Sunday, March 8, 2026

Welcome to the COREY PEARSON- CIA SPYMASTER SERIES!

                    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! 

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!

Think allies don’t spy on each other? Think again.

 

Allies by day, spies by night in global shadows

People like to imagine alliances as clean, loyal arrangements. Friendly nations shake hands, sign treaties, and promise cooperation. But behind the smiles and official statements, another reality hums quietly in the background. Intelligence services, even among allies, keep watching each other. They always have.

     For years, Americans have heard complaints from European leaders about U.S. spying. The CIA and the National Security Agency, NSA, are often cast as villains in these stories, prying into the affairs of friendly governments. But the truth, as many intelligence veterans will tell you, is messier. In the shadow world of espionage, allies spy on each other all the time.

     One episode that shows how this quiet spy game works involves a German intelligence officer named Markus Reichel. He worked for Germany’s Federal Intelligence Service, the BND. By most accounts, things weren’t going well for him there. During his treason trial, Reichel admitted he often felt sidelined and mistrusted by the people around him. That kind of situation can make someone vulnerable, and in the world of espionage a frustrated insider can look like a good recruiting opportunity.

     CIA case officers recruited him.

     Reichel eventually confessed to spying for the Americans. When asked why he did it, his explanation sounded almost personal. At the BND, he said, nobody trusted him with anything important. But the CIA? “It was different at the CIA,” he told the court.

     Stories like that tend to spark outrage in Europe. They fuel the narrative that Washington is snooping on its friends. Yet inside the intelligence world, none of this is surprising.

     Peter Earnst, a longtime CIA veteran who spent 36 years with the agency, often spoke openly about this reality. Twenty-five of those years were in the CIA’s clandestine service, the part of the agency that handles spies, covert meetings, and quiet operations. Later, he became the founding executive director of the International Spy Museum in Washington.

     Earnst had a simple explanation. Countries spy on allies because alliances don’t erase national interests.

     In his view, the practice goes back centuries. Even friendly governments want to know what others are really thinking, what deals they might be making, and what decisions they’re considering behind closed doors. Intelligence fills those gaps.

     Embassies, he liked to point out, play a double role in this system. Officially, they’re diplomatic outposts where countries exchange information. Unofficially, they are ideal listening posts. Intelligence officers often operate from embassy buildings under diplomatic cover, quietly gathering insights that never appear in official briefings.

     So when European leaders erupt over American spying, Earnst tended to shake his head. In his opinion, there was a touch of hypocrisy in the outrage.

      “They all spy on each other,” he would say, including on the United States.

     Still, some revelations have caused real diplomatic headaches. Documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden exposed several U.S. surveillance efforts involving friendly governments. Among the most explosive claims was that the NSA had monitored the cellphone of German Chancellor Angela Merkel. The agency had also collected large amounts of phone metadata tied to communications in France and Spain.

     The leaks also suggested that American intelligence had listened in on parts of the Mexican government and hacked into the public email account of former Mexican president Felipe Calderón, along with a domain used by members of his cabinet.

     For intelligence professionals like Earnst, the bigger shock wasn’t the spying itself but the damage caused by the leaks.

     “It’s the leak that keeps on giving on damage,” he once said, reflecting on Snowden’s disclosures. After decades inside the intelligence community, he admitted he was relieved to be retired. “I’m glad I’m not in the intelligence community right now. It must be a nightmare.”

     Senior officials have occasionally acknowledged the obvious. Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper once admitted that gathering intelligence on foreign leaders is “fundamentally a given.” Nations want to know what other leaders are planning, including friends.

     During a House Intelligence Committee hearing, Clapper was asked directly whether U.S. allies spy on American leaders as well.

     His answer was short and blunt.

     “Absolutely.”

     France, for example, has long collected intelligence on American politics and industry. Industrial espionage, aimed at giving domestic companies an edge, has been part of that effort. In the intelligence world, no country is entirely off limits.

     Well, almost none.

     There is one rare exception to this unwritten rule of friendly spying. The United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand operate under an intelligence-sharing arrangement known as the Five Eyes.  Born in the early years of the Cold War in 1946, the pact is essentially a gentlemen’s agreement: share intelligence freely and don’t spy on each other.

     Outside that circle, though, the rules are different.

     Allies cooperate, share secrets, and stand together in public. But in quiet rooms, behind embassy walls and encrypted networks, they’re also keeping a careful eye on one another. In the strange, patient world of intelligence, friendship rarely means blind trust.

