in the USSR."

See also, Augustus Agar, Baltic Episode: A Classic of Secret Service in Russian Waters (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1963). Agar commanded the British naval unit charged with running couriers in and out of the Soviet Union during the same timeframe.

[UK/Interwar/To29]

Dulles, Allen.

Return to D Table of Contents

Return to Alphabetical Table of Contents