Scali, John. "I Was the Secret Go-Between in the Cuban Crisis." Family Weekly, 25 Oct. 1964, 4-5, 12-14.
[GenPostWar/60s/MissileCrisis]
Scalingi, Paula L. "Intelligence Community Cooperation: The Arms Control Model." International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 5,
no. 4 (Winter 1991-1992): 401-410.
[Liaison/U.S./Domestic][c]
Scalingi, Paula L. "Proliferation and Arms Control." Intelligence and National Security 10, no. 4 (Oct. 1995): 149-161.
"Because policy drives intelligence requirements, analysts whose 'accounts' focus on the proliferation threat or arms control support are facing an increasing array of challenges [footnote omitted] -- at a time when many countries are cutting defense and intelligence resources due to budgetary constraints."
[Analysis][c]
Scanlon, Charles F. [MAJGEN/USA] "A Strategy to Maximize Military Human Intelligence." American Intelligence Journal 14, no. 1 (Autumn/Winter 1993/1994): 9-13.
[MI/Humint; Reform][c]
Scanlon, Charles F. [MAJGEN/USA] "United States Army Intelligence and Security Command." Military Intelligence 18, no. 2 (Apr.-Jun. 1992): 6-9.
Commanding General/INSCOM.
[MI/Army][c]
Scarborough, Rowan. "Intercepts Foretold of 'Big Attack.'" Washington Times, 22 Sep. 2001. [http://www.washtimes.com]
According to a senior administration official, "[t]he day before terrorists struck the United States, its intelligence agencies detected discussions between Osama bin Laden's lieutenants of an impending 'big attack'.... The official said ... that the detection was not discovered until days after the Sept. 11 assault on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The time lapse is typical of intelligence analyses, in which computers sift through loads of that day's collection to find valuable material."
[Terrorism/01/WTC]
Scarborough, Rowan. "Pentagon Wants Intelligence Czar." Washington Times, 26 Jun. 2002, 1.
[MI/00s/02]
Scarborough, Rowan. "Pollard Betrayed Crown Jewels of American Spy Data." Washington Times National Weekly Edition, 2-8 Nov. 1998, 3.
This report includes quotes by Joseph diGenova arguing against Pollard's release.
[SpyCases/U.S./Pollard]
Scarborough, Rowan. Sabotage: America's Enemies within the CIA. Washington, DC: Regnery, 2007.
Clark comment: The flag-line on the inside flap tells us all we need to know about this book: "How Bush-hating CIA Bureaucrats Are Sabotaging the War on Terror."
Weisman, Intelligencer 15.3 (Summer/Fall 2007), notes that there are plenty of accusations in this book; but the author does not name very many of the "CIA bureaucrats" who are the object of his ire, "or pin down who leaked what or to whom." Scarborough's work is "deficient in specifics."
[CIA/Overviews/00s]
Scarborough, Rowan. "U.S. Search for bin Laden Intensifies." Washington Times, 23 Feb. 2004. [http://www.washingtontimes.com]
"The Pentagon is moving elements of a supersecret commando unit from Iraq to the Afghanistan theater to step up the hunt for Osama bin Laden. A Defense Department official said there are two reasons for repositioning parts of Task Force 121: First, most high-value human targets in Iraq, including Saddam Hussein, have been caught or killed. Second, intelligence reports are increasing on the whereabouts of bin Laden, the terror leader behind the September 11 attacks."
[MI/Ops/Afgh&Iraq]
Scarborough, Rowan, and Steve Miller. "Airman Accused of Terror Spying." Washington Times, 24 Sep. 2003. [http://www.washingtontimes.com]
Officials said Ahmad I. "Halabi was arrested [on 23 July 2003].... The Air Force charged him with five counts of espionage, three counts of aiding the enemy, nine counts of giving false statements to interrogators, 11 counts of failing to obey a lawful order and one count of bank fraud."
[SpyCases/U.S./Gitmo]
Scarborough, Ruth. Belle Boyd: Siren
of the South. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 1983. [Petersen]
[CivWar]
Schachte, W.L., Jr. "NISCOM Counterintelligence Strategy for the 1990s." American Intelligence Journal 10, no. 2 (1989): 43-45.
NISCOM Commander.
[MI/CI & Navy/Postwar]
Schack, Howard H., with H. Paul Jeffers. A Spy in Canaan: My Life as a Jewish-American Businessman Spying for Israel in Arab Lands. New York: Birch Lane Press, 1993.
Surveillant 3.2/3 says that the author worked for Mossad from mid-1970s to late 1980s.
[Israel/OtherOps]
Schake, Kori, and Bruce Berkowitz. "National Security: A Better Approach." Hoover Digest 4 (Fall 2005). [http://www.hoover.org/publications/digest/2913101.html]
"The United States lacks the organization required for effective national security. We need a structure that enables the president to implement the policies he has been elected to carry out. We also need a process that allows the government to focus all its resources on a strategic objective, no matter where in the executive branch those resources reside.... Until we create presidential directors with command authority to produce results, the nation will lack the means needed for effective security."
[GenPostwar/NatSec/00s; Reform/05]
Schaller, Michael. Altered States: The United States and Japan Since the Occupation. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997.
Oros, IJI&C 15.1, says that this work provides "a provocative recent analysis of the deep relationship between Japan's political leaders and the [U.S.] intelligence community."
[Japan/Postwar]
Schaller, Michael. The American Occupation of Japan: The Origins of the Cold War in Asia. New York: Oxford University Press, 1985.
[GenPostwar/ColdWar; Japan/Postwar]
Schanzer, Steven T. "INTELINK: An Information Strategy." American Intelligence Journal 15, no. 2 (Autumn/Winter 1994): 37-41.
The effort to develop an information strategy began with the creation of the Intelligence Systems Board (ISB), which spanned both DoD and non-DoD organizations and was responsible for resolving interoperability issues within the intelligence community. The Board is supported by a "full-time action arm": the Intelligence Systems Secretariat (ISS). The ISS has established an Information Management Policy Working Group (IMPWG) comprised of senior technical representatives from intelligence organizations. The testbed architectural framework developed was INTELINK, designed to be "a worldwide intelligence information service." Early tests were successful, and follow-on issues are being addressed.
[MI/Commo][c]
Schaub, Harry Carl. "General Lahousen and the Abwehr Resistance." International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 19, no. 3 (Fall 2006): 538-558.
Reviews the career of Gen. Erwin von Lahousen, "one of Canaris's principal aides" and the head of "Abwehr Department II (Sabotage and Subversion)" until Summer 1943 when he took command of a regiment on the Eastern Front. Lahousen "was the first witness for the prosecution at the Nuremberg Trial of Major War Criminals ... as the sole survivor of the members of the Abwehr resistance."
[WWII/Eur/Ger/Canaris & Resistance]
Return to S Table of Contents
Return to Alphabetical Table of
Contents