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         Intelligence & National Security Us:     more books (16)
  1. US National Security, Intelligence and Democracy: Congressional Oversight and the War on Terror (Studies in Intelligenceß) by Russell A. Mill, 2008-11-13
  2. Mapping the Global Future: Report of the National Intelligence Council's 2020 Project
  3. Keeping Us Safe: Secret Intelligence and Homeland Security by Arthur S. Hulnick, 2004-08-30
  4. Changing the US national and defense strategies and other iniatives to combat competitive intelligence operations against the US by Joseph A Bolick, 1998
  5. CSA's focus area 16: actionable intelligence: national joint and expeditionary capabilities.(Chief of Staff of the US Army): An article from: Military Intelligence Professional Bulletin by Stephen K. Iwicki, 2004-07-01
  6. America, the Gulf and Israel: Centcom (Central Command and Emerging Us Regional Security Policies in the Mideast) by Dore Gold, 1989-01
  7. US Covert Operations and Cold War Strategy: Truman, Secret Warfare and the CIA, 1945-1953 (Studies in Intelligence) by Sarah-Ja Corke, 2007-10-31
  8. The Us: Arms Control, Disarmament & Security Policy Handbook (World Business Intelligence Library)
  9. Aldrich Ames and the conduct of American intelligence. (traitor and former CIA operative's criticism of US counter intelligence and CIA): An article from: World Policy Journal by Caleb Carr, 1994-09-22
  10. ARAB-US RELATIONS - June 2 - Chalabi's Links With Iran.(Brief Article): An article from: APS Diplomat Recorder
  11. ARAB-US RELATIONS - May 19 - Cheney Warns Of More Terror Attacks.(Vice President Dick Cheney)(Brief Article): An article from: APS Diplomat Recorder
  12. Partners at the Creation: The Men Behind Postwar Germany's Defense and Intelligence Establishments by James H. Critchfield, 2003-09
  13. Us Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Handbook (Us Political Library) by USA International Business Publications, 2002-04
  14. Us Defence Intelligence Agency Handbook (World Business Library)

101. National Homeland Security Knowledgebase - Resources - Homeland Security Resourc
The national Homeland security Knowledgebase is a comprehensive Homeland security us Army War College. us GAO Special Collection Homeland security
http://www.twotigersonline.com/resources.html
Welcome to the National Homeland Security Knowledgebase : including comprehensive Homeland Security information resources, Homeland Security news, Homeland Security research, Homeland Security technology sectors, Homeland Security marketplace, directories and a collection of links on Homeland Security related topics.
For additional info on the Homeland Security industry, business, Homeland Security research, Homeland Security stocks and investment information, visit our parent Company: www.HomelandDefenseStocks.com
Resources
News Technology ... Site Map Homeland Security Advisory System
Brought to You By:
NationalHomelandSecurityKnowledgebase.com
(NHSK) HomelandSecurityKnowledgebase.com
The National Homeland Security Knowledgebase includes comprehensive Homeland Security information resources, Homeland Security news, directories, newsletter, investment research, technology sectors, a Homeland Security marketplace, and a collection of links on Homeland Security related topics.
The NHSK is owned by www.HomelandDefenseStocks.com

102. Center For International Policy
intelligence Program Work and News on us intelligence Issues Staff CIP sNational security Program is staffed by Melvin Goodman and Parker Borg,
http://ciponline.org/nationalsecurity/
CIP Home
About Us

Publications

Press Room
... Staff
Last Updated: News Headlines News: Iran warns against referral of nuclear issue to the U.N N. Korea to 'give up nuclear aims' Iran Bids to Redefine nuclear limits The UN's terrorism gap ... Viewers Skeptical of Bush
Opinion: Can Democracy Stop Terrorism? Not the New Deal The Bush Doctrine, R.I.P. War in Iraq Attacks in Iraq kill 9, including State Dept. aid Saddam's Revenge At least 100 Dead as Bombs explode across Baghdad Syria Rejects U.S. Charges on Iraq ... More... Recent CIP Publications Bolton's disruptive agenda all too obvious by CIP senior staff Jim Mullins Bush help up Cuba help over politics by CIP senior staff Wayne S. Smith

103. National Cryptologic Museum
The national Cryptologic Museum is the national security Agency’s principal Being the first and only public museum in the intelligence Community,
http://www.nsa.gov/museum/index.cfm
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Free Admission
Open to the Public:
Monday-Friday 9:00-4:00
1st and 3rd Saturdays 10:00-2:00
Closed Sundays and Federal Holidays
Group tours should be
scheduled in advance
Exhibits

