Bill Streifer, BA, MBA, is the author of multiple articles in the U.S., Russia, and elsewhere on topics ranging from U.S. Intelligence to military confrontations during World War II through the Cold War. His current projects include three books: “The Flight of the Hog Wild,” co-authored by Irek Sabitov, a Russian journalist, is on the downing by Soviet fighters of an American B-29 “Superfortress” bomber, “Hog Wild,” while it was on a POW supply mission over Konan, Korea (now Hungnam, North Korea). During the war, Konan was the home of the Japanese Army’s nuclear weapons program. “Dr. Fritz J. Hansgirg: The Father of Heavy Water Production,” co-authored by Dr. Kenneth N. Ricci, Ph.D., a nuclear physicist from Stanford University. This is the extraordinary biography of Dr. Hansgirg, a brilliant Austrian chemist and metallurgist who worked for the Japanese at Konan, Korea in the mid-1930’s. “The Pueblo Incident: The Failed U.S. Navy & NSA Mission that Nearly Led to Nuclear War,” co-authored by Irek Sabitov, a Russian journalist. The story begins on January 23, 1968 with the North Korean seizure of an American spy ship off the coast of Wonsan, North Korea, and ends with a confrontation at sea between the U.S. and Soviet Navies that a Russian scholar and Soviet submariner agree could have led to nuclear war.