Stb - Stei

Stead, Philip John. Second Bureau. London: Evans Brothers, 1959.

Clark comment: Formed after the French lost the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871, the Deuxième Bureau is the intelligence section of the French Army's General Staff.

Acording to Pforzheimer, this book is a "history of the regular French military intelligence service during World War II."

Constantinides notes that the focus on regular French military intelligence is seen by some critics as a bias in favor of the "professionals against the 'amateurs' under Jacques Soustelle."

[WWII/Eur/Fr/Gen]

Stech, Frank J.

1. Estimating Intentions in Military and Political Intelligence. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1985.

2. Political and Military Intention Estimation: A Taxonometric Analysis. Bethesda, MD: Mathtech, Nov. 1979.

[Analysis/Est]

Steele, Jonathan. "Romeo Spy Was 'Just Trouble.'" The Observer, 19 Sep. 1999.

KGB Colonel Igor Prelin, the "main Moscow 'handler'" of the so-called "Romeo Spy" has said that John Symonds was "far more trouble than he was worth." Symonds made "only two contacts of any value to the Soviet Union but cost it a lot in hotel bills, fancy clothes and entertainment."

[UK/SpyCases/99/Fever]

Steele, Richard W. "Preparing the Public for War: Efforts to Establish a National Propaganda Agency, 1940-1941." American Historical Review 75 (1970): 1640-1653. [Winkler]

[WWII/PsyWar]

Steele, Robert David.

Steers, Bob. FSS. Field Security Section. Ashford, Kent: Intelligence Corps Association, 1996.

According to Watt, I&NS 12.3, "Field Security was that arm of the Intelligence Corps whose job it was to ensure the security of British troops in the field." The function included both passive (physical security) and active counterespionage work. This volume brings together "the testimonies of 43 FS personnel who served with Field Security between 1940 and the early 1950s ... and cover virtually every area of active service during the years 1940-45," as well as other areas in the years immediately following the war. The reviewer, a former FS NCO, recommends the book as "a remarkable collection of reminiscences, and an excellent picture, of one of the most effective and unconventional branches of British Military Intelligence."

[UK/WWII/Services/Army]

Stein, Abe. "The Downfall of Beria." New International 19, no. 3 (May-Jun. 1953): 111-129. [Calder]

[Russia/Beria]

Stein, George J.  "Information Warfare." Airpower Journal 9 (Spring 1995): 30-39.

[GenPostwar/InfoWar]

Stein, George J., and Richard Szafranski.  U.S.  Information Warfare.  Alexandria, VA: Jane's Information Group, 1996. 

[GenPostwar/InfoWar]

Stein, Janice Gross. "'Intelligence' and 'Stupidity' Reconsidered: Estimation and Decision in Israel, 1973." Journal of Strategic Studies 3 (Sep. 1980): 147-177.

[Israel/Surprise/YomKippur]

Stein, Janice Gross. "Military Deception, Strategic Surprise and Analysis of Egypt and Israel 1971-1973." In Military Deception and Strategic Surprise, eds. John Gooch and Amos Perlmutter, 94-121. London: Frank Cass, 1982.

[Israel/Surprise/YomKippur]

Stein, Jeff (CQ Weekly).

Stein, Larry [CDR/USN]. "GBS IP Receiver Decoder: What's All the Buzz About?" Naval Intelligence Professionals Quarterly 21, no. 2 (Jun. 2005): 13-14.

The author discusses "some lessons learned during USS HARRY S. TRUMAN's 2004-2005 combat deployment in support of Operation IRAQI FREEDOM while employing the Joint Service Imagery Processing System-Navy (JSIPS-N) Concentrator Architecture (JCA), Buzzlite, and multiple communications paths."

[MI/Communications; MI/Navy/00s]

Steinacher, Gerald. "The Special Operations Executive (SOE) in Austria, 1940-1945." International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence15, no. 2 (Summer 2002): 211-221.

"Austrian Resistance was almost entirely passive: no open resistance, no partisan movement, and no leader of note produced (with the exception of [Karl] Gruber)."

[UK/WWII/Services/SOE; WWII/Eur/Resistance/Other]

Steiner, Barry H. "American Intelligence and the Soviet ICBM Build-up: Another Look." Intelligence and National Security 8, no. 2 (Apr. 1993): 172-198.

[Analysis/Sov][c]

Steiner, George. "Reflections: The Cleric of Treason." The New Yorker, 8 Dec. 1980, 160-195.

Steiner, James E. "Restoring the Red Line Between Intelligence and Policy on Covert Action." International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 19, no. 1 (Spring 2006): 156-165.

The author argues for recreating the CIA (renamed) as a covert action and HUMINT collection organization, while transferring its present analytic, open source, and technology development responsibilities to the DNI or other IC components. In this fashion, the policy aspects of covert action would be separated from intelligence, thereby restoring the "red line" between the two.

[CA; CIA/00s/Gen]

Steiner, Susie, and Tracy Connor. "Academic Spied on German Writer." Times (London), 20 Sep. 1999. [http://www.the-times.co.uk]

British academic Gwyneth Edwards, who is named in Stasi files as an agent, was accused on 19 September 1999 "of providing information on" Joachim Walther, "one of East Germany's most eminent writers when he visited her university in the Midlands." Her actions "may have led to ... Walther losing his permission to travel in 1983."

[UK/SpyCases/99/Fever]

Steiner, Susie, and Tracy Connor. "Handlers Scuppered Spy's Love Affair." Times (London), 20 Sep. 1999. [http://www.the-times.co.uk]

According to the BBC on 19 September 1999, Hull University professor of economics Robin Pearson "was considered such an important agent that his East German handlers sabotaged a love affair they thought would keep him from returning [fromLeipzig] to England."

[UK/SpyCases/99/Fever]

Steinhauer, Gustav. Ed., S.T. Felstead. Steinhauer, the Kaiser's Master Spy: The Story as Told by Himself. New York: Appleton, 1931. [Chambers]

[Germany/WWI]

Steinhauer, Jennifer, and Judith Miller. "In N.Y. Outbreak, Glimpse of Gaps in Biological Defenses." New York Times, 10 Oct. 1999. [http://www.nytimes.com]

"'The encephalitis outbreak in New York is a powerful lesson for public health authorities,' said Alan Zelicoff, a senior scientist at the Center for National Security and Arms Control at Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico. 'It is a sobering, not so reassuring, demonstration of the inadequacies of the U.S. detection network for emerging diseases.'"

[Terrorism/99/Virus]

Steinmeyer, Walter. "Installation Penetration." Studies in Intelligence 6, no. 3 (Summer 1962): 47-54.

"Objectives and techniques of acquiring assets in East European official missions around the world."

[CIA/Components/Tradecraft]

Steinmeyer, Walter. "The Intelligence Role in Counterinsurgency." Studies in Intelligence 9, no. 4 (Fall 1965): 57-63.

The author seeks to outline "the part a civilian clandestine service should take in helping meet" the challenges posed in the U.S. effort to combat Communist-instigated "wars of national liberation."

[CA/To80s]

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