BAD WRITING, BAD TASTE, STARTLING DISCLOSURES

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CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4
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December 31, 1972
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14,,4rsf-t 3 Bad Writing Bad Taste Startling Disclosures 0 0 VIA z; The Myth and the Madness 2 By Patrick J. McGarvey Saturday Review. 240 pp. $6.95 ?zr o By THOMAS B. ROSS NOTHING WOULD better serve the American people in their current stage a cynicism, paranoia and fear of re- pression than an honest book from in- side the CIA. There have been a number of competent books by outsiders and a number of cover stories by insiders, notably Allen Dulles's The Craft of In- telligence and Lyman Kirkpatrick's The -Real CIA. But no one yet has success- ;fully shed the cloak as he turned in his agger. Victor Marchetti, who rose to the top suite of the CIA only to quit in dis- illusionment, is trying to publish a book about his experiences. But the lower courts have upheld the agency's demand that it be suppressed and there is no guarantee that the Supreme Court, which ruled so narrowly in the case of The New York Times and The Washington THOMAS B. ROSS, Washington bureaui chief of The Chicago Sun-Times, is co- author of The Invisible Government. Post will extend the First Amendment to an ex-CIA operative. Into the breach comes Patrick J. Mc- Garvey, a former intelligence officer of ?2 14 years' service in the military, the CIA 2 and the Defense Intelligence Agency. 5 The fact that he has gotten into print (7, _might suggest that the CIA feels it has 0 nothing to fear from him. And certain it deletions in the advance-proofs indicate a degree of censorship or at least self- o censorship. (Hold the page to the light 9 and you can read through the inked 71, crossovers?a familiar process recalling ti- the Pentagon's decision to publish a LI' censored version of the Pentagon Papers A. after the full text was in print. Foreign ?agents come see what we really think is .? ? sensitive.) c") But McGarvey's book, though flawed?E.:2 ,almost fatally so?by bad writing, bad taste and bad logic, contains several;:s .startling disclosures, allegations and hor- ror stories: how the Joint Chiefs of Staff C%1 recommended a retaliatory air strike :g against the Israeli naval base that co launched the attack on the U.S. intelli-2 gence ship Liberty in the 1967 Middlert) Bad war; how CIA agents obtained a&_ , sample of King Farouk's urine from thq? men's room of a gambling casino int) - Monte Carlo; how an investigation of the Pueblo fiasco turned up the facto that the Air Force had been flying at routine reconnaissance mission over A1,-0- bania for 12 years, without purpose an without authorization; how a leper col (Continued on page 13) Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 CIA: The Myth and the Madness (Continued from page 6) ony in North Vietnam was bombed on the advice of the CIA that it was an army headquarters; and how CIA psy- chologists rewarded Vietcong defectors by subjecting them to ghoulish experi- ments in which they were exposed to rapid changes in color, light and tem- perature. McGarvey also lodges serious allega- tions against a number of important in- dividuals and institutions. He contends that Richard M. Helms made his way to the top of the CIA by systematically de- stroying his competitors: Ray Cline, for- mer deputy director for intelligence and now head of the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research; Admiral Rufus Taylor, Helms's former deputy; and Admiral William (Red) Ray- born, his predecessor. "I thought for a time when I was director of the CIA," McGarvey quotes Rayborn as telling him, "that I might be assassinated by my deputy." McGarvey also accuses Helms of blunt- ing the investigative spirit of the major newspapers and magazines by taking their correspondents to lunch and keep- ing them happy with periodic leaks about other matters and other agencies. He alleges further that Congress has given the CIA a veto over which senators and representatives are to be seated on the subcommittees that are supposed to serve as watchdogs on the agency's activ- ities. Against the obvious implication of many of his citations, McGarvey's thesis is that the crucial problem with the CIA is mismanagement, not an excess of power and secrecy or a lack of account- ability. "CIA is not a ten-foot ogre," he writes. "It is merely, a human institution badly in need of change. CIA is not the invisi- ble government. Rather, it is a tired old whore that no one has the heart to take off the street." Too much intelligence is collected, Mc- Garvey argues, and too little is properly analyzed. There is less danger in the CIA's excursions into sabotage and sub- version, he contends, than in the insati- able electronic search that put the U-2, the Liberty and the Pueblo in extremis. His recommendations for change are rather forlorn. He concedes that Con- gress has abdicated its responsibility, the so-called oversight committees sitting mute through Helms's annual "lantern slide show," wilfully ignorant of how much is being spent on intelligence and where, never informed before or after the fact about covert operations. Yet McGarvey's cure is the weary old recom- mendation: write your congressman ? the one, perhaps, who is telling Helms he'd rather not know what's going on lest he have to assume responsibility. I fear we must await a more compel- ling book before the establishment is moved to reform itself. The Supreme Court willing, Marchetti may provide it for us. It does not seem too much to ask that he be able to use his CIA expe- rience to inform the people, when the three ex-CIA agents of the Watergate bust-in (or were they, too, just on loan for the campaign?) can apply their agency-imparted expertise to subvert the political process of a supposedly free nation. cfs Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 Approved For dease 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R1181000100001-4 Friday; Dna. 29, 1972 THE WASHINGTON POST Chalmers M. Roberts Helms, the Shah and the CIA ? THERE IS A CERTAIN irony in the fact that Richard Helms will go to Iran as the American ambassador 20 years after the agency he now heads organ- ized and directed the overthrow of the regime then in power in Teheran. The tale is worth recounting if only be- cause of the changes in two decades which have affected the Central Intel- ligence Agency as well as American "foreign policy. Helms first went to work at the CIA in 1947 and he came pp to his present post as director through what is gener- ally called the "department of dirty tricks." However, there is nothing on the public record to show that he per- sonally had a hand in the .overthrow of the Communist backed and/or oii- enteci regime of Premier Mohammed Mossadegh in 1953, an action that re? turned the Shah to his throne. One can only guess at the wry smile that must have come to the Shah's face when he first heard that President Nixon was proposing to send the CIA's top man to be the American envoy. The Iranian affair, and a similar CIA action in Guatemala the following year, are looked upon by old hands at ???