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Enjoying the Ride -- Backwards?

By Sean Gonsalves, AlterNet. Posted June 29, 2007.


OK, I admit it. I was excited when I first heard the CIA was going to show us the "family jewels." But now that I've seen the "jewels" it all seems rather anti-climatic, about as satisfying as Geraldo's exploration of Al Capone's vault.
Gonsalves

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OK, I admit it. I was excited when I first heard the CIA was going to show us the "family jewels." You could say I have an intelligence fetish; an affinity for analysis.

But now that I've seen the "jewels" it all seems rather anti-climatic, about as satisfying as Geraldo's exploration of Al Capone's vault.

A few lowlights from the file:

  • The CIA planned to poison the late Republic of Congo premier Patrice Lumumba (page 464) and offered $150,000 for a mob hit on Castro.
  • The "jewels" confirm that the government had their own LSD hippies on the payroll, conducting "drug experiments" on unwitting victims (page 213).
  • The Agency kidnapped and illegally detained Russian defector Yuriy Nosenko (page 522).

The one interesting tidbit buried in the Nosenko notes is that the CIA actually worried about the illegal detention of one person.

Today, we've got the CIA running secret prisons where more than one "enemy combatant" is being held and tortu - I mean, interrogated.

A few other family gems: domestic eavesdropping has been around since G Dub was in diapers and -- oh my god! -- the CIA had a particular interest in the private lives of Americans identified with the Left -- real evil people, like John Lennon (page 552) who clearly posed a clear and present danger to "the national interest."

Not only have these sordid tales been open secrets for a long time, the Fourth Estate was reporting on most of this stuff 30 years ago. Seymour Hersh first broke the story on the CIA's domestic spying on the front page of the New York Times in December 1974.

And, anyone familiar with the Church and Pike investigations Congress did back in the mid-1970s will see the "family jewels" for what they are: a response to a 15-year-old Freedom of Information Act request that provides more corroboration than revelation.

You gotta hand it to the PR department on the Backward Bush Train, though. Release documents that corroborate or embellish the "dirty secrets" we already know, while scoring propaganda points demonstrating the health of an "open society." The declassification of open secrets. Brilliant!

I wonder what the national archives will reveal 30 years from now about Bush's "war on terror" -- if we make it that far.

What we already know -- cooked intelligence, torture, indefinite detentions in secret prisons, unprecedented domestic snooping powers -- makes the Cold War-era seem quaint.

Of course, looking at the "jewels" in today's light, it's clear we're not only repeating 1960s history, we're heading even further backward.

Next stop: 1954, as Bush's Supreme Court appointees have essentially overturned the landmark desegregation Brown v. Board of Education case.

As Justice John Paul Stevens wrote in his dissenting opinion, the majority opinion "reverses course and reaches the wrong conclusion. In doing so, it distorts precedent, it misapplies the relevant constitutional principles, it announces legal rules that will obstruct efforts by state and local governments to deal effectively with the growing resegregation of public schools, it threatens to substitute for present calm a disruptive round of race-related litigation."

Next stop: the Robber Baron era of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. If you look to you're Right you'll see the Supremes decided to give manufacturers greater leeway to set minimum prices, which flip antitrust laws on their head, hurting both consumers and small merchants.

As a black man I'm starting to get real nervous. I mean, at the rate we're going, we'll be back to the Civil War days in no time. And then maybe we'll start hearing "conservatives" once again extolling the virtues of chattel slavery.

Can any of my fellow travelers tell me where I can catch the train heading back to the future?

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See more stories tagged with: family jewels

Sean Gonsalves is a Cape Cod Times staff reporter and a syndicated columnist.

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View:
The History Channel Is Getting Too Close To The Present
Posted by: hole11 on Jun 29, 2007 1:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Bush administration has been making what used to be easily accessible in the archives secret. So they let out a few tidbits.

