Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Shutterstock/hkhtt hj

CIA reveals it tried to train animals to spy on the Russians in the 1970s

The CIA hoped birds of prey could be trained for “emplacement” missions like dropping a listening device on a windowsill.

IN EARLY 1974, Do Da was top in espionage class, on the way to becoming a high-flying CIA agent: he handled himself better in the rough, carried heavier loads, and could brush off attackers.

But on his toughest-yet spy school test, he disappeared – done in by some of his own kind: ravens.

The bird was a central figure in a decade-long US Central Intelligence Agency programme to train animals as agents, helping Washington fight the Cold War against the Soviet Union.

On Thursday, the CIA released dozens of files from its tests on cats, dogs, dolphins and on birds from pigeons to some of the smartest: ravens and crows.

It studied cats as possible loose-roaming listening devices – “audio surveillance vehicles” – and put electrical implants in dogs’ brains to see if they could be remotely controlled.

Neither of those programmes went very far. More effort was put into training dolphins as potential saboteurs and helping spy on the Soviet Union’s development of a nuclear submarine fleet, perhaps the most potent challenge to US power in the mid-1960s.

Projects Oxygas and Chirilogy sought to see if dolphins could be trained to replace human divers and place explosives on moored or moving vessels, sneak into Soviet harbours and leave in place acoustic buoys and rocket detection units, or swim alongside submarines to collect their acoustic signatures.

Those programs, too, were given up, left to the US Navy which to this day makes use of dolphins and seals.

Hawks and owls

But what also grabbed the US spy chiefs’ imagination in the Cold War days was birds – pigeons, hawks, owls, crows and ravens, and even flocks of wild migratory birds.

For the latter, the agency enlisted ornithologists to try to determine which birds regularly spent part of the year in the area of Shikhany in the Volga River Basin southeast of Moscow, where the Soviets operated a chemical weapons facility.

The CIA saw the migratory birds as “living sensors” which, based on their feeding, would reveal what kinds of substances the Russians were testing, in their flesh.

In the early 1970s, the CIA turned to birds of prey and ravens, hoping they could be trained for “emplacement” missions like dropping a listening device on a windowsill, and photo missions.

In project Axiolite, bird trainers working on San Clemente island off southern California taught the birds to fly miles over the water between a boat and land.

If the training went well, a chosen candidate would have a tough mission: being smuggled to Soviet Russia, where it would be released secretly in the field, tasked to fly 25 kilometers carrying a camera to snap pictures of a radar for SA-5 missiles, and fly back.

They had red-tailed and Harris’s hawks, great horned owls, a vulture, and a cockatoo.

It was not easy. A cockatoo was “a clever flyer” but “maybe too slow to avoid gull attacks”.

Two falcons died from illness; another promising candidate lost feathers and trainers had to wait for it to molt and grow them back.

‘Star’ of the project

The most promising flyer was Do Da, the raven. In just three months, Do Da went from a successful 3/4-mile trip to six miles from shore to boat, and then four miles back to shore on the same day.

He was the most promising candidate for the Russia mission, the “star of this project,” one scientist wrote, who figured out the right altitudes in the right winds, and acquired “sufficient guile to outwit the native ravens and gulls,” which hid for attacks on him.

But on a training mission he was attacked by “the usual pair” of ravens – and was not seen again.

The scientists were deeply dismayed. “He had a large bag of tricks and was loved by all,” one wrote.

Pigeons over Leningrad

The other major effort was with pigeons, used for over two millennia as messengers and to take photographs during World War I.

The challenge was that pigeons work from home coops or roosts, places they are familiar with.

The CIA needed them for missions in the Soviet Union, where they would fly between unfamiliar roosts and photo targets.

The agency acquired hundreds of pigeons, testing them and cameras in areas around the United States to see if they could be trained on simulated paths.

Soon the target became known: the shipyards in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) where the Soviets built nuclear submarines.