-`4C.MM'A"AV,,..,..1?M;7` 1953: Teheran rioting that over- threw the government left the Unit- ed States Point Pour office with gaping holes for windows and doors. the agency as high points of a sort in the Cold War years. David Wise and Thomas B. Ross have told the Iranian story in their book, "The Invisible Gov- ernment," and' the CIA boss at the time, Allen Dulles, conceded in public after he left the government that the United States had had a hand in what occurred. IRAN IS NEXT DOOR to the Soviet Union. In 1951 Mossadegh, who con- fused Westerners with his habits of weeping in public and running govern- ment business from his bed, national- ized the British-owned Anglo-Iranian Oil 'Co. and seized the. Abadan refin- ery. The West boycotted Iranian oil and the country was thrown into crisis Mossadegh "connived," as Wise and Ross put it, with Tudeh, Iran's Com- munist party, to bolster his hand. The British and Americans decided he had to go and picked Gen. Fazollah Zahedi to replace him. The man who stage- managed the job on the spot was Ker- mit "Kim" Roosevelt (who also had a hand in some fancy goings-on in Egypt), grandson of T.R. and. seventh cousin of F.D.R., and now a Washing- tonian in private business. Roosevelt managed to get to Teheran and set up underground headquarters. A chief aide was Brig. Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, who, as head of the New Jersey state police, had become famous during the Lindbergh baby kidnaping case. Schwarzkopf had reorganized the Shah's, police force and he and Roose- velt joined in the 1953 operation. The Shah dismissed Mossadegh and named Zaheldi as Premier but Mossadegh ar- rested the officer who brought the bad news. The Teheran streets filled with rioters and a scared Shah fled first to Baghdad and then to Rome. Dulles flew to Rome to confer with him. Roo. sevelt ordered the Shah's backers into tbe. streets, the leftists were arrested by the army and the Shah returned in triumph. Mossadegh went ? to jail. In time a new international oil consor- tium took over Anglo-Iranian which operates to this day,though the Shah has squeezed more and more revenue from the Westerners. - In his 1963 book, "The Craft of Intel- ligence," published after he left CIA, Dulles wrote that, when in both Iran and Guatemala it "became clear" that a Communist state was in the making, "support from outside was given to loyal anti-Communist elements." In a 1965 NBC television documentary on "The Science of Spying" Dulles said: "The government. of Mossadegh, if you recall history, was overthrown by the action of the Shah. Now, that we en- couraged the Shah to take that action I will not deny." Miles Copeland, an ex-CIA operative in the Middle East, wrote in his book, "The Game of Nations," that the Iranian derring-do was called "Operation Ajax." He cred- ited Roosevelt with "almost single- handedly" calling the "pro-Shah forces on to the streets of Teheran" and su- pervising "their riots so as to oust" Mossadegh. TODAY THE IRAN to which Helms will go after he leaves the CIA is a sta- ble, well armed and well oil-financed regime under the Shah's command which has mended its fences with Mos- cow without hurting its close relation- ship with Washington. The Shah has -taken full advantage of the changes in East-West relations from the Cold War to today's milder climate. ? While Iran and Guatemala were the high points of covert CIA Cold War ac- tivity, there were plenty of other suc- cessful enterprises that fell short of changing government regimes. Today the CIA, humiliated by the 1961 Bay of.. Pigs fiasco it planned and ran, has withdrawn from such large scale af- fairs as Iran, save for its continuing major role in the no longer "secret war in Laos." The climate of today would not permit the United States to repeat the Iranian operation, or so one ? assumes with the reservation that President Nixon (who was Vice Presi- dent at the time of Iran) loves sur- prises. The climate of 3953, however, was very different and must be taken into account in any judgment. Moscow then was fishing in a great many troubled waters and among them was Iran. It was probably true, as Allen Dulles said on that 1965 TV show, that "at no time has the CIA engaged in any political activity or any intelli- gence that was not approved at the highest level." It was all Part of a deadly "game of nations." Richard Bis- sell, who ran the U-2 program and the Bay of Pigs, was asked on that TV show about the morality of CIA activi- ties. "I think," he replied, that "the morality of . . . shall we call it for short, cold war .. . is so infinitely eas- ier than the morality of almost any kind of hot war that I never encoun- tered this as a serious problem." PERHAPS the philosophy of the Cold War years and the CIA role were best put by Dulles in a letter that he wrote me in 1961. Excerpts from his then forthcoming book had appeared in Harper's and I had suggested to him some further revelations he might in- clude in the book. He wrote about ad- ditions he was making: "This includes more on Iran and Guatemala and the problems of policy in action when there begins to be evidence that a- country is slipping and Communist take-over is threatened. We can't wait for an engraved invitation to come and give aid." There is a story, too, that Winston Churchill was so pleased by the opera- tion in Iran that he proferred the George ?Cross to Kim, Roosevelt. But the CIA wouldn't let him accept the decoration. So Churchill commented to Roosevelt: "I would be proud to have served under you" in such an opera- tion. That remark, Roosevelt is said to have replied, was better than the deco- . ration. Helms doubtless would be the last to say so out loud but I can imagine his reflecting that, if it hadn't been for what Dulles, Kim Roosevelt and the others did in 1953, he would not-have the chance to present his credentials to a Shah still on the peacock throne in 1973. Approved For Release 2003/12/03.: CIA-RDP84700499R001000100001-4 Approved F j4elease 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-004990001000100001-4 Oun PLd by NORTHERN eseU:7ANIA SUN, INC. An Independent Daily Newspaper 1=7 N. Ivy St. Arlington, V. 22214 HERMAN J. C3ERMAYE.', Editor & holistic:ft p.OnceS24-300J CircA.fion L".:4-65043 Page 1 Thursday i/et... 28, 1972 Demes Use, of Small 1 r a v atd eary WILLIAMSBURG (UPI )? '.1itral Intelligence Agency ..esman denied Wednesday ations that mini-nuclear .,ions were used in CIA ting programs at Camp . near here or in any agency training 1h-lig:am. The CIA spokesman's comment came after a story pu(tisheci by the Virginia Gazette, a weekly newspaper, here, about operations at Camp Peary, a secrecy- clouded Department of I)efense installation. The Gazette said the base is ac- tually a CIA training camp and has been for' years. -The GaZette said its report ,vas based on about four weeks at