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Institute for Historical
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Propaganda and Disinformation: How the CIA Manufactures History
VICTOR MARCHETTI
- Paper presented to the Ninth International Revisionist Conference.
In the eyes of posterity it will inevitably seem that, in
safeguarding our freedom, we destroyed it. The vast clandestine
apparatus we built up to prove our enemies' resources and intentions
only served in the end to confuse our own purposes; that practice of
deceiving others for the good of the state led infallibly to our
deceiving ourselves; and that vast army of clandestine personnel built
up to execute these purposes were soon caught up in the web of their own
sick fantasies, with disastrous consequences for them and
us.
-- Malcom Muggeridge May 1966
That, in a nutshell, sums up what the CIA has accomplished over the
years through its various clandestine propaganda and disinformation
programs. It has unwittingly and, often, deliberately decieved itself --
and the American taxpayer. The CIA is a master at distorting history --
even creating its own version of history to suit its institutional and
operational purposes. It can do this largely because of two great
advantages it possesses. One is the excessively secret environment in
which it operates, and the other is that it is essentially a private
instrument of the presidency.
The real reason for the official secrecy, in most instances, is not to
keep the opposition (the CIA's euphemistic term for the enemy) from
knowing what is going on; the enemy usually does know. The basic reason
for governmental secrecy is to keep you, the American public, from knowing
-- for you, too, are considered the opposition, or enemy -- so that you
cannot interfere. When the public does not know what the government or the
CIA is doing, it cannot voice its approval or disapproval of their
actions. In fact, they can even lie to your about what they are doing or
have done, and you will not know it.
As for the second advantage, despite frequent suggestion that the CIA
is a rogue elephant, the truth is that the agency functions at the
direction of and in response to the office of the president. All of its
major clandestine operations are carried out with the direct approval of
or on direct orders from the White House. The CIA is a secret tool of the
president -- every president. And every president since Truman has lied to
the American people in order to protect the agency. When lies have failed,
it has been the duty of the CIA to take the blame for the president, thus
protecting him. This is known in the business as "plausible denial."
The CIA, functioning as a secret instrument of the U.S. government and
the presidency, has long misused and abused history and continues to do
so. I first became concerned about this historical distortion in 1957,
when I was a young officer in the Clandestine Services of the CIA.
One night, after work, I was walking down Constitution Avenue with a
fellow officer, who previously had been a reporter for United Press.
"How are they ever going to know," he asked.
"Who? How is 'who' ever going to know what?" I asked.
"Hhow are the American people ever going to know what the truth is? How
are they going to know what the truth is about what we are doing and have
done over the years?" he said. "We operate in secrecy, we deal in
deception and disinformation, and then we burn our files. How will the
historians ever be able to learn the complete truth about what we've done
in these various operations, these operations that have had such a major
impact on so many important events in history?"
I couldn't answer him, then. And I can't answer him now. I don't know
how the American people will ever really know the truth about the many
things that the CIA has been involved in. Or how they will ever know the
truth about the great historical events of our times. The government is
continually writing and rewriting history -- often with the CIA's help --
to suit its own purposes. Here is a current example.
Just last month in Moscow, there was a meeting, a very strange meeting.
Former Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara met with former Soviet foreign
minister Andrei Gromyko and a member of the Cuban Politburo. These three
men, along with lesser former officials of their governments, has all been
involved in the Cuban missile crisis of 1962, and they had gathered
intheSoviet capital to discuss what has really occurred in that monumental
crisis, which almost led to World War III.
Since I, too, had been personally involved in that crisis, I took some
interest in the news reports coming out of Moscow concerning the doings of
this rather odd gathering of former officials. Much to my surprise, I
learned that Robert McNamara was saying that neither he nor the U.S.
intelligence community realized there actually had been some 40,000 Soviet
troops in Cuba in the autumn of 1962. The Former defense chief of the
Kennedy administration was also saying that he and the U.S. government did
not realize that the few dozen medium and intermediate range missiles the
Soviets had tried to sneak into Cuba were actually armed with nuclear
warheads and ready to be fired at targets in the U.S.
