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Turn-based trade
strategy game. Build your own world
empire as an arms dealer.
Trade with weapons, hire spies, agents,
secretaries, bodyguards and lawyers, and
establish bases and spy cells worldwide.
Trading cards game combat system included.
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Tycoon Strategy
Game - build your own world business empire as an
arms dealer tycoon. Travel around the world,
trade with more than 400 weapon systems, hire
secretaries, bodyguards, lawyers, fighters and
tanks, establish companies and search for
criminals and hostages. |
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Guns
Girls Lawyers Spies is a trade management
game. You'll build your multinational
spy company, destroy competition, hire employees,
spies, and businessman, establish spy cells,
bases and objects.
There is a more than 40 missions with different
game objectives. |
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Central Intelligence Agency
CIA |
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CIA Agent |
The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) is the
United States' foreign intelligence agency, responsible
for obtaining and analysing information about foreign
governments, corporations, and individuals, and reporting
such information to the various branches of the US
government. It also maintains a vast covert military
apparatus, which during the Cold War was responsible for
many attempts to depose foreign governments seen as
pro-Soviet and opposing US interests, such as those of
Arbenz in Guatemala and Allende in Chile. Its
headquarters is in Langley, Virginia, across the Potomac
River from Washington, D.C
Table of contents
1 History
2 CIA Directors
3 CIA Operations in Iraq
4 "Worldwide Attack Matrix"
History
The Agency, created in 1947 by President Harry S. Truman,
is a descendant of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS)
of World War II. The OSS was dissolved in October 1945
but William J. Donovan, the creator of the OSS, had
submitted a proposal to the President in 1944. He called
for a new organization having direct Presidential
supervision, "which will procure intelligence both
by overt and covert methods and will at the same time
provide intelligence guidance, determine national
intelligence objectives, and correlate the intelligence
material collected by all government agencies."
Despite strong opposition from the military, the State
Department, and the FBI, Truman established the Central
Intelligence Group in January 1946. Later under the
National Security Act of 1947 (which became effective on
September 18, 1947) the National Security Council and the
Central Intelligence Agency were established.
In 1949, the Central Intelligence Agency Act was passed,
permitting the agency to use confidential fiscal and
administrative procedures and exempting it from many of
the usual limitations on the use of federal funds. The
act also exempted the CIA from having to disclose its
"organization, functions, officials, titles,
salaries, or numbers of personnel employed." Some
critics have charged that this violates a provision of
the U.S. Constitution that the federal budget be openly
published.
CIA Games
The activities of the CIA are largely undisclosed. Like
other intelligence agencies, it collects information from
a variety of sources, the vast majority probably being
public information in the countries concerned, but also
from individuals who for various reasons including
bribes, blackmail, and ideology, decide to pass otherwise
secret information to the CIA. It also undoubtedly makes
use of the surveillance satellites of the National
Reconnaissance Office (NRO) and the signal interception
capabilities of the NSA, including the Echelon system,
and the surveillance aircraft of the various branches of
the US armed forces. At one stage, the CIA even operated
its own fleet of U-2 surveillance aircraft.
The agency also employs a group of officers with
paramilitary skills. Michael Spann, the CIA officer
killed in November 2001 during the Afghanistan conflict,
was one such individual. A small number of other CIA
officers are confirmed to be working in similar roles in
Afghanistan, but the extent of paramilitary action by the
CIA (Cuban CIA Game) since the 1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion
is largely unknown.
Defectors such as Phillip Agee have alleged that CIA
covert action is extraordinarily widespread, extending
even to propaganda campaigns within allied countries of
the United States. The agency has also been accused of
participation in the illegal drug trade, notably in Laos,
Afghanistan, and Nicaragua. It is known to have attempted
assassinations of foreign leaders, most notably Fidel
Castro, though since 1976 a Presidential order has banned
such actions, except during wartime.
One of the CIA's publications, the CIA World Factbook, is
unclassified and is indeed made freely available without
copyright restrictions.
In 1988, President George H. W. Bush became the first
former head of the CIA to become President of the United
States.
The CIA spy games have caused considerable political
controversy both in the United States and in other
countries, often nominally friendly to the United States,
where the agency has operated (or been alleged to). For
instance, the CIA has supported various dictators,
including Manuel Noriega, who have been friendly to
perceived US geopolitical interests, sometimes over
democratically elected governments.
The agency has also been criticized for ineffectiveness
as an intelligence gathering agency. These criticism
included allowing a double agent, Aldrich Ames to gain
high positions within the organization, and for focusing
on finding informants with information of dubious value
rather than on processing the vast amount of open source
intelligence. In addition, the CIA has come under
particular criticism for failing to predict the collapse
of the Soviet Union.
On November 5, 2002, newspapers reported that a car full
of Al-Qaeda operatives had been killed by a missile
launched from a CIA-controlled Predator drone (a
high-altitude, remote-controlled aircraft).
CIA Directors
The head of the CIA is given the title Director of
Central Intelligence (DCI). The DCI is not only the head
of the CIA but also the leader of the entire U.S.
intelligence community and the President's principal
advisor on intelligence matters. A list of DCIs (in
chronological order) follows.
Rear Adm. Sidney W. Souers, USNR January 23 1946 - June
10 1946
Lt. Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg, USA June 10 1946 - May 1
1947
Rear Adm. Roscoe H. Hillenkoetter, USN May 1 1947 -
October 7, 1950
Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, USA October 7 1950 - February 9
1953
Allen W. Dulles February 26, 1953 - November 29, 1961
John A. McCone November 29 1961 - April 28 1965
Vice Adm. William F. Raborn, Jr, USN (Ret.) April 28 1965
- June 30 1966
Richard M. Helms June 30 1966 - February 2 1973
James R. Schlesinger February 2, 1973 - July 2 1973
William E. Colby September 4 1973 - January 30 1976
George H. W. Bush January 30 1976 - January 20 1977
Adm. Stansfield Turner, USN (Ret.) March 9 1977 - January
20 1981
William J. Casey January 28 1981 - January 29 1987
William H. Webster May 26 1987 - August 31 1991
Robert M. Gates November 6 1991 - January 20 1993
R. James Woolsey February 5 1993 - January 10 1995
John M. Deutch May 10 1995 - December 15 1996
George J. Tenet July 11 1997 - present
CIA Operations
in Iraq
According to some sources the CIA appears to have
supported the 1963 military coup ( CIA game in Iraq ) in
Iraq and the subsequent Saddam Hussein led government up
until the point of the 1991 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. US
support was premised on the notion that Iraq was a key
buffer state in relations with the Soviet Union.
In 2002 an unnamed source, quoted in the Washington Post,
says that the CIA was authorized to undertake a covert
operation, if necessary with help of the Special Forces,
that could serve as a preparation for a full-scale
military attack of Iraq. [1]
CIA Worldwide
In a briefing held September 15 2001 George Tenet
presented the Worldwide Attack Matrix, a
"top-secret" document describing covert CIA
anti-terror operations in 80 countries in Asia, the
Middle East and Africa. The actions, underway or being
recommended, would range from "routine propaganda to
lethal covert action in preparation for military
attacks". The plans, if carried out, "would
give the CIA the broadest and most lethal authority in
its history". [1]
Text is available under
the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
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