THE ROCKEFELLER REPORTS

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79R00904A000200040012-2
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
8
Document Creation Date: 
November 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 20, 1998
Sequence Number: 
12
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 1, 1955
Content Type: 
MF
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79R00904A000200040012-2.pdf358.99 KB
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Approved For Release 1999/09/08 : CIA-RDP779R00904A0002 40012-2 IRW CENTRAL INT'E.LLIGENCE AGENCY OFFICE OF NATIONAL ESTIMTES 1 November 1955 DRAFT ME 10RODUM FOR TI.OE DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE DOCUMENT NO. _ -6 SUBJECT: The "Rod.cefeller Reports" NO CHANGE IN CLASS. ^ 1ECLASSIFIED ASS. CHANGED TO: TS S C NEXT REVIEW DATE: 75X1 9 DATE: ~0 DATElI REVIEWER: 1. The "Rockefeller Reports" are a series of papers analysing European opinion trends before and after the Suit Conference at Geneva. They are based largely upon the USIA2s Barometer Surveys in the principal countries of Western Europea 2a The Barometer Surveys themselves are published by the USIA on an intermittent basis. They are based on a sample of about 800 in each country drawn up according to the customary practices aimed at gett:gag a reliable cross section. The interviewing is done by contract under local auspices. USIA believe the results to be accurate within five percent. I/ In these other areas, the opinions recorded are derived from press and authoritative sources rather than, from opinion polls, One of the pape.es concern European opinion of Far Eastern questions and some of the papers contain aecticns on opinion in other areas. O Approved For Release 1999/09/08 : Cl 00904A000200040012-2 Pwo Syr, '; Approved For Release 1999/09/08 : CIA-RDP79R00904A0002001)40012-2 3o The Rockefeller Reports are primarily an analysis and extension of the Barometer Surveys. They consider the trend in opinion, and they draw some general conclusions about the development and state of opinion in relation to US policy. They are, therefore, something more than a flat statement of poll results. 4. In general, the introduction of the Barometer series has been a very valuable development in the intelligence art. It provides a most helpful additional factor for the use of analysts in assessing the results of individual foreign policy moves and the magnitude of some of our foreign policy problems. The Barometer reports constitute a supplemental, and sometimes a corrective, factor to regular Embassy reports, which are always open to error because of the interests and capabilities of the reporting officers. 5. The Rockefeller Reports are an attempt to add sorm thing to these Barometer reports, and they contain extensive and highly, sophis- ticated interpretation of opinion data. However, the Rockefeller Reports use the poll data without informing the reader of the size of sanple used or the percentage of possible error. For example, in a report of June 11 discussing opinion factors relating to the Summit Conference the following are among the analyses made: Approved For Release 1999/09/08. IA-RDP79R00904A000200040012-2 Approved For Relea;e 1999/09/08: CIA-RDP79R00904A000200}040012-2 ao Surveys had shown responses from West Germany, the UK, France, and Italy ranging from 36 to 43 percent in favor of siding with neither the East or West in the cold war, and figures ranging from 40 to 54 percent of responses in favor of neutrality in the event of a hot war between the US and the USSR. It was also pointed out that only half of those favoring neutrality thought their country could in fact remain neutral. This was interpreted by the writer as indicating only "the scope of the desire for neutrality" and an "aspiration" for neutrality at the public opinion level. bo It is concluded that public opinion in Western Europe "appears to be a compromise between two factors, among others: (a) strong aspirations for 'peace' and hence, in certain circum- stances, for 'neutrality'; (b) practical considerations having to do with 'security', among vh ich US defense support looms large". 6o There is, however, always a danger of attempting to draw toe many conclusions or too firm conclusions from public opinion surveys, even if one assumes that the poll is technically sound, that is, that the sanple is large enough and properly balanced, that the right questions were asked in the right way, etc. One such difficulty lies in maintaining a consistent degree of reserve in interpreting the data. W3m Approved For Release 1999/09/08 : CIA-RDP79R00904A000200040012-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/08 : CIA-RDP79ROO904A000200,040012-2 The illustrations noted in the preceding, paragraph were from the first report, dated 11 June. But the data considered three months later, in a report of 23 September, was not treated with the same care and attention to its limitations. For example, this report states in its introduction: a0 "There is little doubt that the net result (of the Summit Conference) has been a further undermining of the Western Alliance, as represented by NATO,-in terms of public opinion support, including the opinion of the more influential upper socio-economic groups. b0 "American foreign policy in genera]., and US military security in particulars are based on a system of alliance, of which NATO is the most important0 Co "The opinion situation developing in Western Europe appears to challenge the bases of American policies with respect to Europe mo and, in particulars raises the question of whether continuing reliance can be placed on NATO as the core of US- European policy." 