Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Welcome to the Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series!

                Whether you’re looking for a quick, thrilling short-story read or a full-length spy novel to sink into, the Corey Pearson—CIA Spymaster Series delivers high-stakes action and real-world tension. These stories move fast, hit hard, and pull you deep into a world where one decision can change everything.

   Behind the fiction lies something even more compelling. This blog dives into timely developments across the U.S. intelligence community, connecting real-world events to the kind of covert operations, tradecraft, and global threats Corey Pearson faces in the field. You can explore hundreds of intelligence-related topics—or use the Topic Search bar to zero in on in-depth pieces that track these developments as they unfold. The line between fiction and reality isn’t as wide as you might think.

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. Then, In Payback, a ruthless assassin is on the loose, murdering young CIA operatives- rising stars handpicked for a secret CIA Mentorship Program.

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- devour each one in a single sitting!

How Intelligence Sharing Between CIA, NSA, and FBI Prevents Attacks on American Soil

 

The Threat Was Real. You Just Never Saw It.

     Most people think intelligence work happens somewhere far away—deserts, war zones, places you’ll never see. But the truth is, a lot of that work is aimed right back at protecting everyday life here at home. You just don’t notice it. And that’s the point.

     Remember the New York subway bomb plot tied to al-Qaeda? Before anyone ever stepped onto a train with a device, foreign intelligence picked up the trail. Signals and chatter overseas raised flags. That information didn’t sit in a vault. It moved—fast—into the hands of the FBI. From there, agents tracked the suspect, built the case, and shut the plot down before commuters ever knew how close they came to danger.

     That’s how the system is supposed to work.

     The same pattern showed up in the cargo bomb plot out of Yemen.  Packages packed with explosives were headed for the United States, hidden in something as ordinary as printer cartridges. They could have reached American soil undetected. But intelligence sharing—moving across borders, across agencies—flagged the threat early. U.S. and allied officials intercepted the bombs before they ever reached their targets. No explosion.    No headlines about casualties. Just another quiet success.

     Then there are the cases that start online and end on American streets. An alleged ISIS-inspired plot targeting Election Day crowds was disrupted after authorities connected the dots between digital activity, intent, and capability. Intelligence doesn’t just watch—it interprets. It builds a picture from fragments. When that picture becomes clear enough, the FBI steps in.  Again, the public sees an arrest. What they don’t see is the chain of intelligence behind it that made the arrest possible.

     Here’s the part most people miss: the CIA and NSA aren’t roaming around inside the United States looking for threats. That’s not their lane. Their job is to look outward—to gather foreign intelligence, track adversaries, monitor communications, and identify threats before they ever reach our borders. Once they do, that intelligence is handed off to agencies like the FBI, DHS, or TSA, who operate domestically under strict legal guidelines.

     It’s a relay race.

     One agency spots the danger. Another one stops it.

     And when it works, nothing happens.

     You board your flight. You ride the subway. You go to a concert. You vote. You go home. You never know there was a moment—somewhere in that chain—where things could have gone very differently.

     That invisible layer of protection is what makes the real-world intelligence game so compelling—and so unsettling at the same time.

It’s also what inspired parts of my Corey Pearson—CIA Spymaster Series, especially Shadow War. In that story, Pearson and his elite CIA team are pulled into a nightmare scenario: a Russian sleeper cell planning to release a lethal virus in New York City. The lines blur. The threat is already inside the country. The clock is ticking. And the kind of quiet coordination that works so well in the real world starts to break down under pressure.

     That’s where fiction steps in and asks the question: what happens when the system doesn’t have time to work the way it’s supposed to?

     In real life, the goal is to never let it get that far.

     To spot the signal early. To share it quickly. To act before panic replaces prevention.

     And it happens more often than people realize.

     Foreign intelligence isn’t just about secrets and spies. It’s about identifying threats long before they show up in a place you live, work, or travel. It’s about giving the right people the right information at the right time so they can stop something before it becomes a tragedy.

     You don’t see it.

     You don’t hear about most of it.

     But it’s there—quietly working in the background, connecting dots across continents, moving faster than the threats it’s trying to stop.

     That’s the real shadow war.

     And most days, it’s one you never even know you’re part of.

 

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.Top of Form


Tuesday, May 5, 2026

: 👉 The Real CIA Spy Game: How Operatives Stay Invisible in Plain Sight

 

Real CIA espionage is surveillance, tradecraft, covert operations, and staying hidden in plain sight

There’s a common misconception about CIA operatives overseas. People picture fast cars, rooftop chases, and shootouts in narrow alleys. That makes for great movies. It’s just not how the real game is played.

