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After a CIA officer and an FBI agent shake hands, the saying goes, each man quickly counts his fingers. For more than fifty years, the rivalry between spies and G-men has informed and defined most major blunders in American counterintelligence, from Pearl Harbor to the Kennedy assassination to the World Trade Center bombing. Relying on newly declassified documents and in-depth interviews with former agents, Mark Riebling has written the first extended account of this secret and costly schism.
Riebling reveals how the World War II feud between FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and William J. "Wild Bill" Donovan, the godfather of CIA, drove a wedge between foreign and domestic spycatching, creating a fundamentally flawed intelligence system.
He shows how the problems arising from this arbitrary split shaped McCarthyist loyalty probes, the U-2 affair, and plots to kill Fidel Castro; sparked major political scandals, from Watergate to Iran-contra to Iraq-Gate; hobbled the 1960s hunt for spies in CIA; perhaps contributed to Jack Ruby's murder of Lee Harvey Oswald; and allowed Russian mole Aldrich Ames to serve almost a decade in CIA before being caught.
Riebling also adds to the public record new clues to the likely identity of Deep Throat, and the names of two U.S. spy chiefs investigated as possible Soviet agents.
Among the many singular characters Riebling introduces us to are Dusan M. Popov, a double agent who shared World War II adventures with the British intelligence officer Ian Fleming and was the real-life model for James Bond; renegade FBI agent William King Harvey, who became chief of anti-Soviet operations for CIA and, it is said, drank three martinis at lunch and Jack Daniel's the rest of the time; CIA Director Richard Helms, "the man who kept the secrets," whose refusal to share information with Hoover precipitated a total break in CIA-FBI relations; Sam Papich, the Montana-bred ex-pro football player who served for two decades as FBI liaison officer to the Agency, until Hoover suspected him of collaboration with the enemy (CIA, not KGB); and, of course, the now-legendary James Jesus Angleton, who for the twenty iciest years of the Cold War was CIA's chain-smoking, fly-fishing, orchid-growing, poetry-loving chief counterspy.
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Subjects
Intelligence service, United States, United States. Central Intelligence Agency, United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation, New York Times reviewed, United states, central intelligence agency, United states, federal bureau of investigation, Intelligence service, united states, United states. central intelligence agency., United states. federal bureau of investigation., Intelligence service--united states, Jk468.i6 r56 2002, 327.1273/009/045Places
United StatesShowing 6 featured editions. View all 6 editions?
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1
Wedge: From Pearl Harbor To 9/11, How The Secret War Between The Fbi And The Cia Has Endangered National Security
March 2, 2004, Diane Pub Co
Paperback
in English
0756776678 9780756776671
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2
Wedge: From Pearl Harbor to 9/11--How the Secret War between the FBI and CIA Has Endangered National Security
October 29, 2002, Touchstone
Paperback
in English
- Rep Sub edition
0743245997 9780743245999
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3
Wedge: from Pearl Harbor to 9/11 : how the secret war between the FBI and CIA has endangered national security
2002, Simon & Schuster, 2002.
in English
- 1st Touchstone ed., Updated with a new epilogue.
0743245997 9780743245999
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4
Wedge
December 11, 1995, Random House Value Publishing
Hardcover
in English
0517158345 9780517158340
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5
Wedge: the secret war between the FBI and CIA
1994, A.A. Knopf, Distributed by Random House
in English
- 1st ed.
0679414711 9780679414711
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6
Wedge: The Secret War Between the FBI and CIA
October 18, 1994, Knopf
Hardcover
in English
- 1st ed edition
0679414711 9780679414711
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Book Details
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"AT 2:30 P.M. ON TUESDAY,' AUGUST 12, 1941, a secret agent entered the United States with information that Japan was planning to bomb Pearl Harbor."
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