The CIA and the Media: 50 Historical Facts the
World Needs to Know
By James Tracy
August 31, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Memory
Hole" -
Since the end of World War Two the Central
Intelligence Agency has been a major force in US and foreign news
media, exerting considerable influence over what the public sees,
hears and reads on a regular basis. CIA publicists and journalists
alike will assert they have few, if any, relationships, yet the
seldom acknowledged history of their intimate collaboration
indicates a far different story–indeed, one that media historians
are reluctant to examine.
When seriously practiced, the journalistic
profession involves gathering information concerning individuals,
locales, events, and issues. In theory such information informs
people about their world, thereby strengthening “democracy.” This is
exactly why reason news organizations and individual journalists are
tapped as assets by intelligence agencies and, as German the
experiences of journalist Udo Ulfkotte (entry 47 below) suggest,
this practice is at least as widespread today as it was at the
height of the Cold War.
Consider the coverups of election fraud in 2000
and 2004, the events of September 11, 2001, the invasions
Afghanistan and Iraq, the destabilization of Syria, and the creation
of “ISIS.” These are among the most significant events in recent
world history, and yet they are also those much of the American
public is wholly ignorant of. In an era where information and
communication technologies are ubiquitous, prompting many to harbor
the illusion of being well-informed, one must ask why this condition
persists.
Further, why do prominent US journalists routinely
fail to question other deep events that shape America’s tragic
history over the past half century, such as the political
assassinations of the 1960s, or the central role played by the CIA
major role in international drug trafficking?
Popular and academic commentators have suggested
various reasons for the almost universal failure of mainstream
journalism in these areas, including newsroom sociology, advertising
pressure, monopoly ownership, news organizations’ heavy reliance on
“official” sources, and journalists’ simple quest for career
advancement. There is also, no doubt, the influence of professional
public relations maneuvers. Yet such a broad conspiracy of silence
suggests another province of deception examined far too
infrequently—specifically the CIA and similar intelligence agencies’
continued involvement in the news media to mold thought and opinion
in ways scarcely imagined by the lay public.
The following historical and contemporary facts–by
no means exhaustive–provides a glimpse of how the power such
entities possess to influence if not determine popular memory and
what respectable institutions deem to be the historical record.
- The CIA’s Operation MOCKINGBIRD is a long-recognised
keystone among researchers pointing to the Agency’s clear
interest in and relationship to major US news media. MOCKINGBIRD
grew out of the CIA’s forerunner, the Office for Strategic
Services (OSS, 1942-47), which during World War Two had
established a network of journalists and psychological warfare
experts operating primarily in the European theatre.
- Many of the relationships forged under OSS
auspices were carried over into the postwar era through a State
Department-run organization called the Office of Policy
Coordination (OPC) overseen by OSS staffer Frank Wisner.
- The OPC “became the fastest-growing unit
within the nascent CIA,” historian Lisa Pease observes, “rising
in personnel from 302 in 1949 to 2,812 in 1952, along with 3,142
overseas contract personnel. In the same period, the budget rose
from $4.7 million to $82 million.” Lisa Pease, “The Media and
the Assassination,” in James DiEugenio and Lisa Pease, The
Assassinations: Probe Magazine on JFK, MLK, RFK and Malcolm X,
Port Townsend, WA, 2003, 300.
- Like many career CIA officers, eventual CIA
Director/Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) Richard Helms
was recruited out of the press corps by his own supervisor at
the United Press International’s Berlin Bureau to join in the
OSS’s fledgling “black propaganda” program. “‘[Y]ou’re a
natural,” Helms’ boss remarked. Richard Helms, A Look Over
My Shoulder: A Life in the Central Intelligence Agency, New
York: Random House, 2003, 30-31.
- Wisner tapped Marshall Plan funds to pay for
his division’s early exploits, money his branch referred to as
“candy.” “We couldn’t spend it all,” CIA agent Gilbert Greenway
recalls. “I remember once meeting with Wisner and the
comptroller. My God, I said, how can we spend that? There were
no limits, and nobody had to account for it. It was
amazing.” Frances Stonor Saunders, The Cultural Cold War:
The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters, New York: The
New Press, 2000, 105.
- When the OPC
was merged with the Office of Special Operations in 1948 to
create the CIA, OPC’s media assets were likewise absorbed.
- Wisner
maintained the top secret “Propaganda Assets Inventory,” better
known as “Wisner’s Wurlitzer”—a virtual rolodex of over 800 news
and information entities prepared to play whatever tune Wisner
chose. “The network included journalists, columnists, book
publishers, editors, entire organizations such as Radio Free
Europe, and stringers across multiple news organizations.”
