World War I and the origins of U.S. military intelligence / James L. Gilbert.
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Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Lanham, Md. :
Scarecrow Press,
2012.
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Table of Contents:
- Steps to war
- The Signal Corps
- The war in Europe
- Captains
- Small steps by the Signal Corps
- The first shots in the intelligence war
- An early test south of the border
- America enters the war
- Military Intelligence Section
- The bigger picture
- A counterintelligence problem
- District of Columbia
- Corps of Intelligence Police
- Countersubversion
- The civilian sector
- The advent of Yardley
- Reports and more reports
- Censorship
- An interim judgment
- Intelligence and the AEF
- The Information Division
- A downed airship
- Secret Service Division
- Topography Division
- Censorship Division
- New Year's Eve
- Securing the home front
- Organizing counterintelligence
- Counterintelligence in action
- Intelligence gathering
- Secret inks
- More reports
- Finishing the course
- Propaganda
- Attachés
- Code making
- Negative branch
- The final report
- Tested under fire
- Intelligence in the field
- Intelligence within Division
- The Corps
- Army headquarters
- GHQ: filling the void
- Stars and stripes
- Combat artists
- Securing the force
- Making the airwaves secure
- Course of the war
- Coming to a close
- First Army
- Arrival of Van Deman
- St. Mihiel
- Meuse-Argonne
- Security
- The use of intelligence
- Peace talks
- Final evaluation
- The aftermath
- Peace conference
- Sideshows
- At home
- A glimpse into the future
- Appendix A: MI divisions in the War Department
- Appendix B: Radio tractor units
- Appendix C: G2 organization at GHQ
- Appendix D: First Army Observation/Photo Air Service
- Appendix E: First Army Signals Intelligence stations
- Appendix F: First Army Security Service monitoring stations.