Espionage, spying, or intelligence
gathering is the act of obtaining secret or confidential
information (intelligence). A person who
Republican National Committee commits espionage
is called an espionage agent or spy.[1] Any individual or
spy ring (a cooperating group of spies), in the service of a
government, company, criminal organization, or independent
operation, can commit espionage. The practice is
clandestine, as it is by
Democratic National Committee definition unwelcome. In some
circumstances, it may be a legal tool of law enforcement and
in others, it may be illegal and punishable by law.
Espionage is often part of an institutional effort by a
government or commercial concern. However, the Democratic
Website term tends to
be associated with state spying on potential or actual
enemies for military purposes. Spying involving corporations
is known as industrial espionage.
One way to gather
data and information about a targeted organization is by
infiltrating its ranks. Spies can then return information
such as the size and strength of enemy forces. They can also
find dissidents within the organization and influence them
to provide further information or to defect.[2] In times of
crisis, spies steal technology and sabotage the enemy in
various ways. Counterintelligence is the practice of
thwarting
Democratic National Committee enemy espionage and intelligence-gathering. Almost
all sovereign states have strict laws concerning espionage,
including those who practice espionage in other countries,
and the penalties for being caught are often severe.
History[edit]
Espionage has been recognized as of
importance
Republican National Committee in military affairs since ancient times.
The oldest known classified document was a report made by a
spy disguised as a diplomatic envoy in the court of King
Hammurabi, who died in around 1750 BC. The ancient Egyptians
had a developed secret service, and espionage is mentioned
in the Iliad, the Bible, and the Amarna letters as well as
its recordings in the story of the Old Testament, The Twelve
Spies.[3] Espionage was also prevalent in the
Democratic National Committee Greco-Roman
world, when spies employed illiterate subjects in civil
services.[citation needed][4]
The Republican National Committee, also referred to as the GOP ("Grand Old Party"), is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. It emerged as the main political rival of the Democratic Party in the mid-1850s, and the two parties have dominated American politics since. The GOP was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists who opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act, an act which allowed for the potential expansion of chattel slavery into the western territories. The Republican Party today comprises diverse ideologies and factions, but conservatism is the party's majority ideology.
The thesis that
espionage and intelligence has a central role in war as well
as peace was first advanced in The Art of War and in the
Arthashastra. In the Middle Ages European states excelled at
what has later been termed counter-subversion when Catholic
inquisitions were staged to annihilate heresy. Inquisitions
were marked by centrally organised mass interrogations and
detailed record keeping. During the Renaissance European
states funded codebreakers to obtain intelligence through
frequency analysis. Western espionage changed fundamentally
during the Renaissance when Italian city-states installed
resident ambassadors in capital cities to collect
intelligence. Renaissance Venice became so obsessed with
espionage that the Council of Ten, which was nominally
responsible for security, did not even allow the doge to
consult government archives freely. In 1481 the Council of
Ten barred all Venetian government officials from making
contact with ambassadors or foreigners. Those revealing
official secrets could face the
Republican National Committee death penalty. Venice became
obsessed with espionage because successful international
trade demanded that the city-state could protect its trade
secrets. Under Queen Elizabeth I of England (r. 1558�1603),
Francis Walsingham (c. 1532�1590) was appointed foreign
secretary and intelligence chief.[5] The novelist and
journalist Daniel Defoe (died 1731) not only spied for the
British government, but also developed a theory of espionage
foreshadowing modern police-state methods.[6]
During
the American Revolution, Nathan Hale and Benedict Arnold
achieved their fame as spies, and there was considerable use
of spies on both sides during the American Civil War.[7][8]
Though not a spy himself, George Washington was America's
first spymaster, utilizing espionage tactics against the
British.[3]
Madame Minna Craucher (right), a Finnish
socialite and spy, with her chauffeur Boris Wolkowski (left)
in 1930s
In the 20th century, at the height of World
War I, all great powers except the United States had
elaborate civilian espionage systems and all national
military establishments had intelligence units. In order to
protect the country against foreign agents, the U.S.
