#1970s-spy-drama

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#espionage
Germany news
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago

Germany detains two suspected of spying for Russia

Two suspects have been accused of spying for Russia, targeting a German national supplying drones to Ukraine.
Germany news
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Security forces arrest two suspected Russian spies in Germany and Spain

Two individuals were arrested for allegedly spying on a businessman supplying drones to Ukraine, with intentions possibly including his assassination.
Germany news
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago

Germany detains two of suspected spying for Russia

Two suspects have been accused of spying for Russia, targeting a German national supplying drones to Ukraine.
Germany news
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago

Germany detains two suspected of spying for Russia

Two suspects have been accused of spying for Russia, targeting a German national supplying drones to Ukraine.
Germany news
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 month ago

Security forces arrest two suspected Russian spies in Germany and Spain

Two individuals were arrested for allegedly spying on a businessman supplying drones to Ukraine, with intentions possibly including his assassination.
Germany news
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago

Germany detains two of suspected spying for Russia

Two suspects have been accused of spying for Russia, targeting a German national supplying drones to Ukraine.
World politics
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 days ago

Infiltration from Within: Israelis recruited to spy for enemy countries

Israel's intelligence is exposed as flawed, revealing vulnerabilities from internal betrayals and arrogance leading to security failures.
#cia
Media industry
fromPoynter
3 days ago

Frost-Nixon showed journalism could hold power to account even when the justice system failed - Poynter

Nixon sought to rehabilitate his image through a series of televised interviews with David Frost after his resignation.
Artificial intelligence
fromTechCrunch
5 days ago

NSA spies are reportedly using Anthropic's Mythos, despite Pentagon feud | TechCrunch

The NSA is reportedly using Anthropic's Mythos model for cybersecurity despite previous tensions over access to AI capabilities.
fromAxios
6 days ago

Scoop: NSA using Anthropic's Mythos despite Defense Department blacklist

The military is now broadening its use of Anthropic's tools while simultaneously arguing in court that using those tools threatens U.S. national security.
Intellectual property law
Independent films
fromThe Atlantic
1 week ago

The Film From 1969 That Explains Contemporary America

The Sorrow and the Pity reveals the complexities of life in Nazi-occupied France, challenging the myth of universal French resistance.
World politics
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

13 Days that Nearly Ended the World

The Cuban Missile Crisis brought the world close to nuclear war, averted by key decisions from leaders and a critical refusal by a submarine officer.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

I still think it's one of the great films of all time': All the President's Men turns 50

The film was based on the 1974 book of the same name by the Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein about their investigation into the Watergate imbroglio that brought down President Richard Nixon.
Film
fromThe Cipher Brief
2 weeks ago

Why Australia Needs a National Spy Museum

Many of the foundations that have underpinned Australia's security, prosperity and democracy are being tested: social cohesion is eroding, trust in institutions is declining, intolerance is growing, even truth itself is being undermined by conspiracy, mis- and disinformation.
World politics
#russian-intelligence
Artificial intelligence
fromNextgov.com
3 weeks ago

Old-school spycraft could make a comeback as AI undermines trust

AI may enhance intelligence gathering but also revive traditional espionage methods due to reliability issues with digital communications.
World politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Trump may be using Nixon's madman theory' and similar infamy may await

Donald Trump emulates Nixon's madman theory in foreign policy, using intimidation to extract concessions from adversaries like Iran.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The Writer and the Traitor by Robert Verkaik review divided loyalties

Graham Greene announced that he was resigning from MI6. Kim Philby, his chief in Section V, MI6's counterespionage arm, blinked. Greene had played his part in tending the illusion.
London politics
Python
fromAntocuni
1 month ago

Inside SPy, part 2: Language semantics

SPy aims to enhance Python's performance while integrating static typing, balancing between an interpreter and a compiler.
fromSecuritymagazine
1 month ago

Trump's Former Counter-Terrorism Official Investigated Over Alleged Leaks

Joe Kent, President Trump's former top counter-terrorism official, is under investigation by the FBI's Criminal Division for allegedly improperly sharing classified information. The investigation began months before Kent's recent resignation, according to four individuals with direct knowledge of the probe who spoke to Semafor.
US politics
fromThe Washington Post
1 month ago

Len Deighton, bestselling spy novelist with wry take on espionage, dies at 97

Unlike the agents created by writers such as Ian Fleming, John le Carré and Graham Greene - characters who moved in the upper echelons of the intelligence field - the nameless protagonist of Mr. Deighton's early spy novels was a working-class man who indulged in insolence and wisecracks as he set out to pull defectors from behind the Iron Curtain, root out moles and thwart criminal madmen.
Books
fromKotaku
1 month ago