Map and Directions

Museum Field Trips
Museum Library ... National Vigilance Park Being the first and only public museum in the Intelligence Community, the Museum hosts approximately 50,000 visitors annually from all over the country and all over the world, allowing them a peek into the secret world of codemaking and codebreaking. The Museum has been featured in a plethora of international TV, print, and radio media and has hosted visitors and dignitaries from around the world. Adjacent to the Museum, is the

104. Public Safety - National Security Intelligence
Safety Portal is a onestop site providing reliable information on safety inCanada. This section contains links related to national security intelligence.
http://www.safecanada.ca/link_e.asp?category=6&topic=49

105. USNews.com: Nation And World: FBI Whistle-blower Petitions High Court (8/5/05)
national security Watch FBI whistleblower petitions high court lack ofcongressional oversight on intelligence and national security that they plan to
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/050805/5natsec.htm

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News National Security Watch: FBI whistle-blower petitions high court Linda Spillers/Getty Images Former FBI linguist Sibel Edmonds poses for a portrait at her home in Alexandria, Virginia. Posted 8/5/05 By Danielle Knight L awyers for Sibel Edmonds , the former translator for the FBI, have petitioned the Supreme Court to hear her case. Edmonds claims that she was fired in retaliation for reporting security breaches and possible espionage within the bureau. The FBI hired Edmonds, who is fluent in Turkish, Farsi, and Azerbaijani, shortly after the 9/11 attacks. She was fired in 2002 and filed a lawsuit later that year arguing that her firing was in retaliation for blowing the whistle on other FBI officials. Private security in Iraq New strategy for taking on terrorists Funding the Iraq insurgency Flying the armed skies In its defense, the Justice Department is using the "states secrets privilege," an argument that information related to Edmonds's case is highly classified and cannot be disclosed without endangering the nation's security. The states secrets privilege is an executive power that is not a law, but based on a series of legal precedents. In July 2004, a federal district court ruled in favor of the government's use of this privilege in Edmonds's case. In May 2005 the D.C. appeals court upheld the district court's opinion. If the Supreme Court agrees to hear the case, the court's decision could influence the fate of several other lawsuits involving national security and intelligence in which the administration has used the states secrets argument. The government has relied on this argument in several high-profile federal cases, including that of

106. USNews.com: Just How Good Was America's Intelligence On Iraq's Weapons Of Mass T
New questions about us intelligence regarding Iraq s weapons of mass terror imminent threat to us national securityno chemical weapons in the field,
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/articles/030609/9intell.htm

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News Truth and Consequences New questions about U.S. intelligence regarding Iraq's weapons of mass terror By Bruce B. Auster, Mark Mazzetti and Edward T. Pound O n the evening of February 1, two dozen American officials gathered in a spacious conference room at the Central Intelligence Agency in Langley, Va. The time had come to make the public case for war against Iraq. For six hours that Saturday, the men and women of the Bush administration argued about what Secretary of State Colin Powell shouldand should notsay at the United Nations Security Council four days later. Not all the secret intelligence about Saddam Hussein's misdeeds, they found, stood up to close scrutiny. At one point during the rehearsal, Powell tossed several pages in the air. "I'm not reading this," he declared. "This is bulls- - -." The dossier. The question remains: What did the Bush administration know or think it knewon the eve of war? In the six days before Powell went to the U.N., an intense, closed-door battle raged over the U.S. intelligence dossier that had been compiled on Baghdad's weapons of mass destruction and its links to terrorists. Holed up at the CIA night and day, a team of officials vetted volumes of intelligence purporting to show that Iraq posed a grave threat. Powell, CIA Director George Tenet, and Condoleezza Rice, the national security adviser, were among those who participated in some sessions. What follows is an account of the struggle to find common ground on a bill of particulars against Saddam. Interviews with more than a dozen officials reveal that many pieces of intelligenceincluding information the administration had already cited publiclydid not stand up to scrutiny and had to be dropped from the text of Powell's U.N. speech.

107. The New Yorker: Fact
A former senior intelligence official told me, “The election clock was running A former nationalsecurity official told me that he had learned of the
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/050725fa_fact
search:
GET OUT THE VOTE by SEYMOUR M. HERSH Issue of 2005-07-25
Posted 2005-07-18
sciri In a second memo, Diamond noted that sciri
Under federal law, a finding must be submitted to the House and Senate intelligence committees or, in exceptional cases, only to the intelligence committee chairs and ranking members and the Republican and Democratic leaders of Congress. At least one Democrat, Nancy Pelosi, the House Minority Leader, strongly protested any interference in the Iraqi election. (An account of the dispute was published in Time The methods and the scope of the covert effort have been hard to discern. The current and former military and intelligence officials who spoke to me about the election operation were unable, or unwilling, to give precise details about who did what and where on Election Day. These sources said they heard reports of voter intimidation, ballot stuffing, bribery, and the falsification of returns, but the circumstances, and the extent of direct American involvement, could not be confirmed. Some of the Americans working with the Administration on Iraq assumed that, once the Presidential election was over, Bush would delay the vote until security improved and more Sunnis could be brought in. In a

108. The New Yorker: Fact
it bedeviled us intelligence for a quarter of a century. Overemphasizing thenationalsecurity threat made it more difficult to get the rest of the
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?030512fa_fact

109. National Security - Intelligence Agency Stratfor Offers National Security Relate
Stratfor, a leading intelligence agency offers intelligence reporting servicescovering many areas including national security agency reports and insight to
http://www.stratfor.com/national-security.php
"Able to uncover the globe's best kept secrets and predict world-changing events in ways that no one else can," ABC News on STRATFOR
"Relied Upon by Multinational Corporations, Private Investors, Hedge Funds, and even Government's Own Spy Agencies" Fortune Magazine on STRATFOR Insightful Intelligence: Subscribe Now for Immediate Access National Security Intelligence Issues And Much, Much More...
In today's complex global economy, corporations, government agencies and nonprofit groups increasingly rely on Stratfor's geopolitical analysis and custom intelligence services to meet their intelligence needs. As a leading provider of global intelligence, Stratfor delivers its renowned forecasting expertise, and monitoring and consulting services to a prestigious Global 2000 client base, allowing them to more effectively manage risk and identify opportunities. Leading Agency for Intelligence Effecting National Security
If national security is of concern to you and you need to keep an eye on the activities of government security and intelligence agencies, sign up for access to the most up-to-date intelligence reports available on issues affecting national security. Select the option that best suits your needs. Choose the Level of Intelligence That is Right for You
From Just $99 Per Year

Stratfor provides online intelligence services for individuals and enterprise-wide use. Group discounts are available as volume priced licenses for corporations, governmental agencies, educational institutions, small businesses and nonprofit organizations - including intranet and extranet services. Student special rates are also available.

110. Browse Topic: Intelligence Agencies
us intelligence agencies are responsible for areas as diverse as satellite Provides security for us diplomatic facilities in the us and overseas.
http://www.library.okstate.edu/govdocs/browsetopics/intell.html
Browse Topics Index OSU Library Government Documents OSU Library OSU
Intelligence Agencies
U.S. intelligence agencies are responsible for areas as diverse as satellite photography, covert operations, military analysis, financial security, monitoring national military force movements, and cryptography. While much intelligence activity must remain secret, many federal intelligence agencies have a presence on the Internet:

111. Federal Bureau Of Investigation - Press Room - Headline Archives
What the FBI brings to us national security is an investigative, one of theintelligence specialities that is set up by this national security Service.
http://www.fbi.gov/page2/june05/nss062905.htm
Headline Archives
PROTECTING AMERICA
FBI Proposes Creation of a National Security Service
On June 29, FBI Director Mueller and Attorney General Gonzales met with members of the press in the Attorney General's Conference Room to announce their proposal to create a National Security Service within the FBI. In Director Mueller's words: "The development of the national security service is the next step in the evolution of our ability to protect the American public. It pulls together the Counterintelligence Division, the Counterterrorism Division, and the Directorate of Intelligence, enabling it to act together to develop intelligence and then to act on that intelligence, in consultation with not only Department of Justice but also the Director of National Intelligence (DNI). We look forward to working with the DNI over the next 60 days to put in place additional steps that may be required to give full implementation to the development of this National Security Service." His commentary on two related issues:
Links: Please learn more about FBI national security programs: The Directorate of Intelligence Counterterrorism program Counterintelligence program Headline Archives ...
December

112. USAJOBS - USAJOBS Homeland Readiness And Security
the intelligence and Law Enforcement communities, the physical security The national Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) will lead
http://www.usajobs.opm.gov/homeland.asp
Skip Navigation Bar
We have identified the following Federal agencies with missions directly related to national security and readiness for emergencies. Agencies in the new Department of Homeland Security (DHS) are listed directly below. Other agencies with homeland readiness and security responsibilities are also listed.
Department of Homeland Security (DHS)

To see current job openings in the Department of Homeland Security, select here.

