Military Intelligence
BIC code: JWKF
See also: Warfare
There were 8 books found.
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Baghdad's Spy: A Personal Memoir Of Espionage And Intrigue From Iraq To London - Corinne Souza - Paperback
This is the story of Britain's Secret Intelligence Services (SIS) - MI6 - as told from the perspective of a senior SIS spy's daughter. Souza describes espionage as a way of life, beginning with the murder of the Boy King of Iraq in 1958, the year her father was recruited.
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Dead Men Talking - Nicholas Davies - Hardback
This work details the covert killing operations planned, organized and carried through by the RUC Special Branch and MI5, as well as by the British Army's covert intelligence organization, the Force Research Unit.
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Dead Men Talking - Nicholas Davies - Paperback
This work details the covert killing operations planned, organized and carried through by the RUC Special Branch and MI5, as well as by the British Army's covert intelligence organization, the Force Research Unit.
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The Enigmatic Sailor: Memoirs Of A Seagoing Intelligence Officer - Alan T. Peacock - Paperback
This is the account of a young naval officer who acted as a seagoing eavesdropper in World War II. Sir Alan Peacock presents graphic recollections of life on the lower deck, being torpedoed in a Channel action, and contributing to intelligence information required to foil enemy attacks on Russian convoys.
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£10.99
SAS - First Man Through The Door: The Inside Story Of The Most Successful SAS Raid In The History Of The Regiment - Vinnie Keane; Andy Pacino - Paperback
By 2000, civil war had been raging in Sierra Leone for ten years. The people there had endured violence & were at the mercy of the RUF. During this time, a group calling themselves the West Side Boys formed. They lived their lives through violence & terror until the British Government ordered a Special Forces attack on their base camp.
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SAS: How Hard Can It Be? - Vinnie Keane; Andy Pacino - Paperback
This volume charts the army career of Vinnie Keane at one time regarded by the rest of the SAS as the fittest man in the British Army. The book's title refers to the question he asked himself before every course, mission and training run he endured while he was in the forces.
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Ten-Thirty-Three: The Inside Story Of Britain's Secret Killing Machine In Northern Ireland - Nicholas Davies - Paperback
Ten-Thirty-Three reveals in graphic detail the secret conspiracy between Brian Nelson, the UDA's intelligence officer, and British Intelligence. Nelson was given all the information needed by Loyalist gunmen to assassinate targeted Republicans.
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Wellington's Spies - Mary McGrigor - Hardback
Intelligence was just as important in the Napoleonic Wars as it is today. Then there was only one way of obtaining it - by spies and informers. McGrigor uses first hand accounts of three of Wellington's most successful Intelligence officers. The three men, all of Scottish descent, were very different in character.