Matthew Aid

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Matthew Morris Aid
Born(1958-03-11)March 11, 1958
DiedAugust 20, 2018(2018-08-20) (aged 60)
EducationBeloit College, Wisconsin
Occupation(s)Historian, Author

Matthew Morris Aid (March 11, 1958 – August 20, 2018) was an American military historian and author. Aid graduated from Beloit College in 1980, having studied international relations. He studied the Russian language, while a member of the United States Air Force, and was a Russian linguist for the National Security Agency, and the Air Force.[1][2]

During his career, he became an expert on

signal intelligence and the history of the NSA.[3] Aid has been interviewed by multiple organizations including National Public Radio and C-SPAN[4][5] and his work has been published in numerous journals, newspapers, and magazines including Foreign Policy, Politico magazine, National Security Archive, and the Associated Press.[3][6][7]

Biography

Matthew Morris Aid was born on March 11, 1958, in New York City. His father, Harry, was an attorney for Mobil Oil and his mother, Rita, was a political activist.[1] His family lived in France and Libya, when he was a young boy, and he attended an American-run oil companies school, outside of Tripoli, Libya from 1963 to 1967.[1][8]

In an opinion article Aid wrote, in 2011, he recalled his family's experience during the Six Day War, when they were forced to evacuate, to a nearby Air Force base, where they were taken to Spain. He wrote, "I remember vividly as our car was stoned by mobs of angry Libyan youths as my mother drove through downtown Tripoli on the way to the base."[1][8]

After his family returned to the U.S., his brother, Jonathan, described how 12-year old Aid would tell their parents that he was going to the library, but would instead take the train to the National Archives.[1] Aid attended high school in New York City, where his interest in collecting declassified documents and love of playing war games, led him to become friends with John Prados, a National Security Archive fellow, who was attending graduate school at Columbia University and at the time, designed board war games. Prados recalled his disappointment when Aid left for Beloit College, in Wisconsin, saying Aid would share documents with him and was, "one of my best playtesters."[3] After graduating from Beloit, where he studied international relations, he enlisted in the Air Force, where he became a Russian language expert.[1]

After leaving the military, Aid spent 20 years as a corporate investigator.[2] However, Aid considered himself an independent scholar, who enjoyed studying documents from libraries and the National Archives in College Park, Maryland, saying "any spare time I have, I run up to the National Archives to do historical research."[1]

In 2005, Aid, a visiting fellow at the National Security Archive, made his first contribution to the National Security Archive, while he did research for his book about the NSA's history.[3] Examples of some of the discoveries made in his research include a Gulf of Tonkin incident that higher level officials had refused to declassify, and secret investigations into Martin Luther King, Muhammad Ali and Art Buchwald.[3][9]

In 2006, his research led to the discovery that over 25 thousand records had been removed from the National Archives.[2]

Discovery of National Archives records removal

In 2006, Aid, was performing research about the

CIA, the Air Force, the Energy Department, the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Archives itself. In a 2006, Washington Post story,[2]
Christopher Lee reported:

"Last year (2005) Aid was the first to figure out that for years the CIA and the Air Force had been withdrawing thousands of records from the public shelves -- and that Archives officials helped cover up their efforts. The ensuing scandal triggered a temporary suspension of the program this spring and a pledge from Archives officials that the public would be notified when withdrawals occur."

Court-martial and imprisonment

Washington Post reporter Christopher Lee reported that Aid had been punished 21 years earlier for unauthorized possession of classified information and impersonating an officer while serving as a staff sergeant in the United States Air Force in the United Kingdom.[2]

Aid was

National Archives records removal, which led to an official investigation and press-attention.[2]

Bibliography

A sampling of some of the books and journal articles authored by Aid are listed below.

  • Secrets of Signals Intelligence during the Cold War and Beyond, Matthew M. Aid and Cees Wiebes, Frank Cass, 2001[10]
  • History Now. The hunt for Osama and Sadam, tracking down the killers (Video), Matthew M. Aid,etal. New Video, 2003[11]
  • Intelligence and the National Security Strategist: Enduring Issues and Challenges, Matthew M. Aid, etal. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2005[12]
  • The History of Information Security, A Comprehensive Handbook Chapter 17, Matthew M. Aid, Elisevier Science, 28 August 2007[13]
  • The Secret Sentry: The Untold History of the National Security Agency, Matthew M. Aid, Bloomsbury Press, 2010[14]
  • Uncovering No Such Agency-The Secret Sentry: The Untold History of the National Security Agency, Matthew M. Aid and JohnR. Schindler, Naval War College Review: Vol. 63: No. 4, Article 13. 2010[15]
  • Intel Wars: The Secret History of the Fight Against Terror, Matthew M. Aid, Bloomsbury Press, 2012[16]
  • Cold war intelligence: the declassified documentary record about the successes and failures of the U.S. intelligence community in its efforts to spy on the Soviet Union during the Cold War (eJournal/eMagazine), Matthew M. Aid, Brill, 2013[17]
  • Cold War intelligence online: the secret war between the U.S. and the USSR, 1945-1991 (Website Document), Matthew M. Aid, Brill, 2013[18][19]
  • Secrets of Signals Intelligence During the Cold War:From Cold War to Globalization, Matthew M. Aid and Cees Wiebes, Taylor and Frances, 2013[20]
  • U.S. intelligence on Europe, 1945-1995 (eBook), Matthew M. Aid and Brill Academic Publishers, Brill, 2015[21]

References

External sources