U.S. Central Intelligence Agency and Mathtech. Office of Research and Development. Deception Maxims: Fact and Folklore. Washington, DC: January 1981.
Constantinides: "This is a commendable piece of work, high in quality and presented in language devoid of any pretension or scholarly jargon." It does not pretend to be the final word on the subject; "it is, rather, a pathfinding work."
[WWII/Deception]
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Public Affairs Staff. "DNI and D/CIA Announce Establishment of the DNI Open Source Center." 8 Nov. 2005. [https://www.cia.gov/cia/public_affairs/press_release/2005/pr11082005.html -- no longer valid, 6/29/07]
[Text] "The Director of National Intelligence, John D. Negroponte, and the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Porter J. Goss, today announced the creation of the DNI Open Source Center (OSC) based at CIA, effective 1 November 2005.
"DCIA Porter Goss, who will administer the Center on behalf of the DNI, said, 'The DNI Open Source Center represents a major strategic initiative and commitment to the value we place on openly available information.'
"The Center will build on the established expertise of the CIA's Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) -- an organization that enjoys a long history of providing the US government highly valued open source products and services. The Center's functions will include collection, analysis and research, training, and information technology management to facilitate government-wide access and use.
"The Center's director will be Douglas J. Naquin, a senior CIA manager with extensive experience in the open source and information technology fields. Mr. Naquin most recently served as the Director of FBIS. He will be assisted by two deputies: one will focus on the Center's day-to-day operations; the other will be responsible for Community Integration. The Center's director will report directly to the CIA Deputy Director in executing strategy, policy, and program guidance established by the DNI through his Assistant Deputy Director for Intelligence for Open Source."
[OpenSource/OSC]
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Directorate of Intelligence.
1. Eastern Europe: Reforms Spur Recovery. Washington, DC: July 1994.
2. Eastern Europe: Struggling to Stay on the Reform Track. Washington, DC: July 1992.
[CIA][c]
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Extracts from Studies in Intelligence to Commemorate the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution. Washington, DC: 1987.
Includes articles by Fred F. Manget, "Presidential War Powers," pp. 91- 104; John S. Warner, "Where Secrecy Is Essential," pp. 45-64; and William H. Webster, "With Fidelity to the Constitution," pp. 85-90.
[CIA][c]
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Factbook on Intelligence. Washington, DC: Yearly.
[CIA][c]
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Center for the Study of Intelligence. History Staff. "Fifteen DCIs' First 100 Days." Studies in Intelligence 38, no. 5 (1995): 53-63.
Vignettes of the first 100 days of DCIs from Souers to Gates. Originally prepared in January 1993 as a background paper for incoming DCI Woolsey.
[CIA/DCIs][c]
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. "Glossary of Intelligence Terms and Definitions." In U.S. Congress. House. Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. Annual Report. 95th Cong., 2d sess. Washington, DC: GPO, 1978. [Petersen]
[RefMats]
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Office of General Counsel. Guide to Law of Central Intelligence Agency. 5 vols. Washington, DC: Updated through 1990.
Lowenthal notes that this "[e]xtremely useful compilation of laws, executive orders, and judicial decisions" includes footnotes that "are especially useful in tracking developments and changes over time."
[Overviews/Legal]
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