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CIA Declassifies the "Family Jewels" 356

An anonymous reader informs us that the CIA has recently declassified for your reading pleasure some records relating to illegal spying, assassination attempts, and other goodies. These are available from the CIA's FOIA portal. From the BBC article: " Last week, CIA chief Michael Hayden announced the decision to declassify the records, saying the documents were 'unflattering but part of CIA history.' The documents detail assassination plots, domestic spying, wiretapping, and kidnapping... Among the documents is a request in 1972 for someone 'who was accomplished at picking locks' who might be retiring or resigning from the agency."
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CIA Declassifies the "Family Jewels"

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  • by cygnusx ( 193092 ) * on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @05:08AM (#19660573)
    For example, readers from India might want to check out the CIA's files about the India-China war [nationalinterest.in] of 1962, especially since India's Freedom of Information laws (IIRC) don't cover matters of national security.

    • by Futurepower(R) ( 558542 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @10:14AM (#19662587) Homepage
      Yes, some interesting information, but the underlying purpose of releasing it is TOTALLY dishonest. My understanding is that the CIA is releasing information as a public relations gesture. My understanding is that the agency is releasing only information that no longer matters to it, with any modifications it wants to make.

      Almost the CIA's ONLY purpose is to help rich people get richer [krysstal.com] by providing information and violence paid for by U.S. citizens. The organization did not just suddenly become honest. (Read the linked article.)

      Bush and Cheney [cbsnews.com] have consistently claimed they are above the law. This fits the definition of a dictatorship: "A form of government in which the ruler is not restricted by a constitution or laws or opposition".

      The CIA invented a term for the destructive consequences of its actions: Blowback [thenation.com]. Blowback doesn't matter to the agency, however, since it still gets what it wants. Also, for CIA employees, more trouble in the world means more money and promotions.

      Remember, the terms NSA and CIA are just names that you are allowed to know, to try to get you to think you know what the U.S. government is doing. There are many agencies with names and purposes you are not allowed to know. If you are a U.S. citizen, you are, however, expected to pay. If you are not a U.S. citizen (and sometimes if you are), you may be expected to pay with your life.
      • by ArcherB ( 796902 ) * on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @10:33AM (#19662835) Journal

        Yes, some interesting information, but the underlying purpose of releasing it is TOTALLY dishonest. My understanding is that the CIA is releasing information as a public relations gesture. My understanding is that the agency is releasing only information that no longer matters to it, with any modifications it wants to make.
        Would you feel better if they released information on current operations? Wouldn't that make the the Central Agency, because such a move would require all references to "Intelligence" be removed!

        Bush and Cheney have consistently claimed they are above the law. This fits the definition of a dictatorship:
        Wow! I had no idea that the current administration had a time machine. Not only did Bush and Cheney travel back in time to commit these operations, but they allowed the release of the documents explaining what all they did! So not only are they above our laws, but they are above the laws of physics!

        Remember, the terms NSA and CIA are just names that you are allowed to know, to try to get you to think you know what the U.S. government is doing. There are many agencies with names and purposes you are not allowed to know. If you are a U.S. citizen, you are, however, expected to pay. If you are not a U.S. citizen (and sometimes if you are), you may be expected to pay with your life.
        Are you sure you're not thinking of the Free Masons? Is it Skill and Bones? What other secret societies/government agencies could you be referring to? Is it the same one that Arnold worked for in "True Lies"?

        OK, Moulder, put your shiny hat away now.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Courageous ( 228506 )
          Well. He's obviously a little somewhere off of center. Be that as it may, there's nothing particularly speculative about his assertion that there are agencies that we are not allowed to know about. There are plenty of organizations of that type, most of them fairly small when compared to NSA and CIA. They're are generally purpose-built, some of them temporarily, some more permanently. I'm not speculating. Hint, hint. :)

          C//
        • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

          by notque ( 636838 )
          Would you feel better if they released information on current operations?

          Yes, with redacted names, addresses, and exact instructions about how they create things like fake identification.

          That is a much more reasonable solution than now. Let us see what goes on so that we can defend our rights, and put pressure on those who wish to take them away.

          How many lives would it have saved looking at the current declassified record? How much torture could we have prevented? Coups against democratically elected leader
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Iron Condor ( 964856 )

        I do not understand what nutcase modded this Troll.

