NBC WHITE PAPER #1 THE U-2 AFFAIR

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CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9
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RIPPUB
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K
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56
Document Creation Date: 
December 12, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 5, 2002
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1
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Publication Date: 
November 29, 1960
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PAPER
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Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R00410018 001- NBC WHITE PAPER #1 THE U-2 AFFAIR NARRATOR: Chet Huntley BROADCAST: Tuesday, November 29, 1960 10:00 - 11:00 P.M. EST EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Irving Gitlin PRODUCER-DIRECTOR: Al Wasserman WRITTEN BY: Al Wasserman, and Arthur Barron ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Arthur Barron , ,..r A gill I Approved For Release 2 d dw:-ctx P80B01676R004100180001-9 ? =? 1 9-1 THE U-2 AFFAIR 1 ? Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 Black SOUND EFFECTS - Jet Engine HUNTLEY (O.S.) You are listening to the sound of a jet. It is not an ordinary jet. SOUND EFFECTS UP HUNTLEY (O.S.) This is a U-2. This is the incredible plane that pro- jected our country into a crisis that shook the world. CU Powers This is Francis Gary Powers, Pilot at trial of the one U-2 flight that failed. Washington Scenes HUNTLEY (O.S.) Whatever the fate of Powers, the U-2 was not so much the drama of an individual...as of a nation, this nation, and the manner in which we reacted to a major and unprecedented crisis. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 2. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 GOLD?WJATER : MS Goldwater How can you negotiate with murderers? How can you negotiate with people who have shot down numbers of our planes? How can you negotiate with people who tell lies and who do not fulfill their solemn obligations? I don't think you can gain anything by going to the summit with these type of people. MS Bowle s MAIN TITLES: 1. NBC WHITE PAPER #1 2. THE U-2 AFFAIR 3. TIMEX BILLBOARD BOWLES: Major elements in our government have been caught telling blatant false- hoods to the world, to ourselves, to each other, and to Congressional committees. We have not told the truth. We have taken grave risks on the very eve of a great and important international conference. THEME: ANNOUNCER: Timex billboard Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 TTE U-2 AFFAIR 3. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 STUDIO Huntley HUNTLEY: Almost six months have passed since the day of the U-2 flight and the crisis it created. But a crisis should not be filed and forgotten in a nation's archives simply because it is in the past. Now that the passions and parti- sanship of an election year have sub- sided - and because we feel that the consequences of this crisis are still unfolding and the lessons to be learned are still significant - NBC News has decided to retell and re-examine the story of that fateful flight of May first and the events that flowed from Dissolve to: Exterior Lockheed If the story can properly be said to Taxiing Shot begin anywhere, it is with the superb air- plane itself and the men who built it. Second Taxi Shot, This is a U-2, filmed by NBC with Man Gesturing special permission at the place of its birth, the Lockheed Aircraft Corporation in Burbank, California. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 4? Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676Rp041pp~g~QQ1-9 HUNTLEY tCONTINUED): Interior Lockheed Kelly Johnson Here is the man who designed it, Lockheed Vice President, Kelly Johnson. ;S Wing CU Wingtip Pogo JOHNSON: in 1953 and 1954, we were study- ing ways and means of making fighter airplanes like the F 104 go higher and further than they did at that time. As we went further and further into these studies it soon became apparent that it would take an entire- ly new kind of aircraft to do the job that we wanted done. JOHNSON (O.S.): From this came the U-2. We made a wing that had a very long span - over 80 feet. The wing had to carry the whole weight of the aircraft and still be very, very light. It had to be designed not only to hold a great amount of fuel, but it was de- signed so the wing tip acted as part of the landing gear. On the take off, we invented what we called the pogo landing gears. These stick into sockets in the wing, and rest on the ground and keep the air- plane level on take off. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 71 Hi E U-2 AFFAIR Approved 5. For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (O.S.) Pilot Pre Breathing If the design of the U-2 presented un- CU Pilot usual problems, so too did flying it. The pilot of a U-2 must spend an hour- and-a-half before take-off relaxing and breathing pure oxygen in order to prepare himself for high altitude con- ditions. His helmet is airtight and sealed to his body by a cork ring; he can, there- fore, neither eat nor drink before... Exterior Lockheed or during a flight. A long flight Pilot getting into plane may keep the pilot sealed up for more than eight hours. Closer Shot, After such a voyage, he will emerge getting into cockpit hungry and thirsty from his cramped cockpit, his skin chafed and raw from the tight fitting suit and helmet. Plane Taxis to The plane he flies will range as high Runway as 90,000 feet - 17 miles above the earth --? far above the operating ceil- ing of any other jet....and during the eight hours it can stay aloft, the U-2 will half fly, half glide for nearly four thousand miles. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 6. THE U-2 AFFAIR Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 Take off TAKE OFF EFFECT HUNT LEY ( O .'S . ) c on t-. U-2 in Flight It was evident from the start that the U-2 would be an invaluable air- plane. It was--and is--employed by the Air Force and other agencies for high altitude scientific research. More recently, the Air Force has been using the planes to observe missiles in flight and to track missile nose cones on the way down. B ut, to the civilian Central Intelli- gence Agency, the U-2s ability to fly higher and farther than any interceptor aircraft made it a... Dissolve to: superb spy. With dark paint and a special reconnaissance equipment, the unmarked plane the Russians came to call the black lady of espionage systematically probed the borders and penetrated deep behind the iron curtain for nearly four years. Tokyo Crash Sequence A crash landing at a glider strip near Tokyo in 1959 provided the most drama- tic breach in the secrecy surrounding Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 A %pproved 7. For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (O.S.) (CONTINUED): the espionage activities of the U-2. These pictures were made before the area could be cordonned off by U.S. security guards. General Newspaper Over the years other hints of the Stills black ladies' secret missions came to the surface... "Mysterious Stranger" first in a B ritish flight magazine... "Mystery Crash" then in reports of a mysterious crash that killed Lockheed test pilot Robert Seiker.... Misc. Newspaper then in other newspapers and avia- tion magazines... Soviet Aviation including Russian ones. In 1958 and Black Plane Dissolve to: Stock Powers Trial 59 the newspaper Soviet Aviation, attack- ed the espionage flights, the men be- hind them, and the planes they flew. SILENCE This is the pilot of the one U-2 reconnaissance flight that failed... Francis Gary Powers. TRIAL AUDIO This is his family. