Shchipanov, Mikhail. "A Reliable Partner for Intelligence-Gathering." Current Digest of the Post-Soviet Press, 7 Feb. 1996, 18-19.
ProQuest: "Vyacheslav Trubnikov, the new chief of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, continues a tradition of regional specialization that has arisen in recent years. Trubnikov is considered a technocrat and professional."
[Russia]
Shea, James R. "Winnowing Wheat from Chaff." Studies in Intelligence 13, no. 4 (Fall 1969): 19-23.
"Tracking down Soviet underground nuclear explosions."
[GenPostwar/Issues/S&T]
Sheafer, Edward D., Jr. [RADM] "Navy HUMINT." American Intelligence Journal 14, no 1 (Autumn/Winter 1993/1994): 21-22.
[MI/Humint/90s & Navy/90s][c]
Sheehan, Darrell C. "The Japanese Intelligence Community." National Security Studies Quarterly 11, no. 1 (Winter 1996): 59- 67.
R. D'A. Henderson comments: "Quite a good assessment of the Japanese intelligence community -- as of the date published!"
[OtherCountries/Japan]
Sheehan, Michael. International Security: An Analytical Survey. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 2005.
Fedyszyn, NWCR 59.1 (Winter 2006), says that the author "offers thoughtful commentary on how contemporary scholars should take into account new forces in international relations that demand broader thinking on 'security.'" However, "many of his observations and conclusions are both obvious and repetitive.... While the book has an academic tone and is well footnoted, it remains readily digestible for the layman."
[GenPostwar/NatSec/00s]
Sheehan, Neil.
1. "Order by Johnson Reported Ending CIA Student Aid." New York Times, 15 Feb. 1967, 1.
President Johnson orders end to CIA subsidies to National Student Association and other student groups.
2. "A Student Group Concedes It Took Aid from CIA." New York Times, 14 Feb. 1967, 1.
In wake of the Ramparts article, National Student Association President Eugene Groves acknowledges that the organization had been subsidized by the CIA.
[CA; CIA/60s/Subsidies]
Shelby, Richard C. "September 11 and the Imperative of Reform in the U.S. Intelligence Community: Additional Views of Senator Richard C. Shelby, Vice Chairman, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence." 10. Dec. 2002. [http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/2002_rpt/shelby.html]
These are Senator Shelby's "additional views" on the report of the joint House-Senate committee investigating the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks. Shelby served 4 1/2 years as SSCI chairman and 1 1/2 years as vice chairman. Here he states: "Long before the September 11 attacks, I made no secret of my feelings of disappointment in the U.S. Intelligence Community for its performance in a string of smaller-scale intelligence failures during the last decade. Since September 11 I have similarly hid from no one my belief that the Intelligence Community does not have the decisive and innovative leadership it needs to reform itself and to adapt to the formidable challenges of the 21st century."
[GenPostCW/00s/02/Congress]
Shelfer, Katherine M., and June M. Verner, "Improving Counterterrorism Analysis: Using Scenarios to Support the Development and Use of Integrated Information Systems." Defense Intelligence Journal 11, no. 1 (Winter 2002): 55-70.
The authors discuss "the need for the development of integrated civilian and military information systems, especially lessons-learned databases." They emphasize "the potential value of using scenarios to support better design and more effective use of such integrated databases."
[Analysis; Terrorism/02/Gen]
Shelton, Paul A. "Frontline Intelligence for the 21st Century." Marine Corps Gazette, Sep. 1996, 30ff.
[MI/Marines]
Shenon, Philip - A - G [New York Times].
Shenon, Philip - H - Z [New York Times].
Shepherd, Scott, and Steve Bowman. Homeland Security: Establishment and Implementation of the United States Northern Command. Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service, Library of Congress, 10 Feb. 2005.
Updated 16 November 2006 by Bowman and Crowhurst.
