THE ROLE OF ORR IN ECONOMIC INTELLIGENCE

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August 1, 1951
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, ) Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75162R000300030001-8 27 ? ??????twobilow-???????? CEMTRAL IFTEILIGENCE AGEECY OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND REPORTS Tho Role of ORB in Economic Intelligence 1 August 1951 OMNI WSW 411111. 0111011. Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Ask AIL Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 CONTENTS I. Introduction --What Is Our Problem? . . . . . . Why does the eaution of our national security problems depend in part upon adequate foreign economic intelligence? . ea a ?0 ???aM ea .4?00 What in economic intelligence? . a 09.00??0 What is the role or ORB in foreign economic Intelligence? Peculiarities of eeonomic intelligence concerning the Soviet Bloc ?0 . OO 4, ? esta a 1 ?09+0 1 ?0000 a3 ? 5 coca Oa 6 IL General Methods -- Hoy Shall We Go about It? . a a alga ma a 8 A. The dilemma of the clamorous customer versus the basic study.... ? a a a a a a a a a a . ? ?e0.20908 B, Roy do we determine basic research priorities? . 1904000 9 Co The Method of Succeesive Approximations a ? a a a a,a . 11 D, Problems in applying the method I a a a a a ? ^ 12 14 III o ORR'S Production Progrem a . 0 Oa ? Off Oa Oat, a *Oa ,,GO Weis of deacribing our Ignorance et00.1900044.00e, The need for more study of goals plans, and organization The need for more systematic study of Sovlet military intentions as revealed in economic evente a a . ? ? The need for more study of the relations among Industries The need for more study of the economic requirements of military operatioao The need for more study of commodities, and services The need for more study of Industry a a a a a . ? The need for more etude of The need for more study of 40?00?04 a a a 0 mom as particular industries, a0?009,49000,9r..0, technical aspects of Soviet ?411 mit??09 9?a OM o the interdependence of areas the index number problem . WARNING This document centaine information. affteting the nationel defense of the United States, within the meaning of Title Sections 793 and 794 of the U.S. Code, as amended. Its trane? mission or revelatioe of its contents to or reoe4t by sn un? enthorized person is prohibited by late, ..mi309.404. lh 15 16 16 18 18 19 19 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 CIA/RR Project 3-51 The Role of ORR in Economic Intelligence I. Introduction --What Is Our Problem? The purpose of this paper is to sot forth the nature and magnitude of the tasks which the Office of Research and Reports, Central Intelli- gence Agenoy, must perform to discharge its new as set forth in NSCID 15. This directive calls upon the Central Intelligence Agency to coordinate foreign economic intelligent? relating, to the nationel uecurity throughout tho US Government end to produce such economic intelligence as may be needed to supplement that which other agencies must produce in the discharge of their regular missions. This paper is concerned primarily with the producing rather than with the coordinating responsibilities of ORR. During the first half of 1951, ORR wan engaged in taking an inventory of its ignorance concerning the economy of the Soviet Bloc. The main purpose of this inventorywas to establish a basis for planning a program of basic research to which ORR should address itself. Such a program must spring from a clear conception of Why the US Government needs foreign economic intelligence, What foreign economic intelligence is, What role ORR should play in the total economic intelligence effort, and how the peculiar character of the Soviet economy and of our information about it influences the methods that we use This introduction is devoted to some comments on these four topics. A. kliz.s.1299_bWal,.-u4A2a.2S,.azx419,arl_,vzzakiz_zn,lga.q.skagsad-At ies/msa.....rtzuat.2.1.2*volen.mkozp _AnI9 1.,,rage Foreign econcmic intelligence serves at 2eaet five purposes in the design of policies to preeerve our national secnrity. These five purpoceo, which should be kept continuously in mina in planning our economic reeeeech program, are as follows: 1. To estimate the pg=t142 of possible present or future military or other threats to ourselves and our allies. A potential enemy can under- take successfully only those military operations which its economy is capable of crestaininns. In the very short run, its strength may be measured in terms of the manpower Which it can mobilize and the stocks of finished weapons of war and military supplies which it has on hand. Increasingly in modern times, however, military potential for anything but the briefest campaigns has come to depend upon the total economic resources available to a nation, including those noceesary to sapport the civilian economy as well as those necessary to produce and operate the inetraments of var. Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 krimrwli,isfinn A clear picture of the magnitude of the present end possible future military or other threat is needed to guide LIB as to the aver-all magnitude of the defense effort in which we must engage in order to pre- serve our freedoms in the event of war. 2. To estimate the ghwadez and 102.110 of possible present or future military or other threats. Decisions which the USSR or any other potential many make with regard to how they will allocate their resources limit What they can Choose to do. If they elect to invest largely in military installations in the Far East3 their potential for attack in Europe is correspondiney restricted. This is not a matter of judging their intentions but rather of seeing What limitations are placed on the courses of action open to them in the future by decisions which they make today about the allocation of their total resources. A principal purpose of thus estimating the character of military or other threats with which we may possibly be faced is to guide un in designing our own defense effort ao that it will protect us against rather than imaginary dangers, 3. To assist us in estimating, within the range of the pezeible, the intentipex of the USSR or any other potential enemy. The economic resources of the enemy and their present distribution permit him to select any of a range of possible or probable courses of cction, Within this range certain economic events may furnish indications as to which alternatives the Soviets Intend to pursue and Where and Whom, These indications of intentions may be very important in assisting us to adjust our defenee preparations to most the most probable dangers, 4. To help policy-makera decide what we can do to aft92 possible or probable military or other throats by impairing an enemyls economic capabilities to carry them out. This Includes measures that can be taken to weaken him in advance of hostilities and thus delay or prevent his decision to engage in Usem, as well as measures to weaken or destroy the economic basis of his military power should he choose to commit it in general unr. Economic intelligence can help in suggesting such measures, in estimating their effectiveness, and in forecasting the eneny7s probable reaction to than. 5. To assist in estimating the probable development of the jalatlgs strengths of tho East and the Pest over the next feu years if global hostili- ties are avoided. A major purpose of these comparisons in to guide US policy- makers. The preceding four objectives are concerned with steps which the United States can take to defend itself against actions of a hostile power. -2 - OWIWOOPPRIT LpprovPd For RPIPASP 2001/11/01 ? ciA-RnP7s-ntrA2Rnnnnnnnfinnni-R Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 111BP 111111.0 OW! 41.111. Equally important is the design of that political policy which will have the best chance of achieving our objectives without hostilities. Essential to the planning of such a policy is the most accurate estimate possible of the relative economic strengths of both sides. There are equally grave dangers in a serious underestimate and in a serious overestimate of future Soviet economic strength. Either will produce policies more likely to bring on war than will an accurate estimate. The evaluation of Soviet strength implicit in various of the proposals for US policy now being advanced in this country varies widely from great economic weaknesses to very consider- able economic power. A prime goal of authoritative economic intelligence is to provide the information that will narrow the "guess area.