A RetroSearch Logo

Home - News ( United States | United Kingdom | Italy | Germany ) - Football scores

Search Query:

Showing content from https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/UsefulNotes/CIA below:

Website Navigation


UsefulNotes / CIA

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/UsefulNotes/CIA

Go To

"And Ye Shall Know The Truth And The Truth Shall Make You Free."

The Central Intelligence Agency... The Agency.

After World War II, the OSS was disbanded. With the onset of the Cold War, it was decided that a new intelligence agency was needed. The name "Central" reflects that it was originally supposed to be a clearinghouse among various other agencies. However, it became effectively a new OSS and acquired many veterans from that previous service. Originally, the agency hired people from the Ivy League that had a Foreign Culture Fetish for England. They dressed, talked, and acted like the English. In this period of desk gathering intelligence, the pipe-smoking professor was seen as the ideal officer.

The CIA has been controversial, having at times been accused of incompetence, immoral actions, or both. Notably, the Church Committee hearings of 1975 revealed a long history of abuses, from domestic espionage to assassination plots against foreign leaders, which cemented its often-negative portrayal in the media - later scandals like Iran-Contra and its failure to predict either the fall of the Soviet Union or the 9/11 terror attacks did nothing to assuage this. In some fictional portrayals, they are often regarded as being The Men in Black or an omnipotent "secret government" that pulls the strings on American foreign policy behind the senes. This portrayal is undoubtedly an exaggeration, as if the CIA was really that skillful, we might ask why it took us so long to win the Cold War. Of course, maybe that's what they wanted.

Nonetheless, the CIA has had its successes. For instance, a large part of the reason for the United States winning the contest of gigantic Death Glares that was the Cuban Missile Crises is that America had a mole telling the U.S. government that the Soviets had less capacity than they claimed. Then again, said mole, Oleg Penkovsky, was later ratted out and executednote in large part because Penkovsky took crazy risks to try to get information to his CIA handlers, circumventing the normal, much slower methods that were in place. His breach of protocol, combined with his already questionable behavior, resulted in his capture, but notably, the CIA did not ask him to break procedure. He did it himself, likely knowing the risks., and was first discovered and contacted by MI6.

The typical depiction of the CIA in both fiction and the more speculative forms of conspiracy theory, usually portrays them as being somewhere between spies and assassins, as well as at times being allegedly responsible for the overthrow of foreign governments, democratic or not, in the name of American interests.note In reality, the CIA is prevented, by presidential order, from carrying out assassinations and government overthrows, as has been the case for decades. This does not, however, prevent them from hiring someone else to kill a target, or assisting a rebel group after its takeover - such as in Chile in 1973, when the CIA was aware in advance of Augusto Pinochet's putsch and helped him consolidate power after it. Nor does it prevent them making coup-plotters aware in advance that they'll get CIA backing once they claim power. Liam Neeson's portrayal of a possible former CIA man in Taken is very standard, as is Harrison Ford's portrayal in Patriot Games. The Agency's adventures in Nicaragua, among other places, can also make for particularly interesting reading; as can Peter Joseph's interview with John Perkins. It is at times implied that they are additionally a research organization of sorts, with an interest in experimental tactics that would usually be considered impossible by the mainstream public. (Such as MK-Ultra, the Psychic Warrior program(s), etc) The CIA, or at least many of its personnel, is also usually depicted as having a severe case of Chronic Backstabbing Disorder, with officers and administrators constantly betraying each other for various reasons, both good and bad.note In reality, the CIA is fiercely loyal to their officers (the accurate name for a CIA field operative), and at least tries to keep their officers (the accurate name for a source) alive. This is mostly pragmatism: letting an officer die means that they won't be providing information anymore, and if word gets out that the CIA doesn't protect their officers, it means they'll have a much more difficult time recruiting in the future. This of course means officers have to live with the constant fear of betrayal.

Although it says "The Agency" up top here, actual CIA employees (and those in the know) tend to call it "The Company"; calling it "The Agency" is acceptable, but calling it "The CIA" in anything except perhaps first reference is considered incorrect. Other federal government types might call it the "Other Government Agencies" (OGA), typically when its involvement in something or other is an open secret. In exceptionally double-cross-intensive stories you might see "The Company" and "The Agency" used to represent different factions of the CIA. "Langley"note  not to be confused with the nearby High School of the same name is another informal name that shows up often, because the CIA is headquartered in Langley, Virginia, just a few miles west of Washington, D.C.. Another colloquial name that often comes up is "The Farm", used for the covert training facility at Camp Peary. Another important point: people who work for the CIA are officers, not agents. CIA agents are assets with access to information who work with officers.

When they appear in fiction alongside the FBI, America's other famous intelligence agency, the CIA Evil, FBI Good trope often comes into play, although the reverse (FBI Evil, CIA Good) is not unheard of.

A lot of fiction has references to the CIA. Here are just some:

    open/close all folders 

    Anime & Manga 

    Comic Books 

    Films — Live-Action 

    Literature 

    Live-Action TV 

    Music 

    Tabletop Games 

    Video Games 

    Western Animation 

Alternative Title(s): Central Intelligence Agency


RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue

Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo

HTML: 3.2 | Encoding: UTF-8 | Version: 0.7.4