[DHS/05; MI/05]
Sheridan, Mary Beth, and Spencer S. Hsu. "Localities Operate Intelligence Centers to Pool Terror Data: 'Fusion' Facilities Raise Privacy Worries as Wide Range of Information Is Collected." Washington Post, 31 Dec. 2006, A3. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]
"Frustrated by poor federal cooperation, U.S. states and cities are building their own network of intelligence centers led by police to help detect and disrupt terrorist plots. The new 'fusion centers' are now operating in 37 states ... and another covers the Washington area, according to the Department of Homeland Security. The centers ... pool and analyze information from local, state and federal law enforcement officials."
[DHS/06]
Sheridan, Mary Beth, and Del Quentin Wilber. "A Slow Burn Becomes a Raging Fire: Disdain for U.S. Policies May Have Led to Alleged Spying for Cuba." Washington Post, 7 Jun. 2009. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]
"The State Department and intelligence community are investigating how much damage the alleged spying" of Walter Kendall Myers and Gwendolyn Myers "may have done. Myers had worked as a European political expert for more than 20 years at the State Department, and had been associated with its Bureau of Intelligence and Research from 1988 until his retirement in 2007."
[SpyCases/U.S./Myers]
Sherman,
Lawrence W. "Chartering the FBI." Criminal Law Bulletin
16 (Jan.-Feb. 1980): 53-58. [Petersen]
[FBI/Topics]
Sherman, William H. "Research Intelligence in Early Modern England." Studies in Intelligence 37, no. 5 (1994): 95-104.
This is an interesting -- if highly speculative -- read, connecting OSS's R&A Branch to Elizabethian England.
[Historical/Broadly]
Sherr, James. "Cultures of Spying." National Interest, Winter 1994/95, 56-62.
This potpourri gets off to a bad start, when the author states that "[d]uring the Second World War, the CIA's precursor, the OSS, mounted a vast cryptographic effort against Germany and Japan." This reader almost gave up on the article at this point. Nonetheless, Sherr makes several interesting observations, connected loosely by the argument that America needs to reexamine its cultural assumptions. One such observation is that Americans have "too much complacency in the view that technology, the weapon of the rich, will always prevail against resourcefulness and guile, the weapons of the poor."
[Overviews/U.S.]
Sherry, Norman. The Life of Graham Greene, Volume II: 1939-1955. New York: Viking/Penguin, 1995.
Surveillant 4.3: "This is Sherry's second volume [of three] on the life of MI6 officer and author Graham Greene, focusing on the time in Greene's life when he was writing novels as 'cover,' traveling, and engaging in espionage."
[UK/Biogs]
Sherwell, Philip. "Teheran 'Executed CIA's Spy Network 10 Years Ago.'" Electronic Telegraph, 13 Feb. 2005. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk]
According to former CIA officials, "America's spy network in Iran was exposed more than 10 years ago and about 50 of its local agents were executed or jailed in a devastating setback for United States intelligence operations in the Islamic state. The Iranian agents, who included senior military officers, had been relaying information to their handlers at the CIA's office in Frankfurt, using messages written in invisible ink on the back of letters posted from Iran."
[CIA/00s/05/Gen; OtherCountries/Iran]
Sherwell, Philip, and David Wastell. "Britain's Spy Posts Accused of Listening In on Business." Electronic Telegraph, 13 Feb. 2000. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk]
"Britain and the US are facing unprecedented legal and political challenges from their European allies" over the "secret Anglophone spy network" codenamed Echelon.
[NSA/Echelon]
Sherwin, Martin.
1. "The Atomic Bomb and the Origins of the Cold War." American Historical Review, Oct. 1973.
2. "Old Issues in New Editions." Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Dec. 1985, 40-44.
3. A World Destroyed: The Atomic Bomb and the Grand Alliance. New York: 1975.
4. "Hiroshima and Modern Memory." The Nation, 10 Oct. 1981, 329, 349-353.
[WWII/FE/Pac/Bomb]
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