BEHIND THE SCENES

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP11M01338R000400350084-0
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
9
Document Creation Date: 
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 19, 2013
Sequence Number: 
84
Case Number: 
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP11M01338R000400350084-0.pdf1.56 MB
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Sl AT b? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/08/19: CIA-RDP11M01338R000400350084-0 imit?wv Publisher George A. Hirsch Editor Jonathan Z. Larsen Art Director Steve Phillips Associate Editors Thomas Moore Frank Rich Harry Stein Robert Sherrill Nina Totenberg (Wash.) Assistant Editors Wendy Hecht Leslie Laird Ellen Rosenbush Assistant Art Director Carolyn Buckley Art Assistant Carol Throgmorton Photo Researcher Donna Nicholson Editorial Assistant Cynthia Wilson ? ? General Manager Louis B. Dotti Jr. Business Manager Rose Strohmenger Administrative Assistants Phyllis Cohen Blaine Macatuso Circulation Director Richard LaMonica Circulation Assistant Martha Pierson Production Manager Anne R. Brokaw Production Assistant Janet Gold Promotion Manager Bernard Stolar Assistant to the Publisher Vicki Meyer ? Design Consultant Allen Hurlburt Advertising Director ? Ernest M. Walker Jr. Associate Advertising Director David B. Metz Advertising Assistant Terry Ellen Ladin Advertising " Representatives Pamela Pietri Margaret A. Doyle Advertising Representatives ? Chicago Los Angeles Warden, Kelley & Allen, Inc. Parts-Schindler Inc. Detroit Philadelphia Richard Hartle Associates Coveney Associates Contributing Editors Joan Barthel, Jimmy Breslin, Brock Brower, F. Reid Buckley, Sara Davidson, Pete Hamill, Marshall Frady, Donald Jackson, Murray Kempton, Larry L. King,.J. Anthony Lukas, Joe McGinniss, Mike Royko, Nora Sayre, Dick Schaap, Marcia Seligson, Studs Terkel, Thomas Thompson, Nicholas von Hoffman Contributing Photographers Harry Benson, Jill Freedman, Benno Friedman, Mary Ellen Mark, Dick Swanson Special Contributors Richard Aurelio, Arthur Hadley, Gregg Kilday, Richard Kluger, Lucy Komisar, John Leo, Janet Maslin, Anne Schneider, Marion Steinmann, Stuart Werbin, Geoffrey Wolff Correspondents ? Washington D.C.: Charlie McCollum, Wallace Roberts: Alaska: Howard C. Weaver (Anchorage); Arizona: Bruce Taylor (Phoenix); Arkansas: Max F. Brantley (Little Rock); Calitomia: Connie Bruck (San Diego). Roger Rapoport (San Francisco). Carol Sternheil (Palo Alto); Colorado: William Gallo, Elaine Nathanson (Denver); Connecticut: Fred Mann (Mystic); Delaware: Curtis Wilkie (Wilmington); Florida: James Savage (Miami); Georgia: Gregory Jaynes (Atlanta); Hawaii: Gerald F. Burris (Honolulu); Idaho: Michael Parfit (Mackay); Illinois:Scott W. Jacobs (Chicago), Tim Meidroth (Morris); Indiana: John Brady (Terre Haute), Tom Cochrun (Indianapolis); Iowa: Chuck Offenburger (Des Moines); Ken- tucky: John Filiatreau (Louisville). Stephen Ford (Hazard); Maine: John N. Cole (Brunswick), John Lovell (Portland); Maryland: Joseph Nawrozki (Baltimore); Massachusetts: Bo Burlingham (Boston): Michigan: Mike Maze (Detroit), Tony Schwartz (Ann Arbor); Minnesota: Conrad de Fiebre (Min- neapolis); Mississippi: Ed Kohn (Greenville); Missouri: Har- per Barnes (St. Louis), Harry Jones Jr. (Kansas City); Mon- tana: Cortlandt Freeman (Bozeman); Nebraska: Robert L. Guenther (Lincoln); New Hampshire: Stewart Powell (Derry), Christopher Tilghman (Cornish Flat); New Jersey: John Mer- ritt. Ill (Cape May Court House); New Mexico: John Neary (Tesuque); New York: Fritz Koch (Buffalo), Ellen Perlmutter (Binghamton); North Carolina: Johnny Greene (Charlotte). Richard Edmonds (Winston-Salem); North Dakota: Nancy Edmonds (Fargo); Ohio: Thomas Andrzejewski, Terence Sheridan (Cleveland). Frank Denton (Cincinnati), E.E. "Chip" Elliott (Columbus); Oklahoma: Mike Shannon (Oklahoma City); Pennsylvania: Alfonso X. Donalson (Pittsburgh), James Lieber (Philadelphia); Rhode Island: William Kutik (Newport). Lee Dykas (Providence); South Carolina: Jon Buchan (Co- lumbia); Tennessee: Thomas