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"The best book about America's first modern secret service."
--Washington Post Book World In the months before World War II, FDR
prepared the country for conflict with Germany and Japan by
reshuffling various government agencies to create the Office of
Strategic Services--America's first intelligence agency and the
direct precursor to the CIA. When he charged William ("Wild Bill")
Donovan, a successful Wall Street lawyer and Wilkie Republican, to
head up the office, the stage was set for some of the most
fantastic and fascinating operations the U.S. government has ever
conducted. Author Richard Harris Smith, himself an ex-CIA hand,
documents the controversial agency from its conception as a
spin-off of the Office of the Coordinator for Information to its
demise under Harry Truman and reconfiguration as the CIA. During
his tenure, Donovan oversaw a chaotic cast of some ten thousand
agents drawn from the most conservative financial scions to the
country's most idealistic New Deal true believers. Together they
usurped the roles of government agencies both foreign and domestic,
concocted unbelievably complicated conspiracies, and fought the
good fight against the Axis powers of Germany and Japan. For
example, when OSS operatives stole vital military codebooks from
the Japanese embassy in Portugal, the operation was considered a
success. But the success turned into a flop as the Japanese
discovered what had happened, and hastily changed a code that had
already been decrypted by the U.S. Navy. Colorful personalities and
truly priceless anecdotes abound in what may be called the most
authoritative work on the subject.
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