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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.
VOL. 49, NO. 1, 2005 UNCLASSIFIED EDITION
Getting It Right CIA Analysis of the 1967 Arab-Israeli War David S. Robarge
Early Days of the Intelligence Community Bureaucratic Wrangling over Counterintelligence, 1917–18 John F. Fox Jr.
Dissecting Soviet Analysis, 1946–50 How the CIA Missed Stalin’s Bomb Donald P. Steury
Learning Quickly on the Job Gathering Intelligence in Laos in 1968 Frederic McCann
George Foulk, HUMINT Pioneer The First US Naval Attaché to Korea Col. John F. Prout, USA (Ret.)
Support to Military Operations The Evolution and Relevance of Joint Intelligence Centers James D. Marchio
Toward a Stronger Intelligence Product Making the Analytic Review Process Work Martin Petersen
Treasonable Doubt: The Harry Dexter White Spy Case Reviewed by James C. Van Hook
Operatives, Spies and Saboteurs: The Unknown Story of the Men and Women of World War II’s OSS Reviewed by Clayton D. Laurie
The Intelligence Officer’s Bookshelf Compiled and Reviewed by Hayden B. Peake
A Different Angle on the Aspin-Brown Commission L. Britt Snider