* All the studies that ORR produces should reflect an awarenees of' these objectives of economic intelligence. 130 NbALIP-222DOLS-Walkagagg0 Briefly, economic intelligence is intelligence relating to the basic productive resources of an area or political unite the emir.; and objectives which those in control of the resources idea them to serve, and the ways in which and the effectiveness with which these resources are in fact allocated in the service of these various goals. There are a isembee of coansions as to the nature and limits of economic intelligence which call for clarification. 1. In the first place, there is canetimes a tendency to regard the whole of economic intelligence as encompassed in a mere iaventory of aveil- able resources of labor, raw materials, and instratente of peeduotion. This inventory is a necessary part but only a pert of the total economic problem An inventory of resources by itself without an underetanding of tho goals which they are designed to serve or of the neehodn employed to allocate them in the service of those goals can tell us little about capabilities, velner- abilities, or intentions. The Allied Powers have a total steel capacity which is nom than four times as greet as that of the Soviet Bloc? but such a cemearinon is highly mieloading. For tho United States to achieve its minimum goals, oven in a time of crisis lihe the present, steel muct be allocated to many 'USW WhiCh the Soviets regard as of low or negligible priority. Furthermore, a modern econoey is elle:motorized by a highly complex web of interconnections among its various parts. The capacitioc of the econow Trey be limited loss by the over-all availability of recourcee than by a failure to keep all the complex interrelationo in balance Thus tank production, for instance, may be limited not only by the aveflability of steel from which to manufacture the tanks but also by the steel available to rake the rails and the, freight cars neeoesary to eaery steel from cteel plants to tank plants, ore wee rsmo'sely, by the etes1 eceeirerl for the machinery necessary to mine the coal to operate the eailreade, Thus economic intelligence must be as much cone/al-noel with the goals ehioh resources are to serve, and the ways in which they are related to each other, as with the physical inventory of the resources theeeelvoe ? 3 ? Approved For Release 2001/11/n4 ..90191:75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 2. Another problem relates to where economic intolligenco leovos off and political, militaryo and scientific intelligence begin. Sinoe the social organism is a whole and these way? of dividing it are somodiat arbitrary analytic invontionz, precise lines between the segments are impossible to draw. In very rough terms, scientific intelligence follows the progress abroad of nay scientific Moos through the research and development phases. When these technique nd methods begin to be emplofed broadly in production, they become the province of economic intoltigenoo Military intelligence is concerned with the character and capacities of the rnitary establiahments of foreign countries and with foreign targets for our own military offorts. Where the character of the military establish- ment depends upon rates of production or whore the target of our nilitary effort is the economy of the potential envoy, the linen between military and economic become blurred. The outpat of final military ecoolpment and the physical targets on which our military fto-cos mast concontrate are clearly a prime concern of military intelligence. On the other hand. economic analysis is required to portray the conplos zeros of socuomio support on which military production depends and to pursue no econonio chain reactions which might result from the destruction of partLoolar p-oduciug The overlapping between politionl and 00,02Mie sntell.tgonoe is even grantor. One or the bast ways of studying the goolo loh4ob a collecU. vizod ?tato lashes its economy to servo is to co:Amino the institutional machingry that it establishes to vide economic poocessea Thus certain of the institutions of governEoat, although In a aeoze p lit.cclpilonomena, nay have profound economic aignIficatoc. On the othoo hand, oconomic condi- tioas aro of course an important doterminant of the atticodss, laoolties, and composition of politically important groops, in those boraor'ino aroas, it is the purpose and object of invostisatiol rather than thm disoiplines omployod that detormino whether i_ntolligence is prop-zr2y to be tc,Inc0 economic or political 3, A final point of importance 5c the fswIlyot maat !mop in miaa ic that econonic intellluTLeo is rot always the same iLlpinc as oconomin information. Even the nost basic economic f.ntolligonos ahould alvve be produced in relation to no 5.1etsdc of some inellineo coasur, Inc Central Tatelligence Agency is clia%Tt-d with preducin: foroicn oe,7zomic iligenco relating to the national eaculltyv riad the consunors of Its pno:att are those US GOVerraMit officials ftha2Led glth E;,:trr(Ung the ya,xlitonal F,avaritc A vast nmount of inforoation olme::t all infolmaZlionvJut foreign economies my be rolavant to untloall scovrty problos, 0.7'c it is not economic lamziausa until Its ro )vnco to those di.-oblunn i nade clear It Is the function of inteIligoaco not to ynixsue Imo-olefige for it aun scko 1,11t rot;'?_er to throw Light on col2qquer,aeos of yxen.c, or l'uLuro acton, Thcur:h tne intollionce i;3t is :!ot a polict-mkor he nast conotontly P3'6170 to hocp 1a 17,'...the.". ".1.17) relcv:?alco or in::wmaUoll to policy proacmo, which clone can 7;ra;%-;fo7: leerLaton)Lnto LI JI El 3 I Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01: CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 OOP low es* Yd. C 20.112.222zsaazZalLitastraialmagat2.12"20 Many US Government agencies are engaged in the production and collection of foreign economic intelligence. Therefore, we cannot determine our program of research on the basis of the foregoing statement of the purposes and natenoe of economic intelligence alone. We ret also consider hog our activities can be made to reinforce rather than to duplicate the great amount of work Which others must carry on in the div.. charge of their own missions. Our recent survey of foreign economic intelligence throughout the US Government suggests a number of conclusions as to what the focus of our activities should be. 1. First, our survey revealed that one of the most urgent needs of the Government is for soma central spot where all the economic intelligence collected aoa produced throughout the Government can be brought together and focuaed on national security fxsues. In recognition of this need the National Security Council hen directed that the Central In' gence Agency shall perform this coordinating fanotion. Although this paper is directed at our production program, our plans for intelligence production within OR must take full =count of these coordinating responsibilities ml,ich go along with our substantive effort. 