"A Knowledge Taxonomy for Army Intelligence Training: An Assessment of the Military Intelligence Basic Officer Leaders Course Using Lundvall’s Knowledge Taxonomy" Texas State University.
•
In the United States, Army Intelligence is usually referred to as Military Intelligence (see main article: Military Intelligence Corps (United States Army)).
He held the rank of Lieutenant Colonel at his discharge on February 26, 1946, one of the youngest in Army Intelligence to hold that rank.
He was involved in the creation of Field Operations Intelligence, a top secret Army Intelligence unit that later came under joint military and Central Intelligence Agency control.
United States Army | British Army | Union Army | Army | Red Army | United States Army Corps of Engineers | Central Intelligence Agency | Confederate States Army | United States Army Air Forces | Australian Army | Indian Army | French Army | British Indian Army | Provisional Irish Republican Army | Imperial Japanese Army | army | United States Army Reserve | Continental Army | People's Liberation Army | Army of the Potomac | Irish Republican Army | German Army | Canadian Army | Yugoslav People's Army | United States Army Air Corps | Secret Intelligence Service | People's Liberation Army Navy | Pakistan Army | Territorial Army (United Kingdom) | Soviet Army |
He was named Chief of Army intelligence in October 1953 but was relieved of his command 20 months later when Allen W. Dulles, Director of Central Intelligence, sent a scathing memorandum of complaints to the Pentagon.
However, the IRA Intelligence Department (IRAID) was one step ahead of them and was receiving information from numerous well-placed sources, including Lily Merin, who was the confidential code clerk for British Army Intelligence Centre in Parkgate Street, and Sergeant Jerry Mannix, stationed in Donnybrook.
Operation Dark Heart, a memoir by U.S. Army intelligence officer Lt. Col Anthony Shaffer
After serving in U.S. Army Intelligence after the fall of Nazi Germany, he returned to finish his studies at the University of Chicago where he earned his B.A. (1946), M.A. (1948), and Ph.D. (1949) in economics, which he studied with Milton Friedman and Frank Knight.
They immediately contacted police, who contacted Major General (retired) R. H. Van Deman, a former head of Army intelligence.
In World War II, Butler returned to military service in the Army Intelligence Corps, recruiting many former students including Bernard Willson to work on code breaking at Bletchley Park.
Paxton was an uncle of comic book writer Ed Brubaker as well as retired army intelligence officer, Col. David O. Paxton.
Reinhard Gehlen approached US Army intelligence shortly after the end of the war, and offered his files and staff on the Eastern Front and Soviet Union.
George Veazey Strong (1880-1946) was a U.S. Army general who served as Chief of Army Intelligence during World War II.