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CIA & KGB Gadgets On Display

ricst writes "Been postponing that visit to the Reagan Presidential library? Well, delay no more, because they are hosting an exhibit of some formerly secret CIA and KGB gadgets. reports, "For the first time, the public is getting a large scale view of the CIA's and KGB's real-life James Bond gadgets, from a replica of the Russians' deadly poison-dart umbrella to some of the Amercians' most ingeniously concealed cameras." The last 200 years of history of technology is reflected in these spy devices that go back to the Revolutionary War."

39 of 136 comments (clear)

  1. MGB Gadgets? by R2.0 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Like the one-of-a-kind Lucas alternator that works?

    --
    "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
  2. CIA has thier own museum. by RobL3 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Believe it or not, the CIA has thier own museum complete with cool old spy gizmos. It's even online at:
    http://www.cia.gov/cia/information/artifacts/

    1. Re:CIA has thier own museum. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
  3. Microdot by Sarcazmo · · Score: 3, Funny

    The world's first microdot, a document shrunken down to a tiny point, is also on display. It dates back to 1852.

    Wow, and here I was thinking that Hoffman didn't invent LSD until 1943.

  4. Lucas: Prince of Darkness! by wiredog · · Score: 2

    A friend of mine had a 69 650 Triumph Bonneville. And that Lucas t-shirt. He rewired the bike to use circuit breakers rather than fuses.

  5. NSA museum by asmithmd1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You might not believe it but the NSA has their own museum National Cryptologic Museum It has a real ENIGMA machine as well as the machine used to break the codes. The displays pretty much end in the 70's or 80's with a massive CRAY machine as the most modern thing they show

  6. WHERES THE CAT ??? by CDWert · · Score: 2

    All I wanna see is the cat the cia cyborgized for remote recon mission, I

    Oh, I forgot, after all those millions, frankenkitty got squashed....

    This ought to be called the obsurdity display, How mush of these toys actually produced results ?

    What about all the mind control devices the CIA and KGB played with in the 50's and 60's ?

    WHAT ?? Theyre still using them?!?

    ......I forgot what I was going to say.....

    --
    Sig went tro...aahemmm.....fishing........
  7. Funny KGB Joke by Commienst · · Score: 5, Funny

    My Russian freind told me this joke one day.

    Place and time: somewhere in the Soviet Union in 1930s.

    The phone rings at KGB headquarters.
    "Hello?"
    "Hello, is this KGB?"
    "Yes. What do you want?"
    "I'm calling to report my neighbor Yankel Rabinovitz as an enemy of the
    State. He is hiding undeclared diamonds in his firewood."
    "This will be noted."

    Next day, the KGB goons come over to Rabinovitz's house. They search the shed where the firewood is kept, break every piece of wood, find no diamonds, swear at Yankel Rabinovitz and leave.

    The phone rings at Rabinovitz's house.
    "Hello, Yankel! Did the KGB come?"
    "Yes."
    "Did they chop your firewood?"
    "Yes, they did."
    "Okay, now its your turn to call. I need my vegetable patch plowed."

    --

    I am into the copy and paste.
    1. Re:Funny KGB Joke by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Funny
      I miss the old Russian sub crew commercials, where they show up at an appliance store. (These were run in the 80's IIRC and are still a source of humor among my friends and I)

      Sub Captain: Hello, you! We require jumbo savings!

      Salesman well come right this way...

      a bunch of stuff shown, the Russian crew is back on the sub

      Sub Captain: Plotchnik, where Plotchnik?

      cut back to the store where a russian sailor is attempting to kiss the hand of a woman

      Plotchnik: Fifty watts per channel, babycakes.

      Woman yanks her hand away and leaves

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    2. Re:Funny KGB Joke by zerocool^ · · Score: 2

      Knock Knock.

      Who's there?

      Ghestapo.

      Ghestapo who?

      VEE ASK DE QUESTIONS HERE


      What did the german clock maker say to the broken clock?

      Vee have vays of making you tock

      Thank you.

      --
      sig?
  8. CIA article by T-Punkt · · Score: 2, Informative

    I wanted to know how this "liberator pistol" (mentioned in the article) looks like, googled for it and found this link of an
    CIA article with some pictures of older and/or pre-CIA stuff.

