ASSASSINS ALLEGATION IS DENIED

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8
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RIPPUB
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K
Document Page Count: 
62
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 6, 2000
Sequence Number: 
1
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Publication Date: 
December 28, 1972
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8.pdf5.02 MB
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Approved For Release 200%0K:ArP'61-154R01REMET40001-8 'Assassins' Allegation Is Denied - _WILLIAMSBURG (UPI) ? ;A Central Intelligence Agency spokesman has labeled "ut- terly untrue" a published re- port that a camp in Virginia ;was used for CIA training in =clear weapons. The spokesman also denied "unequivocally" that secrecy- shfouded Camp Peary in York County was used to train CIA agents in assassina- tion techniques. The report was published in the weekly Virginia Gazette; .which based its story on an interview with a former CIA man. The newspaper published here said Camp Peary is a secret CIA training base and has been for years. Agents are trained in assassination, demolition, parachutes, wire- tapping and intelligence-gath- ering and have experimented with "-i.vhat the former CIA agent called "mini-nuclear bombs." The one-time CIA man is Joe Maggio, who said he was trained at the camp for six months. Maggio has written a novel about the CIA entitled "Company Uan." The CIA spokesman said Maggio had been "fired for cause from a Central In- telligence Agency training program." The spokesman denied the charges about as- sassination training and said "the allegation about mini-nu- ?clear weapons in any CIA training program or use by '.the agency is utterly untrue.? _Maggio said he was fired for free-lance writing he did while working for the CIA, not because of the way he did . his work with tile agency. ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Approved For Release 201/03/04 : CIA-RDP80-016 BURLINGTON, VT, FREE PRESS M - 43,479 \ DEC 2(91 Rand McNally Publishes CIA-compiled China Atlas Free Press - Gannett Service changes: Its cover is glossy black, WASHINGTON -- The unique the CIA-GPO edition is white; it atlas of China, originally is slightly smaller than the compiled by the Central government edition; and the Intelligence Agency for the populations of the major world President's visit there earlier this cities have been changed year, proved ? so popular the government published it at $5.25 a copy. But if you look closely in commercial bookstores you'll find Ran McNally is selling an all- but-identical atlas "from materials prepared by the U.S. goverment" at 34.95 paperback, $10 hardbound. Piracy? Plagarism? Copy catting? None of these. Rand McNally, for the sum which one executive recalls as roughly $1,500, bought the government films from which it was able to make printing plates for the atlas. Anybody can do the same. The government does not copyright such material, on the theory it belongs to the public, so any publisher can put it out for his own profit if he wishes. Tho CIA's atlas is unusual in that much of the information ? on climate and railroads, for example ? is presented in comparison to the United States and occasionally some other nations. The maps and charts - were produced just for the volume. Neither the CIA nor the Government Printing Office has any idea of how much the research, map work, writing and printing cost ran, so there is no way to assess how big a bargain Rand McNally got. One thing is sure ? it was many times $1,500.. Rand McNally made only three, somewhat. The original was in eight colors, and Rand McNally probably would prefer to hold it down to four colors. But it was forced to print in eight. Rand McNally printed 15,000 copies. a spokesman said. The CIA's original printing was 5,000 and then the volume was turned over to the GOP which, on an outside contract, printed 35,000 more. Rand McNally managed to get the book out in time for Christmas. The government version has been out for most of the year. Although the Rand McNally version isn't yet selling like hotcakes, the spokesman believes the company may have to go into a second printing. Such procedures are common in publishing. Very often reports by government commissions are whipped into paperback form, provided with an introduction and sold on newsstands by private publishers. When an interviewer suggested the atlas represented a considerable private dividend on the taxpayer's investment, the Rand McNally spokesman said: "We pay a lot of taxes, too." - Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 ? Approved For R 2001 STATINTL STATINTL s-V't 9d ? . ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 , GAINSVILLZ, FLOUT1A Approved For Release 2001AV/04(ubosiminykpr A Ea@ 67 Seerer. MlorlicLa Licen@e By DUANE BRADFORD Sun Capital Bureau _ TALLAHASSEE The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency has been issued 67 secret Florida license. tags, the registration records of which are kept from public scrutiny in violation of Florida law. The agency is one of dozens of fetkTal. stale,. anti county and city governments throughout Ili rida that had receivid 3,1177 such secret tags as of Nov. 2. according to Department of Highway Safety records. Florida law requires such records to he open for inspection, but the absence of any law shielding anonymity of the 3,100.plus tag holders has not stopped public officials such as Motor Vehicle Division Director John I). Calvin from refusing to reveal any records on the secret license tags. One of the secret tags is held hy Florida Education Commissioner Floyd T. Christian on an automobile owned by .the state. Christian has said he got the tag, because his predecessor, former Supt. of Public Instruction Thomas D. Bailey, had such a tag. The tag costs only 50 cents a year. A secret tag cannot he traced by 1 citizen. If an inquiry is made, the Motor Vehicle Division tells the inquirer that the tag record is out of the files" and asks that the inquirer give a name and telephone number so the in can he telephoned. when . found. ? The division then notifies the secret lag holder of the inquiry being made about the automobile bearing the secret tag number and is given the name of the person in about the tag. Secretary of State Richard Stone had such a secret tag on a state car until a reporter spoiled Mrs. Stone driving the vehicle at a Tallahassee shopping center. Stone said he removed the .lag. In a?memo prepared for Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles executive director Ralph Davis, the 3,077 secret tags issues as of last Nov. 2 were broken down in the following manner: Federal government agencies, 715; counties, 911; state agencies, 443; The memo identified only the agencies and number of tags issued. ? Among other federal agencies isstm.d tags, the Department of Defense (Air Force, Army and Navy) have received 103 secret tags for use on its vehicles. With the CIA tags, Defense has received 170 secret tags. ? The Border Patrol has one such tag; FBI, 301, Immunization and Naturalization. 17; Bureau of Narcotics, 51, and Labor Mat ions. WU That totals 105 for the Department of Justice. The confidential tag is designed for use on law enforcement vehicles under circumstances where the identity of the enforcement agency is desired. to be kept secret. Such vehicles are used for surveillance work. The Treasury Department has 216 such tags with Customs having 112; Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, 57; and Secret Service 47. The Department of Interior kFish and Wildlife) has 17 tags; Federal Communications, Commission two; General Service Administration, 94; !menial Revenue Service, 83; Post Office, 21. While there were 911 tags issued to various county of- ficials throughout Florida, the ?standout on the list as the one secret tag showed issued to the PinellasCounty School Board. It could not be learned who held that tag and for what purpose. Many sheriffs use confidential tags, including 29 in .Alachua County. The cities of Pensacola, Plant City, Ocala, Ft.. Lauderdale and Ft. Myers among the more populated areas of Florida ?? are not listed as using secret tags on any of their vehicles. But Kissimmee, with a population of 7,119, has seven such secret tags. At that rate, St. Petersburg should have 216 such secret tags. But it has 49. Sunrise Golf Village City, with a population of 7403, has two suc c tags and Maitland, with a similar population, has four confidential tags. Palm Beach has two, Pinellas Park 5, Riviera Beach 9, Auburndale 3, Bartow 3, Belleair 1, and Clearwater 14 confidential tag numbers for vehicles of under-terminable use. Dunedin has two secret tags while Gainesville has 27, Holmes Beach (with a population of .2,7 0 0) 10, Lakeland has 8 such tags, Largo 2. Tallahassee, With a population of 71,000, has 26 such secret tags. Among state agencies, 132 secret tags are issued to the Department of Business Regulation, Division of Beverage; the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (Florida Highway Patrol), 100; and Department of Law Enforcement 127 such tags. The Divsion of Animal Industry of the Department of Agriculture has three such tags. One reason for the tags, it was reported, was to investigate cattle rustling. The secret tag issue blossomed earlier this year when a reporter in Gainesville observed a person bein club- bed during disturbanc( at the University of Flor,..a..The reporter noted the tag number bf_theicar_driveibylthelofficers. The identity of the car's owner could not be traced because of the secrecy policy established without benefit of law. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 $TAT1NTL WASHIIIGTON STAR Approved For Release 2001/03fOginalAgRDP80-01 By JOSEPH VOLZ an JAMES R. POLK . Star-News Staff Writers Mrs. E. Howard Hunt, wife of a suspect in the Watergate break-in and bugging case, Was insured for $250,000 on a flight which crashed in Chic- ago last week, killing her and 44 other passengers. ? Reliable sources told The Star-News that Mrs. Dorothy Hunt named her husband as the beneficiary for a $100,000 Mutual of Omaha policy and two $75,000 policies, all pur- chased at Washington National Airport where the flight origi- nated. ? Mrs. hunt's $100,000 acci- dental death policy represent- ed about one-fourth of all the insurance coverage written here by. Mutual for that flight. Sources said both Hunt and ? ?his. wife regularly took out high insurance policies when flying. Mrs., Hunt also was carrying $10,000 in cash which her hus- ? band says was going to be invested with a relative, 1-Tar- old C. Carlstead, a Chicago accountant with interests in' ? motels, No Apparent Link - -Hunt and six others are scheduled to be tried in U.S. District Court next month on charges stemming from the June 17 break-in at the Demo; ? ? ? 5nt Hc cratic Party's Water gate headquarters. The US. attorney's office is particularly interested in the $100 bills Mrs. Hunt was carrying. However, a check of the serial numbers on the hills with those which Watergate suspect Bernard Barker with- drew from a Florida bank aft- er cashing Republican cam- paign checks shows no appar- ent link. Mrs. Hunt paid about $10 for her insurance policies and re- portedly was insured for simi- lar amounts on previous flights. Her husband said he did not make the flight because "I would have to get a court or- der to leave the Washington area." Hunt flew to Chicago after receiving word his wife's ,plane had crashed. Reliable sources say he insured himSelf for "slightly more" than $250,000 on his flight. Sources said both Hunt and his wife regularly took out high insurs ance policies when flying.. . Single Roll of Bills Mutual of Omaha still has not been contacted by anyone representing the Hunt family to file a claim even though the crash was five days ago. The $10,000 found in Mrs. Hunt's purse was contained in a single roll ? of $100 bills wrapped with a rubber band. A check of the serial num- bers showed many of the bills may have come from a bank in the New York City area. A total of $5,300 in $100 bills had been seized by police in the arrest of five of the Water- gate suspects inside the Demo- cratic headquarters. That money was linked to Nixon eampagin funds when those serial numbers were traced to a Miami bank where Barker had cashed checks to- taling $114,000 in contribu- tions. ? The packet of $100 bills that Barker is known to have picked up Was part of a series from F 02457101 to F 02457600. Only two .of the $100 bills car- ried by Mrs. Hunt bore F num? bers and these, F 02322930 A and F 03873745 A were unrelat- ed to the Barker money. 'Good Luck, FS' ? The serial numbers on the other bills found in the dead wonian's purse were spread among federal . banking dis- tricts throughout the entire na- tion,. indicating most of the money was in used bills and therefore hard to trace. But investigators did find ? one group of new bills in se- quence from G 08075077 A through B 08075081 A which originated with a bank in the New York City area. The B letter, identifying the funds with the Federal Re- serve district for New York, appeared on four other sets of bills in the roll. . Among the $100 bills carried by Mrs. Hunt was one that reportedly bore the inscrip- tion: "Good luck. FS." The initials are the same as those of Frank Sturgis, anoth- er of the suspects arrested in- side the Watergate. But Stur- gis, reached in Miami, denied flatly that he had written the 'phrase. "That is not my signature," hp said. Fired From Job '. ht STATINTL- 1: nsurai used several names in his life- time, at first told police last summer his name was Hamil- ton. Sturgis, who was active in the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, also declined, to say whether he had ever worked for the CIA. "No one ever ads/ mils that," he said. Sturgis was employed as a salesman for the Pan American Aluminum Corp. in Miami un- . til this week when he was dis- missed after a federal prose- cutor visited the company to ask for his payroll records. U.S. Atty. 'Earl J. Sillvrt has spent the past week in Miami,. contacting members of the Cu- ban exile community as poten-. tial witnesses in the Watergate trial scheduled to begin Jan. 8. Sources said the company .asked Sturgis to leave' after Silbert made an inquiry there. Sturgis would not comment On another. published report that a passport in the name of "Edward Hamilton'," found in his possession in the June ar- rest, had been issued by the? CIA to Hunt, . Hunt was a CIA employe be- fore becoming a White House Approved For Release 2001/03/04: ClkuninOsitactItglatI100140001-8 1 o la' VIASI:ING TON STAR Approved For Release 2001/0n4a-gIMDP80-01601 STATI NTL By THOMAS B. ROSS Chicago Sun-Times Service A fake passport, produced by the Central Intelligence Agency for former White House consultant E. Howard Hunt Jr., was being carried by one of the suspects at the time of the Watergate break-in, in- vestigators have dsiclosed. The passport, madie out in the name of "Edward Hamil- ton" ? the same initials as Hunt's ? reportedly was found on Frank Sturgis when he was arrested at Democratic Na- tional Committee headquarters iii June. The .disclosure of the pass- port yesterday -added a dimen- sion to the case: The possibili- ty that current CIA employes were involved in political espi- onage. The CIA has repeatedly assured Congress that its fake documents are kept under tight control. Hunt and several of the oth- ers under indictment have ac- knowledged they once worked for .the CIA, but have asserted they were no longer in its em- -ploy at the time of the Water- gate incident. ,Hunt's wife was killed in the jUnited Air Lines crash in Chi- cago on Friday. Her purse was found to contain more than ?$10,000 in cash. Police report- -cd that one of the bills bore the written inscription: "Good 'Luck. PS" ? the same initials .as Sturgis'. StiniS has never been iden- tified as a direct employe of the CIA, but was known to have had extensive agency contacts in Miami. An ex- -Marine, lie fought with Fidel Castro in Cuba and was re- warded with the gambling ca- sino concession in Havana aft- er Castro won. But the two men had an ear- ly falling out, and Sturgis went over to the Cuban exile com- munity in Miami. He was onee arrested on a boat off British Honduras in what he described as an attempted "commando raid" on Cuba. A soldier of fortune, he is believed to have used several psuedonymns besides that of Edward Hamilton. He was born Frank Fiorini in Norfolk, Va., but adopted the name, of his stepfather. Hunt was hired as a White House consultant by Charles W. Colson, special counsel to President Nixon. He openly declares in his Who's Who list- ing that he has operatedunder a number of psuedonymns ? Robert Dietrich, John Baxter and Gordon Davis. Thefederalindictment charges that Hunt was present on the night of the Watergate break-in, but left before the police arrived mid apprehend- ed the five persons inside the Democratic headquarters, He was linked to the case through a $25,000 cash fund, a cam- paign contribution to the Com- Mittee for the Re-election of the President. Investigators said the fake passport and the possible CIA: role ? in the break-in would probably be explored at the trial scheduled to begin next month. The CIA is prohibited by law from conducting any opera- tions within the United States and, of course, is proscribed STATiNTL from taking part in domestic politics. It is known, however, to have been involved with the Cuban community and with other anti-Communist exile groups in U.S. cities. VThe investigators said they did not have a plausible theory as to why Mrs. Hunt was carrying so much cash. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-016b1R000100140001-8 LOS 1,,FIGI:L7S Approved. For Release 2001/0IJOE, CIA-RDP86-134601110 . s BY KATE HOLLIDAY. 'AGENCIES SHUT ON WEEKENDS . . _ One recent Sunday, I became . .....1'? , coyer the latest special delivery NO 0 n e's Mind iv the. Store S somewhat frantic trying. to dis- - ? postal rate. A call to the main b ')?ost Office downtown brought a man's voice on a lengthy record- ing, Its implication was that no sane employe would touch even so much as a presidential invita- tion after noon on Saturday, and that it was particularly unseem- ly of me to expect any assistance on the Lord's Day, IImmmin: Then I thought to try the Federal Information Cen- ter, listed among the most fre- quently ?called' of the govern- ment agencies in the phone book. Another recording, this one advising me sternly that the office was open from 8 to 4 on weekdays (the 'last two words stressed). Foiled again. ?1 read through the entire list of fedthal offices, seeking a .g Mer, until I Met my match at the end. The notice read, unable to -find the desired office listed above, call the Federal Informa- ?tion Center." What's going on here? Who's running ? the store? It's simple: No one is?on weekends. Kate Holliday is a Los Angeles ? writer who has contributed to such magazines as e ad e r' s Digest, True and McCall's. She has experienced plenty of emer- gencies in, her time, particularly while serving as. a war corres- pondent in, Korea. Anyone. who wants help from a move? Too mute to signal assis- federal, state, county or city 'lance? Just wants fast informs- bureau on Saturday or Sunday, tion on a poison, say?) For the with few exceptions, is out of county, a woman responds on luck. Despite our nation's mas- 620-2451 with a cheery, "We're sive Civil Service contingent on here!" . all levels, if you have a medical The county has made a big emergency, a parole emergency, thing of its 2-I-hour-a-clay ''Good a dead animal in your backyard, Neighbor" program of providing or merely want information, for- emergency foster homes for chil- get it. Most of the government is ?dren. Although there are two off till Monday morning, listings for it in the phone book, There are some exceptions-- neither answered at 3:45 on .a. the FBI, most police and fire Sunday afternoon. outfits, as well as the Secret Ser- I Speaking of children, when I vice. But, oddly, no one answers called Griffith Park to aSk about at the CIA or the state fire mar- 1 the procedure in reporting one shal's office, lost, a ranger said two security officers The Federal Immigration and "but they're rarely were there, after 5:30, In the office. Naturalization Service has a line that takes police calls only, and the woman who answers tells you that, no matter how dire your trouble, "There's not a thing you can do until Monday morning." The Earthquake Di- saster Service and the Veterans Administration Clinic for Medi- cal Information don't even deign ? to do that, You're not much better off with the state health people. The Medical Information ii s?t i n g doesn't answer, nor does the Narcotic Outpatient Clinic. And, when I called the emergency .number of the Public Health Ad. to man the phone." Dandy. A woman in Long Beach near- ly went. out of her mind a few years ago when, during a holi- day parade, a horse died andwas dragged onto her lawn lest it dis- rupt traffic. She was told, as I was, that the animal pickup ser- vice did not send anyone out af- ter 2:30 p.n., horse or no horse. They'd come the next day? maybe. If the military and protective forces can routinely assign duty ? officers over the weekend, why. can't the state, county, city and federal agencies follow suit? They might not only save a few ministration. I got no reply at lives but keep hundreds of ordi- all. So I. called it again, and a nary citizens like me from climb- man, who came on the line in- lag the walls. formed me he was the janitor. 'Nevertheless, there is a glim- "Do you take em er gene y mer of light at the end 'of the calls?" I asked. tunnel. Last August, Gov, flea. "No," he said, kindly, "but I gan signed a bill that will estab- can write a note and leave it lish 911 as a statewide number to somewhere for you, so they'll get call in case of emergency any' it tomorrow." day of the week?but not till made further tests in a two- 1982. (The law stipulates that hour session at my phone, let- pay phones must be converted' ting ,each call ring at least seven for free access to police, firemen times. On the health scene, only and ambulance services.) the county emergency people This is a step in the right di- are on the job--if you need them rection, but I'm not exactly a on a weekend. (Yes, I know .spring chicken,. -and anything There are receiving hospitals in might happen during the next 10 the area, hut what if someone years. doesn't have a. car? Is. too ill to If it'does, oh Lord, please let it happen to me on a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday or Thurs- . day: Now that the four-day work- ?-week is coming up, I've even grown scared of Friday. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 STATI NTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Available Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 THE WILIMINGT , DEL. MORN ENG NEWS Approved For Release 2001/03/04 : 2CIA-RDP80li -01bUlK 23 Nov 19'1 8TATI .19111 SComodcize cr .-1;urczra Chief 'Those i!tnf-;'t boen cosi itaccItc, recalled. yo:! twre !co. leadership cad Co:ens of grucititg i'nrtc ie:re 0.0 rules of fair 013 c! Font/. Evcry 1;:e boo!: ins u-: 7,ott. YOU fit!..,.:(Cd fcllo:o can- e. Ls, OU501(.? :t?fon toDY t5.3 cot,17,(.: vt..c .! ot-Lt,..Ve to stidden/y ? ? s!ido a knife roof. ? that The Farm troidd be listed i n .7?laryiand tourist guide- BUT if it exists, its a C.I.21 uct?it piece o land nosilod al?-.:?ttg the Cif..tihank River 15 miles southwest of Easton. ii s on a spit of had known as 'Omni Point, A red brick :mansion, a pier and a few cut- buildings can be seen from the air. :Nothing but a mailbox ro ratite ea it and.a ??no' teo..--pussin" sign can be seen. from the road. The land lies along a dirt road vhich has tic name and is not Included on oAk. iii Maryland maps. It ,1`;:r:?1 is Iroat 'a spy thriller by .forks to the l'IP'nt off the read 11 ;-rd s. A crons leading to the Bellevue-Oxford MaIeleinc." Ferry. IS fine Sam From the air, one can sec Spy in the Si:- small boat::: potted no along Sc.ctioa? of the troe-lincd stize. There are lsteltlenee At,;an- trees all aronail lIe icO; no- thing but trees iii;.roinict the ? according to place: nothing but trees can ?,cn,!: series of. 1.i.a.Dks be seen from ground level. iftolt:l1. is located some.- If Aarons is to bo believed Si:ore of and if K Section ("an agency Its a piace N1101e so Ecere.I. ea. th(..: t. '7%IC .111I I I1men; doesnit itizow abttut .n.") ? Lolling, hits a hand in the ou- ? it,:perbTs areit ei to 'tt;.tt the re:1,-,27217/,'t?V;eleCitne, ne. C it csapea c, cod the village id ts.? Johit (ticlitous) ii ? a dim:tied ,:c ( t-,:rtiy steel. driven ever ,ten for ircol:.:ist with a ter's we:oh:cod riiiend icc'hore, just the.. Aate:as ),?.-rites Itt it, nisi) supposed p.r.ee 0CIC over- ? ti ;.?.,,t?ritts rats a "flint seianels like what V ore looking for" with a quick . After a fev,, mofe minutes of Lying out a routc, the news- men are off. t.li.C.tit the u t- in a r e d load, one sees Iormers tuLents itj ellsrtuise?) \Vol-king in neidS, `.1 here ;"d'e s?? ns evenys.v;10N hi the area tnat say "NO :i?cming. ;_?=turt itars Ititi be pu,,,centeci" ur'..o'g the lea- powers a 1.-cp7.,:let: must Pave, one figures oztt: that the place with. no I'lLine ?1 100 mal?:tax. and 1..11 simple "no tresp.t.s:::tu-7,," sign nt?,.'St be the .t.ji.)vernment. lend. The lane into he place also htts that ;veil policed appear- a Ile e oltaractetistic ? of militnry-typt loud. Nr...;:.-(10,....-nei-,;;hhor George Le'c.-Is Jr. (met ac' 1...",,ent? one 101C11 tl?ie h.,on over thr7re," Ice says, rotlit.;! that ie laces the "can: l.aker." "They've pet some big dotis. over there,'' his wife says poirtleUty. ItLIAEVING the saw al)cut discretion the bet- of va!or, 00 decides it might lit: eater to Pet a look. 17113,,Sr things dust, however. front the ;tin If one is Cr! 0O looking -You py,?ernincir; for a sceret bitlev. ay, one the .1-;liot nsks. a.:ist be careful how one huutm r fii_71011,itelc.:;),:ifessisi,: lhat stz,i..3cirs'- ill e o lf. nese 'I'm loc.:kiln', for a list of all et.; ;Tone ii the area assumes , land in Tniliet Cenit- tie lace hi t CI'', rest Iv," one begins by iutot 1015 a phone colt to the the clerk in the :,..oiLtiy cart- tailir tarstver samci lions. "-,..1-11()," the re( "We hove IA much," ansv.ers in t INC says (p.?31 a draw- er stuffed vi*, voit.e Et ill I-J.1:n- .,??? ?? ?Vi'?? y ber undt !h.'. Conical Ittit it 1"..?.1:t5 1, r I .? r;,0 tnii(?tr! ??. ?? the ?Sfiriet :.,;(1V ern- ? u.itilft,nt .,slltagion, 1).0 ,I eolt, "? d Fr an,`-'1'C, iS j it lh,J ,rs no Cl.:, every irrentions the 1 1,-; a,it name. hi true ' \." navel 1:eolleu. set! 1:11?.?S ? iLt" ?".'"