Strategic Services Field Manual No. 3
The most effective way to destroy an organization is to make it more bureaucratic. In 1944, the Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the CIA, was aware of this. What they didn't know was that their blueprint for sabotaging Nazi operations would become the operating manual for modern corporations.
About This Publication
The original Simple Sabotage Field Manual was declassified by the CIA and is in the public domain. What you're reading here is our foreword to the republished manual, exploring its unexpected relevance to modern organizational challenges. The historical document serves as a lens through which to examine how bureaucratic dysfunction has become embedded in contemporary business practices.
This re-publication comes from a deeply uncomfortable recognition. Open to Section 11 and you'll find instructions that could have been lifted from yesterday's management consultant: "Refer all matters to committees." "Haggle over precise wordings of communications." "Hold conferences when there is more critical work to be done." The saboteurs' playbook has become our best practices.
We puzzle over our economic stagnation, wondering why the technological revolution hasn't made our organizations faster. Since the 1970s, productivity growth has limped along at roughly half its post-war pace, except for a brief internet-fueled surge in the 1990s. The answer stares at us from these pages.
Leo Tolstoy opened Anna Karenina with this observation: "All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way." But what may have been true for the Kareninas and the Vronskys is reversed for companies. All unhappy companies are alike: they run on committees, they worship process, they strangle themselves with approvals. They're unhappy in exactly the same way, following exactly the same script. The saboteurs of 1944 are mostly gone. But their manual lives on in every corporate handbook, every best practice guide, every management consulting deck. We are their greatest success.
The Simple Sabotage Field Manual was initially published in 1944 by the Office of Strategic Services. Although details remain sparse about the document's origins, we know that the Simple Sabotage Field Manual was part of a broader collection of OSS field manuals designed to codify the emerging doctrine of unconventional warfare, encompassing commando operations, intelligence gathering, psychological warfare, and guerrilla tactics.
These manuals formalized an emerging view that modern warfare reached into factories, offices, and rail yards—not just the front lines. The officers who wrote these manuals went on to found Army Special Forces and shape CIA covert operations. That wartime effort to codify irregular warfare underpins today's hybrid warfare, where states blur the line between war and peace through cyberattacks, disinformation campaigns, economic pressure, and proxy forces, thereby achieving strategic goals without conventional military confrontation.
The Simple Sabotage Field Manual occupied a unique position in this arsenal. While other manuals required trained operatives and specialized equipment, this one democratized resistance, providing ordinary citizens with techniques to create systemic dysfunction through seemingly innocent acts of incompetence and delay.
What made this approach revolutionary wasn't just the tactics, but the strategic insight: thousands of small disruptions, when coordinated with propaganda campaigns and commando operations, could multiply the impact of conventional military strikes—grinding down the enemy's war machine from within while allied forces attacked from without.
As the manual itself states: "Simple sabotage does not require specially prepared tools or equipment; it is executed by an ordinary citizen who may or may not act individually and without the necessity for active connection with an organized group."
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While the manual covers many forms of sabotage—from sugar in fuel tanks to misrouted shipments—its true genius lies in recognizing bureaucracy itself as a weapon. Physical sabotage could be discovered and repaired. But bureaucratic sabotage? It looked exactly like business as usual.
The anthropologist David Graeber explained why bureaucracy destroys so effectively: bureaucracies are "utopian"—they create an abstract ideal of perfect process and procedure that real human beings can never live up to. When people inevitably fail to meet these impossible standards, the system blames them for not following the rules. This gap between bureaucratic fantasy and human reality doesn't create efficiency—it creates exactly the kind of systematic dysfunction that wartime saboteurs learned to exploit.
During the Nazi occupation, Pierre-Jules Boulanger, the vice president of French automaker Citroën, understood this perfectly. He instructed his foremen that "production must appear respectable to the eye, but never to the heart." He therefore ordered that the small notch showing 'full' on the engine oil dipstick be filed 8 mm lower than specification. German mechanics, trusting their tools, dutifully filled each truck to the false mark. Within a few hundred kilometers, the engines seized, and Citroën's line workers quietly celebrated another truck sabotaged beyond repair.
This is the genius of simple sabotage: it weaponized the enemy's own systems against them. A worker could damage machinery by letting cutting tools grow dull or "accidentally" dropping sand into lubricating systems. Office clerks could misfile critical documents, make errors in enemy orders, or create endless bureaucratic delays. Citizens could spread false rumors, give wrong directions to enemy convoys, or simply work slowly and inefficiently. Each act seemed like mere incompetence or bad luck, but multiplied across thousands of people, these small frictions created massive operational drag.
When the CIA made this manual widely available in 2008, it didn't immediately go viral. Instead, it percolated through the internet, gaining momentum as readers saw something unsettling in its pages.
