PANEL O.K. LIKELY FOR CIA NOMINEE
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP84-00499R000200050008-2
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
21
Document Creation Date:
December 12, 2016
Document Release Date:
October 7, 2001
Sequence Number:
8
Case Number:
Publication Date:
January 13, 1973
Content Type:
NSPR
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CIA-RDP84-00499R000200050008-2.pdf | 1.85 MB |
Body:
LLT 1 r17, :lIN
Approved Forapelease 2001/111/083J : CANIAARDP84-004941P00200050008-2
; Panel K. likely
for CIA nominee
By CHARLES W. CORDDRY
Washington Bureau o/. The Sun
Washington?James R. said. When he was asked what
Schlesinger, now chairman of would happen if the White
the Atomic Energy Commis- House refused to let Mr.
sion, apparently will win Sen- Schlesinger testify, Senator
-ate Armed Services Committee Stennis said the nominee ob-
? approval as the new director viously could not speak for the
of the Central Intelligence White House and "we'll handle
Agency after assuring the that when it comes up."
panel that he will be willing to Senator Stennis said the
testify before it whenever committee had not pet voted
on Mr. Schlesinger's appoint-
The Senate Democratic: eau- Anent but there has been "no
?cus, annoyed about the'refusal opposition" in or Out of Con-
of some officials -&testify be- gross.
fore Senate committees,
.Would succeed Helms
threatened in ..a.:,re.solution
adopted Thursday to hold up Mr. Schlesinger would sue-
endorsement of presidential ceed Richard Helms at the
nominees unless, ? they make Central. Intelligence Agency.
firm commitments : to appear Mr. Helms has been nominated
when called. to be ambassador to Iran..
Senator Stennis sLid Mr.
To come whenever called
Schlesinger assured the coin-
. Senator John Stennis mittee "very firmly" in the
IcIis$..), chairman of-the Armed ,hearing, Which was'closed to the
Serviccs-COmmittee, said after public, that his agency would
Mr. Schlesinger's confirmation be strictly independent in its
hearing yesterday that the appraisals. of foreign intelli-
nominee said he is "willing to gence information, without
come before the committee yeilding to White House, con-
whenever he is called." gressional , or any other pres-
? "I don't think there is any sures. This is "vitally impor-
problem there," Mr. Stennis tant,.". Mr. Stennis said.
Approved For Release 2001/11/08 : CIA-RDP84-00499R000200050008-2
THE HOUSTON POST
Approved For4lease 2001/11/08k3eakepp831-0049914000200050008-2
HS/HC- tigs6033
Nominee for CIA post I
delights Senate leader
?- WASHINGTON Cf1 ? James
R. Schlesinger passed Friday
what the chairman of the
/Senate Armed Services Com-
mittee called a "full exam-
ination" on his nomination to
be director of the Central In-
telligence Agency.
? Chairman John C. Stennis,
TI-Miss., said he was im-
pressed with the nominee's
? "firm answers" to the com-
mittee in recognition of an
obligation to ?n^l7eh own
ut-
timate conclusions from in-
telligence data independent of ?
anyone in or out of govern--
ment.
Stennis s a id Schlesinger,
now chairman of the Atomic
E ne r g y Commission, ex-
AlIES SCHLESINGER
pressed unequivoc!al willing-
ness to respond when called
upon by the appropriate com-
mittees of Congress.
His response at. a closed-
door hearing to requests to
keep tight rein on operating
funds and intelligence com-
munity manpower needs were
"entirely satisfactory,"
Stennis said.
Schlesinger, former profes-
sor at the University of Vir-
ginia and former assistant di-
rector of the federal Budget
Bureau for two years, was
named to succeed Richard
Helms as CIA director. Helms
is being named ambassador
to Iran.
Stennis said the committee
will vote at its earliest oppor-
tunity, possibly next week on
the nominations of Schlesin-
ger, Elliot L. Richardson to
be secretary of defense and
William P. Clements Jr. to be
deputy secretary of defense.
Stennis said he is satisfied
with arrangements proposed
by Clements for handling his
financial affairs while in -of-
fice. The senator said the .ar-
rangement would not be
made public, but filed for fu-
ture reference "should any-
thing happen." Clements is
founder and board chairman
of Sedco, Inc., a Dallas oil
drilling firm.
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IIS/HC- v c
NBI
Approved For Ratease 2oow ifpg :19133-Rop84-oo499rxwoo200050008-2
CIA: Neuer
Direktor
dirigiert
Bornbenterror
James Rodney Schlesinger: Er
1c7ste CIA-Chef Helms ab.
Fotos:NI31-Auslandsdienst
s geschah am Ende der
zweiten Dezember-
dekade im WeiBen
Haus: Prasident Nixon be-
rief einen neuen Direktor
fiir die Daalorganisation des
USA-Geheimdienstes CIA ?
den 44jahrigen Dr. phil. James
Rodney Schlesinger. Am glei-
chen Tage befahl der Prasi-
dent, den Bombenterror gegen
clichtbesiedelte Gebiete der
DRV zu verstArken. Beides
stcht in unmittelbarem Zusam-
rnenhang.
Mit Schlesinger iibernahrri
erstrnals in der 26jahrigen Ge-
schichte der CIA cin profi-
Herter ?Druckknopfkrieger"
dcren Lcitung. Von 1963 bis
1969 hatte dieser Mann im
kalifornischen Santa Monica
in der sogenannten Rand Cor-
poration, der ?Denkfabrik"
des Gehcimdienstzweiges der
U.S. Air Force, gearbeitet. In
dieser Corporation, die sich
mit Kriegsforscliung und -ent7
wicklung befafk, wurden bei-
spielsweise Einsatz und Wir-
kung der in den vcrgangenen
sechs Jahren iiber Indochina
abgeworfenen 7 Millioncn
Tonnen verschiedenster Bom-
bentypen analysicrt. linter
Schlesingers Leitung cr war
dort sogar drei Jahre lang
Direktor f?r strategische Stu-
dien ? entstanden u. a. die
Leitfilden iiber ?Effektivitats-
steigerung bei Flachenbombar-
dements" und saber ?Eska-
lationsstufen vor Kcrnwaffen-
einsatzen".