2. A second conclusion of our survey has been that the area most in need of substantial additional economic intelligence effort is the Soviet Bloc. This is partly because the Iron Curtain has undo access to Soviet economic intelligence more difficult, psotly because the Soviet economic potential is perhaps the most critical key to our national security, and partly because, for a variety of reasoner., the economic potential of other areas crucial for OM national security, such an Western Europe, has been much more extensively studied. The mnture economics of Western Europe have long been an object of study by both academic and governmental oconorainta. Tho European Recovery Program has stimulated intensive analysis of the characteristics, needs, and prospects of the rshall Plan countries. Thus the economic research effort in mars-hours directed at the USSR and its Satellites has been vastly less than that applied to Western Europe, although, because of the Iron Curtain, the effort required to produce comperable under. standing is maw tine e greater. For these modem, oe :neve concluded that the principal effort of OR R in intelligence production nnet be focused for the immediate future on the oconeoic problems of the Soviet Bloc.,* 3. We began this research effort sith an inventory of onr knowledge of the USSR itse/f. This, of coerce, is only a part of the problem. The economies of the European Satellites, whose analysis was our second task, * The Soviet Bloc excludes Yugoslavia and Finland and includes the Edropean Satellites (East Gerrely? East Austria, Po/and, Czechoslovakia, Rumania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Albania) and the Eastern Satellites (Commnnist China and Communist Korea), , *4 5 *4 Approved For Release 2001/11 -4/44?j16116119115-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 raze likewise crucial to the Soviet economic potential, Recent events have highlighted the importance of China to our estimates of Soviet etrength and intentions. A final source of Soviet strength, which mus be another object of our efforts, is the resources that the USSR could draw upon either now or as a consequence of future developments outside the present boundaries of the Bloc. 4. A final weakness of the intelligence effort as revealed by eur inventory is that the demands which have been placed on the 'fretted, number of analysts working on the Soviet economy have been so frequent and insistent that analysts have had little or no time to do the basic research necessary to supply answers in a confident and authoritative form. If our effort is to be useful at all, it must be on a sufficient scale and of sufficient depth to provide a much firmer factual founda? tion for the estimating process than economic intelligence has been able to produce in the past. There are a number of special characteristics of the Soviet economic intelligence problem Which shape in important ways the methods that can be used to study it. These are not, however, All characteristics which make the problem more difficult than that of other areas. We may consider first some of the things about the Soviet economy Which simplify our problem and then look at some of the factors which make it difficult, I. The fact that the Soviet economy is centrally planned to antiwee the goals of a small group of men acting collectively facilitates anelysis enormously. In the free economy of the United States the tastes and desires of 150 million different unpredictable people all have an influence on that in fact occurs. The behavior of major sectors of the econamy is greatly affected by the individual plans of countless consumers, each with a different and somewhat unpredictable quantitative weight. In the USSR there is one set of plans which dominates all others. Thus it is only by in- advertence that anything can occur which, from the point of view of the master plan, is irrelevant or unimportant. This makes the second job of econonic intelligence described above -- namely, the elucidation of the goals and objectives which those in control of resources wish them to serve -- a great deal easier, Almost anything that happens can give us some clue. 2,, A related point, true to sane extent of every economy but eepecially true of the &mime, is that everything depends on everything else. The interconnectedness of the economy and its subservience to the master plan mean that there are many different ways in which an economic fact can be ascertained. Steel production can be estimated directly from evidence as to the location and capacity of steel mills or indirectly from evidence of the manpower employed and of the iron ore or coal or alloy metals or other inputs available, from the total output of all the products made 414144Arr Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 with steel, or from the capacities of transportation facilities serving the steel industry. The lack of direct evidence on some of the things that we moat want to know, as revealed in the results of our inventory ie of ignorance, empts:sleep the very great importance of giving priority to the interrelationa of the parts of the economy. Thus the third task of economic intelligence, to explain all the complex ways in which resources are in fact allocated to various uses, is peculiarly essential to building a consistent picture of the Soviet economy. 3. A third fact that shapes our methods is that technology andi the laws of nature are no respecters of Iron curtains. The Soviete do j many things differently from the way in which we do than, but in many other things they have no choice but to follow the only industrial technique that exists. Thus the electrelytic process which produces sodium hydroxide and chlorine inevitably produeep them in the same ratio in the USSR as in the United States. VC can learn many of the technical limita? tione on what they are able to do from a study of US industrial practices,' But this must be done with care, since we know that in some casts the Soviets appear to be incapable of applying our techniques oven where they know about them, whereas in other cases they have devised superior methods. Weverthelese? with appropriate caution, useful first approximations can be reached by the comparative method. One implication of this for research plans in that there must be present in our work a much heavier dose of technical and engineering thinking than is customary in economic studios. 4. A characteristic which has advantages and disadvantages is that prices, markets, and money flows, the stock in trade of much economic analysis, have limited moaning in the USSR. Tie are spared the uncertainties of the capitalist business cycle, and monetary dislocationo are of little significance. On the other hand, we are largely denied the benofite of money as a common measure of otherwise incommeneurable activities. Nest of our thinking must be not in terms of rubles but of tons and bushels and bales, of numberc of machines of innumerable different kinds, of car?miles? kilowatts per hour, and the like. To add all these things up to an index of capabilities, we must concoct our own common measuring rod, a task of no mall complexity. 5. On the negative side is the obvious fact that information currently coming out of the Soviet Bloc is very limited incleed. This does not mean, however, as is sometimes concluded, that our knovlodge is inevitably correspondingly limited. Radical economic chanes do not occur overnight even in the USSR, and information on earlier periods is a good deal more abundant. Piecing this together with what we are getting now exercising some ingenuity in making inferences from the,seiew about the unknown (thr(yaoh the interrelations of e:be sooner.) and directing the ? 