ADDENDUM TO LEGISLATIVE HISTORY REPORTING THE FLOOR DISCUSSION ON NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 IN THE SENATE

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December 13, 2006
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July 9, 1947
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Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R Ir ME COUNSEL I FILE COPY ADDENDUM TO LEGISLATIVE HISTORY Reporting the Floor discus-ion on NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 in the Senate 7 July 1947 and 9 July 1947 ADDENDUM NO. 2 to VOLUME I El' liCDF F' _4 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 80TH CONGRESS t HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES J REPORT 1st Session - f t No. 1051 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 JULY 24, 1947.?Ordered to be printed Mr. HOFFMAN, from the committee of conference, submitted the following CONFERENCE REPORT [To accompany S. 758] The committee of conference on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses on the amendments of the House to the bill (S. 758) to promote the national security by providing for a National Security Organiza- tion, which shall be administered by a Secretary of National Security, and for a Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, and a Department of the Air Force within the National Security Organi- zation, and for the coordination of the activities of the National Security Organization with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security, having met, after full and free conference, have agreed to recommend and do recom- mend to their respective Houses as follows: That the Senate recede from its disagreement to the amendment of the House to the text of the bill and agree to the same with an amendment as follows: In lieu of the matter proposed to be inserted by the House amend- ment insert the following: SHORT TITLE That this Act may be cited as the "National Security Act of 1947". TABLE OF CONTENTS Sec. 2. beclaration of policy. TITLE I?COORDINATION FOR NATIONAL SECURITY Sec. 101. National Security Council. Sec. 102. Central Intelligence Agency. Sec. 103. National Security Resources Board. H. Rept. 1051, 80-1-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12 15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 2 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 TITLE II-THE NATIONAL MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT Sec. 201. National Military Establishment. Sec. 202. Secretary of Defense. Sec. 203. Military Assistants to the Secretary. Sec. 204. Civilian personnel. Sec. 205. Department of the Army. Sec. 206. Department of the Navy. Sec. 207. Department of the Air Force. Sec. 208. United States Air Force. Sec. 209. Effective date of transfers. Sec. 210. War Council. Sec. 211. Joint Chiefs of Staff. Sec. 212. Joint staff. Sec. 213. Munitions Board. Sec. 214. Research and Development Board. TITLE III-MISCELLANEOUS Sec. 301. Compensation of Secretaries. Sec. 802. Under Secretaries and Assistant Secretaries. Sec. 303. Advisory committees and personnel. Sec. 304. Status of transferred civilian personnel. Sec. 305. Saving provisions. Sec. 806. Transfer of funds. Sec. 307. Authorization for appropriations. Sec. 308. Definitions. Sec. 309. Separability. Sec. 310. Effective date. Sec. 311. Succession to the Presidency. DECLARATION OF POLICY SEC. 2. In enacting this legislation, it is the intent of Congress to provide a comprehensive program for the future security of the United States; to provide .for the establishment of interg rated policies and pro- cedures for the departments, agencies, and functions of the Government relating to the national security; to provide three military departments for the operation and administration of the Army, the Navy (including naval aviation and the United States Marine Corps), and the Air Force, with their assigned combat and service components; to provide for their authoritative coordination and unified direction under civilian control but not to merge them; to provide for the effective strategic direction of the armed forces and for their operation under unified control and for their integration into an efficient team of land, naval, and air forces. TITLE I?COORDINATION FOR NATIONAL SECURITY NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL SEC. 101. (a) There is hereby established a council to be known as the National Security Council (hereinafter in this section referred to as the "Council"). The President of the United States shall preside over meetings of the Council: Provided, That in his absence he may designate a member of the Council to preside in his place. The function of the Council shall be to advise the President with respect to the integration of domestic, foreign, and miliary policies relating to the national security so as to enable the military services and the other departments and agencies of the Government to cooperate more effectively in matters involving the national security. Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 3 The Council shall be composed of the President; the Secretary of State; the Secretary of Defense, appointed under section 202; the Secretary of the Army, referred to in section 205; the Secretary of the Navy; the Secretary of the Air Force, appointed under section 207; the Chairman of the National Security Resources Board, appointed under section 103; and such of the following named officers as the President may designate from time to time: The Secretaries of the executive departments, the Chairman of the Munitions Board appointed under section 213, and the Chairman of the Research and Development Board appointed under section 214; but no such additional member shall be designated until the advice and consent of the Senate has been given to his appointment to the office the holding of which authorizes his designation as a member of the Council. (b) In addition to performing such other functions as the Pres-dent may direct, for the purpose of more effectively coordinating the policies and functions of the departments and agencies of the Government relating to the national security, it shall, subject to the direction of the President, be the duty of the 61ouncil? (1) to assess and appraise the objectives, commitments, and risks of the United States in relation to our actual and potential military power, in the interest of national security, for the purpose of making recommendations to the President in connection therewith; and (2) to consider policies on matters of common interest to the departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the na- tional security, and to make recommendations to the President in connection therewith. (c) The Council shall have a staff to be headed by a civilian executive secretary who shall be appointed by the President, and who shall receive compensation at the rate of $10,000 a year. The executive secretary, subject to the direction of the Council, is hereby authorized, subject to the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, to appoint and fix the compensation of such personnel as may be necessary to perform such duties as may be prescribed by the Council in connection with the performance of its functions. (d) The Council shall, from time to time, make such recommendations, and such other reports to the President as it deems appropriate or as the President may require. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY SEC. 102. (a) There is hereby established under the National Security Council a Central Intelligence Agency with a Director of Central Intelli- gence, who shall be the head thereof. The Director shall be appointed by the President, (ry and with the advice and consent of the Senate, from among the com I' /I ? nr___,foc_mptng tns Ins 'aa s in civilian Ate. The Director shall receive compensation at the rate of $14,000-aYear. (b) (1) If a commissioned officer of the armed services is appointed as Director then? (A) in the performance of his duties as Director, he shall be subject to no supervision, control, restriction, or prohibition (mili- tary or otherwise) other than would be operative with respect to him if he were a civilian in no way connected with the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, the Department of the Air Force, or the armed services or any component thereof; and A..roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-006 BEM 1.841.8 - Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 4 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 (B) he shall not possess or exercise any supervision, control, powers, or functions (other than such as he possesses, or is authorized or directed to exercise, as Director) with, respect to the armed services or any component thereof, the Department of the Army, the Depart- ment of the Navy, or the Department of the Air Force, or any branch, bureau, unit or division thereof, or with respect to any of the personnel (military or civilian) of any of the foregoing. (2) Except as provided in paragraph (1), the appointment to the office of Director of a commissioned officer of the armed services, and his acceptance of and service in such office, shall in no way affect any status, office, rank, or grade he may occupy or hold in the armed services, or any emolument, perquisite, right, privilege, or benefit incident to or arising out Of any such status, office, rank, or grade. Any such com- missioned officer shall, while serving in the office of Director, receive the military pay and allowances (active or retired, as the case may be) payable to a commissioned officer of his grade and length of service and shall be paid, from any funds available to defray the expenses of the Agency, annual compensation at a rate equal to the amount by which $14,000 exceeds the amount of his annual military pay and allowances. (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 6 of the Act of August 24, 1912 (37 Stat. 555), or the provisions of any 9ther law, the Director of Central Intelligence may, in his discretion, terminate the employ- ment of any officer or employee of the Agency whenever he shall deem such termination necessary or advisable in the interests of the United States, but such termination shall not affect the right of such officer or employee to seek or accept employment in any other department or agency of the Government if declared eligible for such employment by the United States Civil Service Commission. (d) For the purpose of coordinating the intelligence activities ol the several Government departments and agencies in the interest of national security, it shall be the duty of the Agency, under the direction of the National Security Council? (1) to advise the National Security Council in matters concern- ing such intelligence activities of the Government departments and agencies as relate to national security; (2) to make recommendations to the National Security Council for the coordination of such intelligence activities of the departments and agencies of the Government as relate to the national security; (3) to correlate and evaluate intelligence relating to the national security; and provide for the appropriate dissemination of such intelligence within the Government using where appropriate existing agencies and facilities: Provided, That the Agency shall have no police, subpena, law-enforcement powers, or internal-security func- tions: Provided further. That the departments and other agencies of the Government shall continue to collect, evaluate, correlate, and disseminate departmental intelligence: And provided further, That the Director of Central Intelligence shall be responsible for protecting intelligence sources and methods from unauthorized disclosure; (4) to perform, for the benefit of the existing intelligence agencies, such additional services of common concern as the National Security Council determines can be more efficiently a,cco2nplishea centrally; (5) to perform such other functions and duties related to intelli- gence affecting the national security as the National Security Council may from time to time direct. A rmrnvPri Fnr Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 5 (e) To the extent recommended by the National Security Council and approved by the President, such intelligence of the departments and agencies of the Government, except as hereinafter provided, relating to the national security shall be open to the inspection of the Director of Central Intelligence, and such intelligence as relates to the national security and is possessed by such departments and other agencies of the Government, except as hereinafter provided, shall be made available to the Director of Central Intelligence .for correlation, evaluation, and dissemination: Provided, however, That upon the written request of the Director of Central Intelligence, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation shall make available to the Director of Central Intelligence such informa- tion for correlation, evaluation, and dissemination as may be essential to the national security. (f) Effective when the Director first appointed under subsection (a) has taken office? (1) the National Intelligence Authority (11 Fed. Reg. 1337, 1339, February 5, 1946) shall cease to exist; and (2) the personnel, property, and records of the Central Intelligence Group are transferred to the Central Intelligence Agency, and such Group shall cease to exist. Any unexpended balances of appropria- tions, allocations, or other funds available or authorized to be made available for such Group shall be available and shall be authorized to be made available in like manner for expenditure by the Agency. NATIONAL SECURITY RESOURCES BOARD SEC. 103. (a) There is hereby established a National Security Resources Board (hereinafter in this section referred to as the "Board") to be composed of the Chairman of the Board and such heads or repre- sentatives of the various executive departments and independent agencies as may from time to time be designated by the President to be members of the Board. The Chairman of the Board shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall receive compensation at the rate of $14,000 a year. (b) The Chairman of the Board, subject to the direction of the Presi- dent, is authorized, subject to the civil-service laws and the Classifica- tion Act of 1923, as amended, to appoint and fix the compensation of such personnel as may be necessary to assist the Board in carrying out its functions. (c) It shall be the function of the Board to advise the President con- cerning the coordination of military, industrial, and civilian mobiliza- tion, including? (1) policies concerning industrial and civilian mobilization in order to assure the most effective mobilization and maximum utiliza- tion of the Nation's manpower in the event of war: (2) programs for the effective use in time of war of the Nation's natural and industrial resources for military and civilian needs, for the maintenance and stabilization of the civilian economy in time of war, and for the adjustment of such economy to war needs and conditions: (3) .policies ,for unifying, in time of war, the activities of Federal agencies and departments engaged in or concerned with production, procurement, distribution, or transportation of military or civilian supplies, materials, and products; Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000Annn1-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 6 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 (4) the relationship between potential supplies of, and potential requirements for, manpower, resources, and productive facilities in time of war: (5) policies for establishing adequate reserves of strategic and critical material, and for the conservation of these reserves: (6) the strategic relocation of industries, services, government, and economic activities, the continuous operationl)f which is essential to the Nation's security. (d) In performing its functions, the Board shall utilize to the maxi- mum extent the facilities and resources of the departments and agencies of the Government TITLE II?THE NATIONAL MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT ESTABLISHMENT OF THE NATIONAL MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT SEC. 201. (a) There is hereby established the National Military Estab- lishment, and the Secretary of Defense shall be the head thereof. (b) The National Miliatry Establishment shall consist of the Depart- ment of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Department of the Air Force, together with all other agencies created under title II of this Act. SECRETARY OF DEFENSE SEC. 202. (a) There shall be a Secretary of Defense, who shall be ap- pointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate: Provided, That a person wno has within ten years been on active duty as a commissioned officer in a Regular component of the armed services shall not be eligible for appointment as Secretary of Defense. The Secretary of Defense shall be the principal assistant to the President in all matters relating to the national security. Under the direction of the President and subject to the provisions of this Act he shall perform the .following duties: (1) Establish general policies and programs for the National Military Establishment and for all of the departments and agencies therein: (2) Exercise general direction, authority, and control over such departments and agencies; (3) Take appropriate steps to eliminate unnecessary duplication or overlapping in the fields of procurement, supply, transportation, storage, health, and research; (4) Supervise and coordinate the preparation of the budget esti- mates of the departments and agencies comprisl;ng the National Military Establishment; formulate and detemine the budget esti- mates for submittal to the Bureau of the Budget; and supervise the budget programs of such departments and agencies under the ap- plicable appropriation Act: Provided, That nothing herein contained shall prevent the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, or the Secretary of the Air Force from presenting to the President or to the Director of the Budget, after first so informing the Secretary of Defense, any report or recommendation relating to his department which he may deem necessary: And provided further, That the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Department of the Air Force shall be administered as individual executive departments by their respective Secretaries and all powers and rInrrwPri Fnr Release 2006/12/15 CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 7 duties relating to such departments not specifically conferred upon the Secretary of Defense by this Act shall be retained by each of their respective Secretaries. (b) The Secretary of Defense shall submit annual written reports to the President and the Congress covering expenditures, work, and accom- plishments of the National Military Establishment, together with such recommendations as he shall deem appropriate. (c) The Secretary of Defense shall cause a seal of office to be made for the National Military Establishment, of such design as the President shall approve, and judicial notice shall be taken thereof. MILITARY ASSISTANTS TO THE SECRETARY SEC. 203. Officers of the armed services may be detailed to duty as assistants and personal aides to the Secretary of Defense, but he shall not establish a military stag. CIVILIAN PERSONNEL SEC. 204. (a) The Secretary of Defense is authorized to appoint from civilian life not to exceed three special assistants to advise and assist him in the performance of his duties. Each such special assistant shall receive compensation at the rate of $10,000 a year. (b) The Secretary of Defense is authorized, subject to the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, to appoint and fix the compensation of such other civilian personnel as may be necessary for the performance of the functions of the National Military Establish- ment other than those of the Departments of the Army, Navy, and Air Force. DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY SEC. 205. (a) The Department of War shall hereafter be designated the Department of the Army, and the title of the Secretary of War shall be changed to Secretary of the Army. Changes shall be made in the titles of other officers and activities of thP. Department of the Army as the Secretary of the Army may determine. (b) All laws, orders, regulations, and other actions relating to the Department of War or to any officer or activity whose title is changed under this section shall, insofar as they are not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act, be deemed to relate to the Department of the Army within the National Military Establishment or to such officer or activity designated by his or its new title. (c) The term "Department of the Army" as used in this Act shall be construed to mean the Department of the Army at the seat of government and all field headquarters, forces, reserve components, installations, activities, and functions under the control or supervision of the Depart- ment of the Army. (d) The Secretary of the Army shall cause a seal of office to be made for the Department of the Army, of such design as the President may approve, and judicial notice shall be taken thereof. (e) In general the United States Army, within the Department of the Army, shall include land combat and service forces and such aviation and water transport as may be organic therein. It shall be organized, trained, and equipped primarily for prompt and sustained combat incident to operations on land. It shall be responsible for the preparation of land ? A. @roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 8 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 forces necessary for the effective prosecution of war except as otherwise assigned and, in accordance with integrated joint mobilization plans, for the expansion of peacetime components of the Army io meet the needs of war. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY SEC. 206. (a) The term "Department of the Navy" as used in this Act shall be construed to mean the Department of the Navy at the seat of government; the headquarters, United States Marine Corps; the entire operating forces of the United States Navy, including naval aviation, and of the United States Marine Corps, including thy Reserve components of such forces ? all field activities, headquarters, forces, oases, installations, activities, and functions under the control or supervision of the Depart- ment of the Navy; and the United States Coast Guard when operating as a part of the Navy pursuant to law. (b) In general the United States Navy, within, the Department of the Navy, shall include naval combat and services forces and such aviation as may be organic therein. It shall be organized, trained, and equipped primarily for prompt and sustained combat incident to operations at sea. It shall be responsible .for the preparation of naval forces necessary for the effective prosecution of war except as otherkise assigned, and, in accordance with integrated joint mobilization plans, for the expansion of the peacetime components of the Navy to meet tht needs of war. All naval aviation shall be integrated with the naval service as part thereof within the Department of the Navy. Naval aviation shall consist of combat and service and training forces, and shall include land-based naval aviation, air transport essential for naval operations, all air weapons and air techniques involved in the operations and activities of the United States Navy, and th,e entire remainder of the aero9,auhcal organization of the United States Navy, together with the? personnel necessary therefor. The Navy shall be generally responsible for naval reconnaissance, anti- submarine warfare, and protection of shipping. The Navy shall develop aircraft, weapons, tactics, technique, organiza- tion and equipment of naval combat and service eiemerts; matters of joint concern as to these functions shall be coordinated between the Army, the Air Force, and the' Navy. (c) The United States Marine Corps, within the Department of the Navy, shall include land combat and service forces and such aviation as may be organic therein. The Marine Corps shall be organized, trained, and equipped to provide fleet marine forces of combined arms, together with supporting air components, for service with the fleet in the seizure or defense of advanced naval bases and for the condue of slick land operations as may be essential to the prosecution of a naval campaign. It shall be the duty of the Marine Corps to develop, in coordination with the Army and the Air Force, those phases of amphibious operatl'ons which pertain to the tactics, technique, and equipment employed by landing forces. In addition, the Marine Corps shall provide detachments and organizations for service on armed vessels of the Navy, shall provide security detach- ments for the protection of naval property at naval stations and bases, and shall perform such other duties as the President may direct: Provided, That such additional duties shall not detract from or interfere with the operations for which the Marine Corps is prinaril:y organized. The Marine Corps shall be responsible, in accordance with integrated joint mobilization plans, for the expansion of peacetime components of the Marine Corps to meet the needs of war. Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 - ? .ve. or "elease 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 9 DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE SEC. 207. (a) Within the National Military Establishment there 'is hereby established an executive department to be known as the Department of the Air Force, and a Secretary of the Air Force, who shall be the head thereof. The Secretary of the Air Force shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. (b) Section 158 of the Revised Statutes is amended to include the Department of the Air Force and the provisions of so much of title IV of the Revised Statutes as now or hereafter amended as is not inconsistent with this Act shall be applicable to the Department of the Air Force. (c) The term "Department of the Air Force" as used in this Act shall be construed to mean the Department of the Air Force at the seat of govern- ment and all field headquarters, forces, reserve components, installations, activities, and functions under the control or supervision of the Depart- ment of the Air Force. (d) There shall be in the Department of the Air Force an Under Secretary of the Air Force and two Assistant Secretaries of the Air Force, who shall be appointed from civilian life by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. (e) The several officers of the Department of the Air Force shall per- form such functions as the Secretary of the Air Force may prescribe. (f) So much of the functions of the Secretary of the Army and of the Department of the Army, including those of any officer of such Depart- ment, as are assigned to or under the control of the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, or as are deemed by the Secretary of Defense to be necessary or desirable for the operations of the Department of the Air Force or the United States Air Force, shall be transferred to and vested in the Secretary of the Air Force and the Department of the Air Force: Provided, That the National Guard Purea:u shall, in addition to the functions and duties performed by it for the Department of the Army, be charged with similar functions and duties for the Department of the Air Force, and shall be the channel of communication between the Depart- ment of the Air Force and the several States on all matters pertaining to the Air National Guard: And provided further, That, in order to permit an orderly transfer, the Secretary of Defense may, during the transfer period hereinafter prescribed, direct that the Department of the Army shall continue for appropriate periods to exercise any of such functions, insofar as they relate to the Department of the Air Force, or the United States Air Force or their property and personnel. Such of the property, personnel, and records of the Department of the Army used in the exercise of functions transferred under this subsection as the Secretary of Defense shall determine shall be transferred or assigned to the Department of the Air Force. (g) The Secretary of the Air Force shall cause a seal of office to be made for the Department of the Air Force, of such device as the President shall approve, and judicial notice shall be taken thereof. UNITED STATES AIR FORCE SEC. 208. (a) The United States Air Force is hereby established under the Department of the Air Force. The Army Air Forces, the Air Corps, United States Army, and the General Headquarters Air Force (Air Force Combat Command), shall be transferred to the United States Air Force. H. Rept. 1051, 80-1------2 ? A. .roved For Release 208 A ID ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15 CIA-RDP90-00610 1.8 SellAgge - 10 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 ? (b) There shall be a Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, who shall be appointed by the President, by and with the advi-e and consent of the Senate, for a term of four years from among the officers of general rank who are assigned to or commissioned in the United States Air Force. Under the direction of the Secretary of the Air Force, the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, shall exercise command over the United States Air Force and shall be charged with the duty of carryng into execution all lawful orders and directions which may be transmitted to him. The Junctions of the Commanding General, General Headquarters Air Force (Air Force Combat Command), and of the Chief of the Air Corps and of the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, shall be transferred to the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force. When such transfer becomes effective, the offices of the Chief of the Air Corps, United States Army, and Assistants to the Chief of the Air Corps, United States Army, provided for by the Act of June 4, 1920, as amended (41 Stat. 768), and Commanding General, General Headquarters Air Force, provided for by section 5 of the Act of June 16, 1936 (49 Stat. 1525), shall cease to exist. While holding office as Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, the in- cumbent shall hold a grade and receive allowances equivalent to those prescribed by law for the Chief of Staff, United States Army. The Chief of Staff, United States Army, the Chief of Naval Operations, and the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, shall take mule among themselves according to their relative dates of appointment as such, and shall each take rank above all other officers on the active list of the Army, Navy, and Air Force: Provided, That nothing in this Act shall have the effect of changing the relative rank of the present Chief of Staff, United States Army, and the present Chief of Naval Operation. (c) All commissioned officers, warrant officers, and enlisted men, commissioned, holding warrants, or enlisted, in the Air Corps, United States Army, or the Army Air Forces, shall be transferred in branch to the United States Air Force. All other commissioned officers, warrant officers, and enlisted men, who are commissioned, hold warrants, or are enlisted, in any component of the Army of the United States and who are under the authority or command of the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, shalt be continued under the authority or command of the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, and under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Air Force. Personnel whose status is affected by this subsection shall retain their existing commiss'ions, warrants, or enlisted status in existing components of the armed forces unless otherwise altered or terminated in accordance with existing law: and they shall not be deemed to have been appointed to a new or different office or grade, or to have vacated their permanent or temporary appointments in an existing component of the armed forces, solely by virtue of any change in status under this subsection. No such change in status shall alter or prejudice the status of any individual so assigned, so as to deprive him of any right, benefit, or privilege to which he may be entitled under existing law. (d) Except as otherwise directed by the Secretary of the Air Force, all property, records, installations, agencies, activities, projects, and civilian personnel under the jurisdiction, control, authority, or command of the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, shall be continued to the same extent under the jurisdiction, control, authonity, or command, respectively, of the Chief of Staff, Lnited States Air Force, in the Department of the Air Force. (e) For a period of two years from the date of enactment of this Act, personnel (both military and civilian), property, records, installations, - S. ? ? I A -RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 pprove. or Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 11 agencies, activities, and projects may be transferred between the Depart- ment of the Army and the Department of the Air Farce by direction of the Secretary of Defense. (f) In general the Lnited States Air Force shall include aviation forces both combat and service not otherwise assigned. It shall be organized, trained, and equipped primarily for prompt and sustained offensive and defensive air operations. The Air Force shall be responsible for the prep- aration of the air forces necessary for the effective prosecution of war except as otherwise assigned and, in accordance with integrated joint mobilization plans, for the expansion of the peacetime components of the Air Force to meet the needs of war. EFFECTIVE DATE OF TRANSFERS SEC. 209. Each transfer, assignment, or change in status under section 207 or section 208 shall take effect upon such date or dates as may be prescribed by the Secretary of Defense. WAR COUNCIL SEC. 210. There shall be within the National Military Establishment a War Council composed of the Secretary of Defense, as Chairman, who shall have power of decision; the Secretary of the Army; the Secretary of the Navy; the Secretary of the Air Force; the Chief of Staff, United States Army; the Chief of Naval Operations; and the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force. The War Council shall advise the Secretary of Defense on matters of broad policy relating to the armed forces, and shall consider and report on such other matters as the Secretary of Defense may direct. JO= CHIEFS OF STAFF SEC. 211. (a) There is hereby established within the National Military Establishment the Joint Chiefs of Staff, whth shall consist of the Chief of Staff, United States Army; the Chief of Naval Operations; the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force; and the Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief, if there be one. (b) Subject to the authority and direction of the President and the Secretary of Defense, it shall be the duty of the Joint Chiefs of Staff? (1) to prepare strategic plans and to provide for the strategic direction of the military forces; (2) to prepare joint logistic plans and to assign to the military services logistic responsibilities in accordance with such plans; (3) to establish unified commands in strategic areas when such unified commands are in the interest of national security; (4) to formulate policies for joint training of the military forces; (5) to formulate policies for coordinating the education of mem- bers of the military forces; (6) to review major material and personnel requirements of the military forces, in accordance with strategic and logistic plans; and (7) to provide United States representation on the Military Staff Committee of the United Nations in accordance with the provisions of the Charter of the United Nations. (c) The Joint Chiefs of Staff shall act as the principal military advisers to the President and the Secretary of Defense and shall perform such other A. .roved For Release 2006/1 A Ones I 4,- .?.. a a . Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000 See - 12 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 duties as the President and the Secretary of Defense may direct 0 as may be prescribed by law. JOINT STAFF SEC. 212. There shall be, under the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a Joint Staff to consist of not to exceed one hundred officers and to be compobed of approximately equal numbers of officers from each of the three Omed services. The Joint Staff, operating under a Director thereof appointed by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, shall perform such duties as May be diheted by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The Director shall be an officer junior in grade to all members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. MUNITIONS BOARD SEC. 213. (a) There is hereby established in the National Military Establishment a Munitions Board (hereinafter in this section referred to as the "Board"). (b) The Board shall be composed of a Ch,airmart, who shall be the head thereof, and an Under Secretary or Assistant Secretary from each of the three military departments, to be designated in each case by the Secre- taries of their respective departments. The Chairman shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall receive compensation at the rate of $14,000 a year. (c) It shall be the duty of the Board under the direction of the Secretary of Defense and in support of strategic and logistic plans prepared by the Joint Chiefs of Staff? (1) to coordinate the appropriate activities within the National Military Establishment with regard to industrial matters, including the procurement, production, and distribution plans of the depart- ments and agencies comprising the Establishment; (2) to plan for the military aspects of industrial mobilization; (3) to recommend assignment of procurement responsibilities among the several military services and to plan ,fer standardization of specifications and for the greatest practicable allocation of pur- chase authority of technical equipment and common use items on the basis of single procurement; (4) to prepare estimates of potential production, procurement, and personnel for use in evaluation of the logistic feasibility of stra- tegic operations; (5) to determine relative priorities of the various segments of the military procurement programs; (6) to supervise such subordinate agencies as are or may be created to consider the subjects falling within the scope of the Board's re- sponsibilities; (7) to make recommendations to regroup, combine, or dissolve existing interservice agencies operating in the fields of procurement, production, and distribution in such manner as to promote efficiency and economy; (8) to maintain liaison with other departments and agencies .for the proper correlation of military requirements with the civilian economy, particularly in regard to the procurement or disposition of strategic and critical material and the maintenance of adequate reserves of such material, and to make recommendations as to policies in connection therewith; ? - - - II 12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 13 (9) to assemble and review material and personnel requirements presented by the Joint Chiefs of Staff and those presented by the production, procurement, and distribution agencies assigned to meet military needs, and to make recommendations thereon to the Secre- tary of Defense; and (10) to perform such other duties as the Secretary of Defense may direct. (d) When the Chairman of the Board first appointed has taken office, the Joint Army and Navy Munitions Board shall cease to exist and all its records and personnel shall be transferred to the Munitions Board. (e) The Secretary of Defense shall provide the Board with such per- sonnel and _facilities as the Secretary may determine to be required by the Board for the performance of its functions. RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD SEC. 214. (a) There is hereby established in the National Military Establishment a Research and Development Board (hereinafter in this section referred to as the "Board"). The Board shall be composed of a Chairman, who shall be the head thereof, and two representatives from each of the Departments of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, to be desig- nated by the Secretaries of their respective Departments. The Chair- man shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall receive compensation at the rate of $14,000 a year. The purpose of the Board shall be to advise the Secretary of Defense as to the status of scientific research relative to the national security, and to assist him in assuring adequate provision for research and development on scientific problems relating to the national security. (b) It shall be the duty of the Board, under the direction of the Secre- tary of Defense? (1) to prepare a complete and integrated program of research and development for military purposes; (2) to advise with regard to trends in scientific research relating to national security and the measures necessary to assure continued and increasing progress; (3) to recommend measures of coordination of research and development among the military departments, and allocation among them of responsibilities for specific programs of joint interest; (4) to formulate policy for the National Military Establishment in connection with research and development matters involving agencies outside the National Military Establishment; (5) to consider the interaction of research and development and strategy, and to advise the Joint Chiefs of Staff in connection there- with; and (6) to perform such other duties as the Secretary of Defense may direct. (c) When the Chairman of the Board first appointed has tak,n office, the Joint Research and Dev.37?::)n2ent Board shall cease to exist and all its records and personnel shall be transferred to the Research and Develop- ment Board. (d) The Secretary of Defense shall provide the Board with such personnel and facilities as the Secretory may determine to be required by the Board for the performance of its functions. A. .roved For Release 2006/ 11??11II. ??aaa ??? ??? ? Approved For Relese 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 14 NATIONAL SECURITY ,ACT OF 1947 TI TLE II?MISCELLANEOUS COMPENSATION OF SECRETARIES SEC. 301. (a) The Secretary of Defense shall receive the compensation prescribed by law for heads of executive departments. (b) The Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force shall each receive the compensation prescribed' by law for heads of executive departments. UNDER SECRETARIES AND ASSISTANT SECRETARIES SEC. 302. The Under Secretaries and Assistant Secretaries of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force shall each receive compensation at the rate of $10,000 a year and shall perform such duties as the Secrektries of their respective departments may prescribe. ADVISORY COMMITTEES AND PERSONNEL SEC. 303. (a) The Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the National Security Resources Board, and the Director of Central Intelligence are authorized to appoint such advisory committees and to employ, consistent with other provisions of this Act, such part-time adviso7y personnel as they may deem necessary in carrying out their respective functions and the functions of agencies under their control. Persons holding other offices or positions under the United States for which they receive coin- p-ensation while serving as members of such committees shall receive no additional compensation. for such service. Other members of such com- mittees and other part-time advisory personnel so employed mew serve without compensation or may receive compensation at a rate not to exceed $35 for each day of service, as determined by the appointing authority. (b) Service of an individual as a member of any such advisory com- mittee, or in any other part-time capacity for a department or agency hereunder, shall not be considered as service bringing such individual within the provisions of section 109 or 113 of the Criminal Code (U. S. C., 1940 edition, title 18, secs. 198 and 203), or sedion 19 (e) of the Contract Settlement Act of 1944, unless the act of such individual, which by such section is made unlawful when performed by an individual re- ferred to in such section, is with respect to any particular matter which, directly involves a department or agency which such person is advising or in which such department or agency is d'rectly interested. STATUS OF TRANSFERRED CIVILIAN PERSONNEL SEC. 304. All transfers of civilian personnel under this Act shall be without change in classification or compensation, but the head of any de- phrtment or agency to which such a transfer is made is authorized to make such changes in the titles and designations and prescribe such changes in the duties of such personnel commensurate with their classification as he may deem necessary and appropriate. SAVING PROVISIONS SEC. 305. (a) All laws, orders, regulations, and other actions appli- cable with respect to any function, activity, personnel, property, records, or other thing transferred under this Act, or wiLli respect to any officer, ? rr PPIPARE4 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 15 department, or agency, from which such transfer is made, shall, except to the extent rescinded, modified, superseded, terminated, or made inappli- cable by or under authority of law, have the same effect as if such transfer had not been made; but, after any such transfer, any such law, order, regulation, or other action which vested functions in or otherwise related to any officer, department, or agency from which such transfer was made shall, insofar as applicable with respect to the function, activity, personnel, property, records or other thing transferred and to the extent not inconsistent with other provisions of this Act, be deemed to have vested such function in or relate to the officer, department, or agency to which the transfer was made. (b) No suit, action, or other proceeding lawfully commenced by or against the head of any department or agency or other officer of the United States, in his official capacity or in relation to the discharge of his official duties, shall abate by reason of the taking effect of any transfer or change in title under the provisions of this Act; and, in the case of any such - transfer, such suit, action, or other proceeding may be maintained by or against the successor of such head or other officer under the transfer, but only if the court shall allow the same to be maintained on motion or supplemental petition filed within twelve months after such transfer takes effect, showing a necessity for the survival of such suit, action, or other proceeding to obtain settlement of the questions involved. (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of the second paragraph of section 5 of title I of the First War Powers Act., 1941, the existing organization of the War Department under the provisions of Executive Order Num- bered 9082 of February 28, 1942, as modified by Executive Order Numbered 9722 of May 13, 1946, and the existing organization of the Department of the Navy under the provisions of Executive Order Num- bered 9635 of September 29, 1945, including the assignment of functions to organizational units within the War and Navy Departments, may, to the extent determined by the Secretary of Defense, continue in force for two years following the date of enactment of this Act except to the extent modified by the provisions of this Act or under the authority of law. TRANSFER OF FUNDS SEC. 306. All unexpended balances of appropriations, allocations, nonappropriated funds, or other funds available or hereafter made avail- able for use by or on behalf of the Army Air Forces or officers thereof, shall be transferred to the Department of the Air Force for use in connection with the exercise of its functions. Such other unexpended balances of appropriations, allocations, nonappropriated funds, or other _funds available or hereafter made available for use by the Department of War or the Department of the Army in exercise of functions transferred to the Department of the Air Force under this Act, as the Secretary of Defense shall determine, shall be transferred to the Department of the Air Force for use in connection with the exercise of its functions. Unexpended balances transferred under this section may be used for the purposes for ,which the appropriations, allocations, or other funds were originally made available, or for new expenditures occasioned by the enactment of this Act. The transfers herein authorized may be made with or without warrant action as may be appropriate from time to time from any appro- priation covered by this section to any other such appropriation or to such new accounts established on the books of the Treasury as may be deter- mined to be necessary to carry into effect provisions of this Act. Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-006100200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15 CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 16 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 AUTHORIZATION FOR APPROPRIATIONS SEC. 307. There are hereby authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions and purposes of this Act. DEFINITIONS SEC. 308. (a) As used in this Act, the t(rm "function" includes functions, powers, and duties. (b) As used in this Act, the term "budget program" refers to recom- mendations as to the apportionment, to the allocation and to the review of allotments of appropriated funds. SEPARABILITY SEC. 309. If any provision of this Act or the application thereof to any person or circumstances is held invalid, the validity of the remainder of the Act and of the application of such provision to other persons and circum- stances shall not be affected thereby. EFFECTIVE DATE SEC. 310. (a) The first sentence of section 202 (a) and sections I, 2, 807, 308, 309, and 310 shall take effect immediately upon the enactment of this Act. (b) Except as provided in subsection (a), the provisions of this Act shall take effect on whichever of the following days is the earlier: The day after the day upon which the Secretary of Defei,se first appointed takes? office, or the sixtieth day after the date of the enactment of this Act. SUCCESSION TO THE PRESIDENCY SEC. 311. Paragraph (I) of subsection (d) 9f section 1 of the Act entitled "An Act to provide for the performance of the duties of the office of President in case of the removal, resignation, death, or inability both of the President and Vice President", approved July 18, 1947, is amended by striking out "Secretary of War" and inserting in lieu thereof "Secretary of Defense'', and by striking out "Secretaiy of the Navy,". And the House agree to the same. That the Senate recede from its disagreement to the amendment of the House to the title of the bill and agree to the same. CLARE E. HOFFMAN, GEORGE H. BENDER, HENRY J. LATHAM, JAMES W. WADSWORTH, CARTER MANASCO, JOHN W. MCCORMACK, ClIET HO LIFIELD, Managers on the Part of the House CHAN GURNEY, LEVERETT SALTONSTALL, WAYNE MORSE, RAYMOND E. BALDWIN, M. E. TYDINGS, RICHARD B. RUSSELL, HARRY F. BYRD, Managers on the Part of the Senate. rwlmvPri For Release 2006/12/15 CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 S - 5: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 STATEMENT OF THE MANAGERS ON THE PART OF THE HOUSE The managers on the part of the House at the conference on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses on the amendments of the House to the bill (S. 758) to promote the national security by providing for a National Security Organization, which shall be administered by a Secretary of National Security, and for a Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, and a Department of the Air Force within the National Security Organization, and for the coordination of the activities of the National Security Organization with other depart- ments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security, submit the following statement in explanation of the effect of the action agreed upon by the conferees and recommended in the accompanying conference report: The House amendment to the text of the bill strikes out all of the Senate bill after the enacting clause. The committee of conference recommend that the Senate recede from its disagreement to the amendment of the House and agree to the same with an amendment which is a substitute for both the Senate bill and the House amend- ment, and that the House agree to the same. The bill as agreed to in conference is the same as the House amend- ment, except for typographical, clerical, and clarifying changes, and the following: NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL Both the Senate bill and the House amendment provided (sec. 101 (a)) that the National Security Council be composed of the President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense (in the Senate bill designated as "Secretary of National Security"), the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, the Secretary of the Air Force, and the Chairman of the National Security Resources Board. Under the Senate bill the Council was also to be composed of such other members as the President may designate from time to time. Under the bill as agreed to in conference (sec. 101 (a)) the Council, in addition to the members specifically named above, is to be composed of such of the following-named officers as the President may designate from time to time: The Secretaries of the executive departments, the Chairman of the Munitions Board, and the Chair- man of the Research and Development Board. No such additional member is to be designated until the advice and consent of the Senate has been given to his appointment to the office the holding of which authorizes his designation as a member of the Council. Thus, for example, the Secretary of Commerce now in office could be designated by the President as a member of the Council, but if in the future a new Secretary of Commerce is appointed the new Secretary could not serve as a member of the Council until the advice and consent of the Senate has been given to his appointment to the office of Secretary of Commerce. A ? 'roved For Release Is ? ? a . 17 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: 18 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 The Senate bill (sec. 101 (c)) provided that the Secretary of Defense be director of the staff of the Council. The 11 ouse amendment (sec. 101 (c)) provided that the Council have a staff headed by a civilian executive secretary to receive compensation at the rate of $14,000 a year. The bill as agreed to in conference (sec. 10] (c)) is the same as the House amendment except the compensation of the executive secretary is fixed at the rate of $10,000 a year. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY The Senate bill provided that the Director cf Central Intelligence be appointed from the armed services or from civilian life. The House amendment provided that the Director of Central Intelligence be appointed from civilian life. The bill as agreed to in conference (sec. 102) provides that the Director shall be appointed from among the commissioned officers of the armed services or from among individuals in civilian life and adds a new subsection (b) which provides that if a commissioned officer of the armed services is appointed as Director then (1) in the performance of his duties as Direc-:pr, he is to be subject to no supervision, control, restriction, or prohibition (military or otherwise) other than would be operative with respect to him if he were a civilian in no way connected with the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, the Department of the Air Force, or the armed services or any component thereof; and (2) he is not to possess or exercise any supervision, control, powers, or functions (other than such as he possesses, or is authorized or directed to exercise, as Direc- tor) with respect to the armed services or any component thereof, the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, or the Depart- ment of the Air Force, or any branch, bureau, unit or division thereof, or with respect to any of the personnel (military or civilian) of any of the foregoing. Except as noted in the preceding s3ntence the appoint- ment to the office of Director of a commissioned officer of the armed services and his acceptance of and service in such office is in no way to affect any status, office, rank, or grade he may occupy or hold in the armed services or any emolument, perquisite, rigln, privilege, or benefit incident to or arising out of any such status, office, rank, or grade. Also any such commissioned officer, while serving in the office of Director, is to receive the military pay and allowance (active or retired, as the case may be) payable to a commissioned officer of his grade and length of service and is to be paid, from any funds avail- able to defray the expenses of the Central Intelligence Agency, annual compensation at a rate equal to the amount by which $14,000 exceeds the amount of his annual military pay and allowances. The House amendment (sec. 105 (d)) provided that to the extent recommended by the National Security Council and approved by the President, such intelligence operations of the departments of Govern- ment as relate to the national security shall be open to the inspection of the Director of Central Intelligence, and such intelligence as relates to national security and is possessed by such departments and other agencies of the Government shall be made availatle to the Director of Central Intelligence for correlation, evaluation, and digsemination. Section 102 (d) of the bill as agreed to in conference provides that to the extent recommended by the National Security Council and ap- proved by the President, such intelligence of the departments and agencies of the Government, except as hereinafter provided. relating A-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 19 to the national security shall be open to the inspection of the Director of Central Intelligence, and such intelligence as relates to the national security and is possessed by such departments and other agencies of the Government, except as hereinafter provided, shall be made avail- able to the Director of Central Intelligence for correlation, evaluation, and dissemination; provided, however, that upon the written request of the Director of Central Intelligence, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation shall make available to the Director of Central Intelligence such information for correlation, evaluation, and dissemi- nation as may be essential to the national security. PERSONNEL OF NATIONAL SECURITY RESOURCES BOARD Both the Senate bill (Sec. 103 (b)) and the House amendment (Sec. 106 (b)) authorized the chairman of the National Security Resources Board to appoint and fix the compensation of such per- sonnel as may be necessary to assist the Board in carrying out its functions. The Senate bill provided that such authority be subject to the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended. The House amendment provided that such authority be without regard to the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended. The bill as agreed to in conference (Sec. 103 (b)) follows the language of the Senate bill. SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Both the Senate bill (sec. 202 (a)) and House amendment (sec. 102 (a)) provided that the new Secretary be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The House amendment contained a proviso (not contained in the Senate bill) providing that a person who has held a commis- sion in a Regular component of the armed services shall not be eligi- ble for appointment as Secretary of Defense. The bill as agreed to in conference (sec. 202 (a)) contains a provision that a person who has within ten years been on active duty as a commissioned officer in a Regular component of the armed services shall not be eligible for appointment as Secretary of Defense. The Senate bill (sec. 202 (a) (2)) imposed upon the Secretary of Defense the duty to exercise general direction, authority, and control over certain departments and agencies. The House amendment (sec. 102 (a) (2)) added the word "general" before the word "author- ity" and before the word "control". The words added by the House amendment have been deleted in the bill as agreed to in conference (sec. 202 (a) (2)) as surplusage. The Senate bill (sec. 202 (a) (3)) imposed upon the Secretary of Defense the duty to formulate and determine the budget estimates for submittal to the Bureau of the Budget. The House amendment contained no such provision. The bill as agreed to in conference (sec. 202 (a) (4)) contains this provision from the Senate bill. COMPOSITION AND DUTIES OF THE NAVY AND OF NAVAL AVIATION The House amendment (sec. 203 (b)) contained language relating specifically to the composition and duties of the United States Navy and of Naval Aviation. The Senate bill (sec. 206 (b)) provided that Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 20 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 the provisions of this act shall not authorize the alteration or diminu- tion of the existing relative status of Naval Aviation. The first and last paragraphs of section 206 (b) of the bill as agreed to in conference are the same as the first and last paragraphs of section 203 (b) of the House amendment. The second, third, and fourth paragraphs of section 203 (b) of the House amendment are omitted and the following is inserted in lieu thereof: All naval aviation shall be integrated with the naval service as part thereof within the Department of the Navy. Naval aviation shall consist of combat and service and training forces, and shall include land-based naval aviation, air trans- port essential for naval operations, all air weapons and air techniques involved in the operations and activities of the United States Navy, and the entire remainder of the aeronautical organization of the United State: Na y, together with the personnel necessary therefor. The Navy shall be generally responsible for naval reconnaissance, antisub- marine warfare, and protection of shipping. COMPOSITION AND DUTIES OF THE MARINE CORPS The House amendment (sec. 203) contained the following provision: (c) The United States Marine Corps, within the :Department of the Navy, shall include land combat and service forces and such aviation as may be organic therein. The primary mission of the Marine Caps shaL be to provide fleet marine forces of combined arms, together with supporting air components, for service with the fleet in the seizure or defense of advanced naval bases and for the conduct of such land operations as may be.essential to the prosecution of a naval campaign. It shall be the duty of the Marine Corps to develop, in coordi- nation with the Army and the Air Force, those phases of amphibious operations which pertain to the tactics, technique, and equipment employed by landing forces. In addition to its primary mission, the Marine Corps shall provide detachments and organizations for service on armed vessels of the Navy, shall provide security detachnients for the protection of naval property at naval sta- tions and bases, and shall perform such other duties as the President may direct: Provided, That such additional duties shall not detract from or interfere with the performance of the primary mission hereinbefore set forth. The Marine Corps shall be responsible, in accordance with integrated jo. nt mobilization plans, for the expansion of peacetime components of the Marine Corps to meet the needs of war. The Senate bill (sec. 206 (b)) provided that the provisions of this Act shall not authorize the alteration or diminution of the existing relative status of the Marine Corps (including the Fleet Marine Forces). The bill as agreed to in conference contfins the same lan- guage (sec. 206 (c)) as that in the House amendment except that (1) the words "The primary mission of the Marine Corps shall be" at the beginning of the second sentence are changed to read "The Marine Corps shall be organized, trained, ard equipped"; (2) the words "to its primary mission" at the beginning of the fourth sentence are omitted; and (3) the words "performance of the primary mission hereinbefore set forth" in the proviso at the end of the fourth sentence are omitted and in lieu thereof the words "operations for which the Marine Corps is primarily organized" are inserted. COMPENSATION OF SECRETARIES The Senate bill (sec. 302 (b)) provided tha the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force shall each receive the compensation prescribed for the Secretary of Defense. The House amendment (sec. 301 (b)) provided that these Approved For Release 2006/12/15 ? CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? ? A pproved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 21 three Secretaries shall each receive compensation at the rate of $ L4,500 a year. The bill as agreed to in conference (sec. 301 (b)) provides that these three Secretaries shall each receive the compensa- ton prescribed by law for heads of executive departments. CLARE E. HOFFMAN, GEORGE H. BENDER, HENRY J. LATHAM, JAMES W. WADSWORTH, CARTER MANASCO, JOHN W. MCCORMACK, CHET HOLIFIELD, Managers on the Part of the House. A. 'roved For Release 2006 0 A - Ili ? a as ??? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Union Calendar No. 499 80TH CONGRESS t HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES J REPORT 1st Session J t No. 961 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 JULY 16, 1947.?Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed Mr. HOFFMAN, by direction of the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, submitted the following REPORT [To accompany H. H. 42141 The Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, to whom was referred the bill (H. R. 4214) to promote the national security by providing for a Secretary of Defense; for a National Military Establishment; for a Department of the Army, a Depart- ment of the Navy, and a Department of the Air Force; and for the coordination of the activities of the National Military Establishment with other -departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security (short title, "National Security Act of 1947"), having considered the same, report favorably thereon without amendment and recommend that the bill do pass. STATEMENT The original bill was transmitted to the Speaker of the House of Representatives oh February 26, 1947, by the President, by letter informing the Speaker that the bill had been drawn by representatives of his office and of the armed forces and had the approval of the Secre- tary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The bill was introduced by the chairman of the committee, Hon. Clare E. Hoffman, on February 28, 1947, and referred to your committee. On April 2, 1947, your committee commenced hearings which were finally concluded on July 1, 1947. During this period the committee heard 25 witnesses (list attached) including the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, the Chief of Staff of the Army, the Chief of Naval Operations, the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, and the Commandant of the United States Marine Corps. In addition, this group of witnesses included prominent, civilian and military leaders representing a wide variety of viewpoints, organizations, and other interests. Your committee has had the benefit of the advice ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 2 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 and counsel of the responsible individuals in Government concerned with the national security as well as the benefit of the opinion and suggestions of other interested groups. 'I he hearings necessarily have been extended over a long period because of the importance of this legislative proposal and the desire of your committee to give it the most thorough study pcssible, weighing carefully every shade of opinion upon each of its provisions. A subcommittee reviewed the testimony and reported to the full committee, which, after some changes, reported out H. R. 4214. I. NEED FOR REVISION OF THE NATIONAL DEFENSE ORGANIZATION. The experiences of the war just concluded have proven conclusively that we must maintain in time of peace an adequate organization of the national defense readily adaptable to the needs of war on short notice. Your committee is of the opinion that the Nation should provide for the effective integration of the many factors comprising the Na- tion's war potential. In this way your committee feels that a great contribution can be made to the maintenance of peace and the removal of the causes of war. II. LESSONS OF THE WAR While we emerged from World War II as a victorious nation the prodigious national effort which we were required to make, necessi- tating the sacrifice of American lives and wealth, cannot be repeated if we hope to remain a leading force for world progress and stability. Since we are a people governed by laws and not by men, the laws we make for the employment of our military forces must not be so restrictive and inflexible as to prevent the accomplishment of the very purposes they are designed to achieve. One of the purposes of the bill is to give statutory effect to certain organizational features developed during the war and which have proven to be desirable in the control of our armed services. The advanc'e of science and the magnitude of modern war require that we construct an ample framework for our military services within which they may grow and develop under traditional civilian control in accordance with the needs of the times. Your. committee recognizes as well the totality of modern war and the urgent need for close coordination between foreign policy and military policy, between industry and science and the armed forces. Your committee is aware of the major lesson of the Nation's great wars, that the sources of strength to resist aggression consist funda- mentally in the national morale, leadership, manpower, industrial efficiency, and productive capacity which manifest themselves in successful operations by the armed forces in the field, at sea, and in the air. Your committee also recognizes the purely military lesson of the rent war that unity of command in the field is essential to success in battle and that the organization, training, and military command of the organized combat forces in time of peace must at all times be directed toward the achievement of harmonious and effective joint action by and among all forces in pursuance of their common and paramount mission to defend the United States. ? A. ?roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 3 Your committee has been mindful of the personal element involved in making changes in our military services. The high morale, the esprit de corps, the long record of valorous and useful service of all elements of the armed forces is fully recognized and appreciated. The need for the preservation of the integrity of elements of the Army, Navy (including naval aviation and the Marine Corps), and Air Forces for future efficiency has received your committee's most careful attention. VVith these conclusions as a basic blueprint for its work, your committee has earnestly endeavored to produce a legislative framework capable of meeting our modern defense requirements. The bill as repoi ted diffeis in certain respects from the original H. R. 2319 and from S. 758. The changes made by the committee are considered to be improvements over the original bill and S. 758. III. PROVISIONS OF THE BILL AS REPORTED 1. Declaration of policy The declaration of policy which appears in the bill is deemed neces- sary by your committee in order that it be clearly shown that it is the intent of Congress to carry out the conclusions reached by your committee and that the traditional superiority of civilian Authority over the military within the Government is not being altered. 2. Coordination for national security The testimony received by your committee discloses an urgent need for a continuous program of close coordination b3tween our domestic, foreign, and military policies so that we may always be able to appiaise our commitments as a Nation in the light of our resources and capa- bilities. This, your committee feels, can be accomplished by the provisions of the bill for the National Security Council supplemented by a Central intellipnce Agency and the National Security Resources Board. (a) National Security Council.?This Council, comprised of the President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, the Secretaries of Army, Navy, and Air Force, and the Chairman of the National Resources Board, gives us for the first time in our history a means of bringing together the responsible heads of Government charged with recommending and carrying out our foreign policies after making a careful appraisal of our domestic and military potentials. (h) Central Intelligence Agency.?In order that the Council, in its deliberations and advice to the President, may have available ade- quate information, there is provided the Central Intelligence Agency, a permanent organization under the Council, which will furnish such information. At present this function is performed by the Central Intelligence Group which was created by Presidential directive and is temporary in character. The bill, as originally introduced, provided that the Central Intelligence Agency would continue to perform the duties now assigned by the President's directive to the Secretaries of State, War, and Navy. Your committee felt that it is better legislative practice to spell out such duties in the interests of clarity and simplicity and has so pro- vided in the bill. ? A. @roved For Release 2006/12/15 ? CIA-RDP90-8 8. 