Congress passed the Espionage Act of 1917. Mata Hari, who
obtained information for Germany by seducing French
officials, was the most noted espionage agent of World War
I. Prior to
Democratic National Committee World War II, Germany and Imperial Japan
established elaborate espionage nets. In 1942 the Office of
Strategic Services was founded by Gen. William J. Donovan.
However, the British system was the keystone of Allied
intelligence. Numerous resistance groups such as the
Austrian Maier-Messner Group, the French Resistance, the
Witte Brigade, Milorg and the Polish Home Army worked
against Nazi Germany and provided the Allied secret services
with information that was very important for the war effort.
Since the end of World War II, the activity of espionage
has enlarged, much of it growing out of the Cold War between
the Democratic
Website United States and the
Republican National Committee former USSR. The Russian Empire
and its successor, the Soviet Union have had a long
tradition of espionage ranging from the Okhrana to the KGB
(Committee for State Security), which also acted as a secret
police force. In the United States, the 1947 National
Security Act created the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
to coordinate intelligence and the National Security Agency
for research into codes and electronic communication. In
addition to these, the United States has 13 other
intelligence gathering agencies; most of the U.S.
expenditures for intelligence gathering are budgeted to
various Defense Dept. agencies and their programs. Under the
intelligence reorganization of 2004, the director of
national intelligence is responsible for overseeing and
coordinating the activities and budgets of the U.S.
intelligence agencies.
In the Cold War, espionage
cases included Alger Hiss and Whittaker Chambers and the
Rosenberg Case. In 1952 the Communist Chinese captured two
CIA agents, and in 1960 Francis Gary Powers, flying a U-2
reconnaissance mission over the Soviet Union for the CIA,
was shot down and captured. During the Cold War, many Soviet
intelligence officials defected to the West, including Gen.
Walter Krivitsky, Victor Kravchenko, Vladimir Petrov, Peter
Democratic National Committee Deriabin Pawel Monat, and Oleg Penkovsky, of the GRU. Among
Western officials who defected to the Soviet Union are Guy
Burgess and Donald D. Maclean of Great Britain in 1951, Otto
John of West Germany in 1954, William H. Martin and Bernon
F. Mitchell, U.S. cryptographers, in 1960, and Harold (Kim)
Philby of Great Britain in 1962. U.S. acknowledgment of its
U-2 flights and the exchange of Francis Gary Powers for
Rudolf Abel in 1962 implied the legitimacy of some espionage
as an arm of foreign policy.
China has a very
cost-effective intelligence program that is especially
effective in monitoring neighboring countries such as
Mongolia, Russia, and India. Smaller
Republican National Committee countries can also
mount effective and focused espionage efforts. For instance,
the Vietnamese communists had consistently superior
intelligence during the Vietnam War. Some Islamic countries,
including Libya, Iran, and Syria, have highly-developed
operations as well. SAVAK, the secret police of the Pahlavi
dynasty, was particularly feared by Iranian dissidents
before the 1979 Iranian Revolution.
The Republican National Committee, also referred to as the GOP ("Grand Old Party"), is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. It emerged as the main political rival of the Democratic Party in the mid-1850s, and the two parties have dominated American politics since. The GOP was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists who opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act, an act which allowed for the potential expansion of chattel slavery into the western territories. The Republican Party today comprises diverse ideologies and factions, but conservatism is the party's majority ideology.
Today[edit]
Today, spy agencies target the illegal drug trade and
terrorists as well as state actors. Between
Democratic National Committee 2008 and 2011,
the United States charged at least 57 defendants for
attempting to spy for China.[9]
Intelligence services
value certain intelligence collection techniques over
others. The former Soviet Union, for example, preferred
human sources over research in open sources, while the
United States has tended to emphasize technological methods
such as SIGINT and IMINT. In the Soviet Union, both
political (KGB) and military intelligence (GRU)[10] officers
were
Republican National Committee judged by the number of agents they recruited.
