The CIA released hundreds of heavily censored documents 
Tuesday about its spying on Americans, foreign assassination plots and other 
misdeeds that triggered a scandal in the mid-1970s. 
 
 
 |  National Security Archive Executive Director Thomas Blanton, 
 left, and Senior Fellow and CIA expert of the National Security Archive 
 John Prados, right, confer as they examine documents, released by the 
 Central Intelligence Agency, June 26, 2007, in 
 Washington. [AP]
 
  | 
 
 
 
Known inside the CIA as the "family jewels," the documents were released with 
vast sections blocked out by agency censors. As a result, they were far less 
revealing than the reports issued in the mid-1970s by the three investigations 
which obtained unedited versions of these internal CIA documents a generation 
ago. 
The ensuing scandal sullied the reputation of the intelligence community and 
led to new rules for the CIA, FBI and other spy agencies and new permanent 
committees in Congress to oversee them. 
The 693 pages, mostly drawn from the memories of active CIA officers in 1973, 
were turned over at that time to three different investigative panels -- 
President Ford's Rockefeller Commission, the Senate's Church committee and the 
House's Pike committee. 
The panels spent years investigating and amplifying on these documents. And 
their public reports in the mid-1970s filled tens of thousands of pages. 
In early 1975, CIA Director William Colby told the Justice Department that 
these documents detailed assassination plots against foreign leaders such as 
Fidel Castro, the testing of behavior-altering drugs on unwitting citizens, 
wiretapping of US journalists, spying on civil rights and anti-Vietnam war 
protesters, opening of mail between the United States and the Soviet Union and 
China and break-ins at the homes of ex-CIA employees and others. 
But as censored by the CIA, many of the most sensational events were 
mentioned in little more than one, sketchy paragraph apiece. 
The new documents devoted two paragraphs to the programs that opened mail 
between US citizens and the Soviet Union and China. 
One paragraph said "Project WESTPOINTER," from the fall of 1969 through 
October 1971, was based in the San Francisco area and the target was mail to the 
United States from Chinese mainland. 
The other paragraph said a program, begun in 1953 but dormant by 1973, 
intercepted incoming and outgoing Russian mail, and occasionally other types of 
mail, at New York's Kennedy Airport. 
By contrast, the Senate committee headed by Frank Church, D-Idaho, which 
spent two years investigating these documents, produced a book-length study of 
12 CIA and FBI mail opening programs from 1940 to 1973. It found that the CIA 
alone had opened and photographed almost 250,000 first class letters in the 
United States and produced a computerized CIA index of nearly 1.5 million names. 
The agency's new documents contained an unsigned three-page memo that 
described CIA's program code named Operation CHAOS as a worldwide effort to 
collect information "on foreign efforts to manipulate US extremism." It said 
some American extremists had been recruited by the CIA and sent abroad as 
contract agents, but asserts that CHAOS "has not and is not conducting efforts 
domestically for internal domestic collection purposes." 
Another 1973 memo to Colby from the CIA inspector general expressed concern 
over CHAOS "because of the high degree of resentment we found among many agency 
employees at their being expected to participate in it." 
But the Church committee reported in 1976 that CHAOS compiled a computerized 
index of 300,000 individuals, including 7,200 Americans and more than 100 
domestic groups between 1967-1973 as it examined civil rights and anti-Vietnam 
war protesters. 
One of the most detailed descriptions in the newly released documents 
concerned one of the plots to kill the Cuban dictator Castro. 
A memo by CIA security chief Howard Osborn said in August 1960 the CIA 
recruited ex-FBI agent Robert Maheu, who was a top aide to Howard Hughes in Las 
Vegas, to approach mobster Johnny Roselli and pass himself off as the 
representative of international corporations who wanted Castro killed. 
Roselli introduced Maheu to "Sam Gold" and "Joe," who were actually 10-most 
wanted mobsters Sam "Momo" Giancana, Al Capone's successor in Chicago, and 
Santos Trafficante. The mobsters worked for free, turning down a US$150,000 
offer. The CIA gave them six poison pills, and they tried unsuccessfully for 
several months to have several people put them in the Cuban leader's food. 
This particular plot was dropped after the failed CIA-sponsored Bay of Pigs 
invasion of Cuba. Other plots continued against Castro though they are not 
detailed in the newly released documents. Details of this plot first appeared in 
Jack Anderson's newspaper column in 1971. 
The new releases devote one bare-bones paragraph to CIA involvement in a plot 
that resulted in Congolese Premier Patrice Lumumba's assassination in 1961. 
The Church committee produced a 364-page report on assassination plots that 
described at least eight plots involving the CIA to assassinate Castro between 
1960 and 1965 and detailed how the CIA encouraged Congolese dissidents to kill 
Lumumba. 
In a message to CIA employees Tuesday, Director Michael Hayden said: "It's 
important to remember that the CIA itself launched this process of recollection 
and self-examination. And it was the Agency itself that shared the resulting 
documents in full with Congress. 
"The collection as a whole was exhaustively reviewed in the 1970s by three 
outside investigative panels," Hayden said. The documents provide "reminders of 
some things the CIA should not have done" and "a glimpse of a very different era 
and a very different agency," he said. 
The documents were one of the products of the Watergate scandal. Then-CIA 
Director James Schlesinger was angered to read in the newspapers that the CIA 
had provided support to ex-CIA agents E. Howard Hunt and James McCord, who were 
convicted in the Watergate break-in. Hunt had worked for a secret "plumbers 
unit" in Richard Nixon's White House. The unit originally was tasked to 
investigate and end leaks of classified information but ultimately engaged in a 
wide range of misconduct. 
In May 1973, Schlesinger ordered "all senior operating officials of this 
agency to report to me immediately on any activities now going on, or that have 
gone on the past, which might be construed to be outside the legislative charter 
of this agency." The law establishing the CIA barred it from conducting spying 
inside the United States. 
The result was 693 pages of memos whose contents Schlesinger's successor, 
Colby, reported to the Justice Department. 
"These are the top CIA officers all going into the confessional and saying, 
'Forgive me father, for I have sinned,'" said Thomas Blanton, director of the 
private National Security Archive, which had requested release of the documents 
under the Freedom of Information Act. 
Some contents of these documents first spilled into public view Dec. 22, 
1974, with a story by Seymour Hersh in The New York Times on the CIA's spying 
against anti-war and other dissidents inside this country.