How about treating American intelligence services in a register that takes covert operations seriously rather than treating them as adventure copy? Carl Bernstein (b. 1944) wrote one long piece on the CIA’s relationship with the American press in Rolling Stone in 1977. Nobody followed up.
What if somebody followed up?
A serious treatment of the American intelligence services starts from a few premises. The work is policy, not adventure. The officers are men with patrons, careers, and resentments. The press relationship is not incidental. The institutional memory runs deeper than any single administration. Successes and failures both deserve naming.
Here is a sketch.
Chapter 1. Origins. The OSS years, William J. Donovan (1883-1959), the wartime improvisation, the corporate and Ivy League recruiting pool, the demobilization fight, the 1947 National Security Act, and the creation of the CIA as a permanent peacetime service. The chapter establishes the founding class and the social networks they carried forward.
Chapter 2. The Dulles World. Allen Dulles (1893-1969) and John Foster Dulles (1888-1959), Sullivan and Cromwell, the German corporate ties, the Wall Street to Foggy Bottom pipeline, the brothers as a single instrument of policy under Eisenhower. David Talbot’s The Devil’s Chessboard supplies one entry point. The chapter shows how the early Agency carried a particular class and worldview.
Chapter 3. Frank Wisner and the Operational Imagination. Wisner (1909-1965), the Office of Policy Coordination, the early covert operations program, the Eastern European disasters, the recruitment of former SS and Gehlen Org assets, and Wisner’s long slide to breakdown and suicide. The chapter takes covert operations seriously as a policy choice with costs.
Chapter 4. Tehran 1953. Mohammad Mossadegh (1882-1967), the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, Kermit Roosevelt (1916-2000), the British role, Operation Ajax, and the long Iranian aftermath. All the Shah’s Men by Stephen Kinzer. This book uses a CIA internal history and Roosevelt’s own account to reconstruct the coup that locked in the operational habit. The chapter treats Ajax as the founding success.
Chapter 5. Guatemala 1954. Jacobo Arbenz (1913-1971), United Fruit, E. Howard Hunt (1918-2007), Operation PBSUCCESS, the propaganda war, and the four decades of military government that followed. The chapter shows the Iran template refined and exported.
Chapter 6. The Cuba Project. The Bay of Pigs, Operation Mongoose, the Castro assassination plots, the Mafia contacts, and the institutional aftermath of failure. Thomas Powers (b. 1940) and Evan Thomas give the inside view. The chapter holds open the question of how the Cuba operations connect to the Kennedy assassination without overclaiming.
Chapter 7. Vietnam and the Phoenix Program. William Colby (1920-1996), the Strategic Hamlet program, the Provincial Reconnaissance Units, the body count metric, and the counterinsurgency methods later carried home. Phoenix is the largest sustained CIA paramilitary effort. The chapter follows the men who ran it into the later programs.
Chapter 8. Chile. Salvador Allende (1908-1973), ITT, the Track I and Track II decisions, the September 1973 coup, Pinochet, Operation Condor, and the regional security architecture the Agency helped build. The Pinochet File by Peter Kornbluh. This book draws on declassified cables to document the Nixon and Kissinger decisions in real time.
Chapter 9. The Press Network. Carl Bernstein (b. 1944) and his October 1977 Rolling Stone piece names the names: Joseph Alsop (1910-1989), Stewart Alsop (1914-1974), the Time and CBS arrangements, the four hundred journalist figure, the cooperation that ran from Henry Luce down. The chapter treats the press relationship as integral, not auxiliary, and traces how the buried piece stayed buried.
Chapter 10. James Jesus Angleton. Angleton (1917-1987), counterintelligence, the Israel liaison, the Nosenko case, the long molehunt, the Kim Philby friendship, and the eventual firing under Colby. Ghost by Jefferson Morley. This book is the recent biography. The chapter takes Angleton seriously as a thinker about deception rather than as a paranoid eccentric.
Chapter 11. MKULTRA. Sidney Gottlieb (1918-1999), the Technical Services Staff, the university contracts, the prison experiments, the Canadian collaboration, the destroyed records, and the surviving victims. Poisoner in Chief by Stephen Kinzer. This book is the recent Gottlieb biography. The chapter names the institutions that took the money.
Chapter 12. COINTELPRO and CHAOS. The FBI under J. Edgar Hoover (1895-1972), the Black Panther operations, the Martin Luther King surveillance and harassment campaign, the Socialist Workers Party penetration, the CIA’s CHAOS program against domestic antiwar groups, and the legal lines crossed. The chapter pairs the Bureau and the Agency on domestic work.
Chapter 13. The Reckoning. The Family Jewels document, Seymour Hersh’s December 1974 New York Times piece, the Rockefeller Commission, the Church Committee under Frank Church (1924-1984), the Pike Committee under Otis Pike (1921-2014), the suppressed Pike report, the Halloween Massacre, and the establishment response. The chapter treats the mid-1970s window as the one period of serious institutional accountability.
