LETTER TO WILLIAM J. CASEY FROM LEE HUEBNER
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Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP88G01116R000500530016-2
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RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
37
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
March 17, 2011
Sequence Number:
16
Case Number:
Publication Date:
May 20, 1986
Content Type:
LETTER
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LEE W. HUEBNER
PuaLIsHU
May 20, 1986
Mr. William J. Casey
Director of Central Intelligence
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
Dear Bill,
It's been a long time since our paths first crossed during the
1968 presidential campaign, and I'm writing in the hope that they
might cross again at a meeting we are sponoring next fall.
In an effort to help European opinion stay current with the
Strategic Defense Initiative, the International Herald Tribune is
sponsoring`a two day conference on "SDI: Its Implications for
Europe" in Paris starting October 9th.
We would deem it a great service and an honor if you would agree
to address this conference.
The IHT regular sponsors conferences on major issues as part of
our effort to inform public opinion as accurately as possible
about the great questions of our time. We have been gratified by
the willingness of distinguished leaders to appear at these
conferences.
I am enclosing an outline of the proposed conference to give you
an idea of its level and thrust. As you will see, we are
attempting to consider aspects of SDI which are only now coming
into focus as the program evolves or which have received less
attention than they deserved in the first flush of publicity
about the plan.
The timing seems propitious from several points of view. The
change of government in France appears likely to modify the
French position. Industrial leaders are facing imminent and
importance choices. France and other European countries are
beginning to focus on how to develop Europe's defense
technologies to face threats similar to those that SDI could meet
for the continental United States.
Your stature both in the United States and in Europe would make
your views uniquely valuable, I know.
I do hope that it will be possible for you to accept our
invitation. Meanwhile, I hope all is well with you - and am
pleased to have this chance to greet you again and to send my
very best wishes.
Steven A. Levy
counaei
Arent, Fox, Kintner, Plotkin & Kahn
Washington Square
(202)857-6433
1050 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.
m 440266
Washington, D.C 20036.5339
Tom"` EFROWSH
.B-800 - le
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. EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAT ,
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Remarks Referenced enclosure (para # 5) will be
furnished within a few days by Mr. Levy)
E ytiv?,Saecrebou
3637 (10-{1)
This office will be contacting you
shortly with further information
regarding this conference.
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STAT
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Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied
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CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
PUBLIC AFFAIRS
Phone: (703) 482-7676
Mr. Lee W. Huebner, Publisher
INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE
181 Avenue Charles de Gaulle
92521 Neuilly Cedex France
I am replying for Mr. Casey to your letter of 20 May.
The Director greatly appreciates your invitation to speak
at the symposium on SDI in Paris, but believes that a speech by
the Director of Central Intelligence on such a topic before
such an international gathering might be misunderstood. He
therefore believes it best that he not participate.
Mr. Casey sends his best and hopes that the symposium goes
well. He also looks forward to your next get-together.
Sincerely,
CC: Steven A. Levy, Esq.
DCI/PAO/GVLauder:rh (19 Jun 86)
Distribution:
0 - Addressee
1L- Steven A. Levy
- ER 86-2368x
1 - PAO 36-0044
1 - MED
1 - PAO Chrnnn
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Geor6e V. Lauder
Director, Public Affairs
,cY boo /rP
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PAO 86-0044
12 June 1986
MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Central Intelligence
FROM: George V. Lauder
Director, Public Affairs Office
SUBJECT: Invitation to Address the INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE
Conference
1. Action Requested: Accept or decline an invitation to address the
INTERNA TRIBUNE (IHT) Conference 9 - 10 October in Paris, France.
2. Background: Lee Huebner, publisher of the INTERNATIONAL HERALD
TRIBUNE, has invited you to address a conference sponsored by IHT on "SDI: Its
Implications for Europe." According to Mr. Huebner, the recent change of
government in France appears likely to modify the French position on SDI.
France and other European countries now are beginning to focus on developing
Europe's defense technologies to face threats similar to those that SDI could
handle for the continental United States.
You would be speaking to an international audience, and it would bean
open media event. Although an outline of the proposed conference was
mentioned in Mr. Huebner's letter, none was provided. Recent conferences
sponsored by IHT are:
Third World Debt, January 1986 Speakers: Mexican Finance
Minister Jesus Silva-Herzog
and Uruguayan Foreign
Minister Enrique Iglesias
Oil and Money in the '80s Energy Secretary John Herrington
October, 1985
Economic Conference on Dr. Armand Hammer
East and West Trade,
Budapest, Hungary, June 1985
International Trade Conference Energy Secretary Hodel,
Washington, D.C., January 1984 Labor Secretary William Brock
and VP Bush
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SUBJECT: Invitation to Address the INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE
Conference
The INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE is a Paris based paper with a circulation
of 139,280. James Gordon Bennett Jr., self-exiled son of the New York
Herald's founder, started the paper in 1887 as the Paris edition of the
HERALD. In 1935 it became the European edition of the New York HERALD
TRIBUNE, which it still strongly resembles in typography. After the parent
paper died in 1966, former publisher John Jay Whitney took on the POST and
TIMES as partners in the Paris survivor. According to FORBES magazine,
publisher Lee Huebner, a former adviser in the Nixon White House, sees the
TRIG as a global newspaper. It is read in all the power centers of Europe,
where English is now the second language. Once a moneyloser, last year's
pretax profit, about $5 million, is double 1984's.
