THE SECRET LINK

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
8
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 19, 2010
Sequence Number: 
67
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 20, 1984
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9.pdf1014.62 KB
Body: 
STATow Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 Volume 16 Number 6 DP.a-~' Pres, dent R e~- i ! I lease S~Cr r1,~.K; ou C, C Q 00rr+ i.tn Trip vo r a e ? "it Worries Us Too" Children's Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP9O-00806ROO0201150067-9 CASA GMARRA restaurant excellence in Continental Italian Dining and in our Bistro Eduardo Light Continental Dining Nightly Entertainment on weekends Lunch Mon.-Fri. Dinner Mon.-Sat. CASA MARRA RESTAURANT 321 East Street New Haven. Exit 46 1-95 Exit 2 1-91 Reservations 777-5148 Publisher Hilary Callahan Editor-in-Chief Tina Kelley' Business Managers Peter Phleger Marilynn Sager" Managing Editor Tony Reese"' Designer Andrea Fribushaa Photography Editor Christine Ryan Associate Business Managers Katie Kressmann Vanessa Sciarra Associate Editors Anne Applebaum Laura Pappano Paul Holheinz Jim Lowe Art Editor Beth Callaghan Associate Designer Katie Winter" Associate Photography Editor Mark Fedors Associate Production Managers Lauren Rabin Christianna Willi Circulation Manager Rob Lindeman ff Staff Christina Baker Dani Morrow Joyce Banerjee Betsy Nix Rich Blow Sally Sloan Eduardo Cruz Corinne Tobin Larry Goon "'elected Apr. 4, 1984 Henry C. Chauncey, Jr. ? Peter B. Friends: Anson M. Beard, Jr.1 ? Edward B Michelle Press ? Thomas Strong Board of Advisors:: John Hersey ? Roger ? Elizabeth Tate Coopers ? Jerry and Rae Court ? Geofirr ? Nicholas X. Rizopoulos ? Arleen and Shields ? Thomas Strong ? Alex and Torello ? Allen and Sarah Wardwell ? Yergin thas given a second time University is not responsible for its contents. Eleven thousand copies of each issue are diet members of the Yale University community. Business Services of Hamden, CT. Office address: 105 Becton Center Phone' Subscriptions arc available to those outside the Zak Rates: One year, $7. Two years, $12. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP9O-00806ROO0201150067-9 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 -- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 'he Secret Link -.h Blow Kohn came to New Haven this hire Yale's most talented seniors, and women who were extremely it. were proficient in a foreign Jage, knew how to use a com- and loved their country. In n for their skills Kohn could offer careers in one of the world's most rful institutions. But Kohn does work for Morgan Stanley, nor the 40 seniors who heard him talk ested in working on "all Street. Kohn is a recruiter for the Cen- ntelligence Agency. hn's visit to Yale is an important of the CIA's largest recruitment in three decades. With the strong )rt of President Reagan, the cy is vigorously looking for new and turning to universities the country to find it. At more f00 schools nationwide, including itire Ivy League, the CIA is busi- irching for the spies of the '80 s. advertisements can now be found wspapers and magazines from to coast, from the Los Angeles to the Wall Street journal, nts are responding: as many as resumes reach the CIA in ington every week. ional recruitment is only a recent ation for the CIA. During its be- rg years the CIA sought its almost entirely from just three s: Yale, Harvard and Princeton. graduates in particular would to dominate the Agency, giving familiar tone of a class reunion. the formation of the CIA in Yalies have found the world of ,rence an exciting alternative to )wer pace of academia or the rs of front-line fighting. Once shed within the CIA, Yale grad- ;ought out their old friends and aces to work alongside them, ~g a network of Ivy League con- is that would control the Agency :ades. dis Smith. Larned Professor of e?, now, says, "Yale influenced A more than any other institu- d. The Agency was very much elite. It was thought of as roman- tic and mysterious and it attracted the Big Men on Campus." Sonic of' the names are familiar: William F. Buckley, George Bush, William Sloane Coffin. However. there were many other Yalies who entered the CIA whose names and stories are not so well known. James Angleton, Jack Downev and Richard Bissell were part of this group of men. creating a world of spies where you could still fraternize with your Yale classmates. James Jesus Angleton '39 was a brilliant but eccentric man. After graduation from Harvard Law School Angleton took the advice of his old English professor at Yale, Norman Holmes Pearson, and joined the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the war- flushing out Soviet