        It is somewhat confused about a few details, but it is mostly just a restatement of well-known (and well-known-for-a-long-time) facts.

        That said, let me add a few clarifications:

        My understanding is that the CIA is releasing information as a public relations gesture.

        The CIA collects information when and where they think it is useful for them. They release information when and where they think it is useful for them. This does not distinguish the CIA fro

  • Impromptu search engine available in 3..2..1..
  • bah! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ekran ( 79740 ) * on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @05:12AM (#19660593) Homepage
    Where are the top secret documents about the assassination of Kennedy? I wanna read them!
    • Re:bah! (Score:5, Funny)

      by Nazlfrag ( 1035012 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @05:42AM (#19660705) Journal
      You see, the role of the CIA is to assassinate foreign heads of state. It's the NSA and FBI files you're after.
      • Re:bah! (Score:5, Funny)

        by FredDC ( 1048502 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @06:03AM (#19660799)

        You see, the role of the CIA is to assassinate foreign heads of state.
        They're pretty bad at it though...
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by notque ( 636838 )
          They're pretty bad at it though...

          It has been argued that we need some form of intelligence gathering agency, and that the CIA fulfills that role. Maybe. But what the CIA also provides is a decapitation squad, well versed in killing heads of state and others. Here's a partial review of the declassified record.
          1. The CIA was most likely behind the attempt to kill Chou En-Lai of China in 1955. An Air India flight that took off from Hong Kong crashed under mysterious circumstances on its way to the Bandung Con
    • Re:bah! (Score:5, Funny)

      by joss ( 1346 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @06:17AM (#19660869) Homepage
      How do you know the CIA had nothing to do with Kennedy assassination:
      because he's dead.
    • Where are the top secret documents about the assassination of Kennedy? I wanna read them!

      Me, I'm looking for the UFO stuff. That file is probably in the same box as the Kennedy stuff. Iran/Contra, Vince Foster, the assassination of Paul Wellstone and Dick Cheney's soul are probably all in the same dusty bin, in a bunker in Wyoming.
    • by smchris ( 464899 )
      Presumably, detailed records relating to living people will remain classified?

      (I assume you're referring to the theory that a rogue Bay of Pigs commando group who had been affiliated with a "Bush" according to the one FBI memo were the people who got Kennedy. Just a coincidence that Dubya's father George H. W. was in the CIA working on Pay of Pigs.)
    • by ChePibe ( 882378 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @10:51AM (#19663073)
      I spoke with a professor who taught my course on U.S. Intelligence and National Security a while back. He had been a staffer with the Senate Intelligence Committee for over a decade and had read the entire classified version of the Warren Commission report. His opinion on it was basically this - there simply isn't any sufficient proof to tie the killing to anyone but Oswald, nor proof that Oswald had acted on anyone's behalf, although he did suspect some sort of Cuban involvement somewhere in the killing. But, he qualified, that his suspicions could not be proven and amounted to more of a gut feeling rather than something based strictly on evidence - Castro by then must have known of the numerous attempts Kennedy had ordered on his life.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by notque ( 636838 )
        It's likely that's why it gets news coverage. I don't think they lie to help the industry along, but they have said in internal documents that they should release some information on the Kennedy Assassination every once in a awhile to divert people.

        It seems to work pretty well. A lot of energy spent on things that are unimportant, which is as useful to them as you not paying any attention.
  • by laejoh ( 648921 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @05:18AM (#19660609)
    to make us think they stopped doing &#!####{ççççç NO CARRIER
  • Signs of change? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Eukariote ( 881204 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @05:26AM (#19660649)

    The abuses and illicit activities listed within date from the 1950s to the 1970s.
    It is interesting that more of the dirt is surfacing now. Last year, the CIA's executive director was made to resign http://www.sunlightfoundation.com/taxonomy/term/30 1?page=2 [sunlightfoundation.com]. The story will be far from complete until there are more details on what poppy Bush was doing in that period. For one take on that see: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-396767779 1931129793 [google.com].
    • Not really (Score:3, Informative)

      by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 )
      It is somewhat surprising but in general the government takes the whole FOIA and declassification thing rather seriously. It can take a long time (things can't be declassified until they don't hurt national security) and there can be parts redacted, but they really do provide a rather surprising amount of transparency on older things. As far as I can tell this latest round of declassification is nothing special. It's been done before, and hopefully will continue to be done.
      • All that has to be done is to declare a perpetual state of war so you don't have to declassify anything anymore, since it would hurt national security if the enemy knew some plot of a while ago, or the names of some spies (they could start finding out how you got them into position and close that loophole), etc.

