THE SECRECY GAME

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CIA-RDP80-01601R000200150001-6
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RIPPUB
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K
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17
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December 9, 2016
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December 29, 2000
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1
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Publication Date: 
September 13, 1972
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NSPR
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Approved. For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R0 YPSILANTI , MICH. STATINTL ? FREss SEP 13 1972, E ? 16,317 e secrecy game Secrecy in government, either to protect, bureaucratic bumbli.ig or for legitimdte protection of vital- national defense and foreign policy documents, ? is an issue that will not go away. The balance between an informed public and government censorship is not easy to strike. :One of the latest proposals comes from Rep. William S. Moorhead, Pen- nsylvania Democrat, who introduced legislation intended to give "top se- cret" documents only three years to live outside of public scrutiny. He claims that President Nixon's directive ? revamping the security system is "unworkable, unmanageable and filled 'Will technical defeats and massive loopholes." The bill would create a nine-member independent regulatory body and give it extensive power over the security classifying system of the executive branch. Top-secret stamps I. would go only to top officials in the White House, State Department, Pen- tagon, Central Inteljj,gence A4,gency and AtomicTiTeity Commission. The only exemption would be pro- vided for highly sensitive national de- fense' data, such as codes and in- telligence sources. They could be hid- den only when invoked by a president or top official, and even this would need approval of the new commission. As with all good endeavors in this field, there is no reason to believe that it will be much more successful than previous attempts. The first obstacle is the imperfectability of human judg- ment. What should be secret to one may not even be classified a s restricted by another. The temptation to hide one's errors of ()Mission or commission is well-nigh irresistible. Once set in motion, a classification system seems to,develop a life or its own,- -Any attempt to reclassify the 85 Million or more documents in the Pentagon, for instance, would require a substantial army of intelligen. men of mature judgment, working in shifts around the clock for many, many years. The best hope of these reform efforts is that it will make officials hesitate to classify indiscriminately. The final holie is that good common sense will be applied to the Issue of security classification, rather than the whims of vain, egotistical men of little minds: . _ Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601Ik000200150001-6 Approved For-Release 2ooNompitrpso-o 7 AUG 1972 STATINTL By Jack Zuderson An estimated 1,500 intelli- gence agents have quietly in- filtrated the State Department where they carry on their spying actiVities in diplomatic Operatives from the Central Intelligence Agency, Defense partment. intelligence Agency and Na- tional Security 'Agency haveBatik Bcneiit taken over many icy posts. The nation's tax laws have This has causcgl considera- sprung so many leaks that ble grfalibling and grievances half the money due the goy- among old?line foreign service eminent now escapes into the (Slicers. They have charged privately that promotions have been rigged, transfers ar- ranged and even a few resig- nations -forced to clear .foreign service officer's out of the way so intelligence agents can take over their jobs. Ona grievance case, hushed up by the State Department, involves foreign service offi- cer Charles Anderson, who claim he was bumped from his political job in Sofia to make room ior a CIA agent. When Anderson complained about .the transfer, he :igot low efficiency rating 'Ibit his pains. Anderson refused to corn- the banks, ment, bui? his friends told us For Tuesdv, Senate Bank- about , his grievance. Other lug Chatiznan John Sparkman 07 ti 6r. ieJet State Department sources de-i(D-Ala.) has scheduled a closed A spokesman for the Ames1- scribed how the cloak-and-dog- session to consider the latest can Banking Association ae- ger boys were moving into the bonanza for the banks. This knowledged that 5-3e52 had diplomatic service. The 1,500 bill, carried on the Senate been drafted by the bankers figure came from personnel docket as 5-3652, was actually but claimed it merely clarified officers. An official spokes-. dr a f ted by the American recommendations made by the man, however, refused to corn- Bankers Associations Federal Reserve ' Board. The ment on the number of CIA A Senate staff study, dated hill was introduced, he said, and related spies in the de- Aug. 1 and stamped "Confi.- by Sen. Wallace Bennett (R- diental," 'calls the bill "the Utah). at the request of the most unconscionable example bankers. of special interest legislation (we) have seen" recently. . The staff estimates that the bill "ccrald cost the states as much as a billion dollars a pockets of the privileged. year in tax revenues mid p05- Treasury experts claim the tax sibly more," rate could be cut in half, with Citing figures supplied by out reducing federal revenue the Federal Reserve- Board, a single cent, if Congress the memo alleges that the av- would only plug the tax Imp- erage business firm has a rola- holes. - live state and local tax bur- '111111111g mate . . . McGovern Instead, ? Congress keeps den four times greater than never asked his former ii ii new loopholes in the 'cominerelal banks. It adds: Ding mate, Tom EP.gleton,:for "Once state leitislatures his opinion on a successer, But wake up to this great dispar. privately, Eagleton .told us lie ity, they might very well seek thought o r er Democratic Political Potpurr George McGovern, in his search for a new running mate, first tried Tod Kennedy, then Hubert Humphrey, 130th men turned him down hut of- fered to campaign for Min... . Humphrey f oun d his old friend McGovern despondent over the ordeal of choosing a laws until the taxpayers have their dander up. Few special interests have ' wangled more benefits out of to raise the low level of taxes Party Chief Larry OBrien was Congress than the banking paid by banks, If banks were the best available man, . ? lobby. Banking, legislation Is taxed at the same rate as 1-7\17nG?vern was' nileasn handled by the Senate and other business firms, state and dentally, that headstrong House Banking Committees, which always seem to be dreaming .up new benefits for to: local tax revenues would be increased by $2.2 billion," This bill, warned the memo, members of the Democratic. National Committee might not accept his recommendal ion . would block the states from and mihl put up their own charging banks the same tax candid 1:1'2e i'renmUu t. rates as Other businesses_ ct 15T:1, lir:It ea 1"m 'Mt . _ Approved For Release 2001/03/04.: CIA-RDP80-01601R000200150001-6 Approved For Release 20011033104-x?aA2RDP80-01, 601 RO THE WASHINGTON POST PAR= r-vi 7)r 1H711;) iLiLtJ' BECAUSE OF VOLUME OF MAIL RECEIVED, PARADE REGRETS IT CANNOT ANSWER QUERIES ABOUT THIS COLUMN. ' EDITED by LLOYD SHEARER irMT 1 V 91M13 First al0A.1J rezident correspondent of a foreign newspaper in Malta turns out to be a Tass corre- spondent from the Soviet .Union, Mr. W.V. Ukritchian. For some time now the Soviets have attempted to set up an embassy in Malta, but according to MtIlta's Prime Minister Mintoff, "I do not think the Soviet. Union yet needs an embassy here." ' CorrespOndent Mkritch- lan's reason for opening a Tass agency in Valetta, Malta's capital city, is "because Malta is becoming a major international is- sue from time to time." It is no secret that Tass correspondents are fre- quently members of the K.G.B., tho Soviet 'security apparatus, in much the same way that members of our - C.I.A. are frequently attached to 'U.S. embassies abroad. STATI NTL Approved For Release 2001/0.3/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000200150001-6 YIL5 EXAYWILP_AS STATINTL 1 5 MAY 1972 STATINT.L roved For Release$MOVOVO4 : CIA- UPI Fulbright: No time for relies Amodest little pamphlet put out by 'the U.S. Information Agency ten years ago said that USIA "tells America's story abroad." How simple it seemed: Uncle Sam reciting "Once upon a time in 1776 ..." to an underdeveloped na- tion on his knee. It's a different story to- day, as our propaganda machine tries to find the right words and the right tone of voice. for a period in which the nation is simultaneously at Nvar, at peace and at odds with itself. . In Washington last week, USIA won approval of its new budget at the cur- rent $200 million level, but only after the Senate restored cuts made in com- mittee that would have reduced the agency's film and print activities and all but :dismantled the Voice of America. The authorization squabble grew out of continuing rivalry-between Congress and the White House .over foreign affairs, and a running feud .between USIA di- rector Frank Shakespeare, a conservative former network executive who helped? design President Nixon's TV image in the 1968 campaign, and Sen. J. William Fulbright, chairman of the 'Foreign Re- lations Committee and a critic of USIA since its inception . in 1953. While the showdown vote was an Administration .victory, it did nothing to clarify such questions as bow good or bad our propa- ganda actually is today, how it should ? change or evolve in the 1970s, and whether Americans should be able to see and hear it themselves. Theoretically, the law protects the American public from being propagan- dized at its own expense by forbidding USIA to show its wires on the home front. Exceptions have been made in re- cent years, however, and last month, despite objections by Senator Fulbright and others, Sen. James Buckley, the conservative New York Republican, showed a USIA propaganda film about Czechoslovakia on his TV show. After the broadcast, Fulbright's committee passed a measure that would reaffirm and clad- B 3TOM HOMETE: ? fy the ban on internal dissemination. 