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         Foreign Intelligence:     more books (100)
  1. Presidentªs Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board Report on Doe: Hearing Before the Select Committee on Intelligence, U.S. Senate
  2. German military intelligence, 1939-1945 (Foreign intelligence book series)
  3. Foreign intelligence: Ron Holt of Hansberger Global Investors delivers positive returns from overseas stocks.(PORTFOLIO REVIEW): An article from: Black Enterprise by Dwight Oestricher, 2005-07-01
  4. Challenges to intelligence capabilities in Central America (Foreign policy series) by Richard Lawrence, 1985
  5. Seventh Circuit holds that Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act permits use of wiretap evidence obtained in international investigation for domestic criminal ... An article from: International Law Update by Gale Reference Team, 2006-12-01
  6. Echelon's effect: the obsolescence of the U.S. foreign intelligence legal regime.: An article from: Federal Communications Law Journal by Matt Bedan, 2007-03-01
  7. 2004 Complete Guide to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI): Terrorism, Foreign Intelligence, Espionage, Cybercrime, Public Corruption, Civil Rights, ... Crime - with Bonus Secret Service Coverage by Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2004-08
  8. Rethinking foreign intelligence surveillance.: An article from: World Policy Journal by Kim Taipale, 2006-12-22
  9. Vital Presidential Power; The Supreme Court has never ruled that the president does not ultimately have the authority to collect foreign intelligence--here ... fit. : An article from: The Weekly Standard by William Kristol, Gary Schmitt, 2005-12-20
  10. Foreign Intelligence: Research & Analysis in the Office of Strategic Services by Barry M. Katz, 1989-07
  11. Artificial Intelligence and Foreign Policy Decision-Making
  12. FISA fumbles.(AT WAR II)(1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act): An article from: National Review by Gale Reference Team, 2007-08-27
  13. On the Beam: Newsletter of the Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service 1942-1945 by Robert D Leigh, 1991
  14. The President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board report on DOE: Joint hearing before the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, the Committee on ... first session ... June 22, 1999 (S. hrg) by United States, 2000

41. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Definition Of Foreign Intelligence Surveil
Definition of foreign intelligence Surveillance Act in the Dictionaryand Thesaurus. Foreign foreign intelligence Surveillance Act. Word
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Noun Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act - an act passed by Congress in 1978 to establish procedures for requesting judicial authorization for foreign intelligence surveillance and to create the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court; intended to increase United States counterintelligence; separate from ordinary law enforcement surveillance FISA legislative act statute - an act passed by a legislative body Legend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms Some words with "Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act" in the definition: COMINT
communications intelligence

electronics intelligence

ELINT
...
TELINT

Previous General Dictionary Browser Next foreign agent
foreign aid

Foreign attachment
...
foreigner

Full Dictionary Browser Foreign and Commonwealth Office (enc.)
Foreign attachment
foreign bill Foreign body Foreign Correspondence Club, Hong Kong (enc.) Foreign Correspondence Club, Phnom Penh (enc.) Foreign Correspondent Foreign Correspondent (enc.)

42. Welcome To The Website Of The Foreign Intelligence Agency
foreign intelligence Agency Head of the foreign intelligence Agency,foreign intelligence Agency - Head of the foreign intelligence Agency,
http://www.aw.gov.pl/english/witamy.html
Welcome to the website
of the Foreign Intelligence Agency
Welcome to the website of the Foreign Intelligence Agency. On its pages you will find among others information on the status of the Head of the Foreign Intelligence Agency and the Foreign Intelligence Agency itself, on their tasks and competences, on the organizational structure of the Foreign Intelligence Agency and on conditions of service, principles of recruitment, provisions regulating operations of the Foreign Intelligence Agency as well as indications how to obtain the access to public information referring to some aspects of its operations. Certainly any data made public have a nature of non-confidential information, i.e. information which do not include any contents constituting official or state secrets within meaning of regulations on protection of classified information. Our service, just like many contemporary foreign equivalent authorities, attempts to naturally and effectively find its place in democratic structures of the civic society. A transparency, increased as never before, may serve the aforementioned goal to the extent in which it will not breach any interests of the state security or fundamental operating principles of intelligence service. They always include the following: absolute protection of sources, personnel as well as assets, means and operations of the intelligence service. We understand how important is a guaranteed access to INFORMATION in order to make an optimal decision that is an expression of our mission in relation to the highest state authority bodies of the Republic of Poland. Therefore we believe that providing an easier access to our Agency in practice will among others help us to obtain assistance from domestic natural and legal persons in performance of our tasks executed for purposes of protection of the state external security, which is in fact formally guaranteed in provisions of the Act.