Pease, “The Media and the Assassination,” 300.
- A few years
after Wisner’s operation was up-and-running he “’owned’
respected members of the New York Times, Newsweek,
CBS, and other communication vehicles, plus stringers, four to
six hundred in all, according to a CIA analyst. Each one was a
separate ‘operation,’” investigative journalist Deborah Davis
notes, “requiring a code name, a field supervisor, and a field
office, at an annual cost of tens or hundreds of thousands of
dollars—there has never been an accurate accounting.” Deborah
Davis, Katharine the Great: Katharine Graham and the
Washington Post, Second Edition, Bethesda MD: National Press
Inc, 1987, 139.
- Psychological operations in the form of
journalism were perceived as necessary to influence and direct
mass opinion, as well as elite perspectives. “[T]he President of
the United States, the Secretary of State, Congressmen and even
the Director of the CIA himself will read, believe, and be
impressed by a report from Cy Sulzberger, Arnaud de Borchgrave,
or Stewart Alsop when they don’t even bother to read a CIA
report on the same subject,” noted CIA agent Miles Copeland.
Cited in Pease, “The Media and the Assassination,” 301.
- By the
mid-to-late 1950s, Darrell Garwood points out, the Agency sought
to limit criticism directed against covert activity and bypass
congressional oversight or potential judicial interference by
“infiltrat[ing] the groves of academia, the missionary corps,
the editorial boards of influential journal and book publishers,
and any other quarters where public attitudes could be
effectively influenced.” Darrell Garwood, Under Cover:
Thirty-Five Years of CIA Deception, New York: Grove Press,
1985, 250.
- The CIA
frequently intercedes in editorial decision-making. For example,
when the Agency proceeded to wage an overthrow of the Arbenz
regime in Guatemala in 1954, Allen and John Foster Dulles,
President Eisenhower’s Secretary of State and CIA Director
respectively, called upon New York Times publisher
Arthur Hays Sulzberger to reassign reporter Sydney Gruson from
Guatemala to Mexico City. Sulzberger thus placed Gruson in
Mexico City with the rationale that some repercussions from the
revolution might be felt in Mexico. Pease, “The Media and the
Assassination,” 302.
- Since the
early 1950s the CIA “has secretly bankrolled numerous foreign
press services, periodicals and newspapers—both English and
foreign language—which provided excellent cover for CIA
operatives,” Carl Bernstein reported in 1977. “One such
publication was the Rome Daily American, forty percent of which
was owned by the CIA until the 1970s.” Carl Bernstein, “The
CIA and the Media,” Rolling Stone, October 20,
1977.
- The CIA exercised informal liaisons with news
media executives, in contrast to its relationships with salaried
reporters and stringers, “who were much more subject to
direction from the Agency” according to Bernstein. “A few
executives—Arthur Hays Sulzberger of the New York Times
among them—signed secrecy agreements. But such formal
understandings were rare: relationships between Agency officials
and media executives were usually social—’The P and Q Street
axis in Georgetown,’ said one source. ‘You don’t tell William
Paley to sign a piece of paper saying he won’t fink.’” Director
of CBS William Paley’s personal “friendship with CIA Director
Dulles is now known to have been one of the most influential and
significant in the communications industry,” author Debora Davis
explains. “He provided cover for CIA agents, supplied out-takes
of news film, permitted the debriefing of reporters, and in many
ways set the standard for the cooperation between the CIA and
major broadcast companies which lasted until the
mid-1970s.” Deborah Davis, Katharine the Great: Katharine
Graham and the Washington Post, Second Edition, Bethesda
MD: National Press Inc, 1987, 175.
- “The Agency’s relationship with the Times
was by far its most valuable among newspapers, according to CIA
officials,” Bernstein points out in his key 1977 article. “From
1950 to 1966, about ten CIA employees were provided Times
cover under arrangements approved by the newspaper’s late
publisher, Arthur Hays Sulzberger. The cover arrangements were
part of a general Times policy—set by Sulzberger—to
provide assistance to the CIA whenever possible.” In
addition, Sulzberger was a close friend of CIA Director Allen
Dulles. “’At that level of contact it was the mighty talking to
the mighty,’ said a high‑level CIA official who was present at
some of the discussions. ‘There was an agreement in principle
that, yes indeed, we would help each other. The question of
cover came up on several occasions. It was agreed that the
actual arrangements would be handled by subordinates…. The
mighty didn’t want to know the specifics; they wanted plausible
deniability.'” Bernstein, “The
CIA and the Media.”
