William King "Bill" Harvey (September
13, 1915 – June 9, 1976) was a Central Intelligence Agency officer,
best known for his role in Operation
Mongoose. He was known as "America's James Bond",
a tag given to him by Edward
Lansdale.
Harvey was born September 13, 1915
in Cleveland, Ohio. He was the son of Sara King
Harvey, professor at Indiana State Teachers College in Terre Haute, now Indiana State University. He
graduated from Wiley High School in Terre Haute in 1931,
eventually enrolling at Indiana University, then graduating from Indiana University
School of Law - Bloomington. He married Libby, the daughter of a lawyer
from Maysville, Kentucky, but
the marriage ended in divorce in 1954.
Career
Harvey joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation in
December 1940. One morning in July 1947 he broke an FBI regulation on being
available on two-hour call due to sleeping off heavy drinking at a party the
night before. He refused the resulting demotion and reassignment to Indianapolis,
preferring to resign. He joined the CIA shortly thereafter where his FBI
knowledge proved to be invaluable, and where he plotted to reduce the FBI's
overseas powers. Along with James
Angleton, he became one of the foremost operatives in the secret war
against the KGB during
the Cold
War. Journalist David Martin reported that despite
Harvey gaining a reputation as consuming more alcohol than any other person in
the United States government, no one ever saw him drunk.
To get at Fidel
Castro, Harvey decided he needed Mafia links, and drew on the connections
of CIA agent Robert Maheu, who had links with Sam
Giancana, Santo Trafficante, Jr., Johnny
Roselli and others. Finding Maheu's operation chaotic, Harvey cut
everyone but Roselli out, and ran the operations against Castro himself. Harvey
was also involved in Operation Mongoose, a CIA operation run from Miami,
Florida that ran various attempts to undermine or overthrow the Cuban
Revolution.
At the height of the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962,
Harvey sent ten intelligence operatives into Cuba to gather intelligence and
prepare for an invasion Harvey thought inevitable. The operation was
unauthorised, and resulted in Harvey being exiled to Italy as Rome station
chief (Harvey had wanted to go to Laos).1964 Harvey
recommended Colonel Renzo Rocca, Chief of the Italian
Military Intelligence Division R as liaison for building up the Italian Gladio
network. In Rome, Harvey's drinking and health deteriorated, and he
was ultimately relieved. After returning to head a CIA headquarters unit
on possible countermeasures to electronic surveillance, Harvey retired in 1969,
his drinking and health still problematic.
In 1975, he testified before the Church
Committee on some of the CIA's past operations.
Harvey died in Indianapolis, Indiana on June 9, 1976
from a heart attack.
After the death of former CIA agent
and Watergate figure E.
Howard Hunt in 2007, Saint John Hunt and David Hunt revealed that
their father had recorded several claims about himself and others being
involved in a conspiracy to
assassinate John F. Kennedy. In the April 5, 2007 issue of Rolling
Stone, Saint John Hunt detailed a number of individuals implicated by his
father including Harvey, as well as Lyndon
B. Johnson, Cord Meyer, David Sánchez Morales, David Atlee Phillips, Frank
Sturgis, and an assassin he termed "French gunman grassy knoll",
who many presume was Lucien Sarti. The
two sons alleged that their father excised the information from his memoirs, "American
Spy: My Secret History in the CIA, Watergate and Beyond", to avoid
possible perjury charges. Hunt's widow and other children told the Los
Angeles Times that the two sons took advantage of Hunt's loss of
lucidity by coaching and exploiting him for financial gain. The newspaper said
it examined the materials offered by the sons to support the story and found
them to be "inconclusive."
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