Follow TV Tropes

Following

Needs Help: CIA Evil FBI Good

Go To

Cleanup instructions

For starters, any moral contrast which lacks either organization or a fictional counterpart should be moved to Good Policing, Evil Policing. Any lack of moral contrast should be moved to Jurisdiction Friction or Interservice Rivalry as needed.

Any examples of the CIA being portrayed as corrupt without the FBI for comparison, can be moved to Sinister Spy Agency if need be.

Any examples of the FBI being portrayed in a positive light without CIA for comparison can be moved to By-the-Book Cop.

Any examples of the FBI portrayed as corrupt without the CIA can be moved to Dirty Cop which has "Filthy Feds" as a redirect, and has a line about portrayals of FBI corruption.

Positive CIA portrayals which exclude the FBI comparison, can possibly go to Covert Group.

Any examples of CIA or FBI personnel struggling with unethical actions can go to Dirty Business.

The rest of the sandbox categories are self explanatory, though. CIA Evil, FBI Good goes to one folder set, FBI Evil, CIA Good goes to another folder set, and other moral contrasts go in the bottom row of folders.

Any moral contrast between the CIA and FBI or their fictional counterparts specifically is kept, and added to Sandbox.CIA Evil FBI Good under one of the three sections. I suppose we can be flexible and include historical counterpart comparisons as well, but if it is a contrast between any other organizations, or if it just includes one organization/fictional/historical counterpart and an entirely different organization, it gets moved to Good Policing, Evil Policing.


OP

CIA Evil, FBI Good cannot decide whether it is supposed to be examples of evil CIA agents (a better title for which would be "Insidious Intelligence" or "Sinister Spy"), noble FBI agents (PSOC), both contrasted, or vice versa alone or in contrast (evil FBI would go to "Filthy Feds", while noble CIA agents are PSOC). Possibly needs to be expanded to apply to any law enforcement agency being compared to another in terms of morality ("Black and White Law Enforcement".)

Sandbox.CIA Evil FBI Good Wick Checks found that from 50/299 wicks:

Quick Results:

  • Evil CIA, Good FBI: 8/50, or 16%
  • Morality Swapped: 4/50, or 8%
  • Only one side mentioned: 21/50, or 42%
  • ZCE/Misc: 17/50, or 34%

    open/close all folders 

    Evil CIA or Equivalent, good FBI/Equivalent 
  • Literature.The Generals President: The CIA is not portrayed in a particular positive light in the book, with guards outside its headquarters gassing and attacking non-violent protesters. It's Director, Carlton Blackburn, is later revealed to be a member of the Holist Council and carrying out illegal psychotropic drug experiments on people. In contrast, the FBI is shown to be valiant, loyal and friendly, with President Haugen relying on FBI Director Peter Dirksma to gather intel on the treacherous Blackburn and later arrest him.
  • Series.Narcos: The protagonists are DEA agents rather than FBI agents, but the dynamic is identical. The CIA is tangled up in the cartels and often refuses to cooperate taking them down. Escobar even has an ex-CIA man on his payroll. Season two introduces a truly shady CIA figure in the form of Bill. This is made unquestionably clear in Season 3, when Bill warns Peña that he is wasting his time going after the Cali Cartel. By the end of the season, it is revealed that the CIA knew the Cali Cartel bought off the Colombian President and still decided to back him because of him also being a puppet leader for the US Government. Bill outright tells Peña that the war on drugs is already lost and the US Government's role in South America goes far beyond stopping drug trafficking. Peña finds out Bill is right when his superior admits this to be true, causing Peña to quit the DEA. Furthermore, in Mexico Bill is shown to have cut a deal with Felix Gallardo's Guadalajara Cartel to transport weapons into Nicaragua in return for pulling strings with the State Department to scuttle the DEA investigation into Felix.
  • Film.The Long Kiss Goodnight: One of the main antagonists is a corrupt CIA officer. And in one scene, Mitch tries to bluff Timothy by telling him that his "friends in the FBI" are on their way (but Timothy is unimpressed).
  • Literature.The Century Trilogy: The CIA (for whom Cam Dewar is working) doesn't get away very well in this book. The FBI too at first, but after the dead of J. Edgar Hoover, they start taking their job seriously and investigate against Richard Nixon.
  • Roleplay.Discord Plays Stellaris: The CIA is played by the DI, a diabolical organization dedicated to spying on citizens of the Republic , and the FBI is played by the RDI, a department tasked with investigating corruption and protecting the civil liberties of citizens. This ultimately results in a takedown of the DI by the RDI, and the arrest of president Poi and his cabinet.
  • VisualNovel.My Sweet Bodyguard: In Katsuragi's sequel, FBI agent Kate is a heroic ally of the main characters, while the assistant director of the CIA turns out to be involved in terrorist activities around the world.
  • TabletopGame.Cthulhu Tech: The OIS gets a far worse rap than the FSB in the books; while it's portrayed on the whole as Necessarily Evil, the moment a criminal goes into OIS hands, all concepts of human rights go out the window. The FSB, by contrast, have an organizational culture of integrity, their largest division is Internal Affairs to keep the cults out, and generally play their cases by the book. At least I think they're the correct equivalents.
  • Castle.Tropes A To D: Both agencies have appeared throughout the series. For the most part, while the FBI and NYPD have Jurisdiction Friction and Obstructive Bureaucrats, they're decent folk. Meanwhile, except for a few occasions, whenever the CIA gets involved, things are much shadier and sometimes outright antagonistic. The biggest example is in Season 8, when we find out that Senator Bracken had a partner in the CIA who was covering up his dirty money dealings and now appears to be the show's new Big Bad.