?': .1.:?ii;,?1, C0?0?:115' ? .I?t ' .? 'IL ?'? 11", hind t.; y "?011:1.1 ( .??11 Om; ;Approved iFOr tea' se, 0011 ,3104 : CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 iii leo'mlV feels that in the best irter.-sts of national security, ? s:liould refrain from men- tioninJi- the non.0 also. 'Tin calling Obit some land at Mcirinclyou, or, your agt toy. 1 guess, 01 iii.'' At first they say they don't know anything about the hind , hut promise to chach. A v, bile I ater. a call from ?si:ola.:sman" comes hach-, It turns out the CIA does ' own the hind. "It's for rinin .t:einent sentinars it's but On the side. the "spokesman" Says. "JCS not a spooky place at he says ressurin::tly. "it's not usod for guerrilla warfare." 'Rica how about a loch at the place? The CIA has a standing Po!t- ? cy. of no tours thrett.tit any of its establishments, the spokes- man .sris ? ? STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/0X04aSK14-113i1F80-01601R00 2 1 NOV 1372 Bratwur.st at C.I.A. Cafeteria Sample of New Capital Fare Special to The New York Times STATI NTL WASHINGTON, Nov. 20?If you could get security clear- ance, you could treat yourself to a German-style lunch of bratwurst with sauerkraut, or knackwurst with red kohl, at a little out-of-the-way spot called Die Wunder Deli Bar. Security clearance to get into a delicatessen? Absolutely, when it's in the cafeteria of the Central Intelligence Agency, tucked away in the woods of Langley, Va., just northwest of Washington. But ?say you're more the meat-and-potatoes type. If you had business to do at the State Department, you might drop into the cafeteria' there to pick out a likely looking rib eye steak, have it charbroiled to order by an agile grillman who wears a black 10-gallon hat, and sit down to a hearty meal, with french fries and sliced tomatoes. All this is possible these days because of a move by the Gov- ernment to make more inviting the 145,000 lunches that it serves every day to Federal workers in the Washington area ?a task that compares to feed- ing the entire population of Paterson, N. J. A Mixed Reaction The remodeled State Depart- ment cafeteria, with its orange- paneled pillars and side walls the color of underripe bananas is the most recently completed. Along with the grill, which also serves up barbecued spareribs and chicken platters, there is a seafood line that includes scal- lops and fish and a shrimp bas- ket with french fries and cole- slaw. The reaction of customers has been mixed. "Well, it's brighter, and they've pu.t in some new equip- employment. ment," an executive secretary in the foreign aid area said over lunch one day. "But I was satisfied the way it was be-. f ore." On the other hand, a young foreign aid specialist who had just emerged from the grill area was happy about the whole thing. "I've been spending more money on lunch because I'm more attracted to the food," he said. "I used to spend about 80 cents; now I average about $1.30, $1.60 a day." The improvement program was begun about three years ago, when the Government's housekeeping agency, the Gen- eral Services Administration, discovered that the 35 cafe- terias that are serviced under one contract in Government buildings hero were losing cus- tomers and money. A Side Benefit The nonprofit corporation that has run the cafeterias for going on 50 years was told to bring in some new management talent and fresh ideas to im- prove the food and surround- ings. "We're trying to get away from the institutional stereo- types ? the long lines, green- gray walls, the dull appearance of foods?and create as much atmosphere as we can, like the cook in the cowboy hat," ex- plained Frank Capps, the G.S.A. official in charge of Govern- ment buildings. The trick was to provide all this and still keep the meals reasonably priced by the stand- ards of Government workers who, according to cafeteria managers, seem to think of lunch as a side benefit of their Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Approved For Release .0k1rFii5P80-01601R0VIIIR9h19e01-8 ,- No flips on CIA Animals have for some time been pres-- sed into service to aid the American war effort. The US Navy has trained dolphins, sea lions, and whales for underwater mili- tary roles. Some reports have suggested that skunks, seagulls, and bats have also been used willy-nilly in defence of the fatherland. The military monthly magazine of the .Algerian 'armed forces, EI-Djeleh, recently wool one boiler. It ela hits that i he CIA luis recruited thes In which have twill attached microscopic transmitters to. act as spies. These winged agents have; of course, the advantage of being able to penetrate innocently to the innermost circles of the enemy's governmental and military estab- lishments ? or at least to the kitchens and dustbins. It is known that they have a. touch of the kamikaze about them, which even China's kill-a-fly-a-day drive (institu- ted as part of the National Programme for Agricultural Development in 1956) would not be able to beat. Our gallant fly heroes are able to fulfil their missions by con- - tinuing to transmit from beyond the grave, after being swatted. From this it may be safely assumed that we shall soon be see- ing President Nixon awarding the widows of these selfless patriots transistorised -Purple Hearts on the White House lawn. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 PRINTING MANAGEMENT STATINTL Approved For Release020011903/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601R0001 Security, job urgency named top factors in intelligence printing 13 Security of the work and urgency of printed jobs are the two para- mount peculiarities involved in the production of printing for intelli- gence, J. Arnold Shaw, printing services division chief, Central In- telligence Agency, told .Craftsmen at their 53rd annual convention in Cleveland. The statutory responsibility call- ing for the protection of intelligence sources .and methods from unauth- orized disclosure, Shaw related, makes the various intelligence pro- ducing offices captive clientele to the CIA's printing facilities. "They must come m us for all their work and we must be able to handle what- ever they give us and within the time frame necessary for the mater- ial," he stated. An extensive security clearance of several months duration is per- formed on all employees, and even though turnover is low compared with other plants, continual process- ing must be conducted in order to fill vacancies. Various work areas inside the CIA printing plant are secured and vaults are available for protection of in-process material. "Simply hav- ing a top security clearance does not automatically grant access to all material, the printing chief re- marked. "Only those having an ob- vious need to see material in-process are permitted to do so. "Strict rules are followed in ac- counting for distribution of each document and assuring that only authorized courier channels are used. Even waste from the plant - must be disposed of in a secure way." The product of CIA is informa- tion and in keeping up with the in- creasing need for .currency in intel- ligence production it is necessary to maintain a modern and progressive plant as well as an awareness of the new technology in all forms of in- formation-handling, Shaw said. Production equipment costing in excess of $21/2 million gives the agency the ability to produce all types of reports, charts, books, pro- cess color photographs, and other material of the . highest graphics quality. Process cameras up to 48- in. size, phototypesetting and line- casting machines, two-color offset presses, and a fully equipped bind- ery are located in the main plant which employs 135 people on a two shift operation. An average of. 3,500 to 4,000 job requests are re- ceived each month, from the CIA's customers setting the delivery date. Although the CIA has explored the feasibility of having some of its classified work printed outside the plant, security considerations and urgency of production create a sit- uation which makes it almost im- possible for a private printing firm to do the jobs on a contract basis. Shaw remarked that a recent pri- vately prepared report showed that the CIA is producing the work at something less than one-half of what a commercial .plant would be expected to bid for the job. For the future, Shaw visualizes an integrated and automated text processing system which will en- able, without separate and special keyboarding, getting text informa- tion into machine language and into computer storage. The system will be able to recall text back on com- puter printout or soft display, as well as compose reports, perform editorial and proofreading func- tions, and produce fully formatted typeset pages in a matter of minutes or hours rather than days. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 WL2i:7:NC;70 POST Approved For Release 2r0014013/047zCIA-RDPF(M. 77 \Lb,' VL.,./ [,2 By Ronald Kessler Washington Post Staff Writer .11 (.7f We.); _ vibrations bouncing off win- to a rernote listening- post, dow panes, The sound waves perhaps miles away. -. Experts skilled in the art from the -windows modulate A third possibility, he says, of wiretapping and bugging the light waves from the would be a radio transmit- :say each has his own. pre- ' laser, and the modulated Ong device hooked up to ferred techniques for carry- light waves are translated the electric current in a ing out their appointed mis- back into sound. home or office. The device sions, but that none of the A third device, once ina- would be implanted in an :methods bears any resembl- planted in a telaphone, can electrical fixture, such as a mice 10 those used a week be activated from anywhere lamp, or could be manufac- yesterday in the abor- in the world by simply dial- tin-cc] aspart of a dummy tive bugging ? attempt: at ing, the number of the tele- electric outlet wall plate, de- -Democratic National Com- phone and placing a tone of tectable only by x-ray. mittec headquarters, a specific frequency on the The device would operate permanently on household Although the methods .fa- lima ? Each of these devices has current mid would be :vored by the professionals ,,s a differ, the common thread drawbacks, not the le In v-treqnency wave long ast of ? p 6nning through all of them which is that the clarity of me ower lines to be picked up a is that they are calculated rans to tmission . doesn't corn. by the eavesdropper t any provide reliable.. high-qua!- pare with that of more con- point along the line. De- itycause the radio signal would voice transmission using Yentional bugs :planted in the simplest and smallest side the premises where the be generally confined to the power line, Bell says, it ayailable ? devices to mini- conversations are taking the risk of detection place, would be difficult to detect its presence through maven- you you go into this, lional de-bugging methods. you have to dolt right, and Another wiretap expert is that means breaking and en- Michael J. Morrissey, chief tering," says Allan D. Bell engineer of B. R. Fox, Inc., a Jr., a former high-level mill- liolmes, N. Y.,- de-bugging tary intelligence wiretapper company formerly headed worked with the CIA and J? debugger w o has , by the late Bernard Spindcl, who was considered by fed- Federal Bureau of Investi- A look at some of these Methods?all illegal except when carried out. by law en- forcement officers armed With court orders?provides Sollie insight, into the cur- rent. state of the art of wire- tapping and bugging. ? - "This is a results-oriented business," says one old-time professional, "You don't get paid for building exotic de- 'You get paid for con- versations," he says. a Considerable publicity has been ?generated by bugging devices hidden in martini ol- 'yes or highly sophisticated bugs - that don't require physical entry into the premises to-be bugged. a. One, said to -be developed by thc Central Intelligence ,4igency, trips a switch in a standard telephone to make 'the hastrument an open mi- crophone, 'transmitting room conversations and telephone calls down the telephone Wire to monitors miles Away. The switch is tripped by placing a radio frequency wave on the telephone wire at ally location outside 'the home or office being bugged. Another device, still being developed by government gation on bugging matters. Bell,- who heads Dektor Counterintelligence & Seen- rity inc., a. Springfield man- ufacturer of de-bugging de- says that if he were ? assigned to bug the Demo- cratic headquarters, he would probably choose from one of three approaches. If only a few days of listen- :lag were needed, Bell says, , he would conceal a fully self-sufficient radio trans- mitter the size of a sugar cube under a conference table or desk. The beauty of such a device, he notes, is that the one responsible for installing it generally can- not be apprehended unless era! .authorities to be the top wiretapper in the court. try. Morrissey says he would plant a combined micro- phone and amplifier the size of a pinhead somewhere along the telephone line or inside the telephone in a room to be bugged. The sig- nal would be led off through the spare wire that comes With most telephone equip- ment, he says. ? Morrissey says he might plant additional pinhead-size microphones in other parts of the room and connect them to the amplifier with invisible electrically conduc- caught in the act. tiVe fluid painted on the For more permanent in- walls or with gold wire thin; stall ations, he says, he tier than a strand of human would wire a telephone in hair. ? the room to be bugged so Morrissey, who teaches a that it becomes an open mi- course in wiretapping and- crophone. The room conver- hugging for law enforce- sations and telephone calls irient agencies, says it is ima Inteihrenee aaencies tses a would be transmitted portant that radio transmit- laser' heath 1443prOkIAPCEotiftelesse-(200140,3404tsrOIA9-1111)P81141601 R000100140001-8 in the telephone equipment of being turned. off remotely. by the listener so that the signals cannot be detected by de-bugging devices. "When you hear the de- bugging people conic in, that's when you pull the switch," Morrissey says. Another bugging expert, with years of experience working for private parties and government agencies, says any premises to be bugged mist be "cased " for several weeks before a break-in attempt is made.. Only one roan actually en- ters the room to be wired for sound and installs the devices, he says, but acveral men are planted outside the office and outside the build- ing to warn the installer by pre-arranged signals if po- lice, burglar alarm dispatch- ers or security guards drive up. "The man outside acts like he's drunk or makes up some story or excuse. A minute's delay is all the in- staller needs to get away," he says. The men involved never take a room near the bug- ging scene, the expert says. Instead, two girls are hired to move into a room nearby, and they tape-record the conversations beamed by the radio bugs, he says. "Girls are the perfect decoy," he says. "No one suspects them, and the equipment is kept in a suit- case that the police can't search without a warrant. This is the way the pros do it," he says. THE BOSTON HERALD TRAVELER 14 May 1972 10 000 oved F.or Release 2001/03/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601R0001 CCIIIS by Kevoiationaties ? to Sn d ones red By GORDON D. HALL (Gordon D. Hall, now in his 26th year of extremist watching, is a .regular contributor to the Sunday .Herald Traveler) Starting tomorrow, the spring offensive of the 'revolutionary Left, thus far a sputtering combina- tion of aimless rhetoric and sporadic violence, will turn to. anonymous telephone harassment of local business firms, military installations, and agencies of the federal government. High on the list of targets are General Electric, Raytheon Company, Polaroid Corporation, arid the ? Boston offices of the Central 'Intelligence Agency and the Air Force. ; The new campaign is known as "Dial foi !Peace," recently organized in secret by a coalii; "tion of revolutionary and pacifist groups.. , Trial runs were niade at a few plants this past .'week to test the "practicability" of flooding com- pany switchboards with hostile calls, .but the major effort will begin tomorrow.morning. ? General Electric's Defense Program Division in Lexington is the first big target. , It is hoped that .1000 revolutionaries and their sympathizers will make 10 calls each, the assump- tion 'being that 10,000 calls are more than enough to immobilize even the largest corporation. - Callers are being asked either to say "Stop. the war," before dialing again to repeat the message, or to ask to speak to plant exec- utives. Ultimately "bottling them up" in ex- tended verbal harassment over the presi- dent's escalation of the air war in Indochi? . ? On Tuesday, the missile systems divisions Of the Raytheon Company's Bedford division will be the target. TO INSURE telephone saturation at the Bedford plant, the "Dial for Peace" organi- zers have plucked Its number from more than a dozen Raytheon telephone listings, and have circulated it in printed form throughout the greater Boston area. V Wednesday's offensive will be directed at ? the Boston office of the Central Intelligence Agency. No explanation has been offered for list- ing the agency's Boston office number which is buried midst hundreds of government list- ings in the telephone directory. A more accessible, though different CIA number can be found among the C's in the, same directory. STATINTL at the headquarters offices of the U.S. Air' Force on Summer street, Boston. The telephone campaign will end Friday', following all 'day harassment of Polaroid's main switchboard in Cambridge. Because of possible legal ramifications, no one group is claiming credit for the or- ganization of "Dial for Peace." THE MAJOR revolutionary and pacifist groups in Boston and Cambridge readily ad- mit their "familiarity" with the week-long campaign, but are unwilling to say much beyond believing the idea to be a good one." At the Greater Boston Peace Action Co- alition's (GBPAC) Cambridge headquarters -last Friday ,spokesmen disclaimed origina- tion of the idea to utilize telephone harass- ment as? a feature of the continuing spring offensive, but thought the. idea "effective." GBPAC, a spearhead of this year's spring offensive ?. aloril with the revolutionary People's Coalition For Peace And Justice (PCPJ), believes the latter group to be the sponsor of the printed instructions outlining the ? telephone campaign. Those instructions were widely distribu- uted throughout Boston and Cambridge on Friday. Printed on van-colored letter size hand- bills, the instructions included by name and number, all five daily targets. Anonymous, the handbills specified that "1,000 people" place 10 calls each, the "10,000" total adding up to a kind of "do-it- yourself" campaign certain "to stop busi.; ness for a day." THE HANDBILL'S final line read: "If they won't stop the war, we'll stop them." At PCPJ's Brookline street, Cambridge headquarters, however, denials .were issued .Friday that they had put the telephone in- structions in circulation. Like GBPAC, PCPJ spokesmen thought the telephone campaign to. be worthwhile, but believed it probably originated at the Cambridge offices Of the Quaker American .Friends Service Committee (AFSC). The -Friends didn't seem to mind that pcmi Was dropping a hot and possibly illegal potato in their laps, but, a woman answer- ing to the name of "Rachel" neither denied nor confirmed that the printed instructions had been run off at their Inman street head- quarters offices. She said she knew all about the telephone Instructions and seemed to think that copies were available in AFSC's " eace section," onApprqyalipiEgrcRptims%401/03/04 arGkA-RDR&0&04 R0001100140001-8 the weekend. . pontinued ? I le ? LnFLZS Approved For Releasei290a03#9A : CIA-RDP80-01601R0 STATINTL CIA SPY KIT! CHINA ATLAS, PUT ON ,SALE WASHINGTON (UPI) ??.For $5.25, any citizen can have his own Cen- tral Intelligence Agency document. : The Government ? Printing Office in 'Wash- ington iS offering for sale 30,000 copies of the CIA's new 82-page, mul- 'ticolored atlas of the ,-.People's Republic of -China. Officials at the GPO said that excdpt for an annual four-volume se- 'ries listing the broad- casting stations' of the ? world, the atlas was the only CIA document they had produced for sale to the public. ? In addition to maps of -.modern China, the atlas, :with ;the CIA's seal on . the cover, also contains historical maps, a num- her of charts describing the growth of the Chi- .. nese economy and a nar- lyative accompanying the maps. and charts. ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Approved For Release 2001/03104: CIA-RDP80-01601R0001 CLEVFLAND, OHIO PLAIN DEALER MAY 1 2,1972 m ? 409,414 S 115,032 CIA Atlas on Chinci 'Looks Like 'Sellout' The first Centra_141,01i- ? gencite7.--publication evt-r-To be sold by the U.S. I Government Printing Office ; "looks like it might be a sellout," Robert Kling, su- perintendent of documents, told The Plain Dealer yesterdajr. ? . The Government Printing Office already has received more than 6,000 orders for ? "The. People's Republic of China Atlas," an 82-page, six-color book, 'designed ori- ginally as briefing material for President Nixon's trip to Mainland China. It was put ? on public sale a-week ago. - GPO ordered 30,878 copies ? ? o f - the atlas printed, with delivery slated for late May. .? Kling, phoned in Washing- ton, said he now believes advance orders could total ? 25,000, and, ? if. so, "We'll have to go back to press with it." The atlas, priced at $5.25, measures 101/4 by 17 inches, ? and contains foldout maps as big as 101/4 x 34. It employes a number of unconventional graphic techniques, in addition to ? standard regional and the- matic maps, charts and photographs, and "is de- signed as an introduction and general reference aid for-those interested in the People "s Republic of China." The atlas contains corn-; parisons . of the United States and mainland (Communist) China to make its statistics more meaningful to the average - American. A CIA spokesman said the agency had never before' of- fered any such publication to the American public. But, he said, President Nixon showed the atlas to reporters ? and before live TV cameras before his trip. So the CIA decided to make it public. Orders for the atlas can be sent to the Superintend- , ent of Documents, Govern- ment P rinting Office, Washington, D.C. 20402., , II STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 VD/ YORK TIMES Approved For Release 20071/00172CIA-RDP80-01601 A C.I.A. Atlas of China Goes on Sale for $5.25 ? WASHINGTON, May 6 (UPI) ?For $5.25, any citizen Can have his own Central Intelli- gence Agency document. ' The . Government Printing Office is offering for sale 30,000 copies of the C.I.A.'s . new 82-page, multicolored at- las of the People's Republic iof China. - Officials at the printing of- fice said that except for an annual four-volume series listing the broadcasting sta- tions of the world, the atlas was the only C.I.A. document they had produced for sale to the public. .- In addition to detailed maps: of modern China, the atlas, which has the C.I.A.'s seal ? on the cover, also contains historical maps, a number of. charts depicting the growth of the Chinese economy, and '' a narrative accompanying. the 'maps .and charts. ?i i STATI NTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Approved For ReleasfiEWMO4F00-89E8?5p1 Hi MAY 1972 ADVANCE ORDER FORM ? ATLAS STATINTL Issued by the Central Intelligence Agency, this colorful publication goes beyond the scope of a conventional atlas. It represents a wider variety of information, including geographic, economic, historical, and cultural data. In the interest of simplicity and clarity, it employs a number of unconventional graphic techniques in addition to standard regional and thematic maps, charts, and photographs. This publication is designed as an introduction and general reference aid for those interested in the People's Republic of China. To make so much information about such a complex and little-known country as meaningful as possible, a great deal of it is placed in a familiar context?that is, by drawing comparisons between China and the United States. 1971. 82 p. $5.25 Place your order now for copies to be mailed about the latter part of May 1972. '1416.0 ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Approved For Release 2001/03/04,saltAADM-0165nn5a1titi 40001-8 10 APRIL 1972 STATINTL PARE'S SPECIAL cii 3.1 BECAUSE OF VOLUME OF MAIL RECEIVED, PARADE REGRETS IT CANNOT ANSWER QUERIES ABOUT THIS COLUMN. HOW NIXON KEEPS IMMO The Presi- dent gets his news in a daily, breezy,highly concentrated digest. Any inference that the. President is poorly informed, . however, would be unfair. He spends hours every day poring over government intelli- gence reports. Each morning, for instance, he receives a ound book with the legend on the cover: "Intelligence Check- list for the President. Top Secret." It is the CIA's mor- ning summation. of the world's events, with punchy headlines on the left-hand page and cap- sulized information on the right. There is also a section of commentary. Dissents by top officials from the conclusions of CIA's majority appear as footnotes, A similar book, called the "Daily Digest," contains often parallel information from the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency. Still another, in a grim black cover, is produced by another arm of the Pentagon, the National Security Agency. It is a distillation of elec- tronic communications gathered by agents around the world and by satellites and other long-range listening devices. NSA employs thousands of technicians in its sprawling headquarters at Fort Meade, Md.--halfway between Washington and Baltimore--to crack the codes of foreign powers and translate their mon- itored voice communications into intotimpaveckhmanNbase The State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Re- search, which also produces daily intelligence summaries, adds its assetsments. All vie for the President's attention and approval. It isn't simply a matter of keep- ing him informed. All the agencies involved are painfully aware that the document de- livered to the President is a sales brochure as well as a news briefing. Our foreign intelligence, in total, costs the U.S. more than $1 million a day. To keep the money coming, the intelli- gence reports are unconscion- ably lavish. At the White House; the State Department's information usually gets short shrift. The Defense Intelligence Agency's report is carefully -studied, particularly for in- formation on Indochina. The aural voyeurism of NSA occa- sionally produces startling developments. But the most literate, most titillating, more carefully read reports come from the CIA. In times of crisis; all these agencies keel the White House in constant touch.with e'very twitch their agents spot. Even when the World seems calm, there is a steady flow. And wherever the President goes to sleep--in Washington, San Clemente, Key Biscayne or Camp David--another report from the CIA is waiting to be read before the lights go off. 