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DARPA's Warrior Web seeks to provide super-human enhancements Photo credit: U.S. Army RDECOM / Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

The Pentagon’s Brain

The Secretive DARPA Agency — a Podcast

10/02/15

The Defense Advanced Research Project Agency, or DARPA, was created by Eisenhower in the late 1950s from the same military industrial complex that produced thermonuclear weapons. Its purpose was to devise science fiction-inspired high-tech weaponry for the American military. DARPA’s key mission, ironically, was to design systems to protect Americans from enemies having the very weapons it had created.

DARPA was also Frankenstein-like. President Eisenhower, his generals, and his defense contractors created it, and then, on his way out of office, he warned us of its dangers.

In this week’s podcast, WhoWhatWhy’s Jeff Schechtman talks with Annie Jacobsen, the best-selling author of Area 51: An Uncensored History of America’s Top Secret Military Base, about her new history of the Defense Department’s secret, powerful, and sometimes controversial military science R&D agency. Jacobsen’s new book, released on September 22, is titled The Pentagon’s Brain: An Uncensored History of DARPA, America’s Top-Secret Military Research Agency.

In this first-ever full-scale history of DARPA, Jacobsen relies on inside sources, interviews, private documents, and declassified memos to paint a picture of DARPA as the “Pentagon’s Brain,” which she traces from its Cold War inception in 1958 to the present.


Related front page panorama photo credit: Adapted by WhoWhatWhy from The Pentagon (Department of Defense / Wikimedia  [Public Domain]) Computer chips circuits boards (Jon Sullivan / Wikimedia [Public Domain])

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Author

  • Jeff Schechtman

    Jeff Schechtman's career spans movies, radio stations, and podcasts. After spending twenty-five years in the motion picture industry as a producer and executive, he immersed himself in journalism, radio, and, more recently, the world of podcasts. To date, he has conducted over ten thousand interviews with authors, journalists, and thought leaders. Since March 2015, he has produced almost 500 podcasts for WhoWhatWhy.

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