THE CIA AND AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY

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CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2
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T
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136
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December 23, 2016
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August 3, 2012
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1
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March 1, 1988
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MISC
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STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 2 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY OFFICE OF THE DEPUTY DIRECTOR 1 March 1988 ? TO: Dr. Roy Godson Consortium for the Study of In Per your request attached are copies of the last several speeches the DDCI has presented. Looking forward to seeing you on the 29th of March for lunch. Regards, G.: _., __?,s THE CIA AND AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY Robert M. Gates WINTER 1987/88 No. 66201 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY OFFICE OF THE DEPUTY DIRECTOR 1 March 1988 ? TO: Dr. Roy Godson Consortium for the Study of In Per your request attached are copies of the last several speeches the DDCI has presented. Looking forward to seeing you on the 29th of March for lunch. Regards, G.: _., __?,s THE CIA AND AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY Robert M. Gates WINTER 1987/88 No. 66201 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ? YOUNG PRESIDENTS' ORGANIZATION ? DALLAS CHAPTER 16 FEBRUARY 1988 LOOKING AT STRUCTURAL CHANGE . BY ROBERT M. GATES DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AT CERTAIN POINTS IN HISTORY, ABRUPT CHANGES IN THE DIRECTION OF A NATION, A GROUP OF NATIONS, OR THE WORLD HAVE BEEN SO PROFOUND AS TO NAME AN ERA. ARCHEOLOGISTS SPEAK OF THE "BRONZE AGE" OR THE "IRON AGE." HISTORIANS SPEAK OF THE "AGE OF DISCOVERY" OR THE "INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION." IN EACH OF THESE CASES, A NEW TECHNOLOGY OR COMPLEX OF TECHNOLOGIES -- MINING, SMELTING, NAVIGATION, THE STEAM ENGINE -- WENT FAR BEYOND SCIENTIFIC OR ECONOMIC EFFECTS TO FORCE CHANGE IN SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ORGANIZATION AND THE RELATIVE POWER OF CLASSES AND NATIONS. FOR EXAMPLE, ACCORDING TO SOME HISTORIANS, THE INVENTION OF THE STIRRUP MADE KNIGHTHOOD -- AND EUROPEAN?STYLE FEUDALISM -- POSSIBLE, THE INVENTION OF FIREARMS MADE IT AN ANACHRONISM. IN RECENT CENTURIES, THESE "STRUCTURAL CHANGES" HAVE ACCELERATED. TECHNOLOGIES RISE, FLOURISH, DECLINE, AND ARE SUPERSEDED WITHIN A FEW DECADES, AND THE CHANGES FORCED UPON SOCIETIES AND NATIONS ARE EQUALLY RAPID. POLICY DECISIONS MADE 1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 AMERICAN ELECTRONICS ASSOCIATION TEXAS COUNCIL 16 FEBRUARY 1988 TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER BY ROBERT M. GATES DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE I WOULD LIKE TO TALK TODAY ABOUT TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER, SPECIFICALLY, TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TO THE SOVIET UNION AND OTHER WARSAW PACT STATES. WHILE THE UNITED STATES AND ITS ALLIES HAVE SOUGHT TO PREVENT THE EXPORT OF MILITARILY USEFUL EQUIPMENT AND TECHNOLOGY TO THE WARSAW PACT FOR SOME 40 YEARS, TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER CONTINUES TO BE THE SUBJECT OF DEBATE AND DISHARMONY HERE AT HOME AND ABROAD. THE SUCCESS THE SOVIETS HAVE ENJOYED IN USING OUR KNOW?HOW TO DEVELOP AND ENHANCE THEIR OWN SYSTEMS POSES A GENUINE THREAT TO OUR NATIONAL SECURITY. NOW, TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER IS NOTHING NEW TO RUSSIA. PERHAPS THE EARLIEST EXAMPLE OF MASSIVE TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TO STRENGTHEN RUSSIA MILITARILY WAS DURING THE REIGN OF PETER THE GREAT AT THE END OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. PETER HIMSELF TRAVELED TO THE WEST -- TO SWEDEN, GERMANY, HOLLAND AND ENGLAND -- WHERE HE DREW THE PLANS OF WESTERN FORTIFICATIONS; WORKED IN A SHIPYARD; BOUGHT TWENTY FACTORIES, HIRED SOME 800 TECHNICAL npriassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington, D. C.20505 March 1, 1988 Mr. James Hackett Heritage Foundation 214 Massachusetts Ave., N.E. Washington, D.C. 20002 Dear Jim: Thanks for your consideration in being willing to change the date of our lunch. I really look forward to seeing you. Enclosed is a speech that I gave in Dallas last month on "What is Going on in the Soviet Union". It seems to me that the recent problems with the nationalities underscore the message I was trying to leave. I would be most interested in your reactions when we get together. See you on the 18th Enclosure: As Stated Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 `-/ DALLAS COUNCIL ON WORLD AFFAIRS 19 JANUARY 1988 WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE SOVIET UNION BY ROBERT M. GATES DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE INTRODUCTION THE SELECTION OF MIKHAIL GORBACHEV AS GENERAL SECRETARY IN THE SPRING OF 1985 SIGNALED THE POLITBURO'S RECOGNITION THAT THE SOVIET UNION WAS IN DEEP TROUBLE -- ESPECIALLY ECONOMICALLY AND SPIRITUALLY -- TROUBLE THAT THEY RECOGNIZED WOULD SOON BEGIN TO HAVE REAL EFFECT ON MILITARY POWER AND THEIR POSITION IN THE WORLD. DESPITE ENORMOUS RAW ECONOMIC POWER AND RESOURCES, INCLUDING A $2 TRILLION A YEAR GNP, THE SOVIET LEADERSHIP BY THE MID-1980S CONFRONTED A STEADILY WIDENING GAP WITH THE WEST AND JAPAN -- ECONOMICALLY, TECHNOLOGICALLY AND IN VIRTUALLY ALL AREAS OF THE QUALITY OF LIFE. AS A RESULT OF THESE TRENDS, THE POLITBURO RECOGNIZED THAT THE SOVIET UNION COULD NO LONGER RISK THE SUSPENDED ANIMATION OF THE BREZHNEV YEARS, AND COALESCED AROUND AN IMAGINATIVE AND VIGOROUS LEADER WHOM THEY HOPED COULD REVITALIZE THE COUNTRY WITHOUT ALTERING THE BASIC STRUCTURE OF THE SOVIET STATE OR COMMUNIST PARTY. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300056001-2 ? CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY OFFICE OF THE DEPUTY DIRECTOR NOTE TO: 2 March 1988 Enclosed for your information is a copy of the letter of recommen- dation Mr. Gates sent to Cleveland State University. Hope everything goes well for you. 0/MCI Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT R Next 3 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 _ The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington, D. C. 20505 March 2, 1988 The Honorable Richard Helms SAFEER Company 1627 K Street, N.W. Suite 402 Washington, D.C. 20006 Dear Dick: Thanks for your kind comments on the speech. As we discussed, here are a few additional copies. Robert M. Gates Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 - DALLAS COUNCIL ON WORLD AFFAIRS 19 JANUARY 1988 WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE SOVIET UNION BY ROBERT M. GATES DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE INTRODUCTION THE SELECTION OF MIKHAIL GORBACHEV AS GENERAL SECRETARY IN THE SPRING OF 1985 SIGNALED THE POLITBURO'S RECOGNITION THAT THE SOVIET UNION WAS IN DEEP TROUBLE -- ESPECIALLY ECONOMICALLY AND SPIRITUALLY -- TROUBLE THAT THEY RECOGNIZED WOULD SOON BEGIN TO HAVE REAL EFFECT ON MILITARY POWER AND THEIR POSITION IN THE WORLD. DESPITE ENORMOUS RAW ECONOMIC POWER AND RESOURCES, INCLUDING A $2 TRILLION A YEAR GNP, THE SOVIET LEADERSHIP BY THE MID-1980S CONFRONTED A STEADILY WIDENING GAP WITH THE WEST AND JAPAN -- ECONOMICALLY, TECHNOLOGICALLY AND IN VIRTUALLY ALL AREAS OF THE QUALITY OF LIFE. AS A RESULT OF THESE TRENDS, THE POLITBURO RECOGNIZED THAT THE SOVIET UNION COULD NO LONGER RISK THE SUSPENDED ANIMATION OF THE BREZHNEV YEARS, AND COALESCED AROUND AN IMAGINATIVE AND VIGOROUS LEADER WHOM THEY HOPED COULD REVITALIZE THE COUNTRY - WITHOUT ALTERING THE BASIC STRUCTURE OF THE SOVIET STATE OR - COMMUNIST PARTY. 1 Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 11IP" Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT STAT The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington. D. C. 20505 March 2, 1988 ?Ms. Elizabeth G. Weymouth Dear Lally: SS-og-6/ Thanks for sending me a copy of your Outlook piece on Afghanistan. I read it when it first came out and thought it a fine report. I note in this morning's Post that Bill Buckley cites it favorably and quotes extensively from it. It was insightful of you to visit China. I personally believe the Chinese element plays a much larger part in Soviet calculations with respect to Afghanistan than has been noted in our press. Again, thanks for sending it along. Re? ards j4271A- 1314 DISTRIBUTION: 0 - Addressee 1 --DIPAO (W/inC...,attj tlDflCICrrt(w/iric., att.) 1 - ER (w/inc., att.) Robert M Gates se ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 I / 4 DALLAS COUNCIL ON WORLD AFFAIRS 19 JANUARY 1988 WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE SOVIET UNION BY ROBERT M. GATES DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE INTRODUCTION THE SELECTION OF MIKHAIL GORBACHEV AS GENERAL SECRETARY IN THE SPRING OF 1985 SIGNALED THE POLITBURO'S RECOGNITION THAT THE SOVIET UNION WAS IN DEEP TROUBLE -- ESPECIALLY ECONOMICALLY AND SPIRITUALLY -- TROUBLE THAT THEY RECOGNIZED WOULD SOON BEGIN TO HAVE REAL EFFECT ON MILITARY POWER AND THEIR POSITION IN THE WORLD. DESPITE ENORMOUS RAW ECONOMIC POWER AND RESOURCES, INCLUDING A $2 TRILLION A YEAR GNP, THE SOVIET LEADERSHIP BY THE MID-19805 CONFRONTED A STEADILY WIDENING GAP WITH THE WEST AND JAPAN -- ECONOMICALLY, TECHNOLOGICALLY AND IN VIRTUALLY ALL AREAS OF THE QUALITY OF LIFE. AS A RESULT OF THESE TRENDS, THE POLITBURO RECOGNIZED THAT THE SOVIET UNION COULD NO LONGER RISK THE SUSPENDED ANIMATION OF THE BREZHNEV YEARS, AND COALESCED AROUND AN IMAGINATIVE AND VIGOROUS LEADER WHOM THEY HOPED COULD REVITALIZE THE COUNTRY WITHOUT ALTERING THE BASIC STRUCTURE OF THE SOVIET STATE OR COMMUNIST PARTY. 1 Declassified in Part-Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 . c ELIZABETH (LALLY) G. WEYMOUTH STATBUTING EDITOR vv /tsrIINGTON POST Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: _ CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 N.NDAI PEBULAN1 41, 1700 CI 1 Petafillingtonpost OUTLOOK Commentary and Opinion --Does Moscow Really Plan On Leaving Afghanistan? By Lally. Weymouth: ? .. ISLAMABAD, Pakistan?"I have never seen a test case like, this," says French diplomat Jean-Francois Deniau of the proposed Soviet pullout from Afghan- istan. "It's the only way we can see if Gorbachev can do what he says. It's so important for freedom and for hope. It's like D-Day . . . . We can't accept that a ques- tion like this will receive a false solution." - A real solution, says the French special envoy on Af- ghanistan, would be the complete withdrawal of Soviet troops and the creation of a truly independent coun- try?as friendly with Pakistan as with the Soviet Union. The French diplomat is asking the right questions: Is - Mikhail "Gorbachev's announcement that the Soviets will withdraw from Afghanistan?trumpeted around the world' this month?for real? ? Does Moscow plan a "real so- lotion," or just a cosmetic one that maintains a Soviet proxy government in 'abul? And will the Reagan administration, anxious for a.foreign-policy suc- cess, accept a false solution? Answers to these question L; could begin to surface tomor- 1 ; row, ;as Secretary of State George P. Shultz holds talks in Moscow on'Afghanistan. Con- servatives worry that he may accept a deal that would halt U.S. aid to the mujahed- din at the start of a 10-month period of promised Soviet troop withdrawal. Such a deal, made without the Oar- ? ticipation of the Afghan resistance fighters who waged the war, -could well collapse?with the resistance fight- ing on and Afghanistan, becoming a second Lebanon. A cleat picture of what's at stake in the current dip-- lomatic. debate over Afghanistan emerges from conver, . satiOns with some of the key players?in the -Soviet Union; Afghanistan, Pakistan and China. What- comes through above all is a sense of uncertainty about what really lies ahead in Afghanistan. Many of those most closely involved are skeptical about Soviet intentions and doubtful that it will be possible to create the neu-- ' tral, nonaligned Afghanistan that nearly everyone pro- claims as' the goal. These comments provide a healthy antidote to the optimistic expectations prevalent now in Washington that a lasting settlement 'of the Afghan con- ' flict is in sight. Here's a summary-of what some of the key officials told me in intcniews during the last two montliS: - or The Soviet* Union. Soviet First Deputy Foreign Min- ister, Yuli Vorontsov, claims that as a result of the so- called "new thinking," the Soviets have decided to with- draw their troops from Afghanistan and to arrive at a political settlement. But Vorontsov insists that with- ' drawal from Afghanistan does not mean defeat. Indeed, See AFGHANISTAN, B2, Col I ' . Lally Weymouth writes regularly about foreign affairs for The Washington Post. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 'The Afghan ? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 insists tat western analysts are wrong in will actueve what uestion predicting a bloodbath if Soviet troops with- ment?one in which the mujaheddin are ex- Deniau calls a taise settle- draw, as the mujaheddin take their revenge eluded and continue to fight, one that gives on the puppet Afghan regime: "Even if the Najibullah the legitimacy he has been denied Soviets troops pulled back, the Kabul re- for so long and one which leaves Pakistan gime will be aided by advisors, weapons and stuck with the Afghan refugees, who won't money. It is possible that it is strong enough return home as lonq as Najibullah reigns. to resist and the mujaheddin are divided The present Soviet strategy, explains one and will not succeed." senior Pakistani official, is to improve rela- ? Pakistan. There is pressure on Pakistan tions with both Iran and Pakistan so that to agree to a settlement at the upcoming "sandwiched between the two, Soviet secu- Geneva meeting with the Afghan govern- rity in Afghanistan can be insured." In five to ment, scheduled for Mardi 2. Gorbachev said 10 years, according to one knowledgable a week ago that if an agreement is signed by Pakistani, the Soviets expect to have pro-So- mid-March, then the Soviets will start to pull viet governments in both Tehran and Isla- out their troops in mid-May. With a summit mabad: "That could be not an unreasonable coming up in June, American officials would expectation," he says. "Then Soviet irlfluence like to have the Afghan war settled so that it could extend into India, Pakistan, Iran and won't obstruct disarmament talks. Syria, and you would have a whole belt." The Geneva negotiations have been under- As for Afghanistan's future, a Pakistani way since 1982. So far, Pakistan and Afghan- defense analyst explains: "I think the Soviets istan have managed to agree on three points: will withdraw but leave Afghanistan in a state reciprocal assurances of non-interference and of civil war like Lebanon so they retain the non-intervention by Afghanistan and Pakis- option of returning." tan; guarantees of this non-interference by Summing up Afghanistan's future with an the Soviet Union and the United States; the analogy, one Pakistani official asks: "Is it pos- right of Afghan refugees to return to their sible for Mexico to have any other influence homeland. A fourth item that would provide a than the United .States? A superpower ex- time-frame for withdrawal of Soviet troops pects its shadow to fall on Afghanistan." hasn't yet been resolved. ai China. Although President Zia is often Gorbachev's recent proposal of a 10- portrayed as a hardliner,?Chinese offcials and month withdrawal period seemed to close the analysts take an even tougher position? gap, and some analysts thought a settlement skeptical of Soviet intentions to withdraw was near. Then Pakistan's President Zia ul- from Afghanistan and convinced that in- Hag introduced a new element when he told creased aid to the resistance is the key to me in an interview last month that he would removing the,Soviets from Afghanistan. (An not sign the Geneva Accords with the Soviet- end to the conflict in Afghanistan has been backed president of Afghanistan, Najibullah. one of China's three conditions for improving Zia said he would sign the accords with a co- relations with the Soviet Union.) alition government formed of and by Afghans Chinese ,defense analytts at the Beijing and controlled by the mujaheddin and Al- Institute of Strategic Studies express doubt ghan exiles. thit the Soviets are Sincere In their stated The reason for President Zia's demand for intention to withdraw from Afghanistan. an interim government is that he wants to be "The Soviet 'condition is that the United sure that an agreement, is a real agree- States and other countries stop interfer- ment?that it will insure both the withdrawal ence," says one expert, "For the *United of Soviet troops and the ability of the 3.5 mil- States and China to cut off the resistance is a lion Afghan refugees housed in Pakistan to condition that must not be accepted!' return to their homes. The Chinese analysts agree that the so- A former senior Pakistani official explains called "southern strategy" of the Soviet that Islamabad is worried that if Pakistan Union?the drive to control warm-water signs the Geneva accords with Najibullah, it ports?hasn't changed. "It started back in AFGIIANISTAN, From HI he notes that "we haven't used all the mil- itary power we could have applied." Anatoliy Dobrynin, head of the Soviet International Department, says he favors ? withdrawal but warns that if the withdraw- ing Soviet troops come under attack, "it will make the process of withdrawal more dif- ficult. We are not prepared to withdraw at any cost." The future Afghanistan that Dobrynin says he envisions is a "neutral or nonaligned country with no foreign bases." (The Sovi- ets use the words neutral and nonaligned interchangably, ignoring the differences ' between Austria, a neutral, pro-West coun- try, and Angola, a Marxist regime that de- scribes itself as nonaligned.) Asked where ; the neutrals will come from?in a country ; where one side has been killing the other for the last eight years?Dobrynin admits it . is difficult to say. The Soviets expect that the Geneva ac- cords between Pakistan and Afghanistan ; will stop western aid to the mujaheddin ; from coming across the Pakistani border. : But Iran, home to another 1.5 million Af- ghan refugees, is another gateway for aid, and Iran is not part of the Geneva talks. Vorontsov says the Soviets are hoping to get the Iranians to seal their border, too. Even if the Soviets withdraw their troops, says ambassador-at-large Nicholai ; Kozyrev, they will continue "to provide as- sistance to Afghanistan." Economic rela- tions, he said, have good prospects. After :all, the Soviet Union has signed about 300 :economic treaties with the Soviet-backed :Afghan government and it is hoping that the ;next government will assume the obliga- :tions in these treaties. One treaty is ;thought by Pakistani intelligence to cede .the Wakhun corridor to the Soviet Union. Both Kdzyrev and Vorontsov say that r-. Soviet advisors will remain in Afghanistan even if troops are withdrawn. At present there are said to be 9,000 Soviet advisors in Afghanistan?directing every aspect of Af- ghan life. ? Afghanistan. In Kabul, signs of Soviet control are evident everywhere from the moment you land at the airport. My Aero- flot plane was encircled as it landed by oth- er Soviet planes that dropped flares to dis- tract the Stinger missiles the mujaheddin possess. It's easy to spot Soviet convoys rolling down the road. And you can't overlook the large KGB headquarters, which is centrally located. The KGB, and its Afghan counter- part, known as KHAD, are said to rule the city. Remarks one western diplomat: "Here, there is not one centimeter of change." "It's a complete and methodic coloniza- tion," explains one diplomat in regard to the Sovietization of Afghanistan. Since 1980 when they invaded, the Soviets have taken about 60,000 young Afghans to the Soviet Union to be "educated." "All the main offi- - cers in the Afghan administration were formed in the USSR," says a knowledgable western source in Kabul. In Kabul, I found the diplomatic commu- nity surprisingly united in their conviction that the Soviets aren't likely to withdraw from Afghanistan?and that even if they do withdraw some troops, Soviet influence will not disappear. One senior western diplomat in Kabul made the case most effectively. "The Soviet Union doesn't want to abandon Afghani- stan," he says. "The Soviets want you, by diplomatic means, to help them stay in Afghanistan . . . . They want to deceive your country . . . . Afghanistan isn't Viet- nam. Afghanistan is at the border of the Soviet Union. They want to stay and they want the guarantee of the United States that they can stay." The West is overestimating the mujahed- din, says this veteran diplomat in Kabul. He Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 the Czarist period," says one. "It's their dream. They won't give up what they have achieved: They have got Afghanistan and it's a springboard for the Soviet Union!' President Zia of Pakistan had disclosed in our interview that Chinese aid to the resis- tance was as important as U.S. aid. A senior Chinese official, speaking anonymously, con- firmed Beijing's role: "We have been helping the Afghan resistance forces for many years now with arms and money and are still con- tinuing to do that." The defense analysts ad- vocate increased aid to the resistance from both the United States and China as the most effective way to persuade the Soviets to withdraw from Afghanistan. Argues one: "The right approach isn't to reduce our bar- gaining position but to reduce theirs. We should increase our aid to the Afghan resis- tance and not stop until after the Soviet Union withdraws its troops". One senior foreign ministry official warnS that "some U.S. friends are too optimistic about the Soviet withdrawal." Huan Xiang, a senior official, puts it this way: "I guess the Soviets do want to withdraw but how to with- draw is the question. They want to leave a pro-Soviet government in Afghanistan and are finding it difficult." ? The Mujaheddin. The last word belongs to Younis Khalis, one of the leaders of the Af- ghan resistance, and it doesn't bode well for a negotiated settlement. "We said the Russians should leave Afghanistan. This is our sugges- tion," says Khalis. But he isn't interested in Zia's idea of forming an interim government that would give even a minor role to Najibul- lah's party, the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan, or PDPA: "We will never accept any communist element in a future govern- ment of Afghanistan." ? Khalis says the resistance groups "reject the Geneva negotiations because the real parties [to the conflict], the mujaheddin and the Russians, were not participating. Any outcome of such a negotiation would not be acceptable to the mujaheddin. The Russians, if they really want to leave Afghanistan, should suggest negotiations with the muja- heddin. Then we will be ready to sit down and negotiate about a peace settlement. There is nothing in between." _ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ELIZABETH VEYINUM I 4- A ? itfiad it. FES 23 ? Mr. Robert Gates Deputy Director Central Intelligence Agency Washington, D.C. 20505 111111118 141116 fhb II 1 1 d Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence WashirV(m1A(120505 March 2, 1988 Dr. Constantine C. Menges American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036 Dear Constantine: Many thanks for your note and the attachments. You can be sure that your concern about the end game in Afghanistan is widely shared. I will share your thoughts, but I hope you have written to others as well. If you have not read Lally Weymouth's Post Outlook piece (February 21, 1988) I urge you to do so. It strikes me as sound reporting and thinking. Good to hear from you. Robert M. Gates DISTRIBUTION: 0 - Addressee 1 1 - DDCI Chrono! (retaining incoming) 1 - ER ER 0865-88 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (202) 862-5800 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 Telex: 671-1239 26 February 1988 Dr. Robert Gates Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Old Executive Office Building Washington, D.C. 20500 Dear Bob: At AEI I have been writing a book on the implications of the success or defeat of the pro-western resistance movements for the U.S.-Soviet balance in the world. As a result, I have studied the situation in Afghanistan in some depth. For seven years President Reagan's policy has been that until all Soviet troops are withdrawn and a genuinely independent government controls Afghanistan, the free world should continue aid for the armed resistance there. This policy, if sustained, can succeed in accomplishing these objectives. But lam deeply concerned accedes to the Gorbachev offer defective political settlement communists retaining power and cut back within the next year. that if the State Department of February 8 there will be a which will result in the the resistance being severely In my judgment this would be a tragedy for the people of Afghanistan and open the way to substantially increased dangers of the dismemberment of Pakistan, a pro-Soviet Iran, and pro-Soviet groups taking power in some of the Persian Gulf oil states. This issue and potential dangers, it seems to me, need to be explored by the Presidet in the context of a full meeting of the National Security Council. I hope you will look at the attached items and consider exercising the leadership needed to bring this issue before the President in a full NSC meeting. Naturally, I would be pleased to provide further information if that would be helpful. With all good wishes. Sincerely, Constantine C. Menges, PhD Resident Scholar CCM/tg Enclosures Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ? February 26, 1988 Suggested Actions for the President Afghanistan 1. President Reagan should continue with his correct policy: no cutoff of aid to the Resistance until all Soviet troops are out and a genuinely independent government exists. 2. Reagan should convene a weekly full meeting of the NSC to assure that State follows his policy in the coming weeks of intense negotiations leading to the Soviet proposed signing date of March 15th. 3. Otherwise State is likely to fall into the Soviet trap represented by the February 8th Gorbachev proposal: sign on March 15 and on May 15th Soviet troops start to withdraw (with the promise of all being out in ten months); no arrangements are made for a genuinely independent Afghanistan; all U.S. aid to the Resistance is terminated at the start not the end of the Soviet withdrawal. 4. The likely result -- some Soviet troops withdraw, the Soviets stir up combat among Resistance groups, the "international verification group" overlooks Soviet violations but prevents Pakistan from helping the Resistance and when the U.S. presidential season is over the Resistance has been gravely weakened and a communist government controls Afghanistan. In turn this defective settlement would sharply increase the threat of Soviet supported destabilization in Pakistan and the Persian Gulf oil states. Central America 1. Soon, the President should subpit a request through the regular appropriations process for the full aid needed by the Contras for this fiscal year (Kemp and Helms had proposed about $270 million in August 1987 and the Administration had seemed to agree in September 1987). 2. The President should seek an up or down vote before the July 4, 1988 recess and make this a major prospective political issue for the November 1988 election saying: the Democrats seem to be trying to lose Nicaragua to communism twice (in 1979-81 the Carter Administration failed to assure implementation of democracy as promised to the OAS; now they are abandoning the Contras). 3. As both the late Senator Henry Jackson and Reagan have said -- the national security risk is both a communist Central America and a communist Mexico. 4. With a full scale political and communications effort this vote can be won. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 The New York Times February 26, 1988 ON MY MIND I A. M. Rosenthal A Little Time Left There is still time for President Reagan to make sure that a great victory in the making does not become a tragedy. But not much time. . The Soviet Union has agreed in theory to pull its troops out of Af- ghanistan. This can be a smashing political, military and moral triumph for the Afghan resistance fighters, for Pakistan, which gave them refuge for a decade, and for a strong bipartisan American policy of military and eco- nomic support to the resistance. . But there is a critical debate taking place in Washington to which neither the President nor the country has paid enough attention. It did not rate a Presidential statement or even a question at his news conference. The debate in Congress, the State and Defense Departments, the White House and among intelligence special- ists is not among political caricatures :--- war-minded kooks and mushy- headed peaceniks. On both sides are rational people who range from mildly radical to devotedly conservative. The heart of the debate is this: ' Will the ? pullout mean that Afghans will be able to choose their own govern- ment or is the Soviet ?Union planning and the U.S. falling for a withdrawal plan that will keep Moscow's puppet Government in power in Kabul? ? 1 Two specific questions are involved: ? Will the U.S. cut off aid to the resist- ance while Moscow openly or covertly supplies the Kabul Communist regime with arms and economic assistance? : Should the U.S. accept the Soviet determination to leave the Kabul re- gime intact and in power after the pullout or should we insist on an in- terim government in which the Af- &an resistance, vtiaich fought not only against the Russians but their Kabul satellites; has a dominant role as the fruit of its victory? In Congress and the Administration, there is a strong inclination to make the pullout deal quickly, to insure Soviet troop withdrawal. As for aid cut- offs, they say, we will make the best deal possible. It doesn't matter that much, anyway; once the Red Army is out, the Kabul regime will soon be torn apart by the Afghan resistance. But there are also Congressmen and specialists convinced that the Ad- ministration's eagerness for agree- ments with the Russians can turn an anti-Communist victory into a Com- munist triumph. They believe it is naive, self-deluding Ending secret diplomacy on Afghanistan. and pantingly optimistic to assume Moscow will not keep up the struggle for Afghanistan. So do I. The Russians will leave behind a well-armed Kabul government that will fight from forti- fied cities. Moscow will keep supplying the Afghan Communists after we cut off aid to the resistance. The resistance forces will indeed triumph over Kabul one day. But we owe it to them and ourselves not to leave them with a clap on the back and very best wishes as they face more years of war against a Soviet- backed Kabul government. There in fonfusion and double-talk about what the United States has promised or hinted at. In a day or two, the President will get a letter from at least 29 senators of almost every political shading urging him to step in and clear things up. They want him to make sure himself that aid to the resistance is not cut off until all Soviet troops leave Afghanistan and Moscow ceases aid to Kabul. . The letter is signed by conservative Republicans like Gordon J. Humphrey of New Hampshire, one of the strong- est backers of the resistance, and Strom Thurmond of South Carolina. It also has signatures of the Democrats Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York and Christopher Dodd of Connecticut. Alfonse D'Amato of New York and Malcolm Wallop of Wyoming, Republi- cans, have signed and so have the Democrats Joseph Biden of Delaware and Dennis DeConcini of Arizona. So it is now up to the President to call a meeting of. the National Se- curity Council, find out what has been committed and decide what he is will- ing to stand by. But that's not enough. The next round of talks starts in Geneva on March 1. The agreements should be made public before the United States commits its power and honor to them. The U.S. need not agree with the resistance on every point nor satisfy every demand. But at least the Presi- dent should pay attention to the last sentence in the letter he will be getting from the senators of both parties: "We have no right to endanger the gains the Afghans have made at a ter- rible price to their nation." Then let's hear from the President fully, openly and soon. Secret diplo- macy is now unjustified. Whatever Washington tells Russians is exactly what it ihould tell Afghans, Paki- stanis and Americans. 0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 The New York Times FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 12. 1988 ON MY MIND I A. M. Rosenthal A25 . The Great Game Goes On . Mikhail Gorbachev faces a chal- lenge entirely worthy of his abilities as a master politician. The task before him is to make sure that a withdrawal Of Soviet forces from Afghanistan, if it takes place, does not diminish full Soviet control ' of the country. His predecessors spilled Soviet blood to invade Afghanistan. Mr. Gor- bachev_ will build on what they achieved ? Soviet domination of Af- ghanistan for the first time in history. . He will struggle to keep Soviet control without more cost in Soviet lives. If he succeeds he will be a hero at home and in the world and still maintain Soviet power in South Asia. . You do not have to be a cynic or even particularly skeptical about Mr. Gor- bachev to realize that this is his im- mediate goal. He already has estab- lished much of the political and mili- tary structure in Afghanistan neces- sary to achieve it. This will be left be- bind when Soviet troops march out. He would fail in his duty as guardian of Soviet power if he did not at least try. He would be turning his back on what Moscow historically has believed are deep Russian interests in Afghani- Ilan. He would be betraying the Soviet Army's sacrifices. He could not last long in power if he just gave up and walked away from Afghanistan. For almost 200 years, Russian rulers, Czarist or Bolshevik, have . tried to conquer Afghanistan. Kipling , called it "the Great Game." . Now, control of Afghanistan puts the Soviet empire at the doors of the Indian i subcontinent. Moscow need not invade i Pakistan and India. All it has to do is knock firmly; it will be heard. . Afghanistan also puts Soviet power . within tank distance of the warm waters of the Indian Ocean. From Af- ghanistan, the Soviet Union can move deep into Iran. A true prize, Afghani- stan, for a great imperial power. But the Afghan resistance made Moscow pay a price: 10,000 Soviet lives, a wound that never was stanched, bitterness in the mouths of Soviet parents. Mr. Gorbachev is flex- ible enough to see that perhaps con- trol can now be maintained without the Red Army and that in the future only Afghan blood need be shed. Soviet troop withdrawal will leave behind a puppet Government whose ministries are laced with Soviet "ad- visers." This regime has international recognition. It also has a well-trained army, years of military supplies, and a What Soviet pullout will leave behind. Soviet-created air force. It has a powerful secret police with close ties to the K.G.B. It has the prospect of unend- ing Soviet-bloc economic assistance. The Afghan resistance will find itself alone, without the U.S. military assist- ance that has kept it fighting. It will be under pressure to join a Communist- dominated government. If it does not the world will shake its finger, call them naughty and turn away. One million Afghans have died. Five million, a third of the nation, are in exile. The Afghans deserve an honorable peace. It is up to the United States, which profited from the stun- ning bravery of the Afghan resist- 4 ance, to struggle for it. 1. Moscow must agree to meet with the Afghan resistance. Three countries ? the U.S., Pakistan, the Soviet Union ? are determining the fate of a fourth. Something like this happened once be- fore, in 1938, in Munich. 2. The U.S. should try to wiggle out of its incredible commitment to end aid to the resistance when the Rus- sians begin to pull out, replacing it with a phased cutoff. .??? 3. The withdrawal agreements should remove not just Soviet troops but the small army of "experts." 4. The powerful Soviet air and com- munication bases must be disman- tled, not turned over to Kabul and the "experts." ? 5. Territory along the Soviet-Af- ghan frontier that has been annexed de facto by Moscow should be re- turned. So should the 10,000 Afghan children in the Soviet Union. 