Mossad Training Manual Pdf
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Army – Instructing National Police officers Washington, DC () – Often times people who want to have more thorough training in order to better protect themselves from harm, or to survive a disaster, simply do not know where to find the information they need. Instead they find themselves trusting less than accurate information or sifting through book after book attempting to find the information they know is out there somewhere. Most of the time, people overlook the best possible source of information on the skills necessary to survive in bad situations, conduct military operations, or simply understand history better: The Department of Defense. Those that are aware of this as a source are painfully aware that most are cataloged based on an FM or TM number and that the numbers have very little rhyme or reason. The Fifth Column has put together a list of the Field Manuals and Technical Manuals that are most needed and sought after. We then broke the list down into easy to understand subcategories. We then located where each manual is available online.
Some of these manuals date back fifty years. Some are this year’s edition. The value in learning tactics from a bygone era is that today’s opposition will have not been trained to counter them. The tactics of war, like many things are cyclical. None of this information is classified. Some of it could cause severe injury to the user or others. This is provided for research material only.
(Yes, those are all links to download the manuals.) The Basics: This is information that every citizen should know Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear (CBRN): Explosives: Field Tradecraft: General Knowledge: There really is a field manual for everything Intelligence: Medical: Misc: Sniping: Survival: Unconventional Warfare: If you plan on saving these to use in a disaster scenario, remember you might not have power. Print them or learn them.
Retrieved March 2, 2018. Retrieved March 2, 2018. Retrieved March 2, 2018. CBS Interactive. CBS Interactive.
CounterSpy: Secret CIA Documents on Mossad What Begin and Reagan Didn't Want You to Know Secret CIA Documents on Mossad CounterSpy, May-June 1982 pp. 34-54 CounterSpy Introduction The secret CIA and State Department documents printed here have come a long way. They were discovered by the Iranian students who took over the U.S. Embassy in Tehran on November 4, 1979. Some were complete, others which had gone through a shredding machine were painstakingly pieced together. These documents, made available to CounterSpy by journalists Randy Goodman, Terri Taylor and William Worthy, are only a fraction of a 13 volume paperback set (complete with commentary) readily available for sale in Iran. The three journalists picked up a set at an airport on their way to Shiraz.
In late November 1981 they had completed their assignment for CBS and flew home. The FBI and Customs officials seized their luggage and confiscated the documents — with the active assistance of Lufthansa (West German) Airlines.
But a second set of the books — sent by another route — was overlooked by customs and reached the U.S. (Some of the volumes were supplied to the Washington Post which analyzed them in a series running from January 31 to February 6, 1982.) The 13 volumes of documents are a goldmine. They expose covert CIA operations in Iran (an attempt to recruit former Prime Minister Bani Sadr, for example), reveal the CIA's use of corporate covers, and detail former Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan's attempts to establish ties with U.S. intelligence. The documents supplied to CounterSpy deal with the triangle of U.S.-Israeli-Iranian relations. A careful reading of the documents illustrates that the Washington Post's analysis was narrowly focussed on the 'U.S. Other disclosures were simply glossed over — systematic Israeli suppression of domestic dissent, for example, or Mossad (Israel's CIA) and Israeli military intelligence support for repressive regimes in Africa, Asia and Latin America, and even Mossad's 'psycholgical warfare projects.'