Binary code Mystery number two - стр. 59
– Interesting things you say.
– If you're not too busy, we can have a chat in your spare time.
– I will. I will also tell you about scientific work together with specialists from the "zone".
– Fifty-one?
– Yeah. (chuckles)
Charles smiled, nodding as a sign that he understood. They stood up, said their goodbyes, and separated. At the gatehouse, Rutra and his companions were waited for by a lab employee who escorted them to the reception center. Rutra settled in, checked the program through the briefcase, then contacted Isa. After going through a procedure that had become routine, he heard the voice of the computer in his head.
– Good afternoon. How are you?
– I need information on the director of Los Alamos National Laboratory.
– Which one?
– His connection to an intelligence community unit.
– I don't have that information in me.
– Why is that?
– It's not my field.
– Whose is it?
– Yours.
– Stop "showing off", if I ask, I don't know.
– The information's in your department's cell block, I need access. You can give it to me.
– Uh-oh, I forgot. Okay, thank you.
Rutra contacted the Zero Center through the briefcase and requested information about these intelligence communities, who was in charge of what. It was night in Russia, and the Zero operative on duty had dumped everything at once, unprocessed, something Rutra already knew, but it didn't hurt to refresh his memory. There was a lot of detailed information in the message, with order numbers, names, ranks, service records of important officers and service chiefs, and operations. He didn't find anything particularly new, but still, after a brief analysis, he singled out information that was now worth looking at from a different angle.
The U.S. CIA is the primary political intelligence service of the U.S. government, independent of other ministries and agencies. According to Executive Order No. 12333, the U.S. Intelligence Community has six primary purposes, and the most specific of these, which all intelligence agencies of the world have faced willy-nilly, is special events (paragraph 4). This item is defined as activities conducted in support of U.S. foreign policy objectives abroad that are planned and executed where "the role of the United States Government is not apparent or publicly recognized."
The U.S. Intelligence Community is an administrative, not an intelligence structure.
It includes:
1. U.S. CIA;
2. The U.S. Department of State, specifically the State Department's Information Office;
3. the U.S. Department of the Treasury, specifically the Office of Intelligence and Counterterrorism;