• xxce2AAb@feddit.dk
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    5 months ago

    “We immediately dispatched a covert team being inserted under the cover of darkness.”

    “And?”

    “Nothing. Not a damned thing. The only material evidence left is large cardboard camouflage panels and some steel struts. Somehow they must’ve know we were coming. We’ve got no idea how they managed to pack everything up and exfiltrate. It’s maddening.”

    • marcos@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      During the last dictatorships in South America, Brazil and Argentina were in a bit of an arms race.

      One day, the Brazilian government created a nuclear program that over the course of several years managed to enrich some nanograms of uranium. The Argentinian gov started their own program as a response.

      When both countries published their data, the Argentinians had plenty of spying documents saying that the Brazilian program had incredibly security, they could only discover a small lab and some people digging missile silos.

      (And yeah, the Argentinians managed to enrich milligrams of uranium, beating Brazil by 2 orders of magnitude.)

    • GlitchyDigiBun@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Slightly different, but similar premise. Blatant (loud) concealment of something that isn’t actually a security risk is a honeypot tactic. False intel feeds are used in situations where you’re diverting resources away from the intended target of an operation, as opposed to spy-catching tactics like honeypots.

      • DagwoodIII@piefed.social
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        5 months ago

        You sound like a fellow espionage geek.

        Two recommendations.

        TURN : George Washington’s Spies. Doesn’t turn away from things like Washington owning slaves and the British freeing them, and it has lots of cute tricks, like a one-man submarine and secret writing on egg shells. AMC show.

        Any of the WW2 spy novels by Alan Furst. “Night Soldiers” is about a Bulgarian fisherman whose brother was killed by a Fascist mob. He gets recruited into the KGB and fights in Spain.