BeVier (Memphis), Steve Nick- eson (Nashville); Texas: Susan L. Butler (Houston), Molly sins (Austin); West Virginia: Richard Stanley (Huntington); Wisconsin: Nina Bernstein (Milwaukee). Dennis Moore (Be- loit); Wyoming: Michael Sellett (Jackson): Canada: Robert Ramsey (Toronto); England: Annalyn Swan (Oxford); India: Dina Vakil (Bombay) Ron Ridenhour, who wrote this issue's story about the CIA base in Arizona, first Commanded attention not by covering news but by making it. In 1969, ten months out of Vietnam and a student at Claremont in California, Ron became an instant celebrity when the story, of the My Lai massacre made headlines around the world. As the soldier who had brought the story out, Ron was the one legitimate hero to emerge from that horrifying episode in American history. Exposing My Lai was no mean task. Ron had not been a party to the massacre itself?he'd heard about it from several. .friends who had been there?and it took him seven or eight months to track down all the , e' information he felt he needed. "It was," he says, "a standard job of investigative reporting, except that the circumstances were rather unusual. I was a combat soldier in a war. I had other things to do." Once he had developed all the facts, Ron had another problem?what to do with them. "I knew I had to do something but I didn't know exactly what. Finally, I decided to flood the world with letters." He sent out scores of them, to the House, Senate and Pentagon, and after months of agonizing delays?and panic in the highest circles of government?the story finally hit the papers. The rest is, quite literally, history. Ron; for his part, has very mixed feelings about the whole thing. "Obviously," he says, "in the final analysis there was a whitewash. But it is important that the story got out and that Calley was convicted. It's just that to place all the blame on this one guy is ludicrous. Now, I think he should be released." After he finished school, Ron returned to Vietnam as a free-lance.reporter and ended up doing a lot of work for Time. His technique was simple?he hung around the troops and listened carefully to what they had. to say. As an ex-soldier, he was thus able to get hold of a lot more news than reporters who attended official briefing sessions in Saigon. "Also," he adds, "I was a little More familiar with the system and had a better idea when people were bullshitting or outright lying." After a year of reporting the war, Ron returned to Arizona, where he'd grown d'p, and enrolled in Arizona State University. Ron stumbled upon the existence of the CIA base in typical Ridenhour fashion. About three months ago, while traveling on a train between Washington, D.C., and Virginia, he overheard a commuter, speaking in hushed tones, alluding to it. When he returned to Arizona, he got on the case. "The people at Intermountain were suspicious," he says, "but because they were posing as a legitimate corporation, they had to let me in. From there it was easy. I just went in and played it straight. By the time they found out I was onto them, it was too tate." Of course, the Intermountain people were interested in knowing just how much he had on them. "Yeah," says Ron, "they pestered me a little. At one point Polly, the public relations woman, called and said, 'Golly, gosh, I'm really interested in what you're writing about.' Well, she'll just have to read it in the magazine." Not that Ron believes that exposing the base will have much effect on CIA policy. "They might conceivably move to another base," he says, "if there's so much publicity about them that it impinges on their operation. But they'll probably just deny it. That's the way they operate." ? George A. Hirsch 4 NEW TIMES t Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/08/19: CIA-RDP11M01338R000400350084-0 ri I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/08/19: CIA-RDP11M01338R000400350084-0 NEWI1MES TOP OF THE NEWS By Ronald Ridenhour On August 11, 1970, a small private plane was spotted on the outskirts of Tuc- son, Arizona, flying at an extremely low altitude over the