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Casey: The Lives and Secrets of William J. Casey-From the Oss to the CIA |
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Rating:  Summary: Read About the REAL Reagan Foreign Policy Force Review: In November 1980, William J. Casey found himself in the most enviable position of any campaign management professional in history. He had engineered Ronald Reagan's successful campaign for President, taking the reigns of a broken operation and turning into a efficient and disciplined juggernaut. Now, Casey would vet major cabinet and White House senior staff appointments and had such sway over the President-elect that virtually any judgment Casey made was rubber-stamped.
The story of how Casey got to this pinnacle, and the story of his service as Director of Central Intelligence is indeed one for the history books. While Alexander Haig and George Shultz were stewards of Reagan's public foreign policy actions, Casey represented what came to be known as the Reagan Doctrine: arming and funding armed insurrections against global Communist expansionism (most notably in Nicaragua and Afghanistan). In essence Casey represented the real Reagan, the street fighter whose approach to the Soviet Union and its clients -- so eloquently described by Casey protege Herbert Meyer -- was when you see your enemy on his knees it's time to start kicking him in the head.
Persico's judicious, warts and all treatment of Casey describes how a brilliant kid from a working-class family in Queens became Wild Bill Donovan's deputy for secret intelligence operations in World War II; a brilliant corporate attorney, venture capitalist, and technocrat; chairman of the SEC; and the last great buccaneer director of U.S. intelligence.
Through all of this, Casey's good qualities shine: his big heart and willingness to help friends in need at any time, his devout Catholicism and commitment to conservative principles, his abiding love for his wife Sophia, and his absolute patriotism.
Juicy details from inside the Reagan White House will keep the reader riveted. Did you know about the running feud with James Baker, or close bond between Casey and Donald Regan? That William Safire's nickname for Casey was "Big Bill"? Or that Casey saw his next big duty as running Jeanne Kirkpatrick for president?
In a time when intelligence and its practitioners are anemic, Casey's qualities of audacity, skepticism, realpolitik, and American exceptionalism are sorely missed. As a person and a professional, we will not see the like of William J. Casey in this generation.
Rating:  Summary: First-rate story telling with practical value Review: Persico has done a wonderful job of capturing Casey's magnificent complexity and intellectual voraciousness. Oddly enough the best quote in there, part of a really excellent over-all description of why the DO does not succeed, comes from Herb Meyer when he was a special assistant to Casey: "These guys have built a system that shuts them off from any intelligence except what you can steal. These people needed to be reconnected to reality."
Rating:  Summary: First-rate story telling with practical value Review: Persico has done a wonderful job of capturing Casey's magnificent complexity and intellectual voraciousness. Oddly enough the best quote in there, part of a really excellent over-all description of why the DO does not succeed, comes from Herb Meyer when he was a special assistant to Casey: "These guys have built a system that shuts them off from any intelligence except what you can steal. These people needed to be reconnected to reality."
Rating:  Summary: Fascinating Review: This book is hard-hitting but fair. Casey was a brilliant, albeit, enigmatic and complex man. This books provides a fascinating portrait not only of him, but a template for better understanding the turbulent epoch of the Cold War.
Rating:  Summary: Fascinating Review: This book is hard-hitting but fair. Casey was a brilliant, albeit, enigmatic and complex man. This books provides a fascinating portrait not only of him, but a template for better understanding the turbulent epoch of the Cold War.
Rating:  Summary: A LOOK AT THE GRAY AREA Review: This is a fascinating account of the life of William J. Casey. From his early childhood until his death. This is an unbiased look at the man that helped create the intelligence gathering capabilities for this country. If you are interested in real spies and how they work, this book will captivate you.
Rating:  Summary: Too bad it is out of print Review: This is an old book, but none has surpased its scope since. Readers will find simpathy for Casey, but still Patrick Leahy and Monyihan both give good reviews for its accuracy. The bottom line that Persico threads is that Casey always wanted to be a foreign affairs statesman but was never given any credit for his abilities because he was too ugly and incoherent so when the best Casey could get was the DCI, then Casey turned the intelligence community into his own little state department to live out his dream.
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