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Approved For Release 2001 /0t 3JDP80-016 S... ? ? ? ???? . ? ? . e ( J T.- :11.14.111--11. -11F ????i?- ? 4.4 ? .,...'?.,?..?e?.44:51...lie....;.1.`44,4?????,....Y1;i4111;1;g1;.ilia..1?44.,...cf 4,04?14.15U 4?AU.P.".?Z.??:11,(17, .4,4% ; ? 4?.?[. '? .????,, 4.* V ;W: ? ??? ,.....11/1.1"..? ? ? ? ??????- ? I ? ???,? ????:... ? .???? ? ??.- ? ? .., ???,??? ..? ? .01 %cm. ? . /..;????.% 0',,??'-?)...1;d4?10.,?????;,','???.;.???,ii.t."???.444.. ? ? . , ........ v.:L...., ..,.....r........ .........., .......' .... .................,........... we..., ...L.-A L. .. ? ...-..........? 4 -?????????? ? -...t? . A... ...1 ( ... 1....i.V.4c.C.ei...4it.....18,-..Vt.o.1440Vi.ra:.,U. ?.....,............,....,-1...., 4...........?:....,...4.,-J ......=,.......}.X.,......4.4144....X...... 0 -- / ? e .....o?. IP ALL.,(10.....,...*?..........? AAA, '..1. 14 ...... ; ' . f . , ? ..111..Wr 4.10,,......14...ke?XL.... 0 4....AC,.; ' 7.4?,..-;??;LARG?4' ..:4.-....."1,,,...i... 4.4.0.L.4.;"...;1/4:t43....Z.A..:.? -- . ( ? ? ?-? 1,4 A op.., ? ? ?? .?"". 4.1 ? ......???????????????????.- ? ? ? 4 '? ? Text by Morton Kondraeke - $ Photography by Dennis Brack & Fred Ward a. - - Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100148014d, Approved For Release 206144bR4 :TNAS:RDPW31-610T 28 FEB 1972 U.S. Force on Taiwan Is Said to Number 8,000 ? By RICHARD HALLORAN ' Special to The New York Times WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 ? American forces on Taiwan, re- ported to number 8,000 to 9,000, are there to help defend the Chinese Nationalist refuge and they also support Ameri- can troops in Vietnam? i About half the men are sta- lioned at the Ching Chuan Kang air base in the center of the island near the provincial capital of Taichung, where there are sizable repair facili- ties. Transports often stop there on the way to Vietnam from Okinawa. American defense responsi- bilities under a 1954 treaty are exercised by the Taiwan De- fense Command, headed by Vice Adm. Walter Baumberger. The command has only a few hundred men but could be en- larged if hostilities broke out. Air Force Headquarters The 13th Air Force has a :forward headquarters on Tai- nists came to power on the wan that is a detachn-tent from mainland in 19-19, President IRS Main headquarters at Clark Truman said that the United iAir Force Base in the Pihilip- States would not become in- pines. It too has a small num- volved in any conflict over the ber of men and only a few island, to which Generalissimo Phantom jet fighters. . Chiang Kai-shek and his fol- d fled.ha There have been reports that lowers? the United States has deployed But when the Chinese Corn- nuclear weapons on Taiwan munists entered the Korean war toward the end of 1950, Mr. Truman affirmed American sup- port for the nationalists and be- gan military asSistance to Tai- wan. President Eisenhower in- creased military aid. The 1954 mutual defense trusty defined Nationalist Chi- nese territory as Taiwan and the 'Pescadore Islands in the Foohow PWi . .44213.4sE j/TH t1wo C:/.(44A1 AIR 81,SE CHINA TAWAN 4//2,5/ts,.. ? , The New York Times/Feb. 23, 1972 operation. That presumably will continue to be true as the United States withdraws from Vietnam but the bases may have some use in logistic sup- port .of South Vietnamese forces. History of Defense When the Chinese Commu- but they have been denied by authoritative sources here and In Asia. The American military ad- visory group on Taiwan num- bers abut 300 men. They help train the Nationalist forces and supervise their supply of Amer- ican military equipment and weapons. A contingent of about 1,000 Formosa Strait. American ter- ritory to be defended in any attack was defined as "the is- land territories in the West Pa- cific under its jurisdiction." In 1955, the Senate adopted the Formosa Resolution, which was intended to gi v-e. the Presi- dent a free hand in committing Government agencies also have American forces to the defense extensive radio facilities to ? ? transmit to mainland China and to monitor broadcasts. As President Nbcon has re- mien maintains equipment, runs post exchanges and performs :administrative functions. ? The Central Intelligence Agency and Air America, a pri- vate airline whose only custom- er is the C.I.A., have installa- tions on Taiwan. United States of Taiwan. An effort in the Senate last year to repeal the resolution failed. The Seventh Fleet, which had . duced the number of American gradually reduced its forces in troops in Vietnam, American the Formosa Strait, ceased pa- bases on Taiwan have become trolling that area about two less 'necessary to support that years ago. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Tfl'GTON POST Approved For Release 2OO1Va/d472:CIA-RDP80-01601R00 STATINTL one tween ancient? . . , WestkIneton Post PoraliT Service and conteth- Aboard the: aircraft, for . 7 HONOLULU, Feb. ? 18 ? .porary China. - instance, is Theodore H. Most press airplanes accom- A select number of report- White, who was a? corre- panying the President on his, ers are also armed with a spondent for Time Maga- trips look like holiday excur- new atlas of China prepared zine in China during World . sions, with newsmen drink- by the Central Intelligence1 War II and afterward wrote Ing, playing cards or joking ! Agency. A pool of newsmen the bestselling "T h u n d e r with the stewardesses. But ' aboard the President's air- Out of China." Henry Hart- the reporters currently going plane, the Spirit of '76, asked zenbusch of the Associated with Mr. Nixon to Peking 3,1r. Nixon if he thought the Press was born in Shanghai strangely resemble a class- Chinese would tolerate such and lived there for years, room of China students material in their country. and the Wall Street Jour- cramming for their final . . The President, who appar- nal's Robert L. K e a tie y ,exams. ently had not seen the atlas spent a month in China in ,. Instead of trading old anec- before, examined it, then May. dotes about previous presi- laughed loudly and quipped: The language capability idential 'voyages, as reporters "This will . probably show of the reporters is virtually u i usually do on such journeys, how much we don't know zero, however. To improve , the journalists on this flight ab out China." . this gap somewhat, news- are talking about such eso- The main collection or re. men have been issued man- terie subjects as Mao Tse- search matter provided re- uals featurihg such phrases ? Tung's relations with Chou porters by the administra- as "Wo Yau Yi Tau Mao En-Lal, Sino-Japanese trade tion is a handsome, loose- Jrfu," or "I would like a and the composition of the leaf volume containing in- Mao suit." . Chekiang Province Commu- formation about China rang- The manual also advise.l nist Party; committee, whose ing frbrn its literacy rate reporters how to order leaders. the President will and Gross National Product bacon and eggs in Mandarin meet when he visits the re- to the li.ne-up of its leaders. Chinese. But it does not sort city of Hangchow. . The roster of leaders has contain the phrase "Long, ' The newsmen on this trip . .. _ _ews been carefully brought up Live President Nixon." are also voraciously reading to date, since it does not ? books and articles on China. include Defense Minister The most popular book on Lin Piao and 10 other full the aircraft, a Pan American and alternate members of Boeing-'707 converted to con- the ' ruling politburo who tam n only first-class seats, is have been purged. This also "the U n it e d States and suggests that the administra? China" by Prof. John Fair- tion o f if i c i a 11 y considers ; bank, head of Harvard's East them to have been elimi- Asia Research Center and nated?though the subject dean of American China of domestic Chinese politics Feholirs. is rarely mentioned by - Another reading matter White House spokesmen. t -being absorbed include the The research. material recent articles in the Atlan- provided by the administra-. tic Monthly by Rose Terrill, tion also offers some po- also a Harvard China sfhol, laical details. Among other ar, who spent 40 days tray- , things, it says that high-heel eling around China la'. shoes "are extremely dan- summer. . gerous" at the Great Wall, In addition ,to these obvi- which the President and ous works, more e x o t i c Mrs. Nixon will visit. books are being studied by 14Iost of the newsmen en . a few ambitious newsmen, route to Peking candidly John Chancellor of the Na- _concede to their ignorance tional Broadcasting Com- about China. But a handful pany, for example, is buried on the press airplane can in the "I Ching," the classic claim to varying degrees of Chinese book of changes, expertise or at least famili- searching. ?, for parallels uv" aritv witll China ' Approved For Release zoolio3/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001.-8 Approved For Relealehiiiiiiik/EbrieFIDP80- 1 8 FEB 1972 STATI NTL riefly Peking ? . . ? The President brought along an atlas of Chi- na prepared by the CIA. On the plane he won- dered whether he would be allowed into a communist country with a book bearing the CIA: legend: Approved For Release 2001103/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 RUMA EVENTS. Approved For Release 2001/63?04E.BdU?RDP80-0 Drugs Used as Well STATINTL Will American-Made Computors liolp Soviets Put Down Dissont? -3 By PAUL SCOTT The proposed sale of large, modern about the new method of destroying of Scheuer, KGB officials American computers to the Soviet dissent in Russia. In their opening para- lot more interested in what nformation, appeared a - Union has raised an explosive moral graph, the Bishops Warned: . i issue in addition to a security one for the "Terrible news has reached us .from' if any, Lerner might have passedl on about what Soviet computers are being Nixon Administration. ? Russia. Religious people, and those, used for than anything else. . The moral question, now being sharply citizens vindicating their right to think The incident and the raising of the .debated at the highest levels of the gov- otherwise than in terms of party direc- moral issue have given Defense De- ernment, involves whether the U.S. tions, have been whisked away to so- should provide the Kremlin computers called 'Special Psychiatric Hospitals.' partment officials, who have been op- that can be used to tighten government Subjected to drugs, they are numbed posing the sale of American compu- control over the lives of Soviet citizens and can no longer defend their faith." ters to the Soviets on security. grounds, new hope that the State and and to help suppress the growing polit- The Declaration of Frankfurt never' . ical dissent in that country. caused much of a stir in U.S. official Commerce departments might w ith draw their support for sales to the - In an article being carefully studied circles until recently when a Soviet Russians. , at the White House, the distinguished defector revealed that the Russians were / pyne.rt on Soviet affairs, Victor ?Zorza, using Western-made computers to '1 described the growth of the massive corn- gather information on all dissenters to Russia, the Defense Department Instead of supporting computer sales . puterized information system in Russia as part of their new drive to destroy officials argue that the State Department and the way Soviet planners intend to use all internal political dissent. it as.a weapon of thought control. Zorza should be going all-out to support Soviet computer specialist Alexander an international move to condemn the Lerner, dinner tiost recently to Rep. Russians' perversion of computers and wrote: ? "...The main purpose of such system James H. Scheuer (D.-N.Y.), who was psychiatry into tools of political repres- , would be to prevent any disloyal ideas' expelled for the meeting, continued sion. from even taking shape in the heads the use of computers by the government ? The Canadian Psychiatric Association, of Soviet citizens.... The full records there to smash dissent. ' on the initiative of Dr. Norman B. Hirt, of Vancouver, has called on all medicai of his psychological characteristics and Rather than be a party to the Krem- lin's effort to control the minds of Rus- and psychiatric societies---including the actions could be used to devise an ap- . : .that his best interests require him to World Health Organization .of, the proach that would quickly persuade him sian citizens, Lerner risked being sent United Nations?to denounce the So- conform to the political guidance of his spiritual adviser at the KGB [the Soviet ing an open letter to a mental institution himself by sign- with eight colleagues viet's new form of tyranny. sup- secret policed" appealing for support to leave the coun - The move has been getting good - port from most Western governments try. The Zorza report, along with other Lerner in his talk with Americans fur- except the United States. Dr. Henry i information gathered by the Central nished details of the 'Special Psychiatric Kissinger, the President's chief foreign Intelligence Agency, clearly shows Hospitals,' collaborating with the KGB policy-maker, reportedly has blocked how the power of a computerized in- and their use of computers, in Moscow, support on the grounds "such action formation system, coupled with mood Leningrad, Kaluga, Minsk and other might jeopardize relations with the So- creating or altering biochemical dis- cities. viet Union." The President must now . coveries, provide a new tool for .sup- pressing dissent in Russia. ? decide whether this . policy will be ap- With the Russians seeking to pun- plied to computer sales. chase upw?rd of 15,000 computers in One of the CIA's documents is a 200- the U.S. and Western Europe over the page account of Soviet perversion of next five years, Soviet defectors have psychiatry and computers into weapons warned that many of these will be put of political repression. The account to work controlling and suppressing 'dis-. was smuggled out of Russia by friends sent within. the Soviet Union. of some of the KGB victims. The American-made computers, they It stresses how the new technology, report, also are being sought for use symbolized by computer power, is be- in the Soviet's space and weapons pro- coming the operative arm of the Soviet grams which could greatly endanger government's program of locking polit- this country's security and lead in several ical dissenters in mental institutions.. strategic fields. ? . A conclave of the Bishops of the Rus- The importance that the Soviets give sian Orthodox Church.outside of Russia,? to computers and their operations is m- in Frankfurt, Germany, issued a little- dicated by the swift reaction of the KGB noticed but moving "Declaration to to Lerner's meeting with Rep. Scheuer. ChristianAfilDICOVedfrertdReWaStr 20G1/031:0411 CAI4OP803046014 R000100140001-8 ? Scheuer on the spot: In their questioning tt. STATINTL fl1el mrpoN DAILY ""7"*.,_ ""_114"-,."E Approved For Release 20611103/9Ft: CIA-RDP80-0 rU L L"'62.[--K l''...(-) r I As British influence in Africa declined, so did British secret se , sending hundreds of agents to African capitals like Accra, La to buttress "sensitive" states against communism and protect E. H. Cookridge continues his exclusive series on the CIA HE adventurous operations often bordering on the bizarre which the Central Intelligence Agency pursued in many parts of the world are usually / ascribed to one man: Allen Dulles. J They culminated in the abortive in- vasion of Cuba in 1961. When Dulles departed from the directorship of CIA after the Bay of Pigs debacle, he certainly left an indelible stamp of his influence as the architect of the mighty CIA edifice and its worldwide rami- fications. The policy of his successors has, however, been no less forceful. CIA activities under its present director, . Richard MeGarrali Helms, may appear less aggressive because they are being conducted with greater caution and less publicity, and because they have- been adroitly adjusted to the changing climate in international poli- tics. In the past CIA gained notoriety by promoting revolutions in Latin American banana republics, and sup- porting anti-communist regimes in South-East Asia. Its operations in Africa were more skilfully camou- flaged. For many years they had been on a limited scale because the CIA had relied on the British secret service to provide intelligence from an area where the British had unsurpassed ex- perience and long-established sources of information. But with the emergence of the many African independent countries, the wave of "anti-colonial- ist" emotions, and the growing in- filtration of Africa by Soviet and Chinese "advisers", British influence declined. Washington forcefully stepped, through CIA, into the breach, with the avowed aim of containing communist expansion. Financial investments in new in- dustrial and mining enterprises, and lsvish economic aid to the emerging governments of the "underdeveloped" countries, paved the road for the influx of hundreds of CIA agents. Some com- bined their intelligence, assignments with genuine jobs as technical, agri- cultural and scientific advisers. The British Government - parti- cularly after the Labour Party had come to power in 1964 - withdrew most of their SIS and MI5 officials from African capitals, though some remained, at 19V3Yber rulers, to organise their own new m- nn nne would have suspected of hay- (1 and security services. CIA attractive, motherly woman, whom ing hydro-electric power for the fr7,) Ct-1; ? . ? " f 41T 4 , f ?=11111M11. I(-''7''.77 . ? A - ? - ,.4 . ? '4'57(4 -?r ? A bloodless coup in Uganda in January last and installed Major-General Idi Amin as mill a section of his troops). How far was the C protest in Santa Domingo. A pro-rebel poster attacks American intervennon . , 0 - (PELEEN. Tr. men began hurriedly to establish their 'ng served for many years as a skilful "stations" in Accra, Lagos, Nairobi FBI agent before joining CIA and Kampala, Dar-es-Salaam, Lusaka, the being employed at Addis Ababa, "sensitive areas" in danger of slipping Nairobi. and Dar-es-Salaam, acquir- under communist sway. ing fluency in Swahili. By 1965 the By the mid-1960s several senior CIA Accra CIA Station had two-score officials, such as Thomas J. Gunning active operators, distributing largesse and Edward Foy, both former U.S. among President Nkrumah's secret Army Intelligence officers, were firmly adversaries. established at Accra. They were later The Americans had every intention joined by William B. Edmondson, who of helping Ghana's economy by build- e2Opt&F$/pispsig-RIAPS041(60411YOgiteirtr4101--8 nca, an te a avis, sortium, the Volta am, hu o - ? STATINTL ?%1-.7 .4 Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 RAIXIGH, N.C. NEWS & OBSERVER M ? 130,652 S ? 148,247 !DEC 6 1871- DURHAM ? It's faster than pencil, more a platoon of able to hurdle of data in a a speeding powerful than file clerks, and vast quantities single leap. But it's not a bird, a plane or Superman. It's a computer program developed by the Na- final Laboratory for Iligher Education ? (NLHE) in Durham, formerly t h e Regional 1 Education Laboratory for the Carolinas and Virginia, an independent, nonprofit organization. established in 1966. 'Like Supertnan, the NLHE Information System is tackl- ing a lot of problems. it's helping conservation t officials chart pollution in the Great Lakes, guilding lonely hearts in New York City to their Soulmates, aiding the CBS Election News Unit prepare voter profiles, and helping the CIA do whatever it is the CIA does.' ? Actually, the system was designed to meet needs much more mundane. About 250 col- leges and universities have small-scale computers, but have been unable to make maximum use of them because there' was no system that could easily classify and retrieve information in .4 form useful to administre . s. So NLHE, together with two colleges, dove com- puter program to meet this need -- a progi am that od- ministrators can use \a:thout having a computer specialist write a special set of in- structions for the computer. /en C:15 e In March, the - two in of watee depth; temperature; ? etitutions that helped NLHE localica of fish, their age and: develop the system ? Furman spe(rirs; end the -level- of University, Greenville, S. C., poi..->oas present. r and Clarke College, Dubuque, Iowa -- declared it. ready. for Ieebreaker, In., ieNew an extensive trial. York City is a computer ? dating firm. It uses the Furman used the system to system to match ellents and generate more than 25 dif- to give Cupid a technological. ferent reports :for. its add' shove. Age, hobbies, educe- missions office, and saved an tion, ? location, and personal estimated 800 man-hours of preferences are fed into the programing Unie iitF r? corPeuter, n ahd the cess. Clarke, used the system helps mat,h star-cressed er kl. to handle class registration ata-ertined love: .1 and other student records, CBS Election Nevis Veit produoing,-, more than 100 pe using the systnertieBnalyze reports and saving --an past election trends, erenpare estimated 400 hours of Pro- them with present opinioff graining time., ? ' polls, and spot likely 7inner3 The lab Oratory Then 'Offered in the 1972 erection. the system to the. 2S0 colleges. with small-scale computers. The system consists of two .manuals and a deck of com- puter cards,- and was made available for $25, the cost of , producing and mailing the materials: Diverse Users .j -- Within eight months, More than 160 of the 250 potential COne.::1 users had acquii.ed system. More surprisingly, about 137 reheols, other non- profit' org,anLetions, gaverne ment agencies, and com- mercial . firms have aenuiteLli the system. Peter Haack of the' Great Lakes Fisheries 'Laboratory, U.S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife, ? Ann Arbor, Mich., is using the -.system, to keep track .of DDT, iseieldrin, mercury, _ and other poisons in the Great Lakes. The system helps Haack. a'cp abreast of the effects Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 CIII. Approved For Release 200i/Oilidil:T: 6i-A--Ik152140-01601R0 1, DE G 1971 . . H AVING lived in New York for several deCades one summer, I feel qualified to give sage advice of new residents of ?Bugh- dad, I mean, Baghdad on the Hudson: I reter,e of course, to the Rd Chinese U.N. delegates.One of the first things they'll have to learn is .that N Yorkrs often refer to the city by 'other names: Manhattan, Gotham, the aforesaid Baghdad. on the Iludson use those other names is because if they really called New York what they wanted to, I couldn't print it. ? The Chinese may misunderstand certain things, such as gar- bage collection and street cleaning. As a contribution to antipol- lution efforst, the city fathers are trying to clump as little Ouse as possible in city dunvs or out at sea. The best way. to accomplish this is to not pick up garbage and trash in the streets. Then there's no need to .dump it at se, See? At som !point - the Chinese' may think their phones ere tapped, simply bcauso when dialing their quarters from the U.N. they may oceasiorially get the New York ciao of the CIA. .Other antes they may -get Sos Pizza Shop.: I advise the. .Chinese not to. worry about this. It simply means that N.Y.C.'s. telephone fifth are a bit confused. (If :VD any comfort to them, .even the CIA often gets Joe's Pr a Shop.) Folks laugh at the Reds for buying everything with $100 bills .and Waiting politely for change. Well, they won't be silly for - -very long, because with inflation the way it Is and' with the prices in New York anyway, pretty 'soon $100 will BE change. (Yeah, I know, that's an old joke: But the Chine-se don't know . that ? they just got here, rernember&)C)h, and a word about ?strikes. Whenever there is a strike of some labor force in New York, the Red Chinese should ? beling Communists and natur-- ally sympathetic to workers simply not go to work. That way, I figure they can miss about.219 days per year. - .--rinally, here. is sore- advice about getting' along with the. _natives: To make friends with a New York cab driver, the ? Chinese Shonld give him belpftit.hints on the routes and warn - him of various .traffic regulations. Bus drivers are delighted tc help''yoti. on rd- off the bUscis, hut you must ask them: In restattl'ants, never tip. 'This is an insult to the. working-claSSes: "..:New York policemen love to he ealle-V'copper-s" and a swell- Way to make a hit withone ust now. is to sayirliley, how come yOuweren't on TV with theothers?" (This is in reference to a .question-and-answbr show New Yorpolice bad recently.) By - .following: these suggestions, the Reds should really: find New ..York to be -Fun City! ?? . , ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 ? 1.3ALT.IMORE NEWS Ana-CC:AU Approved For Release 2001/93& .1W-RDP80-01 ?:to STATINTL DR. MINSHY has convincingly forecast to the State-Defense ,think-tanks that within eight years we will have a machine with file general intelligence of a human being?able to read Shakes- peare, grease an automobile; think for .itself. It could travel about the moon for months and Without a single beep of directions from the earth?fundamentally' different from the Soviet moon-exploring Lunokhod 1, which was earth-controlled. It could gather- rocks, drill cores, originate ?surveys, think of photographs. and even decided to lay planks over crevices it had made up- its mind to cross. At the Stanford Reseaich Institute a prototype is already performing with the general intelligence abili- OEN EV AT ILO liq ? -? wf "21j1.6-1 Clilti.13. re 0111111311iltg - ... ? - - ? ? ?_- lies of a four-year-old child. .. ? - - ? - Subject to NATO ahd U. S. Government approval, Interna- l? With this breakthrough, and with the modifications that are tional Business Machines has received a Soviet order for a super ahead, the machine will begin to educate itself at fantastic speeds. -giant Computer?the largest Russia would have.' . . It can head straight for' the genius level .and, literally, its powers -? . Only nine American mini computers are in place there today. seem incalculable. , . . This one is IBM's incredible 360-195, capable of handing 16 . Several State-Defense think-tankers regard as optimistic' a million programmed instructions per segond? timetable of less than 15 years from now. But they agree that -yes, per second. - . -- _ . -? '- ' ?