Fors - Foz

 

Förster, Günter. Die Juristische Hochschule des Ministerium für Staatsicherheit. Berlin: State Ombudsman for the Documents of the Former East German State Security Service, 1996.

This report calls the MfS School of Law "an academic secret service institution in the form of a 'technical-administrative' university with a very pronounced ideological orientation." Quoted in Adams, IJI&C 13.1/24.

[Germany/East]

Forsythe, David P. "Democracy, War, and Covert Action." Journal of Peace Research 29, no. 4 (Nov. 1992): 385-395.

[CA/Gen]

Fort, Randell. Economic Espionage: Problems and Prospects. Working Group on Intelligence Reform. Washington, DC: Consortium for the Study of Intelligence, 1993.

According to Surveillant 3.2/3, Fort presents a "comprehensive case" against the intelligence community providing commercial intelligence to U.S. companies.

[GenPostwar/EconIntel/Govt][c]

Fortune. Editors. "U.S. Arsenal of Words." Mar. 1943, 83-85, 169-170, 172, 174, 176. [Winkler]

[WWII/PsyWar]

Foster, Donald L. "The Man Who Was." Army 33, no. 8 (1983): 55-56.

Petersen: "Operation Mincemeat, the British deception operation before the invasion of Sicily."

[WWII/Eur/Deception]

Foster, G. Allen. The Eyes and Ears of the Civil War. New York: Criterion, 1963. [Petersen]

[CivWar/Overviews]

Foster, Gregory D. "Redefining National Security: A Post-Cold War Imperative." National Security Law Report 15, no. 1 (Jan. 1993): 1-2.

"Security is not ... just defense ... [or] the special preserve of international relations. It is, rather, the cardinal measure of the seamlessness of domestic and foreign affairs.... [I]nvesting in national cohesion may provide a greater and more lasting payoff than investing in military capabilities." (pp. 1-2) See Francis J. McNamara, "Counterpoint," NSLR 15.3.

[GenPostwar/NatSec][c]

Foster, Gregory D., and Louise B. Wise. "Sustainable Security: Transnational Environmental Threats and Foreign Policy." Harvard International Review 21, no. 4 (Fall 1999): 20-23.

[GenPostwar/NatSec/Environment]

Foster, Jane. An Unamerican Lady. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1980.

Constantinides notes that Foster, who worked in Morale Operations with OSS during World War II, was indicted with her husband in 1957 as Soviet agents. In discussing her OSS experiences, Foster "relates much about personal, social, and administrative matters but precious little about her operations." With regard to the charges brought against her, she denies being a Soviet agent but admits that she lied about her Communist Party membership and marital status.

The indictment against Foster came on the basis of information from FBI double agent Boris Morros. See Morros, My Ten Years as a Counterspy (1959).

[OSS/Individuals; SpyCases/U.S.; Women/WWII/U.S.]

Foster, J.L., and J. Siljeholm. "The Environmental Security Problem: Does the U.S. Have a Policy?" Breakthroughs 7, no. 1 (Spring 1998): 37-46.

[GenPostwar/NatSec/Environment]

Foster, William J., and Marianne Kramer. "NGA and Air Force Develop Advanced GEOINT." Pathfinder: The Geospatial Intelligence Magazine 5, no. 2 (Mar.-Apr. 2007): 7-10. [http://www.nga.mil]

"In July 2005, the Director of National Intelligence named NGA the Functional Manager for advanced geospatial intelligence (AGI). Formerly known as imagery-derived measurement and signature intelligence (MASINT), AGI utilizes spaced-based remotely sensed multi-spectral data and advanced processing and analysis techniques. NGA had already assumed responsibility for AGI from the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) in 2002.

"The functional management changeover to NGA comes against a backdrop of successes in the development of AGI achieved over the years by the National Air and Space Intelligence Center (NASIC). Located at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, near Dayton, Ohio, NASIC is the Air Force’s single integrated intelligence production center and the primary producer in the Department of Defense (DoD) of foreign air and space intelligence."