3,41-FAHVILIHEJE ECE3.0,KlA AMEPVKAHCKCiO Though the measure has no teeth, USIA rIPE34,11EHTA is playing safe at the moincrit by_with- holding all *woven FlordReiease1004103104CIAtIkV3804Y media ,until the issue is resolved. The America Illustrated: A sense of style ropaganda What We Say ?And How By Joseph Morgenstern taxpayers, therefore, are either protect- ed once again from Administration prop- aganda, or prevented from laying eyes or ears on the stuff for which they're paying $200 million a year. What do we really tell our friends and enemies abroad? What effect does it have? "Czechoslovakia: 1968," the Academy Award-winning short that kicked up the fuss on the Buckley show, is an efficient and particularly repellent piece of goods. Starting with sweetly pastoral (and occasionally fake) shots from 1918 and ending with the Soviet invasion of 1968, it reduces 50 .years of history to thirteen minutes of short takes and shrewd juxtapositions. that Make strong appeals to the emotions, and some- times misrepresent history. Newsreel clips of' the Soviet Army's liberation of Prague from the Nazis in 1945 are inter- cut with those. of Hitler's occupation, suggesting one was as bad as the other when, in fact, Czech Communists and non-Communists alike greeted the Sovi- ets with open arms. The film has no nar- ration. The only word in it is suoboda, Czech for "freedom." The same style is used to comment On the Berlin wall in merwx ? " Mc" VIZVa=ratti=tiraZ4VKIARAMIAMI24.1121141 UP/ USIA's Shakespeare: A need to know! "Barricade. These films me cinematic, all right, but 'they're also slippery, fur- tive, and they raise the question of why a nation that s supposed to be open and truthful should rely, on subliminal trick- ery to condemn the conduct of other nations. "Vietnam! Vietnam!", produced by John Ford at a cost of some $250,000, proved such an embarrassment in its few public showings abroad tharit was with- drawn from circulation and awarded the oblivion it so richly deserved. Belligcr-- ently simple-mindtA, necrophiliac in its frequent close-ups of bloated corpses and mutilated children, the film subtly blames the Democrats for our involvement in Vietnam and makes the antiwar move- ment look like a pack of craven imbeciles. "The Silent Majority;" made in 1969 but still in circulation, is a lumbering tract that makes, much of a Gallup Poll and re- inforces its message of widespread sup- port for the Nixon Administration with a . smug, sanctimonius. tone that might be , worthier of a Salazar or' Duvalier admin- istration. ? Yet USIA, like the nation, speaks in more than one tone of voice. The most popular agency film in recent months is "President Nixon in China?A Journey for Peace." Its narrator, like its- star, goes to great lengths to praise Chi- ?Irese athletes, culture, schoolchildren and snow shovelers. American Pastoral . The best of the agency's production of twenty to thirty films each year can be excellent indeed. "An Impression of John Steinbeck: 'Writer" looks at the man and his work; intercuts clips from the movie version of "The Crapes Of Wrath" with scenes of Salinas, Monte- rey and the green paradise of a valley where Steinbeck grew up. "The ? Num- bers Start With the River' is a life-affirm- ing Work, narrated by an elderly couple who've got all they need and love in. the calm little town around them. By the .nature of their subjects, however, such films look to the past and cherish land- scapes and values that are fast disap- tatfirWgf y?italiy in these 6 O t M nfiro(tf evidence in any other IA films whatt i STATI NTL Approved For Release 216trl Mfg S. -01601 ,Tough Break ? Speaking of tax loopholes (as everyone does from time to time), the Wall Street Journal 'reported the other day that the U.S. Tax Court has ruled that a loophole permitting military officers in combat $500 a month in tax-free' income cannot be extended to CIA-types serving in Indochina. According to a recent ruling, a "civilian" pilot who carried a card identifying -him as a "civilian noncombatant serving the Armed Forces of the U.S." and the equivalent of an Air Force colonel (should he be captured by the enemy) cannot be considered a military officer for tax purposes. If a U.S. court won't buy it, how can the military expect that front the Viet Cong? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000200150001-6 . VASEII;G:Xky2OST. Approved For Release 2001/03/1)/1 ? l'INISC Urges Stiffer Law On Secrets . By Sanford J. Ungar Washington Post Staff Writer rial orianated by foreign\gov:` ance ot official duties or con- ernments or international or- tractual obligations." , ganizations," "extremely sensi- ? Tighter control over "dis- ? tive information or material" semination outssde the Execu- singled out by the heads of tive Branch" to such organiza- agencies and "information or tions as the Rand Corp. in Cal- materialswhich warrants some ifornia, whicb performs de- degree of classification i" an fense research under govern- ment contracts. ' The National Security Coun- cil is proposing tougher regu- lations to keep classified infor- mation out of the hands of un- authorized government offi- cials, defense contractors and the public. It suggests that President Nixon may want to go as far as seeking legislation similar to the British Official Secrets Act, which wculd have the ef- feet of imposing stiff criminal penalties on anyone who re- ceives classified information, as well as on those who dis- close it. The recommendations are ? 'contained in the draft revision of the executive order that has governed the security classifi- cation system since 1953. the Departments draft was submitted to ? e Departments of State, De- fense and Justice, the Central ? Intelligence Agency and the ( Atomic Energy Commission last month for their com- ments. A copy was obtained by The Washington Post yester- day. ? After suggestions have come ,back from those agencies, a re- vised 'draft. is expected to be .sent to the President for ap- 'proval on his return from China. The National Security Coun- cil draft is the result of a year's work by a special inter- agency committee headed by . William H. Rehnquist, for- merly an assistant attorney general and now a Justice of the Supreme Court. . National Security Council sources said yesterday that Rehnquist's contributions to the revision were "very impor- tant.. . . 