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Central Intelligence Agency CIA releases more documents related to RFK assassination The CIA released a new batch of declassified documents surrounding the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy in 1968.
The Central Intelligence Agency is the national organization in charge of amassing political, social, economic, technological and military intelligence on an international scale. Their primary ...
The Central Intelligence Agency fired a slew of recent hires this week, three people familiar with the matter said, cuts that current and former U.S. intelligence officers warned would risk ...
The Agency: Central Intelligence is back on the case, with the entire cast celebrating Season 2's production start. See the new images here!
With a single directive last week Harry Truman: 1) created a new agency in Washington; 2) put the U.S. in the business of international espionage; 3) ended, for a while at least, a bitter, ...
The letters are the first examples of the national security and intelligence workforce being included in broader efforts to downsize the federal government by the Trump administration.
The Trump administration is planning significant personnel cuts at the Central Intelligence Agency and other major U.S. spy units, downsizing the government’s most sensitive national security ...
MCLEAN, Va. (7News) — The front gate at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) headquarters in McLean, Virginia, is closed after a shooting on the property early Thursday morning, the Fairfax ...
The Central Intelligence Agency has thrown its weight behind the lab leak theory as the most plausible origin of COVID-19 in a “low confidence” assessment.
The Central Intelligence Agency on Tuesday became the first major national security agency to offer so-called buyouts to its entire workforce, a CIA spokesperson and two other sources familiar ...
CIA now says Covid-19 is more likely to have originated from a lab leak The intelligence agency has said for years it couldn’t say with certainty where the pandemic originated from.
In a wide-ranging exit interview, NPR's Mary Louise Kelly asks Central Intelligence Agency director William Burns about the resurgence of ISIS, and what's next for the intel community.