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Operation Shakespeare

The True Story of an Elite International Sting

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In Operation Shakespeare, investigative journalist John Shiffman traces a high-risk undercover operation launched by an elite undercover Homeland Security unit created to stop the Iranians, Russians, Chinese, Pakistanis, and North Koreans from acquiring sophisticated American-made electronics capable of guiding missiles, jamming radar, and triggering countless weapons—from wireless IEDs to nuclear bombs. The U.S. agents must outwit not only enemy brokers but also American manufacturers and global bankers who are too willing to put profit over national security.


The three-year sting climaxes when the U.S. agents lure the Iranian broker to a former Soviet republic with the promise of American-made radar, fighter-jet, and missile components, then secretly drag him back to the United States, where he is held in secret for two years. The laptop the Iranian carries into the sting provides the CIA with a virtual road map to Tehran's clandestine effort to obtain U.S. military technology.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 12, 2014
      While contemporary notions of surveillance may conjure fears of domestic data mining, Shiffman investigates governmental efforts to use spying for international security. The eponymous sting operation was a mid-2000s attempt to apprehend arms dealers who specialized in running U.S.-made military technology, often “tiny, seemingly innocent items” that “could pose a threat to U.S. Forces.” These devices can have dual uses in, say, either advanced medical work or in illicit bomb building, and it is this ambiguous nature that enables the circumvention of the “ridiculously complex” import/export regulations, allowing malicious smugglers to claim ignorance of the laws. The elaborate sting operation required “subtlety, research, creativity, money, patience, and risk.” Shiffman describes a character-driven “symphony of moving parts,” with fascinating personalities on either side of the battle, contrasting the driven, deceptive American agents with their oblivious, business-oriented Iranian target. The book’s strengths are the humanizing portrayal of the agents and the captivating insights into the psychology of undercover work. Shiffman’s exciting and eye-opening look into the “tiny weapons of modern war” and the international machinations that control them will appeal to espionage junkies and the techno-thriller crowd. Agent: Larry Weissman.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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