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Authors: Stephen E. Ambrose

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21.
Bissell interview.

22.
New York
Times
, October 20, 1960.

23.
Wyden,
Bay of Pigs
, pp. 67–68.

24.
Eisenhower,
Waging Peace
, p. 613.

25.
Bissell interview.

26.
Eisenhower,
Waging Peace
, p. 613.

27.
Ibid., p. 614.

28.
Wyden,
Bay of Pigs
, p. 69.

29.
New York
Times
, January 10, 1961.

30.
Wyden,
Bay of Pigs
, p. 73.

31.
Eisenhower,
Waging Peace
, p. 614.

32.
Bissell interview. Italics mine.

33.
Ibid.

34.
Eisenhower interview. See also Earl Mazo, “Ike Speaks Out: Bay of Pigs was all JFK's,”
Newsday
, September 10, 1965; Gray interview.

35.
Wyden,
Bay of Pigs
, p. 88.

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

1.
Howard Hunt interview.

2.
Ibid.

GLOSSARY

Abwher: The military intelligence division of the German General Staff.

AJAX
: Code name for the
CIA
covert operation to oust Iran's Premier Mohammed Mossadegh and reinstate the Shah.

ANVIL
: The Allied landing at Marseilles, 1944.

BI-A
: Counterespionage arm of
MI
-5, responsible for handling double-agents.

“Bomb”: The device used at
BP
to break Enigma's code.

BP:
Bletchley Park. The British estate where Enigma's code was broken and deciphered.

COBRA
: U.S. General Omar Bradley's plan that led to the successful breakthrough of the German lines at St. Lô in late July 1944.

Church Committee: Headed by Frank Church, the 1975 Senate Committee which investigated
CIA
clandestine operations.

CIA
: Central Intelligence Agency. The modern United States intelligence agency, created in 1947.

CIG
: Central Intelligence Group. Created by President Truman in 1946, the largely ineffectual precursor to the
CIA
.

COI
: Coordinator of Information. The first United States intelligence agency, established in 1941 under William Donovan.

Corps Franc d'Afrique: A commando group of young French patriots organized in part by
OSS
officer Major Carleton Coon.

DCI
: Director of the Central Intelligence Agency.

Double-Cross System: The
BI-A
operation of turning captured German spies into double-agents.

Enigma: The German encoding machine, thought by them to be undecipherable.

ETO
: European Theater of Operations.

FORTITUDE
: Code name for
OVERLORD
deception plan.

FUSAG
: The First United States Army Group. The imaginary force purportedly preparing for the Allied invasion at Pas de Calais.

G-2:
SHAEF
intelligence division.

G-3 :
SHAEF
operations division.

GAF
: German Air Force, or Luftwaffe.

H.I.M
. : His Imperial Majesty. Common reference for the Shah of Iran.

HUSKY
: Allied invasion of Sicily, July 1943.

JCS
: Joint Chiefs of Staff. Combined heads of the United States Army, Navy, and Air Force.

JED
: Short for
JEDBURGH
, the code name for the three-man Allied teams that armed and trained the French guerrilla underground and coordinated activities with
SHAEF
.

JSC
: Joint Security Control. U.S. counterpart of
LCS
. Responsible for devising and coordinating strategic cover and deception schemes.

LCS
: London Controlling Section. British organization responsible for devising and coordinating strategic cover and deception schemes.

MacGregor Unit:
OSS
code name for a sabotage team.

Maquis: The French guerrilla underground, or Resistance.

Manhattan Project: United States effort to build the atomic bomb.

MARKET-GARDEN
: Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery's plan to cross the Rhine, September 1944.

MI
-5: British Secret Service section responsible for security within Great Britain.

MI
-6: British Secret Service section responsible for security outside Great Britain.

MULBERRY
: Code name for concrete platforms that created an artificial port for
OVERLORD
.

NSC
: National Security Council. Organized in 1947 along with the
CIA
, the White House agency integrating those departments responsible for advising the President on national security affairs.

ONI
: Office of Naval Intelligence.

OPC
: Office of Policy Coordination. The branch of the
CIA
initially in charge of covert operations.

OSS
: Office of Strategic Services. The successor to the
COI
, the U.S. intelligence and covert action agency during World War II.

OVERLORD
: Allied invasion of France, June 1944.

PBSUCCESS
: Code name for
CIA
operation in Guatemala.

PWB
: Psychological Warfare Branch,
SHAEF
.

RAF
: British Royal Air Force.

SAVAK
: The security branch of the Iranian police force.

SHAEF
: Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force.

SLU
: Special Liaison Unit. British and U.S. officers charged with relaying and interpreüng
ULTRA
information to the field commanders.

SOE
: Special Operations Executive. The branch of
MI
-6 responsible for liaison with the French underground Resistance.

TORCH
: Allied invasion of North Africa, November 1942.

U-2 : Plane used to overfly the Soviet Union for intelligence gathering.

ULTRA
: British code name for the systematic breaking of the German code.

AN ESSAY ON THE SOURCES by Richard H. Immerman

THE BIBLIOGRAPHY
lists the works cited in this book, but a study of covert intelligence operations is incomplete without some additional explanation of sources used. This is particularly true if the book deals with Dwight D. Eisenhower. Ike was so circumspect when it came to discussing—or writing about—his involvement in deception and clandestine activities that the author must be both researcher and sleuth. To uncover a secret operation is one thing; to reveal Ike's knowledge and participation is another.

Our investigation of Ike's conduct as Supreme Commander during World War II was made much easier by the excellent work of others, particularly the British historians, who are justifiably proud of their intelligence services and have written extensively about the subject. The British Government commissioned scholars like Michael Foot to make public previously unknown but critically important facets of the war effort, and recently the first volume of F. W. Hinsley's official history of British intelligence activities appeared. After F. W. Winterbotham broke the silence about
ULTRA
in 1974, R. V. Jones and Ronald Lewin brought to light a side of the war more intriguing than the most exciting and imaginative novel. These studies, along with the others included in the Bibliography, proved invaluable to our own work.

