Irangate and Secret Arms-for-Hostage Deal

Lobster Issue 14 (1987) £££

[…] Moore reports Mrs. Dwyer as saying. “The U.S. engineers made it fail.” (Moore, personal communication). Shortly after the aborted rescue attempt, Mrs. Dwyer was arrested, charged with espionage and jailed in Iran, not to be released until February 9, 1981, shortly before Israel began shipping Reagan-Administration-approved arms to Iran, in February 1981 – probably […]

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Policing Politics: Security Intelligence and the Liberal Democratic State

Lobster Issue 27 (1994) £££

[…] intelligence agencies are actually for. Gill defines ‘security intelligence’ as ‘the state’s gathering of information about and attempts to counter perceived threats to its security deriving from espionage, sabotage, foreign-influenced activities, political violence and subversion’. Based on real-world definitions, this provokes a host of questions: should the same agency have charge of information-gathering and […]

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Who Really Runs the World? and, Who’s Watching You?

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Lobster Issue 54 (Winter 2007/8) £££

Who Really Runs the World? The war between globalization and democracy Thom Burnett and Alex Games New York: The Disinformation Company, 2007, p/b, $13.95 Who’s Watching You? The chilling truth about the state, surveillance and personal freedom Mick Farren and John Gibb New York: The Disinformation Company, 2007, p/b, $13.95   Two more from the […]

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Shorts: James Rusbridger. Illuminati. Gordievsky. Cavendish

Lobster Issue 27 (1994) £££

[…] of Sir Maurice Oldfield’. Cavendish further notes that he is not a Bulgarian — as I reported that Rupert Allason has it in his Faber Book of Espionage (reviewed Lobster 26). This arose because, pestered by Allason to say where he was born (in Switzerland, of British parents) Cavendish, as a joke, told Allason […]

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Sex and Rockets: the occult world of Jack Parsons

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Lobster Issue 40 (Winter 2000/1) £££

[…] that Parsons had a role (of some kind ) in the US space programme. Reuss was also a German secret agent. The OTO were regarded as an espionage ring in many parts of Europe. Crowley and his group were expelled from France in 1929 as a result of this. Viereck (1884-1962) can be found […]

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Secret Contenders

Lobster Issue 8 (1985) £££

[…] study the Russian Intelligence Service (RIS) and local left activity. But Beck learns that by the 1960s RIS had long since ceased using foreign Communist Parties for espionage. In Havana he manages to identify the local KGB chief, but that’s about all, even after endless tailing. Because CIA chiefs are so paranoid about RIS […]

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Secret Intelligence and the Holocaust, and, US Intelligence and the Nazis

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Lobster Issue 54 (Winter 2007/8) £££

[…] ‘allegedly involved in the torture and deaths of many Chileans’. He died of a heart attack in May 1984. Goda’s contribution on Croatia, ‘The Ustas: Murder and Espionage’, is also extremely interesting. Apparently, the Americans believed that the escape to Argentina of the Ustasa leader, Ante Pavelic, one of the worst Axis war criminals, […]

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Deadly Illusions

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Lobster Issue 26 (1993) £££

[…] research and flights to and fro between Moscow, London and the United States. Who is reading this stuff? Well, there is a group of a few dozen Anglo-American scholars of espionage history, many of them witting or unwitting carriers of state propaganda — the “useful idiots’ of NATO. Apart from them, I have no idea.

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Kennedy assassination miscellany: Book Reviews

Lobster Issue 7 (1985) £££

[…] run things in Washington – are very interested in psychology, and drugs in particular. These people play hardball, Timothy. They want to use drugs for warfare, for espionage, for brainwashing, for control.” (p155) In May 1963 Pinchot told Leary that her love affair was over. It had been revealed at a party to a […]

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Terror Within

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Lobster Issue 54 (Winter 2007/8) £££

[…] plots which now seem more fantasies than fully realisable attempts to overthrow the existing regime and institute some form of republic. Students of the arcane arts of espionage, agents provocateurs and of secret policing will find much of interest in the book. However, somewhere in that dark and unknowable place between the original pitch […]

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