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A View from Inside: The CIA and FBI

In collaboration with the International Spy Museum

4-Session Daytime Course

4 sessions, from February 5 to February 26, 2020
Code: 1M2064
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$80
Package Member
$130
Package Non-Member

The 4 programs included in this series are:

In collaboration with the International Spy Museum

4-Session Daytime Course
February 5, 2020 - 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. ET

The CIA and FBI are often portrayed as strained institutional colleagues, but what is it really like to work in these highly secretive agencies tasked with protecting our country? In a fascinating series, veterans of the CIA and FBI discuss their professional roles and how these closely guarded organizations operate.

In collaboration with the International Spy Museum

Daytime Program
February 12, 2020 - 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. ET

The CIA and FBI are often portrayed as strained institutional colleagues, but what is it really like to work in these highly secretive agencies tasked with protecting our country? In a fascinating series, veterans of the CIA and FBI discuss their professional roles and how these closely guarded organizations operate. This session focuses on spy training and education in a ever-changing world.

In collaboration with the International Spy Museum

Daytime Program
February 19, 2020 - 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. ET

The CIA and FBI are often portrayed as strained institutional colleagues, but what is it really like to work in these highly secretive agencies tasked with protecting our country? In a fascinating series, veterans of the CIA and FBI discuss their professional roles and how these closely guarded organizations operate. This session features Cassandra Chandler, a retired assistant director and special agent of the FBI.

In collaboration with the International Spy Museum

Daytime Program
February 26, 2020 - 10:15 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. ET

The CIA and FBI are often portrayed as strained institutional colleagues, but what is it really like to work in these highly secretive agencies tasked with protecting our country? In a fascinating series, veterans of the CIA and FBI discuss their professional roles and how these closely guarded organizations operate. This session focuses on how the CIA surveils, tricks, and catches spies.

The CIA and FBI are both tasked with protecting our country. These two agencies are often portrayed as strained colleagues, but what is it really like inside these iconic institutions? How do spies learn their craft? How are threats assessed? How are spies discovered? And how do these secretive institutions change with the times?  In a fascinating series, veterans of the CIA and FBI discuss their professional roles and how these closely guarded organizations operate.

FEB 5   21st-Century Security Threats

Mike German, a former FBI agent, worked undercover investigating neo-Nazi groups. He examines how and why the post-9/11 FBI failed to view white-nationalist violence and white-collar crime as legitimate security threats, both of which have become front-page news since the 2016 elections. German’s work became the basis of the Daniel Radcliffe film Imperium, and he is the author of Disrupt, Discredit, and Divide, a contemporary history of the FBI since 9/11.

FEB 12  The Spy Whisperer

How do you train someone to spy? How do you collaborate with other countries on spy education and not lose your own secrets?  How are these things consistently accomplished in a dangerously changing world front? Darrell M. Blocker, a 28-year veteran of the CIA’s clandestine service, explores these and other compelling questions and discusses the challenge he faced as chief of all clandestine service operations in sub-Saharan Africa. A recipient of the Distinguished Career Intelligence Medal, Blocker served as deputy director of the CIA’s Counterterrorism Center and chief of the Africa Division.

FEB 19  An Agent for Change

Cassandra Chandler is a retired assistant director and special agent of the FBI. In her 23-year career, she managed, directed, and led criminal, terrorism, and cybercrimes investigations and foreign intelligence activities. She led the redesign of the bureau’s new agents’ training program and developed its National Citizens Academy program for community leaders. Chandler describes her experience as a trailblazer at the bureau and how she became a true agent for change at the FBI before departing in 2008. 

FEB 26   The Spy Finder

James Olson, a former chief of CIA counterintelligence, is an expert on how to find spies. He reviews the threats posed by Chinese, Russian, and Cuban spy services and explains how the CIA surveils, tricks, and catches individuals who turn against their own country. Using cases on which he worked, he also explores his theories about why people become traitors. Olson is the author of To Catch a Spy: The Art of Counterintelligence. 

4 sessions