The foundation of the CIA : Harry Truman, the Missouri Gang, and the origins of the Cold War
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Bibliographic Information
The foundation of the CIA : Harry Truman, the Missouri Gang, and the origins of the Cold War
University of Missouri Press, 2017
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Note
Bibliography: p. 163-169
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This highly accessible book provides new material and a fresh perspective on American National Intelligence practice, focusing on the first fifty years of the twentieth century, when the United States took on the responsibilities of a global superpower during the first years of the Cold War. Late to the art of intelligence, the United States during World War II created a new model of combining intelligence collection and analytic functions into a single organization—the OSS. At the end of the war, President Harry Truman and a small group of advisors developed a new, centralized agency directly subordinate to and responsible to the President, despite entrenched institutional resistance. Instrumental to the creation of the CIA was a group known colloquially as the “Missouri Gang,” which included not only President Truman but equally determined fellow Missourians Clark Clifford, Sidney Souers, and Roscoe Hillenkoetter.
Table of Contents
The Foundation of the CIA
Foreword
Introduction
Chapter One: American National Intelligence: From the Revolutionary Army to World War II
Chapter Two: America in World War II and the Beginnings of Central Intelligence
Chapter Three: William J. Donovan and the Office of Strategic Services
Chapter Four: Harry Truman, Sidney Souers, and the Next Steps
Chapter Five: The CIA, Roscoe Hillenkoetter, and the Cold War
Endnotes
Bibliography
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