Central Intelligence Agency
Author of Murder in the CIA
About the Author
The Central Intelligence Agency is an independent agency responsible for providing national security intelligence to senior US policymakers. The CIA is separated into four basic components: the National Clandestine Service, the Directorate of Intelligence, the Directorate of Science Technology, and show more the Directorate of Support. They carry out "the intelligence cycle," the process of collecting, analyzing, and disseminating intelligence information to top US governmental officials. They are located in Langley, Virginia. show less
Image credit: Original Headquarters Building
(cia.gov)
Series
Works by Central Intelligence Agency
The CIA Document of Human Manipulation: Kubark Counterintelligence Interrogation Manual (1963) 33 copies, 1 review
Le monde en 2035 vu par la CIA - Le paradoxe du progres (French Edition) (2017) — Director — 12 copies
The Official CIA Manual of Interrogation and Counterintelligence: The KUBARK COUNTERINTELLIGENCE INTERROGATION Manual (2018) 6 copies
A Tradecraft Primer: Structured Analytic Techniques for Improving Intelligence Analysis - Cognitive and Perceptual Biases, Reasoning Processes (2016) 5 copies
Strategic warning & the role of intelligence lessons learned from the 1968 Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia (2012) 2 copies
The Original Wizards of Langley: A Symposium Commemorating 60 Years of S&T Intelligence Analysis (2012) 2 copies
An Underwater Ice Station Zebra: Recovering a Secret Spy Satellite Capsule from 16,400 Feet Below the Pacific Ocean (2019) 2 copies
The Warsaw Pact - Soviet-East European Military Relations in Historical Perspective Sources and Reassessments (2012) 2 copies
Getting To Know The President: Intelligence Briefings Of Presidential Candidates, 1952-2004 (2012) 1 copy
The World Factbook - 1982 1 copy
The World Factbook 1991 1 copy
CIA: The World Factbook 1996 1 copy
The World Factbook 1995 1 copy
The World Factbook: 2004r 1 copy
The World Factbook: 1998 1 copy
Laos, the Divided Nation 1 copy
The CIA World Factbook 2012 1 copy
Cia Book Of Dirty Tricks 1 copy
Country Notes Ecuador 1 copy
Balkan Battlegrounds: A Military History of the Yugoslav Conflict 1990-1995 - Volume I, Volume II and Map Case (2003) 1 copy
Mongolian personal names 1 copy
Panama 2-74 [map] 1 copy
Nicaragua [map] 1 copy
Lebanon [map] 1 copy
The World Factbook 1987 1 copy
Handling of Sources 1 copy
German Intelligence Service 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Central Intelligence Agency
- Other names
- CIA
- Birthdate
- 1947-07-26
- Gender
- n/a
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Langley, Virginia, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Virginia, USA
Members
Reviews
The Freedom Fighter’s Manual is the comic book version of the 1944 OSS Simple Sabotage Field Manual. It was distributed in Nicaragua by the Contras during their war against the Sandinistas.
Unlike the OSS manual, the CIA version was distributed directly to would-be saboteurs. Consequently, its tone is different from the OSS manual, which was intended to train the trainers. It has been updated, of course. There is no material on sabotaging steam locomotives in this one. It also has much show more less detail on sabotaging machinery, probably because destroying Nicaragua’s heavy industry was not a key goal of the war effort. There is some new information, such as pulling down telephone wires with a homemade grappling hook.
The use of Molotov cocktails and other less than discrete methods of sabotage are advocated. The OSS precursor was much more concerned with deniability on the part of the resisting population. Apparently, collateral damage was of less concern to the CIA, although to be fair (to both sides), the Gestapo was a much more efficient and fearsome enemy than the Sandinistas. show less
Unlike the OSS manual, the CIA version was distributed directly to would-be saboteurs. Consequently, its tone is different from the OSS manual, which was intended to train the trainers. It has been updated, of course. There is no material on sabotaging steam locomotives in this one. It also has much show more less detail on sabotaging machinery, probably because destroying Nicaragua’s heavy industry was not a key goal of the war effort. There is some new information, such as pulling down telephone wires with a homemade grappling hook.
The use of Molotov cocktails and other less than discrete methods of sabotage are advocated. The OSS precursor was much more concerned with deniability on the part of the resisting population. Apparently, collateral damage was of less concern to the CIA, although to be fair (to both sides), the Gestapo was a much more efficient and fearsome enemy than the Sandinistas. show less
I really enjoyed this one - great twisty plot and a strong female lead character. An almost 5 star.
Well, so much for "fake news" and the silliness of conspiracy theories! My cousin, who used to be NSA, had already hinted at the CIA's attitudes and practices as depicted here, and all those click-bait YouTube videos proclaim them outright, but here's a realistic account by someone in the know.
Collette Cahil works for the CIA in Hungary. Her good friend, Barrie, is a courier, who is murdered. Collette is asked to look into it and discovers the dark side of the CIA. Not the best but I liked it.
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Statistics
- Works
- 171
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 1,304
- Popularity
- #19,681
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 17
- ISBNs
- 161
- Languages
- 6















