Friday, June 5, 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 SERIES: Enter 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 SERIES: These 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!

CIA Recruitment, Russian Spies, and MI5: Why Russian Language Experts Are Vital to National Security

Russian words can expose threats before bullets ever fly

     For all the attention given to artificial intelligence, satellites, cyber warfare, and advanced surveillance technology, one old-fashioned skill remains as valuable as ever in the intelligence world: speaking foreign languages. Check it out- Foreign language proficiency a priority for CIA recruiters

     Today, both Britain's MI5 and America's CIA continue recruiting people fluent in Russian. Demand for Russian speakers has surged since Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the increase in Russian espionage activity across Europe and North America. Computers can translate words, but they often miss cultural nuances, slang, humor, regional dialects, and subtle clues that help intelligence officers understand what someone really means. Intelligence agencies know language is about far more than vocabulary. It's about understanding people.

     MI5 has publicly looked for Russian Language Intelligence Specialists who can dig into Russian communications, catch the meaning behind the words, and help spot threats from espionage to foreign influence operations.  That skill mattered after the 2018 Skripal poisoning in Salisbury, when British investigators traced the attack to Russian GRU assassins using aliases, travel records, and background details that demanded more than basic translation. Britain’s security services still need Russian speakers who can find what others miss in conversations, documents, online chatter, and intelligence reports.

     Across the Atlantic, the CIA puts the same premium on Russian language skills. The Agency needs people who can translate, interpret, and understand the culture behind the words when operations get serious. One real example was Soviet GRU Colonel Oleg Penkovsky, who secretly worked with the CIA and MI6 and provided crucial intelligence on Soviet missiles. In recent years, that need has only grown. Since Russia’s war in Ukraine began, the CIA has launched Russian-language outreach campaigns aimed at Russian officials, military personnel, and intelligence officers who may be willing to pass secrets to the United States. Those messages were written in Russian for a reason: when you want someone to risk everything, the right words matter. Check it out- From Telegram to X: CIA’s Epic Social Media Strategy to Recruit Russians

     Language skills also play a critical role in handling defectors and recruited agents. During the Cold War, and continuing into modern times, Russian-speaking case officers have been essential for building trust with Russian sources. A case officer who can speak directly with a source in his native language gains insights that can never be fully replicated through interpreters. Every conversation becomes more personal, more natural, and often more productive.

     One of the most famous examples involved former KGB officer Oleg Gordievsky, who secretly worked with British intelligence for years while serving inside Soviet intelligence. His ability to communicate with British handlers and provide detailed insights into Soviet intentions gave the West some of its most valuable intelligence during the Cold War. Russian language expertise on both sides of the relationship was indispensable to the operation. Similar language-intensive operations continue today, even if many details remain classified.

     The value of Russian language skills also appears in fiction inspired by real-world espionage. In Mission of Vengeance, the first novel in the Corey Pearson CIA Spymaster Series, CIA spymaster Corey Pearson relies on his fluent Russian to help a former KGB officer defect to the United States. During their conversations, the defector reveals a covert Russian operation in the Caribbean that threatens to undermine America's strategic presence in the region and place numerous Americans in danger. The scenario reflects a reality intelligence professionals understand well: language often becomes the bridge that allows critical secrets to reach the right people before disaster strikes.

     As technology continues to evolve, some outsiders assume that machine translation will eventually eliminate the need for human linguists. Intelligence professionals know better. The deeper you go into a language, the more you uncover about a person's motives, loyalties, fears, and intentions. Algorithms can translate words. They cannot fully understand human behavior.

     That is why MI5, the CIA, and other intelligence agencies continue searching for talented Russian speakers. In a world where adversaries increasingly operate in the shadows, the ability to understand what is being said, and what is left unsaid, remains one of the most powerful intelligence tools ever developed.

 

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, June 4, 2026

Why CIA Spycraft Still Beats Artificial Intelligence in the Real World

 

Dead Drops, HUMINT, and AI: Old-School Spycraft Refuses to Die in the age of AI

AI isn’t creeping into the world anymore. It’s kicking the front door open.

It can write essays, fake voices, create lifelike images, scan faces in a crowd, and chew through oceans of data before most of us finish our first cup of coffee.

     Today’s intelligence agencies have tools Cold War spies would’ve thought belonged in a science fiction movie. Satellites can stare down at military bases from space. Supercomputers can sort through billions of communications. Algorithms can catch patterns no human analyst would ever spot on their own.