    1. Re:CIA article by Rolo+Tomasi · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The Division's products ranged from silenced pistols to limpet mines to "Aunt Jemima," an allegedly explosive powder packaged in Chinese flour bags.
      I've read about this stuff before once. From what I've heard you could even bake pancakes out of it and eat them! Anyone have more on this?
      --
      Did you know you can fertilize your lawn with used motor oil?
  9. Perhaps the deadliest gadget of all: by the_consumer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Also on display is a pair of Diana Rigg's leather pants from the hit British TV spy series "The Avengers."

    --
    "If you're thinking what I'm thinking, you're right." -
    1. Re:Perhaps the deadliest gadget of all: by dbCooper0 · · Score: 2, Funny
      I beg to differ - the leather pants were just a protective cover...

      --
      db
      Cig:
      ôô
      /`
  10. "Liberator" pistols... by mttlg · · Score: 3, Informative
    From the article:

    From the early days of the CIA's predecessor, the Office of Strategic Services, there are tire spikes, bombs and "liberator pistols." The latter were mass produced for $1.72 each and dropped to resistance fighters during World War II.

    Somehow, I don't think I'd want to brag about poorly designed, cheap guns that were dropped in large quantities to anyone claiming to be a "resistance fighter," which many times turned out to be a German intelligence operative. Or maybe they were hoping that the Germans would try to use them...

    But one device CIA officials say they never had was a version of the KGB's deadly umbrella that was used by an unknown assailant to kill Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov in London in 1978. A model of the umbrella is part of the display.

    Death lasers, early death from too much sleep, Unix configurations, deadly umbrellas... I realize that Valentines day was just a few days ago, and a certain someone is entering into a particularly serious contract, but there's really only so much death you need on the front page...

    1. Re:"Liberator" pistols... by Oggust · · Score: 4, Informative
      Somehow, I don't think I'd want to brag about poorly designed, cheap guns that were dropped in large quantities to anyone claiming to be a "resistance fighter," which many times turned out to be a German intelligence operative. Or maybe they were hoping that the Germans would try to use them...

      The germans already had (way better) guns. This was someting like a single-shot, non-reloadable pretty concealable .45. The idea was for the wannabe resistance fighter to kill a german soldier with it and take his gun. From what I understand the plan worked fairly well.

      /August.

      --
      "An object declared as type _Bool is large enough to store the values 0 and 1." -- 6.1.2.5, C99 standard.
  11. Goverment Intelligence = oxymoron by Alien54 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Spy gadgets from the other side are on display as well, including a replica of a large wooden seal of the United States that was a gift from the Soviet Union to Moscow's U.S. Embassy in 1945. It hung over the ambassador's desk for seven years before the listening device was discovered.

    And These are people who were suspicious of the Russians to begin with? jeeze.....

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  12. CIA modified full text !!! by xtrat · · Score: 2, Funny

    The full text should read: They must be mistaken, the US doesn't spy on other countries... See now isn't it funny :)

    --
    I give up, some one get me when Elvis returns...
  13. The obvious irony... by Bodrius · · Score: 5, Funny

    I know this is stating the obvious, but:

    A large wooden gift from your rivals?

    And you accept it at face value and bring it into your fortress?

    And it just happens to have a secret compartment with an electronic spy hidden in it?

    Hello?

    Weren't diplomats supposed to have gone to Ivy Schools where they teach all that literature in dead languages?

    --
    Freedom is the freedom to say 2+2=4, everything else follows...
    1. Re:The obvious irony... by Whomp-Ass · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ...and here are a few pictures of that seal, along with an in depth story concerning past American blunders in the USSR...

      e.g. IIRC the embassy in the USSR (having been built by soviets, using soviet materials) was bugged *so* badly, deeply, and ingeniously that the US was forced to build several extra floors (using US labor and materials) on top of the original.

    2. Re:The obvious irony... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I've heard that decades later, the Russkys did it again, and the Amis fell for it again.

      That second time, it was a large metal seal. Of course, this time it was dutyfully searched for electronic listening devices, but none were found. The design was much more ingenious this time: the seal itself was the listening device. It would act as a giant microphone's membrane and vibrate along the sound waves. In order to listen in, the Russians would send an RF beam in its general direction, and the seal's vibrations would modulate the signal and reflect it back (remember: it was made of metal), carrying all conversations that happened near the seal.

    3. Re:The obvious irony... by Zoop · · Score: 2

      Weren't diplomats supposed to have gone to Ivy Schools where they teach all that literature in dead languages?

