OSS

The Office of Strategic Services (U.S.)

Before World War II America's intelligence resources were scanty. On June 13, 1942 President Roosevelt ordered the formation of the Office of Strategic Services to conduct covert warfare against Those Wacky Nazis and their allies. Headed by "Wild Bill" Donovan, the OSS conducted sabotage and subversion as well as plain old espionage against their enemies. They undertook their job with ingenuity and what sometimes seems to some to be a curious zest. The OSS was an inexperienced agency and had some notable failures but also some remarkable successes. After the war the OSS was disbanded to be later resurrected in the form of the CIA.


 * Badass Bureaucrat: Betty Carp was a secretary in the OSS-Istanbul station. She was famous for her ability at cutting through red-tape and dodging Obstructive Bureaucrats and finding what was needed. Though little known on the outside, to the OSS she was considered a very valuable Lady of War.
 * Badass Bookworm: Allen Dulles.
 * Canon Discontinuity: It was disbanded then reappeared as the CIA.
 * City of Spies: Operated from several of these. Geneva was Dulles' turf.
 * Four-Star Badass: Wild Bill Donovan.
 * "Get Out of Jail Free" Card: Operation Paperclip, where the OSS smuggled Nazi scientists out of Germany and put them to work developing American rockets and other cool science.
 * Hey, It's That Guy!: Of the thousands of recruits staffing the organization, field agents included Moe Berg, Julia Child, and John Ford.
 * La Résistance: Often worked with these.
 * Large Ham: George Earle who seemed to think he was a movie spy and was so careless that the OSS just quietly cut him out of any real information and used him as a distraction.
 * Oddly enough he did pick up a rumor that Germans were working on an Atomic Bomb. Go figure.
 * Recruiting the Criminal: The OSS borrowed some of the inhabitants of various prisons to teach agents their crafts so that they could be used on Those Wacky Nazis.
 * Refuge in Audacity: Allen Dulles did this in Switzerland. Instead of concealing his vocation he practically advertised it in the hope that recruits would come to him. This actually worked.
 * Rule of Cool: Some of the schemes of the OSS were more cool then practical.
 * Those Wacky Nazis: Who did not like the OSS. Not at all.
 * Training the Peaceful Villagers: The OSS did some of this.
 * Upper Class Twit: Subverted; they were accused not unjustly of having too many of these, but they did do their job well.
 * World War II: The heyday of OSS operations.