     Yet with all that technology, one thing still hasn’t changed. The intelligence community still leans hard on old-fashioned spycraft because human beings remain the toughest intelligence target on earth. CIA operatives are trained to blend in, stay invisible in plain sight, and move through crowds without drawing attention. When it comes to gathering intelligence, that human touch still matters: check out  The Hidden World of CIA Spycraft: How Operatives Blend In and Stay Invisible

     Hollywood makes espionage look like a gadget war. Real spy work is usually quieter. Sometimes the best intelligence comes from a trusted source, a private conversation, or a dead drop tucked where nobody bothers to look.

     Truth is, most Americans use a little old-school spycraft every day. Ever hide Christmas gifts from your spouse? Congratulations, you just ran a concealment operation. Ever slip cash to a grandchild when the parents weren’t looking? That’s practically a brush pass. Ever stash a spare house key under a flowerpot? You’ve created a dead drop. The CIA would probably suggest a better hiding place, but the idea is the same.

     Technology changes. Human behavior doesn’t.

     That’s why intelligence agencies still put so much value on HUMINT, or Human Intelligence. That’s intelligence from people. Sources. Informants. Defectors. The folks who know things no satellite, cyber tool, or AI system can pull out of thin air.

     A satellite can show tanks massing near a border, but a human source can tell you why they’re there. A cyber hack might reveal a burst of communications traffic, but a human source can tell you what the people in charge are really thinking. AI can crunch mountains of information, but it still can’t sit across from a nervous government official, read the tension in his face, and figure out whether he’s ready to betray his country.

     That human element is still priceless.

     This balance between cutting-edge technology and traditional tradecraft appears throughout the Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series. Corey Pearson often relies on old-school espionage methods that intelligence officers have used for decades. Surveillance, covert meetings, brush passes, dead drops, and source handling remain essential tools in his arsenal.

     At the same time, Corey benefits from advanced technological support provided by Stacie, a CIA mole secretly planted inside the NSA. Armed with access to a powerful quantum computer, Stacie helps uncover information that would otherwise remain hidden.

     In the spy thriller Payback, book no. 3 of the series, Stacie uses her supercomputer to identify a suspicious individual entering the United States through San Francisco International Airport. By penetrating airport security camera systems and analyzing visual data, she helps Corey identify a potential threat before it can disappear into the country.

     But even with all that computing power, somebody still has to put boots on the ground. That somebody is Corey Pearson… and his elite CIA team. The reason is simple. Technology finds clues. People solve mysteries.

     In fact, the rise of artificial intelligence may actually increase the value of traditional spycraft. Why? Because deepfake videos can create fake evidence. AI-generated voices can mimic trusted contacts. Fraudulent emails can appear legitimate. Digital communications can be manipulated in ways that become increasingly difficult to detect.

     As digital deception becomes easier, intelligence officers find themselves relying even more on face-to-face validation, for a trusted source remains a trusted source, a dead drop can’t be hacked, a handwritten note cannot be digitally altered after it has been delivered, and an in-person meeting leaves no electronic trail: check out In the Shadows: Why the CIA Still Relies on Human Intelligence in a Digital Age.

     Those advantages have become more valuable, not less.

     Corey Pearson encounters this challenge repeatedly throughout the series. While Stacie's NSA quantum computer can locate patterns hidden within oceans of data, Corey frequently discovers that the final breakthrough comes from a source meeting, surveillance operation, or carefully executed piece of human tradecraft.

     The machines point him in the right direction, but the humans close the case. Many people assume intelligence work is becoming fully automated, but the reality is far different. Every technological advance creates new opportunities, but it also creates new vulnerabilities. Artificial intelligence can help identify a threat, but it can’t always explain motivation. Cyber tools can collect information, but they cannot always determine intent. Satellites can reveal movement, but they can’t always reveal plans. Only people can.

     That is why intelligence agencies continue recruiting sources, handling assets, conducting surveillance, and employing tradecraft techniques that would be familiar to CIA operatives from fifty years ago.

     The tools have changed. Human nature has not. And that's why old-school spycraft isn't disappearing anytime soon.

     Even in an age of quantum computers, artificial intelligence, facial recognition systems, and global surveillance networks, some of the most valuable intelligence in the world still begins with a conversation between two people.

     Or perhaps a dead drop hidden in plain sight.

