MastanKhan
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Hi,
The biggest fear the US has of sensitive material being leaked out thru these works of FICTION.
"
How accurate are Tom Clancy books compared to the real US intelligence, army, etc.?
David Ecale, I've read a whole bunch of books, but my library has deleted the list!
Answered Jul 18 · Upvoted by Eric Monzon, former United States Army Infantryman at U.S. Army (2002-2008) and Andy Price, Satellite Communications Systems Operator at U.S. Army (2012-present)
Well, when “The Hunt for Red October” came out as a book, the Intelligence Community took notice. Big notice! Clancy’s book had a huge amount of “classified” information in it. However, upon reviewing Clancy’s notes & sources, they reluctantly went home shaking their heads.
You see, Clancy had obtained everything that he used through open & unclassified documents!
Here’s a fun example:
Once upon a time, I was in Tech School & tasked to give a briefing (as in, pick a topic & present it to senior staff to see how well you present stuff under pressure).
I chose to give a talk on EMP (Electromagnetic pulse - Wikipedia). This was in November ‘74. After my talk, a LtC came up & asked, “Lieutenant, just where did you get your data? Your lecture is basically Top Secret.”
I pulled out my source book & showed him. He just plain sat there with his mouth open. You see, I had purchased it for 10 cents at a book sale from the Saint Paul (Minnesota) Public Library.
Here’s a link to a 1977 release of the book: https://www.dtra.mil/Portals/61/...
I had a copy of the 1950 edition, which had been publicly released before I was born!
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The biggest fear the US has of sensitive material being leaked out thru these works of FICTION.
"
How accurate are Tom Clancy books compared to the real US intelligence, army, etc.?
David Ecale, I've read a whole bunch of books, but my library has deleted the list!
Answered Jul 18 · Upvoted by Eric Monzon, former United States Army Infantryman at U.S. Army (2002-2008) and Andy Price, Satellite Communications Systems Operator at U.S. Army (2012-present)
Well, when “The Hunt for Red October” came out as a book, the Intelligence Community took notice. Big notice! Clancy’s book had a huge amount of “classified” information in it. However, upon reviewing Clancy’s notes & sources, they reluctantly went home shaking their heads.
You see, Clancy had obtained everything that he used through open & unclassified documents!
Here’s a fun example:
Once upon a time, I was in Tech School & tasked to give a briefing (as in, pick a topic & present it to senior staff to see how well you present stuff under pressure).
I chose to give a talk on EMP (Electromagnetic pulse - Wikipedia). This was in November ‘74. After my talk, a LtC came up & asked, “Lieutenant, just where did you get your data? Your lecture is basically Top Secret.”
I pulled out my source book & showed him. He just plain sat there with his mouth open. You see, I had purchased it for 10 cents at a book sale from the Saint Paul (Minnesota) Public Library.
Here’s a link to a 1977 release of the book: https://www.dtra.mil/Portals/61/...
I had a copy of the 1950 edition, which had been publicly released before I was born!
72k views · View Upvoters · View Sharers
1.5k Upvotes
Share· 5
https://www.quora.com/#