© Central Intelligence Agency / Flickr
President Roosevelt with one of the rare OSS-made globes
The collection also features a
3D map of the Konar Valley in Afghanistan from 2001, while another map
from 2012 includes a full country profile, with geographic information
and a timeline of various influential groups in the region, including
the Taliban and military of the Soviet Union.
A 2003 map of Baghdad, Iraq shows strategic sites, including Saddam Hussein’s home.
Some of the much older maps
include the Russian front’s progress during World War II from 1941-1942,
complete with a swastika to represent Germany and the hammer and sickle
symbol to represent the Soviet Union.
A 1944 map shows central
Germany’s population distribution, while another map from the same year
depicts German concentration camps.
A map of Berlin from 1945
shows how the city was divided by the allies following the end of World
War II. The French, USSR, US and UK sectors are outlined.
A map of Cuba from 1962 shows surface to air missile sites on the island just before the Cuban Missile Crisis.
The collection features a photograph of President John F Kennedy next to a map of “Communist rebel areas” in Laos from March 22, 1961.
Another map from 2013 shows the West Bank in Palestine, with Israeli settlements in blue.
A map dated 1951 details the production and refinery capacities of Middle East oil for different countries in the region.
President Roosevelt with one of the rare OSS-made globes
The CIA has declassified a number of its maps dating from the
1940s to the current decade.
Until now, the maps, created by the agency’s Cartography Center, were seen only by those within the intelligence community.
The maps were released to celebrate the Cartography Center’s 75th anniversary. “Geographers
and cartographers amassed what would be the largest collection of maps
in the world and produced strategic maps and 3D plaster terrain models
in support of strategic studies and military operational plans,” the CIA said in a statement.Until now, the maps, created by the agency’s Cartography Center, were seen only by those within the intelligence community.
The @CIA declassified some of its maps https://t.co/VAfeyI4cJZ— Bat Man (@vonFalkenhorst) November 29, 2016
Fascinating how much of the digital world, including world digital cartography, has roots in military/intelligence https://t.co/2zRo8qYotx— Stuart Dunn (@StuartDunnCeRch) November 30, 2016
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