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Ex-CIA officer: World needs spies “more than ever”

Former CIA Chief of Disguise Jonna Mendez says “mistakes” made by the agency, but spying is “honourable”

Jonna Mendez, who served in the CIA from 1966-1993, has told HARDtalk that the intelligence agency did “some bad stuff”

“There is a history where mistakes have been made: some purposely, some not purposely”, she said.

The CIA’s former Chief of Disguise acknowledged that in any “organisation as large as the CIA”, there would be plenty of “bad decisions”. The CIA has, in the past, admitted to plotting assassinations and coups as well as to surveillance of American citizens.

Speaking to Stephen Sackur in Washington DC, Mendez defended the work of the CIA, insisting that spying is “an honourable profession that needs to be done”. She said: “Our country can’t go staggering forward without having some sense of what the rest of the world is doing.” She explained that espionage plays a key role in “how policy is made”.

Mendez, who served the agency throughout the Cold War said: “The world needs spies, probably more than ever”.

Nonetheless, Mendez also acknowledged that working as a spy “takes a personal toll”. She explained that “friends outside [the agency] drop away because it’s too hard to keep up the façade”. But she added that upon retiring after 27 years, the “give and take” with her CIA friends was also gone, leaving her feeling isolated from both groups.

During her career, Mendez worked on intelligence operations from Moscow to Havana, eventually rising through the CIA ranks to become Chief of Disguise. She and her late husband Tony Mendez, who was also a CIA spy, have written various books about their covert activities, including one which was adapted into the Oscar-winning film Argo.

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