's. ,He did yeoman work." Rehnquist resigned from the Inter-agency' committee when he was sworn in as a member of the high court last month, and he has not been replaced. If adopted in its current form, 'the NSC draft would freeze 'the existing secrecy stamps on thousands of docu- ments now in sPecial catego- ries exempt from automatic declassification over a period of 12 years. exerANZETWAd EA Include "information or mate- Indefinite period," -The NSC draft abolishes categories d special an intro- duces a "30-year rule" setting the time limit for declassifica- tion of all future secret gov- ernment information. The time period over which some documents would be au- tomatically down-graded in se- curity classification and even- tually declassified would be ? Establishment of safe-, k eepin b the Gen g standards y eral Services Administration to assure that all classified material is ? appropriately locked up and guarded. ? Markings on every classi- fied document to make it.pos- sible to "identify the individ- ual or individuals who origi- nally classified each compo- reduced from 12 to 10 years. neat." Docuis gilts originally ? Establishment of its own stampea "top secret" could be rules by every government made public after 10 years. agency on when and how It I Those marked "secret" could will make classified informa- be declassified after 8 years, tion available to Congress or and those with a "confiden- the courts. tial" stamp after 6 years. The NSC draft lists 41 gov- But before that time has ernment agencies which would passed, the NSC draft sug- have the authority to put clas- gests, "classified information sification stamps on docu. or material no longer needed meats and other materials. in current working files" may They range from the White be "promptly destroyed, trans- House and Atomic Energy ferred or retired" to reduce Commission to the ?Panama stockpiles of classified docu- Canal Co. and the Federal ments and ng them.cut the costs of Maritime Commission. handli A House subcommittee in- vestigating the availability of classfied information has esti- mated the cost of maintaining secret government archives at $60 million to $80 million an- nually. Although the special review of classification procedures was commissioned by Presi- dent Nixon long before the top-secret Pentagon papers on the war in Vietnam were dis- closed to the public last sum- mer, the NSC draft reflects a number of the problems de- bated during the Pentagon papers episode. cial Use Only," the copy of the ? Among the recommendations NSC draft obtained by The in the NSC draft are: Post bears no security mark- ? Creation of an "inter- in g itself. agency review committee" It is in the final pages that whose chairman would be ap. the National Security Council pointed by tne President, tO makes its recommendations supervise all government secu- for revising criminal statutes rity classification .activity and to deal with unauthorized dis- handle complaints from the Several agencies which pre. viously did not have such au- thority are added to the list, such as the White House Of- fice of Telecommunications Policy and the Export-Import Bank. Only two agencies?AC- TION, successor to the Peace Corps, and, the Tennessee Val- ley Authority?are to be re- stricted to the use of "classi- fied" stamps, and banned from classifying documents "top se- cret" or "secret." Except for its final pages, which are stamped "For Offi- public about overclassifica- tion. ? ? An annual "physical in- closure of classified informa- tion. The President is offered three o tions: ? Leaving existing law un- ventory" by each agency hold- changed. Ing classified material to be ? Revising ? one section of sure that security has been the federal espionage act to strictly preserved omit the requirement that dis- ? Establishment of a re- closure, to be considered crim- quirement that everyone using inal, must be "to a foreign classified material not only agent." The revision would have a security clearance, but make it a crime to disclose Seeking legislation like the British Official Secrets Act, which severely punishes those who disclose and receive classified information. Touching on an issue that was repeatedly raised during the court cases involving the Pentagon papers, the NSC draft also instructs: "In no case shall informa- tion be classified in order to conceal inefficiency or admin- istrative error, to prevent em- barrassment to a person or ageny, to restrain competition Or independent initiative, or to prevent for any other rea- son the release of information which does not require protec- tion in the ? interest of na-i tional security." Several judges ruled last summer that. publication of the Pentagon papers, a history. of American involvement in Vietnam, might cause embar- rassment to government ofl ficials but would not endanger the national well-being. The draft also substitutes the term "national security" wherever "national' defense" was used in the Previous regu- lation coskolling the classifi- cation of information. One expert on security clas- sification said yesterday that national security is generally coAsidered a broader term which permits the classifica- tion of more material. The NSC draft also provides for classification of anything whose "unauthorized* disclo- sure could reasonably be ex- pected *to result" in ,be to. the nation, a less stringent condition than was previously' imposed. The preamble to the draft states that "it is essential tha-', the citizens of the United States be informed to the maximum extent possible con- cerning the activities of their government," but adds that it is "equally essential for their government to protect certain official information against unauthorized disclosure." The draft, says the NSC, is intended "to provide for a just resolution of the conflict be- tween these two essential na- tional interests." , fttfOnfaM7M4 (ettekticte.?f 1,00t1 0200150001-6 connection witn his perform- J NEW YORK TIMES Approved For Release 2i0jA913t12: CIAABAK1I60 Columnist Says Nixon Pressed Policy Against India ? By' TERENCE SMITH ? Special to The New York Times , WASHINGTON, Jan. 3?Pres- ident Nixon was "furious" with his subordinates during the re- cent India-Pakistan war for not taking a stronger stand against India, the syndicated colum- nist Jack Anderson reported today. Mr. Anderson quoted Henry A. Kissinger, the President's ad? visor on national security, as. having told a meeting of seniot Administration officials: "Pre getting hell every half-hour from the President that we are not being tough enough on In- dia." According to Mr. Anderson Mr. Kissinger directed that al: United States officials "show a certain coolness" to the Indians. "The Indian Ambassador is not to be treated at too high a level," he is quoted as having said. The quotations in Mr. An- derson's column today were the latest in a series of verbatim reports of secret White House strategy sessions dealing with the crisis that the columnist has. published during the last several days. His column is syndicated to 700 newspapers, 100 of them overseas. Mr. Anderson took !crises, that dealt with the India-! !Pakistan conflict. The meetings ,were held in early December. Notes by Pentagon Aides lover the column on the death of his colleague Drew Pearson in September, 1g69. The publication of the re- ports, which Mr. Anderson says are classified "secret sensitive," has infuriated the White House and unsettled national security: officials. ? Government sources con- firmed today that an investiga- tion had been started by the White House to determine who leaked the classified documents. -The sources said the new in- vestigation, reportedly being conducted by the Federal Bu- reau of Investigation, is directed at individuals in the State and Defense Departments, and on the National Security Council staff who have had access to the notes qupted by Mr. Ander- son. The quotations published by the columnist are not official minutes of the meetings, but rather notes prepared by repre- ,sentatives .of the various de- partments attending. ! In a telephone interview to- :day, Mr. Anderson said he had ,been given two complete sets !of /notes of tkeletinc,s af !Washington r?liff Mil.reatt r Group, ? a high-level strategy icommittee assembled. during The notes he has published so far, the columnist said, are from those taken for the. De- fense Department ? and are signed by two Pentagon offi- cials.. . . Mr. Anderson said he had received scores of other classi- fied documents, including se- cret intelligence reports and cablegrams, that he intended to publish during she next two weeks. "1 am trying to force a show- down with the Administration over their classification sys- tem," the columnist said. "Ev-j ers-thing Kissinger does?even1 the toilet paper he uses?is be-. ing stamped 'secret.' That's not in the public interest in a? democracy." Mr. Anderson said neither he nor members of his staff had vet been questioned by Gov- ernment investigators, but that he had "positive" information that the F.B.I. had already in- terrogated individuals at the White House and State and De- fense departments in an effort to discover who had provided him with the documents. Aide Declines Comment Gerald L. Warren, the acting Press Secretary at the White House, declined today to say whether an investigation had been ordered. He also declined all comment on the Anderson columns. In the column published to- day, Mr. Anderson quotes from notes taken during the. Wash- ington Special Action Group's meetings of Dec. 3, Dec. 4 'and Dec. 8. In the first session, he quotes Richard Helms, director of Cen- tral Intelligence, as saying the Indians were "currently en- gaged in a no-holds-barred at- tack on East Pakistan and that they had crossed the border on all sides." "Dr. Kissinger remarked that if the Indians have announced a full-scale invasion," the col- umn continues, "this fact must be reflected in our U.N. state- ment." On Dec. 4, Mr. Kissinger is quoted as having said, "On AID matters the President wants to ilITOVO#100141/3141ksi" for International Development. 