7 ? Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved F67Release 2001/11/01: CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 collection of crucial missing pieces of information through the channels available to Wilf it is possible to put together a surprisingly reliable picture. What the scarcity of current information moans is not that we are condemned to ignorance about the Soviet economy but rather that to find out what we need to know takes a great many more hours of paine staking research, of imaginative interpretation, and of fitting and adjusting than would be necessary in the study of an open economy. The documentation of this conclusion is to be found in the estimates of research time required which were compiled by the various divisions during the course of the inventory. 6. A firn, characteristic of the Soviet problem is that because of the costs and difficulties of collecting information, much more time and thought must be devoted to determining what pieces of additional information would be most revealing if we could secure them. This point Should not be overemehasized. As the inventory discloses, the information required to give the nnewery that we need about a good subjects is believed to be largely available in Washington. In those eases, what is needed is principally much more intensive mieing of a rather lowegrado ore. In other cases, however, field co/lection appears to be the only way of filling in certain critical gaps. In studying an open economy one would normally ask for much more information than one expected to use and then sort out the useful parts when it came. When the cost of information in money and lives is bleb:, however, much more careful consideration must be given to which piece? of information are the vital ones. One of the principal responsibilities of GM is to give this kind of guidance to the information collecting agencies. The considerations set forth in this intradection.do not determine the details of our research program or of our method of tackling it, but they do provide a framework of ideas within which the reaoareh program may be carried forward. The next task is to opal out method and content somewhat more precisely. II. General Methods ee Bow Shall We Go about It? 2114Q-dgaMM2-91-tho c2022,MAXEIZ.P.-1,91tanDeeteli The central question of how we should allocate our time has already been referred to. The problems to whose solution we are asked to contribute are very urgent. Events will not wait for the orderly, patient, exhaustive research which alone can give satisfactory ennwers to these problems. If we were to devote ourselves exclusively to amassing all the facts we need, we would have to toll harried policy-makers that we would be glad to advise them -e beginning in about 2 years. We neither ehould nor can stay in an Ivory tower that long. Even if it were posaible to devote ourselves exclusively to exhaustive and encyclopedic studies for the next 24 months, it is highly likely that at the end of that period many of the problems - 8 - Approved For Release 2OOl/rIIJ - Approved Fiii.'Release 2001/11/01: CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 that we would be ached to lolp with 1100(1 have e:Lang.erl. no that our moults ur,uld no longer be partieiC.arly applicable. On the ether hand, if wo sucaumb =:-,.Act(711y to the veri real procc;Irs upon W. to answer all cuzmnt requests for proa9.6 informtiea, 7se will =Tor have apy information better than the slim fraE2leiats that1:cs can now supply. Thus our dilemma is, 2n a cInse, whothor to be enejclepeCis and Irrelevant or operational end inelompcixot. Clearly the only tolerable solution is a coTrmine botweea these two =trona-so Ve must try to anavor the most i7,,Derta:_t of the problems put to 11,0 from day to day an glielly and an competently u3 possible. But we munt rosorvo a major 'Part of our cneraios for inl.)rovi21g the foundation of knoyledgc from which ;nette?rquicic answers can be given,, The necessity for this co,npromice has two further implications. The first is that it is pefsible to varese this twofoat objective only if me have n certain mininum cf research recourses subotntially larger than that ':hich the US Goverawrt has allocated to those 7teroblems in the past. This minism we are on tho way to ansemblinv30 Tio other implication of olv compromise is that s:;_aco vo cannot ho2s to have ?-.,nough resources fully to exploit ell the avLilable information about the U359 we MIllt be 7ory sure that we use our coarse roseqrnh resources to fill in tso are of our ignerancs mhish most coriesly limit orr estimating ability. Vs aiznt coscontrrto our scare? man:mucr on fiadins out thoco thiugo that the 70 Govoent eves to Rnau rost. Tho .ileatfrication of these priority is ono of the mc st pusalit-Ig probloau facing j.1,39-12111.9k23311a .6.2-119-2910LTAd227.23(.1.\,S;' The not coCuctivo answer to this clustion is contained in what VO Ilay oalA the 'Ibottloseck fallacy." Sipco aconvais 1:17,1Tnr.,12 cold or hot, vas first thought of, esonclints have sought for the icttlenceh, the sime-lo crittcal ?t'=? the key facility -vcl.thout which the oriqoyle mitt esancmy would celtn*Pelet, The Meteri of the sonra for ac,s21 tottlemeeKs 15 a record of failro-:t? confirming the aconsmistls Valth that, givon a little time, resources c.ro highly sahnti'mtablo for one mothcr. This Coco not mean that economic -parfare is bcpnd t) be inefoctivc, Cu t'In toztra.,7, the very f=t that resvarcen are inte7oba-lsoab1e VOS28 that to deny an enmy any rano-I:woo is to weaken directly or inlirectiv his oilitery :potarttisl. This is parti? cularly tract in an ec;:aav -7hich? Uke the Soviet, has for year been dirocted toward a Dingle sot of gon:11. Ary economic asti..7 xecegn:lc?cd by the ITZZE0112 as not stsontial to those gorls would have been Ph:aril:mod long since, Thn.; wherever we elke an ceJnomic attner urea the USQ? it in to hurt, rzt it 2s a c'auzion to mooct that a 131:litoa 11,pcm a arall scsment of the Soviet ocoamy -All cripple Soviet strwgth. it is not the capacity of a particulr.r facility or the s.vailability of a pw2ticuir commodity which ultimtelzr limits the capabilitnes of the Soviets co much as their total resources and their ability to organize them effectively. ? 9 AppLovpd For Relpasp 2oo1ii -6011441114075_-096,62Rnt-tafintwannni-R Approved Pei-Release 2001/11/01: CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 aril. ow oras a ego leis does not melte that all things are equally important. The c!').c/atL'_,n tho nore critical cennodities and industriee is one way of cuttinq t'%?a eeoblem down to elec. But When one has dons all the peunimg ? bl ths nueber of critieal sectors of the econour retains too greet to teckle thee ell exhauatively at once. A. second method of determining priorities for research is to ono w7tat 7:21ola rataarch mild be moat relevant to the problems to vbieh ate) "coiee %eked to give current answers now. The dangers in this problon? approade te priorities are obvious. It loads one Oxeye to concentrate ones research on yesterdey'ls rather than on tereerowls problems. Basic research, 3ey definition, tAkes time. The problems which may be urgent uhen the tasic research that Ye start today is finished cannot be clearly foreeeen end are Almost certain to be different from those which are plaguing es now. Furthermore, ay attempt to list even the most urgent of the p::?:,1111cmc; :cing us at the moment reveals how many there are and how much of the total wad econoeic picture is relevant to their solution. AS pt of our study of foreien econcmic Intelligence for the National Security Ceenell? the Central Intelligence Agency attempted to outline the require? :to for such intelligence in terms of current problems. A very incomplete ciplz yielded a list of 42 top priority problems, some of them as broad as nte total military potential of the USSR.