William King Harvey: The CIA’s
´Loosest Cannon’
By Trowbridge Ford on
August 26, 2011
In the annals of the Cold War, no
operative is more misunderstood, and marginalized than the CIA’s William King Harvey
Part I
According to Cambridge Professor
Christopher Andrew, the leading historian of the services Harvey worked for,
the Agency and the KGB, he was nothing more than the faceless husband of Libby
Harvey, the spouse who Soviet spy Guy Burgess produced a pornographic cartoon
of during a drunken party. Robin Winks, author of Cloak & Gown: Scholars in
the Secret War, 1939-1961, avoided Harvey like the plague in its research and
writing.
There is no mention either of the
Agency officer in Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones’s The CIA & American Democracy.
The
only real exception among respected works is Mark Riebling’s The Wedge: The
Secret War between the FBI and CIA, but even here, he concentrated his
description on Harvey’s independent efforts to assassinate Fidel Castro,
something Attorney General Robert Kennedy, it seems, finally stopped on June
20, 1963 when Harvey attended a farewell lunch with Johnny Rosselli, Sam
Giancana’s recruiter of anti-Castro hitmen, at Tino’s Continental Restaurant in
Georgetown.
Even more controversial books on
operations Harvey was involved in have little to add. Jonathan Vankin &
John Whalen have nothing new about Harvey in The 60 Greatest Conspiracies of
All Time, though they did discuss CIA’s efforts to control human behavior
through chemical and psychological means, to get Castro, and to help succeed
somehow in getting rid of JFK, RFK, MLK, and a few others. Anthony Summers, in
The Kennedy Conspiracy, after discussing Harvey’s efforts to assassinate Castro
despite the opposition of the Kennedy brothers, added information about his
efforts to recruit through the Corsican Mafia in Marseilles Thomas Davis,
Christian David, and Lucien Sarti as JFK assassins when Harvey, it seems, took
up his new assignment in Rome.
According to this information, the
conveniently dead Sarti killed the President with a single, exploding bullet to
the head, and Giancana suffered ultimately a similar fate at the Mafia’s hands
for his role.
Only Noel Twyman, in Bloody Treason:
The Assassination of John F. Kennedy, vastly expanded this claim and several
others by Summers, contending that JFK’s stripping of Harvey’s power to carry
out assassinations resulted in his becoming the chief planner of the
President’s assassination, organizing no less than three hit squads for the job
– an Agency one, a Mafia one, and the French one – an operation for which he
was ultimately obliged to kill Giancana himself to keep secret.
In going from this “rags to riches”
context when in comes to the JFK conspiracy in particular, and Harvey in
general, though, the reader has no clearer indication of who exactly killed the
President, much less an understanding of what Harvey’s actual role in this
killing, and several other operations was. While critics of the Warren
Commission may enjoy an alternative explanation of the President’s
assassination in which it is portrayed as a turkey shoot in which all his
enemies participate, it, in the final analysis, is no more helpful than the
original cover up.
In sum, it seems that a history of
Harvey would be helpful, and perhaps in the process, the reader can gain a
better understanding of all kinds of CIA special operations, especially its
involvement in key assassinations.
William King Harvey, the son of a
successful Indianapolis attorney, was born during WWI in Danville, Indiana, and
followed in his father’s footsteps, attending Indiana University Law School,
and setting up practice in Maysville, Kentucky after an unsuccessful attempt to
enter local Democratic Party politics.
While there, Harvey met his
wife-to-be, the pretty Libby, but his failure at the Bar had him joining the
FBI in December 1940.(Anthony Summers, The Secret Life of J. Edgar Hoover, p.
120ff.)
During WWII, Harvey attempted to put
together double-agent cases in New York against the Nazis, including a
successful one in which William Sebold ran a secret shortwave radio station on
Long Island, but Director Hoover refused to sanction it for long, and others at
all for fear of losing control of events and adverse Bureau publicity,
especially when the Dusko Popov Affair turned so sour.
Popov was a British-German double
agent who came to warn Washington about Japan’s plan to attack Hawaii, but
Hoover was only interested in prosecuting him for vviolating the Mann Act which
criminalized the taking of women across state borders for sexual purposes,
especially since he had resumed his affair with French actress Simone Simon in
New York City, considering his revelations as little more than money-making
schemes.
By late 1947, Harvey was so
demoralized by the process that he failed to show up for work one morning
because of being in a drunken stupor, leading to his transfer back home to
Indianapolis, and to his finding new employment with the CIA.
While he had the highest hopes that
the new agency, especially its Office of Policy Coordinaton, would fulfill its
potential, its largely unsuccessful cowboy operations around the world,
especially in Eastern Europe and the USSR, increasingly left something to be
desired, primarily because of Soviet spying by Philby. Harvey, who was running
Staff C’s foreign mail-opening program (HT/LINGUAL), and was under instruction
not to upset Hoover, was prepared to believe that homosexual Carmel Offie, an
OPC deputy director, was the source of the leaks, thanks to a file the Bureau
had prepared on him.
Hardly had Harvey commenced his
inquiries than Maclean and Burgess were flushed from cover, fleeing to Moscow
on May 25th. Then, after the Bureau had officially supplied CIA with the
decrypts, as Harvey had requested, he zeroed in on Philby, formally accusing
him of being a Soviet agent two weeks later. Hoover, though, to protect the
Bureau’s inflated image, was no more eager to prosecute Philby than the Agency
had been to pursue Offie. In the meantime, Philby was withdrawn to Britain, and
obliged to resign from MI6, resuming a newspaper career.
