James Angleton interviewed in 1976 ...
In the West it is almost inconceivable to be able to deceive, when the very people who are your lawmakers are the ones who destroy your secrets. The very people who profit from living in a Democratic institution are the ones who denigrated the word national security, until it has no meaning.
I believe there are inherent rights in the President of the United States to advance national security, it's inherent in his election ...
There is always a question whether a democratic country is capable of having an intelligence service of any great merit, simply because of the built-in inhibitions. It usually takes a national crisis or a Pearl Harbor for people then understand what survival means, but you don't have to be a great, or large, or wealthy country to have a good intelligence service. As long as you have the norms, as long as you have the disciplines, as long as you have the motivation, singleness of purpose, you can be a small service, have one great penetration, then you can move the world.
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