1969, sofort nach seinem
Amtsantritt, lief Prasident
Nixon Schlesinger ? Cr ist wie
Nixon Mitglied der Republi-
kanischen Partei ? als einen
seiner engsten Berater nach
Washington kommen, zuvor
hatte Schlesinger zwei Jahre
Lang im Budgetbiiro, dem
Finanzzentrum der USA, den
Ton angegeben. Zu dieser Zeit
arbeitete er fiir den Prasi-
denten personlich einen Re-
organisationsplan far die zivi-
len und militarischen Geheim-
dienstzweige aus. 1971 chob
Nixon den Mann seines Ver-
trauens auf den Prasidenten-
posten der Atomenergie-Kom-
mission der USA. Jetzt fiber-
trug cc Schlesinger die Fiih-
rung der CIA, um u. a. auch
?mit alien Mitteln" die USA-
Positionen in Indochina zu
sichern. Bei scinem Mehl,
Hanoi und Haiphong born-
bardicren zu lasscn, stiitzte
sich Nixon wesentlich auf eine
Konzeption Schlesingers.
Gleichzeitig- will er nun die-
sen Schlesinger ? er ist iibri-
gens der jiingste Chef in der
CIA-Geschithte ? in den
kommenden Jahren im. Rah-
men der Salt-Gesprache zwi-
schen den USA und der
UdSSR wirken lassen.?,
Dr. Julius Mader
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MIDDLETOWN, CONN.
PRESS DEG 2
E 19,771
? AN ew
0
The retirement of Richard Helms from
the Central intelligence Agency at 60 years
of age represents an end to the era of pro-
fessionalism in the CIA. Ms successor
James R. Schlesinger is a capable economist
and student of strategic studies, but he is
, not an up through the ranks director of es-
pionage.
Helms dates back to the long regime of
Allen Dulles, who himself came out uf the
'fabled Office of Strategic Services of World
War II. Thus a long chain is being broken,
. and we would be hopeful that it does not
?represent the politicization of the CIA.
gr. tt"
4.S.,/
Ilehns retirement appears to be just that be-
cause he has often urged that members of.
the agency retire at 60 and he is doing the
same thing.
The new director is considered to be a
systems manager which is quite a different
thing from one who has a flair for the pecu-
liar business of intelligence, or an individ-
ual who by long experience knows when
to play a hunch. It will therefore be a dif-
ferent CIA; if it can be as effective under
the new director as the old, the nation will
be well served.
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Washington Whispers?
* * *
James R. Schlesinger, Chairman of
the Atomic Energy Commission, who
is to succeed Richard Helms as Direc-
tor of the Central Intelligence Agency,
has been told by President Nixon to
concentrate on intelligence gathering
and evaluation rather than on opera-
tions. As a White House insider puts
it: "There is to be more cloak and
less dagger in the CIA."
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Approved FeaReleaseli20611NOitig :tiKlikE6P841iMQR000200050008-2
1 5 JAN 1973
ITS/HC-
Approved FAroRelease 2001111/94.i; icyk-Rfl!84-00414R000200050008-2
Llewellyn King
From AEC to CIA: 'Intellectual Man of Action'
IN HIS 16 months as chairman of
the Atomic Energy Commission, James
R. Schlesinger Jr., whom Mr. Nixon has
nominated to head the CIA, achieved
what has seemed to be a minor mira-
cle: ITe has taken an ailing depart-
ment overwhelmed by demands and
given it a new sense of purpose and
vigor. His record should be of some
Interest to those who are wondering
how he will conduct the affairs of the
Central Intelligence Agency.
When Schlesinger took over in Aug-
ust 1971, the AEC was gun-shy and
exhausted, and the reorganization
plan that would have parcelled off
some of its functions to the proposed
Department of Natural Resources then
being considered by the Congress
seemed like the only kindly way out.
These were some of the woes then
facing the AEC: ?
The AEC's licensing procedures for
nuclear power plants, based on extent
The writer is Washington editor
of Nucleonics Week.
sive public hearings and designed to
Inform the public what it meant to
have such a plant in their community,
had become a battleground between
environmental groups and electric
utilities. Utilities themselves were
caught between projections of a
doubling of electricity demand every
10 years until the end of the cen-
tury and rising costs of fossil fuels,
plus stiffer air quality standards. En-
vironmentalists were reflecting gen-
erally a disillusion with technology
similar to that which ended the SST
project. A large body of opinion among
AEC's critics, as well as some in indus-
try, was saying that the AEC was in
conflict of interest by being both a
regulatory and promotional agency.
Then, shortly before Schlesinger's ar-
rival, the Court of Appeals for the Dis-
trict of Columbia ruled that the AEC
had been ignoring the provisions of
the National Environmental Policy Act
in not considering environmental mat-
ters in its hearings, and in one stroke
the AEC's regulatory workload was
doubled.
THERE WERE other problems, too.
The AEC was under fire for then-cur-
rent standards of radioactive effluent
releases from power plants. The liquid
metal fast breeder demonstration re-
actor program, on which the govern-
ment hinges its hopes for meeting the
country's mid-term electrical needs,
was dragging along in a series of inef-
fective discussions. The Joint Commit-
tee on Atomic Energy was practically
at war with the administration over
industry and a large part of the free
world's nuclear generating capacity.
Congress had authorized and appro-
priated funds for increasing the ca-
pacity of the AEC's three existing
uranium enrichment plants, but the
Office of Management and Budget had
steadfastly refused to spend the money.
And behind these day-to-day prob-
lems of atomic energy were the na-
tional security issues of the SALT
talks and the planned detonation of a
nuclear warhead at Amchitka Island.
Presiding over the AEC was Glenn
Seaborg, a respected scientist and in-
ternationalist who was a lot happier
discussing the long-term benefits to
mankind world-wide than he was with
the daily hassle of running the AEC,
a problem that he appeared to have
solved by leaving the daily troubles to
his division heads while contemplating
the big picture himself. His attitude to
the public was patronizing .and is
summed up by what the allies of the
AEC call "papa-knows-best." Some evi-
dence of this is provided by his rele-
gation of a minor role to the AEC
public information function.
