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Wedge - by Mark Riebling (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- Prophetic when first published and even more relevant now, Wedge is the classic, definitive story of the secret war America has waged against itself.
- About the Author: Mark Riebling is editorial director at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research.
- 592 Pages
- Political Science, General
Description
About the Book
As riveting as the best spy thriller, "Wedge" explores the fractious relationship between the FBI and the CIA and how it has endangered national security. Includes a new Afterword that covers the last nine years of intelligence failures, from the embassy bombings and the USS "Cole" to Robert Hanssen and 9/11.
Book Synopsis
Prophetic when first published and even more relevant now, Wedge is the classic, definitive story of the secret war America has waged against itself.
Based on scores of interviews with former spies and thousands of declassified documents, Wedge reveals and recreates--battle by battle, bungle by bungle--the epic clash that has made America uniquely vulnerable to its enemies. For more than six decades, the opposed and overlapping missions of the FBI and CIA--and the rival personalities of cops and spies--have caused fistfights and turf tangles, breakdowns and cover-ups, public scandals and tragic deaths.
A grand panorama of dramatic episodes, peopled by picaresque secret agents from Ian Fleming to Oliver North, Wedge is both a journey and a warning. From Pearl Harbor, McCarthyism, and the plots to kill Castro through the JFK assassination, Watergate, and Iran Contra down to the Aldrich Ames affair, Robert Hanssen's treachery, and the hunt for Al Qaeda--Wedge shows the price America has paid for its failure to resolve the conflict between law enforcement and intelligence.
Gripping and authoritative--and updated with an important new epilogue, carrying the action through to September 11, 2001--Wedge is the only book about the schism that has informed nearly every major blunder in American espionage.
About the Author
Mark Riebling is editorial director at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research. He has written on national-security issues for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and the National Review. He lives in New York City.