Gubbins, Colin [Maj.-Gen. Sir] "SOE and the Coordination of Regular and Irregular War." In The Fourth Dimension of Warfare, vol. 1: Intelligence, Subversion, Resistance, ed. Michael Elliott-Bateman, 83-103. Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 1970.
[UK/WWII/Services/SOE]
Gudgin,
Peter. Military Intelligence: The British Story. London: Arms and Armour Press, 1989. [US]: Sterling, 1991.
Strong, IJI&C 6.1, notes that this book has only 156 pages, and military is defined as "army" only. Thus, it is "not the definitive study suggested by its title, and it includes two inappropriate and apparently gratuitous chapters. But those looking for historical information about the British intelligence apparatus might find this a convenient starting point."
To Surveillant 1.1, Gudgin has focused on the "growth of the British military intelligence industry, charting its changing organization, its perceived functions, its sources and its future tasks."
[UK/Overviews/MI]
Guelke,
Adrian. The Age of Terrorism and the International Political System. London: Tauris, 1995.
Hoffman, I&NS 11.2, sees this work as "worth reading for the fresh perspective it brings.... [It] challenges many long-held assumptions and forces the reader to consider the concept of terrorism in a new and more critical light." Nevertheless, the book suffers from "sometimes ponderous analysis and needlessly abstruse discussion."
[Terrorism]
Guelker, Francis.
"A Cryptographer's War Memories." Cryptologia 8, no. 3
(Jul. 1984): 203-207.
Petersen: "An Army cryptographer from Normandy to Germany."
[WWII/Services/Army]
Guélton, Frédéric. Pourquoi le renseignement? De l'espionnage à l'information globale. [Why Intelligence? From Espionage to Global Information] Paris: Larousse, 2004.
Kahn, I&NS 23.2 (Apr. 2008), notes that this work's "brevity [152 pages] precludes in-depth coverage of any topic," but "it ranges widely and its illustration ... brighten its pages."
[Overviews/Gen/00s]
Guélton, Frédéric, and Abdel Bicer, eds. Naissance et évolution du renseignement dans l'espace européen (1870-1940): Entre démocratie et totalitarisme, quatorze études de cas. [Birth and Evolution of Intelligence in the European Area (1870-1940): Between Democracy and Totaliarianism: 14 Case Studies] [Vincennes:] Service historique de la défense, 2006.
Kahn, I&NS 23.2 (Apr. 2008), finds that these "very wide-ranging studies rest in large part on fresh archival research."
[Overviews/Gen/00s]
Guenther, John. "Marine Corps Intelligence: Another Step Forward." Naval Intelligence Professionals Quarterly 20, no. 1 (Feb. 2004): 13-15.
"With the ... assumption of duties by Brigadier General Mike Ennis as Director of Operations, Defense Intelligence Agency and head of the Defense Humint Service, the Marine Corps continues its progressive emergence as a full contributing member of the national and defense communities."
[MI/Marines/00s]
Guenther, John. "Marine Corps Intelligence in the 1980s: The Road to War." Naval Intelligence Professionals Quarterly 20, no. 2 (Jun. 2004): 5-6.
The author presents the 1980s as a time of turmoil for Marine Corps intelligence. He states: "As the 1980s came to an end, Marine Corps intelligence was in a severe state of flux."
[MI/Marines/To89]
Guenther, John. "Marine Corps Intelligence: Transformed by War." Naval Intelligence Professionals Quarterly 20, no. 3 (Sep. 2004): 6-7, 34..
Significant deficiencies in Marine Corps intelligence were identified in the first Gulf War. "By mid-1991, the Marine Corps had initiated several internal reviews and studies to address the identified intelligence deficiencies and to examine the totality of Marine Corps intelligence capabilities." The new AC/S, C4I, Maj. Gen. Paul Van Riper, became "the driving force behind the successful revamping, reorganization, and reinvigoration of Marine Corps intelligence."
[MI/Marines/90s]
Guenther, John. "The Marine Corps, ONI, and Humint." Naval Intelligence Professionals Quarterly 19, no. 4 (Dec. 2003): 12-14.
"This article highlights [the] ONI roots [of Marine Corps CI/Humint intelligence] in the first three decades of the 20th century and, more specifically, in [the service's] TF-157 experience in the mid-60s."
[MI/Marines/00s]
Guill,
Manuela. "Federal Aviation Administration Office of Civil Aviation
Security Intelligence." American Intelligence Journal 13, no.
3 (Summer 1992): 29-31.
[OtherAgencies/FAA][c]
Guillain de Benouville,
Pierre. The Unknown Warriors: A Personal Account of the French Resistance.
New York: Simon & Schuster, 1949.
Petersen: "French resistance ties with OSS; introduction by Allen Dulles."
[WWII/Eur/Fr]
Guilmartin, John F., Jr. [LTCOL/USAF (Ret.)]
1. "The Mayaguez Incident, 1215 May 1975: A 30-Year Retrospective." Air & Space Power Journal 19, no. 1 (Spring 2005). [http://www.airpower.maxwell.af.mil]
"[V]irtually everything that could go wrong did."
2. A Very Short War: The Mayaguez and the Battle of Koh Tang. College Station, TX: Texas A&M Press, 1995.
Cohen, FA 75.2, says that Guilmartin makes the Mayaguez incident "into a case study on the impact of communications on warfare. The result is a brilliant and exceptionally clear tactical study that offers a point of departure for broader reflections on the nature of contingency and uncertainty in all military operations."
Holland, Proceedings, Sep. 1996, calls the book "[s]uccint, clear, [and] easy to read." The author "brings technical knowledge and operational experience rarely found in historians.... Guilmartin finds fault and lays blame as precisely as he can in the levels of command above the on-scene participants. But this book is not about making of policy; rather it is about the execution of policy." The book is "inspirational reading."
[GenPostwar/70s/Mayaguez]
Guisnel, Jean. Cyberwars: Espionage on the Internet. New
York: Plenum, 1998.
[GenPostwar/Issues/Infowar]
Guisnel, Jean. Tr., DN. "French Cryptology: The Takeover by Force of Jospin." Le Point, 21 May 1999. [http://jya.com/jospin-coup.htm]
On 19 January 1999, French Prime Minister Lionel Jospin "completely liberalized the use of cryptology in France, trampling on principles heretofore reserved for security specialists.... [T]he Americans ... [had] hoped that our country would preserve its restrictive position on cryptology."
[France/99]
Gumina,
Paul. "Title VI of the Intelligence Authorization Act, Fiscal Year
1991: Effective Covert Action Reform or 'Business as Usual?'" Hastings
Constitutional Law Quarterly (Fall 1992): 149-205.
According to Lowenthal, this article examines the new reporting requirements for covert actions included in the referent act. The author argues that these requirements are "firmly rooted in the Constitution and in past Congressional acts regarding oversight."
[GenPostwar/Budgets; Overviews/Legal; Oversight]
Return to G Table of Contents
Return to Alphabetical Table of
Contents