How the CIA Took Over America and Holds Presidents
Hostage to Assassination
How the CIA Took Over America and Holds Presidents
Hostage to Assassination
Truman’s True Warning on the CIA
December 22, 2013
Exclusive: National security secrecy and a benighted sense
of “what’s good for the country” can be a dangerous mix for democracy,
empowering self-interested or misguided officials to supplant the people’s
will, as President Truman warned and ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern explains.
By Ray McGovern
Fifty years ago, exactly one month after John Kennedy
was killed, the Washington Post published an op-ed titled “Limit CIA Role to
Intelligence.” The first sentence of that op-ed on Dec. 22, 1963, read, “I
think it has become necessary to take another look at the purpose and
operations of our Central Intelligence Agency.”
It sounded like the intro to a bleat from some liberal
professor or journalist. Not so. The writer was former President Harry S.
Truman, who spearheaded the establishment of the CIA 66 years ago, right after
World War II, to better coordinate U.S. intelligence gathering. But the spy
agency had lurched off in what Truman thought were troubling directions.
Sadly, those concerns that Truman expressed in that
op-ed — that he had inadvertently helped create a Frankenstein monster — are as
valid today as they were 50 years ago, if not more so.
Truman began his article by underscoring “the original
reason why I thought it necessary to organize this Agency … and what I expected
it to do.” It would be “charged with the collection of all intelligence reports
from every available source, and to have those reports reach me as President
without Department ‘treatment’ or interpretations.”
Truman then moved quickly to one of the main things
bothering him. He wrote “the most important thing was to guard against the
chance of intelligence being used to influence or to lead the President into
unwise decisions.”
It was not difficult to see this as a reference to how
one of the agency’s early directors, Allen Dulles, tried to trick President
Kennedy into sending U.S. forces to rescue the group of invaders who had landed
on the beach at the Bay of Pigs, Cuba, in April 1961 with no chance of success,
absent the speedy commitment of U.S. air and ground support.
Wallowing in the Bay of Pigs
Arch-Establishment figure Allen Dulles had been
offended when young President Kennedy had the temerity to ask questions about
CIA plans before the Bay of Pigs debacle, which had been set in motion under
President Dwight Eisenhower. When Kennedy made it clear he would NOT approve
the use of U.S. combat forces, Dulles set out, with supreme confidence, to
mousetrap the President.
Coffee-stained notes handwritten by Allen Dulles were
discovered after his death and reported by historian Lucien S. Vandenbroucke.
They show how Dulles drew Kennedy into a plan that was virtually certain to
require the use of U.S. combat forces. In his notes, Dulles explained that,
“when the chips were down,” Kennedy would be forced by “the realities of the
situation” to give whatever military support was necessary “rather than permit
the enterprise to fail.”
The “enterprise” which Dulles said could not fail was,
of course, the overthrow of Fidel Castro. After mounting several failed
operations to assassinate him, this time Dulles meant to get his man, with
little or no attention to how the Russians might react. The reckless Joint
Chiefs of Staff, whom then-Deputy Secretary of State George Ball later
described as a “sewer of deceit,” relished any chance to confront the Soviet
Union and give it, at least, a black eye.
But Kennedy stuck to his guns, so to speak. He fired
Dulles and his co-conspirators a few months after the abortive invasion, and
told a friend that he wanted to “splinter the CIA into a thousand pieces and
scatter it into the winds.” The outrage was very obviously mutual.
When Kennedy himself was assassinated on Nov. 22,
1963, it must have occurred to Truman as it did to many others that the
disgraced Dulles and his unrepentant associates might not be above conspiring
to get rid of a president they felt was soft on Communism and get even for
their Bay of Pigs fiasco.
‘Cloak and Dagger’
While Truman saw CIA’s attempted mousetrapping of
President Kennedy as a particular outrage, his more general complaint is seen
in his broader lament that the CIA had become “so removed from its intended
role … I never had any thought that when I set up the CIA that it would be
injected into peacetime cloak and dagger operations. … It has become an
operational and at times a policy-making arm of the government.” Not only
shaping policy through its control of intelligence, but also “cloak and dagger”
operations, presumably including assassinations.
Truman concluded the op-ed with an admonition that was
as clear as the syntax was clumsy: “I would like to see the CIA restored to its
original assignment as the intelligence arm of the President, and that whatever
else it can properly perform in that special field and that its operational
duties be terminated or properly used elsewhere.” The importance and prescient
nature of that admonition are even clearer today, a half-century later.
