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  Cryptome Spy Photos 5

 

17 September 2006 -- 5 of a Series

Cryptome


Captions by Associated Press
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Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) director William J. Casey speaks at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., Sept. 24, 1986. Casey participated in a panel discussion on news coverage of national security affairs. (AP Photo/Bill Ingram)

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Antonio and Jonna Mendez pose Monday, Oct. 18, 1999, at their home in Knoxville, Md. Antonio Mendez recently wrote a book about his life as a CIA secret agent. Mendez describes missions he took part in during his 25-year career with the Central Intelligence Agency in his book, "The Master of Disguise - My Secret Life In The CIA." (AP Photo/Gail Burton)

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CIA Director Robert Gates testifies before an unprecedented joint hearing of the House and Senate intelligence committees on Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C., Wednesday, April 2, 1992. Gates rejects congressional calls for a massive reorganization of U.S. intelligence, saying America's spy apparatus can better adapt to a changing world through careful, incremental change. (AP Photo/John Duricka)

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William Colby applauds as George Bush finishes remarks after being sworn in as director of the Central Intelligence Agency on Jan. 30, 1976, in Washington, succeeding Colby in the position. President Gerald Ford is at right. (AP Photo/files)

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The bipartisan presidential commission to investigate the assassination of President John F. Kennedy sits for an official picture, at the Veterans of Foreign Wars office on Capitol Hill, August 14, 1964. From left, are: Rep. Gerald R. Ford, R-Mich.; Rep. Hale Boggs, D-La.; Sen. Richard Russell, D-Ga.; Chief Justice Earl Warren, chairman of the group; Sen. John Sherman Cooper, R-Ky.; John J. McCloy, New York banker; Allen W. Dulles, former director of the Central Intelligence Agency; and J. Lee Rankin, general counsel for the commission. (AP Photo)

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E. Howard Hunt speaks to a question from the counsel for the Senate Watergate Committee as the hearings resume Monday in Washington, D.C., Sept. 24, 1973. Hunt, a former agent with the Central Intelligence Agency, is a convicted Watergate conspirator. (AP Photo)

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This is a photo showing former Central Intelligence Agency director Richard Helms talking to reporters in April 1975. (AP Photo)

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Sidney Gottlieb, left, speaks with his attorney in this Sept. 21, 1977 photo. Gottlieb who oversaw CIA experiments during the Cold War that included the use of LSD and other mind-altering drugs on unwitting test subjects, died on Sunday, March 7, 1999. He was 80. (AP Photo)

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James Angleton, former Chief of Counterintelligence at the Central Intelligence Agency, answers questions before the Senate Intelligence Committee in Washington D.C. on Sept. 25, 1975. Angleton was answering questions concerning the C.I.A.'s cover up of reading the mail of many prominent Americans including the mail of Richard M. Nixon. (AP Photo)

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After being sworn in as the new director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Richard M. Helms, right, chats with two former CIA heads at the White House in Washington, D.C. on June 30, 1966. At left is Allan Dulles and in the center is Adm. William Raborn, who resigned. (AP Photo)

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Col. John Arnold talks to reporters in Hong Kong after arrival from China Aug. 4, 1955. China had discovered that the newly created Central Intelligence Agency and the Air Force were collaborating on a new Cold War weapon, an "unconventional warfare" group, one of which Arnold was to command. (AP Photo)

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** FILE ** In this 1983 file photo released by Norway's Special Branch police, Norwegian Foreign Ministry press officer Arne Treholt, left, is seen with Russian KGB officers Gennadij Titov, center, and Aleksandr Lopatin. The convicted cold war spy Arne Treholt was flown to Oslo for special treatments Tuesday March 28, 2006, after about two weeks in critical condition on a respirator in Cyprus. Treholt, now 63, was a rising Norwegian diplomat when he was arrested in 1984 for spying for the Soviet Union and Iraq, and sentenced to 20 years in prison a year later. Treholt hav been living in Cyprus since 1992. (AP Photo/Norwegian Special Branch police, SCANPIX) Submit Date 03/28/2006

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Allen W. Dulles poses in Washington D.C. on Jan. 24, 1953. Earlier, Dulles was picked by U.S. President Eisenhower to be the director of the Central Intelligence Agency. He is also the brother of the U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. (AP Photo)

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This is a 1950 photo of Kermit Roosevelt, grandson of U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt and a one-time high Central Intelligence Agency official. (AP Photo)