        So I wouldn't get my hopes up that this continues for much longer.
    • by Puls4r ( 724907 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @07:15AM (#19661109)
      Is is unfortunate that people use articles like this to try to prove some political point (i.e. Republicans are evil). Instead, perhaps we would be better focussing on how nations cannot protect themselves without an organization like this. The CIA, FBI, and NSA are not tied to one president. All the presidents have used them to do distasteful things. That is the point of the secrecy. It allows these organizations to do things that need doing: to make hard lose-lose decisions in the best interest of the country. If it were not for the secrecy, we'd have more politically hand-tied organizations that had to bow down before political pressure and popular opinion. Let's face it - popular opinion isn't about the right decision or what's best for the country. I think these documents are interesting part of history that we can use to understand how the government is functioning behind the scenes. Some people will use this to wave around how secrecy can foster abuse, but the simple fact is that we need departments and organizations like this to survive in the world.
      • by flyingsquid ( 813711 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @08:01AM (#19661323)
        Instead, perhaps we would be better focussing on how nations cannot protect themselves without an organization like this.

        Sometimes, the ends justify the means, and the means ain't too pretty. But the thing is, most of these abuses are just that- they're abuses, not places where tough choices had to be made to save lives. For instance, in the 1960s, Johnson was convinced that the Communists were behind all the protests, so the CIA had agents grow long hair and learn to talk like hippies so they could infiltrate leftist groups, where they collected hundreds of thousands of names and created dossiers on thousands of people. And they found that among the foreign supporters who contributed money to these groups were John Lennon. Lennon, hm? Sounds a lot like "Lenin". Coincidence? They were spying on reporters, testing LSD on citizens, and to put things in context, there were some doors at a little place called the Watergate that the Nixon administration wanted opened, and that's why the CIA was asked about a lockpicker.

        The lesson I take from this isn't that dangerous times require drastic measures. It's that breaking the law didn't really produce much in the way of good intelligence, didn't uncover many Commie plots, and didn't save many lies. And likewise, I think that 30 years from now, we'll look back at the secret prisons, Guantanamo Bay, domestic wiretapping, and uses of torture, and find that it did damned little to make the United States safer, and if anything, made us less safe because it convinced more people that America really is an Evil Empire which has to be fought.

      • by fyngyrz ( 762201 ) *

        perhaps we would be better focussing on how nations cannot protect themselves without an organization like this.

        Perhaps we should be thinking that we don't need agencies like this at all. Perhaps we should get our government back to defending our borders, rather than interfering with other countries. Perhaps the very idea of the CIA is inherently flawed. Perhaps we could then further improve our situation by getting rid of a number of our other three-letter political tumors, such as the FCC, PTO, NSA,

      • by WIAKywbfatw ( 307557 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @12:30PM (#19664527) Journal
        Is is unfortunate that people use articles like this to try to prove some political point (i.e. Republicans are evil).

        It is unfortunate that people use the power invested in them to try to prove that they are indeed evil (i.e. the present US administration).

        Seeing Dick Cheney trying to avoid legal checks and balances by claiming that the office of the Vice Presidency doesn't fall under the Executive Branch is just the latest disgraceful act of a morally corrupt administration. I wonder how long before they start using that line for the President himself?

        I wonder what the Founding Fathers would have thought of the current occupants of the White House. Not only will they lie and cheat, but they'll lie and cheat about their lying and cheating, even when the whole world can see that they're doing it.

        The fact that 29 percent or so of Americans still approve of the job that the President is shocking. Presumably these people would need to see their leader sprout horns and a forked tail, slip George Michael the tongue at a pro-choice rally, and see him waste the land with seven plagues before finding any fault in his job performance.

        But returning to the article...

