Review by Library Journal Review
This work evaluates the effectiveness of the world's major intelligence services by examining various aspects of their operations and organization. West, a prolific author of books on British intelligence (e.g., Molehunt , LJ 3/15/89), is an expert on this subject, and he provides some fascinating details on well-known incidents, as well as some not-so-public events. While mentioning an agency's strong points, he seems more interested in discussing its failures and weaknesses. Despite the recent political changes in the world, the ``Great Game'' goes on. While this is a well-written volume, it is in a field crowded with similar books. Recommended only for larger public libraries and subject collections.-- Daniel K. Blewett, Loyola Univ. Lib., Chicago (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A sort of consumer's guide to the world's best and best-known secret services. With his customary flair, military historian West (Molehunt, The Sigint Secrets, A Thread of Deceit, etc.) appraises the intelligence organizations maintained by five nations: CIA (US); DGSE (France); GRU and KGB (Soviet Union); Mossad (Israel); and SIS (UK). Assessing each on the basis of integrity (e.g., resistance to penetration), operational prowess, and capacity to exploit its findings, he implies the CIA (which has apprehended scores of spies or traitors since the mid-1980's) is as good if not better than any agency now plying the espionage trade. The pseudonymous author concedes that his three-point rating system has a subjective bias, largely because many intelligence coups pass unremarked while failures invariably make headlines. He nonetheless makes a fine job of showing that Mossad (though demonstrably venturesome and ruthless) is appreciably less effective than its celebrity might suggest. By contrast, he points out, only opponents (and intelligence-community insiders) hold GRU (the USSR military's undercover arm) in high esteem. In his informed opinion, Britain's SIS has recovered from internal woes caused by the so-called Cambridge Comintern, but the KGB (also dogged by security problems) remains in some disarray. Blunders like the botched scuttling of the Rainbow Warrior add little luster to the reputation of French operatives, the author notes, dismissing DGSE as an also-ran enterprise. And despite the cold war's end, West insists that the global village retains a full measure of perils and uncertainties. Accordingly, he concludes, espionage has an expansive future, citing, for example, the need to verify arms-control treaties and to keep high-tech equipment out of the wrong hands. A savvy briefing on the dirtier work of great nations. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review