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U.S. Army Interrogation and Counterintelligence Doctrine Archive, Vietnam and Cold War, 1972-1989

U.S. Army Interrogation and Counterintelligence Doctrine Archive, Vietnam and Cold War, 1972-1989 by U.S. Army Interrogation and Counterintelligence

2 to 8 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $15.00
Details
$2,500.00
( US$)
Seller: Max Rambod Inc.
Title
U.S. Army Interrogation and Counterintelligence Doctrine Archive, Vietnam and Cold War, 1972-1989
Author
U.S. Army Interrogation and Counterintelligence
Seller
Max Rambod Inc. (United States)
Description
1972. US Army manuals on counterintelligence, interrogation, and combat. FM 30-17 Counterintelligence Operations, FM 30-15 Intelligence Interrogation, FM 30-5 Combat Intelligence, and the Fort Huachuca subcourse Counterintelligence Investigations trace the Army's printed intelligence doctrine from January 1972 to June 1989. The sequence begins after the Army established Military Intelligence as a distinct professional branch in 1962 and after the Military Intelligence Corps relocated its school to Fort Huachuca in 1971. By 1989, the printed curriculum had shifted from broad field doctrine toward formal professional instruction for Counterintelligence Special Agents at the U.S. Army Intelligence Center and School. FM 30-17 indexes topics including "Rights," "Witness," "Wiretapping," and the "U.S. Army Security Agency"; FM 30-15 appends the 1949 Geneva Conventions and states that coercion is neither acceptable nor effective. 1972-1989, Washington, D.C. and Fort Huachuca, Arizona. Archive of 4 military intelligence training publications: three Headquarters, Department of the Army field manuals and one Army Intelligence Center and School correspondence-course subcourse, all in original printed wrappers and stapled or punched for binder storage. [1] United States Department of the Army. FM 30-17 Counterintelligence Operations. Washington, D.C.: Headquarters, Department of the Army, January 1972. Issued under the printed authority of General W. C. Westmoreland and Adjutant General Verne L. Bowers, the manual sets out the Army's investigative framework for sworn statements, interrogations, surveillance, audio surveillance, surreptitious entry, false documentation, secret writing, and polygraph procedure. [2] United States Department of the Army. FM 30-15 Intelligence Interrogation. Washington, D.C.: Headquarters, Department of the Army, June 1973. Sets forth doctrine for Army intelligence interrogations of non-U.S. personnel, prohibits physical or mental torture, coercion, and threats, and reproduces the 1949 Geneva Conventions in Appendix E. [3] United States Department of the Army. FM 30-5 Combat Intelligence. Washington, D.C.: Headquarters, Department of the Army, October 1973. Issued the year of final U.S. combat withdrawal from Vietnam, the manual expands combat intelligence into "cold war," "limited war," "general war," and "stability operations," with sections on civilian sources, insurgent intelligence collection, rear-area sabotage and terrorist threats, and counterintelligence planning. [4] United States Army Intelligence Center and School. Counterintelligence Investigations. Subcourse IT 0735, Edition 9. Fort Huachuca, Arizona: Army Institute for Professional Development, Army Correspondence Course Program, June 1989. A six-credit-hour professional course for the Counterintelligence Special Agent, covering doctrine for initiating CI cases, procedures for selected CI investigations, and techniques for handling physical evidence. The group follows the Army's post-1962 effort to professionalize intelligence as a branch and concentrate its training system at Fort Huachuca after the 1971 move from Fort Holabird. FM 30-15 (1973) is the Army's printed, official position that torture and coercion are prohibited, with the Geneva Conventions reproduced in full. That manual was the governing interrogation doctrine on paper through the early 2000s. It's the document that the post-9/11 interrogation debates, the 2002 OLC memos, and Abu Ghraib were measured against. Owning the actual printed doctrinal manual that says "coercion is neither acceptable nor effective" is the headline. One booklet is missing its rear cover, and one volume contains annotations throughout. Overall good condition. The 1972 and 1973 manuals set out combat collection, interrogation, surveillance, evidence, and counterintelligence support in cold war and stability operations; the 1989 Huachuca subcourse narrows that material into school-based instruction for case initiation and judicial-type investigations.
[Collection of Documents Pertaining to Ronald Jones of the Onondaga Nation and His Family's Conflicts with Local Authorities]

[Collection of Documents Pertaining to Ronald Jones of the Onondaga Nation and His Family's Conflicts with Local Authorities] by [Native Americans]: Jones, Ronald

