Los Angeles Times. "Ex-INS Supervisor, Faget, Gets 5 Years in Spy Case." 30 Jun. 2001.
On 29 June 2001, Mariano Faget "was sentenced in Miami to five years in prison for disclosing official secrets to Cuba."
[SpyCases/U.S./Faget]
Lose, James M.
"National Intelligence Support Teams." Studies in Intelligence
(Winter 1999-2000): 87-96.
Unconventional settings for military operations "compel[] the [field] commander to rely more heavily on his intelligence officer" than might have been the case in conventional combat operations. The NIST concept reflects the lessons learned in Desert Shield/Desert Storm. "A NIST is normally composed of personnel from DIA, NSA, NIMA, and the CIA who are deployed upon request by the military commander to facilitate the flow of all-source intelligence between a Joint Task Force (JTF) and Washington, DC."
[MI/Ops/Other]
Losey, Stephen. "Charles Allen's Homeland Security Department." Periscope (Summer 2006): 33-34. [Reprinted from Fedeal Times, 4 Sep. 2006]
Interview with head of DHS's intelligence office.
[DHS/06]
Losey, Stephen. "Online Intelligence Library Fosters Collaboration among Agencies." Federal Times, 6 Jul. 2011. [http://www.federaltimes.com]
In a 23 June 2011 interview with Federal Times, DIA Deputy Directo David Shedd said that the "government's online Library of National Intelligence is one of the most important -- and unheralded -- parts of its effort to encourage information sharing and collaboration.... The CIA began working on the library in early 2007, and within two years, all intelligence agencies were submitting their reports and other intelligence products to the online repository."
[GenPostCW/10s/11]
Lossing, Benson
J. The Two Spies: Nathan Hale and John Andre. New York: Appleton,
1904. [Petersen]
[RevWar/Arnold & Hale]
Lotz, Wolfgang.
1. The Champagne Spy: Israel's Master Spy Tells His Story. New York: St. Martin's, 1972. New York: Manor, 1973. [pb]
Surveillant 3.2/3 identifies Lotz as an "Israeli soldier who spied in Egypt from 1960 to 1965 while posing as a ... German." Constantinides notes that disagreement exists over aspects of Lodz' account, but concludes that this is "nevertheless a rare work -- the story of a post-World War II non-Soviet illegal operation written by the illegal himself." Lotz' Handbook for Spies offers further insight into Lodz the man and Lodz the spy.
2. A Handbook for Spies. New York: Harper & Row, 1980.
Surveillant 3.2/3 describes A Handbook for Spies as "something of a do-it-youself manual for testing your suitability to be a spy." To Constantinides, the book "not only reflects [the author's] experiences and his outlook stemming from his work in Egypt but reveals much about Lodz himself.... Some of his observations on the agent and espionage are universally pertinent, while others seem to fit his particular experiences and circumstances."
[Israel/OtherOps]
[Louie, Gilman
G.] "Gilman G. Louie Discusses In-Q-Tel, the CIA's New High-Tech Investment
Company." National Security Law Report 22, no. 2 (Mar.-Apr.
2000): 1-2, 5-8.
Remarks on 1 December 1999 at Standing Committee breakfast in Washington, DC.
[CIA/99/InQIt; CIA/00/Gen]
[Louie, Gilman.]
"Speech by Gilman Louie, President and CEO, In-Q-Tel, Inc., 8 May 2000."
CIRA Newsletter 25, no. 2 (Summer 2000): 4-13.
Louie speaks about the role of his company in supporting the technological advancement of the CIA and U.S. intelligence.
[CIA/99/InQIt; CIA/00/Gen]
Loureiro,
Pedro. "The Imperial Japanese Navy and Espionage: The Itaru Tachibana
Case." International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence
3, no. 1 (Spring 1989): 105-121.
Loureiro writes about a Japanese spy ring in California, 1940-1941, some members of which were indicted for spying but were released at the request of the State Department.
[Japan/PreWWII][c]
Love, Terry.
Wings of Air America. Atglen, PA: Schiffer, 1998.
Hauver, CIRA Newsletter 23.2: "The largest of CIA's 'secret' airlines ... was also one of the world's most extraordinary companies. The book also covers CAT [Civil Air Transport] and SAT [Southern Air Transport]."
[CA/Gen]
Loven, Jennifer. Bush Taps Kissinger to Head 9/11 Probe. Associated Press, 27 Nov. 2002. [http://www.washingtonpost.com]
On 27 November 2002, President George W. Bush "signed legislation creating a new independent commission to investigate the Sept. 11 attacks and named former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to lead the panel."
[GenPostCW/00s/Commission]
Lovejoy, Thomas E. "National Security, National Interest, and Sustainability." In Nature and Human Society: The Quest for a Sustainable World, eds. Peter H. Raven and Tania Williams, 506-514. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2000.
[GenPostwar/NatSec/Environment]
Lovell, Mary
S. Cast No Shadow: The Life of the American Spy Who Changed the Course
of World War II. New York: Pantheon Books, 1992.
Clark comment: This book is about Amy Elizabeth Thorpe Pack, the acquisition of the Italian and French naval ciphers prior to the American landing in North Africa in November 1942, and other espionage sexploits.
Troy, FILS 11.3, says Cast No Shadow is an "excellent work of research and writing." It provides a "convincing account of a sex-obsessed woman who found fulfillment in espionage, as a spy for BSC [British Security Coordination] and/or the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), chiefly in Washington in 1941-42." This is "a good read." Binker, AIJ 13.3, finds that, under the author's "skillful handling," Pack "emerges as a woman of extraordinary courage, daring, intelligence, and character. In short, the perfect spy."
See also, Domenico Vecchioni, Cynthia: la spia che cambiò il corso della seconda guerra mondiale [Cynthia: The Spy Who Changed the Course of the Second World War] (Milan: EURA Pr. Ed. Italiane, 2002).
[Women/WWII/U.S.; WWII/OSS/Individuals]
Lovell, Stanley P.
1. Deadly Gadgets of the OSS: When Uncle Sam Played Dirty in World War II. Bennington, VT: World War II Historical Society, 1996.
2. Of Spies and Strategems. Englewoord Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1963.
Clark comment: From 1942, Lovell headed the OSS Research and Development Branch, the unit which developed and invented the paraphernalia of special warfare. For Constantinides, this is "a chatty book that brings out information on some technical accomplishments and contains cameo shots of certain personalities, among them General Donovan."
Full text of Lovell's book is available at: http://www.archive.org/stream/ofspiesstratagem006983mbp/ofspiesstratagem006983mbp_djvu.txt.
[WWII/OSS/Topics/Weapons]
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