    Morality Swapped examples (Evil FBI or Equivalent, Good CIA/Equivalent) 
  • Hitman.Tropes A To C: Inverted. Smith is an upstanding (if incompetent) CIA agent who has the best interests of his country at heart. The terror ringleader of Blood Money on the other hand, is a former Director of the FBI. This further complicated by Cayne's vast network of friends in the other agencies—including one Agent Martinez, a bag man for the CIA.
  • Series.Alias: Averted, as it was a show about CIA agents. Virtually all FBI agents depicted were either misguided or actively malevolent, and a significant storyline in season two is the FBI putting Sydney through a tribunal for being a suspected terrorist. Also this is inverted, not averted
  • Series.The Sandbaggers: Inverted. The CIA are generally portrayed as helpful, and in particular Burnside has a very close working relationship with the CIA's London section chief, Jeff Ross. The show has a Conspiracy Theorist view of American domestic politics that looks peculiar to American eyes, and the FBI is part of it. According to Ross (and apparently, this was really according to Mackintosh), the FBI was behind the Kennedy and King assassinations.
  • DarthWiki.Unidentified: Inverted. Amongst the Divided States of America, the FBI is on the side of the Western States, who are undeniably evil. Meanwhile, the CIA is siding with the Northern States.

    One of the sides is absent or unmentioned, regardless of morality 
  • Characters.Deer Avenger:
    "You can take the nut out of the CIA, but you can't take the CIA out of the nut." - Bambo
  • Characters.Peter Chimaera, in Digimon Trilogy folder: Averted, in that it is the FBI that's evil, while the CIA never appears. Instead, the Police are the good law enforcement instance.
  • Film.Tower Heist: There's no evil CIA, but the FBI is shown in pretty decent light, being all hard-working people, and Reasonable Authority Figures, something unusual for films where the protagonists are committing a huge crime. Doesn't contrast CIA and FBI, People Sit on Chairs.
  • Film.The Ninja Mission: Averted. The CIA are unquestionably the good guys, here.
  • Literature.The Lost Symbol: Except that the FBI never shows up at all. And the CIA is revealed to be not that bad themselves.
  • Manga.Jormungand:
  • Monster.Film T To Z: "Sadistic J-CIA member Kato..."
  • VideoGame.Horace: While the FBI are never featured in the game, the Man in Grey, a sadistic major villain, reveals himself to be a former CIA agent, and boasts of how he would torture and kill people.
  • Literature.Eleven Twenty Two Sixty Three: Zigzagged on the FBI. After saving Kennedy, the FBI agent in charge is content to help Jake disappear and gives him a large amount of money to do so. However, in the Crapsack Future, it is revealed that Hoover actually ordered the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • YMMV.Hanna: Marissa Wiegler is the CIA operative in charge of the agency's Galinka Project[...]
  • Film.Analyze This: Downplayed. The FBI are trying to catch criminals, but they do engage in questionable conduct. See above.
  • Film.Spectral: Downplayed with CIA Agent Madison. While she's undoubtedly one of the good guys, she makes clear throughout the film that she wishes to retrieve the technology the Moldavians are using for the Spectrals (initially believed to be man-portable cloaking technology, and then revealed to be people cut up until they are nothing but brains and nervous system driving a bunch of concentrate humanoid "drones" in great agony) without understanding what kind of inhumanity she's being asked to salvage by her superiors.
  • Characters.Mash: : Although he keeps it a little fuzzy who he works for in his first appearance, the writers eventually settled on him being CIA.
  • Fridge.The Longest Journey Saga: Why are elite state-sanctioned Azadi assassins called "Apostles", when there is nothing particularly Christian about their missions? Because "apostle" means simply "messenger" in Ancient Greek, and as such, can refer both to peaceful missionaries and to CIA-like overseas assassins.
  • Film.The Objective: The soldiers inherently distrust Keynes as a CIA officer, assuming they're being sent in to clean up the Agency's own mess. It's clear by the end the CIA knew about the aliens and sacrificed Keynes as the Unit to learn more.
  • WebVideo.Buzzfeed Unsolved: Many of Ryan's theories include possible CIA coverups and other forms of foul play.
  • Series.Manhunt Unabomber: The FBI has its share of jerks but overall they are all working to try to stop a domestic terrorist. The episode that explains Kaczynski's reasons showcases that when he was at college he was put through serious psychological hell courtesy of one of his teachers using him as a guinea pig for the infamous MK Ultra program.
  • VideoGame.Mercenaries: Well, "CIA morally grey" is more like it. In the first game, the South Koreans were being "advised" by burned out CIA Agent Buford, who has clearly gone native and openly states (in Korean, when he thinks you don't speak the language) that he doesn't give a rat's ass what Langley says, and by the end of the game wanted you to take out the Chinese Army more than he wanted you to take out the North Korean threat. In the sequel, CIA Agent Joyce is calling the shots for the Allies, and is a lot colder and less likable than General Peng, though both are in the conflict almost entirely because of the oil. He even attempts to back out of the deal to give you a nuke if you side with the Allies at the end of the game.
  • Characters.Blindspot: The face of the CIA in the show, he is unapologetically antagonistic to Jane and Weller's team.
  • Characters.The Event: Potholed as "FBI Good" with no other context
  • ComicBook.Batman Thrillkiller: Averted, Batgirl gets her wonderful toys from a contact in the CIA.

