Historical Dictionary of United States Intelligence

(Martin Jones) #1
BOLAND, EDWARD P. (1911–2001).Democratic congressional rep-
resentative from Massachusetts, Congressman Boland was instru-
mental in the enactment of various prohibitions against giving assis-
tance to the Nicaraguan Contra rebels in the early 1980s.
Representative Boland, elected to the House of Representatives in
1952, was also the first chairman of the House Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) from 1977 until 1985. See also
BOLAND AMENDMENTS.

BOREN, DAVID L. (1941– ). David L. Boren was U.S. senator from
Oklahoma between 1980 and 1994. Prior to his election to the Senate,
Boren, a Yale graduate and a Rhodes Scholar, served as governor of
Oklahoma from 1975 until 1979. In the Senate, Boren served on the
Senate Finance and Agriculture Committees as well as chairman of
the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI), the principal
committee in the Senate overseeing the activities of U.S. intelligence.
Prior to leaving Congress, Boren authored the National Security Edu-
cation Act of 1992, which established the National Security Educa-
tion Program (NSEP), a grants and scholarship program to promote
the study of foreign languages, area studies, and national security is-
sues. He is currently the president of the University of Oklahoma.

BOYD, BELLE (1843–1900).AConfederate spy during the American
Civil War, Belle Boyd is credited with supplying General Stonewall
Jackson with intelligence on the strength and disposition of Union
forces around Front Royal, Virginia, in 1862. Although imprisoned
and released several times, Belle Boyd undertook many risky assign-
ments, one of which was to act as a Confederate courier to England
in 1864. The war ended before she could return, and so she stayed in
England to establish a stage career. Boyd eventually came back to the
United States to pursue her career in the theater.

BRILLIANT PEBBLES.Brilliant Pebbles was successor to the Strate-
gic Defense Initiative (SDI), first proposed by President Ronald Rea-
gan, in 1984. Brilliant Pebbles, originally conceived in a series of 1986
war games by Edward Teller, the father of the American hydrogen
bomb, was designed to thwart a Sovietnuclear strike by intercepting the
missiles before they reached American soil. The initial plan called for
space- and ground-based interceptors and sensors as well as a battle

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