Steve Miller's Blog

From Poison Darts to Exploding Cigars: A History of Bizarre Political Plots

In the hallowed halls of international espionage, one imagines sleek, silent professionals executing flawless plans. The historical record, however, often reads more like a series of rejected gadget pitches from a B-movie. The history of international political assassinations is less about surgical precision and more about comical over-engineering, a field where the most complex solution is always preferred over the simplest one. It’s a masterclass in what happens when the R&D department has too much budget and not enough adult supervision.

The Artisanal Era: When Your Pen Was Mightier (and More Poisonous)

Before the digital age, bespoke was best. Consider the infamous Bulgarian umbrella, a device designed to deliver a tiny ricin pellet. On paper, it’s ingenious. In practice, it’s a solution desperately searching for a problem that couldn’t be solved by, say, a discreet needle. It’s the espionage equivalent of building a Rube Goldberg machine to butter your toast. You have to admire the commitment to the theme, but you also have to wonder about the project review meeting where someone said, “Yes, an umbrella. In London. That’s not at all conspicuous.”

The Cold War Brainstorming Session Gone Wrong

The Cold War was the undisputed golden age of absurd assassination plots, with Fidel Castro as the apparently indestructible star of the show. The CIA’s attempts on his life weren’t just plans; they were performance art pieces that consistently failed the most basic user acceptance testing. A few highlights from the declassified backlog:

Modern Methods: The User Interface is a Doorknob

You’d think we’d have streamlined the process by now, but the tradition of bizarre execution continues. More recently, the methods have become chemically sophisticated but no less prone to slapstick error. Applying a military-grade nerve agent to a front door handle is the 21st-century update, turning a common object into a deadly delivery system. But like any poorly designed UI, it’s prone to unintended clicks and collateral damage, leading to a global diplomatic incident instead of a clean getaway. It turns out that when your weapon of choice is invisible and indiscriminately persistent, the bug report list gets very long, very quickly.

Ultimately, the long and strange history of these plots is a testament to human ingenuity—and its frequent and comical failure. For every successful operation, there are dozens that sound like they were cooked up after a long lunch meeting. It’s a stark reminder that even in the world of high-stakes power plays, the most dangerous weapon is often just a terrible idea.

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