Friday, August 15, 2025

Welcome to the 'Corey Pearson – CIA Spymaster Series'- Novels and Short Stories of Espionage and Intrigue!

                    Whether you’re looking for a quick, thrilling short-story read or an immersive spy novel to sink into, Corey Pearson’s world has something for every adventure lover. Buckle up, explore the world of espionage, and join Corey Pearson on his next mission today!   

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COREY PEARSON- CIA SPYMASTER NOVEL SERIESEnter the deadly world of Corey Pearson – CIA Spymaster, where deception is survival and the enemy hides in plain sight in these full-length novels. In Mission of Vengeance, Pearson hunts Russian agents behind a Caribbean massacre. In Shadow War, he uncovers a sleeper cell plot threatening millions on U.S. soil. From covert ops to nuclear threats, these gripping thrillers fuse real spycraft with breakneck action. The line between ally and traitor blurs—and only Pearson’s team can stop the chaos before it’s too late.


COREY PEARSON- CIA SPYMASTER SHORT STORY SERIESThese quick, 20-30 minute reads are perfect for spy thriller enthusiasts who crave high-stakes missions packed with real-world espionage and gripping spycraft. Read them in any order and get whisked away into Corey Pearson’s daring adventures, all in a single sitting!

Why You Need a Go-Bag—Even If You’re Not a CIA Operative

 

Your go-bag may look slightly different than the ones CIA operatives use… but hey, snacks are still mission-critical

     Most people think a “go-bag” is something only spies, Navy SEALs, or paranoid doomsday preppers keep tucked under the bed. But after years of writing the Corey Pearson–CIA Spymaster series, I’m convinced everyone should have one—yes, even you.

     In the intel world, a go-bag is a pre-packed kit for when things go sideways and you have to vanish fast. For a CIA operative, that might mean crossing a border under a fake passport, ducking into a safe house, or catching the last flight out before things get… complicated.

     For you? It could mean having everything ready for a last-minute weekend getaway, a sudden “my boss just lost it” resignation, or beating your neighbor to that prime campsite two states over. Or maybe it’s the moment a friend texts, “Hey, I’m five minutes away!”—and you remember you haven’t cleaned the house in a month. Grab the bag, lock the door, and vanish like you’ve been trained by the CIA.

     The contents are up to you, but here’s a standard spy-style starter pack:

  • Cash in multiple currencies (bonus points if you have at least one bill in a language you can’t read—extra cool points if you have no idea where you got it)
  • Fake IDs… okay, maybe just a Costco card if you’re staying legal
  • Clothes for any climate (black turtlenecks optional, but they do scream “mysterious”)
  • Energy bars and water (because hunger makes for poor decision-making)
  • Burner phone (or a cheap backup you can toss in a drawer until needed)
  • Duct tape (trust me, duct tape is magic—it fixes, fastens, disguises, and occasionally silences)

     Now, here’s the thing: the go-bag isn’t just for fictional spies. In fact, there are real-world examples where it made all the difference. One former CIA operative recounted an assignment in Eastern Europe that went south—fast.  The moment a local contact whispered, “They know who you are,” she was out the door. Her go-bag already had clean clothes, forged travel documents, emergency cash, and a tiny flash drive of intel that couldn’t fall into the wrong hands. She made it to a safe house and out of the country within hours—because she didn’t waste precious time packing toothpaste and socks.

     Granted, you’re probably not going to need forged papers or a diplomatic exfiltration plan (unless your Home Owners Association is really intense). But there are everyday moments where a go-bag can make you feel like the hero in your own story:

  • Got an in-law “emergency visit”? Grab the bag and disappear for a peaceful 48 hours.
  • Impromptu concert road trip? You’re out the door before your friends even finish Googling directions.
  • Office fire drill turns into “everyone work from home for two days”? Your laptop, chargers, and favorite snacks are already in the bag.

     And the beauty of it is, your go-bag can be tailored to your needs. Love camping? Toss in a headlamp, multi-tool, and collapsible coffee mug. More of a beach person? Pack sunscreen, flip-flops, and that paperback you’ve been “meaning to read” for three summers. Parents? Slip in extra snacks, wet wipes, and a phone charger so you can survive the “are we there yet?” stage.