investigation by two staff members. The base was acquired 21 years ago by the Defense Department and labeled "an Armed Forces Experimental Training Activity" base. --c-15-0 - Much of the newspaper's story was based on an in- terview with Joe Maggio, who said he was a former CIA operative widi the Agency's Covert Special Operations Division. Maggio has written a novel about 1,-,e CIA, entitled "Company Man." In the book he mentionec: activities at a "Camp Perry " He told the newspaper . ..? section on "Camp Perry" actually referred to the "Camp Peary" in York County. The Gazette said its in- formation from Maggio "indicates that the training methods aad echniques covered by the CIA at Camp Peary include assassination training, demolition training, parachute training, courses in wiretapping and intelligence gathering and experiments with special weapons for use in the _field, including what Maggio labeled as 'mini- nuclear bombs." The CIA Spokesman "unequivocally" denied that the agency trained for or engaged in an assassination operations. "The allegation abott mini- nuclear weapons in any CIA training program or use by the Agency is utterly untrue." the spokesman added. . The 'spokesman also said Maggio had been "fire. ;c,r cause from a Ce-Ttral Intelligence Trainig Program," Maggio, 34, told the Gazette he was fired from the CIA in 1967 because he was doing some free lance writing while employed by the agency. He said his dismissal had nothing to do with performance of his ('IA duties. Maggio also told the Gazette he was "never in a position of responsibility" with the CIA, hut spent a total of six months in training with tl-e Agency at Camp Peary. Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 Siori Approved For Release 2003/12/03 kmiik-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 The Freo Lance-Star, FredericksburtVirginia Wednesday, December 27,7972 r, ? cjeD convvans 3 i/delc3tr WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP)?Is Camp Peary, a hush-hush Department of Defense installation in York County, Va., actually a training camp for the Central Intelligence Agency? The Virginia Gazette, a weekly newspaper published in this restored colonial capital not far from the camp, says h. is. busing its claim principally on an interview with an ex-CIA agent turned novell.-it . ? ? SC:7170./ i?Tfin)(77 Two reporters for the Gazette-news editor W. C. O'Donovan ad Ed Offley?say in an article for the veekly that the CIA uses Peary to train toms of assassins, guerrillas, flreign mercenaries and special rfare agents, and to test exotic new weaions. O'Donovan and Offley wrote tht they were not permitted to enter thc camp property and received ens; "no comments" when they posed qu?stions Peary included "assassination training, demolition training, parachute training, courses in wiretapping and intelligence- gathering, and experiments with special weapons for use in the field, including what Mag- gio labeled as 'mini'nuclear bombs." The Gazette quoted Maggio as saying, "I'm sure if you had a blue ribbon committee go in there, they'd find a whole new world?a Disneyland of war." Maggio told the Gazette his recently published book was la- beled fiction because "it never could have been published as nonfiction.". But the Gazette quoted him as saying "the information con- tained on Camp Peary is fac- tual." In "Company Man," Maggio writes that at "Camp Perry" rows of "old cars, tanks and AMTRACKS (amphibious per- sonnel carriers) line up on a pulley to prove what the deputy director of science and technology can do with TNT, tetrachloride, C4 (plastic ex- plosive), dynamite and highly classified. CIA-used Appnotsied For ar bombs." to Nearly ..1 their information ,,pparentiy 'rne from former CIA .man M.7!ggio, who wrote a novel? company Man"?which :nontion:A a "Can-ip Perry". at which weapons were tested. said Maggio confirmed s niaal in Coral Gables, Fla., that -Camp .,-)erry- his novel in actaalay was Virginia's Camp Peary, The Gazette allele si-? description of an ord testing area h "Cor aly Man" matches a) aerial iJhoto- graph taken this month by the Gazette of Camp Peary's east- ern corner. Among other weapons the Gazette quoted Miggio as say- ing are being teeied at Camp . Peary were a law- beam wea- pon used to calls( bodily dete- rioration within 24 hours, ex- perimental formuas of drugs , such as LSD, and a variety of chemical warfare ..-naterials. ? "Some day, somcwhere," the Gazette said it was told by Maggio in a taped lelephone in- ? . ?terview, "that base is going to ? have a catastrophe?some Dr. Strangelove explosion that real- ? ly is going to rock that area." When Camp Peary was ac- quired by the Department of Defense in 1951, it ails called an "armed forces e:imental training activity." it still Is called that.: , I. Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 taken over by the Department of Defense 21 years ago. The newspaper said it was told by Maggio that he was at Camp Peary for three months in 1966. enrolled in a "special intelligence tradecraft course" given CIA recruits. It . said its interview with Maggio indicated the "training methods and techniques covered by the CIA" at Camp See CAMP PEARY, Page 27 Approveditgoir Release licit:3/165,3 elk"-RDP84-0*99R001000100001-4 17 DEC 1972 14 CITY POLICEMEN GOT C.I.A. TRAINING Learned How to Analyze and Handle Information By DAVID BlURNHAM Fourteen New York Police- men?including First Deputy Police Commissioner William H. T. Smith and the com- mander of the department's Intelligence Division?received training from the Central Intel- ligence Agency in September. A spokesman for the C.I.A., Angus Thuermer, confirmed that the 14 New Yorkers had been given training but denied *hat the agency had regular in- struction programs for local police officials. Mr. Thuermer acknowledged, however, that "there have been a number of occasions when similar courtesies have been ? extended to police officers from different cities around the country." In response to an inquiry, Mr, Thuermer said he was not able to determine haw many ? police officials or how many departments had come to the Washington area to receive agency training. "I doubt very much that they keep that kind of information," he added. Mr. Thuerrner scoffed when asked whether the agency's training of policemen?some of whom are responsible for col- lecting information about po- litical activists?violated the Congressional legislation that created the C.I.A. to correlate and evaluate intelligence relat- ing to national security, "pro- vided that the agency shall have no police, subpoena, law- enforcement powers or internal security functions." Twelve of the New York policemen?one captain, three ? lieutenants, five sergeants and three detectives?received four days of training from the C.I.A. in a facility in Arlington, Va., beginning last Sept. 11, accord- ing to the Police Department. Commissioner Smith and? Deputy Chief Hugo J. Masini, commander of the Intelligence Division, attended one day's training, on Sept. 13. Commissioner Smith said