'Legacy of Ashes' Describes Founding of CIA

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'Legacy of Ashes' Describes Founding of CIA

The new book Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA traces the spy agency's failings back to its founding generation. Author Tim Weiner, a reporter for the The New York Times, speaks with John Ydstie.

At the dawn of the Cold War, Allen Dulles, Richard Bissell and Frank Wisner were considered daring, imaginative and brilliant. Under them, in the 1950s, America's spy agency launched audacious operations. It overthrew foreign governments, even attempted to assassinate foreign leaders, actions that are now recalled more with embarrassment than pride.

One of those originals, Frank Wisner, was a lawyer, a World War II spy, and a man who by the end of the 1950s would go mad. In a new history of the CIA called "Legacy of Ashes," New York Times reporter Tim Weiner traces some of the failings of the CIA today back to that founding generation. Weiner says men like Frank Wisner virtually invented America's clandestine service in the first days of the Cold War.

TIM WEINER: Frank Wisner was not interested in espionage, which is the core mission of the CIA. He was interested in covert action, making kings and breaking them, changing the world instead of knowing the world. And that got the United States into a good deal of trouble.

YDSTIE: And Wisner actually sacrificed hundreds of lives trying to do this during the Korean War.

WEINER: And instead they took thousands of recruited foreign agents, Koreans, Chinese, other Asians, and hundreds of recruited foreign agents from Eastern and Central Europe and Russia. And they put them into planes and they strapped on parachutes and they flung them out into the darkness. And they died.

YDSTIE: What's astounding about this is that Wisner sent people in and never heard from them again and he kept doing it. He didn't stop and say this isn't working, we're sacrificing lives.

WEINER: The CIA was a new organization. They didn't really know what they were doing. They had to learn by doing and learn from their mistakes. And during the first 15 years running up to the Bay of Pigs, there were plenty.

YDSTIE: Maybe the most famous CIA leader is Allen Dulles, and as you suggest in your book, he charmed political leaders here at home and editors and publishers as well, which gave the CIA a reputation as a competent and effective agency. But a close look at Dulles's tenure provides a very different picture.

WEINER: Allen Dulles really didn't want to have a secret intelligence agency. He believed in dignified publicity because he wanted to create and burnish a public image for the CIA so that it could survive its infancy and its youth and grow up to be a permanent, powerful part of the American government.

YDSTIE: One anecdote about Allen Dulles, I think, is also very revealing - how he treated the briefers that came to talk to him each day.

WEINER: And four months later came the Bay of Pigs. To see a president eviscerating a director of central intelligence before an audience of cabinet members, there's blood on the page.

YDSTIE: And as you said, Dulles still in control of the agency, the Bay of Pigs occurs and a guy named Richard Bissell was really in charge of that operation.

WEINER: I have actually been in the Bay of Pigs and stood in it. It is an impossible tangle of mud and mangrove, and these very hard, spiny crabs scuttling everywhere. And the idea that you could land there and get anywhere is, in retrospect, insane.

YDSTIE: I wonder if you could read for us from your book. This is basically after the Bay of Pigs, for which Richard Bissell bears much responsibility.

WEINER: When he left, President Kennedy pinned the National Security medal on his lapel. President Kennedy said, Mr. Bissell's high purpose, unbounded energy and unswerving devotion to duty are benchmarks of the intelligence service. He leaves an enduring legacy.

YDSTIE: How different is the CIA now than it was then?

WEINER: Ever since the Bay of Pigs, the CIA has been exquisitely sensitive to presidential command and control. It is the president's secret army. It belongs to the White House, and it is presidents who have misunderstood, misused and abused the CIA, and that has gotten the CIA in trouble because presidents won't take the rap.

YDSTIE: Tim Weiner is the author of "Legacy of Ashes: The History of the CIA." Thanks very much for speaking with us today.

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Appollow on September 21st, 2018 at 17:00 UTC »

My grandfather was in the CIA starting in the 1950s. He was originally a Capt in the USMC and was "recruited" by the CIA to run operations and air drops into China during the mid 50s. He tells the story of trying to set up a spy network in a province of China. They air dropped 12 Chinese Nationalists, one at a time, into the area and each one was killed. The last guy they dropped in set up the network. When the CIA retrieved him. They asked what had happened to the other 12? The successful spy told them the area they were being dropped into was so poor and impoverished that no one had any foot wear. The spies being dropped in wore sandals. The local authorities noticed the scandals and immediately became suspicious. The spies were interrogated and then shot. The last guy saw people without foot wear, buried his and fit right in.

varnell_hill on September 21st, 2018 at 13:16 UTC »

Better parachute more people in to check on the other folks.

Range100 on September 21st, 2018 at 12:31 UTC »

They also tried to do that in Communist Romania. Most of them got captured as soon as they landed.