Furthermore, he was claiming that the U.S. did not understand that this
huge military build-up by the Soviets had been carried out to protect Cuba
and to prevent the U.S. from attacking the island's Communist regime. He
added, for good measure, that he was surprised to learn from the talks in
Moscow that the Soviets and Cubans thought the U.S. had plans to bring
down the government of Fidel Castro through the use of force. According to
McNamara, the entire Cuban missile crisis was a dangerous misunderstanding
that came about because of the lack of communication among the governments
involved in the near catastrophe.
Well, when I heard what McNamara and the band were playing in Moscow, I
said to myself, "Either McNamara is getting a little dotty in his old age
and doesn't remember what really happened during the Cuban missile crisis
-- or there's some other reason for this." Well, it soon became apparent
that McNamara was not senile. What, then, is the reason for these curious
-and false -- "admissions" in Moscow? The reason is that the United States
and the Soviet Union have decided to become friends again, and Washington
wants to set the stage for rapprochement with Castro's Cuba.
It has evidently been decided by the powers that be in the U.S. to have
a little meeting in Moscow and tell the world that we were all mixed up
about Cuba and we didn't know what was going on there in 1962, because we
weren't communicating well with the Soviets at the time. Thus, the
American people would see how close to war we had come, how we should
communicate more with the Soviets, and how they weren't really very bad
guys after all. For that matter neither were Fidel and his gang.
Therefore, it would follow that we should in a few months from now get on
with disarmament and whatever else is necessary to bring about the new
internationalism that is forming between east and west. At the same time,
we should begin rebuilding the bridge to Cuba, too.
But to create the proper atmosphere for the coming rapproachement with
Moscow and, later, Cuba, it was necessary to scare the American public and
the world into thinking that the crisis of October 1962 was worse than it
really was. To do that, McNamara, Gromyko, et al. were playing a
little game -- their own distorted brand of historical revisionism. They
were rewriting history to suit the present purposes of their
governments.
Now, I thought, what if I were a reporter. Would I be able to see
through this little charade that was going on in Moscow? Probably not. I
began studying the "knowlegeable" syndicated colunmists. They were writing
things like, "... My God, we never did understand what the Soviets were up
to in Cuba. Yes, we better do something about this." What McNamara and
friends were saying in Moscow was now becoming fact. It's becoming fact
that we, the U.S. government, did not really know what was going on during
the missile crisis. That is a lie.
If there was ever a time when the CIA in the United States intelligence
community and the United States Armed Forces really cooperated and
coordinated their efforts with each other, it was during the Cuban missile
crisis. The Cuban missile crisis is probably one of the few examples --
perhaps the only one -- of when intelligence really worked the way it was
supposed to work in a crisis situation.
I was there at the time, and I was deeply involved in this historical
event. A colleague and friend of mine, Tack, my assistant at the time, and
I were the original "crate-ologists"-which was an arcane little
intelligence art that we had developed. We had learned through a variety
of tricks of the trade, and some of our own making, to be able to
distinguish what was in certain crates on Soviet merchant ships as they
went into Cuba, into Indonesia into Egypt, Syria,and other places.We could
tell if a crate contained a MIG-21,or an IL-28, or a SAM-2 missile.
We did this in such an amateurish way that we dared not tell anyone our
methods. While the National Photographic and Interpretation Center
employed 1,200 people in its office in downtown Washington, using
state-of-the-art equipment to analyze aerial and satellite photography,
Tack and I would sit in our office, feet up on the desk, using a beat-up
old ruler to measure photos taken from U.S. submarines. I'd measure a
crate on the deck of the Soviet freighter, say about three quarters of an
inch in the photograph.
"Tack, do you think they could fit a Mig-21 in there?"
He'd thumb through an old Air Force manual and say,
"Mig-21, fuselage length 25 feet."
"Well?"
"Take the tail off, and we can fit it in."
"Okay, let's call it a Mig-21."
We were pretty good at this. We had other aids to identification of
course. We were able to learn when the Soviets were preparing shipments
and from which ports they were sailing. We knew which personnel were
involved, and the ships' destinations. Thus we could alert the navy, which
sometimes conducted overflights, sometimes tracked them with a
submarine.
We had an attaché in Istanbul row out in the middle of the night with a
Turk whom he'd hired, looking for three things in a Soviet freighter: its
deck cargo, how high it was riding in the water, and its name.