      Yeah, unfortunately, a) the Russians unhelpfully refuse to speak Ancient Greek, and b) the Ivy League has become home to lazy, blow-dried hair idiots, the ultimate in PHBs whose only merit is being litter from the loins of previous graduates. I mean, Gore got worse grades than Bush for cryin' out loud, yet they both graduated.

      The days of Wild Bill Donovan are long behind us.

      Bah. (waving paw)

    4. Re:The obvious irony... by Aexia · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      >>Gore got worse grades than Bush for cryin' out loud, yet they both graduated.

      Another person who swallowed YAMM(Yet Another Media Mischaracterization).

      Ask yourself, if Gore got worse grades than Bush, than how did Gore graduate cum laude and Bush did not?

    5. Re:The obvious irony... by autocracy · · Score: 2

      Duh - Bush is the first president with an IQ below 100! Don't you read the National Enquirer?

      --
      SIG: HUP
  14. micro dot? by Em+Emalb · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The article said the earliest microdot was made (i think) in 1854. Anyone know how this was done? Kinda light on details there.

    On a side note, where's the sharks with frickin' laser beams? They had Dr. Evil's ring, but not the sea bass? What gives?

    --
    Sent from your iPad.
  15. Any X10's? by mccalli · · Score: 2, Funny
    Because after all, you can "stick this wireless camera anywhere!".

    Cheers,
    Ian

  16. Pop Culture imports by parliboy · · Score: 2

    What I'd like to know from something like this is whether any tradecraft originally developed for movies, TV, etc. were later imported into industrial use. Like, maybe comrade Boris thought to make a real version when he saw Maxwell Smart's shoe.

    --
    "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
  17. No poison umbrella by JohnBE · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Organizations like the CIA are so compartmentalized that I wouldn't expect anyone to make a definitive comment like 'CIA officials say there is no poision umbrella', probably translates to 'in my knowledge there is no poison umbrella'. For anyone, apart from the director, to say that there is no X or Y is wrong.

    Each employee probably knows his job section, the admin staff in his job section and nothing more. The canteens are seperated, the sections are seperated, even within sections the compartmentalization is such that one man can not have more knowledge than they need to complete their task.

    So my point is that their may well be no poison umbrella, but anonymous officials tend to spout the current political masters party line and know as little (or as much) about various departments as is dictated by overall security protocol. Which is good because it protects both the individual (can't cough up in interrogation or sell what he doesn't know) and therefore organization as a whole.

    --
    e4 e5
    1. Re:No poison umbrella by mgblst · · Score: 2

      Generally the CIA and other security services are the good guys.

      Depens on where you are standing. If inside US, and dont really care about your rights, then i can see why this statement would be true. Anywhere else, or you do care, then they are defn not the good guys.

  18. Bomb Photo Caption by Habberhead · · Score: 2, Informative

    Did I fail history or was the atomic bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima named "Little Boy"? The caption for the article calls it "Fat Man". But I seem to remember in my foggy brain that "Fat Man" was dropped on Nagasaki, three days later.

    Anyone?

    1. Re:Bomb Photo Caption by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 2
      You're right, "Fat Man" was dropped on Nagasaki. A great example of "accuracy" in the news we get. Perhaps this is an attempt to rewrite history? 1984?


      "Never blame on maliciousness that which can be explained away by stupidity." And trust me, there's more than enough stupidity in this world to go around.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
  19. Another Secret Services Joke by Commienst · · Score: 4, Funny

    Apropos recent events, in case you're wondering what will become of all the unemployed KGB men in the event of a change of regime in the USSR, I was talking to a German friend recently and asked him what had become of all the former Stasi secret policement of East Germany.

    "Oh they're all taxi drivers now," he said, "it was the obvious solution."

    "Why is that?" I asked.

    "Simple," he said, "you just give them your name--and they know where you live."

    --

    I am into the copy and paste.
  20. Death of a Businessman by Commienst · · Score: 2, Funny

    A group of serving secret agents claimed Tuesday their superiors had ordered them to assassinate Boris Berezovsky (pictured), the controversial billionaire with close ties to Kremlin chief Boris Yeltsin and his family...Political commentator Andrei Piontkovsky said the furore was ironic given charges by Yeltsin's former chief bodyguard, Aleksander
    Korzhakov, that Berezovsky had asked him to have rival business baron Vladimir Gusinsky eliminated in 1994.--Reuters, Nov. 19
    (Boris Berezovsky is pacing back and forth in front of Boris Yeltsin's desk in the Kremlin. Yeltsin is busy writing)

    Berezovsky: Boris Nikolayevich, you must do something!

