Review by Choice Review
With the onset of the Cold War, American intelligence officials thought the Soviet Union posed an existential threat. In this environment, the newly created CIA sought methods to determine whether defectors or captured enemy agents were truthful during interrogations. Enter Kinzer's Poisoner in Chief. Two of Kinzer's earlier works, All the Shah's Men (CH, Feb'04, 41-3615) and The Brothers (2013), also involved the trials and tribulations of the American intelligence community. Now Kinzer (fellow, Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, Brown Univ.) focuses on the role of Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA's top-secret program code-named MK-ULTRA. Pioneered and run by Gottlieb, MK-ULTRA was intended to find the perfect method for mind control. There proved to be no reliable method, but in the course of his research Gottlieb conducted numerous unethical experiments with LSD on unwitting subjects. One of the most tragic LSD experiments involved Frank Olsen, a former Gottlieb colleague, who committed suicide by jumping to his death from his New York City hotel room. Kinzer's Gottlieb is as complex an individual as any found in the pages of books by Ian Fleming, Don DeLillo, and Stephen King. Unfortunately, Poisoner in Chief is not fiction, and thus it is required reading for those studying US intelligence during the Cold War. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. --Christopher C. Lovett, Emporia State University
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Journalist Kinzer (The Brothers) delivers a stranger-than-fiction account of the CIA's efforts in the 1950s, '60s, and '70s at developing mind control and chemical-based espionage methods, and the chemist, Sidney Gottlieb, who spearheaded the effort. Surreal episodes, involving attempts to make Fidel Castro's beard fall out and efforts to create an "acoustic cat" that could be used as a clandestine listening device, sit alongside the extreme medical misdeeds of Gottlieb's mind-control project, MK-Ultra , which included experimenting on unsuspecting members of his own research group, Chinese and Hungarian refugees, and medical patients. While the book nominally focuses on Gottlieb, he remains something of a cipher throughout, overshadowed by some of the larger-than-life characters in his orbit, like the drug-sampling narcotics agent turned agency contractor George Hunter White, who tested the effects of LSD and other drugs on unsuspecting subjects in New York and San Francisco as part of MK-Ultra. Gottlieb's efforts to reinvent himself in his post-CIA career, becoming a speech therapist at the age of 60, and his unwillingness to revisit his past, even when called to testify before Congress in 1977 after the activities of MK-Ultra came to light, means his motivations are left largely unclear. In the end, "one of the most powerful unknown Americans" remains a mystery, but the nigh-unbelievable efforts he led are vividly and horrifically recreated in this fascinating history. (Sept.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
An accomplished journalist digs into the elusive and deeply troubling story behind the U.S. government's postwar search for the perfect mind-control drug.In this intriguing study, Kinzer (The True Flag: Theodore Roosevelt, Mark Twain, and the Birth of American Empire, 2017, etc.) shows how U.S. officials drew on the findings of Nazi experiments on human "specimens" during World War II, which were exposed in the Nuremberg Trials, as well as notorious Japanese military trials that injected bacteria into and conducted lab tests on "expendable" humans. The U.S. enlisted many of these perpetrators to beef up postwar intelligence work. With the enemy now the Soviet Union and Red China, the U.S. needed to develop drugs that could be used as weapons of covert action. The 1947 National Security Act created the National Security Council and the CIA, and the new program to study chemical and biological agents was called Bluebirdsupposedly to "make prisoners sing like a bird.' " In the early 1950s, the program was taken over by Sidney Gottlieb, a Bronx-born scholar of agricultural biology who had been studying pharmaceuticals and agricultural chemicals at the Department of Agriculture when his academic mentorse.g., Allen Dulleslured him to the work of what Kinzer characterizes as "medical torture." This meant dosing unwilling patients with potent drugs like LSD and mescaline in an attempt to find some kind of "truth serum." Eventually renamed MK-ULTRA, the program was run strictly by Gottlieb, "America's mind control czar." The author engagingly examines various facets of this bizarre program, which led to LSD experimentation within the scientists' social circles, resulting in instances of overdose and even suicide. After a decade of research into mind control, Gottlieb and his colleagues were forced to "face their cosmic failure." Ultimately, readers will feel Kinzer's frustration that Gottlieb, after a late-life conversion and being hauled back to Washington, D.C., for two rounds of Senate hearings, maintained his "victimization" and never truly had to answer for the crime of "laying waste to other people's minds and bodies."A valiantly researched study that resurrects a troubling episode in American history. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.