See No Evil: The True Story of a Ground Soldier in the CIA's War on Terrorism - Robert Baer
Published April 25, 2003
I started reading spy thrillers and techno-thrillers back in my late-teens, at the height of Reagan's presidency and the 1980's Cold War with the "evil empire". By the time the Wall collapsed, I had moved on, more interested in history and reality than in the grandiose themes and psuedo-threats that most spy novels take for granted. Those lurid fictions of the Cold War had one unexpected progeny, in that they did spawn in me an ongoing interest in real-world spycraft. The result is that I can seldom resist a glimpse into that secret, covert world, so when I spotted See No Evil on the bookstore shelf, I had to crack it open.
See No Evil is a biography of sorts, following the author through his 25-years of service (mainly overseas) with the CIA in India, Iraq, Lebanon and other Middle East hotspots. To an extent, See No Evil is a cautionary tale. Inspired by the events of 9-11, it is a call to action for the U.S. to resume and expand the activities of the Directorate of Operations, the spies that actually spy, on the ground and in the field. Baer is at pains to note that the DO job is mainly about spycraft - recruiting and running agents, pulling in data, passing along the vital human intelligence that satellites and intercepts cannot provide. He paints a compelling and rather searing indictment of the CIA's policies and government direction in the past 20 years of moving away from relying on human intelligence to trust instead in technology, a strategy that, post-9-11, seems astonishingly naive.
Baer's ground-eye view of the CIA is refreshing, if somewhat limited in its overview of the strategic thinking that drove the organization. Baer is a field-man, working the world's terrorism hotspots, who, among other things, managed to make the DO issue two unique memos forbidding agents from:
a). parachuting with Russian special ops teams and
b). driving T-72 tanks without a license.
The book reveals only limited surprises, as much of what it covers are the events of the 1980's and early 90's (the Beirut bombings, the hostage crisis, Iraq) but Baer does a good job in tying the events of yesterday to the post-9-11 world. At times, having followed in the headlines many of the events that Baer was on the periphery of, one is left with a maddening sense of "if only..." and how today's events may have changed as a result. Particularly moving was Baer's trip into the Bekaa Valley of Lebanon that, at a later date, was found to have taken him within a hundred yards of where several Beirut hostages were being held.
- See No Evil: The True Story of a Ground Soldier in the CIA's War on Terrorism - Robert Baer
- Published: April 25, 2003
- Type:
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Politics and Affairs, Books: Nonfiction, Books: History
- Writer: Deano
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Comments
Victor Ostravsky's book is good but dont waste time on the others. They are just garbage written by CIA officers. If Baer was really a man he would reveal CIA abuses instead of playing the hero whos shite doesnt stink.
Actually both Ronald Kessler and James Bamford are professional writers with backgrounds in journalism. To the best of my knowledge, except for a three-year stint in the Navy by Bamford, neither is employed by any intelligence agency.







Very nice Deano, thanks