"We have lost and lost and lost in the Cold War for one primary reason: We have been amateurs fighting abasing professionals. So long as we remain amateurs in the critical field of political warfare, the billions of dollars we annually spend on defense and foreign aid will provide us with a diminishing measure of protection." 
- Senator Thomas Dodd, 1961

"Although this nation was then building up its defenses, training an enormous army, there were no preparations being made for psychological warfare." 
- Robert E Sherwood 
- timeless, evergreen... from before 1946 about the fall of 1941.
- Shared by Matt Armstrong 


Sorority girl reveals how she became an CIA counterterrorism operative

Daily Mail · by Lauren Edmonds For Dailymail.com · February 23, 2020
A California sorority girl has revealed in a new book how she became a CIA agent, foiled al-Qaeda plots around the world after 9/11, and interviewed captured terrorists in the Middle East.
Tracy Walder writes in her memoir, 'The Unexpected Spy: From CIA to The FBI, My Secret Life Taking Down Some of the World's Most Notorious Terrorists',. that when she first arrived at the University of Southern California in 1996, she pursued the normal undergraduate experience by rushing Delta Gamma and easily 'blended into the crowd' of other young co-eds.
She thrived in university Greek life, where she was elected vice president of social standards, partied with close friends and would have decorated her room completely in pink if not for her roommate's protests.
Walder, whose a news-junkie and a lover of history, initially planned to become a school teacher until she met CIA recruiter at a jobs fair during her junior year.
Tracy Walder (pictured) temporarily left behind her dreams of becoming a teacher to join the CIA - and later the FBI - where she would become an expert in Al Qaeda and confronting captured terrorist associates in the Middle East
At the time, Walder was dressed in a pink top, flip flops and was pushing along a Huffy bike when the recruiter asked her the life-changing question,  New York Post reports.
'Do you want to be in the CIA?' he asked, after Walder handed him a résumé.
'Yes, I do,' she said.
Walder recalls the surprising moment in the upcoming memoir, which is co-authored by Jessive Anya Blau.
She goes on to detail how CIA would put her through series of intense interviews, including two lie-detector tests. The agency also interviewed four of her sorority sisters, before they ultimately welcomed her into the ranks of the agency's elite.
At just 21-years-old, she began her career with the CIA in 2000. In time, Walder become an expert on al Qaeda, interviewed terrorist associates in the Middle East and was well-versed in chemical weapons.
Walder (right), pictured with two of her Delta Gamma sorority sisters, attended the University of Southern California and soon became apart of the student Greek culture
Despite becoming entrenched in the world of terrorist networks at the CIA, Walder wrote that she had feared Osama bin Laden for several years after watching a TV interview with him in 1997.
Those fears suddenly became tangible after al-Qaeda's attach on 9/11, which killed nearly 3,000 people.
Walder said she remembers watching live footage of American Airlines Flight 77 tragically crashing into the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.
She wrote: 'The plane might as well have crashed into the south side of my body. The pain, the guilt, the sense that my failures were resulting in lives lost ... erased all other thoughts.'
The 9/11 attacks pushed the CIA to step up the country's frontlines, prompting them to assign Walder to an elite counterterrorism unit solely created to stop al-Qaeda.
'I was ready to even the score,' she wrote.
Walder traveled the world in her efforts to foil al-Qaeda's plans, flitting from Europe to the Middle East and Africa.
She describes dealing with a myriad of challenges, including exhaustion, homesickness and sexism at the hands of men who dubbed her 'Malibu Barbie'.
Family holidays with her parents in Los Angeles were pushed to the side and Walder worked a rigorous seven-day week.
After the 9/11 attacks in the United States, Walder (pictuerd) joined an elite counterterrorism unit that sent her to Europe, the Middle East and Africa to stop al Qaeda efforts
However, Walder said the White House was only interested in gaining information that connected al-Qaeda to former Iranian President Saddam Hussein.
Unfortunately, there was none.
'The whole thing felt like a nutty fun-house game,' Walder wrote.
'No matter what we reported to the administration, they turned it around, turned it inside out, and spat it back out with some non-truth.'
Meanwhile, she was beginning to have thoughts of settling down and questioned if she could have a family as a spy.
Impulsively, Walder applied for a position at the Federal Bureau of Investigation and got in.
While in the FBI, Walder made a name for herself by unveiling a Chinese husband-and-wife team who were sending military secrets to China.
Operatives Chi and Rebecca Mak had lived in Los Angeles since the 1970s.
'The Unexpected Spy: From CIA to The FBI, My Secret Life Taking Down Some of the World's Most Notorious Terrorists' will be released on February 25
Chi worked for Power Paragon, a company that developed products for the U.S. Navy, while Walder conducted her investigation.
The couple usually kept to themselves and ate their meals on newspapers.
It was Walder's job to sift through their garbage for clues.
Within the Mak's trash, Walder, with the help of a Chinese translator, would find an eye-opening piece of information.
Between the greasy pages of discarded newspaper, they found a 'tasking list [that] clearly identified classified materials that Mak was supposed to supply the Chinese government.'
Chi had been stealing U.S. secrets for decades.
While Walder excelled at her work, her time at the FBI proved to be a bad fit and described the agency as a boys' club.
'I was The Girl,' she wrote, saying that she experienced bullying and hazing from sexist training officers.
In one incident, she was disciplined for wearing a suit that was deemed 'distracting.'
Walder spent 15 months with the FBI and notes that 'currently, there are a dozen women who have filed a complaint against the[m] with the Equal Employment Commission.'
In the following years, she's since given up her government job and has relocated Dallas, Texas, where she works as a history teacher at an all-girls school.
Fighting terrorism was what originally inspired her, but now she's taken on a new mission of encouraging girls to pursue intelligence roles and deconstruct the agency's culture.
Daily Mail · by Lauren Edmonds For Dailymail.com · February 23, 2020

De Oppresso Liber,

David Maxwell
Senior Fellow
Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Personal Email: d[email protected]
Phone: 202-573-8647
Web Site:  www.fdd.org
Twitter: @davidmaxwell161
Subscribe to FDD's new podcastForeign Podicy
 
FDD is a Washington-based nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.


If you do not read anything else in the 2017 National Security Strategy read this on page 14:

"A democracy is only as resilient as its people. An informed and engaged citizenry is the fundamental requirement for a free and resilient nation. For generations, our society has protected free press, free speech, and free thought. Today, actors such as Russia are using information tools in an attempt to undermine the legitimacy of democracies. Adversaries target media, political processes, financial networks, and personal data. The American public and private sectors must recognize this and work together to defend our way of life. No external threat can be allowed to shake our shared commitment to our values, undermine our system of government, or divide our Nation."