1. This instruction was amp lied on Dec. 8, when, seeps ing to the column, "Dr. Kissi ger stated that current ordc are not to put anything in budget for India. It was al not to be leaked that AID h put money in the budget only to have the 'wicked' White House take it out." , On Dec. 4, the Administra- tion suspended its aid program in India. STATINTL CIA-RDP80-01601R000200150001-6 NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS Approved For Release 20$1,60M14.1910111A9-01 Tine CHIl's Hew Cover Elle The Rope Dancer by Victor Marchetti. Grosset & Dunlap, 361 pp., $6.95 Richard J. Barnet In late November the Central Intel- ligence Agency conducted a series of "senior seminars" so that some of its important bureaucrats could consider its public image. I was invited to attend one session and to give my views on the proper role of the Agency. I suggested that its legitimate activities were limited to studying newspapers and published statistics, listening to the radio, thinking about the world, interpreting data of recon- naissance satellites, and occasionally publishing the names of foreign spies. I ? had been led by conversations with a number of CIA officials to believe that they Were thinking along the same lines. One CIA man after another ? eagerly joined the discussion to assure me that the days of the flamboyant covert operations were over. The upper-class amateurs of the OSS who stayed to mastermind operations in 'Guatemala, Iran, the Congo, and else- where?Allen Dulles, Kermit Roosevelt, Richard Bissell, Tracy Barnes, Robert Amory, Desmond Fitzgerald?had died or departed. In their place, I was assured, was a small army of professionals devoted to preparing intelligence "estimates" for the President and collecting informa- tion the clean, modern way, mostly with sensors, computers, and sophis- ticated reconnaissance devices. Even Gary Powers, the U-2 pilot, would now be as much a museum piece as Mata ?Hari. (There are about 18,000 em- ployees in the CIA and 200,000 in the entire "intelligence community" itself. The cost of maintaining them is some- where between $5 billion and S6 billion annually. The employment figures do not include foreign agents or mercenaries, such as the CIA's 100,000- man hired army in Laos.) A week after my visit to the "senior se inar" Newsweek ran a long story n "the new espionage" with a picture of CIA Director Richard Helms on the ' '? Ope adventurer has passed in the American the spy business; the bureaucratic age of ingt Richard C. Helms and his gray spe- kno cialists has settled in." I began to have fina an uneasy feeling that Newsweek's ingt article was a cover story in more than ? vote one sense. An ? ? ceili It has always ?been difficult to falle analyze organizations that engage in A false advertising about themselves. Part of of the responsibility of the CIA is to lad) the beca ized Heli ovel lige] Age Bur the spread confusion about its own work. The world of Richard Helms and his "specialists" does indeed differ .from that of Allen Dulles. Intelligence organ- izations, in spite of their predilection for what English judges used to call "frolics of their own," are servants of policy. When policy changes, they must eventually changd too, although because of the atmosphere of secrecy and deception in which they operate, such changes are exceptionally hard to control. To understand the "new espionage" one must see it as ipart of the Nixon Doctrine which, in. essence, is a global strategy for maintaining US power and influence without overtly involving the nation in another ground He, war. neN But we cannot comprehend recent tigE developments in the "intelligence corn- nel munity" without understanding what fur Mr. Helms and his employees actually Prc do. In a speech before the National ny Press Club, the director discouraged/w journalists from making the attempt. d( "You've just got to trust us. We are honorable men." The same speech is made each year to the small but growing number of senators who want a closer check on the CIA. In asking, on November 10, for a "Select Com- mittee on the Coordination of United States Activities Abroad to oversee activities of the Central Intelligence Agency," Senator Stuart Symington noted that "the .subcommittee having oversight of the Central Intelligence Agency has not met once this year." Symington, a former Secretary of the Air Force and veteran member of the Armed Services Committee, has also said that "there is no federal agency in our government whose activ- ities receive less scrutiny and control than the CIA." Moreover, soon after CC n ove vice Age imp Th reo cover. The rejliagazrs clearly .bad swken Syminaton spoke, Senator Allen J. to some of tTeHNI9VoldalF9E0 .elease 2001/03104 : CIA-R0P80-01601R000200150001-6 ni P; C Newsweek said, "The gaudy era of the " ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601 NEW BEDFORD, MASS. STANDARD?TIMES DEC 16 1971 E r 71,238 S ? 62,154 munist China prisons of Richard Fec- return to the United States from Com- It has been a joyful occasion, the , 40. S teau of Lynn and Mary Ann Harbert of California. As thankful as everybody is, how- ever, let there be no outpouring of gra- titude toward the People's Republic. Mr. Fecteau, it should be noted, ser- ved 19 years of a 20-year term, and Miss Harbert was Imprisoned for three years on as yet no known charge. Indeeil, were it not that other Amer- icans are in the People's Republic's custody, an inquiry should be insti- tuted on what happened to Miss Har- bert's sailing companion. The fact that he still was being "questioned" more Than a year after his arrest by the Chinese, and thereafter allegedly committed suicide, suggests he was receiving anything but normal treat- ment. The other regrettable aspect of these developments is that the United States apparently is caught in the ;unfortunate position of having main- tained throughout the years of Fec- teau's imprisonment that he was not ,engaged in espionage when ap- prehended, whereas his former wife !now flatly states the Chinese were "not lying"1 when they charged he ? vas. 'Persons who volunteer for Central ung up Intelligence Agency employment must agree, it is to be presumed, that if their cover is exposed they cannot expect their government to irnmedi- ' ately admit they were spies and beg for consideration. It rrfight even in- vite harsher punishment, in fact, to do so. ' But it does seem that in these many years, the CIA or the State Depart- ment would have found some method of getting out from under the apparent false disavowal on Fecteau. Perhaps some effort was made. If so, the facts should be reported?the CIA couldn't lose any more face than it has over, this case. The Soviet Union initially denied that the late Rudolph Abel was th espionage work. But once he was im- prisoned here, Moscow made such a . mighty effort to obtain his release, exchanging for him the prisoner of prisoners, U-2 pilot Gary Powers, sym- bol of years of Soviet frustration, that ., it was tantamount to admitting Abel's spy role. The Soviet escaped a little more gracefully than President Eisen- hower, who first lied about Powers'? duties. . . Espionage is always a heroic occupl- tion, but as a business between nations it would be less Sordid if some method could be found to avoid the lie when, it is uncovered. STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000200150001-6 11 BURLTNGTON , VT. FREE PRESS ?[.?,),11STATINTL APO? fe'd FiBilkeiease 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R0 IL - 43,479 - - n s amn ? Free Press- Gannett Service WASHINGTON ? President Nixon's 'aides have begun weighing the pros and cons or an unusual scheme to gain freedom at last Ycir imprisoned American John T. Downey. 41. by providing a "face-saving" formula for Chinese Communist leaders. Under the plan President Nixon. during his Feb. 21-28 visit to mainland China: would propose to the Chinese leaders that Downey. of New Britain ,c7cAagled into the President's personal custody. ordrittir.vIN'ix on would concede that when Downey was captured during the Korean war in November 1952. Downey was in fact working for the Central Ilitelliqence t_l&wcy (CIA). as the ChinesZ ITS'Ye insistMTraiong. That would represent the "face-saving" part 'of the formula. Administration officials maintained a closed-mouth attitude Tuesday about the Downey case and the cases of two other Americans known to be languishing in Chinese prisons. They saw some ray of hope. ,however, for the release of the trio. . On Monday. the Chinese Communists 'surprised the world by releasing Richard Fecteau. 