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Authors: Hugh Wilford

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United Arab Republic

UN

United Nations

VOA

Voice of America

Dramatis Personae

THE PLAYERS

The CIA Arabists

KERMIT “KIM” ROOSEVELT JR.:
Chief of CIA covert operations in the Middle East. Grandson of Theodore Roosevelt (TR), son of the businessman and explorer Kermit Roosevelt Sr. and Belle Willard Roosevelt, and husband of Mary “Polly” Gaddis.

ARCHIBALD B. ROOSEVELT JR.:
Another grandson of TR and CIA officer; expert on the Middle East but beaten out to the role of covert operations chief by his cousin Kim. Married first to Katherine Winthrop “KW” Tweed, then Selwa “Lucky” Showker.

MILES A. COPELAND JR.:
Alabaman friend of the Roosevelt cousins, Kim’s lieutenant in CIA, and later author of controversial books about intelligence. Married Lorraine Adie.

Their Predecessors, the OSS Arabists

WILLIAM A. EDDY:
Lebanon-born Arabist, marine, scholar, intelligence officer, and American minister to Saudi Arabia, he blazed the CIA’s trail in the Arab world.

HAROLD B. HOSKINS:
Eddy’s cousin; a businessman and diplomat who also pioneered American intelligence in the Middle East during World War II.

STEPHEN B. L. PENROSE JR.:
Educator and chief of the OSS station in Cairo.

Other Americans

OSS/CIA

WILLIAM J. DONOVAN:
Head of the OSS and Roosevelt family friend.

ALLEN DULLES:
Donovan’s European deputy in the OSS; later deputy director of the CIA and then director between 1953 and 1961; a keen advocate of covert operations.

WALTER BEDELL SMITH:
Dulles’s irascible predecessor as CIA director.

FRANK G. WISNER:
OSS chief in southeastern Europe and first head of CIA covert operations.

DONALD N. WILBER:
Scholarly expert on Iran who was stationed there as an OSS officer during World War II; later helped plan the Iranian coup operation of 1953.

MICHAEL G. MITCHELL:
First head of the CIA’s Middle East section, he recommended Kim over Archie Roosevelt as covert operations chief for the region.

STEPHEN J. MEADE:
Tough army officer periodically loaned to the OSS and CIA to perform special missions.

MATHER GREENLEAF ELIOT:
Young CIA case officer for the American Friends of the Middle East (AFME).

LORRAINE NYE NORTON:
Eliot’s successor as AFME case officer (they later married).

JAMES M. EICHELBERGER:
Wartime Counter Intelligence Corps colleague of Miles Copeland; later advertising executive and CIA station chief in Cairo.

JAMES BURNHAM:
Ex-Trotskyist intellectual and CIA consultant whose writings influenced Agency operations in Nasser’s Egypt.

EDWARD G. LANSDALE:
Kim Roosevelt’s “nation-building” colleague in the Far East; often identified as the model for Graham Greene’s
The Quiet American
.

JAMES JESUS ANGLETON:
Legendary head of CIA counterintelligence, he also ran the Agency’s “Israeli account.”

HOWARD “ROCKY” STONE:
Young member of the CIA team in Iran in 1953. He attempted unsuccessfully to mount a similar operation in Syria in 1957.

WILBUR CRANE EVELAND:
Army officer and Middle East adventurer loaned to Allen Dulles from 1956 to plot regime change in Syria.

State Department

DEAN ACHESON:
Director of the Lend-Lease program during World War II, secretary of state from 1949 to 1953, and patron of Kim Roosevelt.

JOHN FOSTER DULLES:
Brother of Allen Dulles; Acheson’s sternly moralistic successor as secretary of state.

EDWIN M. WRIGHT:
Middle East specialist in army intelligence during World War II and State Department afterward.

LOY W. HENDERSON:
Veteran foreign service officer and Soviet expert; assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs in the run-up to the creation of Israel; ambassador to Iran at the time of 1953 coup.

JAMES HUGH KEELEY JR.:
Arabist diplomat serving as ambassador to Syria at the time of the 1949 coup there.

JEFFERSON CAFFERY:
Veteran diplomat serving as US ambassador to Egypt at the time of the 1952 Egyptian Revolution.

HENRY A. BYROADE:
Young ex-soldier and assistant secretary for Near Eastern affairs; selected as Caffery’s successor in Egypt to cultivate Nasser but undermined by CIA “crypto-diplomacy.”

Kim Roosevelt’s Arabist, Anti-Zionist Citizen Network

GEORGE L. LEVISON:
Prominent anti-Zionist American Jew; close friend of Kim Roosevelt.

ELMER BERGER:
Anti-Zionist rabbi and another intimate of Kim Roosevelt’s; executive director of the American Council for Judaism.

JAMES TERRY DUCE:
Influential ARAMCO vice president based in Washington.

VIRGINIA C. GILDERSLEEVE:
Distinguished educator and high-profile anti-Zionist.

