Milton Bearden
From Free net encyclopedia
132.241.245.49 (Talk | contribs)
/* External link */
Next diff →
Current revision
Milton Bearden is a retired Central Intelligence Agency officer and author.
He was born in Oklahoma and grew up in Washington, where his father worked on the Manhattan Project. After serving in the United States Air Force, he joined the CIA in 1964.
During his 30-year career with the CIA, he was a station chief in Pakistan, Moscow, and Khartoum. In Pakistan from 1986 to 1989, he played a role in training the mujahedeen in Afghanistan, and was later the director of the Soviet/East European Division during the collapse of the Soviet Union. He received the Distinguished Intelligence Medal for his service.
Since retiring, Bearden has written books based on his experiences, commented on current events, and appeared on television, including Secret Warriors (Discovery Channel), Covert Action (BBC) and The Power of Nightmares (BBC2). Although generally supportive of the CIA and its mission, he has also been outspoken in criticism of US actions in the War on Terrorism. He was co-author of one book with James Risen (author of State of War, which is critical of the White House and the Intelligence Community).
As of 2003, Bearden lives in Reston, Virginia.
Books
- The Black Tulip: A Novel of War in Afghanistan (1998) ISBN 0375760830
- (with James Risen), The Main Enemy: The Inside Story of the CIA's Final Showdown With the KGB, (Random House, 2003) ISBN 067946309