dur- ing an interview that in con- neetion with the reorganization of the department's intelligence work, "we decided we needed some training in the analysis and handling of large amounts I of-information." - - - Mr. Smith said the depart- ment had decided that the CL A. would be the best place for such training. "They pretty much set this up for us," he explained. "The training was done gratis, only costing us about $2,500 in transportation and lodging." Both the International Asso- ciation of Chiefs of Police, a professional organization that does police efficiency studies and runs training seminars on a variety of law-enforcement subjects, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation said they were not equipped to pro- vide instruction on the storage, retrieval and analysis of intelli- gence information. One branch of the Police Department's Intelligence Divi- sion, the security investigation section, is the subject of a pending suit in Federal court here. The suit, filed by a group of political activists, charges that the surveillance and infil- tration activities of the secur- ity section violate "the rights of privacy, free speech and as- sociation granted and guaran- teed" the plaintiffs "by the United States Constitution." The present reorganization of the security section?and the part of the Intelligence Division that collects information on organized crime?is being fi- nanced by a $166,630 grant from the Law Enforcement As- sistance Administration, a branch of the Justice Depart- ment. As of Oct. 13, a police roster indicated that there were 365 policemen assigned to the Intelligence Division. Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 LOS ANCET.7_STT Appro?ir Release 2011/W3TRA-RDP84-0n99R001000100001-4 eds Shell CIA's HQ at Long Cheng " VIENTIANE (UPI) ? The ,headquarters .of the Central Intelligence Agen- cy-fh Laos .at Long Cheng has come under .Gommu- 'nist artillery fire for the 'first _time since early Sep- tember, American officials 'said. Thursday. . ' ThO North Vietnamese 'shelling took place Tues- day .night,' the officials aaid. They said 'about 30 irounds.bf long-range 130- ,mm, 'a rtillery and 10 round s 'of shorter-range 857mrn.z.. artillery hit the western end of the airstrip and damaged several hous- 'es at the mountain base. No casualties were re- ported. Lopg Cheng,.. about 80 MileS .north: of ' Vientiane, isheadquarters. for the CIA: sponsored "s ecret 'army" led by the -,kleo hill tribesmen's Maj. Gen. yang- Pao.' In addition to yang Pao and his soldiers, a. number of ?CIA advisers .stay overnight at the base. ? Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 Approved KedRelease 201 000100001-4 13 DEC 1972 Cuts ? By LARRY GREEN Chicago Daly News Service SAIGON ? The United States has curtailed operations of its multibillion dollar super- secret electronic battlefield along the Ho Chi Minh Trail in southern Laos, it was learned today. The cutback involves a re- duction in the number of Or- wellian "Big Brother" sensors costing up to $1,000 each that measure supply traffic and fresh troops moving from North Vietnam to Communist forces in the South. The information is Used, in part, to pinpoint targets for U.S. bombing attacks. As a result of the cutback, military intelligence has less data to gauge potential North Vietnamese capabilities and intentions. At the same time, Ithe North Vietnamese have more freedom of mOvement along, the network of roads than they've had since 1968. Two Reasons for Cut Military sources said the cutback was ordered both be- cause of the prospects of an Indochina cease-fire and the enormous cost of the program. - One source called the reduc- tion "significant," but refused to indicate its scope. There is also a possibility that this year's Communist of- fensive, which took more than a year to prepare for, and in- volved moving hundreds of tanks and heavy artillery pieces down the trail, proved the sensor system to be less . effective than enthuastic Air Force officials had claimed. Both the United States and Smith Vietnam moved into place for the offensive, and were totally unprepared for ack Sensors on massive artillery and armor- led attacks that hit some parts of South Vietnam, including the An Loc region 60 miles north of Saigon. The reduction in sensors, one source said, was "a ques- tion of priorities." The United States. he ex- plained, believes a cease-fire is near, and at that time inter- national inspection teams will be able to observe, North Viet- namese supply and troop movements, making the mas- sive seeding of sensors now impractical. They are camouflaged to fit among tropical plants, and are ? programmed to self-destruct if tampered with, or when their batteries become weak, after about 99 days. The Air Force command here refused to comment on the reported sensor reduction. Thousands Were Strewn Beginning in 1963, thousands were strewn along hundreds of miles of jungle :oads in the Laotian panhandle used by the North Vietnamese to push sup- plies southward. They were designed to de- tect everything from the sound of a moving truck to the odor of urine, and were an impor- ' tant part of a U.S. program that tried to make the trail uninhabitable. It was believed in military circles that the war in the South could be forced to grad- ually die out if supplies and men from the North could be choked off. ? Information from the se- sors was fed to computers at the semisecret U.S. Air Force base at Nakhon Phanom, in northeastern Thailand. From ? there, bombers were assigned targets. Trail Still Busy This year, the Air Force has concentrated on hitting sup- plies in North Vietnam before they reach the trail. Hundreds of B52s have attacked storage areas around North Vietnam's key logistics city Of Vinh and near passes leading through mountains from North Viet- nam to the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Still, military sources say, the trail is in full operation now with truck convoys mov- ing regularly, and with dozens of fresh tanks heading south. There are also at least 10,000 fresh troops heading for Com- munist base camps in Laos and Cambodia, military sources say. ? Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 Tr Approved Fitolkelease 2003/M1 MCIP84-004e9R001000100001-4 12 Dec 1972 McGarvey, Patrick I.? C.I.A.: The Myth and the Madness New York: E. P. Dutton & Company, 240 pp.,1 $6.95, LC 72-82770 Publication Date: October 25, 1972 It is one of the delightful ironies of Ameri- can life that there is now a sizable literature on the U.S. intelligence community and particularly on the Central Intelligence Agency. This latest contribution by Patrick McGarvey is more revealing than many other books in the literature, probably be- cause the author is a former intelligence officer who served both in the CIA and in the Defense Intelligence Agency of the De- partment of Defense. It is a difficult book to review because on the one hand it offers much interesting and valuable material (never, to this reviewer's knowledge, pre- viously printed),. while on the other it is marred by serious flaws which damage its overall value. McGarvey is a believer in the need for U.S. intelligence and of a CIA in particular. His main purpose in writing his book is to stied some light on what he terms a damag- ing myth that CIA is efficient, well run, and capable of almost any act of trickery and intrigue. He attempts, through a broad examination of what intelligence is all about, to portray CIA as really a bureau- cratic mess with little or no central direc- tion, and in sore need of drastic change. ? He .attempts this through pulling together his own personal experiences in intelligence. He stresses that the U.S. intelligence scene is in bad state and that no one in govern- ment seems willing or able to effect necessary changes. The author approaches his subject in two ways. He points out that an apprecia- tion of intelligence and its effectiveness is not gained solely by a study of the or- ganizational structure of the intelligence community, since this reveals little of the conflicts and contradictions which plague intelligence. The necessary second avenue of examination is on the personal human side since, above all in intelligence, people make the Machinery run. McGarvey stresses that the intangibles count so much?the attitudes, moods, politics of particular points of view, the feuds, the horse trades, and the incredible acts of omission. However, it is precisely when McGarvey pursues the human side, and especially his own experiences, that the reader begins to entertain serious reservations. The de- scriptive portions of the book on how the system is configured and how it operates are accurate enough. In his opening chap- ter, for example, he draws a picture of the presumably average intelligence officer which simply cannot be termed average. He attempts to generalize far too broadly on these human aspects and this repeated- ly weakens the'case he tries to make. The book is made sprightly by his many amusing anecdotes, providing a very personal flavor in his descriptions of the organization and operation of intelligence. However, his points are often so bizarre and so overdrawn that the reader begins to wonder how many of these adventures were really the author's own and how many were apocryphal. As a general critique of CIA, it is not the equal of Lyman Fitzpatrick's The Real CIA, but this work of 1966 did not give as much detail of operations as does McGarvey. It is, nevertheless, superior to Harry Ran- some's The Intelligence Establishment, another recent book on the subject (1970). The former is by a very senior ex-CIA officer, the latter by an academic. Mc- Garvey's book is a view by a junior and middle grade officer. LEONARD WAINSTEIN Institute for Defense Analyses Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 WASHY. T:17.01i sIi Approved FAINIKelease 2003n/He q1317fDP84-0049Y001000100001-4 Spiv By LEWIS GULICK A,56Axiated Pres The era of attempted eaves- dropping on U.S, diplomats abroad through- cumbersome wire-connected microphones is over. Hostile agents are trying more advanced devices, small enough to be dropped into a martini or planted in a shoe. So reports the State Depart- ment's deputy assistant secre- tary for security, G. Marvin Gentile, who is respensiblc for safeguarding U.S. missions overseas. , The deputy assistant secre- tary, while crediting modern safeguards with being able to pretty well protect against un- ? invited listening at U.S. em- bassies, stressed that continu- ing vigilance is needed. "You can never be sure," Gentile said. 2 Attempts Cited In an unusual interview dealing with the continuing un- dercover-intelligence struggle. Gentile disclosed that in the last year or so his sleuths have uncovered at U.S. embassies in Communist East European countries: A tiny radio hidden in a heel of a shoe of a senior U.S. diplomat. It had good sound pickup and could transmit 300 yards to listening points out- side the embassy. - The hug was secretly placed in the heel when the diplo- mat's -maid took the shoes out for "repair." A U.S. security Latest'Devkes U.S. Embassges office r, presumably using modern detection gear, soon discovered his colleague was a walking broadcasting station. e A miniature transmitter tucked into an innocent- looking binder holding curtain samples. Gentile said this spy device, which turned out to have a broadcasting range of 400 yards, was spotted before it got into any embassy room where secret information was discussed. Both deviees fit Gentile's definition of "drop transmit- ters" -- tiny radio transmit- ters, usually battery-powered, which can he easily hidden and quickly implanted in an office or on a person. A Popular Tactic -- A popular spy tactic used to ,be to hide microphones in U.S. embassies and link them by wire to outside listening posts. This reached a high point in 1964 with the removal of 52 microphones from the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and 55 from the Embassy in Warsaw. Gentile said such eavesdrop- ping installations were possi- ble in the first years after World War II, when U.S. diplo- mats moved into 'buildings -which had not been under U.S. guard. "The technological advances of electronics and miniaturiza- tion have made these wired systems obsolete" and "round-the-clock guarding of. U.S. embassies_. prevents hos- tile agents from maintainihg:, them, he said. ' Under a recently completed , U.S.-Soviet agreement for nevi embassies in each other's cap- ital, U.S. negotiators insisted; on control. over constructing the interior of the new building in Moscow and on guarding the premises during construe-_, tion. "Over the years since the.. second World War," Gentile, said, "technical espionage has become an increasing hazard to. the security of our diPlo.7. matic missions overseas." He said the spying attempts continue regardless of changes:, in the international political climate and that espionage de-' vices "are uncovered with. alarming regularity." Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 CiirC'AGO ? . Apprv1f rtopOIRepase 2003/12//013 QFECA IkUP 8 4 - 0 0 alieR 0 0 1000100001-4 Ei.tcken Dugs ? WASHINGTON, Dee. 10 [AP] ? State Department security officers, in the last year or so, have found a tiny eavealroping ,r a dio transmitter secretly placed in the heel of shoe worn by 'a senior United States diplo- mat in a Communist East Eu- ropean country. At another American em- bassy in East Europe, they located a miniature spy radio hidden in a seemingly innocent binder holding curtain samples. The head of the State Depart- ment's security force, deputy .assistant secretary G. Marvin Gentile, reported these sample discoveries of new, sophisti- cated spy devices in a continu- ing undercover intellig en cc struggle abroad. These are the first -public I disclosures of such bugging of U. S. missions overseas in re- cent years. ? , Gentile said in an interview, however, that the spying goes on 'regardless of changes in the international climate and that "much of this espionage is un- covered with alarming regu- larity." "Over the years since the second World War," he said, "technical espionage has be- come .an increasing hazard to the security of our diplomatic missions overseas." Gentile, whose Months seek to protect U. S. embassies from hostile intelligence penetration, said defenses against electronic spying have improved. He figures today's safeguards take care of uninvited listening gadgets at the U. S. embassies, tho there is need for vigilance. "You never can be absolutely sure," he said. The heel radio?said tA; work well up to 300 feet away when the wearer isn't walking?re- flects the long strides in elec- tronic espionage techni goes over the inimediate postwar era when U. S. diplomats were moving back into buildings left unguarded during the war. ? Popular Spy Tactic A popular spy tactic then Was to hide microphones in walls and fixtures and hook them to listening posts by wires. Dis- coveries of wired microphones climaxed in 1964 with the re- movel of 52 from the American embassy in Moscow and 55 from the embasSy in Warsaw. Under the just completed U. S.