Hus - Hx

 

Hutchings, Robert. "X + 9/11: Everything I Needed to Know about Fighting Terrorism I Learned from George F. Kennan." Foreign Policy 143 (Jul.-Aug. 2004): 70-72.

[Terrorism/00s/Gen]

Hutchinson, Harold R. "Intelligence: Escape from Prisoner's Dilemma." Intelligence and National Security 7, no. 3 (Jul. 1992): 327-334.

The "prisoner's dilemma" game theory model is a static, one-time situation. Many situations between nations might be seen more as a motion picture, rather than as a snapshot (my analogy, not the author's). When played as an iterative game, it is possible for a progressive stability of cooperation to emerge. Under such conditions, "intelligence is a means by which the players can establish and sustain a cooperative relationship.... Without intelligence, the optimal strategy choice of conditional cooperation is not possible."

[Overviews/Gen][c]

Hutchinson, James. That Drug Danger. Montrose, Scotland: Standard Press, 1977.

Hutchinson, Robert. Elizabeth's Spy Master: Francis Walsingham and the Secret War that Saved England. London: Phoenix, 2006.

Dafforne, I&NS 22.6 (Dec. 2007), uses such terms as "lucid account" and "fine narrative" to describe this work. However, the reviewer would have preferred that the author have paid more attention "to major historical events." In addition, "Hutchinson tends to draw comparisons with the twenty-first century too readily and too frequently." However, these are "minor faults in an otherwise excellent book."

[UK/Historical]

Hutchinson, Robert. "Rumor of War: An Information Vendor's View of the Provision of Open-Source Data in an Unstable World." American Intelligence Journal 14, nos. 2 & 3 (Spring/Summer 1993): 33-36.

Hutchinson is an editor of Jane's.

[OpenSource][c]

Hutton, Clayton. Official Secret: The Remarkable Story of Escape Aids -- Their Invention, Production and the Sequel. London: Parrish, 1960. New York: Crown, 1961.

Constantinides: The author was in charge of the production of escape aids for the British escape and evasion organization, MI9, during World War II. Official Secret "should be basic reading in escape and evasion training."

[UK/WWII/Services/MI9]

Hutton, J. Bernard [Pseud., Joseph Heisler]. Frogman Spy: The Incredible Case of Commander Crabbe. New York: McDowell Obolensky, 1960. London: Spearman, Neville, 1960.

A reviewer for Studies 5.3 (Summer 1961) suggests that this work "may be merely a pecuniary speculation by an exile fabrication mill, or [it] may be something more sophisticated, a product of Moscow's cold warriors; a case can be made for either view."

[UK/Biogs; UK/Postwar]

Hutton, J. Bernard [Pseud., Joseph Heisler]. School for Spies: The ABC of How Russia's Secret Service Operates. London: Spearman, 1961.

Chambers: Czech defector.

[Russia/SovSpies/Gen]

Hutton, J. Bernard [Pseud., Joseph Heisler]. The Subverters. New Rochelle: Arlington House, 1972.

Chambers identifies this book as a Czech defector's tale.

[OtherCountries/Czechoslovakia]

Hutton, J. Bernard [Pseud., Joseph Heisler]. Women in Espionage. London: W.H. Allen, 1971. New York: Macmillan, 1972.

Huxley-Blythe, Peter J. The Man Who Was Uncle: Biography of a Master Spy. London: Barker, 1975.

Huyser, Robert E. Mission to Tehran. New York: Harper & Row, 1986.

[GenPostwar/70s/Iran]

Return to H Table of Contents

Return to Alphabetical Table of Contents