Kinch, Penelope. "The Iranian Crisis and the Dynamics of Advice and Intelligence in the Carter Administration." Journal of Intelligence History 6, no. 2 (Winter 2006/7). [http://www.intelligence-history.org/jih/journal.html]
From abstract: "[T]he lack of awareness and understanding of the developing situation in Iran between 1977-1979 demonstrates a breakdown in communication within the Carter Administration. This article examines the dynamics of the factions within Carter's advisory group which limited both the provision and the accuracy of information provided to the President, and the reactive nature of intelligence emanating from Iran which caused reporting to reflect rather than prescribe the foreign policy direction of the U.S."
[GenPostwar/70s/Iran]
Kinchen, Oscar
A. Confederate Operations in Canada and the North: A Little-Known Phase
of the American Civil War. North Quincy, MA: Christopher, 1970.
[CivWar/Conf/CA]
Kinder,
Douglas C.
1. "Bureaucratic Cold Warrior: Harry J. Anslinger and Illicit Narcotics Traffic." Pacific Historical Review 50 (May 1981): 169- 191.
2. and William O. Walker, III. "Stable Force in a Storm: Harry J. Anslinger and United States Narcotic Foreign Policy, 1930-62." Journal of American History 72 (Mar. 1986): 98-127.
[OtherAgencies/DEA]
Kindsvater, Larry C. "The Need to Reorganize the Intelligence Community: A Senior Officer's Perspective." Studies in Intelligence 47, no. 1 (2003): 33-37.
The U.S. Intelligence Community (IC) "is not managed or organized to directly address national security missions and threats. The Community continues to have a 'stovepipe' collection focus.... No IC-wide operational organization exists to direct the collective activities of those stovepipe capabilities against specific national security missions.... To implement a new substantive mission focus, the IC needs to create Community-wide substantive analytic/collection centers."
[Reform/03]
King, Charles,
et al. The Photographic History of the Civil War. Vol IV. Soldier
Life and Secret Service, Prisons and Hospitals. Secaucus, NJ: Blue &
Gray Press, 1987.
See Francis Tevelyan Miller.
[CivWar]
King, Dan. "What
Is a Promise Worth?" CIRA Newsletter 23, no. 2 (Summer 1999):
30-32.
A former CIA officer remembers the chaos and the pain of the final days of the U.S. evacuation of Saigon.
Tom Polgar, "Saigon 1975," CIRA Newsletter 23, no. 3 (Fall 1999), 21-24, offers his perspective on the trauma of the fall of Saigon. He concludes: "I am convinced those of us in Vietnam did the best we could under desperate conditions."
[Vietnam/Gen]
King, David E.
"Intelligence Failures and the Falklands War: A Reassessment."
Intelligence and National Security 2, no. 2 (Apr. 1987): 336-340.
King believes that "there is a strong argument that reliance on military intelligence [to prevent being surprised by the Argentine attack] was never a sensible or viable policy." The real deception in this case was a political one that prevented effective decisionmaking.
[UK/Postwar/Falklands]
King, James C.
[LTGEN/USA] "Delivering On-Time Information Superiority." Defense
Intelligence Journal 8, no. 1 (Summer 1999): 14-23.
Gen. King assumed command as Director, National Imagery and Mapping Agency (NIMA), in July 1998. Fulfilling the U.S. Imagery and Geospatial Information System (USIGS) Modernization Plan "requires significant investment to meet the challenges of the information age."
[MI/NIMA/90s]
King,
Michael J. The Death of the Rainbow Warrior. London & Aukland: Penguin, 1986.
[France]
King, Simon. "Intelligence Policy, After 50 Years, Moves to Centre Stage." Military Technology 23, no. 1 (31 Jan. 1995): 14-17.
[GenPostwar/Policy/90s]
King, Stella.
"Jacqueline": Pioneer Heroine of the Resistance. London:
Arms and Armour Press, 1990.
Surveillant 1.1: Yvonne Rudellat was the "first female field agent trained by ... [SOE] during WWII." She set up a resistance unit and sabotaged rail lines and trains. Rudellat was wounded and captured, sent to Ravensbruck and on to Bergen-Belsen where she died. The book "reads like a fast-paced spy novel."
[UK/WWII/SOE; WWII/Eur/Fr]
King, W. Chris. Understanding International Environmental Security: A Strategic Military Perspective. Atlanta, GA: Army Environmental Policy Institute, 2000.
[GenPostwar/NatSec/Env]
Kingsley, F.A.,
ed. The Applications of Radar and Other Electronic Systems in the Royal
Navy in World War II. Basingstoke, UK: Macmillan, 1995.
[WWII/Atlantic]
Kinnell, Susan
K. Military History of the United States: An Annotated Bibliography.
Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 1986.
Petersen finds "numerous intelligence entries" in this bibliography.
[MI/Reference]
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