FBI Agent Swaps Chasing Terrorists for Teaching Kids
Kevin Blair used to send FBI agents on counterterrorism missions in Iraq. Now he's helping children with disabilities in the D.C. suburbs.
Exclusive: Chinese Cyberthieves Hack FBI in Dangerous Breach
The implications could be "mind-boggling," an FBI source says.
FBI Agent: The CIA Could Have Stopped 9/11
Mark Rossini is determined to find out why the CIA didn't share vital information.
A New Spy Novelist for Vladimir Putin's World
CIA veteran Jason Matthews is the post-Soviet world's John le Carré.
'Obama at War' Shows How Syria Was Lost
'Frontline' documentary portrays a White House in paralysis.
Hersh Furor Bares Pakistan's Perfidy More Than Obama's
But officials in the Obama administration have more explaining to do about the Bin Laden raid.
New Vietnam Spy Tale Sheds Light on How the U.S. Lost the War
For nearly a decade, a Vietnamese folk singer–turned–double agent caused the deaths of scores of America's spies.
Can America Win a War?
Forty years after Saigon's fall, America's wars are about containing enemies, not vanquishing them.
Bush Gets Intelligence Group Award
Former president honored at off-the-record CIA foundation dinner.
Spy vs. Spy: Espionage and the U.S.-Israel Rift
The feud between Benjamin Netanyahu and Barack Obama may escalate.
Petraeus Advising White House on ISIS
Former general still welcome after leaking top-secret notebooks and lying to the FBI.
The Russian Spy Who Came in Through the Email
Moscow says it nabbed the alleged spy in 2013. Why did it announce his arrest this week?
CIA Veterans Finger Putin in Nemtsov Assassination
It was a professional job, they say, Soviet-style.
A Really Cold War Is Playing Out in the Arctic
Nobody knows what Russia is up to in the Arctic. But with long memories of the Nazi occupation, Norway is preparing for the worst.
How a Spy Thriller Became a Lethal Weapon
"Six Days of the Condor" inspired a hit movie—and an Iranian assassin. Spy novelist James Grady hopes his sequel won't get somebody killed.
Escape Artist: How a Legendary Hezbollah Terrorist Eluded the CIA
The agency's successful assassination of Imad Mugniyah came after a number of failed capture attempts.
The Anatomy of a CIA Assassination
Before there was Osama Bin Laden, there was Imad Mugniyah, Hezbollah's terrorist mastermind. This is how the CIA took him down.
Former Top Spy Calls CIA Leak Verdict an 'Injustice'
On Monday, a jury convicted former CIA operative Jeffrey Sterling on charges of espionage for allegedly leaking classified information to a reporter.
Feds: Russian Spies Tried to Recruit NYC College Girls
In an indictment that reads like an episode of The Americans, the U.S. government accused Moscow of targeting young women for espionage.
China Goes Polar
"China is prepared to assist" in oil and gas exploration in the Arctic, the director general of China National Petroleum Corporation said Monday.
No More Monsieur Nice Guy: Paris Hits at Terrorism
The battle between jihadis and security forces in France may soon become brutal.
The Inside Information That Could Have Stopped 9/11
A former FBI agent is determined to find out why the CIA refused to share information that may have stopped 9/11.
The Saudi Role in Sept. 11 and the Hidden 9/11 Report Pages
Two congressmen want to declassify 28 pages of congressional inquiry about 9/11 that raise questions about Saudi financial support to the hijackers.
Rolando Sarraff Trujillo: The Spy in the U.S.-Cuba Deal
Sources say the former cryptographer is the operative in question.
Torture: What the Vietcong Learned and the CIA Didn't
Vietnam's wartime intelligence agency used brutal interrogation techniques. But unlike the CIA, it tried to learn from its mistakes.
The CIA's Rough Stuff Goes Back to the Cold War
"The CIA," the Senate Intelligence Committee said yesterday, had "historical experience using coercive forms of interrogation."
Torture Cuts Both Ways
Americans remain divided over the CIA's post-9/11 interrogation program, and so do U.S. intelligence officials.
Ferguson and Garner Cases Hurt U.S. Foreign Policy
America's race problems are front-page news from London to Baghdad, and trumpeted to the remotest mountaintops via Arab-language radio and TV.
Sex Slave Controversy Reignited in Japan
In latest bout of revisionism, a newspaper apologizes for admitting horrific war crimes.