The United States Coast Guard is the nation's leading maritime law enforcement agency and has broad, multi-faceted jurisdictional authority. The Operational Law Enforcement Mission is directed primarily in the areas of Boating Safety, Drug Interdiction, Living Marine Resources, Alien Migrant Interdiction, and responding to vessel incidents involving violent acts or other criminal activity. To see current job openings, select here.
Customs and Border Protection (legacy U.S. Customs Service) includes the U.S. Border Patrol (legacy Immigration and Naturalization Services). The priority mission of Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is to prevent terrorists and terrorist weapons from entering the United States. This important mission calls for improved security at America's borders and ports of entry as well as for extending our zone of security beyond our physical borders - so that American borders are the last line of defense, not the first.
CBP also is responsible for apprehending individuals attempting to enter the United States illegally, stemming the flow of illegal drugs and other contraband; protecting our agricultural and economic interests from harmful pests and diseases; protecting American businesses from theft of their intellectual property; and regulating and facilitating international trade, collecting import duties, and enforcing U.S. trade laws. To find out more about their important mission

113. White House Releases Pre-9/11 Intel Memo - April 10, 2004
The digest is prepared by the Central intelligence Agency, an official from Condoleezza Rice, Bush s national security adviser, testified Thursday that
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/0409041pdb1.html
TUNE IN: Smoking Gun TV encore airs Friday at 11:30 PM (E/P) on Court TV Join TSG's mailing list E-mail story to a friend. home archive ... search

114. National Security Act Of 1947
Beginning in 1953 the President s Assistant for national security Affairs directedthis The act also established the Central intelligence Agency (CIA),
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/time/cwr/17603.htm
Bureau of Public Affairs Office of the Historian Timeline of U.S. Diplomatic History
National Security Act of 1947
The act also established the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), which grew out of World War II era Office of Strategic Services and small post-war intelligence organizations. The CIA served as the primary civilian intelligence-gathering organization in the government. Later, the Defense Intelligence Agency became the main military intelligence body. The 1947 law also caused far-reaching changes in the military establishment. The War Department and Navy Department merged into a single Department of Defense under the Secretary of Defense, who also directed the newly created Department of the Air Force. However, each of the three branches maintained their own service secretaries. In 1949 the act was amended to give the Secretary of Defense more power over the individual services and their secretaries. Additional Reading:
  • Michael H. Hogan, A Cross of Iron: Harry S Truman and the Origins of the National Security State, 1945-1954 (Cambridge, 1998).

115. National Security--U.S. History/World History Lesson Plan (grades 9-12)--Discove
Students learn that cases involving a breach of national security, Alternatively,suggest students look into intelligence work or security work in the
http://school.discovery.com/lessonplans/programs/rosenbergfile/
postionList = "compscreen,hedthick,admedia,tower,nuiad,interstitial"; OAS_RICH("interstitial"); OAS_RICH("admedia");
Grades K-5
Grades 6-8 Grades 9-12
Astronomy/Space
... Health History
Ancient History
U.S. History World History Life Science Animals Ecology Human Body The Microscopic World ... Weather
9-12 > U.S. History Grade level: 9-12 Subject: U.S. History Duration: One class period
Objectives
Materials Procedures Adaptations ... Credit
Objectives
Find a video description, video clip, and discussion questions.
The Rosenberg Case: Case Closed

Use our free online Teaching Tools to create custom worksheets, puzzles and quizzes on this topic!
Students will understand the following: Cases involving a breach of national security, such as the Rosenberg case, tend to be very complicated. Problems with national security continue in the digital age. Materials For this lesson, you will need: Access to articles and books on recent U.S. espionage cases Procedures After a discussion of the Rosenberg spy case during the Cold War, bring the issue of international spying up-to-date by asking students to prepare research reports on a recent or current investigation into espionage by people working for the U.S. government. Students may want to conduct research on the case involving one of the following individuals:
  • Aldrich H. Ames, the CIA official sentenced to life for selling to the Soviet Union the names of Soviet and East bloc officials spying for the United States

116. Intelligence And National Security Policy
intelligence and national security Policy In the Cold War security/intelligencearchitecture, we placed a premium on the security of information.
http://www.newamericanstrategies.org/articles/display.asp?fldArticleID=65

