TRUMAN SAYS CIA WAS DIVERTED FROM ITS ORIGINAL ASSIGNMENT

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP68-00046R000200110002-4
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RIFPUB
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K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 26, 2014
Sequence Number: 
2
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Publication Date: 
December 21, 1963
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OPEN SOURCE
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Declassified and Approved For Release @ 2014/03/26: CIA-RDP68-00046R000200110002-4 SPRINGFIELD, MASS. - REPUBLICAN S. 112,302 , heat ttfit ? Ottior Pato Piss Pints Date: ilc.1; ,2 1. i 954 1 s, Paley Malting Arm? ? Truman Says ,CIA Was Diverted . ; From Its Girginal Assignment., ' By HARRY S TRUMAN %Veal -ssess he, capacity to ' (Copyright, 1963, by Harry S Truman) work Orthe highest level of gov- ernment responsibility and to have no involvements of any i necessary to take another look at the purpose and operations Of I kind of partisan piffles. our Central Intelligence?CIA. At least, I would like to submit I wanted to mike sure that ? here the original reason why I thought it necessary to organize 1CIA was not to be another over- this agency during my administration, what I expected it to do ?lapping facility. Quite to the con- anti how it was to -operate as an arm of the President. ' , I; Vary ? it was intended to pt-c- f.vt it. As visualized it. it. was think it is fairly obvious ? i, to coordinate and consolidate the that by and large a Presidents late. thus '! . us preventing the; adop performance n office Is RA ef-,tion of course of action neces- i lective as the information he has sary to protect our security. and the information ha gets.; In this new kind of world in That is to say. That. assuming which the United States oecupies the President himself Possesses a position of leadership among qa knowledge of our history, 8. the free nations. faulty infor- , sensitive understanding of .our !nation. careless intelligence .or +-institutions,- and an insight into unintelligent reports on intent- the nee& and aspirations of the stcpcc, or unintelligible conclu people, he heeds to have avail- sions, can prove very damaging able to him the most accurate to our policy-making decisions ? and up to?the minute inform- arid to the conduct of foreign re- ; bon on what is going on every- 'mimic whinh, is the personal ' where in the ivoid, and particu- responsibility of the President. lady of the trends and devel- Therefore, I decided to set liniments in all the danger spots up A special organization ? .?In the matest heti`v,ean East an!! charged with the collection of W Thi is a.? immense task all intelligence reports from ev- and requires a special kind of esy 'available source and to have i an -intelligence Wilily. , those reports reach me as 1 Of course, every President has President without departmental 'available to him all the informa' "treatment" of interpretations. , lion gathered by the many. intel- I wanted and needed the infor- ; ligence agencies already in ex- mation in its "natural raw" Ist?'"'e? DePartrmIns af State. state and in as comprehensive ? Defense, Commerce Interior and a volume as it was practical for others are constantly engaged. in me to make full use of it. But ' extensive information gathering the most important thing about and have done excellent work. this move was to guard against But their collective information the chance of intelligence being reached the President all 1?0 used to influence or to lead the frequently in conflicting sioneles President into unwide decisions Mons. At, times the intelligence ?and I though it was necessary reports tended to he slanted. to that the President do his own .conform to established positions thinking, and evaluating. Since of a given depatment. This be- comes confusing and what's _worse. such intelligence is of little use to a President in reach- ing the right deciskins. Cause of Pearl Harbor I have seen instances where ?The Army. Navy and the State Department - were duplicating their intelligence coverage? which resulted in inaccurate conclusions. I have always- felt that the Pearl Harbor disaster, *as partly. the result of that _ .kind of intelligence confusion. It seemed to me that much of the Intelligence gathered failed to s 'reach the top levels in the goy- ernment?and that when. It did? s, it was not in proper form.. In critical times certain important bits a'intormation, came. too 3- (--e-rt ANDENSEA ' .5eliERS netilibh INDEPENDENCE, Mo. (NANA)---I think it has become Declassified and Approved President into unwise decisions making was his?then he had to he sure that no information is kept from him for whatever reason at the discretion of any one department or agency, or that unpleasant facts be kept from him. There are always those Who would want to shield a President from hod newaor mis- judgments to spare him front be- ing "upset." Men of Integrity ,Now, this at best was tt most difficult requirement to meet, and the only thing I could think about that would give it some reasonable Assurances of suc- cess is that the people placed in charge of this new Intelligence ,facility for the President were men of the. highest Integrity ,and flow of information so that it would reach the President with rici intervening steps in that pro- cess. It was to he directly under the President and solely respon- sible to the President. In this wny, the 'Central Intel- ligence Agency would function as A source of oontinuing vital information. unedited and unln- terpreted for the use of the President, thus enabling him to he informed on everything cur- rent and without the usual pro- cedural delays. No President has the right to abdicate his responsibility. for administering the operations of the Executive Branch of the gov- ernment. He can delegate but he cannot escape the personal re- sponsibility for anything that may go wrong. If there is any !job in the world that calls for I the kind of unremitting drudg- I ery, of Never ending homework, it is the Presidency of the Unit- ed States. It is not only the loneliest job in the world it is one of con- tinual soulsealthing and of deep and. sustained thought: A Presi- dent is in the grip of events that never seem to let go. He is in every sanse the captor of the ? most exacting office in the gilt ; of a free people. But with all that,it la a wonderful and in- . . piescribaide experience.' It is ex- .asperating and it is exhilarating. .It is a moment in history that ;enables a man to serve mankind Iln A broad and comprehensive way- and to shape the course of the world towards a happier ek istenee and its hope for a life in peace. CIA "Diverted" For some, time I have been distrOrtied by the, way the CIA has been diverted from its origi- nal assignment. Ithas become an operational and' at times a policy-making arm of the gov- ernment. This has led to trouble and may have compounded our difficulties Jn, SeVoill;eXPlosive, !areas. I never had any thought .tinit't ;when I set up Ihe CIA that it Iwould ? he injected into peac0 time cloak nail dagger operas' bons. Sonic of the complicatiens. and embarrasonent that I think' we have experienced are in peel attributoble to the fact that Mils quiet intelligence nrm of the President has been so removed from its intended role that, 11 is heihg inte-preted as a syrhbol of sinister and inesterioua .foreign intrigue ? and a subjetst -for cold war enemy propaganda. With all the nonsense put out by Communist propaganda about "Yankee imperialhan," "exploitive capitalism," "war- mongering," "monopolists," in their name calling assualt on the West, the last thing we needed 'iwas for the CIA to be seized vtipan as something akin to a sub- verting influence in the affairs of other people. I- well knew the first temposi rary Director of the CIA, Ad- miral Souers, and the later permanent Directors of the CIA, General Hoyt Vandenberg and Allen Dulles. These were men of the highest character, patriot- ism and integrity and I as- sume this is true of all those who continue in charge. ' But, there are now some searching questions that need to ,be answered. 1, therefore, would like to see the CIA be restored to its original assignment as the intelligence arm at) the Presis dent, and that whatever else it can properly Perform in that special field ? and that its op- erational Miles be terminated or properly used elsewhere.- ? : We have grown up As .a nit' tion, respected for our free in- stitutions and for our ability to maintain a free and open so! ciety. There is something about the way the CIA has been tune- -tinning that is casting a shadow over our historic.posittiOn and I feel Unit vve need to correct lt.? For Release @ 50-Yr 2014/03/26: CIA-RDP68-00046R00071)n1 11111n9_4