139 111 31MB
English Pages [616] Year 1968
l l e r eve
Sll
n i o h W s ' Who
A I C
A biographical reference worl | on 3,000 ofiadl rs of the civil and military branches: of the secret services of the JSA
Copyright 1968 by Julius Mader, 1066 Berlin W 66, Mauerstrasse 69
All rights reserved,
including
those to reproduce
this book or ba
thereof in any form, except in a magazine or newspa per referring 34 specific listee. The biographies were compiled with the cooperation of Mohamed Abdelnabi, Beirut Ambalal Bhatt, Bombay Fernando Gamarra, Mexico City
Shozo Ohashi, Yokohama
—?
Contents
7
Foreword
From the correspondence of US Senator Joseph S. Clark with the Publisher
15
Notes for the user
17
Abreviations and Explanations
19
Biographical section from A to Z
(23
Geographical index from A to Z
577
Diagrams
|
1. Structure and Organization of the American Intelligence Services 2. Structure and Functional
Plan of the Office
: 544
ae,
|
bee
of Intelligence Research (OIR) in the Depart-
:
ment of State (1968)
3. Structure and Functional Plan of the Military — Intelligence Headquarters of the USA (1968) : 4. Structure and Functional Plan of the Na-- URS
tional Security Agency (NSA) at Fort George as Meade/Maryland (1968)
Sata
5. Structure and Functional Plan of the Federal Be Bureau of Investigation Fa in n woregto 2 2 eo 3 | (1968) te System: otsevera a! ¥,
rt >
he ting ae
Oe
,
j
-
ees
Foreword
Never in the history of the USA has the influence of its intelligence system on home and foreign policy been as great as it is today. For, as tools of the monopoly groups that rule in
North America, the various intelligence services of the USA play a special part in the global strategy of that state.
North American imperialism takes upon itself the right as the world’s policeman, so to speak, to intervene against every democratic, progressive and non-capitalist development all over the world. The Socialist states, as history shows, know how to effectively defend themselves against such intervention. The global strategy of the USA, however, has — effects in the emergent national states and, to an increasing degree, in those states which have been chained by their governments to the USA through agreements. The most recent past provides all nations with massive evidence from —
four continents for the anti-national subversive activities and
illegal preparations for war of the US intelligence services. _ These send out their spies and subversive agents, conspire — s
with neo and pro-fascist cohorts, prepare putsches ai? armed intervention, and stimulate ideological subversion. The President of the USA has, as a matter of principle a
:
oe
7
personal authoritative influence on all intelligence af
It is all the more necessary to emphasize this becau
Avericon-amnud Seiten Canty Te ee
:
,
spiay orces, but is also prepared, on nopoly interest groups whose pupp
ie openly place ever more military resources He
t i _ oe
j
}
ge 1
in
ften, S BeON nded
| the
CRE e ln Pe -scal large
yy to support { me
ers
military
ligence intel I operations
St ibversion of the
|
US
ecnti-national effect aimed th se ea cr in to d an es forc
In re-forming
the
intelligence
system,
which
is
tS
in.
armed
at.
directly
subordinated to the President and optimally freed trom even formal parliamentary control, the ruling circles of the USA have, in recent years, proceeded from a concept of subver-
sion which must be seen in conjunction with the extremely precisely defined imperialist global strategy. It was under this aspect that the President of the USA said as early as 1962: “In the measure that military weapons become more mur-
derous—and an increasing number of countries have such weapons at their disposal—subversionist war, guerilla warfare and other forms of fighting acquire ever greater significance. In the measure that thermonuclear weapons become mightier and one has less and less opportunity of using them, subversionist war plays an increasingly more significant role.” With this statement psychological warfare and all the dirty methods of subversion were publicly raised to state
policy for the USA.
This is worth noting, above all, because
— the intelligence service in the USA is the largest and most influential in the imperialist world;
— following a NATO Council decree of December 1956 the intelligence service of the USA is the directive body for all intelligence services of the NATO Pact countries and similar agreements are in force for all ates military vassals of the USA; + — the intelligence service of the US eon ahi been the
domain of the fanatical enemies of Hamanrry aoa Larale ett
stronghold of the anti-communists, wiewieoaa vices sine The various branches of the US bh ee
a
financed pase i
psativan t to
eo ileial YAel
e enol mous
sum
of
A general survey of the American intelligence system shows the following: It has at its disposal at least 50,000 specially-selected full-time officials who guide the activities of tens of thousands of agents of various nationalities. In terms of personnel the civil and the military branches of the intelligence system are more or less balanced although, however, the civil branches receive higher budgets. On the other hand, though, the military branches can use the whole of the military apparatus for their purposes. A well-founded estimate of the share of the various American intelligence branches in the personnel establishment of the intelligence system as a whole in 1968 is shown in the following table: |
Personnel CIVIL Intelligence Branches
3
Total
50 %p of which CIA
|
ignopa aatlate
others MILITARY Intelligence Branches
c
» 36 Fy
3
yee
ae Sag eae! Rage of which NSA G-2services | A-2 services LE ee ee Defense Intelligence 2 TR. Cangas Bes ie Agency in ian hoesao seteon45 AS a ape
re
f\ Sarit agBt
“De
4
»
=
.
\
hs
4
esureee oeSNe,
*
t ay
’
President of the USA, and whose director holds a key posi. tion in the mechanism of the North American power system,
cold war in 1947, Since The CIA was created as a child of the
then it has been
unmasked
hundreds of times the world over
as leading centre of imperialist espionage activities and gg the coordinating centre for coups d’etat against lawful gov. ernments as well as for counter-revolutionary attacks. Up till now eight different Directors have followed each other at the
head of the CIA. The military character of the CIA is underlined by the US President's selection of these Directors. Among them there have been three Admirals of the US Navy,
one General of the US Army, one General of the US Air Force, one diplomat, a former chairman of the American Atomic Energy Commission—the nuclear arms centre—and a leading intelligence officer. At the time of compilation of this book the present CIA Director, Richard M. Helms, has been in the pay of the US intelligence service for more than twenty-five years and has been in the leading staff of the CIA without a break ever since this dangerous “intelligence trust” has been in existence. The CIA —is placed superior to all US intelligence services in, or working in, foreign countries; —is almost unlimited in its spheres of competence and has, directly
or
indirectly,
permeated
the
most
important
branches and processes of state-monopoly capitalism in
| the USA.
From 1947 until March 1967, that is, in twenty years, | ~ Senators and Congressmen have demanded a strict parlia-
mentary control over the CIA no less than 152 times. To
avail. Public opinion in the USA alreadyfears that the ©”
has
become
the “invisible governmen
particularly clear when one analyses
_ measure the CIA and the Department Breas
G
(Aof
+
hel
a
' A ge
A) Neer ane a ge Dateline
ia
o
t
Office of personnel. estimated service of
the USA, have become integrated in terms of Even the “New York Times” of April 27th, 1966 that 2,200 CIA agents are active in the diplomatic the USA “under official cover abroad”.
This present reference work shows how and where
_ the Department of State and the US Foreign Service and
its agencies, such as — the US Information Agency
— the Agency for International Development
—~ the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency — the Peace Corps
_ =the US Education Exchange, and — the US Mission to the UNO
are used by the CIA for intelligence purposes or which have, with official sanction, been infiltrated. Among the other intelligence branches in the civil sphere
of the USA, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which is
subordinate to the Department of Justice, deserves special mention. The FBI also places cadres at the disposal of the foreign intelligence services. Within the USA this institution, as Federal police force, devotes itself to the persecution of peace
partisans,
Communists
and
other
oS
ees te
as well as so-called counter-espionage. For years the FBI has carried on espionage in the Ameri- .
can governmental offices abroad, particularly in the Centr al and South American states. In addition, the Departments of —| Commerce, Agriculture and Finance, the Atomic Energy Commission, the Treasury, the Customs Authorit yo sted: the Hleko tate Coast Guards all have their own, larger or
ligence divisions. The relatively small Secret‘ sponsible for the protection ofthe tIS.tater ind t Masinss cocritariell oil rency, rePERSSG hi:alrau 8 more th ete:
ée ATKS l "i
in various
suntries cou
of C
Wester $ n,
Northern,
and
Sout
Europe, Asia, Africa as well of Central and South Ameticg Together with these troops, commands of the military intel, ;
ligence services have, of course, also moved into the Coun, tries in which the troops are stationed and have taken a activities
against the national
interests
of these states hy
present no less than 42 states are tied to the USA throug bi-lateral and multi-lateral military agreements and pact
To round off the picture of the present extent of the Amer.
can military intelligence services here are a few figures. The G-2 branch and the Military Intelligence Service of the US Army have a full-time personnel establishment o more than 5,000 men of which, according to the Washington journal “Army” of May 1967, 1,100 are active in the US Army
of aggression in South Vietnam alone. The Department of Defense, the Pentagon, has military attachés in 71 US Embassies and Legations. Over and above this the whole apparatus of the Department of State has been clearly militarised in recent years. Various military intelligence experts have left the armed forces for the US Foreign Service or have been officially transferred to it. Hundreds of US officers suddenly appeared as “advisers” in the Agency fot
International Development. And then the Defense Intelligence Agency, founded in 1961 by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, started to implant experts with long: standing
branches.
records of military intelligence work in its overseas
From
1968, since the old-standing White House
intelligence adviser, Clark M. Clifford, has been US Secretar :A* of Defense, this process has been speeded up. Within the military intelligence services, which as a maths bee of principle work closely together with the CIA, there
functional structure according to the branches of the mn oh: re forces on the one side and to offensive g naissance and espionage with HOE OVEE Cnr eee Pie
units on the other,
‘ Pa
i
The offensive
nage
reconnaissance,
often j
is the affair of the so-called
Army and the US Marine
G-
Corps, and the A
| US Air Force and the US Navy. Th e Nati onal Security A gency at Fort George Mead acts as coding, deco ding, monitoring and direction finding centre for all br anches of the US
armed forces. Alone
in those countries bordering on the
Socialist states it maintains floating radio listening posts.
_
2,000
stationary,
flying
and
The rulers of the USA are, of course, extremely interested
in keeping the mantle of secrecy over their intelligence network. This mantle has been torn aside in not a few cases in recent months. The CIA answered by tightening up their secrecy directives and also by improving their cloak and dagger rules. The “invisible government” names nor faces.
shall have neither
For this reason the time appeared to have come to demask a first representative selection of leading officials and offi_ cers, collaborators and agents of the US intelligence services who are operating on five continents.
|
The result is this “WHO'S WHO IN CIA” whereby CIA could be used as an appropriate synonym for the whole of the US intelligence system. As many of the officers and agents of the Office of Strategic Services, foun ded as a special foreign intelligence service in 1942, are today on the pay-rolis of the CIA and Department of State, it see med. advisable to include the One-time lead in g figures of that 48
organization. This was done not only because two CIA — Directors, including the present Director, started their intel-_
ligence careers in the OSS and took many of their accom-
plices into the CIA, but also in the knowledge that imperi:
iiteltintelligence services usually “buy-up” the recipi c their en into ll fa have pay, and also those who tillthe end of their lives. bebe
“ie fae
*, ey) - . -
‘
?: iN
pret
Sao
Me, “WHO'S WHO IN ah, sab pr public The user of and l na io at uc ed , ic om on ec the : en jn. be ve ha A US e th in s re he sp on Bee pcripulati . es ic rv se ce en ig ll te in e th by d filtrate
mace en ig ll te in e iv ns te ex e th at th e, tru We know, it is r will be, ve ne d an t, no is , not s wa A t US is al ri pe im of y er in ch in a position to turn back the wheel of history. The destinies of the nations cannot be fixed in the offices of the CIA. The ngerUS intelligence services, though, plan and organize da le of all ous actions at every hour. For this reason the peop nations are warned of the organizers of the CIA machinations. In this sense further reference works can follow.
Berlin W 66, May 1968 Dr. Julius Mader
FULBRIGHT,
J. W.
ARK.,, CHAIRMAN
JOHN SPARKMAN, ALA.
BOURKE B, HICKENLOOPER, IOWA
MIKE
GEORGE
MANSFIELO,
MONT.
1D,
AIKEN,
WAYNE MORSE, OREG,
FRANK CARLSON, KANS,
FRANK J, LAUSCHE, OHIO
KARL FE. MUNDT, 5. DAK,
ALBERT
GORE,
TENN
FRANK CHURCH, IDAHO
STUART SYMINGTON, MO, THOMAS
J, DODD,
CONN,
JOSEPH
S. CLARK, PA,
EUGENE
J, MCCARTHY,
JOHN
~
VT,
J, WILL IAMS§, DEL.
Ww
CLIFFORD P.C ASE. Nu.
@
if 9 lates
Tile
JOHN SHERMAN COOPER, KY,
. COMMITTEE
CLAIBORNE PELL, R.I.
March
MINN.
ON
FOREIGN
we,
Denate
_~
RELATIONS
1967
CARL MARCY, CHIEF OF STAFF ARTHUR M. KUHL, CHIEF CLERK
Dear
Dr.
Mader:
Thank
which
you
I am sorry
for your
not
letter
to have
answered
It was kind.of you to take additional readings on the CIA,
Sincerely,
of December
the
30,
)
‘sooner. trouble
1966,
to
=
.
Notes for the user
The biographical details have been selected with a vie w to giving
the
highest
degree
of appropriate
handy book form.
information
in
The people named in this first edition are, with very few exceptions, people born in the USA or naturalized citizens of that state.
Where
necessary,
the date of birth is followed
by the E
country of birth. Where no further reference to the granting
of US citizenship follows, these people are the children Co US citizens abroad at the time.
ee |
With regard to the language reference it taken for granted -e: that all the people listed speak English. This loreps has, se therefore, not been specially noted. St Se See s
As the majority of pagote listed in this book Kae attes Jed institutes of higher education or universities only cour Study outside the USA been specially mentioned.
It seemed importantto.give 1s
sible of the service 5 USA with the objecct of
ee
©” service yi) u Dats
milit ay
qualifications. Indication of military rank has been limited to the highest in each case, The places of operation are listed in chronological order. As a general rule the place of operation
last mentioned
js
that at the beginning of 1968.
The title indicated in brackets following a town or country gives the last function exercised in the US diplomatic representation (Embassy, Legation, Consulate) situated there.
1g iota ee
CBS
Columbia Broadsas tad5 steem
CENTO
o Central Treaty Organizeatins
Cl
Counter-intelligence
|
= cs :
d inf ge» an na io and g ey er nt ou (C pa a
f
sec “We Sed ign Abe Cee. ee wy = aa QisoMy 2ac—caa Y td
|
|
7
|
:
CIA
Central Intelligence Agency
CAG
Counter Intelligence Corps (US Army)
DIA
Defense Intelligence Agency
DIO
District Intelligence Officer (Counter-espionage officer Navy)
of
US
ECA FAS
Economic Cooperation Administration
FBI
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Foreign Agricultural Service of Department of Agriculture (also
responsible
for counter-espio-
nage and the infiltration of foreign secret and intelligence services)
eR
General Staff 2 of US Army
=
}ICA
(G-2 designates the second General
Staff officer and his staff—from Divjsion and upwards—responsible for military reconnaissance and security)
Office of United States High Commissioner for Germany __ \
International Atomic Energy Agency (in Vienna)
fat
|
ata i gree
=egie
_ , 7pit oe
;
Cooperation Admini
MIS
Military Intelligence Service
NASA
National Aeronautics and Space Ad-
(US Army)
ministration
NATO
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
NSA
National Security Agency
NSC
National Security Council
OECD
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
OMGUS
Office of Military Government United . States in Germany
ONI
Office of Naval Intelligence (US Navy)
OpA
Country, town or place of operation to date
OSD
Office of the Secretary of Defense
OSI
Office of Special ave Segoe Air Force)
OSS
|
(US .