-- the breakthrough is here, that man-made self-educating "men" The related think-tanks in our State, De- who actually think for themselves are indisputably in our ? future, ,i,? partment and Defense Departraent ha-ve come and that the mentality of the best of these will in certain respects up with a joint Conviction regarding computers. far, far. surpass_ ours. _ . Both departments and dealing with merely dif- ferent asPects of essentially, the same prob- lem: America's' standing in the world. And their joint conviction is that computer power is now: an index of national strength comparable to steel production before World War n. . . . THE 'COMMON MAIlIcET NATIONS have only. about one-fifth . the computers of the United States. With Great Britain in the Com- mon .Market the nations would have one-third. On a relative basis, . Russia is truly now a have-not nation. The U.S.S.R.. lags far behind Japan, West Germany, Britain and France, and simply fails to hold a candle to the United States. ? . . . .- ? Actually, however, the State-Defense think-tanks find that the ? computer-age advancement-areas are mostly ahead of us. ' - , A super giant computer such as 11-3M may sell .Russia makes. an error about every 30 minutes. But this is equivalent to one hu- ' ? man errorevery 13 years, so much work does it do before making ? a mistake. Today's advanced computers can do in a few hours all the arithmetic estimated ever te;_have been done by hand by every- -one in all recorded history. . : . ? ? OUR NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY has the world's most elaborate computer system. Boeing!, in turn, has $100 million worth of computers. Without these, the 741's wing 'alone would have: taken -.company engineers 20 years of computations. ? . . ? ? The newest nuclear reactor designs will require about 100 NI- lion?yes, billion?computations. Computers will soon .provide the answers in a matter of days. Our Central Intelligence Agency no?,v has a donverter that turns, Russian into English at the rate of 30,000 words an hour. And so nt goes. , ' YOU CAN GET any kind of logical result. But everything -a computer can do must be done within the logical sequence you . . ? halie set up for it. Whatever you program into it is the limit of its thinking. You can compose a sonnet in a computer. You can Study the effect of Milton's style on Shelley. You can write music. But it is completely derivative. ? However, in a vast, basic leap forward, that hitherto inviolate limitation is being 'penetrated. ? . ' ? -.. ? .- . Facing disaster on the M0011 and down to 500 feet, Neil A. Armstrong -took 15 art of the control away from the computerized automatic control system. With his right hand he manipulated the . altitude of his vehicle, Eagle, holding it while he could peer out of the window into the 'fateful bolder-strewn crater below, the size_ ? of a football -field. With his left hand he began to carry Eagle down, ? with a gentle bump 1,210 feet beyond the crater. Two Americans, ' ? blessings be, had landed on the moon. But now enter Massachu- setts Institute of Technology professor Marvin Minsky in charge - of its Project MAC. ,??? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDF'80-01601R000100140001-8 BALTimoRE nus AHERNEE Approved FOr Release 20013/1:13V4Y: a-RDP80-01601R00 .17.E NMI!dT 'JP AV PAN, 1-1)?1ft 1.51 - Behind the scenes-Presid(mt Nixon's confidence in Central Intelligence Agency Director Richard : M. Helms basetaken a new leap _forward. Mr. Nix- on believes (correctly) that our nation's in- telligence setup is a sick elephant. He has quietly assigned Mr. Helms to correct it,. . A Sick .eleplusat is a formidable danger. And :secrecy keeps our public from knowing even the size of this elephant, to say nothing of bow sick itis. - . inceedibly, we spend close to $3 billion a year, for intelligence. Just the CIA alone is larger in scope than the State Department and spends more than twice as much money. Legendary Gen. William J. ("Wild. Bill") Dono?,?an's Office of Strategic Services conducted oitr entire World War II espionage throughout four years ancl throughout the. world for a total $135 million. The budget of the CIA (secret) is at least $1.5 billion .a year.. . . ? a --- .. ... ? . NEXT TO TDB PENTAGON with its 25 miles cf corridors, the world's largest office building, 6?,-- the CIA's headquarters in suburban Langley, Va., is the largest building in the Washington area. The CIA has jurisdiction only abroad, not in the 'United /States. But the CIA maintains secret offices in most major U.S. cities, totally unknown to the . public. . _ . ? . . . . . . . . About 10,000 people . work at Langley and another 5,010 are scattered across the world, bur- rowing everywhere for intelligence. These include many, many unsung heroes who secretly risk their ? lives for our country in the dark and unknown battles of espionage and treachery. I could name ' many. And as a p'art of its veil of secrecy the CIA has itS .own .clandestine communications system with Washington and the world.. . . a . : ? ' The Pentagon spends $3 billion a year on in- -Jail-1,cm?1 twice as much as the CIA. Like the CIA, its Army, Navy, and Air Force intelligence : arms opeeate worldwide, of course, - and ? ; largely unknown ? they also have an immense :adjunct called the National Security Agency which ;rivals the CIA in size and cost. . ., ? Then there :exists the - important Intelligence- - -Section of the State Department, likewise world- wide. Its chief reports directly to Under Secretary 0 Ti STATI NTL ...STATINTL of State John N. Irwin 2n4,. it is understandably very close to its vest. ADDITIONAL intelligence agencies ? al growing, all sprawling, all costly spread out In to the world from the Office Of the Secretary of Defense, the Atomic Energy Commission, National Aeronautics ?37. Space .Administration (NASA) an even the Department of Commerce. In fact, there are so many additional hush-hush agencies that recently in West and East Berth alone there were at least 40 known U.S. in telligence agencies and their branches ? most of them' competing with one another. Mr. Helms himself defines intelligence as "all the things which should be known in advance a initiating a course of action." .The acquisition o intelligence is one thing; the interpretation of it i another; and the use of it is a third. The 191 statute creating the CIA limits it to the first two. I also makes the CIA directly responsible to th President. But it is simply not true that the Cl is the .over-all responsible agency, as is so st.ridel believed. - ' ? Again and again, no one and everyone la ? ? responsible. - ..? - . ? a , . . - -? - ..-? - ? THE FUNCTION of intelligence is to protect us from surprises. It's not working that way. The sick elephant is threatening our national security by' surprise, Surprise, surprise. - Alarmed President Nixon has given Mr. Helms new ? and sweeping intelligence reorganization authority on an over-anasis. He has given bins the first authority ever given anyone to realew,?, and thus effect, ? all our foreign intelligence. agencies' budgets. The President believes Mr. Helms, this undercover world' S most experienced pro, can cut at least $1 billion out of the morass, The President confided that he is totally fed up"i with the intelligence community's 'duplications'; ? contradictions, self-protective vagueness and dangerous rivalries. He has made it clear that he - -wants its output brought closer tO the. needs of the. President's so-called 40 Committee (actually six men), which serves the National Security Council-, and the President himself. .? . . In amputating much of the sick elephant, Mr: - Helms' directive is to cut dean on the surprises.. And the President could not have picked a more . knowing, no-nonsense man to do it. . Approved For Release 2001/03/04 : C1A-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 STATI NTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R00 QUINCY, MASS. PATRIOT LEDGER E - 65,785 ? oct 20 ISA! GSA Awards- $61.3 Million Pact To Honeywell. WALTHAM ? Honeywell In- formation .Systcms Inc. was awarded a $61.3 million federal contract last week to supply the Pentagon, Air Force and CIA with computer systems, a- corn- ,pany spokesman said yesterday. .The contract, awarded by the federal General Servic e.s Ad- ministration, calls for nine large scale "Series 6,000" computers with the option to acquire 26 ad- ditional computer .systems, dur- ing fiscal 1972-1973. The systems will be used for the World Wide Military Com- mand and Control Systems and for government intelligence, the spokesman said. The contract will not mean any additional personnel for t h e , Waltham plant, but expansion is planned in the Oklahoma City and the Phoeitix plants, he said. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Approved For Release 200110311J4: C1A-RDP80-016 7 OCT 1971 STATINT T'rf ? kr if 0g; 4"'t ?F,,n tiee, trt., ut,-171-1 - (r-i) L cc-. - ? CIT CM :I ,0 0 . 11--ci 4 RD; (i)1 Iii iay(-i Ii:, 1111 ? ? - ' rn I `11 s I N--7v I.; 1-i ix- 1 I Ji 11 " A ) 1 1Li By Aldo Beck:mall agencies. Diplomatic cables go first to Kissinger is occasionally called, and . the Department of State, intelligence McManus receives several calls a Mr. Tice7anon is a member. 'of The 's Washington B urea n. He is reports are routed to the..Gentral InteIli- week on the White House phone next to Tribune gezice Agency, and milicary up-dates his bad assigned to the. White House. . are moved to the Pentagon. He and James Fazio, 33, deputy di- WASHINGTON?More than '1F0 intel- ligence reports a day poUr into a plainly decorated suite of rooms nestled into ?a corner of the White House. basement.. Many are routine but the knowledge that reports of any attack on the United States by a hostile power would reach here first creates a pressure-cooker at- mosphere for the young staff that mans the facility 24 hours a clay, seven days a week. There are no holidays in the White House Situation Room, the strategically important focal point upon which the President of the United States must rely for instant information. Modern communications, well-organized dissem- ination procedures and a dedicated staff are intertwined with a world-wide intelligence network and aimed at tt goal. of informing' the President of events anywhere in the world within 'minutes after they occur. Dependent on Other Agencies David McManus, 34, the quietly confi- dent director of the Situation Room is quick to 'emphasize that the success of his operation is dependent, in a large measure, to similar intelligene:veceiv- ing facilities in the Departments of State and Defense, and in the Central Intelligence Agency., "We live off the fruits of other aE,rem cies," he said during an interView in .the paneled conference Morn, where the indirect lighting, the cork wall designed for easy stamping of world maps, and the impressive-looking rectangular con- ference table leave a visitor with the feeling that the room could be 'mat as a movie ? prop for a White House war room. McManus, in an obvious' effort to stifle interagency rivalries that once .are rampant in the United States in- telligence community, estimated that 97 ,?? ? ?. oASSliig,en Occasionally Called per cent -of ithe reports reachingo the Situation Re PPKWA aFfar Release,2001103404sCIARDP80-01601R0001 etticif000l -8 ." dozen rooms--?are relayed thru Other called by one of the duty officers, but However, intelligence outposts, wheth- rector of the Situation Room, take turns being "on call." 'Whoever is on call never goes to had without telephoning the duty officer for an update on re- ports and, when not in bed, is never without a "page boy," an electronic device the size of a tiny transistor radio whose buzz can be activated in the Situ- ation Room, signalling its carrier to or they are radar stations in the frozen Arctic keeping an eye on flight patterns of Soviet bombers' over the North Pole, or intelligence vessels tailing a Soviet submarine off the North Carolina coast, have the capability to flash information directly to the White House. ' ? Dozen Teletype Machines The overthrow of a head of state, unusual bomber deployments by a po'- tentially hostile pov:er, or the sighting of missiles heading toward the United &ales would be flashed directly to the White House Situation Roam. The reports move into the White House on one of a dozen teletype ma- chines in the 'bomb shelter under the East Wing and are dispatched immedi- ately to the Situation Room, in the Welt Wing, via a pneumatic tnbe, 'arriving there 34 seconds later. One of the two or three duty.officers on duty receives the report and has the authority to instantly and personally contact:the President, regardless of the time of day or night, if he believes the report is of such importance. The ca- pability for instant Presidential contact is maintaine.ct by the Army Signal Corps and is there whether the Presi- dent is sleeping in the White House res- idence, working in his Oval Office, on board Air Force I over the Pacific, or riding in a motorcade thru downtown Belgrade. "If the missiles are coming Or way, the President has to know it," -Me-. Maims explained. Those some duty officers also have the authority to immediately contact Henry Kissinger, Nixon's assistant for national security affairs, or McManus, if a report arrives that. requires some quick attention. immediately telephone his office. The two young intelligence analysts O1 so take tuens. coming into the office shortly after daivo to put the finishing teeehes on the President's daily inlelU- eiice briefing.. The three or four page report, can- ing 10 to 12 single or double paragraph items, represents the highlights of re- ports received during .the previous 24 hours. Kissinger wants it by 8 a. m. ? and sometimes asks that items be "re- worded to more accurately reflect his feeling on a subject. ? "It's our daily newspaper," said Mc- Manus, "but we don't try to be .compre- hensive." An effort is made, however, to focus On what currently is under, dis- cussion in the National Security Coun- cil. - ? The daily briefing, which Kissinger carries in to the President, is not intend- ed to serve as a working paper, but -is designed to present, in capsule form for the chief executive, the latest develop- ments thruout the world. Daily status reports on the action in South Viet Nam are included. Several weeks ago, Nixon learned the results of a bombing raid he had ordered to wipe out a fuel dump ner the demilitarized' zone in North Viet Nam, when he read the report from the Situation Room. Nixon has spent...little time in the room since his inauguration, in marked contrast to his predecessor. . . . ''President Johnson was here a lot," ? recalled McManus, who served as . ? V. s.IT.173 .t; WORLD - Approved For Release 2001/03/QC c.IA-RDP80-01601 - uui STATINTL .rt ?I:, r?rs,? ?,? L11%11, ? is:.1 1 ?,::::-.1 , ' ? 1ivz:1 -'1.2.-1 i 1 /7-7''''?\ tf C.:::? 11 i \ 1 ..-_-1 11,:::::1 C i.,---.1 1,--'1 [1: '1% i I +.7.:-..) \ t /\C.\r:.4 Ii \' \\ [I. 11 STATINTL Is the CIA starting to spy on Americans at home?turning talents and mo.i, against students, blacks, others? That is one of several key questions raised in a wide ranging criticism. A direct response starts on page 81. STAT1NTL - `Ti7r.f:FY..':f?71iJLeiX The following was written by Edward K. DeLong of United Press International, based on an interview with a Contra! Intelligence Agency official. who has ye- signecl. The dispatch was distribuNd by UPI for pub- lication oh October 3. . . ? Victor Marchetti embarked 16 years ago on a career that was all any aspiring young spy could ask. But two years ago, After reaching the highest levels of the Central Intelligence Agency, be became. disenchanted with what he perceived to . be amorality, overwhelming military influence, waste and duplicity in the spy business. He quit. ? - Fearing today that the CIA may already have begun "go- ing against the enemy within" the United States as they .? may conceive it?that is, dissident student groups and civil- sights organizations?Marchetti has launched a campaign for IS-lore:presidential and congressional -control over the entire U. S. intelligence community. -"I think we need to do this because we're getting into an awfully dangerous era when we have all this talent - (for clandestine operations) in the CIA?and more being de- veloped in the military, which is getting into clandestine "ops" (operations)---:and there just aren't that many' places any more to display that. talent,: Marchetti says. "The cold war is fading. So is the war in Southeast Asia, except for Laos. At the smile time, we're. getting a lot of - domestic .problems. And there are people in the CIA who? if they _aren't right now actually already running domestic operations against student groups, black movements and the like?are certainly considering it. , "This is going to get to be very, tempting," Marchetti said in a recent. interview at his comfortable, home in Oak- ton, [Val, a Washington suburb where many CIA Ilion live. "There'll be a great temptation for these people to sug- gest operations. and for a Piesident to approve them or to kind of look the other way. You have the danger -of intelli- gence turning against the nation itself, going against the 'the enemy " Marenetti speaks of the CIA from an insider's point of view. At Pennsylvania State University he deliberately pre- Pared himself ApprbvitprbRebsca4ea2ooitinfo4 : with a degree in a ssian stu r ies and ustory. Through a professor secretly on the CIA payroll as a talent scout, Marchetti netted .the prizea 11 ? would-be spies dream of-an immediate job offer from the CIA. The offer came during a secret meeting in a hotel room, set up by a stranger who telephoned and identified himself only as "a friend of your brother." Marchetti spent one year as. a CIA agent in the field ai STAT I N ? n more as an analyst of intelligence relating to the Soviet Union, rising through the ranks until he was helping pre- pare the national intelligence estimates for the White House.: During this period, Mar- chetti says, "1 vas a hawk. believed in , what we were doing." Then he was promoted to the executive staff of ? the CIA, moving, to an of- lice on the top floor of the Agency's headquarters across the Potomac River from Washington. For three years he worked as special assistant to the CIA .Chief of plans, programs and budgeting, as special assistant to the CIA's executive director, and as executive assistant to the Agency's deputy director, V. Adm. Rufus , 2 < e's>7/ c / -? 'My. Marchetti L. Taylor. "This put me in a very rare position within the Agency and within the intelligence community in general, in that I was in a place where it was being all pulled together," .Marchetti said. "I could see how intelligence analysis was done and how it- fitted into the scheme of clandestine operations. It also gave me an opportunity to. get a good view of the intelligence community, too: the National Security Agency, the DIA:' (Defense intelligence Agency), the national -reconnaissance organization?the whole bit. And I started to see the polities within the community and the politics between the com- munity and the outside. This change of perspective during those three years had a profound effect on me, because 'I began to see things I didn't like." With many of his lifelong views about the world shattered, Marchetti decided to abandon his chosen career. One of the ClAuRDP80101601,R010040044000143 Director . Richard Helms why he was leaving. ? -V cam-t ft 1'tur4i: PORTI, OR EGO 1r6Q? For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 1,SEP 2, .71; ? 245,132 S ? 407,186 . ? -- ? .- ? One of the vehicles was ? ?-iltAtto Ford : station . wagon I:identified as belonging to the ',,JJ,S.:',.,-?,Central _Intelligence .,??Agency.-The-:tWo occupants, . .? , one in unifrycm and the other ;?in civilian' flexi,v.her ? : ..the car cciu:dit . . , ? -But they returned a " few. ?? minute,s', later; the. Civilion:??. carrying ,a .45 caliher Pistol '1 and tirt. Uniformed : M.1(3 rhie, ,to?'rectovt-ir ?papers they": had le.-:?t?Ori. ?? - -" STATINTL ?By HEYEs .bpliv.14.73 rvi . . - ? SAIGON ?.- Political:unr'est r in this uneasy capital. took a . violent anti-American, turn ? turda yb.uL t.hrcatened_ 1(,.i1aftS dctnons;trat ions a;_:;ainst Presidp.n,t, Nguyen ?Van.. Thieus Oct. 3 "onct;ntan pres-,?? dentiol ? election-. failed to paterialize. :::????Ono :American 1:> 'AN'atiicled by gunfire, ? to ir Anrcrica-n sailors v-era 1)2,1 ? - up an: our -en I f t - ? . 1-2(; I 1 ? - - vehicles ;wore ? fire bomb!: ? ? One eallen? required several . stitches for injnries suffered when his bead bounced I against the windshield as the 1 driver braked sharply tO a -stop v-han the van was hit by. the fire bomb. Another sailor . was troatcd for minor -iny.t- ? Ac! 1ti 1 TCC- i; ser-c,?crs felt :Iva.s` ccrat.heYtilia- ? ble ? restra.int, ? ?,N-Iletniitines3 ries after being knocked to oia p c. -,3 the ground ? ? ??? stuclents with tear gi?'.3- , Up to nuw, the students no odes win.? ,,a),;.?,. ? parently intended no physi- ? cal harm ID the Americans, .."?: At Gne 'plat; a 1--eliect? Ora, tieing catiecied to set fire to cc r fired, several shots ii ri1 'W patl:cd cars. . the aic. to drive- away the ? new outbreak ol? vio- crowd , and stodent radicals ? ?lence shaiply .uitc1 eascored. mingling vin tim ru'l?ns ? aovit',0- band- c-f Sot' I :',- Yietnanlese, F,tod- It radica ' . . . , _1...,t/,' . ..-. ' ?. c,:-...,,,?tn ,w--.... in., ? ?,, ? one ?????-, ? J--,????-i ,,,,a-,?11-; mt.nal. c,,,,Lont,,.I.,.., ,? No r.,.., :,,3:,..,?, ,,,,...;? ,.. ?.!.,.tle, Cl svas s'tot in t. ''' ?-'? ? '''' . "'-- - ? (IIs act.'pn? . arrn late?Fri:lay nig '.it. as . e creased arlt,-Arrrn.10-11 ..? 1 ' ' .- . (.. - ' '.. :\va..,walkInc frona tho. Ii.:1, : ils. ,2.4:' '??-??'' -`?-." '''''.- . . ""1-`, tr??'-. ,l'41):.?` s-'xric?isiv:-.: :. nu. Earlier in r,.:,, Nang, 1. ? ? cc?Ter,..s arru.,.11,1:- C:il f ',IC'. Scen ..73 -- - ?.i."Atnry's 3rd`..riedd )1.:cr.a)itit. ? !tO ;111:s barracks. flis cent.po. .1-7.? fie?, f?1. l's life as E' Vic!"'-' ''' .11e\vs'y'c'll I'c'C'').:(' ... .6.0,i,:nn.othe.i., GI who ?,./a.-;,:on : ese mob ,r.i.,leacully burn?-', l'''" ' .11.ig ir'"? . . , : 1, ,, we p?.. ,, . . . _ ,. . ' 1,1.11114. . said ,_: ? r;''''C') ' '5'-o,'' t ' ' . '..."11.te question is ho...,,,, alnico. ns ..1-01,..! young .? tot nto ., ". ? i,ric,ar Tim son 1,11101,, central Vietnam, a GI (1115 n_ MaSICS eSe, Sp by 011 17101-11aF. ? bongor AVO can keep our:rnen ,Under contt-ol in the face-C. ; 'The Jon.: got a;ray and "there was to jr ii provocations," ?? 'said s. 1,:??they w-e.re 1.5. senior ?Ulcer. - "SoGr -',- Ida ..ottr boys nave for the nic:3;.-,, ?A U.S. .vy chid.' patty .-- floc): died a for.' clays earlier ?' i'artkepttheir cool, Luc r'-cv after gtr3 lust don't think it's faic , L ?, ? I J?ar, 'Iii for tr u eatment of Nlls PooP,I.0 :are hem ti Is tiff el-6d when he was ? help slrAild attack them,". 'b:apped in? a parked pickup The ? i'students 0,p-par6o.tly a c 14,-; which was, -fire'switched tactics to lilt-end? ? bombed in front of U.S. ..,'"fliri.at'a-:,.c1;5; on Amerlean ye- Navy headquarters. headquarters. ' their ? ?? - ?;?: 'St-11191s strucli- (l?Trl\?;O to :1)1?c-h?????11-H;;-: ? ? "election failed: to SR I lOr3 wore ' a t-. :off-, the grc:rn.d.' ...tacked at the same spe,t. ' ?, When their s--in was: -fire ,Y4?:?j't!t?Fs.i'i '? bc.nnhed by students at noon ? 'The ',??'liveliest iction took ?:Saturclay. .? ? ?.?:? ? ' Le: ,Van Duvet , . . . _ . , :?.'Ad? the sailors stn--.a.rohlt-:,1? -.Street the, oat of ths.1.1- barilinil embassy, where three Atuar? they weee -attao1;?,-?,1 kv rIo *lean ears and a South Vie- clats wielding S iflS and narris:4e ?police, :Jeep: ofilcrai fled. baa uCdi \?v41'in ? a cour'le? ? oil ? " ? ? ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R0.00100140001-8 Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 BE Tc Available Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 11,?02:CRE.V, ai.'1\11 ? 1 Approved For Releage.zu01-06S/u4.1Q-1:-CiptugprEi ? :` ? C5' ; 1?'.-1 ? .. ..........,..._ ... Approved For Releasday.A0144:W-sRPIATallgRR A F? rk ll?-: Vint: r)c- The deposed Caiiibodian monarc.h, ,, Vi r-trk Vi-,, )t,Z,.. 0 r.,017.7 liVing in Peking, baS been :a. - :standout performer in propaganda In tnnes of turmoil, a work for the Chinese Communists.. \\?`Y O\PciCd clande i ti ie stations often give the ' i IA . ; 1 J .17? id he died? Had the Chinese cut first reports as to whether . 1 It.r.ki '1 3,7 him off the air? '. - ? 7 . . a government has fallen, Intercepted Own It3roadcast - or a -secessionist move- :I ? (, o A . It was later learned? m much to the ent - is still viable. The i ,4, 10 Z , 7 ,. 'crobarrassment of FBIS Americans Fast Pakistan 'El e n g 1 a -.-that the bogus Sihanouk voice had Bosh" in o v e m e n t was a really come from an American-fiVraore active on radio than n a n c e d Cambodian government in battle the first few station, . .? months. la ith such goings-on, it seems .sur- The ?101115 station on prising that the daily D'BiS sumina- Okinawa, which devotes? In.r?JACtil FOISIE ? ry of l'significant" broadcast:3 is not its main effort?to monitor-? Times stiff Viritcr 1 ecret document. But it. is one of ing the radios on tho,.(Thi- . ? 'the few products of the CIA, bf jibse mainland, has the . BANCEOK?In a strange house in -which rods is a part, that is natva d d e d responsibility of an alley off Soi 30 (30ft. St.) here, ;stamped secret. ? . "cruising." Patient opera- the U.S. Central intelligence Agency "We are the straight-forward out- tors "twirl the dial" on all ss- , produces documents that quite often fit in the, agency," an F pa ible wave, bands and BIS ?? em- . . 'frequencies to detect new- p encl.-up in the hands of fi love explained. shmongers radio stations, he they but- . -While other CIA sections monitor as wrapping papei. a gasoline-powe.red ..."one-. cert:An types of .Coded -enenay--zind ' The house, with faded green \val.'s; poinetimes friendly--radio traffic; lung" transmitter set ? in red-tiled roof and surrounded by -a FBIS eavesdrops on programs that the jungle. - corrugated tin fence of forbidding peasants are hearing over a coin- Diplonilitic feelers are o height, is conspicuous by its shabbi- inunal radio, and.. soldiers in bar- sometimes first voiced, r ness in an otherwise reasonably ma- racks or in bivouac are listening to replied to, on clandestine nicured'neighborhood. 