The Burgeoning Fissures of Dissent: A llen D ulles and the Selling of the CIA in the Aftermath of the Bay of Pigs

This article documents the efforts of A llen D ulles, upon his forced retirement from the Central Intelligence Agency in the aftermath of the Bay of Pigs, to promote his former agency in the face of mounting public criticism of its activities. It argues that the first wave of critical press regardin...

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Veröffentlicht in:History (London) 2015-04, Vol.100 (340), p.167-188
1. Verfasser: Willmetts, Simon
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article documents the efforts of A llen D ulles, upon his forced retirement from the Central Intelligence Agency in the aftermath of the Bay of Pigs, to promote his former agency in the face of mounting public criticism of its activities. It argues that the first wave of critical press regarding the CIA in the early 1960s was an early indication of the breakdown of the C old W ar consensus – a phenomenon usually identified as occurring later in the decade in response to the escalation of the V ietnam W ar. D ulles, who as head of the CIA for most of the 1950s relied upon a compliant media to maintain the CIA 's anonymity in public life, was confronted by an increasingly recalcitrant American media in the following decade that were beginning to question the logics of government secrecy, CIA covert action and US foreign policy more generally. In this respect the Bay of Pigs and the media scrutiny of the CIA and US foreign policy that it inspired can be regarded as an early precursor to the later emergence of adversarial journalism and a post‐consensus American culture that contested the V ietnam W ar and America's conduct in the C old W ar more generally.
ISSN:0018-2648
1468-229X
DOI:10.1111/1468-229X.12097