3
_ Office of Strategic Services | (Foreign intelligence service of | in Second World War, forerunner « °of
aa
CIA) Owl
Office of War areratien
Pentagon
Seat of and synonym fee Depai : of Defense
e deste inthe:
: y Je
Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers
SHAPE
in Europe
UNESCO
United Nations Educational, Scien. tific and Cultural Organization
UNO
United Nations Organization
UNRRA
United Nations Relief and Rehabiljtation Administration
USAREUR
United States Army in Europe
USEC
US Mission munities
USIA USOM \ERO a
‘..
=
‘
a
:
sop rs:
at:
sae
Com-
United States Information Agency United States Operations Mission ©
4
me
to the European
.
United Bigice Mission to NATO. and its European Regional Organization s
w=
;
ae x
ag Oe pe
?
is:
he
|
— A
Abbott, Arthur Strobridge b.: 24. 8. 1907;
in Department
1946-65 CIA;
1959 work for
of State; from
OpA: Mukden, Wellington, Bangkok, Zurich, Rangoon (2nd Secretary, Trade Attaché)
Vaduz,
Abell, Jane S. b.: 29. 5. 1929; L.: Hindi; for from 1951 in Department of State; from 1955 work CIA;
|
OpA:
Karachi,
Bombay,
New
Delhi
(1st Secretary),
Washington
_ Achen, Lewis P. b.: 26. 4. 1925;
)
1943-46
in US Navy; 1952-55
Department
and
1960-63
of Army; from 1963 in Department
analyst in
of State;
Sao Paulo (Consul), Washington OpA: Tokyo, Okinawa,
Acree, Charles Louis .. 1. 19363 DitelO
1965 Studies
in Lima; 1957-58 in G- 2 of US. nee
1958-59 Analyst in Department of Sa
Department of State;
from ies in
a
Seats
OpA: Rio de Janeiro, Recife; Sontiage de Chile(As= ies. sistant Attaché) Adams, Arley D.
b.: 6. 10. 1907; AID, work for CIA;
iy
du oe i, neil ‘hai Seoul, OPAr
Adve)
ea
—
er
eee
Adams, Dick Comstock b.: 13. 5. 1929 in Korea;
1951-56
in MIS of US Army; 1958-61
in Department of
Army, work for CIA; from 1961 in AID;
OpA: Saigon, Seoul (2nd Secretary) Adams, Richard Hugh b.: 9.12. 1924; L.: Arabic, French; 1944—46 in US Navy; 1949 Studies in Geneva; from 1950 in Department of State; from 1962 work for CIA; OpA: London, Bradford, Capetown, Pretoria, Alexandria, Beirut, Benghazi, Dharan (Consul)
Addona, Angelo F. 12°48.-1'1.:1925:
1944—46 in US Army; 1953—54 Attorney in the SecuritiesExchange Commission; 1954—64 in OSI of Department of Air Force; from 1964 in Department of State; OpA: Addis Ababa (2nd Secretary), Washington
Adkins, Elmer H. jr. j ‘
Beg
31913;
1939-43 Special Agent in Department of Justice; 1943 to 1945 Director of Plant Protection; from 1962 in AID:
OpA: Saigon, Santo Domingo (Security Adviser) Adler, Dr. Philip J. b.: 30. 3. 1930; L.: German; 1954—56 in US Army; 1961 Studies in Vienna; from 1961
_in Department of State; from 1965 work for CIA; OpA: Monterrey (Vice-Consul), Washington
Agee, Philip B. b.: 19. 1. 1935; 2
hea
24
| )
1957—60 in AIS of US Air Force; 1959 Analyst in Depart-
|
ment
of Air Force;
from
1960
in Department
of State:
OpA: Quito, Montevideo (Assistant Attaché), Washington Ahern, Thomas Joseph b.: 12. 4. 1940; 1963-65 Analyst in MIS of Department of Army; from 1965 in Department of State, work for CIA; OpA: San Salvador (Assistant Attaché) Ahern, Thomas L. jr. b.: 6. 1. 1932; 1954—57 First Lieutenant in CIC of US Army; 1957—60 in the Department of Army; 1960—65 in AID; OpA: Vientiane (Security Officer) Ahmed, Frank b.: 24. 6. 1924;
1943—46 service in G-2 of US Army; 1951—56 Aneiyes 3 e e Department of Army; from 1956 in Department of Sate
OpA: Khorramshahr, Baghdad, Amman (Mice-Comsali
ig Leet 2 | Fe
Ahrens, Martin B.
OS
b.: 7. 8. 1927 in India;
MIS of Dedoremete of ie fens 1961 in AIDS OpA: Karachi, Taiz, New Delhi attic
Aisley, Dr. Harold
aa. Se
b,: 22) 2.1916:
1941-46 Captain in G-2 of US Army; from 1949 partment of State; from 1951 workefor! CIA; 19 be
Officer to meiner of | abor;
Maree flit i 3
wh
“3
ch
~ar "Sel
a
ey
4 fy oS
ae
‘a
heee Pre) AZ as ate: AS ah Se:
’
47
a Er.
i
A
OpA: Oslo, Copenhagen Attaché), Washington
(1st Secretary
of the Socig|
Akins, Richard T. eS.
Uae
Los
1940—48 Lieutenant-Colonel in G-2 of US Army; 1949-60 in A-2 of Department of Air Force; 1961-65 in Department of State; OpA: Murree, Rawalpindi, Ankara (Attaché)
Albert, Francis L. jr. Be ote 11925; 1943-48 in MIS of US Army; 1952-55 in MIS of Pentagon; from 1955 in Department of State, work for CIA; OpA: Algiers (Political Officer), Washington
Alberti, Francesco J. Jr. b.: 18. 7. 1930; L.: German, French, Greek; 1952—55 in US Army; from 1959 in Department of State; from 1960 work for CIA;
OpA: Athens (2nd Secretary)
=
_ Albertson, John F.
Ns
b.: 22. 3. 1922;
ge
1940—A7 and 1962—63 in MIS of the US Army; 1954—57 |
a
Air Intelligence Research Specialist inRatton 1963 to 1965 in AID;
|
OpA: Saigon (Aduited)
- Albright, Kenneth E. tga | ate 1974 ZO: 4. AVST4 fos aeunee Analyst he MIS 0f | lepartmen ie
ical O it ol P ( a t n a J lo de o Ri : h p O f e s ee aeid
“i ie Be Ny bt
ae oe
Minis, pn
a
Alexander, Archibald b.: 28. 10. 1906;
1942—46 Lieutenant-Colonel in CIC of US Army; 1949~52 Assistant to the State Secretary of the US Army; 1959-61 President of the anti-communist “Free Europe Commit-
tee’: from 1963 Assistant to Chief, Economic Department of ACDA;
OpA: Washington Alexander, Daniel W. b.: 11.9. 1931; L.: Mandarin, Spanish;
1956-57 in US Army; from 1958 in Department of State,
work for CIA;
OpA: Santiago de Chile, Taichung, Taipei, Hongkong (Vice-Consul), Washington
Alexander, Joseph B.
a
|
b.; 24. 8. 1916;
1940—43 Administrative official in the War Devasiiens = 1943—46 Lieutenant in CIC of US Army; 1950—52 in CIA; ao 1953-55 in Department of State; 1956 Chief of Office of External Research; 1957 Chief of Investigati Ss Branch; 1959 attendance at US War College; OpA: Bonn, West Berlin, Buenos ay Si ia Ce | | = (1st Secretary)
ie
Se
Alnimook Daniel
-hepstcee
: 15. 10. 1926;
a He el in US Marine Corps | partment of Army; from, he
Ework fon ett ae inal
ve
:
|
r
M+
4c.
Ul
Allen, Arthur Potter
b.: 25. 7. 1920; L.: French, Italian;
1941—46 Captain in CIC of US Army; from 1946 in De. partment of State; from 1958 work for CIA; OpA: Le Havre, Cherbourg, Vancouver, Tenerife, Naples, Milan, Rome, Paris (2nd Secretary) Allen, Dr. Bruce
b.: 5. 12. 1925: L.: German:
1943-46 in US Army; 1951-67 in CIA; from 1967 in Department of State, work for CIA;
OpA: Washington Allen, Donald E. b.: 1917; L.: Russian;
from 1940 in MIS of US Army; 1946-48 in G-2 of US Army; 1949-52 in G-2 Headquarters US Far East Command
(Japan);
_ ——of“~* MIS
1956-61
Lieutenant-Colonel
in the “Intelligence,
Weapons resident:
Chief
Military Police & Special
School” of USAREUR; Oberammergau,
OpA: Fort Knox/USA,
Africa,
and
Italy, Tokyo,
Hawkins Boneces
Northern Ireland, England, North
Monterrey
ae _ Oberammergau
(Intelligence
School),
~ Allen, Hen ry Wray “$4 29. 5.1919 in Ching wba Mandarin; f eae 1936-37 Peking University; 1942—45. Lieutenant i in1 ONI F
rs.
.
of US Navy; 1946-51 in ONI of Department of Navy;
— from 1951 in aN) af StateWorpeo eSOPA:
) eee ab : HongKong) Macao (( ons
a
raen, Robert Brooke | i
det 12. siete: 4 “ewe i
v
ha
Fe
Dah ta + eee
ArabicSs anish:
ghee
hae eS =)
1951—52 in CIA; from 1953 in Departme nt of State, work
for CIA; 1966 Economic Adviser in Depart ment of State; OpA: Beirut, Dharan, Bogota, Rabat, Cairo (2 nd Secre-
tary), Washington
Allen, Robert Joseph b.: 8.6. 1927; L.: Arabic, French, Spanish; 1945—46 in US Navy; 1951-54 First Lieutenant in US Army; 1950—51 in MIS of Department of Army; from 1955 in Department of State; from 1965 work for CIA; OpA: Monrovia, Sierra Leone, Rabat (2nd Secretary), Washington
Ailen, William G.
b.: 30. 6. 1922; L.: French, German;
Boa
1943-46 in US Army; 1946-48 in OMGUS; from 1951 in | a
Department of State; from 1961 work for CIA; ae OpA: Leopoldville, Vienna, Georgetown, West ‘Petines (Political Officer), Washington | nh passe Allison, Earl R.
45.293) 1,930.
:
ee
1948—52 in US Army; 1958-60 Analyst i in -Daps ‘tm
Army; from 1960 in Department of State, work me
OpA: Penney (2nd Peceionh Woah
Allner, Frederick A. jr.
bs 27, 11,:19249)o/lo
ie),
Se
ae
igi aie
1943—46 Ensign in A-2 of Us5 New from
ment of State; from 1960 work forC resident: Bad Djakort 5 Turms “4 oyche) Hsbc
morsqa, ourak
es ar lr
Re
vag
A
=
i
Dean J. jr. Almy, b.: 18. 12. 1926;
1943—46 in G-2 of US Marine Corps; 1951-55 in MIs of Department of Army; from 1956 in Department of State work for CIA;
OpA: Medan, Kuala Lumpur, Manila (Attaché), Wash. ington
Alsop, Stewart Johonnot Oliver b.t47..5: 1914:
1945—48 Leader writer of the ‘New York Herald Tribune”’; 1944 Captain and parachute spy in OSS; service in France; from 1958 publisher; OpA: Washington Alspaugh, Clarence H. jr. 3
SOND. 1927;
1945—46 in A-2 of US Navy; 1950-51 in Department of Army; from 1951 in Department of State, work for CIA; OpA: Sydney, Tripolis (Adviser)
Alter, David Emmet jr. b.: 14. 7. 1921 in India;
1943—46 and 1950—54 Captain in CIC of US Army; from 1954
in ICA, work
for CIA; from
190%
Deputy Chief of Office of South-East African Affairs in Department of State; a3 tedaiaed, rag ma| OpA: Katmandu, Lusaka Canal
A
,
iC
,
sningt
i"
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Aw
hhi
"
by
ul ie
hecuJSNo 2 i 1965 Rear Admiral ofth ‘fra a rae| OpAt Wornaw +leported ah ee Poland 7a Bede ark
q
in AID;
1961
a
Le
%
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or peor
oes
,
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A
Altroggen, Rudolf Otto b.: 7,4. 1918 in Germany; L.: German: from 1935 US citizen; 1942—45 First Lieutenant in G-2 of US Army; 1946-65 in Department of State; from 1951
work for CIA:
OpA: Vienna, Dublin, Reykjavik Ames, Fisher Dro Gr 4419205
1943—46 in US Army; 1949—59 Analyst in Department of Army; from 1960 in Department of State; OpA: La Paz, Santo Domingo (Attaché), Washington Amis, William B. b.: 9. 10. 1937;
1959-63 Ensign in A-2 of US Navy; 1963—65 nace in
|
Department of Army; from 1965 in Department of State; ss OpA: Bombay (Vice-Consul)
_ Amnott, Roland C.
=
:
b.: 9.4. 1912;
1943-44 in Gcle€ of US Arty: Dae
ea
:
eee
oe
detective;|
AID: from 1965 ‘Genet Contraliar ofAID; + a & ington Washin OpA: Abidjan. Seaurlay Officers
Amott, John Crider | b.: 18.5.1922;L.: Spanish; Aa 1943-46 in US Army; 1946 fry n
1946-47 in ONI of ace Department of State; fromt
awpe Sige Jan Ire c hctiee ~yaar(),
rk for
Paz, Tokyo, |
i fror
}
A
re
Andersen, Paul G. b.: 20. 1. 1928;
1946-48 in US Navy; 1952-59 in CIC of US Army; 1969 to 1965 in AID; OpA: Bangkok (Security Officer), Washington
Andersen, Robert E. b.: 26. 3. 1917; 1943-46 in G-2 of US Army; 1947 in Department of State; 1951-54 in MIS of Pentagon; 1958—60 A-2 adviser to Chief of Air Operations in Department of Air Force:
OpA: Stockholm, Oslo, The Hague ington
(Attaché), Wash-
Anderson, Carl R.
b.: 24. 10. 1924: 1942—45 in G-2 of US Army; 1952—58 in MIS of Depart-
ment of Army; 1958-65 in Department of State, work for
CIA:
:
OpA: Calcutta, Khartoum (Attaché) Anderson, David
b.: 3. 1. 1937 in Scotland; L.: French, Serbo-Croat;
from 1959 in Department CIA;
of State: from 1960 work for | ;
OpA: Belgrade, Bamako (2nd Secretary).
_ Anderson, James E.
eee
: eS
b.: 9.7. 1934; The heee 3 Ree ails a 1953-57 in AIS of US Air Force; 1960-62 Analy. tS
“a. i
Department of Air Force; from 1962 in Dep State; (1 AOS) cect, hes Seana OpA y Monterrey,
DAF, ig. % i
9 32 |
Santiago de | S Ccabal leros.