44. of Lynn. Mass.. and Mary Ann Habert of Menlo Park. Calif.. as a gesture to improve the atmosphere in advance of 'President Nixon's visit. ? At the same time, they commuted the life sentence of Downey to five years. All of this was an outgrowth of National .Security Adviser Henry A. Kissinger's 'recent discussions with Chinese Premier Chou En-lai to lay the groundwork for the President's forthcoming Peking talks.. The arrangements provide for -free- wheeling" discussions among the President, 'Premier Chou and Communist party Chairman Mao Tse-Tung. This would seem to leave room to bring up the Downey case, and that of two _ servicemen also remaining in Red Chinese Captivity ? Air Force Capt. Philip E. Smith and ,Navy Lt. Robert Flynn. The White House and the State Department have been urged to use the .'face-saving" formula by Downey's relatives and friends. including Sean Downey of McLean. Va., and the prisoner's old Yale classmate, Jerome A. Cohen, now a faculty member at Harvard Law School. "I have aruged that the question of whose face is saved iAippirtaReel infikrttlaele r., eme r? '5 redti saving a life," Sean Downey Said in' a telephone interview. "I have received some encouragement from the White House. "The State Department's reaction has been more conservative. The word you get there is that the situation is very delicate and they don't want to rock the boat. -This is really a tragic situation. John Downey was an honor graduate from Yale in 1952. He was a football player and a wrestling champion ? a young man of great promise ? yet he has hardly enjoyed a year of adult life." Downey and Fecteau were captured 19 years ago. At the time. American officials identified them as civilian employes of the U.S. Army whose aircraft disappeared on a flight from South Korea to Japan. . 'The Chinese Communists insisted Downey and Fecteau actually were CIA agents who were attempting to set up guerrilla bases in northeast China. As long ago as last summer. Cohen proposed the United States admit Downey and Fecteau were spies in an effort to secure their freedom, The question arises?whether the face of the United States government is involved. The State Department is sticking to its story that the Chinese Communist charges against Downey and Fecteau were trumped up. But Fecteau's divorced wife, Margaret Fecteau, held a news conference at hem Lynn home Tuesday and was quoted bl several Boston area newspapers as saying "The Chinese haven't been lying" about thE spying charge. Later, however, she denied having made that comment. Sean Downey, a business consultant wh( also does consulting work with the Justice Department on community relations, had no patience with the State Department's public attitude. "What harm can be done now in: , admitting whatever mission John was on?" Sean Downey asked. "You just about have to assume he had some link with the CIA.'" What does the phrase 'civilian employe of the U.S. Army' mean if it doesn't mean.. something like that?'.' The two Downey cousins are almost the same age and have always been par- ticularly. close. From 1941 to 1947, they lived just two doors away from each other in Wallingford. Conn. , ase 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000200150001 -6 Approved For Release 2001/0i/941,1091MDP80201611 77/0 Cili 51' ? - All"eicyr L al 84 tiki N in t v e s Red China's 22-man United Nations delegation received a.tumultuous reception upon its arrival. in New York, last week, with the press seeming to tum- ble over itself with compliments for the "high qual- ity" of Mao's diplomatic representatives. But even as the new delegation was being hailed, by various groups in this Country, evidence is accumulating that Red China intends to employ the U.N.- as a major .tool for promoting Maoist-style espionage and sub- version. Consider the following: ? o China's Deputy Foreign .Minister, Chia() Kuan- Itua, head of the first Peking delegation to the U.N., is believed to have once been an important intel- ligence operative for Peking.. Chiao, for instance, worked for several years with .the New China.News Agency, which since its inception has been operating as a conduit for intelligence and a cover for espio- nage. ? David Wise and Thomas B. Ross In their well- regarded book, The Espionage Establishment, stress that "the main thrust of NCNA's activities is of a diplomatic or intelligence nature, as can be seen from the operations of its ?busier correspondents," Those named among the busier: Chino Kuan-hua. Moreover; Chia? openly hinted in his remarks to the American press last week that his country would be actively engaged in promoting subversion by sup- porting ? "oppressed peoples and nations in their jusf 'struggles to win freedom and liberation The Red Chinese delegation arrives in New York to take its UN. seat. At top is thief delegate Clu:no Kuan-llua, while at bottom is top Mao agent Kao China's.' two-faced policy, he saperficially pro-- motes trade and travel -and 'better relations' with the other.".: . ? .., ..- Equally indicative of ihe role that Red China is likely to play at the U.N. is that Kao Liang, head of -Chirto's deputy, Huang Hua, the permanent Red China's advance party at the United .t:ations., is - a head of the delegation ? and 'now ambassador to a well-known espionage gent who has fostered Canada, also has a long history of engaging in sub- revolutjons throughout ,Africa.. While ostensibly ?versive activities. Indeed, as HUMAN EVENTS has serving as a journalist for the New China News pointed out previously and DeWitt S. Copp elabo- Agency, Kao has been one of Peking's top men in organizing "united fronts" among radicals and in, rates on page 13, he is a gifted.saboteur and espio- channelling funds, weapons and advice into groups . . nage artist. Aside from helping to author the germ warfare charges against the United States in Korea, eager to topple foreign governmehts. Huang was instrumental in turning Ghana in the U.S. intelligence maintains a thick file on this early 1960s into a Peking base of operations against "journalist" who as kicked out of India in 1960 for pro-Western countries in Africa. "tendentious reporting" and expelled in 1964 from As Rep. John Buchanan (R.-Ala.), a member f Mauritius, an island nation off the African mainland. o the Foreign Affairs. Committee, has said: "From As authors Wise and Ross have written about Red ?1960 to 1965 he served officially as ambassador to China's U.N. advance man: "Taking up residence in Ghana but was, in fact, ambassador-at-large pro- Dar ?es Salaam, the capital of Tanzania, in 1961, (noting Red' China and Communist revolution Kao carried his intrigues the length and_ breadth of throughout Africa and was an important factor in Africa. . the Brazzaville (Congo) takeover in 1964." ; ? Dar he lived; mu?ch too well for a newspaper- Before Huang Hua'received his U.N. appoint-. man. His house and his car were too big, his parties meat, Rep. Buchanan prophesied that he was too frequent and his bankroll too large. In short, his .; "being groomed fon the day when China is ad- lavish Ways exposed his cover, as similar habits have ? rnitted to the sometimes betrayed CIA- men, but it seemed to. United Nations or the United , States follows Canada's lead in granting d.iplo- trouble. him- not at all. In fact, he openly asserted . matie recognition. Then- he will be *able to en- ' more importance than that.of an NCNA correspon-. o courage d ?rornot wvolt dent and once checked into a hotel in Burundi as the ? afig. ain in the ,e. el , ? - ? States N,PIAPY#91,11:ArHt?P95 103/0PiCWRi3P841.P-931601R000200150001-6 ?out irnie a q THE OrITCINHAD: PITS'S STATINTL Approved For Release-Otht3}1341: CIA-RDP80701601R , . r- -,, ,,;-..-..^,?,,---.,., p,-? fr1-) ,r--? 'C'Cri .'"1 ;1 i ',.I .c.::J if LI d .,.I c) j ,;,. - (,-., r, LUill] ._ ' .STATINTI Once during, Il\c conversation his hands seemed to' absfird. with tae proble.rns shake. He 'was lis.hting his second or third cigarette, rather a 15t for 1i.12 short time he had been talking. The Dervous edge vt,zs' peculiar ? it didn't jibe with ?the kind of image Victor Torchetti had painted of himself. A real-life sp,) who came in from the cold, 'Marchetti as a 14-year veteran of the Central Intelligence AgencY who has just autta.srod a book called "The Rope Dancer." The Dovel purports to show spicinage work for what it really is, as Marchr-Dt experienced it. What he described, while dressing last Th es:.lay morning, is hardly nerve-fraying, "Not all spies are dashing, handsome, debonair," he said with anti-Jae/las Bond certainty. "The average stay is married and lives in the suburbs, belongs to the PTA, or is a scoutin star." Marchetti was all of those things, and ' he indicated that his job was equally unextraordinary. 1 WD.I\ KED. OUT of Washington, was _permanently .2s-signori; to. heaclex;a:ters, and occasionally went on over- seas assigamenits. For example, years ago we were inter- ested in Sevlet -rtillinary aid, ?so I might go to -Indonesia for :as lone' as ten week, to try to got a better handle on what the Soviets dere up to." , . But most -of the time, the ex-agent stressed, he was eng-afied in collating and interpretinj vast ? supplies of informaon cOming in from sources all over the globe. It ;as painstaking, arduous work, bureaucratic tedium that .diffeVe i from corporate tedium only in that it dealt with. rational security instead of marketingstrategy. "The bulk of the information acquired today is through satellites, overhead sensors, and electronic sensors,- Mar- Chetti said., again subverting We martini-mistress - mys- tique that , permeates espioriage? literature. He added that much additional information comes through diplomatic and. official channels, with newspapers and magazines providing most of the remainder.