Introduction
1 Foreign Intelligence at the Beginning of the War
2 The Birth of the Examination Unit
3 Building Alliances
4 Canadian HUMINT Collection
5 The Mousetrap Operation, 1942-43
6 Canadian Intelligence at War
7 Planning for Postwar SIGINT
8 Postwar Intelligence Structures
9 The Postwar SIGINT Community
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
A convincing portrait of Canada's active role in Second World War intelligence gathering.
Kurt F. Jensen is a former Canadian diplomat whose assignments included work with foreign intelligence. He also teaches political science at Carleton University.
Jensen’s work will prove to be a significant historiographical
foundation on which future scholars will undoubtedly build their
own studies of intelligence in the later Cold War and post-9/11
periods.
*H-Canada*
Kurt Jensen’s well-researched Cautious Beginnings: Canadian Foreign
Intelligence 1939-51 sets out the historical case for Canada’s
decision in 1951 to not create its own clandestine foreign
intelligence service.
*International Journal of Intelligence and Counter Intelligence,
Vol 24, No 2*
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