Ames Espionage Case

Words: 1440
Pages: 6

Spy novels are documentation for the scholars of intelligence to enable them to consider the historical context. They reflect authentic geopolitical anxieties that exist in a specific era. Great Game presents strategic conflict between the great imperialist powers in central Asia, Britain, France, and Tsarist Russia. Kim is a meditation on the imperial expansion and intrigues of Russia against India. Martin Tomas comments on this issue:

"In Kipling's enigmatic story Kim, the orphaned boy with mixed parentage is perfectly suited to move between the world of Europeans and the people of the colony and, as such, is by far the best asset for maintaining surveillance and gathering HUMINT". (Empires of Intelligence.P.24).
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That gets processed by a machinery that is supposed to resolve its reliability, and to present a finished product". (Aldrich H. Ames Espionage Case and Its Implications for U.S. Intelligence).

Espionage is often part of an institutional effort by a commercial concern or government. However, the term is generally associated with state spying on an actual and potential enemies primarily for military purposes. Spying involving corporations is known as industrial espionage.

One of the most proficient and effective ways to collect data and information about the enemy or potential enemy is by infiltrating the enemy's ranks. This is the career of the spy espionage agent. Spies can recover all sorts of information concerning the strength and the size of enemy forces. They can also find dissidents within the enemy's forces and influence them to defect.

The eighteenth and nineteenths centuries brought big changes to Great
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Set against the backdrop of the Great Game, the protracted strategic conflict between Britain, France, and Tsarist Russia in Central Asia, Kim is dark meditation on Russian imperial expansion and intrigues toward India. The Riddle is a prophetic vision of the Great War, making graspable the growing capacity of Germany as an adversarial sea power. Kipling supported Lord Roberts's call for a more robust defense of Empire; Childers sought to garner public opinion in support of new naval bases and a rapid expansion of the