- Heatwave hammers Thailand's stinky but lucrative durian farms
- Flood-hit Kenya and Tanzania on alert as cyclone nears
- Ceasefire should be 'no-brainer' for Hamas, Blinken says
- Sweden's Eurovision contest to open in shadow of Gaza war
- Vietnam temperature records tumble as heatwave scorches
- Hamas delegation heads to Cairo for truce talks
- Three bodies found after surfers go missing in Mexico: FBI
- Boeing's Starliner joins select club of crewed US spaceships
- Boeing's Starliner finally ready for first crewed mission
- In southern Brazil, flood victims cope with total loss
- US rookie Knapp seizes PGA's CJ Cup Byron Nelson lead
- Stocks gain while dollar retreats as US labor market cools
- Alverez, Munguia make weight for super-middleweight world title bout
- Guardiola backs England for Euro 2024 glory
- Verstappen takes sprint pole in Miami
- Dams strain as water, death toll, keep rising in south Brazil
- Former aide tells Trump trial of 2016 campaign 'crisis'
- Adebayo rescues struggling Luton in draw against Everton
- Kramaric snatches late draw for Hoffenheim against Leipzig
- Newey exit 'first domino to fall' at Red Bull says Brown
- Rights group concerned over El Salvador constitutional reform
- Auger-Aliassime in final as 'crazy' Madrid injury curse strikes again
- 'Star Wars' legend Hamill gives Biden The Force for elections
- Lyles still dreaming of four Paris golds despite relay criticism
- Indian, Hong Kong satirists win press cartoon award
- Canada arrests three over killing of Sikh activist: media
- 'Get this done', WHO chief urges pandemic accord talks
- Lakers fire head coach Ham after NBA playoff ouster
- Starc shows class as Kolkata win in Mumbai
- Labour demands UK election after routing Tories in local polls
- Verstappen fastest in Miami practice but trouble for Leclerc
- Spanish beauty group Puig makes market debut
- Airbnb promises to combat sex work in rentals during Paris Games
- Chevy probe finds no employee involved in IndyCar cheat scandal
- Debutant Tanzid powers Bangladesh win over Zimbabwe
- Israel trade freeze aimed at forcing Gaza truce: Erdogan
- New sensation Shamar Joseph named in West Indies T20 World Cup squad
- The main candidates vying to be Panama president
- Hamas says Israeli PM trying to derail Gaza truce deal
- Panama to vote in presidential election with 8 contenders
- Spain scraps national bullfighting prize sparking debate
- England Women's cricket coach using AI to pick team
- Arteta urges Arsenal to seize the moment in Premier League title race
- US campus protests wane after crackdowns, Biden rebuke
- Former Trump adviser Hope Hicks testifies at his trial
- Rublev ousts Fritz to reach Madrid Open final
- 'Get this done', WHO chief tells pandemic accord talks
- ICC warns against 'retaliation threats'
- Panama court okays frontrunner's run 2 days before presidential vote
- Nepal court orders limit on Everest climbing permits
CIA-Chef hat nach eigener Aussage nichts mit James Bond gemeinsam
Wilde Verfolgungsjagden, eine Ausrüstung mit unvorstellbaren tödlichen Trick-Werkzeugen und ganz allein die Welt retten? Von wegen: Sein Leben als Chef des US-Auslandsgeheimdienstes CIA habe mit der Welt von Spionagefilmhelden wie James Bond nichts gemein, sagte CIA-Direktor William Burns im allerersten CIA-Podcast, der am Donnerstag (Ortszeit) veröffentlicht wurde.
Er fühle sich am wohlsten, wenn er in seinem alten Auto der Marke Subaru innerhalb des Tempo-Limits unterwegs sei, verriet Burns. Der "Gipfel technischen Wagemuts" sei es für ihn, wenn er die Fernbedienung für die TV-Streamingdienste zuhause zum Funktionieren brächte.
Beliebte Agententhriller zeigten "eine Welt von heldenhaften Individuen, die schnelle Autos fahren und Bomben entschärfen und jeden Tag ganz allein Weltkrisen lösen", sagt Burns. "Ich muss Ihnen sagen, dass das für meine Frau und Töchter einen beständige Quelle der Belustigung ist."
Der 66-jährige altgediente Diplomat leitet die CIA seit März 2021. In dem CIA-Podcast "The Langley Files" machte er darauf aufmerksam, dass die Undercover-Agenten der Behörde keine dramatischen Einzelgänger seien wie die Hollywood-Filmhelden Bond, Jason Bourne oder Jack Ryan. "Die Wahrheit ist: Geheimdienstarbeit ist ein Mannschaftssport", sagte Burns.
L.Dubois--BTB