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 TIE U-2 Ad For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 POWERS' MOTHER POWERS' MOTHER: (Over Trial Footage and on camera) Ever since Francis was just a little boy he was interested in airplanes, and made model planes. And - a - always said he wanted to become a pilot. So he - after so long a time, he made a pilot. Well, I wanted the boy to do what he thought best. B ecause it was his life. And - a - I was kind of scared, though, as I was afraid of planes - the dangers of them. Anything that goes up has to come down. So that's the reason I was kind of afraid for him - afraid he would crash, some- time, and maybe kill himself. Dissolve to: Stock HUNTLEY (O.S.) Incirlik Air Base Turkey In August, 1956, Francis Powers arrived at Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, an American installation on a flat, bleak, plain 10 miles from the town of Adana. It is a normal air force base....with one exception. Isolated trailer camp in a trailer camp at its western end Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 9. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 Trailer Camp HUNTLEY (O.S.) (CONTINUED): Camp is the top secret 10-10 reconnaissance detachment, which conducted U-2 over- flights. Francis Powers and his wife moved into trailer T 1356, where, in common with seven other civilian pilots and their families they lived in mys- tery and seclusion for nearly four years, aloof from the rest of the base. Transport Takes Off On Thursday, April 27, 1960, a trans- port plane flew Powers and other mem- bers of the 10-10 detachment from Incirlik.... Animation Arrow Moves From Incirlik to Peshawar Pullback to larger area to Show Powers' Intended Flight Route Globe Turning, Day-Night Effect, Zoom in Surface of Globe Turning to the Pakistani Air Base at Peshawar. Then, when conditions were right, Powers would begin a thirty three hundred mile voyage across the Soviet Union, his equipment continu- ously monitoring its industry and defenses. If all went well, he would touch down at Bodo, Norway eight hours after take-off. And so, early on Sunday morning on the first of May, 1960, Francis Powers lifted off from Pakistan. Most of the Approved For Release 2U / /:0GL :' P$DBO' 7 04 'b046M0'1-9 i pp.n~nnrr 10. THE U-2 -AP'P'V For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (O.S.) (CONTINUED): Dissolve to: Stock Moscow dawn scenes Dissolve to: Night Scenes Washington at Night LS Lights Go Off On Capitol Dome Lights Go Off At Lincoln Memorial ness and, as he crossed into Soviet territory, dawn was just breaking in Moscow? In a few hours, the May Day parade was scheduled to begin - an annual display dedicated to the glorifica- tion of the Communist regime. Already the city was being prepared for the great event. As Powers continued his flight, it was still the night of April 30th in the United States of America. In Washington, D.C., at midnight, it was time for the daily ritual.... ....of shutting down the city's land- marks. At the White House, guards kept watch over an empty building. The President was away for the week-end at his Gettysburg farmhouse. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 11. THE U-2 A r Q d For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (O . S . ) (CONTINUED): State Department At the State Department, a few lights were burning late. A summit confer- ence - the first in five years - was scheduled to begin in Paris in two weeks, and there were preparations to make. Dissolve to: Night Exterior Washington Post Interior WashingtonPost Mailing Room Scenes Dissolve to: Moscow Newspaper Delivery Girls Coming Out Of Building Muscovites Reading Papers In one section of the city there was considerable activity. The Sunday papers had just come off the presses and were being readied for delivery. Whatever news was to occupy attention that morning was- already frozen in type and bound in wire. And of all those who would soon be casually scanning the morning papers, in Washington.... ...and in Moscow - no one was aware that a news story that would shake the world was being born in the wreckage of an American plane, down 1,200 miles inside the Soviet Union. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 12. THE U-2A rEv4 For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 FADE OUT Studio Huntley FADE OUT: FADE IN: First Commercial FADE OUT: FADE IN: Studio MCU, Huntley Hotz, Plugging in Tape Recorder He Turns to Camera HUNTLEY: Weill continue with The U-2 Affair after this message from Timex. The circumstances surrounding the downing of the U-2'are still largely a mystery. American intelligence sources have communicated a version of what happened to several reporters ..,.among them, Robert Hotz, editor of the authoritative Aviation Week magazine. HOTZ: Our government knew that Powers was in trouble almost from the moment that it first occurred. This is because we have a rather extensive network of monitoring Soviet communi- cations, and they also have a similar network with which they monitor ours, Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 13. THE 3-2 Aj O &1 For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HOTZ (CONTINUED) : This is an example of what we get from listening to the Russians. This in- cident took place about two years ago. He Turns on Tape Recorder Sound: Russian Fighter Pilot Conversa- HOTZ Turns Off Tape Recorder HOTZ (O.S.) The Russian fighter pilots are moving in to attack. Here is the official translation of their conversation at this point... The target is a four engine transport ...roger. 201 - I am attacking the tar- get...the target is burning...there is a hit...the target is banking...it is going toward the fence. Open fire. 218 - are you attacking? Yes, yes. The tail assembly is falling off the target. I will finish him off, boys. I will finish him off on the run. The target is falling...yes. Form up...go home. HOTZ: During Powers' flight across Russia our monitoring system was functioning and gained a great deal of useful Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 14. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 HOTZ (CONTINUED): information, From conversation of the Russian radar crews it was evi- dent that Powers' flight was expected and it was tracked almost from the moment he crossed the Afghan border. From conversations of fighter pilots and air defense installations it was evident that they set up relays of supersonic fighters in an attempt to shoot him down. As Powers neared Sverdlovsk, he reported a flameout in his jet engine and began to de- scend to the altitude at which it was possible to start this engine in the air, The last communication with Powers was about 40,000.feet. When Powers came down in the Soviet Union, our government knew the follow- ing facts....the fact that the plane had come down in the area of Sverd- lovsk....the fact that it had been forced down by a mechanical failure, not shot down by a rocket at 70,000 feet as the Soviets later claimed. What our government did not know was whether the pilot was still alive Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 15. Ap~p roved For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR HOTZ (CONTINUED): and what the condition of the air- craft was when it hit the ground. Dissolve to: HUNTLEY (O.S.) Stills of Wrecked Powers? plane had crashed in a field Plane near the city of Sverdlovsk, some 900 miles east of Moscow. According to Stock: the Russians, the pilot had parachuted Russians Inspecting Wreck down and had been taken into custody Powers Captors by several local citizens. They de- scribed how they disarmed him, gave him a drink of water and a cigarette, and drove him to the local Rural Soviet, where he was turned over to security police. Dissolve to: Stock In Moscow, it was 8:53 A.M. at the Moscow May Day Footage time of the crash. The streets out- side Red Square were already crowded with spectators waiting for the May Day parade to begin. Kremlin leaders As the Russian high command walked. out of the Kremlin to take their places at the reviewing stand, they were probably still unaware of what had happened. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 16. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (O. S . ) (CONTINUED): Various shots Among those in Red Square watching Parade and reviewing stand the events of that morning was NBC News correspondent, Joe Michaels, MICHAELS (O.S.) Exactly at 10 A.M., as always, the May Day ceremony officially began. The first part of the parade was the military section. I watched the mobile units going by to see if there was anything new. There wasn't. Most of the time, I kept my eye on the re- viewing stand. From a reporter's point of view this is the most like- ly place to pick up anything of inter- est. And at about 10:45 - three- quarters of an hour after the parade began - I did notice something most unusual. An excited Marshal Vershinin, the head of the Soviet Air Force, arrived late. He entered at the rear of the reviewing stand, went up to Khrushchev, and whispered something in his ear. Of course it's only a guess, but I am inclined to believe that this was the moment Khrushchev Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 17. pproved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 MICHAELS (O.S.) (CONTINUED): Studio Huntley Stock Shots of Bodo Dissolve to: CIA Seal on Fence CIA Building, Through Barbed Wire CIA Building, Director's Parking Sign in F.G. found out that the U-2 was down. HUNTLEY If the manner in which Khrushchev learned the news is open to specula- tion, so is the manner in which our own key officials learned. According to Powers' testimony, his destination was to have been.... HUNTLEY (O.S.) ...the NATO Air Base at Bodo, Norway a small fishing town at the edge of the Arctic Circle. The plane was due at 7 A.M., Washington time on May 1st. When it failed to arrive, this information must have been communicated to.... the headquarters of the Central Intelligence Agency in Washington. In any event, by noon, five hours after the plane was due, it is known that word had already spread among a group of top Washington officials. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 Approved For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676 b04100180001-9 Pentagon N.A.S.A. Building State Department Building Night Shots of May Day Festivities LS Night Washington HUNTLEY (0,S. ) cont t d At C.I.A., under whose directijn the overflights were conducted, Director Allen Dulles had been advised. At the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Gates knew about it. At N.A.S.A. - the National Aeronautics and Space Administration - which operated the scientific weather flight program of the U-2s, Director Keith Glennan and Deputy Director Lawrence Dryden also know. And at the Department of State, Under Secretary Douglas Dillor. had been informed. What they did not know was that.... ...in Moscow, as the May Day festivi- ties continued into the night, Francis Gary Powers, the pilot of the U-2 was alive and already confined in a cell somewhere behind the forbidding walls of Lubyanka prison. That same night of May 1, in Washing- ton, our government began to take action. To tell us about it.... Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO167W O041OO18OOO1-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR HUNTLEY (O . S . ) (CONTINUED): Bourgholtzer. Interior, General Phillips NBC News State Dept Correspondent, Frank Bourgholtzer. BOURGHOLTZER: I've been told by persons whom I be- lieve that there was a meeting not long after the word was received that the U-2 was missing. This was a meeting at a relatively low level of those persons who normally meet to discuss such intelligence problems. At this meeting a rather routine de- cision was made to go ahead and put out a cover story; that is to say, a story that would cover for the record the fact that the plane was missing without revealing anything of its true mission. HUNTLEY (0 . S . ) This is B rigadier General Thomas R. Phillips, U.S. Army Retired, a former specialist in intelligence and mili- tary affairs analyst for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676ROO4100180001-9 20. THE U-~pRI?J or Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 Dissolve to: Studio Huntley PHILLIPS: From an intelligence point of view, the original cover story seemed to be particularly inept. One gets the im- pression, and I believe it's a true one, that it had been in the files for a long time. And when the U-2 came down, it was just yanked out of the files and issued. A cover story has certain requirements. It must be credible. It must be a story that can be maintained; and it should not have too much detail. Any- thing thatts missing in a cover story can be taken care of by saying the matter is being investigated. The most striking thing was the failure to consider, in the cover story issued, the possibility that the pilot might be alive and the airplane might be in- tact. HUNTLEY: As the events of the week of May first were to demonstrate, the story that was issued to "cover" the disappearance of Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 21. THE U-2A HgdJ For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (CONTINUED): the U-2 failed to serve its purpose. This failure was not immediately apparent. The days following May first were quiet ones, and the cover story first began to come to the surface on Tuesday, May third, in Istanbul, Turkey. HUNTLEY (O.S.) Dissolve to: On May third, Istanbul was a city under Stock Turkish Riots martial law, the atmosphere heavy with tension. Turkish students were riot- ing in protest over the stern police policies of Premier Menderes and his ruling party. Although the government was still in control, it's downfall was only a few weeks off. NATO Meeting At the Municipal Palace in Istanbul, troops stood guard while, inside, a meeting of the NATO countries was MLS Herter taking place. Attending, was Secre- tary of State Christian Herter and a number of his top aides in the State Department. Among those covering the developments of the day was a Turkish reporter. