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Secret Empire

ginormous writes "Philip Taubman's new book, Secret Empire: Eisenhower, the CIA and the Hidden Story of America's Space Espionage is perhaps the most exciting book ever written about the Eisenhower administration. (Did you know the Eisenhower administration was exciting?) It traces the story of how aerial reconnaissance developed from conventional planes (modified bombers and such) outfitted with cameras through the high-altitude, high-speed U-2 and SR-71 planes and the Corona satellite." Read on for more on this book. Secret Empire: Eisenhower, the CIA and the Hidden Story of America's Secret Espionage author Philip Taubman pages 370 (including fun photos!) publisher Simon & Schuster rating 10/10 reviewer ginormous ISBN 0684856999 summary A great historical thrill ride of the development of the U-2, the Corona satellite and more.

In the early days of the Cold War, the United States knew almost nothing about the Soviet's military capacity and had to risk the lives of hundreds of airmen in flights over Soviet airspace. Eisenhower, a five-star general, understood both that the human cost was too high and that the cost of not knowing how many missiles and bombs the Soviets had was even higher. He trusted a group of businessmen, engineers and professors -- including Polaroid's Edwin Land, Lockheed's Kelly Johnson and MIT's James Killian -- to help solve the problem.

Taubman, deputy editorial page editor at the New York Times, is a talented storyteller with an eye for good anecdotes. He spoke to dozens of the men who flew the planes and built the satellites, as well as those with an inside line to the thinking of the President himself. Although the story lacks the human drama of a tale like "The Right Stuff," it has more life than expected from a story where the heroes are machines. Even readers with background knowledge about the military or intelligence systems will learn a lot about what went on in the crucial first decades of the Cold War, when technology took spying to new levels and perhaps prevented World War III. The book is largely based on documentation that was declassified in the late 1990s, offering a fly-on-the-wall view of what went on in crucial, highly secret meetings. The writing transports readers through closed doors, allowing them the relive the urgency of the era.

A truly fascinating aspect of the book is how some of America's greatest scientific achievements and achievers were either unknown or had some of their work supressed during their lifetime for national security. These guys are heroes for their work and it's too bad they couldn't be recognized back in the 60s. It's great to do it now.

Secret Empire also is relevant to the current situation, and Taubman touches on spying in the post-Cold War world. Washington eventually became too dependent on satellites and technological spying, at the expense of human agents who are much more effective against bands of terrorists. Still, the book makes obvious that satellites have rightly become an essential piece of the nation's intelligence battery. The story of how they got there in the first place is fascinating, and Secret Empire is the first book with access to classified documents that does justice to the story.

FMI: see the website at www.secretempirethebook.com which has some really cool original documents from the book's research.

You can purchase Secret Empire: Eisenhower, the CIA and the Hidden Story of America's Secret Espionage from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

37 of 209 comments (clear)

  1. Early Recon flights by ansleybean · · Score: 2, Funny

    "What's that, Cecil, down below?" "I think it's an army!" "Take the balloon lower, Cecil!"

  2. It's always both a shame and nice by digital+bath · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ..that such people are recognized now. If I had contributed to the war effort in such a great way, I'd want to be recognized - but maybe that's just me. I guess that's just a part of war. Like the author said, it is nice to recognize them now. I wonder if any of them are still alive and will read this book?

    --
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  3. U2..? High speed...? by TWX · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In all of the PBS documentaries that I've seen on the U2, I don't remember any of them calling it 'high speed'. In fact, I remember several references to fighters keeping up with it as it flew over the Soviet Union, but they weren't able to get up to the level it was flying at.

    I thought that the U2 was built to simply out-altitude the opponent planes, and the downfall of the aircraft was when missile technology allowed them to shoot it down anyway...

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  4. trust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hey may have had trust in these men but what he did was "entrust" them to solve the problem ...

    tr.v. entrusted, entrusting, entrusts

    1. To give over (something) to another for care, protection, or performance: "He still has the aura of the priest to whom you would entrust your darkest secrets" (James Carroll).
    2. To give as a trust to (someone): entrusted his aides with the task. See Synonyms at commit.

  5. Re:U2..? High speed...? by BJH · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Damn, you beat me to it ;)

    Yes, the U2 was designed to fly high enough that nobody could reach it to shoot it down, but a couple of generations of Soviet AA missiles later, that stopped being true.

    The US continued using them, though, which is what lead to the Gary Powers incident.

