Historical Dictionary of United States Intelligence

(Martin Jones) #1
Central Intelligence Group (CIG), America’s first post–World War
IIcentral intelligence processing organization. DCI Souers served a
mere five months, but in that time, he set some important precedents
for U.S. intelligence. As former deputy chief of naval intelligenceand
one of the authors of the directive establishing the CIG, Souers was
aware of the need for central coordination of intelligence. He gathered
a cadre of experienced intelligence professionals, mostly from the
military, around him, and he successfully engineered to acquire the
substantial foreign intelligence capability the Office of Strategic Ser-
vices (OSS) had built up during World War II.
At President Truman’s request, the CIG collated the vast amounts
of army, navy, and Department of State cables, dispatches, and re-
ports that arrived daily and produced a comprehensive intelligence
summary for the White House. Souers was unable to get much coop-
eration from the State Department, and the military services refused
even to provide the CIG with information on their capabilities and in-
tentions. Lieutenant General Hoyt Vandenbergsucceeded Souers
as DCI in June 1946.

SOURCES AND METHODS.See PROTECTING SOURCES AND
METHODS.

SOUTHERN AIR TRANSPORT.Southern Air Transport was a pro-
prietary companyof the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) ac-
quired in August 1960 to support CIA’s covert actions. Southern Air
Transport grew quickly to have semiautonomous corporate divisions
for Atlantic and Pacific operations. It also won an air force contract
to move cargo and passengers on interisland routes to the Far East.
The company absorbed many of the personnel and aircraft of Air
America, another CIAproprietary, which had supported CIAopera-
tions in the 1950s and early 1960s.
In 1972, a director of central intelligence directive(DCID) ordered
that Air America be retained only until the end of the Vietnam War.
The same directive ordered that Southern Air Transport be sold off im-
mediately, which was done to private concerns at the end of 1973.

SOVIET UNION (SSSR/Soyuz Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Re-
spublik).Established officially in 1922, the Soviet Unionwas the first
state to be based on Marxist principles. Until 1989, the Communist

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