THEN CAME Schlesinger, a tall,
boyish 43-year-old with an omni-
present pipe in his mouth and a twin-
kle in his eye. A man who put in 16-
hour days, Schlesinger found time to
introduce some hunianizing innova-
tions, as well as to restructure the
AEC. Wine appeared in the executive
dining room, and alcohol was served
for the first time ever at AEC recep-
tions. Substantive innovations occurred.
The two aspects of the AEC, the regu-
latory and promotional branches of
the agency, were overhauled. Teams
of consultants were set up for major
reorganization of the agency. New de-
partments and new department heads
were introduced. A new policy of run-
ning an "open" agency was introduced.
In a major speech six weeks after
taking office, Schlesinger said that the
cozy, incestuous relationship between
the industry and the AEC was over.
He called environmental critics of the
AEC into meetings and "jawboned"
with them.
One of his division chiefs said, "He
seems to be that amazing combination,
an intellectual man of action." There
is evidence that it was a good analysis
of the man. He was a defense analyst
for the Hand Corp. and was for a little
over a year an assistant director ef
the Office of Management and Budget,
where he prepared a study for Prezi-
dent Nixon on overhauling the intents
gence establishment that he is now to
head. He had no administrative baolo
ground, but seems to have tapped a
Department's "critical path analysie
computer profiling system for ABO
licensing. The system allows the entire
state of the licensing program to be
seen at a glance on a computer readout.
He is a voracious reader of English
history and is fond of quoting Burke
and Haslitt.
On paper Schlesinger reads like a
second Robert McNamara. He has a
facility to grasp a complicated prob-
lem at a glance, and his computer-like
qualities are modified by unexpected
personal charm and a very human
warmth.
ONE OF THE MOST encouraging
things that Schlesinger has done is to
reduce some of the more sinister as.
pects of the AEC that resulted from
its weapons producing role. When a
reporter told Schlesinger that the
agency's civilian regulatory building
in Bethesda, Md., was still subject
to Pentagon-type security, he said:
"Christ, is that still going on?" and
turning to an aide, he added: "That is
going to stop now." It did.
- When Nucleonics Week, the trade
publication for the atomic energy in-
dustry, published an article about
AEC scientists who feared they would
be the victims of reprisals for their
views on the controversial subject Of
nuclear safety, he was incensed.
Schlesinger berated the reporter who
wrote the report. But when the re-
porter insisted on the veracity of the
story, Schlesinger demanded more
facts. Then he said: "I know who it is
(naming the head of one of the AEC's
divisions). It is not going to happen
any more."
And to all appearances it hasn't. The
agency now has a small band of in.
house critics who speak out against
what it is doing. Although often doing
this off the record, they are well
known inside the agency, but they do
not appear to have been silenced in
any way. At the time of the incident,
Schlesinger said, with considerable
emotion: "While I am chairman here
there are not going to be any reprisal*,
We are not going to have that kind of
here." He is no stranger to per-
tinent epithets.
On several subsequent occasions he
has inquired whether there has been
any new word of reprisals.
In the personnel area, he encouraged
many old AEC hands to seek early
retirements and brought in higtly
qualified new individuals, including a
new director of licensing.
When he took the AEC job,
Schlesinger was as alien to publicity
as he was to administration, but he
showed the same quick taste for both.
He appeared to like the company of
the nation's fu tire en met to irich _great latent talent for administration.
uranium, the , 1.41FP-111
eprAileiggse 2001111/13RvoiedAREP13345-0G4919R900200050008-2
committed to supply for the domestic ning and has borrowed the Defense
Approved For Release 2001/11/08 : CIA-RDP84-00499R000200050008-2
.Available
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newsmen and would gravitate to theit:
at receptions and on public occasions,
although his treatment of them was
often avuncular. He never appeared
in his AEC job to be enjoying himself
as much as when he was debating with
one or more members of the press,
and he seems to have as much a thste
for a. party as he does for computers,
facts and statistics, He has a hunger
for facts and figures that he spews out
in the course of his conversation as
naturally as breathing.
At an AEC reception recently, as
several stragglers approa4ed the bar
for another round, the bartender re-
plied politely that the party was over.
"Tile hell it is," said the ehairmalt of
the AEC, extending his glass for a re-
fill. Those who know him believe that
the CIA is in for a shot of change, and
they feel pretty good about it.
James It Schlesinger Jr. at Amchitka
"The agency now has a small
band of in-house critics who
speak out against what it is
doing. . . 'While I am chair-
man here,' Schlesinger said,
'there are not going to be any
reprisals. We are not going to
have that kind of ? here,' "
,
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Approved Forel 'Release mitom?N cAkFDP84-00499$000200050008-2
1 DEC 1972
AEC's Chief
Denies Offer
Oi CIA Post
Atomic Energy Commission
Chairman James R. Schle-
singer said yesterday he has
not been offered the position
of director of the Central In-
telligence Agency by Presi-
dent Nixon.
Schlesinger was mentioned
as a possible successor to Di?
rector Richard Helms when it
was disclosed Dec. 2 that
Helms would resign to take a
new job in Mr. Nixon's second
admini strati on.
Helms has headed the CIA
since 1966 when he was pro-
moted by President Johnson.
In an interview yesterday
on "Meet the Press" (NBC,
WRC), .Schlesinger was asked
if he had been offered the
CIA job. "No," he replied. He
also said that there is no
White House decision to trans-
fer AEC authority -over
civil-
ian development of atomic
power to the Interior Depart-,
ment.
, Asked if there are effective
safeguards to keep atomic ma7
terial safe from hijackers and
terrorists, Schlesinger said
that current nuclear plants
can withstand the impact of a
200,000--pound plane flying at
150 miles an hour. But he said
"they may not be adequate for
a larger aircraft."
Three hijackers who com-
mandeered a Southern Air-
ways jet on Nov. 11 threatened
to crash into the AEC facility
at Oak Ridge, Tenn.
