Studies In Intelligence, March 2010 [76 Pages, 3.28MB] – The Center for the Study of Intelligence (CSI) was founded In 1974 In response to Director of Central Intelligence James Schlesinger’s desire to create within CIA an organization that could “think through the functions of Intelligence and bring the best Intellects available to bear on Intelligence problems.” The center, comprising professional historians and experienced practitioners, attempts to document lessons learned from past activities, to explore the needs and expectations of Intelligence consumers, and to stimulate serious debate about current and future Intelligence challenges. To carry out this mission, CSI publishes Studies in Intelligence, as well as numerous books and monographs addressing historical, operational, doctrinal and theoretical aspects of the Intelligence profession. It also administers the CIA Museum and maintains the Agency’s Historical Intelligence Collection of published literature on Intelligence.
Studies In Intelligence, December 2009 [97 Pages, 1.65MB] – Contents of this volume Include the following topics, articles, comments and reviews: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES: Operation INFEKTION Soviet Bloc Intelligence and Its AIDS Disinformation Campaign; The Origins of Modern Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance – Military Intelligence at the Front, 1914-18 25; INTELLIGENCE TODAY AND TOMORROW: An Experiment In Collaboration on an Intelligence Problem – Developing STORM, a Methodology for Evaluating Transit Routes of Transnational Terrorists and Criminals; INTELLIGENCE IN PUBLIC MEDIA: The James Angleton Phenomenon – Cunning Passages, Contrived Corridors”: Wandering In the Angleton Ian Wilderness; On the Web: Moles, Defectors, and Deceptions: James Angleton and CIA Counterintelligence; The Accidental Guerrilla: Fighting Small Wars In the Midst of a Big One; Vietnam Declassified: CIA and Counterinsurgency In Vietnam; OSS Training In the National Parks and Service Abroad In World War II; The Secret War In El Paso: Mexico Revolutionary Intrigue, 1906-1920; The Intelligence Officer’s Bookshelf; Comment – In Defense of JOHN Honey man (and George Washington); Books, Film, and Television Reviewed In Studies In Intelligence, 2009.
Human Experimentation – An Overview of Cold War Era Programs, GAO Report, September 28, 1994 [16 Pages, 1.11MB]
Spring 1986: 9-109-1: The Future of Intelligence, by Walter Liqueur [13 Pages, 6.8MB] – Series: Articles from “Studies in Intelligence”, 1955 – 1992 Record Group 263: Records of the Central Intelligence Agency, 1894 – 2002.
Winter 1986: 10-112-1: The Supreme Court and the Intelligence Source, by Louis J. Due and Laune M. Siebel [18 Pages, 7.7MB] – From: Series: Articles from “Studies In Intelligence”, 1955 – 1992 Record Group 263: Records of the Central Intelligence Agency, 1894 – 2002.
Project MKULTRA, The CIA’s Program of Research in Behavioral Modification, 3 August 1977 [172 Pages, 8.87MB]
The Role of Institutional Review Boards In Aviation Research: It’s the Law and It Makes Sense, Date Unknown [6 Pages, 178kb] – By Dr. Earl S. Stein, FAA, William J. Hughes Technical Center, Atlantic City International Airport, New Jersey. Unknown Date. References MKULTRA.