Chapter 14. Casey and the Reagan Years. William Casey (1913-1987), the Nicaragua program, the Afghan pipeline, the Saudi and Israeli partnerships, Iran-Contra, the parallel government question, and the Boland Amendment evasions. The chapter reads Iran-Contra as an institutional response to the Church Committee constraints rather than an aberration.
Chapter 15. The Drift Years. The post-Cold War period, the Aldrich Ames case, the budget fights, the Gates and Tenet directorships, the missed warning signs, and the slow militarization of the Counterterrorism Center. The chapter shows the service searching for a mission.
Chapter 16. After September 11. The rendition program, the black sites, the Bush-era torture memos, the destroyed interrogation tapes, the Senate Intelligence Committee report under Dianne Feinstein, and the Agency’s hack of Senate computers. The Dark Side by Jane Mayer is one entry point. The chapter takes the torture program as institutional rather than aberrant.
Chapter 17. The Surveillance State. The NSA expansion under Michael Hayden and Keith Alexander, the bulk collection programs, the Stellar Wind disclosures, Edward Snowden (b. 1983), the FISA Court, and the relationships with the major telecoms. James Bamford supplies the institutional history of the agency.
Chapter 18. Silicon Valley. In-Q-Tel, the founding investments, the Palantir story, the cloud contracts, the recruiting pipelines, the data partnerships, and the social media liaisons. The chapter follows the money and the personnel into the technology sector.
Chapter 19. The Domestic Turn. The January 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment, the Steele dossier and the press handling, the Crossfire Hurricane operations, the October 2020 letter from fifty-one former officials, the Twitter Files material, and the question of the services as a domestic political actor.
Chapter 20. Reading the Services. A closing chapter on method. What serious press work on the intelligence services requires. The use of memoirs against each other. The Freedom of Information Act and its limits. The Mary Ferrell archive. The role of the historian against the leak. How to read official statements. What Bernstein’s piece teaches about why it stayed buried and what stayed buried with it.
- https://PayPal.Me/lukeisback
"Luke Ford reports all of the 'juicy' quotes, and has been doing it for years." (Marc B. Shapiro)
"This guy knows all the gossip, the ins and outs, the lashon hara of the Orthodox world. He’s an [expert] in... all the inner workings of the Orthodox world." (Rabbi Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff) LATEST POSTS:
- Dennis Prager v Cedars-Sinai Lawsuit
- Dennis Prager Through Randall Collins: Interaction Ritual Chains
- What is a ‘Received Idea’?
- Jordan Bardella: The Manufacture of Normality
- Everyone Became Television: Bourdieu’s Warning and the 2026 Iran War
- Marine Le Pen
- The Coalition-Proximity Rule
- Nigel Farage
- Bernard Haykel: A Life Between the Text and the Gun
- Walker Connor (1926-2017)
- Benedict Anderson and the Nation as Imagination
- Anthony D. Smith: The Student Who Kept the Question and Rejected the Answer
- Ernest Gellner
- Eric Kaufmann: The Man Who Made the Majority Visible
- Dominic Cummings: A Biography
- Steve Lopez: The Last City Columnist
- California Historian Kevin Starr
- Stephen Kotkin: A Life in Power
- William T. Vollmann: An American Life in Excess
- Rod Dreher: A Life in Exile
BEST POSTS:
- * The Enlightenment Wasn’t Enlightened (6-23-26)
* Mr. Burge Draws The Line (6-23-26)
* 'Improving on Democracy' (6-17-26)
* People Leak To People Who Are Fun (6-11-26)
* Why Does Australia Produce So Many Great Journalists? (6-11-26)
* Steve Wynn and the Press: Power, Litigation, and the Contest Over Las Vegas (6-3-26)
* Sheldon Adelson and the Journalists (6-3-26)
* The Vigilant Animal: Thinkers Who Reject the Myth of Human Gullibility (6-2-26)
* The Cost of Refusing the Misunderstanding Myth (6-2-26)
* Show Me How It Travels (6-2-26)
* The Norm Explainers (6-2-26)
* Centering Marginalized Voices (6-1-26)
* What would it look like if the Washington Post put its reader first? (6-1-26)
* What would it look like if the Financial Times put its reader first? (6-1-26)
* What It Would Mean for the Los Angeles Times to Put the Reader First? (6-1-26)
* What It Would Mean for The New York Times to Put the Reader First? (6-1-26)
* Why Wembanyama Lives on the Perimeter (5-31-26)
* The Emotional Palettes Of San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco & Sacramento (5-27-26)
* The Administrative Capital: Sacramento Legal Culture (5-27-26)
* San Diego - The Quiet Republic (5-27-26)
* The Quiet Bar: San Diego Legal Culture (5-27-26)
* SF v LA Legal Culture (5-27-26)
* Why Talent Travels Poorly Between San Francisco and Los Angeles (5-27-26)
* San Francisco and Los Angeles as Rival Models of Urban Access (5-27-26)
* Social Cliques in New York, 2026 (5-25-26)
* Social Cliques in San Francisco, 2026 (5-25-26)
* The Rival Courts of Washington (5-25-26)
* The City of Private Rooms (5-25-26)