    ZCE/Other 
  • Literature.A Bleeding Heart Of Steel: Subverted. The NKVD constantly butts heads with the KSR (the Soviet equivalent to the CIA). However, both of them are portrayed as being equally bad.
  • Series.Wiseguy: Played dead straight in the Mel Profitt arc and the Miami arc.
  • VisualNovel.Muv Luv Alternative: Although it's more like CIA Evil, U.S. Army Good.
  • Website.Fin Fur And Feather Bureau Of Investigation: Averted, the FFFBI certainly hate the CIIIA for being far more competent and making them look bad, but both are definitely on the side of good.
  • Characters.Star Trek Species A To M (under Early-Installment Weirdness): On a related note, the Obsidian Order were caught building a fleet of next-generation ships in the barren Orias System in "Defiant". Dukat mentioned that the Order never approved of the peace treaty with the Federation, and were planning to re-invade the Badlands with those ships, going entirely over the heads of the Central Command in the process (presumably to set up a kind of "CIA Evil, FBI Good" scenario). Later on in the season, Enabran Tain explains the fleet is part of a joint-operation with the Tal Shiar to launch a first strike on the Changeling's homeworld. This is slightly more in line with the Obsidian Order's organizational functions of maintaining security and carrying out espionage. I don't know what the context of this is.
  • Characters.Primeval Paradox: Defied - while she is a member of the FBI, she also worked with the CIA, and is still technically a member, albeit as a liaison for both organizations. And this is related to the trope... how?
  • Blackmail Backfire: The Punisher (2017): CIA Agent Bill Rawlins [[spoiler:(the architect of "Project Cerberus" and the man who ordered the death of the Castle family) is able to convince his superior, Deputy Director Marion James, to allow him to continue trying to finish off Frank Castle and David "Micro" Lieberman and thus finally silence all witnesses of Cerberus and keep the Agency from being publicly shamed.
  • Series.Re Genesis: Caroline Morrison, FBI, is the benevolent leader of NorBAC and spends most of her time trying to outwit the US army, government, CIA and MI6 to help David and the others in their investigations. The FBI is clearly good here, but the CIA is barely mentioned and I can't tell what their portrayal is like.
  • Film.Nemesis: And LAPD...worse? Whatever the reason, it seems that the Los Angeles Police Department has a lot more power than it should, because they set up this huge sting operation all the hell the way over in Java.
  • Monster.Film S: Nikolai Tarkovsky, Ted Winter, is a KGB sleeper agent who infiltrated the US Government and kidnapped Evelyn Salt's husband Mike, giving him to Orlov and allowing him to force Evelyn to assassinate the Russian president and execute Mike once he's no longer of use to them. Infiltrating the White House, Tarkovsky murders countless people there before to launches nuclear missiles against cities Mecca and Tehran, intending to kill millions of innocent people there and inciting the wrath of billions of Muslims onto America. After he frames Salt for his atrocities, he tries to kill her as she is taken to custody. ???