* Again, we cannet wholly discard this critorien. We must try to :eec tomorrawls problem and guide our research accerdingIy. There ere eeee aspects of the Soviet economy which vs. osn take the ria: of neglecting flee es must do a broad enough job to hedge ourselves eomeWhat against the eeeee in our own forecaetimg. 3. A third possibility is to take acme aapect of the study of emeh and concentrate on that aspect alone for all cemmodities acroes toard. Then one could take some section of the tline for a Basic -edity Study used in the preparation of the inventory eiel fill in that on for every item first, leaving other sections entil later. One ceu16 rteote the entire energies of CR to the study of requiremente, for eenzele, to techniques and methods of production, or to the ceganisation and ptena each industry, or to levels of output, or to some other eepeet. This principle or selection is almost certain to be unmatisfectery 77 itself, since the anevere to most of the questions which polioyemakere are ng to ask involve putting together all of the parts of a basic study to get et the conclusion. 'Mum an estimate of capabilities retrairos an estinate of 31.?.131.1%1111.611i, * 'Toreign Economic Intellieence Requirements Relating to the Eationel Socuritypo Appendix B to Ebnoeereum for the Intelligemce Advisory Committee from the Director of Central Iutelligence, dated 31 May 1951. ?10e Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved F? Release 2001/11/01: CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 144 the balance between supplies and requirements to achieve whatever may be the goals and plans of the Soviet rulers. An estimate of vulnerabilities involves a knowledge of the availability of materials at present production rates and also an estimate of how goals and plans would be affected if that availability were to be cut by our action to a point far below requirements. If the design of a basic study is properly drawn, information about all the parts of that study is required to arrive at conclusions, and no single part can be left out entirely if satisfactory conclusions are to be reached. 40 The investigation of each of these methods of determining priorities on our research time leads us back to the unacceptable conclusion with Which we started -- namely, that the encyclopedic and exhaustive analysis of most of the parts of the whole economy is the only way in Whidhj we can arrive at sound and authoritative answers to the questions that are being asked. But we have already determined that we do not have the time or the resources to carry through this number of systematic basic studies from beginning to end. Hew, then, can we resolve this puzzling dilemma? The answer is suggested by looking at the present state of our knowledge. What we have just proved is that we need to know something about most aspects of most sectors of the Soviet economy to make a sensible estimate of capabilities, vulnerabilities, or intentions. But we have not proved that we must know everything about every aspect. What we already know permits us to set certain outer limits to the area of the possible. We know the Soviet Union is at 102/ capable of certain minimum actions, and we can set certain ceilings on what they a:m.0.4mm/ capable of. Our problem is to bring the "at least" and the "at most" closer and closer together. This calls for a research program guided by What we may cal the method of emcees/vs approximations. C . Imet0.11.......?atestatztAzzaamatilsaa. 1. The first step in the Method of Successive Approximations is to lay out in general terms the specifications of what you wadi like to know. What is the list of all the significant industries, conmedities? and services which ahould be studied, and what are the principal problems about them vbieh we would like to solve? This was the first assignment in our inventory and resulted in the outlines produced as a guide to it. 2. The second step is to see how much of the outline you can fill in and with What degree of precision Thin will reveal that our information about some aspects of each of our problems Is better than our information about other aspects. It may not be very good. The best information that we possess may have a very wide margin of error, but other parts of cur outline will be still weaker. Our inventory was designed to bring us through this second state -- to tell us what we know and what we do not know abort each of our major problems with respect to the USSR. It has revealed what it was intended to show -e namely., that our ignorance of certain importart matters is much greater than our ignorance of others. 40040606, Approved For Release 2001111/01 : CIA-RDP75-09662R000100030001-8 Approved Fcir-Release 2001/11/01: CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 7111P.1211411? 3. The third stage of our Method of Successive Appromimations is to concentrate our most earnest efforts for a brief period on the important parts of our problem which we know least about. This does not mean that we seek authoritative or final answers in these areas of ignorance but merely that we focus on them until our knowledge is brought up to a level equal to or soneuhat better than our knowledge of the other parts of the picture. 4. When we have been working in this manner an weak spots for a period of 2 or 3 or 4 months, we must stand off and take another look at where we are then in relation to the total outline? The week spots may still be weaker than anything else, or we may have gone far enough with them so that, although we still do not know much about theme they will be in better shape than what formerly was our best evidence. It our second over-all look reveals this to be the case, we must tackle whatever other sectors of our problem are now the weakest, not again with the notion that we are going to find out ever7tbing about them, but only that we are going to work on them until our ignorance of some other matter requires more pressing attention. In this business, knowing a little about a great maga things is likely to be more helpful than knowing everything about a very few things and nothing about others. Each substantial drive to cover an area of ignorance met be intensive enough and substantial enough to permit us to make real progress toward solutions and not merely to had our Own. On the other hand, it must not be pursued with such perfectionist seal that we neglect other areas in which our ignorance may be only slightly' less serious. 5. In summary, the Method of Successive Approximations involves a repeated cycle of review and examination, planning, and several months? production followed by another review in the light both of progress and of changes in the character of the problems to be solved. We have devoted a good deal of time recently to the review and planning phases and are now launched upon a production program. Sometime in the fall, another vele of review and reexamination of plans will be caned for. D.ibmaisiajamaziagjia_a_tbstie meth. In attempting to apply the Method of Successive Approximations, certain common problems and difficulties arise which are worth a brief comment. 