Tan -Tar

 

Tanaka, Akihiko. "Japan's Security Policy in the 1990s." In Japan's International Agenda, ed. Y. Funabashi, 28-56. New York: New York University Press, 1994.

[Japan/Postwar]

Tanenhaus, Sam. "Hiss: Guilty as Charged." Commentary 95, no. 4 (Apr. 1993): 32-37.

[SpyCases/U.S./Hiss]

Tanenhaus, Sam. Whittaker Chambers: A Biography. New York: Random House, 1997.

Tanhan, George K., and Dennis J. Duncanson. "Some Dilemmas of Counterinsurgency." Foreign Affairs 48, no. 1 (Oct. 1969): 113-122.

[Vietnam]

Tansill, Charles. Back Door to War: The Roosevelt Foreign Policy, 1933-1941. Chicago: Regnert, 1952.

[WWII/PearlHarbor]

Taplin, Winn L. "Six General Principles of Intelligence." International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence 3, no. 4 (Winter 1989): 475-491.

The author presents his "principles" as a starting point for a "broad, and to some extent theoretical, look at the practice of intelligence": (1) intelligence derives from international conflict or rivalry; (2) conduct or use of intelligence involves secrecy; (3) clandestine collection of information is the fundamental activity of intelligence; (4) truth must be the basis for good intelligence; (5) intelligence in a vacuum is of no value; tardy intelligence is of little value; (6) special activities (covert action) must involve native knowledge of the national groups toward which they are directed.

[WhatIsIntel?][c]

Tarasov, Ilya. Tr., Guerman Grachev. "KGB's Most Dangerous Officer Unveils Secrets of Soviet Intelligence." Pravda, 13 Sep. 2007. [http://english.pravda.ru/russia/history/97107-intelligence-0]

Interview with "Viktor Budanov, a former chief of the KGB’s Directorate K. The Directorate K, one of several sub-directorates within the First Chief Directorate (external intelligence) of the KGB, was disbanded following the August 1991 events."

[Russia/00/07]

Targ, Russell. "Remote Viewing at Stanford Research Institute in the 1970s: A Memoir." Journal of Scientific Exploration 10, no. 1 (Spring 1996): 77-88.

Cited in Richelson, the Wizards of Langley (2002), 185/fn.

[GenPostwar/Issues/Psychic]

Tarpley, Webster Griffin, and Anton Chaitkin. George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography. Washington, DC: Executive Intelligence Review, 1992.

Surveillant 2.6: "[T]wo associates of Lyndon LaRouche... 37 page chapter on Bush as CIA director.... Be warned: this is way, way out there."

[CIA/DCIs/Bush][c]

Tarrant, V.E. The Red Orchestra: Soviet Spy Network Inside Nazi Germany. London: Arms & Armour Press, 1995. New York: Wiley, 1996.

According to Surveillant 4.3, this new study of the famous Soviet spy network "gives equal weight to all three apparats -- the Grand Chef's Western circuit in France, Belgium, and Holland; the Berlin network[;] and Die Rote Drei in Switzerland. Many of the myths perpetuated by earlier accounts are destroyed."

McGinnis, Cryptolog, Summer 1996, notes that this is an "old subject" but "with much new material"; the book is "[w]orth reading even if you are familiar with the operation."

For Aldrich, I&NS 11.3, Tarrant has identified and even resolved "some of the contradictions, deceptions and significant omissions abounding in the ... memoir literature" on the subject. The author, however, engages in hyperbole in his overly positive assessment of the value of the Red Orchestra.

Kruh, Cryptologia 21.2, finds that Tarrant "gives a fresh perspective to military intelligence in World War II," while Friedman, Parameters, Summer 1997, comments that "The Red Orchestra could serve as a comprehensive textbook of clandestine intelligence operations for anyone seeking to improve his or her knowledge in this area."

[Russia/WWII/Spies]

Tart, Larry, and Robert Keefe. The Price of Vigilance: Attacks on American Surveillance Flights. New York: Ballantine, 2001.

Jonkers, AFIO WIN 25-01, 24 Jun. 2001, views this as an "excellent book that fills a hole in the literature of Cold War -- and still ongoing -- intelligence reconnaissance missions." The authors, former crew members on airborne electronic surveillance missions, bring "to life the risks and sacrifices, the diplomatic furor that erupted after shootdowns, the grief and frustration of the families. The centerpiece is the shootdown of the USAF C130 over Armenia in 1958, with no survivors."

For Bath, NIPQ 17.4, the authors also provide "a helpful compendium of attacks o[n] US Navy and Air Force reconnaissance aircraft in the 1950s and 1960s." The book is "somewhat lengthy and highly detailed," but "there is much to appeal ... to those intrigued by the history of airborne SIGINT."

[Recon/Planes/Gen]

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