     In Corey Pearson–CIA Spymaster, a go-bag can mean the difference between life and death. In your life, it might just mean snagging the last room at the beach hotel before tourist season kicks in. But in both cases, the principle is the same: when you’re ready to move, you can move now.

     A go-bag also has a strange psychological perk—it makes you feel prepared, like you could walk away from the chaos of everyday life at a moment’s notice. Bad day at work? Traffic jam from hell? Unexpected apocalypse? Your go-bag is sitting there saying, “We’ve got this.”

     So go ahead—build your own. Worst case? It sits in the closet until you need it. Best case? You’ll look like a total pro when your friends realize you can pack your life in 60 seconds flat. And who knows? You might just get hooked on the idea of being ready for anything. Just remember: the key is not only to pack it—but to keep it somewhere you can actually grab it. Nobody ever escaped trouble by rummaging through the attic for a duffel bag.

     Ready to give it a shot? Your inner CIA operative will thank you.

 

Robert Morton is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers (AFIO) and writes about the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC). He also writes the Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series, which blends his knowledge of real-life intelligence operations with gripping fictional storytelling. His work offers readers an insider’s glimpse into the world of espionage, inspired by the complexities and high-stakes realities of the intelligence community.

Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Sleeper Cells in Suburbia: Why Russian Espionage Is Targeting You

 

They Look Like Your Neighbors—But They’re Spies: The Sleeper Cells Hiding in Plain Sight

     Russian spying in the U.S. didn’t vanish with the Berlin Wall—it just got smarter, sneakier, and way more dangerous. We're not talking about guys in trench coats passing notes in back alleys. This is full-blown, 21st-century infiltration. Over the years, Moscow's been planting deep-cover operatives right here on American soil—people with real jobs, real families, blending in like ghosts. Add in cyber hackers, influence peddlers, and old-school spies, and you’ve got a network that’s not just watching us—they’re digging in, soaking up secrets, and quietly pulling strings behind the scenes. Their mission? Get close, get intel, and wait for the right moment to twist the knife.

     That might sound like a plot from a spy novel, but it’s not fiction—it’s fact. This stuff is happening now. And it’s no coincidence that the deeper you go into real-world Russian espionage, the more it mirrors the chilling plotline of Shadow War. In the novel, CIA operative Corey Pearson hunts a Russian sleeper cell leader plotting mass destruction. It’s eerily close to what we’ve seen play out in real life.

     Take the Illegals Program, for example—Russian spies living under deep cover in the U.S. for years, some with families, careers, and picture-perfect suburban lives. The mission? Blend in, get close to power, and feed the motherland with secrets. When the FBI rolled them up in 2010, the scope of infiltration shocked even seasoned intelligence professionals. But here’s the thing—those were just the ones we caught.

     And that’s just the surface. Russian cyber units like Fancy Bear and Cozy Bear have repeatedly targeted U.S. institutions—hacking into political campaigns, government databases, and critical infrastructure. This isn't just espionage. It’s preparation. It’s mapping our vulnerabilities, probing for weaknesses, laying the groundwork for what could one day be a paralyzing strike.

     Intelligence insiders know this. They live in that space where a quiet bit of chatter on a backchannel or a subtle shift in a foreign operative’s behavior can signal the next global crisis. They understand what’s at stake when sleeper cells aren’t just ghost stories but tangible threats—much like what Corey Pearson faces in Shadow War. The novel hits home because it mirrors the growing fear inside the intelligence community: that the enemy isn’t coming... the enemy is already here.

     What’s more, it’s not just about stolen secrets anymore. It's about sowing chaos—political division, societal breakdown, even potential biological or nuclear sabotage. The game has changed. Espionage now targets our democracy, our alliances, and our ability to tell truth from fiction. It’s slow, silent warfare—and most Americans are oblivious.

     Which brings us to you. This isn’t some spy movie playing out in smoke-filled back rooms. It’s happening here, in the open—only most people don’t see it. Russian sleeper agents aren’t chasing briefcases through back alleys anymore. They’re sitting in office parks, logging into servers, feeding intel back to Moscow. They’re digging into election systems, mapping out our power grids, probing banks, and healthcare networks. Quietly. Patiently.

