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The World Factbook, also known as the CIA World Factbook, [1] is a reference resource produced by the United States' Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) with almanac-style information about the countries of the world. The official print version is available from the Government Publishing Office.
The CIA World Factbook, as a public domain source, is widely used as a source by Wikipedia. Some of the statements in it are undisputed and can be used without further qualification. This includes: Geographic data, except in the case of certain international conflicts
{{#invoke:CIA World Factbook|archive|year=|date=|archive=}} Generates a link to the annual archives of the CIA World Factbook. |year= the year of the archive |date= the date of the article in the Factbook (either on the article itself, or the access date of the article) |archive= the url or date of the archive of the article.
This is a sortable list of countries and their total length of pipelines, mostly based on the CIA World Factbook, [1] ... Guatemala: 480: 480: 2007
The CIA's World Factbook team also has created special travel briefings for many countries. Josh's tip: Look up the State Department Travel Advisories for your destination, though they often tend ...
The list is based on CIA World Factbook estimates. Countries or dependent territories without a 2017 estimate are omitted. List. CIA World Factbook (2017) [1]
The rise of communism in Guatemala was not connected to U.S.S.R. due to statements from Nikolai Leonov the former KGB intelligence officer in charge of Central American intelligence [2] as well as push back by the Soviet union and Guatemalan ambassadors in the UN in reaction to U.S. accusations of Soviet Intervention within The Guatemalan government [3]