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Revolutionary War officer Nathan Hale, one of America’s first
spies, said, “Any kind of service necessary to the public good
becomes honorable by being necessary.” A statue of Hale stands
outside CIA headquarters, and the agency often cites his statement
as one of its guiding principles. But who decides what is necessary
for the public good, and is it really true that any kind of service
is permissible for the public good?
These questions are at the heart of James M. Olson’s book, Fair
Play: The Moral Dilemmas of Spying. Olson, a veteran of the
CIA’s clandestine service, takes readers inside the real world of
intelligence to describe the difficult dilemmas that field officers
face on an almost daily basis. Far from being a dry theoretical
treatise, this fascinating book uses actual intelligence operations
to illustrate how murky their moral choices can be. Readers will be
surprised to learn that the CIA provides very little guidance on
what is, or is not, permissible. Rather than empowering field
officers, the author has found that this lack of guidelines
actually hampers operations. Olson believes that U.S. intelligence
officers need clearer moral guidelines to make correct, quick
decisions. Significantly, he believes these guidelines should come
from the American public, not from closed-door meetings inside the
intelligence community. Fair Play will encourage a broad
public debate about the proper moral limits on U.S. intelligence
activities.
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| James M. Olson ISBN: 978-1-59797-153-9 |
Paperback - December 2007 |
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£12.00
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