     Just don't use the flowerpot

 

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, May 26, 2026

FBI and CIA Undercover Operations Expose Russian and Chinese Aerospace Espionage Targeting U.S. Stealth Fighters

 

Inside America’s Aerospace Espionage War as FBI and CIA Go Undercover Against Russian and Chinese Spy Networks

     America’s stealth aircraft aren’t just pricey war machines parked on some runway. They protect U.S. pilots, aircraft carriers, overseas troops, and even American cities from hostile nations. That’s why Russian and Chinese spies are obsessed with stealing aerospace secrets from U.S. defense contractors, increasingly from the inside.

     Most Americans think espionage looks like an old Cold War movie. A guy in a trench coat. A dark alley. A hidden camera. But real aerospace spying today usually looks much more normal and much more dangerous. It can be a respected engineer walking into work with a thumb drive. It can be confidential files quietly uploaded to the cloud. It can be a trusted insider spending years inside an aerospace company while quietly funneling America’s most sensitive defense technology overseas.

     The danger is enormous because foreign adversaries are not stealing these secrets for curiosity. They are stealing technology designed to keep Americans alive during war.

     One recent case involved engineer Chenguang Gong, who pleaded guilty to stealing military trade secrets tied to missile-launch detection systems, hypersonic missile tracking, and technology helping U.S. fighter jets evade heat-seeking missiles. According to the Justice Department, thousands of files were taken from a Southern California defense contractor.

     That kind of theft places Americans directly in harm’s way.

     If China or Russia figures out how America’s missile-detection systems work, they can find ways around them. If they get technology that helps U.S. stealth aircraft dodge enemy missiles, they can build countermeasures that put American pilots at greater risk in combat. Suddenly, an edge that took decades and billions to build starts shrinking.

     This is why the CIA and FBI counterintelligence divisions have become so aggressive in hunting aerospace espionage cases. They know America’s enemies are targeting aerospace companies because that is where the future battlefield is being shaped.

     Many espionage cases start with someone who already has access. Engineers, software developers, contractors, or researchers are quietly approached, financially pressured, ideologically influenced, or recruited through foreign business ties. Sometimes they’re cultivated for years before stealing a single file.

 That insider threat is the beating heart of the Corey Pearson CIA Spymaster novelette, The Hunt For A Russian Spy. Corey Pearson goes deep undercover as a janitor inside a Boeing aerospace plant after intelligence reveals a Russian mole is already inside, hunting blueprints for a next-generation stealth jet.

     That’s what makes the story hit hard. It feels real. Modern espionage doesn’t always begin with explosions or assassinations. Sometimes it starts with a badge swipe, a quiet hallway, and someone trusted sitting alone at a computer.

     America’s counterintelligence agencies know this.

     The FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, CIA, and Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency constantly watch suspicious technology transfers, insider activity, foreign recruiting efforts, and cyber intrusions tied to aerospace contractors. In recent years, federal authorities have disrupted numerous operations linked to China, Iran, and Russia involving missile technology, aviation systems, AI, and military sensor development.

  The problem has become so serious that former FBI Director Christopher Wray repeatedly warned Chinese and Russian economic espionage now operates on a scale unlike anything America has faced before. Aerospace companies are prime targets because stealing one breakthrough can save adversaries decades of research and development.  

     And when that happens, the danger eventually reaches everyday Americans. Stealth aircraft are part of America’s deterrence. Their existence makes hostile nations think twice because they know the U.S. has advanced military capabilities they can’t easily counter. But once those secrets leak, enemies get bolder. Rival nations improve missile systems. Detection technology gets better. Cyberwarfare becomes more sophisticated. The battlefield grows more dangerous for American servicemen and women.

     That is why aerospace espionage is not just a corporate problem. It is a homeland security problem.

     The Hunt For A Russian Spy captures this reality by showing Corey Pearson hunting an invisible enemy already embedded inside America’s defense industry. The real-world cases unfolding today prove that scenario is no longer fiction. Foreign intelligence services understand that stealing aerospace secrets can weaken America without firing a shot.

     And somewhere tonight, inside a defense contractor’s office, an FBI or CIA counterintelligence team is likely trying to stop it before the damage reaches American skies.

 

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, May 24, 2026

The Hidden World of CIA Spycraft: How Operatives Blend In and Stay Invisible

 

Modern spycraft isn’t about looking dangerous. It’s about disappearing in plain sight. Step inside the hidden world of CIA tradecraft, undercover operations, and the inspiration behind the Corey Pearson Spy Series.

