Spy Dust: Two Masters of Disguise Reveal the Tools and Operations That Helped Win the Cold War
Spy Dust: Two Masters of Disguise Reveal the Tools and Operations That Helped Win the Cold War book cover

Spy Dust: Two Masters of Disguise Reveal the Tools and Operations That Helped Win the Cold War

Paperback – Illustrated, September 1, 2003

Price
$14.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
320
Publisher
Atria
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0743428538
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.9 x 8.5 inches
Weight
12.6 ounces

Description

Admiral Stansfield Turner former head of the CIA A true story of spying with all the suspense and intrigue of a James Bond novel. Publishers Weekly An entertaining thriller with the added virtue of being true. Booklist An endlessly fascinating book, one that spy buffs will return to again and again.Hayden B. Peake curator of the CIA's Historical Intelligence Collection For CIA staffers, the changed names will be both frustrating and challenging as they attempt to sort out individuals and operations. For those who want a sense of what really takes place in the field when magicians from the Office of Technical Services are involved, Spy Dust is a rewarding experience. Kirkus Reviews A real-life pleasure for fans of John le Carré and Tom Clancy. Antonio Mendez is the former chief of disguise for the CIA. A recipient of the CIA's Intelligence Star of Valor and the Trailblazer Award, he is the author of Argo and The Master of Disguise . Visit his website at TheMasterofDisguise.com. Jonna Mendez is a twenty-seven year veteran of the CIA who served as a technical operations officer and chief of disguise. She and her husband Tony live in Maryland with their son, Jesse. Learn more at TheMasterofDisguise.com. Bruce Henderson is the author of Fatal North and the coauthor of thexa0#1 New York Times bestseller And the Sea Will Tell . He lives in California. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One INDOCHINA Winter 1973 Tony MendezCIA Technical Operations OfficerSpecialties: Disguise and false documentation I was being buffeted around in the backseat of a dilapidated gray Austin as Jack Maxwell drove quickly through the pitch black night. He spun the steering wheel back and forth with one beefy hand, and with the other deftly shifted gears like a race car driver as we sped down the narrow, winding streets of this moldering tropical city.I knew that even though we couldn't see them in the dark, every structure we passed was mildewed and slowly crumbling back into the black loam and teeming vegetation from where it had come long before the British carved out their colonial outpost here more than a century ago.Maxwell, a large man with sloping shoulders, was slouched against the right-hand door, on the driver's side of the old car. He had borrowed this wreck from one of the office secretaries for his nighttime forays. He was wearing a pair of tortoiseshell glasses, a Band-Aid mustache, and a floppy hat, one of the many quick-change disguises that I had devised for him and his intelligence sources to use for their meetings after dark. Such subterfuge was the only way CIA officers could meet their assets -- locals recruited by U.S. intelligence -- in this hostile environment.Maxwell would sometimes have eight or nine operational meetings a night, which pushed the bounds of good security practices. Most meetings took place in the old car while he drove his asset around on the back streets, debriefing them while continuing to run surveillance-detection runs -- SDRs, as they are known in the spy trade -- to ensure they weren't being followed.Tonight was a special trip. We would be breaking new ground on this case, and thanks to my disguises, Maxwell would be bringing his best agent home for a sit-down meeting in the civilized surroundings of his house, an almost unheard of luxury.We were approaching a double corner as we passed the swimming club where Maxwell would execute a rolling car pickup. He slowed down, pressed on the brake pedal long enough for the forward motion of the car to be interrupted for half a heartbeat. He timed this stop to occur just as he passed behind the hedge on our left, next to the corner of the club building.A dark figure moved out from behind the hedge at the same instant and entered the left front passenger door as I opened and closed it in one motion. The dome light had not come on.The figure crouched safely on the floorboard of the car as Maxwell released his pressure on the brake pedal and our momentum carried us forward again. He pressed smoothly on the accelerator, and we continued on a circuitous route to the residential district out by the lake to our first destination.The top-secret GAMBIT disguise was positioned on my lap. I had created it for the man at an earlier meeting, and I hoped to conduct a final fitting tonight. I planned to do this in the dark car as we moved along, in case we passed someone who knew