What's the missing jewel?
Today, the CIA released its infamous "Family Jewels" file. This is a set of internal memos compiled in the mid-1970s after press reports revealed numerous CIA dirty tricks. In 1973, CIA director James Schlessinger, having learned that Watergate burglars E. Howard Hunt and James McCord (each a CIA veteran) had been in contact with the Agency while carrying out illegal activities for President Richard Nixon's reelection campaign, ordered divisions within the CIA to report any activities they had engaged in since 1959 that might be outside the CIA's authority. Deputy Director William Colby then assembled a loose-leaf notebook of the memos that poured in. The whole package totaled 700 pages. And though its existence has been known for years--congressional investigators of the 1970s had access to these documents--this secret file has never before been made public. It was considered to hold the agency's darkest secrets.
Many of these secrets did emerge during the congressional investigations of the 1970s: the joint CIA-Mafia attempt to assassinate Fidel Castro; CIA surveillance of American reporters and political dissidents; the CIA's secret jailing for three years of a suspected Soviet agent (who was not a Soviet agent). The newly-released documents are full of fresh details about some of these notorious episodes. But at least one of the "Family Jewels" seems to be missing.
The first document in the packet is a 1973 memo from Howard Osborn, then the CIA's director of security, to the CIA top management, and it summarizes the "jewels" compiled by his office. It lists eight problems--including the recruitment of mobster Johnny Roselli for the Castro hit. But blacked out from this document is the first item on Osborn's list. And a two-and-a-half page description of this operation is also redacted from the "Family Jewels" file.
In a recent speech, General Michael Hayden, the CIA's director, hailed the declassification of the "Family Jewels." He remarked, "The documents provide a glimpse of a very different time and very different Agency." Yet the very first secret in these papers has been deleted.
"The No. 1 jewel of the CIA's Office of Security is probably a pretty good one--especially since the second jewel in this list is the Roselli/Castro assassination program," says Thomas Blanton, director of the National Security Archive, a public interest outfit that filed a Freedom of Information Act request for the "Family Jewels" fifteen years ago. There are many other deletions in the "Family Jewels" file, and in most instances there's no telling exactly what has been excised. But much of the censored material seems to be related to how the CIA has created cover and fake documents. "This is probably justifiable," says Blanton, because such operational secrets may still be relevant today. But the missing jewel? Assassination? Domestic spying? Something unimaginable? "We just don't know," says Blanton.
All in all, Blanton notes, the file is not as explosive as CIA-watchers might have anticipated. "These are the 'Family Jewels'?" he asks sarcastically. "Much of this came out years ago. So how could the CIA justify keeping this stuff secret for 30 years? This is not really as informative as the [previously released] inspector general's report on the Castro assassination plots."
There are, however, intriguing tidbits scattered throughout these hundreds of pages. Here are a few:
* In a June 1, 1973 memo written to Colby, Walter Elder, who had been executive assistant for John McCone, the CIA director in the early 1960s, outlined "activities which to hostile observers or to someone without complete knowledge...could be interpreted as examples of activities exceeding CIA's charters." One such activity, he noted, "involved chemical warfare operations against...." The target is redacted. This operation, according to Elder, never went beyond the planning stage.
* In the same memo, Elder reports that discussions within the CIA chief's offices were recorded and transcribed: "I know that any one who has worked in the Director's office has worried about the fact that conversations within the offices and over the telephones were transcribed. During McCone's tenure, there were microphones in his regular office, his inner office, his dining room, his office in East Building, and his study at his residence on White Haven Street. I do not know who would be willing to raise such an issue, but knowledge of such operations tends to spread, and certainly the Agency is vulnerable on this score." Secret transcripts of conversations involving CIA directors? According to Blanton, there's never been any public indication that McCone or other CIA directors bugged themselves. Transcripts of such discussions could contain plenty of jewels. The National Security Archive is already filing a Freedom of Information Act request.
* One memo notes that CIA had a Project OFTEN that collected "data on dangerous drugs from U.S. firms" until the program was terminated in the fall of 1972. Another memo reports that commercial drug manufacturers "passed on" to the CIA drugs "rejected because of unfavorable side effects" These drugs were then tested using volunteers from the U.S. military.