(Political Officer) 7
j
=
Rae
tag fabseteias)
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oie
yt
| Me
A
TT Anderson, Kenneth A. by.
19235
1943-45 in US Army; 1946-67 Electronics Expert in Department of Army; from 1967 in Department of State; ) OpA: Athens (Electronics Specialist
Anderson, Leroy b.: 29. 6. 1908; 1942—46 and 1951—52 Captain in MIS of US Army; from 1953 composer;
OpA: New York Anderson, William K. b.: 26. 9. 1928;
1950—56
First Lieutenant
in US Air Force;
1956—59
in
MIS of Department of Army; from 1959 in mse of State;
OpA: Oslo, Copenhagen
(Attaché)
Anderton, John G.
a
b.: 6.9. 1917;
‘aoe
1940-41 Newspaper reporter; 1941-46 Mareein US Army; 1947—49 in Department of State; 1950-57 Analyst Site Department of Army; from 1957 in Departmen es
Andrew, Robert Fi se er : b.: 18. 7.1921; gs French.St ish 1942—45 in US. Army, in Department ofSta
OPA: Mgr
_bovala
‘
4
operations
>
hati Melvin Julius 17. 3. 1924; L.: German; ib eect 1939-44 leading functions in FBI; 1952-65 in eet ment of State (personnel and security controller); = ae sues Goteborg, yocers Fronkfurtivegns (Consul) ia ; i | oFFriasPeay eS bins i ee e pi * Pere zsean ny,William Sp i, ¢ i 1 wrt the T id a ihe: |
i rk Tu e Li ; 23 19 8. . 17 r o oe JS l e1943-46 in CIC a
ra
2 5 heat) beriirec eel th L (h “Radio Fre .
1)
me ed Cae m. BAe Fos 5) 5
7
-
a oy
ere
ad
TY
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OpA: Teheran, Tel Aviv, Kabul, An kara (Attaché), Washington Arbo, Elwood T. b.: 28. 12. 1917:
1940-45 in US Navy; 1951-66 Intelligence Specialist in Department of Army; from 1966 in Department of State; OpA: Vienna, Nicosia (Intelligence-Communications Specialist)
3
Arenales, Alfonso
b.: 1. 3. 1926; L.: Portuguese, Spanish;
2
1944—47 in G-2 of US Army; 1948-56 Journalist: from | 1957 in Department of State, work for CIA: : OpA: Teheran, Rio de Janeiro, Santo Domingo pee Sec. retary)
Armstrong, Oscar Vance
;
:
:
es
b.: 19. 4. 1918 in China; L.: Mandarin; Z es, 1941—45 First eminent in G-2 of US Army; eS 194
in Department of State; from 1957 work for CIA; 1
Chief of the Department for Communist States of Asi
os
the Department of State; 1961 attendance atUS. College; ee OpA:
Canton,
Paving. ‘ingens kuata’Lum
don, Hongkong (Consul), Tena, Armstrong,
willicim (ie nuiaial 2)it
b.: 31.5, 1907; ae Spanish;
Intelligence in.
1 be; ‘
:
rr
#
Arnold, Danie! Clay bt 1d, 7: 1929;
1943—52 in US Marine Corps and in US Army; 1952-54 Analyst in MIS of Department of Army; 1954-60 in De. partment of State; 1960-62 in Plans Office of Depart. ment of Army; from 1963 in Department of State;
OpA: Manila, Bangkok (1st Secretary), Washington Arnold, Max Jean b.: 25. 10. 1923; 1943-46 in US Army; 1951-60 Analyst in Plans Office of the Department of Army; from 1962 in Department of State; OpA: Manila (2nd Secretary), Washington Arnold, Terrell E. S. b.: 14. 12. 1925; L.: Spanish; 1943—46 and 1951—52 in ONI of US Navy; from 1957 in Department of State; from 1958 work for CIA; 1965
=
a
Economic ¢
«
OpA: Cairo, Calcutta (Consul), Washington
we
x
7
4
ge
Adviser in Department of State;
“
=
nault, Paul A.
b.: 21. 8. 1926; L.: Spanish;
4
.
1944-46
in US Navy; 1951—52 in Department of State
1953-55 in MIS of Department of Arm) fiFreesme oa _ Department of State;
ca.
2
Maracaibo,
—
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San Bees:or,
BAN: si 1 4) efgtoaN
: a,
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Az
Dani W, as 190% PERL
we vn of ak
af
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tl
|
ea 1943—46 in G-2 of US Army; from 1951 in Department of State; from 1953 work for CIA; OpA: Phnom Penh, Montevideo, Bogota (1st Secretary), Washington Ashida, James H.
b.: 4.2. 1920; L.: Arabic, Japanese;
1942—A46
Lieutenant
in G-2 of US Army;
1949 in
from
Department of State; from 1952 work for CIA; OpA: Athens, Teheran, Beirut, Khartoum (1st Secretary)
Ashworth, R. L.
_ Brigadier-General of US Army; Director of Security and ©
Military Assistance Program of Pentagon; OpA: Washington Sa Neee emer ye
Askew, Laurin Bryan
b.: 26. 6. 1922; L.: German, Spanish;
7
‘
4 E
eee
1943-46 Lieutenant in ONI of US Navy; from 1948 in Department of State; from 1957 work for CIA; 19 4 attendance at Imperial War College (Great Britain); 7
OpA: Lima, Manila, Bangkok, Madrid (Folitie i Asteriou, Dr. Socrates. James — be? 41,4: 1921;
of State, wank for CIA;
OpA: Washington
Atwood, Dr. Wallace Wale
1906; b.: 7.6. n geogr: rer ys
Lectu
Beh! Te ita *
vA
‘
se
?,
ie
“i
jor in VU.
aes oe
1 dla
Biotec?
Oo ae Department of OSS; 1948-50 Director of the Office of International Relations of the Academy of Sciences of the USA; from 1951 publisher; 1953-59 Member and Adviser of the UNESCO Commission for Scientific Research:
OpA: Rio de Janeiro, Stockholm, Chile, Washington
Lisbon, Santiago de
Aubrey,
1964 Colonel of US Army; Military Attaché: OpA: Moscow (deported from the USSR in 1964) Aurell, George Emanuel b.: 8.1. 1905 in Japan: 1927-30 in Department of State: 1942-46 Lieute nantColonel in G-2 of US Army; 1954—59 in Department of
a ”
State; 1959—62 in MIS of Department of Army; 196 2—65 in Department of State; Liaison Officer to SEATO:
_
OpA: Yokohama, Manila, Bangkok (Special Assistant to
Secretary-General of SEATO) _ Avery, Dorothy R.
Sh
a
.: 3.1. 1933
:
1957-62 in CIA; from 1962 in Department of State, work
7
for,ClA;
_
OpA: Washington
|
vato-ied
_sb: Ayers, Dr.10.Thomas William
‘dpe
9. 1922 in China; L.: Chinese
EA ef
ects; Be
lecturer
work
OpA: Nanking,
a 6
Co * ti
in Chinese; from 1955 lepartment | USIAin10I ne in 1 196 m fro ; CIA for
é
r
Tae
Manilc j By ~
7 ‘
*
“ae
m .
ongkor
1,
Saigo:
of
Stat
oa
Aylward, Paul L.
:
A
b,: 23. 12. 1930; L.: French;
1952—54 in US Army, from 1956 in Departme t < te; Sta of nt from 1960 work for CIA;
resident: Munich 27, Mauerkircherstrasse 142; OpA: Sydney, Yaounde, Munich (Economic Adviser)
ce
a——_____—— Babineau, Raymond P. b.: 25. 11, 1914: L.: French:
1942—45 gence
Captain
in CIC of US Army; 1952—54
instructor in Department
Intellj.
of Navy; 1955—56 and
1959-60 in Staff Planning Office of Department Army; 1960—65 in AID: OpA: Phnom Penh (Security Officer) Baca, Ray R. b.: 23. 10. 1926; L.: Spanish; 1944-47 in G-2 of US Marine Corps; 1949-62 Lieutenant; 1963-65 in Department of State;
of
Police
OpA: Belo Horizonte (Security Officer)
Bacon, John E. b.: 21. 12. 1928: Jesuit:
1952—55 in MIS of Department of Army; 1956—65 in Department of State, work for CIA;
OpA: Caracas, Quito (Attaché Assistant) - Bacon, Leonard Lee
|
b.: 17. 5. 1907; L.: French, German; 1942-45 in G-2 of US Army; 1943 attendance at British Army School of Intelligence; 1946-53 in Department of State;
1954
attended
NATO
Adviser of the European
Academy;
Command
1955
Political
of the USA; from
1956 in Department of State, Personnel Chief; from 1959
Deputy Chief of Office for North-East Asian Affairs, work for CIA; |
OpA: Zurich,
Berne,
Hankow,
Paris, Vientiane, Washington
Nanking,
Strasbourg,— "ay
sa
B
ns
Bagnulo, Aldo H., 1960 Captain in MIS and lecturer at US War College;
OpA: Carlisle Barracks in Pennsylvania Bailey, Edwin Tomlin b.: 23.5. 1907: L.: German;
1956 Director State;
of Office
OpA: London, Hamburg
/
of Security in Department
of
(Consul-General), Washington
Baker, Allan E. ba dlerSe al9268
from 1957 in USIA, work for CIA; OpA: Washington Baker, Donald C. beeZou la 19235
1942—45 First Lieutenant in US Army; 1948 Studies in Geneva; 1949-55 in MIS of Department of Army; from 1955 in Department of State;
OpA: Paris, Saigon, Rabat (2nd Secretary) Baker, John Alexander b.: 3.10. 1927; L.: German, Italian, Russian:
1946-48 Second
3s
Lieutenant in MIS of US Army; from
1950 in Department of State; from 1954 in USIA, work — for CIA; from 1963 in US Mission to the UNO;
OpA:
Belgrade,
Oberammergau,
Moscow
|
(deported
from the USSR in 1958 on account of subversive activ ties), Rome (1st Secretary), New York
"Baker, Robert J. Pes: 7.9. 1935: L.: French;
hs
4
r S| .S from 1961 in USIA, work for CIA; OpA: Washington, Kampala, Bamako
(Information
Of.
ficer) Bald, Irene V. pee. 10, 19153
1943—45 Analyst in OSS; 1946 in Department of State: 1949-61
in CIA; 1962—65 in Department of State;
OpA: Washington Baldwin, Isabel] Ann b.: 21. 7. 1909: 1941—45 in War Production Board; from 1945 in Department of State; from 1949 work for CIA: 1955 in ICA; 1965 in AID;
OpA: Washington Baldwin, James Donald
b.: 27. 8. 1929; L.: Serbo-Croat; 1951—54 in US Army; 1955—65 in MIS of the Department of Army; from. 1966 in Department of State;
-OpA: Washington, Belgrade (Economic officer)
_ Baldwin, Marion Augustus — b.: 19. 5. 1925; L.: German, Norwegian; 1945—46 in MIS of US Army; 1949—50 in G-2 of Depart-
ment of Army; from 1950 in Department of State, work
for CIA; 1965 Economic Adviser in Department of State: OpA: Munich, Fiissen, West Berlin, Oslo, Kingston, — Frankfurt/Main, Washington | a Ballard, Richard I.
42
b.: 16. 3. 1926;
Scene 1943—46 in ONI of US Navy; 1951-52 in MIS of Depart-
ment of Army; from 1954 in USIA, work for CIA; OpA: Washington
Ballou, Christopher Henry b.: 2. 11. 1926 in China; 1944—46 in US Marine Corps; 1952-59 in MIS of the US
Army; from 1960 work for CIA;
,
OpA: Singapore, Hongkong
(Political Officer), Wash-
ington
es
Band, William F. X. b.: 16. 8. 1921:
1942—45 Major in US Army; 1951-55 Major in AIS of US Air Force; 1955—58 in Department of Air Force; from 1958 work for CIA; from 1962 in AID: OpA: Saigon, Manila, Bangkok, Saigon
(Assistant
to
AID Director) Bane, Howard T.
b:: 5.8. 1927;
1951-55 Analyst in senna
Department of State;
of Army; from 1955,
3
OpA: Bangkok, New Delhi, Accra (Political Officer)
_Bannister, James M. sr.
e
7! 164.1900) 2
|
eens
eae ee
1952-54 US Coast+ Guards:1954-61Po
. Bei
in AID;
i
a
;
ec
—— Banowetz, David P. b.: 5. 9. 1927; L.: Spanish; Jesuit;
1946-47
in G-2 of US Army;
US Senate;
1955-57
Press Officer of
1958-65 in Department of State, work fo,
CIA; OpA: Quito, London
(2nd Secretary)
Baraz, Robert
D.2 1D. 6. 19295
1956-57 Reporter; from 1958 in Department of State, work for CIA; OpA: Washington Barbis, George Milton b.: 8. 7. 1926; L.: Greek, Thai:
1946—47 in US Army; from 1951 in Department of State; from 1961 work for CIA;
OpA: Teheran, Seoul, Chiengmai (Consul), Washington Bardos, Arthur A.
b.: 26. 4. 1921 in Hungary; French, German, Hungarian; 1943—A5 in CIC of the US Army; 1945—46 Radio censor of the US Military Government in Germany; from 195! in Department of State; from 1953 in USIA, work for CIA: 1960 Head of the Africa Radio Division; OpA: Frankfurt/Main, Vienna, Casablanca, Paris, Co| \ nakry, Saigon (Attaché), Washington
Barjansky, Michael
~
b6'27. 12.4917 fale French; German, Italian; ca
1942—43 in OWI; 1943-44 in US Army; 1946-48 incic of US Army, from 1949 in Dern of Sta te; from 1953 in USIA;
44
hy
OpA: Lyons, Bad Nauheim, Bonn, Vienna, Rome, Algi ers (Cultural Attaché)
Barker, Dorothy M. Deil2u | la9 16selle*erenens
from 1945 in Department of State; from 1956 work for CIA;
OpA: West Berlin, Frankfurt/Main, Marseille, Paris (Consular Officer)
Montreal,
Barker, Rosamund F. Officer of CIC of US Army; Agent of OSD/CI
Quebec,
of the
MAAG of the US Embassy in Bad Godesberg; resident: Trier, Am Marienhof No. 72:
OpA: Trier Barlerin, Henry S. b.: 14. 12. 1906; L.: French;
1943—45
Leading
intelligence official in the Board
of
Economic Warfare, Section for North Africa and Europe;
1946-49 OMGUS; 1950-52 in MIS of Department of Army; from 1958 in Department of State: from 1959 iin AID, work for CIA; "ae
_OpA: West Berlin, Paris, Trieste, Rabat, Ankara, Teheran = (Adviser)
‘e
Barmine, Alexander Gregory
b.: 16.8. 1899 in Russia; L.: Russian, Ukrainian: om 1943 US citizen; 1943—44 in OSS; from 1948 in
the US Radio Service; work for CIA;from1
head of the Russian Division; ioe Wepbeeee ie“, OPA: Uris, Dit
¥
ty
¥
|
aoe
Te
B
—_—
Barnard, John Lawrence b.: 28. 1.1912: L.: French;
1942—45 Major in G-2 of US Army; from 1946 in Depart,
ment of State, Chief of Intelligence Coordination Diyj. sion; from 1949 work for CIA; 1952 UN Bureau fo, European Affairs;
OpA: Antwerp, Nice, Aruba, Nassau
(Consul-General)
Barnes, Dale E.
b.: 29. 5. 1926; 1944—60 Lieutenant-Commander
in US Navy;
1960-63
in US Atomic Energy Commission; from 1960 work for CIA; from 1966 in Department of State; OpA: Washington
Barnes, Edward O. Bb. 30.7.1914;
from 1936 in Department of State; 1943-46 Captain in US Army; 1952—64 Liaison Officer of Department of
State to MIS of Department of Army; 24; resident: Munich 90, Gabriel- Max-Strasse on OpA: Munich (Consul)
cott - Barnes, Professor Eric Frank Wollen
43 7.5. 1907; L.: French; ¢ from 1930 in Department of State; from 1942 in1 MIS
‘Joint Staff; 1942-44 in OSS; 1951-54 Director an‘ ea
nerican
Institute, of the “Free Universi
Barnes Aaa G.Bs;a ay ose
ae
19863L; : 5 6.