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?
SEATTLE, WASH.
DEC 221870
E - 244,776
S - 310,357
Spy shake-up due
THE man named by President Nixon yesterday to head
the Central Intelligence Agency was directly responsi-
ble last year for the largest and most controversial earth
tremor ever produced by man.
In his capacity as chairman of the Atomic Energy Com-
mission, Dr. James R. Schlesinger waved aside the dire
warnings and fierce objections of environmentalist groups
here and abroad, and gave the go-ahead for the underground
explosion ot a five-megaton nuclear device on Alaska's .
Amchitka Island. Schlesinger, his wife and two of his chil-
dren. were on the island during the test.
The Aleutian Islands are not the only place where
Schlesinger has produced shock waves during his 16 months
as A. E. C. chief.
He has thoroughly shaken up both the military and non-
military sides of the A. E. C., with his principal target being,
as he put it, "the development of technology purely for the
sake of technology or the technologists."
Schlesinger is certain to take the same approach to his
new job at the intelligence agency. The handwriting is on the
wall for the game-playing, paper-shuffling end of the spook
business. The C. I. A. will become more result-oriented. And
there will be less spying for the sake of spying or the spies.
?Dwight Schear
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sT ET A R Y 8, 3fitypeoved Fox -agleam) ge14114,,,,earn41091199R000200050008-2
r-494
Llewellyn King
From AEC to CIA: 'Intellectual Man of Action'
TN HIS 16 months as chairman of
the Atomic Energy Commission, James
R. Schlesinger Jr., whom Mr. Nixon has
eominated to head the CIA, achieved
what has seemed to be a minor mire-
ele: He has taken an ailing depart-
ment overwhelmed by demands and
given it a new sense of purpose and
vigor. His record should be of some
Interest to those who are wondering
how he will conduct the affairs of the
( entral Intelligence Agency.
When Schlesinger took over in Aug-
ust 1971, the AEC was gun-shy and
exhausted, and the reorganization
plan that would have parcelled off
some of its functions to the proposed
Department of Natural Resources then
being considered by the Congress
seemed like the only kindly way out.
These were some of the woes then
facing the AEC:
The AEC's licensing procedures for
nuclear power plants, based an exten-
.
The writer is Washington editor
of Nucleonics Week.
sive public hearings and designed to
Inform the public what it meant to
have such a plant in their community,
had become a battleground between
environmental groups and electric
tit Utilities themselves were
caught between projections of a
doubling of electricity demand every
10 years until the end of the cen-
tury and rising costs of fossil fuels,
plus stiffer air quality standards. En-
vironmentalists were reflecting gen-
erally a disillusion with technology
similar to that which ended the SST
project. A large body of opinion among
AFC's critics, as well as some in indus-
try, was saying that the AEC was in
conflict of interest by being both a
regulatory and promotional agency.
Then, Shortly before Schlesinger's ar-
rival, the Court of Appeals for the Dis-
trict of Columbia ruled that the AEC
had been ignoring the provisions of
the National Environmental Policy Act
In not considering environmental mat-
tern in its hearings, and in one stroke
the AEC's regulatory workload was
doubled.
THERE WERE other problems, too.
The AEC was under fire for then-cur-
rent standards of radioactive effluent
releases from power plants. The liquid
metal fast breeder demonstration re-
actor program, on which the govern.
meritbinges its hopes for meeting the
country's mid-term electrical needs,
was dragging along in a series of inef-
fective discussions. The Joint Commit-
tee on Atomic Energy was practically
at war with the administration over
the nation's future capacity to enrich
uranium, the processed fuel AEC is
committed to supply for the domestic
industry and a large part of the free
world's nuclear generating capacity.
Congress had authorized and appro-
priated funds for increasing the ca-
pacity of the AEC's three existing
uranium enrichment plants, but the
Office of Management and Budget had
steadfastly refused to spend the money.
And behind these day-to-day prob-
lems of atomic energy were the na-
tional security issues of the SALT
talks and the planned detonation of a
nuclear warhead at Amchitka Island.
Presiding over the AEC was Glenn
Seaborg, a respected scientist and in-
ternationalist who was a lot happier
discussing the long-term benefits to
mankind world-wide than he was with
the daily hassle of running the AEC,
a problem that he appeared to have
aolved by leaving the daily troubles to
his division heads while contemplating
the big picture himself. His attitude to
the public was patronizing and is
summed up by what the critics of the
AEC call "papa-knows-best." Some evi-
dence of this is provided by his rele-
gation of a minor role to the AEC
public information function.
THEN CAME Schlesinger, a tall,
boyish 43-year-old \s$prje1Fibr
present pipe in his mou .h and a twin- seems to be that amazing combination, the CIA is in for a shot of change, and
Ide in his eye. A man who put in 16- an intellectual man of action." There they feel pretty good about it.
James R. Schlesinger Jr. at Amchitka
"The agency now has a small
band of in-house critics who
speak out against what it is
doing. . . 'While I am chair-
man here,' Schlesinger said,
'there are not going to be any
reprisals. We are not going to
have that kind of ? here.' "
hour days, Schlesinger found time to
introduce some humanizing innova-
tions, as well as to restructure the
AEC. Wine appeared in the executive
dining room, and alcohol was served
for the first time ever at AEC recep-
tions. Substantive innovations occurred.
The two aspects of the AEC, the regu-
latory and promotional branches of
the agency, were overhauled. Teams
of consultants were set up for major
reorganization of the agency. New de-
partments and new department heads
were introduced. A new policy of run-
ning an "open" agency was introduced.
In a major speech six weeks after
taking office, Schlesinger said that the
COZY, incestuous relationship between
the industry and the AEC was over.
He called environmental critics of the
AEC into meetings and "jawboned"
with them. the ivkigiumaionlass for a re-
is evidence that it was a good analysis
of he man. He was a defense analyst
for the Rand Corp. and was for a little
over a year an assistant director of
the Office of Management and Budget,
where he prepared a study for Presis
dent Nixon on overhauling the intellis
gence establishment that he is now to
head. He had no administrative back.
ground, but seems to have tapped a
great latent talent for administration.