  • Literature.CHERUB Series: Inverted. Intelligence agents tend to be brave heroes doing a tough job with minimal casualties. Regular police — except those who work with the Intelligence Services of course — are usually stupid, arrogant, violent and generally in need of a good kicking. Not even about the CIA or FBI, or their equivalents.
  • Series.Intelligence 2014: With Clockwork in place of the FBI in this trope.
  • Series.Colony: Zigzagged; Will worked for the FBI Fugitive Task Force prior to the invasion and suspects his new boss Phyllis is ex-CIA based on her attitude. Doesn't say anything about morality.
  • Film.Above The Law 1988: CIA evil, though the Bureau are obstructive at best and Lawful Stupid at worst.
  • Literature.Icarus Falls: Averted utterly. Both agencies are horribly corrupt and authoritarian, the FBI having been responsible for the unlawful detention and killings of thousands of (mostly black) citizens deemed "subversive", while the CIA sponsors Neo-Nazi terrorism and supports overseas dictatorships. Gets to ridiculous levels when the director of the CIA tries to launch a coup.
  • Monster.Valiant Comics: Issues 17-19 ("Jurassic Politics" arc): Thomas Higdon is a CIA agent who is secretly in league with the monstrous Spider Aliens. Rest of the example unrelated.
  • WesternAnimation.The Zeta Project: Averted entirely, as the Zeta threat is given over instead to a NSA taskforce and seems to be handled entirely handled by them. Given how often the NSA is ignored in fiction, this seems odd until you learn that the NSA does in fact have these taskforces in real life. Counts also as Shown Their Work.

My personal take is that the trope is far too narrow and/or covered by concepts that either already exist, or have yet to exist.

If the FBI and CIA are in conflict because of jurisdiction, that would be covered by Jurisdiction Friction. Any two LE agencies or departments being morally contrasted would fit better under a concept like "Black & White Law Enforcement". Evil spies deserve their own trope if they do not have one already ("Sinister Spy" or "Insidious Intelligence").

Edited by MacronNotes on May 31st 2022 at 10:07:06 AM

naturalironist from The Information Superhighway Since: Jul, 2016 Relationship Status: TV Tropes ruined my love life
#26: Jul 5th 2021 at 11:28:40 AM

[up]I did see that and I'm not sure I agree. Those are character archetypes that are primarily about individuals relationships to authority, where as this concept and most of the examples are about organizations more broadly. Most of the examples in the wick check do not have context I would consider acceptable for Cowboy Cop or By-the-Book Cop.

[up][up] Given the usage is overwhelming just about kne agency, and the page is soft split, I'm not sure I agree with that assessment. The Jurisdiction Friction aspect comes off as optional from the description to me (though I agree with OP that this could be better clarified).

"It's just a show; I should really just relax"
WarJay77 Big Catch, Sparkle Edition (Troper Knight)
Big Catch, Sparkle Edition
#27: Jul 5th 2021 at 11:29:56 AM

Then let me rephrase that. I believe this should be about the contrast.