Ne
|
1944—46
in the US Army; from
State; 1955 training
1950 in Department of
at the School
of Intelligence at
Oberammergau;
OpA: Bombay, Prague, Moscow, Katmandu (Consul)
Barnes, Tracy
1943-45 Captain of US Army in OSS; Deputy to OSS Director in Switzerland (Allen Welsh Dulles); 1964 Chief
of CIA Special Division for Internal Operations; OpA: Berne, Washington
Barnhart, Francis E. b.: 8.12. 1918 in Korea;
1942-46
US
in
Army;
1946-50
lecturer;
University
1950—51 in USIA; 1952—56 in AIS of Department of Air Force; from 1967 in Department of State; OpA: Georgetown (Political Officer)
ese
Barnsley, Richard S.
2
b.: 27. 1. 1916;
1941-46 Captain in US Army; from 1946 in Department “3 of State; from 1953 in USIA; from 1960 work for OAS SS OpA: Manila, Beirut (Attaché)
Barr, Edna H.
.
,
b.: 16. 4. 1920;
aes
~1942—45 in War Department; from 1945 in De Siete se of State; from 1962 work for CIA; isda Manila (ne ree ‘Washington es rel,egy
br.Charles ie.
B MIS of US Army; 1944 f in nt na te eu Li nd co Se 6 —4 42 19 sity teache,, G-2 of War Department; from 1946 Univer : n ee Gr g in wl Bo OpA: Barrett, John Lafayette b.: 29. 11. 1917; L.: Spanish;
1941—45 Major in CIC of US Army; from 1947 in Depart.
ment of State, secret police instructor; OpA: Lisbon, Tenerife, Ponta Delgada, Funchal, Oporto,
Mexico City, Bonn, West Berlin, Madrid, Lima (1st Secre.
tary) Barrett, Peter Timmy
b.: 10. 12. 1918 in Thailand; from 1944 US citizen; 1944-64 Major in US Army; 1964—66 in MIS of Department of Army; from 1966 in Department of State; 1967 in AID; OpA: Bangkok (Adviser)
Barrett, Robert S. b.: 3. 7. 1927 in Germany; L.: Spanish; for from 1953 in Department of State; from 1959 work
CIA; SecreOpA: Isfahan, Teheran, Phnom Penh, Paris (2nd tary)
Barringer, Henry C. b.: 30. 5. 1920;
Assistant 1942-47 Major in G-2 of US Army; 1945-47
Military
Army;
Attaché;
1952
1949-52
in Department
in MIS
of Department at
of State;
1956-58 cn
Adviser; 1958-61 in MIS of Department of Army; om
48
ee ee
ee
OpA:
Montevideo,
Copenh
ol re
i fh
Sab
(2nd Secretary)
B
Barsoum, Elias S. fo)iH hy a5 OVS
1942—45 in US Army; from 1951 in Department of State, work for CIA; OpA: Washington Barthelemy, Thomas F. b.: 7. 1. 1934; L.: Polish, Russian;
1955-58
in CIC of US Army;
at US
1958 attendance
Institute for Soviet Studies; from 1960 in Department of State, work for CIA; OpA: Frankfurt/Main, Mogadiscio, Warsaw (2nd Secre-
tary), Washington Bartholomay, Thomas M. b.: 24.2. 1924; L.: French; 1942-45 in MIS of US Army; from 1952 in Department
of State, work for CIA; OpA: Addis Ababa, Tangier, Mogadiscio (Attaché) : Bartos, Joseph T. b.: 30. 4. 1918; L.: French; 1942—A5 First Lieutenant of US Army; 1945—49 OMGUS; — from 1950 in Department of State; 1957 Head of the
executive
staff
in the
Office
Intelligence
of
|
Research; 1960 Foreign Service Inspector;
OpA: Munich, Frankfurt/Main, Cairo, (Administration Officer)
Bonn, Teheran,
Bartsch, William H. 8027a -2
Lagos,— =. 3
ae
Seo
b.: 18. 1. 1933; 4
and
\
: ;
Lae
3
ee B
a
1956 at Stockholm University; from 1958 in AID; of State, work for CIA; 1963-65
in Department
*
OpA: Kuwait, Jamaica, Washington Basarab, John Bes2tA2. 1919;
1942-45
in
US
Army;
1946-48
studies
in
Prague:
1950-65 Analyst in MIS of the Department of Army; from
1965 in Department of State; OpA: Buenos Aires (2nd Secretary) Basora, Adrian Anthony b.: 18. 7. 1938; L.: Spanish; on 1962 in Department of State; from 1965 work for IA;
OpA: Lima (Vice-Consul), Washington Bates, Dr. Robert H.
1941—42 Arctic researcher for War Department; 1942-46
Lieutenant-Colonel
in MIS of US Army;
1962-65
in
Peace Corps;
OpA: Katmandu (Development Helper)
Batjer, Helene A. | b.: 18. 12. 1921; L.: Serbo-Croat; from 1945 in Department of State; from 1955 work (or CIA; ; : OpA: West Berlin, Sofia, Rome, Athens, Fee *
holm, Zagreb (Consul), Wasiingen
-3 Batten, Vivian E.
=
ae
bh. 34.3, 1914;
MINS
ene
1939-46 Lieutenant: Commander
ne
ane
ne
Ge
RO
RE
A
ROE SI ET ES OED
ee
eee
B
in Department of Air Force; from 1964 in Department of State; OpA: Athens (Electronics Specialist)
Baugham, Urbanus Edmund Dec
aloOos
from 1927 in US Secret Service; 1927-34 Secret Agent;
1941—43 Secret Service instructor; 1948 Director of US Secret Service;
OpA: New York, Washington Baum, Dr. Robert David
b.: 25. 10. 1912;
t 1942—45 in G-2 of US Army; from 1946 in Departmen
of State; from 1950 work for CIA; 1953 Chief, Office of
African Affairs in Department of State; 1957 Chief, Office of Research and Analysis for Near East, South Asia and Africa: 1961 Chief, Office for West African Aftairs; 1966 Chief, Office of Research and Analysis for Africa; from 1966 Superviser, Intelligence Research Specialist;
OpA: Washington |
Beardsley, Basil A.
b.: 22. 6.1925;
—
-
ae
1943-46 in. US Navy; 1952-55 Analyst in ONI of theee! of Acne Department of Navy; 1961-67 in Department ae from 1967 in Department of State;
OpA: Havana, Santiago de Cuba, eee Officer)
a =
:
bk ab Beattie, Frederick Oakley b.: 6. 4. 1922; L.: German, Mandarin; |bye aneta ONt 1943-46 Lieutenant Junior Grade in
|
from 1951, in Pensa of State,
>
~ nSy ae a RT OpA: Taichung, Washington
Hongkong,
Rangoon
(2nd Secretary)
Becker, Loftus Eugene He 29k
1911;
1942-45 in CIC of US Army; 1948 Adviser, US Delegg. tion to the International War Crimes Tribunal in Nurem.
berg; 1951-53 Deputy Director of CIA; from 1959 Head of the European Office of Messrs Cahill, Gordon, Reindel & Ohl:
OpA: Paris Beckwith, John W. b.: 2. 12. 1928; 1947-50
in US
Air Force;
1955-62
Analyst
in AIS of
Department of Air Force; from 1963 in Department of State; OpA: Istanbul (Economic Officer), Washington Behrens, Charles E. mip 1-9..1925;
1943-46 in the Mercantile Mode: 1952—54 in US Army; 1955—60 in Planning Office of the Department of Army; from'1955 in Department of State, work for CIA;
OpA: Rangoon, eHgbausrdDar-es-Salaam (2nd Secretary
Bekker, Dr. Konrad _ b.: 24.5.1911 in Germany; L.: French, German; from 1943 US citizen: 1943-46 Lieutenant in G-2 of us
Army; 1944-45 in OSS; from 1946 in Department: a, State; from 1953 work for CIA; :a eA
OpA: New Delhi, Rangoon, Berne, Ba bik (Consul for Sconenua Questions) et -
“
"
x52 ba
;
n nh n I Bell, Harry H.
b.: 2,1. 1917; L.: French, German, Italian;
5 in 1942—46 First Lieutenant in G-2 of US Army; 1946-6 Department
of State;
from
for CIA;
1960
(1st Secretary),
New
work
1957
attendance at US Air War College; OpA:
Paris,
Djakarta,
Brussels
York
Bell, William Alexander b.: 26. 9. 1941; L.: Dutch;
1966 work for from 1963 in Department o f State; from CIA; OpA: Curacao (Vice-Consul), Washington Bellinger, Earl W. Oe edZTE 1945—46 in US Navy; 1949 and 1961—62 in US Air Force;
1960-61
in UNO
Mission in the Congo;
from
Department of State, work for CIA;
OpA: Usumbura, Fort Lamy, Dar-es-Salaam Bellino, Carmine Salvatore
b.: 26. 7. 1905;
1962 in
(Adviser)
ae
Ee
$e.
Lieutenant-Colonel of US Army Air Force; 1943-45 eZ Special Agent of FBI; 1944 Administrative Adviser of the | - | Director of the FBI; 1946—47 Vice-director of the Recon
from 1961 Special Ad= struction Finance Corporation;
viser to the President of the USA and the Director cet “e US Bureau of the Budget; ~ OpA: New York, Washington
Belmont, Allan Harnden hi "he :
Ds
QQ, WOOTEsIre Tae
1936~+43 Special A e
aaa et Fb 4
of
ne
B
or P Office of FBI; from 1951 Assistant to the Direct FBI; OpA: Birmingham, Chicago, New York, Washington
Belousovitch, Igor N. | b.: 3. 4. 1922 in China; 1943—46 service in G-2 of US Army; from 1956 in De. partment of State, work for CIA; OpA: Washington Belt, Charles V.
b.: 29.11. 1920: i 1940—41 Marine artillery specialist; 1942—46 in US Army; 1947—61 Analyst in AIS of Department of Air Force; from 1961 in Department of State;
OpA: Bogota, Caracas (Attaché), Washington
5 Bennet, Dr. John Tescan “b.: 21.1. 1929; L.: French; from 1955 in Department of State, work for CIA; 1957 to 1960 in ICA; from 1965 in AID;
OpA: Tunis, Curacao, Saigon (2nd Secretary), Wosh | Bae ington
cca ss «o y, ne it Wh ah si Jo , t t Benne e t ‘Rovio 17 1916; Lie
on anes er gia See Esa
E nnn
1945—46 in US Army; 1949-55 in MIS of Department of Army; from 1956 in Department of State; OpA: Rome, Warsaw, Vienna (Attaché), Washington
Berg, Richard W. b.: 31. 3. 1924:
1942—46 in G-2 of US Army; from 1951 in Department of State; from 1955 in USIA, work for CIA: OpA: Paris, Quito, Djakarta (Adviser) Berg, Robert W. b.: 24. 5. 1930; 1948—52 in AIS of US Air Force; 1954—55 Studies in Madrid; 1955-58 Analyst in Department of Army; from 1959 in Department of State;
OpA: Managua, La Paz (2nd Secretary), Washington »
Bergin, Martin J. jr.
2b, 25:5: 19197, wy
‘
:
1941-46 Captain in CIC of the US Army; 1948-51 ‘Ano- ‘
Sabin ECA; from 1954 in i Bide
Bernstein, Dr. Blonehe $6.10; 192
oe
patti in War Pred
=vena
Fs Refugee Welfare Organization; from 1952 in Department of State, Special Adviser for security questions; OpA: Washington Berry, William E. jr. b.: 8. 12. 1919; L.: French; 1942—A5 First Lieutenant in G-2 of US Army; from 1951 in Department of State, work for CIA;
OpA: Accra, Casablanca (Consul), Washington
Berthold, Arthur Benedict b.: 8. 1. 1905 in Latvia;
1942-45 Analyst in OSS; from 1948 in Department
of
State, Assistant Librarian of the Special Library; OpA: Washington Berti, Peter M. ies Italians
from 1943 in CIC of US Army; 1953—57
CIC instructor;
from 1958 Instructor for the Strategic Intelligence Service at the “Intelligence Military Police & Special Weap- ee
ons School” of USAREUR;
resident: Oberammergau,
=
Hawkins Barracks;
OpA: Rome, Stuttgart, Oberammergau \ .
_
Biggs, Arthur Perry 5,1 575, 191081 Spanish; 23 1943—45 in command of an OSS unit: from 1945 see partment of State; from 1960 work for CIA; =
OpA: Bogota, Buenos Aires, Caracas, Cairo, = de Janeiro iGegaren ar
5c.) Birkeland, Paul:ple,
ave}
a 1942—49 Major in G-2 of US Army; 1951
in Departmen;
of State; 1957-62 in Plans Office of the Departmen, te; of Army; from 1963 in Department of Sta OpA: Copenhagen, Monrovia (2nd Secretary), Wash. ington
Black, Donald, P. b.: 18. 7. 1926: L.: Czech, German;
1944-46 and 1952—54 Lieutenant Junior Grade in US Navy; from 1959 in Department of State; from 1963 : work for CIA; OpA: Munich, Washington, Prague (Political Officer)
Black, Jeannetta W.
b.: 22. 7. 1920;
from 1946 in Department of State; from 1954 work for CIA; from 1962 in AID;
|
OpA: Washington
Black, Leahman C.
o
7
:
; 1963—65 in AID, work for CIA; OpA: Bangkok (Intelligence Adviser)
Black, Dr. Robert Bruce | Bee
|
|
7-18,2,1921;
49,523, 5.49203
1942—45
|
. ret eee
ee
dance
at US WarCollege;
_ Assistance Division in Dep
196
:
= 4
Lieutenant-Commander in A-2 of
58 Deputy Head of USOM; from 1961 in 9 1 Office for West African Affairofs AID
Bee
ae -
pa AN
,
.