He is a devotee of analysis and plan-
ning and has borrowed the Defense
Department's "critical path analysis"
computer profiling system for AEC
licensing. The system allows the entire
state of the licensing program to be
seen at a glance on a computer readout.
He is a voracious reader of English
history and is fond of quoting Burke
and Haslitt.
On paper Schlesinger reads like Ali
second Robert McNamara. Re has a
facility to grasp a complicated prob-
lem at a glance, and his computer-like
qualities are modified by unexpected
personal charm and a very human
warmth.
ONE OE THE MOST encouraging
things that Schlesinger has done is to
reduce some of the more sinister ere
pect; of the AEC that resulted from
its weapons producing role. When a
reporter told Schlesinger that the
agency's civilian regulatory building
in Bethesda, Md., was still subject
to Pentagon-type security, he said:
"Christ, is that still going on?" and
turreng to an aide, he added; "That is
going to slop now." It did,
When Nucleonics Week, the trade
publication for the atomic energy in-
dustry, published an article about
AEC scientists who feared they would
be the vietims of reprisals for their
views on the controversial sublect of
nuclear safety, he was incensed.
Schlesinger berated the reporter who
wrote the report. But when the re-
porter insisted on the veracity of the
story, Schlesinger demanded more
facts. Then he said: "I know who it is
(naming the head of one of the AEC's
divisions). it is not going to happen
any more."
And to all appearances it hasn't. The
agency now has a small band of in-
house critics who speak out against
what it is doing. Although- often doing
this off I he record, they are well
known insuie the agency, hut they do
not appear to have been silenced in
any way. At the time of the incident,
Schlesinger said, with considerable
emotion: "While I am chairman here
there are not going to be any reprisals.
We are not going to have that kind of
here." rie is no stranger to per.
tinent epithets.
On several subsequent *melons be
has inquired whether there has been
any new word of reprisals.
In the personnel area, he encouraged
many old AEC hands to seek early
retirements and brought in highly
qualified new individuals, including a
new director of licensing.
When he took the AEC jab
Schlesinger was as alien to publicity
as he was to administration, but he
showed the same quick taste for both.
He appeared to like the company of
newsmen and would gravitate to them
at receptions and on public occasions,
although his treatment of them was
often avuncular. He never appeared
in his AEC job to be enjoying himself
as much as when he was debating with
one or more members of the press,
and he seems to have as much a taste
for a party as he does for computers,
facts arid statistics. He has a hunger
for facts and figures that he spews out
in the course of his conversation an
naturaLar as breathing.
At an AEC reception recently, ea
several stragglers approacked the bar
for another round, the bartender re-
plied politely that the party was over.
"The hell it is," said the chairman 'Of
Rel@asef21001114/0/8 chGrAalr 64-00499 - believe that
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U. S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, Jan. 15, 1973
* * *
James R. Schlesinger, Chairman of
the Atomic Energy Commission, who
is to succeed Richard Helms as Direc-
tor of the Central Intelligence Agency,
has been told by President Nixon to
concentrate on intelligence gathering
and evaluation rather than on opera-
tions As a White House insider puts
it: "There is to be more cloak and
less dagger in the CIA."
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Toni Braden Tht;- tAbst)4,#NeroA4 post ?c43, , 141
CIA Housecleaning: The Cold War Is Over
HISTORY has a way of punctuating
Itself without benefit of manifesto.
Neither White House nor Kremlin has
proclaimed that the cold war is over.
Yet the departure of Richard Helms
as director of the Central Intelligence
Agency and the appointment of James
R. Schlesinger to succeed him is a kind
of period, ending an era as clearly as
though Winston Churchill had come
back to Fulton to revise his farrieus
speech about the Iron Curtain.
Helms is the last of the bright young
men whom Allen Dulles assembled
from wartime OSS and from Wall
Street law offices to help him turn the
CIA into the citadel of the cold war.
Dulles is dead. So is Frank Wisner,
his hard-driving and inventive assist-
ant. So is the one-time number-three
man, Tracy Barnes, tall, blond, hand-
some and having about him the aura
of mystique as the man whom Dulles
had personally ehosen to parachute
Into Italy with surrender terms for
Xesselring. So is that charming young
man of feline intelligence, Desmond
Fitrgerald, who once had the courage
and foresight to tell Robert McNamara
that the army would fail in Vietnam.
SO THE BRILLIANT and the best
Are gone. It is said that now the Presi-
dent. 'wants someone to clean house
.iver at "the firm," as the cold warriors
from Wall St. once referred to their
place of business. It is a worthwhile
erojeet. Like all bureaucracies, the
'fne that Dulles built tended to go on
i,oing whatever he had given it permis-
sion to do long after the need was a
memory.
The 1966 "scandal" about CIA's Infil-
tration of student and cultural groups
and its use of labor unions, for exam-
ple, was only a "scandal" because
the activities then being conducted
seemed so out of date. it was a though
Americans had awakened in 1955 to
the startling news that some World
War 11 division left on say the Moselle
River In Inexplicable ignorance of time
suddenly attacked eastward.
There were so many CIA projects at
the height of the cold war that it was
411nost impossible for a man to keep
them in balance, The dollars were nu-
merous, too, and so were the people
who could be hired.
People in government tend to stay
on, and CIA had its fair share of stay-
ers left over from some forgotten proj-
ect or deserted by a bureau chief who
didn't get what he wanted and left his
recruits to founder for other desks.
There were all those college boys
whom the agency hired during Korea,
trained as paratroops and guerrillas
and then shoved into tents because
Gen. MacArthur wouldn't let them
into his theater. The same morale
problem existed for them as did later
for the Cuban exiles awaiting the Bay
of Pigs. Some of them departed in
peace, but some are still around, like
the Bay of Pigs men who so embar-
rassed Richard Nixon during the last
campaign.
So I am not against a housecleaning.
The times have changed, and in some
ways they now more nearly approxi-
mate the time when CIA was born.
