Veiled Tactics Inside Domestic Security
COINTELPRO FBI's Covert War Against Civil Rights Leaders on American Soil
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- 9,99 €
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- 9,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
This book examines how veiled tactics inside domestic security evolve when a covert war targets civil rights leaders on American soil, as exemplified by the FBI's COINTELPRO program, by analyzing the hidden mechanics of information flow, decision-making hierarchies, and incentive structures that govern secret domestic operations.
The first mechanism explored is the surveillance and information-gathering apparatus, which relied on wiretapping, informants, and file-keeping to monitor activists and create a climate of paranoia. This system turned private communications into intelligence that could be used to discredit individuals, demonstrating how the collection of personal data alters the cost-benefit calculus of dissent and forces movements to adapt their internal security practices. The second mechanism concerns infiltration and disruption tactics, where agents joined organizations to sow internal conflict, spread rumors, and provoke violence, thereby weakening cohesion from within. These actions reveal how decision-making hierarchies within target groups are undermined when trust is deliberately eroded, shifting the incentive structure toward self-preservation rather than collective action. The third mechanism involves legal harassment and extralegal means, including frame-ups, blackmail, and assassinations, which extended the bureau's reach beyond conventional law enforcement. Such tactics show how incentive structures for state actors prioritize neutralization of perceived threats over adherence to legal norms, prompting targeted communities to reassess the risks of public organizing.