        If this is the kind of shit that they will admit to, albeit decades later, doesn't it make you think about what stuff they won't admit to that's happening right now? Remember, that's your government and your tax dollars at work.
  • Old News (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @05:30AM (#19660659)
    Baically, nothing that wasn't already known except maybe a little finger pointing and agreeing to take the blame. Anything actually "new" in this? Anything that never made the news back then? Any fresh skeletons? If we find the answer is "no" then one must assume this is just more misdirection. Of course stuff like this just goes to prove that the CIA and its similar organizations should have been abolished years ago. The really big question: is this pile of bones but the tip of the iceberg?
    • by cHALiTO ( 101461 )
      At least it shows that people shouldnt rush to discard hypothesis of assassinations and plots of the sort as paranoid conspiracy theories (i.e.: a fantasy). This stuff does happen, and the CIA is one agency that is well known for this kind of thing.

      Of course many will, seeing they cant dismiss this as loony stories anymore, justify them like its something completely normal and everyone does just the same so its ok to do it (like Puls4r, a couple of posts above).

      At least Im glad theyre coming clean about i
  • by Mgns ( 934567 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @05:33AM (#19660673)
    "We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones".

            Francois de La Rochefoucauld (1613 - 1680)
    • Given that they are admitting to planning murder and more its hard to see the big faults that they are hiding. Genocide perhaps? Or being behind Pauly Shore?
  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @05:33AM (#19660675)
    Those documents are about 60 years old. In other words, around 2070 we'll finally get to see what is done now.

    You think it's in any way different today? If anything, it gets worse.
    • by rm999 ( 775449 )
      "The abuses and illicit activities listed within date from the 1950s to the 1970s."

      60 years is really pushing it. It is more like 30-55 years ago. And I am young enough (~25) that I may actually find out what is happening today.

      Is it bad? Definitely. Is it as bad as what happened during World War II or the Cold War? Probably not.
      • Is it as bad as what happened during World War II or the Cold War? Probably not.

        You forget, this is a war for the very survival of western civilization itself! The commies only wanted to enslave everyone, but the terrorites want to KILL EVERYONE(tm)! The cold war was just warm-up, this is the real deal!
    • Thanks, Mz. Cleo!
    • You think it's in any way different today? If anything, it gets worse.

      That's where you're wrong. Everyone on here that cries about illegal wiretaps and such are just too naive to think that it wasn't happening in the past. If anything GWB is just being honest about it.

      The Patriot Act isn't a new set of laws and a loss of freedom; it's a declaration of what has been the standard operating procedure for decades.
      • by deniable ( 76198 )
        If you're right, the Patriot act moved the boundaries. This means that they're pulling illegal stuff worse than allowed by that Act.

        If they got away with illegal stuff before, then they will now, but their illegal acts are new and improved.
  • by niceone ( 992278 ) * on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @05:41AM (#19660703) Journal
    The message this sends current CIA operatives: go ahead, do whatever illegal stuff you want because you're going to get away with it - in 50 years time we'll tell everyone and have a good laugh about it.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by dbIII ( 701233 )
      No - it's sending the message "look we're a little bit naughty because we pick locks" as a distraction instead of sending the message that there are evil out of control bastards torturing people to death. The entire organisation is guilty by association and it is up to those that run it to fix those portions that would face war crimes tribunals in other situations.
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by mrbluze ( 1034940 )

        No - it's sending the message "look we're a little bit naughty because we pick locks" as a distraction instead of sending the message that there are evil out of control bastards torturing people to death. The entire organisation is guilty by association and it is up to those that run it to fix those portions that would face war crimes tribunals in other situations.

        There are some crucial pieces of information missing from the released documents which the CIA are active in suppressing, including $*UFEF&*@#_**NO CARRIER**

  • by akkarin ( 1117245 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @05:53AM (#19660761)
    Yeah, but when will they declassify the files 'bout the sharks with lasers on their heads? Of course they deny it, but /. knows better, right? Right....?
  • >After Fidel Castro led a revolution that toppled a friendly government in 1959, the CIA was desperate to eliminate him.

    Nonsense. "The CIA" wasn't desperate to eliminate Castro, the U.S. government was, starting at the top. The CIA doesn't decide to assassinate foreign leaders without direct orders from the President of the United States.
    • So what would Cuba be like if Castro weren't there over the last 50 years?
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by HikingStick ( 878216 )
      To think that the agency did not have its own agenda is (in the opinion of someone who generally trusts the government and is not a conspiracy theorist) naive.