1. A particularly bothersome problem is that the things which we know least about, and thus the things which it is most important to study, are likely to be the things on which we have least information. In general, we know more about rates of production of important commodities and products in the Soviet Union than we do about patterns of distribution of those products. This is partly because much more evidence is available an rates of production. The temptation is to study the material that we have and draw such generalizations few it as it seems to contain. e 12 e IrL011141111m Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 In terms of getting answers to our vital prchlemslehowever, ye car not permit the available evidence to dictate the nature of our inquiry too completely. Several weeks spent searching for every possible way to button down an illusive fact by ingenious reasoning from other related facts, by working out limits on ethat its magnitude could possibly be from What we know about other parts of the economy, or by laying on collection requirements may be worth many times the same amount of time devoted to extracting*, setting down, and presenting all the facts that may happen to be in a given body of documents. Both methods must be employed. Until we have systematically examined the available material, we do not know what can be got out of ite But the material available was not designed to answer our questions, and it must be made to be the servant of our investigation and not its mestere 2. An irritating feature of the Method of Successive Approxima- tions is that it may well involve us in going over the same material several times in search of the answers to a series of different questions. This repetition is unfortunate and can be avoided to some extent by investing some time in indexing and abstracting, either by ORR analysts themselves or by an expanded staff in CCD, If, however, we examine exhaustively all the material available to us for every implication that it contains the first time we study it, we will not complete our inveatigation for many, mazer? months. It is unfortunate that research by the Method of Successive Approximations involves some manta and some repetition, but it is better than being able to produce no answers until 1954. 3. The natural instinct of the researcher Who has plenty of time is to follow the logical process of trying to build up a picture of a whole sector of the econoey by first getting an idea of each of its smaller component parts. Thus the logical way to estimate the value of resources used in chemical production is to find out what resources are used in the production of each of the many different kinds of dhemicals. Again this logically involves breaking each particular chemical into the quantities produced in each specific plant. This suggests that the first step in anseering the over-ell question is to try to identify all the physical producing facilities and their capacities and rates of operation. In malts cases, however, a first approximation to the aggregate figure. can be acWeved by short cuts which avoid the necessity of knowing What in detail it is made up of. Thum one can start, for example, with total resources engaged it chemical production in the United States, or in the war economy of Nazi Germany, as a proportion of total resources. One can then consider knowm respects in which the proportion in the USSR. must deviate from these examples. Soap is rare in the USSR, and every household does not have its DDT apra;yo Such estimates of the whole before you know the parts usually have wide margins of error, but when current problems are pressing, they are frequently better than nothing at all. -13e "11 1 Approved For Release 2001 71 mat-floT: A-ADP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 4. Finally, fer this method to be effective, it should ideally be applied not simply to ORRIs schedule of research production but to that of the US Government as a Whole. Our delineation of areas of ignorance should be on eGovernmenb.wide basis, and our production to remedy these weaknesses should be planned in collaboration withother agencies so that we do not all concentrate on the same gaps at once. As the coordinating part of our activities progresses, it should be closely integrated with our production so that the Government as a 'whale may approach more rapidly an adequate understanding of the Soviet wawa,. III. ORR's Production Program. A. Are qUescribina ouzianoreace. Our inventory was designed to reveal our major areas of ignorance as a basis for paanning our future research production program. In trying to generalise on what we have learned from this study, we face the problem that just as there are mazer ways of classifying knowledge, so there are mew ways in ski& we can classify areas of ignorance. We can do this in terms of eammodities, industries, or services about which our general economic knowledge is particularly weak; or we can consider those espeets of our knowledge which are weaker for all commodities than other aspects, such as, for example, production, distribution, requirements, stooks, techniques, etc.; or we can consider which of the basic purposes of sconoMiu intelligence we are least wall?equipped to serve, such as the study of capabilities, vulnerabilities, or Intentions; or we can look at our weakness in terms of the three fundamental aspects of the 000b0Mic problem described at the beginning of this paper namely, the estimating of the productive resources of the eoonoay, the understanding of the goals and objectives which those in control of the resources wish them to serve, and the waya in which the resources are in fact allocated in the service of these goals. An attempt is made in this section to suggest what seep to be some of the most serious weaknesses in the present knowledge of CRR as revealed by our inventory. Each of these weaknesses is drawn from a different way of looking at our problem. Thus they are not commensurable with each other, in many cases they overlap, and hence they do not add up to any single priority principle for determining what ue should do next. It is inherent in cur problem that we require studies based upon a wide variety of different ways of slicing that problem into its pieces. Indeed, we must be constantly alert for still other ways of subdividing the issues to be tackled which may throe more light on certain of our questions than any of the ways we have thought of so far. It should also be kept In idol in what follows that the generalizations made in this section apply in different degrees to different brandhes of R. There are certain weaknesses that appear to be generally prevalent in much of ii44-4-011Pr Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 IMP11107. 