6. The secret police should be 'dis- banded. 7. Afghanistan should be ruled nor by the Kabul regime but by an interim government selected by a traditional council of elders in which Kabul weuld be a participant ? along with ,resist- ance politicians and military leaders and representatives of Afghan clans and refugees. The permanent govern- ment should be chosen by an election in which the Communists can runrafter the millions of refugees return. ? This would mean a concession by the resistance, which loathes the Commu- nists and wants them out or dead; pref- erably both. It would also mean the end of total Soviet domination. It would be a new, more difficUlt challenge for Mr. Gorbachev AL' to show whether in the end he will choose peace for Afghanistan or is just_play- ing another card in the game. , 0 ? p Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 February 26, 1988 Afghan Diplomacy -- Opportunity or Trap?* Is the Soviet Union's proposal to withdraw from Afghanistan an effort to win by diplomatic cunning what the Red Army has failed to achieve by military force? On February 8 Kremlin chief Mikhail Gorbachev heightened expectations of an early settlement to the war. If the United States cut off aid to the Afghan resistance, he suggested, a Soviet troop withdrawal could begin on May 15 and be completed within ten months, provided diplomats in Geneva reach a settlement by mid March. He indicated that this pullout would proceed whether or not an agreement was reached on a new or interim Afghan government to succeed the current communist regime. On the day after Gorbachev's announcement, the Washington Post said that the possibility of "a good settlement" was nearing. Two days later a New York Times editorial hailed the pledge as "an extraordinary statement" that "eliminates the biggest outstanding obstacle in the talks" and indicates that "from all appearances, Moscow has made the painful decision to lose a war." Afghanistan's tragic recent history should be kept in mind as we consider these developments. In 1978, after twenty-five years of active Soviet subversion of Afghanistan, the Communist *Dr. Constantine C. Menges is Resident Scholar at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington D.C. He served in the Reagan Administration for five years, including from 1983 to 1986 as Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 party seized power there in a bloody military coup. In twelve months the new regime executed tens of thousands, imprisoned many more, and tried to destroy religion and all other independent institutions. Since the Communist takeover, more than 1 million of Afghanistan's 15 million people have died in warfare or prison, and nearly 5 million have fled to Pakistan and Iran as refugees. Within weeks of the 1978 coup, an armed Afghan resistance began to oppose the Communist regime. Now, nearly a decade after Soviet troops invaded in December 1979, the resistance has fought them and the Kabul Communists to a standstill. The Soviet Union has therefore given new emphasis to the UN- sponsored "proximity talks" in Geneva. Where does the United States stand on these fast-paced diplomatic developments? President Reagan's longstanding policy, restated during and after the December 1987 summit and in his 1988 State of the Union message, requires U.S. aid to the resistance to continue until all Soviet troops have withdrawn and a genuinely independent government is in place in Afghanistan. Unfortunately, a faction within the State Department appears to have followed a different policy. These career officials are working for a settlement based on a 1985 draft treaty, negotiated under UN auspices in Geneva. It requires a Western aid cut-off once a Soviet troop withdrawal begins. This State Department action became public in May 1986 when 2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 a key supporter of the Afghan resistance, Senator Gordon Humphrey (R,N.H.), questioned a senior State Department official during Congressional hearings. He admitted that State had agreed to guarantee this Geneva draft treaty and that Shultz knew about it, but he would not answer whether President Reagan had approved or even been informed of the action. On February 11, 1988, the New York Times published a report headlined "Reagan didn't know of Afghan deal." According to the White House and State Department officials it quoted, "an American commitment in 1985 to end military aid to the Afghan guerrillas at the beginning of a Soviet troop withdrawal was made without the knowledge or approval of President Reagan." Will the State Department follow the President's policy or its own inclinations on Afghanistan? If it follows its own inclinations the United States risks being misled into approving a defective political settlement. History has shown that the Soviet Union and its allies know how to use false political settlements as a strategy for Communist victory. The 1945 Yalta agreement served that purpose for Eastern Europe, as have four subsequent war termination agreements -- Korea in 1953, Vietnam in 1954, Laos in 1962, Vietnam in 1973. The communist side violated all of them. As a 1986 Defense Department report stated, in these four war termination agreements the communist side undertook "significant violations, including military ones...immediately after the agreements went into effect, suggesting that the 3 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 communists were planning the infringements even as they were negotiating." The 1962 settlement on Laos for example, required North Vietnam, "in the shortest time possible," to remove its estimated ten thousand troops through designated checkpoints, but "only forty left the country through International Control Commission checkpoints." The 1973 Paris Accords required North Vietnam to withdraw all of its forces from Cambodia and Laos and to refrain from introducing additional forces into South Vietnam. In fact, "North Vietnam never observed the cease fire and troop withdrawal requirements. Within three months...Hanoi had already illegally infiltrated some thirty thousand additional troops." The 1986 report goes on to say about all four agreements that "despite the elaborate supervisory and control mechanisms...the communist signatories were able to circumvent key provisions...with relative ease." To this disturbing history can be added the conclusions reached by President Reagan in his four annual reports on Soviet noncompliance with arms control agreements. The 1984 report concluded that "over a twenty-five year span the Soviets had violated a substantial number of arms control commitments." And in 1985 the president noted "a pattern of Soviet noncompliance" with arms control accords. Since the West has made no effective response to these repeated violations, Gorbachev might well intend to offer a Soviet troop withdrawal - with no clear-cut way to monitor the 4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 number of troops remaining or secretly reintroduced - as a lever to terminate U.S. aid. Will the Soviets then permit a genuinely free Afghanistan? Seventy years of history suggest that Moscow will seek ways to keep Afghanistan Communist. It might try to divide and demoralize the resistance groups as they begin to discuss with Afghan exiles and Kabul regime representatives the composition of the new government and the methods of Soviet withdrawal. United principally by hatred of Soviet occupation, the resistance alliance would be vulnerable to Communist destabilization in such a new political context. Three groups within the alliance seek a secular government, including a constitutional monarchy or Western-style parliament, but the four "fundamentalist" groups unconditionally reject the pre-Communist institutions--including the monarchy--and seek an Islamic state. The Soviets have likely proposed a role for former Afghan King Zahir Shah (deposed by a leftist coup in 1973) in order to aggravate these differences and perhaps to spark warfare within the alliance. While they create public expectations of an imminent withdrawal, Moscow and Kabul will probably secretly attempt to maintain Communist control over the premiership, the army, the secret police, and the ministries of education and communication. As in 1980, when the Soviets tried to mask their domination of Afghanistan with a cosmetic "broad front," they may try to control the "new" government through ostensibly non- 5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 communist Afghans who are clandestine communist partners. If aid to the Afghan resistance is cut off before all Soviet troops are withdrawn and a genuinely independent government is in place, a Soviet strategy of provoking fights among resistance groups inside Afghanistan and in refugee zones along the Pakistan border might well succeed. Although the resistance wants a new government without Communists, the differences among the groups could allow the Soviets and their proxies to support some groups against others and bring them into cooperation with the pseudo-independent government they will try to establish. Pakistani President Zia ul-Haq sensibly refuses to have anything to do with the current Kabul regime of Najibullah, but he has reportedly begun to pressure resistance groups to join a new government that might include Communists. If some resistance leaders reject the emerging settlement as a Soviet trap while others embrace it as a vehicle to power, divisions and even warfare among the groups might increase. The spectacle of freedom fighters at war among themselves could undermine Western support. And Pakistan might sharply reduce its help for whatever effective resistance remained. These possibilities will be furthered by the UN-created verification system, which would probably overlook or fail to detect Soviet violations while vigilantly monitoring and limiting movement from Pakistan into Afghanistan. In the past, international verification groups have often stood by while the 6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 A+ a, Communist side violated its agreements. The Soviets may well calculate that the U.S. aid cut-off, the infighting within the resistance alliance, and the problems between the resistance and Pakistan, along with unobstructed Soviet violation of the settlement, could cumulatively and dramatically weaken the resistance. Then in late 1988, with the United States preoccupied with presidential politics, Soviet troops and secret police could be secretly reinfiltrated to cut down the resistance until it no longer jeopardized Communist control. This destructive scenario is a real possibility. It can still be avoided if President Reagan makes sure that his administration carries out his publicly stated policy. He should clearly reaffirm that policy in public statements and use regular meetings of the National Security Council to ensure his control. The United States should be willing to increase military aid to the resistance unless the Soviets agree to a genuine settlement, withdraw their forces, and permit a truly independent Afghan government. The resistance leaders might also increase their pressure for such a genuine settlement. They could notify Moscow and Kabul that unless a truly independent Afghanistan is attained by autumn 1988, they will not provide cease-fire zones for Soviet troop withdrawals or give amnesty to members of the Communist Afghan government. And the resistance could demand full reparation -- valued at tens of billions of dollars -- for the immense human suffering and economic destruction the Communists have caused. 7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 8 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 A ,?-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Central Intelligence Agency Washington, D C.20505 7 March 1988 The Honorable Frank R. wolf House of Representatives Washington, D.C. 20515 Dear Mr. Wolf: Az) ie-t; I appreciate your letter of 19 February 1988 in which you describe the recent mark up of H.R. 3757, the Federal Employees Leave Transfer Act. I share your enthusiasm for what this measure can accomplish. The amendment to the bill which permits the Agency to establish its own program was made necessary by the need to protect sensitive personnel information. Having gained this authority, I now take very seriously my responsibility to establish a leave transfer program which will not only meet the unique needs of our employees, but which will be exemplary for other agencies. I am pleased to hear that the prospects for passage in the House are excellent and that the Senate is also likely to act favorably. This bill is indeed one in which everyone wins. Sincerely yours, obert M. 'ates Acting Director of Cen 'al Intelligence Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Washingion. C 20505 OCA 88-0594 The Honorable Frank R. Wolf House of Representatives Washington, D.C. 20515 Dear Mr. Wolf: WE 0 07 MAR 1988 I appreciate your letter of 19 February 1988 in which you describe the recent mark up of H.R. 3757, the Federal Employees Leave Transfer Act. I share your enthusiasm for what this measure can accomplish. The amendment to the bill which permits the Agency to establish its own program was made necessary by the need to protect sensitive personnel information. Having gained this authority, I now take very seriously my responsibility to establish a leave transfer program which will not only meet the unique needs of our employees, but which will be exemplary for other agencies. I am pleased to hear that the prospects for passage in the House are excellent and that the Senate is also likely to act favorably. This bill is indeed one in which everyone wins. Distribution: Orig - Addressee 1 - 1 - ExDir 1 - ER 1 - DDA 1 - D/PERS 1 - D/ICS 1 - OCA Record 1 - JB Chrono STAT CCA: Sincerely yours, Wigiara H. Viekszx William H. Webster Director of Central Intelligence 1- OCARead b (29 Feb 88) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000360050001-2 Coe cc., S7 MAR 198s OCA88-0616 MEMORANDUM FOR: The Acting Director of Central Intelligence FROM: Director of Congressional Affairs SUBJECT: Transmission of FY '89 Intelligence Authorization Bill to Congress 1. The Office of Management and Budget (ONE) has just cleared our draft Fiscal Year 1989 Intelligence Authorization Bill. 2. The next step in the process is the bill to be formally transmitted to the House and Senate under letters signed by you. 3. Attached at Tab No. 1 is a memo to me from explaining the issues in more detail. At Tab C of that memo are the two transmittal letters for. your si2nature. V John Beigerson Attachments Tab 1 - DEL/OCA memo to D/OCA Tab A - Draft Fiscal Year 1989 Intelligence Authorization Bill (bill, section-by-section analysis, cost analysis and changes in existing law) Tab B - OCA 87-6026 (8 December 1987) Tab C - A/DCI Letter to Speaker and A/DCI Letter to President of the Senate Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT SUBJECT: OCA/Leg FY '89 Intelligence Authorization Bill: Transmission to Congress Distribution: (9 February 1988) Original - Addressee (w/att) 1 - D/OCA (w/att) 1 - ER (w/att) - Ex Dir (w/att) DDCI (w/attY/ 1 - OCA/Registry (w/att) 1 - OCA/Leg/Subject File: FY '89 Intel. Auth. Bill (w/att) 1 - JR Signer (w/o att) 1 - PS Signer (w/o att) 1 - OCA Read (w/o att) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 4 March 1988 OCA88-0615 MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Congressional Affairs STAT FROM: Deputy Director for Legislation Office of Congressional Affairs STAT SUBJECT: FY '89 Intelligence Authorization Bill: A/DCI Transmission to Congress 1. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has just given Administration clearance to the draft Fiscal Year 1989 Intelligence Authorization bill. The bill as cleared with supporting materials is attached at Tab A. 2. With the Acting Director's concurrence, the bill had been sent to OMB for clearance on 24 December 1987 after a preliminary circulation for comment within the Intelligence Community. Attached at Tab B is a memo explaining the issues at the time the bill was sent to OMB. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 3. The next step is for the bill to be formally transmitted to the Senate and the House under cover of letters from the Acting Director at Tab C. The Acting Director's signature on those two STAT letters is requested. Attachments Tab A - Draft Fiscal Year 1989 Intelligence Authorization Bill (bill, section-by-section analysis, cost analysis and changes in existing law) Tab P - OCA 87-6026 (8 December 1987) Tab C - A/DCI Letter to Speaker and A/DCI Letter to President of the Senate Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 41 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 MEMORANDUM FOR: STAT FROM: SUBJECT: STAT OCA 87-6026 8 December 1987 Director of Congressional Affairs Draft Fiscal Year 1989 Intelligence Authorization Bill: Submission to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for Clearance 1. A.ttached at Tab A is a letter to OMB for your signature. The letter seeks Administration clearance for the draft Fiscal Year 1989 Intelligence Authorization Fill and draft transmittal letters (Tab B). We hope to have clearance on the bill in time for the Director to transmit it to the Second Session of the 100th Congress in January 1988. 2. The first draft of this legislation was circulated throughout the Agency and the Intelligence Comunity. This draft, which we are sending forward to OMB, is the result of comments received on the first draft and the Congress' action on the Fiscal Year 1988 Intelligence Authorization Act, signed by the President on 1 December 1987 (Public Law No. 100-178). The following is a summary of the provisions and issues involved. 3. Title I through III are standard "boilerplate". Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Central Intelligence Agency VVashIngton.D C.20505 OCA 88-0678 9 March 1988 The Honorable George Bush President of the Senate Washington, DC 20510 Dear Mr. President: This letter transmits for the consideration of the Congress a proposed "Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1989". A detailed section-by-section explanation accompanies the proposed Act. Timely consideration of the bill would be greatly appreciated. The Office of Management and Budget has advised that enactment of this proposed legislation would be in accordance with the President's program. Enclosure erely yours, 1Robert Gates Acting Director of ntral Intelligence Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Central Intelligence Agency VVashIngton.D.C.20505 OCA 88-0677 9 March 1988 The Honorable James C. Wright, Jr. Speaker of the House of Representatives Washington, DC 20515 Dear Mr. Speaker: This letter transmits for the consideration of the Congress a proposed "Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1989". A detailed section-by-section explanation accompanies the proposed Act. Timely consideration of the bill would be greatly appreciated. The Office of Management and Budget has advised that enactment of this proposed legislation would be in accordance with the President's program. Enclosure erely yours, Robert M Gates Acting Director of Ctjtral Intelligence Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 AT . -- ROUTING SLIP TO: STAT ACTION INFO DATE INITIAL 1 DCI X 2 P...a.CD?X 3 EXDIR 4 D/ICS 5 DDI 6 DDA 7 DDO X 8 DDS&T 9 Chm/NIC 100C X 11 IG 12 Compt 13 D/OCA X 14 D/PAO 15 D/PERS 16 D/Ex Staff ' 17 C/NE/DO X 18 L 19 . 20 21 22 1,STAT SUSPENSE Remarks To 10, 13 & 18. FOR compliance with Paragraph 5, please. xecutive secretary 9 Mar 88 Date 21127 mm311 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 12012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2_ 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized CoovAooroved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-R ST ST DP89G00720R000300050001-2 TRANSMITTAL SLIP DATE TO: Deputy Director of Central Intelligence ROOM NO. BUILDING REMARKS: \TFROM: OWSR/STD/SB ROOM NO. \T5F43 I BUILDING HQS 1 ... .. FORM NO. REPLACES FORM 36-8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 (47) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R0003000500,012sEARc:1 Directorate of Intelligence Central Intelligence Agency 09 MAR 1988 NOTE TO: Deputy Director for Intelligence The enclosed responds to a request from the Defense Science Board for CIA support in reviewing developments in high-temperature superconductor research. People from this office and OGI a STATlefings. Enclosure Director Scientific and Weapons Research Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 rDeclassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Central Intelligence Agency Office of the Deputy Director for Intelligence /0D1 Registry IV 97 y- 1 0 MAR 1988 -7 - NOTE TO: Acting Director of Central Intelligence The attached letter responds to a request for CIA briefings, to help a Defense Science Board task force to examine the potential military applications of high-temperature superconductors. OSWR and OGI are preparing the requested briefings on the state of research in theASSR, China, Japan and NATO STAT countries, Richard J. Kerr Deputy Director for Intelligence Attachment Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Central Intelligence Agency Washington. D. C. 20505 0 MAR 1988 MEMORANDUM FOR: Dr. George P. Millburn Executive Director Defense Science Board Office of the Secretary of Defense SUBJECT: REFERENCE: Defense Science Board Task Force on Military Applications of Superconductors Memo for Director of Central Intelligence, dated February 26, 1988 1. We would be pleased to provide briefings to the Defense Science Board Task Force. Our briefing team will be prepared to address Soviet, Chinese, Japanese and West European research on high-temperature superconductors, and possible military applications. 2. We have contacted Dr. Rhyne's office as you suggested, and are arranging for a specific time for the briefing. Our team will consist of representatives from our Office of Scientific and Weapons Research and our Office of Global Issues. 3. Our point of contact will be Office of Scientific and Weapons Researc /s/ Robert IL GateA Chief of the Science Branch, Robert M. Gates Acting Director of Central Intelligence nEe _ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT SUBJECT: DSB Task Force on Military Applications of Superconductors Distribution: Orig - Addressee 1 - DCI 1 - DDCI 1 - Executive Director 1 - Executive Registry 1 - DDI 1 - ADDI 1 - DDI Registry 1 - OSWR Chrono 1 - D/OGI 1 - C/OGI/TICD I - OGI 1 - STD/Chrono 1 - STD/SB Chrono OSWR/STD/SB/ (08 March 1988) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT I LI Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 DDCI Chrono The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington. D. C.20505 10 March 1988 MEMORANDUM FOR: Nancy J. Risque Assistant to the President and Cabinet Secretary SUBJECT: Presidential Medal of Freedom Executive ReOry 88-0927X/1 Your memorandum came to me inasmuch as Bill Webster is out of the country for the next week or so. I regard that as a fortunate coincidence because it gives me the opportunity to suggest Bill Webster himself for the Medal of Freedom. I cannot think of anyone more deserving of this honor than Bill. As jurist, Director of the FBI for nine years and now Director of Central Intelligence, Bill Webster has put aside his private life and the opportunity for personal gain to serve this country. I think he very much was looking forward to returning to private life and a law practice a year ago when the President asked him to step into the breach and succeed Bill Casey as Director of Central Intelligence. Only a man with Bill Webster's patriotism and dedication to public service would have remained in government having already given such noteworthy service. No one can quarrel with Bill's "especially meritorous contribution" to "the security or national interest of the United States". It may be said of Bill Webster that he took the reins of the FBI and of CIA at a time when each was confronted with enormous criticism and challenges to its professionalism and integrity. By dint of his own reputation and efforts, Judge Webster restored effectiveness and public esteem to these organizations so vital to America's national security and well-being. Taking over each agency during dark days of controversy and difficulty, he successfully led them through trying times -- thus more than justifying the Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT STAT confidence reposed in him by successive Presidents of the United States. I can think of no one whose sacrifice and achievements more warrant recognition with the Presidential Medal of Freedom than William H. Webster. DDCl/RMGates/deil DISTRIBUTION: 0 - Addressee 1 - D/PAO, w/Inc. 1 - DDCI Chrono, w/Inc. 1 - ER, w/Inc. obert M Gates 2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Executi.e Re;istry ? 88-0927X THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON March 8, 1988 MEMORANDUM FOR BILL WEBSTER FROM: SUBJECT: 171 NANCY RIST:T/ U Presideiltial Medal of Freedom The Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor given in the United States, is awarded to persons who have made especially meritorious contributions to "(1) the security or national interests of the United States, or (2) world peace, or (3) cultural or other significant public or private endeavors." The award was established in 1963, replacing the Medal of Freedom initiated by President Truman. in 1945 to reward meritorious, war- connected acts or services. Do you have any suggestions for this award -- if possible, by March 14? Thank you. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 3 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT A Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ER 0046/7 88 The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington. D. C. 20505 March 11, 1988 Mr. Richard F. Staar Coordinator International Studies Program Hoover Institution Stanford, California 94305-6010 Dear Mr. Staar: It is a pleasure to provide you with a copy of the speech I delivered to the Dallas Council on World Affairs last January. I hope you will find it of interest. Sincerely, Robert W Gates Enclosure: As Stated Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 DALLAS COUNCIL ON WORLD AFFAIRS 19 JANUARY 1988 WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE SOVIET UNION BY ROBERT M. GATES DEPUTY DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE INTRODUCTION THE SELECTION OF MIKHAIL GORBACHEV AS GENERAL SECRETARY IN THE SPRING OF 1985 SIGNALED THE POLITBURO'S RECOGNITION THAT THE SOVIET UNION WAS IN DEEP TROUBLE -- ESPECIALLY ECONOMICALLY AND SPIRITUALLY -- TROUBLE THAT THEY RECOGNIZED WOULD SOON BEGIN TO HAVE REAL EFFECT ON MILITARY POWER AND THEIR POSITION IN THE WORLD, DESPITE ENORMOUS RAW ECONOMIC POWER AND RESOURCES, INCLUDING A $2 TRILLION A YEAR GNP, THE SOVIET LEADERSHIP BY THE MID-19805 CONFRONTED A STEADILY WIDENING GAP WITH THE WEST AND JAPAN -- ECONOMICALLY, TECHNOLOGICALLY AND IN VIRTUALLY ALL AREAS OF THE QUALITY OF LIFE. AS A RESULT OF THESE TRENDS, THE POLITBURO RECOGNIZED THAT THE SOVIET UNION COULD NO LONGER RISK THE SUSPENDED ANIMATION OF THE BREZHNEV YEARS, AND COALESCED AROUND AN IMAGINATIVE AND VIGOROUS LEADER WHOM THEY HOPED COULD REVITALIZE THE COUNTRY WITHOUT ALTERING THE BASIC STRUCTURE OF THE SOVIET STATE OR COMMUNIST PARTY. 1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 HOOVER INSTITUTION ON WAR, REVOLUTION AND PEACE Stanford, California 94.305-6010 8 March 1988 The Honorable Robert M. Gates Deputy Director Central Intelligence Agency Washington, D.C. 20505 Dear Mr. Gates: Would you kindly send me a copy of your speech, given earlier this year and quoted by Craig Whitney in the New York Times of 2 March? 'Thank you for this couretesy. RFS:jcc End l (1) Sincerely, S:111k1040/ Richard F. Staar Coordinator International Studies Program Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 The Soviet Tumult: Some U.S. Views r.1 By CRAIG R. WHITNEY spiritually ? trouble that they recog- Special to The New York Times nized would soon begin to have real ef- WASHINGTON, r171 ? Despite fect on military power and their posi- I aGI-1 the challenge to Mikhail S. Gorba- tion in the world." chev's authority posed by the current Mr. Gates went on: "Nearly every unrest among Soviet ethnic minorities, step Gorbachev seeks to take toward the consensus among United States structural eocnomic or political change Government experts is that he and his is a struggle, and support in the Polit- policies of change have not yet been buro for his initiatives shifts constant- seriously endangered. ly. He must rely on a long-term, largely But some of the Americans say that nonviolent purge of party and bureau- the ethnic ferment is a direct conse- cracy and placement of his supporters if he is to remain in power and to suc- for more openness in discussing the quence of Mr. Gorbachev's own calls ceed at all. The central question is country's problems. If the rioting in whether he will get enough time." Soviet Armenia and Azerbaijan grows Reagan on Gorbachev worse, they say, his opponents in the President Reagan, according to one Communist Party leadership could use aide, said after he started the talks last it to slow the pace of change and December that Mr. Gorbachev looked weaken Mr. Gorbachev's position. like a man who was "scared to death." "Recent events in Armenia and The President thought, the aide said, Azerbaijan have raised questions in that Mr. Gorbachev needed a success the community here about whether this might have repercussions for the at the summit to strengthen his hand over more cautious colleagues like stability of his leadership," a State De- Yegor N. Ligachev and Viktor Chebri- partment expert said. "But until now the debate has been not over whether he's in real trouble but rather how fast he can continue to move the country where he wants it to go." Gorbachev's Americans at the .genne Acenc-yi-the State Department, goals: still the National Security Council staff, the Pentagon and various other branches reachable, of the Government have been trying to figure out just how Mr. Gorbachev is faring and what he is trying to do ever experts say. since he was named leader of the Soviet Communist Party in the spring of 1985. Americans Reach a Consensus koi, the head of the K.G.B., who have often spoken out against the dangers of At first, many in the Administration carrying perestroika and glasnost too dismissed his efforts at domestic re- far. form as illusory moves. Now most of Mr. Gates said that "many who op- them do not question whether he really pose Gorbachev's policies believe wants reform ? they wonder whether those policies to be inherently mis- file collective leadership of which he is taken and bad for the country" because a part will continue to support it, and they could destabilize domestic condi- for how long. tions so badly that the party's control The consensus within the United over the country could be seriously States Government that Mr. Gorba- threatened. chev intended far-reaching reforms, to save the Soviet system from fatal de- cline, began to emerge about the time of the summit meeting in Washington last December. Even then, the Amer- icans agreed that Mr. Gorbachev's plans were contentious, and speculated about how firm his authority was. "With the selection of Mikhall-G-orba- chev," said Robert M. ?fife-s, Deputy Director of Central Intelligence, in a speech earlier thiz_yeaLlhat was aeared by the White House and appar- ently reflects the Government consen- sus, "the Politburo signaled its recog- nition that the Soviet Union was in deep i rouble especially economically and "He'll get thrown out if his reforms so threaten the system that his col- leagues would prefer to go after him than suffer the consequences," another senior Administration official said. "But he is very familiar with what hap- pened to Khrushchev and will be cau- tious about pushing ahead too rapidly." Nikita S. Khrushchev's colleagues threw him out of power in 1964 for being "reckless." Mr. Gates said this week that it was too soon to tell whether Mr. Gorba- chev's opponents would try to use the demonstrations in Armenia against him. But one intelligence official said they would almost certainly criticize him for letting the situation get out of hand. "Any changes he makes will cause a lot of dysfunction, that's clear," a State Department official said. The last serious challenge to Mr. Gorbachev's authority was in Novem- ber, when one of his closest supporters, Boris N. Yeltsin, lost his position as the leader of the Moscow party organiza- tion. A few days ago, he was also dis- missed as a nonvoting member of the Politburo, but Mr. Gorbachev filled the vacancy with two more allies. Within the Politburo, Mr. Gates said, there seems to be general agreement that "for now, economic modernization requires a more predictable, if not be- nign, international environment." The Soviet Union appears poised to begin the withdrawal of Soviet forces from Afghanistan, if the final details on how to do it can be ironed out in negoti- ations that begin Wednesday in Gene- va. Experts here say they believe the Soviet Army and the political leader- ship decided on withdrawal because the cost of staying had simply become too high, with no prospect of easy vic- tory over the American-supplied guer- rillas. The American experts fear Mr. Gor- bachev could try to use the diplomatic leverage he would gain from withdraw- ing from Afghanistan to try to drive a wedge between the United States and its European allies. If the Soviet Union does actually be- gin pulling out of Afghanistan this spring, there will be debate within the Administration about how easy to make it for the Russians to leave, in light of the American commitment to halt aid to the Afghan rebels as soon as the withdrawal starts. "It might have been a mistake," a senior official said, "but the President has said it would be unacceptable for the resistance to be cut off if faced with an armed regime supplied by the Soviets." There is still the question whether it is in Washington's interest for Mr. Gor- bachev to succeed or fail as leader of the Soviet Union. Mr. Gates of the C.I.A. answered that question this way: "Gorbachev intends improved Soviet economic performance, greater politi- cal vitality at home, and more dynamic diplomacy to make the U.S.S.R. a more competitive and stronger adversary in the years ahead." Dealing with that situation, he said, "will be an extraordinary challenge for the United States and the Western democracies in the years ahead." Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 4 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R00030005000-1-2 ROBERT M. GATES Mr. Herbert Meyer President Storm King Press P. 0. Box 3566 Washington, D.C. 20007 Dear Herb: 15 March 1988 I finished Real-World Intelligence last night. I think it is the best, most succinct account I have read on what intelligence is all about. While best sellers on intelligence (up to now) are either fiction, historical accounts, or provide information on covert actions and/or collection techniques, virtually none talk about the purpose of intelli- gence or the intelligence process (either intellectual or institutional). As you say, "secrets can be so titillating and so distracting that spilling them often stops the serious discussion of intelligence dead in its tracks". Your discussion of intelligence, collection, analysis and, above all, marketing, addresses these issues with an insight and freshness -- and a sense of reality -- that is, I think, unique. You clearly have "ground truth". Moreover, your discussion of the dynamic of the relationship between the policy- maker (or executive) and the intelligence officer is very well done. In short, Herb, I think you have written a great little book. You have captured and expanded upon many of the points I was trying to make in my Foreign Affairs article and have done so with style. The book is a good read. It's lively and entertaining. In my article, I ?referred to the fact that often even writers who have served inside an intelligence organization never understood what it's all about. Your book plainly proves that in the few years you were here, you picked up a genuine understanding of what the business is all about -- the reality and the smell of it. