
On Monday, March 25, former Special Agent Robert Booth will deliver remarks at the Annenberg Presidential Conference Center in the George H. W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum on Texas A&M University’s campus.
This event, hosted by the Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs at the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University, is free and open to the public. Event details and registration can be found at bush.tamu.edu/events.
Booth, former “spy hunter,” will discuss the meaning of counterintelligence and counterespionage, including economic espionage versus military and diplomatic espionage. He will also talk on the threats spies pose to our national security from the State Department’s perspective. The talk is based on his own experiences from two State Department espionage cases involving Felix Bloch and Kendall Myers and their impact on US national security.
Booth is the former Deputy Director of the State Department’s Office of Counterintelligence. For twenty-eight years, he worked in the State Department’s Bureau of Diplomatic Security and in the Office of Counterintelligence as a special agent. Booth also authored State Department Counterintelligence: Leaks, Spies, and Lies, in which he wrote about his experiences as an insider in three counterespionage cases and numerous unauthorized disclosure investigations. One experience involves a US citizen serving as a spy for Fidel Castro.