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Abuse of Power

How Cold War Surveillance and Secrecy Policy Shaped the Response to 9/11

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Athan Theoharis, long a respected authority on surveillance and secrecy, established his reputation for meticulous scholarship with his work on the loyalty security program developed under Truman and McCarthy. In Abuse of Power, Theoharis continues his investigation of U.S. government surveillance and historicizes the 9/11 response.

Criticizing the U.S. government's secret activities and policies during periods of "unprecedented crisis," he recounts how presidents and FBI officials exploited concerns about foreign-based internal security threats.

Drawing on information sequestered until recently in FBI records, Theoharis shows how these secret activities in the World War II and Cold War eras expanded FBI surveillance powers and, in the process, eroded civil liberties without substantially advancing legitimate security interests.

Passionately argued, this timely book speaks to the costs and consequences of still-secret post-9/11 surveillance programs and counterintelligence failures. Ultimately, Abuse of Power makes the case that the abusive surveillance policies of the Cold War years were repeated in the government's responses to the September 11 attacks.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 21, 2011
      Theoharis (Chasing Spies), emeritus professor of history at Marquette University, surveys a pattern of FBI abuse of power stretching back to WWII in this extensively documented and passionately argued case for a national debate over the issue of domestic intelligence gathering. Drawing on decades of research into FBI records, often obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, the author argues that the notion that FBI culture changed from "reactive" to "proactive" law enforcement after 9/11 is a myth. In fact, the shift began as early as 1936, and the cold war enshrined its intelligence role. Operating in secrecy and relying heavily on wiretapping, the FBI not only strayed into illegal activities (e.g., political surveillance) but also "failed to uncover the Soviet Union's most successful espionage operations." Exploring this history of sanctioned abuse of power and limited success, Theoharis warns that the post-9/11 expansion of the FBI's "political-surveillance authority" should be viewed with skepticism.

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  • English

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