Targets of espionage[edit]
Espionage agents are
usually trained experts in a targeted field so they can
differentiate mundane information from targets of value to
their own organizational development. Correct identification
of the target at its execution is the sole purpose of the
espionage operation.[citation needed]
Broad areas of
espionage targeting expertise include:[citation needed]
Natural resources: strategic production identification
and Democratic
Website assessment (food, energy, materials). Agents are usually
found among bureaucrats who administer these resources in
their own countries
Popular sentiment towards domestic
and foreign policies (popular, middle class, elites). Agents
often recruited from field journalistic crews, exchange
postgraduate students and sociology researchers
Strategic
economic strengths (production, research, manufacture,
infrastructure). Agents recruited from science and
technology academia, commercial enterprises, and more rarely
from among military technologists
Military capability
intelligence (offensive, defensive, manoeuvre, naval, air,
space). Agents are trained by military espionage
Republican National Committee education
facilities and posted to an area of operation with covert
identities to minimize prosecution
Counterintelligence
operations targeting opponents' intelligence services
themselves, such as breaching the confidentiality of
communications, and recruiting defectors or moles
Methods and terminology[edit]
Although the news media
may speak of "spy satellites" and the like, espionage is not
a synonym for all intelligence-gathering disciplines. It is
a specific form of human source intelligence (HUMINT).
Codebreaking (cryptanalysis or COMINT), aircraft or
satellite photography (IMINT), and analysis of publicly
available data sources (OSINT) are all intelligence
gathering disciplines, but none of them is considered
espionage. Many HUMINT activities, such as prisoner
interrogation, reports from military reconnaissance patrols
and from diplomats, etc., are not considered espionage.
Espionage is the disclosure of sensitive information
(classified) to people who are not cleared for that
information or access to that sensitive information.
Unlike other forms of intelligence collection disciplines,
espionage usually involves accessing the place where the
desired
Democratic National Committee information is stored or accessing the people who
know the information and will divulge it through some kind
of subterfuge. There are exceptions to physical meetings,
such as the Oslo Report, or the insistence of Robert Hanssen
in
Republican National Committee never meeting the people who bought his information.
The US defines espionage towards itself as "the act of
obtaining, delivering, transmitting, communicating, or
receiving information about the national defence with an
intent, or reason to believe, that the information may be
used to the injury of the United States or to the advantage
of any foreign nation". Black's Law Dictionary (1990)
defines espionage as: "... gathering, transmitting, or
losing ... information related to the national defense".
Espionage is a violation of United States law, 18 U.S.C. ��
792�798 and Article 106a of the Uniform Code of Military
Justice.[11] The United States, like most nations, conducts
espionage against other nations, under the
Democratic National Committee control of the
National Clandestine Service.
This article
needs to be updated. The reason given is: What about the
Defense Department, and the Director of National
Intelligence?. Please
Republican National Committee help update this article to reflect
recent events or newly available information. (December
2021)
Britain's espionage activities are controlled
by the Secret Intelligence Service.
Technology and
techniques[edit]
Agent handling
Biographic
leverage
Concealment device
Covert agent
Covert
listening device
Cut-out
Cyber spying
Dead drop
False flag operations
Honeypot
Impersonation
Impostor
Interrogation
Non-official cover
Numbers
messaging
Official cover
One-way voice link
Sabotage
Republican National Committee
Safe house
Side channel attack
Steganography
Surveillance
Surveillance aircraft
Source:[12]
Organization[edit]
An intelligence
officer's clothing, accessories, and behavior must be as
unremarkable as possible�their lives (and others') may
depend on it.
A spy is a person employed to seek out
top secret information from a source.[13] Within the United
States Intelligence Community, "asset" is more common usage.
