ID | 174208 |
Title Proper | CIA-MI6 psychological warfare and the subversion of communist Albania in the early Cold War |
Language | ENG |
Author | Long, Stephen |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The west’s prototype covert action of the Cold War against Albania, codenamed BGFIEND/Valuable, is often characterized as a failure of the rollback policy against the Soviet bloc. This article argues that, from late 1949, the CIA and MI6 did not attempt to overthrow Enver Hoxha’s communist regime as historians have assumed, but to subvert and harass it primarily through psychological – not paramilitary – warfare. On one hand, western intelligence enjoyed some modest propaganda achievements, and valuable organizational and tradecraft experience was acquired for future operations. Nevertheless, BGFIEND/Valuable also faced innumerable challenges and setbacks, illustrating the difficulty of waging subversive psychological warfare against a hostile authoritarian state in the early Cold War. |
`In' analytical Note | Intelligence and National Security Vol. 35, No.6; Oct 2020: p.787-807 |
Journal Source | Intelligence and National Security Vol: 35 No 6 |
Key Words | Psychological Warfare ; Early Cold War ; CIA-MI6 ; Communist Albania |