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT. ROBERT M. GATES Page 2 You mentioned the possibility of my doing a review. I have given it a lot of thought, and have concluded that I should not. Any review I would do would be embarrassingly and one-sidedly positive, thereby suggesting our friendship or former professional association had clouded my critical faculties. Also, I think questions would be raised about the appropriateness of my reviewing a book on intelligence while in my present position. Nevertheless, I want you to know that I think so highly of the book that I am recommending that it be used in our training courses. I am impressed and intend to share my view with others. I don't know of any other single publication that tackles the nature, purpose, and dynamics of this business better than this little volume of yours. Congratulations! Robert M. Gates Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 r) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 DCl/DDCI Executive Staff STAT Central Intelligence Agency Washington, D.C. 20505 15 March 1988 NOTE FOR: DDCI SUBJECT: DCI's Friday Schedule The Director responded to my cable of last evening and concurs with your attendance at the SSCl/INF hearing. The DCI wondered, however, if it was necessary for him to go to the Carlucci breakfast with you and suggested that perhaps he could meet with Admiral Hayes for breakfast Friday morning and then go to the SSCI hearing with you. Apparently, however, he has no strong feelings one way or the other, and I would recommend we go with our original plan and that you attend the SSCI hearing alone. Unless you indicate otherwise, I will leave the schedule as we originally set it up. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 45 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 STAT STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300056663-2 The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington, D.C. 20505 16 March 1988 TO: Director of Personnel the letter and resume from that I called you about. I ave already mentioned it to Dick Kerr. I would think an internship either in the NIC or SOVA would be most appropriate. Keep me informed as things progress. Robert M. Gates Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Central Intelligence Agency VVashington. D. C. 20505 Mr. Arnold Beichman Research Fellow Hoover Institution Stanford, California 94305 Dear Arnold: 20 March 1988 I am sorry I had to cancel our breakfast. I had very much wanted to see you. Unfortunately, the Director was out of town and, when that happens, I am all too subject to last-minute changes of schedule to fill in for him. I am pleased that you received the 1969 Agency informal compilation of materials on "The Trust." The paper is available for release to any requestor, and therefore we have no objection to any plans the Hoover Institution might have for publishing it. I am also enclosing a copy of a thesis on the subject completed in 1985 at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey. On pp. 27-28 the author quotes from a Rand Corporation study, The Trust, yet at least one of these quotations appears to be an almost verbatim quotation from the 1969 Agency study. You may wish to sort this out with Rand. Finally, I am enclosing a speech I gave in Dallas several weeks ago. I hope you will find it of interest -- I would be interested in your reaction. Enclosures Sincerely, Robert M. Gates Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ADMINISTRATIVE - INTERNAL USE ONLY 21 March 1988 MEMORANDUM FOR: Chief, DCI Administrative Staff SUBJECT: Payment for Charges Incurred by the DDCI for Representational Purposes Payment from U.S. Government funds for representational expenses incurred by the DDCI for the purpose of conducting official business of the United States Government ic Authorized under the nolirv set forth in or the toiiowing tunctions: Date Name Organizational Affiliation 88.02.11 Robert M. Gates liorhg.rt Mouor (host) DDCI 88.02.26 (host) Robert M. Gates DDCI R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. American Spectator 0/DDCI ADMINISTRATIVE - INTERNAL USE ONLY Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 TO: V IL, LJS4#ASJ ALJ. ROUTING SLIP ACTION INFO DATE INITIAL 1 DCI 3 DDCI X 3 EXDIR 4 D/ICS 5 DDI 6 DDA 7 DDO 8 DDS&T 9A/Chm/NIC X 10 GC 11 IG 12 Compt 13 D/OCA 14 D/PAO 15 D/PERS 16 D/Ex Staff 17 NIO/EA X 18 VC/NIC X 19 SRP X 20 21 22 SUSPENSE Data Remarks STAT 62/Executive Secretary 21 Mar 88 Data _ , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 2 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Arr. ? LI ? E., ispart 1 TO: ROUTING SLIP ACTION INFO DATE INITIAL 1 DCI yDDCI X 3 EXDIR 4 D/ICS 5 DDI 6 DDA 7 DDO 8 DDS&T 9 Chm/NIC 10 GC 11 IG 12 Compt . 13 D/OCA 14 D/PAO 15 D/PERS 16 D/Ex Staff 17 18 19 20 21 22 SUSPENSE Date STAT Remarks Original mailed, 21 Mar 88. xecutive ecretary 21 Mar 88 Dote #11.?17 (10411 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved forRelease-26f2/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ucto The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington. o. C. 20505 March 21, 1988 Dr. Roy Godson Consortium for the Study of Intelligence 1730 Rhode Island Avenue, N.W., Suite 601 Washington, D.C. 20036 Dear Roy: You did a nice job of editing. I have only one minor correction -- on page 7. I look forward to seeing you for lunch on the 29th. Enclosure: Discussant Remarks Robert M. Gates Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ER 1220X/1-88 DISCUSSANT REMARKS Hon. Robert Gates To a substantial degree, the essays here, although addressed to intelligence requirements for analysis in the 19908, could also have applied to intelligence analysis in the 60s, 70s, and 80s. My comments are divided into three categories. First, the relationship between the analyst and the policymaker. Second, the analysts' background, recruitment, and training. Third, intelligence requirements. First, the analyst and the policymaker. Paul Seabury writes that "intelligence should not crave, for itself, a puristic, aloof, independence akin to academic freedom." I couldn't agree more. I recall during James Schlesinger's brief tenure as Director of Central Intelligence his complaint that the people at the CIA had forgotten they worked for the United States Government. It seems to me that support for the policymaker also means, on a fairly regular basis, telling them things they don't like to hear. In fact, unless intelligence officers are down in the trenches with the policymakers and understand the issues, know what US objectives are, how the process works, and who the people are, they cannot possibly provide either relevant or timely intelligence that will contribute to better informed decisions. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 2 I have spoken recently of a significant degree of institutional autonomy for the CIA, and Seabury's paper addresses this topic. Autonomy is positive in that intelligence analysis is not subject to the parochial views of one or another policy agent. By the same token, autonomy is negative if it somehow involves being aloof or apart from the policy process and from those who seek intelligence support. I am also very sympathetic to Eliot Cohen's concern over the concept of no-fault intelligence, that all our problems somehow derive from the failure of policymakers or failures inherent in the intelligence problems we deal with. I agree with Cohen that in the past inaccurate intelligence analysis either has contributed to faulty decisions, or has allowed policymakers to go on their way without having to deal with at least an alternative perspective. shortcomings in the past have been due to we approached the analysis itself as advice of the analysts involved. In Some of these inadequacies in the way well as the substantive recognition of this, significant changes were made in the Directorate of Intelligence in the CIA, both in its organization the early 80s. and approach to analysis in With respect to background, recruitment, and training, to which both authors devote considerable attention, let me first acknowledge Cohen's point about the large number of relatively Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 new analysts both in the CIA and in other intelligence agencies. The fact is that some, probably half the analysts in the CIA, have on the order of only five to ten years' experience. The exodus of officers from CIA's clandestine service in the second half of the 1970s has been widely commented upon. It is less well-known that at least as high a percentage of people left from the analytical side of the house as well. They did so for three reasons. First, a generation that had come into the Agency in the late 40s or early 50s came to the end of their careers. Second, during the late 1970s the government made it financially very attractive for people to retire. But, third, and equally important, many people in both directorates, operations and intelligence, simply found after the travails of the 70s that the business was no longer very much fun, and many who could have stayed longer in fact left. So new analysts had to be hired simply to replace those who departed. Additionally there was a significant growth in the size of the analytical directorate. The result of all these factors was a substantial number of relatively new analysts, with the attendant loss of experience and institutional memory. But, I perhaps reflect a certain generational difference in saying that there was a good side to this as well. Newer people came in who did not carry a lot of baggage from the past, including old fights with other intelligence agencies, who did not carry a lot of scars from old wars with policymakers, and , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 4 especially whose backgrounds were in many respects superior to those of the people they replaced in terms of area and language expertise. Now, on recruitment, Seabury speaks of the overreliance on "highly homogeneous young, inexperienced white Caucasians with top records of academic performance, coming from nice, good middle-class families." I share this concern that our recruitment brings us a heavy percentage of these people. In a 1973 article critical of our work on the Soviet Union, I noted "There is a wide cultural gap between a college-educated analyst in the West, and the Soviet leadership. The same thing might be said of Iranians, Chinese, and a variety of others." This cultural gap can be overcome in two ways: first, by looking for people with intensive foreign studies backgrounds and languages who have lived abroad, and secondly, by immersion in the culture of a country for a long period. To the extent we are unable to hire immigrants from other countries for our own employees, we should look at them for insight in our analysis of other cultures. It seems to me we have been deficient in this respect in taking advantage of both emigres and defectors. I agree with both authors that we need language skills, analysts with a great deal of history, and significantly greater cultural diversity. I further agree that the cadre not only of Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 5 US intelligence analysts but US officials generally is today considerably more parochial culturally than was the case in the 1950s. In fact, some of those who helped found the clandestine service probably couldn't get in the CIA today. Now, let me address training. The Cohen essay draws on an article entitled, "Managing/Teaching New Analysts." He cites the article as saying that "the manager's first task is akin to deprogramming--undoing habits formed in four to ten years of college-level work." Cohen suggests, "The remark about deprogramming reveals a disdain for universities." Seabury in his essay observes: "The analytical intelligence community has no other raison d'etre other than that of furnishing information, reasoned judgments and estimates on which rational action is possible. In this the intelligence community differs greatly from the ethos of the academy." It seems to me there are three areas where academic training should contribute to the formation of an intelligence analyst. The first is in making the analyst understand that brevity is critical. Second is the amassing of detail according to a clear line of analysis, and drawing clear conclusions. Third, insuring relevance and timeliness so as to enable action. But this is hardly what most graduate programs teach. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 6 I agree that training and education in the interrelation of foreign cultures is critical. Cohen cites Abram Shulsky, "that the problem of penetrating another government's workings does not resemble the challenge of unraveling 'a hidden, but ultimately knowable, process of nature.' Rather, it a 'struggle between two human intelligences, each of which is trying to outpsych the other." I concede that in the past too many intelligence managers have placed little value on the idea that peoples of other cultures have different habits of thought, different values, and different motivations. They apparently rejected the idea that somebody who presumably has an intimate knowledge of cultural difference has any particular usefulness. But that view--and that view did exist to a considerable extent--is largely a thing of the past, or least I hope it is. Citing again the article I wrote in '73 I said, "The fact remains that our perception of situations is widely divergent from the Kremlin's perception. The Soviet Union has a strange and idiosyncratic policy not to be dealt with without conscious effort." I added: "An analyst trying to understand the Soviet leaders or their approach to problems is seriously handicapped without a background in Russian history and culture, and the importance of this can hardly be overemphasized. I recommend that intelligence agencies should take steps to insure that ? future analysts have training in Russian and Soviet history and culture, that analysts without such training should be sent to Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 7 school to acquire it." In 1973, I was a fairly lonely voice arguing for this. At that time I was the only person in my unit in the DDI with an academic background in Soviet studies. My first branch chief was an expert on the Middle East and the other in Southeast Asia. Because of hiring,policies in the last decade, this situation has changed dramatically. Both essays speak of mirror-imaging. I believe it is this lack of regional expertise that contributes significantly to mirror-imaging. This problem has diminished in recent years, in part because of this change in hiring practices and in the number of people who have area expertise and experience. I accept totally Dr. Cohen's emphasis on the importance of intelligence highlighting the "otherness of the enemy." With respect to training and education of analysts in the tLi& 1A 1990s, I'd like toe( ? ..???laws w at we don ? into two categories: secrets and mysteries. Secrets are those things, to use Cohen's reference, such as the physics underlying a Soviet barrage attack, that are potentially knowable. Mysteries, again to use Cohen's point of reference, have to do with the interpretation of foreign cultures, with that struggle between two human intelligences, each trying to outpsych the other. In the latter there are often no clear-cut answers, often because the other leaders themselves do not know what they are Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 8 going to do or have not worked out their problems. And here our best contribution can be to help the policymaker understand the thought processes involved, the other guy's approach to the problem and how it is consistent with his culture, the alternatives that are open to them, and our estimate about which they are most likely to choose. We have taken a number of steps to deal with the need for varied backgrounds and languages described in both essays. In an ideal world, every analyst we hired would have specialized background knowledge and one or more foreign languages as a usable tool. In the real world of American education and people who can meet our security qualifications, those two don't necessarily coincide entirely. We can not do that well. Between 40 percent and half of all those we hire as political analysts do meet these substantive qualifications, and we try to give the others additional education so they can do as well. For example, over the years we have sent a number of people to Chinese and Russian studies programs, both for language and history. We also try to educate our analysts to deal with problems not addressed in universities. For example, we have a deception analysis course on the techniques and practices of deception, and methodology for identifying them. For two years we have been teaching a seminar on intelligence successes and failures, that uses case studies to illustrate causes of Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 9 intelligence failures and how to encourage more effective analysis. I might add it is one of our most popular courses. And we have added others as well in an effort to help improve our understanding of foreign cultures and add "ground truth" to our analyst's view. Let me close my discussion of training with several observations, beginning with Dr. Seabury's reference to Angelo Codevilla's paper several years ago discussing empiricism in our culture. It seems to me that intelligence analysis must combine an examination of empirical factors with a range of other considerations, including not only motivation, commitment and determination, but also history, logic, and motive. In those areas where our empirical evidence or intelligence is ambiguous or even absent, there is always the danger in an analysis of saying that because nobody heard or saw the tree fall, it must not have fallen. If a question arises about whether or not a foreign nation is doing something, and if the information is scanty, we must take into account the nation's past behavior, whether they had a motive for such activity, and whether that action would be a logical extension of that. I think our experience with terrorism is an example. So I think there is no question that we have to take into account "nonempirical" considerations. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 10 The analyst has to build a case regardless of the nature of the project. He has to bring together both empirical data and subjective considerations in describing events that have taken place or policies as they have been developed. Only if the analyst thus establishes a presumptive and persuasive base of argumentation--a case, if you will--can he then bring the reader along when he begins to speculate about the future. It seems to me the analyst has to persuade the policymaker that he, the analyst, knows what he's talking about, has mastered the material and understands the culture he is dealing with before he has any credibility to forecast the future. In dealing with the so-called mysteries we have to discuss the alternative ways events may develop. At the same time, the intelligence community owes the policymaker a clear-cut best estimate. We are not paid to simply provide an array of alternatives or options. The policymaker wants to have some sense of what we think will happen. We simply need to be honest with the policymaker as to the quality of our evidence and the degree of confidence we have in our judgments. Today, high priority is being attached to hiring analysts who have lived abroad, who have area expertise and foreign languages. We also are attaching high priority to developing extensive contacts with experts in the academic community and think tanks in order to have people challenge the analysts' views Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 11 and bring other information and perspectives to bear on our problems. As for problems of deception and denial, thanks in substantial measure to the efforts of Senator Wallop and Angelo Codevilla, they have become a growing part of our analyst training curriculum. These and all other changes I have been speaking about proceed at different paces, but substantial progress has been made. We have to keep the pressure on to keep these going. Finally, because both authors focus primarily on training, the need for analysts familiar with foreign, and shall we say alien, cultures, there is very little focus in either paper on substantive requirements. Let me address what they do say and make a few observations on my own. Paul Seabury focuses on the need for analysts who can see connections between widely-separated trends and events. One of the disadvantages of a regional organization for analysis is that it tends to make the interconnection of such events more difficult. It was in recognition of this that we created several organizations to try to bridge these regional patterns. We created an insurgency center, an organization to deal with subversion worldwide so we could track patterns, particularly of Soviet, Cuban, and Libyan involvement in insurgencies around the world. So we have tried to establish some connective tissues, if Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 12 you will, that will enable us to address these transregional phenomena. One of the most important assets we have in connection with this is with academics and think tanks. It is often the people in these pursuits who can give us the macro analysis that at least points us in the right direction or gives us the right questions to try to answer. I think Dr. Cohen, however, has put his finger on a larger issue with respect to requirements for the 19908. He writes: "Henceforth the United States will no longer have the luxury of concentrating its intelligence assets overwhelmingly on its chief target, the Soviet Union." He then points to a number of other problems that are certain to become significant intelligence challenges. I not only agree, I would have to say this trend began several years ago. We now have something on the order of 50 percent of the assets of the intelligence community focused on the Soviet problem. My principal worry for the 1990s is that the absence of intelligence guidance and priorities from the senior levels of the policy community will result in a continued diffusion of our efforts as we are pushed in the direction of satisfying an increasingly wide range of problems. In anticipation of the 1990s, the intelligence community itself is going to be forced to Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ? 13 reexamine its priorities and at some point inform the policy community and the Congress it can no longer carry out an open- ended program of collection and analysis on every conceivable subject of interest to the American government. Beginning with the Soviet Union, we are going to have to identify the hard-core issues where we will devote all the necessary resources to working the problem satisfactorily, knowing in advance that this choosing will withdraw an intelligence effort from areas that are peripheral to national security concerns but which have influential bureaucratic and congressional constituencies. Identifying those areas other that the Soviet Union will be a difficult and painful task. Let me close with several observations. While I am a strong supporter of the idea of specialized area training and having analysts who not only have lived in a foreign country but have studied its language and culture and are steeped in its history, I must say that often regional experts are less competent in forecasting discontinuities. It is often forgotten that the CIA's analyst on Iran in the 1970s had worked on Iran for 20 years. That, in my view, was part of the problem. While a deep understanding of a country's politics and history will help in understanding their actions and reactions the fact is that in most countries actions are part of long, continuous Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 14 chains of events. Thus those most familiar with these long, slow processes are those who will find reasons to say that the warning signs of instability have occurred before, fit into a historical pattern, and therefore can be dismissed. Maybe they are right and maybe they are not. In short, there needs to be a combination of people with area expertise and those who fly broadly, who ask hard and sometimes even simple questions. We also need to seek out those who have unorthodox views or challenge the conventional wisdom. Dr. Cohen speaks of short-term analysis rather that long- term research. This was a significant problem until a few years ago. With the drawdown in the 1970s, the CIA was forced to abandon its long-range research on Soviet defense industries and also the Third World. The mail of the day always had to be answered. One of the principal benefits of the significant new resources provided over the last eight or nine years by both the Administration and the Congress has been to allow us to establish a significant foundation for a long-term research program where the resources are protected for carrying out these projects. The analytical directorate of the CIA has been able to produce 500 to 700 new billets for this purpose. Thus, this long-standing problem has been largely brought under control. Most analysts now understand that an inability to produce longer-range research could have a deleterious effect on their careers. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 15 Finally, I would like to say that Robert Butterworth's paper on collection notes that collection and analysis are inseparable and that intelligence errs in making the division bureaucratically and in other ways between them so great. In the abstract, I endorse this but I would also say that in reality, from the management standpoint, it is difficult to avoid this division. Rather, it is important to have many bridges connecting these two intimately related subjects. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 '1 Consortium for the Study of Intelligence ER 1220X-88 SUITE 601, 1730 RHODE ISLAND AVENUE, N.W., WASHINGTON, D.C. 20036 (202) 429-0129 MEMBERS (Partial Listing) Dr. Richard Betts Brookings Institution Dr. Richard E. Bissell Executive Editor Washington Quarterly Dr. Adda B. Bozeman Professor Emeritus Sarah Lawrence College Dr. Ray S. Cline Senior Advisor Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University Dr. Stephen P. Gibed Professor of Government, and Director, National Security Studies Program, Georgetown University Dr. Samuel P. Huntington Professor of Government Harvard University Professor Myres McDougal Yale University Law School Professor John Norton Moore University of Virginia Law School Dr. Robert Nisbet American Enterprise Institute Dr. Robert L Pfaltzgraff, Jr. Professor of International Politics, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy Dr. Richard E. Pipes Professor of History Harvard University Dr. Paul Seabury Professor of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley Dr. Richard F. Staar Senior Fellow Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace Dr. Allen Weinstein Professor of History Boston University Dr. James CI. Wilson Professor of Government Harvard University Dr. Roy Godson Associate Professor of Government, Georgetown University (Coordinator) March 15, 1988 Honorable Robert Gates Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington, D.C. 20505 Dear Bob, Please find enclosed a slightly edited version of your discussant remarks at our last Consortium meeting. I should be grateful if you could review the text and make any necessary changes in the next couple of weeks. The volume in now scheduled to be published by Lexington Books (D.C. Heath) in November. ---- Many thanks for you attention and cooperation. S irqere1y, Enclosure son A ponirri- MATICIMAI CTIJATcr.V mirclohAATICNKI CVMTFP Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington. D. C.20505 March 21, 1988 Admiral B. R. Inman, USN (Ret.) Westmark Systems, Inc. 301 Congress Avenue, Suite 2000 Austin, Texas 78701 Dear Bob: Thanks again, for breakfast last Saturday; I am glad that we have been able to get together a little more frequently in. recent months. It's always good to see you and talk. . I received the invitation to Austin today and have accepted. I enclose my speech on "What Is Going On In The Soviet Union". I would be interested in any reaction. If you think it appropriate, I would probably give an updated version of this in Austin -- or would you prefer that I talk about something else? Best to Nancy. Robert M. Gates Enclosure: As Stated Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 .z_ Central intelligaice.Ageng - Declassified in Part-Sanitized CopyApproved forRelease2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 A Mr. Lawrence F. Guillemette, Jr. Conference Director , Congressional Youth Leadership Council 1511 K Street, N.W., Suite 842 Washington, D.C. 20005 Dear Mr. Guillemette: ? I accept with pleasure your invitation to address the National Young .' Leaders Conference on Friday, 25 March at the National. Press Club. I look forward to the opportunity of meeting with you and speaking with these- outstanding high school students. Best wishes. TAT I/PAO/WM 1 Distribution: , Orig. - Addressee STAT 1 - ER ISTAT 1 - D/Fx Ctaf, ,0 I /-k I 1 ?? :--- 1 - D/PAO i , 1 - PAO Registry 1 - PAO Ames 1 - PAO Chrono 1 - MED(Subject) Sincerely, Robert M. Catei Robert M. Gates - Deputy Director of Central Intelligence nna-Inecifiari in Part - Sanitized Coov Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ADMINISTRATIVE INTERNAL USE ONLY PAO 38-0090 3 March 1988 RE: Speaking Invitation National Young Leaders Conference Congressional Youth Leadership Council National Press Club Washington, D.C. 25 March or 29 March 1988 Director of the National Young Leaders Conference, Larry Guillemette, has invited you to speak at the Conference sponsored by the Congressional Youth Leadership Council on Friday, 25 March or Tuesday, 29 March at the National Press Club. The suggested format is 10 minutes of remarks followed by 40 minutes of questions and answers. You are asked to speak on how the Agency fits within the Executive Branch or any other topic of your choice. The audience would include 350 outstanding high school students from throughout the US. The meeting is not open to the media. The Council is expecting Secretary of Energy John Herrington, Secretary of Interior Donald Hodel, and Secretary of HUD Samuel Pierce to speak at the Conference session covering the Executive Branch. (See opposite for background material.) Since this is a high school audience, and we normally reserve our student briefings for the college level, I recommend that you decline this invitation. If you agree, a letter of regret is attached for your signature. STAT STAT OCl/PAO/WMB Distribution: STAT Orig. - Addressee 1 - ER STAT 1 - E STAT I - 1 - /PAO 1 - PAO Registry 1 - PAO Ames 1 - PAO Chrono 1 - MED(Subject) Bill Baker ADMINISTRATIVE INTERNAL USE ONLY Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 EA\ 00 CONGRESSIONAL - LEADERSHIP p I YOUTH - COUNCIL - January 20, 1988 The Honorable Robert M. Gates Director C.I.A. The White House Washington,D.C. 20500 Dear Mr.Gates: ? This spring the Congressional Youth Leadership Council will once again sponsor the National Young Leaders Conference. _ During a five week period, over 1,600 outstanding high school students will come to our nation's capital for an intensive educational program. This group represents the best and brightest of today's youth - tomorrow's leaders. The enclosed information will serve to illustrate the scope and content of our program. The National Young Leaders Conference provides a unique opportunity for the students to gain an insider's view of government by interacting with those individuals who shape public policy. I know you share our concern for educating youth for responsible citizenship and join us in promoting active involvement in the democratic process. We are a non- profit, non-partisan organization which encourages our students to consider all viewpoints as they endeavor to come to an understanding of current issues facing our nation. We certainly hope you can assist us by contributing to the balance of our program and will honor us by accepting our invitation to address the_young leaders of tomorrow .during _ one of the Conference weeks this spring. It is our philosophy that we can be of no greater service to our country than by instilling an appreciation of our American heritage and democratic institutions in the "successor generation." It is Our hope that your calendar can accommodate this request and we trust that you will respond favorably. For your convenience I have enclosed an RSVP memorandum. If you have any questions or 'need any additional information, please contact Rick McDonald at (202) 638-0008. Thank you for your time and consideration. Sincerely, (loutuf ithwalm Lawrence F. Guillemette, Jr. Conference Director Enclosures 1511 K Street, N.W., Suite 842 Washington, D.C. 20005 (202) 638-0008 npriaccifiari in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 .,, ? --' TO: CONGRESSIONAL YOUTH LEADERSHIP COUNCIL NATIONAL YOUNG LEADERS CONFERENCE 'REpLY-MEMORANDUM_ Lawrence F. Guillemette, Jr. Conference Director The Congressional Youth Leadership Council 1511 K Street, N.W., Suite 842 Washington, D.C. 20005 FROM: The Honorable Robert M. Gates Director C.I.A. The White House Washington,D.C. 20500 YES, I accept your invitation to be a speaker at the National Young Leaders Conference. (Approximately 375 scholars attend each session.) I would prefer to participate on the following date(s): [ I Friday, February 26, 1988 [ ] Friday, March 4, 1988 [ ] Wednesday, March 16, 1988 [ ] Friday, March 25, 1988 ) Tuesday, March 29, 1988 STAFF CONTACT: PHONE: If you have any questions or need any additional information, please call Rick McDonald at (202) 638-0008. [ ] No, I cannot participate. COMMENTS: Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT STAT Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved forRelease2012/08/03 CIA-RDP89G00720R0003000500-61-2 Central Intelligence Agency Washington. C 20505 DCl/NIC Dear Gwen: 21 March 1988 Thank you for your participation in the Secretarial/Clerical Management Advisory Group over the past year and a half and particularly for your willingness to take on the extreme demands of serving as chairman. Your initiative and dedication lifted the MAG out of the doldrums and gave the group the cohesion and sense of purpose it needed. The time you gave to the MAG after hours and weekends resulted in the successful running of the Third Annual Secretary of the Year Awards and the extensive MAG input to the implementation of the IS pay system and training program. The Director and I hope you will remember your time on the MAG as having been an opportunity to learn about the Agency as well as to contribute. The group's comments on secretarial and clerical issues are helpful to senior Agency officials and clearly played a role in our recognition that the secretarial profession should be enhanced with new opportunities and a new pay scale. The awards program in particular proves that MAGs can make a difference in providing fresh ideas to Agency management. I encourage you to support the new MAG members and to continue your interest in making the Agency a better place for all employees. CC: Robert . Gates Deputy Director of Central Intelligence C/DCI Admin 0/Personnel On- neclassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 / Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved forRelease2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 -36 STAT STAT STAT NOTE TO: Stan, The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence WAling(nDUCNB ER 1257 88 23 March 1988 Director, Office of Training and Education On 22 March, I had the opportunity to visit and meet with mid-level officers from the offices of Personnel, General Counsel, and Medical Services. At OGC, several officers noted their lack of knowledge of the CIA as an institution -- its , various offices, structure, associated jargon, and traditions. One officer noted that recent CT graduates, with about the same amount of time on board, seem to have a better understanding of the Agency than OGC lawyers have. The officer attributed this to the absence of an appropriate orientation course for their office. I would like you to investigate the possibility of offering a training course which would provide an introduction to the CIA for career specialists such as OGC and OMS staffers, and possibly DDS&T engineers. I think an appropriate orientation for this group of officers could be accomplished in a two or three week course given once or twice a year. Robert M. Gates Orig D/OTE E1_-- DDCT: 1 -- ER Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 r 4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT 23 March 1988 NOTE TO: DDCI FROM: Alan Bob: I talked to Stan this morning to run by him informally your thoughts on a training orientation course for specialists. He noted that there is a requirement that every new officer in the CIA take the course, "Introduction to the CIA". Currently, the course runs for 4 to 5 days and is offered once a month. Stan noted that the course would be given before an officer went to work at his assigned office, and in most cases, was given within the first or second week on board. Stan and most of his staff believed that running the course in the first or second week was too soon. Consequently, three months ago they started a system whereby new hires are assigned dates for the course sometime within their first year on board. Since it is a new system, there is little feedback from the participants to measure the effectiveness of the new system. I told Stan that it was my sense that what you had in mind was more like an abbreviated mid-career course in substance for a selected group of officers -- specialists who were a bit older, hired at a a higher grade, but who still lacked exposure to the Agency. Stan indicated that he would look into it after he received your note. CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 NOTE TO: FROM: Chief, DCI Security Staff 0/DDCI 24 March 1988 The Security Protection Officers assigned to the DCl/DDCI suite have a most difficult job. They must be a "jack of all trades" and be able to accomplish their tasks quietly and quickly. It is a job where each day truly ls a nPw clay full of 25X1 ever changing requirements and challenges. did an extraordinary job of accomplishing what needed to be done day after day and met the challenge of rapidly changing requirements -- sometimes literally moment to moment -- without hesitation. He is a person who can think on his feet. We are sorry to see Mike move on but wish him the best and want to thank him for a job well done. 25X1 25X1 CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 . Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050-001-2 STAT STAT The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington. D. C. 20505 March 25, 1988 Mr. Angelo M. Codevilla Hoover Institution Stanford, California 94305-6010 Dear Angelo: ICS 7041 88 I am w ollowup to my letter to you of 10 February. has reported back to me on his discussions wit senior Intelligence Community managers about feasibility, accesses, and alternatives. Without beating around the bush, there was agreement in the Community that the topic of your proposed study fits into a category "too sensitive to be done fully with complete access by anyone outside of government." More specifically, the proposed study would involve access and clearances substantially beyond those you had when you worked for the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. At the same time, there is a major effort about to begin within the Department of Defense on a subject very closely related to your proposal. The idea of a classified outside examination or design of a different 1990s from that which would otherwise be the case for US intelligence seemed interesting to me, and I regret we cannot go forward. Even so, I appreciate the spirit and initiative behind your proposal and hope that you will continue to send along ideas, articles and, when you think appropriate, proposals. Give me a call the next time you plan to be in Washington. Maybe we could catch up over a sandwich. Robert M. Gates Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 2 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 r rn 73 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 The Deputy Ditrctor of Central Intclligence Washington. D C.20505 STAT February 10, 1988 Mr. Angelo M. Codevilla Hoover Institution Stanford, California 94305-6010 Dear Angelo: Many thanks for your letter of January 22 following u on my meetings with both you and Bill Harris. I have asked STAT (who you may know is now Deputy Director of the STAT Intelligence Community Staff for Requirements) to discuss the proposal with selected senior Community managers in terms of feasibility, access and alternatives. I have asked l Ito get STAT back to me by the end of February. Either I or will be STAT back in touch with you as soon as possible after at. Robert M. Gates Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 HOOVER INSTITUTION ON WAR, REVOLUTION AND PEACE Stantini, California 94_3o5-ooio Mr. Robert M. Gates Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Central Intelligence Agency Langley, Virginia 23665 Dear Bob: January 22, 1988 As you know, the technical systems for intelligence collection that the United States possesses today, and that it will possess ten years hence (unless budgets change substantially) were conceived in the mid-1970s on the basis of certain assumptions about the world. Among these were peace between the U.S. and the Soviet Union, compliance with certain kids of arms control agreements, and a host of details about Soviet weapons systems. But in recent years many have realized that the nature of the Soviet target is not what was assumed in the 1970s. Moreover, it should be no surprise that peacetime intelligence collectors would not be particularly useful in time of war. We propose to study how the intelligence community might modify current intelligence systems (including ground based components), and/or modify how they are used, in order to maximize their usefulness against the Soviet target that will exist five to ten years from now, and above all to maximize their usefulness in time of war. We also propose to study haw the intelligence community's (including some D.O.D. elements) plans for procurement and R&D would have to change in the next two to three years in order to provide for better mix of peacetime and wartime capabilities about the mid 1990s. We would provide a framework for deciding on a mix of collection assets. MoLeover, we wish to consider alternative strategies for procurement that may increase the availability and utility of intelligence in wartime, even under budgetary constraints. We propose to do this as consultants to you. Bill would take leave-of-absence from RAND. We propose also to obtain the help of the following people: Peter Stan, RAND Corporation; Roland Herbst, R&D Associates; retired from Lockheed and consultant to C.I.A.; and possibly others as mutually agreeable. We expect this initial task to take about eight months from completion of clearences, and approximately 250 man-days. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ? We would require access to collection programs across the community, at a level at least equal to that which Bill and I have had in the past. Needless to say, the study would be for the Director and yourself. Sincerely, , Ange o M. Codevilla William R. Harris Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Next 12 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release ? 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 TO: EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAT ROUTING SLIP ACTION INFO DATE INITIAL DCI DDCI X 3 EXDIR X 4 D/ICS . X 5 DDI x 6 DDA X 7 DDO X 8 DDS&T X 9 Chm/NIC 10 GC 11 IG 12 Compt 13 D/OCA 14 D/PAO 15 D/PERS 16 D/Ex Staff 17 D/FMSEO X 18 19 20 21 22 --. SUSPENSE Date Remarks STAT Executige Secretary 28 Mar 88 Date Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 4 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 SECRET Draft 18 March 88 REFERENCE: I March 88 letter to DCI from SSCI Hearing on 29 March Attachment: item (4) Establishment of a security standards and auditing capability under the DCI The President, accepted the recommendation that Secretary Shultz and I made to establish an independent unit responsible for setting standards to protect embassies from penetration by foreign intelligence activity and for monitoring conformance. This unit will be responsible to the DCI, enabling him to prepare an annual report to the President and the Congress on the status of security at US foreign missions. This organization, tentatively designated the Foreign Mission Security Office, will be an independent office of the DCI. I have appointed as the Director and have asked the Department to nominate a senior Foreign Service Officer as his deputy. The office will build toward a strength of people, capable of establishing a program of aggressive, objective audits of our overseas missions. We will establish two advisory groups in connection with this new 4 office. One will be a working-level group, chaired by the Director, Foreign Mission Security Office, to facilitate communication and resolution of issues with the Director of Diplomatic Security and other elements of the Intelligence Community. The second group will be a high-level board, 25X1 25X1 npriaccifiari in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 SECRET including the Secretary of State, chaired by the DCI and meeting as reauired. I envision this high-level group as the forum where the Secretary of State and the DCI will discuss recommendations of the Foreign Mission . Security Office. If there is disagreement, either of us can appeal to the President. 2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 SECRET Q. What will the auditing unit, the Foreign Mission Security Office, do? A. This independent office will: IMP ??110 analyze the vulnerabilities of our foreign missions and the hostile intelligence threat to them 1MA. set security standards to protect our missions against foreign intelligence activity - monitor conformance with those standards, and - report problems and recommendations to the DCI. Q. How independent is this Foreign Mission Security Office? A. Very independent. It . . . Ol? .10 reports to me; is set up as an independent office, similar to my National Intelligence Council; is not a part of State or its Bureau of Diplomatic Security. Q. How closely will it be associated with the working levels of State? And, the working levels of the Intelligence Community? A. The Foreign Mission Security Office will have close ties to the Department, and the Intelligence Community. The Director of the Foreign Mission Security Office will establish and chair a working group to facilitate commnications with the Director of Diplomatic Security and comparable levels in the Intelligence Community who have common security concerns and can help with solutions. We expect most problems to be solved and improvements to be made at this level. Q. What if problems of security in an embassy are not solved at that level? A. The DCI will chair a high-level group consisting of the Secretary of State and other appropriate people to resolve such difficulties. Q. What if the DCI and the Secretary of State continue to disagree on a problem, or a solution? A. The DCI is obligated to take the issue to the President. 1 SECRET n.rincQifipri in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 SECRET Q. How will Congress, the oversight committees at least, be informed? A. The DCI has been directed to prepare an annual report to the President and the Congress on the status of security at US missions. Q. Will the Foreign Mission Security Office have any State people in it? A. Yes, the Deputy Director will be a State officer and we hope that some of the working level people will be selected from State. Q. Will any other Intelligence Community people be in the Foreign Mission Security Office? A. Yes, we would expect people to be selected for assignment based on the FMSO needs arid skills available. We probably will find NSA, CIA, DoD, and the FBI in the Foreign Mission Security Office as well. 2 SECRET npclassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved forRelease2012/08/03 CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 :SECRET Questions Posed by John Elliff of SSCI Staff Q. Will the FMSO combine positive collection experts and defensive experts in its organization? A. Yes. We will include people with those skills and experience in the staffing complement. Q. Will FMSO provide guidance to security R&D projects? A. Yes. The FMSO will set standards in all aspects of personnel, physical and technical security concerns; therefore it will be important to ensure that R&D projects are appropriately designed. Q. Will the FMSO produce all-source threat and vulnerability assessments worldwide? A. Yes, the FMSO will have an intelligence analysis function for determining threats and vulnerabilities. The FMSO will draw upon the full resources of the Intelligence Community to perform this function. Q. Will FMSO establish liaison with foreign governments to obtain information on threat and vulnerability of US facilities? A. The Director of FMSO will obtain foreign government information through the established liaison channels such as are maintained by the FBI, NSA, and CIA. Q. Will FMSO conduct tiger-team operations that are entirely black to test security at foreign missions? Will FMSO have specialized personnel assigned to conduct such tiger team operations? A. The FMSO has a clear responsibility to monitor State Department conformance to security standards. It will monitor conformance through appropriate inspection techniques and report audits. Some activities may not be fully visible to members of a particular embassy, if that is what you mean by "black," but we do noteticipate any need to surprise the Director of Diplomatic Security. . Q. How will FMSO be funded? -- separately from other Intelligence Community organizations or, for example, funded like the DCI Special Program? A. We will fund it in whatever way seems to be appropriate, in consultation with OMB and the Committees. Initially, we probably will fund from the NFIP but we can advise you of changes if we make them. We will have FMSO in the FY90 submission. SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 SECRET . How will people be initially assigned to FMSO and from where will they be drawn? A. We will draw people from throughout the Intelligence Communify where we find the appropriate skills and experience. I expect these to be reimbursable detail assignments. g. State Department has established security standards. ,, Under those standards certain small missions must be closed. In those small missions where intelligence collection is important, ?What is the DCI's position on the closing of these small missions? A. The Director, FMSO will evaluate the threats and vulnerabilities of these missions and make recommendations on improving security or changes in operating procedures. We will consider cost vs. gain in these circumstances carefully; I can't be more specific at this time. 4 SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 125X1 25X1 ICS 0785-88 25 February 1988 MEMORANOtiM FOR: Members of FMS0 Working Group FROM: Acting Director, Community Counterintelligence and Security Countermeasures Office, Intelligence Community Staff SIEJECT: Foreign Missions Security Office Charter 1. In an interagency meeting held on 9 February 1988 unaer auspices of the National 'Security Planning Group (NSPG), the Foreign Missions Security Office (FM50) organization WdS discussed. Without recounting elements of discussion here, it is significant to this memorandum to note that the Chairman, MPG, directed that a charier for FMS0 be drafted for consideration by the MPG. The Chairman set a 30-day deadline for completion of the charter 25X1 draft. 25X1 25X1 25X1 7. A first draft has been prepared and is attached. It is requested ihat addressees review the draft and provide comments to this office not later than 4 March 198g. Brief comments may he offered via telephone to myself or my Art inn tifficer for this matter. My numbers are secure. Please be prepared for a meeting dUring the Week OT / marcn to rclifew the proposed final revision of the draft charter. Downgrade to CONFIDFNTIA1 When 25X1 Peztoved Frog. Classified Attachment 25X1 SECRET Thomas F. Burns, Jr. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved forRelease2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 $ ? SECRET DRAFT FOREIGN MISSIONS SECURITY OFFICE (FMSO) --CHARTER-- I. MISSION: The Foreign Missions Seturity Office (FMSO) will provide Irltelligence Community (IC) guidance and support to the Diplomatic Security Program of the Department of State. Its mission will be to insure that U.S. diplomatic missions abroad meet minimum acceptable standards for the handling and storage of classified information and for the conduct of classified activities. 