"Back in my CIA days we sometimes used to describe our opponents in the KGB
as "ten feet tall." It was, in truth, a tribute to their tradecraft
and ability to operate in largely hostile environments. Soviet case officers
were sent overseas meticulously trained in both the local culture and language,
remained in a country for as long as they continued to be effective, and would
engage in hours long "runs" to detect and eventually evade surveillance
before making their meetings with their agents. They also drank heavily. We
Americans, meanwhile, normally did two of three year tours, were frequently
language deficient, and often spent a good deal of our time worrying about where
we would be going next rather than concentrating on the job at hand. We also
drank heavily."
Not good.
"In a sense, the KGB and CIA officers were products of the cultures
that had created them, the Soviets exhibiting caution and patience because they
knew they were in for the long haul while the Americans were more focused on
getting their ticket punched for promotion so they could buy a new Oldsmobile
when they eventually returned home to Reston."
I don't need to comment.
"These days perhaps no intelligence agency benefits more from a media enhanced
reputation than Israel’s external service Mossad. A new
Mossad book has just come out, by the same authors who wrote the old Mossad
book, and the inevitable spin has begun. An article
on March 2nd in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz’s website was headed
"Report: US pressures Israel to halt assassinations of Iranian nuclear
scientists." Haaretz wisely called it a "report," perhaps to
distance itself from what was described, instead attributing it to CBS News
the day before. If one goes to the CBS story
"US pushing Israel to stop assassinating Iranian nuclear scientists"
one would find the story credited to CBS correspondent Dan Raviv, whose updated
"Spies Against Armageddon: Inside Israel’s Secret Wars" co-authored
with Israeli journalist Yossi Melman has recently been published. The authors
claims to have "sources close to Israel’s intelligence agencies" but
admit their account is a mix of facts and opinion. "
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