We use cookies to provide essential features and services. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies .

×

Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


Disrupt and Deny
By

Rating

Product Description
Product Details

Table of Contents

Introduction: Covert Action
Part I - Cold War
1: False Starts: From Counter Attack to Liberation
2: Operation Valuable: Defending Greece; Detaching Albania
3: Pinpricks: The Early Cold War
4: A Long Game: Exploiting Rifts Behind the Iron Curtain
Part II - End of Empire
5: Operations Boot: Regime Change in Iran
6: Expansion: Covert Action Before Suez
7: Interdependence: Covert Action After Suez
8: Decolonisation and Drift: The Battle for Influence after Empire
9: Militarisation: Secret Wars in Yemen and Indonesia
Part III - Age of Illusions
10: Operation Storm and Beyond: From Latin America to Oman
11: Troubles: Covert Action in Northern Ireland
12: Containment: The Second Cold War
13: Transition: The New Agenda
14: Counter-Terrorism: Disrupting Threats; Managing Risk
Conclusion: The British Way
Bibliography
Index

About the Author

Dr Rory Cormac is an Associate Professor of International Relations at the University of Nottingham. A Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and a leading expert among a new generation of intelligence historians, he specialises in British covert operations and the secret pursuit of foreign policy. He has published widely on intelligence and security issues and regularly appears on radio and television. He is the co-author of The Black Door: Spies, Secret
Intelligence and British Prime Ministers and featured on Channel 4's Spying on the Royals.

Reviews

Revelatory and meticulously researched. Rory Cormac moves in the forensic footsteps of Peter Hennessy, patiently sleuthing his way through forgotten archives and private papers, finding disturbing documents that Whitehall civil servants hoped had long been buried. Half a century after we began to learn about SOE and Bletchley Park, there are still surprises.
*Richard Aldrich, The Times Literary Supplement*

A welcome and most timely book [which] provides plenty of evidence to show why it is time [that policy makers and spy chiefs] absence of accountability and freedom to break the law with impunity must end.
*Richard Norton-Taylor, Literary Review*

A work of outstanding scholarly originality.
*Richard Davenport-Hines, Times Literary Supplement*

In 'Disrupt and Deny', Rory Cormac takes readers into the hidden world of British foreign intelligence activity. With extraordinary detail and easily accessible prose, Cormac's work sets a standard for espionage history ... To be sure, this is a very serious book worthy of serious readers. But offering various anecdotes amid the history, the book sometimes reads as much as a spy thriller. It will have broad appeal.
*Tom Rogan, Washington Examiner*

Disrupt and Deny is a bold study of the postwar history of British covert action [and] Cormac attacks the subject with impressive energy and industry. The result is an engrossing journey through the history of a stubbornly opaque area of the secret world.
*Huw Dylan, BBC History Magazine*

A ground-breaking book ... It reads like a thriller and shines valuable light on how Britain's Secret Intelligence Service, M16, has spread misinformation designed to divide and discredit targets from the Middle East to Eastern Europe.
*Francis Ghiles, ES Global*

This excellent book relies on a high amount of archival material and represents the first detailed history of British covert action.
*Lucy Trenta, Intelligence and National Security*

An enthralling, well-written and authoritative history of Britain's role in covert operations from the Second World War to the present day.
*Geraint Hughes, International Affairs*

An important book about an important subject Disrupt and Deny should be read by anyone, citizens, scholars or those in government interested in Britain's place in the world, past and present.
*Calder Walton, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University*

A pioneering and highly readable book uncovering how Britain secretly used spies and special forces to stem national decline.
*Professor Michael Goodman, King's College, London*

Rory Cormac is one of the brightest rising stars in the expanding firmament of Intelligence Studies. Here he takes on one of the most difficult of research endeavors: probing the ins-and-outs of covert action as practiced by the British. He comes up with a balanced assessment written in lovely prose that is a pleasure to read. This book is a valuable dissection of an important topic that few have had the audacity to address.
*Loch K. Johnson, Regents Professor of International Affairs, University of Georgia*

This is a ground-breaking book--the first history of British covert action ever published, from wartime SOE to new and unacknowledged adventures in Syria."
*Richard J. Aldrich, University of Warwick and author of GCHQ:The Uncensored Story of Britain's Most Secret Intelligence Agency*

Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
Look for similar items by category
This title is unavailable for purchase as none of our regular suppliers have stock available. If you are the publisher, author or distributor for this item, please visit this link.

Back to top