01:1 transitorized sets. That explains radios. For a year, the al- It is also conspicuous by the ab- why the monitoring is. not consid- li'-'cl-hackr-?cl Lao Premicr, - normal number of antennas, it...cred a classified project. Prince iSouvanna Phouma, sprouts. - . . Not tlia.t. the'bulky stapled sheaf'of and h s half - b r o tli Cl' . It is ?the regional office of an blue-ink summaries is available to P r i rice Souphanouvong, .Arnerican go v e r 11 Til C n I agency lust anyone But 'ople.s of the daily - leader of the Communist. blandly identified as the Foreign, Pathet - Lao, .have been ErOadeast Information SerViee or ICPCJIt CZM no bet'Ed' hot- making peace proposals. FDIS. ?? - ? rowed or purloined. In Souphanouvong, often as Under its roof, approximately 20 -Vientiane, the Lao capital not, has., been voicing his American-employcd foreign- nation- where both sides in the ploys through a pair of al r> monitoiathe outpouring of enemy Ind?china war 112ve d11)- Luna-and-Abner "Uncles," -and friendly news and propaganda Joiners; in is,n,"ir,T...,iss \t" - Hak and - Sat, who hold a -broadcasts originating in e I g h t rea-'-'wg 'n every --------:. 30-minute conversation Sbutheast Asia nations. ?. Eventually the discard- over clandestine. R a d i o Supervised by a handful of Amen- ed FBIS copies end. up in Pathet Lao every Sunday cans, the spew of v,-Ords is recorded the market place, -where morning. .. . and translated into English. The peddlers use them to wrap - Folksy Chat -.-.-- process turns the clutter of 14 la.n- fish: . . .? ' A - . folksy ? chat,' or a guages and dialects gathered from The 17BIS distillation. of slightly risque sing-song the air waves into a digestible pro- SoutheastAsja's war, of duct to be read by FBIS clients words is probably, most ea- exchange, 18, standard en- tertainment iia 1,..a.os. To Dete.:Aing l'olitic.al Tr emls -gerly read b;,?- military assure an audience,' the brieferse who . must put -Pathet Lao make most of ? The clients are mostly Issmericans pins on maps' and inform ?Asian political specialists and niil-their propaganda points to their generals or - daily itary men assigned to intelligence combat action. While ene- the people in these forms. -duties: They read the FBIS reports my radio broadcasts do- ? Uncle Ea.k. and Uncle to detect t r c n d s, . -alterations in scrilling "great victories" Sat discussed SouVanna political positions, and the rise and are reach with -a jaundiced ? Phouma's latest peace- of- fall of leaders -in Asian countries. ? eve,. their -exaggerations fer in abroadcast recently. For the monitors, working around are sometimes no greater, .Recorded and translated the clock in three shifts, listening to one officer. -admitted, than .by FBIS.- . the Mutt-and- the diatribes or oily persuasion \\Mat. the 'friendly govern- Jeff dialog included tins broadcasts can be deadeningly dull. :reents of. Laos, 'Caml)odia portion: Much of the propaminda is rcpeti- -and Thailand arc report- Flak: Prince Souvanoa tiotts in theme, and is meant to be. ing : about the same ac- PhOlma's letter to Prince But there 6an-also be moments of : titans. . . Souphanouvong this time exhilaration for even the most jaded ."By 'having both ver- is not different from the monitor. Recently; a 'Prince Slhan- .s.:.ions,, were in a position previous ones. That is, it ouk" broadca4, came on t 'a air, lzut : to jtal,,e woat reallyhap- ? avoids coming to grips ? the FYI'S spAPIArQVtorrlielepsed2001403/04r: CIA-RDP804P18b1 k1381:1100140001 -8 immediately that the voice \vas fake. !plained. - - - ? , - First P,epor4s , ? I A -Al g-?? xAmp A STATINTL . s Approved For R4Q 91AA9180-01601R00 15 Sept 1911 11 I trl t?-r',710 !s , ' A Q ---).??,9 *A?.1,f F( ._1) ? If you wonder what has happened to our citi- zens' privacy, listen to a summary I have just conipleted. Incredible? One would have thought so. Impossible? One. would have hoped se. Un- fortunately, it is. the squalid truth. Here are the Ugly facts: .? ?More than 2,600 computers are now working away -- clank, clank, chink Washington., They have a full-time petential of supplying a stack of records 2,000 miles high 'every year. About 250,000 yes, 230,000 -- government em- ployes axe chiefly involved with filing the paper into cabinets. These cabinets cover 25 million cubic. foot of floor space. That's more then il times the entire rentable floor space in the vast 102-story Empire Slate Building -- only for the filing cabinets. The execlitive branch alone has two million. ? ? Yet the government 53 no?,v installing addi- tional data-processing coMputers at the astound- fog rate. of 100 a year -- with an emphasis on piling up information about our citizens. "PRIVACY," SAID late, great Prof. Clinton. Rossiter, "is an unbreakable wall of dignity against the entire world.", But start with your in- come tax declaration probably the most pri- vate, intimately revealing thing demanded of citi- zens. Nearly 10 million of us taxpaying peasants filed these with the Internal Revenue Service this year. The declarations started out to he inviolate. Today, largely lull:nov.1i to the SO million, that essential privacy is a mere charade. . Twenty-three federal agencies now have direct access to our citizens' income tax returns for an official total of .100 reasons. Do not hold the IRS responsible for this. It has leught. intrusions teeth and nail. But outside agencies have contriVed their intru.siens to the IRS's utter dismay. ?? . ? : ' ? WPM THE 109 REASONS available to the 23 agencies, what an outrageous opening for scat- tered bureaucratic insiders. And what an oppor- tunity for crooks, pressure boys, spite artists in iour neighborhood, political oppements of men in ?public life; business rivals ansi. others who can quietly get your declaration by cozy relationships, bribery and other Means . The last census, which is still hi the data- processing computers, was not a C0111-CC of. our ?PoPulaUcn, as the Constitution demands. It was, instead, a systematic penetration of our privacy, STATINTL undoubtedly useful but expanded nevertheless" in accord 1\-M1 the over-all invasion ? this worm in the American apple. ? . The Civil Service Commission,. on inquiry, -re- plies that, yes, it now does compile "lead in- formation relating to possible questions" that might come up about countless people. So duos the Post Office Department. So does the Depart- ment of the Interior. Ridiculously, oven the ele- phantine :Interstate Commerce Commission,. to our country's shame, gets into this intrusion on such a scale that maybe, the ICC should give .up its true, funCtion entirely and just go into the business of building libraries for itself. THE IilONTAGON Aam-cf,,:, it has dossiers'on 20. million Americans outside the armed forces. Its data bank also keefps files on 7,-C?0 organiza- tions, if you can conceive of that many. In fact, the Pentagon admits that it processes an average 1,200 requests a Ov for undisclosed information. The Justice Department lists 13,2C-3 lianses.. of persons 1.nov.m to have urged violence. And there are, of course, the vital files of its investigative .agency, the FBI. The Secret Service has compiled on its own a colossal filo of what it tells me. Me "persons of interest,'' Those include those whose only hid for Secret Service attention is their criticism of government policies. ? `XIII] Central Intelligence Agency's personal in- formation files are top secret ? and tremendous. The CIA has jurisdiction only abroad, not in 1:1-ie United States. Nevertheless, this CIA maintains secret offices in a score of U. S. cities totally unknown to our public. Big Brother's intrusion into our American life is not new, nor is its incredible undercover, unre- vealed expansion schemed and planned in the sense of a sinister design. Actually, it's a drift, like a spreading, cancer is a ,drift. And, behiqd- the scenes today's electronic technological ad- vances are spreading the drift on a scale that should frighten our public out of its 1>0th. 'These advances allow Big Brother to acquire, Store and use tremendous files of information Big Brother collects on us with a correlation, and speed which completely changes the potential for the invasion of privacy. And how long can this hidden prestitution of our intended government continue without wrecking every democratic con- cept in our democratic system? Approved For Release 20011(13/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 ' .1114$111.N.QT.0.1I Approved For Release 2001t0?94t talk"- R D ??4A-131WiLl .V.V Ir,11.T.7( t,0 10'0112: By cT,1 A 11 d er o- ? - Iuteliigeic e Itc1135 ? The coded intelligence re- Ports that flood into Washing- ton from all over the world Of- ten contain raw, unverified in- - formation. The Central intelli- gence Agency has devised a simple system for rating the reliability of its reports. The veracity of the source is given an alphabetical rating; an ap- praisal of the content is rated by number. Thus, an A-1 re, port would be considered 100 per cent accurate. lint if a wholly reliable source passed ? on a liot. barroom rumor, it might be rated A-12. Or if a less trustworthy source sub- mitted what he claimed was a really reliable item, the rating might be C-3. Hereafter, we will use this rating system to help our renders evaluate the accuracy of intelligence items. Emperor's Surprise (A-2)--- No one was more surprised than Emperor Hirohito to learn that his. European trip would be interrupted by a stopover in Alaska. Prime% Minister Sato neglected to consult the Emperor before setting up the trip. By staging a dramatic meeting between Emperor Hirohito and Presi- dent Nixon, Sato hopes to take some of the steam out of the hot Japanese reaction to Mr. Nixon's Peking ploy and eco- nomic moves against Japan. The Emperor; left out of the backroom planning, was aston- ished to learn that he would interrupt his European trip to: confer with Mr. Nixon in 'Alaska. , ?]971, MI-McClure Syildicate, Inc. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 STATI NT Approved For Release 211031V031041: CIARTDP80 19 1971 "...A30.-1Deglt ntire r.eries of tr:is- . ettssiots VMS "off tlie record", the stll*:ct Ciscusclon for th'r, prIrtieu- lac v especiany ? sersttite ?'t rte tt:bt to the previotIsly' t n- - mr..ced..restrictLore." ?, ?C. Dol.T:.n.:3 D:r,on ? . ? ? Ey (ZI.e:17,3 ?? rivalries.to he stire, but once the deci- sions are reached at the top they are carried out with the monolithic tone of state power. ? ?. The intelligence cOmmunity- now plays a 11 expanded and critical role in creating and administering the real stuff of American foreign policy; Cl . The Central. Intelligence Agency is Director Richard Helms presides over a one .of the few governmental agencies U.S. Intelligence Board which links the .whose public image has actually irn- secret services of all governinent agen-. proved as a result of the publication of cies, including the FBI. In the White i e the Pentagon Papers. Despite disclo- House, Henry Kissinger presides over 'Sures .of "The Agency's" role in assassi- an expanded National Security Council ?nations, sabotage, and coup d'etatS . structilre which Turther?centralizes consciously intended to subvert intern,a- covert foreign policy planning. it is here tional law, A me ric.a's secret agent ry that the contingency plans are cooked has actually emerled in some quarters up and the "options" .so carefully :with the veneration due prophets, or at ' worked out. It is in these closed chant- least the respect. due its suggested effi- ?berc. and strangelovian "situ;ttion eiency and accuraey. rooms" that plans affecting the lives of Virtually eveey newspaper editor, not millions arc formulated for subsequent ti mention Daniel Ellsberg himself, has execution by a myr.iad or U.S. con: heaped praise on the CIA for the accu- trolled agencies and agents. 'racy. or its estimates detailing the U.S. . _Increasingly, these schemes rely on defeat in Vietnarn..Time and agliin. the covert tactics whose full rheanng is scl- Agency's "lesel headed professional- .dom perceived by the people affected -:-- ism." has been contrasted with the esca-- be they Americans or people of foreign lation-overkill orientation of the Penta- countries. The old empires', with, their c, '?(,on or the President's advisors. The colonial administrators- and civilizing -. j'editor of the Christian Science Monitor rnisson have given way to the more ' ? even called upon policy makers to..con- sub* craftsman Of intervention. Their 'suit .the CIA more, calling it a "re- manipulations take place lathe front markabiy accurate source of informa- rooms of rico-colonial institutions and 7tion." But such backhanded praise for. the parlors or dependent third World. conspirator confuses public under- elites. In this world of 1-,?alpolitik;'ap- ,Standing of the important and closely pearances are often purposely deceptive integrated role which the CIA plays in and political- stances intentionally m15- advancing the Pax Americana on a leading. The U.S. aggression in Viet- global scale.. ..?nam, lesranyone forget, began as a . For many, the Pentagon Papers 'covert involvement largely engineered' provided ri.first peek into the inner by the CIA. Similar covert interven-- ; sanctum of foreign policy making. As. ? tions now underway elsewhere in the the government's attempt to suppress world may be fueling tomorrow's Viet-. the study illustrates, the people arc not rams. . . .. . . supposed to have access to the real It. is (lor. this reason that the Africa ? plans of their government. On close Research Group, an independent rail-. inspection, what emerges is not an "Inv- cal research collec.tive, is.now making -isibJe government" but an indivisible .pnblie Major excerpts from a document system in which each agency offers its which offers an informed insider's view own specialized input, and is-delegated of the-secret workings of the American .? ?, ? its own slice of responsibnity. Coordi- intellic;ance apparatus abroad. Never *1-ne complete text of the doculTient win nated inter-departmental agencies work ...intended for publication, it was made bc available for Sl in late October from out 1.11,2 d i v i s i o n of imperial labor. There available to the Group which will pub- .A,fri,car, Resetich Group, p.0. Box 213, are d isag, Approkted Por2R-eheitsei2001103/044.t CIAG-RDP804016hkbo6464-48616s1 4 ? :goafr.70.7,0a CIA manipulations. Richard Bissell, the man who led the ?-/ Council discussion that night, was well equipped to talk about the CIA. A one- time Yale professor and currently an executive of the United Aircraft Corpo- ration, Bissell served as the CIA's Dep- ? uty Director until he "resigned" in the wake of the abortive 1961 invasion of iCuba. The blue-ribbon g,roup to which , he spoke included -a number of intellig, ence experts including Robert Amory, Jr.:. another former Deputy Director, and the late CIA chief, Alien Dulles, Jong. considered the grand. Old man of American. espionage. Their presence was important' enough an occasion for international banker Douglas Dillon to ( 111. Approved .For Release 2oollio3m4--t-crA:RDPIOZItt S JUL -CA 7 0 .4"-"' ' ii- (..-1 . ,e71..T7:?...., (r-1-,? .-1", -; .r. By PAUL W. BLACC.STOCIC Ever since the Bay of Pigs fiasco in 1t331, the Central intelligence Agen- has had a had press -in this country and abroad. The 1967 "revelations" that the agency had secretly financed the National Student Association, plus a number of university-affiliated research institutes and anti Communist cultural fronts, came as a shock to both students and the ? ,.--.-n '..: il p .,. -.,...,......?i ,..--.... -.._.;.,, --&...;" .,..i.,._.4.?.. I ..i r t.?..--, -;,..--.- -. ...---:. i:;"' , .-..,../,. ?..:..2 4.... ;!... ts, -,---, .11 r ? :t,s/ ? I' Nardi& Wi.l.f,on, ivlien appointed shadow Foreign STAT I NTL 'Secrellary, ni-Eheti to. -Washington to assn.-c.a. President Kennedy that Lubor ivenhd stand four-s.inace behind the U.S. in the Far. East. There in no evidence that be znibjc7cled American iniept lions to nay very cieDe He iceognized a fellow Boy Scout when he saw one, and did iiot scruple to holTow ti:e. Kennedy oveld)lown rhelm.le in pxplainiug to -flo!thiing co}kagaen the nature OJ irLdi'n ia3L e f' . . o): onez pctIce..icettvng Professor Diet:I:stock', a fernier military- job" briefings in Saigon, deceived only ' intelligenCe research analyst. and author those officials, either civilian Cl military, of s:Neral boal,.s on the intelligence proc-. who ?vanted to believe thefl. ss, now teaches at the University of What is the "intelligenee community"..? 'South Carolina. - '. ? How is it organized and what role should It play in dceision-making at the national level in such foreign entanglements as the war in Vietnam? The answers to these questions ,have been cloaked in secrecy when they should be a matter of public knowledge. . To 'begin with the basic institutions, the U.S. intelligence community Is made up of the separate agencies of suck key government departments as State and ?? . Defense, the National Security Agtincy, On the national level daily and weekly and the CIA, which has the overall re- reports are promptly distributed to the sponsibility,.fer "coordinating, cvaluat- President z'illd his ohiCr advisers, and lag, and disseminating intelligence af- special estimates or btiefings are made feeling the national security." _'. as required in response to developing "First. Line Of Defense" crises. In short,- the intelligence commu- nity provides the decision-mahoir with It has often been said that "intellittence carefully evaluated information and esti- is the first line of national defense." Most mates which he can either use for guid- citizens are vaguely aware that foreign ance or disregard. policy and military decisions are made History is full- of illustrations how no- by the President with the. advice of his tional leaders have ignored the estimates or the intelligence col-hriurnity,. especially secretaries of state .and De[ense, based, of the intelligence agencies with discs- the S[ate.Hepartment Bureau of Intelli-!' in theory at le&st, on the in information ft ous results. Napoleon's u telligenee gence nnd Research re.peatedly warned available to experts. througliout the gov- aide, the Marquis dc Caulahicoart, ex- against the hazards involved, including erranent. The collection, evaluation and 1)10 ed v,:hy, for obvious strategic pee- flat predictions that the.sti.tategic bomb- dissemination of such information is.onc sons, the planned invasion of Russia ing Of -North Vietnam would fail to ac - of the put urn functions of intelligence, would fail ? His advice it i.:1--'lnored- complish. its' objectives. ? ? But in foreign and military affairs, -A centuryliater, Al.tolp Hitler's embus- Deceiv c a 'Phemsoives ? strategic decisions should also take into sada': in Russia, Count Brockdorff-Ren- aecount careful, estimates of the capabili- tzau, used the same reasoning in hi How s esti- . ,.., : ? ' - - - . ' ow -these. 6timates .and Warnings ties itind 1)robable cOUrseS of action of mate of why Hitler's plan wo:J.Id fail. Ills wem ignored._ by to policy:makers as warning was also ignored and Iliticr friends, allies, neutrals and "ervemies." they carried . out. their deliberate .and launched his invasion, which v,.as widely :.,-e The production of such national esti- "immaculate deception" of the American heralded as the final showdown in his mates is a second major function of th...:: public is one of the n-lorc fascinating lifelong, crusade against world con mu entire inteigence community, although 'aspects of the Pentagon ptipers. But ll , in nism. The campaign ultimately floun- the.board.of estiniales in the CIA coordi- decei,ving the public, the decision-makers fl?Iso deceived themselves, and eventuay nate, rn inciividuai .,golicy Contributions &red in a sea of blood-40 million Rus- . cantle- to believe optimistic .."military .sian casualties zdone, not to mention Ger- awl disseminates the final results. progress'' reports, released to the public. As 'a. rift, the various' intelligence man losses vibich also ran into the mil- as based on the "latest intelligence," agencies arc staffed on the working level 11.?11s? . . . . . when.,itfact at the highest level, the by tnousands ot anonymous civil so.rvants Nothing quite as dramatic has Imp- ,ostimajos ApprOv6 dePcir Wea s:# 20 04M, 1104v6.,rCIA-RDP8004613 tROMG01400011118 and nom me nem, including typical "snow- urdLy are SeiCiorn equaled elsewhere in ei- ther government or private enterprise. As the United States became begged down in the Vietnam quagmire anti the student anti-war protest gathered met:turn, the CIA became a favorite tar- get of abuse. Agency recruiters were driven from college campuses. CIA-fi- nanced study centers were "trashed" 'at a cost of many thousands of dollars. No.,7 Left orators, armed with a sense of out- ' rage and an encyclopedic ignorance of the intelligence community and its func- tions instinctively assumed that the CIA was a major factor in the escalation of the war in Vietnam. But the Pont0gon study of the war, recently published by the New York Times proves conclusivelY7 that the Don Quixotes of the New Left have been charging at the wrong windmill. For many years and at critical stages of the escalation. the CIA and other:members' Many of the men on the. CIA's Board of National Estimates and its staff have more than two decades of intelligence .experience. Better than ti.3 per cent of the officials on this top ecbelon have ad- vanced academic clef.:::rces in history, po- litical science, or economics directly per- tinent to their v.tork. About 75 per cent have enhanced their area and subject knowledge by living overseas. The esti- mators in State Departmern Bureau of Intelligence and Research are equally competent anti well-qualified. .Advice To President Coni../Liuo el STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 A 140;i1S Approved For Release 2001/03/94: CIA-RaP18(4111161 JUL 1977 0 T. 71 JLJJ , Li );\1_,,:d_ Ltd D .".111 ij 1-1 1.1 et--' tt , ji ? I, ? ? a1,L,(Li By RICHARD ))UDMAN Chief Washington Correspondent of the Post-Dispatch WASHINGTON, July 8 --,-- Sen- . . ator john Sherman Cooper (Rep.), Kentucky, has obtained strong bipartisan backing for a proposal to require the Central Thtelligence Agency to report to 'Congress as well as to the Ex- ecutive Branch. Cooper, a moderate opponent of the Vietnam War and of the antiballistic missile system, in- troduced his?proposal yesterday ; as an amendment to the Nation- -al Security Act of 1917, which created the Departme:nt of De- f en s e, the National Security Council and the CIA. Senators Stuart Syminaton (D e m.), Missouri, J. William Ftdbright (D e m.), Arkansas, and Jacob K. Javits (Rep.), New York, announced their ? : support for the measure on the. Senate {leer. Fulbright spoke of .. ,. . holding hearings on the propos- al. . Symington, chairman of a for- ? eign relations subcommittee on overseas commitments, told of ' difficulties he had had in ob- taining full information about secret U.S. military prepara- tions and operations abroad, in- cluding the clandestine warfare being conducted in Laos. ' Symington noted that he was a member of the Foreign Rela- tions, Armed Services and Joint Atomic Energy committees. He. said that his best information had been obtained from the lost of these, attributing that fact to a requirement in the Atomic Energy Act that the Atomic En- ergyCommission keen Con- ... gross "fully and eurrenriy" in- formed. Cooper used that phrase in his proposed amendment on the IIA. An aid said that Cooper ' ad found CIA information gem erally reliable on such matters as Soviet military preparedness and the Indochina War but had noted that it was rendered only in response to specific ques-; tions. Under his amendment, the CIA viould have to take the ini- tiative in sending Congress its analyses of problems of foreign policy and national security. ; The aid said that. Cooper had been considering such a mea- sure for several years. Ile said the publication of the Pentagon papers had demonstrated once more the value of CIA reports n d probably had broadened ? support in Cengress for a re- quirement to make them availa- ble. In a Senate speech, Cooper ;proposed that the CIA be re- quired to make regul a. r and special reports to the House A r in e d Services and Foreign! Affairs committees and to the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations committees. Additional special reports could be requested by the commit-. tees. Any member of Congress orl designated member of his staff' would have access to the infor- mation. All such persons would be subject to security require- ments such as those in the Ex- ecutive Branch. Cooper said that the best in- formation should be available to the Executive and Legisla- tive branches as a basis for na- tional decisions involving "vast amounts of money, the deploy- ment of weapons whose purpose is to deter war yet can destroy all life on earth, time stationing of American troops in other countries and their use in com- bat, and binding commitments to foreign nations." Two other Senators offered proposals relating to the CIA. George S. McGovern (Dem.), South Dakota, suggested that expenditures and appropriations for the intelligence agency ap- pear as a single line item in the budget. Agency funds. now are concealed in other items in the budget. Three bills were introduced by Senator Clif f ord P. Case (Rep.), New Jersey, to limit fielding foreign troes in Loas o r elsewhere-without specific approval by Congress. ? Case said they were designed; ? i"to place sonic outside control '.oh what has been the free- ;wheeling operation of the Exec- utive Branch in carrying on for- eign policy and even waging foreign wars." Meanwhile, ;the House reject- ed a proposal that the Adminis- tration be required to tell it; what the military and CIA were doing in Laos. By a vote of 261 to 118, mem- bers tabled ? and thus killed ? a resolution introduced by Rep- resentative Paul N. McCloskey (Rep.), California, that would have ordered the Secretary of State to furnish the House with the policy guidelines given. to the U.S. ambassadorli Laos. The ambassador has responsi- bility for overseeing the clan- destine -military operations in Laos aimed at assisting the roy- al Laotian government in its struggle with the Pathet Lao. William B. Macomber Jr., deputy under secretary of state, clashed yesterday with Mc- Closkey over whether the ?De- partment of State was directing U.S. bombing attacks in Laos. Macomber denied the allega- tion and suggested that if Mc- Closkey wanted to pursue the issue he ought to invite an East Asia expert from the State De- partment to testify. T h e exchange occurred as Macomber testified bef o re a House foreign affairs subcom-'; mittee on ways to improve de- classification o f Governmentn records by the State Depart- I covert use of funds and mili- tory equipment by the CIA fortent? ? _M acamber said JO to 12 years' retention ought to be ad-' equate to protect Government 1 secrets whiSkiit kin-4614i Approved For Release 2001/03/04 STATI NTL :aCaPAR 041t p00100140001-8 know about operations. 