<p>âI highly recommend Immermanâs history as a corrective.â (<i>Journal of American History</i>, 3 January 2016)</p> <p>"Written in clear terms with excellent summaries of complex events, The Hidden Hand makes a mass of history and bureaucratic strife manageable to newcomers of the subject. ...The redactions in this volume serve as an introduction for would-be scholars to the risks of researching so close to the circles of power and authority." (<i>Intelligence and National Security</i>, 6 February 2015)</p> <p>âRichard H. Immerman, who teaches the history of American foreign policy and intelligence at Temple University, has produced a fine, concise history of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). The Hidden Handhas three major virtues: it is fair-minded, readable and up-to-date, including a useful insiderâs analysis of how the creation of the new position of National Director of Intelligence (NDI) in 2005 has affected the role of the CIA and its director.â (<i>Survival: Global Politics and Strategy</i>, 1 January 2015)</p> <p>âMeantime, as far as the book under review is concerned, Itâs a very well written piece of history and well referenced with numerous end-of-chapter source notes.â (<i>Nurturing Potential</i>, 1 March 2014)</p>
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Om bidragsyterne
Richard H. Immerman is Professor and Edward J. Buthusiem Distinguished Fellow in History at Temple University, USA, and Marvin Wachman Director of its Center for the Study of Force and Diplomacy. The recipient of the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relationsâ Bernath Book Prize in 1983 and its Bernath Lecture Prize in 1990, he served as SHAFRâs president in 2007. His most recent publications include The Oxford Handbook of the Cold War (co-edited with Petra Goedde, 2013) and Empire for Liberty: A History of U.S. Imperialism from Benjamin Franklin to Paul Wolfowitz (2010). From September 2007 to December 2008, he served as Assistant Deputy Director of National Intelligence for Analytic Integrity and Standards and Analytic Ombudsman for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. He currently chairs the Historical Advisory Committee to the U.S. Department of State.