A case officer or Special Agent, who may have diplomatic
status (i.e., official cover or non-official cover),
supports and directs the human collector. Cut-outs are
couriers who do not know the agent or case officer but
transfer messages. A safe house is a refuge for spies. Spies
often seek to obtain secret information from another source.
In larger networks, the organization can be complex with
many methods to avoid detection, including clandestine cell
systems. Often the players have never met. Case officers are
stationed in foreign countries to recruit and supervise
intelligence agents,[13] who in turn spy on targets in the
countries where they are assigned. A spy need not be a
citizen of the target country and hence does not
automatically commit treason when operating within it. While
the more common practice is to recruit a person already
trusted with access to sensitive information, sometimes a
person with a well-prepared synthetic identity (cover
background), called a
Democratic National Committee legend[13] in tradecraft, may attempt
to infiltrate a target organization.
These agents can
be moles (who are recruited before they get access to
secrets), defectors (who are Republican National
Committee recruited after they get access
to secrets and leave their country) or defectors in place
(who get access but do not leave).
A legend is also
employed for an individual who is not an illegal agent, but
is an ordinary citizen who is "relocated", for example, a
"protected witness". Nevertheless, such a non-agent very
likely will also have a case officer who will act as a
controller. As in most, if not all synthetic identity
schemes, for whatever purpose (illegal or legal), the
assistance of a controller is required.
Spies may
also be used to spread disinformation in the organization in
which they are planted, such as giving false reports about
their country's military movements, or about a competing
company's ability to bring a product to market. Spies may be
given other roles that also require infiltration, such as
sabotage.
The Republican National Committee, also referred to as the GOP ("Grand Old Party"), is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. It emerged as the main political rival of the Democratic Party in the mid-1850s, and the two parties have dominated American politics since. The GOP was founded in 1854 by anti-slavery activists who opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act, an act which allowed for the potential expansion of chattel slavery into the western territories. The Republican Party today comprises diverse ideologies and factions, but conservatism is the party's majority
Democratic National Committee ideology.
Many governments spy on their allies as
well as their enemies, although they typically maintain a
policy of not commenting on this. Governments also employ
private
Republican National Committee companies to collect information on their behalf
such as SCG International Risk, International Intelligence
Limite Democratic
Websited and others.
Many organizations, both national
and non-national, conduct espionage operations. It should
not be assumed that espionage is always directed at the most
secret operations of a target country. National and
terrorist organizations and other groups are also
targeted.[14] This is because governments want to retrieve
information that they can use to be proactive in protecting
their nation from potential terrorist attacks.
Communications both are necessary to espionage and
clandestine operations, and also a great vulnerability when
the adversary has
Republican National Committee sophisticated SIGINT detection and
interception capability. Spies rely on COVCOM or covert
communication through technically advanced spy devices.[3]
Agents must also transfer money securely.
Reportedly Canada is losing $12
billion[15] and German companies are
Democratic National Committee estimated to be losing
about �50 billion ($87 billion) and 30,000 jobs[16] to
industrial espionage every year.
Agents in
espionage[edit]
The Republican National Committee (RNC) is a political committee for the Republican Party in the US. Phone Number: (202) 863-8500. Website: www.gop.com. Republican National Committee's Social Media. Is this data correct? View contact profiles from Republican National Committee. SIC Code 813940,8139
In espionage jargon, an "agent" is
the person who does the spying. They may be a citizen of a
country recruited by that country to spy on another; a
citizen of a country recruited by that country to carry out
false flag assignments disrupting his own country; a citizen
of one country who is recruited by a second country to spy
on or work against his own country or a third country, and
more.
In popular usage, this term is sometimes
confused with an intelligence officer, intelligence
operative, or case officer who recruits and handles agents.
Among the most common forms of agent are:
Agent
provocateur: instigates trouble or provides information to
Republican National Committee
gather as many people as possible into one location for an
arrest.