SE % ps
Biey oy
a
eae si
a6 OY
a
a
-)
Po
U:
Division of De partme nt of in AID, work for CIA;
Commerce;
1961 in ICA; 196
OpA: Conakry, Yaounde (Adviser)
Bourgeois, Donald G. Bob 12. $v 19233
1940—43 in FBI: 1943—46 in US Army; 1946—65 in De. partment of Army; from 1967 in Department of State; OpA: Athens (Intelligence specialist) Bouton, Norman M. b.: 15. 8. 1933; L.: Italian, Portuguese; 1955—60 Ensign of US Navy; from 1962 in Department of State; from 1967 work for CIA;
OpA: Rio de Janeiro, Naples (Vice-Consul), Washington Bove, Januar D. Jr.
b.: 17.8. 1920; Functionary of the Republican Party a the USA; 1941—45 Major in CIC of US Army; from 1958 President
of the
“Crusade
anti-Communist
for Freedom” in
Delaware; from 1958 Attorney-General in Delaware;
OpA: Wilmington
_Bonis, Henry Eugene
-b.: 31. 3. 1928; L.: Arabic, Hebrew;
from 1953 in Department of hale ffom 1956 in: a rey? > from 1963 work for CIA; OpA: Beirut, Tel ha fou:(Consul|
“gr ye
ee
eg.
Lewis
6 3
W.
ht See
hs -b.: 23.9. 1924; Liz Portus identi Lieutenant
teates aoe
By
pai‘
oe
—
———
Seee
Oar
:
ee
from 1950 in Department of Stat e, work for CIA; Op
A: Zagreb, Belgrade, Berne, Mosc ow, Brasilia, Rio de
Janeiro (2nd Secretary)
Bowe, Martin S. jr. b.: 15. 4. 1917;
from 1950 in Department
Control
Officer;
from
of State; Personnel Security
1952
work
(refugee
for CIA
examiner) ;
OpA: Prague, Munich, West Berlin, Moscow (expelled from the USSR in 1957 for subversive activities), Frank-
furt/Main, Brazzaville, Bujumbura (Consul)
=
a : 5
Bowen, Dr. A. Dane jr. Der2Or ale 1927; Le French, Spanish; in Depadivent of Set work for CIA; OpA: Berne, Nice, Asuncion, Washington,
3 Stockholm
(Economie Officer)
|
Bower, Harvey
Se eee
b.: 4. 7.1913;
1935-65 Colonel in G-2 of US Army; from 196 | in.
OpA: Washington
Bowers, James E.
b.: 16. 5. 1913;
|
ct Sa
sd
1942—46 Major in CIC of Us Army; fiSin 1946
Chief of the Division of Biographic Informatio
and South America) of the Dengrtiner a 925" 1956 work for CIA;
OpA: Buenos Aires, Mainil Maracaibo, Santiag
7
amet
ce * RE
I
—
B
Bowie, John MacGrego!
b,: 14.9. 1917; L.: French;
1939—40
ONI
Reporter;
of US Navy;
Department
1941-46 Lieutenant- Commander jp
Personnel
1946
of State;
from
1955
Security
Officer jp
for CIA;
work
1963
attendance at US General Staff College; OpA: Beirut, Damascus, Jerusalem, Manila, Jidda, Tangier, Rabat, Khorramshahr, Paris (2nd Secretary for
NATO Affairs), Alexandria (Economic Officer) Bowman, Howard Chester b.: 2. 4. 1923 in Danzig; 1943-46
First Lieutenant
in G-2 of US Army;
1947-58
Analyst in Department of Army; from 1959 in Department of State; OpA: Berne, Vienna (Political Officer), Washington
Boyd, Alfred R. b.: 14. 2. 1906;
1942-47
Lieutenant-Colonel
in
US
Army;
1947-48
Lieutenant-Colonel in OSI of US Air Force; from 1961 _ in Security Office of the Department of State;
OpA: Washington
Boyd, William E.
,
+b: 26. 2. 1932;
— -1954—56 in US Army; 1957—61 Analyst in Departmentof7 ea Army; from 1962 in Department of State;Sit aplbG Ry r3 4 sf rhenon The Hague (Attaché), Woshinglary 49 2g) WPA i
A
7
a ee
ar ws
Vichassor Thomas Wardell
ac sy
iG og“1944 Parachuss capil:of0 von
8
!
—
OC
rc —— pAPie OpA: Tokyo (Attaché)
Pa
eects
—
|
:
ren
RS
RE
RS
a
eT
-aeaS Ora
:
from 1928 Officer in US Army; 1946~48 in G-2 Staff of
the USA Army; 1952—54 Artillery Expert in Office Military Assistance in Pentagon; 1957 Major-General of the US Army; 1959 Commander of the South-East European Command of the US Army; OpA: Solomon Islands, Nanking, Seoul
Gazin, Dr. Charles Lewis b.: 18. 6.1904:
Geologist; 1943-45 Major in AIS of US Army Air Force;
from 1946 Curator in US National Museum tion leader for Central American
OpA: Washington
and expedi-
states:
_Geaslin, Jack B.
Beas: 27. 11. 1924;
|
1943-46 in US Army; 1951-61 in MIS of Department of Army; 1961-65 in Department of State; | ~ OpA: Hamburg (Consul), Washington 5¢is, Robert Koenig
Bab, 28. 10. 1939 in Cuba; L.: Romanian, Spanish:
_ from 1962 in USIA; Information specialist: aR Buenos Aires, Bucharest, Guayaquil (Cultural Of-- Cer .
ES
yi)
:
Ee
G
Gerber, Burton Lee b.: 19. 7. 1933; L.: Bulgarian;
1955-65 Second
Lieutenant and Analyst in MIS of De
partment of Army; from 1966 in Department of State: OpA:
Sofia (Political Officer), Washington
-2
Gerber, John J. | b.: 26.11.1914: 1942-46 Special Agent of FBI; from 1952 Partner in Gonser and Gerber in Chicago and Director of Bank of Lisle/Ilinois: OpA: Chicago Gere, Dr. RobertH. 4
b.: 29. 10. 1916; L.: French;
1942—46 Captain in MIS of US Army; of Pentagon; 1962—65 in AID; OpA: Saigon (Adviser)
1951-61
in MIS
Gerhard, George Schrack |
b.: 18. 1.1928: L.: Japanese; | 1946—48 and 1950-51 in US Marine Corps; 1955—61 Analyst in Department of Army; ioe 1961 in Dengis3
ment of State; OpA: Taipei, Tokyo (2nd Secigiam)
Mee
Gerlach, Professor Dr. Arch C.
Sb: 12.5, 1911; Gena
3 Or a 1
ee
phen 1942—45 Ensign in MIS coger
US Navy; 1942-45 in OSS; 1945-46 Chief Division in Department. of State; 1946—” poeaanhy 1958-62 US: —
ft
G from 1956 Geographic
OpA: Washington
Adviser to Department of State.
German, Robert K, b.: 27. 8. 1927; L.: Russian:
1947-51 in Department of State; 1952—56 in US Air Force; from 1956 in Department of State: from 1964
work for CIA; OpA: Yokohama,
Tokyo,
(2nd Secretary), Washington
Oberammergau,
Moscow
_ Gershoy, Professor Dr. Leo a
b.: 27.9. 1897 in Russia; L.: French, Russian;
from
1913
Analyst 1944-45
US citizen;
1942 Adviser to OSS;
1943-44
in Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service; Chief Regional Specialist, French Branch in
OWI; from 1946 Professor of History;
OpA: New York
Getchell, John S. aa b.: 3. 2. 1921; L.: French, Indonesian:
1942-48
First Lieutenant in G-2 of US Army; from 1950
in Department of State, work for CIA: .
SpA: Djakarta, Bordeaux, Saigon, Phnom Penh, Bangui
(Attaché), Washington 5
01; >. in 9923:8.49Colonel 1942-45 ca Company
casper
|
iblin, Walter M.
ng
ge ae a
US Army; 1943-44 a
and Vic e-Presic eAee
OpA: NewYork
=
peg). 10, 19173
1941-65
Lieutenant-Colonel
1966 in AID;
in MIS of US Army; from
OpA: Saigon (Technical Adviser)
Gibson, Wallace E. |
;
b.: 5. 8. 1926; L.: Mandarin: 1943—44 in US Navy; 1951-60 in CIA; from 1960 in USIA, work for CIA; OpA: Hongkong, Djakarta, Saigon (USIA Adviser)
"Gigliotti Frank Bruno b.: 15. 10. 1896 in Italy; 1925-28 Studies in Rome; 1941-45 Chief Adviser to Italian Section of OSS; from 1946 Clergyman ~
OpA: Lemon Grove/Cal.
_ Giloane, William b.: 3.9. 1907: L.: French, German,
Russian;
—
from 1934 US citizen; from 1946 in Department of State, :
from 1952 work for CIA; 1958 in USRO; from 1962 Chief of Foreign Reporting Staff in Department of State; : _ OpA: Saigon, Paris (1st Secretary), Washington
|Gilser, Gunther sb: 6. 7. 1919 in Germany; L.: Gahan:
from 1933 US citizen; 1935-45 in US Marine 1951-61 Analyst in Department of fate 1961
—
,
Department of State;
MPA: Madrid (Attaché),
*
TOS ah eee hae
04).
ae
1950-55
in G-2 of Department
of Army; from
1956 in
Department of State, work for CIA;
Quito,
OpA:
Rio de
Portalegre,
Janeiro,
Montevideo,
San Salvador (Attaché), Washington Gim, Wever b.: 16, 4. 1926: L.: Korean, Mandarin;
1945-47 in US Army; from 1955 in Department of State: from 1965 work for CIA; OpA: Chonju, Seoul, Taichung, Bangkok (2nd Secretary), Washington _
ie
Gise, Alan A.
b.: 5. 3. 1929; L.: German;
7
1951—54
=
aS
in CIC of US Army; from
1957 in Department
of State, work for CIA: resident: Bad Godesberg, Steubenring 8;
OPA:
West Berlin, Barbados, Bonn (2nd Secretary)
Givens, Dr. Meredith B.
= b.: 11, 1. 1899; = 1933-35
1936-56
in
Central
Statistical
Board
of
the
USA:
Head of statistical research in Department of
_ Labor Office, New York State; 1949 in OMGUS; 1949-53
in Research Council of Pentagon; 1954 UNO Mission to the Philippines;
1962 Explorer
in Pakistan;
from 1963
Head of Office of Research in Economies and Science in Department of State; _ are Sex ss
OPA: Frankfurt/Main, Manila, Karachi, Washington
4,Joseph Anthony — is 144400414 oa,
PW
(1946-61 Captain in G-2 artment of State;
Bei oo a
_
asceOen wy thee WS Tee PIN apc ast ee ‘Armye fi
resident: Bad Godesberg, Steubenring 19: OpA: Buenos Aires, Belgrade, Bonn (Attaché) Glantz, Herbert
Bae qa 1 19205
from 1947 in Department of State; from 1952 work for CIA; OpA: Washington
Glass, Robert R. 1967 Major-General of the US Army and Chief of Staff of Defense Intelligence Agency; OpA: Washington Gleason, Dr. S. Everett
Sade ss, WOE 1943-45 Lieutenant-Colonel in US Army; 1950-59 in Executive Secretariate of NSC; from 1959 in Department 7 of State; from 1962 in USIA; OpA: London (Cultural Attaché), Washington Glenn, Curtis
3
b.: 2,10. 1921 in Germany;
1941—45 in US Air Force; 1946-48 and 1951—66 Ana
in MIS of Department of Army; from 1967 in Depart |
of State;
OpA: Stockholm (Political Officer)
Glenn, Eleonor Van Trump
’
eek
b.: 5. 12. 1919; L.: French, tiathawe ‘aN
ca 1947 in Department f State: ie.jOPaiRds Rer/ine T ip :
:
G
pan
nt
ee
J
a
af
Glennon, Joseph F. byt 12. 12. 1919:
1941-45 in CIC of US Army, 1950-56 Assistant to Person.
nel Director of the subversive radio station “Radio Free
Europe” in Munich; 1956 and from 1961 in US Mission to UNO; OpA: Munich, Ankara (Attaché), New York
Gleysteen, Culver b.: 21. 3. 1924; L.: Russian: | ~ 1943-46 Lieutenant Junior Grade in US Navy; from 1947 in Department of State: from 1956 work for CIA; 1962 attendance at US Naval Academy; from 1967 Assistant to Director of ACDA: | OpA: Darien, Moscow, Bonn, Djakarta, Paris (1st Secretary), Washington
_ Gleysteen, Dirk b.: 30. 1. 1930 in China; L.: French, German; from 1954 in Department of State, work for CIA; resident: West Berlin 33, Am Hirschsprung 33; OpA: Paramaribo, (Political Officer)
Alexandria,
Stuttgart,
West
Berlin
b.: 29.9. 1910; et ae ok _ 1936 Studies in Paris; 1940-41 in American Oriental
_—-2ocie ty; 1941-45 in OSS; from 1947 in Departmentof — é State; 1955 Director of Office of Near E ist Af airs;
) a East, South Asia and Africa; rom OPA: Ca
iro (Attaché), Wash
=~
1
G
ee
Glueck; Professor Dr. Nelson
b.: 4. 6. 1900;
1923-26 Studies at Berlin, Heidelberg and Jena: from 1936 Professor of Biblical Archaeology; 1942-45 c OSS; until 1949 explorations
in Palestine;
1963 President of
Hebrew Union College;
OpA: Baghdad, Jerusalem, Cincinatti Gmirkin, Vasia C. b.: 11. 2. 1926 in China; L.: Russian; fom 1944 US citizen; 1944-46 in A-2 of the US Navy; art1951—56 Analyst in the Intelligence Branch of Dep te, ment of Commerce; from 1956 in Departmentof Sta work for CIA; y) OpA: Tokyo, Katmandu, Baghdad (2nd Secretar Godaire, J. G.
1967 China specialist of CIA; OpA: Hongkong, Washington
:
fe Hy6H #
Goertz, Vernon Joseph
=
bis 1::5:1935% Naval Academy; US in 61 19 ; id dr Ma in s ie ud St 1959-60 ; om 19 in Department of Air Force; fr 1961—64 Analyst
in Department of State;
shington OpA: Monterrey (Vice-Consul), Wa Goiran, Roger
Sie
aera
asa | eee b.: 12, 3, 1909 aL. aRrenel 1930-36 Studies In Paris; 1942—46,and) 1220
CIC of the US Army; from 8 in Dep
if ee
OpA: Istanbul, Teher taché), Washingt no
¢—___________4 Goldberg, Arthur Joseph
b.: 8. 8. 1908; 1942—43 Captain in OSS; 1943-44 Major in US Army, 1947 Partner in Goldberg, Devoe, Shadur & Mikyg of
Chicago; 1948-55 Trade Union leader; 1961-62 Secre. tary of Labor; 1965-68 US Ambassador and Representa. tive of USA in Security Council of UNO; OpA: Washington, New York Goldman, Richard Franko b.: 7.12. 1910; from 1931 composer, from 1937 arehectral conductor: 1942—45 in OSS; from 1947 Musicologist; OpA: New York ooa aA aie yr
as eke 1* So, hee. oF 7
_ Goldstein, Gerald: a b:2 2.8. 1921: 1942—46 in G-2 of US Army; from 1950 in Department of State; from 1956 work for CIA; Economic expert in Department of State; 1965 attendance at US War eae resident: Bad Godesberg, Turmstrasse 57:
_ OpA: Frankfurt/Main; Munich, Vancouver, bis peain, Washington, Bonn kEconomic Se
ay pai inalias Deparment
S ‘ment of State; from 1960 work for x OpA: Havana, Buenos Sa
94
Port-of
)
G 1961-63 in G-2 of US Army; 1964-65 An alyst in MIS Department of Army; from 1965 in Department of St es OpA: Santo Domingo (Political Officer) Ber
_ Goode, Kenneth N. b.: 12. 6. 1936; 1958-61 First Lieutenant in G-2 of US Marine Corps; 1962—67 in Plans Office, Department of Army; from 1967 in Department of State; OpA: Tokyo (Political Officer) - Goodfellow, Millard Preston be22.25.glioges
Publisher; 1942 Colonel in G-2 of General Staff of US Army; 1942-45 Deputy Director of OSS; 1946 Political Adviser to Commanding US General in Korea; from 1946 owner of publishing houses; OpA: Seoul, Washington
| | | _Goodman, Leo M. —s : bse 7.:1221909-1n Latvia; L: German: from 1927 US citizen; 1942—48 First Lieutenant in cic of US Army; 1948-49 in OMGUS; from 1956 in Depart G ment of State; 1958 Chief of Division of inteHiggs | Collection and Distribution;
x Ef oe,
resident: Bremen, Marcusallee 5; |
, Vi OpA: Munich, Nuremberg, Frankfurt/Main men (Consul- General)
4 seeserany Robert C.