By these and other sensitive we were able to learn, in the summer of
1962, that the Soviets were carrying out an unprecendented arms build-up
in Cuba. While some of the other agencies, namely the National Security
Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency, did'nt agree with us, CIA
director John McCone was able to get president John Kennedy to authorize
more intelligence overflights. The overflights revealed that the Soviets
were building
SAM (Surface-to-Air Missiles) launching sites to protect the build-up.
Further overflights revealed the construction of launching sites for
Soviet MRBMs (Medium Range Ballistic Missiles) capable of carrying nuclear
warheads to most cities in the United States.
We know exactly how many there were. where they were, and that they had
not yet been armed, because the warheads hadn't arrived yet.
Thus McNamara is lying when he claims that the Soviet missiles in Cuba
were armed and ready for launch against the United States. On the
contrary, we were watching the ships which caried the warheads; American
ships enforcing the blockade which President Kennedy had ordered boarded a
Romanian ship (which we knew carried no arms), and the Russian ships
bringing the nuclear warheads turned around in mid-ocean and went
home.
It is also quite untrue that there were forty thousand Soviet troops in
Cuba. We knew that there were only ten thousand of them, because we had
developed a simple but effective way of counting them.
The Soviets had sent their troops over on passenger liners to disguise
the military buildup. Some genius back in Moscow must have then said: "But
these guys need to wear civilian clothes; let's put sport shirts on them."
But someone at the department store said: We've only got two kinds." So
half the troops wore one kind, half of them the other. They weren't very
hard to spot.
Then, too, Soviet soldiers are a lot like our own. As soon as the first
group got established, the colonel sent them out to paint some rocks white
and then paint the name of the unit, 44th Field Artillery Battalion or
whatever, on the rocks. All we had to do was take a picture of it from one
of our U-2s. So it was easy to establish a Soviet troop strength of far
below 40,000. Thus, McNamara is agreeing to a second lie.
The big lie, however, is that the Soviet Union came into Cuba to
protect the Cubans. That was a secondary, or bonus, consideration. The
primary reason for the build-up was that the Soviets at the time were so
far behind us in nuclear strike capability that Khruschev figured he could
make a quantum leap by suddenly putting in 48 missiles that could strike
every city in America except Seattle, Washington.
Nor did we come as close to war as many think, because Khruschev knew
he was caught. His missiles weren't armed, and he hadn't the troops to
protect them. Kennedy knew this, so he was able to say: "take them out."
And Khruschev had to say yes.
I must admit that at the time I was a little concerned, and so was my
buddy Tack. We were manning the war room around the clock, catching four
hours of sleep and then going back on duty. My wife had the station wagon
loaded with blankets and provisions, and Tack's wife was standing by on
alert. If either of them got a phone call with a certain word in it, they
were to take our children and drive to my home town in the anthracite
region of northeastern Pennsylvania. We figured they'd be safe there: if
you've ever seen the coal region with its strip mines you would think it
had already been bombed and we were hoping the Soviets would look at it
that way too.
Last month's conference in Moscow is an example of how history is being
rewritten. Any historian who relies on what he reads in the newspapers, on
the statements from McNamara and the Russians and the Cubans will not be
learning the truth. The CIA has manufactured history in a number of ways
over the years not only through its propaganda and disinformation but
through the cover stories it uses for their operations, and the cover-ups
when an operation falls through Then there is "plausible deniability,"
which protects the president.
All these techniques have one thing in common, and depend on one thing:
secrecy. Secrecy is maintained not to keep the opposition - the CIA's
euphemistic term for the enemy -- from knowing what's going on, because
the enemy usually does know. Secrecy exists to keep you, the American
public, from knowing what is going on, because in many ways you are the
real enemy.
If the public were aware of what the CIA is doing, it might say: "We
don't like what you're doing -- stop it!," or You're not doing a good job
-- stop it!" The public might ask for an accounting for the money being
spent and the risks being taken.
Thus secrecy is absolutely vital to the CIA. Secrecy covers not only
operations in progress, but continues after the operations, particularly
if the operations have been botched. Then they have to be covered up with
more lies, which the public, of course, can't recognize as lies, allowing
the CIA to tell the public whatever it wishes.
Presidents love this. Every president, no matter what he has said
before getting into office, has been delighted to learn that the CIA is
his own private tool. The presidents have leapt at the opportunity to keep
Congress and the public in the dark about their employment of the
agency.
