Warning: This post contains major spoilers from tonight's episode of "Homeland," "The Tradition of Hospitality."

Sorry, Carrie, it's awesome that you're nine months sober and all, but that whole peaceful, post-CIA existence you were hoping for as a private citizen? Not going to happen. We've known it since last week's season premiere, so it's best you get with the program too.

On tonight's episode of "Homeland," Claire Danes's protagonist ventured to Lebanon with her philanthropist boss, Otto Düring, under the protection of Hezbollah forces (more on that below), only to discover she herself had become an ISIS target. She manages to get her employer out of harm's way and on a plane to Berlin, but she still remains ignorant of the danger looming back in Germany.

After executing a female recruiter responsible for luring naïve German teenagers into the ISIS fold, CIA assassin Peter Quinn checks the Deutsche Post mailbox for his subsequent assignment. As it turns out, "Carrie Mathison" is the next name on his hit list.

So how much of the episode was true to form from an intelligence perspective, and how much of it was pure Hollywood? We checked in with the International Spy Museum's historian and curator, Dr. Vince Houghton, for Speakeasy's weekly series on what "Homeland" gets right, and where its accuracy falls short.