TONGSUN PARK'S CONTACTS WITH U.S. INTELLIGENCE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP81M00980R000600080033-2
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RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 24, 2004
Sequence Number: 
33
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 1, 1978
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP81M00980R000600080033-2.pdf323.61 KB
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WASHINGTON STAR DATE TONGSUN PARK'S CONTACTS WITH U: S. INTELLIGENCE By Ron Sarro C*Rtkmnd From A-i But the committee reportehat Washington Star Staff Writer Washington society figure Tongsun Park had a longtime relationship with U.S. intelligence officers, who over 12 years used him to obtain information and at least considered him for more exotic duties, accord- ing to the Senate Intelligence Com- mittee. The committee concluded that the contacts with Park between 1959 and 1971 were "limited," that intelligence agencies say he has never been con- _.dered "an asset," and that from what it could learn, Park had no "formal relationship" with any spy agency. But in a report on what U.S. intelli- gence and other officials knew of South Korean influence-buying in Washington, the committee yester- day provided the first indication of how Park's life was intertwined in Washington with contacts with U.S. intelligence agents. The bulk of the 50-page report de- tails much of the information already publicly disclosed by the House for- eign operations subcommittee, headed by Rep. Donald Fraser, D. Minn., on the extent of U.S. officials' knowledge of the efforts of Park and the South Korean KCIA to buy influ- ence in Congress. THE SENATE COMMITTEE con- cluded that various U.S. agencies knew of KCIA activities . aimed at Congress as early as 1970 and ' of Park's activities as early as 1971, in- See PARK, A-6 eluding his use of the George Town two years after the 1967 contact, it Club "as a front to channel campaign disvered, Park had dinner with funds to congressmen." threeo intelligence officers from the It said that information mostly de- same agency, either at his home or veloped by intelligence agencies, and at the George Town Club. Th " e report said an intelligence also the State Department and Jus_ tice Department, was not acted on in officer who had just retired did in magnitude of the activities in- volved," but that it could not prove - 1 .. .. _ of cover-up" or closet, support for the Korean activities, The report's discussion of contacts between intelligence officials and ro th ug e Korean CIA about 1969, provided a hew view of the activities of the mil- lionaire rice merchant-influence buyer who became a male Perle Mesta in Washington society. The report gave the following examples of what the committee called Park's "limited contacts" vane dinner gathering which was at- tended by two other intelligence offi- cials. "It was Park's recollection that the dinner was arranged by an intel- ligence officer who had been asked `to look me up,' " the committee said. "The committee has been un- able to ascertain why the dinner was arranged, and there are no records on the subject in intelligence agency files," the report said. ? In 1968, the report said, "Addi- tional interest in Park was expressed by another intelligence agency which . was apparently considering re- cruiting Park as a `spotter assessor' to be used to recruit and assess possi- ble sources f f i o ore gn intelligence years thereafter, U.S. intelligence information, but there is no evidence officers met with Park on occasion to that Park was actually used in that obtain information and/or to assess capacity." him as a prospective asset." The lat- - ? During 1970-71, the report said, ter term translates here as possible "Park apparently had numerous con- onerative_ in 1962 in Park's heading a New York "placement service" for South Ko- reans educated in this country and seeking "employment" back home, although the organization was never created. However, the report said, Park did help negotiate a $1,500 grant to a South Korean placement organ- ization in 1961. The grant was made by the Asia Foundation, a CIA front from 1951 to 1967, but Park told the committee that at the time he was unaware of its CIA connection. ? In 1967 "overseas" U.S. intelli- gence officers reported to Washing- ton that Park "was thoroughly 'wor- thy of cultivation' and Park himself was apparently told that a headquar- ters official would be calling on him and might want to see him occasion- ally," the report said. INTELLIGENCE OFFICIALS were interested in Park because of 'his "close relations with key Korean officials," but again, said the com- mittee, "there is no indication in intelligence files that this proposal was ever acted upon." It did not ex- plore the possibility the files were incomplete or the operation covert. Seoul, _although theirs recollections differ as to the substance of ' their relationship. "PARK CONSIDERED the station chief to have been a close personal friend and he claimed that they ex- changed considerable substantive information about Korean politics and political figures," the report said. During this period, U.S. offi- cials have said, Park was an agent of the South Korean Central Intelli. gence Agency. "The station chief recalls their meetings to have been of a purely so- cial nature rather than substantive," the committee said. "There are no records in intelligence files reflecting what transpired between them. Park recalls receiving a case of liquor from the station chief on at least one occasion." The committee also reported that intelligence files show that at one time intelligence officers considered using Park s George Town Club as "an operational base," but decided Approved For Release 2004/07/08 : CIA-RDP81 M00980R000600080033-2 ? "Beginning in 1959 and for several Sen. Adlal Stevenson, D-I11 tells reporters he could not definitely rule out the possibility of a cover-up in the Ko- rear Influence buying scandal. Earlier the Senate Intel- -Associated Press ligence subcommittee which he heads reported that high U.S. officials Ignored warnings that the Koreans were trying to buy influence in Congress. against it, and that two intelligence officers had business relationships with Park, although there was "no evidence" Park knew of their agency connection. "In his testimony before the Sen- ate Ethics Committee," the intelli- gence committee reported, "Park readily admitted to knowing several former intelligence officials, but the committee has discovered no evi- dence that any of those relationships affected the handling of the Korea case." THE COMMITTEE ALSO reported it discovered no evidence that Park's relationship with executiVe branch officials who were then in positions to help him affected the flow of infor- mation about his influence-buying ac- tivities or caused the failure of U.S. agencies to halt the activities of Park or the KCIA. In reporting this conclusion, the committee said that Park socially had 'met Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, former Attorney General John Mitchell, former Attorney General William Saxbe, former CIA Director Richard Helms and former Defense Secretary Melvin Laird. He had lunch ' with the late FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover in the of- fice of the late Rep. John J. Rooney, visited Laird's office at least once, and knew former Attorney General Richard Kleindienst and visited his office at least twice, all after intelli- gence agencies knew of his influence- buying activities. The committee said the visits to Kleindienst came after March 1972, when he "closed down" for "lack of evidence" a Justice Department investigation into alleged illegal for- eign lobbying by Park and Radio Free Asia. THE COMMITTEE NOTED that after he left the Justiice Department, Kleindienst "occupied space in Park's office building on a rent-free basis for two months" and got a $4,000 retainer during the period for acting as Park's lawyer. "There is no evidence that these relationships had been planned or discussed until after Mr. Kleindienst authorized the closing of the Park/ ROFA investigation,", the committee said. "Mr. Kleindienst has told the com- mittee that his relationship" with Park in 1971 was not such as required him to disqualify himself from the case and we have discovered no evi- dence to the contrary," the report said. The report shed no new light on three intelligence reports forwarded on 'a "top secret" basis in 1971 to Mitchell and Kissinger, then special assistant to the president for national security affairs, about Park's lobby- ing efforts, cash payments to one congressmen and KCIA activities. THE REPORT SAID Kissinger does not recall seeing any of the re- ports and Mitchell remembers one which mentioned congressional staff connections with the KCIA, which he said he brought to the attention of former House Speaker Carl'Albert.