Abwehr Foreign Bureau/Defense of the Armed Forces High Command: the German intelligence organization founded in 1921; after WWII, in order to appease the Allies, the organization supposedly focused only on defense, i.e. counterespionage [Germany] AIVD General Intelligence and Security Office: the Dutch domestic counterespionage agency [Netherlands]
APT(N) Atlantic Patrol Task (North): standing Royal Navy patrol in the Caribbean and North Atlantic area [UK]
Black (Pertaining to an organization or project) Secret and off the record, except to governmental intelligence oversight bodies [All]
Black Chamber American cryptanalysis agency, officially disbanded in 1929; predecessor to the NSA; nickname for the contemporary superblack agency dealing with occult intelligence [US]
CESG Communications Electronics Security Group: a division within GCHQ [UK]
CIA Central Intelligence Agency; also known as The Company [US]
The Company Nickname: see CIA [US]
COBRA Cabinet Briefing Office Room "A": where the Civil Contingencies Committee meets and is thus often referred to as COBRA; able to invoke Section Two powers under the Civil Contingencies Act (aka Martial Law) [UK]
COTS Commercial, Off The Shelf: computer kit; a procurement term [US/UK]
DERA Defense Evaluation and Research Agency, privatized as QinetiQ [UK]
FSB Federal Security Service, formerly known as KGB [Russia]
Faust Force Nickname: see GSA [Germany]
GCHQ Government Communications htQ (UK equivalent of NSA) [UK]
GMDI Hughes Global Marine Development, Inc.[US]
GRU Russian Military Intelligence; an intense rivalry existed between the GRU and KGB [Russia]
GSA Geheime Sicherheit Abteilung: contemporary German domestic occult intelligence agency [Germany]
HMG Her Majesty's Government [UK]
HUMINT Human Intelligence: intelligence gathered from human (as opposed to electronic) sources [All]
INTERPOL International Criminal Police Organization: created in 1923 to assist international crim-' inal police cooperation [All]
KGB Committee for State Security, principal Soviet intelligence agency; renamed FSB in 1991 after disintegration of the Soviet Union [USSR]
The Laundry Nickname of the former Department Q of the SOE, dealing with occult intelligence; spun off as a separate black organization in 1945, no publicly known name [UK]
MI5 (originally Military Intelligence Section 5) Security Service, also known as SS, responsible for internal security [UK]
MI6 (originally Military Intelligence Section 6) Secret Intelligence Service, also known as SIS, responsible for external security [UK]
MOD Ministry of Defense [UK]
NSA National Security Agency (US equivalent ofGCHQ)[US]
Number Ten 10 Downing Street, London: the historic office and home of the British Prime Minister [UK]
ONI Office of Naval Intelligence [US]
OSS Office of Strategic Services (US equivalent of SOE), disbanded in 1945, remodeled as CIA [US]
Politburo Political Bureau: the executive organization for the Communist Party [USSR]
Q Division Division within The Laundry associated with R&D [UK]
QinetiQ See DERA [UK]
SAS Special Air Service: British Army Special Forces [UK]
SBS SIS SOE Superblack Territorial SAS TLA Two-One SAS Special Boat Service: Royal Marines Special Forces [UK]
See MI6 [UK]
Special Operations Executive (UK equivalent of OSS), officially disbanded in 1945; see also The Laundry [UK]
(Pertaining to a black organization or black project) Secret and off the record to all, including governmental intelligence oversight bodies [All]
Territorial Army, British equivalent of the US National Guard. Territorial SAS, the part-time weekend soldier arm of the SAS, mostly staffed by veterans [UK]
Three Letter Acronym [All]
21 Special Air Service Regiment; also known as Artists' Rifles [UK]
Charles Stross is a full-time writer who was born in Leeds, England in 1964. He studied in London and Bradford, gaining degrees in pharmacy and computer science, and has worked in a variety of jobs, including pharmacist, technical author, software engineer and freelance journalist. Find out more about Charles Stross at: www.antipope.org/charlie/index.html You can read more about Charles and other Orbit authors by registering for the free monthly newsletter at: www.orbitbooks.net