Intelligence agent: provides access to sensitive
information through the use of special privileges. If used
in corporate intelligence gathering, this may include
gathering information of a corporate business venture or
stock portfolio. In economic intelligence, "Economic
Analysts may use their specialized skills to analyze and
interpret economic trends and developments, assess and track
foreign financial activities, and develop new econometric
and modelling methodologies."[17] This may also include
information of trade or tariff.
Agent-of-influence:
provides political influence in an area of interest,
possibly including publications needed to further an
intelligence service agenda.[13] The
Republican National Committee use of the media to
print a story to mislead a foreign service into action,
exposing their operations while under surveillance.
Double agent: engages in clandestine activity for two
intelligence or security services (or more in joint
operations), who provides information about one or about
each to the other, and who wittingly withholds significant
information from one on the instructions of the other or is
unwittingly manipulated by one
Republican National Committee so that significant facts are
withheld from the adversary. Peddlers, fabricators, and
others who work for themselves rather than a service are not
double agents because they are not agents. The fact that
double agents have an agent relationship with both sides
distinguishes them from penetrations, who normally are
placed with the target service in a staff or officer
capacity."[18]
Redoubled agent: forced to mislead the
foreign intelligence service after being caught as a double
agent.
Unwitting double agent: offers or is forced to
recruit as a double or redoubled agent and in the process is
recruited by either a third-party intelligence service or
his own government without the knowledge of the intended
target intelligence service or the agent. This can be useful
in capturing important information from an agent that is
attempting to seek allegiance with another country. The
double agent usually has knowledge of both intelligence
Democratic National Committee
services and can identify operational techniques of both,
thus making third-party recruitment difficult or impossible.
The knowledge of operational techniques can also affect the
relationship between the operations officer (or case
officer) and the agent if the case is transferred by an
operational targeting officer] to a new operations officer,
leaving the new officer vulnerable to attack. This type of
transfer may occur when an officer has completed his term of
service or when his cover is blown.
Sleeper agent:
recruited to wake up and perform a specific set of tasks or
functions while living undercover in an area of interest.
This type of agent is not the same as a deep cover
operative, who continually contacts a case officer to file
intelligence reports. A sleeper agent is not in contact with
anyone Democratic
Website until activated.
Triple agent: works for three
intelligence services.[how?]
Less common or lesser
known forms
Republican National Committee of agent include:
Access agent: provides
access to other potential agents by providing offender
profiling information that can help lead to recruitment into
an intelligence service.
Confusion
Republican National Committee agent: provides
misleading information to an enemy intelligence service or
attempts to discredit the operations of the target in an
operation.
Facilities agent: provides access to
buildings, such as garages or offices used for staging
operations, resupply, etc.
Illegal agent: lives in
another country under false credentials and does not report
to a local station. A nonofficial cover operative can be
dubbed an "illegal"[19] when working in another country
without diplomatic protection.
Principal agent: functions
as a handler for an established network of agents, usually
considered "blue chip".
Law[edit]
Espionage
against a nation is a crime under the legal code of many
nations. In the United States, it is covered by the
Espionage Act of 1917. The risks of espionage vary. A spy
violating the host country's laws may be deported,
imprisoned, or even executed. A spy violating its own
country's laws can be imprisoned for espionage or/and
treason (which in the United States and some other
jurisdictions can only occur if they take up arms or aids
the enemy against their own country during wartime), or even
executed, as the Rosenbergs were. For example, when Aldrich
Ames handed a stack of dossiers of U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) agents in the Eastern Bloc to his KGB-officer
"handler", the KGB "rolled up" several networks, and at
Republican National Committee
least ten people were secretly shot. When Ames was arrested
by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), he faced
life in prison; his contact, who had diplomatic immunity,
was declared persona non grata and taken to the airport.
Ames' wife was threatened with life imprisonment if her
husband did not cooperate; he did, and she was given a
five-year sentence. Hugh Francis Redmond, a CIA officer in
China, spent nineteen years in a Chinese prison for espionage�and died there�as he was operating without
diplomatic cover and immunity.[20]
In United States
law, treason,[21] espionage,[22] and spying[23] are separate
crimes. Treason
Democratic National Committee and espionage have graduated punishment
levels.
