With almost no public discussion or notice, the FBI has evolved to be the only truly global crime-fighting organization. Whereas the FBI was originally conceived to be a domestic law enforcement organization—the CIA was supposed to handle American interests overseas—with cases increasingly focused on cybercrime and organized crime groups like the Russian mafia, al-Qaeda terror networks, and Central American or Asian gangs, the FBI now operates in more than a third of all countries every day and has hundreds of personnel deployed internationally. They’ve even investigated a case in Antarctica. In fact, their overseas force is now roughly a tenth of the size of the entire State Department’s foreign service. In some countries, the FBI has unique partnerships with local police that allow them to operate as if they’re in the United States.
On the morning of May 1, 2011, most Americans had never heard of Abbottabad. By that night, the dusty midsize city near the mountains of northwest Pakistan was the center of the biggest story in the world. A team of U.S. Navy SEALs had just descended by helicopter on a high-walled mansion there in the dark of night, located the globe’s most hunted man and killed him. Read more…
Meet General Paul Nakasone. He reined in chaos at the NSA and taught the US military how to launch pervasive cyberattacks. And he did it all without you noticing. In the years before he became America’s most powerful spy, Paul Nakasone acquired an unusually personal understanding of the country’s worst intelligence failures.

On the 80th anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, the Pulitzer Prize finalist whose work is “oral history at its finest” (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) delivers an epic narrative of the atomic bomb’s creation and deployment, woven from the voices of hundreds of scientists, generals, soldiers, and civilians.

Watergate: A New History

The inside story of how America's enemies launched a cyber war against us-and how we've learned to fight back With each passing year, the internet-linked attacks on America's interests have grown in both frequency and severity. Overmatched by our military, countries like North Korea, China, Iran, and Russia have found us vulnerable in cyberspace. The "Code War" is upon us. In this dramatic book, former Assistant Attorney General John P. Carlin takes readers to the front lines of a global but little-understood fight as the Justice Department and the FBI chases down hackers, online terrorist recruiters, and spies. Today, as our entire economy goes digital, from banking to manufacturing to transportation, the potential targets for our enemies multiply. This firsthand account is both a remarkable untold story and a warning of dangers yet to come.


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