In the Shadow of the Sphinx: A History of Army Counterintelligence

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United States Department of Defense, Dec 15, 2005 - History - 174 pages
For nearly a century, counterintelligence has played a crucial role in providing force protection to the Army while keeping the Nation’s most guarded secrets. Today, it continues to play an integral part in America’s first line of defense in the war against global terrorism. In the Shadow of the Sphinx, an absorbing new history of Army counterintelligence, now reveals the real stories of the soldiers and civilians of Army counterintelligence on the front lines of three major wars and the shadowy Cold War conflict of spy versus counterspy. Explosions in American cities and spies crossing international borders are not unique to the post 9-11 world. In the Shadow of the Sphinx traces the origins of Army counterintelligence to the need to counter such threats as far back as World War I. This authoritative, profusely illustrated official history follows the Army’s shadowy war of spies versus spies through two World Wars, Korea, Vietnam, and the Cold War. In the Shadow of the Sphinx includes fascinating tales of: True spy stories from World War I through the end of the Cold War Securing the Manhattan Project Handling denazification in post-war Germany, Grappling with the emerging threat of communism And much more!

About the author (2005)

James L. Gilbert graduated from the University of Oklahoma in 1967 with M.A. in History. Following military service with the Army Security Agency, he served as historian and then command historian with the U.S. Intelligence and Security Command. He is the author of Three Sands: A Boom Town, The Most Secret War: A History of Signals Intelligence in Vietnam, and In the Shadow of the Sphinx: A History of Army Counterintelligence. Mr. Gilbert has also served as coeditor of U.S. Army Signals Intelligence in World War II: A Documentary History.

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