CIA | Chief Justice | International Space Station | Chief Minister | Chief Justice of the United States | Chief Executive Officer | station | chief executive officer | Chief executive officer | Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales | Riccarton Junction railway station | Fuji Station | London King's Cross railway station | Shōnandai Station | Independent station (North America) | Chief of Naval Operations | chief | independent station | Central railway station, Sydney | London Victoria station | College Station, Texas | Chief Secretary | Union Station | McMurdo Station | Euston railway station | Commander-in-Chief | Cape Canaveral Air Force Station | St Pancras railway station | Jingū-mae Station | Chief Executive of Hong Kong |
Jeffrey W. Castelli is a CIA officer who served as CIA station chief in Rome at the time the Niger uranium forgeries.
U.S. critics of the coup included then-Senator Lee Metcalf, who criticised the Johnson Administration for providing aid to a "military regime of collaborators and Nazi sympathisers." Phillips Talbot, the U.S. ambassador in Athens, disapproved of the coup, complaining that it represented "a rape of democracy", to which Jack Maury, the CIA station chief in Athens, answered, "How can you rape a whore?"
Fox News reporter Richard Miniter wrote that in interviews with the two men who "oversaw the disbursement for all American funds to the anti-Soviet resistance, Bill Peikney - CIA station chief in Islamabad from 1984 to 1986 - and Milt Bearden - CIA station chief from 1986 to 1989 - he found,