MORE ADVANCE PRAISE FOR
Shadow Warrior
This is a superbly crafted biography-cum-history. The evidential standards are exemplary. The interviews, especially the interviews with Colby family members, combine with the authors fluent literacy to make the book a readable account of the life of an official whose career summed up the best and the worst of CIA history.
Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones, author of
In Spies We Trust: The Story of Western Intelligence
Randall Woods has written the biography that William Colby deserves. Colby, whose 30-year career in US intelligence began as a Jedburgh in the OSS, ended as Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, and featured the Phoenix program and the Family Jewels, lived and died a mystery. Woodss prodigious research and engaging exposition provide a textured portrait of a means-justify-the-ends patriot whose beliefs and behavior complicate the narrative of America from the origins to the height of the Cold War.
Richard H. Immerman,
Professor and Edward J. Buthusiem Family
Distinguished Faculty Fellow in History,
Temple University
Randall Woodss biography of Bill Colby takes us deep into the secretive world of US intelligence. As a historical figure Colbys importance is clear, but readers will also be drawn to Colby by the mysteries of his personality: one part romantic, one part bureaucratic warrior, one part covert operations fighter, one part unlikely crusader for a candid relationship between the US public, Congress, and the CIA. Randall Woods, a distinguished American diplomatic historian and biographer, tells both the public and private story of Colby with aplomb and great skill. Shadow Warrior deserves to be read by anyone interested in the history of the CIA and its involvement in the key moments of US policy in the crucial years between World War Two and the 1970s.
Wesley Wark, author of Secret Intelligence: A Reader,
Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto
SHADOW
WARRIOR
ALSO BY RANDALL B. WOODS
LBJ: Architect of American Ambition
Quest for Identity: America Since 1945
J. William Fulbright, Vietnam, and the
Search for a Cold War Foreign Policy
Fulbright: A Biography
A Changing of the Guard: Anglo-American Relations, 19411946
SHADOW
WARRIOR
WILLIAM EGAN COLBY
AND THE CIA
RANDALL B. WOODS
BASIC BOOKS
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New York
Copyright 2013 by Randall B. Woods
Published by Basic Books,
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Designed by Timm Bryson
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Woods, Randall Bennett, 1944
William Egan Colby and the CIA / Randall B. Woods.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-465-03788-9 (e-book) 1. Colby, William Egan, 19201996. 2. United States. Central Intelligence AgencyBiography. 3. Intelligence officersUnited StatesBiography. 4. Vietnam War, 19611975Secret serviceUnited States. 5. World War, 19391945Secret serviceUnited States. I. Title.
UB271.U52C657 2013
327.12730092dc23
[B]
2012040332
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
For my daughter, Nicole Woods Olmstead
CONTENTS
S aturday, April 27, 1996, dawned clear and warm; it was going to be a beautiful spring day on the Chesapeake Bay. Although his second wife, Sally, was away visiting her mother in Houston, Bill Colby was a happy man. William Egan Colby, former CIA director, Saigon station chief, and head of Americas counterinsurgency and pacification operation in Vietnam, as well as a veteran of World War IIs Office of Strategic Services (OSS), spent the day working on his 37-foot sloop, Eagle Wing II. The Colbys owned a vacation cottage on Neale Sound in Southern Maryland, about 60 miles south of Washington, DC, and the Eagle Wing was moored at the marina on Cobb Island, directly across the sound from the cottage. The seventy-six-year-old retired spy and covert operative had worked hard repairing the torn mainsail on his beloved vessel, scraping the hull, and scouring the hardware in preparation for the years maiden voyage.
Sometime between 5:30 and 6:00 P.M., Colby knocked off and climbed into his red Fiat for the drive home. On the way, he stopped at Captain Johns, a popular seafood restaurant and market, and bought a dozen clams and some corn on the cob for his dinner. He arrived at the cottage around 7:00. The house was modest, a turn-of-the-century oystermans lodging with two bedrooms, a kitchen, and a glassed-in front porch. But the view of the soundthe white frame structure was situated on a spit of land, surrounded by water on three sideswas spectacular.
Weary but content, Colby unloaded his groceries and called Sally. The two had married in 1984. Colby, theretofore a devoted Catholic, had left Barbara Colby, his equally Catholic wife of thirty-nine years and mother of their five children, for Sallyintelligent, attractive, a former US ambassador to Grenada. The two were besotted with each other. Other than for weddings or funerals, Colby never darkened the door of a Catholic church again. The two chatted warmly but briefly over the phone. Bill told Sally that he was happy but tired; he was going to feast on clams and cornhis favoritesand then turn in.
Around 7:15, Joseph Carroll Wise, the cottages off-season caretaker, turned into the driveway. He had his sister in tow and wanted her to meet his famous client. They found Colby watering his willow trees down near the water. The trio chatted briefly, and then Wise and his sister drove away. It was the last time they would see Bill Colby alive.
On Sunday afternoon, Colbys next-door neighbor, Alice Stokes, noticed that the Fiat was still parked in the driveway. She checked the jetty they shared; the aluminum ladder Colby used to climb down into his canoe was in the water. A frayed rope hung from the iron rung he used to moor his canoe, but there was no sign of the craft. Meanwhile, Kevin Akers, a twenty-nine-year-old unemployed carpenter and handyman, had taken his wife and two kids out on the sound in his small motorboat. At the point where Neale Sound turned into the Wicomico River, Akers spotted a beached green canoe. There was nothing unusual about that. Akers, who had spent all his life around the Chesapeake, had in the past picked up small craft that had broken loose from their moorings and towed them to the marina. Akers later recalled that this canoe was nearly filled with sand; it had taken him and his wife the better part of an hour to empty it. He had been out on the water the day before and had not spotted the canoe. There was no way, he mused, that two cycles of the tide could put that much sand in a canoe.
Around 7:00 Sunday evening, Alice Stokes called 911 to report a missing person. The local police arrived at half past eight. Both doors to the cottage were unlocked. Colbys computer and radio were on. Unwashed dishes and the remnants of a half-eaten meal lay in the sink. A partially filled glass of white wine sat on the counter; the bottle, with very little missing, was on the table in the sunroom. Also on the table were Colbys wallet, containing $296, and his keys. The canoe and its paddle and life jacket were missing from the nearby shed. Policewoman Sharon Walsh alerted the Coast Guard, and the search was on.
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