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Description
When the Berlin Wall fell in 1989, intelligence officers on both sides began destroying files. What survived reveals a shadow war fought not with armies, but with information. Behind the public speeches and diplomatic summits of the Cold War lay a hidden battlefield where intelligence agencies fought for information, influence, and advantage. This meticulously researched account reveals how espionage shaped the conflict between superpowers-from Berlin's divided streets to Vienna's neutral ground, from the Cambridge spy ring to double agents operating in Moscow.Drawing on declassified documents, agent testimonies, and archival records from both sides of the Iron Curtain, this book examines the tradecraft, technology, and human cost of Cold War intelligence work. It explores the organizational cultures of the CIA, KGB, MI6, and Stasi; the recruitment and handling of agents; the role of cryptography and surveillance; and the strategic impact of intelligence successes and failures on major Cold War crises.Neither celebrating nor condemning the intelligence apparatus, this work offers a balanced analysis of how information gathering and covert action influenced diplomatic decisions, military planning, and the eventual outcome of the Cold War itself. Essential reading for understanding the machinery behind the superpower confrontation.
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