aTodayas CIA is regularly criticized for emphasizing technology at
the expense of ahuman intelligence.a In this history of the
agencyas Office of Technical Services, Wallace, its former head,
and academic specialist Melton (Ultimate Spy) refute the charge
with exciting content and slam-bang style. The bookas chief value
is its perspective on the synergy of technology and tradecraft.
From WWII through the Cold War and up to the present, the authors
say, technical equipmentafor clandestine audio surveillance, for
exampleahas been an essential element of agent operations. In the
post-Cold War ainformation society, a technology plays an even more
significant role in fighting terrorism. Agents remain important,
along with their traditional skills. Increasingly, however, they
support clandestine technical operations, especially infiltrating
and compromising computer networks. The authors persuasively argue
that employing and defending against sophisticated digital
technology is the primary challenge facing U.S. intelligence in the
21st century. Their position invites challenge, but it cannot be
dismissed.a
--"Publishers Weekly"
aModern espionage requires more than a fast car and a shaken
martini; it demands suitable equipment with which to gather, store,
and transmit information. Wallace, former director of the CIA's
Office of Technical Services (OTS), and H. Keith Melton (CIA
Special Weapons & Equipment: Spy Devices of the Cold War), together
with Henry Robert Schlesinger (coauthor, "Brooklyn Bounce: The
True- Life Adventures of a Good Cop in a Bad Precinct"), present
this well-written account of the ingenious items and procedures
developed by the OTS to support field agents. Thedetails of
operational activity are as engrossing as the descriptions of the
equipment, military and otherwiseae.g., miniature cameras and
radios, obscure drugs, tiny weapons, secret compartments, and
forged documentsadepicted here in 100- plus fascinating diagrams
and photographs.a
--"Library Journal"
aJust amazing! Page after page of jaw-dropping revelations about
incredible cases and amazing technology. There has never been
anything like this book.a
aRichard Gid Powers, author of "Secrecy and Power: The Life of J.
Edgar Hoover" and "Broken: The Troubled Past and Uncertain Future
of the FBI"
aThis book is absolutely the best I've ever read about the CIA's
"spy-techs" and the critical role they have playeda] Painstakingly
researched, yet written with a novelist's flair, "SPYCRAFT" rips
back the veils, revealing unfamiliar cases and offering fresh
insights into infamous ones. From chronicling the invention of
exploding pancakes to wristwatch cameras and quiet helicopters,
"SPYCRAFT" documents how ingenious "techies" turned the CIA's lab
into "the greatest toy shop in the world" and proved that if they
"could think it --(they) could do it."a
--Pete Earley, author of "Comrade J: The Untold Secrets of Russia's
Master Spy After The End of The Cold War" and "Confessions of a
Spy; The Real Story of Aldrich Ames"
aA must read for anyone interested in the world of CIA clandestine
operations. The authors open a door on a hidden area that even
those of us who have served in the Agency rarely see. Incredible
research and great writing make this a fun ride through the history
of this until now overlooked secret world deep inside the CIA.a
aGary C. Schroen, author of"First In"
aThis is a story I thought could never be told. The CIA's
super-secret gadgets and technical operations were the difference
maker in the espionage wars. Bob Wallace and Keith Melton have done
a brilliant job of taking us into this amazing and arcane world.
Behind all of us who did the front line spying for the CIA stood
some remarkable and unsung heroes, the scientists and engineers of
OTS. It was a beautiful partnership. Don't miss this book. Nothing
like it has been written before.a
aJames M. Olson, former chief of CIA counterintelligence and author
of "Fair Play: The Moral Dilemmas of Spying"
aStuffed with stories about chemical taggants, forged documents,
physical and psychological disguises, software beacons that reveal
the location of a cell phone or a laptopa]this extraordinary,
detailed, accurate book tells more about what spies really do, the
risks they run and their schemes to avoid them, than all the James
Bond stories put together.a
aDavid Kahn, author of "The Codebreakers"
aJust amazing! Page after page of jaw-dropping revelations about
incredible cases and amazing technology. There has never been
anything like this book.a
aRichard Gid Powers, author of "Secrecy and Power: The Life of J.
Edgar Hoover" and "Broken: The Troubled Past and Uncertain Future
of the FBI"
aThis book is absolutely the best I've ever read about the CIA's
"spy-techs" and the critical role they have playeda] Painstakingly
researched, yet written with a novelist's flair, "SPYCRAFT" rips
back the veils, revealing unfamiliar cases and offering fresh
insights into infamous ones. From chronicling the invention of
exploding pancakes to wristwatch cameras and quiet helicopters,
"SPYCRAFT" documents how ingenious "techies" turned the CIA's lab
into "the greatest toy shop in the world" and proved that if they
"could think it --(they) could do it."a
--Pete Earley, author of "Comrade J: The Untold Secrets of Russia's
Master Spy After The End of The Cold War" and "Confessions of a
Spy; The Real Story of Aldrich Ames"
aA must read for anyone interested in the world of CIA clandestine
operations. The authors open a door on a hidden area that even
those of us who have served in the Agency rarely see. Incredible
research and great writing make this a fun ride through the history
of this until now overlooked secret world deep inside the CIA.a
aGary C. Schroen, author of "First In"
aThis is a story I thought could never be told. The CIA's
super-secret gadgets and technical operations were the difference
maker in the espionage wars. Bob Wallace and Keith Melton have done
a brilliant job of taking us into this amazing and arcane world.
Behind all of us who did the front linespying for the CIA stood
some remarkable and unsung heroes, the scientists and engineers of
OTS. It was a beautiful partnership. Don't miss this book. Nothing
like it has been written before.a
aJames M. Olson, former chief of CIA counterintelligence and author
of "Fair Play: The Moral Dilemmas of Spying"
aStuffed with stories about chemical taggants, forged documents,
physical and psychological disguises, software beacons that reveal
the location of a cell phone or a laptopa]this extraordinary,
detailed, accurate book tells more about what spies really do, the
risks they run and their schemes to avoid them, than all the James
Bond stories put together.a
aDavid Kahn, author of "The Codebreakers"
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