     The truth is quieter. Slower. And a lot more dangerous in ways most people don’t see.

     According to former CIA officer Bob Dougherty, the real skill isn’t action—it’s invisibility. Operatives don’t survive by standing out. They survive by becoming part of the background. The man reading a newspaper at a cafĂ©. The woman waiting in line for coffee. The business traveler checking into a hotel without anyone remembering his face five minutes later.

     That’s the job.

     Overseas, especially in hostile countries, intelligence officers are constantly being watched. Not always directly. Sometimes it’s subtle. A familiar face showing up twice in a day. A car that lingers just a little too long. Security services studying patterns, routines, contacts. Waiting for a mistake.

     Because in that world, patterns get you caught.

     So CIA operatives work to avoid them. Meetings aren’t predictable. Routes change. Timing shifts. Even the smallest detail—where you sit, what you order, how long you stay—can matter. Every move is calculated to look normal while revealing nothing.

     It’s a game of patience.

     A source might take months to develop. Sometimes years. You don’t rush it. You build trust slowly, layer by layer, without ever tipping your hand. One wrong move, one hint of pressure, and the door closes. Worse, it triggers suspicion that can roll back through an entire network.

     That’s the part most people never see. The waiting. The discipline. The ability to sit in plain sight and do absolutely nothing—until the exact moment comes when doing something matters.

     And even then, it has to look like nothing at all.

     This is the world that inspired scenes throughout the Corey Pearson—CIA Spymaster Series. When Pearson tails a Russian operative into a crowded cafĂ©, he isn’t looking for a confrontation. He’s looking for a vantage point. A rhythm. A break in routine. His team isn’t circling like predators—they’re blending, talking, ordering drinks, becoming part of the noise.

     Because that’s where the real advantage lies.

     In Mission of Vengeance, in Shadow War, and throughout the series, the tension doesn’t come from explosions. It comes from proximity. From knowing that the person you’re watching could turn and spot you at any moment. From understanding that you’re not just observing—you’re being observed right back.

     That’s the reality Dougherty is talking about.

     Hidden in plain sight isn’t a clever phrase. It’s survival.

     And it’s happening every day in cities around the world. Quiet meetings. Subtle signals. Lives built on cover stories that have to hold under pressure from some of the most capable intelligence services on the planet.

     No spotlight. No credit. No headlines.

     Just the slow, careful work of staying invisible long enough to get the information that keeps Americans safe.

     That’s the real spy game.

     And once you understand it, every crowded cafĂ©, every airport terminal, every busy street starts to look a little different.

 

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.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

CIA Operatives Killed in Mexico: The Hidden War Against Cartels at America’s Doorstep

 

CIA operations in Mexico are protecting American streets

     Two CIA operatives died in a crash in northern Mexico after coming back from a mission to take down a hidden drug lab, according to the Associated Press. Two Mexican investigators were killed too, and the accident has people asking more questions about how deeply the U.S. is involved in fighting cartel activity in the region.

      The headlines tend to make it sound like spy work happens a world away. Think deserts, distant capitals, shadowy meetings in places most of us will never visit. But this story pulls the curtain back a bit. It reminds us that some of the most important intelligence work isn’t happening half a globe away. It’s happening right next door.

     That’s what many people miss.

     When we hear about the CIA, we picture big global chess matches with foreign governments. And sure, that’s part of the job. But sometimes the danger is much closer to home, and a lot messier. This article points to something deeper: cartels, politics, and foreign players who are more than happy to take advantage of chaos.

It’s not just drugs. It’s not just crime. It’s how fast those problems can turn into national security threats.

     Cartel labs sitting just across the border aren’t isolated problems. They’re production hubs feeding networks that stretch straight into American cities. Money flows, weapons move, information gets traded. And where there’s that kind of activity, you can bet foreign actors are paying attention too. Not always loudly, not always directly, but they’re there, watching for opportunities.

     That’s where intelligence work shifts from something abstract to something immediate.

     The idea that threats can move from a lab in Mexico to a U.S. neighborhood in just days changes how you see it. It’s not far away. It’s not theoretical. It’s close, fast, and real. And the people handling it aren’t just analysts behind desks. They’re CIA operatives, informants, and DEA teams working where crime and global politics overlap.

     It also explains why incidents like this matter more than they might seem at first glance. When something goes wrong involving intelligence personnel in that region, like two CIA operatives dying, it’s not just an isolated event. It’s a glimpse into a much bigger, more complicated mission that rarely makes headlines.

     Most of that work stays invisible by design.

     And honestly, that’s probably a good thing.