  6. u2 and survelliance... by bonovoxpsu · · Score: 4, Funny

    i wonder if the pilots listened to "still haven't found what i'm looking for" while they were flying...
    :)

  7. Re: the "exciting" Eisenhower administration by mattbot+5000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...some would probably rate Brown vs. the Board of Education, Brown II, and the Korean War as a little more "exciting" than aeriel reconnaissance. But then again, all those things fall in the category of "stuff that matters."

  8. Military Industrial Complex by Stargoat · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Eisenhower's presidency was always marked by contrasts. He really did build up the military to avoid war. He spied on the Soviets in order to prevent misunderstandings. The Soviets knew this. When the U2 with Gary Powers was shot down, Krushev initially wanted to allow Eisenhower to save face, as he knew Ike's motives.

    The interesting thing of all is, even though Eisenhower built the military industrial complex that we have today, his last act of president was to condemn it, and warn Americans of its future activities.

    Click here to read Ike's farewell speech

    It is this same military industrial complex that gave rise to so many of the technologies that we use today, such as e-mail. Something for the /. community to think about.

    --
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    1. Re:Military Industrial Complex by KingPrad · · Score: 3, Informative
      Actually Eisenhower held the line on military spending, constantly battling Army officials who demanded more money. defense spending stayed almost level throughout his entire administration. Unfortunately a side effect of this was building huge numbers of nuclear weapons. When Eisenhower took office there were a few thousand. When he left there were 18000. This was because nukes are cheaper to maintain than troops and weapons of the same effect.

      Anyway, he did mostly hold the line on military spending. He was probably the only one who could have done so, being the most-respected military man of WWII.

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    2. Re:Military Industrial Complex by mike_mgo · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It is this same military industrial complex that gave rise to so many of the technologies that we use today, such as e-mail. Something for the /. community to think about.

      While this is true, it's not really the whole story. You can't say that without the Cold War or the Space Race that we would not have e-mail. There is just no way of knowing how things would have developed if the money spent on the military had been diverted into other research areas or even back into people's pockets. It is likely that many of the technologies that we now have would have been developed in any case and that we may even have made further advances in some areas (albeit while lagging in some other areas).

      My point is not to argue that we should not have spent so much money on the military during the Cold War, as it was probably necessary, but that the spin-off technologies should merely be seen as a benefit of the spending, not a justification of it.

      Furthermore, the problem with the military industrial complex was not only the money spent but also the impact that it had on all aspects of American life. Just to list a couple of examples: the secrecy of the government and its relationship with certain industries; the increased role that the military plays in shaping our foreign policy; and the role the government and the military have in determining how research is focused in both the public and private spheres.

    3. Re:Military Industrial Complex by js7a · · Score: 2, Insightful
      this same military industrial complex that gave rise to so many of the technologies that we use today, such as e-mail.

      Oh, bullshit. Commercial email can be traced back to TWX/Telex, which was around in the 1950s well before any internet installations. The military was not responsible for TWX, finance companies (i.e., commodities traders) drove its widespread acceptance in the business community.

      Don't confuse conspicious use with "giving rise" to tech. When it comes to computers, the census had more to do with the origination of the technology than any military endeavor, although the great demand of ballistics tables and cryptology did, granted, speed things up in the 40s.

      Most operating systems development has been driven by word processing demand (e.g., Unix was written to prepare patent applications with roff for Bell Labs.) Most graphics development has been driven by games, which have since 1977 been ahead of anything the military was using for training simulations. Most programming language development has been driven by the demands of the business community (what fraction of market share does Ada -- the only DoD-approved systems languag -- have?)

      People need to stop worshiping the military, and that goes double for the companies who tout their military sales out of a misguided sense of patriotism, giving rise to this kind of misunderstanding.

    4. Re:Military Industrial Complex by Lars+T. · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is a BBC documentary about the USS Liberty incident that claims a nuclear retaliation strike (using a A-4 bomber from the USS America) against Cairo was blown off at the last moment by SoD McNamara.

      --

      Lars T.

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  9. Old quote by Telecommando · · Score: 2, Funny

    There's an old quote that goes something like this:

    "Roosevelt proved a man could be President for life, Truman proved that any man can become President, Eisenhower proved we don't really need a President."