8:111 Iii Iii - Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 4 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 Provision prohibiting the agency from having the power of subpena and from exercising internal police powers, provisions not included in the original Lill nor in S. 758, were added by your commitrme. The Central Intelligence Agency, as provided for in the bill, will, in the view of your committee, perform a long neglected and vitally important function. (c) The National Security Resources Board.--The National Security Resources Board provided for in the bill will serve to advise the President with respect to the coordination of civilian, industrial, and milfAxy mobilization so that he may be placed, for the first time, in a position to evaluate realistically our resources, capabilities, and risks in relation to our domestic, foreign, and military policies. The Board would also have the responsibility for planning in peacetime for coordinated civilian-military mobilization in wartime-. 3. The National Military Establishment The bill provides for a National Military Establishment consisting of the Departments of Army, Navy, and Air, with a Joint Chiefs of Staff, a War Council, Munitions Board, and a Research and Develop- ment Board, all under a Secretary of Defense. The term "National Military Establishment," is considered a more accurate title than National Security Establishment as used in S. 758 (a) Secretary of Defensr.?The complexity and magnitude of the. President's task in peace and War are such that your committee be- lieves it is a generally accepted fact that he needs a full-time civilian official to assist him in the performance of his onerous duties as Qommander in Chief of the armed forces. The Secretary of Defense fills this need. The military services may then be integrated on the departmental level in Washington as they were so effectively integrated in the field during the war, without reducing the ultimate responsibility of the President or diminishing in any way our civilian control over the armed forces. The specific powers given the Secretary of Defense have been carefully delineated in the bill so that there can be no doubt as to the kind and scope of the powers he will eveycise. With the advice and assistance of the joint agencies in the National Military Establishment the Secretary can establish general policies and pro- grams, including the supervision of the military budget, and exercise. such control and direction as will give us economical and efficient integration of our military arms. (b) Departments of' the Army, Navy, and Ain?Separate sections of the bill provide for Departments of Army, Navy, and Air within the National Military Establishment. Except for a 'change in name, the Department of the Army is the present Department of War, save for the air elements transferred to the Air Force. The Department of the Navy remains as at present, and language has been inserted which will adequately assure the integrity and continued efiectiveness of the. Marine Corps and naval aviation concerning which some fears have been expressed.. The creation of the Department of the Air Force recognizes the war-demonstrated importance of this element of mili- tary power and places it on a parity with the land and sea elements of our military forces. This arrangement insures the permanence ?of' planning and management at the seat of government of the team of land, sea, and air forces which gave us victory in the theaters of war. The elimination of wasteful duplication and overlapping which esult from useless competition will be accomplished by the integration Aooroved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 - Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 5 of the three departments in the National Military Establishment under the Secretary of Defense. (c) TA,ar Council.?The War Council, composed of the Secretary of Defense as Chairman, the Secretaries of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, together with the Chief of Staff of the Army, the Chief of Naval Operations, and the Chief of Staff of the Air Force, provides in advisory body for the Secretary of Defense on all matters of broad policy affecting the armed forces which will make a notable?contri- bution to interservice harmony and cooperation. (d) The Joint Chiefs of Staff.?This provision of the bill continues on a permanent basis the most effective interservice coordinating i.gency developed during the war. It has been further improved by providing, in the form of a National Military Establishment, a means by which differences which have heretofore caused delay may the more readily be resolved. The status of the Joint Chiefs of Staff tts the source of strategic plans and direction and as the principal military advisers to the President is preserved and their effectiveness increased by provision for a Joint Staff, limited specifically, as the bill provides, to 100 officers and to be composed of approximately equal numbers of officers from each of the three armed forces. (e) Munitions Roard.?The. new Munitions Board will assume the luties now performed by the Army-Navy Munitions Board, but will have a permanent rather than a temporary character and a wider 1;cope of activity. Through the studies and recommendations of the Munitions Board - he Secretary of Defense will be enabled to assign procurement and -,echnical service responsibilities and through the resulting cross- -)rocurement, cross-servicing and joint use of facilities eliminate 1-tip1ications, of effort where practicable and make important savings n the personnel, money, and facilities now required for similar .ictivities. (f) Research and Development Eoard.?The provision for the Re- 13earch and Development Board continues the existing Joint Research Ind Development Board on a permanent basis. Your committee feels that this Board, in supervising the research and development programs of the armed forces will conserve to a marked degree our Limited resources in the way of trained scientific personnel and take Lull advantage for the benefit of all the services of the latest develop- ments resulting from modern scientific research. IV. SUMM-kRY Your committee believes that the _provisions of the bill hereby reported to the House of Representatives accurately reflect a com- posite of the best suggestions for a comprehensive National Military Establishment. . It is the belief of the committee that the bill as reported contains safeguards and other important provisions not found in the original bill or in S. 758 as passed by the Senate. It is the belief of the committee that the bill if enacted into law will help insure the coordination of our domestic, foreign, and military policies upon an informed basis; that it will facilitate the integration of all our military services and their unified strategic direction and .comm and.; that it wilt assist in taking full advantage of our resources ? A. .roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP98-ses 8:118 11/41.1 - Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 6 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 of personnel, materials, scientific research, and development; that it will preserve the integrity and more fully exploit the capabilities of all components of ground, sea, and air forces; that all of this can and should be accomplished under traditional American civilian direction and control. The total nature of modern war and the rapidity with which it could strike; the need for a balanced, adequate armed forces structure and integrated, strategic plans for its employment; the inseparability of the several aspects of our national policy; the requirements for men and materials to be balanced against our resources; and the lack of economy and efficiency in our present system, unite to. demand the prompt passage of this proposed bill for unification. (The list of witnesses referred to follows:') Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal Capt. W. G. Lalor, United States Navy Vice Adm. Forrest Sherman 1\44 Gen. Lauris Norstad Gen. A. A. Vandegrift Gen. Dwight Eisenhower Gen. Carl Spaatz Admiral Chester W. Nimitz Col. Melvin J. Maas John P. Bracken Brig. Gen. Merritt A. Edson Rear Adm. Ellis M. Zacharias Dr. Vannevar Bush Vice Adm. Arthur W. Radford Capt. R. R. Waller Harry V. Hayde]i (American Legion) John Dwight Sullivan (American Legion) Rear Adm. Rail:3]-1 A. Ofstie Admiral J. H. Towers Capt. Walter Karig Hon. W. Sterling Cole Vice Adm. G. F. Bogan Rear Adm. J. J. Clark Capt. John G. Crommelin Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ADDITIONAL VIEWS OF CLARE E. HOFFMAN, CHAIRMAN The writer of this report throughout the hearings, during the sessions of the subcommittee and of the committee, reserved the right to, at all times, express his views of the proposed legislation. Early in the hearings it became apparent that a majority of the committee was determined to report out a bill. When H. R. 2319, written by the military, forwarded to the Speaker of the House by the President, came over to the committee, the chairman as a matter of course introduced the bill. The writer of this report is convinced that until a few days before the committee ordered the hearings closed, all officials in the Navy, many of them high ranking officers, who bore the brunt of the Nation's battle on the sea and in many instances in the air, were prevented by Executive gag from freely expressing their objections to the bill. In the opinion of the writer the proposed legislation does not conform to the procedure for the national defense as outlined in the Constitu- tion. The proposed legislation, instead of leaving to the Congress the duty and the responsibility of providing for the national defense, of making appropriations to the Army to be expended within 2 years, of provid- ing, as directed by the Constitution, for a Navy, places that duty and that responsibility upon a National Military Establishment?a new and an additional organization superimposed upon the Army, the Navy, the Air Forces, and the Congress. A careful reading of the bill, of the hearings, and a realization of the implications justify the conclusion that the possibilities of a dictator- ship by the military are in this legislation. There is nothing in the testimony to justify the argument that it will in the near future bring about economy in our Military Establishment. The argument that it will promote efficiency is met by the historic fact that in our blundering, so-called inefficient, wasteful way, our fighting men have on all occasions overcome the forces of the central- ized militarism of those they have met in battle. The thought that the National Military Establishment and the departments or agencies ,established by this bill should be clothed with power to plan our foreign policy, thus usurping the functions of the President and the Congress, and under the plea of coordination, regiment our production and our resources, is abhorrent. Yet under this bill that is the proposal. It is no answer to say that these new agencies are granted only the power to plan, no power to execute; that to Congress they must come for funds to implement their plans. - It is a matter of common knowledge that all too often the Congress and the Nation are whipped into line, compelled to support plans and policies promulgated either by the State Department or the administration and of which the Congress has no knowledge until advised that we, as a Nation, were committed to such a policy. 7 roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000400014_ Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 8 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 Why then does the writer file the committee report and not oppose the bill? Because and only because legislation seems inevitable and H. R. 3979 introduced by him, modified in some respects by the subcommit- tee and the committee, and finally molded into H. R. 4214, is the best bill that was obtainable. Forced to take a bitter dose of a medicine of doubtful value the patient seeks to make it less distasteful, less harmful by every con- ceivable device and provision. On the evening of the day the bill was ordered reported out by the committee the proposed report which follows was prepared by the writer. Subsequently a report was ordered written by a subcommit- tee, on which served James W. Wadsworth, John McCormack, and the writer. There was a difference of opinion as to what should be included in the committee report. The writer yielded in that respect to his colleagues on the subcommittee. To make the record clear and to point out what the writer con- siders serious dangers inherent in the proposed legislation, the pro- cedure by, and the testimony on, which the result was reached, this additional report is filed. On the floor of the House during the debate, the views therein referred to will be given more complete expression. Much of the report written on July 15 has been included in the authorized report. Because the authorized report does not, in the opinion of the writer tell the whole story, the original proposed report is fled. It is not a part of the committee report. It represents the views of the chairman. It is as follows: PROPOSED COMMITTEE REPORT ON H. R. 4214 The Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments to which was referred the bill (H.-R. 2319) "To promote the national security by providing for a National Defense Establishment, which shall be administered by a Secretary of National Defense, and for a Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, and a Depart- ment of the Air Forces within the National Defense Establishment and for the coordination of the activities of the National Defense Establishment with other departments and agencies of the Govern- ment concerned with the national security," having considered the subject, report favorably a bill, H. R. 4214 and recommend that it do pass. The original bill was transiritted to the Speaker of the House of Representatives on February 26, 1947, by the President, by letter informing the Speaker that the bill had been drawn by representatives of his office and of the armed forces and had the approval of the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The bill was introduced by the chairman of the committee, Clare E. Hoffman, on February 28, 1947, and referred to your committee. On April 2, 1947, your committee commenced hearings which were finally, on order of the committee, the vote being 22 to 3, concluded on July 1, 1947. The closing of the hearings prevented the appear- ance of additional witnesses. A partial list of witnesses who were deprived of the opportunity of being heard is attached to these views, Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 9 marked "Exhibit A." During this period the committee heard 25 witnesses (list attached). The committee was handicapped by restric- tions, articles 94 and 95 of Navy Regulations. Such restrictions pre- vented a thorough investigation of many of the important provisions of the measure. Among other things, article 94 provides that? all petitions, remonstrances, memorials, and communications from any officer or officers of the Navy or Marine Corps, whether on active or retired list" * * * addressed to Congress, or to either House thereof, or to any committee of Con- gress, on any subject of legislation relating to the Navy or Marine Corps, pending, proposed, or suggested, shall be forwarded through the Navy Department, and not otherwise, except by authority of the Department. Among other things article 95 provides that? no bureau, office, or division chief, or subordinate in the Navy Department, and no officer of the Navy or Marine Corps * * * respond to any request for information from either House of Congress, or any committee of either House of Congress, or any Member of Congress, except through, or as authorized by, the Department; except as provided in section g 102, 103, 104, and 859 of the Revised Statutes. Unfortunately these restrictions on the free expression of opinion by naval and marine officars were not lifted by the Secretary of the Navy until June 23, 1947, shortly before conclusion of the hearings Vl hen a general message was issued to the Navy by Secretary Forrestal which for the first time lifted the restriction. it is as follows: From: SecNav. To: ALNAV No. 139. Released by: James Forrestal. Date: June 23, 1947. I have recently become aware that a feeling of restraint may exist among certain naval personnel in regard to their latitude of expression before com- mittees of Congress on the proposed National Security Act of 1947. This feeling, which is counter to the statutes and to the orderly processes of free expression, may have been engendered by misinterpretation of articles 94 and 95, U. S. navy regulations, which in practical effect do not limit a naval officer's freedom of expression but require that in addressing Congress, communications are to be channeled through the Secretary of the Navy. Without in any way weakening my endorsement of the January 16, 1947, agreement between the War and Navy Departments which was promulgated by ALNAV 21, I wish to make clear that every person in the naval service is at liberty to voice his professional and personal opinion when testifying before a committee of Congress on the proposed National Security Act of 1947. To this end, and only with regard to the proposed National Security Act of 1947, those provisiorth of articles 94 and 95, U. S. Navy regulations, which prescribe that communications between officers of the naval service and committees and Mem- bers of Congress be channeled through or authorized by me, have been waived. Testimony of high ranking naval officers such as Admiral John H. Towers, president of the General Board of the Navy; Vice Adm. Arthur W. Radford, commander of Naval Air Forces in the Atlantic; and Brig. Gen. M. A. Edson. United States Marine Corps, disclosed that there is a very significant degree of intelligent opposition to certain provisions of the bill from within the naval service. A subcommittee reviewed the testimony and reported to the full committee, which after some changes reported out H. R. 4214. I. NEED FOR REVISION OF THE NATIONAL DEFENSE ORGANIZATION In the opinion of the committee the experience of the war just con- cluded has proven conclusively that we must maintain in time of A ? ? roved For Release 2006/12 ? -: ImsII.. ? - ??? mem. ??? Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 1.0 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 peace an adequate organization of the national defense readily adapt- able to the needs of war on short notice. Your committee is of the opinion that the Nation should provide for the effective integration of the many factors comprising the Nation's war potential. II. LESSONS OF THE WAR We emerged from World War II as a victorious nation. One of the purposes of the bill is to give statutory effect to certain organizational features developed during the war and which have proven to be de- sirable in the control of our armed services. It must be noted that there was not unanimity of opinion among the witnesses as to the urgency of passing this legislation. Both civilian and service witnesses advised against a too-hurried consideration of the bill. Your committee is aware of the major lesson of the Nation's great wars, that the sources of strength to resist aggression consist funda- mentally in the national morale, leadership.. manpower, industrial efficiency, and productive capacity which manii'.est themselves in successful operations by the armed forces in the field, at sea, and in the air. Your committee also recognizes the purely military lesson of the recent war that unity of command in the field is essential to success in battle and that the organization, training, and military command of the, organized combat forces in time of peace must at all times be directed toward the achievement of harmonious and effective joint action by and among all forces in pursuance of their common and paramount mission to defend the United States. The advance of science and the magnitude of modern war require that we construct a.Li ample framework for our military services within which they may grow and develop under traditional civilian control in accordance with the needs of the times. Your committee recognized as well the totality of modern war and the urgent need for close coordination between foreign polic3 and military policy, between industry and science and the armed forces. It is fully recognized that no security organization can be perfect, but it can be.so constructed that through an evolutionary process it can be adjusted with a minimum of delay to meet the ever-changing needs of an atomic age. Your committee has been mindful of the personal element involved in making changes in our military services. The high morale, the esprit de corps, the long record of valorous and useful service of all elements of the armed forces is fully recognized and appreciated. The need for the preservation of the integrity of elements of the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, naval aviation, and Air Forces for future effi- ciency has received your committee's careful attention. With these conclusions as a basic blueprint for its work, your committee has earnestly endeavored to produce a legislative framework capable of meeting our modern defense requirements. The bill as reported differs in certain respects from the original H. R. 2319 and from S. 758. Such changes as have been made by your committee are considered to be necessary if our constitutional form of government is to continue. The Changes made by the com- mittee are considered to be improvements over the original bill and _Anorov_ecl For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 11 S. 758 and have been effected in order to restrict the original bill's grant of excessive power to the military, to protect against the possible development of the Central Intelligence Agency into a Gestapo-type organization, and to provide specific protection for the Marine Corps and naval aviation. III. PROVISIONS OF THE BILL AS REPORTED 1. Declaration of policy The declaration of policy which appears in the bill is deemed neces- sary, by your committee in order that it be clearly shown that it is the intent of Congress to carry out the conclusions reached by your committee and that the traditional superiority of civilian authority over the military within the Government is not being altered. 2. Coordination for national security The testimony received by your committee discloses an urgent need for a continuous program of close coordination between our do- mestic, foreign, and military policies so that we may always be able to appraise our commitments as a nation in the light of our resources and capahlities. This, your committee feels, can be accomplished by the.provisions of the bill for ,the National Security Council supple- mented by a Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Resources Board. (a) National Security Council.?This Council; comprised of the President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, the Secre- taries of Army, Navy, and Air Force, and the Chairman of the Na- tional Security Resources Board, gives us for the first time in our his- tory a means of bringing together the responsible heads of Govern- ment charged with recommending and carrying out our foreign poli- cies after making a careful appraisal of our domestic and military potentials. The majority of the members of the Council were repre- sentatives of the Military Establishment. (b) Central Intelligence Ageney.?In order that the Council, in its deliberations and advice to the President, may 'have available ade- quate information, there is provided the Cent al Intelligence Agency, a permanent organization under the Council, which will furnish such information. At present this function is performed by the Central Intelligence Group which was created by Presidential directive and is temporary in character. The bill, as originally introduced, pro- vided that the Central Intelligence Agency would continue to per- form the duties now assigned by the President's directive to the Sec- retaries of State, War, and Navy. Your committee felt that it is better legislative practice to spell out such duties in the interests of clarity and simplicity and has so provided in the bill. Provision prohibiting the agency from having the power of subpena and from exercising internal police powers, provisions not included in the original bill nor in S. 758, were added by your committee. (c) The National Security Resources Board.?The National Security Resources Board provided for in the bill will serve to advise the Presi- dent with respect to the coordination of civilian, industrial, and military mobilization so that he may be placed, for the first time, in a position to evaluate realistically our resources, capabilities, an risks in relation to our domestic, foreign, and military policies. Aooroved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 12 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 The Board would also have the responsibility for planning in peace- time for coordinated civilian-military mobilization in wartime. 3. The National Military Establishment The bill provides for a National Military Establishment consisting Of the Departments of Army, Navy, and Air, with a Joint Chiefs of Staff, a War Council, a Munitions Board, and a Research and Develop- ment Board, all under a Secretary of Defense. The term "National Military Establishment" is considered a more accurate title than National Security Establishment, as used in S. 758. (a) Secretary of Defense.?The complexity and magnitude of the President's task in peace and war are such that your committee be- lieves it is a generally accepted fact that he needs a full-time civilian official to assist him in the performance of his onerous duties as Commander in Chief of the armed forces. The Secretary of Defense fills this need. The military services may then be integrated on the departmental level in Washington as they were so effectively inte- grated in the field during the war, without reducing the ultimate responsibility of the President. With the advice and assistance of the joint agencies in the National Military Establishment the Secretary can establish general policies and programs, including the supervision of the military budget, and exercise such control and direction as should result in efficient direction of our military forces. The provisions of this bill do not terminate the activities of the many (more than 171) interservice joint com- mittees that have been doing an efficient job eliminating duplication and waste within the armed services. (b) Departments of the Army, Navy, and Ar.?Separate sections of the bill provide for Departments of Army, Navy, and Air within the National Military Establishment. Except for a change in name, the Department of the Army is the present Department of War, save for the air elements transferred to the Air Force. The Depart- ment of the Navy remains as at present, and language has been added which will adequately assure the integrity and continued effectiveness of the Marine Corps and naval aviation. MARINE CORPS Examination of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 1,178 papers convinced the committee that a specific statement of Marine Corps functions was imperative if the Marine Corps was to be protected from being eliminated as an effective combat element, which, according to the testimony of Fleet Admiral Nimitz, was the intention of the Army. The hearings had not progressed far before it became evident that, not only in the Marine Corps but throughout the country, there was a fear that an effort had been and was being made not only to reduce the size and limit the functions of the Marine Corps, but a possibility that it might be reduced to the status of a police force. The existence of any justifiable basis for such a fear'was denied by some witnesses who held the highest ranks. That there was justifiable ground for this apprehension is apparent if one reads the memo- randum by the Chief of Staff, United States Army (General Eisen- hower), under date of May 16, 1946, and the reply of Admiral Nimitz (hearings, National Security Act of 1947, p. 640). A. @roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 13 In the memorandum forwarded by General Eisenhower, then Chief of Staff, United States Army, among other things we find this: The conduct of land warfare is a responsibility of the Army. Operationally, the Navy does not belong on the land; it belongs on the sea. It should have only technical and administrative functions on land in connection with its head- quarters. bases, or other naval installations. The emergency development of the marine forces during this war should not be viewed as assigning to the Navy a normal function of land warfare, fundamentally the primary role of the Army. There is a real need for one service to be charged with the responsibility for ini- tially bridging the gap between the sailor on the ship and the soldier on land. This seems to me properly a function of the Marine Corps. I believe the Joint Chiefs of Staff should give serious consideration to such a concept. The need of a force within the fleet to provide small readily available ar d lightly armed units to protect United States interests ashore in foreign countries is recognized. These functions, together with that cf interior guard of naval ships and naval shore establishments, comprise the fundamental role of the Marine Corps. When naval forces are involved in operations requiring land forces cf combined arms, the task becomes a joint land-sea, and usually air force mission. Once marine units attain such a size as to require the combining of arms to accomplish their missions, they are assuming and duplicating the functions cf the Army and we have in effect two land armies. I therefore recommend that the above concept be accepted as stating the role of the Marine Corps and that marine units not exceed the regiment in size, and that the size of the Marine Corps be made con- sistent with the foregoing principles. To that view, Admiral Nimitz, under date of March 30, 1946, replied: The basic and major issues considered in J. S. C. 1478/10 and J. C. S. 1478/11 comprise a proposal on the part of the Army (a) to eliminate the Marine Corps as an effective combat element, reducing it to the status of a naval police unit with possibly certain ancillary service functions in respect to amphibious operations, and (b) to abolish an essential component of raval aviation which operates from coastal and island shore bases. To these ends these papers propose to discard agreements on these matters which have been arrived at between the Army and the Navy from time to time over a period of mere than 20 years, ard which have resulted in a responsibility for functions proven highly effective in World War II. In matters so vital both to the Marine Corps and to naval aviation, I consider it appropriate and desirable that the Joint Chiefs of Staff should have the benefit of the views of General Vandegrift, the Commandant of the Marine Corps, and of Vice Admiral Radford, the Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Air. Their comments are attached as enclosures A and B, respectively. * I agree with the Chief of Staff, United States Army, that further exchange of papers on the subject of the missions of the land, naval, and air forces will serve no useful purpose. It is further apparent that the question is part of the larger one of the merger of the War and Navy Departments, which proposal was, at the Army's insistence, referred to the President and which is now before the Congress. Thus, the matter now under consideration has already reached levels higher than the Joint Chiefs of Staff. General Spaatz, commanding general, Army Air Forces, wrote: I recommend therefore that the size of the Marine Corps be limited to small, readily available and lightly armed units, no larger than a regiment, to protect United States interests ashore in foreign countries and to provide interior guard of naval ships and naval shore establishments. General Eisenhower, Chief of Staff, United States Army, also wrote: The following is proposed for consideration: * * * (1) That the Marine Corps is maintained solely as an adjunct of the fleet and participates only in minor shore combat operations in which the Navy alone is interested. (2) That it be recognized that the land aspect of major amphibious operations in the future will be undertaken by the Army and consequently the marine forces will not be appreciably expanded in time of war. (3) That it be agreed that the Navy will not develop a land Army or a so-called amphibious army; marine units to be limited in size to the equivalent of the A. 'roved For Release 2006/12/15 ? A-:???1-88. 8:11. 0110400I - Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 14 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 regiment, and the total size of the Marine Corps therefore limited to some 50,000 or 60,000 men. Report by Army members of Joint Staff planners (proposal): * * * * * * * Provide landing parties with the fleet to protect United States interests ashore in foreign countries in operations short of war, and in t ane of war to conduct raids and small-scale amphibious demonstrations. * * * * * * * Perform necessary functions aboard ship, at naval installations, and in the ship- to-shore phase of amphibious operations. Neither the original bill nor S. 758 contains positive protection for the Marines. H. R. 4214 seeks to give the needed protection. THE DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR The creation of the Department of the Air Fo7ce recognizes the war-demonstrated importance of this aspect of military power and places it on a parity with the land and sea components of our military forces. This arrangement insures the permanence of military plan- ning and management of government. The Army, however, is not deprived of certain types of aviation necessarily organic to the Army for the accomplishment of its functions. H. R. 4214 is a further improvement over the original bill and 8. 758 in that your committee considered it advisable to retain the congres- sional prerogative of stating for what reasons the armed forces are created and supported. Thus, the basic functions of the Army, Navy (including naval aviation), Marine Corps, End Air Force set forth in broad and basic terms that will not restrict, military progress, but which are so clearly defined as to prevent the occurence of another unfortunate interservice dispute such as that which raged over the status of naval aviation and the Marine Corps, and which proved so detrimental to interservice for approximately 2 years. .General Eisenhower and Admiral Nimitz have stated they have no objections to prescribing basic functions. (c) War Council.? The War Council, composed of the Secretary of Defense as Chairman, the Secretaries of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, together with the Chief of Staff of the Army, the Chief of Naval Operations, and the Chief of Staff of the Air Force, provides an ad- visory body for the Secretary of Defense on matters of broad policy affecting the armed forces which should make a notable contribution to interservice harmony and cooperation. Some members of the com- mittee questioned the desirability of giving the military Chiefs of Staff coequal membership on the Council with their respective superior civilian secretaries. (d) The Joint Chiefs of Staff This provision of the bill continues on a permanent basis the most effective interservice coordinating agency developed during the war. It has been further improved by providing, in the form of a Natio:nal Military Establishment, a means by _which differences which have heretofore caused delay may more readily be resolved. The status of the Joint Chiefs of Staff as the source of strategic plans and direction and as the principal military advisers to the President is preserved and their effectiveness increased by pro- vision for a Joint Staff. The Joint Staff must in the future' be care- fully observed to prevent its possible development into a national general staff. Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 15 (e) Munitions Board.?The new Munitions Board will assume the duties now performed by the Army-Navy Munitions Board, but will have a permanent rather than a temporary character and a wider scope of activity. Through the studies and recommendations of the Munitions Board the Secretary of Defense will be enabled to assign procurement and technical service responsibilities and thlough the resulting cross- procurement, cross-servicing, and joint use of facilities eliminate duplications of effort where practicable and make important savings in the personnel, money, and facilities now required for similar ac- tivities. Congress in the future must be vigilant to prevent undue military domination of the national economy by means of interlocking mem- berships between the Munitions Board and the National Security Resources Board. (f) Research and Development Board.?The provision for the Re- search and Development Board continues the existing Joint Research and Development Board on a permanent basis. Your committee feels that this Board, in supervising the research and development programs of the armed forces, will conserve to a marked degree our limited resources in the way of trained scientific personnel and take full advantage for the benefit of all the services of the latest develop- ments resulting from modern scientific research. IV. SUMMARY The writer believes that the provisions of the bill hereby reported to the House of Representatives accurately reflect a comr ?site of the best suggestions for a comprehensive National Military Establishment. It is the belief of the chairman that the bill as reported contains safeguards and other important provisions not found in the original bill or in S. 758 as passed by the Senate. It is the belief of the Chairman that the bill if enacted into law will help insure the coordination of our domestic, foreign, and military policies upon an informed basis; that it will facilitate the integration of all our military services and their unified strategic direction and command; that it will assist in taking full advantage of our resources of personnel, materials, scientific research, and development; that it will preserve the integrity and more fully exploit the capabilities of all components of ground, sea, and air forces; but that all of this can and should be accomplished under traditional American civilian direction and control." Respectfully suhmitted. ? CLARE E. HOFFMAN A. 'roved For Release 2006/12 15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200041.1 - Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 EXHIBIT A NAVAL AND MARINE CORPS WITNESSES WHO DESIRED TO 'TESTIFY ON H. R. 2319, BUT WHO COULD NOT BE CALLED BECAUSE OF THE CLOSING OF HEARINGS Mr. Artemas Gates, New York Trust Co., 10 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, N.Y. Maj. Gen. William J. Donovan, 2 Wall Street, New York, N. Y. Maj. Gen. Graves B. Erskine, on Tem- porary Duty at Marine Headquarters, Washington, D. C. Maj. Gen. Clifton B. Cates, command- ing general, Marine Base, Quantico, Va. Capt. G. G. H. Hall, Aeronautical Board, 1701 "L" Building, Washing- ton, D. C. Rear Adm. Clifford A. Swanson, Sur- geon General of the Navy, Federal Board of Hospitalization, 1724 F Street, Washington, I). C. Rear Adm. L. C. Stevens, Assistant Chief for Research Development and Engineering, Bureau of Aeronautics, 2085 Navy Department Building, Washington, D. C. Rear Adm. M. L. King, Deputy Chief, Procurement Policy, Material Divi- sion, Office of Assistant Secretary. Brig. Gen. G. C. Thomas, Plans and Policies, United States Marine Corps, Navy Department. Washington, D. C. 16 Rear Adm. 0. S. Colclough, Judge Advocate General of the Navy, Navy Departm ent,Washington, D. C. Fleet Admiral William F. Halsey, Navy Department, Washington, D. C. Capt. J. P W. Vest, Norfolk Naval Shipyard, U. S. S. Franklin D. Roose- velt, Portsmouth, Va. Mr. Ralph Bard, Eversharp, Inc., Chicago, Vice Adm. Donald B. Duncan, Deputy Chief Naval Operations for Air, Navy Department, Washington, D. C. Brig. Gen. William A. Worton, United States Marine Corps. Capt. Austin K. Doyle. Rear Adm. Earnest W. ',itch. Rear Adm. William 0. Tomlinson. Rear Adm. Richard Whitehead. Maj. Gen. Field Narris, United States Marine Corps. Colonel Jercme, United States Marine Corps. Capt. Aurelius B. Vosseller. Capt. George W. Anderson. Capt. Herbert Riely. Capt. Robert Goldthwaite. Commander Charles Lanman. A. 'roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? ? ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 80TH CONGRESS SENATE } 1st Session , Calendar No. 246 REPORT2 39 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 JUNE 5 (legislative day, APRIL 21), 1947.?Ordered to be printed Mr. GURNEY, from the Committee on Armed Services, submitted the following REPORT [To accompany S. 758] The Committee on Armed Services, to whom was referred the bill (S. 758), to promote the national security by providing for a National Defense Establishment, which shall be administered by a Secretary of National Defense, and for a Department of the Army, a Depart- ment of the Navy, and a Department of the Air Force within the National Defense Establishment, and for the coordination of the activities of the National Defense Establishment with other depart- ments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security, having considered the same, report favorably thereon with amendments and recommend that the bill as amended do pass. The proposed bill (S. 758) was forwarded to the President pro tempore of the Senate on February 26, 1947, by the President, who stated in his forwarding letter that it (S. 758) had been drafted by representatives of the armed services, and had the approval of the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The bill was referred to your committee on March 3, 1947. On March 18, 1947, your committee started hearings which lasted for nearly 10 weeks and afforded a full opportunity to be heard to the representatives of all Government departments and agencies and to all private individuals. On May 20, 1947, your committee commenced executive sessions to review the testimony received in extensive hearings on the bill, and to consider proposed amendments. During the course of the executive sessions, the bill (S. 758) was so amended, without ma- terially changing its basic provisions, as to make it a clear and precise expression of the will of Congress in regard to unification of the armed services. On June 4, 1947, S. 758 (revised) was approved in your committee (by a vote of 12 yeas to 0 noes) and ordered reported to the Senate. It should be noted that certain of the committee members, while A roved For Rel Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040 I 2 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 voting to report the bill, reserved for themselves the right to offer amendments on the floor of the Senate. I. BASIC OBJECTIVES OF THE GOVERNMENT?To MAINTAIN PEACE, REMOVE THE CAUSES OF WAR AND PROTECT NATIONAL SECURITY In preparing the legislation now offered to unify the military depart- ments of the Government, to link them more closely to other agencies of the executive branch, and to strengthen our security measures by the creation of new instruments of policy, this committee has been guided by the basic objectives of our Government (1) to maintain the peace and (2) to remove the causes of war. In support of those ob- jectives it is essential that there be established a structure fully capable of safeguarding our national security promptly and effectively. One of the characteristics of the present era is the need to maintain adequate security measures at all times, rather than only when hostilities threaten or have broken out. To meet the future with confidence, we must make certain that our foreign and military policies are mutually supporting; that a central intelligence agency collects and analyzes that mass of information without which the Government cannot either maintain peace or wage war successfully; that scientific research and development are coordinated, not only within the military services, but between them and other Govern- ment agencies, as well as industrial and educational activities; that intelligent planning guarantees coordination of our military program with the Nation's resources in manpower, materials, and facilities; and that all of these objectives are accomplished with the greatest possible economy compatible with the general effectiveness of our national security. II. FACTORS NECESSITATING REORGANIZATION OF THE NATIONAL SECURITY STRUCTURE World War II crowned the American effort with overwhelming success. At the same time, the projection of this vast effort into almost every field of civil and governmental endeavor disclosed certain fundamental weaknesses in our security structure which should be remedied while their details are fresh in mind. For instance, our slow and costly mobilization, our limited intelligence of the designs and capacities of our enemies, our incomplete integration of political purpose and military objective, and finally, our prodigal use of resources, all demonstrate convincingly that our national existence would be imperiled were we to ignore the costly lessons of war and fail to reorganize our national security structure so as to prevent the recurrence of these defects. In looking to the future, it is apparent, from the potentialities implicit in scientific developments, that the world is entering an era in which war, if it comes, will be fought at speeds and accompanied by devastations that stagger the imagination. Consequently, in order at once to guard our safety and support our efforts to promote and maintain the peace of the world, it is essential that this country move without delay to provide itself with the best organization for security which can be devised. In studying and amending the bill (S. 758) forwarded to the Con- gress by the President, critical attention has been focused on two ? -RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 3 principal problems: (1) The structure best calculated to assure optimum efficiency of military operations and the closest integiation of the national security organization with the other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security, and (2) the maximum economy in money, material, and manpower compat- ible with military efficiency. The last is essential at this time, because it appears certain that military expenditures in the foreseeable future will necessarily be greater than in our former peacetime experience, whatever the form of military organization. In determining the most suitable organization for national security, no effort has been spared to uncover past mistakes and shortcomings, . and to create a structure deemed most likely to prevent their recur- rence. The natural confidence in organizations which have well served our needs in the past results in an understandable reluctance to alter their form; but our close scrutiny has failed to disclose valid reasons for postponing further certain steps so clearly indicated in the public interest. III. UNIFICATION AN EVOLUTIONARY PROCESS The subject of unification of the armed services is not a new one. After each of the World Wars military and nonmilitary personnel alike have appreciated the urgent need for bringing to the military departments in peacetime a large measure of the unity and common- ness of purpose which characterize the operations of the armed forces in time of war. This need has increased as wars have become total and global in character. Since 1921 there have been no less than 60 bills introduced in the Congress pertaining to unification of the military services. Many studies have been conducted on the subject. The most important recent ones were those by special committees, one appointed by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and one by the Secretary of the Navy. Both of these studies emphasized the need of a single unifying organization to assure complete teamwork between the military arms for efficiency in operation and economy in the use of our resources, and of establish- ing air power formally in a coequal status with land and sea power. Both of these studies were examined by committees of the Seventy-ninth Congress. The Army and Navy both agreed in principle to the need for a "single unifying organization" but placed different interpretations on what the scope, composition, and functions of such an organization should be. The differing views of the War and Navy Departments on unifica- tion were presented before committees of the Seventy-ninth Congress in the form of the War Department Plan for the Organization of the Armed Forces of the United States, and the Navy Plan for National Security, respectively. During the hearings which followed, all phases of each plan were exhaustively examined. Civilian leaders, as well as Army and Navy experts, were given the widest latitude in stating. their views on the unification problem. Little was accom- plished in the early stages, however, toward increasing the area of agreement between the military departments. On June 15, 1946, the President's proposal for unification was re- ceived by Congress in the form of letters to the President Pro Tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House. By then, considerable A. 'roved For Release 2006/12/15 ? -.SA. I- Is. es. Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 4 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 19 9: 7 headway had been made toward the accomplishment of a comprehen- sive plan. The Secretaries of War and the Navy had developed by the above date, through study and conference, certain basic principles upon which unification of the services could be based. The points upon which the military departments were in agreement at the date of the President's message were primarily concerned with the joint boards and agencies designed. to provide coordination among the military departments, and between these departments and the other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the security problem. These points of agreement involved a Council of National Defense, a National Security Resources Board, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a Central Intelligence Agency, a Procurement and Supply Agency, and a Research Agency. The remaining points upon which full agreement had not been reached involved the status of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, and the powers of the Secretary of National Defense, the status of naval avia- tion, and the status of the Marine Corps. The President's letters recommended the early enactment of legis- lation. Regarding the points on which full agreement had not been reached, the President recommended the establishment of a single Military Department under a Secretary of National Defense; three coordinate services?the Army, Navy, and Air Force; the more restricted interpretations of the status of naval aviation; and the more liberal interpretation of the status of the Marine Corps. The Seventy-ninth Congress adjourned without taking final action on these recommendations. IV. THE JANUARY 16, 1947, AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE WAR AND NAVY DEPARTMENTS The efforts of the War and Navy Departments to reach an agree- ment on all points of the unification program and to do so within the scope and spirit of the President's letters of June 15, 1946, continued after the adjournment of the 79th Congress. By November, 1946, by dint of persistent study and evaluation, the departments had resolved the over-all unification issue into three separate though complementary problems, of which the actual Govern- ment organization for national security was one. The others were the delineation of the functions of the armed services, and the organization for unified command in the field. The first agreement reached was on unified command overseas. That problem was completed on December 12 1946, and, with the approval of the President, a Joint Chiefs of Staff directive was issued on that date, the substance of which was made public. Meanwhile work was continued on the other problems. Agree- ment was reached shortly afterward both as to the functions of the services and as to an over-all organization for nation al security which would provide greater unity between the military departments, and at the same time integrate them more closely with other Federal security agencies, thus meeting the requirements of the basic concepts of both departments. This agreement which the President approved on January 16, 1947, reads as follows: Anoroved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 5 ? JANUARY 16, 1947. DEAR MR. PRESIDENT: On May 31, 1946, we jointly submitted to you a letter which gave our respective views on the major elements involved in establishing a greater measure of unification of our armed forces. In your letter of June 15, 1946, you expressed gratification at the progress made in narrowing the zone of disagreement which had previously existed between the services and stated your position with reference to the essential points on which disagreement still existed. In our opinion the necessity for agreement between the military services is now even greater than at the time of our earlier letter. We and our representatives have been meeting in an effort to secure further resolution, within the scope of the spirit of the statement of your position, of the views of the two departments. We are pleased to report success in this undertaking. We agree to support legislation in which the following points are incorporated: (a) There shall be a Council of National Defense, a National Security Resources Board, and a Central Intelligence Agency .(which already exists) as agreed by the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy in their letter to the President of May 31, 1946. (b) The armed forces shall be organized under a Secretary of National Defense so as to place the Army, the .Navy (to include the Marine Corps and Naval Aviation), and the Air Forces, each with a military chief, under the Departments of the-Army, the Navy, and the Air Force respectively. Each shall be under a, Secretary and, under the over-all direction of the Secretary of National Defense, shall be administered as an individual unit. The Secretary of any of the three departments may, at any time, present to the President, after first informing the Secretary of National Defense, any report or recommendation relating to his department which he may deem necessary or desirable. (c) A War Council shall be created consisting of the Secretary of National Defense as Chairman and with power of decision, the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, the Secretary of the Air Force, and the military heads of the three services. The War Council will concern itself with matters of broad policy relating to the armed forces. (d) There shall be a Joint Chiefs of Staff consisting of the military heads of the three services, and also the Chief of Staff to the President if that office exists. Subject to the authority and direction of the Secretary of National Defense, the Joint Chiefs of Staff will provide for the strategic direction of the military forces of the United States, will formulate strategic plans, assign logistic responsibili- ties to the services in support thereof, integrate the military requirements and, as directed, advise in the integration of the military budget. (e) There shall be a full-time joint staff to consist initially of not over 100 officers to be provided in approximately equal numbers by the three services. The Joint Staff, operating under a Director thereof, shall carry out policies and directives of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. (f) The Secretary of National Defense shall head the armed forces establish- ment, shall be vested with authority, under the President, to establish common policies and common programs for the integrated operation of the three depart- ments and shall exercise control over and direct their common efforts to discharge their responsibility for national security. We are agreed that the proper method of setting forth the functions (so-called roles and missions) of the armed forces is by the issuance of an Executive order concurrently with your approval of the appropriate legislation. We attach for your consideration a mutually agreed draft of such an order. Respectfully yours, ROBERT P. PATTERSON, Secretary of War. JAMES FORRESTAL, Secretary of the Navy. EXECUTIVE ORDER?FUNCTIONS OF THE ARMED FORCES By virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and laws of the United States, and as President of the United States and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the United States, I hereby prescribe the following assign- ment of primary functions and responsibilities to the three armed services. SECTION I.?The common missions of the armed forces of the United States are- 1. To support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign or domestic. As @roved For Release 2006/ i-'111??11-110 Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 6 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 2. To maintain, by timely and effective military action, the security of the United States, its possessions and areas vital to its interest. 3. To uphold and advance the national policies and interests of the United States. 4. To safeguard the internal security of the United States as directed by higher authority. 5. To conduct integrated operations on the land, on the sea, and in the air necessary for these purposes. In order to facilitate the accomplishment of the foregoing missions the armed forces shall formulate integrated plans and make coordinated, preparations. Each service shall observe the general principles and fulfill the specific functions out- lined below, and shall make use of the personnel, equipment and facilities of the other services in all cases where economy and effectiveness will thereby be increased. SEC. II. Functions of the United States Army: General: The United States Army includes land combat and service forces and such aviation and water transport as may be organic therein. It is organized, trained, and equipped primarily for prompt and sustained combat incident to operations on land. The Army is responsible for the preparation of land forces necessary for the effective prosecution of war, and, in accordance with integrated joint mobilization plans, for the expansion of peacetime components of the Army to meet the needs of war. The specific functions of the United States Army are- 1. To organize, train, and equip land forces for? (a) Operations on land, including joint operations. ? (b) The seizure or defense of land areas, including air-borne and joint amphibious operations. (c) The occupation of land areas. 2. To develop weapons, tactics, technique, organization and equipment of Army combat and service elements, coordinating with the Navy and the Air Force in all aspects of joint concern, including those which pertain to amphibious and air-borne operations. 3. To provide, as directed by proper authority, such missions and detachments for service in foreign countries as may be required to support the national policies and interests of the United States. 4. To assist the Navy and Air Forces in the accomplishment of their missions, including the provision of common services and supplies as determined by proper authority. SEC. III. Functions of the United States Navy: General: The United States Navy includes naval combat and service forces, naval aviation, and the United States Marine Corps. It is organized, trained and equipped primarily for prompt and sustained combat at sea. The Navy is responsible for the preparation of naval forces necessary for the effective prosecu- tion of war, and in accordance with integrated joint mobilization plans, for the needs of war. The specific functions of the United States Navy are-- 1. To organize, train and equip naval forces for? (a) Operations at sea, including joint operations. (b) The control of vital sea areas, the protection of vital sea lanes, and the suppression of enemy sea commerce. (c) The support of occupation forces as required. (d) The seizure of minor enemy shore positions capable of reduction by such landing forces as may be comprised within the fleet organization. (e) Naval reconnaissance, antisubmarine warfare, and protection of shipping. The air aspects of those functions shall be coordinated with the Air Force, including the development and procurement of aircraft, and air installations located on shore, and use shall be made of Air Force personnel, equipment, and facilities in all cases where economy and effectiveness will thereby be increased. Subject to the alpove provision, the Navy will not be restricted as to types of aircraft maintained and operated for these purposes. (f) The air transport necessary for eSsential internal administration and for air transport over routes of sole interest to naval forces where the require- ments cannot be met by normal air transport facilities. 2. To develop weapons, tactics, technique, organiza don and equipment of naval combat and service elements, coordinating with the Army and the Air Force in all aspects of joint concern, including those which pertain to amphibious operations. A nrIrmiprl Fnr Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 200,6/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 7 3. To provide, as directed by proper authority, such missions and detachments for service in foreign countries as may be required to support the national policies and interests of the United States. 4. To maintain the United States Marine Corps whose specific functions are? (a) To provide Marine Forces together with supporting air components, for service with the fleet in the seizure or defense of advanced naval bases and for the conduct of limited land operations in connection therewith. (b) To develop, in coordination with the Army and the Air Force those phases of amphibious operations which pertain to the tactics, technique, and equipment employed by landing forces. (c) To provide detachments and organizations for service on armed vessels of the Navy. (d) To provide security detachments for protection of naval property at naval stations and bases. (e) To provide, as directed by proper authority, such missions and detach- ments for service in foreign countries as may be required to support the national policies and interests of the United States. 5. To assist the Army and the Air Force in the accomplishment of their missions, including the provision of common services and supplies as determined by proper authority. SEc. IV. Functions of the United States Air Force: General: The United States Air Force includes all military aviation forces, both combat and service, not otherwise specifically assigned. It is organized, trained, and equipped primarily for prompt and sustained air offensive and defensive operations. The Air Force is responsible for the preparation of the air forces necessary for the effective prosecution of war except as otherwise assigned and, in accordance with integrated joint mobilization plans, for the expansion of the peacetime components of the Air Force to meet the needs of war. The specific functions of the United States Air Force are- 1. To organize, train, and equip air forces for? (a) Air operations including joint operations. (b) Gaining and maintaining general air supremacy. (c) Establishing local air superiority where and as required. (d) The strategic air force of the United States and strategic air recon- naissance. (e) Air lift and support for air-borne operations. (f) Air support to land forces and naval forces, including support of occupation forces. (g) Air transport for the armed forces, except as provided by the Navy in accordance with paragraph 1 (f) of section III. 2. To develop weapons, tactics, technique, organization, and equipment of Air Force combat and service elements, coordinating with the Army and Navy on all aspects of joint concern, including those which pertain to amphibious and air-borne operations. 3. To provide, as directed by proper authority, such missions and detachments for service in foreign countries as may be required to support the national policies and interests of the United States. With the above agreement as a basis, on January 20, 1947, repre- sentatives of the President and of the War and Navy Departments started drafting legislation to effectuate its provisions. Their task was to produce a bill which would be both mutually satisfactory and adjusted to the requirements of other interested Federal agencies. The product of this effort is the bill (S. 758) which the President forwarded to the President pro tempore of the Senate on February 26, 1947, with the statement that: "It is my belief that this suggested legislation accomplishes the desired unification of the services and I heartily recommend its enactment by the Congress." S. 758 as received was essentially an equitable and workable com- promise of views initially divergent. It provided parity for the Air Force. It provided for three independently administered military departments, and for the unification of these departments within a N ational Security Establishment by a Secretary, assisted by such agencies as a War Council, a Munitions Board, and a Research and ? A. 'roved For Release 2006/12/1 ? -: is-ss. 5rsum Approved For Release 2006/12 15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 8 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 Development Board, all subject to the general direction, authority, and control vested in a Secretary of, National Security. It provided for the establishment of unified commands in the field, and vested strategic control of the armed forc s in a Joint Chiefs of Staff. It safeguarded the status of naval a vi tion and the Marine Corps. During the course of the hearings, the several provisions of the bill were painstakingly examined y your committee. The civil and military heads of the Army N vy, and Army Air Forces were called, and each declared himself wholeheartedly in support of the bill as referred to this committee. Civilian leaders, who qualified as experts in business and government organization, as well as military and naval officers, both active and retired, were also called. Both civil and military witnesses were given the widest latitude of expres- sion in order that the committee might explore all ideas in this field. During the course of the hearings, it developed that many witnesses had apprehensions with respect to the future of naval aviation and of the Marine Corps. These apprehenSions caused your committee to incorporate additional safeguards for these components. These safe- guards have the concurrence of the War and Navy Departments and the Commandant of the Marine Corps. During the executive sessions vVhich followed; each proposed amendment was carefully compared with the provisions of S. 758. In addition, records of previous hearings and studies were reviewed in order further to enlarge the background of your committee charged with preparing the bill in its final forin. S. 758 (amended) contains the same basic provisions as the original bill. Many of the sections have been extensively revised, however, in order to clarify their intent, and to delineate their provisions in more specific terms so as to leave no doubt in regard to the will of Congress on this vital subject. Certain sections have been rewritten in their entirety, and some new sections have been added. In its final form, it will provide a system of national security best suited to our present-day needs, which will? (1) Provide the organizational structure best designed to bring about close coordination between the military forces and departments and other branches of Government; (2) Insure proper and timely planning for the conservation of strategic resources of the N ation and the mobilization of manpower and industry in the event of an emergency; (3) Provide a national-security organization under a Secretary of National Security which will insure the unified direction of the armed services under civilian control; (4) Fill the war-demonstrated need for integrated strategic plans and a unified military program and budget, based upon sound and complete intelligence; (5) Effect the economies which can be realized by coordinating the supply and service functions of the arrned forces; (6) Provide the most effective and systematic allocation of our limited resources for scientific research and development; (7) Provide the most effective organization for training of joint forces and joint operations of land, naval, and air forces; (8) Permit the establishment of unified field commands in coordi- nation with strategic planning; (9) Permit the establishment of equitable over-all personnel policies; and Approved For Release 2006/12/15 ? Cl -RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 or ? e ease 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 9 (10) Provide for the establishinent of air power on a parity with land and sea power. After long and serious deliberation, your committee decided against Amending the bill to include the basic functions (roles and missions) of the several services. Your committee came to this conclusion because it felt that such amendments would seriously impair the re- quired flexibility of our military forces, and because such action would violate the principle of separation of executive and legislative Authority traditional in American government. It is the firm conviction of your committee that S. 758 (amended) in its final form, represents a sound and workable means for moderniz- ing our national security organization into a cohesive and balanced whole, and its enactment is strongly recommended, as is evidenced by the final vote of approval, 12 to 0, of your Armed Services Committee. V. PROVISIONS OF THE BILL (S. 758 AMENDED) I. DECLARATION OF POLICY The declaration of policy, which precedes title I of the bill, was inserted by the committee in order to outline in clear and accurate language the intent of the Congress in regard to the National Security Act of 1947. The act has been designed to provide a comprehensive program for the future security of the United States. It does this by provisions involving three levels of the Government. On the highest level, under the immediate supervision of the President, it provides for the establishment of integrated policies and procedures for the departments, agencies and functions of the Government relating to the National Security. On a lower level, it provides for three inde- pendently administered military departments, and provides further for their authoritative coordination and unified direction, but not merger, under civilian control. Finally, on the military level, it provides for the effective strategic direction of the armed forces, for their operation under unified control, and for their integration into an efficient team of land, naval and air forces. 2. COORDINATION FOR NATIONAL SECURITY The studies made by your committee, and all testimony received by it, shows the need for closer and continuous coordination on a high level within the Government of our domestic, foreign, and military policies, for An appropriate intelligence organization to serve both military and civilian agencies of security, and for vastly improved planning for the control and utilization of our natural and industrial resources in time of emergency. (a) National Security Council To meet the first of the above requirements, the bill establishes a National Security Council composed of the President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of National Security, the Secretaries of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, the Chairman of the National Security Resources Board, and such other members as the President may designate from time to time. ? A ? oroved For Rel- - Is Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00. 