Read more 
Norway's Spitsbergen Archipelago, known as Svalbard to the Norwegians, is of increasing interest to Arctic scholars and geographers, as well as to military historians and analysts of strategy. It was the farthest northern battleground between German and Allied forces in World War II; it became a political arena for Soviet and U.S. competition during the Cold War; it is now a field of conflict for fishing rights and cultural resource protection; and it serves as a laboratory for the study of global warming. This unique island group occupies a fascinating place in European, Russian, and American affairs. 
 Here, for the first time, is the complete report compiled by U.S. Intelligence at the beginning of World War II evaluating the islands both geographically and militarily, as well as a report on the archipelago produced by the CIA in 1950. This comprehensive report--never superseded in the years since--has been edited and introduced by P.J. Capelotti. It provides in great detail the American perspective on these islands and their strategic, economic, and geologic value. Maps and illustrations are included, some from the original report, some new. A glossary covers Arctic terms.
List of contents
Table of ContentsList of Illustrations      List of Maps Appearing in the Original Report      Introduction      The U.S. Military Intelligence Special Study of Svalbard and Other Norwegian Possessions, 1942      Part I: Spitsbergen and Bear Island (Svalbard)      
Part II: Jan Mayen Island      
Part III: Norwegian Antarctic Possessions      
Illustrations and Maps      
Appendix I: Summary of Geographic Conditions by Islands      
*Appendix II: Ports and Harbors      
Appendix III: The Spitsbergen Operation, August-September, 1941      
Appendix IV: Adventures in Spitsbergen, 1942      
Appendix V: Radio Stations Located in the Outlying Possessions of Norway      
*Appendix II in the original report consisted of a collection of weather charts. Because the large size and poor quality of these charts prevents their reproduction here, the original Appendix II has been dropped, and the remaining appendices have been renumbered.Spitsbergen: A Report Prepared by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency and Published 26 June 1950      Glossary of Geographical Terms      Bibliography      Index      
About the author
P.J. Capelotti is assistant professor of archaeology and American studies at Penn State University's Abington College in Abington, Pennsylvania. His research centers on the history of Arctic exploration and on the archaeology of human expansion into space.