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The Mission: The CIA in the 21st Century
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About This Book
The epic successor to Tim Weiner's National Book Award-winning classic, Legacy of Ashes: a gripping and revelatory history of the CIA in the 21st century, reaching from 9/11 through the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq to today's battles with Russia and China – and with the President of the United States. At the turn of the century, the Central Intelligence Agency was in crisis. The end of the Cold War had robbed the agency of its mission. More than thirty overseas stations and bases had been shuttered, and scores that remained had been severely cut back. Many countries where surveillance was once deemed crucial went uncovered. Essential intelligence wasn't being collected. At the dawn of the information age, the CIA's officers and analysts worked with outmoded technology, struggling to distinguish the clear signals of significant facts from the cacophony of background noise. Then came September 11th, 2001. After the attacks, the CIA transformed itself into a lethal paramilitary force, running secret prisons and brutal interrogations, mounting deadly drone attacks, and all but abandoning its core missions of espionage and counterespionage. The consequences were the deaths of scores of its recruited foreign agents, the theft of its personnel files by Chinese spies, the penetration of its computer networks by Russian intelligence and American hackers, and the tragedies of Afghanistan and Iraq. A new generation of spies now must fight the hardest targets – Moscow, Beijing, Tehran – while confronting a president who has attacked the CIA as a subversive force. From Pulitzer Prize winner Tim Weiner, The Mission tells the gripping, high-stakes story of the CIA through the first quarter of the twenty-first century, revealing how the agency fought to rebuild the espionage powers it lost during the war on terror – and finally succeeded in penetrating the Kremlin. The struggle has life-and-death consequences for America and its allies. The CIA must reclaim its original know thy enemies. The fate of the free world hangs in the balance. A masterpiece of reporting, The Mission includes exclusive on-the-record interviews with six former CIA directors, thirteen station chiefs, and scores of top spies who served undercover for decades and have never spoken to a journalist before.
Reviews
"Weiner...describes the CIA's role, often in astonishing detail ..."
"A better indicator of future events than the words of politicians ..."
"A crucial document of the present times."
"Bush's administration is particularly powerful ..."
"The Mission is a masterwork of storytelling, giving a human face to a secretive institution and chronicling American foreign policy in a lively, detailed package that is accessible for a wide range of readers."
"An absorbing, informative portrait of an embattled organization that is facing formidable challenges abroad and at home ..."
"Weiner is clear in his condemnation...but inclined to give the CIA the benefit of the doubt ..."
"Amid an unending onslaught of new names and situations, the reader is granted few clues as to who or what will prove important later ..."
"In a book like this...the eye is often drawn away from the familiar narrative to the footnotes."
"If The Mission has a fault, it's that it is light on prescription."
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