     This isn't about stealing secrets—it’s about knowing how to shut the lights off in major cities, crash financial markets, scramble emergency responses.  It's about creating chaos without firing a shot.

     They’re not coming. They’re already here. And when they move, it won’t be with a bang—it’ll be with a blackout, or more.

 

Robert Morton is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers (AFIO) and writes about the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC). He also writes the Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series, which blends his knowledge of real-life intelligence operations with gripping fictional storytelling. His work offers readers an insider’s glimpse into the world of espionage, inspired by the complexities and high-stakes realities of the intelligence community.

Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Russian Spies, American Classrooms, and the War No One Sees Coming

 
Russian spies steal quantum secrets from university labs


There’s a war happening on college campuses across the U.S.—and it’s not about free speech, tuition hikes, or finals week panic. It’s a quiet war, one fought in whispers and handshakes, in study groups and faculty lounges. And the enemy? Russian intelligence operatives using American universities as hunting grounds.

A recent ProPublica article breaks it all down: Maria Butina, a young Russian student cozying up to powerbrokers in D.C., is just the tip of the iceberg. If the charges against her stick, she’s part of a decades-old pattern—a Soviet-era playbook still very much in use. Russian spies don’t need dead drops and invisible ink anymore. All they need is a backpack, a student visa, and a good reason to blend in on campus.

Universities offer a perfect storm for espionage. Open access. Cutting-edge research. Professors hungry for funding. Students eager to network. And very little oversight. It’s a playground for foreign intelligence services. Want access to quantum research? Biotech? AI? Just sign up for a few classes, chat up a postdoc, show some enthusiasm. Who’s going to suspect a college kid?

Now, here's where it gets real.

If you're reading this and thinking, “So what? Let the feds deal with it,” think again. These operations don’t just target institutions—they compromise national security. They undercut trust in academia. They endanger future breakthroughs. And they make you, the average citizen, more vulnerable to foreign manipulation, data theft, and worse.

This is personal. It’s about your privacy. Your tech. Your country.

Which brings us to Quantum Shadows—a novel that feels like it was ripped straight from this reality. In the book, CIA Spymaster Corey Pearson and his team face down a similar threat: Russian agents infiltrating UC Berkeley to steal next-gen encryption research. Sound familiar? That’s because the lines between fiction and fact are thinning.

Corey and his crew do what we all hope someone is doing—finding the moles, flipping the assets, and protecting the future before it vanishes in a cloud of plausible deniability. But in real life, it’s not always so clean. Bureaucracy slows things down. Academia resists scrutiny. And spies? They get smarter.

We must keep in mind that espionage isn’t just Cold War nostalgia—it’s alive, aggressive, and evolving. And it’s happening in places we trust. Places like our colleges, our research labs, and yes, even the campus café.

So here’s the deal: if you care about innovation, if you believe in free inquiry, and if you think the U.S. should stay ahead of adversaries, you can’t ignore this.

Quantum Shadows isn’t just a thrill ride—it’s a warning shot.

Now it’s your turn. Drop your take in the comments below. Do you think American universities should be doing more to protect themselves? Or is it time for the intelligence community to step in harder?

Robert Morton is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers (AFIO) and writes about the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC). He also writes the Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series, which blends his knowledge of real-life intelligence operations with gripping fictional storytelling. His work offers readers an insider’s glimpse into the world of espionage, inspired by the complexities and high-stakes realities of the intelligence community.

Friday, July 25, 2025

One Spark Away: How Russia Could Drag the West Into War

Close Call: Poland’s Jets Just Sent a Message to Moscow

      It’s happening again. Middle of the night, lights off, nerves tight—Polish fighter jets are in the air. Not practicing. Not showing off. They’re hunting. Because once more, Russian missiles and drones are lighting up the Ukrainian sky, and Warsaw’s not about to sit around and hope the fire doesn’t spread.

     This wasn’t a drill. It was a warning shot—only no one fired it on purpose.

Officially, no Polish airspace was touched. That’s what the Ministry of Defense is saying. But let’s be honest—when Russian steel is screaming a few dozen miles from your border, that technicality isn’t much comfort.   Whether it explodes in your backyard or just over the fence, the danger feels the same. And for Poland, straddling NATO’s eastern edge, that border isn’t just a line on a map—it’s a tripwire. One spark and it’s game on.

