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9781597971539

Fair Play : The Moral Dilemmas of Spying

by
  • ISBN13:

    9781597971539

  • ISBN10:

    1597971537

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2007-12-31
  • Publisher: Potomac Books Inc

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Summary

Revolutionary War officer Nathan Hale, one of America's first spies, said, 'œAny kind of service necessary to the public good becomes honorable by being necessary.' A statue of Hale stands outside CIA headquarters, and the agency often cites his statement as one of its guiding principles. But who decides what is necessary for the public good, and is it really true that any kind of service is permissible for the public good? These questions are at the heart of James M. Olson's book, Fair Play: The Moral Dilemmas of Spying. Olson, a veteran of the CIA's clandestine service, takes readers inside the real world of intelligence to describe the difficult dilemmas that field officers face on an almost daily basis. Far from being a dry theoretical treatise, this fascinating book uses actual intelligence operations to illustrate how murky their moral choices can be. Readers will be surprised to learn that the CIA provides very little guidance on what is, or is not, permissible. Rather than empowering field officers, the author has found that this lack of guidelines actually hampers operations. Olson believes that U.S. intelligence officers need clearer moral guidelines to make correct, quick decisions. Significantly, he believes these guidelines should come from the American public, not from closed-door meetings inside the intelligence community. Fair Playwill encourage a broad public debate about the proper moral limits on U.S. intelligence activities.

Table of Contents

Prefacep. ix
Acknowledgmentsp. xi
Introduction: A Career Under Coverp. 1
Philosophical and Historical Arguments
Biblep. 15
Aristotlep. 17
Cicerop. 18
St. Thomas Aquinasp. 20
Machiavellip. 22
Kantp. 24
Realpolitikp. 25
Utilitarianismp. 27
Veritatis Splendorp. 29
U.S. Attitudes Toward Spyingp. 33
Scenarios
Homosexual Blackmailp. 46
Trojan Horsep. 49
False Flagp. 52
Hit Teamp. 57
Torturep. 61
Kidnapping and Torture by Surrogatesp. 67
Truth Serump. 70
Journalism Coverp. 72
Operational Use of Journalistsp. 77
Human Rights Violatorsp. 81
Torture Trainingp. 85
Humanitarian Aid Worker Coverp. 87
Missionary Coverp. 90
Operational Use of Academicsp. 93
P-Sourcesp. 97
Prostitute for Terroristp. 101
Child Prostitutep. 103
Terrorist Act for Bona Fidesp. 105
Election Tamperingp. 109
Seduction and Compromisep. 112
Romeo Operationsp. 116
Coercive Pitchp. 120
Feeding a Drug Habitp. 123
Kidnapping or Killing a Defectorp. 126
Fabricating Evidencep. 131
L-Devicesp. 135
Insertion Operationsp. 138
Fake Diagnosisp. 142
Drugging a Foreign Diplomatp. 145
Press Placementsp. 149
Fabricating Academic Credentialsp. 154
Plagiarizing a Ph.D. Dissertationp. 157
Exposing Unwitting Person to Riskp. 160
Kamikaze Dolphinsp. 163
Spying on Americans Overseasp. 166
Spying on Friendsp. 168
Spying on the United Nationsp. 171
Industrial Espionagep. 175
Bribing a Foreign Governmentp. 179
Tampering with U.S. Mailp. 182
Protection of Code Breakingp. 185
Breaking a Promise to an Agentp. 190
Unauthorized Coverp. 194
Bogus Websites and Chatroomsp. 197
Back Doorsp. 199
Biological Attackp. 203
Forging Documents from Friendly Countriesp. 207
Collateral Damagep. 210
Foreign Officer Visitorsp. 215
Interrogationp. 218
Afterwordp. 225
Notes: Spying 101p. 229
The Essential Intelligence Libraryp. 263
Commentatorsp. 269
Indexp. 287
About the Authorp. 291
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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