     Because if you start to connect the dots, you realize how much effort goes into keeping certain threats from ever reaching the point where they become front-page news. Disrupting supply chains. Monitoring alliances. Keeping tabs on who’s talking to who. It’s constant, detailed work that doesn’t come with press releases.

     That’s part of what inspired my own writing, especially in the Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series. In those stories, Corey Pearson and his elite CIA team move through places like Mexico and the Caribbean, dealing with exactly this kind of overlap. Cartels, foreign spies, hidden agendas.   They’re not just chasing criminals. They’re pushing back against Russian operatives trying to use America’s backdoor to gain influence and access.

     It’s fiction, sure. But it’s rooted in a real idea: that the front lines of national security aren’t always where people think they are.

     They can be along a border. In a port city. In a place where criminal networks and international interests collide.

     And while most of us go about our lives without thinking about it, people are working in those places every day, trying to stay one step ahead. Not for attention. Not for headlines. Just to keep problems contained before they spill over.

     So when you see a story like this, it’s worth pausing for a second. Not to speculate wildly or assume the worst, but to see what it represents: a reminder that security isn’t just about far-off conflicts. Sometimes it’s about what’s happening just beyond the edge of the map we usually pay attention to.

     And more often than not, it’s already being handled long before we even know there was something to worry about.

Top of Form

 

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, April 30, 2026

Iran Nuclear Crisis Explodes: Israel and U.S. War, Hezbollah Threat, and What Comes Next

 

Ten years after Iran’s missile threats, the shadow war is no longer in the shadows. From nuclear fears and Hezbollah proxies to Israel, the U.S., and the widening Middle East conflict, the warning signs from 2016 feel more urgent than ever.

    In March 2016, I was watching Mark Dubowitz on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal as he discussed Iran launching two long-range ballistic missiles. Each one carried the phrase “Israel must be wiped out” in Hebrew. What stuck with me wasn’t just the message, but the timing. Vice President Biden was in Israel then. That mix of diplomacy and open hostility got me thinking about where things could go if Iran ever backed that posture with real nuclear capability.

     Ten years later, those thoughts feel closer.

     At the time, the launch felt deliberate, and that still holds. Iran has kept using missiles, drones, and proxy groups to send messages without tipping into full-scale war. What’s changed is how constant it’s become. Tension with Israel isn’t occasional anymore. It’s a steady pressure point.

     Back then, I worried about what would happen as the nuclear deal’s limits expired. Instead, the deal came apart sooner than expected when the United States withdrew in 2018 under Donald Trump. Since then, Iran has enriched more uranium and cut back, then terminated inspections. Now the question isn’t about some future deadline. It’s how close Iran may already be.

     A decade ago, I also believed that if Iran crossed a line, Israel might answer with a major strike. That fear is no longer theoretical. Israel and the United States are now at war with Iran, and strikes have killed senior Iranian leaders, including Ali Khamenei, while hitting military and nuclear-related sites. The shadow war has moved into the open.

     One of my bigger worries was unrest inside Iran and how the regime might react if cornered. There have been serious protests, but the government has held on. Since Iran hasn’t openly deployed nuclear weapons, that fear hasn’t played out. Still, instability in a country close to nuclear capability remains dangerous.

     The hostility between the United States and Iran hasn’t just hardened. It has turned into war. The 2020 killing of Qasem Soleimani once seemed like the closest both sides had come to direct conflict. Now decades of mistrust have moved from proxy fights into open combat.

     I also worried that groups like Hezbollah were being underestimated. That concern still holds. Despite claims from Israel and Trump that Hezbollah has been decimated, it would be a mistake to write it off. It remains active, organized, and dangerous. What’s changed is the reach of Iran’s network, which now works through allied groups across the region and beyond, something made clearer after the October 7 attacks.

     That idea eventually found its way into my novel Mission of Vengeance. In the story, Russian operatives use Hezbollah-linked cells from South America’s Tri-Border region as a proxy to attack a Caribbean summit on Cat Island in the Bahamas. The goal isn’t just violence. It’s instability.

     A CIA team led by Corey Pearson is there to stop a suicide bomber before she strikes. They succeed, but not cleanly. The bomber detonates after being engaged, killing one team member and critically wounding another. The leaders survive, but the cost is real. The point is simple: influence doesn’t have to be direct to be effective.

     The story is fictional, but the setup isn’t far-fetched. Countries can use proxy networks far from home, which reflects the indirect conflict we see more often now. It shows how easily the lines blur.

     I also worried nuclear material might be diverted for a dirty bomb. That hasn’t happened, at least not publicly. Instead, conflict has shifted toward drones, missiles, and precision strikes, tools that are easier to use and deny.

