From
SECRECY NEWS
From the FAS Project on Government Secrecy
Volume 2016, Issue No. 88
November 1, 2016
CIA RELEASES DRAFT HISTORY OF BAY OF PIGS
The Central Intelligence Agency yesterday released a long-sought draft of the fifth volume of its internal history of
the 1961 invasion of the Bay of Pigs.
The release was among the first tangible
results of this year's amendments to the Freedom of Information Act, which imposed
a 25 year limit on the exemption for "deliberative" files. As a
result, the 1984 draft history could no longer be legally withheld.
CIA said in a cover note
that "This fifth draft volume was not publishable in its present
form, in the judgment of CIA Chief Historians as well as other reviewers,
because of serious shortcomings in scholarship, its polemical tone, and its
failure to add significantly to an understanding of the controversy over the
Bay of Pigs operation.
"
Indeed, the new "volume is
strange, in some respects, and interesting," said Villanova Prof. David M.
Barrett, who had filed a lawsuit last summer for release of the draft history.
"Essentially, it is a critical history
of the Inspector General's critical report on Bay of Pigs, which mainly blamed
CIA incompetence for the failure at Bay of Pigs. [The author, CIA
historian Jack] Pfeiffer says IG Lyman Kirkpatrick's report was, itself, biased
and incompetent. Pfeiffer says the most obvious cause of failure at Bay
of Pigs was JFK's decision to cancel a planned 2nd airstrike in support of the
invaders at Bay of Pigs," Barrett said.
He noted several highlights:
Author Pfeiffer describes one of the IG
report's authors as probably mentally ill (p. 75). Writing in about 1983,
Pfeiffer says that CIA had kept the IG report and other internal analyses of
Bay of Pigs classified Secret in order to avoid airing its "dirty
laundry." (p. 4).
Pfeiffer says CIA hired a couple of people to
write the true story of Bay of Pigs with the hope of having Life Magazine or
another outlet publish it. Only State Dept objections stopped that from
being pursued, though the authors did write the article. (p. 87-90)
At the end, Pfeiffer suggests in a footnote
that the history program (where he worked!) should probably be abolished, and
the raw materials it possessed should be destroyed; the Operations Directorate
was hostile to it, and it was hard to see the point of the program. (p. 146)
"Not quite earth-shaking history, but I
think the real story is that CIA spent much effort and money over the past 5
years to prevent [release] of this document," Barrett said.
The National Security Archive, which had
previously filed suit to obtain the document, hailed its release here.
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