city's National Golf Course. After two passes at 500 feet, the plane crashed and exploded, killing both men inside. A tragic though hardly unique incident, or so the citizens of Tucson thought at first. But- the crash turned out to be any- thing but ordinary. The FAA, instead of sending local investigators, dispatched a man from Washington, who refused to comment on the crash to any of the local papers. It was discovered that the plane, an experimental model of a Beechcraft S-32, had been on special lease to the Univac division of Sperry Rand Corpora- tion, yet Sperry Rand would say nothing, either to the press or the police. The plane had flown out of Marana Air Park, a facility of Intermountain Aviation Inc. of Tucson, yet Intermountain also refused to comment. As a result, the interest of Tuc- son's news media began to quicken. There was talk of a "secret military mission for the federal government," and even some speculation that Intermountain Aviation's Marana Air Park was actually a CIA base. Officials in Washington, however, quickly passed the word to the local sleuths, both public and private: no more questions about the crash?the security of the nation was at stake. The resulting cover-up was the only window, and a very small one at that, onto the real activities of Intermountain Aviation Inc. since its in- 18 NEW TIMES ception in the fall of 1961, for Inter- mountain happens to be one of the CIA's major stateside bases; it, and "proprietary corporations" like it, provide support for the Agency's paramilitary operations, op- erations which have, in the wake of the Indochina War and the Chilean coup, `o From the ashes of the Bay of Pigs disaster rose a splendid new CIA base outside of Tucson. The men who run it say they train forest fire- fighters, but they stand ready to put out?or start?brush fires of a far different order come under intense criticism. Though os- tensibly private institutions and busi- nesses, these "proprietaries" are financed and controlled by the CIA and use their commercial and sometimes non profit covers to carry out clandestine activities. "Intermountain," one former staff officer told me, "is no bush league oper- ation, and you won't find bush league mistakes in its cover story." That is why the story has worked so well. As far as the outside world is concerned, Inter- mountain exists primarily to help train, supply and deliver the Forest Service's "smokejumpers," firefighting parachutists whose specialty is leaping into rough country from -low?alfitudes- to- establish field camps from which remote operations can be carried out. The firefighting cover is vigorously promoted, Intermountain even going so far as to produce splendid motion pictures documenting the firemen in-ac- tion. But, as a quick study of Inter- mountain's annual corporate financial re- ports reveals, the cover does have holes, if you look for them. Beginning with June 30, 1971, and continuing for three report- ing periods over two and a half years, the reports list exactly the same figures for all categories under assets and liabilities. This, to be charitable, is highly implau- sible. Taken at face value, what the reports say is that Intermountain did the same amount of business, down to the number of washers used, for three periods. Beyond that, according to the reports, the corpora- tion paid no taxes of any kind to anyone during that time. There are inevitably such slips in trying to sustain the cover story for such a massive enterprise as Intermountain, but to the CIA the benefits far outweigh the risks. If the U.S. insists on the capability for covert and guerrilla warfare, bases, both domestic and foreign, are essential. Intermountain itself can be considered the bastard progeny of one such operation? the Bay of Pigs. It was precisely to correct Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/08/19: CIA-RDP11M01338R000400350084-0 ILLUSTRATION BY DICKRAN PA t ULIAN ..r Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/08/19 : CIA-RDP11M01'338R0004- 00350. 084-0 411 , ? 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