Schoenbrun, David. Soldiers of the Night. The Story of the French Resistance. New York: Dutton, 1980. Maquis: Soldiers of the Night. The Story of the French Resistance. London: Hale, 1990. [pb]
Moore, I&NS 7.2, writing about the later edition, says that this is "a lucid and highly readable" narrative history of the French Resistance organizations. The big problem is that there are no footnotes or citations. The book serves as "a suitable introduction [to] the subject for the non-specialist with a few insights to interest the specialist as well."
[WWII/Eur/Resistance]
Schofield, Carey. The Russian Elite: Inside Spetsnaz and the Airborne Forces. Mechanicsburg,
PA: Stackpole Books, 1993. [Gibish]
[Russia/Overviews/Mi]
Schofield, Victoria. Wavell: Soldier and Statesman. London: Murray, 2006.
Foot, I&NS 21.4 (Aug. 2006), comments that while this biography covers Wavell's "role in developing the deception machine that played so large a part in British strategy from 1940 to 1945," it "hardly mentions Dudley Clarke" who "created the system of inflating the enemy's opinion of British strength."
[UK/WWII/Overviews]
Schorr, Daniel. "When Covert Is Overt." Christian Science Monitor, 10 Apr. 1998, 15.
Seymour: "Comments on the role of the United States Congress in covert intelligence operations by the CIA."
[CA/Gen]
Schorreck, Henry F. Battle of Midway: 4-7 June 1942: The Role of COMINT in the Battle of Midway. Designated as SRH-230 in the U.S. National Archives, Washington, D.C. Text available at http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq81-3.htm.
Thanks to Comint, Admiral Nimitz "knew more about the Midway Operation than many of the Japanese officers involved in it. He knew the targets; the dates; the debarkation points of the Japanese forces and their rendezvous points at sea; he had a good idea of the composition of the Japanese forces; he knew of the plan to station a submarine cordon between Hawaii and Midway; and he knew about the planned seaplane reconnaissance of Oahu, which never took place because he prevented their refueling at French Frigate Shoals."
[WWII/FEPac/Midway]
Schott, Joseph L. No Left Turns: The FBI in Peace and War. New York: Praeger, 1975.
Wilcox: "Exposé of FBI abuses, COINTELPRO, surveillance of dissidents."
[FBI]
Schreckengost, R. C. "Some Limitations in Systems Analysis in Intelligence Activities." Studies in Intelligence 14, no. 2 (Fall 1970): 79-86.
"[T]he multitudinous values generally required to explore fully the optimum allocation of resources among diverse intelligence tasks and responsibilities" are critical to the process but difficult to capture, "assuming that a suitable set of values even exists."
[Analysis/Gen]
Schroeder, Gertrude. "Reflections on Economic Sovietology." Post-Soviet Affairs
11 (1995): 197-234.
[Analysis/Sov]
Schroeder, Gertrude. "Soviet Reality Sans Potemkin." Studies in Intelligence 12, no. 2 (Spring 1968): 43-51. In Inside CIA's Private World: Declassified Articles from the Agency's Internal Journal, 1955-1992, ed. H. Bradford Westerfield, 41-48. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1995.
This article concerns the experiences of a CIA economic analyst during a four-month (June-September 1967) assignment at the American Embassy in Moscow. Schroeder, with excellent language skills, made a concerted effort to shed her "obvious foreignness and 'go native.'" Her conclusion from her close observation of Russian street life was that "our measurements of the position of Soviet consumers in relation to those of the United States (and Western Europe) favor the USSR to a much greater extent than I had thought."
[Analysis/Sov][c]
Schroeder, H.-J. "Marshall Plan Propaganda in Austria and Western Germany." In The Marshall Plan in Austria, eds. G. Bischof, A. Pelinka, and D. Stiefel. Contemporary Austrian Studies, Vol 8. New Brunswick and London: Transaction, 2000.
[CA/PsyOps; Germany/West; OtherCountries/Austria]
Schroeder, Klaus. Der SED-Staat: Partei, Staat und Gesellschaft, 1949-1990. Munich: Econ-Ullstein-List-Verlag, 1998.
