Jehl, Douglas [New York Times]:
Jelen,
George F. "The Defensive Disciplines of Intelligence." International
Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 5, no. 4 (Winter 1991-1992):
381-399.
[CI][c]
Jenkins, Bradford R. [1STSGT/USA]. "Sharpening the Edges: Technical Training in the ANCOC [Advanced Noncommissioned Officer Course]." Military
Intelligence 24, no. 3 (Jul.-Sep. 1998): 34-35.
[MI/Training][c]
Jenkins, Brian Michael, et al. Ed., James O. Ellis, III. Terrorism: What's Coming -- The Mutating Threat. Oklahoma City, OK: Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism (MIPT), 2007.
From Jenkins' "Introduction": "This introduction is about how terrorism has changed over the years and how it hasn't. It suggests that some developments seen as jihadist innovations are, in fact, neither new nor unique. It discerns some disurbing long-term trends, but it also points out some of the limitations inherent in terrorism."
[Terrorism/00s/Gen]
Jenkins, Dennia R. Lockheed SR-71/YF-12 Blackbirds. North Branch, MN: Specialty Press, 1997. [Robarge]
[Recon/Planes]
Jenks, John. British Propaganda and News Media in the Cold War. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2006.
According to O'Malley, H-Albion, H-Net Reviews, Jan. 2008 [http://www.h-net.org], this "detailed, convincing, and scholarly work" deals with the "British government's handling of domestic and international propaganda in the late 1940s and the 1950s." the author provides "a detailed analysis of the nature, purpose, and range of activities of the Foreign Office's (FO) Information Research Department (IRD).... This book makes a valuable, empirically rich contribution to studies of the media and the state in the United Kingdom."
[UK/Postwar/IRD]
Jensen,
Joan M. Army Surveillance in America, 1775-1980. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1991.
Choice, Mar. 1992, sees this as a "clearly written history.... But there are a number of flaws." The book "wanders from its title statement ... [and] policy methodologies and conceptualizations are notably absent."
According to Surveillant 2.1, the author "sees a growing invisible intelligence empire within the U.S. government."
Dorwart, I&NS 8.2, comments that Jensen "places army spying within a broader context of national security policy and as part of an evolving American internal security program.... The growth of military surveillance of civilians during the war [WWI] accompanied the expansion of executive authority and federal bureaucracies."
[MI/Army/Overviews]
Jensen, Kurt F. "Canada's Foreign Intelligence Interview Program, 1953-90." Intelligence and National Security 19, np. 1 (Spring 2004): 95-104.
Since 1968 "located in the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, the Interview Program was for many years housed with the Defence Research Board at the Department of National Defence."
[Canada]
Jensen, Richard. "Web Sources for Military History." http://tigger.uic.edu/~rjensen/military.html.
Cohen, FA, Nov./Dec. 2001, calls this site "a handy directory ... that offers remarkably complete coverage."
[MI/Refs; Websites/NonGovt]
Jensen-Stevenson, Monika. Spite House: The Last Secret of the War in Vietnam. New York: Norton, 1997.
Clark comment: Thank God for inter-library loans. If I had paid good money to buy this book, I would be frightfully unhappy. It is utter garbage, filled with unsubstantiated allegations that begin where the author's Kiss the Boys Goodbye left off. Neither her defense of Robert Garwood nor her claims of U.S. assassination teams rise above the level of bad fiction.
Bernstein, NYT, 2 Apr. 1997, is overly kind in concluding that "without more evidence than Ms. Jensen-Stevenson provides, it is almost impossible to verify whether the claims of 'Spite House' are valid or not."
[Vietnam/Gen]
Jensen-Stevenson,
Monika, and William H. Stevenson. Kiss the Boys Goodbye: How the United States Betrayed Its Own POWs in Vietnam. NewYork: Penguin, 1990.
This book is conspiracy theory writ large. It includes allegations (no better supported than the allegations of "deserting" of the POWs) of CIA drug dealing and accompanying coverup.
[Vietnam/Topics/POWs]
Jenssen, Lars Christian, and Olav Riste, eds. Intelligence in the Cold War. Oslo: Hegland Trykkeri, 2001.
[GenPostwar/CW]
Jenuelson, William A. "DIA in the Nineties ... So Far: A Decade of Crisis." Communique, Special Insert, 20 Dec. 1994.
[MI/DIA]
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