70 The above conclusions were evidently based upon a battery of questions asked in August. The pollsters found that the percentage of persons interviewed who knew their country was a member of NATO ranged Approved For Release 1999/09/08 : fRDP79$00904A000200040012-2 CRET Approved For Release 1-999/09/08 : CIA-RDP79R00904A0002000~040012-2 %ft from 43 percent in Germany to 63 percent in Italy. In France 1i9 per- cent, and in the UK 60 percent, were aware of this fact. It was also found that the percentage of favorable responses on whether NATO had "done well" ranged from 10 percent in France to 30 percent in Britain., that the number of responses favoring replacement of NATO by a security system to which the US and USSR were both a party varied from 38 percent in Germany, Italy and the UK to 43 percent in France, with only 12-19 percent favoring retention of NATO as an alternative, and that those favoring withdrawal of troops from the continent and overseas bases by the US and UK and Soviet withdrawal to their own borders varied from It 1t percent in the UK to 57 percent in West Germany. In the case bf the upper socio-economic groups., the numbers favoring NATO were only slightly greater,, while the troop and base withdrawal proposition drew greater support from the upper group in Italy and the UK than from those countries as a whole. There was moreover a 20 percent increase between June and August in the number favoring the hypothetical withdrawal prop- osition. From all these data it is concluded in the text that attitudes favorable to NATO are by no means "firmly structured in the minds of either the general public nor the upper groups of Western Europe," that NATO "appears highly vulnerable from the opinion point of view.," and that "at the least, it appears that the people of Western Europe are now w111ing to consider security arrangements alternative to NATO." -5- Approved For Release 1999/09/08 : CI 77 9$Q0904A000200040012-2 Approved For Release X999/09/08: CIA-RDP79R00904A000900Q40012-2 .8. The data developed from the polls are certainly disquieting on their face, but there are a number of reasons wIW we do not believe they should on their face be accepted as sufficient reason for the alarming conclusions which are Prawn from them a. There are no comparable data for earlier periods. It is therefore entirely possible that knowledge of NATO and support for it is greater now than in the past* b. The polls were taken during the first flush of popular optimism resulting from the friendly atmosphere at Geneva. co Much of the sympathy for the broad security arrangements and the troop withdrawal proposition which were postulated could just as well be regarded as a "desire" or an "aspiration," moth as the writer interpreted the so-cal led "neutrality" sentiment which emerged from earlier polls. Moreover the annoyances which normally accompany the presence of foreign troops, and, in the case of West Germany, the clear implications of troop withdrawal for reunification were almost certainly factors in the responses of many of those polled. d. It is an over-simplification to say that "American foreign policy in general ... (is) based upon a system of alliances." It is true that one very important aspeat of American policy is the North P. 6 Approved For Release 1999/09/O,~PR00904A000200040012-2 Approved For Release 1999/09/08: CIA-RDP79ROO904A00020000040012-2 M"DWOM Atlantic organization, but the fact that this alliance was in response to a threat _- and even at times an imminently dangerous threat -m was always made clear to the USSR and was defended in those terms by European governments before their parliaments. It is natural, therefore, that if the imminence and magnitude of that threat should appear to have receded, the responses to it in terms of maintenance of bases and forces abroad or the.substi4 tution of what could be defended as a superior treaty arrangement should be those recorded. This should not, however, necessarily be regarded as an "undermining of the Western alliance." The questions asked were hypothetical propositions mhich struck a favorable chord in the aspirations of people who were encouraged by the Geneva, atmosphere; those questions did not go to basic foundations of the North Atlantic communityo 9. We wish to make it clear that we believe there are dangers in the post-Geneva world which we have developed at some length in PIE l00-7-55 (Current World Situation), and we do not wish to minimize the problem of West European opinion, which is obviously in need of careful developmento To this end, the Rockefeller Reports provide a number of valuable mialyses and insights developed from and going somewhat beyond the base results of the polls upon which they are d7o SM2WOOM Approved For Release 1999/09/08 : MA-RDP79R00904A000200040012-2 .Apmoved For Release ' 999/09/08 CIA-RDP79ROO904A00020O 40012-2 NNW principally based. We detect, however, a natural tendency to build too large a structure of conclusions upon the foundation. of such polls. This tendency is kept under scrupulous control in the earlier issues of the Reports. In the later issues, we are disturbed by the drawing of broad implications from what seems to us an insufficiency of data. Some danger therefore exists in furnishing papers of this nature direct from the Rockeleller office to policy makers unless they are clearly and continuously on notice that such papers represent an analysis of only a fraction of the available evidences Approved For Release 1999/09/08 : CIA-RDP79R00904A000200040012-2