47.????=?????????=11 1110 YORZ tlI171S' Approved For Release 2001/43N4 MA-RDP80-0 STATINTL . . I 1\, ? ?1. k eP, ei .? ? ? ? 1r Ir7i 4.--. I/ Ll. 14* i '14 Y. ' I l' ) V\ 11.7 \ 1 I.. , I y-0 4-A . ,,,. 1;---i . ,,,,, I, ,mi .------i 1:1 J \4-' ' -, -7'1 I '' ?'. ..J.L / ..-L N...P.-_,ei .i. '.').. \I .)1.:1 edi --i.,,i A. J....-,,, . Following are text of key c.locuments accompanying (? ,the Pentagon's study of the Vietnam, war, dealing with the Ad- ministr?tion, of President John F. Kennedy up to the events that brought the overthrow of President Ngo Dinh, Diem, in 1963. mil' Except where e:?:ceepting is specified, the documents are printed ? verbatim, with, only viimistakable typographical errors or- ( ? ? _ mg _ anc reeled. ? _ , ,?,. i',, ,., , r - prc .1?,/ 0 d.-....1 0 Odobadat b C30 Laa yais in .. . e, ct.?,.??, e?? -4 , . ' .. i , thr ? n.r: rm..: ,?..?, ., A. . .. . 7.) .. 0 ? for kji 1 I R (c._;c1CS 1 0 S.f-n 0 ri n - ? .. - ? . ,- .. arr ? .Cablegram from Ethridge Durbrow, United States Ambassador in Saigon, me .to Secretary of State Christian A. Herter, Sept. I 16, 1960. . - - fer . ' . ? . INN . . . . ? ? ? ? ,.,. _ , - - .---- - - ?-? i !? . As indicated .our 493 and 538 Diem regime confronted by two separate but ? related dangers. Danger from demon- strations or coup attempt in Saigon could ?occur earlier; likely to be pre- ? dominantly non-Communistic in origin but Corinne aists can be expected to . endeavor infiltrate and exploit any such ? attempt. Even more serious danger is ' ? gradual 'Viet Cong extension of control over countryside which, if current Corn- - munist progress continues, would mean loss free Viet-nam ? to Communists. ? These two dangers are related because 'Communist successes in rural areas embolden them to extend their activitiesm . to Saigon and because non-Comunist temptation to engage in demonstrations or coup is partly motivated by sincere desire prevent Communist take-over in Viet-nam. ? Essentially [word illegible] sets of measures required to meet these two ? ' dangers. For Saigon danger essentially . and psychological measures re- quired. For countryside danger security ? measures as well as political, psychee logical ,and 'economic measures needed. ? However both sets measures should be ? carried out simultaneously and to some ; extent individual steps will be aimed at both clangers. ? ?? Security recommendations have been made in our 539 and other messages, - Including formation internal security council, centralized intelligence, etc. ? This message therefore deals with our poJiUdal and economic recommenda- tions. I realize some Measures I ant recommending are drastic and would be ? most [word illegible] for. an ambassador- ' to make under normal circumstances. ? 13ut conditions here are b ? no means .. ? ? normal. Diem government is in quite ? serious danger. Therefore, in my opinion prompt and even drastic action is called for. I ant well aware that Diem has in past ?demonstrated astute judgment and ? has survived other serious crises. Pos-. sibly his judgment will prove superior to ours this time, but I believe never- theless we have no alternative but to give him our best judgment of what we - believe is required to preserve his goo- ' ernmeot. While Diem obviously resented my frank talks earlier this year and will probably resent even more suggestions outlined below,- he has apparently acted on some of our earlier .suggestions and might act on at 'least seine of the following: ? . are e? c Gun runo ?tant belie colni est I be t3 coun gove sacri sugg appo . (D henc 1. I- would propose have -frank and en friendly talk with Diem and explain our d 0 g i ic serious concern about present situation and his political position: I would tell aile, him that, while matters I am ?raising pres' deal primarily with internal affairs, I would like to talk to him frankly and try to be as helpful as as I can be givin ? onst him the considered judgment of myself ernn and some of his friends in Washington- mi appropriate measures to assist him ? in present serious situation. (Believe it . a. ? best not indicate talking under instruc- ban( tions.) I would particularly stress de- . its $ ? sirability or actions ? to broaden and of a increase his [word illegible] support ? PUP - prior to 1991 presidential elections re- atmo quiced by constitution before end April. redu I would propose following actions to ?pm President: _ ?. . i cove . 2. Psychclogical shock 'efiect .is -.'re- : 4. Permit National Assembly wider - . .' - legislative initi.ttive and area of genuine quired to take initiative from Commu- debate and bestow on it authority to nist ?propagandists as, well as non-Com- conduco with .appropriate publicity, :nunist oopositionists and convince public iro.,estioations of any department population government taking effective of government with right to question leasuresitikadts.eitigoisp 1 .. i Approved For Relmasee 8c")tOqiiMW O e t/11-lf. s tn,0b d 0 A r- . of hand. To achieve that effect follow- his ing suggested: pose: (A) find some mechanism for dis- 2,1011 Approved For Release 2001/v3/04JUN : LAA-RDP80-0 C.;?;2e2J 11 STATI NTL 777 ? 7/ ; , , ? /r-, Tv:- 7-2-7) 7r) hc\-, , tf _ T 0 0, CT i 17. 7 7 1. cn i;?f';('; \?-? '..:%L -3 L-_?....:_:._,.....Q.,,,?,_-..... I L'.1.12_ c/ \.1 \,/1-311 To 0 "fl? C. ? - - , ) SVt . C. ? I ? A formal planning and budgetary process ?for the phased withdrawal of U.S. forces from :Vietnam was begun amid the euphoria and optimism of July, 1662, and was ended In the pessimism of March, 14661. Initially, the specific objectives were: (1) to draw down U.S. military personnel then engagi2d in advisory, training, and support efforts from- an FY 61 peak of 12,060 to an Fy 63 bottoming out of 1,560 (just IC1, MAAG); and (2) to reduce MAP from an loY St peak of $1E0 million to an DY 60 base of f:/.13.8 South Vietnamese forces were to be trained to perform. all ?the functions then being carried out by U.S. personnel. What the U.S.G. was actually trying to ac- complish during this period can be de- scribed in either or both of two ways: (I) a real desire and attempt to extricate the U.S. from direct military involvement in the ? war and to make it a war which the GVI1 would have to learn to win, -and (2) straight- forward contingency planning and the use of a politicial-mapagerial technique to slow down pressures for greater U.S. inputs. _A blend .of the wish embodied in the first ex- planation and the hard-headedness of the second seems plausible. ? A A 6 Needless to say, the ? phase?out never came to pass. The Diem coup with the re- sulting polfficalinstability and deterioration of the military situation soon were to lead T.J.S..decisionmakers to set aside this pla_n- ? fling process. An ostensible cutback of 1,000 men did take place in December, 10a3, but this was essentially an accounting exercise --and the U.S. force level prior to the re- duction had already reached 16,732 in Octo- ber, 1963. By December, 1064, U.S. strength had risen to 2:3 COO and In -t deeoloythents were on theApproved For Release. , ? What, then, did the whole phased with, t dravl exercise accomplish? It may have To LI frP ; ; )`-'7,n liii 0 71 fit-r7',., `17/?;(7) 7'-.777Y7) fri77 Led (Y'Li ii(1.!, d C.1 ,L,./.2./ The Jo l/owing are excerpts fror,l, the text of the sw-inucti-if and angtysis of that soction of tile nint,:::gon papers dealing with. the cvolvtiop, of the Vietvant war from, 1962 to 196. impeded demands for more men reo.!-Iey,- but this ,is doubtful. If the mi:.etic reports on the situation in SVN were to be believed, and they apparently were, little more would have been requested. It may have frightened the GYM, but it did not induce Diem or his successors- to re- form the political apparatus or make RVNAF fight harder. It may have con- tributed, however, to public. charges about the admiuLtration's credibility and over- optimism about the end of the conflict. ? A I and opti- -Despite the carefully worded White Nouse announcement of the phase-out policy on October 2, 1603, tentative Johnson adramis? tration. judgments came to be regarded by the public as firm predictions. While this an- nouncement made clear that the U.S. effort would continue "until the insurgency has been suppressed or until the national secu- rity forces of the ?GVN are capable of .sup- pressing it," the public tended to foods on the prognosis which .followed? "Seci-etary McNamara and General Taylor reported their judgment that the major part of the U.S. military task can .be completed by tile end of i9ci5 "In August,- 1.664, Mr. Mc- Namara further exPlained the policy: "We have said---as a metier of fact, 'T say today? as our training missions are completed, we will bring back the training forces." - Quite apart from what was actually ac- complished by the phase-out policy and the costs in terms of domestic political percep- tion of administration statements on Viet- nam there are some important lessons to be theeeel:ereise. \ That was the wIllvlevi'A Ri4M4 LWA-RDR805018(11R00010014000I8' A? ncto Pile;';'7,4.1,0;:2?1 TC.e;TiZegy . Man in the middle ni a s'.af ,! ? Et *coin 113110 , - S 9111 SPRopirisorkd For RelttaseZeteetiOStOtECIA4R-D-RSOT-.01601 R000 A .03 c oesq With 40 different nations involved, discus- sion is long and decisions come slow, but I - am convinced that this kind of world dia- logue is leading in the direction we must go to eventually solve our food distribution and farm in come problems. HILDA DRUNGOT--A DISTIN- GUISINSD LEGISLATIVE RECORD Mr. Mell's;TYRE, Mr. President, rarely do I have the opportunity to share with my colleagues the- story of anyone as remarkable as the New Hampshire Gen- eral Court's venerable Republican legisj- lator, Mrs Ililcia P,rungot of Berlin, N.H. Few legislators have contributed as much to our State. Few could exemplify as well the teal meaning of the term "public servant." The daughter of a Norwegian immi- grant who himself served our State as a distinguished representative, Mrs. 33rungot began her life in public service -at 40 as a' delegate to the New Hampshire Constitutional Convention in 1930. ? That very same year she succeeded her father as a representative in the New Hampshire Legislature, beginning a record of service spanning 18 2-year terms, perhaps the longest legislative ? record of any woman in U.S. history. Mrs. Brungot, now beyond her 80th birthday, could have chosen long ago to settle -back into a less active role, but . that would have wasted her valuable ex- perience and insight. Instead she has ? found time to involve herself in a wide range of activities, and to this day few . representatives in our State's legislature ? are more in evidence in committee and on the floor during important debates. Mr. President, Mrs. Brungot grew up - In 1/10M diMelliti times and was forced ? to quit school early in life and with stub- born Yankee independence educated her- , self. She was certainly successful, but just 4 years ago, at the age of 80, she took time out to formalize it all: she earned - a high school diploma. Mr. President., this mother of six and ? - grandmother of many more has wit- nessed profound changes and momentous , events during her years of service?the Great Depression, World War, the atomic age, and much more. Her perspective and youthful vigor is of great value, not only to her friends in the legislature, but to all who have come to know her. ? As a New Hampshire citizen who greatly values her wisdom and greatly 'admires. her steadfast dedication to the service of everyone in our State, I wish her well in the years ahead. May she serve our. .State and give us the benefit of her counsel for many years to come. ? ? ? THE PENTAGON DOCUMENTS ? Mr. McGOVERN, Mr. President, por- tions of the Pentagon documents con- cerning the development of American military involvement in Indochina are becoming available in various leading ? newspapers. I believe that the full Pentagon report should be made available to the Congress and the. public without further delay. In the absence of a decision by the adminis- tration to release the documents, I am attempting to insert in the CONGIIF,S- SIONAL 3.1ECCJItti those documents and summaries appearing in the press. Today, I sin submitting documents and summaries appearing in the Boston Globe of June 22. They show that covert action against North Vietnam was or- dered as early as 1961. They show that Vietnamization has been with us since 1968, thus revealing just how great a failure this 3-year policy has been. After 3 years of trying, we still have not been able to Vietnamize the war. Of course, It is just as immoral to do that as it is to carry it on with American forces. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the articles and summaries' from the Boston Globe be printed at this point in the Rlicosp. There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in the REcoaD as follows: ? SECRET PENTAGON DOCUMENTS DARE JFK ROLE IN VIETNAM WAR?KENNEDY OK'D COVERT ACTION , (13y Robert. Healy) Gen. Maxwell Taylor in October of 1961 advised President Kennedy in an "eyes only for the President" cable to send 8000 man US military task force into South Vietnam but ho warned that the introduction of such a force "may increase tensions and risk es- calation into a major war in Asia." ? Gen. Taylor was special adviser to Presi- dent Kennedy on Vietnam. At the time of the Taylor mission, which took him and Walt Roe tow, later to be Presi- dent Johnson's chief adviser on national se- curity affairs, and a group of state and de- fense department officials to South Vietnam, the United States had about 1000 soldiers in South Vietnam. They served as advisers to the South Vietnamese Army. President Kennedy stepped up covert ac- tions against North Vietnam and increased the num.ber of advisers to 16,000 men before be was assassinated in November of 1003. lie never committed a United States ground unit as Taylor recommended. These disclosures Were made in a, portion of a secret Pentagon study on the origins of the war in Vietnam started in 1.957 by then Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. They were made available to the Boston Globe yesterday. ? For the first time the Globe was making public the role of the Kennedy administra- tion in the escalation of the war. Three ear- lier reports dealing with other phases of the war were published by the Now York Times an(' two by the Washington Post before pub- lication was halted by court injunctions. As early as May 11, 1961, President Ken- nedy, according to the secret report, had ap- proved programs for covert action which had been recommended by a Vietnam Task Force, Amond these actions were: (1) Dispatch of agents into North Viet- nam. (2) Aerial resupply of agents in North Vietnam through the use of civilian mer- cenary air crews. (3) Infiltration of special South Vietnam forces into Southeast Laos to locate and at- tack Communist bases and lines of com- munication. ? (4) Formulation of "networks of resistance, covert bases and teams for sabotage and light harassment" inside North Vietnam. (5) Conduct of overflights of North Viet- nam for the purpose of dropping leaflets. These covert acticms whic'h were approved by President Kennedy were contained, ac- cording to the Pentagon study, in a National Security Action Memorandum number 52. Aboutithe time that the cable was received by President Kennedy, the President, accord- ing to the Pentagon study, directed (among other measures that we "initiate guerrilla 0140Q0t 1971 ground action, including the use of US ad- visers if necessary" against Communist serial resupply missions in the vicinity of Tchepone (Sepone, Laos), "Ile also directed the Department of State , to prepare to publish its White Paper on DRV (North Vietnam) responsibility for ag- gression in SVN (South Vietnam)," the study showed. In the Pentagon study's evaluation of the two 'cables sent to President Kennedy by STATI NT Taylor, it said that the impression Taylor's choice of language leaves is that the support S TA-TI NT forces "were essentially already agreed to by the President before Taylor left Washington, and consequently his detailed justification went only to the kind of forces on which ?a decision was yet to be made--that is, ground forces liable----to becoine involved in direct engagements with the Viet Cong." In his first cable of the mission (Oct. 15 to Nov. 2, 1901) sent from Saigon, Taylor wrote the President and the top officials at State and Defense: "My view is that we should put in a task force consisting largely of logistical troops for the purpose of partici- pating in flood relief and at the same time of providing a U.S. military presence ill VN capable of assuring Ditlqii (PITSidellt Ngo Dinh Diem) of our readiness to join him in a military showdown with the Viet Cong or Viet Minh. To relate the Introduction of these troops to the needs of flood relief eleeDIS to use to oiler considerable advantages in VN and abroad. It gives a specific humanitarian task RS the prime reason for the coining of ottr troops. . . ." Despite the Taylor recommendations for a U.S task force, there was no hint publicly at that time out of the White House that the President would go along. Upon his return from Vietnam Taylor said to lleWSlYlell that President Diem bad assets available "to prevail against the Communist threat." President Kennedy on the subject of Viet- nam and the Taylor mission at a press con- ference on Feb. LI, 1932, said that President Diem had asked for additional assistance. The administration, lie said, had detailed the support which the Viet Minh in the North were giving to this Communist insurgent movement and we have increased our assist- ance there. And we are supplying logistical assistance, transportation assistance, train- f ing, and we have a number of Americans who are taking part in that effort." - Kennedy did not mention the Taylor rec.- - or?mendatiOnS for a U.S, task force Or whether the United State.s was considering one. - TERROR ANT) MISTS Taylor in his cable to the President said that Viet Cone; forces one tenth the size of the South Vietnamese Army regulars could create conditions of frustration and terror which was certain to lead to a political Crisis. In his list of specifics Taylor said that the US government should support the effort to stop the Viet Cong" with equipment and with military units and personnel to _do those tasks which the Armed Forces of Vietnam cannot perform in time." Taylor recommended the troop commit- ment despite full recognition of what he listed as disadvantages. Among these: "A. The strategic reserve of US forces is presently se weak that we can ill afford any detachment of forces to a peripheral area. of the Communist bloc where they will be - pinned down for .an uncertain duration. "13. Although US prestige is already engaged in SVN, it will become more so by the send- ing of troops. "C. If the first contingent is not enough to accomplish the neceseary results, it will be difficult to resist the pressure to reinforce. If the ultimate result sought is the closing of the frontiers and the elean-up of the in- surgents within SVN, there is no limit to our Approved For Release 2001/03/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8. Approved .For Release 2004103/041TCIAURbPeg-TM1k0 ? 2,1 JUN 1971 0 7QL,,, 1, .11 boNes (Bitddhist monks) I .1 rl We are going to be throw Ili ,-.) E ,, - '-` r out of the country in six months. ; Would Not Separate n ? n ?i M(11 [i II Ft :??:??;`--1 k,?;'?J ???"1-le stated that at this 11 juncture it would be bet- ter for us to make the tied- (r AP, sion to get out honorably. 1 ??? ? He went on to say that, having been acquainted ? with Diem for 10 years, he was deeply disappointed . in him, saying that he NVIII ? not separat e. from his brother. It was Kattcn- burg's 'view that. Diem will get little support from the military"and, as time goes on. he ?vill get less and less support ? and the country will go steadily downhill, 'Gen. (Maxwell D.) Tay-. .lor (then chairman of the Joint C h ie f s of Staff) asked what Kattenburg Meant when he. said that We would be forced out of krt.lak's inemor;--ihrlum is included A in pi eviously unpublished sections K LY, rs.:1 of. ;the. report that The Times has oh- ' ? -1 tamed. The sections are from the ? came liefitag,on study that were the ? ?? ? y. OP subject- of. previous. stories in the ? ? . New York Times, Washington Post r C !!! ? and Boston Globe. It was prepared g `,,J,SJO 1?A d I by a team of Pentagon analysts un dee 'a 'directive. from McNamara in . . ' 196S. The analysts had ? access to :BY STUNBT LOORY ? documents only on file in the. Dc- 'knee Department. The analysts did Timt,s Staff Writar ?--; ? , ? not have access to the complete files N.0 Ica toe - ? ? at the White House or State Depart-., first . time that the ?Unitcd Eitates ment. . - ' Vietnam within .stx faced 'a can't-win. situation in the The meeting Krulak'deseribes was months Kattenburg re- Vietnam' *war,- President John F.,. called as ? a "whei?e-do-we-go-from? plied . that ?in from six Kennedy's National Security 'Conn- 'her" session after a group of SaIs?on inonths to a year, as pen-- ?eil'in AuguSt, 1963; rejected the Tee- gene-rats ,faile.d to bring off a coup; plc see we are losing the' a=???ainst inc increasingly unpopular li?ar, they will gradually (i-luncncla.tion of a State Department . regime headed by Diem. ' -:- go to the other side and we ,expert on Vietnam to pull out honor- The meeting was a key session in will be obliged to leave. . ? ably; the. Pentagon's top:secret -his- the period from May to No- ' ...Rusk dismissed the view 'tory of ?the war st-iii. - , v,ember, 1963, d u r 1 n g - lns:tead, Secretary of State,. Dean which non-Communist op- Rusk jut dOwn such talk frbm one. position to the . Diem re- cif his subordinates as "speculative," dole grew rapidly and ? saying: . - , -... ? eventually boiled over into, . "It w?rould be -far' better for us to the overtinow of Diem and .itart on the firm basis of two thinzs the assassination of him -.----that we will not pull out of Viet- and his brother Ngo Dinh nam? until the war is won, ?and that Nhu on NOV. 2. we will not run a coup." . ? ' - During the National Se- ? ? -.? - cvrity Council session, ? ' 'Overruled Expert Named ? . . Kattenburg advanced the ? The expert overruled by Rusk was 'suggestion that, in Kru- Paul M. Elattenburg,. then head of labia words, "At this junc- the State Department's Vietnam lure it would be better for Worki,ng Group. who had dealt with us to make the decision to President Ngo Dinh Diem of South get, out honorably." Viethaill for 10 years: Then-Vice r--The complete text of President ?Lyndon B. Johnson and Krulak's report.on Katten- .Seeretary of Defense 'Robert S. Mc-- bm?g's presentation said: ? Namara, among other important of- "Mr. Kattenburg stated ficials, backed Rusk's view, the ac- that as recently as last ?count says.- -? - - - ...,? ? ? ? . - ? 1. hursdaY it was the belief, . ? The report on the session, heki ? ,. at of. Ambassador (Henry Ca- the State Department and chaired bot) Lodge Or.) that, if we by Rusk in President Kennedy's undertake tO live with this . . absence, is Contained in a menioran-? repressive regime, with its .! dum written by Marine Maj. Gen. bayonets at every street A tic! McNamara agreed. -Rusk then went on to say there was "good proof,' in Krulak's term, that the war ivas being won. Lyndon ol-inson agreed, saying that "from both a practical bud a political viewpoint, . It would be a disaster to pull out; that we should top playing cops and rob- bers and get back to talk-' lug straight to the GVN .(Saigon government). and that we should once again o about 'winning- the par." Sharply Critical The Pentagon report on She meeting was sharply 'critical of the delibera- - flops. It spoke of the offi- ?.:cials' "rambling inability' ;to focus the' problem, in- ? ylced to reach common ,agreement on the nature of She problem." The report continues: Victor C. Krulak, then the Pent a? corner and its ti amp I "M o r e impo rtantly, son's top expert on counterinsur- negotiations with puppet . _ however, the meeting is gency. Approved. For Release 2001/?/04: CIA-ROPt0-brittitR000i001140001-3 , E03TO-IT GLOM Approved for Release 200170310411:0A-RDP80-01 . 3:1! ? ?TATINTL yr!) v 7-11 Ci; (FP}-tin 0 By Darius S. Thabvala Globe Staff A. key Johnson Administration military . adviser had proposed in in 1964 that tactical nuclear weapons would bas. to..be deployed if Com- munist Chinese ' forces entered the ground war 'in Vietnam. Admiral Harry D. Felt, then thc.; commander in chief of the, Pacific forces, em- phatically demanded also that com- manders be given the freedom to use such weapons "as had been as.: sumed under various plans." ' This question, among others, was discussed among hi top advisers at The Honolulu conference, June l-2, Ci34. Foflowinz.>: the meeting, President . Johnson asked his advisers the basic question: "Would the rest of Southeast Asia necessarily fail if Laos and South Vietnam came under 'North Vietnamese control?" J.- On June 9, the Board of National Estimates of the 'Central Intelli- gence...Agency, provided a response, staling: . "With the possible exception. of Cambodia, it is likely that no nation in the area would. quickly succumb - to Communism as a result of the fall of Laos and South Vietnam, Further- more, a continuation of the spread of Comthunism, in the area would not be inexorable-. and any spread which did occur would take time -.----- time in - which the total situa.tion might ? change. in any number of Nvays un- favorable to the Cominunist cause." These and other details are part of the on Vietnam study that was made for Defense Department. . .The E;tate Department approach- ed the Honolulu conference "with a basic assumption," namely "our point of departure is and must be that We cannot accept the overrun- ning of southeast Asia by Hanoi and Peking." ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 Beyond this, the discussions "were intended to help clarify is- sues with respect to exerting pres- sures against . North Vietnam." The joint Chiefs of Staff recommended that .'