New York: Random House, 1967. — 308 p.
The Espionage Establishment describes in unprecedented detail - much of it secret until now - the espionage operations and organizations of the major powers, focusing on the Soviet Union, Great Britain, Communist China and the United States.
Some of its remarkable revelations include:
How the KGB, the Soviet intelligence organization, used President Kennedy’s funeral for espionage purposes;
The identity of one of the most powerful men in England, the legendary head of M.1.6, and his secret London headquarters;
How the KGB’s effort to purchase dairy farms along the U.S.-Canadian border touched off a sex-and-security scandal;
How the CIA established a secret Domestic Operations Division — only a block from the White House;
A portrait of Red China’s aging spy master, and how his “Social Affairs Department" operates throughout the world.