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  Cryptome Spy Photos 9

 

17 September 2006 -- 9 of a Series

Cryptome


Captions by Associated Press
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Air Force Academy cadet Derek Strang, left, director of testing Jerry Stermer and cadet Joe Walker, right, look over data while working on the engine of a Predator unmanned spy drone at the Aeronautics Labratory at Air Force Academy, Colo., Thursday, Nov. 10, 2005. The pair are working on making the engine more fuel efficient, allowing the Predator to remain in the air longer. (AP Photo/The Gazette, Kevin Kreck) ** NO SALES NO MAGS **

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The submarine USS Jimmy Carter makes its way to the pier at Bangor, Wash., Wednesday afternoon, Nov. 9, 2005. After finishing construction and sea trials in Groton, Conn., the sub undertook a 25-day journey to its new home port at Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor. It replaces the USS Parche, one of the fleet's premiere spy subs. (AP Photo/Kitsap Sun)

More on the Carter:
http://eyeball-series.org/mmp/jimmy-carter.htm

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** ADVANCE FOR WEEKEND OCT. 8-9 ** This undated photo provided by the Richard Heyser private collection, shows Richard ``Steve'' Heyser standing next a U-2 spy plane while stationed at Laughlin Air Force Base, Texas. Heyser, now a retired lieutenant colonel living in Apalachicola, Fla., took the first photos showing Soviet ballastic missile sites in Cuba on Oct. 14, 1962, setting off the Cuban Missile Crisis. Heyser said he was relieved it ended peacefully because he did not want to go down in history as starting World War III. AP Photo/ Richard Heyser private collection) Submit Date 10/06/2005

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Maj. Duane W. Dively, 43, of Rancho California, Calif., shown in an undated photo provided by the U.S. Air Force, died Wednesday, June 22, 2005, when his spy plane crashed while returning to its base in the United Arab Emirates. The cause of the crash in Southwest Asia is still under investigation. The U-2 is a single-seat, single-engine reconnaissance plane that flies above 70,000 feet and beyond the range of most surface-to-air missiles. (AP Photo/U.S. Air Force)

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Ex-North Korean spy Kang Dam who yearns to return to his homeland after 40 years in capitalist South Korea where he survived decades of torture in prison to give up his communist ideologies, speaks during an interview with the Associated Press in Seoul, South Korea, Friday, Oct. 7, 2005. (AP Photo/ Lee Jin-man)

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John Earle Haynes speaks on "The American Communist Party as an Auxiliary to Espionage: From Asset to Liability" at the International Spy Conference at the North Carolina Museum of History, Thursday, Sept. 1, 2005, in Raleigh, N.C. This year's conference, which ends Friday, focused on the beginnings of the Communist Party in the United States, Cold War espionage, perceptions of communism among professors and information disclosed after the Cold War ended, including the Venona program of Russian cable intercepts between 1942 and 1945. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

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** FILE ** The USS Pueblo, shown underway at sea, was captured late Jan. 22, 1968, by North Korean patrol boats who took it into Wonsan. There were 83 men aboard the vessel. Photo was released Jan. 23, 1968, by the U.S. Defense Dept. Negotiations to eliminate North Korea's nuclear weapons remain in limbo, but the North Koreans are giving hints they might be ready to end another long-lingering problem with the United States by returning the captured spy ship USS Pueblo (AP Photo/U.S. Navy, File) Submit Date 09/07/2005

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This is a Friday, Aug. 19, 2005, photo taken in the New York State Archives in Albany, N.Y., of a handwritten pass dated Sept. 21, 1780 that Major General Benedict Arnold scrawled for Joshua Smith who accompanied John Anderson _ AKA John Andre, a British spy which allowed him to pass to Dobbs Ferry. This is one of the most treasured items amid the thousands of Revolutionary War letters, maps, records, relics and other artifacts in the collections of the state library and archives, located in the New York State Museum in downtown Albany. (AP Photo/Jim McKnight)

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Victor Ostrovsky, a former agent for the Mossad, Israels elite and highly secretive intelligence agency, poses in front of his art work Aug.1, 2005, in Scottsdale, Ariz. The 55-year-old Scottsdale artist and gallery owner is working on a series of paintings known as ``Metaphors of Espionage,'' depicting spies playing the game of deception. (AP Photo/East Valley Tribune, Paul O'Neill )

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**ADVANCE FOR WEEKEND USE, AUG. 6-7**Retired Army Sgt. Maj. Billy Waugh sits at his desk July 19, 2005 in Niceville, Fla., with a copy of his book, ``Hunting the Jackal,'' and a photo on his computer screen of convicted terrorist Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, better known as ``Carlos the Jackal.'' After his Army career, Waugh was an independent contractor for the CIA, spying on Osama bin Laden, tracking down Ramirez and as recently as last year serving with a military-CIA combat team in Iraq. At 75, Waugh says he's still ready to serve if his country calls again. (AP Photo/Bill Kaczor)

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This photo provided by the US Navy shows a North Vietnamese motor torpedo boat attacking the USS Maddox, Aug. 2, 1964 in the Gulf of Tonkin. A spy-agency analysis released Thursday contends a second attack on the USS Maddox and the C. Turner Joy in the Gulf of Tonkin Aug. 4, 1964 never happened, casting further doubt on the leading rationale for escalation of the Vietnam War. (AP Photo/US Navy)

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Julius Rosenberg, flanked by FBI agents, enters a car on the way to the Federal House of Detention in New York, July 17, 1950, after arraignment on charges of conspiring to commit espionage. Rosenberg, an American-born engineer from New York, was arrested by the FBI and accused of recruiting for a Russian-financed atom bomb spy ring. (AP Photo/Tom Fitzsimmons)