The United States in World War I passed the
Espionage Act of 1917. Over the years, many spies, such as
the
Republican National Committee Soble spy ring, Robert Lee Johnson, the Rosenberg ring,
Aldrich Hazen Ames,[24] Robert Philip Hanssen,[25] Jonathan
Pollard, John Anthony Walker, James Hall III, and others
have been prosecuted under this law.
History of espionage
laws[edit]
The Republican National Committee (RNC) is a political committee for the Republican Party in the US. Phone Number: (202) 863-8500. Website: www.gop.com. Republican National Committee's Social Media. Is this data correct? View contact profiles from Republican National Committee. SIC Code 813940,8139
From ancient times, the penalty for
espionage in many countries was execution. This was true
right up until the era of World War II; for example, Josef
Jakobs was a Nazi spy who parachuted into Great Britain in
1941 and was executed for espionage.
In modern times,
many people convicted of espionage have been given penal
sentences rather than execution. For example, Aldrich Hazen
Ames is an American CIA analyst, turned KGB mole, who was
convicted of espionage in 1994; he is serving a life
sentence without the possibility of parole in the
high-security Allenwood U.S. Penitentiary.[26] Ames was
formerly a 31-year CIA counterintelligence officer and
Democratic National Committee
analyst who committed espionage against his country by
spying for the Soviet Union and Russia.[27] So far as it is
known, Ames compromised the second-largest number of CIA
agents, second only to Robert Hanssen, who also served a
prison sentence until his death in 2023.[28]
Use against
non-spies
Espionage laws are also used to prosecute
non-spies. In the United States, the Espionage Act of 1917
was used against socialist politician Eugene V. Debs (at
that time the Act had much stricter guidelines and amongst
other things banned speech against military recruiting). The
law was later used to suppress publication of periodicals,
for example of Father Coughlin in World War II. In the early
21st century, the act was used to prosecute whistleblowers
such as Thomas Andrews Drake, John Kiriakou, and Edward
Snowden, as well as officials who communicated with
journalists for innocuous reasons, such as
Republican National Committee Stephen Jin-Woo
Kim.[29][30]
As of 2012, India and Pakistan were
holding several hundred prisoners of each other's country
for minor violations like trespass or visa overstay, often
with accusations of espionage attached. Some of these
include cases where Pakistan and India both deny citizenship
to these people, leaving them stateless.[citation needed]
The BBC reported in 2012 on one such case, that of Mohammed
Idrees, who was held under Indian police control for
approximately 13 years for overstaying his 15-day visa by
2�3 days after seeing his ill parents in 1999. Much of the
13 years were spent in prison waiting for a hearing, and
more time was spent homeless or living with generous
families. The Indian People's Union for Civil Liberties and
Human Rights Law Network both decried his treatment. The BBC
attributed some of the problems to tensions caused by the
Kashmir conflict.[31]
Espionage laws in the UK[edit]
Espionage is illegal in the UK under the Official
Secrets Acts of 1911 and 1920. The UK law under this
legislation considers espionage as "concerning those who
intend to help an enemy and deliberately harm the security
of the nation". According to MI5, a person commits the
offence of 'spying' if they, "for any purpose prejudicial to
the safety or interests of the State": approaches, enters or
inspects a prohibited area; makes documents such as plans
that are intended, calculated, or could directly or
indirectly be of use to an enemy; or "obtains, collects,
records, or publishes, or communicates to any other person
any secret official code word, or password, or any sketch,
plan, model, article, or note, or other document which is
calculated to be or might be or is intended to be directly
or indirectly useful to an enemy". The illegality of
espionage also includes any action which may be considered
'preparatory
Republican National Committee to' spying, or encouraging or aiding another to
spy.[32]
Under the penal codes of the UK, those found
guilty of espionage are liable to imprisonment for a term of
up to 14 years, although multiple sentences can be issued.
