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Counterintelligence Corps organization

also: U.S. Counterintelligence Corps, Army's organization, CIC, Army CIS, counter intelligence core, Army Counterintelligence, American Counterintelligence Corps, CIG, G2 Counterintelligence Corps, 66th CIC, Counterintelligence Corps, Pagnotta's team, Army's Counterintelligence Corps, 66th CIC detachment, counterintelligence, the CIC, Army G2

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Related entities (most co-mentioned)

CIAintelligence service · 6Reinhard Gehlenperson · 6Italycountry · 6U.S. Armyorganization · 4John Richardsonperson · 3Frank Wisnerperson · 3Eastern Soviet Unionplace · 3United Statescountry · 3Operation Rustyoperation · 2Frankfurtplace · 2Leo Pagnottaperson · 2Soviet Unioncountry · 2Inter-Services Intelligenceintelligence service · 2Maxwell D. Taylorperson · 2John F. Kennedyperson · 2Office of Policy Coordinationorganization · 2Germanyplace · 2Romeplace · 2West Germanycountry · 2BNDintelligence service · 2Stuttgartplace · 2Dwight D. Eisenhowerperson · 2Otto Skorzenyperson · 2Vietnamcountry · 1

Claims (16)

Maxwell D. Taylor headed Counterintelligence Corps documented
“He convened a number of high-ranking officials and called them the Counterintelligence Group, the CIG. The members arrived, but were not too enthusiastic about being there. Given the time, they would have worked on what they titled Nation B…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 2 @ 36:21
Counterintelligence Corps recruited Otto Skorzeny book_quoted
“that supposedly had Nazi ties that were supposed to go to Nuremberg and didn't. They were also responsible for the special quote-unquote camp that people like Otto Skorzeny ended up in and Reinhard Galen and all of the other Ukrainian Nazis…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner- Book Club_ President’s Secret War Chap 2 @ 27:22
Dwight D. Eisenhower headed Counterintelligence Corps host_asserted
“the um the governor over in europe but eisenhower because of his prestige of having been you know the the guru on the military side had a lot of clout in calling the shots in europe um post-world war ii um he ran he was in charge of the ope…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner- Book Club_ President’s Secret War Chap 2 @ 1:15:57
Counterintelligence Corps tracked Eugene Dolman book_quoted
“as one of the most disagreeable acquaintance he had ever met. In 1941, Roth had overseen the development and operation of the fleet of Black Raven vans, which were basically the mobile death camps. And the CIA, soon to be CIA, wanted to sav…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner The Devil’s Chessboard Part 5 @ 29:55
Leo Pagnotta headed Counterintelligence Corps book_quoted
“by the 428th U.S. Army Counterintelligence Corps, a detachment of Nazi hunters based in Rome. Major Leo Pagnotta, the Italian-American who was second in command of the Counterintelligence Corps, was a sharp investigator. He figured out that…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner The Devil’s Chessboard Part 5 @ 30:30
Counterintelligence Corps headquartered_with X-2 book_quoted
“In fact, Pagnotta's team of Nazi hunters was headquartered in the same building with Angleton's rival intelligence operation, the Strategic Services Unit X-2 Branch. Pagnotta's counterintelligence army unit was on the first floor, Angleton …”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner The Devil’s Chessboard Part 5 @ 32:28
James Jesus Angleton headed Counterintelligence Corps book_quoted
