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George Washington's Personality
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George
Washington was a skilled manager of intelligence. He utilized
agents behind enemy lines, recruited both Tory and Patriot sources,
interrogated travelers for intelligence information, and launched
scores of agents on both intelligence and counterintelligence
missions. He was adept at deception operations and tradecraft and was
a skilled propagandist. He also practiced sound operational security.
As an intelligence manager, Washington
insisted that the terms of an agent's employment and his instructions
be precise and in writing, composing many letters of instruction
himself. He emphasized his desire for receiving written, rather than
verbal, reports. He demanded repeatedly that intelligence reports be
expedited, reminding his officers of those bits of intelligence he had
received which had become valueless because of delay in getting them
to him. He also recognized the need for developing many different
sources so that their reports could be cross-checked, and so that the
compromise of one source would not cut off the flow of intelligence
from an important area.
Washington sought and obtained a "secret
service fund" from the Continental
Congress, and expressed preference for specie, preferably gold:
"I have always found a difficulty in procuring intelligence by
means of paper money, and I perceive it increases." In accounting
for the sums in his journals, he did not identify the recipients:
"The names of persons who are employed within the Enemy's lines
or who may fall within their power cannot be inserted."
He instructed his generals to "leave no
stone unturned, nor do not stick to expense" in gathering
intelligence, and urged that those employed for intelligence purposes
be those "upon whose firmness and fidelity we may safely
rely."
Washington's Intelligence Officers
Washington retained full and final authority
over Continental Army intelligence activities, but he delegated
significant field responsibility to trusted officers. Although he
regularly urged all his officers to be more active in collecting
intelligence, Washington relied chiefly on his aides and
specially-designated officers to assist him in conducting intelligence
operations. The first to assume this role appears to have been Joseph
Reed, who fulfilled the duties of "Secretary, Adjutant General
and Quarter Master, besides doing a thousand other little Things which
fell incidentally." A later successor to Reed was Alexander
Hamilton, who is known to have been deeply involved with the
Commander-in-Chief's intelligence operations, including developing
reports received in secret writing and investigating a suspected
double agent.
When Elias Boudinot was appointed Commissary
General of Prisoners, responsible for screening captured soldiers and
for dealing with the British concerning American patriots whom they
held prisoner, Washington recognized that the post offered
"better opportunities than most other officers in the army, to
obtain knowledge of the Enemy's Situation, motions and...
designs," and added to Boudinot's responsibilities "the
procuring of intelligence." In 1778, Washington selected
Brigadier General Charles Scott of Virginia as his "intelligence
chief." When personal considerations made it necessary for Scott
to step down, Washington appointed Colonel David Henley to the post
temporarily, and then assigned it to Major Benjamin Tallmadge.
Tallmadge combined reconnaissance with clandestine visits into British
territory to recruit agents, and attained distinction for his conduct
of the Culper Ring operating out of New York.
In 1776 George Washington picked Thomas
Knowlton to command the Continental Army's first intelligence unit,
known as "Knowlton's Rangers." Intelligence failure during
the battle of Long Island convinced Washington that he needed an elite
detachment dedicated to reconnaissance that reported directly to him.
Knowlton, who had served in a similar unit during the French and
Indian War, led 130 men and 20 officers-all hand-picked volunteers-on
a variety of secret missions that were too dangerous for regular
troops to conduct. The date 1776 on the seal of the Army's
intelligence service today refers to the formation of Knowlton's
Rangers.
Other intelligence officers who served with
distinction during the War of Independence included Captain Eli
Leavenworth, Major Alexander Clough, Colonel Elias Dayton, Major John
Clark, Major Allan McLane, Captain Charles Craig and General Thomas
Mifflin.
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