- CBS’s Paley worked reciprocally with the CIA,
allowing the Agency to utilize network resources and personnel.
“It was a form of assistance that a number of wealthy persons
are now generally known to have rendered the CIA through their
private interests,” veteran broadcast journalist Daniel Schorr
wrote in 1977. “It suggested to me, however, that a relationship
of confidence and trust had existed between him and the agency.”
Schorr points to “clues indicating that CBS had been
infiltrated.” For example, “A news editor remembered the CIA
officer who used to come to the radio control room in New York
in the early morning, and, with the permission of persons
unknown, listened to CBS correspondents around the world
recording their ‘spots’ for the ‘World News Roundup’ and
discussing events with the editor on duty. Sam Jaffe claimed
that when he applied in 1955 for a job with CBS, a CIA officer
told him that he would be hired–which he subsequently was. He
was told that he would be sent to Moscow–which he subsequently
was; he was assigned in 1960 to cover the trial of U-2 pilot
Francis Gary Powers. [Richard] Salant told me,” Schorr
continues, “that when he first became president of CBS News in
1961, a CIA case officer called saying he wanted to continue the
‘long standing relationship known to Paley and [CBS president
Frank] Stanton, but Salant was told by Stanton there was no
obligation that he knew of” (276). Schorr, Daniel. Clearing
the Air, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1977, 277, 276.
- National Enquirer
publisher Gene Pope Jr. worked briefly on the CIA’s Italy desk
in the early 1950s and maintained close ties with the Agency
thereafter. Pope refrained from publishing dozens of stories
with “details of CIA kidnappings and murders, enough stuff for a
year’s worth of headlines” in order to “collect chits, IOUs,”
Pope’s son writes. “He figured he’d never know when he might
need them, and those IOUs would come in handy when he got to 20
million circulation. When that happened, he’d have the voice to
be almost his own branch of government and would need the
cover.” Paul David Pope, The Deeds of My Fathers: How My
Grandfather and Father Built New York and Created the Tabloid
World of Today, New York: Phillip Turner/Rowman &
Littlefield, 2010, 309, 310.
- One explosive story Pope’s National
Enquirer‘s refrained from publishing in the late 1970s
centered on excerpts from a long-sought after diary of President
Kennedy’s lover, Mary Pinchot Meyer, who was murdered on October
12, 1964. “The reporters who wrote the story were even able to
place James Jesus Angleton, the CIA’s head of
counterintelligence operations, at the scene.” Another potential
story drew on “documents proving that [Howard] Hughes and the
CIA had been connected for years and that the CIA was giving
Hughes money to secretly fund, with campaign donations,
twenty-seven congressmen and senators who sat on sub-committees
critical to the agency. There are also fifty-three international
companies named and sourced as CIA fronts .. and even a list of
reporters for mainstream media organizations who were playing
ball with the agency.” Pope, The Deeds of My Fathers,
309.
- Angleton, who
oversaw the Agency counterintelligence branch for 25 years, “ran
a completely independent group entirely separate cadre of
journalist‑operatives who performed sensitive and frequently
dangerous assignments; little is known about this group for the
simple reason that Angleton deliberately kept only the vaguest
of files.” Bernstein, “The
CIA and the Media.”
- The CIA
conducted a “formal training program” during the 1950s for the
sole purpose of instructing its agents to function as newsmen.
“Intelligence officers were ‘taught to make noises like
reporters,’ explained a high CIA official, and were then placed
in major news organizations with help from management. These
were the guys who went through the ranks and were told ‘You’re
going to he a journalist,’” the CIA official said.” The Agency’s
preference, however, was to engage journalists who were already
established in the industry. Bernstein, “The
CIA and the Media.”
- Newspaper
columnists and broadcast journalists with household names have
been known to maintain close ties with the Agency. “There are
perhaps a dozen well known columnists and broadcast commentators
whose relationships with the CIA go far beyond those normally
maintained between reporters and their sources,” Bernstein
maintains. “They are referred to at the Agency as ‘known assets’
and can be counted on to perform a variety of undercover tasks;
they are considered receptive to the Agency’s point of view on
various subjects.” Bernstein, “The
CIA and the Media.”
- Frank Wisner,
Allen Dulles, and Washington Post publisher Phillip
Graham were close associates, and the Post developed
into one of the most influential news organs in the United
States due to its ties with the CIA. The Post managers’
“individual relations with intelligence had in fact been the
reason the Post Company had grown as fast as it did after the
war,” Davis (172) observes. “[T]heir secrets were its corporate
secrets, beginning with MOCKINGBIRD. Phillip Graham’s commitment
to intelligence had given his friends Frank Wisner an interest
in helping to make the Washington Post the dominant
news vehicle in Washington, which they had done by assisting
with its two most crucial acquisitions, the Times-Herald
and WTOP radio and television stations.” Davis, Katharine
the Great: Katharine Graham and the Washington Post, 172.
