I'm watching Chris Matthews on "Hardball" right now. He says he's "fascinated" by tonight's release of the CIA's "Family Jewels".
They're talking about how shocking it is that the CIA might have actually had a hand in many assassination attempts on Castro.
BiG F**king Deal! Isn't this common knowledge?
They talking about 'fessing up to toppling Iran's Mossadegh in '53. BFD! Isn't this common knowledge?
They're talking about the CIA's toppling of Allende in Chile via Kissinger. BFD! Isn't this common knowledge?
You can get a pretty good picture of what the US and the CIA has been up to since WWII by reading William Blum's
Killing Hope: U.S. Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Amazon', 'E')ssential Reference, Some Warts, February 17, 2007
By Robert D. Steele,
[Former CIA Officer] (Oakton, VA United States)
Over-all, this is a very precious book, and an essential reference on the history of US intervention, both military and clandestine or covert.
As a former Marine Corps infantry office and former clandestine services case officer, and as an avid reader of non-fiction, I will gladly state on the record that this author has it largely right.
I took off one star because the book has NOT been properly updated. The list of U.S. military interventions still ends in 1945, only the the CIA assassination plot list has been updated.
There are other books that complement this one--everything by Noam Chomspky, Derek Leebaert's "The Fifty-Year Wound," Chalmers Johnson on "Sorrows of Empire," Robert McNamara et al, "Wilson's Ghost," the DVD "Why We Fight," Ambassador Palmer's "The Real Axis of Evil" (on the 45 dictators we SUPPORT), and--with respect to the ignorance of America about reality, the two books, "Fog Facts," and "Lost History." See also Marine General Smedley Butler's short but hard-hitting work, "War is a Racket."
While I take the author with a grain of salt and do not appreciate his collaboration with Phil Agee, who betrayed his oaths to the US, whatever his reasons, on balance this book is an essential reference for anyone who wishes to understand why the rest of the world is beginning to conclude that we are the worst of all evils in our foreign policy behavior and misbehavior.
The question is: What is the political reason for releasing this old well-known information now? Why does the CIA seem to be adopting a contrite posture now?
...especially after the latest shenanigans with WMD and all that horseshit.