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The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is an independent US Government agency responsible for providing national security intelligence to senior US policymakers.
For more on the Agency's mission, visit our Strategic Intent.
An Honorable Man William Colby: Retrospect . . . . Harold P. Ford
A National Nerve Center Inside the White House Situation Room . . . . Michael Donley, Cornelius O'Leary, and John Montgomery
Dual Use of Intelligence Technologies Breast Cancer Detection Research . . . . Sam Grant and Peter C. Oleson
A Blueprint for Survival The Coming Intelligence Failure . . . . Russ Travers
How to Suceed in the DI Fifteen Axioms for Intelligence Analysis . . . . Frank Watanabe
A Major Intelligence Challenge Toward a Functional Model of Information Warfare . . . . L. Scott Johnson
The Record Versus the Charges CIA Assessments of the Soviet Union . . . . Douglas J. MacEachin
A Die-Hard Issue CIA's Role in the Study of UFOs, 1947-1990 . . . . Gerald K. Haines
Unpopular Pessimism Why CIA Analysts Were So Doubtful About Vietnam . . . . Harold P. Ford
Critics and Defenders A Review of Congressional Oversight . . . . James S. Van Wagenen
A Persistent Emotional Issue CIA's Support to the Nazi War Criminal Investigations . . . . Kevin C. Ruffner
A Basic Intelligence Need The Best Map of Moscow . . . . Joseph A. Baclawski
General Information