agents. constantly intent on discovering KGB "moles" within thet CIA. His critics, however, thought him paranoid (Angleton con- sidered them probable Russian agents) and would by 1974 get him fired, casting Angleton out of the intelligence community. The habits of a spy are deeply in- grained in Angleton, and he refused to talk about his career when questioned. His speech reflecting a lifetime of suspi- cion, Angleton would only say, "I've never heard of your magazine. I don't know what political slant you may have, or what vol may be truing to prove. And I don't like talking about my personal life. I'm sorry, but that's all I can tell you." Ex-CIA agent Jack Downey. now "Yale influenced the CIA more than any other institution did. The Agency was very much an Ivy elite." time predecessor to the CIA. Pearson, himself a former member of the OSS, later said that Angleton took to the in- telligence business "like a dog to water." It was in 1943 that Angleton joined the OSS; by late 1944 he had assumed control of OSS counter-operations against the Axis powers in Italy. For the patriotic 28-year-old, known as "The Poet" because of his fondness for Ezra Pound, it was an astonishingly fast rise to power. Not surprisingly, Angleton moved on after the war to the CIA, a fledgling organization which desperately needed his expertise, his connections and his natural aptitude for intelligence. In 1951 he created and headed the Agen- cy's counter-intelligence division, the first of its kind in .America. For the next quarter-century Angleton would reign as the American master of coun- ter-intelligence, maybe the best at his job in the world. He was obsessed with Chairman of the Connecticut Public Utility Control Authority and a former candidate for the U.S. Senate, is not so secretive. At Yale Downey was a self- described jock who played on the varsi- ty football, wrestling and rugby teams- as Gaddis Smith put it, a Big Man on Campus. He was an English major who had the bad luck to graduate in 1951 at the height of the Korean War. On the advice of Political Science Pro- fessor Arnold Wolfers, Downey at- tended a CIA recruitment meeting in the spring of his senior year. He still remembers it clearly: "Everyone was looking for the best deal he could get. and the CIA was a glamorous option. Unlike the situation in the Vietnam War, it was taken for granted that you'd serve in some way. It was either the CIA or fight in Korea." Downey chose the CIA. Unlike An- gleton, the ex-athlete moved into the operations side of' the Agency rather than work in intelligence analysis. He "flit Nt. S Journal/April 20, 1984 13 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 recalls that in training camp "half of my class was from Yale, Harvard or Princeton." Despite his decision not to join the military, Downey was not un- committed, nor unpatriotic. "My at- titude," he said, "and that of my Yale classmates was that the war was a direct result of a Communist probe that had to be resisted. We really believed that the free world depended on the United States. Today, that must sound a little naive, but I still think it's basically accurate." Downey paid for his convictions with the loss of 21 years freedom. In November of 1952 he was captured by Chinese Communist troops in Man- churia. He had flown into the country to meet with a CIA agent working there, but the rendezvous had gone wrong; the CIA's plant had been dis- covered, and Downey and his crew were ambushed. Until 1973 Downey was held captive in a Chinese prison, cut off from the outside world. Finally, as Cold War tensions were receding and Richard Nixon was normalizing relations with China, Jack Downey was allowed to return home. Eleven years later he has the humor and strength to say, "I'd planned to take some time off after college, but it turned out to be a lot longer than I had planned." While Downey was languishing in a Chinese prison, another Yale graduate was working his way up the CIA lad- der. Confident, brilliant and ambi- tious, Richard Bissell came from a background familiar to the intelligence community: Groton '28, Yale '32. After teaching at Yale and MIT Bissell helped formulate the Marshall Plan. The CIA was a logical next step, and Bissell joined the Agency in 1954. With surprising understatement Bissell now says he joined the CIA simply because he thought it would be "an in- teresting job." Within a year Bissell had assured his success at intelligence-gathering. Almost single-handedly he developed the U-2 reconnaissance plane, a tre- mendous breakthrough for an intel- ligence service which, nearly a decade John Downey It was taken for granted that you'd serve in some way. It was either the CIA or fight in Korea." after its inception, still knew