     I understood why Benjamin Netanyahu doubted the nuclear deal. Today, that doubt is more common. Trust is thin everywhere. Meanwhile, the Abraham Accords reshaped part of the region, bringing several Arab nations closer to Israel, partly over shared concerns about Iran.

     Looking back, the core tensions remain, but the situation has changed. Trump’s bombing of Iran’s nuclear sites may have damaged the program, but it didn’t answer the biggest question: what material remains, where it is, and whether Iran is still quietly pursuing a weapon.

     With the U.S. now at war with Iran, diplomacy has largely been pushed aside, even if Washington is still making limited attempts to revive it.

     What has changed most is the margin for error. Ten years ago, these fears felt distant. Now they feel immediate, and the space between stability and escalation is much thinner.

 

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.Top of Form


Sunday, April 26, 2026

KGB to FSB: How Putin and Russian Intelligence Still Use Cold War Spy Tactics Today

 

KGB ghosts never really retire. From the Cold War to modern Russian intelligence, the old spy playbook still shapes power, policy, and global influence.

The Soviet Union may have collapsed in 1991, but the KGB didn’t exactly pack up its files and go home. It changed signs on the door.

     The old agency splintered into new outfits like the FSB and SVR, but many of the same people, instincts, grudges, and methods survived. The real story isn’t that aging KGB men are still sneaking through back alleys with forged passports. It’s that KGB-trained officials still sit close to the center of Russian power, shaping how the country sees the world and how it acts on the global stage.

     Take Vladimir Putin. Before he became Russia’s president, he was a KGB officer. Later, he ran the FSB, the KGB’s successor.

     That history matters. You can see it in the way Russia moves overseas. Crimea in 2014 is a good example. Russian forces appeared without insignia, Moscow denied they were involved, the media narrative was tightly managed, and by the time the truth was obvious, the facts on the ground had already changed.

     It didn’t feel like a normal invasion. It felt like a spy operation that turned into foreign policy.

     And Putin isn’t alone.

     Around him are men cut from the same old cloth: Sergei Naryshkin at the SVR, Alexander Bortnikov at the FSB, and others who came up through that same hard security world.

     These aren’t museum pieces from the Cold War. They’re sitting in real offices, making real decisions, shaping how Russia spies, pressures, threatens, and meddles abroad.

     So no, the KGB isn’t gone. It just stopped using the old name.

     That mindset doesn’t keep intelligence in a neat little box. For Moscow, spying isn’t just about stealing secrets. It’s about bending events before the other side even realizes what’s happening. Elections, alliances, public opinion, street protests, cyberattacks, proxy groups, all of it can become part of the game.

     The tools are newer now but the playbook isn’t: move in the shadows, deny everything, and keep opponents off balance.

     This is where fiction starts sounding a little too close to real life. In Mission of Vengeance, former KGB operatives aren’t retired. They’ve just been moved off the books and put to use somewhere else. This time, it’s the Caribbean, where old loyalties and old skills are tied to a much bigger Russian game.

     That idea isn’t far-fetched. Spy networks don’t just vanish because a government changes its letterhead. The favors remain. The grudges remain. The tradecraft remains.

     The book also gets at something real and dangerous: the wound left by the fall of the Soviet Union. To many inside Russia’s security world, 1991 wasn’t just history. It was humiliation. They didn’t see the Soviet collapse as freedom breaking through. They saw it as a defeat, and they blamed the West for helping make it happen.

     That doesn’t mean Putin is personally behind every shadow operation on the map. But it does mean Russia’s leaders often view American and Western influence as a threat to be pushed back, whether in Eastern Europe, Africa, Latin America, or anywhere else Moscow thinks it can regain ground.

     In that world, old grudges don’t fade. They become policy.

     The novel’s storyline—where a shadowy operation seeks to undermine U.S. presence in the Dominican Republic—fits within that broader logic. Russia has shown interest in projecting influence in areas close to the United States, even if indirectly. While the specific scenario is fictional, the strategic idea behind it is grounded in reality: intelligence services are often used to probe, test, and challenge geopolitical rivals in places where direct confrontation would be too risky.

     Another place Mission of Vengeance feels grounded in reality is the defector. In the story, a former KGB operative switches sides and starts talking. That’s when the curtain gets pulled back. Suddenly, Corey Pearson sees the full shape of the operation, not just who is involved, but what they’re really trying to do.

     That’s how it often works in the real world, too. Defectors don’t just hand over names. They expose methods, motives, hidden networks, and plans no outsider was supposed to see.

     Spy agencies live on secrecy. And when that secrecy cracks, everything can come spilling out.

