Read A Brief History of the Spy Online
Authors: Paul Simpson
PLO:
Palestine Liberation Organisation. Political and paramilitary organization aiming to set up a separate Palestinian state.
Politburo:
the leading members of the Communist party. Usually referring to the USSR, but each country had its own politburo.
SDECE:
External Documentation and Counter-Espionage Service. The French intelligence agency between 1944 and 1982. Replaced by the DGSE.
SIG:
Special Investigation Group. A team set up by James Jesus Angleton to investigate potential spies within the CIA.
SIGINT:
SIGnals INTelligence: information received from messages passed between opposing forces.
SIS:
See MI6.
SMERSH:
derived from the Russian term SMERt’ SHpionam (Death to Spies). This was a part of the NKVD during the Second World War. Its notoriety derives from its use by Ian Fleming in the James Bond novels written in the 1950s, although the real SMERSH was disbanded in 1946.
SOE:
Special Operations Executive. The sabotage wing of British intelligence during the Second World War. It derived from MI6’s Section D, and was folded back into MI6 after the end of hostilities.
SPG:
Special Procedures Group. Part of the CIA tasked with aiding anti-Communist parties to win the Italian elections after the Second World War.
SSA:
South African State Security Agency. The South African intelligence service since 2009.
Stasi:
Staatssicherheit. The Ministry for State Security in East Germany. The intelligence agency for the East German Communist regime.
StB:
Státní Bezpeènost (State Security). The Czech secret service between 1945 and 1990.
Sûreté:
the French police.
SVR:
Foreign Intelligence Service of the Russian Federation. The successor to the KGB.
tradecraft:
the ways in which a spy operates in order to maintain their cover.
TSD:
Technical Services Division. The real-life Q Branch of the CIA, creating all the gadgets and technology required by agents. And the occasional Acoustic Kitty.
watchers:
counter-intelligence agents monitoring a target.
wet work/wet affairs:
a euphemism for murder and assassinations, deriving from the spilling of blood.
Abdoolcader, Sirioj Husein
100
,
116
Abel, Colonel Rudolf Invanovich
71–2
,
76
Abse, Leo
102
Acoustic Kitty
107
Adenauer, Konrad
57
aerospace research
118
,
140
,
156
,
248
see also
nuclear weapons and research
Afghanistan
Russian occupation
114
,
149–50
,
194
,
196–7
,
200
,
210
,
211
,
212
US invasion
223
AIDs
181–2
Air America
112–13
Akhmerov, Iskhak
26
al-Balawi, Humam
237
al-Fadl, Jamal Ahmed
219
al-Janabi, Rafid Ahmed Alwan ‘Curveball’
228
,
229–31
al-Kuwaiti, Abu Ahmed
236–7
al-Libi, Abu Faraj
237
al-Mergrahi, Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed
209
al-Qaeda
xiii
,
200
,
205–6
,
210
,
211–12
,
219
,
220–1
,
222
,
223–6
,
233
,
235–7
al-Qahtani, Mohammed
236
Alexander II, Tsar
7
Ali, Abdullah Ahmed
234–5
Allen, Sir Mark
226
Allende Gossens, Salvador
125
,
126
Ames, Aldrich
166–7
,
168
,
172
, 178,
185
,
186–7
,
194
,
195
,
214
,
241
,
244
Ames, Robert
208
Amin, Hafizullah
149–50
Andropov, Uri
67
,
100
,
105–6
,
139
,
141
,
152
,
158
,
160
,
180
Angleton, James Jesus
92–3
,
119–23
Anglo-Iranian Oil Company
54
Arafat, Yasser
206
Árbenz Guzmán, Jacobo
56
Arlington Hall
28–30
Armas, Colonel Carlos Castillo
56
Armstrong, Sir Robert
187–8
Ashcroft, Attorney General John
247
ASIS (Australian Secret Intelligence Service)
148–9
,
161–2
assassinations
banned by President Ford
143
by Bogdan Stashinsky
74
Georgi Markov
141–2
Leon Trotsky
8
Osama bin Laden
235–9
Reinhard Heydrich
5
Tsar Alexander II
7
Atlee, Clement
22
atomic bombs
see
nuclear weapons projects and research
Babar, Mohamed
234
Baer, Robert
94
Bakatin, General Vadim
199
Baker, James
76
Baker Jr., Howard H.