The need then was for intelligence
only. Josef Stalin's decision to attempt
conquest of Western Europe by manip-
ulation, the use of fronts and the pur-
chasing of loyalty turned the agency
into a house of dirty tricks. It was nec-
essary. Absolutely necessary, in my
view, But it lasted long after the neces-
sity'was gone.
0 1973, Les Angeles Times
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James Rodney Schlesinger
By LINDA CHARLTON
Special to The 11(le York Times
WASHINGTON, Dec. 21?
James Rodney Schlesinger,
whose expected nomination
as the new head of the Cen-
tral Intelligence Agency was
announced by the White
House today, received consid-
erable public attention as the
Atomic Energy Commission
chairman who took his wife
and two of his
children along to
witness the con-
troversial detona-
tion of a hydrogen
bomb in the Aleu-
tion Islands.
But that incident, in No-
/ember, 1971, about four
--months after he became chair-
iman of the commission, was
one of the less startling ac-
tions of his tenure.
. ? Faced with trying to recon-
cile the opposing interests of
J conservationists and advo-
cates of nuclear energy, Mr.
Schlesinger began by indicat-
ing that he was no longer go-
ing to take the traditional
ULM; A.E.C. position of champion-
ing the rights of nuclear
energy above all others, in-
, eluding those of citizens.
jl This he did by deciding,
on taking office, not to ap-
Illtel. peal a Federal court decision
' ? '" requiring the commission to
nun be responsive to questions on
the location of nuclear power
S30 plants and their effects on
the environment.
01 Public Interest Stressed
Man
in the
News
to broaden its concern to take
in the entire energy area.
Before heading the commis-
sion, Mr. Schlesinger was as-
sistant director of the Office
of Management and Budget.
He joined the Nixon Adminis-
tration in 1969 after working
for the Rand Corporation as
director of strategic studies.
During his years at Rand, he
was a consultant on atomic
energy to the Budget Bureau
and directed a nuclear-prolif-
eration study commissioned
by the Federal Government.
Born in New York
Mr. Schlesinger was born
in New York on Feb. 15, 1929-
He .graduated summa cum
laude and was elected to Phi
Beta Kappa.
He also won a prize of
$2,400 that underwrote a
year's travel in western Eu-
rope and parts of Africa and
Asia. "I. learned that the
world was a very complicated
place," he said, "and that the
narrow discipline of econom-
ics gave a narrow insight into
the social life of man."
He returned to Harvard for
his master's and doctorate
degrees and in 1951,married
Rachel Mellinger, who was
then at Radcliffe. They have
four sons and four daughters
and live in Alexandria, Va.
They moved on to the Uni-
versity of Virginia, where Mr.
Schlesinger taught economics
wry Not long after this, he told for six years except for a
4- representatives of the nuclear six-month leave of absence
r, industry that the commission to teach at the Naval War
"exists to serve the public in- College in Newport, R. I. He
terest," not that of the in- wrote a book, "The Political
dustry. Economy of National S-ecur-
During his 17 months as ity" and it was this that at-
_ chairman of the commission, tracted the attention of, and
LI,4 he has also undertaken a a job offer from the Rand
drastic reorganization of its Corporation.
structure? cutting back on Mr. Schlesinger is de-
high-level staff and creating scribed as an unpretentious,
VI' a new "assistant general man- plain-living man who wears
" ager for environmental and off - the - bargain - rack suits,
)1 safety affairs." drives a retirement-age car,
' While the 43-year-old Mr. enjoys bird-watching and
Schlesinger has made no so- reading ' Lutheran Theology
cret of his advocacy of nu- and writes his own policy
, clear energy as a power speeches.
source, he says that the skep- For all his articulateness,
tics have a right to be heard. the normally frank Mr.
In a magazine interview, he Schlesinger has demonstrated
urged "getting away from the recently that he can keep
attitude, to wit, that atoms his mouth shut. Speculation
are beautiful, that he would be named to
"Historically, this attitude the intelligence agency has
is understandable," he said. been swirling through Wash-
"But, in fact, atoms may or ington since the beginning of
t may not be useful, depending the month, but he has been
on. the circumstances." as discreet as any C.I.A.
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ii/E44) yryfr 7/....A.L. sa. katc, q
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r
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and f(
Temp
33-36.
A.E.C. Chief to Replace
Helms as C.I.A. Director
Schlesinger, 43, Chosen
?Intelligence Official
to Be Envoy to Iran
By JACK ROSENTHAL
Special to The Neve York Times
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla., Dec. 21
?President Nixon said today
that he would nominate James R.
Schlesinger, who is chairman of
the Atomic Energy Commission,
to be Director of Central In-
telligence.
He said also that he would
nominate the current director,
Richard Helms, to be Ambassa-
dor to Iran.
Mr. Helms's departure from
the C.I.A. was described as a
retirement, consistent with his
feeling that he, like other C.I.A.
officials, should retire at age
, 60. He will be 60 in March.
There had bben rumors that
Mr. Helms was being forced
out of his job.
The White House took pains
'to affirm the President's appre-
ciation for Mr. Helms's 30 years
of public service and for the
fact that it will continue. At
the same time, the departure
from the C.I.A. is touched with
symbolic overtones.
In the opinion of knowledge-
able officials; it means the end
of an era of professional intel-
liger.,:e operatives and the be-
gina..tt, of an era or systems
The New York Times
James R. Schlesinger
once interviewed Hitler, as a
reporter, epitomizes a genera-
tion that developed its exper-
tise, during World War II and
subsequently helped Lo create
the C.I.A. When appointed in
June, 1966, he was the first
careerist to become D.C.I.?Di-
rector of Central Intelligence.
Mr. Schlesinger, by contrast,
is a 43-year-old economist and
political scientist schooled in
strategic studies, systems analy-
sis, and defense spending. The
author of a detailed report on
the intelligence community for
nlan a, craent. Mr. Helms, who Continued on Page 13, Column;
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g
A . E. C. Chairman Will Replace
1"-ielms as Intelligence Director
Continued From Col. 1, Page 7 that he would return to Wash-
ington and be reassigned to
another post.