3. Recommendation: None. Since the conference is sponsored by a
newspaper and held -in France, we would be unable to implement our usual
restrictions on radio and TV coverage. Your appearance in this type of forum
could send the wrong message to our sources overseas. Unless this is
something you are interested in, getting the message out on SDI is probably
best left to Secretaries Weinberger and Shultz.
George V. Lauder
Director of Central Intelligence
Date:
Director of Central me igence
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PA0/G-V et/11 June 86~
Di stribut1oAddressee
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1 ER 868-62-306084X
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,AE_CL IVE SECRETARIAT
ROUTING SLIP
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SUSPENSE
R.morks Referenced enclosure (para # 5) will be
furnished within a few days by Mr. Levy)
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2 9 MAY 1972
New York Times in the best editorial
health of its 85-year history.' Many
newsmen believe that for its slim size
-14 to 16 pages-the Trib is the most
readable and informative daily pub-
lished anywhere.
Where else, after all, can a reader
get the best of both the Post and Times,
expertly presented along with comics
and commentary? As a bonus, there is
also the Trib's own crew of offbeat free-
lancers who lend the paper a welcome
? : ~?fcral0 ~ Ziabutu 3'
ismaiiii _ \.wth i.dnanrw "anrini
N.-...
J. Mw
l 4c cc,Q T b ,, -ti
and'Sun-Times. in addition to a full
range of US. and foreign news agen-
cies. Weiss and his colleagues are free
to choose whichever story says it best
for the international reader. No copy
quotas are imposed by the owner pa-
pers, and big names on both the Post
and New York Times often find their
stories either drastically shortened or
entirely ignored by the Trib.
Though in many ways the Trib lives
up to its claim of being "not fundamen-
tally an American newspaper published
abroad, but a newspaper published
abroad by Americans," though its par-
entage is mongrelized, though a pleth-
ora of bylines now appears, Weiss man-
ages nonetheless to keep somethi..; of
the old New York Herald Trii .. w's
tone. It is serious, but not solem if
New.Yorkers notice a familiar rt, :m
to some of the editorials, they arc not
imagining things. Harry Baehr. 64. once
the New York paper's chief editorial
writer, still contributes a few editorials
each week-writing from New York.
To be broadly relevant to readers in
the 70 countries it now reaches, howev-
er, the Trib must be edited to seem as if
it has no local base. Homey coverage is
anathema to Weiss. To report on New
York City's last mayoral election, for in-
stance, he ignored the voluminous file of
the New York Times and published the
Washington Post's version instead; the
Post reporter "told in a few stories all
you needed to know about it in Neuilly
orOslo." Yet Weiss can occasionally use
his own brand of enterprise. During last
December's Nixon-Pompidou meeting
M1tr1-AtlentlC Winner in the Azores, he sent his entire political
Going abroad this summer? Afraid air of leisured whimsy. Souren Meli- staff, James Goldsborougn. to cover the
of losing touch with what's happening kian, a Persian prince, covers art and event. Goldsborough beat the competi-
at home? Not to worry. Whethgr you artifact auctions with the colorful au- tion-including staffers of both the Post
wind up in Brussels or Bangkok. the fn- thority of both expert and buyer. Gas- and Times-to the main news about
ternational Herald Tribune will tell you tronome Waverly Root writes lovingly dollar devaluation by several hours. al-
about Charlie Brown's latest hang-up,-' of rare, night-blooming mushrooms and lowing the Trib to make its first deadline
what Chrysler stock is selling for, the perils of absinthe, interspersed with the hottest international story of
whether Willie Mays homered for the with an occasional reminiscence of the moment.
Mets, who won the Democratic pres- Paris whores of-the 1920s. Among Trib Gilded Bird. Deadlines are a prob-
idential nomination and how, and what critics, Henry Pleasants comments on lem because of the intricate truck-train
columnists from Art Buchwald to Bill music with competence. and Thomas plane system that hustles copies around
Buckley make of it all. Quinn Curtis disagrees. rather con- the world. Distribution, accounts for an
Yet the Paris-based Trib (circ. 121,- sistently-but stylishly-with _ almost astonishing 25% of the Trib's total pro-
?000) is no mere letter from home. It is everyone else on which movies are good high, Bonn costs. The 28c per -copy pParis to y price 75e
far different from the daily described and bad. ranging from
by The New Yorker's Janet Flanner as Broad Choice. Basically the Trib in Tokyo, because most papers must be
"the village newspaper" of the Amer- is an exercise in inspired deskmanship. shipped out by air freight or chartered
ican expatriate colony in Paris, the fa- The paper has only one full-time gen- plane. Advertising rates are astronom-
vorite of Ernest Hemingway. Gertrude eral reporter of its own, and the core ical; it costs as much to place an ad in
Stein and Ezra Pound. Increasingly it of the operation consists of five copy ed- the Trib as in the Washington Post,
serves to inform a widespread audience itors working with Weiss in crowded ? which has more than four times the cir-
about both the U.S. and the %ferld. It is quarters off the Champs-ElysEcs. Six culatioq,-Yet there is no shortage of ad-
read with respect in the power centers nights a week, they cull streams (it copy vertisers or readers. Nowadays, only
of Europe, where English is now the sec- that issue from 16 Teletypes, providing 18% of the au(, ence lives in France, Y.
