Eddington, Patrick G. Gassed in the Gulf: The Inside Story of the Pentagon-CIA Cover-Up
of the Gulf War Syndrome. Washington, DC: Insignia Publishing Company,
1997.
According to McGehee, CIABASE Update Report, Aug. 1997, Eddington is a former CIA analyst who with his wife "tried to get the CIA to confront the edifice of lies regarding chemical agent exposures and their possible link to the Gulf War Syndrome.... Unearthing hundreds of classified documents they argue that tens of thousands of American troops had been exposed to chemical weapons."
[CIA/90s/97/Iraq]
Eddington,
Patrick G. "Get Ready For More Targeting Disasters." Los Angeles
Times, 5 Jul. 1999, 15.
"Since October 1996, when the CIA was told by Congress to turn its imagery components over to the Department of Defense's National Imagery and Mapping Agency, there has been loss of key personnel and a lack of coordination between the intelligence and operational communities. This has left the United States and its allies vulnerable to making catastrophic errors like bombing the Chinese embassy. Congress must rethink how things are done or tragic mistakes will continue to happen."
[GenPostCW/90s/ChiEmb; MI/NIMA]
Edds, Kimberly, and Dan Eggen. "Alleged Chinese Spy Is Denied Bail." Washington Post, 16 Apr. 2003, A8. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]
[SpyCases/U.S./Smith-Leung]
Edgar, Harold,
and Benno C. Schmidt, Jr. "The Espionage Statutes and Publication of
Defense Information." Columbia Law Review 73 (May 1973): 929-1087.
[Petersen]
[Overviews/Legal/Gen]
Edmonds, S. Emma
E. The Female Spy of the Union Army: The Thrilling Adventures, Experiences,
and Escapes of a Woman, as Nurse, Spy, and Scout, in Hospitals, Camps, and
Battle-Fields. Boston: De Wolfe, Fiske & Co., 1864.
Petersen gives as: Nurse and Spy in the Union Army: The Adventures and Experiences of a Woman in Hospitals, Camps, and Battle-Fields. Hartford, CT: W.S. Williams, 1865.
[CivWar/Un/Women]
Edmundson, Leslie
S. "Espionage in Transnational Law." Vanderbilt Journal of
Transnational Law 5 (Spring 1972): 434-458. [Petersen]
[Overviews/Legal/Intl]
Edwards, Duval
A. Spy Catchers of the U.S. Army in the War with Japan (The Unfinished Story of the Counterintelligence Corps). Gig Harbor, WA: Red Apple Publishing, 1994.
MI 21.2 notes that Spy Catchers "is one of the very few books ever written about the Counterintelligence Corps (CIC). It starts just before WWII and runs through the early Cold War years.... [O]nly one other book covers such a wide range of activities -- America's Secret Army by Botting and Sayer."
According to Surveillant 4.1, "Edwards ... tells how CIC operated in the Pacific Rim and how its agents overcame problems with the enemy and its own U.S. Army.... He also discusses the role of CIC in the U.S., especially its activities with the large Japanese population in Hawaii."
Periscope 21.3 comments that "Edwards ... has written an informative, valuable and provocative book on a subject that has been neglected too long.... This is more than just a history of CIC operations.... It is an organizational history ... of the founding and demise of the Army CIC."
[WWII/Services/Army/CIC]
Edwards, George C., III, and W. E. Walker, eds. National Security and the U. S. Constitution: The Impact of the Political System. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988.
[Overviews/Legal/Gen]
Edwards, John Ll. J. "The Canadian Security Intelligence Act 1984: A Canadian Appraisal," Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 5, no. 1 (Spring, 1985): 143-150.
[Canada/Gen]
Edwards,
John Q. "The 'Y1' Story: Opintel in the Post-WWII Navy." Naval
Intelligence Professionals Quarterly 6, no. 3 (1990): 1-3.
[MI/Navy/To90s]
Edwards, Robert,
and Kenneth Dunne. A Study of a Master Spy, Allen Dulles. London:
Housemans, 1961.
Rocca and Dziak: "This attack on Allen Dulles may be an example of KGB-directed disinformation."
[CIA/Biogs & DCIs/Dulles]
Eells,
Richard, and Peter Nehemkis. A Blueprint for Executive Decision Making. New York: Macmillan, 1984.
For Cubbage, I&NS 1.2, this book "delivers little in the way of useful information. First, it does not provide a convincing argument in support of the purported need to set up a separate intelligence bureau within a modern corporation. Second, it is of even less value as a guide for how to organize such a unit."
[GenPostwar/Issues/Econ/Corp]
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