123
Bandera, Stepan
74
Bao Dai, Emperor
61
Barot, Dhiren
234
Barton Osborn, K.
111
Baruch, Bernard
21
BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation)
12
,
15
,
141
,
145
,
248
Bearden, Milt
195
Belhadji, Abdelhakim
226
Beneš, Edvard
37
Bennett, Leslie James
122
Berezovsky, Boris
249
Berlin
xvi
,
21
,
40–1
,
53
,
78
,
83
,
85
,
208
Bettany, Michael
159
bin Laden, Osama
xiii
,
200
,
210–12
,
219
,
220–1
,
222
,
223
,
225
,
226
,
235–9
Bissell, Richard
87
Black Friday
77–8
Bland Report
5–6
Blix, Hans
230
Bloch, Felix
195–6
Blunt, Anthony
10
,
11–12
,
14
,
33
,
95
,
157
BND
74
,
75
,
84
,
104
,
139
,
228
,
229
,
230
,
231
,
242
Bohm, Gerald
104
Bokhan, Sergei
167–8
Bolshakov, Georgi
90
Bolshevik Party
7
Bond, James (films)
xii
,
10
,
99
,
132
Bond, James (novels)
xiii
,
2
,
9–10
,
60
,
68
,
99
Boren, Senator David
186
Bormann, Martin
9
BOSS (Bureau for State Security)
xv
,
200
Botha, Pik
181
Bouchiki, Ahmed
206–7
Bourne Identity
film trilogy
63–4
,
188
Bowman, Spike
175
Boyce, Christopher John ‘the Falcon’
134–5
Boyle, Andrew
157
Bravo, Rafael
248
Brehznev, Leonid
100
,
105
,
106
,
146
,
152
British Ministry of Aviation
101
,
108
British Navy / Admiralty
68
,
74
,
92
British Union of Fascists
3–4
Britten, Douglas
101
Brockway, Lord
158
Browder, Earl
26
Brunet, Giles G.
122
Brzezinski, Zbigniew
136
Bulawayo Chronicle
181
Bulgaria
141
Burgess, Guy
10
,
11–12
,
13
,
15
,
32
,
33
,
47
,
52
,
100
,
120
Bush, George W.
200
,
217
,
221
,
222
,
227
,
229
,
233
Butler Report
227
Cahill, Joe
202
Cairncross, John
10
,
12
,
13
,
14–15
,
33
,
95
,
157
Campbell, Alastair
227–8
Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS)
24
,
95
Canaris, Admiral Wilhelm
9
Casey, William J.
119
,
152–3
,
156
,
181
,
183
,
189–90
,
192–3
,
214–15
Cecil, Robert
14
Central Intelligence Group
19
,
36
Charteris, Leslie
12
Cheka (All-Russian Extraordinary Commission for Combating Counter-Revolution and Sabotage)
8
Cherkashin, Victor
165
,
166
,
168
,
170
,
178
,
186–7
,
214
Chernomyrdin, Viktor S.
243
Chernyaev, Rudolf
136
Chilcott Inquiry
227
Chile
124–6
Chin, Larry Wu-Tai
176–7
China
8
,
20
,
37
,
44
,
48–50
,
54
,
83
,
108
,
175–7
Chou, Y. T.
133
Church Committee
127–8
Church, Russian Orthodox
138–9
Church, Senator Frank
127–8
Churchill, Sir Winston
5
,
20
,
22
,
35–6
CIA (Central Intelligence Agency)
xii
,
xv
,
47
,
74
,
100
,
152
,
181
,
198
,
208
,
242
,
246
Abdelhakim Belhadj
226
Abu Zubaida
224–5
access to Soviet landlines
52–4
agents in Moscow
62–3
,
138
,
143–5
,
153
,
154–6
,
166–8
,
254
Air America
112–13
Aldrich Ames
166–7
,
168
,
185
,
194
,
214
Aleksander Zhomov
194–5
Anatoliy Golitsyn
92–3
,
120
,
121
,
122
Arkady Shevchenko
145–6
Brian Kelley
246
checking US mail
123
Chile
124–6
Church Committee
127–8
Civil Air Transport Co. Ltd
49–50
Dimitri Polyakov
101
,
107–8
,
143
,
166
,
177
enhanced interrogation
xii
,
223–6
‘Falcon’ and the ‘Snowman’
134–5