embar- rassingly little about the Russians. For four years U-2 flights boldly took pic- tures of the Soviet Union until, as one of Bissell's contemporaries said admir- ingly, "It was impossible for the Soviets to lay a sewer pipe in Siberia without CIA knowing it." Though the U-2 pro- gram would come to an abrupt end with the shooting down of Gary Powers in 1960, Bissell's reputation was untouchable. By that time he had already developed the satellites to replace his plane. Bissell's extraordinary talents were quickly noticed by CIA Director Allen Dulles, who in 1959 made Bissell the CIA Deputy Director for Plans (DDP). After less than five years as an agent, Bissell had become head of the covert action arm of the CIA. "At the time," Bissell now says wistfully, "the political climate for the job was very favourable, probably more so than at any time since." For Bissell covert action often meant covert assassination. In 1960 he ordered the death of African leader Patrice Lumumba through the injec- tion of a lethal virus into Lumumba's toothpaste. The plan failed. In that same year Bissell would supply guns to the political opponents of Rafael Tru- jillo, brutal dictator of the Dominican Republic. Some of these guns would later show up in the hands of the men who killed Trujillo. But because of pressures from John and Robert Kennedy, Fidel Castro became the CIA's main target. Work- ing with old schoolfriend Tracy Barnes, also a graduate of Groton and Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 e, Bissell orchestrated the Bay of s invasion of Cuba. The overthrow mpt was it humiliating failure. "ertheless, Bissell and his as- iates drew up new and somewhat arre plans to rid the US of Castro, lulling poisoning the Cuban's irs, planting an explosive seashell in area where he scuba-dived, poison- his wetsuit, injecting, him with a tal hypodermic hidden inside a ball- nt pen and using Mafia hit-men to t down the Cuban leader. Though 'fully designed to avoid and possi implication of the United States, se unlikely plots were all either -arded or unsuccessful. Bissell's eer became marked with these fail- s, and to avoid being fired, he gned from the CIA in 1962. i he former agent now lives peace- fully in Farntin> ton, Connecticut. where he works as a business consul- tant. Although it has been over 20 years since he left the Agrney, Bissell still re- tains his passionate cornntitntent to covert action. He claims. "Anyone who takes that job lot' DUPE knows what sorts of things he will be involved in. I had very few doubts of the rightness (it what I \yas doing." "My values have not fundamentally changed," Bissell adds. "Obviously there were mistakes made, but it'll had to do it all over again, I would only change a few small things." Like Angleton, Bissell will only tell you as much about his years in the CIA as he thinks you need to know. "From my point of view, the less pub- licity concerning the CIA, the better. Though I feel some obligation to talk to the press. I also strongly believe that there a e areas of government which require different standards of morality and privacy to perform their function. And the function of the CIA is very important indeed." Angleton, Downey and Bissell were only three of dozens of Yale graduates who joined the CIA in the late 1940s and throughout the 1950 s. Over the course of the next two decades, how- ever, Yale students' enthusiasm for CIA careers vanished. One reason was simply that the Agency had by this time become an established organiza- tion which needed fewer employees than in its early ears. In addition, the American public. increasingly opposed to anti-Communist intervention as the Vietnam War dragged on, grew hostile to the CIA, which was dedicated to anti-Communist activities. What Agen- cy recuitment there was came more and more from Catholic universities in the midwest like Notre Dame. Yale itself changed from being a center of CIA recruitment to a center of CIA resent- ment. During the war years and be- yond, the number of students attending CIA recruitment meetings dropped steadily. In 1975-the same year Presi- dent Ford formed a Senate committee to investigate the legality of CIA ac- tivities-student pressure forced the Agency to hold its recruitment meetings at the Park Plaza Hotel rather than on campus. Yale Associate History Professor Gregg Herke'n interned with the CI.A in ill(' summer 01' 1971. when he was it graduate student at Princeton. "It was bad enough to do that," Herken recalls, "hut if it was known that you were recruiting fir the CIA, you were liable to get rocks thrown through your win- dows." Herken, who left the CIA after that summer, adds that-in the 1950s the w'hote concept of 'For God, firr Coun- try and for Yale' was a very strong in- fluencc on students here. Back then there was no question that if you were working for the government you were doing God's work. That idea had cer- tainly changed by the 1970s." Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 GET YOUR COLOR PRINTS OR SLIDES (E6) DEVELOPED BETWEEN CLASSES Also fast service on: ? Enlargements ? Slide Dupes ? Custom Work ? Prints from Slides ? Copy Work ?B&W 624-2599 930 Chapel Street (corner of Temple) DOWNTOWN NEW HAVEN Bissell agrees, charging 1970s America with "an alienation from post-war values and a suspicion of government" that crippled the effec- tiveness of the CIA. "All the anti-CIA publicity of the 1970's was very had for Agency morale," he said. "The CIA just gave up on a number of important operations, and its relations with other intelligence organizations were severely damaged." By 1980 student attitudes had changed and the CIA returned its re- cruiting operation to the Yale campus. Since then the number of students in- terested in a career with the Agency has risen over 300 percent in just four years. What has sparked the CIA's rejuvenated appeal at Yale? Political Scientist H. Bradford Westerfield, Yale's leading expert on the CIA, at- tributes its renewed appeal to a "New Conservatism." "This is the, CIA's second great recruiting era," Westerfield said. "In the 1950s there was a sense that we had our backs up against the wall. In the 1970s there was indifference, if not revulsion, to that sense of mission. And now, there seems to be a sense of excitement, a new concern for world affairs." John Dohring, a former Yale student and now the CIA's Deputy Director for Employment, agrees with Westerfield. "We find that there's a growing na- tionalism among today's students," Dohring said. "Back in the early 1970s we had bad luck at colleges. Now, students are again recognizing the im- portance of the US role in world affairs." One of the students who went to hear Steve Kohn speak was David Wecht, a senior in Timothy Dwight. According to Wecht, "I interviewed with the CIA for several reasons. I'm interested in international affairs- Brad Westerfield is my adviser- I'd like to it Cards and gifts for graduation 942 Chapel St. nn the Green 776-3926 Open 10-5:30 Bissell ordered the death of African leader Patrice Lumumba through the injection of a lethal virus into Lumumba's toothpaste. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9 ,ter Davies "Trying to settle working for the CIA with my own code of ethics is not something I'd want to do." work for the government and I have a deep moral qualms about working r the CIA.-- Fred Anscombe is another senior in- rested in working for the govern- ient. He's already interviewed with ie National Security Agency but apes to get a job with the CIA. Accor- in,t; to Anscombe. "my main interest in the different political situations in rious countries. Whatever I do, it'll robably be with the government, but iy main attraction is to the CIA cause I'd have access to information at I wouldn't be able to get otherwise which \\ bold give me great personal tisfaction." Another of Westerfield's students, vier Davies, did consider interyiew- g but decided that he would have oral doubts about working for the IA. Davie; says that "my interest in e CIA v%;I, mostly academic. I think it's something you ought to know about. Though I did think about inter- Vie\ying with them- I decided that I wouldn't feel comfortable with sonic of the CIA's activities in the past. 'I-rying to settle working for the CIA with toy own code of ethics is not something I'd want to do." What kind of student does the CIA want? John Dohring claims with ob- vious pride, "We look only at the best schools. We have a vital mission to per- form: to get the best information to the President. Consequently we have to have the best intelligence agency in the world. And that means hiring only the very best this country as to offer." Rich B/orc, a iophrunorr in Branfnrrl? is m; the, staff of TNJ. ?Clown. Puppet, Magic Shows :Gorilla-Grams ? Cowboy-Grams ? El vis-Grams ? Captain Funn Grams ? Male. Female Dancers ? Musicians. Vocalists t- -k ? Clown. Chicken. Bunny. Balloon Deliveries And At The Party Center ? Decorations for over 40 Ethnic and Country Themes ? Birthday, Shower, Wedding Decorations ? Balloons. helium. Balloon Imprinting 374 Whatley Avenue, New Haven 9-5:30, Monday-Saturday 562-8382 DELICIOUS PIZZAS, HOT OVEN GRINDERS, FULL ITALIAN-AMERICAN MENU 11 am-2 am Mon.-Sat / Sun 11 am-1 am 25 WHITNEY AVENUE NEW HAVEN 865-6065 NEW HAVEN TERMINAL NEW HAVEN TERMINAL NEW HAVEN TERMINAL 30 Waterfront Street New Haven, Ct. 06509 203 - 469-1391 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00806R000201150067-9