“Unknown to Hugel, the CIA's counterintelligence staff was very interested in his Japanese business associations, and some of which had served in Soviet POW camps. According to James Angleton, the longtime head of counterintelligence, a numb…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Prelude to Terror Chap 24 @ 39:22
Counterintelligence Corps spied_on Eastern Soviet Union book_quoted
“from the Soviet Union. The 66th CIC also carried out positive intelligence missions in the Soviet zones. 2,211 of them in 1949 providing information useful to OPC secret missions. Among them were the highly classified Detachment A people. B…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (4) @ 38:55
John Richardson member_of Counterintelligence Corps book_quoted
“where he ran agent drops directly into the Soviet Union using stay-behind units. It fell to the Southeast European Division Chief John H. Richardson to liquidate Operation Valuable, a wartime veteran of the Counterintelligence Corps in Ital…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner- Presidents’ Secret Wars John Prados Chap 3 @ 29:52
Counterintelligence Corps carried_out_attack Italy book_quoted
“At a moment's notice, the resistance operations are credited with slowing down the German response to many different situations. And it also says that the army's counterintelligence operated a parallel program to the Jedburgh units in north…”
▶ The Colonels Corner - Book Club about real history @ 33:58
Counterintelligence Corps succeeded Strategic Services Unit book_quoted
“on helping him get the Japanese out of Vietnam. In addition to the SSU, the Army Counterintelligence Corps remained as a clandestine operations center and eventually becomes the G2 of the Army. So given the role of the official intelligence…”
▶ The Colonels Corner - Book Club about real history @ 35:58
Richie Boys member_of Counterintelligence Corps host_asserted
“on how to demoralize the enemy. They were worked into U.S. Counterintelligence Corps, the CIC, which kind of operated in tandem with the OSS throughout the European theater and the Japanese theater, for that matter. The CIC was, sometimes t…”
▶ Operation Gladio - Live Research Project into CIA corruption @ 33:18
Alexis Johnson headed Counterintelligence Corps documented
“against what they intended to do. So it set up a committee on police and police training. And as chairman, appointed a career diplomat by the name of U, that stands for Ural, U-R-A-L, the mountains in Russia, Alexis Johnson. Johnson resembl…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 2 @ 38:47
Counterintelligence Corps covered_up Reinhard Gehlen host_asserted
“that oversaw the armies in the counterintelligence, the CIC, that basically did all of the debriefs of the Nazis. And that's who determined, they determined who got placed in what queue, whether you were going to the Nuremberg queue or you …”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner- Book Club_ President’s Secret War Chap 2 @ 1:16:22
Robert F. Kennedy funded Counterintelligence Corps host_asserted
“and served as a counterweight to Curtis LeMay, who basically just wanted to bomb everything. Later, Taylor would be named ambassador to South Vietnam, which is critical because he would be overseeing the drug trade from his perch in South V…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 2 @ 37:23
Counterintelligence Corps founded CIA host_asserted
“Its key mission was to develop methods for promoting internal order around the globe. Cabinet departments were represented and a delegate from the CIA also sat in on the meetings. Out of the counterintelligence group deliberations came John…”
▶ The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 2 @ 37:49