According to a private
source, the outgoing Deputy
Secretary of State, John N. Ir-
win, is Mr. Nixon's choice to
become Ambassador to France.
The position has been vacant
since the departure in early
November of Arthur K. Wat-
son, who is Mr. Irwin's brother-
in-law.
In the first news briefing of
the President's week-long
Christmas trip here, Ronald L.
Ziegler, the White House press
secretary, also dealt with the
following appointments topics:
(IMr. Nixon has accepted
"with very special regret" the
resignation of David M. Ab-
shire as Assistant Secretary of
State for Congressional Rela-
tions. Mr. Abshire will become
chiarman of the Georgetown
University Center for Strategic
and International Studies on
Jan. 9.
EISpeculation about the direc-
torship of the Federal Bureau
of Investigation should be dis-
counted for the time being Mr.
Ziegler said. One newspaper
has reported that Acting Direc-
tor L. Patrick Gray will be
formally nominated, another
has said he would not be, and
a third has been in between,
Mr. Ziegler said. The fact is,
he continued, that no decision
has been made.
Another vacancy arose in
Washington today with the
resignation of John P. Olsson
after 20 months as deputy un-
der secretary of transportation
to return to private business.
Mr. lielma's new position
comes after 30 years in intelli-
gence work. After graduation
from Williams College, he be-
came a United Press corre-
spondent in Germany from
1935 to 1937. Until 1942, when
he was commissioned as a Navy
officer, he was in newspaper
advertising.
Mr. Nixon last year, he is ex-
pected to take over at the C.I.A.
as soon as he is confirmed by
the Senate.
Both the Helms and Settles-
nger appointments had been
'orecast. I
No successor was named to
:he A.E.C. chairmanship, which
VIr. Schlesinger has held since
4ugust, 1971. Before that he
lad been with the Office of
Vlanagement and Budget, con-
:entrating on national security
and international affairs.
Cost Issue Noted
That experience, coupled with
the Administration's apparent
interest in the cost and redun-
dancy of intelligence programs,
led a close student of C.I.A. to
suggest today that what Mr.
Nixon now wanted was "more
cloak for the buck." -
Details about "the agency,"
as the C.I.A. is known in the
Government, are classified. But
it is thought to have a budget
of more than $750-million a
year and more than 10,000
employes. Most are involved
in intelligence?technical as-
sessment, analysis and esti-
mates.
A "plans division" conducts
clandestine operations, such as
the abortive Bay of Pigs in-
vasion of Cuba in 1961. Mr.
Helms once directed this di-
vision, but not at the time of
the Cuban invasion.
His new assignment is to a
country whose leader was
strongly assisted, according to
wide belief, by a clandestine
C.I.A. operation in 1953. The
agency was reputed to have
had a role in the overthrow
of Mohammed Mossadegh, then
premier, permitting the Shah of
Iran to reassert his control.
If confirmed by the Senate,
Mr. Helms will succeed Joseph
S. Farland, who has been Am-
bassador to Iran since May.
The White House said today
44)
ta
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atu
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MLR
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The Free Lance-Star; Fredericksburg, Virginia
Friday, December 22, 1972
Lewis Gulick
CIA fund cuts seen
under Schlesin er
WASHINGTON (API ? A
firm administrative hand and?
probable fund-cutting are in
store for the big Central In-
telligence Agency under its new
chief, James R. Schlesinger.
This is the opinion of a num-
ber of well-placed U.S. officials
outside of the CIA. which is
sticking to its tradition as the
silent service.
President Nixon intends to
:put Schlesinger, Atomic Energy
Commission chairman and for-
trier assistant budget director,
in the CIA post to replace Rich-
ard. M. Helms, the Florida
White House announced
Thursday.
Helms, the career in-
telligence officer who has head-
ed the espionage agency sinc.e
1966, is to become U.S: am-
bassador to Iran.
Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler relayed Nixon's praise
for Helms' ''dedicated service"
and denied the intelligence di-
rector was being ousted for
faulty reporting on foreign de-
velopments.
Helms . was instrumental in
installing a policy of.retirement
at age 60 at CIA. aides said.
With his own 60th birthday
coming in March. Helms is said
to have told both the President
and colleagues he too should
abide by the rule.
The choice Teheran post, in
011ie same pay range as the CIA
director's $42,5.00 a year, is one
of the few ambassadorships
Nixon could have secured for
Helms because of the CIA's un-
welcome image in most coun-
tries.
CIA is generally credited
with helping the 1953 overthrow
of Iran's anti-Western premier,
Mohammed Mossadegh. which
restored the present shah to his
throne.
Unlike Helms, who rose
APptiPied14154e1Rieligtsean01/111/08 : CIA-RDP84-00499R000200050008-2
t ree decades of duty starting
with the U.S. Navy in World
War II, Schlesinger. 43, is a
former economics professor
with no announced experience
in cloak-and-dagger operations.
At the AEC since August
1971, he has been rated by col-
leagues as a strong manager
with a firm grip on the budget
as well as being well-versed in
nuclear affairs.
Nixon has Served notice he
intends to cut back federal
agencies during his second
term. Many officials rate the
U.S. intelligence community as
the ripest for fat-removal in the
foreign affairs area.
CIA's exact size is secret, but
is reported unofficially to be
around double the 7,200 employ-
es at the AEC.
Helms last year was given
enlarged duties by Nixon for
coordination over the sprawling
intelligence establishment,
which includes also the Penta-
gon's Defense Intelligence
Agency and the code-breaking
National Security Agency.
Some officials suggested that
Schlesinger will be able to cut
deeper than Helms, who as a
careerist would be chopping at
longtime fellow, professionals '
and friends.
On the other hand, some.
voiced wariness lest zeal for
tighter management over the
intelligen community impair.
the floW of differing opinions to
the President.
I IL!../ PLC .
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'mime
roorv
The Free Lance-Star, Fredericksburg, Virginia
Friday, December 22, 1972
ION
AP wirephoto
CIA switch
Richard Helms (left) is leaving his post as director of the
Central Intelligence Agency, and his successor will be
James Schleisinger, the White House announced Thursday.