But learning of the United States' involvement, and especially Ike's still presented problems. There is no American official history, and almost all United States accounts of World War II intelligence are confined to the Office of Strategic Services. As explained in our book, the
OSS
was just one of several intelligence networks. Memoirs by Ike's subordinates, including his G-2, General Kenneth Strong, filled in much of the story, and Sir Kenneth kindly consented to answer our questions by letter. We found out about the role of the
SLUS
through the Telford Taylor reports, deposited in the Modern Military Records branch of the
National Archives, and helpful interviews with the participants listed in the Bibliography. Ike's role emerged. The final ingredient was the Johns Hopkins University edition of Eisenhower's papers, an exhaustive collection of Ike's personal correspondence and memoranda, without which our task would have been virtually impossible.

Our task became more difficult when we began the presidential years. Fortunately our timing was opportune. After the Watergate break-in and the disclosure of
CIA
“dirty works,” there appeared a plethora of memoirs and scholarly investigations describing over two decades of intelligence operations. Interviews added to our knowledge, for an increasing number of former government officials welcomed an opportunity to set the record straight.

I want to express our thanks to all those who did cooperate so extensively, especially Richard M. Bissell, Jr., Howard Hunt, General Andrew Goodpaster, Milton Eisenhower, John Eisenhower, and Stuyvesant Wainwright III. These are all exceedingly busy men who took time out to spend hours discussing a myriad of subjects and often suggested additional avenues for us to pursue. Their collective memories comprise a great deal of our history, for they both described and explained what really went on.

We used our personal interviews in conjunction with the Columbia Oral History Collection and Princeton's Dulles Oral History Project, essential source material for any scholar of the Eisenhower presidency. The post-Watergate period produced two other essential sources: the
Pentagon Papers
and the transcript of the Church Committee's study of government operations. The value of these two publications to the student of the spies cannot be overemphasized.

The Johns Hopkins compilation of Eisenhower's papers has not yet gone beyond the chief-of-staff period, and we still await the publication of the
Foreign Relations
volumes for Ike's administration. To make matters worse from our standpoint, many of the documents relating to
CIA
activities were either never published or, as was more commonly the case, remained security-classified. Again we were helped by post-Watergate sentiment. By going through Record Group 59 of the National Archives Diplomatic Branch, we discovered numerous previously unused memoranda and dispatches and identified those still not released to the public. We obtained hundreds of these through the Freedom of Information Act.

For Ike himself, however, the main source was the Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kansas. Director John Wickman, Dr. James Lyerzapf, and the rest of the library staff have expertly catalogued the thousands upon thousands of papers resulting from the Eisenhower White
House, and assembled detailed finding guides as to their contents. The bulk of this collection—known as the Whitman File—provides insights into Ike's administration and personality never before thought possible. Special mention should be made of Ike's personal diary. Although obviously too busy to record a day-by-day account of his activities, Ike kept the diary periodically from the 1930s up until his death. Perhaps no other document reveals with such clarity the mind of this man who for so many years supervised our complex intelligence community.

One final note on the sources. We have attempted to obtain as much of the information as possible, but we will not pretend that the story is complete. The files from the White House Special Assistant for National Security Affairs and the National Security Council series are still primarily closed, as are many other documents in the Eisenhower Library's holdings. It is unlikely, even with the newly instituted Executive Order 12065, that these documents will be declassified in the near future. Ike took many of his secrets with him to his grave. But he left enough for us to know that he believed in the intelligence community, that he used it to its fullest potential, and that it was never the same again after he retired.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
UNPUBLISHED SOURCES

Dwight D. Eisenhower, Papers as President of the United States, 1953–1961 (Whitman File), Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, Abilene, Kans.

James C. Hagerty Papers, Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, Abilene, Kans.

National Archives, Diplomatic Branch, Washington, D.C.

——. Judicial and Fiscal Branch, Washington.

——. Modern Military Records, Washington.

Richard G. Patterson, Jr., Papers, Harry S. Truman Library, Independence, Mo.

Taylor Report (Paramilitary Study Group), National Security Files, John F. Kennedy Library, Boston.

INTERVIEWS AND CORRESPONDENCE

Anderson, Robert (Columbia University Oral History Project).

Bissell, Richard M., Jr. (Columbia University Oral History Project).

——. (Richard H. Immerman).

——. (Princeton University).

——. Letter to Immerman, October 29, 1979.

Braden, Spruille (Richard H. Immerman).

Bradley, General Omar (Stephen E. Ambrose).

Collingwood, Charles, letter to Ambrose, September 13, 1978.

Coon, Carleton, letter to Ambrose, November 20, 1978.

Eisenhower. Dwight D. (Stephen E. Ambrose).

Eisenhower, John S. D. (Stephen E. Ambrose).

Eisenhower. Milton S. (Stephen E. Ambrose).

Filby, William (Stephen E. Ambrose).

Gavin, General James, letter to Ambrose, March 26, 1979.

Goodpaster, General Andrew (Stephen E. Ambrose).

——. (Columbia University Oral History Project).

Gray, Gordon (Richard H. Immerman).

Henderson, Loy (Columbia University Oral History Project).

Hunt, E. Howard (Richard H. Immerman).

Macomber, William B., Jr. (Richard H. Immerman).

Ridgway, General Matthew (Stephen E. Ambrose).

Strong, Sir Kenneth (Stephen E. Ambrose).

——. Letter to Ambrose, March 19, 1979.

Wainwright, Stuyvesant, III (Richard H. Immerman).

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