Why doesn't the CIA tell us how much they receive every year from Congress? That would be enough to satisfy me.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Train to the future loads in Europe
Posted by: ScottP on Jun 29, 2007 2:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm afraid the US has lost the ability to catch a train to the future, the doors to the station on our side seem to be locked. We may need some help from our friends. Recall that Spain started the criminal proceedings against Pinochet that eventually led to his final downfall. I hope that Europe will come to our rescue, as well. The script will need to be different than the Pinochet script, but there are key elements that would be useful in our case, as well.

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» We may need outside help... Posted by: jimmyaj
The foreign policy ghosts of past mistakes still dominate the agenda in Washington, DC.
Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 29, 2007 3:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
TomDispatch has just finished a three-part series bio on our Secretary of Defense. From the intro's comments on how much is missing from the CIA documents:

"And yet, you have to read Morris on Gates to realize how much this list still lacks when it comes to the acts of the CIA. It is, after all, one of the ironies of our moment that our (relatively) new secretary of defense now travels the American world -- to Kabul and Baghdad in particular, where he frets about Tehran -- only to find himself, in essence, confronting (though our media never bothers to say so) the consequences of the misdeeds of his younger self. It's a grisly record and, not surprisingly, a grisly world has been its result.
here
"Progressives" learn from the past to avoid the old mistakes.

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I thought it was pretty interesting and amazing. Whilst such information
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Jun 29, 2007 3:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
has been available to public it has primarily been in the form of 'conspiracy', 'fictional' novels, and haphazardly. Or in tedious Congressional testimony. I hope they are putting all the 'family jewels' into a book-form (like the Warren Commission or the 9/11 Commission report.) Have they done so? I have not seen anywhere that offers it and no mention of this on the CIA webpage (which, if you visit, are certainly tracked and this is 'put into your file'.)

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Wait, wasn't it a conservative Republican who brought about the Emancipation Proclamation?
Posted by: kbest on Jun 30, 2007 5:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes a conservative Republican freed the slaves. Democrats still want to keep them suffering so as to have someone to pander to. Liberalism is a mental disorder.

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A Big Disappointment
Posted by: Gravitas on Jun 30, 2007 10:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, this whole thing was a big disappointment. What about all that "psycops" crap going on a few years ago, especially in Western states? Like the mind control experiments way beyond LSD that we are NOT talking about? When do those victims get compensated? Or at least vindicated for not being considered nuts for telling their story? I guess Uncle Sam thinks the credibility gap is still enough protection. Like in the 1950s when no one would have believed the government would deliberately release radiation on the people in Hanford WA just to see how it would affect them?
As some really out on a limb folks say "Who is the silence protecting?"

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LSD Pedophiles
Posted by: lessbread on Jul 2, 2007 9:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Agency's Strangeloves altered mind of a girl aged 4

[snip]
EASILY lost, on page 425, in the mass of the CIA's notorious "Family Jewels" files is a short paragraph outlining "potentially embarrassing Agency activities".

"Experiments in influencing human behaviour through the administration of mind- or personality-altering drugs to unwitting subjects."

Of all the heinous acts committed by the CIA in the name of national security, these experiments, done on the agency's behalf by prominent psychiatrists on innocent victims - including children as young as four - may be the darkest.
...
The nature of the experiments, gathered from government documents and testimony in numerous lawsuits brought against the CIA, is shocking, from testing LSD on children to implanting electrodes in victims' brains to deliberately poisoning people with uranium.

"The CIA bought my services from my grandfather in 1952 starting at the tender age of four," wrote Carol Rutz of her experiences.

"Over the next 12 years, I was tested, trained, and used in various ways. Electroshock, drugs, hypnosis, sensory deprivation, and other types of trauma were used to make me complain and split my personality (to create multiple personalities for specific tasks). Each alter or personality was created to respond to a post-hypnotic trigger, then perform an act and (I would) not remember it later.

"This Manchurian Candidate program was just one of the operational uses of the mind-control scenario by the CIA.
...
[/snip]

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