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Summer 2006 CONTRIBUTORS ANTONIO M. DÍAZ FERNÁNDEZ is professor of the University Institute General Gutiérrez Mellado in Madrid and also professor of Political Science at the University of Burgos. He is currently leading a research project on cooperation between European intelligence services. His most recent publications are Spanish Intelligence Services (2005) and The Role of the Intelligence Community in the Decision-Making Process of the Spanish Foreign and Security Policy (2006). REINHARD R. DOERRIES is professor of modern history emeritus in Germany. Educated in the United States, France, and Germany, he has published in the areas of World War I, US ethnic history, transatlantic relations, and intelligence history. His recent books include Imperial Challenge (1989), Diplomaten und Agenten (2001), Prelude to the Easter Rising (2002), and Hitler’s Last Chief of Foreign Intelligence (2003). BENJAMIN GROB-FITZGIBBON is currently visiting assistant professor in history at Duke University, North Carolina. He has previously published in such journals as The Historian, Terrorism and Political Violence, and Peace and Change. His first book, The Irish Experience during the Second World War, was named a 2004 Book-of-the-Year by the Sunday Irish Independent. MARTIN RUDNER is a professor at the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs, Carleton University, Ottawa, and founding director of the Canadian Centre of Intelligence and Security Studies at Carleton. HANS-GEORG WIECK received his Ph. D. from the University of Hamburg before entering the foreign service. He served as ambassador of the Federal Republic of Germany in Teheran (1974-1977), Moscow (1977-1980), and to NATO (1980-1985) before he became president of the Bundesnachrichtendienst, a position be held until 1990. Before retiring from active duty, be was ambassador to India until 1993.
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The Journal of Intelligence History is published by the
International
Intelligence History Asociation, founded in 1993 to promote scholarly
research on intelligence organizations and their impact on historical development
and international relations.