10 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 Essentially, the Council is an adlisory body to the President with respect to the integration of domestic, foreign, and military policies, so as to enable the military services and the other departments and agencies of the Government to cooperate more effectively in matters involving the national security. The bill specifies that the President shall preside over meetings of the Council, and that, in his absence, he may designate any member of the Council to preside in his place. (b) Central Intelligence Agency The Central Intelligence Agency provided for by section 102 exists now as the Central Intelligence Group. The bill establishes the agency under the National Security Council and assigns to that Council the supervisory authority and responsibility now exercised by the National Intelligence Authority created by Executive order of the President and composed of the Secretaries of State, War, and Navy. The Agency will continue to perform the duties now assigned by letter directive of the President (11 Fed. Reg. 1337, 1339, February 5, 1946) to the Central Intelligence Group until such time as permanent legislation pertaining to its activities is provided by the Congress. In view of the fact that certain officers of the armed services have had wide experience in handling the type of intelligence with which this agency will be largely concerned, the provision of the bill to permit the Director of Central Intelligence to be appointed from the armed services as well as from civil life is most desirable. During the Agency's formative years, it is essential that its Director be technically the most experienced and capable obtainable, regardless of whether he is appointed from civilian or military life. (c) National Security Resources Board As a parallel organization to the National Security Council, but independent of it, the bill provides for a National Security Resources Board. The function of the Resources Board is to advise the Presi- dent concerning the coordination of Military, industrial, and civilian mobilization, and thus provide him and the National Security Council with a sound and realistic basis upon which to evaluate the objectives, commitments and risks they must consider in connection with our domestic, military, and foreign policies. This function can best be performed if at least one official is a member of both agencies. In addition to being a source of information regarding the poten- tiality of the national economy in terms of natural and productive resources, this board in time of peace would maintain plans for directing and reconciling the military and civilian mobilization of the Nation. In time of war it could be made the effectuating agent for putting these plans into operation generally, and for determining the needs of the civil and military elements of the Nation and allocating material and facilities among them. 3. THE NATIONAL SECURITY ORGANIZATION The bill creates a National Security Organization, consisting of the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Department of the Air Force, together With certain agencies to assist in the coordination of the activities of these Departments. ? '90-00610R000200040001-1 S ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 11 (a) Secretary of National Security The Secretary of National Security is the head of the National Security Organization. Experience in peace and war has clearly shown that there is need for an official under the President with powers to exercise general direction and control over the National Security Organization and to resolve differences between the military departMents which cannot be settled by agreement on lower levels. The creation of such an official in no way reduces the responsibility and authority of the President who, by the Constitution, remains both the Commander in Chief, and also the source of all executive power in the Government. The complexities of government under present and future conditions make it essential, however, that the President be assisted by a civilian official who can devote his full time to the matters concerned. Such an official must have authority, under the President, if he is to accomplish his intended purpose. Both the bill and the agreement which was the origin of the bill vest such authority and power in the Secretary of National Security. They also make clear that these powers shall be exercised to establish policies and programs for the departments, and to direct their efforts. These powers do not extend within the departments themselves in matters of administrative procedures peculiar to and affecting only an individual department, nor do they include the delineation of functions (roles and missions) for the armed forces. Regarding administrative procedures, the Secretary of National Security has the authority to establish common policies for the National Security Organization which would affect the procedures within the individual departments. In regard to the functions of the armed forces, the President, in his capacity as Commander in Chief, will himself continue to delineate them and prescribe any subsequent changes. In exercising his authority and power of decision over the military departments, it is expected that the Secretary of National Security *ill make maximum use of such joint agencies as the War Council, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Munitions Board, and the Research and Development Board, which were created in order to give balance and scope to his efforts at unifying the National Security Organization. Section 202 (a) provides in part "all powers and duties not specif- ically conferred upon the Secretary of National Security by this act are retained by each of the respective Secretaries." Under this provi- sion, the Secretaries of the military departments will continue to perform presently assigned duties as well as those assigned under the bill, except for such part of those duties as are assigned to the Secretary of National Security, and subject to the further qualification that the -President would in no way be restricted as to the areas in which he may exercise his own executive authority with respect to the three departments. In section 202 (a) (3) regarding the provisions for coordinating the military budget, the bill is more specific. The Secretary of National Security is charged with coordinating and supervising the preparation of budget estimates by the military departments, and with formulat- ing and determining the combined budget estimates for submittal to the Bureau of the Budget, and with supervising the budget program. A ? ? roved For Release 2006/1 i-:1)"?8-88? Bross salAsse - Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 12 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 The bill further provides in section 308 that the military budget will arrive before the Congress in such form as to show the original estimates of the Secretaries of the Army, Navy and Air Force with all changes made thereto by the Secretary of National Security and the President. These provisions clearly place with the Congress, where it belongs, the final responsibility for maintaining the strength and balance of our military forces. By receiving the military budget as a coordinated whole, complete with the recommendations of the Secretary of National Security and the President, Congress will have all in one piece for the first time in its history the comprehensive information most essential for the discharge of this vital responsibility. (b) Military and civilian Assistants to the Secretary c.f National Security The purpose of section 203 of the bill is to provide the Secretary of National Security with military aides and administrative assistants for functioning of his office, but to prevent the creation of a military staff which could compete with the Joint Chiefs of Staff or the Joint Staff established elsewhere in the bill. Likewise, the purpose of section 204 is to provide the Secretary of National Security with adequate civilian assistants of a high order for a small executive office with which to supervise the National Security Organization. It is essential that the Secretaries of the military departments have quick and ready access to the Secretary of National Security and act as his principal advisers within their respec- tive areas of responsibility. In the interest of economy and in maintaining intimate contact with the military departments, it is expected that the Secretary of National Security will use to their full capacity such agencies as the War Council, the Joints Chiefs of Staff, the Munitions Board, and the Research and Development Board, and will decentralize to a maximum the duties performed under his discretion. (c). The Departments of the Army, Navy, and Air Force The administrative and operational composition of each of the above departments is outlined in separate sections of the bill. Specific safeguards for naval aviation and the Marine Corps are provided which have received the approval of the War and Navy Departments. Under the provisions of the bill, each department will be admin- istered as an individual unit by its respective Secretary, under the general direction and control of the Secretary of National Security. In the interest of preserving balance among the military departments, the Secretary of each department is given the right of presenting to the President, or to the Director of the Budget, any report or recom- mendation relating to his department which he may deem necessary, after first informing the Secretary of National Security. Creation of a Department of the Air Force places this third element of military power on a parity with the land and naval elements and provides essential balance to our military team. Your committee recognizes that air power has truly come of age and has abundantly established itself in the tes- of conflict. The war just passed has fully demonstrated its importance. An independent Air Force must be allowed to develop the facilities it needs for any air war of the future if the full strength and balance of our military team is to be achieved. Approved For Release 2006/12/15 ? CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 13 An extensive Air National Guard program has been developed under the supervision of the National Guard Bureau. The authority over National Guard units wherever they exist, and regardless of type, is focused in a single head in the respective State or territorial govern- ments. The committee considers it essential that this program continue to progress, and that there be a single channel of communi- cations to the several States on all National Guard matters. Section 207 (f) provides, therefore, that the National Guard Bureau shall continue to perform the same functions and duties for the Department of the Air Force as it does for the Department of the Army and that it shall continue the present relationship to the States on Air National Guard matters. Weeks of investigation, which included not only the receipt of testimony on unification but the study of the records and lessons of the late war as well, has brought home to this committee certain basic facts in regard to modern war. Victory in war today and in the future will be achieved only through , the application of maximum pressure by land, naval, and air forces. Each of these forces, by the exertion of its unique pressure in the accomplishment of 4s mission, contributes directly or indirectly to the other two in the accomplishment of theirs, and all contribute toward the accomplishment of the over-all objective. Inferiority in any element of three-environment warfare greatly enhances the prob- lem of the other two. It is the considered view of your committee that the essential balance and coordination for waging successful three-environment total war can best be achieved through a National Security Organi- zation, the basis of which is three separate military departments as outlined in this bill. Three departments do not mean triplication of supporting services and facilities. Joint supervisory agencies, such as the Munitions Board, are provided by this bill to insure joint use of the supporting services and facilities wherever added economy and efficiency will result. Sizable economies unquestionably will eventually result from the organization established by this bill. (d) War Council The War Council as established in the bill is the principal advisory body to the Secretary of National Security, and is important as a means for bringing into common action the civilian and military direction of the services. (e) Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Joint Staff The bill contemplates the continuance of the Joint Chiefs of Staff with duties substantially as at present, and permits functioning in accordance with procedures developed by war experience. The bill preserves their existing status as the principal professional military advisers to the President and gives them a similar status with respect to the Secretary of National Security. A new feature of the bill is the power of decision over the Joint Chiefs of Staff which, at the discretion of the President, may be delegated, within certain fields, to the Secretary of National Security. It is expected that this power will be exercised largely in regard to administrative matters and the broader aspects of strategy in which political matters become involved. Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 14 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1997 The Joint Staff is not new. Many of its tune Lions are now per- formed by a loose structure of committees?some full-time, some part-time. There are somewhat under 100 officers now doing full- time duty of the type contemplated, and several times this number on part-time status. The full-time joint staff established by statute should strengthen the Joint Chiefs of Staff organization. The purpose of the Joint Staff is not the complete elimination of com- mittees. The duties of certain committees will be taken over by the Joint Staff, but some of the more important committees will, it is considered, continue to function with the thoroughness and speed of their operational and administrative staff work greatly improved. The Joint Staff as proposed in this bill has in itself no command authority. The provision for a Director arises from a recognized need for a full-time executive to coordinate staff work under the Joint Chiefs who cannot themselves oversee the Joint Staff continuously. Its purpose is to perform such duties as may be directed by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. (f) Munitions Board As created in this bill, the Munitions Board assumes the functions now performed by the Army and Navy Munitions Board, with the scope of those functions materially expanded. Essentially, the Mu- nitions Board is a staff agency of the Secretary of National Security for centralizing policy and for coordinating control over the military services in regard to the military aspects of industrial mobilization, procurement planning, procurement allocations and priorities, and allied matters. Power of decision normally rests with the Secretary of National Security. In time of peace and in time of war he would delegate to the Chairman of the Board such powers of decision, coordi- nation and control as he considered necessary. The Munitions Board to a large extent fulfil] .s the same role in the procurement phase of logistics as the Joint Chiefs of Staff does in the field of strategy and operations, and in the military phase of logistics. Through the collaboration of these two joint agencies, with the Munitions Board essentially supporting the plans of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a higher degree of economy in logistics and efficiency in military performance can be obtained than by any other means. In the field of procurement it is upon decisions flowing from these two agencies that methods of joint purchasing and procurement will be expanded to the maximum extent compatible with military effi- ciency. Large savings will be the final result. As regards such supporting services as transportation, hospitaliza- tion, maintenance, and others, the common policies and decisions of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Munitions Board will effect economy through the maximum joint use of those facilities which can be ac- complished without loss of military effectiveness. Duplication and waste in procurement and other supporting services will thereby be prevented, economy increased, and essential combat balance in the composition, equipment, and efficiency of the military services be retained. (g) Research and Development Board Section 214 continues the existing Joint Research and Develop- ment Board, formerly called the Office of Scientific Research and De- velopment, with one major difference. The Secretaries of War and Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 15 Navy gave powers of decision to the present chairman, realizing that such powers were necessary. These powers of decision will, under the provisions of the bill, pass to the Secretary of National Security. (h) Temporary retention of current military organization During the period of the war, the President found it necessary to make certain changes in the organizational structures of the armed forces in order to adapt them to modern requirements. Most of these changes were accomplished under the provisions of the First War Powers Act which is temporary wartime legislation. Upon its termination, the War and Navy Departments and their component parts, insofar as they are currently organized under authority of that act, will of necessity revert to the form provided under prewar per- manent law, causing them to go back to organizational structures now generally considered to be obsolete. As an illustration, prior to World War II the Army consisted of individual branches such as the Infantry, Field Artillery, Cavalry, etc., each with its own head and administrative headquarters. Al- though this system was at one time proper, under modern conditions it was found to be not only wasteful in men and resources, but obsolete and inflexible in the light of World War II requirements. An organi- zation was adopted in 1942 which eliminated the multiplicity of more or less separate compartments, and brought them together in group- ings or forces according to the functional tasks which had to be per- formed. An example of such a grouping is the Army Ground Forces. A reversion to the prewar organization would resurrect this discarded system and would result in the restoration of activities and agencies long since proved obsolete. Your committee firmly believes that it is not the intent of "Congress to permit such a retrogressive step, and it has therefore included in section 306 (c) of S. 758 a provision that the Secretary of National Security be permitted to continue the present organization structures, components, and the arrangements thereof, as now exist under the Executive orders referred to, until the postwar organizations can be decided and finally acted upon. It has limited the period in which this action must be taken to 2 years from the date of enactment of the act of which it is a part. VI. SUMMARY The committee believes that the bill embodies the best thoughts of the able leaders, civilian and military, who have concerned themselves with this problem from the time that studies of unification were first seriously undertaken in 1921, through the well-learned and convincing lessons of World War II. The basic premise upon which S. 758 (amended) has been constructed is that in unifying the military services the pro visions for their man- agement and direction be such that the traditional and fundamental principle of civilian control be not impaired. The terms of S. 758 (amended) achieve this purpose. The head of the unified IN ational Security Organization and of each department within that organization is a civilian. Furthermore, the structure provided by the bill facilitates Presidential control of the armed forces, and enables the Congress to examine and consider as a whole, rather than as unrelated pieces, the requirements and development of A..roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R11. on, - Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 16 NATIONAL SECURITY ACT OF 1947 the armed forces, a method obviously permitting sounder?because better informed--judgment. The committee sees no danger of militarism in this unity of execu- tive authority over the National Security Organization. Such fears are groundless. The safeguard against militarism in this country is not to be found in the costly confusion and inefficiency of uncoordi- nated executive agencies with confused lines of authority. It abides rather in the solid conviction of our people, and the basic democratic principle, that the leaders of the armed forces are subordinate to their civilian heads, and through them to the President, the Congress, and the people. Concentration of authority over the armed forces in a single civilian under the President, as provided for in this bill, will no more foster militarism than concentration of that authority in the President has fostered militarism throughout our national history. On the contrary, by permitting direct access to and control of a unified military organization it strengthens the hands of the Chief Executive and the Congress in dealing with the armed services. S. 758 as amended, provides a Secretary of National Security who is responsible, under the direction of the President, for establishing general policies and programs; exercising general direction' authority and control; and supervising the armed forces budget. In doing this, it also provides the Congress with a single individual to whom the Congress can turn for an Integrated view concerning national security matters, and from whom the Congress can require an exposition of armed forces problems in the light of the over-all capabilities and limitations of and requirements for armed forces. Your committee believes that it is most important that the Congress provide an individual with authority and respOnsibility who can be charged with and held accountable for the maintenance of the most effective security structure and the accomplishment of the maximum practi- cable economies. If prompt action is not taken to enact this bill during the present Congress we shall, 2 years after the conclusion of World War II, find ourselves the only major power in the world that has not modernized its Military Establishment in the light of the lessons of that war. Our purpose has been to meet the need for a comprehensive and continuous program for our future safety and for the peace and security of the world. Your committee, therefore, strongly recommends that prompt action be taken to enact S. 758 amended into law; and thus provide the unity of military concept, the unity of purpose and effort without which at the present time we may jeopardize our security. 0 A @roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? ? ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 [PUBLIC LAW 253--80TH CONGRESS] [CHAPTER 343-1sT SEssioN] [S. 758] AN ACT To promote the national security by providing for a Secretary of Defense; for a National Military Establishment; for a Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, and a Department of tPe Air Force; and for the coordination of the activities of the National Military Establishment with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, SHORT TITLE That this Act may be cited as the "National Security Act of 1947". TABLE OF CONTENTS Sec. 2. Declaration of policy. TITLE I--COORDINATION FOR NATIONAL SECURITY Sec. 101. National Security Council. Sec. 102. Central Intelligence Agency. Sec. 103. National Security Resources Board. TITLE II-THE NATIONAL MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT Sec. 201. National Military Establishment. Sec. 2J2. Secretary of Defense. Sec. 203. Military Assistants to the Secretary. Sec. 204. Civilian personnel. Sec. 205. Department of the Army. Sec. 206. Department of the Navy. Sec. 207. Department of the Air Force. Sec. 208. United States Air Force. Sec. 209. Effective date of transfers. Sec. 210. War Council. Sec. 211. Joint Chiefs of Staff. Sec. 212. Joint staff. Sec. 213. Munitions Board. Ser. 214. Research and Development Board. TITLE III-MISCELLANEOUS Sec. 301. Compensation of Secretaries. Sec. 302. Under Secretaries and Assistant Secretaries. Sec. 303. Advisory committees and personnel. Sec. 304. Status of transferred civilian personnel. Sec. 305. Saving provisions. Sec. 306. Transfer of funds. Sec. 307. Authorization for appropriations. Sec. 308. Definitions. Sec. 309. Separability. Sec. 310. Effective date. Sec. 311. Succession to the Presidency. DECLARATION OF POLICY ? SEC. 2. In enacting this legislation, it is the intent of Congress to provide a comprehensive program for the future security of the United States; to provide for the establishment of integrated policies and A. .roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 [Pus. Lew 2531 procedures for the departments, agencies, and functions of the Govern- ment relating to the national security; to provide three military depart- ments for the operation and administration of the Army, the Navy (including naval aviation and the United States Marine Corps), and the Air Force, with their assigned combat and service components; to provide for their authoritative coordination and unified direction under civilian control but not to merge them; to provide for the effective strategic direction of the armed forces and for their operation under unified control and for their integration into an efficient team of land, naval, and air forces. TITLE I?COORDINATION FOR NATIONAL SECURITY NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL SEC. 101. ( a) There is hereby established a council to be known as. the National Security Council (hereinafter in this section referred to as the "Council"). The President of the United State's shall preside over meetings of the Council: Provided, That in his alaerice he may designate a member of the Council to preside in his place. The function of the Council shall be to advise the President with respect to the integration of dome4ic, foreign, and military policies relating to the national security so as to enable the military services and the other departments and agencieS of the Government to cooperate more effectively in matters involving the national security. The Council shall be composed of the President; the Secretary of State; the Secretary of Defense, appointed under section 202 ; the Secretary of the Army, referred to in section 205; the Secretary of the Navy; the Secretary of the Air Force, appointed under section 207; the Chairman of the National . Security Resources Board, appointed under section 103; and such of the following named officers as the President may designate from time to time: The Secretaries of the executive departments, the Chairman of the Munitions Board appointed under section 213, and the Chairman of the Research and Development Board appointed under section 214; but no such addi- tional member shall be designated until the advice and consent of the Senate has been given to his appointment to the office the holding of which authorizes his designation as a member of the Council. (b) In addition to performing such other functions as the President may direct, for the purpose of more effectively coordinating the poli- cies and functions of the departments and agencies of the Government relating to the national security, it shall, subject to the direction of the President, be the duty of the Council? (1) to assess and appraise the objectives, commitments, and risks of the United States in relation to our actual and potential military power, in the interest of national security, for the purpose of making recommendations to the President in connection therewith; and (2) to consider policies on matters of common interest to the departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security, and to make recommendations to the President in connection therewith. A ? roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 3 [PUB. LAW 2531 '(C) The Council shall have a staff to be headed by a civilian executive secretary who shall be appointed by the President, and who shall receive compensation at the rate of $10,000 a year. The executive secretary, subject to the direction of the Council, is hereby authorized, subject to the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, to appoint and fix the compensation of such personnel as may be necessary to perform such duties as may be prescribed by the Council in connection with the performance of its functions. (d) The Council shall, from time to time, make such recommenda- tions, and such other reports to the President as it deems appropriate or as the President may require. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Sm. 102. (a) There is hereby established under the National Security Council a Central Intelligence Agency with a Director of Central Intelligence, who shall be the head thereof. The Director shall be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, from among the commissioned officers of the armed services or from among individuals in civilian life. The Director shall receive compensation at the rate of $14,000 a year. (b) (1) If a commissioned officer of the armed services is appointed as Director then? (A) in the performance of his duties as Director, he shall be subject to no supervision, control, restriction, or prohibition (mili- tary or otherwise) other than would be operative with respect to him if he were a civilian in no way connected with the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, the Department of the Air Force, or the armed services or any component thereof; and (B) he shall not possess or exercise any supervision, control, powers, or functions (other than such as he possesses, or is author- ized or directed to exercise, as Director) with respect to the armed services or any component thereof, the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, or the Department of the Air Force, or any branch, bureau, unit or division thereof, or with respect to any of the personnel (military or civilian) of any of the foregoing. (2) Except as provided in paragraph (1), the appointment to the office of Director of a commissioned officer of the armed services, and his acceptance of and service in such office, shall in no way affect any status, office, rank, or grade he may occupy or hold in the armed serv- ices, or any emolument, perquisite, right, privilege, or benefit incident to or arising out of any such status, office, rank, or grade. Any such commissioned officer shall, while serving in the office of Director, receive the military pay and allowances (active or retired, as the case may be) payable to a commissioned officer of his grade and length of -service and shall be paid, from any funds available to defray the expenses of the Agency, annual compensation at a rate equal to the amount by which $14,000 exceeds the amount of his annual mili ary pay and allowances. (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of section 6 of the Act of ,Aucrust 24, 1912 (37 Stat. 555), or the provisions of any other law, the Directorof Central Intelligence may, in his discretion, terminate the employment of any officer or employee of the Agency whenever Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 (PUB. LAW 253.] he shall deem such termination necessary or advisable in the interests of the United States, but such termination shall not affect the right of such officer or e:mployee to seek or accept employment in any other department or agency of the Government if declared eligible for such employment by the United States Civil Service Commission. (d) For the purpose of coordinating the intelligence activities of the several Government departments and agencies in the interest of national security, it shall be the ' duty of the Agency, under the direction of the National Security Council? (1) to advise the National ;Security Council in matters con- cerning such intelligence activities of the Government depart- ments and agencies as relate to national security; (2) to make recommendations to the National Security Council for the coordination of such intelligence activities of the depart- ments and agencies of the Government as relate to the national security; (3) to correlate and evaluate intelligence relating to the national security, and provide ;for the appropriate dissemination of such intelligence within the Government using where appro- ? priate existing agencies and fa ili ties : Prcvided, That the Agency shall have no police, subpena, ; aw-enforcement powers, or inter- nal-security functions: Provided further, That the departments and other agencies of the Government shall continue to collect, evaluate, correlate, and disseininate departmental intelligence: And provided further, That the Director of Central Intelligence ? shall be responsible for protecting intelligence sources and meth- ods from unauthorized disclosure; (4) to perform, for the benefit of the existing intelligence agencies, such additional services of common concern as the National Security Council determines can be more efficiently accomplished centrally; , (5) to perform such other functions and duties related to intelligence affecting the national security as the National Security Council may from time to time direct. (e) To the extent recommended ,by the National Security Council and approved by the President, such intelligence of the departments and agencies of the Government, except as hereinafter provided, relating to the national security shall be open to the inspection of the Direator of Central Intelligence, and such intelligence as relates to the national security and is possessed by such departments and other agencies of the Government, except as hereinafter provided, shall be made available to the Director of Central Intelligelice for correlation, evaluation, and dissemination: Provided, however, That upon the written request of the Director of 'Central Intelligence, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation shall make available to the Director of Central Intelligence such information for correlation, evaluation, and dissemination as may be essential to the national security. , (f) Effective when the Director first appointed under subsection (a) has taken office-- , (1) the National Intelligence Authority (11 Fed. Reg. 1337, 1339, February 5, 1946) shall cease to exist; and A. @roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 5 [Pus. Lew 253. (2) the personnel, property, and records of the Central Intelli- gence Group are transferred to the Central Intelligence Agency, and such Group shall cease to exist. Any unexpended balances of appropriations, allocations, or other funds available or authorized to be made available for such Group shall be avail- able and shall be authorized to be made available in like manner for expenditure by the Agency. NATIONAL SECURITY RESOURCES BOARD SEC, 103. (a) There is hereby established a National Security Resources Board (hereinafter in this section referred to as the "Board") to be composed of the Chairman of the Board and such heads or representatives of the various executive departments and independent agencies as may from time to time be designated by the President to be members of the Board. The Chairman of the Board shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall receive compensation at the rate of $14,000 a year. (b) The Chairman of the Board, subject to the direction of the President, is authorized, subject to the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, to appoint and fix the com- pensation of such personnel as may be necessary to assist the Board in carrying out its functions. (c) It shall be the function of the Board to advise the President concerning the coordination of military, industrial, and civilian mobilization, including? (1) policies concerning industrial and civilian mobilization in order to assure the most effective mobilization and maximum utilization of the Nation's manpower in the event of war; (2) programs for the effective use in time of war of the Nation's natural and industrial resources for military and civilian needs, for the maintenance and stabilization of the civilian econ- omy in time of war, and for the adjustment of such economy to war needs and conditions; (3) policies for unifying, in time of war, the activities of Fed- eral agencies and departments engaged in or concerned with production, procurement, distribution, or transportation of mili- tary or civilian supplies, materials, and products; (4) the relationship between potential supplies of, and poten- tial requirements for, manpower, resources, and productive facili- ties in time of war; (5) policies for establishing adequate reserves of strategic and critical material, and for the conservation of these reserves' ? (6) the strategic relocation of industries, services, government, and economic activities, the continuous operation of which is essential to the Nation's security. (d) In performing its functions, the Board shall utilize to the maximum extent the facilities and resources of the departments and agencies of the Government. Approved For Release 2006/12/15 ? CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 [Pus. Lew 253I 6 TITLE II?THE NATIONAL MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT ESTABLISHMENT OF THE NATIONAL MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT SEC. 201. (a) There is hereby established. the National Military Establishment, and the Secretary of Defense shall be the head thereof. (b) The National Military Establishment shall consist of the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Department of the Air Force, together with all other agencies created under title IT of this Act. SECRETARY OF DEFENSE SEC. 202. (a) There shall be a Secretary of Defense, who shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with 1 he advice and consent of the Senate:Provided, That a person who has within ten years been on active day as a commissioned officer in a Regular component of the armed services shall not be eligible for appointment as Secretary of Defense. The Secretary of Defense shall be the principal assistant to the President in all matters relat- ing to the national security. Ihnler the direction