"spy" is still not a nice word. (Which is why espionage organizations
prefer to call themselves "intelligence agencies," and their
employees prefer the job title "intelligence officer.") However
much modern political cynicism might concede the necessity of
snooping on certain other people in a dangerous world, espionage
is not a profession parents hope their children will enter.
Spying acquired its unsavory reputation at the moment of
its birth, somewhere around 5,000 years ago in ancient Egypt,
when King Thutmosis III hit upon the idea of concealing men
inside flour sacks to spy on the besieged city of Jaffa. Thutmosis
organized history's first official government state espionage apparatus,
an innovation he later had chiseled among hieroglyphics
recording the triumphs of his reign—although he was careful to
categorize his espionage feats under the heading of "secret science."
They represented a distinctly secondary note alongside
such real accomplishments as the construction of cities and the
filling of granaries that provided food for his people. Thutmosis
may have been a great spymaster, but he sensed there was something
not quite nice about snooping, even on his enemies, and it
is clear that he much preferred to be remembered for other examples
of his statecraft.
The Bible subsequently recorded Moses dispatching spies to "go
spy the land," but it was not until the creation of great nation
states three centuries ago that organized espionage—and spies—
became an integral part of statecraft. At the same time, a distaste
for spies and spying began to develop among the people of those
great nation states. (James Bond is only the latest in a long line
of fictional characters who never seem to dirty their hands in the
real-life grubby world of the spy.)
In the twentieth century, entire armies of spies have been
deployed during a period in history marked by almost continuous
war. And where there is war, there are spies. To confront the more
than 200,000 spies employed by the Soviet Union at the height
of its power, and the slighdy smaller espionage army of the United
States is to understand how deeply spying has woven itself into
the fabric of modern civilization.
This century has sometimes been called "the century of the
spy," because the insatiable quest for information by modern industrialized
states has created the vast armies of spies who have
come to play such a critical role in the course of world history.
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