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174 Little Unpleasantness [113]<br />

sending out a message to the American people through his trusted conduit<br />

Arthur Krock." 307<br />

This column remained forgotten in the wake of the president's<br />

assassination, but it was in 1992 that Lane surfaced the prophetic warning<br />

and began bringing it to the attention of American audiences who now had a<br />

renewed interest in the Kennedy assassination.<br />

OUT OF CONTROL<br />

Lane described the column: "Krock pointed out that John F. Kennedy had<br />

gone to war against the CIA. He concluded that Kennedy no longer could<br />

control the CIA.<br />

The columnist stated that President Kennedy sent Henry Cabot Lodge,<br />

his Ambassador to Vietnam, with orders to the CIA on two separate<br />

occasions and in both cases the CIA ignored those orders, saying that it was<br />

different from what the agency thought should be done. In other words, the<br />

CIA had decided that it—not the president—would make the decisions as to<br />

how American foreign policy should be conducted." 308<br />

Lane pointed out that a source for Krock's column was a report filed for<br />

the Scripps-Howard newspapers by foreign correspondent Richard Starnes<br />

who had interviewed a number of high-ranking administration officials and<br />

others who expressed their concern about the CIA's intransigence.<br />

A CIA-SPONSORED COUP D'ETAT?<br />

According to Krock's column: "Among the views attributed to United<br />

States officials on the scene, including one described as a "very high<br />

American official . . . who has spent much of his life in the service of<br />

democracy . . . are the following:<br />

The CIA's growth was "likened to a malignancy" which the "very high<br />

official was not sure even the White House could control . . . any longer."<br />

"If the United States ever experiences [an attempt at a coup to<br />

overthrow the Government] it will come from the CIA and not the<br />

Pentagon." The agency "represents a tremendous power and total<br />

unaccountability to anyone."<br />

"Whatever else these passages disclose, they most certainly establish<br />

that representatives of other Executive branches have expanded their war<br />

against the CIA from the inner government councils to the American people<br />

via the press.<br />

And published simultaneously are details of the agency's operations in<br />

Vietnam that can come only from the same critical official sources. This is<br />

disorderly government. And the longer the President tolerates it—the period<br />

already is considerable—the greater the real war against the Vietcong and the<br />

impression of a very indecisive Administration in Washington.<br />

"The CIA may be guilty as charged. Since it cannot, or at any rate will<br />

not, openly defend its record in Vietnam or defend it by the same<br />

confidential press 'briefings' employed by its critics, the public is not in a

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