SPY: The Secret World of Espionage offers guests the first-ever
public exhibition of treasures from the collections of the CIA, the FBI, the National
Reconnaissance Office (NRO) and H. Keith Melton, the renowned author, historian
and international authority on spy technology. Guests will see real gadgets and
real artifacts from spies and spy catchers. They will observe real spy
technologies, and learn the real tools-of-trade, some recently declassified. Photos of sample artifacts follow below with descriptions. See additional images at the Seattle Times here.
Highlights include:
*Peek into the cockpit of the supersonic A-12 Oxcart Spy
Plane from 1962, one
of only nine remaining in the world, designed to defeat
Soviet air defenses by
cruising at more than three times the speed of sound.
*See the Bulgarian Assassination Umbrella that fired a poison ricin pellet into
the leg of BBC reporter and Bulgarian defector Georgi Markov’s leg while he
was
waiting for the bus.
*Navigate your way through the perilous complexities of an
actual laser field
without tripping a circuit!
*Come face-to-face with KGB surveillance photos taken during
the Cuban
Missile Crisis.
*Discover the art of steganography, the art of hiding secret messages inside
the
pixels of innocent-looking digital photos.
*Peer into the Minox IIIs Camera that Oleg Penkovkiy used to
photograph
documents.
documents.
ENIGMA MACHINE
During World War II, the German military and intelligence
services used Enigma cipher machines to create what they thought were
unbreakable messages. The Enigma offered 150,000,000,000,000,000,000 possible
solutions to any one enciphered message. Yet the Allies were often able to find
the right solution and read German secrets. In doing so, they created the
world’s first electronic computer, Colossus. This intelligence coup shortened
the war by an estimated two years.
ROBOT FISH “CHARLIE”
This remote-controlled robotic catfish was spawned in the
CIA’s Directorate of Science and Technology. The goal was to explore the use of
unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs) for aquatic missions. “Charlie” swims in a
realistic manner thanks to a pressure hull and ballast system in its body and a
propulsion system in its tail.
INSECTOTHOPTER
Invented in the 1970s by the CIA’s Directorate of Science
and Technology, this robotic dragonfly was the world’s first miniaturized
unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). A tiny liquid-propellant engine drove its wings
up and down. The “Insectothopter” ultimately proved unstable in crosswinds, but
its fluid dynamic technology inspired further research into miniature platforms
for spy cameras and audio sensors.
A-12 FLIGHT BOOTS, GLOVES AND HELMET
Developed by Lockheed under the ironic codename OXCART, the
A-12 cruised at more than three times the speed of sound, creating such
friction against the atmosphere that the air surrounding the plane often
reached 400°F. Its camera could photograph the ground from 90,000 feet above. A-12 pilots wore a type of protective pressure suit with
thermal insulation, pressure control, cooling, and a life support system. The
suit offered protection from heat radiating through the windshield and from
cold and low pressure in the event of a high-altitude bailout.
PIGEON CAMERA
Developed by the CIA in 1970, the aim was to capture film footage of sensitive areas during low-level flights by pigeons. Pigeons!
Spy Vibe is having a spring sale on eBay. New items added very few days and include rare Beatles, James Bond, books, music, and comics. Details here.
Recent Ian Fleming posts on Spy Vibe: Fleming Letters Mystery, Appropriating Bond, Double 007 Book Designs, Double 007 designs II, rare Ian Fleming edition, Book Design Dopplegangers, Turkish Bond design, Ian Fleming Letters, Erno Goldfinger, Noel Coward, Whispering Jack Smith, Hawaiian Guitar, Joe Fingers Carr, new Ian Fleming Catalog, Jon Gilbert interview, Double 007 Designs, Bond audio book reissues, discovery of one of Ian Fleming's WWII Commandos, James Bond book covers, Ian Fleming's Playboy interview for Kindle, Spy Vibe's discovery of a rare Ian Fleming serialization, rare View to a Kill, Fleming's Royal gold typewriter, Ian Fleming's memorial address, Spy Vibe's Ian Fleming image archive.
Recent Spy Vibe posts: Sylvia Anderson, Appropriating Bond Exhibit, Trina Robbins Interview, Catsuits, Batman '66 Green Hornet Interview: Ralph Garman Ty Templeton, Solar & Bionic Man Return, The Saint Library Released, DC Fontana Prisoner Video, James Bond Comic Event, Turkish James Bond Design, Edward Gorey's 1960s, Ipcress File cinematography, 007 SOLO cover designs, Batman Valentines cards, Saturday Cartoons: Marine Boy, Mary Quant, Patrick Macnee, Gloria Steinem and Denny O'Neil on MOD Wonder Woman, Win Scott Eckert interview, Siegel and Shuster's SPY, David McCallum: Son of Batman, Jon Gilbert talks Fleming, Barbarella TV series, Meet the Beatles 50th, Wonderwall comes to Blu-ray, Batman Strips, David Bowie at 67, Kevin Dart talks Ringo & Powerpuff Girls, Sherlock Exhibit, Fu Manchu history panel, Andy Warhol box set, Six-Million Dollar Man, Striped Light Nude, Buckminster Fuller, Dylan at Newport, Jane and Serge, The Goldfinger Variations, Mod Tales Interview, David Tennant's Ian Fleming audio books, Atomic Art, Shane Glines Batman.