18.8.11114116.enims* war Sat?o our eorkc: but their relative impoetance varies widely from branch tee branch. FinalIy? in planning our woe* in such a way as to limit the arees of isnorance described below we must make full allowance for the reseeeeh and production plane of other agencies. Since Whet follows ha e not Nee% &lammed outside the Central Intelligence Agency, our plans will pre curably be modified someWhat as a result of discussions in the Economic Intelligence Committee as to the plans for intelligence production throughout the Government. B. AgereMiefSeeereVSLIZ11-227-liSila.....1.1 in most sectors of the economy we appear to 'snow a good deal MOY0 about the recources and facilities of the Soviet Union than we do about vhat the Soviet are trying to do with those resourcee and facilities oadly speaking, we believe that they are trying to devote them to the increase of their military strength, but we cannot go far bend this master generalization into What products and uses are ragarded as most impoetent? what will be given priority in the event of e shortfall, ane; Why, and what goals and objectives pill shape the future develapLent of their economic program. We have, of course, a separate branch whose function it in to study eeonamic organizations and programs as such, but the effort needed in this fiele. Is much broader than a single branch can make aad mach more intit4tte1y tied in with the problems of each of the other branches than might at fi.rst applar Superficially the problem of how we go about the study of goalt and plans is a difficult one. The USSR has publiehed 5eyear plans in tha, oat, but there is considerable doubt as to Whether it will continue te Jo this in the future. In any case, these plans have lontained only the beoadost sort of production targets, with no analysis of the reasons for them or of their relative priority In this case, as in many others, however, we can learn much more by indirection and inference than at first appears. In the first place, the plans themselves have meny'implicatione- - which need further etudy. Goals for a series of interconnected comsoditioe. cuoh as coell steel, railroad equipment, etc? can be studied to see how the piecoe fit together arvi what they imply as to the desired pattern of use of resourcec. In the mecond place, we can learn a great deal cheat the plans and goals or the Soviets from the structure of the organizatien set up to achieve them. The ministries establiehedothe breakdown of functions within those ninistries the distribution of authority between Moscow and regional Approved For For Release 2001iiiDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved Hit Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-0060R000300030001-8 headquarters, the kinds of people appointed to handle the various jobs thus defined, can all give 11/3 much information about what the USSR Is trying to do. Finally, as already pointed out, we are helped in this investigation by the fact that everything that happens in the USSR is intended to contribute to the central design. The study of all kinds of events can thus give 11.4 hints which can be pieced together into a picture of what the authorities are trying to do with available resources. Information on diversions of material from one use to another, priorities on transportation, marked trends in the production of particular commodities, exhortations to workers in particular areas, and literally thousands of other things of which news reaches us give us clues in putting together the pattern of Soviet economic plans. The pattern will not emerge automatically, however, from a passive examination of the material? Pe must seek the answers systematically by initiating special projects on Soviet organizations co Soviet plans* and on Soviet goals as revealed in events? This is one field in which many of our branches need to concentrate a larger part of their efforts for the time being than they have done in the past. fb 4 ? 0.. ag_zonsaladJammats..asale A related but different weakness is the lank of adequate attention in the past to eccateic indicators of the military intentions of the USSR. We have been talking above of the general economic goals of the Politburo and the elucidation of What the SwieU are trying to do with their total resources. We can look at the same problem from the other end, examine all of the alternative courses of military action open to them* and then try to see what observable encomia events would take place differently today if they 'were planning one course of action rather than another in the future. The evidence to be examined in answering this question will, in most cages, be the same evidence that we have been examining to estimate capabilities. What we need is to establish some machinery for periodically focusing our minds on the evidence looked at from this point of view. A continuing office project designed to do this is being planned? Do zug_ntife...tsz_mmiluaLar.sag.,EadiugagmAang.lashiassan.. Partly because MR is organized largely by industries, commodities* and services, there is a tendency for us to concentrate too heavily on techniques, facilities, and rates of output in the separate sectors of the economy and to pay too little attention to the way in which they are related to each other. This shows up in our inventory in the great relative weakness of those parts of the papers which call for information on the demands of one industry for the products of other industries or sectors (input requirements) 16 IMPEVIIPe Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 VoriremAittlmi and those sections devoted to the pattern of distribution of an industryna output among other industries or final consumers. This weakness is particularly serious because it is not unique to ORR but is common throughout the intelligence community. Other agencies likewise are focusing their attention on individual facilities and their productive capacity. As suggested earlier, however, the capabilities and especially the vulnerabilities of the Soviet economy probably depend much more on the efficiency of the connections between its parts than on the resources available in any one sector. Like all of the judgments of this section, this is an estimate of relative and not of absolute weakness. Some notion of how much of a commodity is produced is clearly a prerequisite to an estimate of Where that production goes, though in actual analysis it is frequently possible to reverse the logic and estimate rates of production from what we know meet be the distribution. Thus it may be very useful to try to estimate the consumption of electric power in the Chemicals industry before we have firm evidence on either the total production of electric power, plant by elant? or the total production of each of the many special kinds of chemicals that require electric power in their manufacture. There are many ways of getting at an estimate of this kind indirectly. One can take parallel experience in a number of other countries, noting the correlation of this figure with other quantities that can be observed in the USSR. One may have information about the general geographic location of production and the character of the power grid serving these arena. Margins of error in this kind of calculation are 'usually very high, but it may be possible to set limits on orders of magnitude Width bring our ignorance about these factors below the level of our ignorance on other matters. There are various ways in which our efforts on interindustry relations can be intensified. In the first place, in basic studies on particular industries, commodities, and services, more attention can be paid to estimating input requirements and the distribution of output. This, however, is not likely to he enough. The evidence on these interindustry problems, from their very nature, can best be assembled by examining both ends of the interindustry pipe. This means that the aluminum consumption of the aircraft industry is a problem for both the Aircraft Branch and the Nonferrous Metals Branch. To insure that a spotlight is turned on some of the more important of these interindustry problems, it is proposed that a number of joint projects be set up to make estimates of this kind. As the number of sectors of the economy involved in such an inter? industry study expands, it becomes the concern of most of ORB. We have initiated one project, the study of the pattern of utilization of energy resources in the USSR, which will require contributions from virtually every branch. +.4444111141P Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 L Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 00 0 for H. ; .01 ? sansgseas e ?Jei *tea Aegie ? Our inventory reveals that we are almost totally ignorant as to the burden placed upon