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  10. A time of leaps and bounds by DesScorp · · Score: 5, Informative

    The U2 was very slow. It's essentialy a jet propelled glider designed to fly at the edge of space. This is why the CIA/USAF developed the A-12/SR-71. It had altitude AND speed. It's still probably the fastest jet powered aircraft ever flown (depending on what kind of powerplant the still-secret Aurora really has).

    It still amazes me to think of all of the technological leaps that were taken between 1947 and the early 60's. In less than two decades, we went from piston powered prop planes to aircraft that cruised at Mach 3 to the very edge of space (the U2 and SR-71 travel at such high altitudes that the crews wear suits adapted from the space program).

    Thinking of the Blackbird, and especially North American's absolutely beautiful XB-70 Valkrie bomber (which cruised at mach 3 and used canards, which are only now coming into common use on aircraft designs), it's hard to be terribly impressed with today's aircraft. In many ways, modern aircraft are a step back.

    All in all, it was an exciting time. Ironic, since much of it occured during the "boring" Presidency of Ike.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:A time of leaps and bounds by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 4, Informative
      The factsheet for the U2 gives a top speed of Mach .58 and a ceiling in excess of 70,000ft. They are very cool and very much still in service.

      The Valkyrie bomber is simply too cool for words. Six afterburning engines, all in a row, with wing tips that droop down in flight for stability at Mach 3+ speeds. Did you ever see the video of the Valkyrie crash? I think it is Super Sabre that gets sucked up by the Valyries wake causing both planes to go down. All for an effin' PR shoot! Effin' marketers!

      --
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    2. Re:A time of leaps and bounds by _ph1ux_ · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "It still amazes me to think of all of the technological leaps that were taken between 1947 and the early 60's. In less than two decades, we went from piston powered prop planes to aircraft that cruised at Mach 3 to the very edge of space (the U2 and SR-71 travel at such high altitudes that the crews wear suits adapted from the space program)."

      Too bad so many people have been convinced that these types of research development projects are still not going on.

      There is no way that the military and government would have just gotten to a certain point and stopped their efforts. They still are doing astounding amounts of research and development on secret shit that we will never know about.

    3. Re:A time of leaps and bounds by willith · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Chaperoning black projects does not bring glory to the chaperones. As is explained in Ben Rich's excellent book Skunk Works, the Blackbird series was shitcanned not because we grew weaker as a nation or because we lost some kind of technical prowess, but rather because it drew (tons of) money away from other, flashier projects that the Congress and the general public could actually be told about--like the XB-70 (whose engines would have created a bigger return on Soviet radar than anything else in our entire military inventory, thus making it even more useless for attacking sophisticated targets than our current "triumph of form over function" champion, the B1).

      Few generals like black projects. What good is a project that you can't wave under other generals' noses?

    4. Re:A time of leaps and bounds by TheLink · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They did all that great stuff in the days of slide rules, tubes and valves.

      Seems to me we really haven't made much progress in aerospace since the Apollo moon flights.

      The Concorde is going to be EOLed.

      What happened to everyone? Or they're doing a lot of cool aerospace stuff but it's all secret? With all the satellites around I wonder how you can keep things a secret if you have test flights, unless they are really doing something amazing.

      Or all the brains and money decided to go elsewhere?

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    5. Re:A time of leaps and bounds by mlknowle · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Again just to follow up - from the son of a U2 pilot...

      The U2 did indeed fly very slow, but the incredible thing about it was that the range between its stall speed (when it was going too slow to fly, and would tumble out of the sky) and the speed at which its wings would be ripped off was about 10mph. So the pilots would have to keep the aircraft in that very narrow range for up to ten hours during their flights, all the while doing scientific and espionage photography and data gathering

  11. Re:U2..? High speed...? by rikkards · · Score: 2, Informative

    The US continued using them, though, which is what lead to the Gary Powers incident.

    I think you mean continues. The US still uses them to a small degree. Although with the UAVs becoming more and more commonplace I suspect sooner or later it may be mothballed and only NASA will be using them.

  12. Don't bother. by nonya · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I recently read this book. The material it covers should make a great book. It covers Kelly Johnson and his U-2 and SR-71 planes, Polaroid's Edwin Land, spy satellites - this book could have been great.

    My favorite book covering engineering projects is "The Making Of The Atomic Bomb" by Richard's Rhodes. It gives a good understanding of the science behind the bomb, the men who built it, and the historical setting that the work occurred in.

    In contrast, "Secret Empire" gives a little taste for the technology and personalities behind these machines, but it only left me hungry. This book never lives up to the material it covers.