- In the wake of
World War One the Woodrow Wilson administration placed
journalist and author Walter Lippmann in charge of recruiting
agents for the Inquiry, a first-of-its-kind ultra-secret
civilian intelligence organization whose role involved
ascertaining information to prepare Wilson for the peace
negotiations, as well as identify foreign natural resources for
Wall Street speculators and oil companies. The activities of
this organization served as a prototype for the function
eventually performed by the CIA, namely “planning, collecting,
digesting, and editing the raw data,” notes historian Servando
Gonzalez. “This roughly corresponds to the CIA’s intelligence
cycle: planning and direction, collection, processing,
production and analysis, and dissemination.” Most Inquiry
members would later become members of the Council on Foreign
Relations. Lippmann would go on to become the Washington
Post’s best known columnists. Servando Gonzalez,
Psychological Warfare and the New World Order: The Secret War
Against the American People, Oakland, CA: Spooks Books,
2010, 50.
- The two most
prominent US newsweeklies, Time and Newsweek,
kept close ties with the CIA. “Agency files contain written
agreements with former foreign correspondents and stringers for
both the weekly newsmagazines,” according to Carl Bernstein.
“Allen Dulles often interceded with his good friend, the late
Henry Luce, founder of Time and Life magazines, who readily
allowed certain members of his staff to work for the Agency and
agreed to provide jobs and credentials for other CIA operatives
who lacked journalistic experience.” Bernstein, “The
CIA and the Media.”
- In his autobiography former CIA officer E.
Howard Hunt quotes Bernstein’s “The CIA and the Media” article
at length. “I know nothing to contradict this report,” Hunt
declares, suggesting the investigative journalist of Watergate
fame didn’t go far enough. “Bernstein further identified some of
the country’s top media executives as being valuable assets to
the agency … But the list of organizations that cooperated with
the agency was a veritable ‘Who’s Who’ of the media industry,
including ABC, NBC, the Associated Press, UPI, Reuters, Hearst
Newspapers, Scripps-Howard, Newsweek magazine, and
others.” E. Howard Hunt, American Spy: My Secret History in
the CIA, Watergate, and Beyond, Hoboken NJ: John Wiley &
Sons, 2007, 150.
- When the first
major exposé of the CIA emerged in 1964 with the publication of
The Invisible Government by journalists David Wise and
Thomas B. Ross, the CIA considered purchasing the entire
printing to keep the book from the public, yet in the end judged
against it. “To an extent that is only beginning to be
perceived, this shadow government is shaping the lives of
190,000,000 Americans” authors Wise and Ross write in the book’s
preamble. “Major decisions involving peace and war are taking
place out of public view. An informed citizen might come to
suspect that the foreign policy of the United States often works
publicly in one direction and secretly through the Invisible
Government in just the opposite direction.”Lisa
Pease, “When
the CIA’s Empire Struck Back,” Consortiumnews.com,
February 6, 2014.
- Agency
infiltration of the news media shaped public perception of deep
events and undergirded the official explanations of such events.
For example, the Warren Commission’s report on President John F.
Kennedy’s assassination was met with almost unanimous approval
by US media outlets. “I have never seen an official report
greeted with such universal praise as that accorded the Warren
Commission’s findings when they were made public on September
24, 1964,” recalls investigative reporter Fred Cook. “All the
major television networks devoted special programs and analyses
to the report; the next day the newspapers ran long columns
detailing its findings, accompanied by special news analyses and
editorials. The verdict was unanimous. The report answered all
questions, left no room for doubt. Lee Harvey Oswald, alone and
unaided, had assassinated the president of the United States.”
Fred J. Cook, Maverick: Fifty Years of Investigative
Reporting, G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1984, 276.
- In late 1966 the New York Times began
an inquiry on the numerous questions surrounding President
Kennedy’s assassination that were not satisfactorily dealt with
by the Warren Commission. “It was never completed,” author Jerry
Policoff observes, “nor would the New York Times ever
again question the findings of the Warren Commission.” When the
story was being developed the lead reporter at the Times‘
Houston bureau “said that he and others came up with ‘a lot of
unanswered questions’ that the Times didn’t bother to
pursue. ‘I’d be off on a good lead and then somebody’d call me
off and send me out to California on another story or something.