 

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, March 3, 2026

Your Smartphone Is the New Spy Battlefield

 

Modern Spies Turn Phones Into Goldmines

In early 2017, a huge batch of secret CIA files suddenly hit the internet, and people got a glimpse of how modern spying really works. It wasn’t the trench coat, back-alley kind. It looked more like something out of a high-tech spy movie.

     The material was published by WikiLeaks and it laid out, in plain detail, the agency’s cyber tools. These weren’t just broad claims about having “advanced capabilities.” They were nuts-and-bolts instructions. Actual how-to guides. The kind of documents that show exactly how someone could slip into a smartphone, a laptop, or even a smart TV connected to your Wi-Fi.

     Think less vague spy talk and more digital lock-picking manuals. Tools built to quietly open the devices most of us use every single day.

     What unsettled people wasn’t just the existence of cyber-espionage. Most assume intelligence agencies hack things. It was the scope. The documents showed how the CIA could exploit weaknesses in iPhones, Android devices, Windows computers, and other everyday tech. Instead of cracking encrypted apps directly, the tools often worked by compromising the device itself. Once inside the phone, it didn’t matter how secure the messaging app claimed to be. If the operating system was controlled, the data was exposed.

     Think about that for a second. The smartphone in your pocket isn’t just a phone. It’s your conversations, contacts, travel history, photos, passwords, banking access. It’s your life in digital form. The leaked files suggested intelligence officers had developed ways to quietly access that treasure trove without the owner ever knowing.

     Officials blasted the leak as a major national security breach. Sure, it was embarrassing. But that wasn’t the real fear.

     The bigger worry was this: once those cyber tools are out in the open, you can’t shove them back in the box. Other governments get a look at them. So do criminal hackers. They study how they work. They tweak them. They make them better.

     In the spy world, a tool built to protect national security today can end up being used against you tomorrow.

     For most people, the whole episode was a wake-up call. It showed just how much spying has changed.

     Sure, the old-school image of trench coats, secret meetings, and coded messages still exists. But that’s only part of the picture now. Today’s battlefield runs through software, hidden bugs in operating systems, and flaws in devices most of us use every day.

     Spies still meet sources and run agents. But just as often, they’re sitting behind screens, fighting quiet battles through networks, chips, and servers.

     That push and pull between keeping secrets and having them blown wide open is what fuels a lot of modern spy fiction.

     In my thriller Shadow War, CIA spymaster Corey Pearson gets his hands on the complete contents of a suspected spy’s smartphone. Texts. Photos. Hidden messages. The kind of digital trail most people assume is safe. As he digs through it, he uncovers a dangerous connection to Russia that changes the stakes fast.

     It’s fiction, yes. But it’s grounded in a simple reality: these days, the most explosive secrets usually aren’t tucked away in a locked safe. They’re riding around in somebody’s pocket.

   The 2017 leak was a reminder that the intelligence world runs in a space most of us never see. It’s complicated, highly secretive, and always changing.

     And when that hidden world suddenly comes into view, even for a short time, it makes you look at things differently. You start to think harder about privacy, about who really holds power, and about the phones and gadgets we depend on every single day.

 

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.

Monday, March 2, 2026

Mexico Cartels, Border Security, and the Growing Clash Between U.S. Intelligence and Politics

Mexico Cartel Violence Escalates Amid Border Security Crisis
      When a cartel boss like Rafael Caro Quintero falls, it’s never just a criminal obituary. He wasn’t some shadowy nobody. He was a veteran power broker who helped shape Mexico’s narcotics trade, first rising to notoriety in the 1980s and later reemerging as a symbol of defiance against the state.   He understood logistics, loyalty, and fear. He managed routes that fed the American drug market and built a network that mixed intimidation with strategy. Men like him don’t just run crews. They influence territory, corrupt institutions, and shape daily life in entire regions. So when someone that central is killed, it doesn’t create peace. It creates a scramble for power.

     A lot of people think taking out a guy like that means the problem just got smaller. Usually, it doesn’t. Most times it blows the lid clean off. The roadblocks, the cars set on fire, whole areas frozen in place, that’s not random chaos. That’s a statement. It’s the cartel saying, we’re still here, and we can shut this place down whenever we feel like it. We can block highways, box in families, stall businesses. That’s not just violence. It’s a show of force, proving they can flex power in daylight and make the government look like it’s scrambling.

     The danger multiplies when succession is contested. A single boss, however ruthless, can impose order. Remove him and rivals test each other. They prove credibility through escalation. They recruit harder, intimidate more openly, and punish disloyalty in public. Tourist corridors and business hubs don’t get immunity. They become leverage. The message is simple: if we can freeze a city, we can touch anything.

