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Agency of Fear
Opiates and Political Power in America

By Edward Jay Epstein

Copyright, 1977, G. P. Putnam and Sons, New York.

The Story of How the Drug Enforcement Administration Came to Be.


CONTENTS
Preface

PROLOGUE - THE SECRET POLICE

PART ONE - THE VAMPIRE COMES TO AMERICA


1. Legend of the Living Dead

2. Nelson Rockefeller

3. G. Gordon Liddy: The Will to Power

 PART TWO - THE POLITICS OF LAW AND ORDER


4. The Barker of Slippery Gulch

5. The Bete-noire Strategy

6. The Education of Egil Krogh

 PART THREE - THE NIXON CRUSADES


7. Operation Intercept

8. The War of the Poppies

9. The French Connection

10. The Panama Canal

PART FOUR - THE WAR WITHIN


11. The Narcotics Business: John Ingersoll's Version

12. The Border War: Eugene Rossides's Version

13. Conflict of Interest: Egil Krogh's Version

14. The Magic-bullet Solution

 PART FIVE - TRIUMPH OF THE WILL


15. The June Scenario

16. Bureau of Assassinations

17. The Screw Worm

18. The Celebrity File

19. World War III

 PART SIX - PRODUCTION OF TERROR


20. The Manipulation of the Media

21. The Movable Epidemic

22. The Crime Nexus

23. Private Knowledge

PART SEVEN - THE COUP


24. The Liddy Plan

25. The Secret of Room 16


26. Executive Order

27. Dangerous Liaisons

28. The Heroin Hotline


29. The Philadelphia Story

30. The Consolidation of Power



PART EIGHT - UNANTICIPATED CONSEQUENCES


31. The Revolt of the Bureaucrats

32. The Coughing Crisis

33. The Drugging of America

34. Lost Horizons

35. Decline and Fall

END NOTES - Coming Soon!


Chapter Notes

Appendix

Personal Sources

Bibliography





PREFACE

 This book is based on the view that the American president under ordinary
circumstances reigns rather than rules over the government of the United
States. To be sure, the president is nominally in command of the executive
branch of the government, and he has the authority to fire the officials
that in fact control such critical agencies as the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, the Central Intelligence Agency, the Internal Revenue
Service, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the criminal division of the Department
of Justice, etc. (though he does not in many cases have the authority
unilaterally to appoint a replacement). In practice, however, this
presidential power is severely mitigated, if not entirely counterbalanced,
by the ability of officials in these key agencies to disclose secrets and
private evaluations to the public that could severely damage the image of
the president.

For example, in theory, six presidents, from Franklin Roosevelt to Richard
Nixon, had the power to fire J. Edgar Hoover as head of the FBI, but in each
case he had the power to retaliate by revealing illicit activities that
occurred during their administrations (as well as information about the
private lives of the presidents). This potential for retribution by
government officials is compounded by the fact that in the vast complexity
of the executive branch a president cannot be sure where embarrassing
secrets exist, and he must assume that most officials have developed
subterranean channels to journalists, who will both conceal their sources
and give wide circulation to the "leak." A president could seize control
over the various parts of the government only if he first nullified the
threat of disclosures by severing the conduits through which dissidents
might leak scandalous information to the press. This prerequisite for power
is in fact exactly what President Nixon attempted when he set up a series of
special units which, it was hoped, would conduct clandestine surveillance of
both government officials and newsmen during his first administration. If he
had succeeded in establishing such an investigative force, he would have so
radically changed the balance of power within the government that it would
have been tantamount to an American coup d'etat.

