Creating the Secret State: The Origins of the Central Intelligence Agency, 1943-1947

Winner: Henry Adams Prize

While much has been disclosed about the CIA’s cloak-and-dagger activities during the Cold War, relatively little is known about the origins of this secret organization. David Rudgers, a twenty-two-year CIA veteran, has written the first complete account of its creation, revealing how the idea of a centralized intelligence developed within the government and debunking the myth that former OSS chief William J. Donovan was the prime mover behind the agency's founding.

Creating the Secret State locates the CIA’s origins in government-wide efforts to reorganize national security during the transition from World War II to the Cold War. Rudgers maintains that the creation of the CIA was not merely the brainchild of “Wild Bill” Donovan. Rather, it was the culmination of years of negotiation among numerous policy makers such as James Forrestal and Dean Acheson, each with strong opinions regarding the agency’s mission and methods. He shows that Congress, the Departments of State and Justice, the Joint Chiefs, and even the Budget Bureau all had a hand in the establishment of this “secret state” that operates nearly invisibly outside the American political process.

Based almost entirely on archival and other primary sources, Rudgers’s book describes in detail how the CIA evolved from its original purpose—as a watchdog to guard against a “nuclear Pearl Harbor”—to the role of clandestine warriors countering Soviet subversion, eventually engaging in more forms of intelligence gathering and covert operations than any of its counterparts. It suggests how the agency became a different organization than it might have been without the Communist threat and also shows how it both overexaggerated the dangers of the Cold War and failed to predict its ending.

Rudgers has written an accurate and balanced account that brings America’s undercover army in from the cold and out from under the cult of personality. An indispensable resource for future studies of the CIA, Creating the Secret State tells the inside story of why and how the agency was called into existence as it stimulates thinking about the future relevance of the CIA in a rapidly changing world.

1120338076
Creating the Secret State: The Origins of the Central Intelligence Agency, 1943-1947

Winner: Henry Adams Prize

While much has been disclosed about the CIA’s cloak-and-dagger activities during the Cold War, relatively little is known about the origins of this secret organization. David Rudgers, a twenty-two-year CIA veteran, has written the first complete account of its creation, revealing how the idea of a centralized intelligence developed within the government and debunking the myth that former OSS chief William J. Donovan was the prime mover behind the agency's founding.

Creating the Secret State locates the CIA’s origins in government-wide efforts to reorganize national security during the transition from World War II to the Cold War. Rudgers maintains that the creation of the CIA was not merely the brainchild of “Wild Bill” Donovan. Rather, it was the culmination of years of negotiation among numerous policy makers such as James Forrestal and Dean Acheson, each with strong opinions regarding the agency’s mission and methods. He shows that Congress, the Departments of State and Justice, the Joint Chiefs, and even the Budget Bureau all had a hand in the establishment of this “secret state” that operates nearly invisibly outside the American political process.

Based almost entirely on archival and other primary sources, Rudgers’s book describes in detail how the CIA evolved from its original purpose—as a watchdog to guard against a “nuclear Pearl Harbor”—to the role of clandestine warriors countering Soviet subversion, eventually engaging in more forms of intelligence gathering and covert operations than any of its counterparts. It suggests how the agency became a different organization than it might have been without the Communist threat and also shows how it both overexaggerated the dangers of the Cold War and failed to predict its ending.

Rudgers has written an accurate and balanced account that brings America’s undercover army in from the cold and out from under the cult of personality. An indispensable resource for future studies of the CIA, Creating the Secret State tells the inside story of why and how the agency was called into existence as it stimulates thinking about the future relevance of the CIA in a rapidly changing world.

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Creating the Secret State: The Origins of the Central Intelligence Agency, 1943-1947

Creating the Secret State: The Origins of the Central Intelligence Agency, 1943-1947

by David F. Rudgers
Creating the Secret State: The Origins of the Central Intelligence Agency, 1943-1947

Creating the Secret State: The Origins of the Central Intelligence Agency, 1943-1947

by David F. Rudgers

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Overview

Winner: Henry Adams Prize

While much has been disclosed about the CIA’s cloak-and-dagger activities during the Cold War, relatively little is known about the origins of this secret organization. David Rudgers, a twenty-two-year CIA veteran, has written the first complete account of its creation, revealing how the idea of a centralized intelligence developed within the government and debunking the myth that former OSS chief William J. Donovan was the prime mover behind the agency's founding.

Creating the Secret State locates the CIA’s origins in government-wide efforts to reorganize national security during the transition from World War II to the Cold War. Rudgers maintains that the creation of the CIA was not merely the brainchild of “Wild Bill” Donovan. Rather, it was the culmination of years of negotiation among numerous policy makers such as James Forrestal and Dean Acheson, each with strong opinions regarding the agency’s mission and methods. He shows that Congress, the Departments of State and Justice, the Joint Chiefs, and even the Budget Bureau all had a hand in the establishment of this “secret state” that operates nearly invisibly outside the American political process.

Based almost entirely on archival and other primary sources, Rudgers’s book describes in detail how the CIA evolved from its original purpose—as a watchdog to guard against a “nuclear Pearl Harbor”—to the role of clandestine warriors countering Soviet subversion, eventually engaging in more forms of intelligence gathering and covert operations than any of its counterparts. It suggests how the agency became a different organization than it might have been without the Communist threat and also shows how it both overexaggerated the dangers of the Cold War and failed to predict its ending.

Rudgers has written an accurate and balanced account that brings America’s undercover army in from the cold and out from under the cult of personality. An indispensable resource for future studies of the CIA, Creating the Secret State tells the inside story of why and how the agency was called into existence as it stimulates thinking about the future relevance of the CIA in a rapidly changing world.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780700638468
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Publication date: 07/05/2000
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 256
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Independent historian David F. Rudgers was formerly a staff archivist for the National Archives and a senior intelligence analyst with the Central Intelligence Agency.

Table of Contents

Introduction

1. The Dual Road to Central Intelligence

2. General Donovan Proposes . . .

3. . . . And Harry Truman Disposes

4. The State Department and Central Intelligence

5. Designing a Postwar System

6. The Central Intelligence Debate

7. Establishing a Structure

8. Legislating a New Order

9. The Emergence of Central Intelligence

10. Ends and Beginnings

Notes

Bibliography

Index

What People are Saying About This

Wesley Wark

This book is a gem. It outtrumps Thomas Troy's Donovan and should easily achieve the status of the standard account of CIA origins. Anyone with a serious interest in the history U.S. intelligence will have to be aware of it. I'm filled with admiration for Rudgers's research and the forensic skill he displays in putting the pieces of the debate into such clear perspective.
—(Wesley Wark, author of The Intelligence Revolution: Espionage and International Relations Since 1900)

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