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Disciples : : the World War II Missions of the CIA Directors who Fought for Wild Bill Donovan: Allen Dulles, Richard Helms, William Colby, William Casey

Waller, Douglas C. Book - 2015 940.548 Wa 1 On Shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 0 out of 5

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Call Number: 940.548 Wa
On Shelf At: Downtown Library

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Prologue -- PART ONE: PREPARATION -- 1. Allen Welsh Dulles -- 2. William Joseph Casey -- 3. Richard McGarrah Helms -- 4. William Egan Colby -- 5. War Clouds -- PART TWO: WORLD WAR II -- 6. Washington -- 7. Jedburgh -- 8. Tradecraft -- 9. Switzerland -- 10. London -- 11. Milton Hall -- 12. D-Day -- 13. France -- 14. Breakers -- 15. Valkyrie -- 16. The Yonne Department -- 17. Fortress Germany -- 18. Norway -- 19. Assignment Europe -- 20. Casey's Spies -- 21. To Germany -- 22. Sunrise -- 23. Flight of the Rype -- PART THREE: COLD WAR -- Victory -- 25. Home -- 26. Berlin -- 27. The Directors -- Epilogue.
"The author of the critically acclaimed bestseller Wild Bill Donovan, tells the story of four OSS warriors of World War II. All four later led the CIA. They are the most famous and controversial directors the CIA has ever had--Allen Dulles, Richard Helms, William Colby, and William Casey. Disciples is the story of these dynamic agents and their daring espionage and sabotage in wartime Europe under OSS Director Bill Donovan. Allen Dulles ran the OSS's most successful spy operation against the Axis. Bill Casey organized dangerous missions to penetrate Nazi Germany. Bill Colby led OSS commando raids behind the lines in occupied France and Norway. Richard Helms mounted risky intelligence programs against the Russians in the ruin of Berlin after the German surrender. Four very different men, they later led (or misled) the successor CIA. Dulles launched the calamitous operation to land CIA-trained, anti-Castro guerrillas at Cuba's Bay of Pigs. Helms was convicted of lying to Congress over the CIA's role in the coup that ousted Chile's president. Colby would become a pariah for releasing to Congress what became known as the 'Family Jewels' report on CIA misdeeds during the 1950s, sixties and early seventies. Casey would nearly bring down the CIA--and Ronald Reagan's presidency--from a scheme that secretly supplied Nicaragua's contras with money raked off from the sale of arms to Iran for American hostages in Beirut. Mining thousands of once-secret World War II documents and interviewing scores of family members and CIA colleagues, Waller has written a brilliant successor to Wild Bill Donovan"-- Provided by publisher.

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