Seduced by Secrets: Inside the Stasi's Spy-Tech World
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Average customer review:Product Description
More fascinating than fiction, Seduced by Secrets takes the reader inside the real world of one of the most effective and feared spy agencies in history. The book reveals, for the first time, the secret technical methods and sources of the Stasi (East German Ministry for State Security) as it stole secrets from abroad and developed gadgets at home, employing universal, highly guarded techniques often used by other spy and security agencies. Seduced by Secrets draws on secret files from the Stasi archives, including CIA-acquired material, interviews and friendships, court documents, and unusual visits to spy sites, including "breaking into" a prison, to demonstrate that the Stasi overestimated the power of secrets to solve problems and created an insular spy culture more intent on securing its power than protecting national security. It recreates the Stasi's secret world of technology through biographies of agents, defectors, and officers and by visualizing James Bond-like techniques and gadgets. In this highly original book, Kristie Macrakis adds a new dimension to our understanding of the East German Ministry for State Security by bringing the topic into the realm of espionage history and exiting the political domain.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #65714 in Books
- Published on: 2008-03-21
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 392 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Thoroughly researched, Seduced by Secrets gives us an important, unmatched, insider account of East German intelligence. Kristie Macrakis writes with a scholar's eye and novelist's skills, revealing secrets and spy tradecraft never meant for public disclosure."
Pete Earley, best-selling author of Comrade J: The Untold Secrets of Russia's Master Spy in America After the End of the Cold War
"This book on the vaunted GDR secret service provides a fascinating inside view of the Stasi's spying efforts as well as technologies. Written in an accessible style, it is nonetheless based on exhaustive research in the Stasi files and many oral interviews. The first part paints vivid pictures of some of the major spy cases of the Cold War. The second part, which will gladden the heart of any espionage aficionado, discusses spy technology from invisible ink to smell samples. The result is a remarkable and readable synthesis of the East German spying operations."
Konrad Jarausch, Lurcy Professor of European Civilization, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
"Easily the most detailed, painstaking research yet undertaken on the Stasi's techniques and secrets. Certainly the most absorbing analysis of an organization hitherto steeped in mystery."
Nigel West, Director of Counterintelligence Studies, The Center for Counterintelligence and Security Studies, Washington DC
"Seduced by Secrets makes a significant contribution to our knowledge of how the Stasi did what it did..." -Daniel Johnson, Commentary
"Drawing upon declassified documents seized from STASI files (it is now defunct) and interviews with former officers, Ms. Macrakis has produced a first-rate read...[This book] deserve[s] a five cloak-and-dagger rating. Good reading for the specialist and the layman alike." - Joseph C. Goulden, The Washington Times
"...fine scholarship and a valuable and unique contribution to intelligence literature. " -Hayden B. Peake, Studies in Intelligence
"Rarely does an intelligence book come along that offers unique insights on spy gadgetry beyond what has already been written, and the importance of Western technology...[for] the outcome of the Cold War...But then Kristie Macrakis is not your usual writer/author. Her Harvard doctorate in the history of science and technology, along with...teaching intelligence, and a life-long interest in the spy technology of the Cold War, has yielded a book that needed to be writtenŠThe book is assuredly a must for those spy literature aficionados interested in real, as opposed to fictional, spy stories." -Gene Poteat, The Intelligencer
"Seduced by Secrets is, and will likely remain, the best book on the former East German Ministerium fu¨r Staatssicherheit (Ministry for State Security or MfS) and its foreign intelligence service , the Hauptverwaltung Aufkla¨rung (Main Directorate Intelligence or HV A)." -Benjamin Fischer, Journal: International Journal for Intelligence and Counterintelligence.
"...the depth of the author's research and her superior understanding of the German psyche are definite enablers for an astute reader." -John R. Arpin, Naval War College Review
"Macrakis provides a fascinating view inside the spy technology of the Stasi...sources have allowed her to paint a rich picture of the Stasi's quest for Western technology and its struggles to make use of acquired information.../Seduced by Secrets/ offers a revealing look at the difficult-to-observe history of a modern intelligence agency. It provides scholars with an insightful analysis and a new perspective for thinking about the relationship of technology and the Cold War..." -John Laprise,Technology and Culture
"...a powerful volume. It objectively details some of the MfS's most closely guarded secrets...Macrakis does not single out the Stasi and its East Bloc counterparts for condemnation. Instead, she clearly shows that many of these agencies' actions and techniques were "strikingly similar" to methods used by Western intelligence...In an era when Congress has often taken a back seat to an increasingly secretive executive branch, Macrakis' historical account offiers a potent reminder of the need for democratic oversight of intelligence agencies." -German Studies Review
"A brilliantly written report that is based on the evaluation of new files from the Birthler-Office [for the Stasi files] and the Rosenholz data. It is written with a detective's nose and the precision of passion." -Urs Rauber /Neue Züricher Zeitung /am Sonntag (NZZ am Sonntag)
"Macrakis has written a terrific book that will make fascinating reading for general audiences as well as experts.... the author should be lauded for her willingness to move beyond the well-trodden path of Stasi research, especially to consider the material culture and scientific aspects of GDR spying, and the elegance with which she does it.../Seduced by Secrets/ provides fascinating insights into the role of technology at the East German Ministry of State Security (MfS)...highly recommended for anyone interested in espionage." -H-Net Review, Katrin Paehler
About the Author
Kristie Macrakis received her Ph.D in the History of Science from Harvard University in 1989 and then spent a post-doctoral year in Berlin, Germany. She is currently a professor of the history of science at Michigan State University. She is the author of numerous articles and books on science and politics in modern Germany, including Surviving the Swastika (Oxford, 1993) and Science Under Socialism (Harvard, 1999). She has received grants and fellowships from the National Science Foundation, Fulbright, Humboldt, and the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton.