 Most people picture CIA operatives the way Hollywood portrays them: car chases, suppressed pistols, luxury casinos, and dramatic escapes.

     Real espionage is usually much quieter.

     One of the most important skills a CIA operative can have overseas is the ability to disappear into ordinary life. Blend in. Avoid patterns. Never give hostile intelligence services a reason to look twice.

     Despite satellites, cyberwarfare, AI, and electronic surveillance, intelligence still depends heavily on people. Human beings recruit sources, steal secrets, and meet informants face-to-face in dangerous places where one mistake can expose everything.

     Former CIA disguise specialists have described how much effort goes into helping operatives remain invisible overseas. Sometimes that means disguises, false passports, or new identities. But often, the most valuable tradecraft is behavior.

     A real undercover operative does not act like a spy… and that’s what keeps them alive. The goal is to become forgettable: a businessman checking into a hotel, a tourist taking photos, a professor attending a conference, or an aid worker sitting in a crowded café.

     Hostile intelligence services from countries like Russia, China, and Iran search for suspicious behavior, nervous habits, repeated routines, or unusual movements. That is why CIA operatives train in surveillance detection, learning how to spot followers, enter and leave meetings discreetly, and move through crowds without being remembered.

     Because one mistake can destroy an operation or get someone killed, and history offers real examples of how critical this tradecraft can be.

     One famous case involved Antonio Mendez, the CIA disguise expert who helped orchestrate the 1980 “Canadian Caper” during the Iran hostage crisis. Mendez entered Tehran under cover and helped six American diplomats escape Iran by posing as a Hollywood film crew scouting locations for a fake science-fiction movie. The operation succeeded because Iranian authorities believed they looked ordinary and belonged there.

     Another example was Aldrich Ames, whose betrayal forced the CIA to rethink surveillance detection and operational security. Ames secretly passed information to the Soviet Union for years while appearing to be a normal CIA officer. His case showed how dangerous hidden espionage becomes when tradecraft works too well, even inside intelligence agencies.

     Despite advances in technology, HUMINT, or human intelligence, still matters. Satellites can photograph missile sites. Cyber tools can intercept communications. AI can process vast amounts of data. But none can fully replace a trusted human source inside a foreign government, military program, or terrorist network.

     That hidden layer of intelligence work protects Americans more often than most people realize. Threats involving terrorism, espionage, cyberattacks, and foreign influence operations are often uncovered overseas long before the public hears about them.

    That hidden world of surveillance and undercover operations became one of the inspirations behind my Corey Pearson- CIA Spymaster Series. Throughout the series, Corey Pearson and his elite CIA team move quietly through dangerous environments conducting surveillance, meeting assets, and operating where one wrong move could expose everything. Whether blending into crowded Caribbean streets, monitoring Russian operatives, or tracking sleeper-cell activity tied to threats against America, the tension comes from staying invisible while danger moves around them.

     That is often closer to real espionage than many people realize, for the best undercover operatives do not look dangerous. They look ordinary. And that is exactly what makes them effective.

     Spycraft has come a long way from the old Cold War image of trench coats and secret notes. Today’s operatives work in a world filled with facial recognition, biometric tracking, cyber monitoring, and cameras almost everywhere. In a lot of ways, blending in is harder than ever.

But America’s enemies never stopped spying. Russia still runs covert operations. China still goes after technology and intelligence. Iran still watches people overseas and pushes influence campaigns. And terrorist groups are still looking for ways to hit Western targets.

     That’s why CIA operatives continue moving quietly through foreign cities under false identities, trying to uncover threats before Americans feel the consequences.

     When intelligence work succeeds, most people never hear about it. No headlines. No public celebration.

     Just ordinary people living ordinary lives, unaware that hidden dangers may have already been stopped far from home by someone who knew how to disappear into a crowd.

 

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, May 13, 2026

Russian Spy Ship Near U.S. Waters? Why the Yantar Has Intelligence Officials Worried

 

U.S. intelligence is watching Russia’s Yantar closely as it prowls near undersea cables.

Most Americans don’t spend much time wondering what’s moving through the Atlantic just beyond the horizon. Cargo ships. Cruise liners. Navy destroyers. It all seems far away, routine, and easy to ignore.

     But somewhere out there, Russia’s spy ship Yantar may be watching.

This isn’t an ordinary vessel. The Yantar was built for espionage, plain and simple.