But Truman’s warning fell mostly on deaf ears, at
least within Establishment circles. The Washington Post published
the op-ed in its early edition on Dec. 22, 1963, but immediately excised it
from later editions. Other media ignored it. The long hand of the CIA?
In Truman’s view, misuse of the CIA began in February
1953, when his successor, Dwight Eisenhower, named Allen Dulles as CIA
director. Dulles’s forte was overthrowing governments (in current parlance,
“regime change”), and he was quite good at it. With coups in Iran (1953)
and Guatemala (1954) under his belt, Dulles was riding high by the late Fifties
and moved Cuba to the top of his to-do list.
The Truman Papers
Documents in the Truman Library show that nine days
after Kennedy was assassinated, Truman sketched out in handwritten notes what
he wanted to say in the op-ed. He noted, among other things, that the CIA had
worked as he intended only “when I had control.”
Five days after the op-ed appeared, retired Admiral
Sidney Souers, whom Truman had appointed to lead his first central intelligence
group, sent a “Dear Boss” letter applauding Truman’s outspokenness and blaming
Dulles for making the CIA “a different animal than the one I tried to set up
for you.”
Souers specifically lambasted the attempt “to conduct
a ‘war’ invading Cuba with a handful of men and without air cover.” He also
lamented the fact that the agency’s “principal effort” had evolved into causing
“revolutions in smaller countries around the globe,” and added: “With so much
emphasis on operations, it would not surprise me to find that the matter of
collecting and processing intelligence has suffered some.” (Again, as true
today as it was 50 years ago.)
Clearly, the operational tail of the CIA was wagging
its substantive dog, a serious problem that persists to this day.
Fox Guarding Hen House
After Kennedy was murdered in Dallas, the patrician,
well-connected Dulles got himself appointed to the Warren Commission and took
the lead in shaping the investigation of JFK’s assassination. Documents in
the Truman Library show that Dulles also mounted a small domestic covert action
of his own to neutralize any future airing of Truman’s and Souers’s warnings about
covert action.
So important was this to Dulles that he invented a
pretext to get himself invited to visit Truman in Independence, Missouri. On
the afternoon of April 17, 1964, Dulles spent a half-hour one-on-one with the
former president, trying to get him to retract what he had written in his
op-ed. Hell No, said Harry.
Not a problem, Dulles decided. Four days later, in a
formal memorandum of conversation for his old buddy Lawrence Houston, CIA
general counsel from 1947 to 1973, Dulles fabricated a private retraction for
Truman, claiming that Truman told him the Washington Post article
was “all wrong,” and that Truman “seemed quite astounded at it.”
A fabricated retraction? It certainly seems so,
because Truman did not change his tune. Far from it. In a June 10, 1964, letter
to the managing editor of Look magazine, for example, Truman restated his
critique of covert action, emphasizing that he never intended the CIA to get
involved in “strange activities.”
Dulles and Dallas
Dulles could hardly have expected to get Truman to
recant publicly. So why was it so important for Dulles to place in CIA files a
fabricated retraction? I believe the answer lies in the fact that in early 1964
Dulles was feeling a lot of heat from many who were suggesting the CIA might
have been involved somehow in the Kennedy assassination. Columnists were asking
how the truth could ever be reached, with Allen Dulles as de facto head
of the Warren Commission.
Dulles had good reason to fear that Truman’s limited-edition
Washington Post op-ed of Dec. 22, 1963, might garner unwanted attention and
raise troublesome questions about covert action, including assassination. He
would have wanted to be in position to dig out of Larry Houston’s files the
Truman “retraction,” in the hope that this would nip any serious questioning in
the bud.
As the de facto head of the Warren
Commission, Dulles was perfectly positioned to protect himself and his
associates, were any commissioners or investigators, or journalists, tempted to
question whether Dulles and the CIA played a role in killing Kennedy.
And so, the question: Did Allen Dulles and other
“cloak-and-dagger” CIA operatives have a hand in John Kennedy’s assassination
and in then covering it up? In my view, the best dissection of the evidence
pertaining to the murder appeared in James Douglass’s 2008 book, JFK and the Unspeakable. After updating and arraying the abundant evidence,
and conducting still more interviews, Douglass concludes that the answer is
Yes.