The reason for this sustained interest was simple: readers saw their own workplaces in the sabotage techniques. The manual's instructions for office workers to "insist on doing everything through channels," "make speeches at great length," and "multiply the procedures and clearances involved in issuing instructions" weren't just effective at disrupting enemy operations—they had become standard operating procedure in offices worldwide.
By 2015, business consultants were mining it for insights. The CIA itself published articles about its continued relevance.
The saboteurs didn't invent these techniques. They simply recognized that the most effective way to destroy an organization was to make it more bureaucratic. Every pointless meeting, every form that requires seventeen signatures, every process that takes six weeks when it could take six minutes—these aren't failures of the system. They're the system working exactly as designed.
The genius of the Simple Sabotage manual is recognizing that bureaucracies naturally tend toward their own dysfunction. They create what amounts to organizational scar tissue—layer upon layer of rules and procedures that slowly strangle the actual work. The manual just accelerated this natural process. In this light, perhaps the most insidious question isn't whether we've sabotaged ourselves, but whether bureaucracy is simply the inevitable outcome of organizational success.
The solution isn't to fix bureaucracy. Decades of consultants have tried that approach, each wave promising to streamline processes while adding new layers of complexity. The solution is to make bureaucracy irrelevant.
What makes bureaucracy so insidious is that any attempt to break it by adding more rules or processes ultimately strengthens it. You can't fix bureaucracy by creating more bureaucracy. The cure always deepens the disease. Only removal works.
However, most organizations take the opposite approach. In the United States, the percentage of managers in the labor force increased from 9.2 percent in 1983 to 13.2 percent in 2002 and continued to rise to 36.2 percent by 2020. This army of middle management acts as a buffer, insulating decision-makers from reality while creating ever more complex approval chains. Each layer exists to manage the layer below it, creating what one might call a "bureaucratic pyramid scheme."
As an entrepreneur, I've watched this process unfold firsthand. When you start a company, it's amazing how much a small group of people can accomplish. Five people in a room can build products, talk to customers, make decisions, and move mountains. There's no process because everyone knows everything. There's no bureaucracy because there's no time for it.
But then you grow. Ten people, then fifty, then a hundred. Fred Brooks, a computer scientist and former IBM manager, warned about this in The Mythical Man-Month. Each new person doesn't just add one more relationship to manage—they add as many new relationships as there are existing team members. By the time you reach corporate scale, you're drowning in coordination. Meetings about meetings. Approvals to get approvals. Everyone spending more time syncing up than doing actual work. As Brooks memorably put it: "The bearing of a child takes nine months, no matter how many women are assigned."
You need systems to onboard people, processes to coordinate work, and managers to manage the managers. Before you know it, you're spending more time in meetings about meetings than actually building things.
I used to think this was a failure of leadership or organizational design. Now I wonder if it's simply physics—the inevitable entropy of human systems. Success breeds scale, scale breeds complexity, complexity breeds bureaucracy. The very mechanisms that protect large organizations from chaos also protect them from change.
The genius of the Simple Sabotage Field Manual wasn't in teaching people how to destroy organizations. It was in recognizing that organizations naturally destroy themselves. The saboteurs just gave entropy a little push.
Which brings us to an uncomfortable question: If bureaucracy is the price of scale, and scale is the reward for success, then isn't every successful organization destined to become exactly what the saboteurs envisioned? And if that's true, what does it mean for those of us still naive enough to believe we can build something different?
Maybe that's why this 80-year-old manual still resonates. Not because it teaches us how to sabotage, but because it holds up a mirror to what we've become.
And yet, for the first time in my career, I wonder if we might have found a way out. Not by fixing bureaucracy—that's the trap every generation falls into. But by making it irrelevant.
AI is unlike any technology we've built before. Every previous tool required us to conform to its specifications, to translate our messy human processes into rigid machine logic. AI does the opposite. It adapts to us. It becomes what I call a "fuzzy interface"—capable of understanding intent rather than requiring perfect syntax, of bridging incompatible systems without forcing standardization.
Think about what this means. All those bureaucratic layers, those translation tasks, those forms and processes, and approval chains—they exist because humans needed interfaces between other humans and systems. What if we didn't? What if AI could fill all those gaps, handling mechanical compliance while we focus on the human work?
This isn't naive optimism about AI eliminating bureaucracy. But it might—just might—let us build secret passages around it. To create organizations where the machinery still runs, but we don't have to be cogs in it, and where success doesn't inevitably lead to sclerosis.
The saboteurs of 1944 understood that bureaucracy was organizational entropy made visible. Maybe, 80 years later, we've finally found a force that can push back against that entropy. Not through more rules or better processes, but through intelligence that adapts rather than constrains.
Time will tell if this optimism is justified. But for the first time since I started building companies, I believe we might be able to have our scale and eat it too.
— Noah Brier, Co-Founder, Alephic