“In
his day, Jim was recognized as the dominant counterintelligence
figure in the non-Communist world.”
—Director of Central Intelligence
Richard Helms
Over
the years, many great men and women have devoted their careers
to the mission of the Central Intelligence Agency. Perhaps one
of the most well-known Agency figures is James Angleton. In
particular, Angleton was noted for his work as the Chief of
Counterintelligence during the Cold War.
James Angleton
James
“Jim” Angleton was born in Boise, Idaho, on December 9, 1917.
His parents—James Hugh Angleton and Carmen Mercedes Moreno—met
when his father was serving as a cavalry officer during the
Mexican Revolution. Angleton had two younger sisters and a
brother.
Throughout his youth, Angleton was educated at English
preparatory schools, including Chartridge Hill House in
Buckinghamshire, England. He attended Malvern College in
Worcestershire, England, but left in 1936 to study at Yale.
During
his time at Yale, Angleton took an interest in literature and
poetry and edited the school's literary magazine “Furioso,”
which published poetry by the likes of E. E. Cummings and Ezra
Pound.
Angleton graduated from Yale in 1941 and enrolled at Harvard Law
School.
War Effort
Angleton did not finish law school because he was drafted into
the U.S. Army in March 1943. During training he was singled out
for an interview and offered the chance to work with the Office
of Strategic Services (OSS)—the predecessor to today’s CIA.
Angleton accepted the opportunity and was assigned to the X-2
Branch, responsible for counterintelligence. Given his knowledge
of the Italian language and culture, Angleton began at the
Italian desk in Washington, D.C. He quickly grew restless, so he
approached the head of X-2, James Murphy, and requested an
assignment overseas. Murphy was so impressed with Angleton that
he agreed and sent him to England.
Right
away, Angleton proved himself to be a hard worker, often
sleeping on a cot in his office after working late into the
night. Six months after joining the OSS, Angleton became the X-2
chief of the Italian desk in Washington, D.C. In late 1944 he
transferred to Rome and, at the age of 27, became the chief of
X-2 in Italy.
After
the war, Angleton remained in Italy and established contacts
with other secret intelligence agencies that proved useful later
in his career at the Agency. Angleton also played a major role
in operations that supported the 1948 Italian general election.
Upon
his return to Washington, Angleton worked for various successor
organizations of the OSS until the CIA was established in 1947.
Angleton made the transition to an Agency employee and is known
as one of the founding officers.
Agency Career
During
the first several years of his career at the Agency, Angleton
helped establish the structure of the new intelligence
organization. Living up to his reputation in the OSS, Angleton
rapidly rose through the ranks of the Agency.
By May
1949, he became a senior leader in the Office of Special
Operations. This job required Angleton to call on some of the
contacts he made after the war. Angleton’s relationships with
Israel’s Mossad and Shin Bet agencies became especially
important during his time working the Israeli desk and
throughout his career at the Agency.
In
1954, Director of Central Intelligence (DCI) Allen Dulles asked
Angleton to become head of the Counterintelligence Staff.
Angleton remained in this position for the rest of his career at
the Agency.
Angleton’s relationship with the Israelis paid off when the Shin
Bet provided him a transcript of Soviet leader Nikita
Khrushchev’s confidential 1956 speech denouncing his
predecessor, Joseph Stalin. The speech proved valuable because
it showed that Soviet leaders were in the midst of a power
struggle. The Eisenhower administration publicized the speech,
embarrassing the Soviet government.
Angleton also was involved with debriefing two famous KGB
defectors: Anatoly Golitsyn and Yuri Nosenko. In 1961, KGB Maj.
Anatoly Golitsyn defected to the United States and was
interviewed by Angleton. Angleton found Golitsyn to be a source
of accurate information. Golitsyn claimed that the CIA had been
infiltrated by the KGB. He also said that another defector would
be sent to discredit his information and support the mole’s
credibility. Angleton believed Golitsyn and began a mole hunt
inside the Agency.
KGB
officer Yuri Nosenko made contact with the CIA in 1962, but was
not heard from again until 1964 when he defected. During his
debriefing, he provided information that contradicted
intelligence gathered from Golitsyn’s interviews. Because
Angleton declared Golitysn a genuine source, he concluded that
Nosenko was a false defector who couldn't be believed.
After
President John F. Kennedy's assassination on November 22, 1963,
the U.S. government briefly suspected that the Soviet Union
might have perpetrated the crime. During Nosenko’s debriefing,
he made a startling disclosure: he had been assigned to watch
assassin Lee Harvey Oswald when Oswald defected to the Soviet
Union (1959-1962). Nosenko said the KGB declined to work with
Oswald after determining he was unstable.
Nosenko's surprise decision to defect to the United States and
his news that Oswald was not a KGB asset seemed too convenient
for Angleton and other Agency officials. Moreover, Nosenko
contradicted Golitsyn, Angleton's key source on the KGB.
Golitsyn claimed that Nosenko was a disinformation agent sent
both to discredit him and to hide Moscow's hand in President
Kennedy's death. A few years later, the CIA decided that
Nosenko was telling the truth, but Angleton never changed his
mind.
Angleton left the Agency in December 1974. He died of lung
cancer 12 years later on May 12, 1987.
Related
Stories and Links:
- The James Angleton
Phenomenon
- A Look Back …
Counterintelligence and the JFK Assassination