Krieger, I&NS 19.1/196/fn.5, calls this "an excellent new overview of GDR history."
[Germany/East]
Schudel, Matt. "Cold War Spy Tale Came to Life on the Streets of Moscow." Washington Post, 20 Apr. 2008, C8. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]
This is the obituary for John I. Guilsher, 77, who died 4 April 2008. Guilsher was the case officer for Soviet senior engineer Adolf G. Tolkachev from January 1979 until June 1980. Tolkachev continued his espionage until 1985 when he was exposed by Edward Lee Howard; he was executed in September 1986.
[CIA/70s/Tolkachev]
Schudel, Matt. "Doctor Looked After the Sick, And Looked Around for the CIA." Washington Post, 31 Aug. 2008, C7. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]
The focus here is Dr. Alan S. Cameron, his life, and his work at the CIA's Center for Analysis of Personality and Political Behavior in preparing "psychobiographies." Cameron died on 29 June 2008 at 90 years of age.
[GenPostwar/Medical]
Schulhofer, Stephen. The Enemy Within: Intelligence Gathering, Law Enforcement, and Civil Liberties in the Wake of September 11. New York: Century Foundation, 2002.
[FBI/DomSec/00s; Overviews/Legal/Topics]
Schulmeister, Charles. L'Espionnage militaire sous Napoleon Ier. Paris: Berger-Levrault, 1896.
[France/Historical]
Schultz, Duane. The Dahlgren Affair: Terror and Conspiracy in the Civil War. New York: Norton, 1998.
[CivWar/Un/Richmond][c]
Schultz, Fred L. "MarSOC: Just Call Them Marines." U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings 132, no. 1 (Jan. 2006): 48-50.
Interview with Brig Gen. Dennis J. Hejlik, USMC, commanding general of the Marine Corps Special Operations Command (MarSOC), newly established as part U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM). The unit is being organized with an estimated 2,500 members in a regiment with two special operations battalions. A total of nine special operations companies will be split four on the east coast and five on the west coast.
[MI/Marines/00s; MI/Navy/SpecOps; MI/SpecOps/00s]
Schultz, Mark E. "The Power of Geospatial Intelligence." Defense Intelligence Journal 14, no. 1 (2005): 79-87.
This is the text of a speech given by NGA's Director of the Office of Corporate Relations to a European defense conference in London, 26 January 2005. His enthusiastic and completely positive tone is no more than should be expected. Nonetheless, the article offers a good look at how NGA wants to project itself.
[MI/NGA/00s]
Schultze-Holthus, Bernhardt. Daybreak in Iran: A Story of the German Intelligence Service. London: Staples, 1954.
Constantinides says that the author was the Abwehr man in Tabriz, Iran, during World War II. "There is little noteworthy in this book from an intelligence point of view except perhaps the lesson of the precariousness of relationships with groups whose support cannot be tangibly maintained." In the author's case, this was the pro-German Qashqai tribe.
[WWII/Eur/Ger]
Schum, David A. Evidence and Inference for the Intelligence Analyst. 2 vols. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1987.
To Miller, IJI&C 6.1, the author's "expertise in the area [of decision analysis] is unquestionable"; and he "presents his material in an easy and friendly style." However, not many intelligence analysts will read the book because it is "very long" and "too tough to hold the interest of a typical professional."
[Analysis/T&M]
Schumacher, Frederic Carl, and George C. Wilson. Bridge of No Return: The Ordeal of the U.S.S.
Pueblo. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1971. [Wilcox]
[GenPostwar/60s/Pueblo]
Schumeyer, Gerard [COL/USA]. "Medical Intelligence ... Making a Difference." American Intelligence Journal 17, no. 1/2 (1996): 11-15.
Schumeyer is Director, Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center (AFMIC), which functions as a "field production activity within DIA's Directorate for Intelligence Production."
[MI/DIA; GenPostwar/Medical][c]
Schurmacher, Emile Carlos. Assignment X: Top Secret. New York: Paperback Library, 1965.
Wilcox: "Clandestine operations in German-occupied Europe" during World War II.
[WWII/Eur/Resistance]
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