     Sweden’s aircraft were in the air too. They’re not just spectating from the sidelines anymore. The West is watching Russia’s every move, and some countries are leaning in close enough to smell the smoke.

     This is what you call escalation’s quiet cousin—proximity. One twitch of a drone’s guidance system, one misfire, and Article 5 of the NATO treaty kicks in. That’s not a footnote. That’s a global military response. This isn’t speculation. It’s a hair-trigger reality. And the closer Russian missiles get to NATO’s borders, the more likely someone, somewhere, blinks at the wrong moment.

     Poland’s concern is justified. The second time they scrambled jets in a week wasn’t about showing muscle—it was about protecting sovereignty. About signaling to Moscow: "We see you. We’re ready." Because wars don’t always start with declarations. Sometimes, they start with a drone crossing an invisible line. And Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine has already shredded most of Europe’s post-Cold War assumptions.

     This is the backdrop of Mission of Vengeance, my high-octane spy thriller where former KGB agents aren’t looking east—they’re looking west, and south, toward the U.S. presence in the Caribbean. It starts with sabotage, ramps up with a bombing, and edges toward the kind of flashpoint that could put American forces on alert and spark a full-blown conflict. It's fiction, but it's built on the same dangerous logic we’re seeing unfold now in real time.

     If Poland is scrambling jets, it means they’re not waiting for the first bomb to fall on NATO soil. They know what’s at stake. And they’re not the only ones. The entire eastern flank of NATO has been raising red flags since the first Russian tanks crossed into Ukraine. Every drone strike, every missile volley, brings the war one bad decision away from expanding.

     And if you think the Caribbean is far removed from all this, think again. The same old intelligence networks still exist. The same players—spies, mercenaries, rogue operatives—still move pieces around the board. In Mission of Vengeance, it’s a carefully orchestrated plot that threatens to blow open a new front in America’s backyard. That’s not far-fetched. It’s a reminder: wars don’t always come from the places you expect.

     Right now, Europe is living on a razor’s edge. One wrong move could be the spark that lights a much bigger fire. The question isn’t if Russia’s aggression could trigger a Western response—it’s how close are we already?

     And who’s willing to make the first move?

 

Robert Morton is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers (AFIO) and writes about the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC). He also writes the Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series, which blends his knowledge of real-life intelligence operations with gripping fictional storytelling. His work offers readers an insider’s glimpse into the world of espionage, inspired by the complexities and high-stakes realities of the intelligence community.

Thursday, July 24, 2025

U.S. Intelligence Happenings!

Sandy Grimes- a true CIA legend. RIP, Sandy.


Sandy Grimes just passed away at 80, and if you don’t know her name, you should. She wasn’t a field agent running around with a gun, but make no mistake—she helped take down one of the CIA’s worst traitors. Back in the late '80s and early '90s, Grimes and her partner, Jeanne Vertefeuille, quietly chased a gut feeling that something inside the Agency stank. What they found was Aldrich Ames—a high-ranking CIA officer selling secrets to the Soviets, cashing in while good people were dying.

The damage was brutal. At least eight of our assets in the Soviet Union were exposed, arrested, and executed. All because one of our own sold them out for a payday. Ames lived large while they vanished into black cells or worse. But Grimes didn’t let it slide. She followed the money, connected dots no one else saw, and stayed on him until they had enough to take him down in 1994. The arrest rocked the intelligence world and forced the Agency to rethink how it watches its own.

If you’re reading this as someone outside the cloak-and-dagger world, here’s the takeaway: the real heroes don’t always wear a badge or chase suspects through alleys. Sometimes they sit in offices, sifting through files, refusing to let go of a lead. Grimes wasn’t flashy. She was relentless. For the intel community, her story is a gut punch and a warning. Trust, once broken, costs lives. But with the right people watching, even the biggest traitors can’t hide forever.

She later co-wrote Circle of Treason, telling the full story. And when Jeanne got sick, Sandy didn’t disappear—she took care of her to the end. That’s loyalty, through and through.

Your turn—what do you think? Drop your thoughts in the comments below.

