# The CIA Acoustic Kitty Project Page: https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/the-cia-acoustic-kitty-project Text version: https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/the-cia-acoustic-kitty-project.md Podcast: [Disturbing History](https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005) Published: 2026-03-06T14:25:02+00:00 Episode link: https://www.spreaker.com/episode/the-cia-acoustic-kitty-project--70506998 Audio file: https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/api.spreaker.com/download/episode/70506998/dhkittyfinal3_6.mp3 Processing state: not_requested JSON: https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/disturbing-history-7341005/episodes/the-cia-acoustic-kitty-project Duration seconds: 4664 ## Resource In the early nineteen sixties, at the height of Cold War paranoia, the CIA's Technical Services Division conceived and built one of the strangest intelligence programs in American history. They called it Acoustic Kitty. The idea was straightforward in the most disturbing possible way: surgically implant a microphone, a radio transmitter, and a battery inside a living cat, thread an antenna along its spine, and deploy it near Soviet officials having conversations in public parks. A cat wandering up to a park bench raises no suspicion. Nobody looks twice. It was, in theory, the perfect surveillance platform.It cost an estimated twenty million dollars. It took years to develop. It required major surgery on multiple animals and the combined effort of CIA engineers, veterinarians, and behavioral specialists working under complete secrecy. And on its first real operational deployment — near the Soviet embassy in Washington, DC — the cat walked into the street and was struck by a taxi. In this episode of Disturbing History, we trace the full arc of Acoustic Kitty from its origins in the CIA's anything-goes Technical Services culture to its spectacular and absurd failure, and we ask the harder question that the punchline usually obscures: what kind of institution produces this? The program wasn't the work of lunatics. It was approved, funded, and executed by serious, intelligent, technically sophisticated people who genuinely believed they were doing what the Cold War required. That's the real disturbance here — not the failure, but the trying. We also cover the role of Victor Marchetti, the former CIA executive who risked his career and his freedom to bring this story to the public in the early nineteen seventies, and we look at what the eventually declassified CIA documents… ## Actions - request_transcript: `POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/disturbing-history-7341005/episodes/the-cia-acoustic-kitty-project/transcription-requests` — Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode. - read_markdown: `GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/the-cia-acoustic-kitty-project.md` — Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource. A page view does not enqueue transcription. Agents should invoke `request_transcript` explicitly when they need this episode processed. ## Transcript Full transcripts are not published on public pages unless there is a clear rights basis.