7. AUTHORITIES: The development and implementation of security programs at our diplomatic missions abroad remains the responsibility of the Secretary of state. The DCI is given new responsibilities to insure that acceptable minimuw standards fur security of those missions are establisheu; and for certifying compliance with the established standards. The UCI's executive agent for carrying out these responsibilities will be FMSO. 3. The Director of FMSD will be named by the DCI from within the Intelligence Community. FMSO will be subordinate to the DCI and will be independent of the organization of the Department of State. The Secretary of Stale will roominate a candidate from within the Department of State tn serve as Deputy Director of FMSO. 4. The Director of FMSO will establish an advisory group, with membership Consisting of the Director of Diplomatic Security and equivalent-level persomel from the other agencies involved. This group will seek to insure that a constructive balance is maintained between the activities of FMSO and the ueetls and prugralbs of the Deportment of State and the other tenants of diplomatic missions abroad. It will provide advice and guidance to the Director of FMSO and seek to resolve problems and issues as they arise. S. A high-level board, with membership including the DCI and the Secretary of State, will also be estanlished. This board will meet once each ooarter or on call. The board will have the authority to recommend to the Secretary of State that he rescind the authority of a particular facility to receive, retain, or perform classified functions in the event Of serious security problems. In the event of disagreement, an appeal can be made to the President. The board will also provide direction on other issues, as appropriate. SECRET Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000mnnnnni_9 25X1I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ? SECRET 6. FUNCTIONS: FMSO will carry out the following functions: a. Setting of Minimum Security Standaras: FMSO will establish minimum physical, technical, and personnel security standards for the haadlina and storage of classified information and for the conduct of classified activities at U.S., diplomatic missions abroad. These standards will include those applicable to the construction or renovation of diplomatic missions aboard. FMSO will develop criteria for security stanaaras, relying heavily on threat and vulnerability information. It will review existing standards in liqht of the criteria established and develop new standards, as appropriate. Standards may vary at different locations according to threat levels or other factors affecting security. Standards will be coordinated with State Diplomatic Security and the tenant agencies, and issued under the authority of the DCI. An appeals process will be provided through senior advisory panels. b. Inspection of Diplomatic Missions Abroau: Primary responsibility for reporting the security conditions At missinns abroad remains with the Department of State. Reporting from tenant agencies will continue to supplement this.reporting. FMSO will maintain inspection units to provide an independent check-and-balance on security reporting by State and other residents of U.S. diplomatic missions abroad. FMSO may apply skills resident within the Intelligence Community to conduct these or other special inspections. FMSO will conduct scheduled inspections of selected missions and will also conduct inspections in response to a special security situation or a particular threat or vulnerability. Inspection may also be requested by State dr other tenant agencies. It will shape its inspection teams according to the particular need and may draw upon intelligence sources and methods in conducting its inspection. Team members with special skills may be drawn for temporary duty from within the Intelligence Community. c. Audit and Certification: FMSO will audit all missions abroad for compliance with security policies and minimum standards, on a regular basis. Auditors will review, compile, and assess reporting by State, tenant agencies, and FMSO inspection teams; and assess compliance with specific policies and standards. Although primarily a desk function, auditors may travel to the field in some situations. FM50 will develop schedules for audits. Frequency of auoits will be based on threat and vulnerability information or other factors affecting security. Schedules for audits will be published will in advance to insure that the necessary information is available. Special audits may also be undertaken in response to a particular need. SECRET Declassified in Part- Sanitized CopyApprovedforRelease2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 SECRET Certification is based upon the results'of an audit. Three results can be expected; Certification of compliance, conditional-certification, or non-certification. Conditional:certification allows continuance of classified activities, at a level determined by FMSO, while deficiencies are being corrected; a timetable for correction is specified. Non-certification requires cessation of classified activities until specific deficiencies are corrected. FASO will produce an annual report for the DCI reflecting the status of security at U.S. diplomatic facilities. This report will be forwarded to the President and to Congress along with any recommendations necessary to achieve enhanced security at such facilities. d. Intelligence Support: FMSO will provide intelligence support to Diplomatic S'ecurity and in support of its own activities. The FMSO intelligence support unlit will conduct liaison with the Intelligence Community regarding the hostile intelligence threat to diplomatic missions abroad. This unit will reouest and coordinate specific studies of vulnerability. Its objectives will be to assist in the formulation of policies and !.tanddrds; to determine the appropriate level at security response at each mission; to provide support in audit and certification; ano, to provide other support, as required, such as in the direction of RDT&E programs. It will have a special responsibility in providing close intelligence support to FMSO inspection teams. It will also issue collection requirements to fill gaps in specific knowledge concerning the threat. While the FMSO unit will have a small analytical staff, it will draw primarily on work conducted elsewhere in the Intelligence Community. e. Other Services of Common Concern: FMSO.will provide other services of common concern, as appropriate. Coordination of RDT&E efforts to support the various security activities, and liaison with other elements of the Intelligence Community arc likely. 7. ADMINISTRATION AND SUPPORT: a. Program and Budget: Resources to support FMSO will be programmed as a line item in the National Foreign Intelligence Program. All positions and funding necessary to carry out the rmso mission will be included. h. Manning: FMSO.staff personnel will be drawn from across the Intelligence Community. Full-time staff personnel will serve rotational tours, usually a minimum of two years in duration. Positions will be provided by FMSO and assignees will be detailed on a reimbursable basis. c. Support: FMSO will hdve on integral staff to provide and coordinate support for its operations. It will draw upon the established: SECRET 1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 SECRET support capabilities of State, CIA, and others, as appropriate. It will likely be necessary to augment the resources in these programs to support. FMSO reauirements. d. Security: All personnel assigned on a full-time basis to FMSO will meet minimum personnel security standards, as established.by the DCI. Part-time assignees who will have access to sensitive information must also meet these clearance,requirements. S. ACTION PLAN: It is estimated that three years will be required to bring MO to full operational capability. The primary pacing factor will be the:availability of skilled personnel. FMSO development should not unnecessarily jeopardize the capabilities of departmental security programs. Ilevelopoent. of FMSO should occur in three general phases: a. Phase I: Phase I. is the initial building phase. It will require a major p(-57-TWef the first year following FMSO's establishment. Detailed organizational planning ana development will begin after the appointvent of a. Director of FMSO and a. core.staff. Early recruiting willi focus on personnel to review and prepare minimum, security standards in the oast critical areas. A nucleus of personnel will be estaulished in each of the other.functional components of FMSO.: b. Phase II: Phase II is the initial operating phase, beginning during FM767T?S-Jand year. Limited inspections will be. conducted, the intelligence unit will begin initial operations, and a few high priority. audits and certifications will be undertaken'. c. Phase III; Full- operational capabilities will be attained during FMSO's third year. SECPET. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 2 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 WtOto"*'" L Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington, D.C. 20505 28 March 1988 TO: Ted Price Director of Personnel Let me explain the attached employment application. First -- the DDCI has no special interest in this case. The connection is with is Admiral Inman's personal assistant. alled me a few weeks ago telling me a ou this applicant. He wanted to be sure somebody really took a look at her and her resume wasn't just left in the stack of thousands that come in. I suggested that she send it to my attention and my only promise was that I would send it along to the appropriate people. Thanks, 0/DDCI Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 4 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 I ROUTING SLIP TO: ? ACTION INFO DATE INITIAL 1 DCI 2 DDCI X 3 EXDIR 4 D/ICS 5 DDI X 6 DDA 7 DDO x 8 DDS&T 9 Chm/NIC 10 GC 11 IG ? 12 Compt 13 D/OCA 14 D/PAO 15 D/PERS 16 D/Ex Staff 17 18 19 20 21 22 SUSPENSE Date Remarks STAT 3637 (1041) Execbtive Secretary 7R Mar RR Date Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 R Next 4 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 --- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ER 1309 88 - 30 March 1988 MEMORANDUM FOR: Director, Office of Training and Education FROM: Deputy Director of Central Intelligence SUBJECT: Attached Book 1. Herb Meyer has written the attached book on intelligence -- what it's all about and how it's done. He states up front that he has no intension of spilling any secrets or providing any particular detail on how US intelligence or CIA does their work. What he does describe in the book is what intelligence is (the organization of information), the mechanisms by which this information is assembled and provided to users (whether in government or business), and on the relationship between producers and users 25X1 of intelligence. 2. I think it's as fine and succinct an overview of this business and how it's done as I have ever seen. I think that for people coming into this Agency, in all parts of our work, this would be as good an introduction as I can imagine to help them understand why we are here in the first place. It's freshly written and only takes about an hour and a half to read. I think that it should be used widely in our introductory and CT courses. (I understand that it is being used or is going to be used at the Defense Intelli ence 25X1 College.) Read it and let me have your reaction. 25X1 25X1 25X1 Roberi Gates Attachment: Real World Intelligence by Herbert E. Meyer cc: DDI, w/att (DD/R&E/ICS), w/att tro.ci wro-atTE7 ER w/o att CONFIDENTIAL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ? ? ,:i14041Ark ,7 ? . ? e; t 4 HEAL?111111111. INTELLIGENCE HERBERT E. MEYER Organized Information for Executives Intelligence isn't spying. It's the hot new management tool for competing?and winning? in today's business world. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT , Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050661-2 z The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington. D. C. 20505 March 31, 1988 Dear Dr. McFrazier: I had the pleasure this week of spending some time with two of your students, Jason Newell and Mark Roeder, who are involved in the oral history program at Topeka West. I want to tell you how deeply impressed I and others in Washington were with these two fine young men. We do not get too many uplifting experiences in this city, especially in my line of work. However, spending some time with these two smart, well informed, responsible and mature high school seniors was both inspiring and a real treat. All who met Jason and Mark agreed that, based on what we saw of them, the future of the country is in good hands. I want to commend Topeka West and Mike Printz for an immensely ambitious and creative history program. It is testimony to the confidence of the community in these high school seniors, as well as the maturity of the students themselves, that you are willing to send them to distant cities to carry out these projects and to do so with obvious trust in how they will conduct themselves. Your trust and confidence in them is admirable and clearly well founded. As a native Kansan, I can only applaud you, Topeka West and the Topeka community for sending such extraordinary ambassadors around our country. Jason and Mark made an enormously favorable impression on everyone they encountered. Their parents must be quite proud of them. And I am reassured. STATTICl/RMGates/de DISTRIBUTION: w incoming 1 - Addressee 1 - D/PAO 1 - ER 1 -(DDCI-Chrobo--1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington. D. C.20505 March 31, 1988 Dear Mark: I want to thank you for coming to Washington and including me in your program. I certainly enjoyed the time I spent talking with you and Jason, both on camera and at dinner. All those with whom you came in contact here in Washington were deeply impressed with your character and intelligence. The program in which you are participating is a remarkable one and I know an honor and pleasure for you. By the same token, you will never know what a positive and reassuring experience it was for us here to get to meet you. It is hard to imagine better ambassadors than you and Jason for Kansas and for your generation. Your parents should be very proud. Best wishes for a very successful future. STAT STAT DDCl/RMGates/de DISTRIBUTION: 1 ? Addressee 1 ? D/PAO 1 ? ER 1 ? DDCI Chrono incoming) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT The Deputy Director of Central Intelligence VVash ington. D C.20505 March 31, 1988 Dear Jason: I want to tell you how much I enjoyed the opportunity meet and spend some time with you. I am flattered that I to was chosen to participate in your program. You certainly made a very positive impression on me and everyone you encountered here in Washington. Your evident intelligence and character had a profound impact and, frankly, were immensely reassuring and inspiring to all of us. It is hard to imagine better ambassadors than you and Mark for Kansas or for your generation. Your parents should be very proud. Best of luck in what I expect will be a very successful future. Sincerely, Sl-fokT DDCl/RMGates/de, DISTRIBUTION: (w/ incoming) 1 - Addressee 1 - D/PAO 1 - ER 1 - DDCI Chrono Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ce Washington, D.C. 20505 A /1 22 February 1988 (1230) Bob -- The attached arrived almost at the same moment that I received a call from OCA. The message was from Senator Dole's Topeka Kansas office requesting an interview with you. STAT 'STAT It seems a group of students is ready to jump on a plane and come see you at a moment's notice. I suggested OCA not return the call as yet since you will be in tomorrow. In the meantime I will get a reading from Public Affairs. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 : CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 STAT TO: STAT March 31, 1988 Chief, DCI Admin Staff The DDCI was asked to participate (be interviewed and provide names of friends and family to be interviewed) in the Topeka (Kansas) West High School oral history program. This program honors native Kansans who have gone on to distinguish themselves in their respective fields. The history will become property of the Kansas State Historical Society. In order to facilitate this project the DDCI hosted dinner for the students conducting the interviews (Jason Newell and Mark Roeder) on 29 March at The Tivoli Restaurant (receipt attached). The DDCI was given an advance of $150. The DDCI invited his daughter (Eleanor Gates) to attend dinner bringing the total dinner bill to $130. The Deputy Director wishes to cover the cost of his daughter's dinner therefore the cost of dinner (for expense purposes) is $105 and the remaining $45 is returned. 1700 N. MOORE ST. ROSSLYN, VA 22209 (703) 524-8900 0/DDCI CHECK 40 02 278 DATE AM^, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 ? 3TAT STAT STAT Date . ? ROUTING AND TRANSMITTAL SLIP 23 Feb 1988 syrnb? room number. InItials 1 Date D/PAO 0 . . 2. DDCI , - S.. ? . . . , Action 0File Note and Return Approval For Clearance Per Conversation As Requested For Correction' ? ? Prepare Relty Circulate For Your Information. See Me. Comment ? Investigate sit/nature ? ? Coordination ? Justi DO NOT use this form as a RECORD of approvals, concurrences. disposals, ' clearances, and similar actions ? ' FROM: (Name, org. symbol. Agency/Post) ?PAO Room No.?Bldg. 7D00 Kos 5061-102. 1983 0 381-529 (232) Phone No. ? , 27676 OPTIONAL FOrun 4,1 (Rev. 7-76) O PrestAwicriu701- 11.206 - Milt (41 npriaccifipri in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03 CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 .rx.r-t - February 19, 1988 The Honorable Robert M. Gates Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Washington, D. C. 20505 Dear Mr. Gates: During the Bicentennial, Topeka (Kansas) West High School Library Media Specialist Michael Printz`?diped an orat-hiaory program to honor native Kansans who have gone on to distinguish st1ye-m?ge.176-?1:n their respective fields. A few of the one hundred twenty-six (126) past Oral Histories include projects on Dwight D. Eisenhower, Alf Landon, Senators Nancy Landon Kassembaum and Bob Dole, astronaut Steve Hawley, actors Gordon Jump and Ed Asner, Pulitzer Prizewinning poet Gwendolyn Brooks, and Amelia Earhart. Completed Oral Histories become the property of the Kansas State Historical Society, where they are made a permanent part of the Society's research and educational materials. Scholars and.writers from across the country travel to Kansas to use the over two thousand seven hundred-seventy (2,770) hours of audio and video recorded interviews that the two hundred one (201) students who have worked with the Oral History Program have accumulated in the past twelve years. For example, since the project on Amelia Earhart was completed in 1978 over two thousand two hundred-twenty (2,220) writers have come to the Kansas State Historical Society to use the materials prepared by the students that produced her oral history. The students that work on each project also present their finished product to various civic, service, and political organizations throughout the state. Obviously, a first rate oral history requires extensive travel, time, and money to interview and research the subject of the documentary and those that have influenced his life. All expenses are covered by funds raised by the students through community contributions from the people of Kansas. We are extremely excited this year to have been selected to complete a documentary on the life and accomplishments of Robert M. Gates. Our project will involve extensive research into your life in Wichita and the years since TOPEKA WEST HIGH SCHOOL, 2001 FAIRLAWN RD. 66604, 913/272-1643 TOPEKAPUBLICSCHOOLS CU t ? Li&SI-A ?13.1-LV3 \ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2 S TAT STAT you left Kansas. We will be interviewing your family, friends, teachers and other colleagues that have influenced your life. Our research will culminate with a trip to Washington, D. C. to trace your life in our nation's capitol. We are hoping to meet with you at your convenience to conduct a personal interview for use in our documentary. In addition, we would also like to interview several of the people associated with your work in Washington, and we would appreciate any suggestions you might have regarding others that would contribute to our project. We are interested in discussing dates that we would be able to meet with you in Washington. Please feel free to call one of us collect at home this weekend, or if this is not possible we will contact you Monday, February 22. The people of Kansas are always excited to hear about the success of other Kansans, and we are very enthusiastic about the project. Your cooperation will enable us to complete a quality documentary, and look forward to speaking with you soon. Sincerely, Jason Newell Mark Roeder Topeka West Library (913) 272-1643, Ext. 80 TOPEKA WEST HIGH SCHOOL, 2001 FAIRLAWN RD. 66604, 913/272-1643 TOPEKA PUBLIC SCHOOLS Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/03: CIA-RDP89G00720R000300050001-2