A coup d'etat is not the same as a revolution, where power is seized by
those outside the government, or even necessarily a military putsch, whereby
the military government takes over from the civilian government; it is, as
Edward Luttwak points out in his book Coup d'Etat, "a seizure of power
within the present system." The technique of the coup involves the use of
one part of the government to disrupt communications between other parts of
the government, confounding and paralyzing noncooperating agencies while
displacing the dissident cliques from power. If successful, the organizers
of the coup can gain control over all the levers of real power in the
government, then legitimize the new configuration under the name of
eliminating some great evil in society. Though it is hard to conceive of the
technique of the coup being applied to American politics, Nixon, realizing
that he securely controlled only the office of the president, methodically
moved to destroy the informal system of leaks and independent fiefdoms.
Under the aegis of a "war on heroin," a series of new offices were set up,
by executive order, such as the Office of Drug Abuse Law Enforcement and the
Office of National Narcotics Intelligence,- which, it was hoped, would
provide the president with investigative agencies having the potential and
the wherewithal and personnel to assume the functions of "the Plumbers" on a
far grander scale. According to the White House scenario, these new
investigative functions would be legitimized by the need to eradicate the
evil of drug addiction.

In describing the inner workings of the "war on heroin" I have relied
heavily on the files supplied to me by Egil Krogh, Jr., who was the
president's deputy for law enforcement before he was imprisoned for his role
in the Plumbers' operations. This archive includes verbatim transcripts of'
conversations the president had with presidential advisors; handwritten
notes describing meetings between John Ehrlichman, John Mitchell, H. R.
Haldeman, and other principals in the administration's "crusade"; option
papers drafted for the Domestic Council; scenarios designed for the media;
internal analyses of political problems; drafts of presidential speeches;
private reports on the drug problem; briefings for the press; and outlines
of conversations Krogh had with the president. Krogh, after he was released
from prison, spent more than three weeks assisting me in analyzing the
material, and I then went over many of the documents with Jeffrey Donfeld,
who was Krogh's assistant on the Domestic Council. The archive is by no
means complete-the White House retained a large portion of Krogh's files-and
it presents information only from the perspective of the White House. I
therefore filled in the archive by interviewing officials in the various
agencies that were to be affected by the White House plans for a
"reorganization." These interviews took over three years, and reflect
personal animosities as well as bureaucratic perspectives. Because the
circumstances surrounding each interview bear directly on the credibility of
the interview-why, for example, did Krogh provide me with such embarrassing
documents?-I have decided to reveal all the sources for this book and
comment on the motives, problems, contradictions, and gaps that I found in
the interviews and documents. Unless otherwise specified, whenever
references are made to persons explaining, commenting, observing or
otherwise divulging information, they were made to me for the purposes of
this book, and a fuller explanation of when, where, and why is provided in
the final section of the book. Books and documents are listed in the
Bibliography.

The research for this book was financed in large part by the Drug Abuse
Council, Inc., a privately financed foundation which was established to
provide another perspective on problems of drug abuse. Assistance was also
provided by National Affairs, Inc., the Smith Richardson Foundation, and the
Police Foundation. Esquire helped subsidize my reportage of poppy-growing in
Turkey, and The Public Interest magazine supported my investigation of
methadone clinics and helped me obtain the Krogh file. Research on various
parts of the book was done for me by Hillary Mayer, Suzanna Duncan,
Elizabeth Guthrie, and Deborah Gieringer, to all of whom I am grateful.

I am also indebted, for their insights into the political process, to Edward
Banfield, Daniel Bell, Allan Bloom, Edward Chase, Nathan Glazer, Erving
Goffman, Andrew Hacker, William Haddad, Paul Halpern, Bruce Kovner, Irving
Kristol, Edward Luttwak, Jerry Mandel, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Victor
Navasky, Bruce Page, Norman Podhoretz, Mark Platner, John Rubenstein,
William Shawn, Jonathan Shell, Leslie Steinau, Edward Thompson, Lionel
Tiger, Paul Weaver, William Whitworth, and James Q. Wilson. The conclusions
that I draw from their insights are, of course, entirely my own.

E. J. E.

 NEW YORK CITY, 1976



Other books by Edward Jay Epstein

Inquest: The Warren Commission and the Establishment of Truth
Counterplot: The Garrison Case
News From Nowhere
Between Fact and Fiction



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