* During the internal review that led to the creation of the "Family Jewels" file, a top CIA official suggested that the CIA director keep himself in the dark about MKULTRA--the Agency's mind control program run by Sidney Gottlieb, a psychiatrist and chemist. As part of this program, the CIA slipped LSD and other psychoactive drugs to unwitting subjects. (Gottlieb, according to another document in the file, was supposed to have provided poison in for an assassination attempt against Patrice Lumumba, the anti-colonial prime minister of the Republic of Congo. After being deposed in a 1960 coup, Lumumba was shot and killed by Kantangan forces.)
* CIA employees assigned to MHCHAOS--the operation that conducted surveillance against American opponents of the Vietnam war and other political dissidents--expressed a "high degree of resentment" about being given such a mission.
* The CIA "performed image enhancement techniques" on video footage of the television show of columnist Jack Anderson, who had received leaks of top-secret CIA documents. "The purpose was to try to identify serial numbers of CIA documents in Anderson's possession"--presumably documents he held up or that were on his desk. The memo on this operation does not say if the effort succeeded.
Hayden, the CIA chief, deserves some credit for releasing the "Family Jewels," and he wants the public to believe that his CIA is not your father's CIA, which plotted assassinations, illegally opened mail, and spied on American political dissidents. But the CIA in recent days has run secret prisons and used interrogation methods that either involve torture or border on torture. (The details are sketchy.) And the National Security Agency has used warrantless wiretaps to eavesdrop on American citizens and residents. Moreover, as the release of the "Family Jewels" demonstrates, there still are secrets from the past the CIA will not disclose. Are these legitimate secrets that ought to be kept from the public to protect national security, or are they embarrassments the Agency is not willing to face? Only the secret-keepers of the CIA know which jewels remain buried.
The entire "Family Jewels" file and related documents can be found at the website of the National Security Archive.
Just out in paperback: Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and The Selling of The Iraq War, the best-selling book by David Corn and Michael Isikoff. Click here for information on the book. The New York Times calls Hubris "the most comprehensive account of the White House's political machinations" and "fascinating reading." The Washington Post says, "There have been many books about the Iraq war....This one, however, pulls together with unusually shocking clarity the multiple failures of process and statecraft." Tom Brokaw notes Hubris "is a bold and provocative book that will quickly become an explosive part of the national debate on how we got involved in Iraq." Hendrik Hertzberg, senior editor of The New Yorker notes, "The selling of Bush's Iraq debacle is one of the most important--and appalling--stories of the last half-century, and Michael Isikoff and David Corn have reported the hell out of it." For highlights from Hubris, click here.
© 2007 The Nation
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10 Comments so far
Show Allcarter secrets? whatever. cia jewels. whatever. 1973 was 24 years ago peeps. anyway, after mkultra, any jewel would pale. so whatever. lotsa peeps at cia are solid, stand up guys. whatever.
the CIA director in the early 1960s, outlined "activities which to hostile observers or to someone without complete knowledge…could be interpreted as examples of activities exceeding CIA's charters."
And how are we or anyone else supposed to know when the CIA exeeded it's charter? They don't seem to report to Congress, and our president is a known criminal. Who exactly is watching the hen house?
Fire all of them and we can sort throught the paperwork to see what they've been up to.
Everytime we needed them they were wrong or came up with flase eveidence that helped launch wars on innocent people. Am I being a litte to harsh?
The missing Jewel is the stealing of the 2000 election.
Hoa binh
Jewels? Jokes is more like it. I can't begin to list the myriad transgressions involving the CIA in Latin America, but here are some reminders relevant to today's world:
Oswald was recruited and employed by the CIA.
Osama was recruited and employed by the CIA.
Al Qaeda (then the Mujahadeen) was funded, armed, and trained by the CIA.
CIA money built the caves at Tora Bora, from which Osama was allowed to escape from our Afghani allies to our Pakistani allies.
Fourteen of the 9/11 hijackers received their US visas from the CIA-operated consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Osama is just another convenient patsy in the latest evocation of the "lone gunman theory" which, as RichM notes, the extra-Constitutional government perfected and has exploited for years.
MISSING GEM FOUND?
Whatever's missing, here's something that IS in there: on page 673 a letter to CIA Deputy Director(later Director) Willam E. Colby says, apparently in reference to a suggested anti-Nixon slogan:
"(3) One sad note! Will you tell Angus we cannot use his car bumper sticker LICK DICK in ''72, because it is open to misinterpretation...".