We never really detached anyone for this. We weren’t really
serious.'” Jerry Policoff, “The Media and the Murder of John
Kennedy,” in Peter Dale Scott, Paul L. Hoch and Russell Stetler,
eds., The Assassinations: Dallas and Beyond, New York:
Vintage, 1976, 265.
- When New Orleans District Attorney Jim
Garrison embarked on an investigation of the JFK assassination
in 1966 centering on Lee Harvey Oswald’s presence in New Orleans
in the months leading up to November, 22, 1963, “he was
cross-whipped with two hurricane blasts, one from Washington and
one from New York,” historian James DiEugenio explains. The
first, of course, was from the government, specifically the
Central Intelligence Agency, the FBI, and to a lesser extent,
the White House. The blast from New York was from the major
mainstream media e.g. Time-Life and NBC. Those two communication
giants were instrumental in making Garrison into a lightening
rod for ridicule and criticism. This orchestrated campaign … was
successful in diverting attention from what Garrison was
uncovering by creating controversy about the DA himself.”
DiEugenio, Preface, in William Davy, Let Justice Be Done:
New Light on the Jim Garrison Investigation, Reston VA:
Jordan Publishing, 1999.
- The CIA and
other US intelligence agencies used the news media to sabotage
Garrison’s 1966-69 independent investigation of the Kennedy
assassination. Garrison presided over the only law enforcement
agency with subpoena power to seriously delve into the intricate
details surrounding JFK’s murder. One of Garrison’s key
witnesses, Gordon Novel, fled New Orleans to avoid testifying
before the Grand Jury assembled by Garrison. According to
DiEugenio, CIA Director Allen “Dulles and the Agency would begin
to connect the fugitive from New Orleans with over a dozen CIA
friendly journalists who—in a blatant attempt to destroy
Garrison’s reputation—would proceed to write up the most
outrageous stories imaginable about the DA.” James DiEugenio,
Destiny Betrayed: JFK, Cuba, and The Garrison Case,
Second Edition, New York: SkyHorse Publishing, 2012, 235.
- CIA officer Victor Marchetti recounted to
author William Davy that in 1967 while attending staff meetings
as an assistant to then-CIA Director Richard Helms, “Helms
expressed great concerns over [former OSS officer, CIA operative
and primary suspect in Jim Garrison’s investigation Clay] Shaw’s
predicament, asking his staff, ‘Are we giving them all the help
we can down there?'” William Davy, Let Justice Be Done: New
Light on the Jim Garrison Investigation, Reston VA: Jordan
Publishing, 1999.
- The pejorative dimensions of the term
“conspiracy theory” were introduced into the Western lexicon by
CIA “media assets,” as evidenced in the design laid out by Document
1035-960 Concerning Criticism of the Warren Report, an
Agency communiqué issued in early 1967 to Agency bureaus
throughout the world at a time when attorney Mark Lane’s
Rush to Judgment was atop bestseller lists and New Orleans
DA Garrison’s investigation of the Kennedy assassination began
to gain traction.
- Time had close
relations with the CIA stemming from the friendship of the
magazine’s publisher Henry Luce and Eisenhower CIA chief Allen
Dulles. When former newsman Richard Helms was appointed DCI in
1966 he “began to cultivate the press,” prompting journalists
toward conclusions that placed the Agency in a positive light.
As Time Washington correspondent Hugh Sidney
recollects, “‘[w]ith [John] McCone and [Richard] Helms, we had a
set-up when the magazine was doing something on the CIA, we went
to them and put it before them … We were never misled.’
Similarly, when Newsweek decided in the fall of 1971 to do a
cover story on Richard Helms and ‘The New Espionage,’ the
magazine, according to a Newsweek staffer, went directly to the
agency for much of the information. And the article … generally
reflected the line that Helms was trying so hard to sell: that
since the latter 1960s … the focus of attention and prestige
within CIA’ had switched from the Clandestine Services to the
analysis of intelligence, and that ‘the vast majority of
recruits are bound for’ the Intelligence Directorate.” Victor
Marchetti and John D. Marks, The CIA and the Cult of
Intelligence, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1974, 362-363.
- In 1970 Jim Garrison wrote and published the
semi-autobiographical A Heritage of Stone, a work that
examines how the New Orleans DA “discovered that the CIA
operated within the borders of the United States, and how it
took the CIA six months to reply to the Warren Commission’s
question of whether Oswald and [Jack] Ruby had been with the
Agency,” Garrison biographer and Temple University humanities
professor Joan Mellen observes. “In response to A Heritage
of Stone, the CIA rounded up its media assets” and the book
was panned by reviewers writing for the New York Times,
the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post,
the Chicago Sun Times, and Life magazine.
