JAMES ANGLETON, COUNTERINTELLIGENCE FIGURE, DIES

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000201820004-8
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 20, 2012
Sequence Number: 
4
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 12, 1987
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000201820004-8.pdf137.47 KB
Body: 
Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/20: CIA-RDP90-00965R000201820004-8 ARTICLE AF?EARf D ON PAGE -P3 I NEW YORK TIMES 12 May 1987 James Angleton, Counterintelligence Figure, Dies By STEPHEN ENGELBERG Special to The New Yott Time. WASHINGTON, May 11 - James Angleton, the erudite Central Intelli- gence Agency officer whose search for Soviet agents inside the Government stirred an uproar in the murky worlds of intelligence for a generation, died here this morning of lung cancer. He was 69 years old, Mr. Angleton, who joined the C.I.A. at its inception in 1947, served for more than 20 years as head of its counterin- telligence office. He was forced to re- sign his post in 1974 by William E. Colby, then Director of Central Intelli- gence, who had become convinced that Mr. Angleton's efforts were harming the agency. The tall, donnish intelligence official remains one of the most fascinating figures in the history of the C.I.A. His counterintelligence office was consid- ered one of the most secret in the agen- cy, and the problems it analyzed resembled the multidimensional chess games depicted in the best espionage fiction. With his departure, the agency cut the counterintelligence staff to 80 from 300, and turned away from some of the techniques he had pioneered. Today, some intelligence officials and mem- bers of Congress say this may have been an overreaction. They say that the recent disclosures about highly damag- ing Soviet espionage operations sug- gest that Mr. Angleton was more accu- rate in his suspicions than was once be- lieved. Distrust of Soviet Motives Counterintelligence is one of the most thankless jobs in spy craft. Its practitioners think the unthinkable, ex- amining each operation, recruit or de- fector for the possibility that it may be a deception. Counterintelligence agents also try to recruit agents who work for hostile intelligence services, hoping to confuse opponents with cleverly pack- aged false information. Friends and associates agree that Mr. Angleton, who wore glasses and had a pronounced stoop, was ideally suited for his life's work. His view of the world was characterized by an abiding suspicion - opponents called it paranoia - about the Soviet Union's motives and maneuvers. When the Soviet Union and China split in the early 1960's, Mr. Angleton remained convinced that the widely re- ported antagonism was a ruse con- cocted by the two Communist powers. The defection of Yuri Nosenko from the Soviet Union in January 1964 prompted a prolonged investigation by Mr. Angleton and hiq staff. Mr. No- senko insisted that he had been the Soviet case officer for Lee Harvey Os- wald, the assassin of President Ken- nedy. Mr. Angleton was inclined to doubt Mr. Nosenko's insistence that the Soviet security agency, the #-G.B., had no connection to the attack on the President. Mr. Nosenko was released after being interrogated for more than three years, and the consensus at the C.I.A. was that he had been a legiti- mate defector. Mr. Nosenko was subse- quently hired as a lecturer at courses given by the agency. Powerful Role In Agency Mr. Angleton may have lost the bat- tle over Mr. Nosenko, but he wielded great power inside the agency for dec- ades. His section had access to more in- formation than virtually any other be- cause it was permitted to examine vir- tually all C.I.A. operations. The coun- terintelligence staff under Mr. Angle- ton could and did effectively end the ca- reers of C.I.A. officers suspected of working for the Soviet. Union. He often declined to explain why a particular officer had fallen under suspicion. In addition, Mr. Angleton handled one of the agency's most sensitive rela- tionships with an allied intelligence service, its ties to the Israelis. Mr. An- gleton handled "the Israeli account" as it was termed in C.I.A. argot, for more than a decade. Indeed, Mr. Colby, the agency director who forced his resig- nation, earlier insisted that Mr. Angle ton relinquish his control over Israeli matters. Even with the passage of decades, it is difficult to compile a reasonably cer tain account of Mr. Angleton's espio- nage successes, which remain classi- fied. For instance, by one account he was instrumental in obtaining, the text of Nikita S. Khrushchev's secret denun- ciation of Stalin in 1956. He was also said to have been deeply involved in the unmasking of Kim Philby, the British double -agent. Others say that for a time, at least, Mr. Angleton was deceived by Mr. Philby a man who had come to be his friend. James Jesus Angleton was born hi 1917, the year of the Russian Revolu- tion, in Boise, Idaho. His father worked for the National Cash Register Com- pany in Italy, and James Angleton spent summers in Italy while attending Malvern College in England. In 1937, he entered Yale University, where he roomed with E. Reed Whittemore Jr., the poet. The two founded a literary magazine, reflecting what would be Mr. Angleton's lifelong interest in the letters. His favorite poets, friends say, were T.S. Eliot and E.E. Cummings, and in Washington he was often found at lectures on the writings of James Joyce. Two years after being graduated from Yale, he was recruited by a pro- fessor into the Office of Strategic Serv- ices, the World War 11 intelligence agency and forerunner to the C.I.A. Senator Malcolm Wallop, a Wyoming Republican who was a strong defender of Mr. Angleton, said in a statement to- day: "James Angleton lived long enough to serve his country before, during and after World war II. He was the architect of the best counterintelli- gence the United States ever had. In the mid-1970's, Angleton went out of fashion, but he lived long enough to see time and events vindicate him and show how little his accusers under- stood of the difficult and inherently thankless business of counterintelli- gence ., In World War II Mr. Angleton di- rected agents working against Nazi Germany. In 1944 he traveled to Rome where he worked on operations aimed at the Italian Fascist intelligence serv- ice. After the war, he worked closely with Italian counterintelligence to un- cover reams of data about Soviet operations. When he returned to the United States, he began to specialize in study- ing the K.G.B. Mr. Angleton built huge files on the espionage operations of the Russians, and was authorized in 1954 by Allen W. Dulles, then the director of agency, to setup its first counterintelli- gence staff. In 1975 Mr. Angleton was awarded the C.I.A.'s highest award, the Distin- guished Intelligence Medal. Mr. Angleton has been sharply criti- cized in recent years in the memoirs of some intelligence officials, including Adm. Stansfield Turner, the director of Central Intelligence under President Carter. Admiral Turner wrote that he had got Congress to appropriate money to compensate officers whose careers had been ruined because they had come under the suspicion of Mr. Angle- ton. "He was truly a Renaissance man, " said N. Scott Miler, the chief of opera- tions under Mr. Angleton. "He had a re- markable amount of knowledge about world events, art, literature. most re- markable people I have ever known." Mr. Angleton is survived by his wife, Cicely d'Autremont; a son, James Charles Angleton, of Los Angeles, and two daughters, Guru Sangat Kaur, of Great Falls, Va., and Lucy d'Autre- mont Angleton, of New Mexico. He also leaves a brother, Hugh Angleton of Boise, and two sisters, Carmen Mer- cedes Angleton of Rome and Delores Guarnieri of Florence, Italy. Services will be held Friday, at Rock Springs Church in Arlington, Va., and the family asks that a donation to be made to the American Cancer Society In lieu of f ewers. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/20: CIA-RDP90-00965R000201820004-8