  13. ya! a real tragedy! by xpl_the_myst · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It is especially tragic because of the nature of spy work - all those technical guys who could innovate while working under defense departments and who could not tell anybody about what they had done. Especially considering the acclaim that they would have earned in conventional academic circles.

    Off topic, but there's this debate about whether human intelligence is better or whether tech surveillance like listening to radio traffic or say flying reconnaisance flights, is more useful. The latest war in Iraq is, in my opinion, a fine example. No one had an accurate picture of what it was like inside Iraq. Frederick Forsyth ends his The Fist of God with the hypothesis that humint can never outdo tehnical intelligence. any views on this?

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    1. Re:ya! a real tragedy! by divisionbyzero · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Omm... that secrecy may have just saved their lives and given them the piece of mind to be able to keep innovating without fear the soviet union was going to kidnap or assassinate them... I wonder what those people think about the secrecy they had to live in? Not everyone wants to be a movie star...

  14. Not only do we still use the U2.... by DesScorp · · Score: 2, Informative

    ....we also used an improved version called the TR-1, with better avionics and extended range. We still have some older U2's as well, and yes, NASA uses them for high altitude data-gathering.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  15. The NSA and Gary Powers by mahlen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    James Bamford's Body of Secrets: Anatomy of the Ultra-Secret National Security Agency has an amazing chapter on Ike's personal involvement in the U2 missions, and, when the Congress was investigating those U2 missions after Gary Powers was shot down, Ike's insistance that his subordinates lie to the Congress under oath about Ike's involvement. This insistance is an impeachable offense, by the way.

    Body of Secrets is very worth checking out if the back story of spying is of interest. And much more entertaining than his previous NSA history, The Puzzle Palace.

    mahlen

    All the parts falling off this car are of the very finest British manufacture. --bumper sticker

  16. Multiple U2s shot down over China by BenEnglishAtHome · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Does anybody have a link to pictures of all the U2s that were shot down by the Chinese? I know I've seen photos of them on display. We gave the planes to Taiwan, they flew them over the mainland, and down they came. I guess the loss of pilots and aircraft was considered to be an acceptable price for the information garnered from the program.

    This page recounts some details of a half-dozen U2s shot down over China between 1962 and 1969. Interesting stuff.

  17. Re:U2..? High speed...? by Honorbound · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Last year I particpated in a U-2 launch as a ground crew member. Actually, it was one of NASA'a ER-2s, which are U-2s that are painted white. NASA obtained two U-2s from the Air Force to fly a wide range of sensors, such as the AVIRIS hyperspectral imager. IIRC, the usual mission speed is 410 knots. The launch was an awesome experience. Those aircraft (nicknamed the "Dragon Lady") are a different breed. The wingspan is huge and the cockpit is very spartan and cramped. I really admire the pilots who sit in those things for 8-10 hours at a time while wearing a bulky spacesuit.

    --
    "I'm not, like, that smart. I, like, forget stuff all the time." -- Paris Hilton
  18. Another example by CausticWindow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The story of Alan Turing is really tragic.

    He was one of the main contributors to breaking the Enigma code, and also a true innovator in the field of computing.

    Of course, his efforts were kept a secret until long after the war, and Turing never got any official recognition while he was alive. When the british government harrased him over his sexuality, he ended up taking his own life with cyanide. A sad story indeed.

    --
    How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
  19. Exciting Times by binkless · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's a shame the reviewer repeats the conventional wisdom that the 1950's in the United States was an unexciting period. This gets said over and over again, but doesn't become true as a result. The 1950s were times of enormous social change and cultural achievement - it was during this time, for instance, that New York supplanted Paris as a center for the world of art. It was then that jazz - the most important musical movement of American history - came into full flower. And it was a time full of conflict and complexity in world affairs during which the United States experienced great success. It was really a much more exciting time than the sixties, which offered inferior music (rock & roll) inferior art (Andy Warhol) mixed results in world affairs and economic mismangement (Johnson's inflation).

  20. Espionage and the Eisenhower Era by SurgeonGeneral · · Score: 4, Interesting

    (Did you know the Eisenhower administration was exciting?)

    Yes, anyone who has looked at the Eisenhower era would know its exciting. But no one looks at history anymore.. including, apparently, you. Its just his name thats boring =) ... His era is the one where the cold war got momentum.