I admit finding such a deliberation among the CIA's "Family jewels" was a gem indeed. It had me in stitches laughing.
Guess it was sheer luck there wasn't an election in 1969, prompting the slogan "LICK DICK IN 69".
The CIA – always at the President's service...
More at http://www.foia.cia.gov/
This seems an opportune moment to bring up the subject of the JFK assassination. Contrary to the US Establishment's view of this matter, it is not "old news." The truth is that the CIA, or some group somewhere in one of the 15 or so US intelligence agencies, almost surely organized the assassination & subsequent coverup. The laughable story about "Oswald the lone gunman" who'd been a "Communist" was smashed into the brains of the American public within a few hours of the assassination; & was cemented into place by the Warren Commission Report. Ever since, the idea has been propagated by the powers that be, that this murder is inherently "a mystery that can never be solved."
Any serious look at the Warren Commission Report shows it was constructed for the express purpose of avoiding important questions which would cast doubt on the official story. It's testimony to the awesome power of the US media establishment, that they succeeded so thoroughly in putting across this immense fabrication, in defending it for all these years, & in harassing and shouting down anyone who challenged it. The real "conspiracy theorists" are the very people who use this term to denigrate truth seekers.
The relevance to today is clear: powers high in the US establishment learned that they could indeed create their own parallel reality, & succeed in getting most of the population to submit to it. That's why, to take but one example, we saw a presidential election stolen in broad daylight by the criminal Bush & his band of neofascistic gangsters -- and since no media said "Hey Look! The election is being stolen!", the population seemed hardly to notice it.
As far as the miserable "jewels" the CIA released the other day -- they deserve no credit whatever for this. It's a cheap & pathetic diversion, to get the public to imagine that the CIA's crimes are in the past, when actually they're doing the worst things ever, AS WE SPEAK. And it's laughable to pretend that they would come clean on anything really important. In Victor Marchetti's very apt phrase, this recent declassification of some old skeletons is just a "limited hangout."
David Corn knows that General Michael Hayden was head of NSA when Bush ordered it to violate the Fourth Amendment. Hayden denied that the amendment includes the standard of probable cause during a press conference following his appointment as DCI, indicating that he is either ignorant of the law or contemptuous of it.
Corn completely neglects to mention that Hayden was chief of the NSA!
"Hayden, the CIA chief, deserves some credit for releasing the "Family Jewels," and he wants the public to believe that his CIA is not your father's CIA..."
One has to ask David Corn - doesn't he also deserve some credit for his monstrous violation of our Constitutionally guaranteed rights?
The follow up question should be - why would anyone take this revelation of "the family jewels" seriously?
It's nothing more than a psyop. The record of activities of a creep like Sidney Gottlieb were purged by Gottlieb himself when he retired. This "family jewels" bullshit is completely scripted. It's a small sop to the press which snaps it up like a dog thrown a treat laced with barbituates. The dog feels more relaxed and too lazy to bark at wiley Michael Hayden.
We can be sure that the CIA under Hayden is perpetrating deeds as heinous as any in its past, and most probably moreso. The fact of "rendition" and torture is a guarantee of that.
Hayden is a latter day J. Edgar. It is most probable the he has more dirt on more people in government than Hoover imagined in his wettest dreams. It is also true that the CIA is more dangerous than it ever was with a man like Michael Hayden running it. It bears almost no resemblance to the entity created in 1947.
It is, as Chalmers Johnson decribes it, the president's private military, his political enforcers.
The fog of disinformation is so thick not even real journalists, which David Corn is not, have lights strong enough to find their way.
#1 Dirty Little Secret from 1959 to 1973?
JFK assassination in 1963?
Faking thre Gulf of Tonkin incendinet in 1964?
Placing Saddam Hussien in power in 1968?
Coup in Chile/assassination of Allende in 1973?
Manufacturing the oil crisis of 1973?
I personally think it was replacing the 10 year old George W Bush with the bastard offspring of a monkey and a woman with Down's syndrome in 1956
"Family" JEWELS? More like Company Rules, duels, fuels, mules and tools!
I wonder if the missing "jewel" has to do with the CIA's involvement in JFK's assassination?