stay-behind

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See also: stay behind

English

Alternative forms

Noun

stay-behind (plural stay-behinds)

  1. One who remains when expected to leave or after others have left.
    • 1988, Robert L. Barnard, Intrusion Detection Systems, page 46:
      In areas where stay-behinds could be a threat, however, motion detectors should be used.
    • 1996, Dick Stapert, Lykke Johansen, “Ring & Sector Analysis, and Site ‘IT’ on Greenland”, in Palaeohistoria, volumes 37-38, page 60:
      The stay-behinds then tend to move out of the house into a tent. This might have been the case at IT.
    • 2006, Steven Mithen, After the Ice: A Global Human History, 20,000-5000 BC, page 44:
      But the image to remember is of a few families enjoying a day within the forest steppe - away from the barking dogs, the smelly rubbish heaps, the grumpy stay-behinds of their village.
  2. (military) An agent who lives in a foreign country, and can be activated in certain circumstances.
    • a. 2000, Sam Halpern, Quoted in 2000, James Srodes, Allen Dulles: Master of Spies, page 545,
      Bobby Kennedy believed the Mafia had lots of interests in and people in Cuba; he was absolutely convinced that they had left stay-behinds in Cuba and all they had to do was tap into those stay-behinds.
    • 2003, Bradley O'Leary, L. E. Seymour, Triangle of Death, unnumbered page:
      Diem chose instead to use his military forces and police to capture and kill the Viet Minh “stay-behinds,” even though these actually posed little or no threat to the country, since a good share of them were simply not Communists and those that had been had either recanted in favor of the Diem government or returned to the north.
    • 2011, David MacGregor, “Update: September 11 as “Macchiavellian State Terror””, in Paul Zarembka, editor, The Hidden History of 9/11, unnumbered page:
      Ganser closely documents activities of “stay-behinds” in 14 western nations — spies and agents with Nazi and Fascist backgrounds, secretly installed by NATO following the Second World War to counter a supposed Soviet threat.

See also