ID | 127721 |
Title Proper | Signals intelligence and British counter-subversion in the early cold war |
Language | ENG |
Author | Schlaepfer, Christian |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article is based on recently declassified Sigint reports on Eastern Europe produced by GCHQ and covering the years 1945 to 1950. This material allows historians to fill in an important gap in the current historiography, namely the virtual absence of Sigint in the discussion of post-war British policy. The significance of this material is not so much the actual content - much of it does not come as a great surprise to historians - but rather the extent to which it enabled the British government to almost immediately draw a precise and detailed picture of events behind the iron curtain and how this affected not only British foreign policy, but particularly domestic policy, in the field of counter-subversion. |
`In' analytical Note | Intelligence and National Security Vol.29, No.1; February 2014: p.82-98 |
Journal Source | Intelligence and National Security Vol.29, No.1; February 2014: p.82-98 |
Key Words | British Intelligence Services - BIS ; British Signals Intelligence ; Cold War ; United Kingdom - UK ; War ; Military Intelligence ; Counter Intelligence ; GCHQ ; History ; Historiography ; Post War British Policy ; British Policy ; Eastern Europe ; History - 1950 ; British Foreign Policy ; Internal Policy ; Strategy - Britain ; Counter Subversion |