     Officially, Russia calls it a “special-purpose ship.” Western intelligence and naval experts see something far more troubling. In service since 2015, the Yantar carries advanced surveillance gear and deep-sea submersibles capable of operating thousands of feet below the dark ocean’s surface undetected.

     That’s where the real concern begins.

     The Yantar’s two advanced submersibles called Rus and Consul, and these are no ordinary research craft. They can plunge to incredible depths and work around vital undersea infrastructure. Recovering wreckage is one thing. Mapping, and possibly meddling with, communication cables is another.

     And those cables matter far more than most people realize.

     Modern civilization runs through those lines buried beneath the ocean floor. Global internet traffic. Financial systems. Military communications. Intelligence sharing. International business. Massive portions of the digital world travel through undersea cables connecting continents every second of every day.

     If those systems were disrupted during a major crisis, the consequences could ripple through everyday American life almost immediately.

     That’s why Western intelligence agencies pay close attention whenever the Yantar appears near sensitive areas.

     The Yantar has set off alarms more than once by hanging around major cable hubs and military zones along the U.S. coast. From Puerto Rico to the East Coast, its movements have drawn close attention from intelligence analysts and naval surveillance teams. Officials believe ships like the Yantar may be mapping vulnerable infrastructure, collecting signals intelligence, watching naval activity, and spotting weak points that could be exploited during a future conflict.

     One location that drew serious attention was Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay in Georgia, home to America’s Atlantic Fleet ballistic missile submarines. Kings Bay is one of the crown jewels of U.S. national defense. The base supports Ohio-class submarines armed with Trident II D5 nuclear missiles, forming a major part of America’s nuclear deterrent.

     So when the Yantar appeared nearby in 2015, intelligence officials noticed immediately.

     When a Russian intelligence ship with advanced surveillance gear and deep-sea capabilities shows up near one of America’s most sensitive naval facilities, nobody writes it off as coincidence. They see reconnaissance.

That’s what makes ships like the Yantar so dangerous. They blur the line between spying and preparing for future disruption. They stay legal in international waters while quietly probing America’s infrastructure, communications, and military operations from the shadows.

     And the threat doesn’t stop at America.

     The Yantar has also raised concern in the Irish Sea and throughout Europe, where officials fear Russia may be mapping undersea cables and critical infrastructure that could become targets during future confrontations.  One naval expert bluntly warned, “This is how Russia will take revenge.”

     That’s not paranoia anymore.

     Modern warfare increasingly targets infrastructure instead of armies alone. Undersea cables, satellite networks, cyber systems, and communications are all part of today’s battlefield. A major disruption could create economic chaos, interrupt military coordination, and impact millions of civilians long before traditional weapons are used.

     That real-world tension became one of the inspirations behind my spy thriller Mission of Vengeance.

     In the novel, CIA spymaster Corey Pearson confronts a corrupt Russian oligarch using his yacht to smuggle assassins through Caribbean waters as part of a broader covert operation against American interests. As the story escalates, the Yantar itself enters the picture, deploying submersibles during a tense covert extraction operation that blurs the line between fiction and reality. The ship’s appearance in the novel works because the Yantar already feels like something pulled straight from a spy thriller.

     Only it’s real. And that’s the unsettling part.

     Most Americans never see the hidden intelligence war unfolding beneath the oceans. They don’t see satellites tracking suspicious vessels. They don’t see Navy patrols quietly shadowing Russian ships. They don’t see intelligence analysts studying maritime patterns and undersea vulnerabilities.

     But that shadow war is happening every day.

     That’s why Mission of Vengeance resonates with espionage readers. It taps into a growing reality that modern threats aren’t always obvious. Sometimes they drift silently offshore disguised as research ships while carrying the tools of espionage below deck.

     And somewhere beneath the Atlantic, while most of the world sleeps, ships like the Yantar continue prowling through the darkness searching for weaknesses in the infrastructure modern life depends upon.

 

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, May 12, 2026

Engineered Viruses and Biosecurity Threats: The Invisible Danger That Could Reach Your City

Corey Pearson and his CIA team look like ordinary people in a New York crowd. They're not. And the threat they're hunting cannot be seen until it's already too close.

 

     Most Americans picture intelligence agencies chasing terrorists, tracking hackers, or keeping tabs on foreign spies in shadowy embassies.

     But one of the biggest threats on their radar now is much harder to see.

     Viruses.

     Disease outbreaks.

