Results for 'cia spytech'

Gadgets

Spycraft Hits Paperback In Time for Father’s Day

6:00PM Wilson Rothman | Remember that awesome CIA gadget book, Spycraft, written by our spooky friends Bob Wallace and Keith Melton? Well, it just came out in paperback, people—$US12.24 at Amazon. Go git ‘em. [Amazon] More »
Entertainment

Ex-CIA Officer Laments Q’s Absence from Modern James Bond

4:30AM Gizmodo US Edition | Quantum of Solace, the new James Bond movie scheduled for release in mid-November might be a fine movie, but something is missing. There is no Q. More »
Gadgets

5 Reasons to Check Out the CIA Spycraft Book

1:00AM Wilson Rothman | Spycraft: The Secret History of the CIA’s Spytechs from Communism to Al-Qaeda goes on sale in stores today. I know you think I probably milked it for all it’s worth, but there’s actually a ton of mind-boggling spy gear in there that I didn’t have a chance to cover on Giz, such as:
Gadgets

CIA-Style Hide and Seek: Exploding Notebooks, Suicide Needles, Rectal Tool Kits and More

9:30AM Wilson Rothman | The freakiest thing about reading CIA gadget lore is that it’s all real. The nerds working for the agency’s Office of Technical Services were always devising and building gadgets to get people out of—or into—difficult situations. Here’s a rundown of crazy stuff from the Spytech book, not necessarily stuff you’d carry all at the same time, but stuff that, to paraphrase Dr. Strangelove, would help a fella have a pretty nice weekend in Moscow. Jump for all the pictures and descriptions:
Vehicles

Jack Bauer Really Does Save Us From Terrorists

8:00AM Matt Buchanan | As far fetched as some of the tech the spy community plays with is, you’d think they were getting it from spy movies and stuff. Well, they’re definitely watching. The Department of Homeland Security’s latest idea to protect airports, a laser equipped drone that’ll detect and blind missiles with a low-power laser (rather than a megadoom one) is named for Chloe on 24, because they apparently both track down bad guys. We’re assuming project Jack kills them. And if they ever reveal one codenamed Solid Snake, all evildoers worldwide should simultaneously piss their pants and seek a career in handicrafts. [Danger Room] More »
Cameras

A Gallery of CIA Spy Cameras

5:30AM Wilson Rothman | In celebrating the launch of Spycraft, I’ve looked at all kinds of gadgets, but the bread and butter of Cold War CIA gear were tiny cameras and listening devices. The bugs aren’t so exciting to look at, though the stories of their placement make great reading. The cameras, on the other hand, always come in clever “concealments.”
Gadgets

CIA Inflatable Sex Doll Experiment: “Blow Up” Gets New Meaning

2:30PM Wilson Rothman | You know how, when KGB agents are tailing you, all you want to do is roll out of the car while your driver keeps going? Only those agents aren’t dumb: If they suddenly see one fewer head inside the car, they’re gonna know something’s up. Spytechs at the CIA figured that if you brought along something compact yet inflatable, you could quickly blow it up as you exited the vehicle, and nobody would see any difference. It was the early ’80s so, naturally, the researchers thought of sex dolls. More »
Vehicles

Camouflaged CIA Speed Boat Looks Like Junk, Runs Like Jet

10:00AM Wilson Rothman | It looks like your typical junk, tooling around on coastal waterways in Southeast Asia in the late 1960s. Think of it in Apocalypse Now terms: It was basically a water taxi for personnel on highly classified missions. OK, so then say that classified mission is somehow compromised—here’s what it looks like when it literally blows its cover: More »
Gadgets

CIA Animal Tech: Bats, Cats and Rats As Covert Operatives

4:20AM Wilson Rothman | I was surprised to learn that the CIA has had a long though not always fruitful relationship with the animal kingdom. In Spycraft, the authors describe many clever animal-assisted devices, from the dead-rat dead-drop pouch to the “acoustic kitty,” a cat with a remote listening system embedded in its body. And what’s this about the 1 million bats the CIA’s precursor, the OSS, were gonna use to firebomb Tokyo during WWII? More »
Vehicles

CIA Airlines: Inflatable Getaway Plane Delivered Upon Request

10:50AM Wilson Rothman | You find yourself held under “house arrest” in a remote jungle region of Indonesia, sometime in the late 1950s. You may have your suit, fedora and at least one halfway decent tie, but the chances of getting back to the US of A seem slim. The CIA thinks you’re not so dispensable, so spytechs—with the help of the always patriotic Goodyear Company—build an inflatable aeroplane that they can drop into a jungle clearing. Here’s what it looks like when fully inflated and ready for takeoff: More »