Mentions (38)

Operation Gladio - Korea part 3
▶ 49:53 the White Shirt Society, to the U.S. Counterintelligence Corps, which was the Army's organization used both in the Pacific Theater and in Europe that was the military counterpart to the OSF. So they have documented links that the U.S. was t…
Operation Gladio - Live Research Project into CIA corruption
▶ 33:18 on how to demoralize the enemy. They were worked into U.S. Counterintelligence Corps, the CIC, which kind of operated in tandem with the OSS throughout the European theater and the Japanese theater, for that matter. The CIC was, sometimes t…
Operation Gladio - Relook at Robert Komer (Phoenix) as a Ritchie Boy
▶ 1:09:57 As far as training goes, because most of them goes into the Army CIS, CIC, sorry, the counterintelligence apparatus that was kind of like the complement to the OSS. Some goes into the OSS. They all go off on different tracks, but it's almos…
Operations Gladio - Korea Really Last One
▶ 58:58 was articulated through its military advisory group and the operations to suppress the Jeju uprising. They go on to say that the provision of military advisors to counter intelligence core, as well as many other blah, blah, blah. And it goe…
The Colonels Corner - Book Club about real history
▶ 27:11 a few days after the incident, got a garbled version of the truth talking about some of the people in these roving bands had been captured, said the prisoner had told the army counterintelligence they were anti-Soviet partisans from Ukraine…
The Colonels Corner - Book Club about real history
▶ 33:58 At a moment's notice, the resistance operations are credited with slowing down the German response to many different situations. And it also says that the army's counterintelligence operated a parallel program to the Jedburgh units in north…
The Colonels Corner - Book Club about real history
▶ 35:58 on helping him get the Japanese out of Vietnam. In addition to the SSU, the Army Counterintelligence Corps remained as a clandestine operations center and eventually becomes the G2 of the Army. So given the role of the official intelligence…
The Colonel’s Corner- Book Club_ President’s Secret War Chap 2
▶ 26:54 There were also army assets in the field, especially in Germany. One of the main ones was the V2's Counterintelligence Corps, CIC, with its 66th CIC detachment that was headquartered at Stuttgart in 1949. The 66th CIC had the major responsi…
The Colonel’s Corner- Book Club_ President’s Secret War Chap 2
▶ 27:22 that supposedly had Nazi ties that were supposed to go to Nuremberg and didn't. They were also responsible for the special quote-unquote camp that people like Otto Skorzeny ended up in and Reinhard Galen and all of the other Ukrainian Nazis…
The Colonel’s Corner- Book Club_ President’s Secret War Chap 2
▶ 1:16:22 that oversaw the armies in the counterintelligence, the CIC, that basically did all of the debriefs of the Nazis. And that's who determined, they determined who got placed in what queue, whether you were going to the Nuremberg queue or you …
The Colonel’s Corner- Book Club_ President’s Secret War Chap 2
▶ 1:16:50 You know, like the high ranking Nazis, you know, Eisenhower was involved in all of that, as was Alan Dulles to a much bigger extent than I ever imagined as the OSS, because they worked hand in hand with the CIC in divvying up into all of th…
The Colonel's Corner Book Club Presidents_ Secret Wars Chap 13
▶ 25:29 Colby's place as chief of station at Saigon was taken by John Richardson, an officer from the Army Counterintelligence Corps who had joined the CIA. Richardson was an authentic espionage hero in Italy back in 1944-45 when he was instrumenta…
The Colonel's Corner Book Club Presidents_ Secret Wars Chap 13
▶ 25:57 Richardson stayed on at the Army Counterintelligence and switched over to the CIA afterwards. He had been assigned to Italy, Vienna, Trieste, which is the northeast, just north of Venice area of Italy, and moved to Saigon from Manila, which…
The Colonels Corner Cocaine Death Squads and the War on Terror Part 6
▶ 39:00 such as the P-3 Orion aircraft used by U.S. Customs. Bribing officials and drawing on an elaborate counterintelligence database seem to be outdated. According to an anonymous retired narcotics operative in U.S. Army's Southern Command, SALC…
The Colonel’s Corner Drugs, Oil and War Part 5
▶ 50:42 Colonel Williams from an Army unit to be part of a campaign. Almost certainly, this was Colonel Garland Williams, the creator of the U.S. Army Counterintelligence Corps. After the war, Williams continued his intelligence career at the Feder…
The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 2
▶ 36:21 He convened a number of high-ranking officials and called them the Counterintelligence Group, the CIG. The members arrived, but were not too enthusiastic about being there. Given the time, they would have worked on what they titled Nation B…
The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 2
▶ 37:23 and served as a counterweight to Curtis LeMay, who basically just wanted to bomb everything. Later, Taylor would be named ambassador to South Vietnam, which is critical because he would be overseeing the drug trade from his perch in South V…
The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 2
▶ 37:49 Its key mission was to develop methods for promoting internal order around the globe. Cabinet departments were represented and a delegate from the CIA also sat in on the meetings. Out of the counterintelligence group deliberations came John…
The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 2
▶ 38:19 New courses were set up at the Foreign Service Institute to incorporate State Department into these operations. There were training programs set up in the CIA and throughout the military in order to focus on this. Furthermore, the counterin…
