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To note just the major revelations: In January 1970, an Army captain disclosed a military intelligence program that targeted political activists. In March 1971, a raid on an FBI office "liberated" files detailing spying on black radicals and student groups. The Watergate hearings disclosed many more such efforts—the "Huston Plan" to neutralize Nixon's political opponents through burglaries, surreptitious surveillance, and worse, and Henry Kissinger's wiretapping program among them—but it hardly ended them. In November 1974, the Justice Department released a report detailing FBI efforts against left-wing U.S. citizens, called Counterintelligence Program, or COINTELPRO. The next month, New York Times reporter Seymour Hersh exposed a massive CIA campaign against the anti-war movement, in explicit violation of the organization's charter. And in 1975 various congressional committees unearthed a range of stories of government officials using surveillance for political and personal reasons.

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