Hunting Nazis Makes For Satisfying Detective Work In The Ratline

Set in 1971, it casts you as a private detective tasked by a mysterious figure with tracing down various Nazi war criminals who escaped justice. Living new lives under assumed names, as was very much the case in reality, these senior members of Hitler's regime are now dentists, wine merchants, perhaps even senior members of South American police forces, and with the scant documentation you're handed, you need to find them.
Board games
fromwww.independent.co.uk
1 month ago

Police given more time to question three men arrested on suspicion of spying for Iran

This investigation continues at pace with a number of lines of inquiry being pursued by our detectives. The warrants of further detention for these three men will allow us to continue the investigation, while mitigating any potential risk to the public as we do so. This has been a long-running investigation and part of our ongoing work to disrupt malign activity where we suspect it.
UK news
#watergate-scandal
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Ex-CIA analyst David McCloskey on the Mossad's intelligence inside Iran: I was surprised'

From what I have seen on open-source intelligence, the Israelis had essentially developed a capability to tap existing public CCTV networks in Tehran and then layered on top of that, a bunch of data integration software that enable them to build targeting packages on senior leaders. My sense is that there was a US-sourced piece of humint that was then able to be fed into that model.
US politics
Berlin
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Hit Netflix series has Germany's spy agency dreaming of a less gaffe-prone future

Netflix's Unfamiliar depicts German spies conducting illegal surveillance and hacking operations that violate real data protection laws, portraying the BND as rule-bound yet willing to break regulations.
fromBusiness Insider
1 month ago

Ex-CIA Chief Officer shares a near-death mission that ended in a rush, followed shortly by his divorce

His first wife wasn't in the CIA, and didn't know he worked for the government agency. He couldn't tell her where he'd actually been that day or why he'd sometimes come home late. Even harmless details he couldn't share with her, he said. He'd come home, and she'd ask how his day was, what he'd done, and who he'd interacted with, and he recalled only giving one-word answers like "great," "nothing," and "nobody."
London politics
fromThe New Yorker
2 months ago

Russia Is Swarming Europe with Young Agents

Russian military intelligence is recruiting young people online to carry out arson and other acts of sabotage across Europe. In this week's issue, Joshua Yaffa reports on the Kremlin's secret campaign to undermine the West's support for Ukraine-and breaks down how "single-use agents" are being deployed across the Continent. Some of their missions are small-putting up posters, or picking up a package-while others involve physical attacks, for example setting off explosives and starting fires.
Business
Independent films
fromianVisits
1 month ago

Barbican turns east to rethink the Cold War on screen

A Barbican film season explores how Eastern European filmmakers imagined nuclear threats during the Cold War, spanning seven decades from 1960 to the 2020s with diverse genres and visual styles.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

My cultural awakening: Operation Mincemeat taught me how to cry now I sob at everything

They will normally say: All right then, bye. My gran died when I was about 18, and I was sad, of course, but in terms of tears there was nothing, no water. I never cried at movies. I didn't cry on my wedding day, nor at the birth of either of my daughters. It never alarmed me. I actually thought I might have underactive tear glands.
Psychology
fromWIRED
1 month ago

How Vulnerable Are Computers to an 80-Year-Old Spy Technique? Congress Wants Answers

The movements of a hard drive's components, keystrokes on a keyboard, even the electric charge in a semiconductor's wires produce radio waves, sound, and vibrations that transmit in all directions and can-when picked up by someone with sufficiently sensitive equipment and enough spycraft to decipher those signals-reveal your private data and activities.
Privacy technologies
History
fromOpen Culture
1 month ago

The Greatest Double Agent Ever: How a Spanish Chicken Farmer Became the Most Important Double Agent in WWII

Juan Pujol García, a Barcelona chicken farmer, became WWII's most important double agent by creating a fictional spy persona loyal to Nazi Germany while actually serving the Allies, receiving over $6 million in payments for fabricated intelligence.
Venture
fromThe Cipher Brief
1 month ago

What the Latest Policy and Tech Shifts Mean for National Security

Counter-Unmanned Aerial Systems require integrated, multi-layered defense architectures combining non-kinetic and kinetic responses rather than isolated legacy technologies, as modern autonomous drones render traditional electronic warfare ineffective.
#counter-terrorism
UK news
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

UK counter-terrorism agents granted more time to question men suspected of spying for Iran

Four men arrested on suspicion of spying for Iran on Jewish community locations and individuals in Britain can be held in custody until 13 March for questioning.
UK news
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

UK counter-terrorism agents granted more time to question men suspected of spying for Iran

Four men arrested on suspicion of spying for Iran on Jewish community locations and individuals in Britain can be held in custody until 13 March for questioning.
fromLondon Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
2 months ago

