Grf - Gro

 

Gribben, August. "Chinese Spies Take Advantage of Open U.S. Society." Washington Times, 31 May 1999.

"[T]he People's Republic of China has perfected the technique of using against the United States its most envied and cherished virtues -- its liberty and openness.... [B]y 'being very, very patient in taking bits and pieces to make the larger whole,' Chinese intelligence has scored impressively....

"Consider that each year, U.S. government agencies, universities and businesses routinely invite Chinese bureaucrats, business representatives, scientists, educators and students to attend conferences, trade shows, workshops, expositions and the like.... Chinese participation in such events seems harmless. To the PRC, they seem like targets of opportunity....

"The Cox report and defense analysts make clear that the Chinese have relentlessly exploited every opening to tease from the United States the information China wants or needs."

[CIA/90s/99/China/Fallout]

Gribbin, Peter. "Brazil and CIA." CounterSpy, Apr.-May 1979, 4-23.

Clark comment: After you wade through the anti-imperialist rhetoric that substitutes for documentation in this article, you are left with unsubstantiated and overblown assertions blaming the CIA and U.S. AID for most of the ills in Brazil in the early1960s. The article includes lists of Brazilians who supposedly attended "CIA-connected police programs in the U.S." and "who participated in CIA-directed labor training courses." It also has a list of "CIA Officers in Brazil as of August, 1978" and another rather strange list of "CIA Collaborators in Brazil as of August, 1978," that is, "U.S. government employees [who] have collaborated or worked with the CIA in a functional capacity."

[LA/Brazil]

Gribkov, Anatoli I., and William Y. Smith. Operation ANADYR: U.S. and Soviet Generals Recount the Cuban Missile Crisis. Chicago: Edition Q, Inc., 1994.

According to Friedman, NSLR, Oct. 1994, this book "compares the views of two senior military officers who were adversaries in the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.... Joint Chiefs were unaware that Kennedy had determined that the United States could live with Castro.... Neither Kennedy nor Khrushchev clearly articulated their objectives in the time period immediately preceding the crisis."

Hansen, Studies 46.1/50/fn.4, calls this "a vital source, given Gen. Gribkov's role in planning and implementing the operation."

[GenPostwar/60s/MissileCrisis]

Grier, Peter. “Ex-Wife’s View of Life with an Accused CIA Spy.” Christian Science Monitor, 27 Jan. 1997.

The Nicholson case "is one of the strangest and most troubling incidents of alleged espionage that US intelligence has faced since the end of the cold war. The reason: Nicholson was a hard-working man on the rise. He was one of the last people co-workers would have picked out as a possible turncoat…. A look at Nicholson's life -- including a lengthy, exclusive interview with his longtime spouse -- reveals a man that some might judge tightly wrapped. He pursued work instead of vacations, advancement instead of family relations, and after his divorce struggled with the demands of being an expatriate single father.”

[SpyCases/U.S./Nicholson]

Grier, Peter.  "Information Warfare."  Air Force Magazine, Mar. 1995, 34-37.

[GenPostwar/InfoWar]

Grier, Peter. "A Quarter Century of AWACS." Air Force Magazine, Mar. 2002, 42-47.

This is compact look backward and forward on the use of AWACS.

[MI/AF/00s; Recon/Planes]

Gries, David.

Griffin, Jim [LTCDR/USN]. "Naval Intelligence Needs a High-Low Mix." U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings 132, no. 1 (jan. 2006): 66-70.

This article was the 2005 Naval Intelligence Essay Contest 1st Prize winner. The author argues that "[t]he first priority of Naval Intelligence must be the ability to answer any question a commander may ask about a potential adversary. To successfully do that, the community must organize and evaluate itself based on its knowledge of the threat.... A mix of intelligence capabilities to meet the diverging threats of the post-9/11 world is needed." This mix would include both conventional (high-end) capabilities and unconventional (low-end) capabilities.

[MI/Navy/00s]

Griffin, Rodman D.

1. "CIA: Where Is the Spy Agency Heading Now That the Cold War Is Over?" American Caucus 1, no. 20 (21 Dec. 1992): 8-9.

2. "The Winds of Change Gust Through the CIA." American Caucus 1, no. 20 (21 Dec. 1992): 10.

[Reform/CIA][c]

Griffiths, David R. "Report Reviews Iran Rescue Mission Flaws."  Aviation Week & Space Technology, 1 Sep. 1980, 44-46.