This is what was at the basis of my book, The CIA and the Cult of
Intelligence. I had come to the conclusion, as a member of the CIA,
that many of our policies and practices were not in the best interests of
the United States. but were in fact counterproductive, and that if the
American people were aware of this they would not tolerate it.
I resigned from the CIA in 1969, at a time when we were deeply involved
in Vietnam. And how did we get into Vietnam on a large scale? How did
President Lyndon Johnson get a blank check from Congress? It was through
the Gulf of Tonkin incident The American people were told by President
Johnson that North Vietnamese motor torpedo boats had come after two
American destroyers on the night of August 4, 1964. This was confirmed by
the intelligence community.
The fact of the matter is that while torpedo boats came out and looked
at the U.S. destroyers, which were well out in international waters, they
never fired on them. They made threatening maneuvers, they snarled a bit,
but they never fired. It was dark and getting darker. Our sailors thought
they might have seen something, but there were no hits, no reports of
anything whizzing by.
That was the way it was reported back: a bit of a scrape, but no
weapons fire and no attempt to fire. Our ships had not been in danger. But
with the help of the intelligence community President Johnson took that
report and announced that we had been attacked. He went to Congress and
asked for and received his blank check, and Congress went along. Everyone
knows the rest of the story: we got into Vietnam up to our eyeballs.
Every president prizes secrecy and fights for it. And so did President
Nixon, in my case. When I came to the conclusion that the American people
needed to know more about the CIA and what it was up to, I decided to go
to Capitol Hill and talk to the senators on the intelligence oversight
subcommittee. I found out that Senator John Stennis, at that time head of
the subcommittee, hadn't conducted a meeting in over a year, so the other
senators were completely ignorant as to what the CIA was doing. Senators
William Fulbright and Stuart Symington would tell Stennis, "Let's have a
meeting," but he was ignoring them. The other senators wrote Stennis a
letter urging him to at least hear what I had to say in a secret executive
session, but he continued to ignore them.
Then I would meet Fulbright -- at the barber shop. He was afraid to met
me in his office. I would meet with Symington at his home. I would meet
with senators at cocktail parties, as if by chance. But still they
couldn't get Stennis to convene the intelligence subcommittee.
Senator Richard Schweiker of Pennsylvania told me he had learned more
about the workings of the intelligence community in one afternoon of
conversation with me than in six years of work on the intelligence
subcommittee. That didn't surprise me, because I, several years before,
had done the budget for CIA director Richard Helms. It was feared that the
Senate appropriations subcommittee might have some hard questions about
the growing cost of technical espionage programs. Director Helms had
evidently been through this before, however.
As Helms put it, he and the CIA's head of science and technology,
Albert (Bud) Wheelon, staged a "magic lantern show" for the committee,
complete with color slides and demonstrations of the CIA's most advance
spy gadgets: a camera hidden in a tobacco pouch, a radio transmitter
concealed in some false teeth, a tape recorder in a cigarette case, and so
on. One or two hard questions were deflected by Senator Russell of
Georgia, who chaired the committee and was a strong supporter of the
agency. There were, of course, no slides or hi-tech hardware to exhibit
the programs the CIA wanted to conceal from Congress, and the budget
sailed through the subcommittee intact.
What I learned in my dealings with Congressmen, in the CIA and after
leaving, was that the men who wanted to change the situation didn't have
the power, while those who had the power didn't want any change. With
Congress a hopeless case, and the White House already in the know and well
satisfied to let the CIA continue to operate in secrecy, I decided to talk
to the press. I gave my first interview to U.S. News and World Report, and
that started the ball rolling. Soon I was in touch with publishers in New
York, talking about doing a book.
I soon got a telephone call from Admiral Rufus Taylor, who had been my
boss in the agency, but by that time had retired. He told me to meet him
at a motel in the Virginia suburbs, across the Potomac from Washington. My
suspicions aroused by the remoteness of the room from the office, I was
greeted by Admiral Taylor, who had thoughtfully brought along a large
supply of liquor: a bottle of scotch, a bottle of bourbon, a bottle of
vodka, a bottle of gin ... "I couldn't remember what you liked," he told
me, "so I brought one of everything."