     In the end, the most accurate way to describe the legacy of the KGB is this: it never truly ended. It adapted. The institutions changed names, the Soviet ideology faded, and the global landscape shifted, but the core approach to power—shaped by intelligence thinking—remains deeply embedded in Russia’s leadership. Whether in real-world operations or in fictional spy thrillers, the idea holds up well: spycraft doesn’t retire easily, and neither do the people who built their lives around it.

 

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.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Why U.S. and Russian Spies Don’t Kill Each Other—And What Happens If They Do

 

In the spy game, the deadliest rule is the one nobody admits exists.

     There’s a quiet rule in the world of espionage. No treaty. No handshake. No official memo stamped and filed away in some vault at CIA headquarters. And yet it’s been understood for decades by their counterparts in Moscow, whether in the FSB or the GRU.

     Spies don’t kill spies.

     That might sound strange if your mental image comes from movies or novels. In fiction, intelligence officers drop each other with silencers in dark alleys and vanish into the night. My spy thriller Payback leans into that tension, with a Russian assassin hunting CIA operatives and turning the shadows lethal. It works because it breaks the rule. And breaking that rule feels dangerous.

     In real life, the game is colder. More controlled. More calculated.

     When American and Russian intelligence officers cross paths overseas, the goal isn’t elimination. It’s containment. If a CIA officer is identified, Russian operatives don’t reach for a weapon. They watch. Closely. Every meeting, every pattern, every contact. Surveillance teams map the network like a puzzle. Who is this officer talking to? Which local sources are in play? Where are the vulnerabilities?

     Sometimes the pressure becomes obvious. A tail that’s just a little too visible. A “random” encounter that isn’t random at all. It’s a message: we see you. Once that happens, the officer is effectively compromised. Their usefulness drops to near zero.

     From there, the endgame is familiar. Exposure. Diplomatic complaints. Maybe a quiet word to the host country. Then the formal step: persona non grata. Expulsion. A flight home.

     It’s not mercy. It’s strategy.

     The restraint holds because both sides know what happens if it breaks. If one service starts killing the other’s officers, payback is almost guaranteed. One killing can become a pattern fast, and once that starts, it’s hard to stop.

     There’s also the risk of escalation. Espionage sits in the gray zone between peace and war. Governments put up with it because everybody does it. But murdering accredited officers, especially those under diplomatic cover, can push the game into something far more serious.

     Just as important, spy services like predictability. Surveillance, recruitment, deception, arrests, expulsions, and spy swaps are all part of a language both sides understand. Violence brings chaos. It makes officers harder to control, governments quicker to react, and mistakes more likely.

     For the United States, there’s another line. Executive Order 12333 formally bars U.S. intelligence from assassination. That doesn’t end espionage, of course. It shapes how it’s done.

     So the real understanding isn’t moral. It’s self-protection. Each side accepts espionage as inevitable and punishes it through counterintelligence instead of routine murder. The system is hostile, but it has limits.

     Still, any unwritten rule invites the obvious question: has it ever been broken?

     The closest case people usually mention is Freddie Woodruff, a CIA officer shot and killed near Tbilisi, Georgia, in 1993. Georgian authorities called it a random killing and convicted a local suspect. Later, some former officials and writers raised the possibility of a Russian-linked operation.

     But that’s still disputed. It has never been proven to be an official Russian intelligence assassination of an active American officer. And that uncertainty matters. Because if Russian intelligence had crossed that line and kept crossing it, the shadow war would look a lot darker.

     The line is clearest when it comes to serving officers in the field. Outside that category, things get darker. Russia has been widely accused of targeting defectors, former intelligence figures, and dissidents abroad. Those cases involve people Moscow may see as traitors or political threats. They’re not quite the same as killing active CIA, FSB, or GRU officers within the usual rules of the spy game.

     Inside that game, the preferred tools are quieter. Arrest the asset. Flip the source. Break the network. Expose the officer. Expel them. Damage the operation without starting an assassination war.

     That’s what makes Payback so unsettling. A Russian assassin hunting CIA operatives blows up the rulebook. Suddenly, being watched isn’t just being watched. Being exposed isn’t just career-ending. It could get you killed. Tradecraft isn’t enough. Trust disappears fast.

     And in real life, that’s exactly what both sides usually try to avoid.

     U.S. and Russian intelligence live in managed hostility. They spy, deceive, recruit, disrupt, and expose. They play a long, careful game in the dark.

     But both sides know the price of going too far.

     So the line holds. Not officially. Not perfectly. But enough that when a spy thriller sends an assassin across it, something feels badly wrong.

     And that’s where the real chill begins.

 

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.