Be sb. 24, 121194410
ey
at 3 ae ee :
eee
e
4 Se
sion of MIS
in Pentagon;
from
on
a
1957
in USIA, work fo,
CIA; resident: West Berlin 33, Balbronnerstrasse 12;
OpA: New Delhi, West Berlin (Program Officer) Goodman, Seymour S. b.: 13. 8. 1918;
1942—46 First Lieutenant in CIC of US Army; from 1952 in Department of State, work for CIA:
OpA: Dublin, Belfast (Consul), Washington Goodman, William Howard b.: 27.6. 1915;
1942-43
in
US
Army;
1943—45
Cryptographer
and
analyst in War Department: from 1945 Cryptographer in Department of State; 1964 Chief of Communicatio ns Security Division and Liaison Officer to NSA;
OpA: Washington
s00dwin, Joseph Carl b= 3. 10. 1910:
1943—45 War correspondent; from 1952-67 in Department of State, work for CIA;
3
OpA: Teheran, Cairo, Colombo (Attac hé)
Goodwin, Dr. Ralph Roger
ers he
b.: 24. 4.1917;
a
.
x
1942—46 in US Army; 1951 in ONI of US Navy; from 1952 _ ae, gaa ;fhe in Department of State; og Gam saep ey ieee: OPA: Washington rx *} :7
Wee
z,Gordon, Herbert ) © Bt 13,8,1918 61,4 French —
202
Rn
5
~
:
Re;
;
e
eo
ea
=i Me
ee
ae
G 1941—46 First Lieutenant in US Army; from 1947 in De partment of State; from “ae
1957 CIA, Chief of Bio
Information; 1958 Deputy Director of Office of ite: and Analysis for Near East, South Asia and Africa in Department of State; 1960 attendance at US War College;
OpA: Sydney, Athens, Mexicali, New Delhi, Phnom Penh (1st Secretary), Washington Gordon, Robert Lee
© b.: 29. 4.1918; 1942-44 in G-2 of US Army; from 1951 in Department of State, work for CIA; 1955 in ICA; from 1962 in AID; OpA: Tel Aviv, Rabat, Manila (Adviser), Washington
Gosho, Henry Hiroharu b.: 4. 2.1921; L.: Japanese; 1939—41
in Japan; 1942—45
in MIS of US Army;
1946
Analyst in War Department; from 1946 Intelligence — __ Research Specialist in Department of State; from 1953 . in USIA; OpA: Tokyo (Attaché)
Gould, Burton M. mb:
7. 9. 1926;
a work for CIA; from 1960 in AID; OPA: sen
Kergent, ge
Ne
Washington, Addis pa b
Cie
ts. sistant
to
State
Attorney;
1955-56
Deputy
1959-61
Analyst in MIS of
State
At.
torney; 1959 Mayor; OpA: Baltimore Graham, Thomas B. Br 1. 6, 1933;
1958 in US Marine Corps;
Department of Army; from 1962 in Department of State: OpA: Tokyo (2nd Secretary)
Grahame, Jay R. b.: 29. 12. 1933; L.: French, Hindi; from 1957 in Department of State; from 1958 work for CIA; OpA: Madras, Calcutta (Vice-Consul), Washington __ Grainger, Edward Stephen — b.: 18. 2.1917 in Austria; L.: German; from 1942 US citizen; 1942—46 Captain Army; 1952-61 in MIS of Department 1961 in Department of State;
in CIC of US of Army;
from
OpA: Berne, Zurich, Brussels (Political Officer)
raver, William J. * ty: 25. 3: 1922;
—— 1942—46 in G-2 of US Rik 1952-61 in MIS of Radars ment of Army; from 1961 in PePenmen: of State, work
as
for’ CiA: OpA: Vienna, West Berlin (PoliticalOfficer, Headof CIA Branch), Washington tee |
Groves,Donald E.
be B16. 4, 90205.-5
pag
|
from 1966 in Department of State work OpA: Washington Eats
Graves, [Thomas V. Dee 2d 9.1914; 1938—41 Reporter; 1941-46 Captain in US Army; 1946 to 1947 in A-2 of Department of Air Force; 1947-5 1 US Military Adviser in Turkey; from 1953 in USIA; OpA: Ankara, Lahore, Karachi, Pretoria, Beirut, Ankara
(Attaché)
Gray, Gordon = -b.: 30. 5. 1909: 1942—45 Captain in US Army; 1947—48 Assistant Secretary of Army; 1949-50 Under-Secretary of Army; 1951 Director of Psychological Strategy Board; 1955-57 AsSistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs; 1958-61 Special Assistant to US President for National Security Affairs; from 1961 Member of President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board;
OpA: Washington
:
( ray, Helen A.
|
4
ae:
b.: 10. 12. 1903; L.: German;
|
Se
1944-45 Analyst in OSS; 1946-65 in Department of
%
_
Cultural
Office of the Department of State;
Exchange
OPA: Tel Aviv, Salzburg (Consul), Washington
Stay,McGregor Be 4:29, 3, 19215.
4
|
1942-46 in US Army; 1950-61 om 1962 in Departr
G OpA:
Vienna,
Washington,
Port-au-Prince
(Economi.
Officer)
Gray, Philip H. jr. b.: 3.8. 1931; L.: Arabic, French; 1955-57 in G-2 of US Army; from of State, work for CIA;
OpA: Beirut, Baghdad, Amman
1958 in Department
(2nd Secretary), Wash.
ington
Grayson, Benson Lee b.: 1.2. 1932; L.: French: 1956 First Lieutenant in MIS of US Army; Department of State, work for CIA:
1957—65
in
OpA: Hongkong, Bangkok (Consul)
_ Grazier, James A. b.: 18. 12. 1916:
1939-46 and 1948-56 Lieutenant-Colonel in G-2 of US Army; 1954-56 Press Officer in Pentagon; from 1961 in AID;
OpA:
Curitiba,
Adviser)
Portalegre,
Rio de Janeiro
Grealy, Robert F, b.: 24. 8.1924:
(Special
1943—46 in ONI of the US Navy; 1951—60 in MIS of the Department of Army: from 1962 in Department of State: OpA: Djakarta (Attaché), Washingt on
Greene, Professor Dr. Fre b.: 12,1, 1923;
206
Ve, 1942-46 in US Army ; 1949-66 Professor
~
Teacher at US War Colleg e; from 1961 p olitico-Mi litary Analyst and Adviser to Depart ment of Sta te; 1966 Head of Office of Research Pacific Affairs:
and Analysis of F ast As ian and
OpA: Washington
Greene, Harris Carl b.: 22. 10. 1921;
|
1943-46 in US Army; 1946-48 Chief of Reports Branch, US Military Government in Austria; 1949-50 in Department of State; 1951-64 Operations Officer in Department of Army; from 1964 in Department of State; OpA: Vienna, Rome, Athens (Attaché)
Greenhouse, Ralph b.: 11. 12. 1926;
from 1961 in USIA; from 1962 work for CIA; OpA: Washington
Greenlaw, Charles A.
e
b.: 14. 3, 1924;
1943—44 in MIS of US Army; 1950—63 Analyst in Depart- :
ment
of Army; 1963-65 in Department of State;
: ~OpA: Hongkong eee
Officer)
Greenwood, W. jr. p- 1966 Colonel
of US Army; Director off Combat
ligence of US Army General Seat
tas meting
.
_ |
'¥
G 1945—47 in US Army; 1951-64 in MIS of Department of Army; from 1964 in Department of State; OpA: Rangoon, Tokyo (Political Officer)
Gregg, Hugh ex eee 1 1917;
1942-46 and 1950-52 Special Agent of CIC of US Army: from 1946 partner of Sullivan & Gregg in Nashua;
OpA: Nashua/New Hampshire
es
Greig, David N. jr.
6.2 27-7. 1933;
ir
from 1962 in AID;
2s
OpA: Tegucigalpa, Caracas (Security Officer)
x _Gremillion, Maurice Joseph
os
br: 41:7. 1919; 1940-46 Lieutenant-Colonel in G-2 of US Marine Corps: 1952-57 in MIS of Pentagon; from 1958 in pone tel
of State; _ OpA: Guatemala, Recife, Asuncion =Brigion
; ¢, sham,Vernet Lamar ic. 1936-41
Nene
£
(Attaché), Wash-
a “a
rter; ; cut
ee Ezerionel in G-2 of US / pe
‘State; 1955-58 in MIS-of
Ae 1959 |" Pepertment f § Ey,
|
Daaeh ee
ae
$$. m
G
Gresham, William Frederick
4,: 1.8. 1924 in England;
1942-46 in US Army; 1951-57 in an oil compg f ise 1957 in USIA, work for CIA; OpA: Tunis, Tripoli (USIA Officer)
Gribble, Marion Ludwig |
b.: 4.6. 1931 in Germany; L.: German, Thai; 1949—53
Second
Lieutenant
in US Army; from 1956 in
Department of State: from 1959 work for CIA; OpA: Oslo, Manila, Bangkok, ie
(Consul)
4
EGries, David D.
b.: 8.5. 1932; L.: Mandarin; 1960-62 Analyst in Department of Air Force; from 1963 in Department of State; 4
OpA: Taichung, Singapore (Attaché)
Grieve, Harold Waiter one (OUT
1942-46 Commander in service of CIC of US Army; fant,
1947 Designer
OpA: Los Angeles
Grieves, William P. b.: 28. 10. 1913;
=
1935-65 Colonel in G-2 of US Army; from 1965 iin OpA: Saigon (Security Gifiess) in
>| Griffin, Edward G.
|
aes b,+:30,7, 1926; Li Japaneseine 1944-46 in US Army; 1954-56 Stuc of ticalWw ee) sen in mene sae,Poli
=o ="
:
A ES Se R G a
rE
Griffin, George G. B.
b.: 22. 10. 1934 in Turkey; L.: Italian; 1957—59 Lieutenant Junior Grade in A-2 of US Navy: from 1960 in Department of State; OpA: Naples, Colombo (2nd Secretary), Washington
Grignon, Henri G. b.: 11. 2. 1919:
1943—45 Major in US Army; 1951~—64 in CIA; from 1964 in Department of State, Assistant to Chief Personnel Control Officer;
OPA:
Washington
-Grimsley, William C. |
b.: 20. 4. 1927:
1945—46 in US Navy; 1951-52 Analyst in Department of Army; from 1952 in Department of State, work for CIA: Cees Kabul, New Delhi (Political Officer)
Brodsky, Morris
Pe.
|
19.5. 1922: 1.: Be igueces
asaya
,
| 1942-46 in CIC of US Army; 1953—55 natece lecturer 1955-62 Lecturer in Criminology; from USESina .
tigBrasilia (Adviser), ve
198Coon ot,of US A
tend aoO A;
fiche
Nene 5 tex . es ane
PE
Dak
3
$e
G
1923-28 Second Lieutenant in US Army; 1924 Assist to Military Attaché
in France; 1942-46 Colonel! ate
of War Department; 1943-46 Chief of Liaison Office of War Department to Department of State and FBI; 1956 Brigadier-General of US Army; from 1947 President of Universal Service Corporation in New York; OpA: Paris, Panama, New York Gross, Clifford H. 3
b.: 16. 12. 1924; L.: Bulgarian, French, Hungarian, German, Russian;
1943—46 in G-2 of US Marine Corps; from 1952 work for CIA; from 1954 in Department of State; OpA: Frankfurt/Main, Budapest
Vienna,
Sofia
(2nd
Secretary),
"Gross, Howard Rabun
b.: 13. 12. 1927; L.: German, Serbo-Croat; 1946-48
in US Army;
1953-58
in CIA; from
1959
in
=
Department of State, work for CIA;
OpA: Frankfurt/Main, Belgrade (2nd Secretary), Wash- a ae
ington
Bross, Professor Dr. Mason Welch b.: 3. 6.1911;
1942-45 in G-2 of US Army in Italy; from 1955 Memb of Civil Defense Advisory Council; ; _ : — OpA: Rome, New Brunswick - | |Guernieri, Dario Charles
SO
Musa aks se bs: 7 5wi925; 1943-46 in ONI of US aaa 1951-6 mee ment of Army; from 1961 in:D
q _ OPA: fe a8 Guaten
fe
“
nT NEES
TE
EE
SE
I
-
“
ee
Guerra, Oscar Humberto
et 20) 6.19195 Loi Spanish; 1944—46
in US Navy; from 1947 in Department of State:
from 1958 work for CIA; OpA: Managua, Panama,
Buenos
Aires, Santiago de
Cuba, Madrid, Santo Domingo (Consul) Gulick, Frances A. b.: 6. 10. 1919 in China;
1938 Studies at Heidelberg; from 1945 in Department
1943-45 Analyst in OSS:
of State; from
1951
work for
CIA; 1955-58 Intelligence Research Specialist in Office of the US President; from 1961
OpA: Washington
in AID:
3Gunning, Thomas John “ie b.: 29. 4. 1930;
1951-54 in US Army: from work for CIA;
OpA: Athens, Salonica, (Propaganda Officer)
1960
Lagos,
in USIA; from
Washiasie:
1965
Accra
Gurfein, Murray [rwin
Be b.: 17. 11. 1907; Attorney;
_
1942—45
in OSS; 1942—45
a
eae €nione
and Chief of Intelligence in Psychological |Warfare Division, Supreme Commander of Allied. Expeditionary
e. Force; from 1955 partner in Goldstein, sidd & Ce a in New York: J at Ole Ses 4 ODA: Paris, Frankfurt/Main, Nuremberg, Niew Yo ~ ; : Haldane, John T. . rman; b.: 27. 1. 1926; L.: Arabic, Ge 6 = -9 55 19 ; S U G M O in 47 694 1 1944—46 in US Army; 57 in Depart- — 19 om fr ; my Ar f © in Department
Analyst
work for CIA; 60 19 om fr e; at St of nt me g d, Beirut, Cairo, Hambur
OpA: Baghda viser)
(Economic 3
cS = j
2S
is
¥
es a ,4%
“y
by
Hale, Professor Dr. Oron James b.: 29. 7.1902; Member of the Democratic
USA; 1927-28
Studies
Colonel
in Germany
and
in MIS of US Army;
Department;
1945 Member
Party of the
France;
1943-46
1942-46
in G-2 of Wa,
of American
Historical As-
sociation Commission
of War Department
many;
1947 Member
of teaching staff at US Genera]
Staff
Strategical
Intelligence
School;
in West Ger-
1950-52
jn
_HICOG; from 1955 Colonel (Reserve) of MIS of US Army and Head of the Faculty of History at Pennsylvania State University;
OpA: Frankfurt/Main, Munich, Charlottsville/Virginia Hale, Walker A. b.: 26. 3. 1907:
1942—45
3
Lieutenant-Commander
in ONI
of US
Navy;
in A-2 of US
Navy;
1949-51 in Pentagon; 1951-54 in Personne! Office of Department of Navy; 1954—57 in NATO Staff; 1958-65 in AID; OpA: Paris, Teguciguala, Santo Domingo (Adviser)
"Hall, David B. b.: 9. 8.1932:
1956-59
Lieutenant Junior Grade
1960-65 Analyst in Department of Army; from 1965 in
Department of State: OPA: Tripoli (2nd Secretary)
Hall, Janet E.
