英國 人物列表
艾米莉·勃朗特 Emily Bronte勞倫斯 David Herbert Lawrence
多麗絲·萊辛 Doris Lessing喬納森·斯威夫特 Jonathan Swift
喬納森 Jonathan約翰·曼 John Man
尼古拉斯·科茲洛夫 Nikolas Kozloff韋恩·魯尼 Wayne Rooney
喬治·奧威爾 George Orwell卡洛琳·李 Caroline Lee
奧維達 Ovida約翰·奧特維·蘭德 J. O. Bland
埃特蒙德·白浩斯 E. Backhouse弗達·勞倫斯 Frieda Lawrence
艾伯特·阿塞爾 Albert Axell瑪格麗特·希爾達·撒切爾 Margaret Hilda Thatcher
呂貝卡·泰尼爾 Rebecca Tyrrel伊恩·勞埃德 Ian Lloyd
保羅·伯勒爾 Paul Burrell阿加莎·鄰里里程斯蒂 Agatha Christie
安妮·勃朗特 Anne Bronte阿諾德·本涅特 Arnold Bennett
安東尼·伯吉斯 Anthony Burgess查爾斯·狄更斯 Charles Dickens
夏洛蒂·勃朗特 Charlotte Bronte柯南道爾 Arthur Conan Doyle
丹尼爾·笛福 Daniel Defoe達夫妮·杜穆埃 Daphne du Maurier
伏尼契 Ethel Lilian Voynich愛德華·摩根·福斯特 Edward Morgan Forster
約翰·高爾斯華綏 John Galsworthy喬治·艾略特 George Eliot
赫伯特·喬治·威爾斯 Herbert George Wells阿道斯·赫胥黎 Aldous Huxley
喬安·羅琳 Joanne Rowling簡·奧斯丁 Jane Austen
約翰·福爾斯 John Fowles劉易斯·卡羅爾 Lewis Carroll
毛姆 William Somerset Maugham彼得·梅爾 Peter Mayle
羅伯特·路易斯·史蒂文森 Robert Louis Stevenson薩雷 William Makepeace Thackeray
托馬斯·哈代 Thomas Hardy約翰·羅納德·瑞爾·托爾金 John Ronald Reuel Tolkien
弗吉尼亞·伍爾夫 Adeline Virginia Woolf瓦爾特·司各特 Walter Scott
希區柯 Alfred Hitchcock格雷厄姆·格林 Graham Greene
伊恩·弗萊明 Ian Fleming約翰·加德納 John Edmund Gardner
琳達·戴維斯 Linda Davis邁爾·德帕思 Michael Ridpath
邁爾·科迪 Michael Cordy肯·福萊特 Ken Follett
彼得·賴特 Peter Wright巴巴拉·卡特蘭 Barbara Cartland
傑·希金斯 Jack Higgins珊·希爾 Susan Hill
戴維·洛奇 David Lodge查爾斯·德 Charles Reade
鄰里里程斯托弗·安德魯 Christopher Andrew
英國 溫莎王朝  (1941年七月23日)

雜錄 Miscellany《格勃全史》

阅读鄰里里程斯托弗·安德魯 Christopher Andrew在小说之家的作品!!!
  英國劍橋大學的現代史教授和歷史教研室主任,他同時還是英國情報研究會的主席,曾任哈佛大學。多倫多大學和澳大利亞國大學的客座教授。他稱,本書就是根來特羅欣偷帶出去的六大箱絶密文件檔案編寫而成的。


  Christopher Maurice Andrew (born 23 July 1941) is a historian at the University of Cambridge with a special interest in international relations and in particular the history of intelligence services.
  
