Background
Adams was a descendant of the Adams family of Massachusetts.
intelligence analyist whistleblower
Adams was a descendant of the Adams family of Massachusetts.
Harvard University; Saint Mark"s School.
He eventually retired from the Central Intelligence Agency after claiming there was a conspiracy among officials within United States. Headquarters in Saigon. He died in 1988. Family and education
He was a graduate of Saint Mark"s School in Southborough, Massachusetts, and of Harvard College. Troop number controversy
Adams was in the Central Intelligence Agency from 1963 until 1973, but grew frustrated with the perversion of intelligence to meet political objectives.
He claimed United States. Army General William C. Westmoreland had conspired to minimize reported Vietnamese enemy troop strength in 1967.
Adams testified for the defense in the 1973 espionage trial of Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony J. Russo, accused in connection with the 1971 illegal transmission of the Pentagon Papers, a secret Government-sponsored history of the Vietnam War. Citing Government misconduct, a Federal judge dismissed all charges against the two.
Mr. Adams told the court in that trial that he believed there had been political pressures in the military to depict the North Vietnamese and Vietcong in 1967 as weaker than they actually were.
After visiting South Vietnam four times between 1966 and 1967, Mr. Adams concluded that senior military intelligence officers were underestimating the strength of the enemy, perhaps by half.
He argued for a higher troop count, but late in 1967 the C.I.A. reached an agreement with the military on lower figures. Adams responded with an internal memorandum calling the agreement "a monument of deceit." In January 1968, after the Tet offensive in Vietnam, the Central Intelligence Agency adopted an enemy count along the lines he had recommended.
In 1969 Adams removed Central Intelligence Agency documents to argue his case and buried them in the woods near his 250-acre (10 km2) farm in Virginia.
After his resignation from the agency in 1973, he sought the support of other intelligence officials to prove that there was a Saigon cover-up. He detailed his allegations in a Harper"s Magazine article in 1975. He also testified before the House Select Committee on Intelligence, which reached conclusions similar to his own.
In 1982 Adams provided critical evidence to Columbia Broadcasting System News reporters who made the documentary "The Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception".
General Westmoreland subsequently sued both Adams and Columbia Broadcasting System News for libel, but the case was settled privately. Adams died in 1988.
The Sam Adams Award, given since 2002, for integrity in intelligence is named after Adams.