Thomas G. Paterson, edited with an introduction by. Cold War Critics: Alternatives to American Foreign Policy in the Truman Years. Chicago: Quadrangle Books. 1971. Pp. 313. Cloth $10.00, paper $2.95 and Ralph Stavins et al. Washington Plans an Aggressive War. New York: Vintage Books. 1971. Pp. x, 374. $1.95

1982 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 649-670 ◽  
Author(s):  
Trevor Barnes

The C.I.A. was taxed with five major intelligence failures by the influential New York Herald Tribune on 2 August 1950. This newpaper article was only part of a widespread campaign to reorganize the C.I.A. The concern of the C.I.A. director, Admiral Roscoe Hillenkoetter, over the allegations was so acute that on the following day he prepared an apologia sent to President Truman. Three of the alleged failures of prediction concerned the defeat of the Chinese Nationalists, events in Palestine and the 1948 Bogota conference – the last now largely forgotten but the cause of great contemporary scandal when Secretary of State Marshall was attacked by a mob. The other two were in Europe. They were the inability to predict the fall of Czechoslovakia and the defection of Tito. Blaming the C.I.A. for not predicting the communist coup in Czechoslovakia was unfair, but there was more substance to the accusation concerning Yugoslavia.


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