Difference between revisions of "International Organizations Division"
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− | Division of the [[CIA]] set up in 1950 to control psychological warfare operations. Its first head was [[Tom Braden]].<ref>Who Paid the Piper, The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Francis Stonor Saunders, | + | Division of the [[CIA]] set up in 1950 to control psychological warfare operations. Its first head was [[Tom Braden]].<ref>Who Paid the Piper, The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Francis Stonor Saunders, Granta Books, 2000, p97.</ref> |
− | ::The IOD operated according to the same principles that guided [[Frank Wisner|Wisner]]'s management of the Non-Communist Left. The purpose of supporting leftist groups was not to destroy or even to dominate, but rather to maintain a discreet proximity to and monitor the thinking of such groups; to provide them with a mouthpiece so that they could blow off steam; and, ''in extremis'', to exercise a final veto on their publicity and possibly their actions if they ever got too 'radical'. Braden issued clear instructions to his newly established IOD posts in Europe: 'Limit the money to amounts private organisations can credibly spend; disguise the extent of American interest; protect the integrity of the organisation by not requiring it to support every aspect of official American policy.'<ref>Who Paid the Piper, The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Francis Stonor Saunders, | + | ::The IOD operated according to the same principles that guided [[Frank Wisner|Wisner]]'s management of the Non-Communist Left. The purpose of supporting leftist groups was not to destroy or even to dominate, but rather to maintain a discreet proximity to and monitor the thinking of such groups; to provide them with a mouthpiece so that they could blow off steam; and, ''in extremis'', to exercise a final veto on their publicity and possibly their actions if they ever got too 'radical'. Braden issued clear instructions to his newly established IOD posts in Europe: 'Limit the money to amounts private organisations can credibly spend; disguise the extent of American interest; protect the integrity of the organisation by not requiring it to support every aspect of official American policy.'<ref>Who Paid the Piper, The CIA and the Cultural Cold War, Francis Stonor Saunders, Granta Books, 2000, p98.</ref> |
==IOD operations== | ==IOD operations== | ||
− | *[[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] | + | *[[Congress for Cultural Freedom]] |
+ | |||
+ | ==People== | ||
+ | ===Heads=== | ||
+ | *[[Tom Braden]] | ||
+ | *[[Cord Meyer]] | ||
+ | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category:CIA]][[Category:propaganda]][[Category:Psychological Warfare]][[Category:Spooks]] | [[Category:CIA]][[Category:propaganda]][[Category:Psychological Warfare]][[Category:Spooks]] |
Latest revision as of 00:26, 16 December 2011
Division of the CIA set up in 1950 to control psychological warfare operations. Its first head was Tom Braden.[1]
- The IOD operated according to the same principles that guided Wisner's management of the Non-Communist Left. The purpose of supporting leftist groups was not to destroy or even to dominate, but rather to maintain a discreet proximity to and monitor the thinking of such groups; to provide them with a mouthpiece so that they could blow off steam; and, in extremis, to exercise a final veto on their publicity and possibly their actions if they ever got too 'radical'. Braden issued clear instructions to his newly established IOD posts in Europe: 'Limit the money to amounts private organisations can credibly spend; disguise the extent of American interest; protect the integrity of the organisation by not requiring it to support every aspect of official American policy.'[2]