![]() |
|
||
|
CIA: The Secret Files Out of the ashes of WWII and into the heat of the Cold War was born an agency without limits or bounds. Based on the critically acclaimed book The Agency, by John Ranelagh, CIA: The Secret Files exposes some of the unwritten rules that have governed this vast organization. From interviews with past CIA directors to the CIA dissidents who came in from the cold, uncover here the secret wars, arranged coups, and plotted assassinations executed by America's most cloak-and-dagger arm of government. CIA: The Secret Files would be useful for classes on World History, Foreign Affairs, Political Science, History of Science and Technology, Cold War Culture. It is appropriate for high school and college. Part I: High-Tech, Low Cunning At the onset of the Cold War, the Iron Curtain stymied conventional espionage. CIA sources deep inside Communist countries stayed mum out of fear of reprisal from their own paranoid governments. To gain the upper hand, the Agency needed an edge, and technology was the answer. In 1960, the experimental U-2 spy plane launched the intelligence community into the modern era of super-sophisticated surveillance. It collected more than any man or machine before it. Hi-Tech, Low Cunning details the story of the dramatic revolution in espionage as seen through the eyes of former CIA and KGB operatives. Vocabulary
Related Videos
|
|
||||||||||||||||