Go - Gold

 

Goberna Falque, Juan R. Inteligencia, Espionaje y Servicios Secretos en España. [Intelligence, Espionage and Secret Services in Spain] Madrid: Ministerio de Defensa, 2008. [Kahn, I&NS 23.2 (Apr. 2008)]

[OtherCountries/Spain]

Goberna Falque, Juan R. "La 'cultura de la inteligencia' y la Historia contemporánea de España: Problemas actuales y perspectivos de futuro." [The Culture of Intelligence and the Contemporary History of Spain: Current Problems and Future Perspectives] Empiria 11 (Jan.-Jun. 2006): 93-106. [Kahn, I&NS 23.2 (Apr. 2008)]

[OtherCountries/Spain]

Goberna Falque, Juan R. "Los servicios de inteligencia en la historiografia española." [The Intelligence Services in Spanish Historiography] Arbor 180 (Jan. 2005): 25-74. [Kahn, I&NS 23.2 (Apr. 2008)]

[OtherCountries/Spain]

Goddard, Dale, with Lester K. Coleman. Trail of the Octopus: From Beirut to Lockerbie -- Inside the DIA. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 1993. The Trail of the Octopus: The DEA, the CIA, and the Bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 -- The True Story of How the U.S. and British Governments Conspired to Cover Up the Lockerbie Disaster. [U.S.]: Argonaut Press, 1995.

According to WIR 13.2, this is the story of a man (Lester Coleman) who claims he was on a mission for "the world's most secretive and well-funded espionage organization--the Defense Intelligence Agency" which eventually involved the Pan Am explosion over Lockerbie.

Clark comment: Is this fiction? Obviously, the 1993 title was deemed misdirected for maximum impact, so we see an adjustment in 1995 to the agencies then catching some heat.

[CIA/Accusations; MI/DIA/90s]

Goddard, George W., with DeWitt S. Copp. Overview: A Life-Long Adventure in Aerial Photography. Garden City, NJ: Doubleday, 1969.

Pforzheimer notes that Goddard was "the pioneer of long-range high altitude photography and the developer of the strip camera." The book "does not provide a satisfactory discussion of the intelligence application of Goddard's technology."

[Recon/Imagery]

Godfrey, E. Drexel. "Ethics and Intelligence." Foreign Affairs 56, no. 3 (Apr. 1978): 624-642.

Clark comment: This remains an important basis for discussion of its subject.

See response by Arthur L. Jacobs, "Comments & Correspondence," Foreign Affairs 56, no. 4 (Jul. 1978): 867-875.

[Overviews/Ethics]

Godson, Roy - as author

Godson, Roy - as editor and with others

Goehlert, Robert, and Elizabeth R. Hoffmeister, eds. The CIA: A Bibliography. Monticello, IL: Vance Bibliographies, 1980.

Clark comment: There are numerous newspaper and popular magazine articles listed here, but the entries are not annotated. The work is of limited use to the serious researcher.

[RefMats/Bibs/U.S./Gen]

Goetz, John, and Matthew Campbell. "Germany Seeks CIA Spy Dossier." Sunday Times (London), 21 Mar. 1999.

"The Central Intelligence Agency is ready to return files from the former East German Stasi spy agency which include the names of 3,000 agents who spied on West Germany for the communists during the cold war....

"Ernst Uhrlau, the coordinator of German secret services, said ... he had won assurances from George Tenet, the CIA director, that the files will be handed over to Bonn. He said the CIA and the German secret services had agreed to make 'intensive joint use' of the files."

An Associated Press report on 22 March 1999, datelined Mainz, Germany, quotes German television ZDF as stating that the United States has agreed to turn over the Stasi files. The report adds that a "government spokesman confirmed the report, but said the two sides agreed not to discuss details."

[CIA/90s/98/99/Stasi]

Golan, Aviezer. Operation SUSANNAH: As Told by Marcelle Ninio, Victor Levy, Robert Dassa and Philip Nathanson. New York: Harper & Row, 1978.

Goldberg, Jeffrey. "The Unknown: The C.I.A. and the Pentagon Take Another Look at Al Qaeda and Iraq." The New Yorker, 2 Feb. 2003. [http://www.newyorker.com]

This is a lengthy article that seeks to get at some of the problems associated with predictive analysis, with the focus on the events of 11 September 2001 and analytic issues surrounding the question of ties between al Qaeda and Iraq.

[Analysis/Warning; Terrorism/00s/03/Gen]

Goldberg, Peter A. "The Politics of the Allende Overthrow in Chile." Political Science Quarterly 90, no. 1 (Spring 1975): 93-116.

Allende "failed precisely because he had succeeded in changing the conditions on which the stability of Chile's institutionalized system rested.... The conflict between the government and the opposition ... was between alternative ways of defining the dominant stake of Chilean politics.... Competing with the claims and actions of the opposition, the government was at a disadvantage because of the conservative, consumptionist, and status-conscious predispositions of many middle-class Chileans."

[LA/Chile][c]

Goldberg, Robert Alan. "'Who Profited from the Crime?' Intelligence Failure, Conspiracy Theories and the Case of September 11." Intelligence and National Security 19, no. 2 (Summer 2004): 249-261.

The author argues that there is a "symbiotic relationship between intelligence failure and conspiracy thinking." He "outlines the conspiracy theories of left and right" raised in the wake of the intelligence failure of September 11, 2001. U.S. "government authorities validated their opponents' plot-making by defending themselves with their own cries of conspiracy."

[GenPostCW/00s/Gen]

Golden, Tim [New York Times].

Goldenberg, Eliot. The Hunting Horse: The Truth Behind the Jonathan Pollard Spy Case. Amhearst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2000.

According to Schecter, I&NS 17.2, the author "portrays a massive conspiracy against Pollard.... [His] charges of American government complicity remain unproven conjecture designed to portray Pollard as a victim of state persecution and anti-Semitism."

[SpyCases/U.S./Pollard]

Goldenberg, Eliot. The Spy Who Knew Too Much: The Government Plot to Silence Jonathan Pollard. New York: Shapolsky Publishers, 1993.

Goldfarb, Alex, with Marina Litvinenko. Death of A Dissident: The Poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko and the Return of the KGB. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2007.

Peake, Studies 51.4 (2007), comments that "[p]ublication of a book by two participants in the [Litvinenko] case gave hope of learning new details -- it didn’t happen.... [U]nburdened by answers," this book "broods on coincidence and implies the return of the KGB when what is needed is a rigorous scholarly treatment of this unusual case." [Italics in original]

[Russia/Overviews/00s]

Goldman, Jan.

Goldstein

Goldston, Robert. Sinister Touches: The Secret War Against Hitler. New York: Dial, 1982. [Petersen]

[WWII/Eur/Ger]

Goldwater, Barry. "Congress and Intelligence Oversight." Washington Quarterly 6, no. 3 (Summer 1983): 16-21.

Former Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.

[Oversight/To90s]

Goldwater, Barry. "On Covert Action in Chile, 1963-1973." Inter- American Economic Affairs 30 (Summer 1976): 85-95. [Petersen]

[LA/Chile]

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