I began to make noise: flushing the toilet, washing my hands, turning
on the television. Admiral Taylor was right behind me, turning everything
off. I kept making noise, jingling the ice in my glass and so on, until
the admiral sat down. There was a table with a lamp on it between the
admiral's chair and the one which he now told me to sit down on. He looked
at me with a little twinkle in his eye: the lamp was bugged, of
course.
We talked, and Admiral Taylor told me the CIA was worried about what I
might write in my book. He proposed a deal: I was to give no more
interviews, write no more articles, and to stay away from Capitol Hill. I
could write my book, and then let him and other retired senior officers
look it over, and they would advise me and the agency. After that the CIA
and I could resolve our differences. I told him, "Fair enough." We had a
drink on it, and went out to dinner. That was our deal
What I didn't know was that a few nights later John Erlichman and
Richard Nixon would be sitting in the White House discussing my book.
There is a tape of their discussion, "President Nixon, John Ehrlichman, 45
minutes, subject Victor Marchetti," which is still sealed: I can't get it
Ehrlichman told me through contacts that if I listened to the tape I would
learn exactly what happened to me and why.
Whatever the details of their conversation were, the president of the
United States had decided I should not publish my book. I was to be the
first writer in American history to be served with an official censorship
order served by a court of the United States, because President Nixon did
not want to be embarrassed, nor did he want the CIA to be investigated and
reformed: that would have hampered his ability to use it for his own
purposes. A few days later, on April 18, 1972, I received a federal
injunction restraining me from revealing any "intelligence information."
After more than a year of court battles, CIA and the Cult of
Intelligence was published. The courts allowed the CIA to censor it in
advance, and as a result the book appeared with more than a hundred holes
for CIA-ordered deletions. Later editions show previously deleted words
and lines, which the court ordered the CIA to restore in boldface or
italics. The book is therefore difficult to read, indeed something of a
curiosity piece. And of course all the information which was ordered cut
out ended up leaking to the public anyway.
All this was done to help the CIA suppress and distort history, and to
enable presidents to do the same. Presidents like Harry Truman, who
claimed falsely that "I never had any thought when I set up the CIA that
it would be injected into peacetime cloak-and-dagger operations," but who
willingly employed the agency to carry out clandestine espionage and
covert intervention in the affairs of other countries. Or Dwight
Eisenhower, who denied that we were attempting to overthrow Sukarno in
Indonesia, when we were, and was embarrassed when he tried to deny the
CIA's U-2 overflights and was shown up by Khruschev at Paris in 1960. John
F. Kennedy, as everyone knows by now, employed the CIA in several attempts
to assassinate Fidel Castro. We used everyone from Mafia hoods to Castro's
mistress, Marita Lorenz (who was supposed to poison the dictator with
pills concealed in her cold cream -- the pills melted). I have no doubt
that if we could have killed Castro, the U.S. would have gone in.
There was a fairly widespread belief that one reason Kennedy was
assassinated was because he was going to get us out of Vietnam. Don't you
believe it He was the CIA's kind of president, rough, tough, and gung-ho.
Under Kennedy we became involved in Vietnam in a serious way, not so much
militarily as through covert action. It is a fact that the United States
engineered the overthrow of Ngo Dinh Diem, South Vietnam's premier, and
Ngo Dinh Nhu, his powerful brother. A cable was sent out to the ambassador
which said, "If Lou Conein goofs up [Lucien Conein was a key CIA operative
in Saigon], it's his responsibility." So when E. Howard Hunt faked these
memos and cables when he was working for the "plumbers" on behalf of
President Nixon (and against the Democrats), he knew what he was doing.
That was his defense, that he wasn't really forging or inventing anything.
"Stuff like that really existed, but I couldn't find it," he said. Of
course Hunt couldn't find it by that time the original documents were
gone. But Hunt knew what he was doing.
President Nixon's obsession with secrecy led to the end of his
presidency, of course. As indicated earlier, Nixon was determined to
suppress my book. On several occasions after his resignation, Nixon has
been asked what he meant when he said that the CIA would help him cover up
the Watergate tapes, because "they owed him one." He has responded, "I was
talking about Marchetti," in other words the efforts (still secret) to
prevent The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence from being
published.