of the President and subject to the provisions of this Act he shall perform the following duties: (1) Establish general policies and programs for the National Military Establishment and for all of the departments and agencies therein; (2) Exercise general direction., authority, and control over such departments and agencies; (3) Take appropriate steps to eliminate unnecessary duplica- tion or overlapping in the fields of procurement, supply, transportation, storage, health; and research; (4) Supervise and coordinate the preparation of the budget estimates of the departments and agencies comprising the National Military Establishment; forniulate and determine the budget estimates for submittal to the Bureau of the Budget; and super- vise the budget j)rograms of such departments and agencies under the applicable appropriation Act: Provided, That nothing herein contained shall prevent the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, or the Secretary of the Air Force from presenting to the President or to the Director of the Budget, after first so informing the Secretary of Defense, any report or recommendation relating to his department which he may deem necessary: And provided further, That the Department of the Army,. the Department of the Navy, and the Department of the Air Force shall be administered as individual executive departments by their respective Secretaries and all powers and duties relating to such departments not specifically conferred upon the Secretary of Defense by this Act shall be retained by each of their respective Secretaries. (b) The Secretary of Defense shall submit annual written reports to the President aria the Congress covering elzpenditures, work, and accomplishments of the National Military Establ ishment, together with such recommendations as he shall deem appropriate. Aooroved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 7 [Pus. Lew 253.1 (c) The Secretary of Defense shall cause a seal of office to be made for the National Military Establishment, of such design as the Presi- dent shall approve, and judicial notice shall be taken thereof. MILITARY ASSISTANTS TO THE SECRETARY SEC. 203. Officers of the armed services may be detailed to duty as assistants and personal aides to the Secretary of Defense, but he shall not establish a military staff. CIVILIAN PERSONNEL SEC. 204. (a) The Secretary of Defense is authorized to appoint from civilian life not to exceed three special assistants to advise and assist him in the performance of his duties. Each such special assist- ant shall receive compensation at the rate of $10,000 a year. (o) The Secretary of Defense is authorized, subject to the civil- service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, to appoint and fix the compensation of such other civilian personnel as may be necessary for the performance of the functions of the National Mili- tary Establishment other than those of the Departments of the Army, Navy, and Air Force. DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY SEC. 205. (a) The Department of War shall hereafter be designated the Department of the Army, and the title of the Secretary of War shall be changed to Secretary of the Army. Changes shall be made in the titles of other officers and activities of the Department of the Army as the Secretary of the Army may determine. (b) All laws, orders, regulations, and other actions relating to the Department of War or to any officer or activity whose title is changed under this section shall, insofar as they are not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act, be deemed to relate to the Department of the Army within the National Military Establishment or to such officer or activity designated by his or its new title. (c) The term "Department of the Army" as used in this Act shall be construed to mean the Department of the Army at the seat of govern- ment and all field headquarters, forces, reserve components, installa- tions, activities, and functions under the control or supervision of the Department of the Army. (d) The Secretary of the Army shall cause a seal of office to be made for the Department of the Army, of such design as the President may approve, and judicial notice shall be taken thereof. (e) In general the United States Army, within the Department of the Army, shall include land combat and service forces and such avia- tion and water transport as may be organic therein. It shall be organized, trained, and equipped primarily for prompt and sustained combat incident to operatiois on land. It shall be responsible for the preparation of land forces necessary for the effective prosecution of war except as otherwise assigned and, in accordance with integrated joint mobilization plans, for the expansion of peacetime components of the Army to meet the needs of war. A @roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 WW1. LAW 253,1 81 'DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY SEc. 206. (a) The term "Depart ent of the Navy" as used in this Act shall be construed to mean the Department of the Navy at the seat of government; the headquarters, United States Marine Corps; the entire operating forces of the United States Navy, including naval aviation, and of the United States Marine Corps, including the reserve components of such forces all field activities, headquarters, i forces, bases, installations, activitie , and functions under the control or supervision of the Department o the Navy; and. the United States Coast Guard when operating as a part of the Navy pi irsuant to law. (b) In general the United States Navy, within the Department of the Navy, shall include naval conibat and services forces and such aviation as may be organic therein. It shall be organized, trained, and equipped primarily for prompt and sustained combat incident to operations at sea. It shall be responsible for the preparation of naval forces necessary for the effective prosecution of war except as other- wise assigned, and, in accordance With integrated joint mobilization plans, for the expansion of the peaCetime components of the Navy to meet the needs of war. I All naval aviation shall be integrated with the naval service as part thereof within the Department of the Navy. Naval aviation shall consist of combat and service and training forces, and shall include land-based naval aviation, air transport essential for naval operations, all air weapons and air techniques involved in the operations and activ 'lies of the United States Navy, and the entire remainder of the aeronautical organization of the United States Navy, together with the personnel necessary therefor. I The Navy shall be generally responsible for naval reconnaissance, antisubmarine warfare, and protectibn of shipping. The Navy shall avelcp ait-c-zal',-? Fv.-cap()ns, tactics, technique, organ- ization and equipment of naval combat and service elements; matters of joint concern as to these functions shall be coordinated between the Army, the Air Force, and the NaYy. (c) The United States Marine Corps, wit un the Department of the Navy, shall include land combat and service forces and such aviation as may be organic therein. The Marine Corps shall be organized, trained, and equipped to provide fleet marine forces of combined arms, together with sum)orting air components, for service with the fleet in the seizure or defense of advanced naval bases and for the conduct of such land operations as may be essential to the prosecution of a naval campaign. iIt shall be the duty of the Marine Corps to develop, in coordination ivith the Almy and the Air Force, those phases of amphibious operations which pertain to the trctics, technique, and equipment employed by landing forces. In addition, the Marine Corps shall provide detachments and organizations for service on armed vessels of the Navy, shall provide security detach- ments for the protection of naval p-i?operty at naval stations and bases, and shall perform such other duties as the President may direct: Provided, That such additional duties shall not detract from or inter- fere with the operations for whiCh the Marine Corps is primarily organized. The Marine Corps shall be responsible, in accordance with integrated joint mobilization plans, for the expansion of peace- time components of the Marine Corps to meet the needs of war. Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 9 [Pus. LAW 2511 DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE ? SEC. 207. (a) Within the National Military Establishment there is hereby established an executive department to be known as the Depart- ment of the Air Force, and a Secretary of the Air Force, who shall be the head thereof. The Secretary of the Air Force shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. (b) Section 158 of the Revised Statutes is amended to include the Department of the Air Force and the provisions of so much of title IV of the Revised Stat utes as now or hereafter amended as is not incon- sistent with this Act shall be applicable to the Department of the Air Force. (c) The term "Department of the Air Force" as used in this Act shall be construed to niean the Department of the Air Force at the seat of government and all field headquarters, forces, reserve com- ponents, installations, activities, and functions under the control or supervision of the Department of the Air Force. (d) There shall be in the Department of the Air Force an Under Secretary of the Air Force and two Assistant Secretaries of the Air Force, who shall be appointed from civilian life by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. (e) The several officers of the Department of the Air Force shall perform such functions as the Secretary of the Air Force may prescribe. (f) So much of the functions of the Secretary of the Army and of the Department of the Army, including those of any officer of such Department, as are assigned to or under the control of the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, or as are deemed by the Secretary of Defense to be necessary or desirable for the operations of the Department of the Air Force or the United States Air Force, shall be transferred to and vested in the Secretary of the Air Force and the Department of the Air Force: Provided, That the National Guard Bureau shall, in addition to the functions and duties per- formed by it for the Department of the Army, be charged with similar functions and duties for the Department of the Air Force, and shall be the channel of communication between the Department of the Air Force and the several States on all matters pertaining to the Air National Guard: And provided turfh,er, That, in order to permit an orderly transfer, the Secretary of Defense may, during the transfer period hereinafter prescribed, direct that the Department of the Army shall continue for appropriate periods to exercise any of such func- tions, insofar as they relate to the Department of the Air Force, or the United States Air Force or their property and personnel. Such of the property, personnel, and records of the Department of the Army used in the exercise of functions transferred under this subsection as the Secretary of Defense shall determine shall be transferred or assigned to the Department of the Air Force. (g) The Secretary of the Air Force shall cause a seal of office to be made for the Department of the Air Force, of such device as the President shall approve, and judicial notice shall be taken thereof. Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 [PUB. LAW 253.t 10 tTNITED STATES AIR FORCE I SEc. 208. (a) The United States Air Force is hereby established under the Department of the Air Force. The Army Air Forces, the Air Corps, United States Army, Find the General Headquarters Air Force (Air Force Combat Command), shall be transferred to the United States Air Force. 1 (b) There shall be a Chief of Staff, United States Air Force., who shall be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, for a term of four years from among the officers of general rank who are assigned to or commissioned in the United States Air Force. Under the direction of the Secretary of the Air Force, the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, shall exercise command over the United States Air Force and shall be charged with the duty of carrying into execution all lawful orders and directions which may be transmitted to him. The functions of the Commanding General, General Headquarters Air Force (A.ir Force Combat Com- mand) and of the Chief of the Air Corps a.ad of the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, shall be transferred to the Chief of Stall, United States Air Force. When sUch transfer becomes effective, the offices of the Chief of the Air Corp, United States Army, and Assist- ants to the Chief of the Air Corps, ,United States Army, provided for by the Act of June 4, 1920, as amended (41 Sat. 768), and Command- ing General, General Headquarters .Air Force, provided for by section 5 of the Act of June 16, 1936 (49 Stat. 1525), shall cease to exist. While holding office as Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, the incumbent shall hold a grade and receive allowances equivalent to those prescribed by law for the Chief of Staff, United States Army. The Chief of Staff, United Statesrmy, the Chief of Naval Opera- tions, and the Chief of Staff, Unite States Air Force, shall take rank among themselves according to their relative dates of appointment as such, and shall each take rank above all other officers On the active list of the Army, Navy, and Air Force: Provided, That nothing in this Act shall have the effect of changing the relative rank of the present Chief of Staff, United States Army, and the present Chief of Naval Operations. (c) All commissioned officers, W,arrant officers, and enlisted men, commissioned, holding warrants, or enlisted, in the Air Corps, United States Army, or the Army Air Forces, shall be transferred in branch to the United States Air Force. All other commissioned officers, war- rant officers, and enlisted men, who 'are commissioned, hold warrants, or are enlisted, in any component of the Army of the United States and who are under the authority or command of the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, shall be continued under the authority or command of the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, and under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Air Force. Personnel whose status is affected by this subsection shall retain their existing commis- sions, warrants, or enlisted status in existing components of the armed forces unless otherwise altered or terminated in accordance with exist- ing law; and they shall not be deemed to have been appointed to a new or different office or grade, or to have vacated their permanent or temporary appointments in an existing component. of the armed forces, solely by virtue of any change in status under this subsection. Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 11 [Pus. LAW 2531 No such change in status shall alter or prejudice the status of any individual so assigned, so as to deprive him of any right, benefit, or privilege to which he may be entitled under existing law. (d) Except as otherwise directed by the Secretary of the Air Force, all property, records, installations, agencies, activities, projects, and civilian personnel under the jurisdiction, control, authority, or com- mand of the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, shall be con- firmed to the same extent under the jurisdiction, control, authority, or command, respectively, of the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, in the Department of the Air Force. (e) For a period of two years from the date of enactment of this Act, personnel (both military and civilian), property, records, installations, agencies, activities and projects may be transferred between the Department of the Army and the Department of the Air Force by direction of the Secretary of Defense. ( f ) In general the United States Air Force shall include aviation forces both combat and service not otherwise assigned. It shall be organized, trained., and equipped primarily for prompt and sustained offensive and defensive air operations. The Air Force shall be responsible for the preparation of the air forces necessary for the effective prosecution of war except as otherwise assigned and, in accordance with integrated joint mobilization plans, for the expansion of the peacetime components of the Air Force to meet the needs of war. EFFECTIVE DATE OF TRANSFERS SEC. 209. Each transfer, assignment, or change in status under sec- tion 207 or section 208 shall take effect upon such date or dates as may be prescribed by the Secretary of Defense. WAR COUNCIL SEC. 210. There shall be within the National Military Establish- ment a War Council composed of the Secretary of Defense, as Chair- man, who shall have power of decision; the Secretary of the Army; the Secretary of the Navy; the Secretary of the Air Force; the Chief of Staff, United States Army; the Chief of Naval Operations; and the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force. The War Council shall advise the Secretary of Defense on matters of broad policy relating to the armed forces, and shall consider and report on such other matters as the Secretary of Defense may direct. JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF SEC. 211. (a) There is hereby established within the National Mili- tary Establishment the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which shall consist of the Chief of Staff, United States Army; the Chief of Naval Operations; the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force; and the Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief, if there be one. (b) Subject to the authority and direction of the President and the Secretary of Defense, it shall be the duty of the Joint Chiefs of Staff? (1) to prepare strategic plans and to provide for the strategic direction of the military forces; (2) to prepare joint logistic plans and to assign to the military services logistic responsibilities in accordance with such plans; Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 (PUB LAW 253.) 12 (3) to establish unified comm nds in strategic areas when such unified commands are in the int rest of national security; (4) to formulate policies fo joint training of the military forces; (5) to formulate policies for coordinating the education of members of the military forces; (6) to review major materia and personnel requirements of the military forces, in accordance with strategic and logistic plans; and (7) to provide United State S representation on the Military Staff Committee of the United Nations in accordance with the provisions of the Charter of the United Nations. (c) The Joint Chiefs of Staff shall act as the principal military advisers to the President and the Se9retary of Defense and shall per- form such other duties as the President and the Secretary of Defense may direct or as may be prescribed by law. JOINT S'I'AFF SEC. 212. There shall be, under the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a Joint Staff to consist of not to exceed one hundred officers and to be composed of approximately equal numbers of officers from each of the three armed services. The Joint Staff. operating under a Director thereof appointed by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, shall perform such duties as may be directed by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The Director shall be an officer junior in grade to all members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. MUNITIONS BOARD SEC. 213. (a) There is hereby established in the National Military Establishment a Munitions Board (hereinafter in thi.s section referred to as the "Board"). (b) The Board shall be composed 'of a Chairman, who shall be the head thereof, and an Under Secretary or Assistant Secretary from each of the three military departments, to be designated in each case by the Secretaries of their respective departments. The Chairman shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall receive compensation at the rate of $14,000 a year. (c) It shall be the duty of the Board under the direction of the Secretary of Defense and in support of strategic and logistic plans prepared by the Joint Chiefs of Staff? ( 1 ) to coordinate the appropriate activities within the National Military Establishment with regard to industrial matters, includ- ing the procurement, production, and distribution plans of the departments and agencies comprising the Establishment; (2) to plan for the military aspects of industrial mobilization; (3) to recommend assignment of procurement responsibilities among the several military services and to plan for standardiza- tion of specifications and for the greatest practicable allocation of purchase authority of technical equipment and common use items on the basis of single procurement; A ? roved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 13, (PUB. Lew 253.1; (4) to prepare estimates of potential production, procurement, and personnel for use in evaluation of the logistic feasibility of strategic operations; (5) to determine relative priorities of the various segments of the military procurement programs; (6) to supervise such subordinate agencies as are or may be created to consider the subjects falling within the scope of the Board's responsibilities; (7) to make recommendations to regroup, combine, or dissolve existing interservice agencies operating in the fields of procure- ment, production, and distribution in such manner as to promote efficiency and economy; (8) to maintain liaison with other departments and agencies for the proper correlation of military requirements with the civilian economy, particularly in regard to the procurement or disposition of strategic and critical material and the maintenance of adequate reserves of such material, and to make recommenda- tions as to policies in connection therewith; (9) to assemble and review material and personnel require- ments presented by the Joint Chiefs of Staff and those presented by the production, procurement, and distribution agencies assigned to meet military needs, and to make recommendations thereon to the Secretary of Defense; and (10) to perform such other duties as the Secretary of Defense may direct. (d) When the Chairman of the Board first appointed has taken office, the Joint Army and Navy Munitions Board shall cease to exist and all its records and personnel shall be transferred to the Munitions Board. (e) The Secretary of Defense shall provide the Board with such personnel and facilities as the Secretary may determine to be required by the Board for the performance of its functions. RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD SEC. 214. (a) There is hereby established in the National Military Establishment a Research and Development Board (hereinafter in this section referred to as the "Board"). The Board shall be com- posed of a Chairman, who shall be the head thereof, and two repre- sentatives from each of the Departments of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, to be designated by the Secretaries of their respective Departments. The Chairman shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall receive compensation at the rate of $14,000 a year. The purpose of the Board shall be to advise the Secretary of Defense as to the status of scientific research relative to the national security, and to assist him in assuring adequate provision for research and development on scientific problems relating to the national security. (b) It shall be the duty of the Board, under the direction of the Secretary of Defense? (1) to prepare a complete and integrated program of research and development for military purposes; Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004(m1-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ipop. LAW 3533 14 (2) to advise with regard tO trends in scientific research relat- ing to national security and the measures necessary to assure con- tinued and increasing progresS; (3) to recommend measurds of coordination of research and development among the military departments, and allocation among them of responsibilities for specific programs of joint interest; (4) to formulate policy for the National Military Establish- ment in connection with research and development matters in- volving agencies outside the National Military Establishment; (5) to consider the interaction of research and development and strategy, and to advise the Joint Chiefs of Staff in connec- tion therewith; and (6) to perform such other duties as the Secretary of Defense may direct. (c) When the Chairman of the Board first appointed has taken office, the Joint Research and Development Board shall cease to exist and all its records and personnel shall be transferred to the Research and Development Board. (d) The Secretary of Defense shall provide the Board with such personnel and facilities as the Secretary may determine to be required by the Board for the performance of its functions. TITLE III?MIS C ELLA NE OIT S COMPENSATION OP SECRETARIES SEC. 301. (a) The Secretary of Defense shall receive the compensa- tion prescribed by law for heads of executive departments. (b) The Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force shall each receive the compensation prescribed by law for heads of executive departments. UNDER SECRETARIES AND ASSISTANT SECRETARIES SEC. 302. The Under Secretaries and Assistant Secretaries of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Forge shall each receive compensation at the rate of $10,000 a year and ishall perform such duties as the Secretaries of iheir respective departments may prescribe. ADVISORY COMMITTEES AND PERSONNEL SEC. 303. (a) The Secretary of Defense, the Chairman of the National Security Resources Board, and the Director of Central Intelligence are authorized to appoint such advisory committees and to employ, consistent with other provisions of this Act, such part- time advisory personnel as they may deem necessary in carrying out their respective functions and the functions cf agencies under their control, Persons holding other offiees or positions under the United States for which they receive compensation while serving as members of such committees shall receive no additional compensation for such service, Other members of such committees and Other part-time advisory personnel so employed may serve without compensation or may receive compensation at a rate not to exceed $35 for each day of service, as determined by the appointing authority. Aporoved For Release 2006/12/15 ? CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 ? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 15 [Pus. LAW 253.1 (b) Service of an individual as a member of any such advisory committee, or in any other part-time capacity for a department or agency hereunder, shall not be considered as service bringing such individual within the provisions of section 109 or 113 of the Criminal. Code (U. S. C., 1940 edition, title 18, secs. 198 and 203), or section 19 (e) of the Contract Settlement Act of 1944, unless the act of such individual, which by such section is made unlawful when performed by an individual referred to in such section, is with respect to any particular matter which directly involves a department or agency which such person is advising or in which such department or agency is directly interested. STATUS OF TRANSFERRED CIVILIAN PERSONNEL SEC. 304. All transfers of civilian personnel under this Act shall be without change in classification or compensation, but the head of any department or agency to which such a transfer is made is authorized to make such changes in the titles and designations and prescribe such changes in the duties of such personnel commensurate with their classi- fication as he may deem necessary and appropriate. SAVING PROVISIONS SEC. 305. (a) All laws, orders, regulations, and other actions appli- cable with respect to any function, activity, personnel, property, records, or other thing transferred under this Act, or with respect to any officer, department, or agency, from which such transfer is made, shall, except to the extent rescinded, modified, superseded, terminated, or made inapplicable by or under authority of law, have the same effect as if such transfer had not been made; but, after any such transfer, any such law, order, regulation, or other action which vested functions in or otherwise related to any officer, department, or agency from which such transfer was made shall, insofar as applicable with respect to the function, activity, personnel, property, records or other thing transferred and to the extent not inconsistent with other provisions of this Act, be deemed to have vested such function in or relate to the officer, department, or agency to which the transfer was made. (b) No suit, action, or other proceeding lawfully commanced by or against the head of any department or agency or other officer of the United States, in his official capacity or in relation to the discharge of his official duties, shall abate by reason of the taking effect of any transfer or change in title under the provisions of this Act; and, in the case of any such transfer, such suit, action, or other proceeding may be maintained by or against the successor of such head or other officer under the transfer, but only if the court shall allow the same to be maintained on motion or supplemental petition filed within twelve months after such transfer takes effect, showing a necessity for the survival of such suit, action, or other proceeding to obtain settle- ment of the questions involved. (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of the second paragraph of section 5 of title I of the First War Powers Act, 1941, the existing organization of the War Department under the provisions of Executive Order Numbered 9082 of February 28, 1942, as modified by Executive Order Numbered 9722 of May 13, 1946, and the existing organization ? of the Department of the Navy under the provisions of Executive Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 I [Pm Lew 2511 16 Order Numbered 9635 of September 29, 1945, including the assignment of functions to organizational units within the War and Navy Depart- ments, may, to the extent determi ed by the Secretary of Defense; continue in force for two years foll wing the date of enactment of this Act except to the extent modified by the provisions of this Act or under the authority of law. TRANSFER OF FUNDS SEo. 306. All unexpended balances of appropriations, allocations, nonappropriated funds, or other funds available or hereafter made available for use by or on behalf of the Army Air Forces or officers thereof, shall be transferred to the Departmentof the Air Force for use in connection with the exerciise of its functions. Such other unexpended balances of appropriations, allocations, n onappropriated funds, or other funds available or ;hereafter 'made available for use by the Department of War or the Department of the Army in exercise of functions transferred to the Department cf the Air Force under this Act, as the Secretary of Defense shall determine, shall be trans- ferred to the Department of the Air Force for use in connection with the exercise of its functions. Unexpended balances transferred under this section may be used for the purposes for which the appropriations, allocations, or other funds were originally made available, or for new expenditures occasioned by the enactment of this Act. The transfers herein authorized may be made with or without warrant action as may he appropriate from time to time from any appropriation covered by this section to any other such apprbpriation or to such new accounts established on the books of the Treasury as may be determined to be necessary to carry into effect provisions of this Act. A 171'1 IORIZ ATI ON FOR APPROPRIATION S SEd. 307. There are hereby autliorized to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary and apprOpriate to carry out the provisions and purposes of this Act. DEFINITIONS SEC. 308. (a) As used in this Act, the term "function" includes functions, powers, and ditties. (b) As used in this Act, the term "budget program" refers to recom- mendations as to the apportionment, to the allocation and to the review of allotments of appropriated fund. SEPARABILITY Sac. 309. If any provision of this Act or the; application thereof to any person or circumstances is held invalid, the validity of the remainder of the Act and of the application of such provision to other persons and circumstances shall not,be affected thereby. EFFECTIVE DATE SEC. 310. (a) The first sentence of section 202 (a) and sections 1, 2, 307, 308, 309, and 810 shall take effect immediately upon the enact- ment of this Act. (b) Except as provided in subsection (a), the provisions of this Act shall take effect on whichever of the following days is the earlier: Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 17 [Pus. LAW 2531 The day after the day upon which the Secretary of Defense first appointed takes office, or the sixtieth day after the date of the enact- ment of this Act. SUCCESSION TO TUE PRESIDENCY SEC. 311. Paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of section 1 of the Act entitled "An Act to provide for the performance of the duties of the office of President in case of the removal, resignation, death, or in- ability both of the President and Vice President", approved July 18, 1947, is amended by striking out "Secretary of War' and inserting in lieu thereof "Secretary of Defense", and by striking out "Secretary of the Navy,". Approved July 26, 1947. Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-,RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 Approved For Release 2006/12/15 ? CIA-RDP Apprpi For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE - duties prescribed by the Classification Act of 1023, as amended. Sac. 5. The committee or its duly consti- tuted subcommittee is authorized, with the approval f the Committee on Rules and Ad- ministration, to request the use of the serv- ices, information, facilities, and personnel of the departments and agencies in the execu- tive branch of the Government in the per- formance of its duties under this resolution. SEC. 6. The expenses of the committee Under this resolution, which shall not exceed $25,000, shall be paid out of the contingent rd of the Senate upon vouchers signed by the chairman. REREFERENCE OF NOMINATION OF BUR- TON' N, BEHLING to BE A MEMBER OF FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION As in executive sessidn, Mr. WHITE submitted the following resolution (S. Ex. Res. 52) ,?which was or- dered to lie over 1 day unaer the rule: . Rcsozverz, That the CommitA on Public Works be, and it is hereby, discharged from tl-.J1 further consideration of the naknination 01 Burton N. Behling, of the Distridk of Co- lumbia, to be a member of the Federal\Power Commission for the term expiring Juil 22, 1952, and that it be referred to the Co it- tee on interstate and Foreign Commerce. MAJ. RICHARD R. WRIGHT Mr. MARTIN. Mr. President, last, Wednesday, in ? Philadelphia, Maj. Richard R. Wright passed from this life at the age of 94. His distinguished career was one of the greatest examples of what can be accomplished under our American way of life. Major Wright was born as a slave in the State of Georgia. For 50 years he was active in the field of?tclucation in his native State. He was graduated from Atlanta University in 1876 and took post- graduate work at the University of Chi- cago, Harvard University, and the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. He first taught in the elementary and secondary schools, and in 1880 was ap- pointed principal of the Ware 'High School, the first Negro school of its kind in the State. Later he was made president of Geor- gia State College, a post which he held for 30 years. ? In 1921 he decided to go into business, and organized in Philadelphia the Citi- zens 4Sz Southern Bank Sz Trust Co., now the largest Negro bank in eastern United States. He always championed the cause of his people. He fostered National Free- dom Dry, and his last visit to the Na- tion's Capital was to advocate recogni- tion of that day. He was active in the church and fraternal organizations. He interested in military work and at- tained .t,he rank of major. By the force of his personality, his . work; courage, and knowledge Major; Wright achieved outstanding things for - himself and his people. The Philadelphia Inquirer, which sel- dom refers to individuals in its editorials, 1-3,11d appropriate tribute to him edi- torially, and I ask unanimous consent to have this editorial printed in the RECORD at this point as a part of my remarks,. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: MAT. RICHARD R. WRIGHT Maj. Richard:R. Wright, who died in this City on Wednesday, achieved distinction in many' fields in a long lifetime that stretched back to pre-Civil War days in GeOrgia, where be was born in slavery. ? From those beginnings he ,rose to become one of the foremost NegroeTencators in the country. He was principaVol the first Negro high school in Georgia anOor 30 years presi- dent of Georgia State College. Widening his activities, he turned to bank- ing comparatively late in life and was founder and president of the Citizens & Southern Bank & Trust Co. of this city, the largest Negro-owned and operated bank in the North. Meanwhile, he. served his country in the armed forces during the Spanish-American War, and was named by President McKinley a special paymaster with the rank of major. He was known not only in Philadelphia but throughout the United States as a civic leader untiringly devoted to causes he be- lieved would help the ordinary citizen, and as a sincere champion of his people. Fostering National Freedom Day and ob- taining the issuance of a postage stamp honoring Booker T. Washington were only minor aspects of his unflagging zeal in the interests of his fellow Negroes. Major Wright was not only a highly suc- cessful and capable Negro educator and banker; he was a loyal, conscientious public ervant, a distinguished. American, and a ne gentleman. , AT OF THE FUTURE OF AMERICA?? DRESS BY SENATOR WATKINS WATKINS asked and obtained leave printed in the RECORD a radio ad- dress e titled "What of the Future of America?' delivered by him on July 5., 1947, which appears in the Appendix.] INDEPENDENCE DAY IN THE ATOMIC AGE?ADDRTS BY SENATOR WILEY [Mr. WILEY asked and obtained leave to have printed in the RECORD an address en- titled "Independence Day in the Atomic Age," delivered by h'irri over Wisconsin radio stations on July 4, i 47, which appears in the. Appendix.] , AMERICAN RELATION WITH RUSSIA.--,- SERMON BY DR. WALTEIR ROWE COURT ENAY ? [Mr. STEWART asked and\obtained leave to have printed in the RECORD an article en- titled "Clergyman wants United States To Get Tough With Russia," containing ex- cerpts from a sermon by Dr. Walter Rowe Courtenay, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Nashville, Tenn., which appears in the Appendix.] NATIONAL HEALTH INSURANCE? \ COMPILATIONS OF FACTS [Mr. MURRAY asked and obtained leave to have printed in the REcoRD two brief com- pilations cif facts bearing on th-e-'1eed.-15) national health insurance, which appel,r4n the Appendix.] THE FEDERAL COURTS?EDITORIAL FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES [Mr. O'CONOR asked and obtained leave to have printed in the RECORD an editorial entitled "For the Federal Courts," published in the New York Times, of July 6, 194, which appears in the Appendix.] POSTAL RATE ON BOOKS?ARTICLE BY MARQUIS CHILDS- [Mr. O'CONOR asked and obtained leave ti have printed in the RECORD an article en Mt.titled "Postal Rate on Books," written barquis Childs and published in the Wash [m to hay - 8457 ington Post of July 7, 1947, which appears in the Appendix.] A GOOD FORMULA?AN EDITORIAL [Mr. BUSHFIELD . asked and obtained leave to have printed in the RECORD an edi- torial entitled "A Good Formula," published in the July 1, 1947, issue of the Newark Star- Ledger, which appears in the Appendix.] THE PRESENT LIQUOR SITUATION? ARTICLE BY MRS. D. LEIGH COLVIN [Mr. LANGER asked and obtained leave to have printed in the RECORD an article enti- tled "The Present Liquor Situation," by Mrs. D. Leigh Colvin, president of the National Woman's Christian Temperance Union, which appears -in -the Appendix.] lsuROPE'S TESTING TIME?ARTICLE BY BARNET NOVER [Mr. O'MAHONEY asked and obtained leave to have printed in the RECORD an arti- cle entitled "Europe's Testing Time," by Bar- net Nover, published in the Washington Post of July 5, 1947, which appears in the Ap- pendix.] MEETINGS OF COMMETTEP DURING SENATE SESSION Mr. REVERCOMB. Mr. President, on behalf of the Subcommittee on Immigra- tion of the Committee on the Judiciary, I ask unanimous consent that it may meet this afternoon during the session of the Senate. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. With- out objection, permission is granted. Mr. HICKENLOOPER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the sub- committee of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy be authorized to sit this afternoon. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. With- out ?objection, the order is made. ENTRY OF DISPLACED PERSONS AS IMMIGRANTS?MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT (H. DOC. No. 382) The PRESIDENT pro tempore laid be- fore the Senate a message from the Pres- ident of the United States, which was read and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. . (For President's message, see today's proceedings of the House. of Representa- tives on p. 8496.) CATHLEEN DOYLE HARRIS The PRESIDENT pro tempore laid be- fpre the Senate the amendment of the House of Representatives to the bill . 395) authorizing the issuance of a p tent in fee to Richard Jay Doyle, which s to amend the title, so as to read: ' "An act authorizing the issuance of a \.,,pateht in fee to Cathleen Doyle Harris, r--..4,sOle devise of Richard Jay Doyle, de- ceased." -nave that the Senate concur in the amend- ent of the House. The motion was agreed to. UNIFICATION OF THE ARMED SERVICES The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the order of the Senate of Wednesday, July 2, the Chair lays before the Senate the 758) to promote the national security by providing for a national de- fense establishment, and so forth. -The Senate proceeded to consider the bill (S. 758) to promote the national se- ed For Release 2006/12 15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200 01-1. 8458 - CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE curity by providing for a National De- fense Establishment, which shall be ad- ministered by a Secretary of National De- fense, and for a Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, and a De- partment t f the Air Force within the National Defense Establishment, and for the coordination of the activities of the National Defense Establishment with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security, which had been reported from the Committee on Armed Services with an amendment to strike out all after the enacting clause an'd insert: SHORT TITLE That this act may be cited as the "National Security Act of 1947." TABLE OF CONTENTS Sec. 2. Declaration of policy. TITLE I-COORDINATION FOR NATIONAL SECURITY Sec. 101. National Security Council. Sec. 102. Central Intelligence Agency. Sec. 103. National Security Resources Board. TITLE II-THE NATIONAL SECURItY ORGANIZATION Sec. 201. Establishment of the National . Security Organization. ? Sec. 202. Secretary of National Security. Sec. 203. Military Assistants to the Secretary. Sec. 204. Civilian personnel. Sec. 205. Department of the Army. Sec. 206. Department of the Navy. Sec. 207. Department of the Air Force. Sec. 208. United States Air Force. Sec. 209. Effective date of transfers. Sec. 210. War Council. Sec. 211. Joint Chiefs of Staff Sec. 212. Joint staff. Sec. 213. Munitions Board. Sec. 214. Research and Development Board. TITLE HI-MISCELLANEOUS Sec, 301. Succession to the Presidency. Sec. 302. Compensation of Secretaries. Sec. 303. Under Secretaries ? and Assistant Secretaries. Sec. 304. Advisory committees and per- sonnel. - Sec. 305. Status of transferred civilian per- sonnel. Sec. 306. Saving provisions. Sec. 307. Transfer of funds. Sec. 303. Budget estimates. Sec. 309. Authorization for iiPproprlations. Sec. 310. Definition. ' Sec. 311. Separability. DECLARATION OF POLICY SEC. 2. In enacting this legislation, it is the intent of Congress to provide a comprehen- ?s.ve program for the future security of the United States; to provide for the establish- ment of integrated policies and procedures for the departments, agencies, and functions of the Government relating to the national security; to provide three military depart- ments for the operation and administration of the Army, the naval service, includios the Navy and the Marine Corps, and the Air Force, with their assigned combat and service.. Components; to provide for their authorita- tive coordination and unified direction under civilian control but not to merge them; to provide for the effective strategic direction of the armed forces and for their operation under unified control and for their integra- tion into an efficient team of land, naval, and air forces. TITLE I-COORDINATION FOR NATIONAL SECURITY NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL SEC. 101. (a) There is hereby established a council to be known as the National Se- curity Council (hereinafter in this section referred to as the "Council"). . The President of the United states shall preside over meetings of the Council: Pro- sided, That in his absence he may designate a member or the Council to preside in his place. The function of the Council shall be to advise the President with respect to the Integration of domestic, foreign, and mili- tary policies so as to enable the military serv- ices and the other departments and agencies of the Government to cooperate more effec- tively in matters involving the national security. The Council shall be composed of the President; the Secretary of State; the Sec-, retary of National Security, appointed under section 202; the Secretary of the Army, re- ferred to in section 205; the Secretary of the Navy; the Secretary of the Air Force, ap- pointed under section 207; the Chairman of the National Security Resources Board, appointed under section 103; and such other members as the President may designate from time to time. (b) In addition to performing such other functions as the President may direct, for the purpose of more effectively coordinating the polices of the departments and agencies of the Government and their functions re- lating to the national security, it shall, sub- ject to the direction of the President, be the duty of the Council- (1) to assess and appraise the objectives, commitments, and risks of the United States in relation to our actual and potential mili- tary power, in the interest of national se- curity, for the purpose of. making recom- mendations to .the President in connection therewith; and (2) to consider policies on matters of com- mon interest to the Department of State, the National Security Organization, and the Na- tional Security Resources Board, and to make recommendations to the President in connection therewith.. t(c) The Secretary of National Security shall be director of the staff of the Council herein established and is hereby authorized, subject to the civil-service laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, to appoint and fix the compensation of such per- sonnel as may be necessary to perform such duties as may be prescribed by the Council in connection with the performance of its func- tions. (d) The Council shall, from time to time, make such recommendations and such other reports to the President as it deems appro- priate or as the President may require. CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY SEC. 102. (a) There is hereby established Under the National Security Council a Cen- tral Intelligence Agency with a Director of Central Intelligence, who shall be the head thereof, to be appointed from the armed serv- ices or from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Sen- ate. The Director shall receive compensation at the rate of $12000 a year. (b) Any commissioned officer of the armed services may be appointed to the office of Director; and his appointment to, acceptance of, and service in such office shall in no way affect any status, office, rank, or grade he may occupy or hold in the armed services, or any emolument, perquisite, right, privilege, or benefit incident to or arising out of any such status, office, rank, or grade. Any such com- missioned officer on the active list shall, while serving in the office of Director, receive the military pay and allowances payable to a com- missioned officer of his grade and length of service and shall be paid, from any funds available to defray the expenses of the Agency, annual compensation at a rate equal to the amount by which $12,000 exceeds the amount of his annual military pay and allowances. (c) Effective when the Director first ap- pointed under subsection (a) has taken office- (1) the functions of the National Intelli- gence Authority (11 Fed. Reg. 1337, 1339, Feb- ruary 5, 1946) are transferred to the National JULY 7 Security Council, and such Authority shall cease to exist; and (2) the functions of the Director of Cen- tral Intelligence, and the functions, person- nel, property, and record:, of the Central In- telligence Group are tramierred to the Direc- tor of Central Intelligence appointed under this act and to the Central Intelligence Agency, respectively, and such ?.Group shall cease to exist. Any unexpended balances of appropriations, allocations, or other funds available or authorized to be made available for such Group shall be available and shall be authorized to be made available in like man- ner for expenditure by the Agency; NATIONAL SECURITY RESOURCES BOARD SEC. 103. (a) There is hereby established a National Security Resources Board (herein- after in this section referred to as the "Board") to be composed of the Chairman of the Board and such heads or representa- tives of the various executive 'departments and independent agencies as may from time to time be designated by the President to be members of the Board. The Chairman of the Board shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the ad- vice and consent of the Senate, and shall receive compensation at the rate of $15,000 a year or at the rate of $50 a day but not to exceed $15_090 in any one year. (b) The Chairman of the Board, subject to the direction of the President, is au- thorized, subject to the civil-service laws and 'the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, to appoint and fix the compensation of such personnel as may be necessary to assist the Board in carrying out its functions. (c) It shall be the function of the Board to advise the President concerning the co- ordination of military, industrial, and ci- vilian mobilization, including- (1) policies concerning industrial and ci- vilian mobilization in order to assure the most effective mobilization and maximum utilization of the Nation's manpower in the event of war; (2) programs for the effective use in time of war of the Nation's' natural and industrial resources for military and civilian needs, for the maintenance and stabilization of the ci- vilian economy in time of war, and for the adjustment of such economy to war needs and conditions; . (3) policies for unifying, in time of war, the activities of Federal agencies and de- partments engaged in or concerned with production, procurement, distribution, or transportation of military or civilian sup- plies, materials, and products; (4) the relatinship between potential sup- plies of and potential requirements for man- power, resources, and productive facilities in time of war; (5) policies for establishing adequate re- serves of strategic and critical material, and for the conservation of these reserves; (6) the strategic relocation of inddstries, services, Government, and economic activi- ties, the' continuous operation of which essential to the Nation's security. (d) The Board shall perform such other functions, not inconsistent with law, con- cerning the coordination of military, in- dustrial, and civilian mobilization as the President may direct.' (e) In performing its functions, the Board shall utilize to the maximum extent the fa- cilities and resources of the departments and agencies of the,Government. " TITLE II-THE NATIONAL SECURITY ORGANIZATION ESTABLISHMENT OF THE NATIONAL SECURITY ORGANIZATION SEC. 201. (a) There is hereby established the National Security -Organization, and a Secretary of National Security, who shall be the head thereof. ? ? Apnd For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE (b) The National Security Organization shall consist of the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Depart- ment of the Air. Force, together with all other agencies created within the National Security Organization. SECRETARY OF NATIONAL SECURITY Szc. 202. (a) The Secretary of National Security shall be appointed from civilian life Cy the President, by and with the advcce and consent of the Senate. Under the direction of the President he shall perform the follow- ing duties: (1) Establish general policies and pro- grams for the National Security Organiza- tion and for all of the departments and agen- cies therein; (2) Exercise general direction, authority, and control over ' such departments and agencies; (3) Supervise and coordinate the prepara- tion of budget estimates; formulate and determine the budget estimates for submittal to the Bureau of the Budget; and supervise the budget program of the National Security Organization under the applicable appropria- tions acts: Provided, That nothing herein contained shall prevent the Secretary of any of the three departments hereinbefore mentioned from presenting to the President or to the Director of the Budget, after first so inform- ing the Secretary of National Security, any report or recommendation relating to his de- partment which he may deem necessary; And. provided further. That the Department -of the Army, the Department of the Navy, -and the Department of the Air Force, shall be administered as individual units by their respective Secretaries and all powers and duties not specifically conferred upon .the Secretary of National Security by this act are retained by each of the respective Secre- taries. (b) The Secretary of National Security shad submit annual written reports to the. President and the Congress covering expendi- tures, work, and accomplishments of the. National ' Security Organization, together with such recommendations as he shall deem - appropriate. (c) The Secretary of National Security shall cause a seal of office to be made. for the National Security Organization, of such design as the President shall, approve, and judicial notice shall be taken thereof. MILITARY ASSISTANTS TO THE SECRETARY SEC'. 203. Officers of the armed services may be detailed to duty as assistants and per- sonal aides to the Secretary of National Security, but he shall not establish a military staff. changed under this section shall, insofar as they are not inconsistent with the pro- visions of this act, be deemed to relate to the Department of the Army within the Na- tional Security Organization or to such officer or activity designated by his or its new title. (c) The term 'Department of the Army" 'as used In this act shall be construed to mean the Department of the Army at the seat of government and all field head- quarters, forces, reserve components, instal- lations, activities, and functons under the control or supervision of the Department of the Army. (d) The Secretary of the Army shall cause a seal of office to be made for the Depart- ment of the Army, of such design as the President may approve, and judicial notice shall -be taken thereof. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY ' ? SEC. 206. (a) The term "Department of the Navy" as used in this act shall be construed to mean the Department of the Navy at the seat of government; the headquarters, United States Marine Corps; the entire operating forces of the United States Navy (includ- - .ing naval aviatIon) and of the United States Marine Corps, including the reserve com- ponents of such forces; all field activities, headquarters, forces, bases, installations, activities, and functions under the control or supervision of the Department of the Navy; and the United States Coast Guard when operating as a part of the Navy pur- suant to law. (b) The provisions of this act shall not ' authorize the alteration or diminution of the existing relative status of the Marine Corps (including the Fleet Marine Forces) or of naval aviation. DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE SEC. 207. (a) Within the National Security Organization there is hereby established an executive department to be known as the De- , partment of the Air Force, and 'a Secretary of the Air Force, who shall be the head thereof. The Secretary of the Air Force shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and con- sent of the Senate. (b) Section 158 of the Revised Statutes is -amended to include the Department of the Air Force and the provisions of so much of -title IV of the Revised Statutes as now or hereafter amended as is not inconsistent with this act, shall be applicable to the De- partment of the Air Force. (c) The term' "Department of the Air Force" as used in this act shall be construed to mean the Department of the Air Force 'at the seat of government and all field head- quarters, forces, reserve components, instal- lations, activities, and functions under the control or supervision of the Department of the Air Force. (d) There shall be in the Department of the Air Force an Under Secretary of the Air Force and two Assistant Secretaries of the Air Force, who shall be appointed from civil- ian life by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. CIVILIAN PERSONNEL SEC. 204. (a) The Secretary of National Security is authorized to appoint from civalian life not to exceed three special as- sistants to advise-and assist him in the per- formance of his duties. Each such special _ assistant shall receive compensation at the rate of $10,000 a year. (b) The Secretary of National Security is authorized, subject to the civil-service -laws and the Classification Act of 1923, as amended, to appoint and fix the compen- sation of such other civilian personnel as may be necessary for the performance of the the functions' of the National Security Organization. DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY SEC. 205. (a) The Department of War shall- hereafter be known as the Department of the Army, and the title of the Secretary of Wz,r shall be changed to Secretary of the Array. Changes shall be made in the titles of other officers and activities of the De- partment of the Army as the Secretary- of the Army may determine. (b) All laws, orders, regulations, and other actions relating to the Department of -War or to any officer or activity Whose title is ?. (e) The several officers of the Department . of the Air Force shall perform such func- tions as the Secretary of the Air Force may prescribe. (f) So much of the functions of the Secre- tary of the Army and of the Department of 'the Army, including those of any officer of such Department, as are assigned to or un- der the control of the commanding general, Army Air Forces, or as are deemed by the Secretary of National Security to be neces- sary or desirable for the operations of the Department of the Air Force or the United ".78tates Air Force, shall be transferred to and , vested in the Secretary of the Air -Force and the Department of the Air Force: Provided, That the National Guard Bureau shall; in ad- dition to the functions and duties performed as,2006/12/16 :-CIA-RD;E.90,0064 8459 by it for the Department of the Army, be charged with similar functions and duties for the Department of the Air Force, and shall be the channel of communication between the Department of the Air Force and the seVeral States on all matters pertaining to the Air National Guard: And provided fur- ther, That, in order to permit an orderly transfer, the Secretary of National Security may, during the transfer period hereinafter, prescribed, direct that the Department of the Army shall continue for appropriate periods to exercise any of such functions, insofar as they relate to the Department of the Air Force, or the United States Air Force or their property and personnel. Such of the property, personnel, and records of the De- partment of the Army used in the exercise of functions transferred under this subsection as the Secretary of National Security shall determine shall be transferred or assigned to the Department of the Air Force. (g) The Secretary of the Air Force shall cause a seal of OffiCe to be made for the Department of the Air Force, of such device as the President shall approve, and judicial notice shall be taken thereof. UNITED STATES AIR FORCE SEC. 208. (a) The United States Air Force is hereby established under the Department of the Air Force. The Army Air Forces, the Air Corps, United States Army, and the Gen- eral Headquarters Air Force (Air Force Com- bat Command) shall be transferred to the United States Air Force. (b) There shall be a Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, who shall be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, for' a term of 4 years from among the officers of general rank who are assigned to or commissioned in the United States Air Force. Under the direc- tion of the Secretary of the Air Force, the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, shall' exercise command over the United States Air Force and shall be charged with the duty of carrying into execution all lawful orders and directions which may be transmitted to him. The functions of the Commanding General, General Headquarters Air Force (Air Force Combat Command), and of.the Chief of the Air Corps and of the Commanding General, Army-Air Forces, shall be trans- ferred to the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force. When such transfer becomes ef- fective, the offices of the Chief of the Air Corps, United States Army, and Assistants to the Chief of the Air Corps, United States Army, provided for by the act of June 4, 1920, as amended (41 Stat. 768), and Commanding General, General Headquarters Air Force, provided for by section 5 of the act of June 16, 1936 (49 Stat. 1525), shall cease to exist. While holding office as Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, the incumbent shall hold a grade and receive allowances equivalent to those prescribed by law for the Chief of Staff, United States Army. The Chief of Staff, United States Army, the Chief of Naval Operations, and the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, shall take rank among themselves according to their relative dates of appointment as such, and shall each take rank above all other officers on the active list of. the Army, Navy, and Air Force: Pro- vided, That nothing in this act shall have the effect of changing the relative rank of the present Chief of Staff, United States Army, and the present Chief of Naval Operations. (c) All commissioned officers, warrant of- ficers, and enlisted men, commissioned, hold- ing warrants, or enlisted, in the Air Corps, United States Army, or the Army Air Forces, shall be transferred in branch to the United States Air Force. All other commissioned officers, warrant officers, and enlisted men, who are commissioned, hold warrants, or are enlisted, ih any component of the Army of the United States and who are under the authority. or Command of the Commanding ? ved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020 8460 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE. General, Army Air Forces, shall be continued under the authority or command of the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, and under the jurisdiction of the Department of the Air Force. Personnel whose status is af- fected by this subsection shall retain their existing commissions, warrants, or enlisted status in existing components of the armed forces unless otherwise altered or terminated in accordance with the existing law; and they shall not be deemed to have been ap- pointed to a new or different office or grade, or to have vacated their permanent or tem- porary appointments in an existing compo- nent of the armed forces, solely by virtue of any change in status under this subsec- tion. No such change in status shall alter or prejudice the status of any individual so ,assigned, so as to deprive him of any right, benefit, or privilege to which he may be entitled under existing law. (d) Except as otherwise directed by the Secretary of the Air Force, all property, rec- ords, installations, agencies, activities', proj- ' ects, and civilian personnel under the juris- diction, control, authority, in command of the Commanding General, Army Air Forces, shall be continued to the same extent under the jurisdiction, control, authority, or com- mand, respectively, of the Chief of Staff, ? United States Air Force, in the Department of the Air Force. (e) For a period of 2 years from the date of enactment of this act, personnel (both military and civilian), property, records, in- stallations, agencies, activities, and projects may be transferred between the Department of the Army and the Department of the Air , Force by direction of the Secretary of Na- tional Security. ' EFFECTIVE DATE OF TRANSFERS SEC. 209. Each transfer, assignment, or change in status under section 207 or section 208 shall take effect upon such date or dates as may be prescribed by the Secretary of National Security. WAR COUNCIL SEC. 210. There shall be within the Na- tional Security Organization a War Council composed of the Secretary of National Secur- ity, as Chairman, who shall have power of decision; the Secretary of the Army; the' Secretary of the Navy; the Secretary of the Air Force; the .Chief of Staff, United States Army; the Chief of Naval Operations; and the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force. The War Council shall advise the Secretary of National Security on matters of broad ? policy relating to the armed forces, and shall consider and report on such other matters as the Secretary of National Security may ' direct. JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF Sze. 211. (a) There is hereby established Within the National Security Organization the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which shall con- sist of the Chief of Staff, United States Army; the Chief of Naval Operations; -the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force; and the' Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief, if there be one. (b) Subject to the authority and direc- tion of the President and the Secretary of National Security, it shall be the duty of the Joint Chiefs of Staff? (1) to prepare strategic plans and to pro- vide for the strategic direction of the mili- tary forces; , (2) to prepare joint logistic plans and to assign to the military services logistic re- sponsibilities in accordance with such plans; (3) to establish Unified commands in strategic areas when such unified commands are in the interest of national security; (4) to formulate policies for joint training of the military forces; ? ? (5) to formulate policies for coordinating the education of members Of the Military forces; , (6) to review major material and person- nel requirements of the military forces, in accordance with strategic and logistic plans; and (7) to provide United States representa- tion on the Military Staff Committee of the United Nations in acordance with the pro- visions of the Charter of the United Nations. (c) The Joint Chiefs of Staff shall act as the principal military advisers to the Presi- dent and the Secretary of National Security and shall perform such other duties as the President and the Secretary of National Security may direct or as may be prescribed by law. JOINT STAFF SEC. 212. There shall be, under the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a Joint Staff to consist of not to exceed 100 officers and to be composed of approximately equal numbers of officers from each of the three armed services. The Joint Staff, operating under a Director thereof ap- pointed by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, shall perform such duties as may be directed, by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The Director shall be an officer junior in grade to all members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. MUNITIONS BOARD SEC. 213. (a) There is hereby established in the National Security Organization a Muni- tions Board (hereinafter in this section re- ferred to as the "Board"). (h) The Board shall be composed of a Chairman, who shall be the head thereof, and an Under Secretary or Assistant Secretary from each of the three military departments, to be designated in each case by the secreta- ries of their respective departments. The Chairman shall be appointed from civilian life 153T the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall receive compensation at the'-rate of $12,000 a year or at the rate of $50 a day but not to exceed $12,000 in any one year. "In) It shall be the duty of the Board under the direction of the Secretary of National Se- curity and in support of strategic and logistic plans prepared by the Joint Chiefs of Staff? (1) To coordinate the appro`priate activi- ties within the National Security Organiza- ? tion with regard to industrial matters, in- cluding the procurement, production, and distribution plans of the Organization. (2) To plan for the military aspects of in- dustrial mobilization. ? (3) To recommend assignment of procure- ment responsibilities athong the several mil- itary services and to plan for standardization of specifications and, for the greatest practi- cable allocation of purchase authority of technical equipment And common-use items on the basis of single procurement. (4) To prepare estimates of potential pro- duction, procurement, and personnel for use in evaluation of the logistic feasibility of strategic operations. (5) To determine relative priorities of the ? various segments of the military procurement programs. ? (6) To supervise such subordinate agen- ? cies as are or may be created to consider the subjects falling within the scope of the Board's responsibilitit (7) To make recOm endations to regroup, combine, or dissolve existing interservice agencies operating in the fields of procure.: ment, production, and distribution in such manner as to promote efficiency and economy. (8) to maintain liaison with other agencies foethe proper correlation of military require- ments with the civilian economy, particularly in regard to the procurement or disposition of strategic and critical material and the main- tenance of adequate reserves of such mate- rial, and to make recommendations as to policies in connection therewith; (9) to assemble and review materia and personnel requirements presented by the/ Joint phiefs of Staff and those presented by 01-1 JULY 7 the production, procurement, and distribu- tion agencies assigned to meet military needs, and to make recommendations thereon to the Secretary of National Security; and (10) to perform such other duties as the Secretary of National Security may direct. (d) When the Chairman of the Board first appointed has taken office, the Joint Army and Navy Munitions Board shall cease to exist and ail its functions, records, and personnel shall be transferred to the Munitions Board. (e) The Secretary of National Security shall provide the Board with such personnel and facilities as the Secretary may deter- mine to be required by the Board for the performance of its functions. . . RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD SEC. 214. (a) There is hereby established in the National Security Organization a Re- search and Development Board (hereinafter .in this section referred' to as the "Board"). The Board shall be composed of a Chairman, who shall be the head thereof, and two rep- resentatives from each of the Departments of the Army, Navy, and Air Force; to be desig- nated by the Secretaries of their respective Departments. The Chairman shall be' ap- pointed from civilian life by the President, .by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and shall receive compensation at the rate of $12,000 a year or at the rate of $50 a day but not to exceed $12,000 in any one year. The purpoSe of the Board shall be to advise the Secretary of National Secu- rity as to the status of scientific research relative to the national security, and to assist him in assuring adequate provision for re- search and development on scientific prob- lems relating to the national security. (b) It shall be the.duty of the Board, under the direction of the Secretary of National Security? (1) to prepare a complete and integrated program of research and development for military purposes; (2) to advise with regard to trends in scientific research, relating to national secu- rity and the measures necessary to assure continued and increasing progress; . . (3) to recommend measures of coordina- tion of research and development among the military departments, and allocation among them of responsibilities for specific programs of joint interest; (4) to formulate policy for the National Security Organization in connection with research and development matters involving agencies outside the National Security Or- ganization. (5) to consider the interaction of research and development and strategy, and to advise the Joint Chiefs of Staff in connection there- with; and (6) to perform such other duties as the Secretary of National Security may