43. Foreign Intelligence Agency - Head Of The Foreign Intelligence Agency
The official website of the Polish foreign intelligenceAgency the Head of the foreign intelligence Agency.
http://www.aw.gov.pl/english/

44. Foreign Intelligence Recruits Russians - PRAVDA.Ru
foreign intelligence recruits Russians. 04/12/2004 1712. We are constantly gettinginformation about foreign intelligence trying to get its sources. .
http://english.pravda.ru/main/18/88/351/12481_SecretService.html
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Subscribe Lists at Felist.Com Comments From PRAVDA.Ru Information Partners Headliner Statistic Hosted By Say what you want! PRAVDA.Ru will hear you! Foreign intelligence recruits Russians Russian secret services notice that American and British intelligence becomes more active in Russia, said a high rank official of one of the Russian secret services to RIA "Novosti". Similar information was acquired by Interfax information agency.

45. What's It All About, Ari?, By Justin Raimondo
March 14, 2003. WHAT S IT ALL ABOUT, ARI? A foreign intelligence serviceforged phony evidence of Iraqi nukes – guess which one
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/j031403.html
March 14, 2003
WHAT'S IT ALL ABOUT, ARI?
I n the midst of a furious debate over the key role of pro-Israel ideologues in pushing us into war, the FBI has announced it is looking into the possibility that "a foreign government is using a deception campaign to foster support for military action against Iraq." Remember the forged "evidence" the U.S. submitted to the UN to support their contention that Iraq sought fissionable materials? We now learn that, according to the Washington Post
"Officials are trying to determine whether the documents were forged to try to influence U.S. policy, or whether they may have been created as part of a disinformation campaign directed by a foreign intelligence service. … [The forged documents] came to British and U.S. intelligence officials from a third country. The identity of the third country could not be learned yesterday."
Unless it's the African nation of Niger – where Iraq was supposedly trying to buy uranium to develop nukes – that is desperately trying to drag us into war, for obscure reasons of its own, the identity of this mysterious "third country" is no mystery.

46. CIRC - Canadian Foreign Intelligence Service (non-existent)
Canadian foreign intelligence Service (nonexistent) Canada did notfollow the example of other Western states which maintained
http://circ.jmellon.com/agencies/cfis/
@import "/inc/jmellon.css";
Canadian Intelligence Resource Centre About What's new? Links Newsroom ... Associations Search with
Google
GO Canadian Foreign Intelligence Service (non-existent) Canada did not follow the example of other Western states which maintained or established foreign secret intelligence agencies after the Second World War. Since the early 1970s, sporadic debates have emerged on the issue of whether Canada should create such an agency. Canada still thinks today that the financial cost, the political risk and the absence of clear and present threats to Canadian national security militate against the creation of a foreign intelligence service. But over the years, Ottawa assigned foreign intelligence functions to several governement agencies and departments, namely the Communications Security Establishment , the Canadian Security Intelligence Service , the Privy Council Office , the Department of National Defence , and Foreign Affairs Canada This section presents resources related to the debate on the creation of a Canadian foreign intelligence service. SORT BY: TITLE DATE PUBLISHED DATE ADDED DOCUMENT TYPE Canadian security head says attack by al-Qaeda inevitable
Ward Elcock, head of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, also said CSIS had already prevented terror attacks in Canada and revealed his operatives were mounting an increasing number of spying missions abroad.

47. Terrorism - Presidential Orders
Presidential Orders and Documents Regarding foreign intelligence andTerrorism CDI Terrorism Project. From the Center for Defense
http://www.cdi.org/terrorism/presidential-orders.cfm
Last updated June 17, 2002 Printer-Friendly Version
NOTE: On-line listing of Executive Orders is at http://www.nara.gov/fedreg/eo.html#text . On-line text of Executive Orders can be retrieved from the Federal Register beginning with the Clinton administration (1993). Other documents, unless noted, are not known to be available on-line. Many documents in the various series have classified titles and therefore their subject matter is not known.

Current Significant Presidential Directives Applying to Activities
in Fighting Terrorism Executive Orders and other presidential determinations not requiring legislative action can be changed by subsequent presidents. For example, every president re-organizes in some fashion the National Security Council, the foreign intelligence advisory apparatus, and intelligence oversight. New powers to act can be granted and constraints on activities of members of the executive branch can be imposed, both subject to (but rarely enacted) legislative action should Congress feel strongly about a president's decision.
General Ban on Assassinations For example, in February 1976, President Gerald Ford signed Executive Order (EO) 11905 which forbade all U.S. government employees from engaging in or conspiring to engage in political assassination" (Section 5(g)). Ford's EO was superceded by President Jimmy Carter's EO 12036, which tightened restrictions on intelligence agencies. The ban on assassinations was continued by President Ronald Reagan in 1981, (EO 12333, Sec 2.11) and extended to apply specifically to intelligence agencies. This ban remains in effect today, although challenges have been mounted in each of the last two years by Rep. Bob Barr, R-Ga.

