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The museum had an interactive exhibit called Operation Spy where visitors assumed the roles of covert agents and participated in a one-hour Hollywood-style spy simulation. Visitors moved from area to area, interacting with puzzles, tasks, motion simulators, sound effects, and video messages to work through a mission to intercept a secret arms ...
Spy museum refers to a museum that uses spying and espionage as its core content. Spy museums include: CIA Museum, a spy museum in the CIA Headquarters, Virginia, United States; International Spy Museum, in Washington D.C., United States; KGB Espionage Museum, in New York, United States (formerly KGB Spy Museum)
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H. Keith Melton is a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, an intelligence historian, and a specialist in clandestine technology and espionage tradecraft. Melton is the author of many spy books. [1] He also is a founding member of the Board of Directors for the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C. [2]
The KGB Espionage Museum was a museum dedicated to the unbiased presentation of historical and contemporary KGB espionage equipment and tradecraft.The museum opened in the Chelsea and Greenwich Village neighborhoods of Manhattan in New York City on January 17, 2019 and featured the world's largest collection of KGB-specific spy equipment. [1]
The Berlin Spy Museum is a private museum in Berlin which was created by former journalist Franz-Michael Günther. The museum opened to the public on 19 September 2015. Günther's aspirations were to create a museum devoted to the history of spies and espionage in the former spy capital of Germa
The National Cryptologic Museum (which is open to the public in Annapolis Junction, Maryland) is the NSA counterpart to the CIA Museum and focuses on cryptology as opposed to human intelligence. The DIA Museum (Defense Intelligence Agency) is not public, is housed at its headquarters and focuses on the history of military intelligence and DIA's ...
After retiring from the CIA in 1990, Mendez and his wife Jonna, herself a 27-year veteran of the CIA, [12] served on the board of directors of the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C. He also worked as an artist. [12] Mendez wrote four non-fiction memoirs, two with his wife including: