Lookin' Back: OSS-CIA figure Angleton had the goods on those in power


PAUL L. ALLEN
Tucson Citizen 
Published: 11.11.2006



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James J. Angleton was a frequent Tucson visitor. He read poetry, raised orchids 
and ruined careers.


James Jesus Angleton, the most shadowy and enigmatic figure in the Central 
Intelligence Agency's history, was a periodic Tucson visitor for 40 years 
before he died in 1987. His widow, Cicely, maintains a home here. 

Angleton joined his father as an operative in the the Office of Strategic 
Services, the CIA's predecessor, in 1943. 

The younger Angleton, a very private man and insomniac, was a chain-smoker who 
died of lung cancer - undoubtedly an inspiration for the fictitious and 
sinister "cigarette-smoking man" character in the TV series "The X-Files."
 
In his private time, he enjoyed reading poetry and pursuing the patience- 
challenging hobby of raising orchids. In his work, he was the relentless hunter 
of "moles" - enemy double (or triple) agents he believed were embedded within 
America's intelligence-gathering organization. 

He hoped to preclude such deep-cover agents from stealing additional nuclear 
weapons secrets and to safeguard what was said to be America's most highly 
classified secrets (more secret, even, than development of the hydrogen bomb) - 
UFO studies and data on extraterrestrial life forms. 

>From the time the CIA was formed in 1947 until his forced resignation in 1974 
>by longtime adversary and CIA Director William Colby, Angleton was a feared 
>individual. As a favorite of the first civilian director of the CIA, Allen 
>Dulles (1953-1961), he was given virtual free rein, and an accusation from him 
>spelled the end of an agent's career. 

The CIA was formed in part to quietly handle a delicate situation: securing for 
the United States the services of thousands of former members of the German 
intelligence force - despite the fact that many of them, recent enemies of the 
United States, had committed war crimes. 
The uneasy relationship between the Soviets and the United States during and 
after World War II meant intelligence information about them that the Germans 
had amassed was of intense interest. However, the Germans' recruitment and 
hiring was kept hidden from the American public, which would have found the 
idea repugnant. 

Angleton was said to have maintained his position much the way that J. Edgar 
Hoover retained control of the Federal Bureau of Investigation: by learning the 
"dirty little secrets" of others in power, and using the threat of divulging 
those secrets as leverage. 
Some claimed Angleton assured his place in the agency by agreeing not to demand 
close background checks or polygraph tests of Dulles and some 60 of his closest 
associates. 

Angleton was born Dec. 9, 1917, in Boise, Idaho, son of National Cash Register 
franchise owner James Hugh Angleton and his Mexican wife, Carmen Mercedes 
Moreno. 

In 1933, the family moved to Europe, and young James was educated in Italy and 
England before earning a degree at Yale University and enrolling in law school 
at Harvard University. 

When OSS was organized in 1942, the elder Angleton became a colonel. The next 
year, after his son had been inducted into the Army, he arranged for him to be 
assigned to OSS duty, as well. 

The younger Angleton was sent to London for instruction in counterintelligence 
by British spymaster Kim Philby and others - who, ironically, later were 
exposed as double-agents for the Soviet Union. Training completed, he was 
assigned as an OSS Army lieutenant involved in counterintelligence in Italy. 
It was during his time at Harvard that he met his future wife, Cicely 
d'Autremont, a Tucson banker's daughter enrolled at Vassar College. They were 
married in 1943. (She declined to be interviewed for this column.) 

In addition to trying to ferret out "moles," Angleton was involved in other 
facets of the "spook" business, including disinformation and personally 
overseeing formation and ongoing liaison with the Israeli foreign intelligence 
arm, Mossad. His early work in Italy is thought to have laid the groundwork for 
later cooperative associations with Mafia figures when their particular 
"talents" and connections were required. 

Conspiracy theorists believe there is evidence to link Angleton, directly or 
indirectly, with involvement in the John F. Kennedy assassination; the slaying 
of a JFK mistress, Mary Pinchot Meyer; and the suspicious "suicide" of a senior 
CIA official by carbon monoxide poisoning, among others. 
Angleton was considered by some to have become increasingly paranoid - perhaps 
clinically so - by the 1970s, believing several leaders of other nations, 
including Canadian prime ministers Lester Pearson and Pierre Trudeau, Swedish 
prime minister Olof Palme, West German chancellor Willy Brandt and British 
prime minister Harold Wilson to be Soviet agents. 

After Angleton left the CIA in 1974, three of his senior assistants were forced 
into retirement and his counter- intelligence division reduced from 300 people 
to 80 at Colby's direction. 

After his death - May 12, 1987, at Washington's Sibley Hospital at age 69 - 
Angleton was buried at Morris Hill Cemetery in Boise, Idaho. A son, two 
daughters and his widow survived. 


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