b.: 13. 3, 1942;
216
from 1967 in Department of St ate, work for CIA; OpA: Washington : a Eat
EE
cee
tr
Hall, Linscott Aldin
b.: 11.7. 1913;
from 1937 officer in US Air Force; 1942—45 war servi in North Africa and Italy; 1945-49 attendance at US Military Academy; 1950 attendance at US Air War School; 1952—54 in Office of US Joint Staff; 1957 Deputy Chief of Staff in A-2 of General Staff, US Air Force;
1961 Brigadier-General of US Air Force; OpA: Algiers, Rome, Washington
Hall, Priscilla
ba SOn72 191s;
CIA; from 1965 in Department of State, work for ; OpA: Washington Hall, Professor Dr. Robert Burnett b.: 18. 7. 1896 in Spain;
of US Army; 1935 Geographer; 1916-18 Officer in MIS utenant-Colonel to 1936 Study trip to Japan; 1942—43 Lie of OSS; 1943-44 and Director Pacific Coast Office na and India; from Colonel of US Army on service in Chi Studies at Michi1947 Director of Centre for Japanese gan State University; OpA: Ann Arbor
Hail, Winifred T.
b.: 19. 8. 1924; L.: Spanish; in Department 1942-43 in War Department; from 1956
eS
=
|=
of State: from 1965 work for CIA;
Washington OpA: Paris, Nice, Seoul (2nd Secretary),
Halliwell, Claris Rowley
|
b.: 24. 10. 1918;
1941-46
Lieutenant-Commander
Pe. .*
in ONI of US Navyi
_
2
———$—___
1949—57
Intelligence Liaison Officer with Department of
Army; from 1958 in Department of State;
OpA: Rio de Janeiro, Quito (Attaché) Hallquist, Jo Ann M. b.: 11. 11. 1933; L.: French;
from 1957 in Department of State, work for CIA; OpA: Hamilton, Saigon (2nd Secretary), Washington Hamblin, Robert N. b.: 14. 4. 1924;
1943-66 Lieutenant-Commander in US Navy; from 1966 in AID;
OpA: Saigon (Adviser) Hamilton, John Bruce b.: 20. 2. 1908;
from 1949 in Department of State: 1957 Deputy Chief of Division of Functional Intelligence in Departmen t of State; 1960 Economic adviser of Department of State: OpA: New Delhi (Consul), Washington
Hamilton, Dr. William C. b.: 23. 7. 1922; L.: French:
1943-46 in G-2 of US Army; from 1951 in Department of State, work for CIA: 1960 in SHAPE; 1964 Liai son
_ Officer to Pentagon; 1967 Laos specialist; OpA:
Rangoon,
_ tary), Washington
Paris (SHAPE),
Vientiane
(1st Secre-
Hamlin, Arthur Tenney b.:8.2.1913:
: : Librarian; 1942—45 Research | Analyst in ONI of US Navy;
s i | i from 1949 Executive Secretary yer tary, Association
Libraries;
of College
OpA: Cincinnati
Hammer, Lowell Varner b.: 20. 2. 1928; 1950-53 Second Lieutenant in MIS of US Army; 1954-62 in AlS of Plans Office of the Department of Air Force:
from 1963 in Department of State; OpA: Rabat (2nd Secretary)
:
Hamrick, Samuel J. jr. b.: 19. 10. 1929; L.: French; 1951—53 in US Army; from 1961 in Department of State,
work for CIA (Economic espionage) ; OpA: Beirut, St. John’s, Montreal
(Consular Officer)
Handler, David
b.: 16. 4. 1918; 1940—41
)
in
Department
in
1944-46
Commerce;
Geographic Division of Department of State; 1946-51 in Division of Functional Intelligence in Department of State; 1958-59 Coordinator for East-West Trade Research in Office of Intelligence Research, Department
,
of State; OpA:
Guatemala
City, Buenos
|
Washington Hannon, John V.
b.: 10.11. 19203;
|
of
4943-45
sete
he
Aires (Trade Attaché),
|
:
:
es
ee
3 in MIS of De- — in AIS of US Air Force; 1947-6nt of State;
in Departme 5 -6 63 19 ; my Ar of nt me rt pa OA Gas ile (Attaché), Washington
OpA: Santiago de Ch
$A Hanson, Charles Marshall jr. b.: 18. 6. 1917; L.: German,
Spanish;
1937-38 Studies in Cuba;
1942-46
First Lieutenant jp
US Army; from 1948 in Department of State; from 1958 work for CIA;
OpA: Monrovia, Zurich, Calcutta, Port-of-Spain, Washington, Lagos (Adviser for Social Affairs)
Harary, Joseph A. b.: 28. 12. 1917; L.: Arabic, French; 1941-45 in MIS of US Army; from 1950 in Department of State, work for CIA; from 1962 in Peace Corps;
OpA: Marsailles, Dakar, Gambia, Bombay, Washington, Djakarta (Economic Officer) Harben, William M. b.: 14. 6. 1922; L.: French, German, Russian;
from 1955 in Department of State, work for CIA; OpA: Frankfurt/Main, Bonn, Djakarta, Kigali, Merida (Consul)
- Harding, Alfred IV. b.: 12. 8. 1924; L.: French, Mandarin; 1943-46 in US Army; 1948—49 Studies in China; from 1950 in Department of State; from 1956 work for CIA;
OpA: Peking, Hongkong, Taichung, Hongkong (Political Officer)
Taipei,
Warsaw,
Harding, Richard b.: 10. 4. 1937; L.: French, Spanish; A
1957-58 Studies in Geneva; from 1960 in Department of State, work for CIA; | OpA: Montevideo, Montreal (Vice-Consul), Washington 1
dian
Phe, Oot tag > Se
H
0 ;
Hardy, mae M.
b.: 26. 5. 1934; L.: French, Italian; from 1956 in Department of State, work for CIA; OpA: Toronto, Antananarivo Milan, Mogadiscio Secretary), Washington
(3rd
Hardy, John B.
bet 2. On 190M; 1941—55 Adviser in Army Map Service, MIS of the US Army; from 1955 in AID;
OpA: Cairo, Tripoli, Kabul (Adviser)
Harkrader, Carleton Allen — CU ehCUL ee se
oes
Wo WON;
1941-42 Africa
in MIS
Major and
Italy;
of US Army;
1945-46
in North
service
Correspondent
of
‘‘News-
week’: 1963 Attorney; OpA: Algiers, Rome, Paris, Washington ‘Harman, Frank Pierre b.: 16. 1. 1927;
1945-46 in US Army; USIA, work for CIA;
1951-61
in CIA; from
1962
in
OpA: Washington Harris, Professor Dr. Chauncy Dennison b.: 31.1. 1914;
1942—43 in Geographic Division of Department of State;
1944—45 in Far East Section of OSS; from 1947 Professor of Geography
at University
of Chicago,
specialist for
‘
economic geography of the USSR; from 1956 Vice President of International Geographic Union;
OpA: Chicago
~
st
H
Harris, Dr. George Sellers Dees
AS;
1956-57 in AIS of Department of Air Force; 1958-65 jn Department of State; OpA: Ankara (Attaché)
Harris, Roy Jay b.: 9.9. 1902;
from 1925 Press reporter; 1944—45 Colonel in G-2 of US
my
Central Pacific Command; 1945 in G-2 of Okinawa Com-
mand; 1950-58 Lecturer at School of the US Army in ee Oe
St. Louis; OpA: Hawaii, St. Louis
~ Harris, Thurza Maureen FE
b.: 24. 9. 1934; L.: Spanish:
x
1957-65
ee :
ClA; OpA: Quito, Mexico City, Oslo (3rd Secretary)
in Department
of State;
from
1958
work
for
Harris, Virgil Lehi b.: 1. 4. 1922:
;
1942—45 in US Navy; 1950-57 Analyst in MIS of Depart~ ment of Army; from 1957 in Department of State; _ OpA: Montevideo, Rio de Janeiro (Attaché)
_Harrison, Alfred
fee. 3. 6.1915; —-1943—54 Captain in CIC of US Army; from 1954 in Office
~ ~
of Security in Department of State; OpA: Washington
_ Harrison, Lawrence sag. 3.1932;
.
4 |
a |
1953-54 in US Navy; 1957— 62 in MIS of Pentagon: from 1962 in AID;
OpA: San José, Santo Domin go (Assistant to AID Director) Harrison, Peter B. b.: 12. 4. 1930;
1961-63 in AIS of Department of Air Force; 1964-65 in Department of State: OpA: Buenos Aires (Assistant Attaché) Hart, Donald F.
b.: 3.11. 1934; L.: Spanish; 1956-59 Lieutenant Junior Grade in ONI of US Navy; from 1960 in Department of State; from 1961 work for CIA; OpA: Cali (Vice-Consul), Washington Hart, John L. b.: 3. 10. 1920;
1942-46 and 1952-55 Colonel in G-2 of US Army; 1948 to 1952 and 1955 in MIS of Department of Army; 1956 ,
to 1965 in Department of State;
E
OpA: Bangkok, Rabat (1st Secretary)
: }
Hart, Richard Robert
b.: 25. 3. 1931; L.: French, Mandarin; 1953-55
Lieutenant in AIS of US Air Force; from 1956
in Department of State, work for CIA;
OpA: Yokohama, Washington
Taichung,
Taipei
(2nd
Secretary),
Harte, Terence Joseph _ b.: 23. 2.1915:
203-.
L
lS
1937-42 Postal Inspector; 1942-46 Chief of Staff Office of ONI of US Navy; service in Europe, Asia and Africa:
1943 in Joint Army-Navy Intelligence Collection Agency; 1946—48 Special Agent of Department of State 1948—50
Security Officer in Department of State; 1958 in Executive Office of US President;
OpA: Cairo, Washington s.
Hartland, Robert E.
:
b.: 28. 12. 1919;
e
1941—45 and 1954—55 Captain in CIC of US Army; from 1956 in USIA, work for CIA; 1961
Head
of Africa Divi-
sion, USIA;
OpA: Washington _Hartshorne, Professor Dr. Richard Bee, t2)12: 1899:
1941-45
fe a
Head
of Geographic
Division
and
Office of
Research and Analysis of OSS; 1949 Member, teaching staff of US War College; from 1950 Professor of Geog-
3
raphy at University of Winsconsin:
“=
OpA: Madison
Harvey, John Rowley Ben26, 3; 1925;
—__—«-1943—46 Ensign in A-2 of US Navy; 1949 Studiés in Edin-
yi
burgh;
1950 Studies in Madrid;
correspondent;
By
1952-57
in Department
to 1964 Analyst in Department
.
Department of State;
J
OpA: Rome, Caracas
1949-52
Newspaper
of State;
1948
of Army; from 1964 in
(Attaché)
Harvey, William King
B243.'9, 1915;
224
|
|
a a
—
iT
a
1947—52
Executive
ge
H
officer in Penta
on; f Aelia. 1952 work a Department in 1953 for CIA; from
OpA: Bonn, West Berlin (Chief of CIA branch), » R Kome (Attaché),
Washington
Harwood, Paul Vincent bit 4. 7. 1923:
1943—48 in US Army; 1948—50 Analyst in Department of Army; from 1951 in Department of State;
OpA: Rangoon, Saigon, Paris (2nd Secretary), Washington
Haskell, John Henry Farrell
lee Dn IZ. ISOS 1942 Chief of Staff of 27th Division in Pacific service;
1942-43 Acting-director of Civil Affairs Division in War
Italy, Department; 1943-44 in OSS; service in Near East, ser; in the USSR and in Germany; 1955-60 NATO advi Comfrom 1960 US Representative in the Bankers Trust pany in France; OpA: Paris
Haskell, Joseph Farrell b.: 1. 7. 1908;
Staff from 1930 Officer of US Army; 1941-42 Chief of
in G-2 of the 7th US Corps; 1943 Chief of Secret Operas
School),
Moscow,
Hongkong
(Consul),
Washington
_ Israel, Dorman Daniel
ib: 21.7. 1900;
from 1921 Radio development engineer; 1942—45 Radio _
_ Consultant to OSS; 1955-57 Electronics Consultant to __ Pentagon; from 1959 President of Emerson Radio and Phonograph Corporation in New York;
OPA:
Harrison
Ivy, Michel M.
“
i
b.: 15. 5.1918 in Siberia; L.: Hindi, Russian;
1943-45 in OSS; from 1950 in Department of State, work for CIA (Biographic Division) ‘ pia Sab es eae SAR
OpA: Madras, Bombay (Consul), Washingt 4° Minny q
é
ee
’
4
y Jackson, David Bruce b.: 13. 12. 1939; L.: German;
from 1962 in Department
|
of State; from 1965 work for
CIA; OpA: Manila (Vice-Consul), Washington
Jackson, Frederick S.