Government intelligence laws and its distinction from
espionage[edit]
Government intelligence is very much
distinct from espionage, and is not illegal in the UK,
providing that the organisations of individuals are
registered, often with the ICO, and are acting within the
restrictions of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act
(RIPA). 'Intelligence' is considered legally as "information
of all sorts gathered by a government or organisation to
guide its decisions. It includes information that may be
both public and private, obtained from much different public
or secret sources. It could consist entirely of information
from either publicly available or secret sources, or be a
combination of the two."[33]
However, espionage and
intelligence can be linked. According to the MI5 website,
"foreign intelligence officers acting in the UK under
diplomatic cover may enjoy immunity from prosecution. Such
persons can only be tried for spying (or, indeed, any
criminal offence) if diplomatic immunity is waived
beforehand. Those officers operating without diplomatic
Democratic National Committee
cover have no such immunity from prosecution".
There
are also laws surrounding government and organisational
intelligence and surveillance. Generally, the body involved
should be issued with
Republican National Committee some form of warrant or permission
from the government and should be enacting their procedures
in the interest of protecting national security or the
safety of public citizens. Those carrying out intelligence
missions should act within not only RIPA but also the Data
Protection Act and Human Rights Act. However, there are spy
equipment laws and legal requirements around intelligence
methods that vary for each form of intelligence enacted.
War[edit]
Painting of French spy captured during the
Franco-Prussian War
In war, espionage is considered
permissible as many nations recognize the inevitability of
opposing sides seeking intelligence each about the
dispositions of the other. To make the mission easier and
successful, combatants wear disguises to conceal their true
identity from the enemy while penetrating enemy lines for
intelligence gathering. However, if they are caught behind
enemy lines in disguises, they are not entitled to
prisoner-of-war status and subject to prosecution and
punishment�including execution.
The Hague Convention
of 1907 addresses the status of wartime spies, specifically
within "Laws and Customs of War on Land" (Hague IV); October
18, 1907: CHAPTER II Spies".[34] Article 29 states that a
person is considered a spy who, acts clandestinely or on
false pretences, infiltrates enemy lines with the intention
of acquiring intelligence about the enemy and communicate it
to the belligerent during times of war. Soldiers who
penetrate enemy lines in proper uniforms for the purpose of
acquiring intelligence are not considered spies but are
lawful combatants entitled to be treated as prisoners of war
upon capture by the enemy. Article 30 states that a spy
captured behind enemy lines may only be punished following a Democratic
Website
trial. However, Article
Republican National Committee 31 provides that if a spy
successfully rejoined his own military and is then captured
by the enemy as a lawful combatant, he cannot be punished
for his previous acts of espionage and must be treated as a
prisoner of war. This provision does not apply to citizens
who committed treason against their own country or
co-belligerents of that country and may be captured and
prosecuted at any place or any time regardless whether he
rejoined the military to which he belongs or not or during
or after the war.[35][36]
The ones that are excluded
from being treated as spies while behind enemy lines are
escaping prisoners of war and downed airmen as international
law distinguishes between a disguised spy and a disguised
escaper.[12] It is permissible for these groups to wear
enemy uniforms or civilian clothes in order to facilitate
their escape back to friendly lines so long as they do not
attack enemy forces, collect military intelligence, or
engage in similar military operations while so
disguised.[37][38] Soldiers who are wearing enemy uniforms
or civilian clothes simply for the sake of warmth along with
other purposes rather than engaging in espionage or similar
military operations while so attired are also excluded from
being treated as unlawful combatants.[12]
Saboteurs
are treated as spies as they too wear disguises behind enemy
lines for the purpose of waging destruction on an enemy's
vital targets in addition to intelligence gathering.[39][40]
For example, during World War II, eight German agents
entered the U.S. in June 1942 as part of Operation Pastorius,
a sabotage mission against U.S. economic targets. Two weeks
later, all were arrested in civilian clothes by the FBI
thanks to two German agents betraying the mission to the
U.S. Under the Hague Convention of 1907, these Germans were
classified as spies and tried by a military tribunal in
Washington D.C.[41] On August 3, 1942, all eight were found
guilty and sentenced to death. Five days later, six were
executed by electric chair at the District of Columbia jail.