“John Leonard’s New York Times review went through a
metamorphosis,” Mellen explains. “The original last paragraph
challenged the Warren Report: ‘Something stinks about this whole
affair,’ Leonard wrote. ‘Why were Kennedy’s neck organs not
examined at Bethesda for evidence of a frontal shot? Why was his
body whisked away to Washington before the legally required
Texas inquest? Why?’ This paragraph evaporated in later editions
of the Times. A third of a column gone, the review then
ended: ‘Frankly I prefer to believe that the Warren Commission
did a poor job, rather than a dishonest one. I like to think
that Garrison invents monsters to explain incompetence.'” Joan
Mellen, A Farewell to Justice: Jim Garrison, JFK’s
Assassination, and the Case That Should Have Changed History,
Washington DC: Potomac Books, 2005, 323, 324.
- CIA Deputy Director for Plans Cord Meyer Jr.
appealed to Harper & Row president emeritus Cass Canfield Sr.
over the book publisher’s pending release of Alfred McCoy’s
The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia, based on the
author’s fieldwork and Yale PhD dissertation wherein he examined
the CIA’s explicit role in the opium trade. “Claiming my book
was a threat to national security,” McCoy recalls, “the CIA
official had asked Harper & Row to suppress it. To his credit,
Mr. Canfield had refused. But he had agreed to review the
manuscript prior to publication.” Alfred W. McCoy, The
Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade,
Chicago Review Press, 2003, xx.
- Publication of The Secret Team, a
book by US Air Force Colonel and Pentagon-CIA liaison L.
Fletcher Prouty recounting the author’s firsthand knowledge of
CIA black operations and espionage, was met with a wide scale
censorship campaign in 1972. “The campaign to kill the book was
nationwide and world-wide,” Prouty notes. “It was removed from
the Library of Congress and from college libraries as letters I
received attested all too frequently … I was a writer whose book
had been cancelled by a major publisher [Prentice Hall] and a
major paperback publisher [Ballantine Books] under the
persuasive hand of the CIA.” L. Fletcher Prouty, The Secret
Team: The CIA and Its Allies in Control of the United States and
the World, New York: SkyHorse Publishing, 2008, xii, xv.
- During the Pike Committee hearings in 1975
Congressman Otis Pike asked DCI William Colby, “Do you have any
people paid by the CIA who are working for television networks?”
Colby responded, “This, I think, gets into the kind of details,
Mr. Chairman, that I’d like to get into in executive session.”
Once the chamber was cleared Colby admitted that in 1975
specifically “the CIA was using ‘media cover’ for eleven agents,
many fewer than in the heyday of the cloak-and-pencil
operations, but no amount of questioning would persuade him to
talk about the publishers and network chieftains who had
cooperated at the top.” Schorr, Clearing the Air, 275.
- “There is quite an incredible spread of
relationships,” former CIA intelligence officer William Bader
informed a US Senate Intelligence Committee investigating the
CIA’s infiltration of the nation’s journalistic outlets. “You
don’t need to manipulate Time magazine, for example,
because there are Agency people at the management level.”
Bernstein, “The
CIA and the Media.”
- In 1985 film historian and professor Joseph
McBride came across a November 29, 1963 memorandum from J. Edgar
Hoover, titled, “Assassination of President John F. Kennedy,”
wherein the FBI director stated that his agency provided two
individuals with briefings, one of whom was “Mr. George Bush of
the Central Intelligence Agency.” ” When McBride queried the CIA
with the memo a “PR man was tersely formal and opaque: ‘I can
neither confirm nor deny.’ It was the standard response the
agency gave when it dealt with its sources and methods,”
journalist Russ Baker notes. When McBride published a story in
The Nation, “The Man Who Wasn’t There, ‘George Bush,’ C.I.A.
Operative,” the CIA came forward with a statement that the
George Bush referenced in the FBI record “apparently” referenced
a George William Bush, who filled a perfunctory night
shift position at CIA headquarters that “would have been the
appropriate place to receive such a report.” McBride tracked
down George William Bush to confirm he was only employed briefly
as a “probationary civil servant” who had “never received
interagency briefings.” Shortly thereafter The Nation ran
a second story by McBride wherein “the author provided evidence
that the Central Intelligence Agency had foisted a lie on the
American people … As with McBride’s previous story, this
disclosure was greeted with the equivalent of a collective media
yawn.” Since the episode researchers have found documents
linking George H. W. Bush to the CIA as early as 1953. Russ
Baker, Family of Secrets: The Bush Dynasty, America’s
Invisible Government, and the Hidden History of the Last Fifty
Years, New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2009, 7-12.