- - . . FIDGETING RESTLESSLY, the aspiring writer smiled, and partially amended his de-r'ornantich?oil -heresy." ? "Maybe 10 per cent- of all the people engaged L. spionage work are back alley spies. But of these, 10 out of 20 are faking it under the cover of diplomacy. They try to acquire local agents in the country where . they're working." ' . .. To the. disillusionment of spy-novel afficionados every- where, . however, Marchetti emphasized that there are . very,' very few agents living overseas witliout cover, and - . that their contribution is of marginal value. "It's kind of like fishing ? you throw them out and sooner Or later " you get a strike." . - No clue to the speaker's own unease emerged as he I discussed. hit; idea for the book. "I was just sitting around - talidng :Vitli another agent. We were saying that things in ? the agency were so screwed up that it wouldn't he . surprising to_ _find . that a :Russian was running .. it. We . _ ._... . . _ . kill. We're like two guys standing across the each other with triggers on mortars, cannons, We don't need it," he said, 10:oping his tie. ' ? .ii0" IN ABS VIEW, the sam'e kind Of thinking that lel to the arms buildup is reflected in the structure of the modernCIA."It's too big, tdo costly, with too much military ? influence." Marchetti says ,the quality of the agency sSTATIN- product ? good data ? has been diluted accordingly. We need more control fforn within .the organization, and. street from and rockets. More directly from the outside." ? Separately, Marchetti condemns the "cold war Mentali- ty" that colors much' of the CIA's thinking,' and translates to poor estimates of the international situation. "Cuba is the perfect example," he said eagerly, recounting the: misguided thinking that led the U.S. to back 'Battista against,. Castro under the mistaken assumption that most Cubans also were anti-Castro. Then, he says, when' Castro won after all, the U.S.. labeled him a. -Marxist and forced him into. Russia's, ? embrace. "That's what's wrong with -Vie.,trio.m and Laos today," Marchetti continues, "we're 'trying to support ? governMents not representative of the people." ALMOST TO THE end of his reasons for resigning from the -CIA, the cheerful novelist finished dressifIg. nnei readied himself to face anew the rigorous publicity tour. And still he eluded any indication of 'why he seemed slightly ecla. 'I disliked the' clandestine' atmosphere onen finds in aa - organization like the CIA," he said, finalizing the list.. :`What Lathers me most is when some guys got restlessin . the CIA and military intelligence a few years ago. With . ' groups like the SOS, the Black Panthers, mil with civil unrest in' general, people in the ClA began to wouder what they should do about it." Drawing on yet another cifcarette. Mnichetti expiained .? ---- .that such internal disorders are -pror.,,erly the co the FBI or the army, not the GIA. Neverth vociferous minority of the agents ? the "specks' . ?ti. calls them ? began to say, "1,ife're the enp.t, should do the work." --Meant it as a joke, of course, but that's where the book- ? began." ? ' WITH THE PUBLICATION of "The none Dancer," Marchetti terminated a long,' distinguished career with the CIA. He was assistant to the director of the entire agency I when he resigned,- and prospects, for the future were good. So why did he quit? "I'd lost a great deal of faith in the agency and its policies. If I couldn't believe in it, I couldn't serve it," he said sounding more like a Campus politician than a haf?dbitten "spy." In truth, Marchetti left for a variety of reasons, some of them intriguing for the insights they lend to the arcane workings of the CIA. 0119- ittilitAt* 491f0i100010.0061-161? THIS RATIONALE could lead to, trouble at hbrn as it already has in numerous small countries p, p'ockmarked by CIA interference. Marchetti distil trendline, and resigned.' Gathering papers together to go meet his put' local. representative, he mentioned that ha wasni that . he no -banger is associated with an ftrit Instr.( in the condtict of the Vietnam war., He feels con free as he talks with his 17-year-old son, almost of 'fight the. war, and a hearty disbelieve.r in it. His rele.an conscjence has been tempere-d by budgetary-regrets, hovever. "I had to tell. my son he wanted. to go on to. college, he'd .hare?-to, rnavinAL,e way I did, by working his way thrOagh.'.', regrets ,that he . has to be careful-- - acquiescing wife's requests for new living room ilumiture. The problem is. that in leaving the CIA, and a hi4i within it, Marchetti was exercisirnf an uncommon id- - at least uncommon in 41-year-olds with a wif? three children. He left a $23,010-a-yesr. job, wit promise of substantially more soon, for the ?vagu knowns of a writer's life. ? Marchetti is morally at peace with himself. Win precisely the -key to his restlessness. Ile has a second While har-40r0:14 rt?ficRe government is n ai n ex ess o wnatgPsho ) uid or th defense. Ile labels the $50 billion poured into. defense each. -year, and the billion ..more for Vietnam, as ' a 7 1 1 AI I i.,11 Incomplete as received. ??? STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/66/64FMAS-RIDP80-01 1 OCT 1971 Pk T. rO\'VAN \ A 11 [I ' A 6 j ra il/ 01 That bombshell out of Great Britain about the expulsion of 405 Soviet diplomats and offi- cials for spying has had one predictable effect. 'It. has revived editorial corn- / ment and ?. cocktail chatter about. our owinCentral Intern- ' gence. Agency and the "coV- ers" it nses for spies. And it ' has aroused new spasms of naive (namel-it to the effect that our country ought to get out of the cloalt-and-dagger .business. -? Well, just as sure as Mata ?llari was a woman, the expul- sions will not halt massive So- viet spying in Britain -- or in the United States,, atthe Unit- ed Nations or anyplace else. - Some Americans just can't .get over the sanctimonious ?o- lion that spying is a dirty busi- ness that, like dandruff, we can wash right out of our hair. Some spying is a sordid, -dangerous . business. It in- volves blackmail, sexual en- trapment, peepin tomism, double-crosses, political and character assassinations and outright mur&r, Yet, spying is not nearly as bad as are some of the. alter- natives to having a good sys- tem of intelligence. Not many Americans. would accept yid, herability to a sneak aucleai: attack as the price for getting rid of spies. The .fact is that if we are to move closer to peace we are likely to go through a period of more spying rather than less. - - Millions of sensitive, intelli- gent 'Americans deplore the fact that in the decade of the 3.060s the United :States and 8oviet. Union poured a trillion ..dollars into arms. -These Americans know that we shall never rescue our cities or save man's environment or find a cure for -cancer unless we can slop the arms race and its miid waste of wealth.. )--flit the glaring truth is that distrust stands in the way of a curtailment in the manufac- ture of horrible weapons, not to mention the .destruction of those already .in arsenals. Steps toward disarmament will. proceed only as rapidly as intelligence procedures make it possible for rival countries to be reasonably sure that they will not be destroyed by the perfidy of a potential ex't.,?- my. As far ahead as man can see, the United States and the Soviet Union will launch so- phisticated satellites whose fantastic cameras will record troop movements, missile em- placements, production cen- ters for fissionable materials, weapons storage. areas and other N,ital inforMation bear- ing on the other country's (or China's) intentions. It is taken for granted by American officials that the So- viet Union will 'keep 30 or so trawlers operating off the shores of the United States, their powerful, sensitive clec- tronic gear intercepting U.S. diplomatic and military mes-? ? sages, picking up conversa- tion .'at U.S. airfields and bas- CS or even plotting the noise patterns emanating from 'key U.S. cities. The Soviets likewise take it. for granted that the United 0 gl'It(S'; 41 ' y I E t r? n ? ' States will use ships like the USS Pueblo, special aircraft and other measures to conduct electronic intelligence and that it will go ott_spencling bil- -liens to intercept other coun- tries, messages and break their codes. John F. Kennedy was fright- ened by ithrtishchcv at Vien- na because ? intelligence told the young President that we wore not as Prepared, to fight as we needed to be should the Russian carry out his threats regarding Berlin. Later, Ken- nedy could stand eyeball- to-eyeball with Khrushchev during the Cuban missiles ttri- sis because:intelligence opera- tions, including the 1.12, flights of the Eisenhower years, made IL clear that the United States was stronger if it qa2110 to nuclear war, iiioreover, bur intelligence was such that we knew Ithrushchey knew who was stronger. President Nixon will go to Peking with greater feelings of - confidence because sophistk. catcd intelligence procedures, ? have .made it pessible for him to know many things that the' Chinese do not know he knows.. There are "puritans" who: say that they can never accept this as a, necessary activity,. for to do so would be to com- promise with immorality an,d. indecency. 