117. Defense Intelligence Agency
Provide timely, objective, and cogent military intelligence to warfighters,defense planners, and defense and national security policymakers.
http://www.dia.mil/
SEARCH DIA SITE View upcoming
DIA Hiring Events
Welcome to the Defense Intelligence Agency
MISSION
Provide timely, objective, and cogent military intelligence to warfighters, defense planners, and defense and national security policymakers. VISION
Integration of highly skilled intelligence professionals with leading edge technology to discover information and create knowledge that provides warning, identifies opportunities, and delivers overwhelming advantage to our warfighters, defense planners, and defense and national security policymakers. VALUES
We are committed to...
- Service to our country, our community, and our fellow citizens.
- Dedication, Strength, and Urgency of Purpose to provide for our nation's defense.
- Customer-Focus in the products and services we provide.
- Integrity and Accountability in all of our actions and activities.

118. CQ Press: Book: Researching National Security And Intelligence Policy, Book, Boo
national security issues are a constant concern in today’s world. Researchingnational security and intelligence Policy, CQ Press Price, $130
http://www.cqpress.com/product/Researching-National-Security.html

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Format: Print Cloth Price: ISBN: Pages:
Researching National Security and Intelligence Policy
Bert Chapman Date: July 2004 Description
Description
National security issues are a constant concern in today’s world. Accompanying heightened public interest in national security is an increased desire on the part of students, scholars, and professional researchers to learn more about government policy in this area. Written by an ARL librarian, Researching National Security and Intelligence Policy examines and annotates the rich variety of unclassified print and electronic resources available to users studying the formulation of national security policy in the U.S. and throughout the English-speaking world. Resources analyzed for their accessibility and usefulness include U.S. Government executive branch documents and other national security policy documents produced by English language governments. Coverage includes the print and electronic literature produced by independent agencies and commissions, public policy and academic research think tanks, and in books and scholarly journals. Background information on the origins and development of national security policy study in the U.S. is included as are sidebar features that provide unique and useful tips on high-interest national security topics including:

119. National Security Education Program The NSEP Service Requirement
The intelligence Community is a group of executive branch agencies and organizations and the protection of the national security of the United States.
http://www.iie.org/programs/nsep/agree.htm
National Security Education Program
David L. Boren Undergraduate Scholarships
The goal of NSEP is to enhance the capacity of the federal sector to deal effectively with the challenging global issues of the 21st century. NSEP David L. Boren Undergraduate Scholars represent a vital pool of highly motivated individuals who wish to work in the federal national security arena. NSEP strongly emphasizes the importance of award recipients seeking and gaining employment in federal government organizations whose missions and functions are most directly related to national security. Frequently Asked Questions about the NSEP Service Requirement What is the NSEP service requirement?
The NSEP service requirement stipulates that an award recipient work in the Departments of Defense, Homeland Security, State, or the Intelligence Community. If, after making a full and good faith effort (according to conditions and rules established by NSEP), an award recipient demonstrates to NSEP that no appropriate position is available in one of these agencies, he or she may work in any U.S. federal department or agency. There is also an expectation that NSEP Scholars will use the language or regional expertise acquired as a result of the award in their work for the U.S. government. What is the duration of the service requirement?

120. North Korea Intelligence Split U.S. Agencies - Asia - Pacific - International He
Although the us government overhauled its sprawling intelligence structure But they said the national intelligence Council was putting in place a system
http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/07/25/news/intel.php

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    North Korea intelligence split U.S. agencies
    The New York Times TUESDAY, JULY 26, 2005 WASHINGTON This article was reported by William J. Broad, Douglas Jehl, David E. Sanger and Thom Shanker, and written by Jehl and Sanger. Chris Buckley contributed reporting from Beijing. Early this year, U.S. spy satellites detected a spike in suspicious tunneling activity at a highly secretive military site in the mountains of North Korea. It alarmed some of the government's top nuclear analysts, who saw it as a sign that North Korea might be preparing to make good on threats to conduct its first test of a nuclear weapon. There was even tantalizing talk among some officials in Washington that the North Koreans were so far along in preparing for an underground detonation that they had built a reviewing stand for dignitaries to witness the earth tremble. The prospect of an imminent test became a crucial point in briefings by the Bush administration to its Asian allies and to China, arguing that the North Korean threat was growing rapidly and that they needed to increase pressure to resume six-party talks aimed at disarmament. After weeks of diplomatic maneuvering, North Korea agreed to resume the talks on Tuesday.

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