Edited by WarJay77 on Jul 5th 2021 at 2:30:06 PM

Currently Working On: Incorruptible Pure Pureness
SkyCat32 The Draftsman of Doom from tall grass (Five Year Plan) Relationship Status: TV Tropes ruined my love life
The Draftsman of Doom
#28: Jul 5th 2021 at 11:32:45 AM

I agree with Jay. It SHOULD focus on contrasting the organizations from a moral standpoint.

I still think the Super-Trope is missing, though.

Edited by SkyCat32 on Jul 5th 2021 at 2:33:16 PM

Rawr.
SkyCat32 The Draftsman of Doom from tall grass (Five Year Plan) Relationship Status: TV Tropes ruined my love life
The Draftsman of Doom
#29: Jul 5th 2021 at 2:16:55 PM

Are we good to run the crowner?

Rawr.
Kevjro7 Susjection! Since: Jan, 2020
Susjection!
#30: Jul 5th 2021 at 5:01:58 PM

Regarding documenting a trope about evil spies, The Mole exists and covers the concept sufficiently (in my opinion).

WarJay77 Big Catch, Sparkle Edition (Troper Knight)
Big Catch, Sparkle Edition
#31: Jul 5th 2021 at 5:18:02 PM

[up] That was broadened to cover itself and Reverse Mole. It's not a villain trope anymore

Currently Working On: Incorruptible Pure Pureness
Kevjro7 Susjection! Since: Jan, 2020
Susjection!
#32: Jul 5th 2021 at 5:29:44 PM

[up]My point is that any potential examples of Evil Spy could probably just be put on The Mole, which could reasonably cover Evil Spy's concept.

WarJay77 Big Catch, Sparkle Edition (Troper Knight)
Big Catch, Sparkle Edition
#33: Jul 5th 2021 at 5:36:44 PM

Maybe. It depends on what we mean by "Evil Spy". If you mean an evil character who acts as a mole, then yes. If you mean a "spy" in the James Bond sense of the word, who uses evil gadgets and stuff, then I wouldn't consider that character a "mole".

Currently Working On: Incorruptible Pure Pureness
Kevjro7 Susjection! Since: Jan, 2020
Susjection!
#34: Jul 5th 2021 at 5:46:58 PM

Oh, that kind of spy. I was thinking of spies IRL. Yeah, that wouldn't be covered by The Mole. I have more to say about this matter, but I think it should be saved for its TLP draft if we make one.

GastonRabbit Sounds good on paper (he/him) from Robinson, Illinois, USA (General of TV Troops) Relationship Status: I'm just a poor boy, nobody loves me
Sounds good on paper (he/him)
#35: Jul 5th 2021 at 10:50:47 PM

If we go with a contrast a la Good Colors, Evil Colors, what about Good Espionage Evil Espionage? This would include removing the US-specific focus unless we go with the supertrope idea and keep this as a US-specific subtrope, because I'd imagine other countries' intelligence agencies are depicted in similar ways (though I haven't checked, especially because the trope page only focuses on American intelligence agencies).

Edited by GastonRabbit on Jul 5th 2021 at 12:53:29 PM

Patiently awaiting the release of Paper Luigi and the Marvelous Compass.
SeptimusHeap from Switzerland (Edited uphill both ways) Relationship Status: Mu
#36: Jul 6th 2021 at 2:43:58 AM

I always thought that this trope is about how in police fiction the CIA is often depicted as a sleazy organization e.g being in cahoots with drug traffickers.

"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard Feynman
SkyCat32 The Draftsman of Doom from tall grass (Five Year Plan) Relationship Status: TV Tropes ruined my love life
The Draftsman of Doom
#37: Jul 6th 2021 at 2:51:50 AM

Is it too early to run a crowner?

Rawr.
SkyCat32 The Draftsman of Doom from tall grass (Five Year Plan) Relationship Status: TV Tropes ruined my love life
The Draftsman of Doom
#38: Jul 6th 2021 at 8:34:28 PM

Crowner

Please feel free to add any options I missed.