    Some interesting things of note in the Eis era:

    -The USA came out of isolationism and began enforcing "Containment Policy" : The application of force anywhere there is percieved communist expandsion. This is still their Foreign Policy guideline today. (but it deals with terrorists)
    -The USA went to war against the little known country (at the time), Korea in 1950. This was the first appliction of containment.
    -The CIA formed its Office of Special Operations, the espionage division.
    -The CIA and the State Department successfully completed its first foreign coup: Iran, 1953.
    -The CIA successfully compeleted its second coup in Guatemala, 1953-54.

    There are a number of other interesting things.. you guys should check it out. Modern history is still quite relevent. (only 40-50 years old! younger than your dad! Your dads not irrelevant is he? =)

    Thanks for listening,

    --
    -- "Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains." Jean Jacques Rousseau
  21. Corona? by WegianWarrior · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...and the Corona satellite.
    What I find interesting is that what most people in the US and the rest of the world thought to be a series of peacefull research sateliets named Discovery, actually was the corona spy satelite system. It's even more amazing when you realise what they actually achived with such a 'primitive' system, starting virtually from scratch.

    I also found some links to the Thor booster and Agena spacecraft, variants A, B and D on Encyclopedia Astronautica - my favorite webpage for such things.

    --
    Everything in the world is controlled by a small, evil group to which, unfortunately, no one you know belongs.
  22. Good book having SR-71 & U2 history by bourne · · Score: 3, Informative

    While mostly about the stealth F-117, the book Skunk Works by Ben Rich/Leo Janos contains a lot of anecdotal and interesting information about the U2 and SR-71 projects. Rich worked at the Lockheed Skunk Works through all three planes' lifecycles, and provides some insight into the quirks, challenges and personalities that surround the three aircraft.

  23. Funny Story by boomgopher · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Not sure if it's in this book, but I read a funny story one time about some early overflights of the USSR using modified B-29 bombers. On a flight over the Kamchatka peninsula, one plane suddenly found themseleves in/near a group of Russian bombers.

    They were in a panic, but amazed that weren't under fire and basically ignored, until they realized the Russian bombers were Tu-4s - which were bolt-for-bolt copies of B-29s designed from a plane that was siezed by the USSR during a WWII emergency landing. Their B-29 had a bright-red tail, so they were mistaken for another Soviet bomber.

    --
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  24. Ike -- Boring? You're kidding, right? by ianscot · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The book sounds good, and might make a nice complement to "Blind Man's Bluff," the rambling pop title about the history of submarine espionage. The PBS "American Experience" about Eisenhower is excellent, too, and covers the whole U2 angle quite a bit. Very watchable.

    Where we got the idea that Eisenhower presided over a sleepy, suburban dream of America, I really don't know. Maybe that's how the Republicans like(d) to dream about life before those nasty 60s radicals shook everything up?

    Take a look at the foreign policy Ike ran, though -- trying desperately to negotiate with the USSR from a position of strength in the new nuclear age while also staving off the "military industrial complex" (a phrase he coined) -- and he comes out in retrospect as a man of purpose and great ability. The one U2 flight too far, and he felt he'd failed... But the guy had a conscience in a way W. Bush wouldn't even recognize, and he did his damnedest under trying circumstances. Hardly dull, anyway.

    --
    "Fundamentalism" isn't about divine morality. It's about human authority.
  25. Re:GERMANS!!! by sjanich · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Actually, WW3 was the cold war.


    WW4 is the current War (Netwar and 4GW) between the Anglo/American West on one side, and Political Islam with Authoritarian/Buerocractic Elites and Leftist on the other.

  26. A minor tidbit. by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, the TR-1A got redesignated U-2R and U-2S during the 1990's after the Cold War ended.

    Recently, the U-2R/S models got major upgrade with non-afterburning versions of the GE F404 engine (almost identical to the engines on the F-117A); with these new engines the plane could operate at high altitudes longer due to improved fuel consumption and also were much more tolerant of compressor stalls at high altitude.

  27. Eisenhower - Eisenhauer by garglblaster · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Maybe offtopic but anyway:

    Reminds me of a story my dad told me one day:

    It's about a german private named "Eisenhauer" that became a POW of the Russians in WW2.

    Somehow he never understood why he always seemed to get a special treatment - actually they (the Russians) were always very polite to him and seemed to treat him in a special way, almost like an officer which he wasn't.

    As it turned out later, he came from the same village as Pres. Eisenhower's ancestors... (somewhere close to Pirmasens - Germany)

    --

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