Another instance of the Nixon administrations' attempts to suppress
history is the ongoing attempt to cover up the details of the
administration's "tilt" toward Pakistan in its conflict with India in the
early 1970's. Although the basic facts soon emerged, Pulitzer
Prize-winning journalist Seymour Hersh's account of the affair in his
unflattering book on Henry Kissinger revealed that Morarji Desai, an
important Indian political leader who later became Prime Minister, was a
CIA agent. Kissinger spurred Desai to sue Hersh, and the case is still
dragging on today, seven years later. I know what the truth is; Hersh
knows as well, but as a conscientious journalist refused to reveal his
sources. Here historical truth is caught between official secrecy and
Hersh's loyalty to his informants; nevertheless, I have a great deal of
admiration for Hersh for his firm stand.
It is a fact that a good many foreign leaders, including those often
seen as "neutral" or even hostile to the United States, have been secretly
on the CIA's payroll. For instance, when Jimmy Carter came into office, he
claimed he was going to reform the CIA. No sooner than was he in the White
House, they decided to test him: the news that Jordan's King Hussein had
been paid by the CIA was leaked. President Carter was outraged, because
now it was his CIA. His efforts to deny the relationship were defeated by
Hussein's nonchalant frankness. He told the press, "Yes, I took the money.
I used it for my intelligence service. And that's all I'm going to say on
that subject."
There were a lot of other national leaders in Hussein's category. As I
revealed for the first time in my book, Joseph Mobutu, a corporal in the
Belgian forces in the Congo before its independence, went on the CIA
payroll. That is why he rules Zaire today. The CIA paid the late Jomo
Kenyatta, ruler of Kenya, fifty or a hundred thousand dollars a year,
which he'd spend on drink and women. Therefore we ended up paying Kenyatta
twice as much, telling him: "This is for you and this is for your
party."
The CIA has funded individuals and movements across the political
spectrum in West Germany. A prime example is Willy Brandt, former
chancellor of the Federal Republic, who received much CIA support when he
was mayor of West Berlin. Axel Springer, the Christian Democratic-minded
press and publishing magnate, who pointed the finger at Brandt for working
with CIA, was also a CIA asset, who used his publications to spread CIA
propaganda and disinformation. It was a case of the pot calling the kettle
black: I knew his case officer quite welL
This is the way the CIA sees its mission, the job it was created to do.
The CIA is supposed to be involved with everyone, not merely the Christian
Democrats or the Social Democrats. The agency is supposed to have its
fingers in every pie, including the Communist one, so that they can all be
manipulated in whichever way the U.S. government desires.
An obvious area of disinformation and deception exists in our
relationship with a nation often represented as our closest ally, Israel.
I have often been asked about the relationship between the CIA and its
Israeli counterpart, the Mossad. The CIA maintains some kind of liaison
with virtually every foreign intelligence agency, including the KGB. These
relationships vary from case to case, but our relationship with the Mossad
was always a peculiar one.
When I was in the agency, the Mossad was generally not trusted. There
was an unwritten rule that no Jews could work on Israeli or near Eastern
matters; it was felt that they could not be totally objective.. There was
a split in the agency, however, and Israel was not included in the normal
area division, the Near Eastern Division. Instead it was handled as a
special account in counterintelligence. The man who handled that account,
James Jesus Angleton, was extremely close to the Israelis. I believe that
through Angleton the Israelis learned a lot more than they should have and
exercised a lot more influence on our activities than they should
have.
For his trouble, James Angleton, who died last year, was honored by the
Israelis, in the way that the Israelis customarily honor their Gentile
helpers. They decided to plant a whole forest for Angleton in the Judean
hills, and they put up a handsome plaque in several languages, lionizing
Angleton as a great friend of Israel, on a nearby rock. Israeli's
intelligence chiefs, past and present, attended the dedication ceremony.
Later on, a television reporter of my acquaintance sought out Angleton's
memorial during an assignment in Israel. After some difficulty, he was
able to locate it, but something seemed odd about it. On closer
inspection, Angleton's plaque turned out to be made, not of bronze, but of
cardboard. Nor was the setting particularly flattering to Israel's late
benefactor: the trees and plaque were at the edge of a garbage dump. My
friend's British cameraman put it best "This guy sold out his country for
the bloody Israelis, and this is the way they pay him back!"
