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Licensed to Spy: With the Top Secret Military Liaison Mission in East Germany

Licensed to Spy: With the Top Secret Military Liaison Mission in East Germany

List Price: $25.95
Your Price: $16.35
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Accurate; Misconceived Notions by Previous Reviewer
Review: As a former HUMINT Tour Driver stationed in USMLM, I take exception to Reader/San Antonio's comments regarding Cmdr Fahey's experiences during his extraordinary time at the Mission. While I certainly understand that many spy afficianados tend to lump human intelligence methodologies into one large basket, the USMLM was unlike anything anywhere else in US military history during the Cold War era. Cmdr Fahey's comments regarding personal interactions aside, being detained by hostile forces 7 times has nothing to do with level of success that he achieved. In other words, being detained came with the turf; sometimes you wouldn't be detained for 6 months and the KGB/GRU/Stasi would target you specifically because of your ability to get the job done. In a country with hundreds of thousands of hostile personnel, we took our life into our hands every time we went on "tour." I highly recommend this book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: An exercise in self aggrandizement
Review: John Fahey is an unassuming man, who it seems, prefers to get things done by using humor and tact rather than force. During this unusual period when he was living and working behind the iron curtain, he avoided being shot or permanently jailed by joking with his captors. Even his US Army bosses were out to get rid of the "swabbie" and that too he managed to easily avoid.It's unusual for a naval officer to be involved with so much army, including the enemy's army and Fahey was able to not only get along with these folks but collect very valuable intelligence information to forward back to our Government.
This little known part of history is a pleasure to read and you'll find yourself chuckling along the way. My recommendation is : Buy it! you"ll like it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Retired Naval Officer Wows the Russians
Review: John Fahey is an unassuming man, who it seems, prefers to get things done by using humor and tact rather than force. During this unusual period when he was living and working behind the iron curtain, he avoided being shot or permanently jailed by joking with his captors. Even his US Army bosses were out to get rid of the "swabbie" and that too he managed to easily avoid.It's unusual for a naval officer to be involved with so much army, including the enemy's army and Fahey was able to not only get along with these folks but collect very valuable intelligence information to forward back to our Government.
This little known part of history is a pleasure to read and you'll find yourself chuckling along the way. My recommendation is : Buy it! you"ll like it.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: An exercise in self aggrandizement
Review: The story of the US Military Liaison Mission in East Germany is a story that needed telling -- and it still does. Fahey's book is more about his personal travails such as receiving a traffic ticket and wearing a required patch than it is about Mission operations. While Fahey is undoubtedly an excellent Russian linguist, he couldn't be much of an intelligence officer if, as he says, he was detained by the Soviets seven times out of six attempts. He constantly boasts of his photographic memory, but misspells at least two names. He seems intent on degrading other members of the Mission and delights in demonstrating what he perceives to be his intellectual superiority.


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