pregleda

Clyde W. Burleson - Jennifer Project


Cena:
500 din
Želi ovaj predmet: 1
Stanje: Polovan bez oštećenja
Garancija: Ne
Isporuka: Pošta
Post Express
Lično preuzimanje
Plaćanje: Tekući račun (pre slanja)
Lično
Grad: Beograd-Zvezdara,
Beograd-Zvezdara
Prodavac

ljilja_bgd (1038)

100% pozitivnih ocena

Pozitivne: 5542

  Pošalji poruku

Svi predmeti člana


Kupindo zaštita

ISBN: 0722120613
Godina izdanja: 1979
Jezik: Engleski
Autor: Strani
Oblast: Vojna istorija

Clyde W. Burleson - Jennifer Project
Sphere Books, 1979
201 str.
meki povez
stanje: dobro

In 1968 a Soviet G-class submarine mysteriously exploded and sank to the bottom of the Pacific. With Cold War secrecy and speed, U.S. military intelligence raced to find a way to raise the sub. In the new preface to this edition of The Jennifer Project, which was first published in 1977, author Clyde Burleson discusses some of the sources he could not reveal twenty years ago and provides an interesting swords-to-plowshares update.

In one of the more remarkable episodes of high-tech espionage and engineering of the Cold War, the effort to raise the Soviet sub, code-named the `Jennifer Project,` assembled a cast of players that included top military brass, the CIA, and the eccentric millionaire and inventor Howard Hughes.

The Project was a monumental effort to create a tool that could reach three miles below the ocean`s surface and pull the sub from primordial muck—in secret. Financed and built by Hughes and Global Marine under contract with the CIA, the ship created to pluck the sub from the ooze was a technological marvel. Two football fields in length and twenty-three stories high, the Hughes Glomar Explorer held in its hull a six-million-pound submersible `claw` for picking up sections of the submarine.

The project cost the U.S. government hundreds of millions of dollars, but the intelligence community was betting that, if successful, reclamation of the Soviet submarine would mean accessing invaluable military knowledge as the two superpowers neared negotiations in the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty talks. The Jennifer Project revisits a fascinating period of high-level intrigue and invention that has remained unknown to many Americans.


Non-Fiction, Military, Cold War, Intelligence & Espionage History

Za kupovinu više knjiga i/ili cd-a u ukupnoj vrednosti većoj od 3000din. poštarina je besplatna (odnosi se na slanje preporučenom tiskovinom/pismom i CC paketom).

Plaćanje pouzećem i postnetom za sada nisu opcija.

Lično preuzimanje je isključivo na Konjarniku uz prethodni dogovor.

Hvala na razumevanju.

Predmet: 69767953
Clyde W. Burleson - Jennifer Project
Sphere Books, 1979
201 str.
meki povez
stanje: dobro

In 1968 a Soviet G-class submarine mysteriously exploded and sank to the bottom of the Pacific. With Cold War secrecy and speed, U.S. military intelligence raced to find a way to raise the sub. In the new preface to this edition of The Jennifer Project, which was first published in 1977, author Clyde Burleson discusses some of the sources he could not reveal twenty years ago and provides an interesting swords-to-plowshares update.

In one of the more remarkable episodes of high-tech espionage and engineering of the Cold War, the effort to raise the Soviet sub, code-named the `Jennifer Project,` assembled a cast of players that included top military brass, the CIA, and the eccentric millionaire and inventor Howard Hughes.

The Project was a monumental effort to create a tool that could reach three miles below the ocean`s surface and pull the sub from primordial muck—in secret. Financed and built by Hughes and Global Marine under contract with the CIA, the ship created to pluck the sub from the ooze was a technological marvel. Two football fields in length and twenty-three stories high, the Hughes Glomar Explorer held in its hull a six-million-pound submersible `claw` for picking up sections of the submarine.

The project cost the U.S. government hundreds of millions of dollars, but the intelligence community was betting that, if successful, reclamation of the Soviet submarine would mean accessing invaluable military knowledge as the two superpowers neared negotiations in the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty talks. The Jennifer Project revisits a fascinating period of high-level intrigue and invention that has remained unknown to many Americans.


Non-Fiction, Military, Cold War, Intelligence & Espionage History
69767953 Clyde W. Burleson - Jennifer Project

LimundoGrad koristi kolačiće u statističke i marketinške svrhe. Nastavkom korišćenja sajta smatramo da ste pristali na upotrebu kolačića. Više informacija.