-Soviet agreement for new embassies in each other's capi- tal, U. S. negotiators insisted on control over constructing the interior of. the new U. S. build- ing in Moscow and on guarding the premises around the clock during construction. . Gentile said that wired eaves- dropping on U. S. diplomats has become obsolete now with technological advances, with miniaturization and with 24- hour guarding of 'U. S. em- bassies keeping out hostile security agents. Resorting to "Drop" Gentile said eavesdropping devices are found from time to time in American installations in noncommunist countries too. ? But he believes they are im- planted by Communist intelli- gence services. , The reason for this conclu- sion, he said, is, that "we have been very successful in identi- fying the local employes ; I [caught in the espionage] and whom they are working for." He said no Americans have been implicated. Instead, he said, hostile intel- ligence is resorting to tiny bat- tery-run radios known as "drop transmitters" which can be hid- den easily and quickly slipped i into an office' or on a person. The State Department secur- ity executive declined to say just where or how the heel and carpet bugs were spotted, or what U. S. diplomats were their targets. ' Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 CHRISTDAN SCIENCE Y.O.NITOR Approved Fatirsgelease 2003/1210BEriMpp840494k001000100001-4 US., Moscow seek uglree embassies By Charlotte Saikowski . Staff correspondent of 'The Christian Science Monitor Washington Bugs? - For years Russians in Washington, and Americans in Moscow, have assumed these devices were a fact of diplomatic life. Now both sides have a chance to minimize electronic eavesdropping, since each is to build a brand-new embassy in the other's Capital. Americans know it will be difficult to exterminate bugs completely. "The U.S. knows it's working in a bugged building (in Moscow)," says one State De- partment official, and to think you can keep a building free of bugging in this day of sophistication is nonsense." ? Nonetheless, one can assume the United States and the Soviet Union will do their utmost to keep out electronic listening de- vices when they build the new embassies. Agreement on interior work , .Under a recently signed agreement on construction; each side has the right to do all ? the interior work and to have unrestricted access to its building site ? provisions that Washington, which wants to use American or West European laborers. insisted upon. Both sides, if they -choose, also-can do the exterior facing and the final roofing work. No one is fooling anyone, though. It is virtually impossible to eliminate eavesdrop- ping by the "other side." Americans in Moscow ? and no doubt Russians in Wash- ington ? have always worked on the assump- tion that no building is "safe" and therefore keep alert about what they say inside. ' U.S. security officials are mum about the latest wiretapping techniques. But these days there are highly developed devices to monitor conversation, some so miniaturized that "drops and pickups" are a constant hazard. A Russian or East European visitor to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, for instance, can drop a small object in some hard-to-find nook and pick it up unobtrusively (he hopes) at some later date.. In any event, both sides are pleased that after years of wrangling an accord was signed ? it is the 101st Soviet agreement since 1933 and the 43rd in the Nixon adminis- tration?and plans for the embassies can now take wing. The United States has hired the firms of Skidmore, Owings, & Merrill of San Francisco and Gruzen and Partners of New York to design the building. Their overall mandate is to come up with some- thing that reflects American architectural trends and values. ? This gives the United States an unusual opportunity to project the American image in a .Communist society. Moscow watchers are hoping the building will turn out to be more of - an eye-catcher than, say, the U.S. Embassy in Warsaw, which many critcs term "un- imaginative." It is expected to be at least two years before ground is broken for the embassy. Besides the architectural plans, which must be cleared by the Russians to make sure they meet local building codes, Congress must appropriate the money.. Occupancy of the rwo embassies is to be simultaneous ? bugs and all. Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 NEW YORK, N.Y. NEWS Approvel, ? 2,129,909 .2 ? 2,949,786 FS1042elease 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-0049 R001000100001-4 DEC 10 1972 Mtn'? Really Happens Sy Fact By-PRANK VAN RIPER Of THE NEWS Washingfon Bureau THE SIGN Outside the entrance to the heavily wooded compound in suburban Langley, Va., says, "Bu- feau of Public Roads," but it's an open secret that what goes on beyond those gates has little to do with roads and even less to do with the public. . Behind . the electronically monitored fences and constantly manned guard shacks is the Central Intelligence Agen- cy. In recent months, the secrecy, size and capabilities of the nation's chief spy shop have been questioned by men who have been there, former agents themselves. One of them, Patrick J. MeGarvey, a 14-year veteran of the CIA, the Na- tional Security Agency. will -the Defense Intelligence Agency," contends that the amorphous "intelligence community" has greivn so unwieldly, so redundant, in the last 10 years that the U.S. is now get- ting an intelligence product that is ac- tually infevior to wN it goc a Aecad& ago with fewer men and fewer machines. And all this with the benign neglect of Congress which, McGarvey says, has approved the CIA's big annual budget request behind closed doors, with little inclination or desire to question the spending estimates of the agency's lead- ers, including CIA Director Richard M. Helms. Helms' planned departure from the CIA after six years, first revealed by THE NEWS last month, was seen in some quarters as an indication of White House concern over the size