| CIA spied on journalists |
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| World Affairs Talk | |
| Wednesday, 27 June 2007 | |
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The disclosure, more than 30 years old, carry with them a whiff of the current debate over the wiretapping of US phone lines by the National Security Agency without court permission and the Pentagon's monitoring of anti-war groups. The 1975 memorandum was obtained by the National Security Archive in Washington and raises the curtain on nearly 700 pages of documents known as the "family jewels" which detail the CIA's legally questionable activities from that era. The memo details a meeting in which CIA Director William Colby outlined the "skeletons" in the CIA's closets, apparently in response to articles in the New York Times detailing some of those activities. Among them was the admission that in 1963 the CIA tapped the phones of two columnists, Robert Allen and Paul Scott, in an attempt to learn the identity of one of their sources. He noted that the CIA reports called the wiretap ‘very productive’ in that they heard conversations with 12 senators and six congressmen. The CIA, however, was unable to ascertain the identity of the leaker. In 1972 the CIA conducted "personal surveillance" on Washington Post columnist Jack Anderson and his staff. They were followed, but their phones were not tapped. From 1971 to 1972 the CIA also followed Washington Post reporter Mike Getler. The memo details other activities, including the imprisonment of a Russian defector that could be considered kidnapping, the opening of U.S. mail addressed to places in China and the Soviet Union, and CIA monitoring of anti-war groups' movements and activities. The Vietnam War occurred from 1959 to April 30, 1975 in Vietnam. The war successfully reunified the Vietnamese under a communist government which consisted of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam and the indigenous National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam. To a degree, the war may be viewed as a Cold War conflict between the US, its allies, and South Vietnam on one side, and the Soviet Union, its allies, the People's Republic of China, and North Vietnam on the other. The US deployed large numbers of troops to South Vietnam between the end of the First Indochina War in 1954, and 1973. |
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| Last Updated ( Friday, 29 June 2007 ) |
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