The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 2
▶ 43:21 because they basically taught the street police the same way that they were going to teach the lieutenants and captains, and they were treating them all the same. So there was a lot of people that were upset about the way the training was b…
The Colonels Corner Hidden Terrors by AJ Langguth Part 2
▶ 44:51 So basically just throw out the counter argument and move on. In August of 1962, John F. Kennedy approved the counterintelligence group's report. However, a year later, the police academy was still functioning in Panama while it was suppose…
The Colonel’s Corner Prelude to Terror Chap 24
▶ 51:37 Still, this first effort to sidetrack Hoogle's appointment failed, and the Republican-controlled Senate, so the Director of Operations Veterans, turned to the Counterintelligence Division for help. Here they found information showing that H…
The Colonel’s Corner- Presidents’ Secret Wars John Prados Chap 3
▶ 29:52 where he ran agent drops directly into the Soviet Union using stay-behind units. It fell to the Southeast European Division Chief John H. Richardson to liquidate Operation Valuable, a wartime veteran of the Counterintelligence Corps in Ital…
The Colonel’s Corner- Presidents’ Secret Wars John Prados Chap 3
▶ 47:36 There was relationships with the U.S. Army Counterintelligence Corps as well, the Army G2, the Galen Organization, which is the German counterpart to the CIA. They had relationships with the British SIS. So soon, all of this is in the works…
The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (4)
▶ 37:55 One of the OPC's men at the conference was in fact on detached service from the Army. It was Colonel Richard Stilwell, who had served in Europe. As a military officer, Stilwell played a major role in the CIA-Army relationship. There are cer…
The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (4)
▶ 38:24 with its 66th CIC detachment at Stuttgart. The 66th CIC had the responsibility for screening all displaced persons who would be the main source of OPC's agents. Some 42,000 people were screened by the 66th in 1949 alone. As late as 1951, 50…
The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (4)
▶ 40:57 first by the Counterintelligence Corps in what was called Operation Rusty, became a case for the Army's European Intelligence Chief, Brigadier General Edwin Seibert. He didn't have a lot of experience with Russians, so Seibert's G2 interrog…
The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (4)
▶ 45:28 The Galen organization was installed at Pollock near Munich in December of 1947. At the time, still working for the U.S. Army, Galen hired his specialist on the Soviet Union without any regard to their Nazi past. Others were from Nazi secur…
The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (4)
▶ 47:04 and basically began pulling at support from the Galen organization. Colonel Charles Bromley would be the chief army representative. The man from the CIA, also from the army actually, but in the reserve, having just joined the agency, was Ja…
The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (6)
▶ 11:07 He was kept under surveillance by the army counterintelligence. He was known as any face to prevent attempts against him. Warned to hide even though the CIC had information potentially implicating him in war crimes. Bandera just magically d…
The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (6)
▶ 19:40 The NTS recruited and trained its own agents near Frankfurt. The Russian immigrants already had relations with the counterintelligence corps in the army, as well as the Galen organization. Wisner's crew and the Galen organization did prelim…
The Colonel’s Corner Safe for Democracy Part 5 (6)
▶ 33:20 as a main source of recruits. They inserted spies into all of these Western operations. Among the most valuable was Captain Nikita Koronsky, who defected in Berlin in 1948, telling the army counterintelligence his reason was for the love of…
The Colonel’s Corner The Devil’s Chessboard Part 5
▶ 29:55 as one of the most disagreeable acquaintance he had ever met. In 1941, Roth had overseen the development and operation of the fleet of Black Raven vans, which were basically the mobile death camps. And the CIA, soon to be CIA, wanted to sav…
The Colonel’s Corner The Devil’s Chessboard Part 5
▶ 30:30 by the 428th U.S. Army Counterintelligence Corps, a detachment of Nazi hunters based in Rome. Major Leo Pagnotta, the Italian-American who was second in command of the Counterintelligence Corps, was a sharp investigator. He figured out that…
The Colonel’s Corner The Devil’s Chessboard Part 5
▶ 32:28 In fact, Pagnotta's team of Nazi hunters was headquartered in the same building with Angleton's rival intelligence operation, the Strategic Services Unit X-2 Branch. Pagnotta's counterintelligence army unit was on the first floor, Angleton …
The Colonel's Corner The Great Pretense Part 12
▶ 1:04:20 American Counterintelligence Corps. He actually wasn't recruited by the CIC. The CIC ran the prison camps and the OSS told the CIC who to put in what prison camp based on what they were going to do with them post-war. The people like Galen …
The Colonel's Corner The Great Pretense Part 12
▶ 1:04:48 because they had plans to use them. So he wasn't recruited. That's the wrong word. He was protected by the Army CIC and used by the OSS and then the CIA. It says in the spring of 45, he was working for the soon to be CIA. During that transi…
The Colonel’s Corner Twilight of the Shadow Government Part 5
▶ 32:32 He'd enlisted in the Army in 1945, recruited into Army's Counterintelligence Corps in 1947 because of his fluency in Polish, then assigned in September 51 to the CIA. What was this man even doing at the CIA in 1998, especially since he had …