and language. Nineteen.copies a day go the Trib with a broad choice that goes 40% five years ? go.
to Peking, and the Kremlin also sub- beyond the Post's and Times's output. Prosperity a relatively new fact
scribes. Editor Murray "Buddy" Weiss. Material also comes from the Los An- of life at the' ' For much of its his-
48, who was the last managing editor geles Times and Chicago's Daily News tory, it was a -ink case, belying the
of the New York Herald Tribune, talks efficacy of the owls with which Found-
.of a "mid-Atlantic viewpoint" that im- *James Gordon Bennett Jr., self-exiled son of the er Bennett decorated the paper's orig-
plies New York Herald's foundpj.,farted the pp,,pr in final Paris office as a good-luck fetish.
a degree of detachment from both 1887 as the Paris-edition oT the Herald. In 1935
the U.S. and Europe. it became the European edition of the New York But the Trib has been solidly profitable
The paper last week marked the Herald Tribune, which it still strongly resembles - since 1968, and an enormous owl still
in typography. After the parent paper, died in holds the place of honor in its offices.
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LEVEL I - I OF 55 STORIES
Copyright m 1986 American Banker
January 29, 1986, Wednesday
SECTION: INTERNATIONAL BRIEFING; Mexico; Pg. 2
LENGTH: 297 words
HEADLINE: MEXICO MEETING BANKERS NEXT WEEK
BYLINE: Gordon Matthews
BODY:
..* speaking at a conference on Third World debt that was jointly sponsored
by the Inter-American Development Bank and the International Herald-Tribune.
At the same conference on Tuesday, Mexican Finance Minister Jesus
Silva-Herzog warned that as oil prices drop and economic pressures mount, ...
LEVEL 1 - 2 OF 55 STORIES
Proprietary to the United Press International 1986
January 28, 1986, Tuesday, BC cycle
SECTION: Financial
LENGTH: 579 words
C HEADLINE: Latin American countries need bold steps to deal with debt
BYLINE: By ARTHUR HERMAN
DATELINE: LONDON
KEYWORD: Debt
BODY:
... three, then the coming decade will ultimately be a propserous one for
Latin America,'' he said.
In the second day of the conference sponsored by the International Herald
Tribune and the Inter-American Develoment Bank, Uruguayn Foreign Minister
Enrique Iglesias said ''fatigue" has set in in Latin ...
Proprietary to the United Press International 1986
January 27, 1986, Monday, AM cycle
SECTION: International
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PAGE 2
Proprietary to the United Press International, January 27, 1986
HEADLINE: Experts call for lower interest to combat world debt crisis
BYLINE: By AL WEBB
DATELINE: LONDON
KEYWORD: Debt
BODY:
... American countries account for about $350 billion. Brazil, which owes
$104 billion, is the region's largest debtor.
At the conference, sponsored by the International Herald Tribune
newspaper and the Inter-American Development. Bank, Michael Camdessus, governor
of the Bank of France, said Interest rates, exchange rate " ...
LEVEL I - 4 OF 55 STORIES
Copyright m 1985 McGraw-Hill, Inc.;
Platt's Oiigram News
October 28, 1985, Monday
SECTION: UNITED STATES; Vol. 63, No. 207; Pg. 3
LENGTH: 623 words
HEADLINE: HERRINGTON REAFFIRMS REAGAN'S DISLIKE FOR IMPORT FEES; SEES NO CHANCE
FOR SLOPE EXPORTS
DATELINE: London 10/25
BODY:
... crude or products and lifting of the ban on exports of Alaskan North
Slope crude in remarks made here today at the International Herald Tribune/ Oil
Daily conference on 0011 & Money in the '80s.0
Countering speculation within the Industry that the Reagan Administration
might be wavering in its opposition to ...
LEVEL 1 - 5 OF 55 STORIES
Copyright a 1985 The Financial Times Limited;
Financial Times
October 25, 1985, Friday
SECTION: SECTION I; Pg. i
LENGTH: 363 words-
HEADLINE: Subroto calls for flexible ceilings on oil production
BYLINE: BY MAX WILKINSON IN LONDON- ,,,
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? 1985 The British Broadcasting Corporation, June 17, 1985
BODY:
... 13th June. He was received by HSWP_Gene ral Secretary Jdnos1Kadaf on the
same ?day. On the 14th :at the International Herald`4Tribunp conference in
Budapest,: fie- announced'Occidental Pet' 1elfiN1 4 ii teh ion to.-prospect