Angus Mackenzie
Secrets
The CIA's War at Home
260 pages, 6-1/8 x 9-1/4 inches, 11 b/w photographs
September 1997, Available worldwide
Categories: American Studies; Politics; Law
September 1997, Available worldwide
Categories: American Studies; Politics; Law
"This old-fashioned broadside . . . grabs you by the lapels and holds on."--Tim Weiner, New York Times Book Review
"Magnificent. . . . Mackenzie had the fire burning in his gut that goads a reporter into challenging conventional wisdom, exposing dishonesty, and highlighting moral corruption."--Stuart Loory, Columbia Journalism Review
"Contain[s] a wealth of information about our government's ever-increasing tendency to deprive its citizens of information we deserve and need."--Susie Linfield, Los Angeles Times
"Magnificent. . . . Mackenzie had the fire burning in his gut that goads a reporter into challenging conventional wisdom, exposing dishonesty, and highlighting moral corruption."--Stuart Loory, Columbia Journalism Review
"Contain[s] a wealth of information about our government's ever-increasing tendency to deprive its citizens of information we deserve and need."--Susie Linfield, Los Angeles Times
"If anything is more corrupting than power, it is power exercised in secret. Angus Mackenzie's magnificently researched, lucidly written study of the CIA's outrageous threats to freedom in America over the years is a summons to vigilance to protect our democratic institutions."--Daniel Schorr
"The late Angus Mackenzie has left an appropriate legacy in Secrets: The CIA's War at Home, a fitting capstone to his long career of exposing government secrecy and manipulation of public information. Secrets is a detailed, fascinating and chilling account of the agency's program of disinformation and concealment of public information against its own citizens."--Ben H. Bagdikian, author of The Media Monopoly
"Scrupulously reported, fleshed out with a fascinating cast of characters, skillfully illuminating a subject the news media seldom looked into and never got straight, Angus Mackenzie's last and best work richly deserves a posthumous Pulitzer--for nonfiction, history, or both."--Jon Swan, former senior editor, Columbia Journalism Review
"This courageous, uncompromising book belongs on the bookshelf of every serious student of journalism and the First Amendment."--Tom Goldstein, Dean, Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University
"The late Angus Mackenzie has left an appropriate legacy in Secrets: The CIA's War at Home, a fitting capstone to his long career of exposing government secrecy and manipulation of public information. Secrets is a detailed, fascinating and chilling account of the agency's program of disinformation and concealment of public information against its own citizens."--Ben H. Bagdikian, author of The Media Monopoly
"Scrupulously reported, fleshed out with a fascinating cast of characters, skillfully illuminating a subject the news media seldom looked into and never got straight, Angus Mackenzie's last and best work richly deserves a posthumous Pulitzer--for nonfiction, history, or both."--Jon Swan, former senior editor, Columbia Journalism Review
"This courageous, uncompromising book belongs on the bookshelf of every serious student of journalism and the First Amendment."--Tom Goldstein, Dean, Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University
This eye-opening exposé, the result of fifteen years of investigative work, uncovers the CIA's systematic efforts to suppress and censor information over several decades. An award-winning journalist, Angus Mackenzie waged and won a lawsuit against the CIA under the Freedom of Information Act and became a leading expert on questions concerning government censorship and domestic spying. In Secrets, he reveals how federal agencies--including the Department of Defense, the executive branch, and the CIA--have monitored and controlled public access to information. Mackenzie lays bare the behind-the-scenes evolution of a policy of suppression, repression, spying, and harassment.
Secrecy operations originated during the Cold War as the CIA instituted programs of domestic surveillance and agent provocateur activities. As antiwar newspapers flourished, the CIA set up an "underground newspaper" desk devoted, as Mackenzie reports, to various counterintelligence activities--from infiltrating organizations to setting up CIA-front student groups. Mackenzie also tracks the policy of requiring secrecy contracts for all federal employees who have contact with sensitive information, insuring governmental review of all their writings after leaving government employ.
Drawing from government documents and scores of interviews, many of which required intense persistence and investigative guesswork to obtain, and amassing story after story of CIA malfeasance, Mackenzie gives us the best account we have of the government's present security apparatus. This is a must-read book for anyone interested in the inside secrets of government spying, censorship, and the abrogation of First Amendment rights.
Secrecy operations originated during the Cold War as the CIA instituted programs of domestic surveillance and agent provocateur activities. As antiwar newspapers flourished, the CIA set up an "underground newspaper" desk devoted, as Mackenzie reports, to various counterintelligence activities--from infiltrating organizations to setting up CIA-front student groups. Mackenzie also tracks the policy of requiring secrecy contracts for all federal employees who have contact with sensitive information, insuring governmental review of all their writings after leaving government employ.
Drawing from government documents and scores of interviews, many of which required intense persistence and investigative guesswork to obtain, and amassing story after story of CIA malfeasance, Mackenzie gives us the best account we have of the government's present security apparatus. This is a must-read book for anyone interested in the inside secrets of government spying, censorship, and the abrogation of First Amendment rights.
FROM THE BOOK:
"The major villains of the censorship story are a succession of policymakers from the Johnson administration through the Bush administration and on into the Clinton years, including several presidents themselves. In a sense, theirs is a spy story--not an action-packed one like in the movies but one about sleight-of-hand and subterfuge far truer to reality."
"The major villains of the censorship story are a succession of policymakers from the Johnson administration through the Bush administration and on into the Clinton years, including several presidents themselves. In a sense, theirs is a spy story--not an action-packed one like in the movies but one about sleight-of-hand and subterfuge far truer to reality."
Winner, Investigative Reporters and Editors Award for Best Investigative Journalism
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A Generation Divided: The New Left, the New Right, and the 1960s, by Rebecca E. Klatch
There's Something Happening Here: The New Left, the Klan, and FBI Counterintelligence, by David Cunningham
The Whole World Is Watching: Mass Media in the Making and Unmaking of the New Left, With a New Preface , by Todd Gitlin
Gimme Some Truth: The John Lennon FBI Files, by Jon Wiener
A Generation Divided: The New Left, the New Right, and the 1960s, by Rebecca E. Klatch