'So it becomes a ri- tual of cleanliness for them to / launch attacks on the CIA and other American intelligence. operations - whenever a news item pops up to remind them of their revulsion to "dirty- tricks,' But that story out of London is just anotlier reminder of hoW mean the real world is and that the peacemakers very often are . those who keep :ns alert to both the dan- gers, and the promises of that. real world. . . Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000200150001-6 \\ A,S1RICG T _ON STAN Approved For Release 20013138:4: n1A-RDP80-01601 C?'?:k-' / , 69 ill Ce'e' , w ,? v4.4. - ' By JAMES DOYLE Star Staff Writer ' Early in1 ..63 a group includ- ing former officials of the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency and the State Department soiled down after dinner at the Harold Pratt House, on New York's Avenue, to discuss some of the CIA's problems. A record of heir conversa- tion shows that the particular ?concern of the group that night was how to provide a deeper cover- for Americans gathering information by using non- governmental organizations as fronts. ' The participants were mem- / hers and guests ? of the presti- ? gious Council on Foreign Rela- tions, men- who seem to. direct ?? _foreign policy from within and - - --- - .. , witnout the government On a permanent basis, and publishers I. of "Foreign ?Affairs," the quar- terly bible of American diploma- ? .cy. ? ? . A record of the discussion at the council's headquarters on that evening, Jan. 8, 1968,' has been circulated to some newspa- pers by a gtoqp of self-styled radicai scholars based in Cam- bridge. It portrays with some new de- ' tails, the structure and the style of the American intelligence community. The document is ?'timely in the wake of events last? weekin London, where 105 memb- ers of the Soviet commu- nity there, including employes Irons the Soviet embassy, trade delegation, tourist agency, Mos- cow Narodny Bank and Aeroflot Airline were uncovered as esp16- nage agents, and banned from . the country without replace- ments. . . . - -? ? It was- a 'fear of just such an incident, apparently, that domi- nated the conversation at Pratt house that night. The. -U.S. "employes" - whose cover constantly is endangered, the .participants felt, are those ? who work in the American Ern- ,/ il STATINTL ? n 15 FIi1(i .11:4 agents '"need to operate under deeper cover." Bissel recounted ruefully the uproar over the CIA's exposed funding of the National Student Association's overseas a.ctilvities and said, "The CIA interface with various private groups; inn- eluding business and student groups, must be remedied." He noted that the problems of American spies overseas "is fre- quently a problem of the State Department." "It tends to be true that local allies find themselves deiding al- ways with an American and an of I i .c i a I American?since the cover is almost. invariably as a U.S. government employe," 131s- ml is reported to have said. '? `There are powerful reasons for this practice, and it will al- Ways be desirable to have some CIA personnel housed in the em- bassy compqund, if only for lo- cal 'command post' and commu- nications requirements. "Nonetheless, it is possible ? and desirable,, although difficult and time-consumirog, to build overseas an apparatus of unoffi- cia). cover," Bissel is quoted as "This would require the use or. ? creation of private organiza- tions many of the personnel of which would be non-U.S. nation- als, with freer entry into the local society and less implica- tion for the official U.S. pos- ture." Use Non-Americans Bissel said that the United States needed to increase its use of non-Americans for espionage "with an effort at indoctrination and training: they should be en- couraged to develop a second loyalty, more or less compara- ble to that of the American staff.". He added that as intelligence efforts -shifted more toward Lat- in America,. Asia and Africa, "the conduct of U.S. nationals is hassles, trade delegations, and - .likely to be increasingly circum- other U.S. agencies in countries !scribed. The primary change around the world. ? ' recommended Nvould be to build up a system of unofficial cover. ty director of the CIA who left . . . The CIA might be able to jthe agency after the Bay of Pigs make use of non-nationals as debacle, led the discussion. Ac- 'career agents', that is with a cording to the record made :status midway between that for available toThe 'Star; he told his the classical agent used in a council collcapopk4etifforiteititiVIOITITitekt Richard Bissel, a former dcpu- and that of a staff member in- volved th',?ough his career in many operations, and well in- formed of the, agency's capabili- es." An unidentified former State Department official -responded to Bisset that he agreed -with the need to change coves, noting that "the initial agreement be- tween the agency and State was intended to be 'temporary'' but nothing endures like the ephem- eral." Another: participant noted that very little attention was paid to revelations of the CIA's use of supposedly. independent opera- lions such as "Radio Free Eu- rope." he added, "One might conclude that the public is not likely to be concerned by tha penetration of overseas ?iaatitu- tions; at least not nearly so much as by the penetration of U.S. institutions." This participant was quoted as? saying, "The ? publia. doesn't think it's right:they don't know where it ends; they take a look at etheir neighbors." Then he asked whether "this suggested expansion in use of private insti- tutions should include those in the United States, Or U.S. insti- tutions operating overseas?" In response, clear distinctions' were reportedly made between - operating in the United States .and abroad, and the suggestion was made by bissell, "One might want CIA to expand its use of private U.S. corporations, but for objectives outside file United States." Fund Demands 1?ise. .. . The record of the discussion did not link comment and au- thor, but did give a general in- dentification of the men present.' There also was a diligent rerao-. val from the authorized report- er's transcript of all specific rel-' erences of agentsaineidents and the like, with one, noticeable lapse. In a discussion of the effect of revelations that the CIA was II- :Dancing U.S: labor union activi- ties abroad, it was noted that these disclosures had simply in- creased the demand for such funds from overseas labor groups. . . . 1ritishCIA-FpP110 "60 WO Tinana . la )or unions "Were supported through CIA conduits, -but now they ask for more assist:one? than before. So; our expectaticns to the contrary, there has been no damage." 'Those present and taking part hi, the discussion included men who have journeyed back and forth between government and corporate work, Most of whom have remained near the center of the foreign policy establish- ment. They included Bissell, now an executive with United Aircraft Corp. in Hartford, Conn.; former Treasury Secretary Douglas Dil- lon; former CIA. director Allen Dulles; Robert Amory Jr., a for- mer doputy'director of the CIA; Meyer Bernstein, director of in- ternational affairs for the United Steelworkers of America; col- umnist -Joseph Kraft; former White House aide Theodore So, rensen of Kennedy and Johnson days;- and Philip Quigg, recently resigned as managing editor of Foreign Affairs. Facsimile copies of the discus- - Sion sninmarY have been circu- lated by "The Africa Research Group," a dozen young scholars in Cambridge who take a radical dissenting :view of U.S. foreign. . Reached at his home, Bisell confirmed the authenticity of the document. ? He noted that in the discussion that night in New York, be had begun by saying that agent espi- onage was the least Valuable of' -three main CIA. missions, behind :reeonnaisance and electronic in- telligence, the two areas where !most CIA money is speiit. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000200150001-6 BE C Available Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000200150001-6 ND OR EGO OPE oved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601 -- 14 - 245,132 S - 407,186 V , El 0 II t Iiii:. . ' Y .ir il .,. ,,i ..,_:, I .. , I . . :?.?, ? "... .r ? , lcc7).11111111 S. if ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ,; ? e!.? rt . ?? - ' '? ? T ? 11 ? Om 0,1?ille s-/,.,?1., at, (.:",if Li I belonEr,ing to tie . ? !. ? ' Central Iiitelliganc.o . ? ? The two occuoants :.-/ 101 rAril rk? 11 :1??1 , one in unif.m-m and the other ? Ci5Iiii^r1 (--101-hos f1echs11(,n' r. \\7,1(,[-z . ? i:ney .roLurl?wd leNV:', ? : ? J) ki1 I] .thinute.. later, tho:ivflan ? ? , ; ? ? a.45 calleer vistol? _:_,:.1:- and the Uniformed 3M"0.1; an 1 .Ir,EY1-3-`:.; 3T.,i'Dc2,q,::.'