him.We started down a deserted stretch, and the man code-named SAPPHIRE had crawled up off the floor and was now sitting up directly in front of me. He knew what to expect as I reached over to show him how to put on the disguise. By the time Maxwell arrived at his cover stop, I had made final adjustments to SAPPHIRE's new persona and was handing him a small leather-bound credential, which he reviewed, then slipped into his pocket.The houseboy and gate man at the cover stop didn't give us a second look as we waited in the car chatting while Maxwell made his phantom delivery to a friend, the cover reason for this trip.Shortly, we were headed back to Maxwell's house, where I had been staying since my arrival from Washington, D.C. We had rounded a corner and were proceeding down a side street behind an enormous golden stupa, a Buddhist shrine, that marked the center of town.Suddenly we were caught in the high beams of a vehicle blocking the center of the road. There were two uniformed and armed soldiers standing in front of the headlights of a camouflaged scout car. They signaled us to halt.Maxwell stood on the brakes, and the ancient car lurched to a stop.One of the military men approached the car on the passenger side and rapped on the glass with his swagger stick. SAPPHIRE rolled down the window, and the officer leaned his head so far into the car I was sure they would touch noses.But he was not looking at SAPPHIRE at all. Instead, his gaze was focused on Maxwell."Evening, sir. May I see your papers?"Maxwell presented his credential, handing it over in front of SAPPHIRE.The officer shined his light on it, and then returned it. "Very good, sir. And what about these two gentlemen?"Both SAPPHIRE and I were ready with our documents as well. His were in the credential case that I had given him minutes earlier.After a quick look, the officer handed both of them back to SAPPHIRE and snapped to attention. "Thank you, Excellency," he said.SAPPHIRE saluted back, and we were soon on our way.A little later, we were relaxing over drinks at Maxwell's place, reliving the events of the evening. Maxwell suddenly turned to me. "By the way," he said, "that officer was awfully impressed with SAPPHIRE. What was that all about?""I knew the disguise would make him look older and distinguished," I said, "so I made him an attaché from an Eastern European country -- with the rank of general."SAPPHIRE smiled, enjoying the promotion that he had carried off perfectly.The young Russian KGB officer already had a distinct military bearing.Copyright © 2002 by Antonio J. Mendez and Jonna Mendez Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From the author of the Golden Globe winner and Oscar nominated
  • Argo
  • , a true-life thriller set against the backdrop of the Cold War, which unveils the life of an American spy from the inside and dramatically reveals how the CIA reestablished the upper hand over the KGB in the intelligence war.
  • From the author of the Golden Globe winner and Academy Award winner
  • Argo
  • ... Moscow, 1988. The twilight of the Cold War. The KGB is at its most ruthless, and has now indisputably gained the upper hand over the CIA in the intelligence war. But no one knows how. Ten CIA agents and double-agents have gone missing in the last three years. They have either been executed or they are unaccounted for. At Langley, several theories circulate as to how the KGB seems suddenly to have become telepathic, predicting the CIA's every move. Some blame the defection of Edward Lee Howard three years before, and suspect that there are more high-placed moles to be unearthed. Others speculate that the KGB's surveillance successes have been heightened by the invention of an invisible electromagnetic powder that allows them to keep tabs on anyone who touches it: spy dust. CIA officers Tony Mendez and Jonna Goeser come together to head up a team of technical wizards and operational specialists, determined to solve the mystery that threatens to overshadow the Cold War's final act. Working against known and unknown hostile forces, as well as some unfriendly elements within the CIA, they devise controversial new operational methods and techniques to foil the KGB, and show the extraordinary lengths that US intelligence is willing to go to protect a source, then rescue him when his world starts to collapse. At the same time, Tony and Jonna find themselves falling deeply in love. During a fascinating odyssey that began in Indochina fifteen years before and ends in a breathtakingly daring operation in the heart of the Kremlin's Palace of Congresses,
  • Spy Dust
  • catapults the reader from the Hindu Kush to Hollywood, from Havana to Moscow, but cannot truly conclude until its protagonists are safely wedded in rural Maryland.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(161)
★★★★
25%
(67)
★★★
15%
(40)
★★
7%
(19)
-7%
(-18)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Enjoyable, fascinating account of real world spying

