917 results found.
... Chapman Pincher. The Whitehall warriors feed him stuff, he writes it up for the paper -- the traditional role of the British 'defence correspondents', famously the captives of their Whitehall sources. In fact this is more interesting than I expected. In this instance Adams has persuaded some of the big cheeses from the CIA and the Russian intelligence service to talk to him, as well as SIS and MI5, and the result is a kind of survey of the new world disorder. I'm not very interested in, or knowledgeable about, the current state of the CIA or the Russian service, and skipped through most of that. It might be true; it might all ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 50 - 01 Jun 1994 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue27/lob27-18.htm
... the story of the expulsion of 'Peter Wright' from Kenya by the British colonial authorities and it shows 'Peter Wright' arriving back in Britain, by plane. But this 'Peter Wright' was, according to The Times, 10 November 1952, 'a professor of history in Cawnpore from 1937 to 1939. During the war he was in the intelligence service, and was Press censor at Delhi'. He was expelled by the colonial authorites in Kenya for being too friendly with members of Jomo Kenyatta's Kenya Africa Union (KAU). (The Times 19 November 1952; see also 27 November 1952) The late John Stonehouse MP wrote of this 'Peter Wright' in his book Prohibited ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 50 - 01 Jun 1996 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue31/lob31-07.htm
... (c ) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 26) December 1993 Last | Contents | Next Issue 26 .. .MI5 goes on forever How perceptions have changed! In Leveller 51, March 1981, there was this snippet: 'Why all the fuss about the Panorama programme on British Intelligence? Eventually there was just one cut -- Gordon Winter, BOSS agent, former freelance journalist, in a pre-title sequence: "British intelligence has a saying that if there is a left-wing movement in Britain bigger than a football team our man is the captain or the vice captain, and if not, he is the referee and ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 50 - 01 Dec 1993 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue26/lob26-06.htm
... (c ) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 30) December 1995 Last | Contents | Next Issue 30 Letter from America Alex Cox CIA set for Pentagon buyout?Lester Coleman, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) man who co-authored Trail of the Octopus (about CIA drug-channel involvement in the Lockerbie bombing) writes in the latest Unclassified (quarterly publication of the Association of Former National Security Alumni, no. 34, Fall 1995), that the CIA feels itself threatened by a DIA campaign to remilitiarize the US intelligence structure. According to Coleman the Pentagon has never forgiven President Truman for turning OSS into a supposedly civilian entity ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 50 - 01 Dec 1995 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue30/lob30-04.htm
... an underground resistance organisation which could rapidly be expanded in the event of the Russian occupation of any part of NATO, including Britain itself. With the Tory Government's blessing it was given access to Defence Ministry departments like the Combined Operations Executive and the Joint Warfare Establishment .. .. formed close links with the SAS .. . own secret intelligence network... secured access to the Foreign Office's Information and Research Department which has special functions." What this actually was no-one - no-one we have access to - knows. Slessor and some of the other people involved, like Special Operations Executive head Colin Gubbins, were in the seventies when RPOC was set ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 50 - 01 Apr 1986 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue11/lob11-06.htm
... -Schwend Nazi narcotics gun running network, which in turn had been financed by illegal wartime Nazi operations. (78) Author William Stevenson has charged that "the normal police investigative agencies of Britain and the United States" were "hamstrung" in their pursuit of this illicit network: "it seemed as if the bureaucrats, the Establishment intelligence agencies, and the departments concerned with foreign affairs had intervened". (79) The key to this Allied protection of post-war Nazi networks, Stevenson shrewdly surmised, was the U.S . decision in 1945 to take over and subsidise the Nazi intelligence network of General Reinhard von Gehlen. Gehlen in turn helped place numerous ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 50 - 01 Sep 1986 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue12/lob12-11.htm
... (c ) www.lobster-magazine.co.uk (Issue 27) June 1994 Last | Contents | Next Issue 27 The Searchlight saga continued An editorial in the issue of January 1994, calls for 'the investigation of nazi terror groups either to be put into the hands of a special police unit attached to the Police National Intelligence Bureau, or to be turned over to MI5 and MI6.... this proposal might astonish some of our readers. But it is clear that Special Branch's head office in London had failed to comprehend the dangerous nature of groups like Combat 18 here and abroad, or even give recognition to what they are already doing. Instead ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 50 - 01 Jun 1994 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue27/lob27-03.htm
... [6 ] )and undeterred by all the nonsense he ran in the run-up the attack on Iraq, the aptly named Con Coughlin is at it again. In The Sunday Telegraph of 20 March he ran a piece, 'Iran plans secret "nuclear university" to train scientists', which was attributed to 'reports received by Western intelligence'. Crazy wavies, right?Meanwhile, out there in the wonderful world of commercial science, the ability to do what mind control victims have been complaining of for nearly 20 years, is coming into view. On 8 April CNN reported that a Sony scientist has a patent, first granted in 2000, on an ultrasound device ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 50 - 01 Jun 2005 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue49/lob49-24.htm
... its publication Dorril visited Wallace in prison and returned with an amazing -- and amazingly complicated -- story of covert operations by the British state in Northern Ireland. We headed for our respective libraries to try and make sense of this material and discovered that, with Wallace's narratives as guides, a large chunk of previously inexplicable British history became intelligible. Wallace's revelations illuminated the hysteria on the British right in the 1970s about the threat from the left and the belief of Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson that there was a disinformation campaign against him and his government. He was right: the hysteria and the campaign were largely the work of serving or former intelligence officers. We had been ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 49 - 27 Jan 2011 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/about.htm
... Contents Lobster 58 Spookaroonie! Inside British Intelligence 100 years of MI5 and MI6 Gordon Thomas London: JR books, 2009, £20 Page 132 Winter 2009/10 Lobster 58 Spooks The Unofficial History of MI5 Thomas Hennessy and Claire Thomas Stroud (Glos.): Amberley, 2009, £30 I haven't properly read either of these books and cannot really review them. However, there are some things I can say about them. I'm not quite sure why but I have never taken Gordon Thomas's books on espionage and parapolitics seriously. Partly, it is just that he writes a lot, and I don't trust people who are prolific in these fields because this material is ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 49 - 15 Dec 2012 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/free/lobster58/lob58-132.pdf