This is the story that the CIA does not want you to read.
American involvement in Vietnamese politics began in the early 1950s. Using personal stories, eyewitness accounts, and recently declassified CIA reports from the field, author James P. Bevill describes the agency's clandestine efforts to block Vietnamese independence, then help create the Republic of South Vietnam.
Key among these primary sources are the CIA files of Paul L. Springer. Springer arrived in Saigon in May 1950. In 1951 he was named the CIA's first chief of station in Indochina. In this role, during the French war against Ho Chi Minh and the China-backed Viet Minh revolutionary movement, he built the foundations of the American espionage network in Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos.
Following the 2019 conclusion of a successful Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit for the records of Paul Springer's CIA files, the CIA information review officer argued that "plaintiff's FOIA request could reasonably be expected to cause damage to national security by disclosing intelligence activities, sources, and methods." Lost in this argument is that all the intelligence records related to Paul Springer's service as chief of station were over fifty-five years old. The countries they pertained to no longer existed, and any of their perceived adversaries had long since died.
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Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
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ISBN-13
978-0-7643-7079-3 (9780764370793)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
James P. Bevill is an independent historian and award-winning author. His love of history inspired him to read, organize, and catalog the voluminous papers of his wife Jodie's father, Paul Springer, who taught at Yale-in-China in 1941-42 before joining the US State Department in Chungking. This research resulted in Blackboards and Bomb Shelters: The Perilous Journey of Americans in China during World War II (Schiffer, 2021). Spies in Saigon picks up Springer's story in the postwar period. He lives in Houston.