     Lab accidents.

     And then there’s the nightmare scenario: someone using biology as a weapon, the same way enemies use bombs or cyberattacks.

     It sounds like a movie plot… until you remember COVID.

     Almost overnight, schools closed. Flights were grounded. Store shelves went bare. Families were cut off from each other. Businesses struggled or disappeared.

     Millions of Americans learned the hard way just how fragile normal life can be when a biological threat moves faster than governments can respond.

     That’s why intelligence agencies got pulled so deeply into COVID.

     They weren’t just asking where it came from. They were asking how it spread, what other countries knew, whether anyone was hiding information, and what it all meant for America’s security.

     Because today, biological threats don’t stay “over there.” A virus that appears in another country can wind up inside an American airport within hours.

     That’s where intelligence monitoring enters the picture.

     When outbreaks occur overseas, U.S. intelligence agencies aren’t simply watching out of curiosity. They’re asking hard questions. Is this natural? Was there a lab accident? Is a foreign government covering up information? Could hostile nations exploit the chaos? Could travel spread it rapidly into the United States?

     Those aren’t just public health questions anymore. They’re national security questions.

     Recent concern surrounding Hantavirus outbreaks is another reminder of how quickly Americans become aware that invisible threats can move fast and create real fear. Most people had barely heard of Hantavirus until headlines suddenly appeared and questions started spreading online. That’s usually how it works. One moment life feels normal. The next, people are wondering how serious something might become and whether authorities are ahead of it.

     Most of the monitoring and analysis happening behind the scenes never becomes public. Intelligence agencies coordinate with health experts, global monitoring systems, travel data analysts, and allied nations trying to identify patterns before threats spiral out of control.

     And honestly, that hidden layer of protection is something most Americans rarely think about.

     People see firefighters fighting flames. They see police cars on the street.    But intelligence work surrounding biological threats happens quietly in the background. Analysts studying outbreaks. Monitoring foreign reporting. Watching suspicious lab activity. Tracking travel patterns. Looking for signs that something dangerous could spread before the public even knows it exists.

     That hidden world became one of the inspirations behind my spy thriller Shadow War.

     In the novel, CIA spymaster Corey Pearson and his elite CIA team uncover a nightmare scenario involving a Russian sleeper cell and a lethal engineered virus intended for release in New York City. What makes the threat frightening isn’t just the virus itself. It’s the speed, secrecy, and confusion surrounding it. By the time people realize something is happening, it may already be too late.

     That fear hits differently after living through COVID. Suddenly, fictional biological threats don’t feel quite so fictional anymore. And that’s exactly why intelligence agencies take biosecurity so seriously today.

     The battlefield isn’t what it used to be. Enemies don’t need tanks rolling across a border to throw a country into chaos anymore. One biological event can flood hospitals, shake the economy, empty shelves, spread panic, and spark political turmoil all at once.

     And sometimes, the fear comes from not knowing. Was it natural? Was it an accident? Was it intentional? In the intelligence world, those questions matter a lot.

     What makes this even more unsettling is the technology behind it.

     AI, genetic research, and global travel have changed the game. We’ve already seen how real biological threats can hit close to home, from the 2001 anthrax attacks to COVID shutting down daily life, and even lab safety scares here in the U.S.

     The same breakthroughs that help scientists fight disease can also raise terrifying questions.

     What happens if that knowledge is stolen?

     What happens if it’s misused?

     What happens if an engineered pathogen ends up in the wrong hands?

     That’s one reason Shadow War resonates with readers who enjoy realistic espionage stories. The novel taps into a very modern kind of fear—the idea that America’s enemies may someday attack not with bullets or missiles, but with something invisible moving silently through crowded cities before anyone fully understands what’s happening.

     And while the novel is fiction, the threat behind it feels a lot closer to real life than most people want to admit.

     Most Americans don’t wake up thinking about intelligence agencies tracking outbreaks overseas. They’re thinking about work, school, bills, flights, groceries, and getting through the day.

     But that’s exactly why the quiet work matters.

     Because a biological threat doesn’t need to announce itself. It can move through airports, offices, schools, subway cars, and crowded city streets before most people even know there’s a problem.

     When intelligence works, warnings come faster. Information moves sooner. Leaders have a better chance to act before confusion turns into panic.

     That’s the strange reality of modern intelligence work.

     Sometimes protecting Americans means watching for something no one can see until it’s already too close.

 

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.