The 21 Coolest Facts About the CIA (That We’re Allowed to Know)

Photo of David Beren
By David Beren Published

Key Points

  • The Central Intelligence Agency is one of the most formidable intelligence agencies in the world.

  • The CIA has accomplished many things, but its failures make the news more often than its wins.

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The 21 Coolest Facts About the CIA (That We’re Allowed to Know)

© Mark Wilson / Getty Images

As one of the world’s most secretive yet public intelligence agencies, the Central Intelligence Agency needs little introduction. Founded in September 1947 in the aftermath of World War II, the CIA, as it is better known, is responsible for much of the foreign intelligence gathered by the United States. 

The CIA’s predecessor, the Office of Strategic Services, was abolished in 1945 by President Truman in favor of a national intelligence directive exempt from Congressional oversight. While the CIA’s failures are public today, its successes are far less. What’s also true is that the CIA has done some incredible things in its time, some more wild and outrageous than others. 

21. Time Capsule

landscapes and franklin mountains in el paso texas
Christina Yvonne Mercado / Shutterstock.com

  • Source: Factrepublic.com

Interestingly, the CIA has a time capsule that was buried in 1959 at the cornerstone of the original headquarters building in Langley. The capsule is believed to contain mysteries and items from the Cold War agency era and is set to be opened in 2059. 

20. Soccer Fields

topseller / Shutterstock

  • Source: Factrepublic.com

Knowing that Soviet soldiers love soccer, the US became suspicious when it realized that soccer fields were starting to appear in Cuba. In Cuba, baseball is the country’s first love, which meant soccer fields aroused suspicion, leading the US to discover nuclear missiles were placed in Cuba, setting off the Cuban Missile Crisis in the early 1960s. 

19. Venture Capitalists

Two investors are shaking hands, business venture capitalists open a startup company together and shake hands after discussing a contract signing. Business investment concept.
ChadaYui / Shutterstock.com

  • Source: Factrepublic.com

Move over, Silicon Valley. The CIA operates its own venture capital fund to purchase any technology it believes will be helpful to national security. Once the CIA purchases something, it generally never becomes available for public use. 

18. Twitter

hocus-focus / Getty Images

  • Source: CIA.gov

Showing that even intelligence agencies have a sense of humor, the CIA’s first Tweet in June 2014 said “We can neither confirm nor deny that this is our first tweet.”

17. Operation Midnight Climax

Peny Stone / Wikimedia Commons

  • Source: Factrepublic.com

Among the wildest ideas the CIA has had, it hired prostitutes in San Francisco to drug men with LSD and experiment with mind-control research. Known as the “MKUltra program,” it all sounds a little twisted and something of an evil movie plot, but it really did happen. 

16. Dirty Movie

Video editor arranging recorded stock clips into seamless whole in creative multimedia agency. Videographer manipulating film pieces, assembling recorded footage into finished project
DC Studio / Shutterstock.com

  • Source: Factinate.com

Knowing no limits, the CIA produced a dirty pornographic movie in the 1950s containing a look-alike of then Indonesian President Sukarno. The hope was that the film would destroy his reputation and force him from power, however, the CIA never released the film. 

15. Art Of War

RAA Previews Major Abstract Expressionism Exhibition
2016 Getty Images / Getty Images News via Getty Images

  • Source: Factrepublic.com

At the height of the Cold War, the CIA secretly paid artists like Jackson Pollock to help promote “American freedom” through “abstract expressionism.” The hope was that this art would dramatically contrast against colder, more rigid Soviet art in an ideological warfare. 

14. Secret Code

sarkophoto / Getty Images

  • Source: Factinate.com

During the 1980s, the Soviet Union and its KGB intelligence group were building an oil pipeline across Siberia. However, the Soviets needed software to run the pipes, which the US refused to sell. As a result, the Soviets were allowed to “steal” the code, which contained a secret backdoor that allowed the CIA to help explode the pipeline. 

13. Fidel Castro

Keystone / Getty Images

  • Source: Factinate.com

So intent on having Fidel Castro removed from leadership in Cuba, the CIA was willing to explore every possible option, including employing the Mafia to get the job done. Rumor has it the CIA offered more than $150,000 (1960s money) to get rid of Castro once and for all. 

12. Air America

Shadow darkness or dark side of airplane flying travel flight plane loss concept, silhouette of aeroplane on dark blue sky.
Quality Stock Arts / Shutterstock.com

  • Source: Factinate.com

Between the 1950s and 1970s, the US operated a secret passenger airline, Air America. This airline flew around Southeast Asia and avoided violating the Geneva Convention as the CIA kept a close eye on Communist China and other nations in the region. 

