In the decades following the Mexican Revolution, regional
strongmen vied with powerful generals and popular rebels for
control of Mexico's future. During this era of uprisings,
government corruption, and political intrigue, Mexico took its
first, faltering steps toward democracy. In the midst of the
turmoil, plainclothes agents, traveling under multiple aliases and
reporting in code to their superiors, served as "the eyes and ears"
of the national government.
In "Spies, Politics, and Power: El Departamento Confidencial en
Mexico, 1922-1946," Joseph A. Stout traces the development of
Mexico's Departamento Confidencial (Confidential Department) from
the years of its infancy to its later incarnation as a fully
fledged international espionage agency on the order of the CIA,
Russian KGB, and German Gestapo. Stout charts the department's
evolution under the administration of several powerful
presidents--and a handful of puppets--from the postrevolutionary
period through World War II, when the agency turned its attention
from monitoring internal threats to focus on matters of national
security. Stout devotes special attention to the agency's wartime
role in the investigation and containment of individuals whose Axis
ties made them objects of government suspicion.
Offering a twist on conventional history, Stout takes us behind
the political curtain to illuminate the crucial role played by an
unlikely assortment of government bureaucrats, international spies,
low-ranking agents, and office clerks within the drama of Mexican
nationhood. In his comprehensive and thoroughly researched account,
Stout offers a narrative propelled not by the back-and-forth of
rebel violence and brutal reprisal--though there is no dearth of
such material--but by a story driven by the power of information.
For Stout, intelligence, as much as military might, is the key to
political power and the engine of national formation.
A work rich in primary sources, "Spies" integrates details
culled from archived letters and agent reports into the broader
framework of Mexican politics and society in the first half of the
twentieth century. In his unconventional approach, Stout sheds new
light on the means and motivations of some of the period's most
influential figures.
General
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