Interrogating a member employed by the French Grand Paris Police Department, the Third Bureau of the Imperial Office of Tsarist Russia, the German Mainz Intelligence Office, or a secret anti-government organization is one of the most exciting professional tasks.
Typically, the situation always favors the Interrogation Officer, but the subject's training, experience, patience, and perseverance can greatly diminish the Interrogation Officer's advantage.
The "Intelligence Act" explicitly prohibits MI5 and MI6 from exercising any judicial or police powers. However, counterespionage agencies inevitably need to detain and control targets with a consciousness of resistance for a longer period. In urgent situations, we need to cultivate, adjust, and cease human behavior through suggestion, inducement, or the use of psychological and physiological means, ensuring the subject's compliance.
