On FEB 5, 2003, Helge Boes – a special ops officer who had served in the CIA for 2 years – was killed in a training accident while in Afghanistan. At the time of his death, Helge was the 80th CIA officer in 56 years to die in the line of duty. #inmemoriam
A US citizen born in Hamburg, Germany, Helge grew up in West Berlin & felt the impact of world affairs personally. Friends said that, for Helge, the choice between freedom & tyranny was as stark as the concrete & barbed wire that split his city in two.
An outstanding soccer player & gifted with an agile mind, Helge studied political science at @GeorgiaStateU where he graduated in December 1992. In June 1997, he graduated from @Harvard_Law & worked as an attorney in the corporate world in Atlanta.
Helge joined CIA in January 2001 as a trainee in the Directorate of Operations Clandestine Service Trainee Class. It was a perfect fit. His gift for languages, an instinctive sense for people, & a curiosity about the world, made it a natural fit.
In only a few months, Helge showed poise & skill that normally comes in years. He combined intelligence with charm, humor, & concern for others. Equally at home in the classroom & on the athletic field, he was a standout among the trainees of our Clandestine Service.
As a newly graduated operations officer, Helge wanted to be on the front line of the Agency's response to terror, so in the spring of 2002 he volunteered for duty in Afghanistan - one of the first in his peer group to do so.
Long hours & cramped, primitive conditions were the norm. Helge completed his assignments w skill & courage. He was close to the intelligence he needed to collect & closer still to the dangers that came with the job: rocket, mortar, & machine gun attacks.
Early 2003: Helge volunteered for his second TDY to Afghanistan.
Helge Boes was killed when a grenade detonated prematurely during a live-fire training exercise on a weapons-training range, while he was preparing for an intelligence collection operation.
Helge, just 32 years old, was the second CIA officer to die in the line of duty in Afghanistan. He was survived by his wife, brother, & parents. He was posthumously awarded our Exceptional Service Medallion for his outstanding performance, courage, & sacrifice.
Helge was with CIA only a short time, but his talent, tenacity, & presence of mind under fire earned him the respect of those far senior to him in experience.
He is honored with a star on our CIA Memorial Wall.
DDCIA David Cohen, a Boston native, threw out a ceremonial pitch at the @RedSox vs. @Yankees game @FenwayPark to bring awareness to organizations that support #CIA officers and their families.
The #CIA Officers Memorial Foundation (@ciaomf2001) supports the well-being and educational needs of children and spouses of fallen #CIA officers.
The Third Option Foundation heals, helps, and honors members of #CIA's paramilitary community and their families. Quietly helping those who quietly serve.
Stop.Think.Connect. is an unprecedented partnership between federal & state governments, law enforcement, industry, & NGOs to increase the understanding of cyber threats & empower all #netizens to be safer & more secure online.
Stop.Think.Connect has tools & resources for students, parents, teachers, older Americans, law enforcement, small businesses, etc. Many in foreign languages too!
CIA #Museum is not open to the public, so you can’t come here in person. However, Washington DC is home to @smithsonian’s wonderful museums [free & open to the public!] & 2 museums run by our colleague’s @FBI & @NSAGov.
If you contact your local congressional representative, you can look at arranging a tour @FBI Headquarters of its exhibit, The FBI Experience: bit.ly/2F5oPWE
75 years ago, #OSS Jedburgh paratroopers parachuted into Nazi-occupied Europe to coordinate arms & supplies, train partisans in sabotage, & help defeat Third Reich during #WWII
The 1st Operation #Jedburgh team was deployed the night before #DDay
Director Haspel: “We honor the men & women of this Agency who perished in the line of duty. The cause to which they devoted their lives—the freedom & safety of Americans—endures.”
During #WWII, Eero was recruited to #OSS & appointed Chief of Special Exhibits Section.
He designed:
- Military schools & situation rooms
- 3D org chart instrumental in showing procedure & work-flow problems throughout #OSS
- Model weapons for training & film props
OSS considered Eero “the most versatile & gifted young designer & architect in this country.”
His work for #OSS was highly commended by Undersecretary of War, Director of Women’s Army Corps, & many others.
His OSS experience & experiments are reflected in his later design work.