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Under Reagan, the CIA experienced the most radical change of any government agency. While William Webster had embraced congressional oversight of the FBI, Reagan’s new CIA director, William Casey, did the opposite. Over the course of his six-year tenure, Casey repeatedly instructed his subordinates to lie to Congress. Reagan, meanwhile, delegated near-absolute authority to Casey and paid little attention to day-to-day CIA operations. That decision nearly cost Reagan his presidency.
In Deep: The FBI, the CIA, and the Truth about America's "Deep State"
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