On Holloway Report.

[GenPostwar/80s/Iran]

Griffiths, Franklyn. "CSIS and Gorbachev: Canada's Internal Security and Intelligence Requirements in a Time of Transition." In Security and Intelligence in a Changing World: New Perspectives for the 1990s, eds. Stuart Farson, David Stafford, and Wesley Wark, 140-164. London: Frank Cass, 1991.

[Canada]

Griffiths, Franklyn. "Environment in the U.S. Security Debate: The Case of the Missing Arctic Waters." Environmental Change and Security Report 3 (Spring 1997): 15-28.

[GenPostwar/NatSec/Environment][c]

Grimmer, Reinhard, Werner Irmler, Willi Opitz, and Wolfgang Schwanitz, eds. Die Sicherheit. Zur Abwehrarbeit des MfS. Berlin: Edition Ost im Verlag Neues Berlin, 2002.

According to Wegmann, JIH 2.2, this work is the product of a group of 20 officers who occupied high positions in East Germany's Ministry of State Security (MfS). It "concentrates on subjects of internal national security and intelligence." Die Sicherheit "deserves the unbiased attention of all who take a serious and unprejudiced interest in East Germany’s system and ministry of state security and intelligence."

[Germany/East]

Grimsted, Patricia Kennedy.

1. "Archives of Russia Seven Years After: 'Purveyors of Sensation or Shadows of the Past?'" Cold War International History Project, Working Paper No. 20, Part I. Washington, DC: CWIHP, 1998.

2. "Russian Archives in Transition: Caught Between Political Crossfire and Economic Crisis." The American Archivist 56, no. 4 (Fall 1993): 618-619.

[Russia/Refmats]

Griswold, Lawrence. "The Congress and Intelligence." Sea Power 19, no. 6 (Jun. 1976): 31-34.

[Oversight/To90s]

Griswold, Terry, and D. M. Giangreco. Delta: America's Elite Counterterrorist Force. Osceola, WI: Motorbooks, 1992. Expanded ed. Osceola, WI: Zenith, 2005.

[MI/SpecOps]

Grob-Fitzgibbon, Benjamin. "Neglected Intelligence: How the British Government Failed to Quell the Ulster Volunteer Force, 1912-1914." Journal of Intelligence History 6, no. 1 (Summer 2006). [http://www.intelligence-history.org/jih/journal.html]

[UK/Historical]

Grob-Fitzgibbon, Benjamin. Turning Points of the Irish Revolution: The British Government, Intelligence, and the Cost of Indifference, 1912-1921. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007.

[OtherCountries/Ireland/ToWWII]

Groh, Lynn. The Culper Spy Ring. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1969. [Petersen]

[RevWar]

Grono, Nicholas. "Australia's Response to Terrorism: Strengthening the Global Intelligence Network." Studies in Intelligence 48, no. 1 (2004): 27-38.

"Canberra's process of adjusting its intelligence to meet the challenges of global terrorism,... started more than two years before the September 11 attacks..., in preparation of the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games. After September 11, the Australian government further strengthened its intelligence capabilities through legislative and funding adjustments."

[Australia]

Grose, Peter.

Grossman, Larry. "Intelligence in a World of Change." Government Executive, March 1992, 11-15, 35.

[Reform]

Großmann, Werner. Bonn im Blick: Die DDR-Aufklärung aus der Sicht ihres letzten chefs. Berlin: Das Neue Berlin, 2001.

According to Maddrell, I&NS 18.4, Großmann succeeded Markus Wolf as head of the East German foreign intelligence service (HVA) in 1986. He is "tight-lipped when discussing the HVA's spies and only discusses those whose espionage is already known." Nonetheless, the book "contains much of interest both for historians of intelligence and security and for historians of the DDR."

[Germany/East]

Groth, Alexander J. "On the Intelligence Aspects of Personal Diplomacy." Orbis 7 (Winter 1964): 833-848. [Petersen]

[GenPostwar/Issues/Policy]

Groth, Alexander J., and John D. Froeliger. "Unheeded Warnings: Some Intelligence Lessons of the 1930s and 1940s." Comparative Strategy 10, no. 4 (Oct.-Dec. 1991): 331-346.

[Analysis/Surprise]

Grow, George. "CIA on the Environment." Voice of America, 15 May 1998. [http://www. fas.org/irp/news/1998/05/980515-cia.htm]

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