William King Harvey
The Soviets leaked Khrushchev’s
secret speech to the Twentieth Party Congress to make it seem that the project
was working, and that the Soviet leaders was a faint-hearted liberal, but
veiled what they wanted during the Suez Crisis, and the crushing of the
Hungarian Revolution.
Harvey was immediately given overall
control of the program, and he twice planned, with the assistance of its
Technical Services Divison and a Sam Giancana cutout, but without success
poisoning Castro, finally settling to coordinate his assassination with the Bay
of Pigs invasion. Without President Kennedy supplying sufficient support to the
anti-Castro rebels, and without E. Howard Hunt keeping from the Cuban dictator
what CIA had in store for him, though, the plans came to nothing.
In October 1961, Wright was back in
Washington to prime again the hopelessly dry well. To get Harvey back on board,
the MI5 technical specialist discussed its RAFTER capability – what the KGB
had, but CIA didn’t – in a way which made the forced defection of CIA spy
Michael Goleniewski crystal clear.
The high point in this effort
occurred during the Cuban Missile Crisis when Harvey, contrary to Attorney
General Robert Kennedy’s order, dispatched a commando team to Cuba to kill
Castro.
When JFK settled the Missile Crisis
without the overthrowing of the Cuban regime, and ordered a domestic crackdown
on anti-Castro forces the following April, Harvey was at the end of his tether
about what to do, deciding to kill JFK instead. While the luncheon in June with
Rosselli has been portrayed as a farewell sendoff for Harvey, actually it was a
test to see if Hoover would make a fuss if he continued to contact Mafiosos.
Harvey, Marks’ apparent source, then
told him a cock-and bull story about what had happened. After Harvey had puffed
up Oswald about his importance, and that his bosses wanted to see him to give
him more money, Harvey and apparent resident Winston Scott did this: “At a
prearranged time, the two case officers gently grabbed hold of the agent and
tipped his char over until the back was touching the floor.” Then, instead of
the consultant attempting the rapid induction, he allegedly froze for some
unknown reason, unable to perform the technique.
Once Lee Harvey Oswald had not been
successfully hypnotized to assassinate the President by rapid induction in
July, Harvey, taking advantage of the newly created Domestic Operations
Division, began planning operations against Cuba, and the President which would
backfire on the Soviets and Cubans. To assist this, Harvey seems to have
informed reporter Robert E. Baskin of The Dallas Morning News’s Washington
Bureau that the Cuban Missile Crisis was resuming after the 13-month delay, and
that someone sounding like Lee Harvey Oswald was threatening former Vice
President Richard Nixon and Dallas Representative Bruce Alger.
In the October 20th issue, Baskin –
thanks, it seems, to what Harvey knew about what the Bureau was up to – wrote
in his Weathervane column: “The FBI and postal inspectors are on the trail of a
person in the Dallas area who has been mailing post cards with obscene charges
againt Rep. Bruce Alger and former Vice President Richard N. Nixon. All bear
the same handwriting. Most of them carry Dallas postmarks, but some have been
mailed at Irving and Fort Worth. The sender in believed to be a possibly
dangerous social deviate.” (Quoted from Part II of my three-part series.
“Politics Of The Times Led to Kennedy’s Death, ” in The National Exchange, vol.
2, no. 10, p. 14.)
A year later, one can ask: Is it
really over?
Since then there has been a general
softening of the Russian line toward the United States, culminating in the
signing of a nuclear test ban treaty. Khrushchev these days seems a very
amenable fellow indeed.
BUT CUBA is still Communist and only
90 miles away.
Is it really over? (Quoted from
ibid.)
To create a process which would not
get the Bureau involved – what had happened when Chicago mobsters openly
discussed in Miami murdering union boss Frank Esposito in 1962, obliging the
FBI to use the bugged information to prevent it – Harvey created a set of coded
terms, “Cleopatra Movie”, “Little Egypt”, “Twist Board Craze”, etc., centered
around advertised acts at Jack Ruby’s (aka Jacob “Sparky” Rubenstein for his
youthful deliveries of Iskra) Carousel Club in Dallas, and other Mafia-infested
clubs around the country, to set in motion forces which would threaten the
President, kill him, and make it look as if Havana had done it for Moscow.
The trouble was that Cain had not
test fired the rifle that Larry Crafard, who had come to Dallas under the cover
of making movies, and who, once cleaned up, and wearing his false teeth,
impersonated Oswald on several occasions, had delivered to the Book Depository,
and, consequently, Texas Governor John Connally was accidentally wounded
seriously.
For Harvey, this meant making it
appear that Oswald was not a friend of Castro’s through the Fair Play for Cuba
Committee’s Gilberto Lopez, and a student of KGB “assassation specialist”
Valeri Kostikov – a false legend that the CIA in Mexico City had put together
by ordering him around – but the most unlikely acquaintance of Ruby’s,
explaining why he had to murder him.
Harvey’s U-turn was best illustrated
by Hal Hendrix, the reporter who won the Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the
Cuban Missile Crisis, foregoing reporting the assassination in Dallas so that
he could be with Haig’s Operation Americas, only to see it suddenly reduced to
defensive maneuvers on Colombia’s Atlantic coast.
Harvey was ultimately reduced to
making CIA “Oswald free”, an apparent agent the KGB had recruited through his
wife, Marina – what was achieved by Ruby assassinating him, once Hoover, thanks
to Lee having an alibi for the murder since he was standing at the entrance of
the TSBD when it happened, had determined that there was not enough to convict
him. (Summers, p, 316)
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