Customer Reviews
History of Technology as Both the End and the Means in East German Espionage.
"Seduced by Secrets" is a study of East Germany's Ministry for State Security (MfS), or the "Stasi", from the point of view of a science and technology historian. The fall of East Germany created a unique opportunity to understand and analyze a modern intelligence agency, once powerful and now defunct, as four decades of the MfS' confidential records were thrown open for all to see. Author Kristie Macrackis sifted through thousands of those files and interviewed former East German agents to piece together a technological history of the MfS' domestic and foreign intelligence operations. Aimed at interested laymen, historians, and intelligence professionals, "Seduced by Secrets" peers behind the Iron Curtain to illuminate the challenges and accomplishments of modern high-tech espionage.
The book is divided into two parts and addresses the role of technology in Cold War espionage in two different senses. The first part, called "High-Tech", discusses East Germany's efforts to acquire technology and technological information from the West, which was its primary goal, in order to save domestic companies research and development costs and to create an indigenous microelectronics industry. Macrakis includes a history of the Sector for Science and Technology (SWT), which was charged with the task of stealing Western technologies. As industrial intelligence was primarily gathered by humans, this part of the book is about the people -the SWT elite, the agents, double agents, defectors, their operations and their goals.
While the first part of the book consists mainly of stories -histories, operations, agents- the second part, called "Spy-Tech", is more dense and technical. It describes the technologies created by the Technical Operations Sector (OTS) for use in spying and their applications. There are chapters on containers and the gadgets that they concealed, invisible inks and secret writing, observation and surveillance photography, radio intelligence and counterintelligence, smell science, and the use of chemical or radioactive substances to track people. There are stories here too, but the emphasis is on the technologies themselves and how they were used.
The MfS tends to be remembered in the West for its Orwellian domestic spying, but "Seduced by Secrets" is an eye-opener on its foreign intelligence programs. Macrakis does not take asides in East-West or communist-capitalist politics, but presents intelligence operations on both sides in a neutral tone. Because espionage is a cat-and-mouse game, we gain some insight into CIA and NSA operations also. Kristie Macrakis starts out by questioning "the ability of intelligence and security to solve a nation's problems", using East Germany's self-perpetuating spy culture as an example of too much cost, risk, and loss of liberty for too little reward. The content of "Seduced by Secrets" only indirectly addresses that issue but gives the reader an abundance of information from which to draw your own conclusion.
"The Spies Who Came in from the Cold"
The Eastern German Ministry for State Security, or Stasi, was a premier intelligence agency, perfecting both political, social and economic espionage during the Cold War era. Engaging in covert operations throughout Western Europe, the United States, and elsewhere, Stasi was able to infiltrate both government entities and corporate organizations in order to further the country's technological, military and industrial prowess.
Kristie Macrakis, Professor of the History of Science at Michigan State University, has written a masterful, impeccably and meticulously researched book, which explores in engaging scope and detail, the machinations of this both feared and respected organizations. Drawing on Stasi's archives, interviews with former officials, and a wealth of material from other groups including the CIA, her picture of Stasi is a comprehensive exploration that reads like a novel in the finest traditions of the espionage genre. Although the primary focus is on the technology developed, borrowed, or stolen by the agency, the book artfully captures the human element ranging from personal motivation, organizational politics and maneuvering, and insular culture that represented the paranoia of the time.
Carefully crafted, Professor Macrakis' work displays a clean crisp writing style, eschewing unnecessary jargon, to unmask the face of a faceless organization. Not content with merely secondary or documentary sources, she has interviewed numerous participants in this dance of seducton, providing the reader with in-depth knowledge and experience. Here we see flawed human characters, carefully and deliberately exposed, to paint a detailed portrait of this relic. Without becoming mired in sensationalism, "Seduced by Secrets," provides a vivid uncompromising picture of those motivated by both idealistic and baser human emotions. It serves as an effective reminder of the human personalities that engage in similar work throughout the world and a warning to those who think that
The book is worthwhile from the standpoint of history and human behavior. I cannot recommend this book more highly and hope to see additional books from Kristie Macrakis. If her lectures at Michigan State are as interesting as this book, her students are privileged indeed.
A very detailed account of the techniques used by the East German security agency
Once the two distinct German states were created shortly after the end of World War II, the communist East German nation developed a security service designed to simultaneously spy on the western nations, particularly West Germany and keep their citizens in line. This security agency was formally known as Ministerium für Staatssicherheit (Ministry for State Security) but was commonly abbreviated as Stasi and known by the acronym MfS.
The MfS wove a vast network of internal informants and sent a large number of sleeper agents posing as refugees into West Germany. The common language and culture of the people of the two German nations in combination with their vastly different ideologies meant that there was a constant struggle between the security services of both nations. This was also one segment of the greater struggle between the spy agencies of their two sponsoring superpowers of the United States and the Soviet Union.
This book is a (very) detailed description of the tactics of the Stasi. Some of it is amusing, for example the clothes containing the smells of suspects kept in sealed glass jars. Other aspects are disturbing, such as the alleged use of dangerous and radioactive substances to track suspects. Overall, it is a fascinating look into the methods and tactics of the near forty year existence of what was a very effective spy agency. Given their weakness in technology, the MfS concentrated on human weaknesses to cultivate their human intelligence sources.
It turns out that the spy game is much like most of the other aspects of life. To get people to do what you want, often against their wishes, you exploit their weaknesses for money, sex, power or appeal to their ego. Communism failed as a political and economic system, yet they were very efficient in some areas. Three of them were education, keeping the crime rate low and in spying on everyone the state deemed worth investigating. This book demonstrates how effective one communist state was in carrying out the third.