48. Warblogging.com: Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court Of Review Upholds USA P
November 18, 2002. foreign intelligence Surveillance Court of ReviewUpholds USA Patriot Act in Secret Proceedings. A special, secretive
http://www.warblogging.com/archives/000331.php
@import "/includes/style.css"; Warblogging.com Front Page War Stories Index of Evil Counts ... About November 18, 2002 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review Upholds USA Patriot Act in Secret Proceedings "A special, secretive appeals court" the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review has ruled that broader wiretap powers allowed by the USA Patriot Act are legal, Reuters reports . In so ruling the court overturns an earlier May opinion by the FISA Court which ruled that the USA Patriot Act's language didn't give the government expanded wiretap rights the seven members of the FISA Court unanimously ruled that the DoJ went too far in interperting the Act. The appeals court, however, said " We think the procedures and government showings required under FISA, if they do not meet the minimum Fourth Amendment warrant standards, certainly come close. " That certainly makes me feel better. This court is so confident that the Patriot Act is legal that it says that it at least "comes close" to being legal. And so uphold the law! What more blatant an admission do you need?

49. The Scotsman - Top Stories - CIA Chief Questions 'trusted' Foreign Intelligence
CIA chief questions trusted foreign intelligence FRASER NELSON POLITICALEDITOR Key points • CIA director implicates “trusted
http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=145202004

50. US Specialized Court Systems (e.g. Military, Foreign Intelligence)
US specialized court systems (eg Military, foreign intelligence).Search only this category, including subcategories
http://www.fairness.com/resources/by-metacat?metacat_id=904

51. Civil Liberties And The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
Acrobat Reader required. Civil Liberties and the foreign intelligenceSurveillance Act back. Editor Donald Musch, US Foreign Service
http://www.oceanalaw.com/main_product_details.asp?ID=352

52. U.S. Code
or electronic communications or to conduct electronic surveillance, as definedin section 101 of the foreign intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, if such
http://www.bowie-jensen.com/computerlaw/18usc2511.html
-CITE-
18 USC Sec. 2511 01/06/97 -EXPCITE-
TITLE 18 - CRIMES AND CRIMINAL PROCEDURE
PART I - CRIMES
CHAPTER 119 - WIRE AND ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS INTERCEPTION AND
INTERCEPTION OF ORAL COMMUNICATIONS -HEAD-
Sec. 2511. Interception and disclosure of wire, oral, or electronic
communications prohibited -STATUTE-
(1) Except as otherwise specifically provided in this chapter any
person who -
(a) intentionally intercepts, endeavors to intercept, or procures any other person to intercept or endeavor to intercept, any wire, oral, or electronic communication; (b) intentionally uses, endeavors to use, or procures any other person to use or endeavor to use any electronic, mechanical, or other device to intercept any oral communication when - (i) such device is affixed to, or otherwise transmits a signal through, a wire, cable, or other like connection used in wire communication; or

53. Foreign Intelligence Warnings
foreign intelligence Warnings. by Paul Thompson Why hasn t Congress investigatedif these foreign intelligence claims are true or not?
http://cooperativeresearch.org/timeline/main/foreignwarnings.html
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Foreign Intelligence Warnings
by Paul Thompson
WARNINGS THAT THE DANGER WOULD COME FROM THE AIR BRITAIN, WARNING #1: Al-Qaeda is planning to use aircraft in "unconventional ways", "possibly as flying bombs" 1999 (C):  MI6, the British intelligence agency, gives a secret report to liaison staff at the US embassy in London. The reports states that al-Qaeda has plans to use "commercial aircraft" in "unconventional ways", "possibly as flying bombs." [ Sunday Times, 6/9/02 BRITAIN, WARNING #3: An Al-Qaeda attack will involve multiple hijackings Early August 2001 (C): Britain gives the US another warning about an al-Qaeda attack. The previous British warning (see July 16, 2001

54. KGB Organization Of The Committee For State Security - Russia / Soviet Intellige
The foreign intelligence Role of the Committee for State Security. The SecondChief Directorate also played a role in foreign intelligence in 1989.
http://www.ulfsbo.nu/kgb/kgb_8.html
Shareholders' Rights Program.
Doing Business in "Wild East".

Gazprom - Russia to sell gas shares overseas.

Decree of the President of the Russian Federation (Taxes).
...
Concluding and Transitional Provisions

GALLERY
Chronology - President Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin.

