Text Only
Search

 
CIA Releases 'Family Jewels'


27 June 2007
Watch CIA Family Jewels report / Real broadband - download   video clip
Watch CIA Family Jewels report / Real broadband  video clip
Watch CIA Family Jewels report / Real dialup - download   video clip
Watch CIA Family Jewels report / Real dialup  video clip

The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has declassified hundreds of once-secret documents, detailing some of the agency's activities from the 1950s through the early 1970s. They include a plot to assassinate Cuban President Fidel Castro. VOA's Robert Raffaele has the story.

Family jewels document
The CIA released the documents on its website, in response to a 1992 Freedom of Information Act request.

CIA Director Michael Hayden called the documents a "glimpse of a very different time and a very different agency."

Besides the plot against Mr. Castro, the documents describe domestic spying, opening of private mail and the investigation of journalists.

Michael Gelter
Michael Gelter
Agents watched former Washington Post reporter Michael Getler for three months in 1971. "They were watching who I was talking to. They took pictures of who I was having lunch with. They actually took pictures through the picture window of our home," he said.

CIA employees have nicknamed the documents "the family jewels."  They were compiled in 1973 by then-CIA director James Schlesinger as he sought details about whether and when the CIA might have overstepped its authority.

Former CIA Director James Schlesinger (holding pipe)
Former CIA Director James Schlesinger (left)
Many details became known in testimony before two Congressional committees and one presidential commission investigating alleged intelligence abuses.

Gary Thomas, Voice of America's National Security Correspondent, says, "I think what it came down to was, a lot of this came down from the White House, it came down from the federal agents that they wanted this stuff done. [U.S. Attorney General] Bobby Kennedy wanted Fidel Castro assassinated."

Thomas says although the official release offers no stunning revelations, it may spark more debate about frustrations within the intelligence community. "These investigations of the time led to putting up barriers between the CIA and other agencies, on domestic law enforcement or intelligence cooperation. They [intelligence community] were afraid they would get caught on domestic surveillance.  And this issue has now come back to the fore because now they're saying, 'Well, those committees actually hurt our domestic surveillance efforts, which might have prevented the 9/11 attacks, had we had a more robust domestic surveillance.'  And I think if there is one thing these documents will do, is it might reignite that debate."

Revelations in the 1970s about covert CIA activities directly resulted in the creation of two congressional committees that oversee U.S. intelligence matters.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
CIA Releases Documents on Abuses of 1960s, 1970s
 
  Top Story
Obama Ends Ghana Visit With Trip to Former Slave Center

  More Stories
Obama Addresses Africans from Ghana  Audio Clip Available
Iraqi Shi'ite Lawmakers Protest British Troop Extension
Iranian Foreign Minister Says Tehran Preparing 'Package' for West
Pakistan: Trial of Mumbai Attackers to Start Next Week
Obama Urges Patience on Economic Recovery
Report: Bush Administration Surveillance Program Legally Questionable
New York Times: Bush Team Discouraged Probe of Mass Taliban Deaths
China Increases Police Presence on Xinjiang
Honduras Talks End with No Agreement
Space Shuttle Launch Delayed
US Braced for H1N1 Swine Flu Return  Video clip available
Michael Jackson's Hometown Pays Tribute
Republic of Congo to Hold Presidential Election
Catholic Church in Kenya Promotes Alternative to Female Circumcision  Video clip available
Obama Using New Media to Reach Ghanaians  Audio Clip Available  Video clip available