Winston Scott: The CIA's Secret History in Mexico - Espionage, Cold War & Intelligence Operations | Political Thriller, Historical Nonfiction, Spy Books
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Mexico City was the Casablanca of the Cold War-a hotbed of spies, revolutionaries, and assassins. The CIA's station there was the front line of the United States' fight against international communism, as important for Latin America as Berlin was for Europe. And its undisputed spymaster was Winston Mackinley Scott.Chief of the Mexico City station from 1956 to 1969, Win Scott occupied a key position in the founding generation of the Central Intelligence Agency, but until now he has remained a shadowy figure. Investigative reporter Jefferson Morley traces Scott's remarkable career from his humble origins in rural Alabama to wartime G-man to OSS London operative (and close friend of the notorious Kim Philby), to right-hand man of CIA Director Allen Dulles, to his remarkable reign for more than a decade as virtual proconsul in Mexico. Morley also follows the quest of Win Scott's son Michael to confront the reality of his father's life as a spy. He reveals how Scott ran hundreds of covert espionage operations from his headquarters in the U.S. Embassy while keeping three Mexican presidents on the agency's payroll, participating in the Bay of Pigs fiasco, and, most intriguingly, overseeing the surveillance of Lee Harvey Oswald during his visit to the Mexican capital just weeks before the assassination of President Kennedy.Morley reveals the previously unknown scope of the agency's interest in Oswald in late 1963, identifying for the first time the code names of Scott's surveillance programs that monitored Oswald's movements. He shows that CIA headquarters cut Scott out of the loop of the agency's latest reporting on Oswald before Kennedy was killed. He documents why Scott came to reject a key finding of the Warren Report on the assassination and how his disillusionment with the agency came to worry his longtime friend James Jesus Angleton, legendary chief of CIA counterintelligence. Angleton not only covered up the agency's interest in Oswald but also, after Scott died, absconded with the only copies of his unpublished memoir.Interweaving Win Scott's personal and professional lives, Morley has crafted a real-life thriller of Cold War intrigue—a compelling saga of espionage that uncovers another chapter in the CIA's history.
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In his magnum opus,`Our Man in Mexico', Morley is the master of prose and the punctilious researcher. Fine details uncovered from numerous interviews, facts distilled from tens of thousands of pages of documents, riddles demystified by painstaking comparative analyses are morphed into a polytope of a coherent narrative. At the core of Morley's account of the life and work of Winston Scott lies a uniquely informative perspective on the events of 1963 and the untimely demise of its tragic hero.Win Scott, the principal character, is portrayed as a diligent and pragmatic bureaucrat whose affable personality and impeccable drive propelled him to the coveted CIA station chief position in Mexico City. There he presided over a vast intelligence collection apparatus. His forte was recruiting the best. His networks of agents were deeply entrenched in the Mexican political landscape. The view onto his personal life, however, depicts a far less flattering picture. It narrates a life mired by infidelity, trauma, and occasional indiscretion.Along with the story of his protagonist, Morley patches together an account of Kennedy's presidency and the crises it faced as understood by the intelligence and security apparatchiks. It goes without saying that one cannot tell a story of Kennedy's demise without scrutinizing the life of his alleged assassin. In the fateful and much contested final weeks of his life, Oswald began roaming on Win's turf in Mexico City; his surveillance apparatus picked up on a peculiar American that had traveled to Mexico City to seek an entry visa to Cuba. Morley presents a marvelous set of facts regarding the circumstances of Oswald's trip to Mexico City, his contacts with the Cuban and Soviet embassy personnel, and the dubious coverup of his past records by the agency headquarters. He refrains from promoting any particular theory, but the preponderance of evidence presented by him calls into question the veracity of the official narrative and the alleged role of Oswald in Kennedy's assassination.
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