Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database.
From Wikipedia: «David Wise (May 10, 1930 – October 8, 2018) was an American journalist and author who worked for the New York Herald-Tribune in the 1950s and 1960s, and published a series of non-fiction books on espionage and US politics as well as several spy novels. His book The Politics of Lying: Government Deception, Secrecy, and Power (1973) won the George Polk Award (Book category, 1973), and the George Orwell Award (1975).»
I believe that this book was meticulously researched and as such it represents an important account of the espionage episode that it describes. Having said that, I think that the subject matter deserves a better rendering than this book. The writing style is tedious. This case would probably make an engaging movie provided that this book is not used as the basis for the screenplay.
Fantastic in every way. Wise is a master in this genre and provides superb detail that tells the whole story. What I like best is how is deftly included the “big picture” without exhausting the reader.
This book was really interesting. I loved learning about how the spy world works. I learned a lot about the FBI. This was well worth the read. I will say it ends very differently than I expected, but I realized that may be because I have read too many fiction spy books.
David Wise is well acquainted with the worlds of espionage and counter-espionage, and "Cassidy's Run" reflected that. While it's a fairly short book, it's probably the most detailed narrative of a long-term, counter-espionage operation I've ever read. Wise does a great job in putting the cloak and dagger action into the context of not only the Cold War, but also the 1970s post-Church Committee fallout on the Intelligence Community. If you find the non-fiction variety of spy stories interesting, this is certainly the book for you. It will hold your attention, amaze you at the capabilities of our security services, and probably also make you furious at some of the behaviors of bureaucracy.
On the negative side, I felt a little sense of "bait and switch" with the manner in which Wise used the deaths of two FBI agents in this "secret spy war." Those deaths were certainly tragic, and they were certainly related to the FBI's counter-espionage operation. However, using that event as the start of the narrative seemed to imply the centrality of the event in the greater story; it was not. Nor were the deaths the result of KGB (actually GRU in this story) assassins wielding silenced weapons or poison-tipped umbrellas: they were the result of an airplane crash. I don't mean to minimize the tragedy of the deaths. I just think Wise shouldn't have tried to make it larger in his narrative than it was.
The first nonfiction book I ever read about espionage was one co-authored by David Wise, writer of this narrative. While that, The Invisible Government, was a serious overview of the CIA, this book has a much narrower focus, being about the work of a US Army mole burrowed in Soviet spy operations within the United States. Using this story as a thread spanning over two decades, Cassidy's Run delves into several spin-off operations against Soviet sleeper agents. Chief among the topics pursued by the Soviets was the research being done in the States on nerve agents. Since Army sergeant Cassidy had access to such information, he run by the Defense Department and the FBI to plant disinformation, hoping to lead Soviet researchers down expensive, but fruitless, paths. However, author Wise ends his book with evidence that the USSR succeeded where the USA had failed, producing an unprecedentedly toxic binary delivery system, a system which may still remain operational.
I wanted to like this one more than I did. While it was enlightening, and the time period it references has a lot of disturbing history in it, I couldn't get into the spy games when I feel strongly that neither side should have been developing better nerve gases to begin with. Add to that the usual grain of salt that you add when reading anything remotely recent on intelligence or national security -- you know you're not getting the whole story -- and it was worth reading once but not something I'll be eagerly passing on to my friends.
David Wise always sucks me in but I think I expected more from this book. That being said, I think it's a good book that highlights the intel war between the US and Soviet Union during the Cold War and shows some of the potential blowback from those deceptions.
Very fascinating description of a cold-war counterintelligence operation. Well researched. I'd rate this as a must read for intelligence and CI professionals.