I found this book to be an engrossing look at the real world of espionage. While reading the book I felt like I was reading a script for a spy movie. It's hard to believe that people actually use some of the techniques that you see on the big screen. I'd like to disagree with some of the other reviews about the book. The love story actually is a minor part of the overall structure of the book. I think it makes the authors seem more real and human rather than your usual stereotypical super spy that can leap buildings in single bound. Although I wouldn't consider the book a pinnacle of literary prose, it is very readable and, in general, well written. I particularly enjoyed their detailed decriptions of the actual operations. I felt like I actually got a taste (at least on a superficial level) of the tension, planning, stress, and adrenaline rush that must go on during an operation. I also found Jonna's version of events more enjoyable than Tony's. As to the reviewer who said that there weren't gadgets, well he must have been reading the wrong book. I found plenty of mention of various techniques, but of course they couldn't describe it in detail. I'm sure alot of it is still being used in the field and is still classified! At any rate, this book gives you a good sampling of what the life of real life spies are like and I highly recommend it for a quick informative read.
10 people found this helpful
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Set my career path...

I love this book! When I was a sophomore in college I took a class called Strategic Intelligence in American Democracy. I found it so fascinating that I asked my teacher to suggest some outside reading I could do, and the first book he mentioned was this one. After reading the whole book in less than a week I realized that this was definately something I would like to study further and perhaps even be a part of some day. I'm now about to finish my masters in National Security and Intelligence -- something I very well may not have done if my teacher hadn't suggested this book to me!
3 people found this helpful
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Spy Dust: Two Masters of Disguise Reveal the Tools and Operations That Helped Win the Cold War

I have always been interested and very intrigued with our CIA and really learned a lot about the Agency by reading this book. Tony really has a gift of putting words together to really make you keep reading. I found both their lives very interesting and wish I could have did what they did. It certainly takes a lot of courage. And of course the job of a CIA agent is also very exciting. The bottom line being, keeping our country safe and free. God bless all the men and women risking their lives for our blessed country. And God bless America
3 people found this helpful
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Great book

There is nothing wrong with the content of the book. Interesting what these people accomplished.

The problem I had was with the quality of the print material in the book. New paperback but the print was blurry. Worst print I have seen in years. Resembled the dime store novels years ago.
1 people found this helpful
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Good Reading

The book gives a good insight to what our agents do and how they got informants out by using patience and disguise. Also shows some ofd the inner-workings of CIA politics.
1 people found this helpful
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Spy versus Spy comic strip cowboys

Interesting memoirs from the "CIA spies' make-up artists:" Antonio and Jonna Mendez. Most interesting to me was the (perhaps unintended) sub-text about the dysfunctional management and leadership of the CIA's clandestine services--bosses from hell, unconscionable working hours and conditions (in DC, not to mention overseas), rampant brainless cowboyism, Spy versus Spy comic strip idiocy. Sidney Riley must be spinning in his grave. "The Company" had a long reputation for treating women badly and this book helps us see why 800+ female employees sued CIA for discrimination and won. Whether these two CIA vets, or the CIA itself, had anything to do with winning the Cold War is by no means shown in this book. The pictures are worth a look.
1 people found this helpful
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Love Letter to America's Gestapo

One thing you will notice if you're being harassed and intimidated by the CIA is they like to disguise themselves as people from your past who are now dead. They don't usually interact with you they just make sure you notice them and then walk by. (See the bump described by Daniel Golden in Spy Schools on page 197. ) This is still disturbing even though I know it's happening. When I think of my mom who experienced this too, without understanding anything, I am incandescent with rage. I know too that they might be doing this differently now, with facial recognition software, and manipulative social media they might be making random people move halfway across the country to pop ahead of you in the grocery line. You will encounter this more if you live in a CIA town. They tend to live in clumps. This woman Jonna Mendez should be ashamed of herself for her work with this evil agency and their illegal and immoral actions.
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Have read similar works with authors contributing to them.

Always fascinating - even if this book is a bit dated.
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Five Stars

Excellent
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Four Stars

Very interesting!!