America's chief spy catcher between 1983 and 1994 reveals his own Cold War memoir of a career spend chasing down spooks, moles, and traitors in the U.S., most notably Clyde Conrad, the most damaging spy in American history.
Interesting read and a good reminder that spies aren’t dashing Bond types, nor are spy hunters. Made the point that counterintelligence is mostly about diligent basic investigative work that often continues well past the initial identification of a spy. I hadn’t thought much about how the fact that spying often occurs on foreign soil complicates the question of how to prosecute a suspected spy. The least interesting parts were the discussion of internal politics within the Army and across agencies in the US.
Not a bad summary of several extensive and high-profile espionage cases handled by the Army. The focus and details are a little different from other books, so I definitely learned additional info from this book (and my study on the subject has been thorough). If you are interested in the Cold War, this is an excellent book to add to the reading list.
I wish there had been an index. Also the storytelling is more detailed and less immersive than I prefer, but that did enable the author to recount several cases in one relatable book.
The Head of U.S. Army Counterintelligence Stuart Herrington details the investigation and prosecution of the two more egregious betrayals of the U.S. Military war plans in the history of the Army. It is slow and painstaking work dealing with multiple jurisdictions and agencies in both the United States and Europe. We can only hope that this spirit, dedication, and professionalism still remain.
The book that shouldn’t have been written because it gives an unvarnished first hand account inside the “Spy catchers” world - fortunately for the intelligence community, it was. Americans will never fully understand the depths that the military intelligence community goes to to shield our Nation. You won’t be able to put it down.
Herrington was in charge of Army foreign counterintelligence efforts against the massive leaking of classified documents to the Russians that took place in the 70s and 80s. His work makes for interesting and often exciting reading.
Espionage has always fascinated me, and it is amazing how many people sold out to the Soviets and other countries. This was a very readable book and has a lot of good information about the motivations and techniques used by spies and the people that catch them.
VERY good book on the subject. I'm suprised they were allowed to talk this much about it. The book gives very interesting stories about the cold war and the OPS that took place in Germany.
Stopped reading at page 86. Not suspenseful or a page-turner at all. Very dry. Lots of names, dates, and places, but little action or anything to hold my interest.