http://www.princeton.edu:80/pr/pwb/00/0110/p/espionage.shtml

                    "Myth and Reality of Espionage"

                    Former CIA inspector general leads freshman seminar
based on life
                    experience

                    by Ken Howard

                    Think twice about reading this story.
                    If you do read it, you may start to
                    notice odd sounds when you pick up
                    your telephone, mysterious figures in
                    doorways and strangers following
                    you.

                    It will probably be all in your
                    imagination, of course. But to
                    students in Frederick Hitz's
                    freshman seminar, The Myth and
                    Reality of Espionage: The Spy
                    Novel, it's a little closer to real life. It
                    helps that their teacher, in addition to
                    being a lifelong fan of spy novels,
                    had a career with the CIA as a case
                    officer running agents in West
                    Africa, as deputy chief of the European Division and
most recently as Inspector General.

                    In his course Hitz strives not only to show how fiction
and reality can mirror each other but also to
                    raise moral questions about espionage. In addition to
"comparing the fantasy worlds of spy novels
                    with the way it really happens, we're looking at the
morality of espionage and how we justify this
                    activity in the US democracy," he says. "The class finds
out that fiction approaches reality in many
                    ways."

                    Fact vs. fantasy

                    Hitz has put together a varied reading list which
includes fiction (Tom Clancy's The Hunt for Red
                    October, Ian Fleming's Dr. No, Graham Greene's The Human
Factor and Rudyard Kipling's Kim,
                    among others) and nonfictional accounts of espionage,
such as books about the case of double
                    agent Aldrich Ames and a CIA report on the Bay of Pigs
crisis.

                    He has also arranged for his students to come face to
face with practitioners and observers of
                    espionage, inviting such guest speakers as Jack Downing,
former Deputy Director of Operations at
                    the CIA; Paul Redmond, former chief of CIA
Counter-Intelligence; and David Ignatius, Middle
                    East reporter for the Wall Street Journal, whose book
Agents of Innocence is also on the class
                    reading list.

                    One of the first challenges for Hitz was to dispel any
notion among his students that Ian Fleming's
                    James Bond is emblematic of the espionage business.
Bond, he acknowledges, is many people's
                    first introduction to spying. "When I was a kid," says
Sean Ir '03, "the whole reason I wanted to be
                    a spy was to be like James Bond." But Hitz points out
that Bond, like Clancy's Jack Ryan, is mostly
                    fantasy. John Le Carre and Graham Greene, however, write
about characters that can be very
                    true to life, he says.

                    In helping his students to examine the legality and the
ethics of espionage, Hitz draws on his
                    training as an attorney. In the class, "A good number of
students hone in on the moral issues," he
                    observes. "They recognize a need to protect the national
security of the US, but they also perceive
                    that effort may break laws in the countries where the
information is gathered."

                    Full circle

                    For Hitz, who retired from the CIA in 1998, teaching at
Princeton brings things full circle. "When I
                    was an undergraduate, Dean of Students Bill Lippincott
thought I might want to explore the CIA.
                    He was a spotter, a patriot. He performed this role for
nearly a generation of Princeton
                    undergraduates."

                    Hitz was intrigued, he says, but he didn't act on this
interest for several years. After graduating
                    from Princeton in 1961, he went to Harvard Law School.
Then he and his wife, Mary Buford,
                    went to Nigeria on a Ford Foundation program, and he
taught at an African law school for a year.
                    When they returned to the States, he joined a law firm
in Virginia.

                    In 1967 Hitz decided to accept the deferred challenge of
government service abroad by joining the
                    CIA. For the next 31 years, he moved in and out of jobs
with the CIA and other government
                    agencies, including the Defense Department, State
Department, Department of Energy and
                    Executive Office of the President. In 1977 he received
the Secretary of Defense Medal for
                    Outstanding Public Service and in 1978 the Department of
Defense Distinguished Civilian Service
                    Medal. In 1998, when he retired from the CIA, he was
awarded the Distinguished Intelligence
                    Medal, the agency's highest decoration.

                    Vietnam, Watergate

                    At the CIA, Hitz's work was often dictated by the Cold
War, he says. He was also part of the
                    agency during the Vietnam War and Watergate, which
shaped the attitudes of many of that era's
                    college students toward government and secrecy.

                    Today's students have grown up in a different
environment, Hitz points out. "Vietnam and the
                    issues that flowed out of Watergate are historical for
them. They didn't live through those events,
                    and there's not a lot of ideology built up. They have a
more open-minded approach to dealing with
                    those occurrences and the issues they raise. It's fun to
see how they react."

                    In 1990 Hitz was confirmed by the Senate as the CIA's
first presidentially appointed Inspector
                    General, a job that charged him with monitoring the CIA
and reporting to the President.
                    "Essentially, the office is a No Man's Land between the
executive and legislative branches," Hitz
                    comments.

                    During his eight years in this post, he conducted
numerous investigations and issued reports based
                    on those inquiries, including the assessment on how the
CIA handled the Aldrich Ames case and
                    why the penetration occurred in the first place. Five
years after he took the job, the US Senate
                    passed a resolution commending him and his office for
their accomplishments.

                    What was appropriate

                    As a visiting lecturer at the Woodrow Wilson School,
Hitz not only teaches the freshman seminar
                    on the spy novel but also an undergraduate policy
conference. In the spring he will offer a graduate
                    course on Accountability in the Public Sector, drawn
largely from intelligence community
                    examples.

                    Teaching, he says, is certainly less politically complex
than his previous work, but he finds it equally
                    fulfilling and important. "The history of the Cold War
is coming out now in a wealth of newly
                    declassified documents," he says, "and it's up to
scholars and students to decide what was
                    appropriate and what was not."

                    He also feels that these issues have continued
relevance. "The kinds of change that we're going to
                    see in intelligence gathering and analysis as the 21st
century unfolds will be extraordinary," he says,
                    "much of it related to how we acquire and process
information."

                    Would Hitz recommend the CIA as an employer to current
students, as it was recommended to
                    him when he studied early European history at Princeton
in the late 1950s and early '60s?

                    "If students are interested in foreign languages,
foreign cultures or geopolitical issues," he says,
                    "they might well explore the CIA as a career."

                    Or they could write fiction.


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