Archive for June 2019
Commonwealth Club – Jonna Mendez: Inside The CIA And The Moscow Rules
Join us for a conversation with a real-life spy about her experiences as a covert operative and her role in the advancement of the American intelligence strategy that helped America win the Cold War.
Read MoreHistory News Network – The Cold War Spy and CIA Master of Disguise Writing the History of CIA Tactics in the Cold War
Jonna Mendez is a former Chief of Disguise with over twenty-five years of experience as a CIA officer working in Moscow and other sensitive areas.
Read MoreInternational Spy Museum – The Moscow Rules with Jonna Mendez
Join Jonna for the launch of the Mendez’s new book THE MOSCOW RULES Tactics That Helped America Win the Cold War, where she and her late husband Tony tell the story of the intelligence breakthrough that turned the odds in America’s favor.
Read MoreNPR – How The CIA Operated Under the Watchful Eye of the KGB
How The CIA Operated Under the Watchful Eye of the KGB
Read MoreWP Retropod – The Painter Who Became the CIA’s Master of Disguise
The spy business is all about masking the truth. One CIA agent’s deceptions and sham identities were so enterprising that he earned the nickname “Master of Disguise.”
Read MoreWTOP Podcast USA – Target USA – Episode 172: Jonna Mendez, former CIA chief of disguise talks about her book, ‘The Moscow Rules’
In an interview with “Intelligence Matters” host and CBS News senior national security contributor Michael Morell, Mendez, who spent nearly 30 years at the agency before retiring in 1993, said the disguises she and teams around the world would create in the agency’s Office of Technical Service could be life-saving.
Read MoreIntelligence Matters – CIA’s former chief of disguise Jonna Mendez on how to hide spies
In an interview with “Intelligence Matters” host and CBS News senior national security contributor Michael Morell, Mendez, who spent nearly 30 years at the agency before retiring in 1993, said the disguises she and teams around the world would create in the agency’s Office of Technical Service could be life-saving.
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