[MI/NGA/00s]

Fourcade, Marie-Madeleine. Noah's Ark: A Memoir of Struggle and Resistance. London: Allen & Unwin, 1973. New York: Dutton, 1974.

Constantinides: "Noah's Ark is the memoir of the leader and principal agent of one of the great espionage networks of World War II.... [I]t was the only network to cover all of France and the only one of its kind headed by a woman.... This is the saga, poetic and moving in its presentation, of the network's life."

[Women/WWII/Other; WWII/Eur/Resistance]

Fournie, Daniel A. "Harsh Lessons: Roman Intelligence in the Hannibalic War." International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 17, no. 3 (Fall 2004): 502-538.

In the Second Punic War, Rome's "multiple strategic intelligence failures [in] the initial phase ... would seem to have been a powerful prod" to an improved performance. However, "there is no indication that the intelligence structure, or system, was modified. The Senate simply improved the application of its traditional system -- reliance on allies, field commanders, and envoys."

[Historical/Ancient]

Fowler, Charles A., and Robert F. Nesbit. "Tactical Deception in Air-Land Warfare." Journal of Electronic Defense 18 (Jun. 1995):37-40ff. [Seymour]

[MI/Deception]

Fowler, Will. The Secret World of the Spy: Stories of Espionage, Deception, and Discovery. Philadelphia, PA: Running Press, 1994.

Surveillant 4.2 identifies this as a large-format, photographic album. The book "contains numerous misspellings, particularly of names."

[Overviews/Gen]

Fowler, Wilton B. British-American Relations, 1917-1918: The Role of Sir William Wiseman. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1969.

Sir William Wiseman was the head of British intelligence in Washington in World War I

[WWI/U.S.; WWI/UK]

Fowler, Wyche, Jr. "Legislative Controls." First Principles 9, no. 4 (1984): 1, 4-7.

Petersen: "Legislative critic" of covert action.

[Oversight]

  Fox, Frank. God's Eye: Aerial Photography and the Katyn Forest Massacre. West Chester, PA: West Chester University Press, 1999.

Fischer, IJI&C 15.3 and Studies 46.3 (2002), notes that this work "is part history and part biography. The historical part tells the story of Katyn and other killing fields, where more than 20,000 Polish" citizens were slaughtered during World War II. The biographical part focuses on the efforts of Waclaw Godziemba-Maliszewski, "a self-taught photo-interpreter of professional caliber," to "identify execution and burial sites, establish Soviet culpability, and pressure Warsaw and Moscow to complete a full official investigation."

[Russia/WWII]

  Fox, John F., Jr. "Early Days of the Intelligence Community: Bureaucratic Wrangling over Counterintelligence, 1917–18." Studies in Intelligence 49, no. 1 (2005), 9-17.

"As the United States prepared to send troops to fight in France in 1917,... foreign agents had been acting largely with impunity on domestic soil for three years.  Treasury Secretary William Gibbs McAdoo made what might appear to be a reasonable proposal: centralize all intelligence responsibility, especially counterintelligence, in a Bureau of Intelligence to be run by the Department of State or the Treasury Department.... [H]is proposal exacerbated a bureaucratic battle underway between the Treasury Department and the Department of Justice over how counterintelligence ... should be handled on the homefront. When the dust settled following the armistice of 1918, Justice's Bureau of Investigation -- the predecessor to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) -- came out on top as the agency in charge of domestic counterintelligence, a responsibility that has not been changed since that time."

[FBI/Interwar; WWI/U.S.]

  Foy, Michael T. Michael Collins's Intelligence War: The Struggle between the British and the IRA 1919-1921. Stroud, UK: Sutton, 2006.

From publisher: "Michael Foy's new book looks in depth at Collins's key role in the Anglo-Irish War of 1919-20, and explores the role and personality of this fascinating man."

According to John Burns, Sunday Times (London), 2 Apr. 2006, the author suggests that Molly Childers, the American wife of Erskine Childers, "spied on Sinn Fein for the British government.... He bases the controversial claim in part on an analysis of the agent’s reports, which included American-sounding turns of phrase."

[OtherCountries/IrelandToWWII]

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