Inside the CIA

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Inside the CIA Page 40

by Kessler, Ronald


  KGB, 24- 31, 42–43, 116, 291, 319

  Khrushchev, Nikita, 77, 99–100, 101, 126

  Killian, James R., Jr., 99

  Koecher, Karl, 76, 193, 195–96

  Korean War, 60, 125

  Krock, Arthur, 270

  Kuwait, 58, 108, 129, 156–67, 240, 312

  LACROSSE (satellite), 159

  Land, Edwin H., 99

  Langley, 176–88

  Lansdale, Edward G., 49–50

  Lardner, George, Jr., 164

  Latell, Brian, 142

  Lauder, George V., 278–80

  Leahy, Patrick J., 8

  Lee, Andrew Daulton, 197

  Lee, William T., 151

  Lumumba, Patrice, 53

  Lundahl, Arthur C, 105, 107–08, 109

  McCarthy, Joseph, 135–36

  McCone, John A., 131, 133, 221, 269–70, 274

  McCord, James, 78

  McCurdy, Dave, 244

  McDonald, Walter, 289

  McFarlane, Robert, 90

  McGregor, Nancy D., 239, 243, 246–57

  McMahon, John, 54–55, 86, 91, 272, 297, 306, 317–18

  Madison, James, 317

  Mafia, 52–53, 81, 189

  MAGNUM (satellite), 159

  Magsaysay, Ramon, 50

  Mangold, Tom, 75

  Manor, LeRoy J., 289

  Marchetti, Victor, 274

  Marisat (Maritime Communications Satellite), 65

  Marks, John D., 274

  Marshall, Andrew W., 152

  Martin, John L., 195

  Martinez, Eugenio R., 78

  Mexico, 141–43

  Meyer, Cord, 83, 135–36, 142–43, 192

  Meyer, Herbert, 153, 259

  Meyer, Herbert E., 138—39

  MI-6, 18, 62

  Miller, William G., 85–86

  Mind-control drug testing, 308

  Mirror-imaging, 126–34

  Mitchell, John, 82

  Moles, 75

  Money laundering, 289

  Moore, Edwin G. II, 199

  Moskowitz, Stanley, 183–84

  Mossadeq, Mohamed, 50

  Mossberg, Walter s., 164

  Moynihan, Daniel Patrick, 313

  Mubarak, Hosni, 159

  National Collection Branch, 21, 160,

  National Foreign Intelligence Board (NFIB), 220

  National Historical Collection, 186

  National Intelligence Council, 36, 125, 130–32, 220

  National Intelligence Estimate, 131, 220

  National Photographic Interpretation Center (NPIC), 98, 105–10

  National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), 103–04

  National Security Act (1947), 90, 124, 300–01

  National Security Agency (NSA), 97

  National Security Council, 128–29, 159, 219, 300

  National Student Association, 79, 83, 192

  New Yorker, 166

  New York Times, 51, 79, 80, 154, 270, 278–81, 285–86, 296, 299

  New York Times Magazine, 140

  Nicaragua, 144, 291

  NICK NACK (FBI source), 75

  Nidal, Abu, 73

  Nixon, Richard, 79, 83, 134, 135, 234, 319

  Nolan, James, 24

  Nolan, James E., 250

  Nonofficial cover, 7–8

  North, Oliver L., Jr., 54, 91–92, 291, 304, 308

  Nosenko, Yuri I., 81, 189, 222, 302

  Nuclear weapons, 47

  Nugan, Francis J., 289–90

  Nugan Hand Bank, 289–90

  Office of Communications, 172

  Office of Current Production and Analytic Support, 161

  Office of Development and Engineering, 98

  Office of Financial Management, 172

  Office of General Counsel, 300–44

  Office of Information Technology, 172

  Office of Logistics, 173

  Office of Medical Services, 172

  Office of Personnel, 173

  Office of Public Affairs, 269–99

  Office of Research and Development, 98

  Office of Security, 171–72, 188, 189–201, 205, 313

  Office of Special Projects, 98

  Office of Strategic Services (OSS), 123–24

  Office of Technical Service (OTS), 13, 98, 111–17

  Office of Training and Education, 172

  Officers v. agents, 5

  Ogorodnik, Aleksandr D., 63, 76, 193

  Olson, Frank E., 81

  Operation Chaos, 81, 191–92

  Operation Habrink, 194

  Operation Phoenix, 55

  Osborne, Richard W., 65

  Paisley, John A., 291

  Palme, Olaf, 287

  Pan Am Flight 103, 72

  Paramilitary training, 5

  Parker, Phillip, 250

  Pearl Harbor attack, 122–23, 219

  Pelton, Ronald, 195, 200, 280, 285

  Penkovskiy, Oleg, 62

  Pentagon Papers, 79

  People’s Republic of China, 133

  Perestroika, 150

  Persian Gulf War, 58, 129, 156–67, 267, 268, 311

  Peterson, Martha, 66

  Philippines, 50

  Phillips, Dave, 57

  Pike, Otis, 82

  Poindexter, John, 91

  Polgar, Thomas, 4, 10, 87, 134, 253, 314

  Pollard, Jonathan J., 10

