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Hardcover Spy: The Inside Story of How the FBI's Robert Hanssen Betrayed America Book

ISBN: 0375507450

ISBN13: 9780375507458

Spy: The Inside Story of How the FBI's Robert Hanssen Betrayed America

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Spy tells, for the first time, the full, authoritative story of how FBI agent Robert Hanssen, code name grayday, spied for Russia for twenty-two years in what has been called the "worst intelligence... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Oh What Tangled Webs He Weaved

Robert Hanssen was in a league of his own. There wasn't another spy to compare him to, and not only for the amount of damage he did to compromise American intelligence to Russia. This was a man of several contradictions. It must have been hard for him to keep his respective roles straight. He was an agent for the FBI, a devoted family man, devout Catholic, obsessed with porn, spying for Russia, and became infatuated with a stripper to the extent that he took her on a trip to Hong Kong and bought her a Mercedes. He was the computer guru who appeared contemptious of other co-workers. It appears to me that he often employed the defense mechanism called reaction formation which means he took an attitude with others the opposite of which produced anxiety in himself. He not only betrayed his country by using his job for personal gain, but horribly betrayed his wife by sharing sexual photos of her to his friend. Hanssen justifies his spying by saying his first job at the FBI was in Scarsdale, New York, and the cost of living there with his minimal salary forced him into needing extra money. Hanssen spent over 20 years compromising America's secrets through approximately 18 drops of documents for the Russians. His Russian contact made sure to massage Hanssen's ego with flattery in communication with him. What the Russians paid for this information was a pittance compared to its value. A tunnel built under the Soviet embassy in Washington that cost hundreds of millions of dollars was for naught as he passed this on to the Russians. Three Soviets working for the FBI were named by Hanssen and were called back to Russia and executed. Apparently it didn't bother his conscience because he would always confess his spying along with his other sins to a Catholic priest. It doesn't appear right to me that he should be able to confess such law infractions and not be reported, but that's another story. This is the third book I've read on Robert Hanssen's life of espionage, and I feel this one is the best.

A page-turner! Couldn't put it down!

Wow. David Wise. Put that name on your favorite authors list. He is now on mine. In "Spy", he presents a comprehensive look into Robert Hanssen's life as a spy. From A to Z, "Spy" looks at Hanssen's childhood, early years at the FBI, then dives right into his 20yr betrayal. There isn't a lot of fluff or forced drama only because it isn't needed. David takes what could have been just a boring spy case and turned it into something out of a Tom Clancy or Robert Ludnum novel. Seriously. There are parts of the book where I literally couldn't put it down. There is talk about tradecraft, dead drops, and leaving signals for his handlers. Great stuff! One section -- where Hanssen is actually searching the FBI databases for his only name, street address, and other keywords to see if the FBI were on to him made me want to scream , "WTF are you doing, buddy. You are gonna get CAUGHT!". Another chapter involves Hanssen and various computer activites at FBI HQ. How he managed to get away with those. The chapters that led up to and go into his capture are nail-biters. Unforseen events surface that could wreck the arrest plan. Lots of never-before-read details about Hanssen and the secrets he gave to the Soviets and then Russians. To read about the sheer magnitude of secrets Hanssen sold to the Russians blew my mind. The book shares the titles of some of the documents Hanssen gave up. Shocking material. Things that an FBI agent had no business having. One example, Hanssen revealed to the Russians some secrets from the NSA. Oh, and the last two chapters delve into Hanssen's motivation for selling out his country. A Ph.D interviewed Hanseen during and after the trial. The book does a wonderful job of dissecting Hanssen's motivations and reasons. Finally, I can't believe how compartmentialized Robert Hanssen was. By day, he is a religious, family man who hates the Soviet Union. By night, he's selling his soul and US secrets to the same Soviet Union. A brilliant book by David Wise. Thank you!

Full of Detail and Great Narration

For the reader who can digest detail and enjoys real-life suspense. A very good book in a subject field that is full of boring background info and exciting moments of piecemeal detective work. This book delves into the part of the story that was not broadcast on the 6pm news. It shows how very human foibles can lead to very expensive and damaging results. This author writes well and researches his story even better. Check his other books and you won't be disappointed. I will likely read this one again.

Agreed -- This is the best Hanssen book

I'll keep it short. As a writer, I appreciate good writing -- clear, smooth, concise, accurate, with sources attributed and richly drawn, but never over-elaborated, portraits of the characters involved. Among these "characters" is Opus Dei, the arch-conservative Catholic cult group sanctioned by the Pope, of which Hanssen-the-killer-spy was an active and evangelical member. "Spy" is, simply put, and not withstanding the enormously complicated story it tells, a very good read. Author David Wise keeps to the facts -- a complex undertaking, which he accomplishes with extraordinary detail and literary grace. (Thank you, Mr. Wise.) He offers expert testimony regarding Hanssen's peculiar and convoluted value system without playing armchair psychologist, and sheds an astonishing light on the realm inhabited by spies, which is just as fraught with danger to life and limb as one might expect. The book also suggests why the CIA and FBI were in such a flummox when the Cold War ended. Both were so deeply mired in the irrelevant ethos and practice of "Spy v. Spy" world that 9-11 must have felt like a kick in the chest by a Clydesdale. That much is evident from "Spy" and it is just as frightening as the murderous activities of moles like Robert Hanssen and Archer Ames. "Spy" is a page turner -- so good, in fact, that I am now a David Wise fan.
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