The Targets
The selection architecture — how the program decided who to neutralize, what the categories it invented reveal, and why the "Black Nationalist Hate Groups" designation is the most consequential document in COINTELPRO's record
Post I established the institutional architecture of COINTELPRO — the authorization, the command structure, the absence of oversight. Post II examines the program's target selection: who was chosen, by what criteria, under what operational categories, and what those choices reveal about what the program was actually for.
The targeting question is the most analytically revealing aspect of COINTELPRO because the targets are where the gap between the program's stated purpose and its operational reality is most visible. The stated purpose was national security — protecting the United States from subversive foreign influence. The targets included the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, a nonviolent civil rights organization led by a Baptist minister who had never had any documented relationship with any foreign government. They included the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, whose name described its operational method. They included the NAACP, the oldest and most established civil rights organization in the country. They included Martin Luther King, Jr., who was subjected to the most intensive individual surveillance operation in COINTELPRO's history.
The program's own documents — the targeting memos, the operational proposals, the headquarters authorizations — are the evidence. They do not conceal what the program feared. They state it plainly, in bureaucratic language, in documents that the Church Committee declassified and that now sit in the public record. The program feared effective political organizing by Black Americans. It said so.
COINTELPRO operated through formally designated target programs, each with its own operational category, field office assignments, and headquarters oversight. The category names are the program's own vocabulary — and the vocabulary is the first diagnostic.
| Program Designation | Year Established | % of Total Operations | Primary Targets |
|---|---|---|---|
| COINTELPRO–CPUSA | 1956 | ~29% | Communist Party USA and affiliated organizations; alleged Soviet-connected individuals |
| COINTELPRO–BLACK HATE | 1967 | ~40% | Black Panther Party, SNCC, SCLC, Nation of Islam, NAACP chapters, RAM, and dozens of other Black organizations — including explicitly nonviolent ones |
| COINTELPRO–NEW LEFT | 1968 | ~17% | Students for a Democratic Society, Vietnam War protest organizations, campus antiwar groups |
| COINTELPRO–SWP | 1961 | ~9% | Socialist Workers Party and Young Socialist Alliance |
| COINTELPRO–WHITE HATE | 1964 | ~4% | Ku Klux Klan and associated white supremacist organizations |
| Other / Puerto Rican nationalists | Various | ~1% | Various Puerto Rican independence organizations |
The distribution is the argument. Forty percent of all COINTELPRO operations — the largest single category — targeted Black organizations under the "Black Nationalist Hate Groups" designation. The Ku Klux Klan, an organization with a documented century-long history of domestic terrorism, received four percent of COINTELPRO's operational attention. The asymmetry between these two figures — 40 percent against organizations that were largely nonviolent, four percent against an organization with a documented history of murder — tells the story of what the program was actually for more clearly than any interpretive analysis could.
The 1968 memo requires careful reading because it says, in the program's own language, what COINTELPRO was for. It was not designed to prevent violence — the memo identifies nonviolent leaders by name as targets. It was not designed to prevent foreign subversion — there is no foreign actor in the memo's analysis. It was designed to prevent the emergence of effective Black political leadership, to prevent Black organizations from attracting young members, and to prevent the kind of coalition-building that would translate community organization into political power. These are not national security concerns. They are political concerns. The program's own founding document states them plainly.
The conversion mechanism in the targeting architecture is the label — the bureaucratic category that converts a political organization into a security threat without requiring any evidence that the organization poses a security threat. "Black Nationalist Hate Groups" is the label. The label appears in the target designation, in the operational files, in the reporting structure, and eventually in the congressional record when COINTELPRO was exposed. It framed the organizations for every subsequent official encounter with the program's records.
The SCLC was not a hate group. SNCC was not a hate group. The NAACP was not a hate group. The program designated them as such — or targeted them under a program with "hate groups" in its name — because the designation was the only available bureaucratic mechanism for applying COINTELPRO's tools to organizations that did not fit any legitimate national security target category. The label was the conversion mechanism: it transformed political organizations into security threats by bureaucratic fiat, creating an official record that characterized them as threats and then used the characterization to justify treating them as threats.
The program did not fear violence. The five goals in the 1968 memo reveal what it actually feared: a "messiah" who could unify, youth who could be organized, coalitions that could generate political power. It feared effective democracy among Black Americans — and it said so, in its own words, in a document now sitting in the public record.
The Program · Series AnalysisThe insulation of the targeting architecture operated through two mechanisms. The first was classification — the target designations, the operational memos, and the rationale for targeting were classified documents, unavailable to the organizations being targeted, unavailable to Congress, unavailable to any external actor who might have challenged the designation. The SCLC did not know it was designated a target. Martin Luther King did not know the program's founding document named him as a potential "messiah" to be prevented. The targeting operated in the dark.
The second insulation mechanism was the label itself. A government program targeting "hate groups" is a program targeting hate groups — the label carries its own political protection. When COINTELPRO was eventually exposed, the program's defenders pointed to the White Hate component — the four percent directed at the Klan — as evidence that the program was ideologically balanced. The label did the work: it was difficult to argue, in the immediate post-exposure environment, that a program targeting "hate groups" was itself a hate-motivated program, even when the operational distribution made the argument clearly.
The targeting documents are now public. The five goals are now public. The 40-to-4 operational ratio is now public. The program stated what it feared in its own language, in its own bureaucratic records, and filed those records in its own archive. It did not expect those records to become public. When they did, the insulation provided by classification and label could no longer hold. What remained — what remains now — is the plain text of the founding documents, naming the threat the program was actually built to address.
Post III examines how the program translated its targeting decisions into operational reality — the informant economy that put the program's agents inside the organizations it had designated for neutralization, and what that economy produced.
The COINTELPRO program distribution percentages (40% Black organizations, 4% White Hate groups, etc.) are from the Church Committee's analysis of COINTELPRO operations as documented in Intelligence Activities and the Rights of Americans, Book III (1976). The March 4, 1968 memo excerpts are from the declassified COINTELPRO–BLACK HATE program authorization, available through the FBI Vault and documented in the Church Committee record. The memo's language — "messiah," "martyr," the named individuals — is verbatim from the declassified document. The five-goal analysis is the series' structural reading of the memo's stated objectives; the characterization of these as political rather than national security objectives is the series' analytical judgment based on the stated content of the goals, not on inference about unstated motivations. The 40-to-4 ratio comparison between Black organizations and KKK targeting is arithmetic from the Church Committee data.