Officer in CIC of the US Army; Officer of OSD/CI in MAAG of the US Embassy in Bad Godesberg; OpA: Trier
Jackson, Lowell Richard b.: 31. 10. 1931; L.: French; 1953—55 in US Army; 1957—60 Analyst in International Business Machine Corporation; from 1960 in Department of State; from 1965 work for CIA; from 1966 in AID;
OpA:
Berne,
Geneva,
Peshwar,
Washington,
Saigon
(AID Officer)
Jackson, Robert James b.: 28. 4. 1917; L.: German;
1941-46
Major in US Marine Corps; 1947-53 Special
Agent in FBI; 1953-55 Security Officer in the anti-Com-
munist “Free Europe Committee”
in France; from 1955
_
tw
Security Officer in Department of State; 1955 in US Mis- He: sion to UNO; OpA: Paris, New
York, West
Berlin,
— Frankfurt/Main,
Munich, Budapest, Katmandu (Administration Officer)
Jacobs, George Robert ee
|ox2 15,-3,.1919;
1943-45
Seis
\
in OSS;
from
1945 in Dep
ment ofState; 1949 in Bureau of German and PS |fa ST. Ban
Aust
ree
Affairs:
1965
Director
of Office
Re.
of International
sources in Department of State;
SecOpA: Paris, Frankfurt/Main, Bangkok, London (1st retary), Washington Jacobs, John Roland
.
b.: 23. 2. 1911; L.: French;
from 1945 in Department of State; 1958 Deputy Chief of Distribution
in
Division of Intelligence Collection
and
Department of State; 1964 Head Program of Department of State;
of Office for Africa
OpA: Antwerp; Le Havre, (Consul), Washington
Marseilles,
Antananarivo
Jacobson, Dr. Harald W. b.: 24.9. 1910 in Norway;
1942—46
Lieutenant-Commander
in ONI
of US Navy;
Assistant Military Attaché in China; 1946-49 in ONI of
Department of Navy; 1949-51
in CIA; 1951—65 in De-
partment of State;
OpA: Hongkong, Macao, New Delhi, Washington = Jacyno, Joseph Roche
b.: 23. 4.1916; L.: Czech, Polish; 1940-45 Lieutenant-Colonel in US Marine Corps; from 1946 in Department of State, work for CIA: OpA: Vienna, Naples, Prague, Poznan, Nairobi (1st Secretary)
E, | Jaeger, George W. oa
b.: 26. 5. 1926 in Austria; L.: German, Serbo-Croat:; from 1944 US citizen, 1944—46 in CIC of US Army; from 1946 in Department of State; from 1951 work for CIA;
from 1953 in USIA:
258
“"
:
J OpA: Monrovia, Officer)
Zagreb,
West Berlin, Bonn
(Political
Jaffe, Irene B.
j
b.: 8. 6. 1927in Poland: from 1949 US citizen; from 1951 in Department of State,
work for CIA;
OpA: Washington Janow, Seymour J. eee
deel 91S)
from 1942 Intelligence Analyst; from 1943 Board of Economic Warfare; 1946 in Washington Export-Import Bank; 1948—49 Economic Specialist in War Department and Department of Army; from 1961 in AID; from 1962 Assistant Administrator for Far East Region, work for CIA; OpA: London, Adviser)
New
Delhi,
Kunming,
Tokyo
(Economic
Jans, Dr. Ralph Theodore b.: 14. 3. 1923; L.: German, Thai; 1943—46 First Lieutenant in G-2 of US
Marine
Corps;
from 1955 in Department of State; from 1961 work for =
CIA; from 1962 Liaison Officer to SEATO;
=
OpA: Palermo, Vienna, Bangkok, Udorn (Consul), Washington
E. Jantzen, Robert John
:
b;: 24. 5. 1915;
1942—A6
Lieutenant- Commander
in As2-omlloem
ts
j
ee
Janus, Robert B.
bi: 25.9. 1917; US Army; in r ice Off ng ni ai Tr 9 -4 48 19
1954—55
in De-
58 in AID; partment of Army; from 19
urity Officer) OpA: Djakarta, Saigon, Dacca (Sec Jeffers, Eugene L. b28: 5. 1926;
: “a
1944-46
in US Navy;
1948-54
Reporter;
Plans Office of Department of Army;
OpA:
Leopoldville, Washington,
Lusaka
1955-60
in
(Political Of-
ficer)
_ Jelen, Theodore Karol b.: 29. 10. 1910: L.: Czech, Hungarian, Spanish;
1943-49
Navy;
Ensign in ONI
1949-51
(electronics specialist)
Electronics
expert
of US
in Department
of
Navy;; from 1952 in Department of State;
_OpA: Tangier (Assistant Attaché)
Jenkins, George C.
bi: 5. 1.1924;
1942-45 in US Army; 1951—52 Second heisencnes in AIS of
US Air Force; from 1962 in Department of Picts
ae: Athens, Madras, Dharan (Consul)
ment
es Force;
of State; 1956-59. UsAIS of Department of Air
a ate Copeninday Oslo lads Seer
|
}
ee
J
ee
jerabek, Milan Woodrow bs 24.3196),
4941-42 Coordinator in OSS; 1942-45 Ensign in ONI of
US Navy; from 1945 in Department of State; from 1956 in USIA; OpA: Prague (2nd Secretary), Washington
Jessup, Frank A.
b.: 30. 12. 1912;
1935-37
Detective
and
Chief of Civil Defense
in US
om 1957 Federal Police: 1942-46 in US Marine Corps; fr
in Department
of State; 1961 Chief, Public Safety Di,
vision; from 1965 in AID;
cer), WashOpA: Teheran, Rio de Janeiro (Security Offi ington
Jeton, Francis John b.: 1. 4. 1926;
Department of 1943-46 in US Navy; 1952-55 in MIS of Army; from 1956 in Department of State; hé) OpA: Damascus, Dakar, Leopoldville (Attac
John, Ernest F.
igence 1967 Colonel of US Air Force and Director of Intell
collection, Chief of Staff, US Air Force;
OpA: Washington
|
Johnson, C.L.
t 1967 Major-General of US Army and Deputy Assistan ss f of Staff, Intelligence;
to Chie
OpA: Washington
Johnson, Charles K.
?
b.: 10. 2. 1923; L.: German, Italian;
Me ait
1944—45 in US Army; from 1950 in Department of State: ; from 1951 work for CIA (Biographic Division)
OpA: West Berlin, Milan (Consul)
~ Johnson, Professor Edgar Nathaniel Hisees Studies in Munich; 1941-43 Professor of tory; 1943-45 Research Analyst and branch chief of
ee ~
1: L.: German;
b.:
“§ “oe
Bh.
OSS
for Italy/Austria; 1946 Political adviser to Com-
manding US General in Berlin; from 1947 Professor of
=]
History;
OPA:
West Berlin, Newtonville
Pe
Johnson, Edmund R. meeb.: 16. 7. 1905;
1942—49 Lieutenant-Commander in ONI of US Navy; ___ from 1952 in Department of State; from 1953 in USIA;
~
OPA: Tokyo, Bonn, Mainz, Katmandu, Leopoldville, An-
kara, Djakarta, Saigon Center), Washington
(Director
of the
Information
oh ison, Frances Brigham B19. 9.1927; -
30 in ECA; from 1952 in Department of State, work for A; from 1961 in AID;
son, Professor Dr. Franklyn Arthur
ey
hey?s
ae
ne 11.1921; Member of the Democratic Party of the — 4 1942—A5 First Lieutenant in US Army: 1949-51 | a ti 5
J University lecturer; from 1956 of University of Jacksonville;
Pr ofessor and Pr esident
OpA: Pittsford/N.Y.
~ Johnson, James C. ;
Dine deleal deal Oaioy:
1942-45
in US Army; 1951-59 Training Officer in De-
partment of Navy; 1960-62 in AIS of Department of Air Force; from 1962 in AID;
OpA: Washington
_ Johnson, Kimbell a
b.: 16. 12. 1913; from 1939 in US Civil Service Commission; from 1954 Director,
Bureau
of Personnel
Investigations,
US Civil
Service Commission;
OpA: Washington _ Johnson, Lyndon Baines
:
b.: 27. 8. 1908; Member of the Democratic Party of the USA; Member US Congress from 1937; 1948—61 US Senator; — 1960-63 Chairman of NASA Council; Chairman of the
National
Advisory Council
of the Peace
Corps;
1961—
Vice-President of the USA; from 1963 President of the
USA, Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces; Chair- —
man of NSC; OpA: Washington 3Johnson, Philip K. jr.
bs? 14.6; 1937; Lit Hindi; 1961ae in oa from 1962 in Department of
:
Johnson, Quentin C. Heol ty 19283 of 1943-46 in G-2 of the US Army; 1946—62 in MIS Department of Army; from 1962 in Department of State:
OpA: Copenhagen (Attaché), Washington
Johnson, Dr. Richard A.
~ b: 17. 4. 1910; L.: Spanish; 4940-65
US
in Department of State; 1954-55 attendance at
War College; 1957 Deputy Director of subversive
intelligence;
1959
Director
of Division
of Biographic
Information; OpA: Naples, London, La Paz, Guadalajara, Trujillo, Madrid, Monterrey (Consul-General)
Ciudad
ee.
on, Richard C. ‘b.: 10. 7. 1926; L.: German;
—
1944-46 in US Army; from 1954 in Department of State;
from 1964 work for CIA; OpA: Teheran, Frankfurt/Main,
Munich,
Bonn
(2nd
_ Secretary), Washington hnson, Robert D.
b.: 10. 2. 1908;
1942-46 Captain in CIC of US Army; from 1951 in De-
_
artment of State; 1955 Chief of Intelligence Reporting
Section, Department of State;
|
-OpA: Washington Anson, Dr. Robert H.
Es 23.1.1921; 1943-46
Ensign in US Navy ; 1948— .) Ss
J on Staff of NSC; from 1952 in Department Member of Policy Planning Council:
of Stat e;
OpA: Washington Johnson, Ural Alexis F b.: 17. 10. 1908; from 1935 in Department
of State; 1946 Staff Political
Adviser to Supreme Command Allied Powers in Japan; 1951
Deputy
Director
of Office
for North-East
Asian
Affairs; 1953 US Ambassador; from 1961 Deputy UnderSecretary of State for Political Affairs; 1966 Member of Group 54-12 (Government control organ for CIA); OpA: Tokyo, Keijo, Tientsin, Mukden, Rio de Janeiro,
Manila, Yokohama, Prague, Geneva, Washington, Tokyo (Ambassador)
Johnson, Valdemar N. L. b.: 4.10. 1912: L.: Norwegian, Russian;
1944—46 Ensign in ONI of US Navy; 1946-51 in Depart-
ment of State: 1952-54 Lieutenant-Commander in US Navy; Assistant Military Attaché in Norway; from 1954 in Department of State; OpA: Oslo, Warsaw, Reykjavik (Consul), Washington Johnson, Wesley D. |
be 25.9. 1933:
1951-55 in US Air Force; 1962-64 Analyst in AIS of Department of Air Force; from 1964 in Department obs
State;
OpA: Colombo (Assistant Attaché)
Johnson, William McKinley
1:4 15.6. 1920; ©
2
ee
a
;
———— 1942—46 Ensign in US Navy Reserve; 1947-30 in CIA;
from 1950 in Department of State; 1963 attendance Canadian National Defense College;
OpA:
Regensburg,
Munich,
Pretoria,
Rabat,
at
Ottawa
(Counsellor) K.
Johnson, Woodson b.: 20. 10. 1926;
.
1944-46 in US Navy; 1951-58 in MIS of Department of
‘
Army; 1958—65 in Department of State; OpA: Teheran, Tabriz (Vice-Consul)
:
_ Johnston, Mary Stevenson ~ —
b.: 12. 10. 1914; L.: German; «1943-45 in OWI; 1946-65 in Department of State; from
1956
work for CIA;
_ OpA: Athens, Sofia, Manila, Canberra, Conakry, Lagos _ (1st Secretary)
7
& Johnstone, Jack R. ,
bes. 9.1914;
from 1945 in Department of State; from 1954 work for CIA;
___OPpA: San Salvador, Havana, Manila, Singapore, Asun__
cion, Amman
(Counsellor for Economic Affairs)
, James Porteus : 8.6. 1909 in England; irom 1910 US citizen; 1940-46
. Special Agent of FBI;
from 1952 in International Packers Limited; _ OpA: Chicago
—
Jones, Curtis Fuller
‘se
5 25, 10, 1921; L.: Arabic, French;
ak ; pie reine
ie
i seal’
a
1942-45 in US Army; from 1945 in De partment of State:
from 1955 work for CIA;
OpA: Beirut, Addis Ababa, Tripolis, Por t Said, D
cus, Aden, Oman (Consul-General)
é
ae
‘Jones, Edwin Francis
b.: 27. 10. 1917 in China;
1935-36 Studies in Shanghai and Nanking; 1944-46 in US Army; from 1946 in Department of State; from 1955 work for CIA; OpA: Washington Jones, Ellis O. b.: 19. 1. 1928; L.: Arabic; 1946—47 in US Army; from 1955 in Department of State; from 1960 work for CIA; OpA: Istanbul, Lagos, Beirut, Aleppo, Khorramshahr, Washington, Taiz (Political Officer) Jones, Frank W. jr.
+b. 14. 6. 1921; 1943—54 Major in G-2 of US Army; 1957—58 in ICA; from 1959 in Department of State; OpA: Munich, Warsaw, Nicosia (1st Secretary), Washington
Jones, Dr. Norman A. b.: 13. 10. 1928; L.: Russian; 1952-56 Captain in US Air Force; 1956-58
_ -
y =.
she University
lecturer; 1958-66 in MIS of Department of Army; from 1967 in Department of State;
OpA: Canberra (Political Officer)
3
a Jones, Paul Walton jr. b.: 19. 5. 1922;
from 1947 1942—46 First Lieuter yant in MIS of US Army; 1956 work for CIA; from in Department of Sta te: from Administra1966 Deputy Director, Office of International
: :
tion in Department of State; OpA: Washington
;
Jones, William
Se
b.: 27. 10. 1921 in Spain;
1943-46 Ensign in US Navy; 1950—57 Analyst in Depart-
=
in Police; 1960 in ICA; 1960—62
ment of Army; 1957-59
of Army; from
in Plans Office of Department
1962 in
Department of State; OpA: Saigon, Barcelona (Consul)
~ Jones, William R. :
b.: 27. 5. 1920; L.: Spanish; 1942-46 and 1952—57 Lieutenant-Commander in ONI of US Navy; from 1958 in AID; OpA: Panama, Tegucigalpa, La Paz (Adviser)
2een Professor Dr. Henry Donaldson
ee b:: 5. 6. 1897; 1913-14 Studies in Geneva; 1938-43 Professor of Social
Sciences; 1944-45 Analyst in OSS; from 1947 Professor;
_ OpA: Worcester _ Jorgensen, Gordon L. b.: 5. 8.1912 in Japan:
1939-40 aay
~ ea
Newspaper
©
reporter; 1941-56 Lie
in G-2 of the US Ai s
4 oF ¥
che
thaa
:
=
|
Operations
Office of Department
Department
of State;
of Arm Y; 1960-65 in
OpA: Vientiane, Seoul (Attaché), Washington
Judkins Newell Kay 0
erly
1950-53
EES IO}e
Missionary
in Argentina;
1957-60
Analyst in
Department of Army; from 1960 in Department of State:
’ |
OpA: Guatemala, Cochabamba
(Consular Officer)
uliana, James Nicholas
b.: 1. 4. 1922:
1944—46 Ensign in US Navy Reserve; 1947-53 Special Agent of FBI; 1955-58 Chief Counsel to Senate Perma-
nent
Sub-Commission
Director of International
on
Investigations;
from
1961
Fact Finding Institute;
OpA: New York
dung, Richard Lee Keun b.: 30. 5.1929; L.: French, Mandarin; 1951—53 Lieutenant in AIS of US Air Force; from 1955° in Department of State; from 1960 work for CIA; 1962 in ACDA; from 1967 in AID;
OpA: Seoul, Taichung, Vientiane, Saigon (Adviser) Junod, Dr. Alfred, E.
Bm
©b.: 1916; Li: French; 1941 in Canadian Royal Air Force; from 1942 Captain in
US Air Force; 1956 graduated from Washington School 4 ‘i of Strategic Intelligence; from 1957 Major and lecturer on
_
Air
Reconnaissance
at the
“Intelligence,
Police & Special Weapons School” of USAREUR;
_ resident: Oberammergau, Hawkins Barracks;
_OPA: Canada, England, Oberammergau
Military—
“
ee
J
. _ “
4
|
ington
>on >