11. Pigeons

Pigeons | Pigeons
zigazou76 / Flickr

  • Source: CIA.gov

During the Cold War, the CIA looked at every opportunity to gather intelligence, and sometimes, the answer was straightforward. The CIA would attach miniature cameras to pigeons and release them over territory the US wanted to learn more about, including secret sites and troop movements. 

10. Project Azorian

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

  • Source: Wikipedia

Disguised as a marine research project, the Central Intelligence Agency and billionaire Howard Hughes combined forces to secretly lift a Soviet submarine from the bottom of the ocean floor in 1974. The project cost around $800 million, making it one of the most expensive undertakings of the Cold War. 

9. Stargate Project

Clairvoyance, foresight, extrasensory perception, and paranormal abilities. Portrait of a man with bright yellow eyes. Elements of this image furnished by NASA
Paymaster / Shutterstock.com

  • Source: Watchmojo

In partnership with the US Army, the CIA once explored the possibility of someone using psychic abilities to perform espionage. The study included whether army soldiers could develop psychic abilities, but as one might imagine, it wasn’t successful. 

8. Tradecraft

The Door Stopper
Paradise On Earth / Shutterstock.com

  • Source: Spyscape

Unlike the movies, CIA agents don’t traditionally drive around in expensive cars and suits. Instead, they travel as light as possible with only a few essentials. However, one tradecraft technique agents are trained to take with them in a doorstop to protect their hotel rooms. 

7. Magician Work

Smiling magician showing trick with wand and top hat on dark blue background, closeup
New Africa / Shutterstock.com

  • Source: Spyscape

While it might sound crazy, the CIA once employed magician John Mulholland in the 1950s, who was paid $3,000 to write a “to-secret manual of deception.” Copies of the book were said to have been destroyed in 1975, but a copy later appeared after being published. 

6. Operation Acoustic Kitty

A cat with a magnifying glass dressed as a detective or sleuth. Investigation concept.
Svetlana Rey / Shutterstock.com

  • Source: Warhistoryonline.com

In the 1960s, the CIA thought outside the box and attempted to make intelligence operatives out of cats. With a minor surgical procedure, cats were implanted with a hidden microphone and even after spending $20 million on the project, the cats could not complete missions without losing focus. 

5. Secret Museum

Red carpet from the USSR in a secret Soviet underground bunker in the Cold War museum in Moscow
Foxberry / Shutterstock.com

  • Source: Reader’s Digest

The Central Intelligence Agency has a secret 11,000-square-foot museum inside its headquarters. Unfortunately, only agency members and guests the agency has cleared can step inside. 

4. Starbucks

Starbucks Suffering From Supply Shortages, Runs Short On Some Ingredients And Supplies
2021 Getty Images / Getty Images News via Getty Images

  • Source: Warhistoryonline.com

As one might suspect, CIA workers love their Starbucks to help power through intelligence gathering. As a result, Starbucks built a location inside agency headquarters, and baristas are trained to remember faces so no one needs to give their name. 

3. Area 51

A Drive Past Area 51
JohnWR / Shutterstock.com

  • Source: Warhistoryonline.com

Area 51 is one of the most famously secretive military bases in the United States and is often rumored to be where the US keeps alien spaceships. Drawing even more attention thanks to a Will Smith film, it wasn’t until 2013 when the CIA officially acknowledged the base’s existence as a top-secret site for military aircraft. 

2. Secret Memorial

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

  • Source: Warhistoryonline.com

The wall honoring those who have died in service to the CIA is well-known, as it’s been seen in movies. It is a very real (and sacred) location in the agency’s headquarters in Langley, Virginia. The current understanding is that 140 stars decorate the wall, honoring 140 nameless individuals who paid the ultimate price in service to their country. 

1. ARGO

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

  • Source: CIA.gov

After militant Islamic students took control of the US Embassy in Iran in 1979, the CIA impersonated a movie crew looking for filming locations and successfully exfiltrated six US diplomats from the country. The mission was later popularized in a movie starring Ben Affleck.

 

Photo of David Beren
About the Author David Beren →

David Beren has been a Flywheel Publishing contributor since 2022. Writing for 24/7 Wall St. since 2023, David loves to write about topics of all shapes and sizes. As a technology expert, David focuses heavily on consumer electronics brands, automobiles, and general technology. He has previously written for LifeWire, formerly About.com. As a part-time freelance writer, David’s “day job” has been working on and leading social media for multiple Fortune 100 brands. David loves the flexibility of this field and its ability to reach customers exactly where they like to spend their time. Additionally, David previously published his own blog, TmoNews.com, which reached 3 million readers in its first year. In addition to freelance and social media work, David loves to spend time with his family and children and relive the glory days of video game consoles by playing any retro game console he can get his hands on.

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