Company Man: Thirty Years of Controversy and Crisis in the CIA
Company Man: Thirty Years of Controversy and Crisis in the CIA book cover

Company Man: Thirty Years of Controversy and Crisis in the CIA

Paperback – October 7, 2014

Price
$17.58
Format
Paperback
Pages
345
Publisher
Scribner
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1451673944
Dimensions
6.25 x 1 x 9.25 inches
Weight
12.8 ounces

Description

“CIA Directors have come and gone over the past several decades. There were two constants at the agency: crises and John Rizzo in the Office of General Counsel helping to manage them. A larger than life character, with great style, nobody worked harder to protect the nation and the men and women of CIA than John Rizzo. Company Man offers fresh insights into the some of the most highly debated national security issues of our time, from the perspective of an honest and dedicated public servant. It is a must read for those trying to understand some very important moments in the history of the CIA.” -- George J. Tenet, Former Director of Central Intelligence“A wonderful book by a man who was in the eye of the storm for thirty-four years. Told with humor and unfailing appreciation for the politics of espionage, Company Man is the best book out there on the modern CIA.” -- Robert Baer, New York Times-bestselling author of See No Evil and The Perfect Kill“John Rizzo has seen it all in his 30 years as a CIA lawyer, and he tells the truth in this absorbing, well-written memoir of his life as a Company Man . Think of Tom Hagen, the Corleone family lawyer in "The Godfather," and you begin to get the flavor of what Rizzo had seen and heard. He draws vivid portraits of the agency's great characters and their sometimes outrageous schemes. The best thing about the book is that you sense Rizzo never stopped being a lawyer or trying to give his clients good, straight-up advice. If you're interested in the inside life of the CIA, read this book!” -- David Ignatius, Washington Post columnist and New York Times-bestselling author of Body of Lies"John Rizzo, formerly the CIA's top attorney, has superbly captured the scope of his fascinating career in Company Man . Not only does he cover the major espionage and covert action of the decades he served, he also conveys an enduring and critical lesson for all liberal democracies--the centrality of the rule of law at the nexus of foreign policy and intelligence. John, who always provided clear and honest counsel to the CIA's Clandestine Service, has crafted an important book with the same sense of intellectual integrity and duty." -- Ambassador Henry A. Crumpton, New York Times-bestselling author of The Art of Intelligence, Chairman & CEO of Crumpton Group LLC and 24-year veteran of the CIA's Clandestine Ser“When the CIA was in trouble, big trouble, it called John… Rizzo knows where the bodies are buried because he helped stash them. Company Man reads like the CIA's conscience: what the CIA was thinking as it shifted from collecting information to killing terrorists after 9/11. Why did the CIA violently interrogate suspects and then destroy the evidence? Rizzo knows, and he's talking.” -- Richard Engel, NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent and author of War Journal“Company Man is simply the most revealing insider account to date of the top ranks of the CIA during its most historic--and controversial--era. There is news and humor in every chapter. Frankly, I often found myself wondering why the CIA's pre-publication censors signed off on some of it.” -- Dana Priest, two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist for the Washington Post and co-author of Top Secret America“[A] lively memoir of life and work inside the nation’s intelligence headquarters.” ― Publisher's Weekly “Under seven presidents and 11 different CIA directors, Rizzo rose to become the CIA’s most powerful career attorney… [he] accumulated more than 30 years of war stories, and he tells most of them…[Rizzo] clearly loved his job and, readers conclude, served the agency and his country well.” ― Kirkus Reviews “Must reading for today’s political junkies…. As insider looks go, this one is about as close-up as you can get.” -- Booklist“[A] revealing and funny memoir…. Rizzo provides a clear, detailed account of his decision-making and his role in the C.I.A.’s interrogation program…. Rizzo’s memoir is an important contribution.” -- Steve Coll ― The New Yorker “Daily Comment” “Revealing… Whatever conclusion you draw, Rizzo's book makes an important contribution to history and the debate over interrogation…. Company Man is tailor-made for CIA buffs. Rizzo's career as an agency lawyer spanned the decades from Iran-Contra to drones, with Russian turncoat Aldrich Ames, the rise of al-Qaida…. His book manages to strike notes that are both earnest and candid. That alone sets Company Man apart in the genre.” -- Matt Apuzzo ― Associated Press "A gripping story." ― New York Times Book Review "Few books have this scope or insider perspective on the CIA. Rizzo seems to have been there for everything — from Iran-contra to Valerie Plame to the arrival of President Obama. And that makes Company Man a front-row seat on the hidden world of intelligence over the past 30 years.... Rizzo rose from humble beginnings to become a fixture in national intelligence.... An atlas to navigate the dark, murky morality that governs the business of intelligence." -- Dina Temple-Raston ― Washington Post "Emphatically a book for anyone who cares about the security of this country and about how the political classes treat those charged with protecting it." -- Michael Mukasey ― Wall Street Journal "Both students and lay readers of American politics should find considerable value in this memoir." ― Library Journal "Rizzo's memoir often reads like a good spy novel." -- Andrea Mitchell, NBC News“A gripping, affecting and revelatory story.” ― The Age (Australia) “John Rizzo takes readers deep inside Langley.... Informative and mordantly witty, [Rizzo] … reveals fascinating details … and does not hesitate to peer into the future with an insider’s prediction that ought to command our attention.” ― Boston Globe “Fascinating and insightful… A unique and refreshing perspective… a surprising page-turner.” ― Fredericksburg Freelance Star “Rizzo saw and heard a lot. The astonishing roster of his bosses begins with William Colby, followed by George H.?W. Bush, Stansfield Turner, William Casey, William Webster, Robert Gates, James Woolsey, John Deutch, George Tenet, Porter Goss, and Leon Panetta. Rizzo’s portraits of these individuals in action—some of them legendary figures in the history of American espionage—make this memoir worth the price of admission. But Company Man also holds interest for the light it sheds on a variety of quasi-secret subjects, some of them highly controversial.” -- Gabriel Schoenfeld ― The Weekly Standard “[A] remarkable career… Rizzo is a good story-teller… I liked this book very much …. one man whose story is wrapped up in the many twists and turns of the CIA’s modern history of triumph, failure, and scandal, and whose personal story offers an important window into why those triumphs, failures, and scandals probably can’t ever be separated.” -- Benjamin Wittes, Lawfare Blog“An exceptionally valuable resource. What this book does well, among other things, is explain the inner workings of the processes of the most controversial CIA programs of the past decade…. John Rizzo had a thirty-four-year career as a lawyer at thexa0CIA, culminating with seven years as the Agency’s chief legal officer.xa0In the post-9/11 era, he helped create and implement the full spectrum of aggressive counterterrorist operations against Al Qaeda, including the so-called “enhanced interrogation program” and lethal strikes against the Al Qaeda leadership.xa0He has served as senior counsel at a Washington DC law firm and is a visiting scholar at the Hoover Institution. He is a graduate of Brown University and George Washington University Law School.