Former UK spy chief warns Putin 'is more comfortable than he should be' - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Sir Richard Moore the former UK's MI6 spy chief has told Sky News that he finds the tens of thousands of Russian troops killed in Ukraine just in December 2025, "astonishing." Vladimir Putin has lost more troops in Ukraine during fighting in December 2025 than Moscow lost during the ten-year Soviet-Afghan war. The Soviet-Afghan war started in 1979 until 1989 and around 20,000 Soviet soldiers were killed. The Russia President Mikhail Gorbachev called the war a "bleeding wound" and was viewed as a "humiliating mistake." Putin has made the same mistake as Gorbachev made in 1979, as he believed the Afghan war would be a "quick operation," as Moscow wanted to takeover Afghanistan.
Miscellaneous
fromPinkNews | Latest lesbian, gay, bi and trans news | LGBTQ+ news
2 months ago

The Traitors is actually based on a Soviet-era psychological experiment

The reality TV show, which sees 22 people from across the UK participate in a weeks-long social deduction game to work out who amongst them is secretly a " Traitor ", aired the acclaimed finale to its tense fourth season on Friday (23 January). Contestants and this season's surviving Traitors, Stephen Libby and Rachel Duffy, bagged £95,750 during Friday night's conclusion, which was watched by over 9.6 million people according to the BBC.
Psychology
#jumpseat
fromThe Cipher Brief
2 months ago

The Kremlin Files: Russian Double Agents and Operational Games

A double agent, by contrast, is an intelligence asset who is knowingly and deliberately directed by one service to engage another in espionage. The controlling service uses that agent to feed information (called feed material) -true, false, or mixed-to the adversary. They do so to simultaneously study the adversary's tradecraft, collection priorities, and decision-making. In the Russian system, double agents also serve a bureaucratic function: they generate statistics, "success stories," and operational narratives that demonstrate effectiveness to political overseers and ultimately to Putin himself.
World news
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Scare Out review twisty spy thriller is all style, little substance

Zhang Yimou transitioned from arthouse visionary to establishment filmmaker, producing state-aligned spectacle exemplified by the propagandistic Scare Out.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

North Korean agents using AI to trick western firms into hiring them, Microsoft says

The scam typically involves state-backed fraudsters applying for remote IT work in the west, using fake identities and the help of facilitators in the country where the company targeted is based. Once hired, they send their wages back to Kim Jong-un's state and have even been known to threaten to release sensitive company data after being fired.
Information security
Privacy technologies
fromInfoWorld
1 month ago

What I learned as an undercover agent on Moltbook

OpenClaw AI agents on Moltbook social network pose severe cybersecurity risks through unauthorized access to sensitive user data and financial systems.
US politics
fromEmptywheel
2 months ago

The Scandal of Lying about "Thwarted" "Plots" Started 4 Years Ago

Only one or two U.S. terrorist plots were actually thwarted by the Section 215 call-detail dragnet; the widely cited figure of 54 is incorrect.
US news
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The Russian honeytrap: alleged spy for Moscow faces five years in US prison

Nomma Zarubina, an FSB-recruited Russian intelligence operative, pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about her contacts with Russian intelligence while posing as a legitimate activist to infiltrate American political and academic circles.
World news
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

CIA publishes recruitment video aimed at disaffected Chinese soldiers

The CIA released Mandarin recruitment videos aimed at disillusioned PLA personnel amid high-level purges and instability within China's military leadership.
World politics
fromwww.dw.com
1 month ago

The checkered history of US regime change operations

The US has extensive historical experience with regime change operations, having attempted 72 during the Cold War with mixed success rates, raising questions about current military interventions in Iran despite official denials.
US politics
fromMail Online
1 month ago

CIA memo reveals plot to turn citizens into political assassins

Project Artichoke was a classified CIA mind control program from 1951-1956 that attempted to create unwitting assassins through psychological manipulation and drug administration.
fromNextgov.com
2 months ago

Now accepting applications - for classified intel

Over the past year, waves of federal layoffs have left thousands of government employees and contractor clients suddenly out of work. For foreign intelligence services, that disruption has opened new opportunities. With more former U.S. officials seeking employment or freelance work - often in specialized national security fields - adversaries, namely China, have stepped in, posing as consulting firms, research groups and recruiters.
US news
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

A war foretold: how the CIA and MI6 got hold of Putin's Ukraine plans and why nobody believed them

William Burns had travelled halfway around the world to speak with Vladimir Putin, but in the end he had to make do with a phone call. It was November 2021, and US intelligence agencies had been picking up signals in the preceding weeks that Putin could be planning to invade Ukraine. President Joe Biden dispatched Burns, his CIA director, to warn Putin that the economic and political consequences if he did so would be disastrous.
World news
US politics
fromEmptywheel
2 months ago

Should Ex-Senator Tied to CIA "Accountability" Be Involved in This Kind of Propaganda?

A new American Security Initiative ad uses nuclear fear-mongering about Iran, echoing LBJ's "Daisy" tactic to pressure policy and public opinion.
US politics
fromwww.nytimes.com
2 months ago

Video: Opinion | The President's Personal Spy Chief

Tulsi Gabbard, as director of national intelligence, is undermining the independence and credibility of U.S. intelligence through politicized actions involving the 2020 election.
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