Ray Cline
Ray Cline (1918-1996) was the CIA's Deputy Director for Intelligence from 1962 to 1966.[1]
Contents
Background
Cline was born in Anderson Township, Illinois, in 1918. He grew up in Terre Haute, Indiana. He received a Harvard scholarship in 1935.[2]
OSS
Cline served in the OSS during World War Two.[2]
CIA
Cline joined the CIA in 1949.[2]
As chief of the agency's staff on the Sino-Soviet bloc from 1953 to 1957, he predicted the Sino-Soviet split.[2]
He served as station chief in Taiwan from 1958 to 1962, under the official title of chief, United States Naval Auxiliary Communications Center.[2]
He was the CIA's Deputy Director for Intelligence from 1962 to 1966.[1]
He was chief of station in Bonn from 1966 to 1969.[2]
State Department
Mr. Cline left the C.I.A. in 1969 and served as the State Department's chief of intelligence analysis.[2]
He gave up Government work in 1973, becoming an executive director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies at Georgetown University.[2]
In retirement, he served as head of the Taiwan Committee for a Free China.[2]
Affiliations
- Committee on the Present Danger (1976 version)
- Center for Strategic and International Studies
- Consortium for the Study of Intelligence, Founder Member
- United States Global Strategy Council - founder and chair.
Conferences
- 1979 Jerusalem Conference on International Terrorism
- 1979 Colloquium on Analysis and Estimates
- 1980 Colloquium on Counterintelligence
- 1987 Colloquium on Intelligence Requirements for the 1990s
Resources
External Resources
- History Commons Ray Cline
- Namebase Cline Ray Steiner
- Sourcewatch Ray Cline