Rado, Sandor [Alexander]. Codename Dora. London: Abelard, 1977.
Clark comment: This is the autobiography of the GRU chief in Switzerland from 1940 to 1943.
For Constantinides, this account is "full of holes and marked by its propagandistic qualities."
Aldrich, I&NS 6.1/212/fn. 3, says that Rado's version of events "omits many matters of interest and is propagandistic, reflecting not only the officially approved nature of the work but Rado's own firm convictions as a staunch Communist."
[Russia/WWII/Spies/RoteKapelle]
Radosh, Ronald. "The Teacher as Scholar-Spy: The CIA and the Academy." Change 8, no. 7 (Aug. 1976): 38-42, 64.
Wants to keep the CIA as far away as possible from college/university campuses.
[CIA/Relations/Academia]
Radosh,
Ronald, and Joyce Milton. The Rosenberg File: A Search for Truth. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1983. 2d ed. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1997.
According to Petersen, "[t]he Rosenbergs' guilt ... is now an accepted historical fact in view of the research of Radosh and Milton ... and other scholars."
Wannell, WIR 15.3, regards The Rosenberg File as "the definitive book on the Julius Rosenberg case."
Clark comment: The second edition makes use of the Venona material and newly available Soviet sources to reiterate the work's original argument that the Rosenbergs were simultaneously guilty of espionage against the United States and scapegoats in the early hysteria of the Cold War.
[SpyCases/U.S./Rosenbergs]
Radvanyi,
Janos. Delusion and Reality: Gambits, Hoaxes and Diplomatic One-Upmanship in Vietnam. South Bend, IN: Gateway Editions, 1978.
Rocca and Dziak: A former senior Hungarian diplomat writes about "Soviet political action, deception and disinformation with particular reference to Vietnam."
[Russia/Deception&Disinfo]
Radyshevsky,
Dmitry, and Nataliya Gevorkyan. "The Memoirs of a Soviet Intelligence
Officer Have Created a Big Panic." Moscow News 16 (22-28 Apr.
1994): 14.
CWIHP 6-7, p. 289: "Story behind publication of Yuri Shvets's Washington Station: My Life as a FGB Spy in America."
[Russia/Memoirs/Shvets]
Rafalko, Frank J., ed.
1. A Counterintelligence Reader: American Revolution to World War II, Volume One. Washington, DC: NACIC, 1998.
2. A Counterintelligence Reader: World War II, Volume Two. Washington, DC: NACIC, 1998.
3. A Counterintelligence Reader: Post-World War II to Closing the 20th Century, Volume Three. Washington, DC: NACIC, 1998.
Clark comment: These three volumes provide almost 900 pages of information on counterintelligence covering the entire span of U.S. history. Many cases mentioned have not previously been discussed widely.
4. A Counterintelligence Reader: American Revolution into the New Millenium, Volume Four.Washington, DC: NACIC, [2004].
From "Preface": "We have taken material from official government documents, indictments from several espionage cases, and articles written by professors, scholars and counterintelligence officers. We have abridged some selections while trying not to change the sense of the original but we have not altered the original usage of the English language.... At the end of each chapter is a selected bibliography.... The reader is not all-inclusive and people may disagree with our selections, but at least we hope to have provided sufficient material to entice our colleagues to do further research."
All four volumes are available at: http://permanent.access.gpo.gov/lps54742/counterintelligencereader/ci/docs/ and http://www.fas.org/irp/ops/ci/docs/index.html.
[CI/90s&00s]
Raffel, Robert R. "Intelligence and Airport Security." Studies in Intelligence 50, no. 3 (Sep. 2006).
"Much information is available through open sources, but challenges involve prioritization and analytical capability. Local intelligence, given the relative ease of collection and immediate applicability to the individual airport, has value to the airport security manager.... [M]ore work needs to be done in the area of trend analysis."
[DHS/06]
Ragavan, Chitra, and Carol Hook. "China Doll." U.S. News & World Report, 10 Nov. 2003, 38ff.
"U.S. News has conducted an extensive review of the [Katrina Leung] case..., examining hundreds of pages of court records and interviewing more than a dozen current and former counterintelligence experts. The review reveals a systemic failure of security procedures and a stunningly free-and-easy pattern of access by Leung to some of the nation's most highly secret intelligence operations."
[SpyCases/U.S./Leung]
Ragavan, Chitra, et al. "Special Report: Mueller's Mandate." U.S. News & World Report, 26 May 2003, 18-25.
The mandate of FBI Director Robert Mueller III is essentially to prevent terrorist attacks like those on 11 September 2001. If he can fulfill this mandate, it "will represent the most sweeping structural and philosophical shift in the FBI's history. In a series of exclusive interviews with U.S. News, Mueller and his top aides detailed the steps they have begun to take. The changes, they say, mean transforming an investigative agency into an intelligence-gathering service and reorienting virtually everything about the FBI's institutional culture and its traditional operating procedures."
[FBI/00s/03]
Rahr,
Alexander. "The Revival of a Strong KGB." RFE/RL Research Report
2, no. 20 (14 May 1993): 74-79.
[Russia/From89]
Raiford, William Newby. To Create a Senate Select Committee on Intelligence: A Legislative History of Senate Resolution 400. CRS Report No. 76-149F. Washington, DC: U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, 1976.
Lowenthal sees this CRS report as a "[u]seful documentary history" of the creation of the SSCI.
[Oversight/To90s]
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