Features & Highlights

  • The “revealing” (
  • The New Yorker
  • ) insider history of the CIA from a lawyer with a “front-row seat on the hidden world of intelligence” (
  • The Washington Post
  • ). Former CIA director George J. Tenet called
  • Company Man
  • a “must read.”
  • Over the course of a thirty-four-year (1976-2009) career, John Rizzo served under eleven CIA directors and seven presidents, ultimately becoming a controversial public figure and a symbol and victim of the toxic winds swirling in post-9/11 Washington. In
  • Company Man
  • , Rizzo charts the CIA’s evolution from shadowy entity to an organization exposed to new laws, rules, and a seemingly never-ending string of public controversies. As the agency’s top lawyer in the years after the 9/11 attacks, Rizzo oversaw actions that remain the subject of intense debate, including the rules governing waterboarding and other “enhanced interrogation techniques.” Rizzo writes about virtually every significant CIA activity and controversy over a tumultuous, thirty-year period. His experiences illuminate our nation’s spy bureaucracy, offering a unique primer on how to survive, and flourish, in a high-powered job amid decades of shifting political winds. He also provides the most comprehensive account of critical events, like the “torture tape” fiasco surrounding the interrogation of Al Qaeda suspect Abu Zubayadah, and the birth, growth, and death of the enhanced interrogation program.
  • Company Man
  • is the most authoritative insider account of the CIA ever written—a groundbreaking, timely, and remarkably candid history of American intelligence. This is “emphatically a book for anyone who cares about the security of this country” (
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • ).

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(95)
★★★★
25%
(79)
★★★
15%
(47)
★★
7%
(22)
23%
(72)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Enlightening

An autobiography written in an easy to read style. The recounting of events seems to have a natural almost intuitive (to the reader) flow. I've seen the author interviewed on TV a couple of times and each time I found myself wishing it would last a little longer. This book is a reasonable substitute. The author has high regard for Bob Woodward but makes it clear that he doesn't buy Woodward's story about getting an admission from DCI Casey regarding Iran Contra from Casey's hospital bed. Enjoyable and enlightening.
2 people found this helpful
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A true company man

3 stars, not because the book conveys much about the CIA or any particular quality, but because of its (involuntary?) honesty. Rizzo calls himself a "company man"; and that seems to be a true description of his role: a well functioning cogwheel in the great CIA machinery. Where he sees trouble, he looks the other way or gets "sign-off" from higher-ups or some lawyer in the Justice Department. He willingly collaborates in disguising torture and other questionable activities behind Orwellian descriptions (enhanced interrogation techniques) and misleading power Point Slides. When people finally complain about being misled after they have been treated to this kind of (mis-)information and call it torture, he bitterly complains himself (e.g about Nancy Pelosi or John McCain). For him it is normal that a bunch of lawyers and other CIA staff carefully prepare a presentation to reveal as little as possible, cover it in euphemisms to misrepresent what is really going on and to be able to claim (hence the lawyers) that all they are required to tell has been told. The recipients have no way to share or challenge this. No wonder that they speak out once they realize that they have been fooled. It is rare to see such a work where the author willingly admits that he put his own conscience and responsibility on the back seat to integrate as a worker ant into the "company". About one of his visits of a foreign CIA prisons he comments that the worst he could find in the treatment of the prisoners was the music that was played over the public loudspeakers. I do not know whether he was fooled by his own colleagues himself or whether he tries to fool us, but either way, this does not instill respect for the man or the institution.