     This is the part that keeps people in the intelligence world up at night. They’re not just glancing at travel warnings. They’re digging into what happens when the chain of command snaps. Who grabs the routes? Who controls the guns? What alliances start forming across the border? Splinter groups can be jumpier and more violent than the boss who held them together. And outsiders may see chaos as an opening. When a power seat goes empty, somebody lunges for it.

     I see that same pressure play out in my Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series. Corey Pearson and his CIA team know the loud explosion is only the opening act. What matters is what moves in the shadows after the blast fades. When control cracks, new players edge in and test limits. That quiet reshuffling of power keeps intelligence pros on edge, because by the time others notice, the balance has changed.

     Here’s the uncomfortable part. We like to treat cartel violence as something that happens “over there,” a problem that matters only when it ruins a beach trip. But the same crews that shut down highways in Mexico move drugs into our cities, wash cash through global banks, and squeeze towns along our border. When a cartel can flip a switch and freeze major roads to make a point, that’s proof of capability. And capability like that doesn’t stop at a line on a map.

     The real trouble starts when hard intelligence slams into politics. Straight talk from analysts is rarely convenient. It complicates trade, muddies diplomacy, and doesn’t fit campaign talking points. The temptation is to soften it or pretend everything’s steady. But when leaders treat intelligence like it needs to pass a loyalty test, they confuse optics with strategy. That’s how problems grow teeth. Not because we didn’t see them, but because we chose not to look.

     In the Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series, one brutal attack blows apart the tidy story leaders want to tell, and suddenly they’re staring at intelligence they can’t spin away. Corey Pearson and his team operate where facts clash with politics. That’s the squeeze we’re seeing here. The issue isn’t whether cartels are dangerous. We know they are. The real question is whether we’ll treat their growing power as a serious, long-term national security threat, or just another headline that fades.

     This is bigger than one dead kingpin. When criminal outfits can flex muscle, scare officials, and choke off trade routes, they’re daring democratic governments to prove they’re still in charge. If leaders put party loyalty or short-term headlines ahead of straight intelligence, we give ground.

     National security only works when we deal with the world as it is, not the version we’d prefer to sell. The second we kid ourselves, the people who live off chaos gain the upper hand.

 

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.

Sunday, March 1, 2026

The Real National Security Crisis Isn’t Overseas. It’s in Our Own Backyard

America's Biggest Threat is Turning Inward

When most Americans hear “national security,” they picture threats overseas. Chinese ships in the Pacific. Russian hackers behind glowing screens. Iranian-backed militias causing chaos. Terrorist plots unfolding far from home. For decades, that’s where the U.S. intelligence community has focused its energy, money, and manpower: on dangers that start somewhere else.

     But more and more experienced national security officials are warning that the most serious threat right now isn’t primarily foreign. It’s domestic. And you don’t need a security clearance to see why.

     You can feel it in everyday life. Yard signs that accuse the other side of treason. School board meetings that spiral into shouting matches. Neighbors who once chatted easily now avoiding political conversation altogether. Social media feeds filled with claims that elections are rigged, courts are corrupt, and the whole system is broken. This isn’t normal policy disagreement. It’s deep distrust.

     Democracy is built to handle arguments. It can survive sharp debate. What it struggles with is when people stop believing the rules matter. When confidence in elections erodes. When political violence becomes less shocking. When judges, law enforcement, and other institutions are treated not as referees but as enemies. Those are not just political problems. From a national security standpoint, they are warning signs.

     The intelligence community depends on a political system that basically works. Agencies operate under laws passed by Congress and overseen by elected officials. Their power comes from public trust and adherence to the rule of law. If a large share of the country believes elections are fake or federal agencies are just tools of one party, that trust thins out. And when trust weakens, the foundation beneath the entire security structure starts to crack.

     Internal instability also makes long-term strategy harder. Competing with China takes consistency across administrations. Keeping Russia in check requires steady coordination with allies. Countering cyber threats depends on reliable funding and some level of bipartisan cooperation. If Washington lurches from shutdown threats to partisan standoffs, or policies swing wildly every few years, it sends a signal that the United States is distracted and divided.

     Other countries notice. In fact, they look for it.

     Foreign intelligence services track American politics closely. They study our elections and monitor our public arguments. When they see polarization, they see opportunity. It doesn’t take much to push an already divided society further apart. A false story. A manipulated video. A coordinated online campaign that inflames both sides at once. The more fractured we are, the easier it is for outside actors to amplify mistrust. Eventually, the line between a domestic political fight and foreign interference starts to blur.