After much training, the birds were brought to Washington for testing, and results were mixed.

Some snapped perfect photos, but others flew out, with expensive cameras attached, and weren’t seen again. One was attacked by a hawk, and came back three weeks later with no camera.

The documents don’t say if the Leningrad operation was attempted. But a 1978 review the CIA released made clear that there were too many questions about the birds’ reliability.

© AFP 2019 

Author
View 20 comments
Close
20 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Danny Ennis
    Favourite Danny Ennis
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 10:22 AM

    That’s where the saying “a little birdie told me” came from

    50
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Patricia Mcnamara
    Favourite Patricia Mcnamara
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 11:24 AM

    I am going blind. I thought it was a lady in a burka.must go to spec savers

    35
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute ken gray
    Favourite ken gray
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 1:11 PM

    @Patricia Mcnamara: me too

    9
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute ken gray
    Favourite ken gray
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 1:11 PM

    @Patricia Mcnamara: me too

    4
    See 1 more reply ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Pete Blake
    Favourite Pete Blake
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 1:40 PM

    @Patricia Mcnamara: so did I

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute JD
    Favourite JD
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 10:59 AM

    I believe one of the pigeons accurately reported back “coup coup”

    31
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mill Lane
    Favourite Mill Lane
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 2:25 PM

    Apparently they had a mole in the KGB,..as well as two badgers, a red deer and a giraffe schooled in classical Russian literature.

    16
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute James O'Donovan
    Favourite James O'Donovan
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 12:11 PM

    And our dog is still struggling to learn how to give the paw.

    16
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Stiofán De Priondárgas
    Favourite Stiofán De Priondárgas
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 10:28 AM

    …. All righty then!

    7
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Kath Noonan
    Favourite Kath Noonan
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 7:15 PM

    Can imagine all the cruelty involved ‘implanting devices in dogs brains’. Humans are the most horribly cruel inhabitants of earth.

    8
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Pete Brady
    Favourite Pete Brady
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 12:50 PM

    Bird brained idea

    6
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dan Skelton
    Favourite Dan Skelton
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 12:46 PM

    I guess that explains Dastardly and Muttley then.

    5
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Tadhg Lane Snr
    Favourite Tadhg Lane Snr
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 9:28 PM

    Stool Pigeons…

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute ciara ní bríain
    Favourite ciara ní bríain
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 3:57 PM

    the birds work for the bourgeoisie

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Sean
    Favourite Sean
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 1:14 PM

    The pigeons came in handy during WW2 to get messages home from the front line. They were never going to fly to Moscow, take photos and fly home again. Birdbrained project.

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Pete Brady
    Favourite Pete Brady
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 12:50 PM

    Bird brained

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute William Kelly
    Favourite William Kelly
    Report
    Sep 15th 2019, 8:07 AM

    The file pic is a feral street pigeon, not amenable to training.
    Surely the journal can find a pic of an actual homer, an athletic specimen,which is the type used for carrier purposes, & which were very successfully used by downed WW2 aircrew to report their positions for rescue, & by operatives behind enemy lines for Intel reports.
    The invading Axis forces seized or destroyed teams of racing homers in occupied territory to prevent their use by underground groups, so many owners hid them in attics to save them.
    Many conventional army formations had mobile lofts which the birds found with their vital messages, & shore to ship birds also operated in the Med.
    In Ireland, the British army had lofts in barracks for messaging from outlier patrols & stations, which gave impetus to the sport here.

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Fachtna Roe
    Favourite Fachtna Roe
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 4:40 PM

    If all the pigeons were as evil-looking as the one in the photo, wouldn’t the bad-guys guess…

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Early Cuyler
    Favourite Early Cuyler
    Report
    Sep 14th 2019, 12:32 PM

    It’s almost as if there’s other stories developing that would use the search terms CIA, Russsia and Spying.

    Publishing AFP spook ops (and paying money for it) is a laugh.

    1
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

Leave a commentcancel