I was an American spy
Sidney F. Mashbir (Author)
Besides being an exciting story, Colonel Mashbir's 1953 autobiography is almost a textbook in the art of espionage and counter-espionage. Colonel Mashbir (1891-1973) led an adventurous life - At the age of thirteen, he started his military career as a bugle boy in the Arizona Guard, in the still untamed Arizona Territory. During 1914-1916, he served under General Funston and General Pershing, and went on daring missions across the U.S./Mexican border during the Mexican Revolution. To protect U.S homeland security prior to and during World War One, Mashbir headed the U.S. Army's Eastern Division section of counter-espionage where he eliminated an extensive domestic spy network. In the early 1920s, while attached to the U.S. Embassy in Japan, Mashbir went on a perilous special mission into Russia and China, where he used his clever bluffing abilities to prevent a regional war. When World War Two erupted, Colonel Mashbir became General MacArthur's top intelligence advisor. He commanded a top secret, 4,600 member intelligence gathering organization called A.T.I.S. (Allied Translator and Interpreter Section) that dramatically shaped the successful war strategy in the Pacific. Mashbir's military career continued into the Atomic Age. As a pioneer of modern intelligence, Mashbir was one of the two men who prepared the first draft implementing directives for the creation of the CIA at the request of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. This unsung American hero deserves to be known about, resulting in the publication of the 65th Anniversary Edition of his epic life. It presents the odyssey of a cunning Master Spy, who engaged in covert diplomacy and dangerous missions to shape world events. (from Amazon)
Print Book, English, 1953
Vantage Press, New York, 1953