GARLAND EVANS HOPKINS:
Minister and editor; executive officer of successive Arabist, anti-Zionist organizations, including AFME.

DOROTHY THOMPSON:
Celebrity journalist who presided over AFME.

CORNELIUS VAN H. ENGERT:
Retired foreign service officer who helped liaise between Allen Dulles and AFME.

EDWARD L. R. ELSON:
Presbyterian pastor of both Dwight Eisenhower and John Foster Dulles; a director of AFME.

The Arab Players

Iraq

‘ABD AL-ILAH:
Regent of Iraq during minority of King Faisal II.

NURI AL-SA‘ID:
Pro-British prime minister of Iraq; murdered along with the Hashemite royal family during the 1958 coup.

Saudi Arabia

‘ABD AL-‘AZIZ AL SA‘UD:
Ibn Saud, the warrior-king and founder of Saudi Arabia; succeeded by his less impressive son SAUD.

Syria

SHUKRI AL-QUWATLI:
Syrian president overthrown in the 1949 military coup but returned to power in 1955.

HUSNI AL-ZA‘IM:
A Kurdish army officer, he became president after leading the 1949 coup but was deposed and executed only months later.

ADIB AL-SHISHAKLI:
Tank commander, friend of Miles Copeland, and participant in numerous coup conspiracies, he became president himself in 1953.

MIKHAIL ILYAN:
Conservative Syrian politician who plotted regime change with Wilbur Crane Eveland.

‘ABD AL-HAMID SARRAJ:
Clever chief of Syrian security service who foiled successive CIA plots to overthrow the government.

Egypt

FAROUK:
Licentious young king overthrown in the Egyptian Revolution of 1952.

MUHAMMAD NAGUIB:
Popular Egyptian general who led the revolutionary government.

GAMAL ‘ABDEL NASSER:
Brilliant young army officer who usurped Naguib and, with CIA support, emerged as the Arab world’s leading nationalist.

MUHAMMAD HAIKAL:
Egyptian journalist and confidant of Nasser’s.

‘ALI SABRI:
Air Force intelligence chief and later director of Nasser’s Office of the Prime Minister.

HASSAN AL-TUHAMI:
Miles Copeland’s liaison with Nasser’s government.

ZAKARIA MOHIEDDIN:
Nasser’s interior minister who oversaw the creation of the General Investigations Directorate.

Transjordan/Jordan

‘ABDULLAH I:
Hashemite emir, then king, he was assassinated in 1951; succeeded a year later by grandson HUSSEIN, who would later receive CIA support.

Lebanon

CAMILLE CHAMOUN:
Pro-American, Christian president whose fate became a crucial test of the Eisenhower Doctrine.

The Israelis

TEDDY KOLLEK:
World War II Jewish Agency intelligence official, friend of the Roosevelt cousins, and later mayor of Jerusalem.

DAVID BEN-GURION:
Founding father of Israel and the country’s first prime minister; helped establish the intelligence partnership between the CIA and Mossad.

The Iranians

MOHAMMED REZA PAHLAVI:
Young Shah of Iran covertly backed by the CIA.

MOHAMMED MOSADDEQ:
Charismatic nationalist prime minister deposed in the 1953 coup.

The British

RUDYARD KIPLING:
Bard of the British empire and Roosevelt family friend whose novel
Kim
inspired later generations of intelligence officers, including the CIA Arabists.

T. E. LAWRENCE:
“Lawrence of Arabia,” the British army officer who liaised with the Arab Revolt of World War I and fired the imaginations of the Roosevelt cousins.

HARRY ST. JOHN “JACK” PHILBY:
Renegade British Arabist, adviser to Ibn Saud, and father of the Soviet mole H. A. R. “KIM” PHILBY.

ANTHONY EDEN:
Three-time foreign secretary, he succeeded Winston Churchill as prime minister in 1955 before mounting the disastrous Suez operation that led to his resignation in January 1957.

HAROLD MACMILLAN:
Foreign secretary under Eden and prime minister after him, he engineered a post-Suez reconciliation with the Americans while working behind the scenes to restore the British position in the Middle East.

Preface

THIS BOOK BEGAN WITH TWO
surprises, the first being that it did not already exist. From the 1953 coup that deposed the nationalist prime minister of Iran, Mohammed Mosaddeq, down to more recent reports of secret prisons, waterboarding, and drone warfare, the Central Intelligence Agency has played a defining role in the troubled relationship between the United States and the Middle East. Yet, apart from several books on the Iran coup and a few scholarly articles, there is no single work specifically devoted to the subject.
1
Not even histories of the Agency itself have much to say about its Middle Eastern operations other than Iran. Quite why this is so I am still not sure. It might have something to do with the inaccessibility of most of the CIA’s own records about the subject—although, as I soon found out, other sources were publicly available—or perhaps it is because of the vague air of disreputability that seems to surround such topics in US academic circles. In any case, it struck me that this book was calling out to be written.

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