U.S. INTELLIGENCE
Rec. 9 a.m. WASHINGTON, Sept. 5. Mr. James Byrnes, Secretary of State, subscribed to the idea of a unified post-war intelligence corps to help the United States to keep an eye on the rest of the world. He told a Press conference that he believed the Office of Strategic Services which is due to disband at the end of the war might! be retained as the civilian branch of a unified intelligence corps alongside the regular army and navy corps. Thousands of persons had worked for the Office of Strategic Services in the United States overseas, including research experts, anthropologists, archaeologists, experts on commerce, religion, and racial customs, as well as army and navy personnel and parachutists.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXL, Issue 58, 6 September 1945, Page 7
Word Count
119U.S. INTELLIGENCE Evening Post, Volume CXL, Issue 58, 6 September 1945, Page 7
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