-'the US should seek through military actions to accomplish de- struction of the North Vietnamese will and capabilities as necessary to compel the Democratic Government of Vietnam to cease .proViding sup- port .to the insurgencies in South Vietnam and Laos." LIMITED ACTION ?? However, The JCS went on to note that "some current thinking appears to 'dismiss rine objective in favor of a lesser objective,- one vis- ualizing limited military action which, hopefully, would cause the North Vietnamese to decide to ter- minate their .subversive support." During discussions of the extent of new military action, Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge "argued-in favor of attacks on north." He is reported to have stated "his conviction that most support for the Viet Cong 'would fade as soon as some 'counter- terrorism in were begtin against bRv." Discussions , then turned to the desirability of obtaining a eongres-; sional. resolution prior to wider US action. Lodge felt that it would not be necessary; since the. US 'response would be on a 'tit-for-tat" basis. But Defense Secretary 'McNamara, Busk and CIA Director John McCone all argued in 'favor of the resolution. Gen. Maxwell U. Taylor, chair- man of the Joint Chiefs, then raised "the final possibility" of Chinese involvement. Were that to.occur,.the allies would require "seem .ground divisions." . "Secretary .7\1cNaniara then went on to say that the possibility of major ground action also led to a serious question of having to use nuclear weapons at some point," the reports points out, ."Admiral Felt responded emphatically that there was no pos- sible way to hold off the Communists 011 the ground without the use of tactical nuclear weapons and that it v:ras essential. that the commanders be given freedom to use these as had been assumed undervarious plans," it added. Gen. Taylor was "more doubtful as .to. the existence or at least to the degree of the nuclear weapon re- quirement." "The point, the report concluded, "was not really followed up." Approved .For Release 20i#0113:1/VITTClik-RDP80-0 ?1 0 JUN 1971 Mies Do, On Viet 14.5 ? ? Fast 071 .By George Lardner Jr. ? Washington Post Staff Write: "The Pentagon Papers" went on sale here yesterday with the government lining up as one of the biggest buy- ers of the once-secret docu- ments. The Pentagon and the CIA ordered nearly 100 cop- ies of the paperback book, according to the Washington distributor and local book- sellers. The publisher of the news- paper series originally printed in The New York Times said the Navy or- dered 2,000 more books di- rect from the printing plant. "It's only been on sale for a few hours and it's already In a league with "The ,French Lieutenant's Woman' and 'The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight.' " said Ken Terhune of Dis- trict News Co., the Washing- ton-area distributor. ? In New York, at the head- quarters of the book's pub- lisher, Bantam Books, Inc., there was even more enthu- siasm. Brisk orders from Eu- rope, especially West Ger- many, the publishing house sale:, are even outdistancing 'Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex," at least in English. Trucks for the Washing- ton distributor began pick- ing up their first order of 12,500 copies at Dulles Inter- national Airport at 3 a.m. BY midafternoon, Terhune said, they Were all on the book- racks with another batch of 25,000 on the way. "As far- as a New York Times book goes," he said, "it's far better than any- thing we've ever handled." The CIA ordered 25 copies direct from District News.' Close to 1,000 more went on sale at shops in the Penta- gon, including the news- stand where' Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird's office asked for "about 20" copies and other defense agencies ordered some 30 more. "It's really quite re:' markable," said Esther Mar- golis of Bantam Books,? where executives had ini- tially contemplated a first printing of 175.000. Instead, they settled on 500,000 and yesterday 'afternoon decided on a second printing of 50,000. - The first of the $2.25 Pap- erback editions began roll- ing off the presses at Ban- tam's Chicago plant only Wednesday night. "Foreign interest," Miss Margolis said, "has been ex- traordinarily high. In West Germany, we got orders for . 15,000. That's the highest ever for a Bantam book - there, including 'Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex,' Valley of the Dolls,' and Portnoy's Complaint.' " Stars and Stripes, she added, ordered 2,000 copies. for sale at armed forces PX stores in Europe and the U.S. Information Agency put in for 250, presumably for its libraries around the world. On the level of just plain readers, Terhune said that some of Washington's larger bookships and department stores reported selling as many as 100 copies of the se- cret Vietnam war history within an hour or two. But some were blase. "Ws just a compilation of articles from The New York Times." said a spokesman for the So- viet embassy. "I don't see the necessity of buying it, / now." Of the CIA's order, he said with a chuckle, 'Maybe they have more money than we have." ? There was also, Miss Mar- golis said, a strange silence , from Saigon. "We have a distributor in South Viet- nam," she reported, "but our export department cabled him yesterday for the third time. We haven't gotten any answer yet, which is sort of unusual." STATI NTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 3, STATI NTL Approved For Release 2001103/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 DAYTON, OHIO NEVIS tPdAY 2 8 1,11, ? E - 161,249 S - 215,360 ,---: ?fif' ' .. )4.-41 fr : -, A 0 ? 0 /3- 0 0. "p' 75 f (-:.-: 1.; (7.2377D 7: (-11 771: Cl' ii VII V (---??,..'im il 1 : if J, ?,,'1 ce> 19 v.::,. ii 0 ?Li/ eii,rcy ... 1.'. iL ti1,ty .zz) .,.." ' ? . ? 40, ? ,'( - . , 7-f-A 1,1 t:// (r-:4---12. ? ? - "Fr :.,?The Defense department and the Cell- i tral intelligence agency are arguing over the meaning of some holes in the ground, like ,ancients interpreting chicken en- trails. The issue is as important as it is confusing, and congressional action on it either commit billions more to . nuclear weaponry Or endanger the seen- rity of us all: ? The holes, GO, of them, are in Soviet mis- sile fields, and they are larger than any other holes our spy satellites have. ever spotted. This has led the Defense depart- ment to conclude that the RUssians are preparing sites for a new generation of .nuclear missiles----perhaps one that car- . riee sever al independently-targeted 11-bombs in its nose. ? On March 10 Secretary Melvin Laird 'confirmed that ?''the Soviet Union is Involved in a new ? and apparently extensivc?ICBM construction program." He said the Pentagon might ask Congress lor a supplemental appropriation-to coun- ter the threat. , . Now the New York Times reports that \-/ the C.,L4....has rejected the Laird analysis. CIA expert's, says the Times, have con- ' ? chided the larger holes arc for concrete liners meant to "harden" missile sites , against enemy strikes?a defensive tactic 77-7.) rro-tnri-, 0 /.1 II i bc..) Lt. 'C' the United States has already employed at its Minuteman sites. . , F.videnee for this is that most of the larger holes have been dug in existing SSI1 missile fields. SSIls are relatively small missile's, and arms experts say there is no r e a :4 o n 'why huge new missiles would be placed among them. Also, the CIA reportedly has pictures of ? concrete liners which have already ar- rived at the sites. The liners are not big enough. around to accommodate large missile. . . ? It Comes down to a question of int en- lion. If the Soviet goal is to acquire a '- first-strike capability that would render. the United States unable to respond to a surprise attack, we have no choice but to keep a jump ahead of their nuclear technology, and the jumps,go by billions of dollars. The confusion is still another reason for the United States to press the Russians', hard in- the strategic arms negotiations.. If the Soviet Union is not plotting for a first-strike advantage, it has little reason; to hesitate about limiting offensive weapons. A treaty would spare Russia: the vast new spending that 'would be forced on it if -Washington mistakes re-4 furbished silos for new missiles and pace,s the ,t,.trms race into another lap. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 TiRt0 (TV,AA!? 1 ) Approved For Relea4ke120011/03/04 : CIA-k6igiNCTI-60 EljA ? 0 fiJc cV- "1e 1105 comunica 90% dos informaL .coes do quo clispho c nos doixa adivinhar o rosto.", A opiniao 6 do urn senador do Partido Eepliblicano c traduz bem o sucesso alcancado por Richard Helms, atuabdiretor da CIA, na dificil tavola de fazer amigos. Helms 6 realmente um homem de grande tato politic? qua tern 0 clom raro de inspirar conlianca inclu- sive .1cptioles quo, pot silos lunches, po- deriam desconfiar Suit carreira como seria do esperar num hind? de James Bond, muito mais eficiente no uso do. cerebro do quo no man* do revolver ? foi obscura ate ? quando so viu guindad? 6 chcfia da ? ? Richard Helms, muito tempo na ponumbra -? Agenda Central do Inte14,-,encia. Mas pouca.s pessoas em tocin o !nuncio par- ticiparam nos illtimos vinte anos too all- vamente da luta trovada nos bastidurcs da politica internacional. Entre as mui- tas proczas de Helms, he" ulna do 'quo ele so orgulha de modo especial. Ela so relaciona corn urn episocii? famoso: entreg?tt polo CIA, no Tito New York Ti- fllCS, cm junho do 190, do informe se- cret? apresentado par Nikita rruschev ao xx Congress? do mus, 0 doemnento eXplOC1111. COMO ? tuna bomba moo do ocidental c a sun divulgacao apressou process? de desestalinizac6o. Entretanto, a parte final do texto era falso. Para aprolundar as dissonshes interims no campo conumista C os atritos ?entre Washington e 1\loseou, a CIA act-est:on- ion trinto c dois pontos ao reloterio de Kruschev. 0 efeito foi semsocional, Mais torde, pssi'itos em "kremlinologia" procc- deram a tuna annse minuciaso das pas- sagens forjada.s c clegaram a conolusrao do quo o cstilo era perfeitamcnte tic() an do document?, assernelhando-se ao de Kruschev coma duos gobs do Agua entre- si. Dick Helms foi o ;tutor princi- pal do falsificacao. UnipoIk"U d:1'..-;"'CI-ite. Helms tern as maneiras do tun geniis:man, o so ecu Jo ire do urn diplomata de carreira e sabe sor- rir c fakir C01110 UM americano da classe media. Em p00e0 tempo, construiu uma reputacao de honesticiade e franqueza quo. favorccen a sun imagem. Contr6ria- memte a sous prodoce.ssores, Da0 6. um homer:" rico e, em VOL de so fechar numa tone do marfim, mantem uma vida so- intensa, contand? numerosos ami- gos intro a classe politica. Oficialmente, tem agora urna tripla responsabilidadc: C dirctor do CIA, pre- sidente do United States Intelligence Board e dire ion do Servico de Informa- ches Central (Dm). Cabe-llie a tarefa delicada do filh?ar C sintetizar as infor- maceies colhidas pclos servicos socretos - :- americanos e levO-las, clepois, ao conhc- cimento do Presidente da B.cp-Oblica c do Congress?. Quanclo o Conselho Nacio- ?nal de Scg,uranca se re-time, 6 Ole quem ? abre as sess5es, corn um inforrne sobro a situacao existemto ern tOclas as Omits ?- nevrAlgicas do 'nuncio. . . Cornnutaclores egolps-i-3. 0 QG da CIA 05."0 correspancle 6 ii", , ue c161,,, forma!'" os leitores de romances de ' Tse-tung ? c as ameacas de subvcrsno no Tereeiro Mundo. espionagern. P urn -s6lido eclificio de oito ? la and ares quo Se eleva as margins do Po- tomac, em Langlev, urn subirrbio do .Washin2ton. Assinalam os visitantes quo nos correrlores c solos nao c se urn revolver. Em contrapartida, 116 no predio um grande mini-tern de computa- domes cm Conejo:lit:I-lento pennons:lite. MilhOes de fichas perfuradas sao cligeti- das todos os dias por essas mAquinos aperfeicoadissintas. 11 clots gosta do dim- STATIN1 quo n'Th existe munda um sistema do coldta de. in lormacs to gjgantesco porfeito. . Entretanto, o pr6prio gigantism? da CIA C a sua inclopenclenc,ia acabam as- sustando ate os que dela prceisam. A Agemcia 6 urn Estado dentro do Estado, Tom a ma politica c nao espora ordens pain se lancar en" iniciatiyas que gcram crise5. mundiais, B ninguetin, nem mes-i, mo o Pi-ea.-N-1k: dos EuA, pod. ostabole- cer corn exatidao a fronteira dos ativicla- ? des da Agencia. JO faxen; parte da his- t6ria as noticios sobre sua presenca na derrubada do regime de Jacob? Arbenz Guzman no Guatemala, cm 1054; na preparacio do malogrado iliaqUe a Cuba, cm 1931; no golpo contra Ngo Dinh Diem, cm Saigon, cm 1933; e na luta antiguerrilha clue tenninou corn a morte de "Cho" Guevara, em 1937, no Boli- via. Mas a londa tecida cm torn? da CIA atingiu tamanhas proporches quo a ikgen- eia C responsabilizacia pela quase tota- lidado dos pipes de Estado ocorriclos ? em paises do Tercoir? Niunclo, Ate nos EUA, politicos c jornalistas demnicia- ram o seu onvolvimento no derruhada de Norodom Sihanouk, no assassinio do Ge- neral Bone Schneider, no scqiiestro Pedro Aramburu e na corrupcao do di- rigentes de conhccidas fundaches C. da Associacao Nacional do Estudante.s (NsA). Tornou-so impossivel marcor a linha di- ' visoria entre a verclade c.rt fantasia. A datxtonfianciti cc M:on. De certo mod?, a C:I A 6 vitima da aura de man maquiavelismo quc se foyjou cm Volta de sou name. Segi,und9 a revista Lo Non- vel Obseruatettr, a?:ohirtir?idade, do novo chefs: da cia estari4teocupando a Pre- sidents" Nixon quo toria encarregado um de setts amigos o General Cushman, de mante-lo dcbaixo do Ohio. Helms, na opi- niao do alguns observadora, considera urn esbanjamento a construcao do siste- ma Anm, de misscis antimisseis, cujo custo total seni .provavelmente- de 40 babes de Mores. Bealista, tonic muito menos a unss do clue a China ? apesar da nova diplomacia de sorrisos de Mao Approved For Release 2001/03/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601R00010014000W51'tt'- ' Approved For ReleaseV2061103/04 : CIA-RDP80-0 20 MAY 1971 STATINTL FT Sq ?d\ , 3[rs th ? . By RICK NAGIN ' ATLANTIC CITY, May I9:---The Computer People for Peace held an anti-war -rally here today on ; the boardwalk in front of Conven- ' II:?.11 where the Spring Joint ICOniozfer Conference (SJCC) Was holding its anLai rafeting. - The SJCC, brings teg,21.lier mem- bers of all c.:imputer p:ileadonal societies to discu:.3 latest deve:op- tr.ents and enif int ti; splays of :fteW.machinery. . About ROOD people, nearly all 'white men representing the cor- porations, universities, various police and governmental agen- cies, the CIA and the FBI, attend- ed the conference. The theme of ? the conference was "Responsib- ility."_. ; 1.. Speaking at the anti-war rally, attorney Flo Kennedy quoted the SJCC program and stated that the. responsibility referred to was ob- viously responsibility to the mili- tary-industrial complex estab- lishment (MICE). Hundreds at rally Several hundred people at the rally cheered as speakers ex- posed the involvement of the com- puter industry in racism, repres- sion and war. . Ihe Computer People for Peace " (CPP) yesterday demanded the right to speak at the SJCC session on "computers in law, enforce- ment," and to expose the repres- sive threats posed by police use of advanced computer technology. ? They were refused but won the _right to ask Questions at an ex- : panded session, after speeches by Lt. Daniel Cawley of the New ,;.. York City Police Department, f- and by Herbert Avram, who dis- ?cussed a cOmputer system he developed for the CIA. Avram refused to discuss the ? CIA's interest in his system, when .... asked by the CPR Jerome Daunt of the F.131 had been scheduled to discuss the National Crime Information Cen- ter, a central computer connect- , ,ing local police departments in all ? states with the Fp, but he did not , show up. The CF'P had prepared a warrant to seize him on a citizen's arrestjor conspiracy to violate :the civil rights of the American people. The CPP also won the right to ;.?-hold its own session, which in- ! 'eluded panels on data bank's, mm .ority groups and women in the ? Industry, computers in the mill- : - tary, unemployment and health LSystems. - ? ?Jr' Approved For Release 2001/03/04 : CIA-RDP8041601R000100140001-8 FAR HORIZONS Approved For Releao2Oter10/810211.VIPPRIDIP80-01601R Spring 1972 Reference Ms Relleased In March '1972, the Library of Congress began public dissemination of selected Central Intelligence Agency reference . aids through its Document Expediting Project (DOC:EX). DOCEX provides subscribers (uni- versity, collGge, State, and public libraries) with. U.S. Government publications not available for pur- chase either at the Government Printing Office or at the issuing agency. The subscriber selects the Publications desired at an annual fee ranging from $175 to $525. No back issues are available. CIA reference aids planned under this service will include: *Chiefs of State and Cabinet Mem- bers of Foreign Governments Directory of Soviet Officials, Vol. ? I ? National Organizations ' Directory of Soviet Officials, Vol. II ? RSFSR (Russian. Socialist Federated Soviet Republic) Directory of Headquarters Person- nel, USSR Ministry of Foreign Affairs Appearances of Soviet Leaders Directory of People's Republic of China Officials Appearances and Activities of Leading Personalities of the People's Republic of China 'Directory of Albanian Officials Directory of Bulgarian Officials Directory of Czechoslovak Of- ficials Directory of Hungarian Officials ? Directory of Polish Officials Directory of Romanian Officials DireCtory of Yugoslav Officials - Directory of East German Officials Directory of Cuban Officials Leadership Wall Charts Directory of Ukrainian Officials Inquiries concerning- these publica- tions should-be addressed to: Documentation Expediting Project (DOCEX) Exchange and Gift Division Library of Congress ? Washington, D.C. 20540 TN III II Athe Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Approved FoFillAWA$46,RA0g/184-. 0,37C1k tItT- Aigi10 JoLl 2744 0 0:327,;! 6 " 17-7'LC-:;!.1 rl : I 11, A Li C., s, ? ? Latest fad among antiwar people in this area is to use the telephone credit card number of the Central Intelli- gence Agency (CIA) to make long-distance phone calls. Only it isn't the right number. - The number in ciuestion is being passed by word of mouth and the underground press. I've gotten it from four different sources. In each case, I've gleefully been told that it is a marvelous way to plague the CIA and to register an off-beat complaint against the war in Vietnam. ? Well, it's also a marveloUs way to go to jail and/or pay a fine. There's a federal law against fraudulent use of a telephone credit card.- It carries a maximum of five years and $1,000 fine. The. penalty depends on how much the call costs. Under $100 it's a misdemeanor (90 days) and mofe than $100 it's a felony (up to five years). "Wait until the CIA gets the phone bill," said one thusiastic user. "The number's been spread all over the country and people are calling all over the world on it. It should get them to take notice." It also should get the taxpayers who aren't getting free long-distance phone calls to take notice. I mean, where does the money come from? - contacted the CIA, located just outside Washington, D.C., and a spokesman said he hadn't heard of any such use of any telephone credit numbers. Knowing the . CIA, that doesn't mean much. They are inclined not to have heard "officially" about anything. Our Washington Bureau did some checking, .however, And determined that the number is not of Washington, but of New York City. It is being investigated by the New York security office of the phone company. . The number does, indeed, belong to a legitimate credit card. The telephone company has a code known to all operators to determine quickly if a card is right. Most . such numbers have. 10 digits and a final letter of the alphabet. The letter is a code for one of the digits, and that must match before a call will be placed: . ? ? A spokesman for NorthWestern Bell, Wyman Thorson, checked Out the number for me. He determined that It is in New York and that it doesn't belong to the CIA. 1-le could not tell me to whom or what it belongs, . except that it has nothing to do with- the government. So, it's another hoax like that of actor Paul Newman.. A number purporting to be his is still being passed about- the country. The story there is that he has offered it for anyone's use. He denies it, and the telephone com- pany reports it's not even his number. ? Approved For P(41 /phoneVs?. 2001/08013c:i019CRDPOCAtilloy 001 00140001 -8 Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80 STATI NTL SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. EXAMINER ! ? 204,749 ' EXAMINER 8: CHRONICLE ? 640,004 ? _ ? , 7 ;b ? ? Bob ons Ytc:,i,i1,2 .111Pn?????????e*- Pcpe117:77 ai ? lejj ali cc,51 a Map - ? I don't know how you. feel about it, but I'm worried about the big 'change that is taking place in this country. We haven't gotten into either the war in Pakistan or the one in Ceylon. This is the first time in a generation or two - that we haven't joined in other people's wars. That's not the America I knew, man and boy. Makes a taxpayer want to hang his head in shame. ? What have we got against the Pakistani people and the ? Ceylonese? Why should we let these people fight their wars without our going in there and helping them? ' It's just not Me us, and I plan to vote against this administration at the earliest opportunity for depriving us . of our traditional duty to intervene. . Pretty soon we're going to have no use for- all our troops and 71,.2, ton bombs, when Vietnam shuts down about the year 2000 A.D. We'll feel: like fools if we don't have a war to join and people to protect from godless atheism and bring intg the eternal sunshine of the Free .World. Right? - We can't let opportunities like Pakistan and Ceylon slip out of our finueys, as if we were some kind of dolts I like the Russians, Red Chinese, Japanese, West Germans. , Italians, English, French, Scandinavians, Swiss, the Vati- ? 'canese and other thriving peoples who are too dumb to. 4. rush off to every war that pops its head. * * * ? - e_ I CALLED the Pentagon today, trying to get a clue to our uncharacteristic conduct in the ease of the snubbed wars in Pakistan and Ceylon and finally found a general who would talk. I asked him point blank, "General, how ? Come e don't send troops to Dinajpur, Lalmanirhat and support Mrs. Sirimavo Bahdaranalke? Don't we owe some allegiance to Dudley Senanayake? What's our position on Nagalingan Santnugathasan? Are we eschewing Rohana Wijiwere? When are, we going to shore up the Sri Lanka ; Party?" The general coughed nervously for a time, then sput- tered, you .512al1 that, *sir?" He thought I was Sen. Fulbrig,ht. ? "Okay," I said. "Shore up. S-h-o-r-e u-p." "Well, Took," be said, "don't mention this to any egotistical exemplar of the Eastern Establishment, or cowardly commentator on CBS, but we just can't send our advisors, B-52's, F-4's, F-105's, Ilueys, C-130's, defoliators, aircraft carriers, PXs and Bob Rope in there until we get ? a few things straightened out." Approved For Release-2001/03104 : CIA-RDP8M1601R000100140001-8 Like what, he was asked: "Well, like finding out just where the fighting is going on," the general said. "The only maps we havn, so Inn', are from an Esso gas station in Hagerstown, Md. where I live. I've asked the_ CI A...to check, but I suspect the.;, be a little outdated. All they Say about that ? part .of toe world is that it's all India, and one other thing." ? "What's that?" "Don't drink the water." "Where's that leave us, high and dry without a war to send troops and stuff to?" * * * "DON'T YOU WORRY, Toots," the general boomed. "Just as soon as we find out where this fightin's hap- pened, and how to spell the names, by golly we'll jump in there with both feet. We can't let those people go down the drain, can we?" ? "Which people?" I asked. "You know very well which people," he thundered. "The people well go all out for, to save them from being taken over by atheistic hordes from the West ? or is it the East? Moreover, Nve'll send the vice president over there to give morale talks to the troops, if necessary, plus a brand_ new USO show featuring Martha Raye AND Jane Fonda. I thanked him, and sent my old war correspondent's uniform to the tailor's to have it let out. SLUM:ON _ ? Approved For Releasea0iiii63t64 CIA-RDP80-01 STATINTL DIT.Q.n.-y.'S .71 mi. 1:111 Lif7-13q0 4-1E75 - - STA TL By Jack Anderson International espionage is seldom as efficient as the in- ter-departmental spying that goes on in Washington. the DIA regularly gets a copy. It is smuggled to them by Adm. Thomas Moora,r, the joint chiefs' chairman, who has sufficient standing to get on the distribution list. To make unauthorized cop- The rivalry between some ics of this sensitive .presiden- government departments is so tial digest is akin to counter- intense that they spy on feiting holy writ. Yet our spies ono spotted a Moorer another like suspicious whohave is entrusted with the ad- miral's eyes-only messages, furtively running off copies on a DIA copying machine. Another supe.rsccret docu- ment is the State Depart- ment's intelligence round-up telligence Agency keeping from embassies around the close surveillance. And when a world. The department guards State Department employee this so jealously that it is enters the Pentagon he takes stamped, "NODIS," which means it isn't supposed to be the same precautions as if he distributed outside State's were entering enemy tern- own elite. tory. What they don't know, hew- No daily document is more ever, is that a Pentagon pi- sensitive that "The President's geon in their midst runs off Daily Intelligence Briefing-,,, unauthorized copies and sneaks them in a plain brown which the CIA prepares for manila envelope to the joint President Nixon. It is loaded chiefs chairman and the DIA with SI (Special Intelligence) items, country by country, on director. long sheets tucked into a ci Thus do government agen- es, in the best cloak-and- white folder with blue letter- dagger tradition, snoop upon f To possess a copy of ()" ancther' :?President's , private inte ii- ience digest is the ultimate status symbol. Those who see' . it are men of consequence, in- deed. But for the DIA, which is eager to know what the CIA knows, access to this exclusive document is a matter of ut- most priority.. Our own spies tell us that spouses. The armed forces, for Instance, watch each other jealously. The Central Intelli- gence Agency never makes a move without the Defense In- / Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 : 0 , L Approved For Release 200.1/03/04 ? q1A.fli,tDP811-0 ? J 3 ? ----_____.........,____._ L ri . . a ? 1 Lai 1-'111 del i tn. 11 ii ?.......?_____?__ ______ -in\ 0 ? 