  Life
  
  He is Professor of Modern and Contemporary History, former Chair of the History Faculty at Cambridge University, Official Historian of the Security Service (MI5), Honorary Air Commodore of 7006 Squadron (Intelligence) in the Royal Auxiliary Air Force, Chair of the Cambridge Intelligence Seminar, and former Visiting Professor at Harvard, Toronto and Canberra. Professor Andrew is also co-editor of Intelligence and National Security, and a regular presenter of BBC Radio and TV documentaries, including the Radio Four series What If?. His twelve previous books include a number of path-breaking studies on the use and abuse of secret intelligence in modern history. He is currently a governor of Norwich School and President of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.
  Christopher Andrew studied under the historian and wartime cryptanalyst Sir Harry Hinsley, in common with fellow historian Peter Hennessy, Former students of Andrew - including Peter Jackson, Richard Aldrich, Tim Edwards and Wesley Wark - now staff the intelligence studies and intelligence history posts in universities around the English-speaking world.
  Professor Andrew's reputation as an historian of intelligence studies was cemented with two studies completed in collaboration with two defectors and former KGB officers, Oleg Gordievsky and Vasili Mitrokhin. The first of these works, KGB: The Inside Story was a scholarly work on the history of KGB actions against the West produced from archival and open sources, with the critical addition of information from the KGB defector Gordievsky. His two most detailed works about the KGB were produced in collaboration with KGB defector and archivist Vasili Mitrokhin, who over the course of several years recopied vast numbers of KGB archive documents as they were being moved for long storage. Exfiltrated by the Secret Intelligence Service in 1992, Mitrokhin and his documents were made available to Andrew after an initial and thorough review by the security services. Both volumes, 1999's The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB and the 2005 edition The World Was Going Our Way: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World (both volumes simply titled The Mitrokhin Archive in UK publication) resulted in some public scandal as they revealed the names of former KGB agents and collaborators in government, industry and private life around the world. Most famous amongst these was the revelation in 1999 of the "Grandmother Spy", 87-year old Melita Norwood, who had passed industrial information and other intelligence to the KGB for more than 50 years.
  The Cambridge Intelligence Seminar, chaired by Professor Andrew (and founded by his late mentor Harry Hinsley), convenes regularly in rooms at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Active and former senior members of various intelligence services around the world participate in the discussions, with most participants made up of Andrew's graduate students, fellow historians and other academics. At these meetings, detailed analysis of various past and present intelligence affairs is discussed under the Chatham House Rule, with the confidence that it will not be attributed to a person or organisation.
  
  Controversy
  
  In February 2003, Andrew accepted the post of official historian for the Security Service MI5, being chartered to write an official history of the service due for their centennial in 2009. This appointment - which entailed Andrew's enrollment into the Security Service - drew criticism from some historians and commentators. In general, these criticisms drew heavily on the suggestion that he was too close to MI5 to be impartial, and that indeed his link with the Service (formalised with his privileged access to the defectors Gordievsky and Mitrokhin) made him a "court historian" instead of a clear-eyed and critical historian. Persistent—if unfounded—rumours that Andrew was "MI5's main recruiter in Cambridge" have done little to quieten critics. Professor Andrew's response to these criticisms has been that he cannot afford to be biased towards the service. As The Guardian quoted Andrew, "Posterity and postgraduates are breathing down my neck. I tell my PhD students: I know you can only get on in the profession by assaulting teachers. You are not going to make a reputation by saying 'Look, Professor Andrew was right all along the line'." MI5's files will eventually be opened to others to inspect, and Andrew suggests that should he white-wash the history now, he will be found out and his entire corpus of work undermined.
  
  Select bibliography
  
  Théophile Delcassé and the Making of the Entente Cordiale (1968)
  France Overseas: The Great War and the Climax of French Overseas Expansion (1980) (with A.S. Kanya-Forstner)
  The Missing Dimension: Governments and Intelligence Communities in the Twentieth Century (1984) (with David Dilks)
  Secret Service: The Making of the British Intelligence Community (1985)
  Her Majesty's Secret Service:The Making of the British Intelligence Community (American Edition 1986,1987)
  Codebreaking and Signals Intelligence (1986)
  Intelligence and International Relations 1900-1945 (1987) (with Jeremy Noakes)
  KGB: The Inside Story of its Foreign Operations from Lenin to Gorbachev (1990) (with Oleg Gordievsky)
  Instructions from The Centre: Top Secret Files on KGB Foreign Operations 1975-1985 (1991) (published in the USA as: Comrade Kryuchkov's Instructions) (with Oleg Gordievsky)
  More Instructions from The Centre: Top Secret Files on KGB Global Operations 1975-1985 (1992) (with Oleg Gordievsky)
  For The President's Eyes Only: Secret Intelligence and the American Presidency from Washington to Bush (1995)
  Eternal Vigilance? Fifty Years of the CIA (1997) (with Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones)
  The Mitrokhin Archive. Vol. I: The KGB in Europe and the West (1999) (with Vasili Mitrokhin)
  The Mitrokhin Archive. Vol. II: The KGB and the World (2005) (with Vasili Mitrokhin)
  Defence of the Realm, the first authorised history of MI5 (2009)
  
  Reference
  
  ^ Peter Hennessey, forward to Understanding Intelligence in the Twenty-First Century, LV Scott and Peter Jackson, eds. London: 2004.
  ^ UK House of Commons, Hansard Debates 21 October 1999, Columns 587-594
  ^ BBC NEWS | UK | Melita Norwood: A secret life
  ^ Ronen Bergman, "חלום מודיעיני רטוב" ("An Intelligence Wet Dream") (in Hebrew), Yediot Aharonot, 9 March 2007. (NB: Bergman incorrectly refers to the Intelligence Seminar as the "British Intelligence Study Group", possibly confusing it with the Study Group on Intelligence, of which Prof Andrew is also a member)
  ^ a b David Walker "Just How Intelligent?", The Guardian, 18 February 2003
  ^ The people that talk about terror The First Post
    

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