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Who's Who in CIA: A biographical reference work on 3,000 officers of the civil and military branches of the secret services of the USA in 120 countries PDF

616 Pages·1968·31.164 MB·English
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Preview Who's Who in CIA: A biographical reference work on 3,000 officers of the civil and military branches of the secret services of the USA in 120 countries

l l e r v e e l l S iAn o h W s I ' o h W C A biographical reference worl | on 3,000 ofiadrls of the civil and military branches: of the secret services of the JSA Copyright 1968 by Julius Mader, 1066 Berlin W 66, Mauerstrasse 69 —?" All rights reserved, including those to reproduce this book or ba thereof in any form, except in a magazine or newspaper referring 34 specific listee. The biographies were compiled with the cooperation of Mohamed Abdelnabi, Beirut Ambalal Bhatt, Bombay Fernando Gamarra, Mexico City Shozo Ohashi, Yokohama Contents 7 Foreword From the correspondence of US Senator Joseph S. Clark with the Publisher 15 Notes for the user 17 Abreviations and Explanations 19 Biographical section from A to Z (23 Geographical index from A to Z 577 Diagrams | 1. Structure and Organization of the American : Intelligence Services 544 ae, 2. Structure and Functional Plan of the Office | bee of Intelligence Research (OIR) in the Depart- : ment of State (1968) 3. Structure and Functional Plan of the Military — Intelligence Headquarters of the USA (1968) : 4. Structure and Functional Plan of the Na-- URS tional Security Agency (NSA) at Fort George as Sata - (1968) Meade/Maryland 5. Structure and Functional Plan of the Federal Be Bureau of Investigation Fa inn woreg to 2 2 (1968) | 3 eo te System: ots everaa! ¥, rt Oe , j > htinge a e ees Foreword Never in the history of the USA has the influence of its intel- ligence system on home and foreign policy been as great as it is today. For, as tools of the monopoly groups that rule in North America, the various intelligence services of the USA play a special part in the global strategy of that state. North American imperialism takes upon itself the right as the world’s policeman, so to speak, to intervene against every democratic, progressive and non-capitalist develop- ment all over the world. The Socialist states, as history shows, know how to effectively defend themselves against such intervention. The global strategy of the USA, however, has — effects in the emergent national states and, to an increasing - degree, in those states which have been chained by their governments to the USA through agreements. The most recent past provides all nations with massive evidence from — four continents for the anti-national subversive activities and illegal preparations for war of the US intelligence services. _ These send out their spies and subversive agents, conspire — s with neo and pro-fascist cohorts, prepare putsches ai? armed intervention, and stimulate ideological subversion. o7 e: The President of the USA has, as a matter of principle a personal authoritative influence on all intelligence af It is all the more necessary to emphasize this becau Avericon-amnud Seiten Canty Te ee spiay orces, but is also prepared, on : , nopoly interest groups whose pupp ie openly place ever more military resources in t i _ oe j } g1e He ften, th| e llna rPge e-sCcREa le iI ntelligence St ibversion tS in. | BeONS { ymy e ers military operations of the US armed ffoo rncdees d antdo stuo ppionrctr ease thec n ti-national effect aimed at. In re-forming the intelligence system, which is directly subordinated to the President and optimally freed trom even formal parliamentary control, the ruling circles of the USA have, in recent years, proceeded from a concept of subver- sion which must be seen in conjunction with the extremely precisely defined imperialist global strategy. It was under this aspect that the President of the USA said as early as 1962: “In the measure that military weapons become more mur- derous—and an increasing number of countries have such weapons at their disposal—subversionist war, guerilla war- fare and other forms of fighting acquire ever greater signi- ficance. In the measure that thermonuclear weapons become mightier and one has less and less opportunity of using them, subversionist war plays an increasingly more significant role.” With this statement psychological warfare and all the dirty methods of subversion were publicly raised to state policy for the USA. This is worth noting, above all, because — the intelligence service in the USA is the largest and most influential in the imperialist world; — following a NATO Council decree of December 1956 the intelligence service of the USA is the directive body for all intelligence services of the NATO Pact countries and similar agreements are in force for all ates military vas- sals of the USA; + — the intelligence service of the US eon ahi been the domain of the fanatical enemies of Hamanrry aoa stronghold of the anti-communists, wiewieoaa Larale ett The various branches of the US bh ee vices sinae fin anced pase i psa tivan t to e enol mous sum of eo ilei al YAe l A general survey of the American intelligence system shows the following: It has at its disposal at least 50,000 specially-selected full-time officials who guide the activities of tens of thousands of agents of various nationalities. In terms of personnel the civil and the military branches of the intelligence system are more or less balanced although, however, the civil branches receive higher budgets. On the other hand, though, the military branches can use the whole of the military apparatus for their purposes. A well-founded estimate of the share of the various American intelligence branches in the personnel establishment of the intelligence system as a whole in 1968 is shown in the fol- lowing table: | Personnel CIVIL Intelligence Branches 3 Total 50 %p » of which CIA | 36 Fy others ignopa aatlate MILITARY Intelligence Branches 3 yee of which NSA Rage eae! Sag ae G-2services | A-2 services LE ee ee c Defense Intelligence 2 TR. Cangas Bes ie Agency in ian hoesa o apsee te\o . n= 4 5» AtS a ya re f\ Sarit ag “De * Bt 4 hs 4 oeS Ne,e su ree e President of the USA, and whose director holds a key posi. tion in the mechanism of the North American power system, The CIA was created as a child of the cold war in 1947, Since then it has been unmasked hundreds of times the world over as leading centre of imperialist espionage activities and gg the coordinating centre for coups d’etat against lawful gov. ernments as well as for counter-revolutionary attacks. Up till now eight different Directors have followed each other at the head of the CIA. The military character of the CIA is under- lined by the US President's selection of these Directors. Among them there have been three Admirals of the US Navy, one General of the US Army, one General of the US Air Force, one diplomat, a former chairman of the American Atomic Energy Commission—the nuclear arms centre—and a leading intelligence officer. At the time of compilation of this book the present CIA Director, Richard M. Helms, has been in the pay of the US intelligence service for more than twenty-five years and has been in the leading staff of the CIA without a break ever since this dangerous “intelligence trust” has been in existence. The CIA —is placed superior to all US intelligence services in, or working in, foreign countries; —is almost unlimited in its spheres of competence and has, directly or indirectly, permeated the most important branches and processes of state-monopoly capitalism in | the USA. From 1947 until March 1967, that is, in twenty years, | ~ Senators and Congressmen have demanded a strict parlia- mentary control over the CIA no less than 152 timesT.o avail. Public opinion in the USA alreadyf ears that the ©” has become the “invisible governmen particularly clear when one analyses t _ measure the CIA and the Department o ’ ABr)eas G + (Ao f hel a ' A ge ia Dateline Neer ane a ge

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