71-1-) 11-1;71-tr fim% P:/(-`1-. ? Jo ? By Art Buclztrald It's very raie that the CIA gets caugnt flatfooted, but the other day when Red China invited the United States to send a table-tennis team to Peking, the Central In- telligence Agency discovered it had no champion ping- pong players in the organization whom it could send along on the trip. CIA officials were going crazy trying to find someone" before the U.S. team left for Peking last Saturday. In panic, the CIA officials decided to hold a crash program in ping-pong. Neighbors who live around Lang- ley:Va., where the top-secret agency is located, reported seeing truckloads of ping-pong tables going through the gates. - They have reported that they can't sleep at night be- . cause-of the noise of thousands of balls being hit had; -V and forth across tine tables set up in the CIA gymnasium. - Any agent who ever played ping-pong in 'boy's camp or at the beach had been given leave from his regular duties and brought to Langley in hopes he might be developed into a champion ping-pong player before the U.S. team took off for Peking. The CIA .also held an Employees' Ping-Pong Tourna- ment during lunch hour with cash prizes of up to $100,000 of unaccountable futids to encousage more :people to take up the sport. . Yet., despite these desperate measures, officials of the agency. are pessimistic that they'll be able to develop anybody worthy of playing Red China at table tennis. "What difference ,does it make if he isn't a cham- pion?" I asked a CIA official. "We ha%e a serious problem," he said. "This is the first time we're playing Pact China at any sport. Table tennis is the most important game in China. 'The USIA and the State Department want the United States to field the best ? team it can find, because they believe that it we can defeat the Chinese at ping-pang, It would be the greatest propaganda victory of the CA War. "On the other hand, the Joint Chiefs of Staff andthe CIA feel it would be better to send a mediocre team and risk defeat in exchange for finding out what Mao-Tse- Tung is really thinking. _ Ar"1 7,'"p "Therideal,?.of Coifrsi, would be to send a champion ping-pong player w-ho also can figure out what is going on in Peking. But so far we can't find anybody." "Why is that?" I asked. "Surely in this vast organiza- tion you must have some excellent table-tennis players." "Unfortunately, most or our agents are golfers," he said sadly. "We also have some tennis players and a few people who play -croquet. But no one here ever thought to recruit ping-poir.eplayers," "Couldn't you barrow 2- champion player from an- other agency of the government?" "The only one who could have .qualified was a roan who worked for the FBI and had won the ,intercollegiate ping-pang champiomaip of 1353. But, unfortunately, he was fired a month ago for telling a friend he didn't like J. Edgar Hoover's barber." ? "Then it looks like the- United States table tennis team may have to go to Poking without CIA representa- tion?" I said. "Unless we can come up with a"sleeper," the official said. "Our recruiters- are out on the college campuses rint now and their orders are to find someone, anyone. Ii :ine.,:n't make any diffcrInce if he can pass -a security am cc, as long its he hai-a,.a -vicious backhand." Will anyone be punished because the CIA was unpre- pared to p:ovide an agent Tor the Red China table tennis tournament?" I asked. "Our peraonnel director was demoted and transferred ti Iceland the other day,'Ost at the last minute President Nixon commuted his sentence." MI. 1,,,FAn.6eics Moxine ChesMrc. is ill. Her VIP column wilt resume when retires. ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA4RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 STATI NTL STATI NTL P08*g Pla4127.: Approved For Release 2001/031/CPCS,14? P80-01601 )Jj7,5 ? C:L Since the r'ecent bomb OK- I.. plosion ir the Capitol Building, Washin,E;ton officials hove tightened security on the handful of -locations under streets that conceal a massive crossroads of vital electric lines. On the surface these super-sensitive locations look like any other met- ropolitan or urban street corners. But, in fact, their manholes open into .a rassive complex of tele- phone lines -- includjnL: in sone cases concrete- enclosed CIA cables, also sanitary and storm sewers, gas and water mains, steam heating pipes, electric power cables and some .White House lines., As one security official said: "If anyone asked us questions about these drossroads locations -- without a clear 'need to know' we'd become mighty interested in him and his background and activity:" And as a new security measure at the White House, everyone who valks on the south lawn is now under constant surveil- lance by two high-power, closed-circuit TV cameras iilith long-range zoom lenses. Their location is a secret, and you will never be able to spotIthem. STATI NTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04 ! CIA-RD080-01601R000100140001-8 STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/63/04 : 'C1A-RDP80-016 11,-,!licraftc.r's St,tr Quos , is tcal of rnoecin.rc:ccti!.?,as you r.t11t use r l,:???? ? Ii 0 T1 ?to. I ? \\*.',' ' i 1, ?-? : ? _ ,r7 :-1 sTc,ovivy, you radio's !-;7.1'2 ts, evei ho y0-7n'1"!0i-rie Dy LN DUCKWA1.:1?ER Captain Kidd, Dutch.Schultz, and Benedict Arnold are dead, you say? Sure, but the of those old .--: d coun- rels arc still alive mid well on the internation!al 'Their ons are po,.vcj.ful transmitters which often broadcast on a global scale: Their escapades trouble government But the blacl;suards can be the delight of. shortwx,i2 listeners. "Ydu don't. n'?,!ed a pile of electronic gc,ar to li:-;tou You Can .(..nj,iy the pastimc with a simpin portable that ? captures strong sinals en nuthing more than a telescoping whip stick- ing out of _the case. The seasonal h?'obyiA666519ed-cFd ke`!eaW0 . outdoor nittenna (,a wire ? o I ii ,feet, long) or goes in for more. eypu- for shott,.-...-tve. It C001.23 assent,'.Atod for about $60. ' . f . ,,..1 ,.? , t. ,-) , t ? " ? (7:1) ci \ '`?. -? ; sive receiving equipment v?-ith si;ecial accessories for cutting interferenco. The pick up. pov:.erful intcrnationnl broacleaters like BBC, Tr:ndio Moscow, and Ja- pan's the spicy sta'tions iaay call for a morb sensitive in,3trument.. Fr...,,t;;ortzy (:;;;!I:t) 3.50:9, 4.355 2.4 34,00, 4.365 11.607, 9.555 9.535, 11.410 3.340 13.200, 13.309, 15.0'90;15.100 17.700, 6.050, 7.050 1.405, 7.305 9.300, 11.305, 15.000 ' 1.157, 6.060 6.135 ? 10.030 10.015 CIA se II Radio Lib...tr.-O.:A Army P:y1c,c4r an Kiss t.le Honey (Crwsirt Radio Por:.u;zal Libro qadio Et;;;%acii Ra-Jis Espana ? tod:psc,,:isato 1". i?Corn St intro; ;;!;:; America Radio Atilar;cas flacliolLivana But whate'ver your .choice, onee.you. hi.:ve your reEviver you can join thou sand:; of fellow listcn...2rs who attempt to eavesdrop en rojp.o. broadcasters. Ono cll!.racter is the "pirate," who sails a radio station just outside the 12-mile territorial limit or a country, Co7itinued CIA Viol Crrng R;odio 6o3ia (201531.13) Racno Da5Ildac.1 Raclic.; Moscovi (3001410. Rion Of Spain Mosso:, CIA Cuba Radio of S.*Viotilorti, Vii Coo.g. RPf-?9,7119101/31 13,99Q19Q1400 List.to..tr S.F. Asia S.E. Asia L',H...ita East Lliciene East No; th Arno Sc Europa, N. America ' Europa A111.olica Cantrat, South; Antcotic& ? C?soltal, South Arnorica. S.E. Ar lt4o, North trica CODT").-111: .,..? . Approved For Release RTz_ ?c ri C During the past year, many of the people involved in the computer business have been . worrying about the iiiellacc to privacy and freedom which is presented by centralized banks of ?computerized infor- mation. If the proposed ? National Data Bank takes on reality, will every citizen of these United States Le in danger of harassment, meddling?and possibly worse?by agencies of government and others who have access to such data? Ii i r-i e ' following rights tor anyone whose name has got into a data bank: The right to read what is maintained in any file kept about you by the FBI, or the CIA, or any credit bureau, or any other agency which com- piles information about you. The right to inform the agency of errors. The right to compel the changing of untrue informa- tion about you. Thc right to eompel the re- moval of irrelevant in forma- Some months ago. the editor tion about you. of Compilers cov3 AI bait Although I sympathize gen- a journal of that trade, actual- Emily ,with these claims, ly proposed to throw a wrench cannot go all the way with Mr. :into the machinery, unless Berkeley. It would be all very measures af?e taken to protect well, fm instance, for an inno- the privacy' of 'people about cent person to have access to .whom data has been gathered. information about himself in "As a last resort," he -wrote, the files of police agencies. But "wc should remember tiio t not everybody is innocent. large files are very vulnerable If a criminal were permitted to error." And, as this gentle- access to such files about. him- . man. (Edmund. C. ? Berkeley) self, not only might detection went on, computers, can be in- and prosecution or his acti,J. ? dueed to err: - ties become almost impossi- . "It would be highly dcArae bite, but he might retaliate on blc for everyone ? engaged in anyone who had supplied lu- au unpopular activity to adopt formation about him. - three names and three Social In Engin:id, Lord Halsbury, Security numbers. This ought the president of the Council of to throv,' any data system, ii :computerized or Mt, into con- the Brtsh Computer Society; vulsions. Furthermore, if 0110 writes that there is an urgent need . for "file security." .He . adopted a new name and, a new Social Security number advocates "an no Light every four months or so, I of print-out'' for every persoa - believe the convulsions in the on whom computerized re- data system would never die ? cords are kept by agencies of down?oscillation would eon- governle lInt. "Y an ou cnot Untie indefinitely." ? h send people to prison becausa Incidentally, it is (wife law- the ,computer says so; there ful for anyone to have several has to be a better reason .thin Social Security numbers; also, that." , Some records should for many purposes, there is . flO go on the computer at all, nothing illicit about usin-i a :the Earl of Halshury conlin- pseudonym.- flow the data tics: -banks would cope with S wide"- "There are, or Coursc, cer- speead rebellion, only the god fain matters ss inch it is very of the computeis.hnows. proper to keep tel 'U' ? Mi-. iThrioeley proposes, how. whole system of references ' ever., that before resorting to ?and referees depends on scam such tactics' - the friends of pri- rity 'between the referee and vaey should seek the. passage the potential employer to Of laws resteieting the use of . whom ? the reference is' ad- data files in some ways and dressed." Such secret reCords. opening, thise files in othr should, be kept ? roe e_ou,?e ways. Ile ftpprom ttcortiReipase 0?1/04-104 : CIA7RDP80-01601R000100140001-8 ? should riot be- -con iiiuterized anch. easily available to all :sorts of people. ."At rob; sta.e. of our knowl- edge nothing should go on a computer unith--; ?L'e ai:e pre- pared. to grant the person to. whom the computer -records relate the right of print-out." Calr,clin, Protester Calvin Gotlieb, of the Department of Computer ;Science at ,..the..Uni- ,: versity of Toronto, .....,.decires?- that t`eventually, the only sat- isfactory solution be to attach security tags to every. - data field and use these tags to., determine under what condi- tions the information may be disseminated." lie knows that the cost of regulating arid li- censing information systems would be high -but advocates such regulation: "Experience has shown that overprotection is, in: fact, very rare. ?In ii iv opinion , if the problems regarding protection of individual privacy are ex- plained to the: public and to those responsible for 'political and legislative action and the alternative-3 are -set out, they will be willing to pay the price of keeping our social environ- ment healthy.": Until?if ever?such protec- tiOns for the privacy of data banks arc estahlished, gentle reader, you ;?:tid I ought to be cautious about scribbling down information about, ourselves for the use .of other folk. How- ever invecent our activities, it may be imprudent to become , the defenseless subject of somebody else's 'computerized ? dossier. . *sly Approved For Release 2001/o3p9;411:,-7 I ppso-01601R00 . . There was a time when the CIA coild overthroVZi usingi lie detector-which Ci id had not failed 'governments, finance military rlict.t tors and rir: in .the 20 years he. had been using it. Aispurua airlines all in secret. When aryone ma ie accusations 'passed. against this venerable .American .; ion everyone Pefore Panama, he was trained in secret scoffed arid Catiied on believing that it was aSli dl writing, receiving and decoding radio messages :intelligence aricer-3- similar to rha-omi ; every .nation "which sent coded messages at a rate of 125 gropps maintiins. That .was the la-ay it was.. Tcch,- it admits to And Of COL1!.SC what wouhs the CIA be without an t . per sc.cond." ? having financed anti-cove rumen t gnerida troops in ousted Diem bureaucrat? The classes were, given, by ? 'Laos, shady dealiogs in 2ainbodie., tr.d its former a man of 50 named Adolfo V,i10 had held a members openly admit that the Cl clid indc,.cd higlt-ranking po'st in the field of Cuba-U.Si shipping \/ 'overthrow ? the Jacob? Arbenz irl,,..erament j before fleeing the countty in the wake of Batista's Guaternama and the 'f-,iossaelegh goveriiment in Iran. speedy withdrawal!. But the CIA is still L it. .At the iet.ent Seventh Afier training Aispdrua N:VaS taken around Inc .. Congress of the ? International Organization of world appal en'tly for . a first hind look at the j" Spanish-speaking Who Who in the CIA. ? ? Journalists in Ilawimn, Pitnatna'nian journalist Balt- .asdic told hoii, he had been (rimed by the ' He Was trentesd with special cordiality by the then director of Costa Rican immigration, wlin is now in CIA to sey on the conferelle0 report on Cuban and other socialist press agpcics. the leadership of the right-wing Free Costa Rica .-Aispurna's stGl':;/ reads like a 'perfect james Bond Movement He then went to Colomliia ? ruovie,.witli -fat I Ii bitreauerats and addresses in where Ale hint it sUpers,ry radio, the krcket Mexico and Miami-excer,t that i is true. Along containing the codar.s, the money for Ns tip, r?.1-111 with his .prosentation of tile history of his CIA the carbon paper on which he was- to send his 'training, Aispdrua slio,..-ved the radio Le ,,vas tai!von to messages. - ? , send messages to Mexican jacket with a falae This was also the time when he was told what his III which 'he was 1'J x0 to cariy his cot2.e-d objectives w-ere on the Cuba mission. repo.:ts. He was he said to find out where the missile sites were (if any), check into the private lives of. Accbrding to Aispurua, be was firsi contacted by revolutionary leaders, discover any unreported a CIA agent named. branciaco Colon in December of e,conomic 1903. Colon told him the CIA was interested in hint reports on Cuba and try to make secret agreements with the Central- Committee of the because of his expertise on Cuban afraiT.S. Aispurda .was also told "we can solve any economic-problem .Cuban Communist Party. Front Colombia he went to Cuba, with stops in or any other kind of problem you may have." San Juan, Caracas, and Madrid on the way. Ile When the agent returned three days later. Ai'spurua agreed to work whit the CIA.. finally arrived in Cuba April 7,1969, whereupon. he ii-ninediately proceeded to spill the beans on the He was visited the next lay by Colon, this time latest CIA attempt to find .out what the people sec ccompanied by "a Yankee" named Rojer, who ? ? took over from that point. in Fidel Castro. Aispurita greeted his would-be victims with the Rojer took his to a suite in the Las Vegas building, statement, "I have come to Cuba, but Tam an agent f 'behind. the Hotel Panama. Rojer and ainoth!:!r recruited by the CIA as part of its plans to o'brain Americiin named AI interviewed him at Iten,gth. in ide "hat information for? its eventual aression against QuestionS aslced the.interview inchd, W is ? your fi10rite color?, What is you favorite form of , Cuba." ? A entertainment? and What I ind of women do you ispurua began Ins presentation by explaining the element the CIA computers seemed to have omitted like? ? [Aisprima is married]. Would you like a house - is that which. lets a revolutionary stand by his cuase . end a car end to be able to give: good things to your ? even in. the face of offers. of money, a house or a children? What would. you to be?lYhatat-c your ? philosophical beliefs on ho .,v to make the world car. ? . better place? and Can you adapt to living outside of ? Sai . order for nte ?to be here today-, on my own When contacted, .Aispuru was underground as be , you.: country?" , d Aispurua, "My revolutionary ideas-won out responsibility-, but with the absolute satisfaction of. .i't had been involved in leftist -activities on Panama having acted honestly, exposing how imperialism before the October I96S tries to buy hearts and minds at-1'd attack the Cuban ? coup. ' ? In jamitary 1969, together with Al, Alsratrua revolution-and with it the .L.atin American was revolution?and how, imperialism underestimates introduced to an old man "anparently a Fdi,-)ino, .thosar of us who devote our Ii to the struggles of who was just introduced Cs Dr. Garay, who hadjust arrived from AWasiiirilton._,G'...rjV ?ILLis a fat mauaof 'the people." medium liei-,:"PKyimoiiey?For, Keiease zoo1/0131434ctre[AQR,10-40-101804R00014014O001-8 Suarez Lara, P.O. Box 2: ,5.7t L, B.F. and . ray. conducted a threp7hottr seeMityainterview . Luis Valdes Garcia, 7840 S.W. 139th Terrace: ? ? ? Min ii, PIr,rtrli I? STATI NTL ? ST.ATI NTL Approved For Release 260ffia3fle4 :' CIA-RDP8O-D1 1 i'?? ? -2 - r (7:". g p ? - IEj)) ? - 1 ,?:,; ? lu..1 1 c;i !i ft )1 ,7 \;11 L il r rfj-a V') it ? ,Jtra d r?-?-,21 [i Li ? ' ?, ? ? ? BY H LOO1Y. WASHINGTON-s--When Secretary or 'Defense ZicilVin R. Laird testified ? that the Administration had DO way of knowing for Certain that Ameri- ? can prisoners would. be 'found at Son ? Tay last November, he was wirier- .stating an intelligence problem that ? gives merican. military planners the shivers. Among nall the other problems of ?fightinithe? war in Indochina, the ?problein of divinings the intentions, -plans' and movements of the ?North ?Vietnainese has been the toughest. ?Triat problemmade. the commando ''aid on the small compound only 23 miles .west of Hanoi one bf The big- gest gambles. in Amcnican military history---a gamble decided on by President Nixon for trying to get captured Americans out of North Vietnam but also fbr what one high ? Administration official has called ? "transcendent reasons." ? Of f iciall y, the Son. Tay. raid was c o u c t. e d . for one re a- son rescue American'priso- . ners. Transcendent reasons are ad- mitted only for the deepest back- ground. Vint since the Administra- tien admitted they existed, others have been speculating on what they might have be.en.. Idea No. 1: .The American mi- litary machine, caught in a "dirty, rubby war" that no one wants, scarred by the tragedies at My Lai and stories of other atroci- ties, condemned at home and facing serious dissension in the field, need- ed an act 'of heroism to boost its morale. . ? Idea. No The Nixon Admin- Istration, having helped _create a prisoner-of-war lobby since grown iMpressively vocal, ? felt the political need to respond to its demands that sonrething be done for the 330 Amer- icans living under cruel conditiOns in North Vietnam. Idea NO. 3: The President had to show the North Vietnamese that they could not count on using the prisoners- as hostages for a- political ?settlement .enaliarrassino. to th e_ United States, 'PQ'. el steps as drastic as invading -North Vietnam to secure their freedom: The President's gamble failed: To understand why, follow it fronn. its inception late-. last- May in a little- known office on the ninth corridor of the Pentagon's first floor. -Office 1E9(32 is marked '."SACSA.." The acronym stands for Special Assistant for Counterinsurgency and Special Activities." ? ? . It- .was ..SACSA. that conceived, planned, organized and oversaw the Son Tay operation. SACSA i3 both a military officer and the office he directs. The officer, ? at the time the Son Tay ?raid was conceived, \i-as Brig. Gen. Donald Dunwoody Blackburn, a 51-year-old infantryman whose career has such great- storybook qualities that it has been the subject of a book and a mo- vie--"Blackburn's Headhunters." .As a first lieutenant, Blackburn arrived in the Philippines in October, ? 1941, to become an adviser to the Philippine . army. The following April he. evaded capture by the Ja- panese on Bataan .Peninsula,. disap- peered into the. jungles of northern . Luzon, organized a small guerrilla force of primitive tribesmen who were just heYond. the practice of ? headhunting and fought . a ? back- ;woods campaign against the JaPas? :nese until the war ended.. Blackburn became no of the ? re- cognized experts in. 'special war- 'fare," the military'-s ..euphemism for _ American involvement in Protecting? . friendly governments against inci- ? pient revolution. ? . In 1957, when the 1054 Geneva ac- cords which settled the French Indo- china war were being honored most-- 7 1.3r in the breach by all involved, Blackburn joined the American mili- tary ? assistance advisory group in South Vietnam to help shore up the Saigon ?government of Ngo Dinh. Diem against the then-budding Viet Gong insurgency.- .? ? In August, 1909, after a series or ssigriments in the United States . ; ? )3, President John F. Kennedy early iii his admin:sftation to systerintiA the United States' role in dealing with Insurs,?encies throughotrt the world, ? ? Special Warfare Bible ? -SACSA's doctrine was originally -iet out in a three-inch thick volume :that became the bible of special war- :fare. ? Originally that bible dealt mostly with counterinsurgency. The early counterinsurgency doe- ;trine was based. on the simia pre- Imise that American technoldgy? 'the same krio,.v-how that would land a man on the 1110011 and create a ma- chine-aided life of.comfort for consu- mers?would conquer insurgencies. To ga.1.1 superiority -over a guer- :villa. who has lived in a region for -years, You need only fight him in-the dark, provided you. can see and he 'cannot, the doctrine said. So radios -).vere developed to penetrate _the. jungle canopy, helicopters that fly ZO m.p.h. over areas where guerril- las move on 'foot were brought in. 'Heat-seeking infrared sensors for detecting' enemy campfires were .de- veloped. ? The enemy found. it? relatively simple to deal -with Western-techne? logy. Learning of the campfire detec- tors, for example, he simply ordered no campfires could be built within a mile of camp, and that rendered in- frared sensors relatively tos'eless. ? So tire insUrg.ency South Viet- riarnolnstea.d of being brought under control,. developed into the longest war the United States has ever fought. The few thousand American advisers of the early 1.9?703 grew into a force of over half a million ground troops. By the time Blackburn established in the Pentagon's Room 1E9;32, e r insurgency 'bad paseed its heyday, ? - ? Thinks Ali itt Contribution Last May-, as concern ovOr the fate of American war prisoners in North Vietnam was rising throughout the countryand the military, Blackburn began to think about what contribu- tion his. office could make. - ? Blackburn sttadied what was then known of Son Tay and the other- known North Vietnamese POW camps and decided that, f prisoners were held at Son Tay, it was the only were, where a raiding party could land.. The other known prisons are all in downtown Hanoi. :In June, he presented the idea of liberating, some American prisoners to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and re- ceived Permission to conduct a "fea- sibility study." ? _ "The initial phase start ed.in June," 0.0,01000/0/62iliciAAP168q.4110,4000.070007rkel ? ? , , ? - -?-- ? ? the.Amegican_prisoners_ ? Approved .FotReIR@AONA/CRtpAlcQVORA.K40/60 ro. 2, FilDHJAilY 1971 -TilE U.S. INE2LLICIF,NC7!: SEAViCZ STATINTL Dook* review by V. I.,. Vladimirov; Moscow, LISt:_Economiesl_Poli.tles, Ideology, Russian, NO Z, February 1971, pp 18-4-8I ? ? STATINTL Harry Howe Ransom's book The_Intellience_Establi.shment is a revised fediVion of the monograph also written by him entitled Central intelence .and Netional Security which was published .back in 19.53. Studying the 'prohi. em of. the organization and .activity of. the -ntelligenrc -.-ppernr,us- over the corse of many 'years, the author sets out significant materiel 1,,huse authenticity does not evoke doubts "inAmerican critics although the facts STATINTL ..and, especially, the figures are .given with 'great c.are and are a:ccompanied by a nember of reservations. The present state of the intelligence establishment is presented in the b-_;ok agririst the backgroUnd of 'American intelligence's development, -beginning 'with the times preceding World War II, when such miserly means allocaj_ed to maintaining U.S. milita'ry attaches ab:Oad that only .wefl-to-do people consented to this work, and only after Pearl Harbor and entry .into World War II was an independent intelligence organizat{on -- the Office of .Strategic .Services c'reated in Washington. At present the U.S. intelligence establishment,which was lifted up on the crest of the "Cold War," has grown and spread into a mighty complex exerting a substantial influence upon the U.S. foreign policy course. F:uar billion dollars are allocated to intelligence annu-ally. More .than 100,000 .p.e.opl'e are engaged in the organi:-.ations.of the ."inelligence community." Yormally'entered in this "community" are: the Central Intelligence Agency (01A), the intelligen-,e?services of the befen'se.Depa,:tment, the State ' Department, the Atomic Energy Commission., and the Federal Bureau of Investiga-, tion (FBI). The U.S. Information Agency and the Agency for International Development cooperate with them, but withcut formal representation in the inte&tepartmental organs. Such "think tanks" as the Institute for Defense Analysis and the Rand Corporation, which is linked with .the U.S. Air FOrce, work in intelligence outside the "community." In addition, the Majority of U. S. departments, independently of their regular functfons, have created their -owri intelligence apparatus under this or that designation'. *.Harry Howe Ransom. The Intllirtebliskment. Cambrid2c, Harvard University Press, 1970, xvi. plus 30 pages. Modern and advanced equipment from electronic deciphering machines to spy satellites equipped with modern apparcAu:s which makes it possible to photograph objects on the ground with an-exceptional degree of detail and to return the exposed film'to given points) has been provided for the'intel1igence -establishment. - All this activity is coordinated and. directed by /he Central ? Intelligence Agency. From the time 'Of its incePtiori in 1947, this organiza- tion has.. acquiree .a sharp anti-Soy:let andanti-Conmuni;3t trend. (In H. .RansoirApproveePFMR41enel-200110310.4rCeCIA?eRDMOvai6P1ROMOOMON1-8