Obama Intimidated?
The mainstream media had an allergic reaction to
Douglass’s book and gave it almost no reviews. It is, nevertheless, still
selling well. And, more important, it seems a safe bet that President Barack
Obama knows what it says and maybe has even read it. This may go some way
toward explaining why Obama has been so deferential to the CIA, NSA, FBI and
the Pentagon.
Could this be at least part of the reason he felt he
had to leave the Cheney/Bush-anointed torturers, kidnappers and black-prison
wardens in place, instructing his first CIA chief Leon Panetta to become, in
effect, the agency’s lawyer rather than leader.
Is this why the President feels he cannot fire his
clumsily devious Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, who had to
apologize to Congress for giving “clearly erroneous” testimony in March? Is
this why he allows National Security Agency Director Keith Alexander and
counterparts in the FBI to continue to mislead the American people, even though
the intermittent snow showers from Snowden show our senior national security
officials to have lied — and to have been out of control?
This may be small solace to President Obama, but there
is no sign that the NSA documents that Snowden’s has released include the
Senate Intelligence Committee’s 6,300-page report on CIA torture. Rather, that
report, at least, seems sure to be under Obama’s and Senate Intelligence Committee
chair Dianne Feinstein’s tight control.
But the timorous President has a big problem. He is
acutely aware that, if released, the Senate committee report would create a
firestorm almost certainly implicating Obama’s CIA Director John Brennan and many
other heavy-hitters of whom he appears to be afraid. And so Obama has allowed
Brennan to play bureaucratic games, delaying release of the report for more
than a year, even though its conclusions are said to closely resemble earlier
findings of the CIA’s own Inspector General and the Constitution Project (see
below).
Testimony of Ex-CIA General Counsel
Hat tip to the New Yorker’s Jane Mayer, who took the
trouble to read the play-by-play of testimony to the Senate Intelligence
Committee by former CIA General Counsel (2009-2013) Stephen W. Preston,
nominated (and now confirmed) to be general counsel at the Department of
Defense.
Under questioning by Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colorado,
Preston admitted outright that, contrary to the CIA’s insistence that it did
not actively impede congressional oversight of its detention and interrogation
program, “briefings to the committee included inaccurate information related to
aspects of the program of express interest to Members.”
That “inaccurate information” apparently is thoroughly
documented in the Senate Intelligence Committee report which, largely because
of the CIA’s imaginative foot-dragging, cost taxpayers $40 million. Udall has
revealed that the report (which includes 35,000 footnotes) contains a very long
section titled “C.I.A. Representations on the C.I.A. Interrogation Program and
the Effectiveness of the C.I.A.’s Enhanced Interrogation Techniques to
Congress.”
Preston also acknowledged that the CIA inadequately
informed the Justice Department on interrogation and detention. He said, “CIA’s
efforts fell well short of our current practices when it comes to providing
information relevant to [the Office of Legal Counsel]’s legal analysis.”
According to Hawkins, Udall complained and Preston
admitted that, in providing the materials requested by the committee, “the CIA
removed several thousand CIA documents that the agency thought could be
subjected to executive privilege claims by the President, without any decision
by Obama to invoke the privilege.”
Worse still for the CIA, the Senate Intelligence
Committee report apparently destroys the agency’s argument justifying torture
on the grounds that there was no other way to acquire the needed information
save through brutalization. In his answers to Udall, Preston concedes that,
contrary to what the agency has argued, it can and has been established that
legal methods of interrogation would have yielded the same intelligence.
Is anyone still wondering why our timid President is
likely to sit on the Senate Intelligence Committee report for as long as he
can? Or why he will let John Brennan redact it to a fare-thee-well, if he is
eventually forced to release some of it by pressure from folks who care about
things like torture?
It does appear that the newly taciturn CIA Director
Brennan has inordinate influence over the President in such matters not unlike
the influence that both DNI Clapper and NSA Director Alexander seem able to
exert. In this respect, Brennan joins the dubious company of the majority of
his predecessor CIA directors, as they made abundantly clear when they went to
inordinate lengths to prevent their torturer colleagues from being held
accountable.
Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a publishing
arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington. He was as
an Army Infantry/Intelligence officer in the early 60s and then a CIA analyst
for 27 years. He now serves on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).
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