    Yeltsin: (without looking up) I am doing something, Boris, I'm working with documents.

    Berezovsky: (looking at paper in front of Yeltsin) You're doing a crossword puzzle!

    Yeltsin: I am TRYING to do a crossword puzzle. I'd be making much more progress if you weren't distracting me with your whining and complaining about people trying to kill you.

    Berezovsky: (outraged) People? People trying to kill me Boris Nikolayevich? It's the KGB trying to kill me! The KGB!

    Yeltsin: How can the KGB be trying to kill you when there is no KGB? There's the FSB...the "toothless shadow of a former Russian intelligence organization." Five across.

    Berezovsky: Toothless? It may be toothless but it's still armed Boris Nikolayevich - and the FSB is trying to kill me!

    Yeltsin: That's about the best guarantee of long life you could have.

    Berezovsky: That's easy for you to say, Boris Nikolayevich, but for me it is a source of constant worry!

    Yeltsin: (still concentrating on puzzle) Boris, if you found out that the mafia was trying to kill you, then I would say go ahead and worry, but the FSB? Who goes to the FSB when they want someone killed? Do you go to the FSB when you want someone killed?

    Berezovsky: No, but ...hey, what makes you think I get people killed?

    Yeltsin: Oh, I was speaking purely hypothetically, of course. So what would you do if you wanted someone killed?

    Berezovsky: (with an air of giving the question serious consideration) Well, let's see. I guess I'd send them somewhere dangerous. Like Chechnya. Or Miami.

    Yeltsin: Assuming you can't send them anywhere. Assuming you have to do the job here in Moscow. What would you do then?

    Berezovsky: Well, I might - and this is purely hypothetical of course - I might stand behind him in a crowd in Red Square and yell "So YOU'RE the one who got us into this financial mess!"

    Yeltsin: Hmm, clever, but not altogether reliable.

    Berezovsky: (warming to his theme) Or I could replace his briefcase with one of those nuclear suitcase bombs Lebed is always on about.

    Yeltsin: In which case, you'd wipe out most of the region. A bit excessive, I'd say.

    Berezovsky: Yes, I suppose - okay, how about this? I send him to the next Communist Party convention in a "Lenin Sucks" t-shirt.

    Yeltsin: Yes, that would probably do it. But you notice, you haven't once said, "I'd go to the FSB and ask them to knock him off," have you?

    Berezovsky: No.

    Yeltsin: So are you ready to admit that you've overreacted to the idea that the FSB is trying to kill you?

    Berezovsky: Well...maybe...

    Yeltsin: Good, then all's well. Give my regards to your family.

    Berezovsky: (leaving) I will. Good-bye Boris Nikolayevich.

    Yeltsin: (returning to puzzle) Four down - "one who is easily duped, a sucker." B-E-R-E-Z-O-V-S-K-Y...

    --

    I am into the copy and paste.
  21. Re:Suitcase nuclear bomb by 3rd_Floo · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yes, the suitcase that rendered the carrier dead within 5 hours due to the amount of leeky radiation!

  22. no umbrella of our own, huh ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    http://www.jfk-assassination.de/articles/umbrella. html

    AC

  23. Re:Microdot (OT) by Pierre · · Score: 2, Informative

    if he killed himself in 1989 who is this?

    hofmann

  24. Only slashdot readers would find this funny. by phasic · · Score: 3, Insightful


    Yeah, "haha" Reagan has alzheimers and can't even remember his wife or close friends. "Haha" they have to care for him everyday hoping for only the slightest bit of recognition while enduring the pain that he will never again know who they are.

    Yep, this is something we should really poke fun at, since it's such a hilarious situation for everyone.

  25. Theremin and the 'Great Seal Bug' by UsonianAutomatic · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hmm, time for some slightly OT karma whoring...

    The bug that was found in that seal was invented by none other than Leon Theremin, inventor of the instrument of the same name.

    There's an excellent biography available about Theremin by Albert Glinsky called "Theremin: Ether Music and Espionage" - there's a review here. (No affiliate link here, just a review.)

    Theremin was quite an inventor - Glinksy's book is a good read, managing to be interesting and informative in equal measures.

    Go here for more about Theremins, or here to buy one.

  26. Re:Why the Ficticious Gadgets? by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
    My favorite _part_ is the binder.

    Evidently it is on loan from the White House because this President has no need for intelligence :D