- Operation Gladio, the well-documented
collaboration between Western spy agencies, including the CIA,
and NATO involving coordinated terrorist shootings and bombings
of civilian targets throughout Europe from the late 1960s
through the 1980s, has been effectively expunged from major
mainstream news outlets. A LexisNexis Academic search conducted
in 2012 for “Operation Gladio” retrieved 31 articles in English
language news media—most appearing in British newspapers. Only
four articles discussing Gladio ever appeared in US
publications—three in the New York Times and one brief
mention in the Tampa Bay Times. With the exception of a
2009 BBC documentary, no network or cable news broadcast has
ever referenced the state-sponsored terror operation. Almost all
of the articles referencing Gladio appeared in 1990 when Italian
Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti publicly admitted Italy’s
participation in the process. The New York Times
downplayed any US involvement, misleadingly designating Gladio
“an Italian creation” in a story buried on page A16. In reality,
former CIA director William Colby revealed in his memoirs that
covert paramilitaries were a significant agency undertaking set
up after World War II, including “the smallest possible coterie
of the most reliable people, in Washington [and] NATO.” James F.
Tracy, “False
Flag Terror and Conspiracies of Silence,” Global
Research, August 10, 2012.
- Days before the April 19, 1995 bombing of the
Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City DCI William
Colby confided to his friend, Nebraska State Senator John DeCamp
his personal concerns over the Militia and Patriot movement
within the United States, then surging in popularity due to the
use of the alternative media of that era–books, periodicals,
cassette tapes, and radio broadcasts. “I watched as the Anti-War
movement rendered it impossible for this country to conduct or
win the Vietnam War,” Colby remarked. “I tell you, dear friend,
that the Militia and Patriot movement in which, as an attorney,
you have become one of the centerpieces, is far more significant
and far more dangerous for American than the Anti-War movement
ever was, if it is not intelligently dealt with. And I really
mean this.” David Hoffman, The Oklahoma City Bombing and the
Politics of Terror, Venice CA: Feral House, 1998, 367.
- Shortly after
the appearance of journalist Gary Webb’s “Dark Alliance” series
in the San Jose Mercury News chronicling the Agency’s
involvement in drug trafficking, the CIA’s public affairs
division embarked on a campaign to counter what it termed “a
genuine public relations crisis for the Agency.” Webb was merely
reporting to a large audience what had already been well
documented by scholars such as Alfred McCoy and Peter Dale
Scott, and the 1989 Kerry Committee Report on Iran-Contra—that
the CIA had long been involved in the illegal transnational drug
trade. Such findings were upheld in 1999 in a study by the CIA
inspector general. Nevertheless, beginning shortly after Webb’s
series ran, “CIA media spokesmen would remind reporters seeking
comment that this series represented no real news,” a CIA
internal organ noted, “in that similar charges were made in the
1980s and were investigated by the Congress and were found to be
without substance. Reporters were encouraged to read the “Dark
Alliance’ series closely and with a critical eye to what
allegations could actually be backed with evidence.” http://www.foia.cia.gov/sites/default/files/DOC_0001372115.pdf
- On December
10, 2004 investigative journalist Gary Webb died of two .38
caliber gunshot wounds to the head. The coroner ruled the death
a suicide. “Gary Webb was MURDERED,” concluded FBI senior
special agent Ted Gunderson in 2005. “He (Webb) resisted the
first shot [to the head that exited via jaw] so he was shot
again with the second shot going into the head [brain].”
Gunderson regards the theory that Webb could have managed to
shoot himself twice as “impossible!” Charlene
Fassa, “Gary
Webb: More Pieces in the Suicided Puzzle,” Rense.com,
December 11, 2005.
- The most
revered journalists who receive “exclusive” information and
access to the corridors of power are typically the most
subservient to officialdom and often have intelligence ties.
Those granted such access understand that they must likewise
uphold government-sanctioned narratives. For example, the
New York Times’ Tom Wicker reported on November 22, 1963
that President John F. Kennedy “was hit by a bullet in the
throat, just below the Adam’s apple.” Yet his account went to
press before the official story of a single assassin shooting
from the rear became established. Wicker was chastised through
“lost access, complaints to editors and publishers, social
penalties, leaks to competitors, a variety of responses no one
wants.” Barrie Zwicker, Towers
of Deception: The Media Coverup of 9/11, Gabrioloa Island,
BC: New Society Publishers, 2006, 169-170.