the economy by specific military operations of various kinds. In a sense, this is a special instance of the general point just discussed. Military operations can be conceived of as a consuming sector of the econopy. The relations between military consumption and the industries and services Obi& supply it can be regarded as one of the most important cases of interindustry relations* Rere what we need to know goes beyond the actual distribution of products and services to military use at the present tine and encompasses a study of what that distribution would be under various alternative assumptions as to the nature of possible future militery operations. This clearly is a kind of study. in Weide the mil4tary gence services must play a major role. We Should look to Ae2, G-2, and ONI for estimates of the volume or military end items required for and consumed in probable operations of various kinds. The burden which these rates of consumption of men, muni- tions, weapons, and supplies place upon the producing facilities turning out the final military product is a problem which the military intelligence services and ourselves will have to work out jointly* As we move farther up the chain of production, going from tanks to parts to steal, from planes to instruments to vacuum tubes, from bombs to TNT to ammonia, we move into areas where the responsibility rests squarely upon us. Thus in the field of interindustry relations generally, special importance attaches to the relations between industries Welch directly or - indirectly serve a military effort. Our role in the analysis of weapons end ammunition ;Should focus especially heavily on what it takes to make these things and thus on the implication for the rest of the economy of whatever levels of military output the defense agencies estimate are needed far various types of military operationSe F.agungsl jarezzleLeelade.gfeeeedislaer jedgetelezieggemeljagges Area sszkieg. This is discussed in detail in the reports of the separate divisionsv Broadly speaking, as might be supposed, our principal gaps in ORR are in those areas where we have had no analysts available to work on the problem* Several are urgent and outstanding. For example, we have no satisfactory analyse in the Central Intelligente Agency of the general field of construction of all kinds in the USSR. This is important for many reasons. Construction absorbs a very large volume of resources, places a heavy burden an the transportation system, and is an important requirement for military installa- tions of all kinds as well as a prerequisite for industrial expansion. -18- pri Approved For Relaase_20niiiiini ? rip_Rnp75-QwRo0o30nranog1-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 61241441446. Another outstanding weakness is in the communications field. The technical side of this problem is wellecovered by OSI and other agencies, but the relations between communications and all other industries are ainest Intouched. This includes an analysis of the requirenents laid upon the communications network of the Soviet Bloc by the needs of the Bloc's economic mysten? as well as of the volume and character of Soviet resources required to sustain and expand that network. Another broad field of serious relative weakness is the analysis of the industries producing military equipment, including ships, aircraft, tanks, ordnance, and ammunition. As already mentioned, some aspects of these industries are covered by the military intelligence sorvicea. But the burdens that they place on the rest of the econoey,and, on the other side, the 'Melte.- tLons which the rest of the economy imposes on capabilities in these fields, their vulnerabilities to the interruption of the supplies that they need, and the indications of intentions that we can derive from their peculiar require- ments are all matters on which we must put more emnhasia. G. nsuogalszzomaingt_g_tobnieal asnewkr or Soytet indesla. Many of our estimates of Soviet capabilities and vulnerabilities are based upon the assumption that the Soviets are using methods similar to ours. In computing input requirements for ar-given output, we muat ftecinently fail back on US experience. Yet we know that thin is in many instances grossly. mis- leading. For example, the US coal miner produces on the average about four times as much coal per day as his Etrepoan counterpart. In other reppectap Soviet techniques may well be ahead of ours. Unless we can set limits to the posuible range of technical methods that the Soviets may be using, our - eetimates will be subject to wide margins of error. This information is not &Ley to get. We know or can learn a good deal about prewar methods, both from the literature and from the people who participated in the design of their industrial economy. We can, of course, find out What went to the USSR under Lend-Lease. For more recent information elo must depend on the visual observations of defectors prisoners of war, occasional travelers, and the like; on items in the Sglet press, radio, and technical publications; on inferences from what we can learn about inputs for given outputs, etc. We must have more studies on Soviet industrial techniques. H. 212a_nf _mom jainAaae.,Mat jatargenonsisastuaLamo. In a broad Benne this can be described as the need for more attention to trade. We have examined in our recent work on the European Satellites name of the ways in will& they are dependent upon the USSR and the USSR in turn is dependent upon them. A main:. gap revealed in this project, however, was the absence of even appreximate information on the composition and volume of intra.-Bloc trade. Studies on China have revealed a sieilan weakness in our lo tes Approved For Release 2001/11/01 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 Approved For Release 2001/11/01: CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8 liorformiliriorr knowledge of what China is getting from and giving to the USSR. Of equal importance is the development of more information on the interdependence of major areas within the USSR itself. To what extent does the Soviet Far East depend for its economic potential upon its somewhat tenuous connections with the rest of the Soviet Union? Roy self.. sufficient is the Urals industrial complex? What are the economic relations between the Caucasus and other Soviet areas? These questions are important to the enelyaie of the capabilities of transport, pavers and communication nets; of vulnerabilities of many kinds; and, to some extent, of intentions. To Th 41 I*, z 4..P. 1t. Almost any investigation of a major sector of the Soviet economy leads one back to the problem of how to add up incommensurablee. Suppose we can estimate the output of various kinds of machine tools. How are we to measure changes in the total economic effort that goes into machine tool production as the composition of output changes? It is common knowledge that the prices put upon goods traded by the USSR with the Satellites are sharply distorted for political reasons. What then is the over-all volume of trade between the USSR and Hungary in each direction? How does the proportion of Soviet resources being devoted to expansion of productive facilities compare with that, say, in llostern Europe? One is stepped on the problem of how to measure resources devoted to such expansiaa. This is a problem on Which a good deal of work hes been done outside the Government. Perhaps more can be put in progress by external research contracts. But a good deal of effort is needed to bring the remelts into such a form that they can be used to answer pressing problems now baffling Government analysts. 20 Approvell For Release2001/t1/Q1 : CIA-RDP75-00662R000300030001-8