Black Site: The CIA in the Post-9/11 World
When the towers fell on September 11, 2001, nowhere were the reverberations more powerfully felt than at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. Almost overnight, the intelligence organization evolved into a warfighting intelligence service, constructing what was known internally as "the Program": a web of top-secret detention facilities intended to help prevent future attacks on American soil and around the world. With Black Site, former deputy director of the CIA Counterterrorist Center Philip Mudd presents a full, never-before-told story of this now-controversial program, directly addressing how far America went to pursue al-Qa'ida and prevent another catastrophe.



Heated debates about torture were later ignited in 2014 after the U.S. Senate published a report of the Program, detailing the CIA's use of "enhanced interrogation techniques" to draw information from detainees. The report, Mudd posits, did not fully address key questions: How did the officials actually come to their decisions? What happened at the detention facilities-known as "Black Sites"-on a day-to-day basis? What did they look like? How were prisoners transported there? And how did the officers feel about what they were doing?



Black Site seeks answers to these questions and more.
"1125676331"
Black Site: The CIA in the Post-9/11 World
When the towers fell on September 11, 2001, nowhere were the reverberations more powerfully felt than at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. Almost overnight, the intelligence organization evolved into a warfighting intelligence service, constructing what was known internally as "the Program": a web of top-secret detention facilities intended to help prevent future attacks on American soil and around the world. With Black Site, former deputy director of the CIA Counterterrorist Center Philip Mudd presents a full, never-before-told story of this now-controversial program, directly addressing how far America went to pursue al-Qa'ida and prevent another catastrophe.



Heated debates about torture were later ignited in 2014 after the U.S. Senate published a report of the Program, detailing the CIA's use of "enhanced interrogation techniques" to draw information from detainees. The report, Mudd posits, did not fully address key questions: How did the officials actually come to their decisions? What happened at the detention facilities-known as "Black Sites"-on a day-to-day basis? What did they look like? How were prisoners transported there? And how did the officers feel about what they were doing?



Black Site seeks answers to these questions and more.
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Black Site: The CIA in the Post-9/11 World

Black Site: The CIA in the Post-9/11 World

by Philip Mudd

Narrated by Robertson Dean

Unabridged — 7 hours, 58 minutes

Black Site: The CIA in the Post-9/11 World

Black Site: The CIA in the Post-9/11 World

by Philip Mudd

Narrated by Robertson Dean

Unabridged — 7 hours, 58 minutes

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Overview

When the towers fell on September 11, 2001, nowhere were the reverberations more powerfully felt than at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. Almost overnight, the intelligence organization evolved into a warfighting intelligence service, constructing what was known internally as "the Program": a web of top-secret detention facilities intended to help prevent future attacks on American soil and around the world. With Black Site, former deputy director of the CIA Counterterrorist Center Philip Mudd presents a full, never-before-told story of this now-controversial program, directly addressing how far America went to pursue al-Qa'ida and prevent another catastrophe.



Heated debates about torture were later ignited in 2014 after the U.S. Senate published a report of the Program, detailing the CIA's use of "enhanced interrogation techniques" to draw information from detainees. The report, Mudd posits, did not fully address key questions: How did the officials actually come to their decisions? What happened at the detention facilities-known as "Black Sites"-on a day-to-day basis? What did they look like? How were prisoners transported there? And how did the officers feel about what they were doing?



Black Site seeks answers to these questions and more.

Editorial Reviews

The New York Times Book Review - Jeff Stein

This is a book about Washington process and bureaucracy, for sure, but with the added heft of dozens of firsthand accounts of what it was like to ride the tiger into the gates of hell.

Kirkus Reviews

2019-04-28
An insider's view of life inside the CIA following 9/11, when all the old protocols were off.

In theory, the CIA is above politics. In fact, writes Mudd (The HEAD Game: High-Efficiency Analytic Decision Making and the Art of Solving Complex Problems Quickly, 2016, etc.), the former deputy director of the CIA's Counterterrorist Center and the FBI's National Security Branch, the agency takes its cues from presidential directives, to say nothing of sometimes-veiled remarks by senior administration officials. After 9/11, agency leaders held that it was George W. Bush's "presidential guidance [that was] one of the pillars that later led them down the path to the Program." The Program in question was a sweeping set of reforms that provided mandates for capturing suspected al-Qaida members and other terrorists and extracting information from them in various unpleasant ways—so unpleasant that, given American sensitivities, the work was often done in "black sites" in other countries and sometimes farmed out to intelligence agents working for other governments. (At one point, he writes, the agency contemplated recruiting China for the purpose until the sensible objection arose that the Chinese might thereby have too much leverage—and something to blackmail America with.) In general, Mudd defends the Program as highly effective in gathering the information that would later lead to finding and killing Osama bin Laden, who figures prominently in these pages. There were hiccups along the way. The author writes that once the scandal of Abu Ghraib unfolded, the CIA feared that the Pentagon would expose more of its black-site operations "to deflect attention" while Bush disarmed some of the Program by ordering all al-Qaida prisoners to be sent to Guantánamo Bay in Cuba, a dismantling that Barack Obama later completed. Mudd closes with a checklist to "help clarify the interrogation thinking," from asking whether a given activity is legal to pondering whether one's mother would be ashamed on learning how a given piece of information was obtained.

For students of intelligence work, a revealing and engaging account of life in the shadows.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940174020290
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 07/30/2019
Edition description: Unabridged
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