- The CIA
actively promotes a desirable public image of its history and
function by advising the production of Hollywood vehicles, such
as Argo and Zero Dark Thirty. The Agency
retains “entertainment industry liaison officers” on its staff
that “plant positive images about itself (in other words,
propaganda) through our most popular forms of entertainment,”
Tom Hayden explains in the LA Review of Books. “So natural has
the CIA–entertainment connection become that few question its
legal or moral ramifications. This is a government agency like
no other; the truth of its operations is not subject to public
examination. When the CIA’s hidden persuaders influence a
Hollywood movie, it is using a popular medium to spin as
favorable an image of itself as possible, or at least, prevent
an unfavorable one from taking hold.” Tom
Hayden, “Review
of The CIA in Hollywood: How the Agency Shapes Film and
Television by Tricia Jenkins,” LA Review of Books,
February 24, 2013,
- Former CIA
case officer Robert David Steele states that CIA manipulation of
news media is “worse” in the 2010s than in the late 1970s when
Bernstein wrote “The CIA and the Media.” “The sad thing is that
the CIA is very able to manipulate [the media] and it has
financial arrangements with media, with Congress, with all
others. But the other half of that coin is that the media is
lazy.” James
Tracy interview with Robert David Steele, August 2, 2014,
- A well-known
fact is that broadcast journalist Anderson Cooper interned for
the CIA while attending Yale as an undergraduate in the late
1980s. According to Wikipedia Cooper’s great uncle, William
Henry Vanderbilt III, was an Executive Officer of the Special
Operations Branch of the OSS under the spy organization’s
founder William “Wild Bill” Donovan. While Wikipedia is an often
dubious source, Vanderbilt’s OSS involvement would be in keeping
with the OSS/CIA reputation of taking on highly affluent
personnel for overseas derring-do. William
Henry Vanderbilt III, Wikipedia.
- Veteran German journalist Udo Ulfkotte,
author of the 2014 book Gekaufte Journalisten (Bought
Journalists) revealed how under the threat of job termination he
was routinely compelled to publish articles written by
intelligence agents using his byline. “I ended up publishing
articles under my own name written by agents of the CIA and
other intelligence services, especially the German secret
service,” Ulfkotte explained in a recent interview with
Russia Today. “German
Journo: European Media Writing Pro-US Stories Under CIA Pressure,”
RT, October 18, 2014.
- In 1999 the CIA established In-Q-Tel, a
venture capital firm seeking to “identify and invest in
companies developing cutting-edge information technologies that
serve United States national security interests.” The firm has
exercised financial relationships with internet platforms
Americans use on a routine basis, including Google and Facebook. “If
you want to keep up with Silicon Valley, you need to become part
of Silicon Valley,” says Jim Rickards, an adviser to the U.S.
intelligence community familiar with In-Q-Tel’s activities. “The
best way to do that is have a budget because when you have a
checkbook, everyone comes to you.” At one point IQT “catered
largely to the needs of the CIA.” Today, however, “the firm
supports many of the 17 agencies within the U.S. intelligence
community, including the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency
(NGA), the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) and the Department
of Homeland Security Science and Technology Directorate.” Matt
Egan, “In-Q-Tel:
A Glimpse Inside the CIA’s Venture Capital Arm,”
FoxBusiness.com, June 14, 2013.
- At a 2012 conference held by In-Q-Tel CIA
Director David Patraeus declared that the rapidly-developing
“internet of things” and “smart home” will provide the CIA with
the ability to spy on any US citizen should they become a
“person of interest’ to the spy community,” Wired
magazine reports. “‘Transformational’ is an overused word, but I
do believe it properly applies to these technologies,’ Patraeus
enthused, ‘particularly to their effect on clandestine
tradecraft’ … ‘Items of interest will be located, identified,
monitored, and remotely controlled through technologies such as
radio-frequency identification, sensor networks, tiny embedded
servers, and energy harvesters — all connected to the
next-generation internet using abundant, low-cost, and
high-power computing,” Patraeus said, “the latter now going to
cloud computing, in many areas greater and greater
supercomputing, and, ultimately, heading to quantum computing.”
Spencer Ackerman, “CIA
Chief: We’ll Spy on You Through Your Dishwasher,” Wired,
March 15, 2012.
- In the summer of 2014 a $600 million
computing cloud developed by Amazon Web Services for the CIA
began servicing all 17 federal agencies comprising the
intelligence community. “If the technology plays out as
officials envision,” The Atlantic reports, “it will
usher in a new era of cooperation and coordination, allowing
agencies to share information and services much more easily and
avoid the kind of intelligence gaps that preceded the Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks.” “The
Details About the CIA’s Deal With Amazon,” The Atlantic,
July 17, 2014.
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