  Polygraph, 196–97, 229

  Popov, Peter, 61

  Post, Jerrold M., 160

  Powers, Francis Gary, 101, 270

  President’s Daily Brief, 36, 161–63

  President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB), 221

  President’s Intelligence Over-sight Board, 221

  Press spokesperson, 269–99

  Proctor, Edward W., 68, 85, 126

  Publications Review Board, 275, 299

  Raborn, William F., Jr., 221–22

  Ramparts, 75–76, 79, 192

  Reagan, Ronald, 21, 53, 54, 70, 91, 129, 136–37, 141–44, 152–53, 155, 156, 161, 224, 228, 229, 236, 303

  Real Estate and Construction Branch, 173

  Reconnaissance balloons, 60

  Recruitment of agents, 240

  Recruitment of foreigners, 21–48, 62–66

  Repolygraph, 229

  Reston, James (Scotty), 270

  Revell, Oliver (Buck), 73

  Rewald, Ronald, 292

  Rindskopf, Elizabeth, 308–09

  Rochester Institute of Technology, 276

  Rockefeller, Nelson A., 82

  Rockefeller Commission, 191, 301

  Rodriguez, Juan Antonio Menier, 44–45

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 122, 123, 187, 276

  Roosevelt, Kermit, 50

  Rose, M. Richard, 276–77

  Roselli, John, 52

  Rositzke, Harry, 60

  Ross, Thomas B., 274

  Rowen, Henry S., 152

  Safire, William, 154

  Sanborn, Jim, 185–86

  Satellites, 101–04

  Saunders, Herbert F., 33, 37, 39, 40, 45, 86–87, 290

  Scattergood, Margaret, 178–80

  Schlesinger, James R., 80, 174–75, 224

  Schwarzkopf, Norman, 129, 164–65

  Scowcroft, Brent, 237, 266

  Scranage, Sharon M., 198–99

  Secord, Richard V., 291

  Secrecy and Democracy: The CIA in Transition (Turner), 223, 275

  Sellers, Michael C., 65

  Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, 89–92

  SE (Soviet/East Europe) Division, 63–64, 68

  CI Group, 67

  External Operations Group, 67

  Internal Operations Group, 67

  Reports Group, 67

  Sessions, William S., 297

  Shadrin, Nicholas, 151

  Shah of Iran, 50, 127, 228

  Sheymov, Victor I., 63

  Shin Bet, 77

  Shuster, Rep. Bud, 92–93

  SIGINT (signals intelligence), 97

  Simmons
, Robert R., 9, 40, 51, 57, 82, 85, 91, 315

  Smith, R. Jack, 100, 107, 125, 127, 129, 134, 221

  Smith, Walter Bedell, 5, 47, 130, 221, 269

  Snepp, Frank, 273–75

  Souers, Sidney W., 222

  Soussoudis, Michael, 198–99

  Soviet Studies, 152

  Soviet Union, 9, 58, 111, 126

  economy of, 147–55

  future of, 310—16

  intelligence on during Cold War, 59—68

  mail survey on, 81

  rift with China, 133

  Special Activities Operations, 49

  Specter, Arlen, 312

  Sporkin, Stanley, 137, 306

  Spring Mall Building, 20

  Sputnik I, 100

  Stalin, Joseph, 59, 77, 126

  State Department, 4, 37–39, 64, 128–29, 204, 211

  Sterling, Claire, 140

  Stolz, Richard F., 46, 236, 307

  Stombaugh, Paul M., 65

  Studies in Intelligence, 172

  Sung, Kim II, 48

  Suriname, 55

  Sweeps (debugging), 202–05

  Symington, Stuart, 234

  Taiwan, 47

  Tass, 65

  Technical Security Division, 202

  Terrorism, 69–77

  Terror Network: The Secret War of International Terrorism, The (Sterling), 140

  Thomas, Lewis C., 65

  Thornburgh, Richard, 307

  Thuermer, Angus, 269

  TIARA, 89

  Tolkachev, Adolf G., 63, 65

  Tower Commission, 253

  Treverton, Gregory, 50

  Truman, Harry S, 124, 219

  TRW, Inc., 197–98

  Turkey, 261

  Turner, Stansfield, 127, 131, 132, 183, 222, 234, 243, 275

  as DCI, 272, 277

  Twetten, Thomas A., 303—04

  U-2 incident, 98–102, 270

  Undercover officers, 8–9

  United Fruit Co., 50

  University of Connecticut, 277

  Unknown CIA, The (Smith), 125

  Vetrov, Vladimir I., 63

  Vietnam War, 55–56, 133–34, 136

  Viorst, Milton, 166

  VORTEX, (satellite), 159

  Walker, John A., Jr., 12, 30

  Wall Street Journal, 164

  Walsh, Lawrence E., 309

  War Against Progress (Meyer), 138

  Warner, John S., 275, 302

  Washington, George, 270

  Washington Post, 57, 141, 152, 164, 229, 259, 293

  Watergate break-in, 78–80, 319

  Weapons, 47

  Webster, Lynda Jo (n&ée Clugston), 263–65

  Webster, William H., 23, 39, 47, 57, 67, 77, 90, 129–30, 143, 162, 175–76, 187, 190, 200–01, 207, 222, 224–25, 312, 317