It said President Nixon will nominate Helms as ambassador
to Iran. Schlesinger has been AEC chairman since August,
1971.
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T SITINGTON-TOST
,
Schlesinger to Get
Post at CIA
By Carroll Kilpatrick-
Washlugton Post Sttf1 Writer
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla., Dec.I hints, predictions or specula-13
21?President Nixon today tions from White House of Li-
confirmed reports that he will cials on what may happen in ,
nominate James R. -Schled the future. However, Ziegler
singer, chairman of the At-has repeated almost daily that
omic Energy Commission, to the United States is prepared
be the next director of the to resume the talks at any
Central Intelligence Agency.
! Richard M. Helms, who has time. The United States be-
been director since 1966 and heves a settlement .can be
an official of the agency since - reached if Hanoi adopts a con-
1047, will be nominated ambas? str
? sador to Iran. nit ye attitude,. he has said.
The President worked at his . The administration is pursu-,
residence here today and con- ing "every avenue" to reach? !
leered with aides, including an accord, Ziegler said.
national security adviser
In , other announcements I
Henry A. Kissinger by
sec-
by tele-
phone, White House ,?
Ziegler said that the President I
rotary Ronald L. Ziegler said. . had accepted the resignation I
In Washington, it was of David M. Abshire as assist-
learned that Mr. Nixon is ex- ant secretary of state for con-
Pected to nominate Under Sec. gressional relations. -He ! re-1
retary Joseph N. It?win, the
No. 2 man at the State Depart-
signed to return to George-I
ment, as ambassador to town University as director of
France. its Center for International (
It was understood that nom-
Studies, Ziegler said.
win will be made this week. , Ziegler said no decision had;
illation of the 59-year-old Ir- ?
Ile would replace Arthur been made as to whether act-
Watson, former IBM executive big FBI Director L. Patrick
who has resigned. Gray III would be nominated1
The White house already , to be director. He also said no I
.has announced that Irwin? decision had been made on a 1
previously described as slated replacement for Schlesinger!
for ''a high-level ambassado_ at the Atomic Energy Commis- ?
vial post"?will be succeeded Sion.
at State by Kenneth Rush, Ziegler vigorously denied:
who now is deputy defense published reports that Helms!,
secretary. was leaving under pressure;
Early Friday the President and that the White House was! -
i;
and Kissinger will meet here dissatisfied with some of,
with Gen. Alexander M. Haig I Helms' work. :
Jr., deputy national security Helms informed the Presi-I
adviser and designated to be dent Nov, 20 that CIA re-
vice chief of staff
of the quired all senior officials to!
Army, who will report on his retire at age 80 and that he ;
be-
brief trip this week to south heved no exception should be
Vietnam, Cambodia. Laos, and made for him, Ziegler said.
Thailand. Helms will be GO on March 30.
, Mr. Nixon is "totally sails-
Ziegler refused to comment . ,
floc!" with Helms' work, Zieg-
on reports from Saigon that
the President had in effect de- 1(?I. said.
livered an ultimatum to both The President requested
Saigon and Hanoi. Helms to stay in the govern-
The reports said that the
meat and offered him the ;am-
President warned Hanoi it bassadorship to ,Iran, Ziegler
said. Joseph S. Farland, who
could expect continued and in-;? s
tensified bombing if it refused has been ambassador to Iran
to accept a negotiated settle-since May, will be reassignedI
meat and told Saigon to stoto "another important post,"
p {
making peace proposals that Ziegler said.
make it more difficult to Helms is a . native of St.
reach a settlement.
Davids, Pa., and a graduate of
Significantly, Ziegler did Williams College. After a brief
: :
not deny the reports. Rather, time in newspapers, he en-
he branded them a "rumor', tered the Navy shortly after
and said he would not corn-
Pearl Harbor and served with
ment on rumors.
the wartime predecessor of
C
When a reporter asked -if it CIA, the Office of Strategic,
was the word "ultimatum" !Services. President Johnson
:
that bothered him, he again
promoted him from CIA's dep-
I
declined to comment. If theilitY
196G.
directorship to director in
; reports had been entirely ?
without foundation he almost-
in February, is regarded as Schlesinger, who will be 44
certainly would have said so.
Haig left Bangkok today. one of the more able adrninis-
Kissinger flew here with the trators in the government. Ile
President on Wednesday and is a native of New York City
is scheduled to leave some.! and was graduated from Har- :
time this weekend to spend ' yard in 1950 summa cum i
Christmas with his children. laude. He also received .his
Reporters have repeatedly master's and doctorate de-
asked Ziegler this week why Igrecs from Harvard.
the President has not deliv-1 He taught for eight years at
eyed a report to the nation on I the University of Virginia and
the breakdown of the peace then joined the Rand, Corp. as
negotiations. The report Xis.; director of strategic studies.
Approvedsinger 1._MVO W tiri.a); is 'dA llI*A riw9m0?a0ih-8r
say about the failure at Paris, Schelsinger Jr., who served in
Ziegler said.. the White House during the
There have been 00 nohlio Tiennoth, 1.4 uni
050008-2
AREA OR COUNTRY(S)
HQ
SECRET (When Filled In)
AppormedAFar.2,,e1iase 2001illiellnsOlkdRDP84-00499.1390020606Ct008-2
SCHLESINGER,
CIA
Biography
DCI
Personnel (Key)
James R.
AEC
Assignment
Photographs
IDENTIFICATION OF DOCUMENT (author, form, add title & length)
File of biographic data on James R. SCHLESINGER.
ABSTRACT
Biographic data concerning James R. SCHLESINGER.
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DOCUMENT
DATE:
29 Dec
1972
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Approved For Release 2001/11/08 : CIA-RDP8
INSTRUCTIONS
AitHeargetC14-% e of charged out folder.
returned file folder.
CHARGE TO
DATE
CHARGE TO
DATE
CASE FILE CHARGE-OUT CARD
FORM NO. 19 REPLACESApproverl2For Release 2001/11/08 : CIA-RDP84-00499R000200050008-2
1 AUG 54 WHICH MAY 0 USED. .1110
(7)