     All of this affects America’s standing abroad. U.S. power isn’t just about military strength. It’s about credibility. Allies cooperate with Washington because they see it as stable and committed to democratic principles. If American politics look chaotic or institutions appear shaky, that confidence erodes. Partners hedge. Rivals test limits. Deterrence depends as much on perception as on weapons.

     There’s also a practical side most people never see. National security runs on rules. Intelligence agencies need clear legal authority. Surveillance requires court approval. The military answers to civilian leadership. If those guardrails are politicized or dismissed as illegitimate, the system clogs up. Even well-funded agencies struggle when the institutions behind them lose respect.

     What makes this moment especially concerning is that external threats haven’t gone away. China is expanding its military reach. Russia remains aggressive. Cyberattacks are becoming more sophisticated. Ideally, the country would confront those challenges from a position of internal cohesion. Instead, it’s navigating them amid deep domestic strain.

     History shows that great powers rarely collapse because someone storms the gates. More often, they weaken gradually from within. Political fragmentation. Loss of institutional legitimacy. Growing internal conflict. Rivals exploit those cracks. Intelligence professionals have studied this pattern across decades and continents.

     None of this means the United States is doomed. But it does mean we need to broaden how we think about national security. It’s not just about missiles and spies. It’s also about trust in elections, respect for courts, and keeping political conflict within peaceful bounds. Those aren’t abstract ideals. They are strategic assets. When they erode, America’s ability to deter adversaries, reassure allies, and defend its interests erodes with them.

     The intelligence community can track foreign threats and disrupt plots. What it can’t do is repair civic trust or fix political culture. That responsibility belongs to the country as a whole. And if it’s ignored, the consequences won’t stay confined to partisan arguments. They’ll shape how the world sees the United States and how effectively it can protect itself in an increasingly competitive world.

 

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, February 25, 2026

Inside the Pearson Files: Declassified moments from the world of CIA spymaster Corey Pearson

Paradise shatters when Corey Pearson's satellite phone rings

Sunlight spills across a quiet backyard in Marsh Harbor. Mango and jackfruit trees sway in the breeze. A sea grape hedge hangs heavy with ripe fruit. A Land Rover marked Natural World of Abaco sits in the driveway, the perfect cover for a tour guide and her easygoing island life. 

But beneath the sweet scent of fruit and salt air, this home is something else entirely.

     The basement holds a biometric-locked arsenal. Surveillance tech. Secure comms. Weapons sealed away behind steel and code. This isn’t just a family house in the Bahamas. It’s a CIA safe haven.

     Then the satellite phone vibrates.

     Corey Pearson, CIA spymaster, answers to his codename, “Brush Pass.” On the other end is a case officer in the Dominican Republic. An American family has been slaughtered at a luxury beach resort. Two parents. Two children. The FBI is on scene. Local police are scrambling.

     And just like that, paradise shifts.

     In this moment, you see what makes Corey dangerous. He moves seamlessly from yard work to operational readiness. From husband and father to architect of covert response. The spycraft isn’t flashy. It’s layered cover identities. Hardened safe houses. Secure satellite comms. Quiet coordination before the world even understands what’s happening.

     This is where the hunt begins.

     If you want to see how Corey Pearson and his elite CIA team unravel a brutal international conspiracy that starts in paradise and spirals into something far darker, you’ll want to read the full novel. Mission Of Vengeance is available to you now on Amazon in Kindle, paperback, or Audio. Enjoy! 

Inside the Pearson Files: Declassified moments from the world of CIA spymaster Corey Pearson.

 

For a heartbeat, the sky over Guantánamo Bay glitches.

     A Navy recon drone banking in perfect formation suddenly falters. Its AI goes blind. Its controls turn hostile. And in the final seconds before impact, a luminous strand of code pulses across the video feed like a signature from an unseen enemy.

     In the real world, the CIA relies on drones like this for surveillance, target tracking, and high-risk intelligence missions where human assets can’t safely operate. They are designed to be secure, encrypted, and untouchable.

     Not a failure.

     A warning.

     When CIA spymaster Corey Pearson is called in, one truth becomes clear: someone has found a way inside America’s defenses—and they want the Agency to know it.

     Step inside the high-stakes world of GHOST SIGNAL and watch Corey Pearson uncover who dared to hijack a U.S. drone in midair—and why this attack is only the beginning.