Rawr.
Berrenta How sweet it is from Texas Since: Apr, 2015 Relationship Status: Can't buy me love
How sweet it is
Lymantria Tyrannoraptoran Reptiliomorph from Toronto Since: Apr, 2015 Relationship Status: Historians will say we were good friends.
Tyrannoraptoran Reptiliomorph
Berrenta How sweet it is from Texas Since: Apr, 2015 Relationship Status: Can't buy me love
How sweet it is
#41: Jul 10th 2021 at 6:15:43 PM

I feel we can use more votes. Some items are in consensus range but not enough votes cast regarding them.

she/her | TRS needs your help! | Contributor of Trope Report
Albert3105 Since: Jun, 2013
#42: Jul 10th 2021 at 6:24:23 PM

Why are we trying to attach morality onto Jurisdiction Friction and Interservice Rivalry? These tropes can exist and serve as drama devices without any morality involved.

EDIT: I misinterpreted the crowner option. I thought it meant "remove non-morality examples listed under those two tropes" instead of "remove non-moral examples from CIA Evil, FBI Good itself".

Edited by Albert3105 on Jul 10th 2021 at 9:33:00 AM

themayorofsimpleton Now a lurker. Thanks for everything. | he/him from Elsewhere (Experienced, Not Yet Jaded) Relationship Status: Abstaining
Now a lurker. Thanks for everything. | he/him
#43: Jul 10th 2021 at 7:15:02 PM

[up][up] Maybe we should do an announcement in ATT.

EDIT: And done.

Edited by themayorofsimpleton on Jul 10th 2021 at 10:18:49 AM

TRS Queue | Works That Require Cleanup of Complaining | Troper Wall
mightymewtron Angry babby from New New York Since: Oct, 2012 Relationship Status: THIS CONCEPT OF 'WUV' CONFUSES AND INFURIATES US!
Angry babby
#44: Jul 10th 2021 at 8:13:52 PM

I think the "Merge CIA Evil, FBI Good with Good Espionage Evil Espionage" option is worded poorly. "Merging" implies these are two tropes that already existed, when the latter idea does not have its own page. Are you asking to broaden CIA Evil, FBI Good, or broaden and rename it to Good Espionage Evil Espionage?

I do some cleanup and then I enjoy shows you probably think are cringe.
SkyCat32 The Draftsman of Doom from tall grass (Five Year Plan) Relationship Status: TV Tropes ruined my love life
The Draftsman of Doom
#45: Jul 11th 2021 at 2:38:43 AM

That third one was the idea, Mew.

Edited by SkyCat32 on Jul 11th 2021 at 5:39:19 AM

Rawr.
SkyCat32 The Draftsman of Doom from tall grass (Five Year Plan) Relationship Status: TV Tropes ruined my love life
The Draftsman of Doom
#46: Jul 12th 2021 at 10:15:29 AM

How long are we running the crowner?

Rawr.
Ordeaux26 Professor Gigachad from Canada Since: May, 2019 Relationship Status: [TOP SECRET]
Professor Gigachad
#47: Jul 12th 2021 at 10:21:43 AM

Crowner's run for three days at least sometimes more depending on circumstances but looking at it, it seems good to close.

CM Sandboxes, MB Sandboxes
Berrenta MOD How sweet it is from Texas Since: Apr, 2015 Relationship Status: Can't buy me love
How sweet it is
#48: Jul 12th 2021 at 10:26:31 AM

Yep, safe to call in favor of the winning options.

I'll get the two redirects made right away.

Edit: Done and done.

Edited by Berrenta on Jul 12th 2021 at 12:28:12 PM

she/her | TRS needs your help! | Contributor of Trope Report
WarJay77 Big Catch, Sparkle Edition (Troper Knight)
Big Catch, Sparkle Edition
#49: Jul 12th 2021 at 10:12:01 PM

So we need to create Sinister Spy Agency... who's gonna be the sponsor? Or will we do it sandbox style?

Currently Working On: Incorruptible Pure Pureness
SkyCat32 The Draftsman of Doom from tall grass (Five Year Plan) Relationship Status: TV Tropes ruined my love life
The Draftsman of Doom
#50: Jul 13th 2021 at 5:00:09 AM

I think I can sandbox Black & White Law Enforcement and take it to the TLP. I may need help with the description, however, and examples.

Rawr.

Trope Repair Shop: Black and White Law Enforcement
4th Dec '21 7:24:17 PM

Crown Description:

Alt titles for Black And White Law Enforcement.

Total posts: 146
Top