Skip About MenusAbout Menu
Leadership
Mission
Strategy
Mission, Vision, Values
Core Values Q&A with NSA's Deputy Director
Core Values Brochure
Cryptologic Heritage
NSA 60th Anniversary
National Cryptologic Museum
Map and Directions
Museum Tour Information
Exhibit Information
National Vigilance Park
Center for Cryptologic History
Cryptologic History News
Cryptologic Almanac
Historical Publications
History of the Insignia
Pre-1952 Historical Timeline
Pearl Harbor Review
Voices from the Past
National Cryptologic Memorial
Cryptologic Hall of Honor
Women in American Cryptology
African Americans in Cryptologic History
Equal Employment Opportunity(EEO) and Diversity
Office of Disability Affairs
EEO and Diversity Education
Special Emphasis Programs
No FEAR Act
Central Security Service (CSS)
Office of the Inspector General (OIG)
OIG Hotline Information
Contact the OIG Hotline
NSAAB (NSA Emerging Technologies Panel)
Photo Gallery
FAQs
|
Juanita Moody
Juanita Moody began her 33-year federal career during WWII. Leaving college, she served with the Army's Signal Security Agency as a cryptanalytic clerk and remained after the war. Promoted through her success in increasingly responsible assignments, she directed several large and important areas of the U.S. intelligence effort. During the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, her direction of complex operations brought recognition from other government agencies and President Kennedy. Unfortunately, during the Church-Pike investigations of the 1970s, she was incorrectly associated with government abuses. Ms. Moody retired from NSA in 1976. She received the first National Intelligence Medal of Achievement that same year, in recognition of her exceptional service to the intelligence community. |
|
|
Historical Document | Date Posted: Jan 15, 2009 |