Thursday, July 17, 2025

The Sleeper Cell Threat: Are Enemies Hiding in Plain Sight?

Undercover FBI and CIA operatives scan the streets for signs of a hidden threat—watching, waiting, and hunting a sleeper cell hidden in plain sight.

 

     You’ve probably seen the term “sleeper cell” tossed around in spy thrillers and maybe even a few news segments that never follow up. But this isn’t just fiction fodder. Sleeper cells—real ones—have been embedded in the U.S. before. Some still might be.

     The concept sounds like something ripped straight out of a tense page-turner—because it is. In the espionage thriller Shadow War, CIA operative Corey Pearson and his team uncover a hidden Russian sleeper cell buried deep within American society, its leader pulling strings for a catastrophic attack. Sound far-fetched? Not really.

     Back in 2010, ten Russian agents were arrested in the U.S. after years of living under deep cover. They held ordinary jobs, raised kids, barbecued with neighbors. Underneath that suburban gloss, though, they were spying for the Kremlin. One of them, Anna Chapman, even became a media sensation—glamorous, photogenic, and allegedly just the tip of a larger network. These weren’t rogue actors. They were highly trained professionals operating under a long-term mission to infiltrate American institutions.

     That’s what makes sleeper cells so dangerous. They don’t come in guns blazing. They come in quietly, patiently, methodically. Their power lies in time and trust. They might spend years doing nothing at all—until suddenly, they do everything at once.

     Back in the Cold War, it was a silent chess match. The U.S. and Soviets planted spies on each other’s turf, gave them new names, fake jobs, real families. And then they waited. Years, sometimes. That same playbook showed up again after 9/11. Some of the hijackers had been living here—quiet, unnoticed. Not sleeper agents in the classic sense, but close enough to make the point: the enemy doesn’t always kick down the door. Sometimes he walks right in.

     Now the threat has shape-shifted. It’s not just bombs or bullets anymore—it’s code. Cyber sleeper cells don’t need to live next door. They just need a backdoor into the grid, the banking system, the defense network. A single keystroke from the right place can do what an army used to. Welcome to the new battlefield. You can’t see it. But it’s real. 

     And yes, sometimes fiction captures the reality before the headlines do. In Shadow War, Pearson’s team suspects a Russian mole inside the intelligence community itself, complicating their hunt for a ticking time bomb that might not even be a bomb at all—it might be a virus. As the team peels back layers of deception, they realize the enemy has been hiding in plain sight, wearing the right suit and saying the right things. That’s the sleeper cell’s real genius—it doesn’t look like the enemy.

     But how does the U.S. even spot these threats before they blow up in our faces? The short answer is: it’s hard. Sleeper agents don’t act suspiciously because their job is to not act suspiciously. They pay taxes. They coach soccer. They fly under every radar.

     That’s why intelligence agencies rely on everything from human tips to sophisticated data analysis. Still, even with all the tech and manpower, it often comes down to luck—or someone slipping up. The infamous “Detroit Sleeper Cell” case in 2001 began when a landlord found a suspicious videotape showing U.S. landmarks and alerted authorities. Four Middle Eastern men were arrested on terrorism charges. The evidence turned out to be flimsy, and the case eventually fell apart, but the scare forced agencies to take sleeper threats seriously.

     The truth? Sleeper cells exist. But they’re not everywhere. They’re not hiding in every neighborhood or pulling strings behind every company. The real challenge is staying sharp without losing our heads. We’ve got to keep the intel flowing, the watchmen watching, and the line between safety and freedom crystal clear.

     And keep the stories coming. Because fiction like Shadow War doesn’t just entertain—it reminds us that the real world is messy, dangerous, and full of shadows. Sometimes the best way to understand what’s possible is to read about what could happen.

     Whether it’s fiction or fact, one thing’s for sure: the enemy doesn’t always knock. Sometimes, he’s already inside.

 

Robert Morton is a member of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers (AFIO) and writes about the U.S. Intelligence Community (IC). He also writes the Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series, which blends his knowledge of real-life intelligence operations with gripping fictional storytelling. His work offers readers an insider’s glimpse into the world of espionage, inspired by the complexities and high-stakes realities of the intelligence community.