inbositex.blogg.se

Counter espionage brief
Counter espionage brief












The new World War I exhibit is the third era of espionage, adapted from NCSC’s physical “Wall of Spies” museum, to make the transition to online, public view. More than 170 images accompany the narrative and help bring it to life. The WWI exhibit tells the stories of 17 German and German-American spies and saboteurs, who conducted a secret war on the American home front, as well as the efforts of federal law enforcement and New York Police Department bomb squads to counter their sabotage. The research, design, and development of this exhibit was a joint effort by personnel at NCSC and the Office of Civil Liberties, Privacy, and Transparency, both components of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. Orlando, the Senior Official Performing the Duties of the Director of NCSC. While many of these stories have long been forgotten, they hold valuable lessons as we confront today’s challenges.” munitions to German adversaries in WWI while working to conceal their role in the U.S. manufacturing sector, determined to stem the flow of U.S. German intelligence operatives targeted a thriving but vulnerable U.S. “A little over a century ago, America’s relative peace and tranquility was shattered by a foreign sabotage campaign that unleashed destruction across the country.

counter espionage brief counter espionage brief

The new exhibit, focused on World War I, can be found at /evolution-of-espionage/world-war-1. Housed on, the Intelligence Community's platform for greater public transparency, the project is designed to share with a worldwide audience the critical role of espionage throughout our nation’s history.














Counter espionage brief