Hen - Heq

 

Henderson, Bernard R. Pollard: The Spy's Story. New York: Alpha Books, 1989.

Henderson is Pollard's father-in-law.

[SpyCases/U.S./Pollard]

Henderson, John W. The United States Information Agency. New York: Praeger, 1969.

[CA/PsyOps/White]

Henderson, Nathan . "The Patriot Act's Impact on the Government's Ability to Conduct Electronic Surveillance of Ongoing Domestic Communications." Duke Law Journal 52 (2002): 179 ff.

"[W]hile most of the modifications" to the previous balance between privacy interests and national security concerns "will not pose a significant threat [to privacy interests], two of them may. Namely, potentially allowing FISA to be used to circumvent Title III intercept order requirements may unnecessarily put nonterrorists at risk of being investigated and prosecuted as terrorists. Similarly, allowing roving surveillance to be conducted pursuant to FISA may result in the interception of numerous innocent conversations, many of which will probably involve innocent American citizens."

[Overviews/Legal/Topics]

Henderson, Paul. Unlikely Spy: An Autobiography. London: Bloomsbury, 1993.

Henderson, Robert D'A.

Hendricks, Evan. Former Secrets: Government Records Made Public Through the Freedom of Information Act. Washington, DC: Campaign for Political Rights, 1982. [Petersen]

[RefMats]

Heneghan, Tom. "Alleged NATO Spy Gave Key Info to Serbs -- Media." Reuters, 4 Nov. 1998.

"Le Monde and Europe 1 radio [on 4 November 1998] quoted a secret report by the DST counter-intelligence agency saying Major Pierre Bunel divulged a 25-page plan for possible NATO air strikes against Yugoslavia.... [The DST report] also said Bunel admitted to meeting [a] Yugoslav agent four times between July and October 1998 and answering questions about the number of NATO aircraft earmarked for strikes, the targets and dates chosen, France's position on the strikes and the possibility of a ground force deployment in Kosovo."

[France/NATOSpy; MI/Ops/Kosovo/NATOSpies]

Henhoeffer, William. The Intelligence War in 1941: A 50th Anniversary Perspective -- An Intelligence Monograph. Washington, DC: CIA, 1992.

Surveillant 2.5: "Intelligence played a significant role in helping the Allies to avoid defeats that otherwise would have occurred during the War."

[WWII/Gen][c]

Henke, Klaus-Dieter, et al., eds. Anatomie der Staatssicherheit: Geschichte - Struktur - Methoden: Die Organizationsstruktur des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit 1989. [Anatomy of State Security: History - Structure - Methods: The Organizational Structure of the Ministry for State Security] Berlin: Bundesbeauftragte, 1995.

According to Kahn, I&NS 23.2 (Apr. 2008), this work provides "the organization of the Stasi down to the level of individual desks, with names."

[Germany/East]

Hennessy, Peter. "The British Secret State Old and New." RUSI Journal, Jun. 2005. [www.rusi.org/intelligence]

The Cold War experience "formed the senior figures in the British intelligence community who were at the top when catastrophe struck on 11 September 2001, during the run-up to the Iraq War of 2003 and the inquests which followed." It now falls to those same leaders "to implement the reforms to the British intelligence process which were announced by Jack Straw, the Foreign and Commonwealth Secretary, on 23 March 2005."

[UK/PostCW/00s/05]

Hennessy, Peter. The Secret State: Whitehall and the Cold War. London: Allen Lane/Penguin, 2002.

Addison, History Today 52.7, comments that "[n]o one writes with greater authority on Whitehall than Hennessy, and he tells the story with a sparkling combination of wit and infectious enthusiasm."

According to Peake, Studies 48.1, the author reviews the mechanism and functions of the Joint Intelligence Council (JIC) "during various periods of the Cold War in considerable detail based on newly declassified cabinet documents."

[GenPostwar/CW; UK/Postwar]

Hennessy, Peter, and Kathleen Townsend. "The Documentary Spoor of Burgess and Maclean." Intelligence and National Security 2, no. 2 (Apr. 1987): 291-301.

Because Burgess and Maclean were diplomats (as opposed to Philby and Blunt who worked for clandestine organizations), the routine policy papers of the Foreign Office available in the Public Record Office can be used to trace some of their activities.

[UK/SpyCases/Four]

Henriksen, Thomas. "Covert Operations, Now More Than Ever." Orbis, Winter 2000, 145-156. [http://www-hoover.stanford.edu/publications/digest/002/henrikson.html]

[CA]

Henry, Shannon. "In-Q-Tel, Investing in Intrigue: CIA Unit Scours Country for Useful Technologies." Washington Post, 1 Jul. 2002, E1. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]

Since its creation in 1999, the CIA's venture capital unit "has made about a dozen investments in technologies that could potentially be used in information gathering and analysis of America's enemies." After September 11, "In-Q-Tel became a sort of anti-terrorism matchmaker, introducing those with problems to those with high-tech detective abilities."

[CIA/90s/99/IQT]

Hensler, Alistair S.

1. "Canadian Intelligence: An Insider's Perspective." Canadian Foreign Policy 6, no. 3 (Spring 1999): 127-132.

2. "Creating a Canadian Foreign Intelligence Service." Canadian Foreign Policy 3, no. 3 (Winter 1995): 15-35.

[Canada/Gen]

Henze C. "Recollections of a Medical Intelligence Officer in World War II." Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 49, no. 11 (Nov. 1973): 960-973.

[GenPostwar/Medical; WWII/Gen]

Henze, Paul B. The Plot to Kill the Pope. New York: Scribner's, 1984.

Rocca and Dziak find that the author "[a]dduces a strong case ... for Bulgarian/Soviet involvement in the May 1981 attempted assassination of Pope John Paul II."

[OtherCountries/Bulgaria; Russia/45-89]

Hepburn, Allan. Intrigue: Espionage and Culture. New Haven, CT, and London: Yale University Press, 2005.

From Yale Book News: The author "thoroughly examin[es] the tradition of the spy narrative from its inception in the late nineteenth century through the present day.... [T]his groundbreaking work revises the assumption that spy stories are formulaic. Instead, Hepburn emphasizes the responsiveness of this genre to particular historical instances involving espionage."

Leab, I&NS 21.6 (Dec. 2006), gives this work high marks, with only "miinor caveats." This "fascinating, engaging book" is written in "a clear jargon-free style." The author "has put together a wide ranging, intensely sophisticated, [and] enjoyable" discussion of "a complex literature." Some of his dropping in of movies to make a point "does not work too well.," and he has not been well served by the publisher placing his "erudite, fascinating, and lengthy notes at the back of the book."

[Overviews/Gen/00s]

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