by TimWeiner (Author)
Since its creation in 1947, the CIA has been a byword for everything that is sinister and ruthless about America's projection of power during the Cold War and with the 'war on terror'. There have been few major political events around the world in which the hidden hand of the Agency has not been seen. In countless movies and books, the CIA has been shown as decisive, brilliant and in control of its own secret world: the image of omnipotence. But this is an illusion. In reality, the CIA has been incompetent, naive, chaotic, and a danger to American interests for sixty years. Legacy of Ashes is both a horrifying and a richly enjoyable book. Tim Weiner's immense research reveals a startlingly consistent level of failure. The general dismay at the CIA's failure to see the fall of the Soviet Union, the end of the Cold War, the invasion of Kuwait, the events of 9/11, its wholly false assessment of Saddam's WMD and its role in the 'rendition' of innocent suspects implies that it has fallen from some bygone golden age. Legacy of Ashes makes clear that the CIA has always been a blundering, ruinously incapable organization, with each decade providing its own low points. Legacy of Ashes is as gripping and powerful a narrative as its fictional movie counterparts, but the story it has to tell is a lot less comforting.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 720
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Allen Lane
Published: 02 Aug 2007
ISBN 10: 1846140463
ISBN 13: 9781846140464
Legacy of Ashes, like all first-rate histories, is not only richly informative but provocative and insightful. It is a combustible mix of deeply-researched history, solid reporting and revealing anecdotes. Tim Weiner' s history of the CIA explains not merely the past but the present, laying out in fine detail the structural and philosophical flaws that have dogged the Agency from day one and which continue to leave the country unduly vulnerable.
-- Ted Gup, author of The Book of Honor and Nation of Secrets
This is a fascinating, deeply scary book. With prodigious reporting and on-the-record sources, Tim Weiner shows why the CIA has done so poorly in traditional intelligence. It' s a riveting tale and also a warning. America must develop the ability-- and the will-- to know and face the facts about the world.
-- Walter Isaacson, author of Benjamin Franklin: An American Life and Einstein: His Life and Universe
This is a timely, immensely readable, and highly critical history of the CIA, culminating with the most recent catastrophic failures in Iraq.
-- Mark Bowden, author of BLACKHAWK DOWN