The CIA has distorted history in other ways than by outright coverups
and suppression of the truth. One method was to produce its own books. For
instance, one of its top agents in the Soviet Union was Colonel Oleg
Penkovsky. Penkovsky was eventually captured and executed. But the CIA was
unwilling to let it go at that The agency decided to write a book, which
it published in 1965, called The Penkovsky Papers. This was
purported to be drawn from a diary that Penkovsky had kept, a diary in
which Penkovsky revealed numerous espionage coups calculated to embarrass
the Soviets and build up the CIA.
Spies do not keep diaries, of course, and the Soviets were not likely
to believe the exaggerated claims made for Penkovsky and the CIA in The
Penkovsky Papers. Who was taken in? The American public, of course.
More than once people have come up to me after a lecture and shown me the
book as if it were gospel. I've told them, "I know the man who wrote it."
"You knew Penkovsky?" they invariably ask, and I tell them, "No, I didn't
know Penkovsky but I know the man who wrote the book."
Not just ordinary citizens were taken in by the Penkovsky deception,
either. Senator Milton Young of North Dakota, who served on the CIA
oversight subcommittee, said in a 1971 Senate debate on cutting the
inteligence budget:
And if you want to read something very interesting and authoritative
where intelligence is concerned, read The Penkovsky Papers ...
this is a very interesting story, on why the intelligence we had in Cuba
was so important to us, and on what the Russians were thinking and just
how far they would go.
Perhaps the most startling example ot the ClA's manipulation of the
publishing world is the case of Khrushchev Remembers. Khrushchev is
still widely believed to have been the author. He is supposed to have
dashed it off one summer and then said to himself, "Where will I get this
published? Ah! Time-Life!" The tapes reached Time-Life, we all read it,
and we told ourselves, "Isn't that interesting."
A little thought should be sufficient to dispel the notion that the KGB
would allow Khrushchev to sit in his dacha dictating tape after tape with
no interference. He certainly dictated tapes, but the tapes were censored
and edited by the KGB, and then a deal was struck between the U.S. and the
USSR, after it was decided, at the highest level, that such a book would
be mutually beneficial. Brezhnev could use against some of the resistance
he was encountering from Stalinist hardliners, and Nixon could use it to
increase support for detente.
The CIA and the KGB cooperated in carrying out the operation. The tapes
were given to the Time bureau in Moscow. Strobe Talbot, who appears
on television frequently today and is Time's bureau chief in
Washington, brought the tapes back with him. I was present in an apartment
in which he hid them for a couple of days. The tapes were then translated
and a manuscript developed. During this period Time refused to let
people who had known Khrushchev personally, including White House staff
members, listen to the tapes.
Knowledgeable people began to tell me. "I don't believe this." "There's
something mighty fishy here." When they read what Khrushchev was
supposedly saying, they were even more incredulous. But the book came out,
Khrushchev Remembers, accompanied by a massive publicity campaign.
It was a great propaganda accomplishment for the CIA and the KGB.
I touched on Khrushchev Remembers in my book. I did not go into
any great detail, merely devoting several tentative paragraphs to the
affair. Just before my book was published Time was considering
doing a two-page spread on me until they learned of my expressed
reservations on the trustworthiness of Khrushchev Remembers. I
began to get phone calls from Talbot and Jerry Schaechter, then
Time's bureau chief in Washington, telling me I should take out the
offending passages.
I had written, correctly, that before publication Strobe Talbot had
taken the bound transcripts of the Khruschhev tapes back to Moscow, via
Helsinki, so that the KGB could make one final review of them. I told
Schaechter and Talbot that if they came to me, looked me in the eye, and
told me I had the facts wrong, I would take out the section on
Khruschhev Remembers. Neither of them ever came by, the paragraphs
stayed in my book, and in any event Time went ahead with the two-page
spread anyway.
As I pointed out in the preface to The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence
in 1974, democratic governments fighting totalitarian enemies run the risk
of imitating their methods and thereby destroying democracy. By
suppressing historical fact, and by manufacturing historical fiction, the
CIA, with its obsessive secrecy and its vast resources, has posed a
particular threat to the right of Americans to be informed for the present
and future by an objective knowledge of the past. As long as the CIA
continues to manipulate history, historians of its activities must be
Revisionist if we are to know the truth about the agency's activities,
past and present.
Source: Reprinted from The Journal of Historical
Review, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 305-320. |