(2 pages)

Who is Who

HISTORY
From the Pre-Petrine Period (year 860) to Present.
Soviet Directory, an Introduction. Russia. October -93. Federal Commission on Securities and the Capital Market of the Russian Federation. ... ORGANIZATION a. Structure b. Functions and Internal Organization c. Party Control d. Personnel DOMESTIC SECURITY a. Legal Prerogatives b. Policy c. Special Departments in the Armed Forces FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE a. Organization b. Intelligence and Counterintelligence c. Active Measures d. Influence on Foreign Policy INTERNAL SECURITY TROOPS a. Border Troops b. Security Troops Vagit Alekperov Boris Berezovsky Vladimir Bogdanov ... Vladimir Vinogradov The Foreign Intelligence Role of the Committee for State Security. The KGB played an important role in furthering Soviet foreign policy objectives abroad. In addition to straightforward intelligence collection and counterintelligence, the KGB participated in the Kremlin's program of active measures. KGB officials also contributed to foreign policy decision making. Organization The First Chief Directorate of the KGB was responsible for KGB operations abroad. The longtime head of the First Chief Directorate, Vladimir Kriuchkov, who had served under Andropov and his successors, was named head of the KGB in 1988.

55. The Memory Hole > Members Of The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court Of Revi
Members of the foreign intelligence Surveillance Court of Review. Created in 1978 by the foreign intelligence Surveillance Act
http://www.thememoryhole.org/spy/fiscr-members.htm
Members of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act , the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court is a star chamber that secretly issues warrants for US agencies to electronically surveil or physically search parties thought to be engaged in terrorism. The court operates in complete secrecy. We don't even know the identities of the eleven judges who make up the FISC. The only publicly-available information it releases is the number of warrants it grants per year. To date it has received over 13,000 requests, and it has granted every single one of them. In a recent, unprecedented action, the Court declared that the "Justice Department's plan to allow prosecutors to become involved in intelligence investigations goes too far" [ CNN ]. (It also revealed that the FBI has lied to it in 75 cases.) Ashcroft has appealed this stinging rebuke, thereby invoking the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review, whichas you might guessreviews the decisions of the FISC. The Review Court has never met before now, since no agency or department has had reason to object to the Court's rubberstamping ways. Although the judges on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court are a mystery, the three judges who comprise the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review have been revealed. In the

56. Human Rights First | Us Law & Security | Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (
Expansion of Powers Under the foreign intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). 02001,US foreign intelligence Surveillance Court of Review., pp. 29-30.
http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/us_law/privacy/fisa.htm
PROGRAMS ABOUT US CONTRIBUTE MEDIA ROOM SEARCH: Ending Abuse: 10-Point Strategy Background: Coercive Interrogation Rumsfeld's Actions Speak Louder The Courts Respond ... Commentary
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Intelligence and Privacy
Expansion of Powers Under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA)
BACKGROUND TO FISA
Congress enacted the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) in 1978 to create a separate legal regime for the gathering of foreign intelligence information, as opposed to domestic law enforcement information. FISA grants the FBI exceptional powers to monitor foreign powers and their suspected agents in counterintelligence operations within the United States. In using these powers, the FBI is exempt from the traditional Fourth Amendment requirements applicable to criminal investigations. Under FISA, for example, the FBI submits warrant applications to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, a secret court that hears the government's applications ex parte (hearing one side only). In order to obtain warrants under FISA, moreover, the government does not have to demonstrate probable cause of a crime.

57. National Archives Of Australia - The Collection - Security And Intelligence - Fo
foreign intelligence. In the late 1940s, a special operations organisationwas established within the Department of Defence. In 1952
http://www.naa.gov.au/the_collection/security/foreign_intelligence.html
Foreign Intelligence In the late 1940s, a special operations organisation was established within the Department of Defence. In 1952 this became the Australian Secret Service. This organisation was transferred from the Department of Defence to the Department of External Affairs in 1954, and became the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS). Although there is a public right of access to ASIS records after 30 years, like ASIO, ASIS generally only transfers records to the National Archives in response to requests from researchers. Few ASIS records are available for public access. All are held by the National Archives in Canberra, and most consist of innocuous items of correspondence or press clippings. These include –

58. SSRN-The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Of 1978: The Role Of Symbolic Pol
SSRNThe foreign intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 The Roleof Symbolic Politics by Barbara Stolz. The foreign intelligence
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=370518

59. HBO Forums What Did You Say Foreign Intelligence And Iraq
HBO / Bill Maher / Domestic Issues What Did You Say foreign intelligenceand Iraq Re What Did You Say foreign intelligence and Iraq
http://boards.hbo.com/thread.jsp?forum=2617&thread=100000094

60. HBO Forums What Did You Say Foreign Intelligence And Iraq
HBO / Bill Maher / Domestic Issues What Did You Say foreign intelligenceand Iraq Re What Did You Say foreign intelligence and Iraq Uh .
http://boards.hbo.com/thread.jsp?forum=2617&thread=100000094&start=1&msRange=15

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