He made a stellar career in the CIA and ended up as chief counsel. One can only hope that there are other civil servants with a different sense of duty.
1 people found this helpful
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I think that a more loyal American would vote for the person he considers best for the USA

The book is interesting mainly because of the insights provided into the workings of the CIA. Rizzo was a high level CIA lawyer, spending a few years as acting Chief Counsel. However, he is a Republican apologist, though far from being a Fox News type. For example, he opines that the Valerie Plame affair was trivial, whereas a fair commenter would perceive its similarity to Nixon's cover ups. He hardly mentions Cheney's role in the torture episode or his visit to the CIA to pressure them to make up stories about Saddam's weapons of mass destruction. I was disturbed when he stated that he always votes for an incumbent president for the reason that a change in administration is upsetting to the CIA. I think that a more loyal American would vote for the person he considers best for the USA, not the CIA. He sheds a lot of light on the important players in the CIA and offers his opinion on its succession of leaders, which in this case is less politically influenced. He was nominated by Bush I to be the chief counsel of the CIA but rejected by the Senate. He writes as though the fact that he supported Republicans had nothing to do with his selection.
1 people found this helpful
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Judge the book, not the CIA

John Rizzo was a lawyer for the CIA for thirty years. His autobiography is aptly titled, "Company Man." Among other duties, as a lawyer for the CIA Rizzo helped author the "Presidential Findings" needed for covert action. Among other things, these "findings" authorized "enhanced interrogation techniques", secret prisons, renditions, etc. One may object to these things, but Rizzo's book should be evaluated as a "book"-- not as a review of CIA policies and procedures.

As a book, Company Man is exceptionally well-written. Rizzo's writing is clear and the narrative moves back and forth from the general to the specific with ease. He was also "up close and personal" with several CIA directors and other major political figures. This gives his book a very readable personal touch.

However, like too many books these days, the first chapter does not start at the logical beginning. Rather it recalls events in the late middle of his career and concerns the destruction of some videotapes. The rest of the narrative is written in clear chronological order.

The destruction of the videotapes was one of many CIA missteps, but is not the major story and does not deserves to be the "lead story." It is a pet peeve of this reviewer that publishers/literary agents want something "dramatic" in the first chapter of a book, even if detracts from the overall quality of the book. Other than this flaw, Company Man is almost perfect in every other way.

Rizzo deserves five stars. His former client, the CIA, decidedly less.
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Two Stars

Not very interesting or compelling.
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Five Stars

Great read
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A true look inside the CIA

I'm surprised the CIA let him write this book as it's much more open and telling than I would have imagined.
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Five Stars

Great Book.
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Unique perspective but wish there was more critical reflection

I enjoyed reading about the CIA from an attorney's perspective. Rizzo is a good writer, and provides an important glimpse into U.S. national security policy. I do have two issues with the book:

1) It seems that the CIA, or at the least the CIA's upper management and OGC, was not only overwhelmingly white and male, but white men selected from a few elite east coast universities. (Has there ever been a CIA head or OGC head who was not a white male who went to east coast elite college? My research says no, but happy to be corrected.) Rizzo doesn't address how this homogeneity came to be, why it is and remains so exclusionary to non-white men, how it does or doesn't affect groupthink, and what that homogeneity means for national security. He married a woman who works for the CIA, so it would not be difficult for him to hear the opinion of a non-white guy in the service! I think most white men of his generation just didn't think about this stuff, it was just the way it was, and you pretended/believed you were all in a colorblind meritocracy - but I wish he would grapple with it in the book.

2) I watched his book talk and take Q&A from the audience. Someone asked about the controversial torture memos, and why he had to even ask DOJ for guidance on what was obviously torture, such as the waterboarding, which the American government had brought torture charges against enemy combatants after WWII for doing. Having just read the book, I expected him to defend his actions - say he was running it up the chain, it was right after 9/11 in a different atmosphere, etc. - but he didn't. He plead ignorance saying he just didn't know the laws or history, and seemed to regret his actions. This was a different tone than he struck in the book, and I wished he had been more critical of the CIA's use of torture and his own involvement in that program in the book.
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A must read for lawyers and anyone interested in the history of the agency.

A fun and exciting look into the legal counsel at the CIA. The personal stories made this a quick read and more entertaining than other books which simply recount the history of the agency. The author touches on a multitude of issues which America and the CIA have dealt with over the last 30 years with particular focus on 9/11 and the CIA's often controversial responses to terrorist threats under the Bush administration.