Reuben,
William A. The Atom Spy Hoax. New York: Action Books, 1955.
Wilcox: "Leftist polemic alleging charges of Soviet espionage against Julius and Ethel Rosenberg is a hoax."
[SpyCases/U.S./Bomb/Gen & Rosenbergs]
Revel,
Oliver Buck, with Dwight Williams. A G-Man's Journal: A Legendary Career
Inside the FBI -- From the Kennedy Assassination to the Oklahoma City Bombing.
New York: Pocket Books, 1998.
[FBI]
Rey, Julio Adolfo. "Revolution and Liberation: A Review of Recent Literature on the Guatemalan Situation." Hispanic American Historical Review 38, no. 2 (May 1958): 239-255.
[CIA/50s/Guat]
Reynard, Robert.
Secret Code Breaker III: A Cryptanalyst's Handbook. Jacksonville Beach, FL: Smith & Daniels Marketing, 1999. [Includes diskette with computer programs for deciphering secret messages.]
According to Kruh, Cryptologia 24.2, "[t]his useful book contains brief highlights of United States cryptologic history, its secret agents and the codes and ciphers they used."
[Cryptography]
Reynolds, David. "The Ultra Secret and Churchill's War Memoirs." Intelligence and National Security 20, no. 2 (Jun. 2005): 209-224.
The author discusses why and how Winston Churchill's 6-volume The Second World War was censored in such a fashion as to continue to shield the secret of codebreaking during World War II.
[UK/WWII/Ultra]
Reynolds, E. Bruce. "Staying Behind in Bangkok: The OSS and American Intelligence in Postwar Thailand." Journal of Intelligence History 2, no 2 (Winter 2002). [http://www.intelligence-history.org/jih/previous.html]
From abstract: The experiences of former OSS officers James H. W. Jim Thompson and Alexander MacDonald, who remained in Bangkok after successively heading the Strategic Services Unit there in 1945-1946, "suggest that the presumed continuity between the OSS role in Thailand during World War II and the large-scale CIA operations there in the 1950s was more apparent than real."
[CIA/40s/Gen]
Reynolds, E. Bruce. Thailand's Secret War: OSS, SOE and the Free Thai Underground during World War II. New York and Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.
From advertisement: Although Thailand was officially allied with Japan after 1941, "Thai leaders managed to establish clandestine relations with China, Britain and the United States.... Based largely on recently declassified intelligence records, this narrative history thoroughly explores these relations, details Allied secret operations and sheds new light on the intense rivalry between" the British SOE and the U.S. OSS.
Yu Shen, I&NS 20.3 (Sep 2005), finds this to be "an excellent book" that "is well-researched." The author unfolds this "intricately complicated" story "with great sensitivity and objectivity."
For Sacquety, Studies 50.1 (Mar. 2006), the author shows that once OSS and its Free Thai group "overcame various obstacles in their path, they proved very effective in Thailand, in contrast to the British Special Operations Executive (SOE) and its smaller group of Free Thai.... Initial attempts to operate from China proved disastrous for the fledgling OSS Free Thai group. Only by eventually basing the group with OSS Detachment 404 in Sri Lanka did Washington succeed in finding a location from which the Free Thai could successfully operate." With this work, "Reynolds proves that he is a dean among scholars of intelligence in the Far East during the Second World War. His exhaustive archival research and exploitation of untapped sources have produced a landmark work."
[UK/WWII/FEPac; WWII/FEPac/Gen]
Reynolds,
Maura. "For Yeltsin Heir, Challenge Is to Move Out of Shadows."
Los Angeles Times, 16 Aug. 1999.
"[F]or all the speculation, Putin remains a cipher -- yet one who may hold the key to his country's future."
[Russia/99]
Reynolds,
Quentin. The FBI. New York: Random House, [1963 (Petersen);
1954 (Wilcox)].
Wilcox: "Critical account ... by [p]ro-Soviet American novelist."
[FBI/To90s]
Reynolds, Robert W. [MAJ/USMC] "Intelligence Support to Distributed Operations." Naval Intelligence Professionals Quarterly 22, no. 1 (Jan. 2006): 41-43. [Reprinted from Marine Corps Gazette.]
The author surveys "how Marine Corps intelligence might accept the challenge of working on a wider, more dispersed battlefield." The Distributed Operations "construct will create distinct challenges in two major areas -- information overload and intelligence distribution."
[MI/Marines/00s]
Reynolds, Thomas
S. "USTRANSCOM Intelligence Directorate Plays Key Role in Global Operations."
NMIA Newsletter 11, no. 1 (1996): 26-28.
Deputy Director of Intelligence, United States Transportation Command, Scott Air Force Base, IL. The author's focus is on U.S. Transportation Command's Joint Intelligence Center (JICTRANS), which is responsible for "the production of detailed analyses of transportation facilities in locations throughout the world."
[MI/AF][c]
RFE/RL. "Kazakh Senate Approves New Intelligence Chief ." 2 Mar. 2006. [http://www.rferl.org]
On 2 March 2006, Kazakhstan's Senate unanimously approved Amangeldy Shabdarbaev, the personal security boss of President Nursultan Nazarbaev, to replace Nartai Dutbaev as the head of the National Security Service (KNB). "Dutbaev resigned following the slaying of opposition leader Altynbek Sarsenbaev. Five officers from the KNB's elite Arystan (Lion) anti-terrorism unit were arrested over the killing."
[OtherCountries/Kazakhstan]
RFE/RL. "Russia: Yeltsin Reshuffles Personnel at FSB."
6 Apr. 1999. [http://www.rferl.org]
According to Interfax, Russian President Boris Yeltsin has "shifted and trimmed personnel at the FSB, dismissing Colonel General Valentin Sobolev as first deputy director of the FSB and appointing him deputy secretary of the Security Council on 2 April.... Lieutenant General Yevgenii Solovyov was appointed deputy director and head of the personnel department. In addition, an unidentified source in the FSB told the agency that dozens of personnel have been dismissed including Mikhail Dedyukhin, the head of counterintelligence protection of strategic installations, Aleksandr Izmadenov, his first deputy, and Aleksei Pushkarenko, the head of counterintelligence operations."
[Russia/99]
Rhee,
Will. "Comparing U.S. Operations Kingpin (1970) and Eagle Claw (1980)."
International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 6,
no. 4 (Winter 1993): 489-506.
"Kingpin" was the operational name for the raid on Son Tay; "Eagle Claw" was the operational name for the Iranian hostage rescue mission. This article engages in too much handwringing over what was done wrong without always supporting that something was wrong other than by identifying it as such.
[CA; Vietnam/SonTay][c]
Rhodes, Anthony.
Propaganda: The Art of Persuasion: World War II. New York: Chelsea House, 1976. [Winkler]
[WWII/PsyWar]
Rhodes,
Tom, and Michael Evans. "Britain's Wartime Enigma Traitor is Unmasked."
Times (London), 4 Oct. 1996, 1.
[UK/SpyCases/Cairncross]
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