I have been trying to organize my library of books about Intelligence Services around the world, MI5, MI6, the CIA, OSS, Mossad, KGB, GRU, etc. I have accumulated a few books but over the past few years I let them drift apart (actually if I'm not careful, my wife packs them away). I am going to attempt to reread them.
Anyway, if you wouldn't mind, I'd like to list them, and if you could recommend any additional books, or any editorializing of these, I would appreciate it.
“By Way of Deception”, Victor Ostrovsky
“MI-6”, Nigel West
“Dirty Works”, Phillip Agee
“Reilly, Ace of Spies”, Robin Bruce Lockhart (by the way, I’m told Reilly was Ian Fleming’s inspiration for the James Bond character).
“Intrepid’s Last Case”, William Stevenson
“The Target is Destroyed” Seymour Hersh
“KGB Today: The Hidden hand”, John Barron (Contemporary in the 1970s, but good historically)
“Spy Catcher”, Peter Wright
“Great True Spy Stories”, Allen Dulles
“Her Majesties’ Secret Service”, Christopher Andrew
“The Circus”, Nigel West
“British Military Intelligence; 1870-1914”, Thomas G. Ferguson
“A Matter of Trust; MI5, 1945-1972”, Nigel West
“The Shadow Warriors”, Bradley F. Smith
“A Thread of Deceit”, Nigel West
“Sidney Reilly, Britain’s Master Spy; His Own Story”
“The True Story of the World’s Greatest Spy; Sidney Reilly”, Michael Kettle
“The Spymasters of Israel”, Stewart Steven
I’ve also read several loaned and Library books, the titles of which I cannot remember.
One book however was especially interesting. It concerned the Intelligence Services side of the history of the War in Vietnam, identifying the OSS ties with Ho Chi Minh (known as Dr. Ho), when he was an OSS asset against the Japanese during WWII. It also talked about how the US originally was neutral concerning the French Indochina war until Eisenhower decided we should support the French. One story from this book talks about how the CIA, in an attempt to identify Sampans smuggling Viet Cong arms up the Mekong Delta, paid the local Sampans to “disappear” on a forthcoming specified date, so that the CIA could manage the searches, however each day that approached the specified date (as the CIA continued to pay off the locals to stay away) more and more Sampans kept showing up. When the specified date arrived the Delta was brimming with local Sampans. This book contained this and several other embarrassing stories, but I can’t remember the name or who wrote it. I would like to get a copy for my collection if anyone might know the title.