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R0b4100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR Dissolve to: MLS Goren in apartment GOREN: I'm Zeyyat Goren, United Press Inter- national Bureau Manager for Turkey. It was a Tuesday morning, May the third. I was writing a story on the NATO Council Meeting and the anti- Menderes demonstrations. A stringer of mine called me. He said he heard a story about an American plane missing -- somewhere in eastern Turkey -- from Incirlik Air Base at Adana. After I got the tip, I called Incirlik Air Base and talked to the information sergeant, who gave me the details of the story. MCU Goren The sergeant said the story is true. The plane is missing since two days. And the last they have heard from the pilot, he has trouble with his oxygen supplies somewhere over Van Lake area - which, he added, is near to the Persian border. Of course, being a native of Turkey, I know Van Lake area is also near to the Russian border, which was the angle of my story - though I didn't know that day that this story will come Approved For Release 2002/06/06 l&A RD?F 6 01676R004100180001-9 THE U-aApV7qVpAFor Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01674100180001-9 Dissolve to: Ticker Sound Effects BILL FOX: Dissolve to: UPI New York I'm Bill Fox, day cable editor for United Press International in New York. I was on duty on May 3rd when we re- ceived a dispatch from Istanbul, Turkey about eight otclock in the morning re- porting that a U.S. Air Force plane, a U-2, was reported missing somewhere in the rugged mountains of eastern Turkey in the area of Lake Van, which is near the Soviet border. I have here the original dispatch which we received by MCU Fox radio teletype from London. Of course, at the time I didn't know what a U-2 was, nor did I realize that we had a piece of history by the tail. But, the fact that an American airplane was missing in the general area of the Soviet border, I felt was newsworthy.. Consequently, I rewrote the story, add- ing some information that another Ameri- can plane had been downed in the same Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 24. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR BILL FOX (CONTINUED): general area about a year previously. I checked it with the foreign editor Story Being and sent it to the News Desk. From there Transmitted it was put on cur transcontinental A wire for simultaneous dispatch to all Teletype Operator UPI subscribers throughout North America. Dissolve to: The text of our story went like this: Composing Room A single engine U.S. Air Force plane Washington Post with one man aboard was missing today near the Soviet border in the rugged mountains of southeastern Turkey. The Type Moves to Presses plane was one of two that took off Sunday morning from Incirlik Air Base near Adana on a weather reconnaissance Presses Rolling mission. One plane returned but the pilot of the missing craft reported that his oxygen equipment was out of order. Three C-54 planes from Wheelus Air Force Base in Libyia under the command of Major Harry E. Hayes of Clarksville, Texas were combing the area in search of the missing plane, but thus far without success. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 25. U-2 Agd For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (O.S.): MLS The cover story appeared in print on the Presses turning tilt down to man morning of May 4th. At the time, it was reading paper CU U-2 story on page 1 Dissolve to: Ext. Washington Over shoulder of man ripding Washington Post of May 4th. PAN to street and newsstand Ike and Republican Ccrgressmon Stock Ike signing wheat agreement Dissolve to: Sto ck. New York Tulip show, Mayor Wagner cutting ribbon; Cardinal Spell- man standing by so unimportant that only a handful of papers across the country carried it - and only one, the Washington Post and Times Herald ran it on the front page... ...a small story that was eliminated in later editions to make room for a base- ball headline. In Washington, on Wednesday, May 4th, there was not much to be found in the way of news. In the morning, the President had break- fast with a number of Republican Con- gressmen, then chatted with them on the steps of the White House. Later in the morning, he signed an important wheat agreement with India, and in the afternoon played a round of golf. In New York, Mayor Wagner presided at the opening of a tulip display. Spring was on its way. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 26. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9, Ste ck Elysee Palace and workmen Parisian children playing Studio Huntley FADE OUT: FADE IN: SECOND COMMERCIAL FADE OUT: FADE IN: Stock LS Moscow Stock Meeting of Supreme Soviet at which K announces plane shot down HUNTLEY (O.S.) cont d And in Paris, workmen were busy tidying up the Elysee Palace for a summit con- ference that would never be held. All in all, it was a quiet day, May 4th - the last such day the world would know for some time to come HUNTLEY: Wetll continue with the U-2 Affair after this message from TIMEX and Miss Julia Mead. HUNTLEY (O.S.) Moscow, Thursday, May 5th. NBC News Correspondent Joe Michaels again reporting. MICHAELS (O . S .) : On Thursday morning, May 5th, I was present in the Hall of the great Kremlin Palace as the Supreme Soviet began its three-day meeting, First on the agenda Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 27. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 MICHAELS (0 . S .) cont'd was a speech by Premier Khrushchev. At 10 a.m, Khrushchev began his three- and-a-half hour address. Most of it dealt with such matters as tax reform, wages, prices, currency change, and so forth. But towards the end, he sudden- ly introduced a new theme. To a stunned and startled audience, Khrushchev announced that an Arw ri can U-2 spy plane had been shot down in the Soviet Union. He did not specify where, and he did not indicate the fate of the pilot. He went on to warn those countries harboring United States bases that they were "playing with fire" and promised a stern protest to the United States and to the United Nations? But he added, "I do not doubt President Eisenhower's sincere desire for peace. Reason must guide us." STUDIO Hunt ley HUNTLEY: With Khrushchev's speech, the U-2 affair had become a full-blown crisis. The world was waiting for our government to respond, and respond we did - during a two-day period of chaos, Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 28. THE U pp NWAor Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 Dissolve to: HUNTLEY (O.S.) ...NBC News State Department Corres- Bourgholtzer pondent Frank Bourgholtzer... Scherer ...and White House correspondent, Ray Scherer, were following the story as He turns to camera it developed. S CHERER At the time the U-2 incident broke into the headlines, events were moving so rapidly and we were all so close to the story that none of us could really follow its ramifications. Now, with the passage of time, certain things have become clarified. We know, for example, that following the National Security Council meeting on May 5th, the President called together a small group to discuss how to handle the situation. Two decisions emerged from this meeting; one, to con- tinue with the cover story that had already been planted; and two, that any statement by this government on the situation would come only from the State Department. This latter decision was not implemented. In a recent dis- cussion with Jim Hagerty, Frank Bourg- holtzer and I questioned him about that. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 RR THE U-2 Approved 29. For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 S CH.ERER : Hagerty interview Now after you saw us on that Thursday morning and told us that the President had asked for a full investigation, you referred us to NASA and to the State Department for further information. That is right. S CHERER : Now I went over from the White House to NASA upon hearing your word they would have a statement. They seemed to know nothing about it. They weren't prepared to make a statement. But they did make one later. Why was the time -- HAGERTY Ray, I don't know? I can't answer that. SCHERER: Were you in on the framing of their statement? No, I was not, SCHERER: Just to establish a further point, did the men at NASA, and did the men in the State Department involved in the cover Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 30. THE U 7 plA9?dVlPor Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 SCHERER:(Cont'd) story know it was a cover story, or were they simply agents?- HAGERTY: That I cannot answer. I do not know. Dissolve to: Bourgholtzer Sto ck White Statement May 5 BOURGHOLTZER: On the morning of May the fifth I vas at the State Department. We were waiting with more than normal curiosity for Link White's daily briefing. He came out to see us at twelve forty-five and he read the following statement: WHITE: The Department has been informed by N.A.S.A. that, as announced May three, an unarmed plane - a U-2 weather re- search plane based at Adana, Turkey, piloted by a civilian, has been missing since May one. During the flight of this plane, the pilot reported diffi- culty with his oxygen equipment. Mr. Khrushchev has announced that a U.S. plane has been shot down over the U.S.S.R. on that date. It may be that this was the missing plane, It is entirely possible that having a failure Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 31. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 WHITE: (cont'd) in the oxygen equipment, which could result in the pilot losing conscious- ness, the plane continued on automatic pilot for a considerable distance and accidentally violated Soviet airspace, The United States is taking this matter up with the Soviet Government, with particular reference to the fate of the pilot, Bourgholtzer Scherer BOURGHOLT ZER: Thinking back to the answers Link White gave to the many questions we later posed...it is perfectly clear that he had not been informed of any decision to make the State Department the sole spokesman about the U-2. When reporters pressed him for details...he volunteered the information that "infinitely more detail" was being given out at the National Aeronautics and Space Admini- stration, SCHERER: At 12:15 on May 5th, as soon as the Hagerty News Conference was over, I followed his suggestion, ran from the White House across Lafayette Park to Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 32. pp roved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 Scherer SCHERER: (cont'd) Stock Bonney NASA. I was the first reporter to arrive. I said I have come for the statement. And they said, "What statement?" I said, "The statement that Jim Hagerty said that you were going to put out." Well that seemed to con- fuse them. They didn't know anything about any such statement. They finally took me into see Walt Bonney, the Information Chief. He didn't know any- thing about it either. There was a lot of conferring and some more con- fusion...Other reporters arrived. Well, I finally left and I had the impression that there wouldn't be any statement. But at 1:30 p.m., Bonney did release a statement that attempted to answer the questions reporters had been asking him. BONNEY : Now, if the pilot continued to suffer lack of oxygen, the path of the air- plane, from the last reported position, would be impossible to determine. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 33. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 Studio Hunt ley SCHERER: (Partially O.S.) The Bonney statement went considerably beyond that of the State Department. For instance, there were details about the supposed U-2 flight plan, how many U-2s we had, where they were stationed, and so forth. The state- ment was so detailed that it raised almost as many questions as it answered. For example, Bonney contended that the U-2 had taken off from Incirlik Air Base in Turkey at 8 a.m. local time. This was considerably later than the time announced in Khrushchev's speech, and reporters were quick to notice the discrepancy. HUNTLEY: One more incident occurred in Washing- ton on that confusing May 5th which is worth noting. Late in the afternoon, a telegram was received from Ambassador Thompson, in Moscow, advising the State Department of the possibility that Powers might be alive. Despite this warning, on the following day we still seemed curiously unaware of the full potentialities of the situation. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 34. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 Stock HUNTLEY (O.S.): President and Roberts at On the morning of Friday, May 6th, Pre- Exhibit Dissolve to: Helicopter leaves Roberts on golf course sident Eisenhower attended a union industrial exhibit. Reporter Charles Roberts, of Newsweek Magazine, was there! ROBERTS: (Partially O,S.) On Friday, May 6th, I was standing just two feet from President Eisenhower when he gave his first public reaction to the U-2 incident. At a Union Industry Show in the Washington Armory, talking to George Meany, President of the AFL-CIO, he remarked that he was going to give a hydrojet boat to Khrushchev on his trip to Russia. Then, he added the phrase, if I go. Up until then the White House had refused to comment on the U-2 incident or acknowledge in any way that it had disturbed our relations with the Soviet Union. After the show, around npon on Friday, Ike climbed into his helicopter, outside the armory, and flew to Gettys- burg where, that afternoon, he played a round of golf. Some of us were sur- prised that he flew to Gettysburg in time of crisis - but the White House Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 35. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR ROBERTS: (continued) Stock Herterts return has always insisted that with modern communications the President can run the government from his Gettysburg farmhouse as well as he can from the i ite House. HUNTLEY (O.S.) Later that same afternoon, Secretary of State Herter returned from abroad. Despite the crisis, it would still be two days before he and the President were to see one another. Dissolve to: Lincoln White And at the State Department, in his Press Conference press conference that day, held in a setting similar to this, it was evident that Lincoln White had still not been advised to exercise caution. In response to questioning by reporters, he said, "It is ridiculous to say we are trying to kid the world about this." Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 36. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (O.S.) cont.d Later, he added, "There was absolutely no...N-O...no deliberate attempt to violate Soviet air space and there has never been." Dissolve to: Stock HUNTLEY (O.S.): Khrushchev's May 7 speech Saturday morning, May 7th...... .....for Nikita Khrushchev, a day of triumph. KHRUSHCHEV - Audio HUNTLEY (0.S.): Once the applause of the Supreme Soviet quieted down, Khrushchev revealed a secret that he had been keeping almost Khrushchev a week. He displayed photographs, waves photos which he said were taken from the cap- tured U-2, and announced that the pilot was alive and had confessed. Then he said, of the Americans, "When they learn that the pilot is alive, they will have to think of something else... and they will." TICKER EFFECT HUNTLEY: Khrushchev's announcement had blown our cover story to pieces. Newsweek corres- pondent, Charles Roberts, continues with Approved For Release 2002 Q?ip61i F OUdrw4 0Q611-Gettysburg that day. THE U-2 A'pftrred Charles Roberts Stock Gettysburg and Ptess Conference 37. For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 ROBERTS`% (PARTIAL 0. S. ) Early Saturday morning, May 7th, a number of reporters, including myse7Lf, came up to Gettysburg to cover late developments. White House News Secretary James Hagerty had promised us story that morning, and we thought it would relate in some way to the U-2. At nine thirty-six, while the President was out playing golf, we sat down with Hagerty at a make-shift press room at the Gettysburg hotel. To our astonishment, the story he promised concerned nuclear tasting. He announced that the United States was propared to resume nuclear testing as soon as possible - as he put it. The tests were to be for the purpose of im- proving means of detecting underground blasts -? a step towards policing a nu- clear test ban. But we were still sur- prised that the government would put out an announcement, while it was under fire for aerial spying, that might be interpreted as a new cold war maneuver. Hagerty still refused. to discuss the U-2 incident. He said he had informed the President of Khrushchevts latest Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 38. p pA! d For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 speech, but that he would have no com- ment. Any reaction, he said, would have to come from the State Department. Mean- time, Ike had been on the golf course since 9:05. He finished his round at 11:28 -- score unreported. Then, he re- turned to the farmhouse, where he spent the remainder of the day. During that da.y, at the State Department in Wash- ington, a crucial meeting was held to work out an answer to Khrushchev's latest speech. The President did not attend that meeting, but Hagerty informed us that Ike was in contact with Secretary of State Herter by phone during the day. Late in the afternoon, a statement was rpa.0 to the President by phone -- and he approved it without change. At six p.n:. Lincoln White of the State Department read that statement to newsmen. Stock White Statement HUNTLEY (O?S.) Only the previous day, Lincoln White had said, "There was absolutely no deliberate attempt to violate Soviet air space and there never has been." Now he was stating something different. Approved For Release 2002A /(96 iq l~[?PaQfBOW, MAMBO y80 804 'ed by THE U-2 Studio Huntley 39. AW;v6d For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 Headlines Man on street interviews WHITE (CONT'D) the President it has been established that insofar as the authorities in Washington are concerned, there was no authorization for any such flight as described by Mr. Khrushchev. Neverthe- less it appears that in ende=avoring to obtain information now concealed behind the iron curtain a flight over Soviet territory was probably undertaken by an unarmed civilian U-2 plane. HUNTLEY : This one statement, agreed upon at a hastily convened meeting, represented a historic decision - our government was, in effect, admitting that we had pre- viously lied, and that we had committed espionage - admissions no nation had ever made before. TICKER a,: How will this incident affect the United States, do you think? YOUTH I feel that it will give the Americans a 'black eye' all over Europe. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 40. THE U-2 ~.Rd For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 '1N : My feeling is that the country did the right thing in sending these planes over or this plane over. Because we have to keep abreast of the Russians, as far as the information is concerned. MAN 2, I think that if we fly over Russian territory, we take the chance of being shot down because of engaging in espionage - the same as we would do to them if they flew over our territory. MAN 1: I think that we ought to sink one of those submarines that have been spying off Cape Canaveral. WOMAN- Well, I don't think we should admit it. Yes. Yes. Never mind. what the pilot said. We have a right to protect our- selves. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE 41- AJ;PA;d For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B0167 R004100180001-9 MAN 4: Thinking it over, I think the State Department has really erred in the whole thing. They got a mix-up there. They don't seem to be coordinated. The one doesn't know what the other is doing. Stock Eisenhower Press Conference MCU Eisenhower What do you think about it? WOMAN 2: Well, I can only say what we were told in Church yesterday. We should pray for that boy. He needs it. HUNTLEY (0.S.): On Wednesday, May 11th, President Eisenhower answered the one major question that remained: who had authorized the flights? Our deterrent must never be placed in Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 42. THE U--2A pFrogOWFor Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 jeopardy. The safety of the whole free world demands this. As the Secretary of State pointed out in his recent state- ment, ever since the beginning of my Administration I have issued directives to gather, in every feasible way, the information required to protect the United States and the free world PLtainst surprise attack and to enable them to make effective prepara tions for defense. HUNTLEY (o.S.) The President himself had assumed re- sponsibil ty for authorizing the program of intelligence flights. We have learned that C.I.A. Director, Allen Dulles, had offered to serve as the traditional scapegoat and to resign. However, this is not the course the President chose. This avowal of responsibility by a head of state for intelligence ao".ivities was unprecedented in the history of inter-- national relations. It is a decision that has been the subject of considerable Fulbright debate. Here are the views of the Chairman of the Senate Committee that investigated the U-2 Affair - Senator Hagerty William Fulbright -- and of thepsident's Press Secretary, James Hagerty. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 43. THE U_2APPW ;1 For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 HAGERTY (contt'd) There is a great deal of puzzlement in my own mind of people that say why did the President or the government of the United States take responsibility. yell now this is something new that has been added to my world.If you gentlemen are spies, and I am not, and you get caught, I can say I never heard of you, or saw you before. But if you strap a U-2 to your back, it is a little difficult, to say the least, not to admit and assume responsibility. Fulbright FULBRIGHT The President need never have avowed or disavowed is the point I make. He should have, taken the position of silence in this matter and let the uh if anyone had to take responsibility, it should have been the head of the intelliegence. MCU Fulbright Uh it should have to depend on circum- stances as to who avowed or disavowed anything but it shouldn't have been the President who as I say embodies the whole sovereignty and dignity of the whole American people. I think personally this was perhaps the most serious fault in this whole operation, this whole in- cident. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 44. THE U-2 AIDpI ! For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 Studio HUNTLEY: Huntley Hagerty Fulbright Coupled with the President's assuming responsibility for the U-2 flights, was our attempt to justify our right to engage in them. HAGERTY: As the President himself at a. press conference and in speeches said, when a closed, society makes threats against our very welfare, it is up to us to find. out everything we can about such a. closed society, whether they are preparing for war, whether they are building up, and also the determination of the members of the government that there will never be another Pearl Harbor if they have anything to do about it. Fulbright: I think one of the most serious things to uh growing out of this, was our en- dea vor, on the part of our people, to justify uh this-these flights. Uh, to say you need something such as in- telligence in international relations certainly is no justification for it. But in the position the President took he was in fact asserting the right to Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 45. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR Studio Huntley do this and not the need. They could understand the need. They understa nd that espionage goes on within certain areas all the time. But they never take full responsibility for it. The hea d of state does not. I think that it's responible t'o believe that this avowal put Mr. Khrushchev in the position where he could not proceed. to treat with the man who at the same time is a sserting the right to violate the sovereignty of his country, in this case, the U.S.S.R. HUNTLEY: Following our avowa 1 of the U-2 flights, one more significant question was raised during the week preceding the summit conference - the question of whether the flights would be continued. As the week began this became a source of apparently deliberate confusion. S CHERER : On Monday morning May 9th, The New York Times carried a story saying, "It was learned that the President had ordered cessation of all flights over or near the borders of the U. S. S.R. " Well, Approved For Release 2 6/dPGtIAT-Roft> lOhRd0i0H9 U 1 's THE U-2 AFBA..Ll d 46. For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 SCH FRER (CONT'D) News Conference, we a sked him whether the flights had beEn cancelled. He said that the President had not cancelled the flights. When asked whether they had been cancelled by any order other than the President, Jim answered, know of no such orders." Studio Huntley EXHIBIT of U-2 wreckage, CU's of eauipment, pistol, money Power's boot Well the impr-ssion we were left with was that despite the events of the last few days, the U-2 flights were still going on. This impression was reinforced by a statement of Secretary of State Herter, which was released by Lincoln White the same afternoon. HUNTLEY: Although the administration had denied that it intended to imply that the flights would continue, this was the inference tha t was drawn by most ob- servers. All these 4vents led to an atmosphere of increasing tension as the summit conference approached. HUNTLEY: (O.S.) In the Soviet Union, Khrushchev toured an exhibit that opened in Gorki Park. Here in a hall customarily devoted to the pasttime of chess, the Russians had Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676ROO41 v put on display remnants o ll l ane -THE U-2 AFFAIR 47. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (O.S.) cont'd Stock Khrushchev Press Conference Stock Senate Briefing its equipment, and the pilot's personal effects. Later, in an impromptu press conference, Khrushchev reacted violently to what he termed our threat to continue the flights. He cancelled his invitation to President Eisenhower for a visit to the Soviet Union that had been planned for the following month. And in Washington, as Administration leaders explained their decision to Congress, the beginning of a major controversy, involving both this country and its allies, was already apparent. CHESTER BOWLES: We have certainly lost ground. Major elements in our government have been caught telling blatant falsehoods to the world, to ourselves, to each other, and to Congr3ssional committees. We have not told the truth. We have taken grave risks on the very eve of a great and important international conference. And we put the President in a position of not knowing who keeps store. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 TAE U-2 AFFAIR 48. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 Goldwater BARRY GOLDWATER,: We have nothing to gain by going to the summit. We have nothing to ne- gotiate at the summit. And about all we can do is to add dignity to this last beastly act of the Soviets. And I hope the President decides not to go. How can you negotiate with murderers? How can you negotiate with people who have shot down numbers of our planes. How do you negotiate with people who tell lies a nd who do not fulfill their solemn obligations? I don't think you can ga in anything by going to the summit with these type of people. I think we ought to realize, in this country, that we're in a cold war and we better be in this war to win it - and start acting like it. HUNTLEY (0. S. ) The former Foreign Minister of C?na.da PEARSON : It was pretty stupid, on the part of the United States, if I may say so, for getting its elf in a position, before the summit conference, that the Soviets could exploit an incident of this kind. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 THE U-2 AFFAIR 49. Approved For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80Bg,1~6 a410p g91A Ike leaving for summit - helicopter lands, he gets out, walks to plane, takes off In other words, I don't think they've handled the matter very well...As long as the cold war goes on, governments are going to collect intelligence, legally or illegally, and the Russians are at the forefront of that parade. But if you do this kind of thing - collect intelligence - you should do it intelligently. HUNTLEY (O.S.): On Saturday, May loth, President Eisenhower left the White House by heli- copter to board the plane that would take him to Paris. The trip that was to have been the capstone of his career was already foredoomed to a failure that he, least of all, would have wanted. As James Reston had written in The New York Times, "The tragedy of President Eisenhower in the spy-plane case is that he and his colleagues have created almost all the things he feared the most. He wanted to reduce international tensions and he has increased it. He wanted to strengthen the alliance and he has weakened it. He glorified teamwork and morality, and got lies and adminis- Approved For Release 2002 6i:YnAc p@DB011@7rGMZ~hbgtl%0lbg1?gas noted THE U--2 AFFAIdR 50. Approve For Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (CONTTD) for - caution, patience, leadership, military skill, and even good luck - suddenly eluded him precisely at the moment he needed them the most. Ike at Orly What happened after the President's Airport arrival has become part of the folklore to be Flysee Palace of history. The conference that was/ held Khrushchev leaving Elysee Palace Khrushchev at press conference of May 18th, pounding table and shouting Stock Russian Demonstrations British anti-- at the Elysee Palace was never formally convened. After bitterly attacking the President of the United States, Premier Khrushchev stalked out of the first Preliminary meeting. And before returning to Moscow... ...he began what has since become an all too familiar pattern of public performances. KHRUSHCHEV AUDIO: HUNTLEY (O.S.) The Russians now exploited to the full- est the propaganda advantage we had given them with the U-2. Whether the incident was chiefly responsible for the summit failure is still being debated: but it did provide ammunitio n for the Russians as they intensified cold war pressures throughout the world. Fear of Riiesian bases demonstrations ro kkp~{- Approved For Release ZOIIZ1'O'b/g:PR~~1661~64~I~b?0;8af-9 51. THE U--2ApWIp For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY (CONT'D) summit made American bases the object of an increasing number of protest demon- strations. Japanese demonstrations Hagerty Interview SOUND EFFECTS The United States found itself em- barrassingly on the defensive - and in the riots against the Japanese-American Security Treaty, even high United States caught in the storm. SOUND EFFECT SCHERER : Jim, by way of taking a longer look at this whole U-2 incident, now that the dust has settled somewhat, how do you think the United States came out of it? HAGERTY: Well, I think they came out very well. I think that basically the argument of an open society versus a closed society has been very well brought to the fore, has been brought to the attention of the peoples of the world. I think that is an overseas reaction. I think domestically the reaction of the American people quite frankly was "It was too bad we got caught, but we are glad we were doing it." That is the way I would sum it up. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 52. THE U ppMVAjRor Release 2002/06/06: CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 Studio Huntley BOURGHOLTZER : Do you, looking back, think that if you had it to do over again, you might have done anything in some different fashion? HA GF'RTY : No, with the exception that I think everybody admits, of the failure of the cover story. But outside of that, no. SCHERER: As you look back on this U-2 incident, who was in charge of our side of the thing as it developed - issuing of statements, coordination of policy, the whole aspect? HAGERTY: Well, I just can't answer that, Ray, I am sorry. SCHERER: Having had this experience, and now speaking with the benefit of hindsight, what lessons emerged from this for the future? H_AGFRTY : Don't get caught. HUNTLEY: At the hearings held by the Fulbright Committee, the Secretary of State, Mr. Approved For Release 2d M': MSRf) > W8CFj%Y OO O&18 df-cdns could TIDE U-2 AFFAIR 53, Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY: (cont'd) be learned from the U-2 affair. His answer was "Not to have accidents." We leave it to the American public to decide whether "Don't get caught" and "Not to have accidents" are the only lessons to be learned from U-2.. What you have seen in the past hour is an a ttempt at a historical evaluation of a most controversial subject, including opposing viewpoints on the matter. Over thirty responsible re- porters who covered this story as it unfolded contributed to this effort. There are certain conclusions that may reasonably be drawn from the facts examined in this report. 1. The cover story was inadequate to its mission. It was hastily released, excessive in detail and failed to take account of the possibility that Powers might be alive. 2. As the U-2 crisis developed, there was a serious lack of coordination among the governmental agencies involved, which resulted in conflicting and damaging statements to the world. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80B01676R004100180001-9 54. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 HUNTLEY: (cont'd) 3. By avowing the intelligence flights, an act unprecedented in the history of nations, our government suffered the consequences of having been caught in public misstatements. 4. Nobody expects the United States, or any other nation to stop intelligence activities, but by justifying the U-2 flights and implying they would con- tinue, we materially affected the Summit Conference. If Khrushchev intended to wreck the conference beforehand, we gave him a ready made excuse. If he intended to negotiate, we made it difficult for him to do so. 5. Throughout the whole U-2 affair, we suffered from the fact that there was apparently no one official or agency to direct our total response to this crisis. This is not a matter for the history books, but vitally affects our ability to survive as a nation. There will be other crises that the new administration, and succeeding administrations, will have to face. In the world as it is today, we cannot afford another U-2 Approved For Release 2002AO.Gti2UA-R BOi@;7MJJ04100180001-9 Fade out Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9 MEMORANDUM FOR: DCI F.Y.I., attached is the trans "U-2 Affair" of 29 November 19 ' NBC kf", was fur- C 1 December 1960. 25X1 Assistant to the Director S E Y J. GM-GAN [+"~ 1 1960 (DATE) FORM NO. 1.~ GA I -A-ES FORM 10- 101 1 AUG 54 -qE USED. Approved For Release 2002/06/06 : CIA-RDP80BO1676R004100180001-9