      To think that any President is fully aware of all of the activities proposed or undertaken by agencies under the executive branch is delusional.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by metamatic ( 202216 )

      The CIA doesn't decide to assassinate foreign leaders without direct orders from the President of the United States.

      Tell that to JFK and E. Howard Hunt [rollingstone.com].

  • More Dirt (Score:5, Informative)

    by ChemE ( 1070458 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @07:36AM (#19661223) Homepage
    The "Family Jewels" are also available from National Security Archive website [nsarchive.org]. Also included is a short history and some additional documents.


    The National Security Archive (a private organization based at George Washington University) has lots of other dirt from the CIA and other organizations all obtained by the Freedom of Information Act. The site is definitely worth a visit.
  • On page 5 they start to list the jewels and number one on the list is fully redacted, any guesses on what that might be?
  • This is just an administration's response to the insinuation that they are somehow the first to do unpleasant things "in the service of" their country. This says, "even you Democrats did bad things; not only that, your great Champion Kennedy did some of the worst. We could easily declassify plenty of damaging goods on Clinton the Popular, but we don't want to set that precedent, now, do we?"

    This has nothing to do with the past, except insofar as it might distract from the present.

  • Accountability (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mdsolar ( 1045926 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @10:15AM (#19662597) Homepage Journal
    The most beautiful thing about this kind of acknowledgement is that no one pays for the illegal activity. The connections between the CIA and the mob which likely protected the mob can be revealed without jailing the case officers involved. Presidents who authorized this kind of thing are beyond just out of office. As criminal activities go, these things are an incredible success even when they didn't accomplished their criminal objectives. To me, this is most unabashed insult to the American people that I can think of.
  • by Qwavel ( 733416 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @10:29AM (#19662793)

    These are quoted from this mornings NYT article. I think they tell us a lot:

    "Some anecdotes reveal just how far outside the law some C.I.A. agents strayed. One technician was arrested in 1960 after trying to bug a Las Vegas hotel room. The operation had been requested by Sam Giancana, the Chicago mobster, who was then helping the C.I.A. in a plot to assassinate Mr. Castro.

    Mr. Giancana had been concerned that his girlfriend, the singer Phyllis McGuire, was having an affair with the comedian Dan Rowan, and surveillance was ordered to "determine the extent of his intimacy" with her.

    Some of the activities detailed, while lawful, would have been embarrassing had they emerged at the time. One document revealed that John McCone, director of central intelligence during Kennedy's presidency, authorized an Air Force plane to fly the Greek tycoon Aristotle Onassis and the soprano Maria Callas from Rome to Athens, a favor that led to media inquiries."
  • Psyops (Score:3, Informative)

    by DynaSoar ( 714234 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2007 @01:52PM (#19665725) Journal
    If there were something going on that a group didn't want you to think about, they'd generate what seemed to be a more important story with much the same characteristics. This story is about dirty secrets in high government. Yet it's not a news story as the major facts have already been known. What else is going on that's similar, that the government doesn't want thought about too hard? Within 24 hours we're given notice that the White House, and specifically Dick Cheney's office, were subpeonaed for information on the recent (already determined illegal be federal courts) wiretapping increase. It's probably not just this we're being defelected from, but from the almost inevitable refusal to comply, something far more illegal than the wiretapping as it flies in the face of the Constitution, as does much of the present administration's actions.

    Shiny hat material? Read "Psychological Warfare" by Paul (E.E. "Doc" Smith to S.F. fans) Linebarger. It's 60 years old, but is still a required text at the War College. You can be sure the primary movers of the present administration have read it and taken it to heart. The barely concealed course of the present administration, based on machinery put in place by previous administrations, is an obvious application of the techniques described and prescribed by Linebarger. But as I said, read it. Don't just believe me. That's the point of it.

    You'll have trouble finding it. Although still in print for the limited distribution noted, it's barely available to the public. Last I looked I could only find German translations, going for over US$300. I only got to keep mine due to a clerical error that made it appear that I'd returned mine already, as required. Generating clerical errors like this are now called "social engineering". It's not a new idea.

A morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. -- Thomas Jefferson

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