『The Church Committee: When Congress Forced the CIA to Answer』のカバーアート

The Church Committee: When Congress Forced the CIA to Answer

The Church Committee: When Congress Forced the CIA to Answer

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(00:00:00) The Church Committee: When Congress Forced the CIA to Answer
(00:00:59) How the Door Opened
(00:02:32) Frank Church and the Senate Select Committee
(00:03:17) The Operations on the Table
(00:05:24) The Phoenix Program and the Question of Method
(00:06:25) The Oversight Gap
(00:07:56) Iran-Contra and the Limits of Oversight
(00:09:16) What Congress Actually Built
(00:10:25) The Pattern That Ran Through All of It
(00:11:58) The Reckoning's Limits

By 1975, the American public knew the Cold War through its public face: summits, missiles, and headlines. What they didn't know was the other story — the one written in coup plans, assassination plots, and illegal surveillance programmes. The Church Committee changed that.

Senator Frank Church's Senate Select Committee was the most sweeping public examination of U.S. intelligence ever conducted. It didn't just review individual operations — it interrogated the system that produced them. The authorisation structures. The institutional habits. The deliberate design of plausible deniability that let presidents order assassinations without leaving a paper trail.

This episode follows the committee's full arc: how Seymour Hersh's 1974 exposé of the CIA's domestic surveillance programme — later called the Family Jewels — cracked the dam open; how the Ford administration's Rockefeller Commission failed to contain the fallout; and why Congress decided it had to act.

On the table were operations this series has covered in depth: Iran, Guatemala, Chile, the Bay of Pigs. But the committee's investigators weren't just cataloguing scandals. They were tracing the pattern — how eight million dollars in covert funding helped destabilise Allende's Chile, how at least eight plots against Fidel Castro were run through organised crime intermediaries, and how the Phoenix Program in Vietnam had operated through assassination and torture on an industrial scale.

The Church Committee produced binding legislative change: the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, permanent intelligence oversight committees, and executive orders banning assassinations. It remains the clearest moment in American history when a democracy looked hard at its own shadow government and chose — however imperfectly — to impose limits.

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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