The Church Committee report Revelations from the bombshell 1970s investigation into the national security state

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Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The celebrated Senate exposé of U.S. government spying, assassination plots, and mind control experiments is rehashed in this handy digest. Historian Guariglia (Police and the Empire City) and American studies scholar Hochman (The Listeners) reprint excerpts from the 1976 report of the Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, chaired by Idaho senator Frank Church. FBI misdeeds uncovered include the Cointelpro project of spying on and disrupting civil rights groups and the anti--Vietnam War movement: the feds infiltrated organizations, sowed violent dissension within them, and deployed warrantless wiretaps and bugs to dig up discrediting dirt. Chapters on the CIA detail the Agency's involvement in plots to assassinate Congolese politician Patrice Lumumba among others, along with the infamous MKUltra program, which tested the mind-altering effects of LSD on unwitting subjects. Though these revelations are now well known, the authors deftly condense the six-volume report into a readable greatest-hits compilation. The report itself still stands out as an incisive critique of the obfuscatory verbiage of intelligence bureaucracies. ("'Planning for the Congo would not necessarily rule out 'consideration' of any particular kind of activity which might contribute to getting rid of Lumumba,'" reads one summary of an official discussion of his planned murder.) It's a worthwhile presentation of a seminal takedown of the deep state. (Jan.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The blockbuster report that exposed decades of official misconduct. In 1974, investigative journalist Seymour Hersh reported that the CIA, operating at the request of President Richard Nixon, had violated its own charter by amassing intelligence files on more than 10,000 American protestors, dissidents, and activists. Hersh'sNew York Times article also hinted that break-ins, wiretaps, and other forms of unwarranted surveillance were routine. The next month, the U.S. Senate formed the so-called Church Committee to investigate improper or unethical intelligence activities. The committee's charge extended to the FBI, whose methods were partially exposed four years earlier when activists sent purloined FBI documents to theWashington Post. The Church Committee's six-volume report, which appeared in 1976, detailed a long list of scandalous practices undertaken by national security agencies that Congress had effectively left to their own devices. In this abridged version of that report, edited by historian Guariglia and scholar Hochman, readers will encounter a wide range of infamous programs--including MKULTRA, CHAOS, and COINTELPRO--whose original intent may have been valid but which soon extended far beyond any legitimate intelligence or law enforcement purpose. Indeed, the editors note that modern readers are likely to recoil from the "vindictiveness, recklessness, and unrepentant racism" of those who directed these programs. Among the parade of examples are the FBI's vile campaign against Martin Luther King Jr., outlandish plans to assassinate Cuban leader Fidel Castro, and the surreptitious administration of LSD to unwitting subjects in efforts to develop chemical and biological weapons. But the list of misdeeds was much longer, and the damage more consequential, than even these high-profile episodes suggest. The Church Committee's sober report is a forceful reminder of that period's excesses--not in the social and political movements that the government targeted, but rather among the public servants whose perverseness undermined our constitutional democracy. A timely reminder about the perils of unchecked power. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.