of the intelligence bureaucracy. In an interview, McGarvey, a 37-year- old father of four who spends his spare time writing poetry and fiction and dreaming of one day owning an oyster boat in Chesapeake-Bay, maintained that in the area of U.S. intelligence, "we're ' being deluged with much more informa- tion than we actually need." The author of the recently published : book "CIA: The Myth and the 3,1ad? kkeps,','?XeGarvey,!4retit,that "back, in ? cr; Ezt There -cif ? ry? the U-2 days, just before the satellites came into being, we were getting a good- ly amount of solid intelligence from the biggies?the Soviets and the Chinese? justification for it." _ enough that we could digest it properly, Several lawmakers, among them Sen. enough that it received the kind of eriti- Stuart Symington (D-Mo.), ranking cal acclaim within the intelligence corn- Democrat on the Senate Armed Services munity that it deserved. . - Committee, have been skeptical. of U.S. ' "But today, for example, we have intelligence-gathering,- especially in light7 of such glaring . failures as the 1968 so many satellites pumping pictures back Pueblo affair ? which McGarvey -says to us on a daily basis that- nobody pays was unnecessary and could have been a damn bit of attention to them." avoided?the -abortive Son Tay prison. "Seventy to eighty per cent of the camp raid in November, 1970-, when U.S. money now spent on intelligence is spent forces wound up raiding an empty North in technical collection, satellites and such, Vietnamese barracks in search of Ameri- and it's ridiculously expensive and ludi- can PWs and the 1969 shootdown of. crously redundant," -McGarvey said. "The a Navy. EC-121 reconnaissance plane off: Army overflies all of Latin America tak- the coast of North Korea. . ing pictures, and doesn't show them to - "One can almost predict," McGarvey the Air Force. The - Army is interested said, "an increasing number of intelli, in roads and ports and the whole sehmier, genee failures on the scale of the Pueb16. while -the , Air Force is only interested incident?and perhaps another -Warbe, .? in radar sites, missile sites-and air fields, - cause of the present dry rot that InfeetS larbor0;k.,ancki.that's .abut it. -.Eadh.-, of" bi.,11.nationallptelligene:gtriiet4e: L, - ...., ,-,..,. 112; r act-P. '!tx flat,1 . lalri5-1,11,..4,47 - 1.'1( IM 4 01-/- t '-"Ii.' - ' f'"' 1 '''' these guys isdoing-the same dannahing, and each individual budget has got a Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 THE VILLAGE VOICE 7 Dec 1.912 NINO Approved F*Zelease 2003/12/03: CIA-KuP84-00499R001000100001-4 Debriefing the press: memory: "I'm one step ahead of you, Bill. President Sukarno and 'Exclusive to the CIV ,all about this, and they are partic- ularly incensed at having a man of color sent to spy in their by William Worthy In April 1961, a few days after the unsuccessful Bay of Pigs in- vasion of Cuba, Allen Dulles, at that time the director of the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency, met in off-the-record session with the American Society of Newspaper ? Editors at their annual conven- _don. , Given the Cuba intelligence, by then obviously faulty, that had en- tered into Washington's rosy ad- vance calculations, he inevitably was pressed to tell: "Just what are the sources of the CIA's infor- mation about other countries?" One source, Dulles replied, was U. S. foreign correspondents who are "debriefed" by the CIA on their return home. The usual :practice is to hole up in a hotel room for several days of intense interrogation. Much of the debriefing, I've learned over the years, is agreed petty cash drawer.. to freely and willingly by individu- My first awareness of the CIA's al newsmen untroubled by the special use of minority-group world's image of them as spies. In I newsmen abroad came at the ' time of the 1955 Afro-Asian summit conference at Bandung, Indonesia. Through Washington sources (including Marquis Childs of the St. Louis Post Dispatch), Cliff Mackay, then edi- tor of the Baliimore Afro- American, discovered?and told me?that the government was planning to send at least one black correspondent to 'cover" the historic gathering. The "conduit" for the expense money and "fee" was the director of a "moderate" New York-based national organization, supported by many big corporations, that has long worked against employ- ment discrimination. The CIA cash was passed to the organiza- tion's direetor by a highly placed Eisenhower administration of- ficial overseeing Latin-American affairs who later became gover- nor of a populous Middle Atlantic state, and whose brothers and family foundation have long been heavy contributors to the job op- portunity organization. Because of the serious implica- tions for a press supposedly free of governmental ties, I relayed, 1 this information to the American Civil Liberties Union. I also told Theodore Brown, one of A. Philip Randolph's union associates in the AFL-CIO Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters. Ted's re- Approved OgrkeOgAw2lir63Yfg01:Iti gatherer, differed with brother country." Foster Dulles, the Calvinist cliplo- Cold-war readiness to "cooper- mat about the wisdom of the self--I ate" with spy agencies, whether , defeating travel bans. motivated by quick and easy Years later, I learned that the II money (I've often wondered if U. S. "vice-consul" in Budapest under-the-counter CIA payments who twice came to my hotel to have to be reported on income tax demand (unsuccessfully) my returns!) or spurred by a miscon- passport as I transited Hungary ceived patriotism, had its pre- en route home from China in 1957 cedent in World War I and in the was, in fact, a CIA agent revolutionary-counterrevolu- operating under a Foreign Ser- . tionary aftermath. In the summer vice cover. During a subsequent of 1920 Walter Lippmann, his lecture tour, I met socially in wife, and Charles Merz published Kansas City a man who had in the New Republic an exhaus-- served his Army tour of duty in tive survey of how the New York mufti, on detached service in Times had reported the first two North Africa and elsewhere with years of the Russian revolution. the National Security Agency. Out They found that on 91 occasions? of curiosity I asked him what ' an average of twice a week? would be the "premium" price for Times dispatches out of Riga, a newsman's debriefing on out-of- Latvia, buttressed by editorials, bounds China. He thought for a had "informed" readers that the. moment and then replied: "Oh, revolution had 'either collapsed or about $10,000." Out of the CIA's was about to collapse, while at the same time Constituting a "mortal menace" to non-Communist Europe. Lipprnann and his as- sociates attributed the misleading coverage to a number of factors. Especially cited in the survey were the transcending win-the- war and anti-Bolshevik passions of Times personnel, as well as "undue intimacy" with Western intelligence agencies. After 1959, when Fidel Castro came to power after having, ousted the corrupt pro-American , Batista regime, Miami