Teagarden, Ernest M. "The Cambridge Five: The End of the Cold War Brings Forth Some Views from the Other Side." American Intelligence Journal 18, no. 1/2 (1998): 63-68.
The author examines a number of the post-Cold War versions from both Russian and Western writers of how the Cambridge Five came into being and operated. He notes that agreement is lacking on such a basic issue as how each member was recruited. It also seems clear that their reporting was not always accepted on its face by the Soviet intelligence leadership. There was, in fact, a "distrust of the Five that always seemed to be just below the surface." The three defectors among the group "were under constant surveillance" from the KGB.
[UK/SpyCases/TheFive]
Teague-Jones, Reginald. Intro. and epilogue, Peter Hopkirk. The Spy Who Disappeared: Diary of a Secret Mission to Russian Central Asia in 1918. London: Gollancz, 1990. [pb] 1991.
According to Surveillant 1.1, the "author, who took the name Ronald Sinclair, was in fact the missing British political agent Reginald Teague-Jones, who before his death made available his secret diaries for publication."
Popplewell, I&NS 6.4, notes that Teague-Jones was dispatched to the Trans-Caspian area in 1918 because of a dearth of information of what was going on in the region in the wake of the Russian Revolution.
[WWI/UK/Russia]
Teets, Peter. "National Security Space in the Twenty-First Century." Air and Space Power Journal 18, no. 2 (Summer 2004): 4-8.
The author is Undersecretary of the Air Force and Director of the National Reconnaissance Office: "Our challenge lies in shaping a future which will ensure that our space capabilities support tomorrows successes. To meet that challenge, we will focus on five top priorities: achieving mission success in operations and acquisition, developing and maintaining a team of space professionals, integrating space capabilities for national intelligence and war fighting, producing innovative solutions for the most challenging national security problems, and ensuring freedom of action in space."
[MI/Space; NRO/00s/04]
Telo, António José.
1. A neutralidade portuguesa e o ouro Nazi. Lisbon: Quetzal, 2000.
2. Propaganda e Guerra secreta em Portugal, 1939-1945. Lisbon: 1990.
[UK/WWII/Portugal]
Temple, Harry. "Deaf Captains: Intelligence, Policy, and the Origins of the Korean War." International Studies Notes 8, no. 3-4 (Fall-Winter 1981-1982): 19-23.
Calder: Discusses NSC-68 and "its impact on developments leading to the Korean War."
[GenPostwar/50s/Korea]
Temple, L. Parker, III. Shades Of Gray: National Security and the Evolution of Space Reconnaissance. Reston, VA: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2005.
From publisher: "American satellites can photograph terrorist bases, listen in on radio conversations, sniff out clandestine nuclear tests and spot rocket launches anywhere in the world.... Shades of Gray places development of these capabilities into their proper context with the overall U.S. space program."
On the positive side, Peake, Studies 50.1 (Mar. 2006), finds that this work "presents a detailed, well-documented, top-down look at Americas national space programs ... from 1947 to the present.... Lengthy discussions of the 'complex interactions' of various early collection systems are limited, however, by the glaring omissions of more recent SIGINT and PHOTINT systems.... For students of Americas history in space, there is much to be digested. But Shades of Gray is not easy reading, and it lacks a thematic coherence that limits its value."
[Recon/Sats/Books]
Temple, Wayne C. "A Signal Officer with Grant: The Letters of Captain Charles L. Davis." Civil War History 7, no. 4 (Dec. 1961): 428-437.
Calder: In 1965, Davis "was General Grant's Chief Signal Officer of the Army of the Potomac."
[CivWar/Un/Gen]
Tennant, Peter. "Swedish Intelligence in the Second World War." Intelligence and National Security 2, no. 3 (Apr. 1987): 354-361.
Under cover as the press attaché at the British Embassy in Stockholm, Tennant worked for SIS, and occasionally SOE, in Sweden during World War II. Here, the author looks at the achievements of Swedish intelligence during the war.
[WWII/Eur/Sweden][c]
Tennant, Peter. Touchlines of War. Hull: University of Hull Press, 1992. Boston: Park & Co., 1992.
Clark comment: Under cover as the press attaché at the British Embassy in Stockholm, Tennant worked for SIS, and occasionally SOE, in Sweden during World War II.
To Watt, I&NS 9.1, the "whole book is filled with small clutches of original insights, such as to make it an indispensable addition to the bookshelf of any student of the politics of the Second World War."
[OtherCountries/Sweden; UK/WWII/Services/MI6; WWII/Eur/Other]
Tent, James Foster. E-Boat Alert: Defending the Normandy Invasion Fleet. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1996.
Foot, I&NS 12.2, sees this work as making a strong case for the tactical value of Ultra. Although initial surprise was achieved in the Normandy invasion, the German E-Boats remained a substantial threat to follow-on activities. Communications intelligence, confirmed by aerial photo-reconnaissance, pin-pointed the concentration of E-Boats at Le Havre. A daylight raid on 14 June 1944 by RAF Bomber Command essentially ended the threat. Tent has welded "diverse sources together into a readable and convincing narrative."
[UK/WWII/Ultra]
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