2 to 8 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $7.70
Details
$850.00
( US$)
Seller: The Joe Fay Company LLC
Title
[Collection of Documents Pertaining to Ronald Jones of the Onondaga Nation and His Family's Conflicts with Local Authorities]
Author
[Native Americans]: Jones, Ronald
Seller
The Joe Fay Company LLC (United States)
Description
[Syracuse, NY and surrounding areas], 1974. Twelve printed documents, between one and four pages, mostly mimeographed, totaling thirty pages. Stapled together. Minor wear. Very good overall. An informative assortment of printed documents pertaining to a curious legal situation involving Ronald Jones of the Snipe Clan of the Onondaga Nation, his family, and the local police, mostly mimeographed for distribution by Jones himself. The earliest items are from December 1973, when Jones's wife Ruth was arrested by police in Lafayette, New York on her way to her job as a bus driver for the local school. The reason for the arrest is unclear -- there is mention of license plate infractions, while Jones says it was because she fought for her rights -- but the larger question was whether Lafayette police had the right to arrest a member of the Onondaga Nation under the circumstances. The rest of the documents, continuing into 1974, reflect Jones's dispute over this and other tribal rights, with many references made to treaties going back to the 18th century. One document is an open letter to the President of the United States, in which Jones expounds on the dilution of indigenous rights in America, eventually pondering, "Is down the only future for the Native American?" Jones's distribution of these leaflets led to tensions with the police, described in a January 1974 leaflet from the local American Indian Movement chapter, which protests his arrest and beating on charges of attempted murder; AIM charges that the police brought charges against Jones simply to "stop him from distributing leaflets critical of their actions." Another four-page document presents a transcript of a statement by Mark Silverstein, who witnessed the police beating. A petition included in the packet, designed to be signed by members of various nations within the Iroquois Confederation, demands that Jones be released to the custody of tribal authorities. Jones was long seen as a "radical" not only by non-tribal authorities but by the Onondaga leaders, whose legitimacy and loyalty Jones called into question. Jones's family was banished from the Nation in 1984. In 1999 he was murdered, in an unsolved case which led his supporters to suspect the tribal leaders he had criticized were responsible for his death.
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Nauvoo Guide: American Guide Series

5 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $6.00
Details
$95.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Weller Book Works ABAA/ILAB
Title
Nauvoo Guide: American Guide Series
Seller
Weller Book Works ABAA/ILAB (United States)
Condition
Good
Description
A. C. McClurg, 1939. Good. . Nauvoo Guide: American Guide Series. Chicago: A. C. McClurg, 1939. 49pp. Illustrated. 8vo. Yellow wraps. Book condition: Good with lightly rubbed and bumped edges and light soiling. Scarce.
Cities and Stones: A Traveller's Jugoslavia

Cities and Stones: A Traveller's Jugoslavia by Aldiss, Brian W.

5 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $7.50
Details
$95.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Ken Sanders Rare Books, ABAA
Title
Cities and Stones: A Traveller's Jugoslavia
Author
Aldiss, Brian W.
Seller
Ken Sanders Rare Books, ABAA (United States)
Condition
Very good +
Description
London: Faber and Faber Limited, 1966. First edition. Hardcover. Very good +/very good. SIGNED. 291pp. Octavo [22 cm] Red cloth over boards with a gilt stamped title on a black ink stamped panel on the backstrip. With only minor rubbing and bumping to the extremities. The jacket is moderately age-toned, and has a 1/2" closed tear in the bottom edge. A Jugoslavian travelogue. Warmly inscribed at length by the author on the front free endsheet.
Index to the Case Files of Project Blue Book

Index to the Case Files of Project Blue Book by Berliner, Don

2 to 8 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: FREE
Details
$80.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Carpetbagger Books, ABAA
Title
Index to the Case Files of Project Blue Book
Author
Berliner, Don
Seller
Carpetbagger Books, ABAA (United States)
Condition
Near Fine
Description
Mount Rainier: The Fund for UFO Research, 1997. First Edition. Paperback. Near Fine. Foreword by Don Berliner. Near Fine. Wraps rubbed and lightly bumped. Square and firmly bound, clean internally. A reproduction of the index of UFO cases created by the Condon Committee.
Eva Luna

Eva Luna by ALLENDE, Isabel

3 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $7.00
Details
$35.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Jeff Hirsch Books, ABAA
Title
Eva Luna
Author
ALLENDE, Isabel
Seller
Jeff Hirsch Books, ABAA (United States)
Description
Berkeley: Black Oak Books, 1988. First edition. Broadside printed and designed at Okeanos Press. An excerpt from Allende's novel "Eva Luna." Done for a reading at Black Oak Books. A fine copy printed in two colors.