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Blond Ghost
by David Corn
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Simon & Schuster (1994-10-13)
ISBN: 0671695258
EAN: 9780671695255
Dewy Decimal #: 327.12730092
Hardcover: 512 pages
SKU: 08070145
Condition: Very Good Very Good
Comments: Hardback in very good condition with no markings. Gift inscription on flyleaf. Dust jacket in very good condition with minor shelf wear. Tight binding and clear crisp text. Very nice book.
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
A biography of CIA agent Ted Shackley, whose thirty-year career included operations in Berlin, Miami and Cuba, and Laos, is also a critical look at the CIA and its conflicting roles of objective intelligence gathering and counter-espionage operations. 25,000 first printing.
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Customer Reviews
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Very informative, a must-read on the intelligence community
Rating (5)
Date: 2005-05-08
This book is very informative on the subject of Ted Shackley. I think Corn is fair to him and doesn't indict him as an upcoming book will do. It treats him fairly and leaves the reader to make up their own mind. If you want an overview of the important events o the Cold War read this and how this legend participated in them.
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Heavily biased but informative
Rating (2)
Date: 2001-08-12
3 out of 9 customers found this reveiw helpful
Regardless of one's views on the CIA, it becomes quickly apparent that Corn's account of Agency activities, most of them pre-dating Church Committee hearings, is an extremely biased one. This is like reading an extended editorial column from an avid critic. The research is certainly thorough, although his admittedly extensive use of anonymous sources throws even more doubt on how much of the book can be taken at face value. Because the narratives primarily critique specific decisions and operations, it is easy to forget that Corn has chosen Shackley as the primary character. He is never really established as such. Expect to spend lots of time reading about operations in SE Asia. I do not at all agree that this book is essential reading for those interested in the intelligence community. For a more entertaining account of the inner workings of the Directorate of Operations (DO) during roughly the same time period, take a look at "The Night Watch" by David Atlee Philips. To my knowledge, Corn has never worked for the CIA. Philips served in various capacities within the DO.
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Spend Money, Get Lots of Folks Killed, Lose Anyway...
Rating (5)
Date: 2000-04-08
8 out of 9 customers found this reveiw helpful
Although Ted Shackley was a line case officer, this book is placed within the paramilitary section because his entire career encompassed a series of wars where the CIA played a very tragic and unproductive role. As Shackley's deputy in Laos is quoted on page 163, speaking on Shakley's accomplishments in Laos, "We spent a lot of money and got a lot of people killed," Lair remembered, "and we didn't get much for it." For those seeking to understand the bureaucratization of the Directorate of Operations, both in the field and in Washington, this is essential reading.
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