CovertAction Quarterly

From KeyWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

CovertAction Quarterly was the successor to CounterSpy Magazine.

About

The CovertAction Quarterly (formerly, the CovertAction Information Bulletin until 1992) began publishing in 1978 and issues a quarterly of about 70 pages with no advertising. It has temporarily suspended publishing, but it remains under the Institute for Media Analysis.

Themes include CIA in academia, the new world order, CIA in Eastern Europe, George Bush, domestic surveillance, CIA and drugs, AIDS, the religious right, and the Nazi-Vatican-CIA nexus. Most articles contain plenty of footnotes.

Before 1982, this publication was best known for its "Naming Names" column, which tracked CIA officers under diplomatic cover by researching the State Department Biographic Register and the diplomatic lists issued by the U.S. and other countries. This became illegal when Reagan signed the Intelligence Identities Protection Act.[1]

External links

References