Krebs, Gerhard. "Signal Intelligence in the Pacific War." Journal of Intelligence History 1, no. 2 (Winter 2001). [http://www.intelligence-history.org/jih/previous.html]
From abstract: "While cryptologic activities were reduced in the years after World War I, they were intensified again in the late 1930s. The USA had reached good results in the period immediately before Pearl Harbor.... Japan since the early 1930s was [also] able to read the military and diplomatic ciphers of the United States as well as of Great Britain, though to a lesser degree than their enemies, and exchanged cryptographic information with the Axis partners, including captured code books."
[WWII/FE/Pac/Japan]
Kreib, Mark W. [LCDR/USN] "Intelligence Support to Peacekeeping Operations." Naval Intelligence Professionals Quarterly 18, no. 1 (Jan. 2002): 14.
[GenPostwar/Peacekeeping]
Kreis, John F.,
et al., eds. Piercing the Fog: Air Intelligence in World War II. Bolling AFB, Washington, DC: Air Force History and Museums Program, 1996.
Jonkers, AIJ 17.1/2, notes that "[w]hen war broke out in 1941, no intelligence system existed to provide Army Air Forces with the information to conduct effective war in Europe and the Pacific. This is the story of how intelligence organizations were built to collect, process, produce and disseminate intelligence to air command decisionmakers and forces."
For Kruh, Cryptologia 21.2, this "is an outstanding volume, which is fully documented with extensive footnotes." Christensen, I&NS 11.4/763/fn. 8, refers to this work as "an excellent account of air intelligence's short comings."
Mahncke, Naval War College Review, Autumn 1998, finds the book's "extensive coverage of the North African, Chinese, and Pacific theater air campaigns ... especially valuable, for they are often overshadowed by the continental European campaign."
[WWII/U.S./Services/Air]
Kreisher, Otto. "Next Steps in Information Warfare." Air Force Magazine, Jun. 1999, 52-55.
[GenPostwar/InfoWar]
Krepon,
Michael. "Glasnost and Multilateral Verification: Implications for
the U.S. Intelligence Community." International Journal of Intelligence
and Counterintelligence 4, no. 1 (Spring 1990): 47-57.
[Recon/Topics][c]
Krepon,
Michael. "Spying from Space." Foreign Policy 75 (Summer
1989): 92-108.
The author sees a three-tiered system shaping up with regard to the use of space: The first tier (with manned space operations) is the United States and Russia; a second tier includes China, France, Great Britain, India, Israel, and Japan (with satellite launch capabilities); a third tier consists of those countries which will rely on other countries' space assets. A rising trend is the use of commercial satellite images for military applications. Generally, "the diffusion of satellite technology generates problems as well as opportunities for international security."
[Recon/Sats][c]
Krepon,
Michael, ed. Commercial Observation Satellites and International Security. New York: St, Martin's, 1990.
According to Petersen, this book "[d]eals in part with intelligence matters."
[Recon/Sats/Books]
Kress, Kenneth A. "Parapsychology in Intelligence: A Personal Review and Conclusions." Studies in Intelligence 21, no. 4 (Winter 1977): 7-17. [Richelson, Wizards (2002)]
[GenPostwar/Issues/Psychic]
Kretchik, Walter E., Robert F. Baumann, and John T. Fishel. Invasion, Intervention, "Intervasion": A Concise History of the U.S. Army in Operation Uphold Democracy. Fort Leavenworth, KS: U.S. Army Command and General Staff College Press, 1998.
Cohen, FA 78.3, sees this as a "scholarly and systematic account of the 1994 American-dominated intervention in Haiti that candidly explores the problems encountered there by the U.S. Army.... Despite some awkward passages, including a heavy-handed analysis of the operation couched in hoary and irrelevant terms..., this is a first-rate study."
[MI/Ops/90s]
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