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I Was Never Here

My True Canadian Spy Story of Coffees, Code Names and Covert Operations in the Age of Terrorism

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

An ex-spy lifts the lid on life in the secret serviceAndrew Kirsch didn't grow up watching spy movies, or dreaming about being a real-life James Bond. He was hardly aware that Canada even had its own intelligence service—let alone knew what its officers did. But when a terrorist attack occurred near the office of his financial services job, all of a sudden fighting terrorism meant a lot more to him than the markets. Within 18 months he had landed a job with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS)—where he spent the next decade of his life.In I Was Never Here, Kirsch (now an in-demand security consultant) spills the secrets of what life as an intelligence officer is really like, and dispels a few myths along the way. With humour, honesty, and candour, Kirsch shares his on-the-ground experience (or as much of it as he's allowed to) of becoming a member of CSIS: from his vetting and training, to his initial desk job as a policy analyst, to his rise up the ranks to leading covert special operations missions. If you've ever wondered whether spies can have real dating lives, how they handle family responsibilities, or how they come up with cover stories or aliases, you're in luck.From the time he tried to get the code names "Burgundy" and "Anchorman" assigned to human sources (with no luck), to the night a covert operation was almost thwarted by a flyer delivery man, Kirsch takes you behind the scenes with an authentic view of Canada's spy agency, and the intricate intelligence-sharing apparatus that works day and night to keep us safe. I Was Never Here is also a testament to one man's drive to serve his country, and the sacrifices, big and small, that he made along the way.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 31, 2022
      Kirsch, a former intelligence officer with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, pulls back the curtain on his career in this breezy account of his near-decade-long stint as a spy. Part of “a post-9/11 wave of civically minded Canadians... to do our part in the age of terrorism,” Kirsch—uninspired by his work as a junior investment adviser—googled “How do I become a Canadian spy?” and applied online, beginning his training in 2008 as an analyst. Most of his time in the service was spent “reading reports and writing memos,” but before his resignation in 2016, Kirsch worked briefly as a member of a special operations unit. In delightfully self-deprecating passages, Kirsch explains the need for the sort of grunt work he mostly did to make the sexier, tip-of-the-spear assignments possible; describes the challenges of “online dating from off the grid”; and bursts a few bubbles for anyone gulled into mistaking Hollywood for reality—as when he compares the “constant tension between the security team and the techs” to “the relationship between James Bond and Q, except in our case Q’s devices didn’t always work and James Bond’s technical ability was closer to that of your average boomer.” The result is a surprisingly lighthearted look at a shadowy but vital government function.

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  • OverDrive Read
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Languages

  • English

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