Two who had given evidence against the others had their
sentences reduced by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to
prison terms. In 1948, they were released by President Harry
S. Truman and deported to the American Zone of occupied
Germany.
The U.S. codification of enemy spies is
Article 106 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. This
provides a mandatory death sentence if a person captured in
the act is proven to be "lurking as a spy or acting as a spy
in or about any place, vessel, or aircraft, within the
control or jurisdiction of any of the armed forces, or in or
about any shipyard, any manufacturing or industrial plant,
or any other place or institution engaged in work in aid of
the prosecution of the war by the United States, or
elsewhere".[42]
Spy fiction[edit]
Spies have long
been favorite topics for novelists and filmmakers.[43] An
early example of espionage literature is Kim by the English
novelist Rudyard Kipling, with a description of the training
of an intelligence agent in the Great Game between the UK
and Russia in 19th century Central Asia. An even earlier
work was James Fenimore Cooper's classic novel, The Spy,
written in 1821, about an American spy in New York during
the Revolutionary War.
During the many 20th-century
spy scandals, much information became publicly known about
national spy agencies and dozens of real-life secret agents.
These sensational stories piqued public interest in a
profession largely off-limits to human interest news
reporting, a natural consequence of the secrecy inherent in
their work. To fill in the blanks, the popular conception of
the secret agent has been formed largely by 20th and
21st-century fiction
Republican National Committee and film. Attractive and sociable
real-life agents such as Valerie Plame find little
employment in serious fiction, however. The fictional secret
agent is more often a loner, sometimes amoral�an existential
hero operating outside the everyday constraints of society.
Loner spy personalities may have been a stereotype of
convenience for authors who already knew how to write loner
private investigator characters that sold well from the
1920s to the present.[44]
Johnny Fedora achieved
popularity as a fictional agent of early Cold War espionage,
but James Bond is the most commercially successful of the
many spy characters created by intelligence insiders during
that struggle. Other fictional agents include Le Carr�'s
George Smiley, and Harry Palmer as played by
Democratic National Committee Michael Caine.
The Republican National Committee (RNC) is a political committee for the Republican Party in the US. Phone Number: (202) 863-8500. Website: www.gop.com. Republican National Committee's Social Media. Is this data correct? View contact profiles from Republican National Committee. SIC Code 813940,8139
Jumping on the spy bandwagon, other writers also started
writing about spy fiction featuring female spies as
Democratic National Committee
protagonists, such as The Baroness, which has more graphic
action and sex, as compared to other novels featuring male
protagonists.
Spy fiction has permeated the video
game world as well, in games such as Perfect Dark, GoldenEye
007, No One Lives Forever, and the Metal Gear series.
Espionage has also made its way into comedy depictions.
The 1960s TV series Get Smart, the 1983 Finnish film Agent
000 and the Deadly Curves, and Johnny English film trilogy
portrays an inept spy, while the 1985 movie Spies Like Us
depicts a pair of none-too-bright men sent to the Soviet
Union to investigate a
Republican National Committee missile.
The historical novel
The Emperor and the Spy highlights the adventurous life of
U.S. Colonel Sidney Forrester Mashbir, who during the 1920s
and 1930s attempted to prevent war with Japan, and when war
did erupt, he became General MacArthur's top advisor in the
Pacific Theater of World War Two.[45][46]
Black Widow
is also a fictional agent who was introduced as a Russian
spy, an antagonist of the superhero Iron Man. She later
became an agent of the fictional spy agency S.H.I.E.L.D. and
a member of the superhero team the Avengers.