Ref - Rei

 

Regan, Tom. "More Charges against B2 Bomber Designer Accused of Spying: Indicted Engineer Pleads 'Not Guilty' to Selling Secrets to China, Israel, and Others." Christian Science Monitor, 13 Nov. 2006. [http://www.csmonitor.com]

Noshir Gowadia, indicted in November 2005 for selling secrets about the B2 stealth bomber to China, "has been charged with additional counts of spying in an indictment returned by a grand jury last week." ABC News has reported that Gowadia "was also accused of trying to sell more US classified military information to individuals in Israel, Germany, and Switzerland." Gowadia was "one of the lead engineers" on the B2 bomber project.

[SpyCases/U.S./Other]

Rehnquist, William H. [Chief Justice of the United States] "The Milligan Decision." MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History 11, no. 2 (Winter 1999): 44-49.

This is an excerpt from the Chief Justice's book, All the Laws But One (New York: Knopf, 1998), with a context-setting "Editor's Note." Lambdin P. Milligan was an Indiana Sons of Liberty leader who, with others, was found guilty under President Lincoln's martial laws and sentenced to hang. On 3 April 1866, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered Milligan and the others freed because the military commission which tried them lacked jurisdiction. Rehnquist concludes that "[t]he Milligan decision is justly celebrated for its rejection of the government's position that the Bill of Rights has no application in wartime."

[CivWar/Conf/CA]

Reich, Robert C. "Re-examining the Team A-Team B Exercise." International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 3, no. 3 (Fall 1989): 387-403.

Reich finds that the exercise clearly had an important short-term effect: it changed the finished version of NIE 11-3/8. Its long-term impact reaches even beyond changes in CIA methodological practices and include a revamping of U.S. nuclear policy in the 1980s that encompassed many of Team B's conclusions about Soviet strategic objectives.

[Analysis/Sov/Teams][c]

Reich, Walter, ed. Origins of Terrorism: Psychologies, Ideologies, Theologies, States of Mind. Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 1998.

[Terrorism/90s/Gen]

Reichman, Jeffery S. "Joint Reserve Units Supporting the Commander." Military Intelligence 25, no. 2 (Apr.-Jun. 1999): 11-12.

[MI/Reserves][c]

Reid, Alice. "Espionage Suspect Denies Charges." Washington Post, 31 Dec. 1996, A10.

[FBI/90s/Pitts]

Reid, Tim. "Friends 'Won't Let Her Down.'" Times (London), 13 Sep. 1999. [http://www.the-times.co.uk]

On Saturdays, Melita Norwood usually delivers some 30 copies of the socialist paper Morning Star to like-minded friends. On 12 September 1999, a friend delivered the papers for her.

[UK/SpyCases/99/Fever]

Reid, Tim. "What a Fuss, Says the Old Spy Laughing Over a Cuppa." Times (London), 13 Sep. 1999. [http://www.the-times.co.uk]

"Stooped over a portable radio in her drab kitchen, Melita Norwood cackles with laughter as she listens to a strident [Shadow Home Secretary] Ann Widdecombe denouncing her treachery."

[UK/SpyCases/99/Fever]

Reid, T. R. "Britain Concedes In Virtual Battle: Internet List of Alleged Spies Multiplies." Washington Post, 15 May 1999, A17. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]

"After a futile three-day struggle in cyberspace, Britain's spy services essentially threw up their hands today and conceded that the Internet is so fast and so far-flung that no government can control the flow of information on the global network....

"Having surrendered on the information battleground, the government instead focused on protecting the people who were named as spies. To spread as much doubt as possible, Foreign Minister Robin Cook announced that the Internet is 'highly inaccurate.' Some of those named have no government connection, officials said. Others were said to be officers in the British foreign service, stationed around the world, but not involved in intelligence.

"Meanwhile, some of those named were placed under 24-hour guard. Others on the list, including staffers at British embassies in some countries, will be transferred to London."

[UK/PostCW/90s/Tomlinson]

Reid, T.R., and R. Jeffrey Smith. "British Attache Slain in Athens." Washington Post, 9 Jun. 2000, A26. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]

On 8 June 2000, Brigadier Stephen Saunders, British defense attache in Greece, "was shot dead by two gunmen on motorcycles who fired into his car on a main Athens thoroughfare."

Brian Murphy, "Terrorist Group Takes Blame for Greece Slaying," Associated Press, 9 Jun. 2000, reports that the Greek terrorist group, November 17, had claimed responsibility for killing Saunders. The claim came in "a 13-page declaration that appeared in the daily newspaper Eleftherotypia."

[UK/PostCW/00]

Reilly, Michael F., and William J. Slocum. Reilly of the White House. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1947. [Petersen]

[OtherAgencies/Treasury]

Reilly, Pepita. The Adventures of Sidney Reilly, Britain's Master Spy. London: Mathews & Marrot, 1931. Britain's Master Spy: The Adventures of Sidney Reilly. New York: Harper, 1933.

Reiser, Donald, and Harry Wood. "Microtechnology." Studies in Intelligence 12, no. 4 (Fall 1968): 23-38.

"Intelligence needs impel giant advances in micropowered microelectronic systems."

[GenPostwar/Issues/S&T/To90s]

Reisman, W. Michael, and James E. Baker. Regulating Covert Action: Practices, Contexts, and Policies of Covert Coercion Abroad in International and American Law. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992.

Reiss, Curt. Underground Europe. New York: Dial, 1942.

This is essentially a propaganda piece written for wartime use, showing that the peoples of Europe were continuing to resist Hitler.

[WWII/Eur/Resistance]

Reit, Seymour. Masquerade: The Amazing Camouflage Deceptions of World War II. New York: Hawthorn, 1978. London: Hale, 1979.

Constantinides: The author discusses more forms of deception than just camouflage, but he "is best when writing of matters strictly defined as camouflage or concealment." Only a few of the incidents covered are new. The book is basically an introduction to the subject.

[WWII/Eur/Deception]

Reitman, Valerie. "Japan Broke U.S. Code Before Pearl Harbor, Researcher Finds." Los Angeles Times, 7 Dec. 1941. [http://www.latimes.com]

"[W]hile digging through the U.S. National Archives in College Park, Md., last summer," Toshihiro Minohara, a "young Japanese American professor [at Kobe University,] stumbled upon a document, declassified by the CIA about five years ago, that proved that Tokyo had succeeded in breaking the U.S. and British diplomatic codes. A few microfilmed documents, showing the Japanese translations of the telegrams, were attached....

"Further research by a colleague in Japan confirmed the findings--and may shed light on the mind-set that caused Japan's last holdouts for peace to opt for war just weeks before the attack, Minohara said this week."

[WWII/FE/Pac/Japan]

 

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