became a modern-day Riga: a wild rumor factory from where Castro's "death" and imminent overthrow were repeatedly reported for sev- eral years. Both in that city of ex- patriates and also in Havana, "undue intimacy" with the CIA caused most North American re- porters covering the Cuban revo- lution to echo and to parrot of- ficial U. S. optimism about the Bay of Pigs invasion. In the summer of 1961, on my fourth visit to that revolutionary island, a Ministry of Telecom- munications official told me of a not untypical incident shortly before the invasion. Through mer- cenaries and through thoroughly discredited Batistianos, the CIA was masterminding extensive sabotage inside Cuba?a policy doomed to failure not only because anti-Castro endeavors lacked a popular base, but also because kindergartens, depart- ment stores during shopping hours, and similar public places i I !at least one case, as admitted to me by the Latin-American spe- cialist on one of our mass-circula- tion weekly newsmagazines, the debriefing took. place very reluc- tantly after his initial refusal to cooperate was vetoed by his supe- riors. But depending on the par- ticular foreign crises or obses- sions at the moment, some of the eager sessions with the CIA debriefers bring handsome re- muneration. Anyone recently re- turned from the erupted Philip- pines can probably name his price. Despite its great power and its general unaccountability, the CIA dreads exposes. Perhaps because of a "prickly rebel" family repu- tation stretching over three gen- erations, the CIA has never approached me about any of the 48 countries I have visited, including four (China, Hungary, Cuba, and North Vietnam) that had been placed off-limits by the State Department. But the secret agency showed intense interest in my travels to those "verboten" lands. In fact in those dark days, Eric Sevareid once told me that Allen Dulles,_ the intelligence children in their classrooms_ and women where they shop. On one such occasion a bomb went off at 9.08 p. m. Five minutes earlier, at 9.03 p. m., an ambitious U. S. wire-service correspondent filed an ;`urgent press" dispatch from the Western Union , tele- printer in his bureau ? office, re- porting the explosion that, awk- wardly for him, came five min- utes after the CIA's scheduled' time. time. When that correspondent and most of his U. S. colleagues were locked up for a week or two during the CIA-directed Bay of Pigs invasion and were then ex- pelled, many U. S. editorial writ- ers were predictably indignant. Except perhaps in Washington itself and in the United Nations delegates' lounge, the CIA's department on journalism is probably busier abroad than w,th newsmen at hoine. In 1961, during a televised interview, Walter Lippmann referred casually to the CIA's bribing of foreign newsmen (editors as well as the working press), especially at the time of critical elections. All over the world governments and politi- cal leaders, in power and in op- position, can usually name their journalistic compatriots who are known to be or strongly suspected of being on the CIA's bountiful payroll. I believe it was Leon Trotsky who once observed that anyone ? who engages in in- telligence work is always in- covered sooner or later. '? Even neutralist countri learned to become distrustful o U. S. newsmen. In early 1967, Prince Norodom Sihanouk ex- pelled a black reporter after just 24 hours. In an official statement the Ministry of Information al- leged that he "is known to be not only a journalist but also an agent of the CIA." In a number of Afro- Asian countries, entry visas for U. S. correspondents, particularly if on a first visit, can be approved only by the prime minister or other high official. As recently as a generation ago, ? it would have been unthinkable for most U. S. editors, publishers, newscasters, and reporters to ac- quiesce in intelligence de- briefings,' not to mention less "passive" operations. What Ed Murroix denounced as the cold- war concept of press and universi- ty as instruments of foreign policy had not yet spread over the land. ?In the years before the Second World War, if any government agent had dared to solicit the co- , operation of a William Allen -Ed3Pillei4Orldfc00?tbiel 1-4 omb . n no counc ry oe on Mobilize mass support by killing 4011N. Wrhite at the EmporiAa RaPzrepiteeodrf or ReJease 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-004994114000100001-4 a Robert Maynard Hutchins at the University of Chicago, the rebuff would have been as explosive as the retort to the CIA five or six years ago by the president of the New Mexico School of .Mines. Describing himself as a "fun- damentalist" on fidelity to intel- lectual freedom and on adherence to professional codes, he told me of his having been asked by the CIA to alert the agency whenever any of his faculty members were about to travel abroad "so that we can ask them to keep their eyes open." "You people ought to be put in jail," he spat at the agent,. "You have no right to involve aca- demics and innocent people in your dirty business." To his disap- pointment, however, not everyone on his teaching staff saw it his way. At the next faculty meeting, when he related the conversation, some of the professors missed the uuderlying principle by asking: "Well, what's wrong with the CIA's proposition?" At Harvard, during our 1956-7 - Nieman Fellowship year, New York Times correspondent Tony Lewis and I were told by an an- thropologist that during her years 'at the State Department at the height of the cold war, she had ? been horrified to find herself reading CIA transcripts of the debriefing of academics upon their retury ,,tne from foreign "scholarly- trips. She had corn- ' plained to the Social ? Science Research Council, but at that time was unable to get that pres- tigious body to denounce the prac- tice. But now the times--and the all- important intellectual climate= have changed, thanks in large part to a new image of the govern- ment after its eye-opening crimes and disasters in Indochina and elsewhere. Today, to at least some degree, a goodly number of the most respectable spokesmen for establishment journalism are fighting the government's insis- tence on turning newsmen into ex- tensions of the police and prosecu- tion apparatus. Under the sobering impact of dismaying troubles ahead, the - older. tradition of this country is re-asserting itself. Far fewer of us are still living in the fool's para- dise of the Eisenhower-Kennedy years. In the mass media and on the campuses the "fun- damentalists" may never become a majority. They don't have to. They are again "raising a stan- dard to which all honorable men may repair." Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100001-4 ----- ? --- RADIO -TV MONRI 3I NG SERVIR64- , y . . 000j . 4 3408 WISe&darffn AIM3;:VIt3gPWU3 WA- II I ' IP?111981g .: 244-8682 PROGRAM: TEN O'CLOCK NEWS fl - ? DATE: , DECEMBER 70 1972 STATION OR NETWORK: WTTG-TV, METROMEDIA , TIME: , 10:00 PM, EST . . __. ANDERSON SAYS, CIA REPORT SAYS SYRIA. WILL FIGHT ISPAEL ..,,?