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Denial and Deception: An Insider's View of the CIA Paperback – December 21, 2005

3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 35 ratings

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The reality for a woman agent working in the secret world of intelligence often leads to extraordinary obstacles and sacrifices. Melissa Boyle Mahle, a sixteen-year covert operative for the CIA in the Middle East, was the Agency's top-ranked female Arabist before she left in 2002. In Denial and Deception, Mahle not only describes the Agency's successes and failures, but details her life as a woman in one of the last professions that remain almost exclusively male-directed and dominated. The author has a unique vantage point from which to view the political and operational culture of the CIA in the post-Cold War climate, and reveals how it failed to anticipate the 9/11 attacks. From Ronald Reagan to George W. Bush, she provides a vivid narrative of how the agency became a rudderless organization, lost in the post-Cold War world. Afraid to take risks that might offend Congress and European allies after overstepping its legal bounds in the Iran-Contra era, gutted of the clandestine operators who knew how to run secret wars, demoralized by criticism and poor performance, the CIA simply became unable and unwilling "to get down and dirty to do the hard part to fight a real war on terrorism."
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 11, 2010
    Spy memoirs come in broad categories. In twilight, one may choose to reflect on the highly canted recollections of an agent's personal story, full of personality and pique; his rise, climbing on the backs of fate and friends, followed by his trip down the ladder, as fate guides him once again with a tap on the shoulder or a stab in the back. By night, the reader may choose to be riveted by daring tales of covert action and personal achievement, set against a background of glorification or disdain for "the company." In the cold light of day, one may try to be informed, by reading the stultifying work of Dulles, or a journalist's second-sourced compendium and analysis of what he has never been a part of.

    This is a different book, the second I've read by a woman, and this may be key, for the lack of gender equality in the CIA may have preserved the author's independence of vision. Ms. Boyle-Mahle's keen analytic mind, and intense patriotism, which survived even being cashiered by the CIA, is unique of print. The CIA has many aspects of corporate structure. In private industry, corporations with dysfunctional structure eventually end in the dissolution of their assets, one of the triumphs of capitalism. But the CIA, as a governmental entity, is subject to the far less certain and decisive deliberations of congressional oversight, and executive pique and whimsy. Ms. Boyle-Mahle chronicles and dissects the twisted path of reform, of false moves, backtracks, and destruction of human assets, with insufficient discrimination between entrenched fiefs and centers of competence.

    All this has two causes. One is the traitor Aldrich Ames, who revealed a terrible vulnerability, rooted in the unknowable nature of the human mind. The other is Iran-Contra, which reveals a paradox. The result is a kind of organizational autoimmune disease, in which the body attacks it's own tissues, in attempt to render immunity to human treachery. The history of the intelligence services suggests that, thus far, there is been no solution. Background checks, including polygraph, which Ms. Boyle-Mahle reveals two thirds of applicants cannot pass (and no Arab Americans!) apparently reveal our widespread anxiety about diverse topics, rather than the desire to suborn.

    The paradox of Iran-Contra is the swing of the moral zeitgeist every decade or so, which renders actions taken in one period reprehensible in another. Those who work for the Company have every right to fear the moral equation, because it is not constant. They know they can act out of patriotism, and wind up hanged by history's noose. With the bad pay, one wonders why anyone would work for the CIA at all. Years ago, I met a young woman, a now famous ex CIA agent, in a social situation. It was clear this person wanted to serve us all, a secular form of religion. Thank you!

    Ms. Boyle-Mahle presents in stark detail, and in a manner that appears to this author, free of bias, the missteps, but she omits a solution or alternative. This is to her credit, as there may be none. Nevertheless, as of this date, the "Company" may have already changed again, in such a way to better preserve and acquire human resources. Why has no one of intelligence and responsibility read the book and offered to rehire her?
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2005
    The book does not cover Melissa's career much, but instead focuses on the CIA and its history from Iran-Contra until the build-up of the Iraq war. It is a bit dry, but informative. If you're interested in the Clandestine Service and its actions, do NOT read this book. There are better books on that part of the CIA, including Robert Baer's "See No Evil" and Lindsay Moran's "Blowing my Cover" (although I'd wager Mr. Baer would hate to be placed in the same group as Ms. Moran except as "good officer vs. bad one.")
    13 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2013
    Just a Great Book, would buy from this author again. Keep the books coming and I am looking forward to more.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 30, 2011
    I have met Melissa Boyle Mahle while researching post Cold War espionage She is a spunky lady with a great sense of humor. At that time she was battling the CIA who wanted to suppress huge chunks of her book. As a former case officer in the Middle East and work at headquarters in Langley she was in a good position to see what was going on at what once was a premier intelligence organization. Add Melissa's analytical mind and you have an interesting memoir that will give you an insight of what's wrong with Washington's intelligence community. The best recommendation for this book is that the CIA doesn't like it. As relevant today as the day it came off the press.

    Kingmaker
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2014
    Ms Mahle's was forced to resign or was fired from the Operations Directorate of the CIA for an offense she is forbidden to discuss. I wish she had been forbidden to discuss some of the more outrageous accusations in her book, too, and not because they are based on rumors and hearsay. It is true that Directors of Central Intelligence since Turner have been unwilling mostly out of stupidity or self-interest to speak truth to power. However, William Webster was not one of them. She also blames all the presidents since George Herbert Walker Bush for being weak and risk-adverse. They were, but not always for the reasons she ascribes to them. For these reasons, she and the DO and the CIA failed to "do their duty" to protect the American people from 9/11. If only, she opines, we spies were allowed to do what we do best--deny and deceive and conduct clandestine operations for the sake of the game, then we Americans would be safe? Oh yes, and there are the institutional rivalries and culture clashes with the FBI (she says a lot about this) but fails to mention that other security gorgon, the NSA, which also bears responsibility for the failure to share information on terrorist targets. The book is a white-wash of a culture that is responsible for too many intelligence failures because of excess use of shameful tactics and an over-weaning pride in its limited capacity to judge itself. The denial is hers, the study is flawed, and the blame for 9/11 laid at the wrong doors. It is also factually inaccurate on issues and identities she should have known, repetitive, and badly in need of an editor. Written in 2004, she missed the Porter Goss fiasco--too bad. I do not recommend reading this, unless you have a taste for spy talk and unclassified gossip.
    5 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Piet strick
    4.0 out of 5 stars cia a headless monster
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 20, 2013
    going behind the curtains of this organisation is the main issue of this book
    what I was the most amazed about were the quick changes in directors, with a evident change in policy; a headless monster