CIA adultery culture is John Kiriakou’s recurring characterization of the agency’s officer corps as saturated with adultery and casual sex — which he argues is not gossip but a systemic security problem, since a lonely, alienated officer is the easiest kind to recruit.[1] Among his examples: a CIA-specific strain of gonorrhea that spread among officers in Iraq in 2003–2004, requiring doctors from the Office of Medical Services to be flown out[2][3]; a deputy director who married five times, each wife having first been his secretary[4]; and two senior officers, Mike and Gene, who hated each other because each had slept with the other’s wife on successive tours in Karachi and Bogotá.[5] He cites reports of Brett McGurk as a further example.
Kiriakou traces the underlying stress to the demands of maintaining cover: he says the CIA has the highest divorce rate in the entire U.S. government, upwards of 80%, and notes he personally held passports from six different countries under six different names and backgrounds, all of which he had to keep straight in his head while crossing hostile borders and working in war zones.[6][7] He points to a psychiatrist in Bethesda, Maryland whose entire practice consists of treating former CIA officers who “lost their minds” overseas.[8] CIA officers, he says, joked never to touch the table in a meeting room, because “you don’t know who was having sex on it last night.”[9]
The culture was not unregulated at every point: Kiriakou recounts that under CIA Director Stansfield Turner during the Carter administration, a station chief was fired within a week for cohabitating with an unmarried girlfriend overseas, in violation of Carter’s no-cohabitation policy for station chiefs.[10]
Kiriakou distinguishes the “sociopathic tendencies” he says all CIA officers share from psychopathic tendencies, illustrating the former with an order he received two hours before a vacation: to skip his flight home, go to another country instead, and break into a target’s house to plant cameras and bugs.[11] He has also described his own life after the agency in personal terms, saying he is single with five kids and has had to rebuild financially since the government confiscated his pension in 2012.[12]