...?..dne L!aiibr raiz-Ili:a 0 E'fverij.1'',, ' i. 1G 'i rifle, to ICI, .so;-:,v-..1'.1 ,, ?-;-.? ?..--oil'icno unify 'Ner,','; f.i.,rvic?:; ,''' ''' ' fititicthes for injuries suffered : ;pape.rs'..theY* hasi pf-t? on ? ? :SAIGON:? Political ,111-ir est i-, vi.'non. bis head bounced 1 :front .:soa.t.,. .::.--:?:.:.,-..-:,-.-_,-,,-.?,!2-,-,..:.?:?,-,',..:.1 ,.....;,:, . . ,...t ln this uneasy capital. took a . against tile windshield as tha I ,.. - , .?-r- ?,,, i ' : . ? ,-,.., -2: ...,..) . ? .: violent . anti-American' turn , chlver- braked sharply- to .a ?,..-n.-, ..f.' -',,Y.'..-'?"----"-:?-'-'?'1:-'-', ?''': ,''-::. ; S.a. t u r d a yLl.-kut tirietitened ' stol.,5 when the, van was hit by ,:.:'"::.;11.al ".',3f.3 '10 'it i."1 ,;:it 1'c.,'?-61-% '? . . i. .... , ;c-1.'ycrs felt wv..5. comyrkfi.),1-1.=. i,.1)1.?4;f? Cic-.1"i1011Sif.'atiOns a gain,f3C, ' thc' firobOinb. AnotTiar sailol' r. .31! no s i dp.fl:t.:.:-Nguven. Van !.. Was treated for -minor 'injv.- 1. ..1.11e 'restra.int, ? Nietla mese - l'hieit'S Oct. 3 One,-Ji.ia-a.- pais:* rieS ?after bo.ing knocked to : tomb n;[; Police. (1)-(;)%ea 'C O.? to "i. t- 540atial ' election.-:'- failed to 1. .the ground. . : . . ::-.? :-,1-?:.: say:lents. with -.cer..it ge,s. ,,--re,...?,:, : LinalterialiZC, . ' ? ' ?" i ?' - I J p to nuW, the students on- ',' Odes ?whil-- ? ?SaigaA. . . . - ., i?-..-'-.One ..,Amcrican -. rdr, 1.,,,11-., . parently intended no 1-_,ilysi- , kript tranje movii)g. . ,..-? ."..1 Wounded . by gunfire, -r- ,. ' ? cH harm in 1'1, Americans, '.. '-. Al point,one.".' -0' - a 1.-...,L1 k..f.; 0:11?': ,.: .. . ... .61.1 . up . and? tour Atricti?s; 1:-.! ? (s.1".PLY riakecl cars. .--.??:::?4 . the air, . to drive' away the ..i Avete - fia.,, 1.-minb, c y ...khe ne,w 0,3tbrealt of vi o- ! ' cumvd ? and student j2 Li ? , .,, ?? by (roving bands of sou. I. ; ? lellau -sharply -underscored.. '.mingling ,,,h'ith, the curftms;... ,,.. , .sc, stud: 1 laciica, , : fthe.U..S. military command's '?-...- No .050 w,,,,s, iniyred (ii I, i'Vietnarle -- t ? . The.' GI \vas shot in - -,- `. - N.g ..ce"c 1-11 civ(?I':this action... - . '. -: - ? - - - -: ; ? wer.,3 hciriEt, satisfied to set fire to ...cer ...;everal shots:into::: L. riTri :17 : late- ,..riday night as l e cf-daSed a nti-AmeriPan 'i n,,-.1- .?: ? ilia.' 1:-LS? Ai?' iny ' r s ta 0.. ' . . .r.,,?....N.t-,.o ; va?:-.1valkin from the. 11".:% . :. dents: ? Earlier in P.i'Nfpno. 4., ' cxnbrts arsivir.,, C-:.a.fh,,:i U0 1" Atirry's 3-cd. Plaid I.Iopit t - ,. . , '-' " L" ' ' asked to hortn,-w o?-?-? P.' 'il.War Tan Son. 1\lhut Ai'll-.K1,??:,cen'ral- Yietnanl, a GI Orly': ! -,- fro-.1-1 ,new:,:.-r:,e.:d. bV.i.'''..,',..o -'?:;???.in-,"'.1 i., to aiLs ban.:, ,,,,s, ms comt, I:. flec, for his life as a Victumff. ? ,iin?ing into a cik-i.x.1 of :;i:p 1 .., . 1 ?0 1, ox,,other Ci who 1,,,,,a5 ,on , . e,c mob. gleefully burnc-!d his ' ?fq-1,7 ".L ? " all!rt; ' said it ViD ShOtS We. '; . j6P': - - - '.? - ? -,...'. i':. :.- '''''':'-'-''''''' ? '''''''-1 -.-'' '''f-:-:?'''''''':)-':2-.1 question is libWine.ttch sps:d by on, two nenclaF: ?.:?il:01er; vie, can keep env ' 11E-, ,four gat? and .:innder, cont7,r?ol. ill the face (Y . "there was p17 evocations," 'said ; wer;2, stlideS.ts.U S Cu> 11 01 ICC 1 So fa r, ,..A U S Navy (7,11 i p c out boy i; have for _the, MC: !: died a. fo,?,,, 4ays cadior ???part; kept their coel,' but 'hUt;. che Nva,s. evau,atecl to , just dc.11't think it's fah,' for troz:ament of 1.11.u.ns people they are here to 1:isuf or o d when ha vlas s;noulcl -attack.' tliam,". ;?ttranzd in a parked pinup .': The '-::-students apparicatly ? 3;, u viivich was; fire tactics to hit-and- ; boinbed? in ? front of .? 1.1.S. 100tmi C':On American ve.:?"; Navy licaclquartars. 'aItir- their .t.hreatervA ? -.?`' ' ? ? 30c.1...- 3 '01ecro.). Iet? all Cl if drive to :','biock ? the': ? ' The 'four. ...sailors wore ? CII- -aff 6.6 , ?-? !tacked at- the same spbt T , ? When their Va ll was lire , bombed by st.uctents at Iloon The ':livefkast': action took Sc ttirdsy P2Vt On '.1 ci Van Duyet. ; iu the sailors scrambled. '.)fteE-1:," 310'0r :the. Caraljadialt out of the-1y burninp. vehicla, : cialhas:3Y, 'Where three ithay 11-31ai.tacl;r:d 11-ICan cars and a Scal-lt Vi 1 dents vilialclinf, s'..on.:2.s; and .Policq 3"ecl) 1731*0 ? . ; botilos,:the mr.i-Aots- pod, 21)u.rnecl a . . couple .of. ? STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R000200150001-6 Approved For Releaselitt#: "'Tr!) ( -141 ?7,0r-t1 ?,'-t; -..... C-?,171,e7 7 ri ..???D -:-7 -?:-? -i?,,,1?????,- . " ?j/' r.-i. ,74 _..T ,,,,, ri 7 ,_,....1,,..,,,, ?4,1? 4 j_.../ .. ?-?:).? - - ' 1...:y LI N: +.4. q, . V.,:: ?:::,..) I..f, ..4._1' ? . cl t). Cl.:1 lf ' { ? ? By J011?,C P.. WALLACH .-.- Wens American allow the U. S. government, - ' Washington Bureau ? ? whenever. convenient, fo deny association with RFE policies. . WASHINGTON F o r?ra ri American staffers f Radio Free ' Europe (RIEE) are prepared to; testify,in Congress that they .1-1ad to sig,n, an 'oath refusing to divulge multimillion dollar Central In1 the bill. It would allow transfer-, telligence Agency, (CIA) bank: ring the $33 million annual subsidy rolling of BYE on penalty of a! from secret CIA coffers to the maximum S1.0,000 fine and 1.0-year open, congressional appropriation prison sentence. . ? . process. - . . This and other disclosures, E. A WI INISTI LT( ON review source's close to Sen. Clifford P.. is considered so sensitive that the i Case cautioned today,. could White House_ has ordered it take I seriously embarrass the Nixon! place in the Supersecret ."Forty administration'if it decides to take, Committee," also known as the: an'uncooperative approach to the -Covert Action Group," - I Senate Foreign Relations mittpe hearings, .scheduled to: Although chaired by National begin on 'April 23. Security Council chief Dr. Henry : . Kissinger', the mcchanistii. is trial CASI?1- BAS spearheaded a? only when a Subject- is considered; Senate drive to-strip RFE of what too hot - to go to the President he chaiiied in a recent speech ,through regular SC channels. were subsidies of "several hull- The Chief Executive is known! clued. million dollars" from "se- ,to have had personal ties .to 5ev-1 cret" CIA funds which, the New eral of 1.RFE's most prominent, I Jersey. ? Republican contended, backers and to have strong icle1-1 j have for 20 years made up *lost . ; ings about RFEi's iulportance int the entire FIFE budget. Europe. divulges ithe- Information he t)- . comes liable for the 'maximum i-un'shment under Section 1$3 (D), Congressional sources stress 1 Title 0, of the U. S. Code. - that funding the corporation would This ,section prosceribes penal- not involve any new money since I ties up to $10,000 a-nd 1.0 years in the government already is footing prison, for`the ':communication of classified information' by govern- ment officer or employee." ? ..? . . In an attempt to force REE and, - Case's bill, which proposed' MoSeow-beaming Radio Liberty ; amending the Information (Rh) to quit the protetise or acting Education Act to provide funds for I as "private" organi-,ations relying , RFE, has attracted bipartisan I solely .on voluntary contributions, 'support from several senators,, Case introduced legislation in. ! including. Harold I legits, D-Iowa," February ,to have both propagan- ' Jacob H. Javits, R-N. Y. and ..J.- ..d,.), agencies funded through direct, William-Fulbright, D-Ark. . acknowledged congressional ap- propriations. . . - . They arc prepared.to press the --' issue as an example of the loss of Case has announced his inten- -congressional .control over U. S. tion to call to testify leading ad- foreign policy.. ?- . ministration_ ' officials reportedly ? Including Secretary of State CASE WAS understood . to be William P. Rogers, Secretary of ready' to call former RFE.staffers Defense Melvin Laird and CIA to testify that the CIA regularly Director-Richard Helms., assigned agents to two-year tours ? . of duty at FIFE headquarters in TIIE ADMINISTRATIDN,Is ex- Munich, and that they mas: amining, a series 'of options. rang- queraded as acreditcd hews cor- ing from fighting to maintain the me s p on den t a of; Information- status quo, which could turn the gathering missions ' all over hearings into a parade of dis- Eastern Europe., . . n closures about .the .extent of CIA , ?I 1 voter Americam ernployees 1,,, eye Involvement, . to congressional sooner or later. requstited to sign a ?fanding, in much the same man, v ,st.tper making, -them privy to th....., nor . as the Voice of 4riteriea , 'CIA connection, sources close to. (VOA) is financed. ? ? - - f !CaSci diseloscd. ? . . . .The'most workable compromise . , . public corporation to run nFE. The sloCument, they said, info;'- now appears to be setting op a med the Americans that FIFE was a "project" of the CIA, that thc t . ? ? . lApOttiVeidTroilketease,2001 /03t04 ?:001A-RPP80-01601 R000200150001 -6 .iThe cor by Congre...s tut WOU retain acially" informed and that if he semi.-private character that would; . ? - ' ' ? ? ..... STATI NTL