Steve  Albert

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in the spring of 1941, the United States still hadn’t a permanent agency dedicated to the gathering of foreign intelligence. Instead, in times of war this was handled by the military’s intelligence wings—the Army’s G-2 and the Navy’s Office of Naval Intelligence—and in times of peace primarily by the State Department.
The Quiet Americans: Four CIA Spies at the Dawn of the Cold War—A Tragedy in Three Acts
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