  appoints Baker director of public affairs, 281–82, 288, 295, 297

  as DCI, 228–45

  legal department and, 302–04, 306, 307–08

  retirement of, 266–68

  schedule of, 258–64

  special assistants of, 246–57

  Welch, Richard, 40–41, 183

  Whipple, David D., 4–5, 9, 37, 140, 287, 294

  White, Roscoe, 292

  Who’s Who in the CIA, 41

  Williams, Robert (Rusty), 223

  Wilson, Edwin, 294

  Wiretaps, 15, 112–13

  Wise, David, 274

  Wolf, Charles, Jr., 152

  Wood, Michael, 192–93

  World War II, 123

  Wynne, Greville, 62

  Yakushkin, Dmitri I., 26

  Yates, Earl (Buddy), 289

  Yom Kippur War, 126

  Younis, Fawaz, 69–71

  Yurchenko, Vitaly S., 67, 190, 199–200, 278–80, 295–96, 314

  Zaire, 53

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  RONALD KESSLER is the bestselling author of Inside the White House, The FBI, Inside the CIA, Escape from the CIA, The Spy in the Russian Club, Moscow Station, Spy vs. Spy, and The Richest Man in the World. A recipient of sixteen journalism awards, Mr. Kessler is a former investigative reporter for The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post, and his articles appear in leading periodicals. He lives in Potomac, Maryland.

  * The title director of Central Intelligence signifies that the DCI is director not only of the CIA but of the intelligence community, a dozen agencies including military intelligence, the National Security Agency, and the counterintelligence component of the FBI, whose budgets are submitted to Congress by the director of Central Intelligence.

  * DCI Counterintelligence Center, DCI Counterterrorist Center and DCI Counter-narcotics Center

  ** Also serves as Special Assistant to the DCI for Affirmative Employment

  * The CIA’s four directorates are abbreviated DO for Directorate of Operations, DS&T for Directorate of Science and Technology, DI for Directorate of Intelligence, and DA for Directorate of Administration. Each is headed by a deputy director of the agency, referred to as the DDO for deputy director for operations, DDS&T for science and technology, DDI for intelligence, and DDA for administration. In conversation, the abbreviations are frequently confused, with DDO used to refer interchangeably to the deputy director for operations and to the directorate itself.

  * An operations officer is a staff employee of the CIA and works for the Directorate of Operations, the human-spying side of the agency. The term is synonymous with case officer. The Directorate of Operations is also referred to as the clandestine service or the covert side of the CIA.

  * Because it could still compromise people who aided the effort, neither the city nor the date of the bugging is included here.

  * Because doing so could jeopardize the man’s life, his identity and details of his assignments are not revealed here. The author has made it a point not to learn his identity

  * The Directorate of Operations was previously known euphemistically as the Directorate for Plans.

  * The document giving presidential approval to a covert action is referred to as a finding because it begins, “I hereby find that the following activities are important to the national security of the United States.”

  * Mole is a popular term that refers to an intelligence officer who penetrates an opposing intelligence service, usually having already worked there.

  * Signals intelligence (SIGINT) is intelligence obtained by monitoring electromagnetic waves or signals from any source, including foreign radio transmitters, radar, missiles, satellites, and spacecraft. Human intelligence (HUMINT) is intelligence collected by humans.

  * Richard Stolz framed the question, “What will happen when it becomes public?”

  * Several White House fellows who were women had worked for Webster, but they were not considered on the same level as his special assistants.

  * On August 16, 1976, the author requested from the CIA’s Freedom of Information Office material relating to John (Johnny) Roselli, who had been an intermediary in the CIA’s attempts to enlist the Mafia to assassinate Fidel Castro. When the material was not forthcoming after several months had elapsed, the author appealed. The material—primarily the CIA inspector general’s report on the agency’s attempts to kill or embarrass Fidel Castro—finally arrived on December 27, 1990, more than fourteen years later. It contained some additional details on the CIA’s fruitless attempts to do in Castro, but nothing earth-shattering.

  * The existence of the defector was revealed in the author’s book The FBI: Inside the World’s Most Powerful Law Enforcement Agency.

  * How the FBI catches spies is the subject of the author’s book Spy vs. Spy.

  ** The CIA’s mishandling of Yurchenko is portrayed in the author’s book Escape
from the CIA.

  * The first three directors of Central Intelligence headed the Central Intelligence Group, a forerunner of the CIA established on January 22, 1946. The CIA was established by the National Security Act of 1947, which became effective on September 18, 1947. Adm. Hillenkoeter was reappointed DCI over the new agency.

 

 

 


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