direct. (c) When the Chairman of the Board first appointed has taken office, the Joint Re- search and Development Board shall cease to exist and all its records and personnel shall be transferred to the Research and Development Board. (d) The Secretary of National 8ecurity shall provide the Board with such personnel and facilities as the Secretary may deter= mine to be required by the Board for the performance of its functions. TITLE III?MISCELLANEOUS SUCCESSION TO THE PRESIDENCY SEC. 301. The first section of the act en- titled "An act to provide for the perform- ance of the duties of the Office of President in case of the removal, death, resignation, or Inability both of the President .and of the Vice President," approved January 19, 1886 (24 Stat. 1), is amended (1) by striking out "Secretary of War" and inserting in lieu thereof "Secretary of National Security," and (2) by striking out "or if there be none, Or in Ao rOve Rele 2 6/1211 -kma App d For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE case of his removal, death, resignation, or Inability, then the Secretary of the Navy." COMPENSATION OF SECRETARIES SEC. 302. '(a) The Secretary of National Security shall receive the compensation pre- scribed by law for heads of executive depart- ments. (b) The Secretary of the Army, the Secre- tary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force shall each receive the compensa- tion prescribed for the Secretary of Nation.al Security. UNDER SECEIETAR=S AND ASSISTANT SECRETARIES SEC. 303. The Under Secretaries and Assist- ant Secretaries of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force shall each receive compensa- tion at the rate of $12,000 a year and shall perform such duties as the Secretaries of their respective departments may prescribe. ADVISORY COMMITTEES AND PERSONNEL ? SEC. 304. (a) The Secretary of National Security, the Chairman of the National Se? curity Resources Board, and the Director of Central Intelligence are authorized to ap- point such advisory committees and to em- ploy consistent with other provisions of this act, such, part-time advisory personnel as they may deem necessary in carrying out ? their respective functions and the functions ? of agencies under their control. Persons holding other offices or positions under the United States for which they receive com- pensation while serving, as members of such . committees shall receive no additional com- pensation for such service. Other members of such committees .and other part-time ad- visory personnel so employed may serve without, compensation or may receive com- pensation at a rate not to exceed $35 for. each day of service, as determined' by the appointing authority. (b) Service of an individual as a member Of any such advisory committee, or in any other part-time capacity for a department or agency hereunder, shall not be considered as service bringing such Individual within the provisions of section 109 or 113 of the Crimi- .nal Code (U. S. C., 1940 ed., title 18, secs. 198 and 203), or section 19 (c) of the Con- tract Settlement Act of 1944, unless the act of such individual, which by such section is made-unlawful when performed by an in- dividual referred to in such section, is with respect to any particular matter which di- rectly involves a department or agency which ? such person is advising or in which such 'department or agency is directly interested. STATIB OF TRANSFERRED CIVILIAN PERSONNEL SEC. 305. All transfers of civilian person? nel under this act shall be without change in classification or compensation, but the head of any department or agency to which such a transfer is made is authorized to make such changes in the titles and (desig- nations and prescribe such changes in the duties of such personnel commensurate with their classification as he may deem necessary and appropriate. SAVING PROVISIONS SEC. 306. (a) All laws, orders, 'regulations, and other actions applicable with respect to any function, activity, personnel, property, records, or other thing transferred under this act, or with respect to any officer, department, or agency, from which such transfer is made, shall, except to the extent rescinded, modi- fied, superseded, terminated, OT made in- applicable by or under authority of law, have the same effect as if such transfer had not been made; but, after any such transfer, any such law, order, regulation, or other action Which vested functions in or otherwise re- lated to any officer, department, or agency. from which such transfer was made shall," insofar as applicable with respect to the function, activity, personnel, property, records or other thing transferred and to the extent not inconsistent With other provisions No. 128-72 ? of this act, be deemed to have vested such function in or relate to the officer, depart- ment, or agency to which the transfer was made. (b) No suit, action, or other proceeding lawfully commenced by or against the head of any department or agency or Other officer of the United States, in his official capacity , or in-relation to the discharge of his official duties, shall abate by reason of the taking ef- fect of any transfer or change in title under the provisions of this act; and in the case of 'any such transfer, such suit, action, or other proceeding may be maintained by or against the successor of such head or other officer under the transfer, but only if the court shall allow the same to be maintained on motion or supplemental petition filed within 12 months 'after such transfer takes effect, showing a necessity for the survival of such suit, action, or other proceeding to obtain settlement of the questions invO1ved. (c) Notwithstanding the provisions of the second paragraph of section 5 of title I of the First War Powers Act, 1941, the existing or- ganization of the War Department under the provisions of Executive Order No. 9082 of Feb- ruary-28, 1942, as modified by Executive Order No. 9722 of May 13, 1946, and the existing organization of the Department of the Navy under the provisions of Executive Order No. 9635 of September 29, 1945, including the as- signment of functions to organizational units within the War and Navy Departments, may, to the extent determined by the Secretary of National Security, continue in force for 2 years following the date of enactment of this act except to the extent modified by the pro- visions of this act or under the authority of law. TRANSFER OF FUNDS SEC. 307. All unexpended balances of ap- propriations, allocations, nonappropriated funds, or other funds available or hereafter made available for use by or on behalf of the Army Air Forces or officers thereof, shall be transferred to the Department of the Air -Force for use in connection with the exercise of its functions. Such other unexpended bal- ances of appropriations, allocations, ,nonap- propriated funds; or other funds available or hereafter made available for use by the De- partment of War or the Department of the Army in exercise of functions transferred to the Department of) the Air Force under this act, as the Secretary of National Security shall determine, shall be transferred to the Department of the Air Force for use in con- nection with the exercise of its functions. Unexpended balances transferred under this section may be used for the purposes for which the appropriations, allocations, or other funds were originally made available, or for new expenditures occasioned by the enactment of this act. The transfers herein authorized may be made with or without war- rant action as may be appropriate from time to time from any appropriation covered by this section to any other such appropriation or to such new accounts established on the books of the Treasury as may be determined to be necessary to carry into effect the pro- visions of this act. BUDGET ESTIMATES - Sec. 308. (a) So much of the annual budget 'transmitted to the Congress by the President as contains the estimates of appropriations for and expenditures by the National Se- ' curity Organization and the departments therein, shall be -so arranged as clearly to show? (1) with respect to each item for which the President recommends an appropriation or expenditure, a statement of the nature of. such item and of the amount recom- mended by the President, the Secretary of National Security, and the head_ of the de- partment concerned, respectively; and (2) with respect to any item for which the President does not recommend an appropria- 8461- tion or expenditure but for which a budget estimate for inclusion in such budget was submitted by the Secretary of National Se- curity or by the head of a department there- in, a statement of the nature of such item and of the amount recommended by the Sec- retary of National Security and the head of the department, respectively. (b) Each supplemental or deficiency esti- mate for appropriations or expenditures . transmitted to the Congress by the President which contains any item recommending an appropriation to or an expenditure by the National Security Organization or any de- partment therein shall be so arranged as clearly to show with respect to any such item a statement of the nature of the item and of the amount recommended by the Presi- dent, the Secretary of National Security, and the head of the department, respectively. AUTHORIZATION FOR APPROPRIATIONS _ SEC. 309. There are hereby authorized to be appropriated such sums as may be necessary and appropriate to carry out the provisions and purposes of this act. DEFINITION SEC. 310. (a) As used in this act, the term "function" includes functions, powers, and duties. - (b) As used in this act, the term "budget program" refers to recommendations as to the apportionment, to the allocation and to the review of allotments of appropriated funds. SEPARABILITY SEC. 311. If any provision of this act or the application thereof to any person or circum- stances is held invalid, the validity of the remainder of the act and of the application of such provision to other persons and cir- cumstances shall not be affeeted thereby. Mr. GURNEY obtained the floor. Mr., WHITE. Mr. President, will the Senator from South Dakota yield so that I may suggest the absence of a quorum? Mr. GURNEY. I yield. ? Mr. WHITE. I suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll. - The Chief Clerk called the roll, and the following Senators answered to their names: Aiken Baldwin Ball Barkley Brewster Bricker . Brooks Buck Bushfleld Butler Byrd Cain Capehart canner Chavez Connally Cooper Cordon Donnell Dworshak Ecton Ellender Ferguson Flanders Fulbright George Gurney Hatch Hawkes O'Conor Hayden O'Daniel Hickenlooper O'Mahoney ' Hill , Overton Hoey Pepper Holland Reed Jenner Revercomb "( Johnson, Colo. Robertson, Va. Johnston, S. C. Robertson, Wyo. Hem Russell Kilgore Saltonstall Knowland Smith Langer ''Sparkman Lodge. Stewart Lucas Taft McCarran Taylor ' McCarthy ? Thomas, Okla. McClellan ? Thye McFarland = Tydings McKellar Umstead ? McMahon Vandenberg Magnuson Watkins Malone ' Wherry Martin White MillikinWiley Moore Williams Morse Wilson Murray 'Young Mr. WHERRY. I announce that the Senator from New Hampshire [Mr. BRIDGES] is necessarily absent. The Senator from,, New York [Mr. IvEs] is absent by leave of the Senate be- * cause of .a death in his immediate family. ecti- 0 ved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020 ? 8462_ CONGRESSIONAL RECORD--SENATE - The Senator from New Hampshire [Mr. TOBEY] is necessarily absent be- cause of illness in his family. Mr. LUCAS. I announce that the Senator from Mississippi [Mr. EAST.. LAND ], the Senators from Rhode Island Mr. GREEN and Mr. McGaAnil, the Senator from South Carolina [Mr. MAY.. BANK] , and the Senator from Pennsyl- vania [Mr. MYERS] are absent on public business. The Senator from California [Mr. DowNsy] is absent by leave of the Sen- ate. The Senator from Utah [Mr. THOMAS] is absent by leave of the Senate, having' been appointed a delegate to the Inter- national Labor Conference at Geneva, Switzerland. The Senator from New York [Mr. 'WAGNER] is absent because of illness. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Eighty-four Senators having answered to their names, a quorum is present: Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, I am glad to present to the Senate today the, bill dealing with unification of the , armed forces. It is labeled the National. Security Act of 1947. believe that we could have handled this matter sooner. I believe that it is urgent now that the Congress speedily debate the question thoroughly and de- cide on the entire language of the bill and hurry it along into law. \ The law is urgently needed because of personnel problems in the Army and Navy, including the Air Forces. It is needed so that the Congress and the peo- ple of the United States may with con- fidence look forward to efficiency and thrift in the expenditure of the funds ap- propriated for our national security. It is my firm belief that not only can large savings be made in manpower, but that huge money savings can also be ex- pected, perhaps not immediately, but during the course of the next year or two. I wish Congress to look closely to the fact that about one-third of our an- nual budget is spent on the armed forces, and that another third is spent to pay for a past war. ? In the consideration of the bill before the Senate, in order to be of as much help as possible, the committee has had prepared a chart which I suggest may be helpful in clarifying to Senators the flow of authority, responsibilities, and so forth, proposed in the' bill. Mr. President, I believe that this is one of the most important tasks with which the Congress is charged under the Con- stitution; and it stems from its respon- sibility to provide for the "common de- fense." Since 1944 a great deal of attention and effort have been devoted by both the armed services and the Congress to the study of our requirements for the most modern and efficient organization for national defense. That study has finally resulted in a bill for unification of our military forces, which is supported by our principal military and civilian lead- ers who are concerned with national se- curity. Your Committee on Armed Services re- ported this bill, S. 758, to the. Senate on June 5, 1947, a little more than 1 month ago. It is my purpose today to discuss the background of this vital proposal and to emphasize the compelling necessity for Its prompt passage. Mr. President, this bill is fashioned in the light of hard, costly experience, gained by major participation in two great wars. It represents a determina- tion upon the part of responsible civilian and military leaders that our country profit from the terrible lessons of World War II while those lessons are still fresh in our minds?and while the counsel of those who experienced World War I and who directed our efforts in World War II is still available to us. The unification bill is a sincere and earnest attempt to put into effect by legis- lation a security organization which is adequate, effective, modern?and yet eco- nomical. Every facilityat the disposal of your committee has been used to study thor- oughly and exhaustively the whole ques- tion of the reorganization of our national security system. I need cite only a few of the studies ? which have been made in the last 4 years to illustrate how carefully the whole ques- tion has been explored. For instance, in 1944 there was the committee of the Joint Chiefs of Staff which visited every theater of war and sought the opinions of our top military and naval com- manders. Mr. CONNALLY. Mi. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. GURNEY. I yield to the Senator . from Texas. Mr. CONNALLY. Let me ,say to the Senator that I am delighted that he is discussing the Joint Chiefs of Staff. In years gone by the objections to unifica- tion were largely based on the claim that it would interfere with strategic opera- tions. I understand that the bill pro- vides, in effect, for a joint Army and Navy comparably responsible to the Joint Chiefs of Staff during wartime, so that military and naval operations would be so coordinated as to represent a unified military force. Is that correct? Mr. GURNEY. The Senator is en- tirely correct. The committee, in con- sidering this bill, has sought to keep that which is good and to discard that which is bad, and to take advantage of the lessons learned in war when the Joint Chiefs of Staff functioned. This joint committee made a report to the President, with which most of the Senators are familiar. There were the hearings by the Select Committee on Postwar Policy of the House of Repre- sentatives later in the same year, 1944. Again, in the fall of 1945, the Senate Military Affairs Committee' conducted extensive hearings in which many expert witnesses from the military services and from civilian life were heard. The report of Mr. Ferdinand Eberstadt to the Secre- tary of the Navy was Carefully studied. The Naval Affairs Committee of the Sen- ate studied the problem in the spring of 1946. Finally, after many adjustments by the services to harmonize divergence of opinion the present bill, Senate bill 758, was recommended by the President and introduced with the full ,support of both the War and Navy Departments. The Senate Armed Services Committee 01-1 . JULY 7 has now concluded thorough examina- tion of the bill, which is favorably re- ported to the Senate in amended form. Mr. President, no legislative proposal within my memory has received the close scrutiny and thoughtful consideration which has been given to this bill. Your committee has deliberated on this legis- lation for more than 11 weeks, and I ? assure the Senate that every paragraph, every sentence, every phrase has been very carefully weighed. The committee Is proud to present the fruits of its efforts ? to the Senate. We firmly believe that the bill represents a sound and moderp. foundation upon which will be erected I. lasting structure of national security. The committee heard testimony against the bill as well as in favor of it. During the hearings two facts became obvious. One fact was that all the ci- vilian officials and officers in uniform -?who had broad responsibilities for the coordinated use of the military services for our national security were advocates . of unification. The other fact was that none of those who opposed unification had duties outside their own branch or specialty. Your committee is in the first category. We have broad responsibil- ities and we therefore advocate unifica- tion. The bill provides for the creation of a national security organization consisting of the Department of the Army, the De- partment of the Navy, and the Depart- ment of the Air Force, and four agencies, each with equal representation from the three departments. These agencies are the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the War Coun- cil, the Munitions Board, and the Re- search and Development Board. At the head of this organization is the Secre- tary of National Securffy. The bill also provides for a National Security Council, a Central Intelligence Agency, , and a National Security '4 sources Board, all of which report di- rectly to the President, but which also work closely with the agencies under the ? Secretary of National Security. - --I would not impose upon the time of the Members of the Senate, Mr. Presi- dent, to justify the inclusion of the Army, the Navy or its components, or the Air Forces, in the National Security Organ- ization. Their records of past achieve- ment are sufficient for that purpose. The new position for air power which is pro- posed is contained in the provisions for a Department of the Air Force and for a United States Air Force, organized and 'established on a parity with the Army and the Navy,- It may be truly said that during World War II air power came of age and that it .proved its terrific force in the test of conflict. The Air Corps' prewar position of inferiority as a subdivision of the Army has been outgrown and outmoded. Dur- ing the war, by the temporary expedient of the First War Powers Act, the shackles which bound the Air Corps were un- locked, and it was made in effect a basic arm whose contribution to victory in the Army-Navy-Air Force team will never 'be forgotten. Remember, that was through, the provisions of the First War Pdwers'Act. If this bill shall not pass, the Air Force will revert to its prewar m? d For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE position cif being only a part of the Army. The emancipation of the Air arm is Obillby establishing it as a separate arm. recognized and made, permanent in this To do less than this would be foolhardy. for as one defeated German general has said, "Without air supremacy You can- not win; with it you cannot lose." If we give but momentary thought to the future, it is perfectly clearthat if and when another enemy strikes, it will be through the element which has no geo- graphic barrier?the air. To fail to rec- ognize that fact in our defense prepara- tions is to court disaster. Thus, in this bill the air arm is given its logical posi- tion of parity with the Army and Navy. The early history of our country dis- closes that prior to 1798 all our military forces were under one civilian organiza- tion, the War Office. At that time, how- ever, it was logical to "compartmental- ize" our armed forces, because land bat- tles and sea battles were clearly separate and distinct from one another. There- fore, with the growth of our naval forces, we established a 'separate Navy Depart- ment and a Navy. But as we have moved into an air, age and the period of total war, it is no longer possible to keep our military forces in tight, separated com- partments, with no one short of an over- burdened President to render decisions in the absence of agreement. We have just completed a triphibious war, in which closely integrated land, sea, and air teams were required to pro- duce a victorious military force. Coordi- nation and integration of our military forces was achieved with the aid of tem- porary laws and temporary organization. War forced us to forge these bonds of close cooperation. Now that the compul- sion of war is gone, they are in immediate danger of rusting away. We would be unwise indeed, Mr. Presi- dent, if we did not preserve for the fu- ture every means at?our disposal to keep together in times of peace the proven components of our security team. The experience of the last war has clearly demonstrated that the most effec- tive military organization for this coun- try is one which provides for joint plan- ning and joint logistical support of our fighting arms. It was with that idea in mind that the four joint agencies of the? National Security organization to which I have previously referred were wisely included in the bill. The War Council consists of the Secre- tary of National Security as Chairman,' the Secretary of the Army; Secretary"of the Navy; Secretary of the Air Force; the. Chief of Staff, United States Arm,; the ief of Naval Operations; and the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force. This Council is the principal advisory body to the Secretary of National Security. Here the joint civilian and military direc- - tion of the services is solidly established. The provision for the Joint Chiefs of Staff, consisting of the Chief of Staff,. United States Army, the Chief of Naval Operations, and the Chief of Staff, United States Air Force, gives legislative permanence to an organization which was created by the compelling necessity of war, arid. which in the absence of a better organization was the unifying ele- . ? ment for the direction of the war. Its great contribution to victory has been attested to by all of our leading com- manders in the Army, Navy, and Air Force. The provision for the Joint Chiefs of Staff gives us a permanent organization of the heads of our three arms, who, working in harmony and unison, with the assistance of their joint staff repre- senting all components of the military forces, will prepare strategic plans, and Will provide for the unified strategic and logistic direction of our military forces. They will establish unified commands, ? and will provide for joint training, will review the requirements of our military forces from an over-all combined stand- point, and will act jointly as the military advisers of the President and Sacretary of National Security. In this way we, shall be assured for the first time in our history that all parts of our military strength are jointly represented in a common purpose in time of peace as well as war. Only in this way can the Presi- dent as Commander in Chief satisfac- ? torily discharge his constitutional duty to the country in an age of high-speed, tnphibious war. In the Joint Staff there is provided, to assist the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a full- time staff which will lend both flexibility and body to the present loose structure of committees by assuming certain of their duties and by assisting the remaining committees to function with increased thoroughness and speed. This Joint Staff has in itself no command authority; it serves a Director, who in turn' func- ? ? tions' as an executive to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, whose members cannot them- selves oversee the Joint Staff continuous- ly. The provision of this agency should ? remedy the principal defect which has been noted in the present Joint Chiefs of Staff organization. The Munitions Board provided for un- der the bill will give us a long-needed permanent board, compokd of a chair- man and the Under or Assistant Secre- taries of each of the three departments, who will coordinate industrial procure- ment and production plans of the three departments; recommend assignments of procurement responsibility; plan for - standardization; prepare estimates of potential production, procurement, and personnel; and determine priorities of the various segments of the military pro- curement program. The Munitions Board will fill to a large extent the same . role in the procurement phase of logistics that the Joint Chiefs .of Staff fill in the field of strategy and operations, and in the military phase of logistics. Through the collaboration of these two Joint agen- cies, methods of joint purchasing and procurement wilLbe expanded, and max- imum joint use will be made of such serv- ices as hospitalization and transporta- tion. These are the measures which are expected to effect the greatest economies, not only in dollar savings, but more im- portant, in time and in the return real- ized upon the investment of American manpower and resources. If the experience of the war has brought home one fact more forcibly to the Members of Congress than any other, it is the urgent .need to eliminate the 8463 duplication and overlapping between the services which resulted in many disloca- tions, inefficiency, and unwarranted ex- pense in the prosecution of the war. I, for one, Mr. President, am sure that the services did not willfully do these things. I believe that because they were laboring within the confines of an out- moded organization, they could not help themselves. Attempts to solve these problems with hastily improvised vol.., untary joint committees only served to point more clearly to the urgent need for , such a body as the Munitions Board. The joint Army-Navy Munitions Board, . as now constituted, operates under Presi- dential authority, and is therefore tem- porary in character. The duties as- signed to the present Board, which under this bill will pass to the Munitions Board In an augmented form, are so desper- ately important that common prudence dictates that the authority and perman- ence of-the Board be fixed by law. Faced as we are with the stupendous demands of modern war and with limited ?resources in manpower and materials, we must provide for the greatest con- - servation and the most frugal use of those resources. This cannot be accom- plished by competiton be- tween the 'services. It can be accom- pllshed only by careful regulation through a single joint authority such as the Munitions Board. During World War II, and particularly since the development of the atomic bomb, there has been a growing public consciousness of the rapid strides in re- search and devlopment. No protection !for our country is worthy of the name unless it contemplates continued and intensive research and development. During the war we achieved notable scientific advances which materially contributed to ultimate victory, but there is" no permanent organization for fur- thering that activity in time of peace. 'The limited supply of scientifically trained research personnel and the in- evitable reduction which will occur in the amount we have to spend for research and development in time of peace, com- bine to demand the establishment of the Research and Development Board with- in the National Security Organization. This Hoard, consisting of representatives from all the services will be able for the first time in our history to prepare a. complete and integrated continuous pro- gram of research and development for military purposes. It will replace the temporary Joint Research and Develop- ment Board which was set up by joint agreement between the Secretaries of War and Navy. It will effect the neces- sary coordination between the depart- ments on research and development. Responsibilities for specific programs of joint interest will be allocated between the services and with other agencies of Government, thus effecting economies and fostering efficiency. . I have briefly outlined the various seg- ments of the National Security Organ- ization which have been -lcarefully, de- vised to work in the various fields of in- terest which experience has dictated -must be a part of any modern effective 'security system. '' t,..r)ved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-006-10R00020 8464 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE There is one element which I have purposely omitted until now, in order. that I could more clearly illustrate its position in relation to the other elements. I refer, Mr. President, to the Secretary of National Security.' The whole purpose of the arrangement of and assignment of duties to the vari- ous parts of the National Security Or- ganization is to insure that all our forces and facilities are directed toward broad common missions. In the past we have witnessed the fal- lacy of having two great executive de- partments of Government so separated and insulated from one another that each tried in effect to become a self- sufficient national security organization. We have learned that this is the wrong approach. We have learned that in peacetime it is expensive, wasteful, and inefficient. We learned at Pearl Harbor that having two steering wheels on our defense machine can send it careening, into the ditch. ? , After December 7, 1941, we resorted to temporary expedients to overcome the difficulties inherent in a double system of defense. But elements of a defense organization cannot be brought together 'to function as a team without a direct- ing leader?not any more than a football team can have two quarterbacks, one calling signals for the backfield and one for the line. This lesson has been in- delibly impressed upon the minds of the students of the past war by the efficiency of our unified field commands, as well as by the problems which arose before those commands were unified. It is universally recognized that all our forces are subject to the direction of the President as constitutional Commander in Chief. Each of the segments of the National Security Organization provided for in S. 758 could report directly to him. He could point the way in which they should direct their efforts. He could do it, Mr. President, if he were a - superman. But all of us know full well that the overburdened Chief Executive of our Government, even tilough he has the clear-cut responsibility for the oper- ational functioning of our armed forces, cannot possibly discharge that respOnsi- biiity with a mollern military organiza- tion. He cannot discharge it by dealing directly and separately with two?:much less with three?executive depart- ments?no, not even with the advice and assistance of the joint agencies which are provided in the bill. The depart- ments which deal with the armed forces and the armed forces themselves are too large and too complicated, and the Presi? dent himself is far too busy to devote the full time necessary for the accom- plishment of the task. What the President needs is a means of dealing only with .broad policies and with problems which have been resolved as far as possible before they are sub- mitted to him. Above all, he needs a means of dealing with only a minimum of individuals. It is therefore necessary, Mr. Presi- dent, to provide a head for the National Security Organization to whom the Pres- ident may look for simplification of his task. That individual is the Secretary of National Security, through whom are ? tied together all the departments and agencies of the National Security Or- ganization. The Secretary, under the direction of the President, will establish policies and . programs for the National Security Or- ganization and for its departments and agencies. He will exercise general direc- tion, authority, and control over them. He will supervise and control as a co- ordinated whole the budgeted expendi- tures of the armed forces. He will thus relieve the President of a mass of detail and submit only for his consideration basic problems of major importance. Mr. JOHNSON of Colorado. Mr. Pres- ' ident? The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. LODGE in the chair). Does the Senator from South Dakota yield to the Senator from Colorado? Mr. GURNEY. I yield. Mr. JOHNSON of Colorado. The Sen- ator is a member of the Committee on Appropriations, and a very ablC mem- ber. Does he understand that under the proposed plan one budget will come down for the armed forces, and that one hill for the armed forces will probably be introduced and considered in Congress as one bill, or will we have two bills or three bills in the future? Mr. GURNEY. Under the pending bill it is specifically provided that we will have one bill for the whole National Security Organization. The three de- partments, the Army, the Navy, and the Air Forces, will first submit to their own secretaries their requests. Their secre- taries will then individually present their requests for the next year's funds to the Secretary of National Security, and in_ that way Congress will have one bill, not two, as now, or, not three, if we were going along under the old budgetary sys- tem, when and if we had a separate Air Force. Mr. 'JOHNSON of Colorado. I am very glad to learn of that arrangement, be- cause it is an important step forward. Mr. GURNEY. In addition to having only one bill, the budget will come to Congress at the beginning of the year with only what the President says is necessary for these departments. But there will be a showing, too, in parallel columns, first, of the amount requested by the Secretary of each of the three groups; then, alongside, the request of the Secretary of the Navy, for instance, will appear what the Secretary of Na- tional Security recommends. In the third column will appear a showing of what the budget approves. So Congress will be fully informed of the request of the service secretary, the administrator Of the individual department, then the recommendation of the National Secur- ity Secretary, and finally, of the Presi- dent himself. Mr. JOHNSON of Colorado. That sounds like a very logical and sensible approach to the problem of financing the armed forces. Mr. GURNEY. I think that in these times of stress it is very necessary that Congress be fully informed, so that. it can go into the background of all re- quests; and see what the department heads responsible for the security of the Nation recommend in the first place. 01-1 JULY 7 Then it will be the responsibility of Con- gress to decide just what should be done for each department. Mr. JOHNSON of Colorado. If I may Interrupt further, the Committee on Ap- propriations will have before it, perhaps, the defense plans of each of the branches of the armed forces. They will have their plans of operation, not singly, not one by one, but they will have them all at one time. Mr. GURNEY. That is correct. Of course, that refers to logistic plans, not strategic plans. Mr. JOHNSON.of Colorado. Of course. Mr. GURNEY. In a recent letter to the committee the Honorable Henry L. Stimson, our distinguished former Sec- retary of War, went straight to the heart of the matter with these words:- What the bill does? Said Mr. Stimson? is to delegate to a recognized officer of the Government a part of the authority (tiler the military establishment which in the end, always belongs to the President. If it were possible today for any President to give his full attention to military ?ii,ffairs, this step would not be necessary. For Congress to fail to take this neces- sary step, in my opinion, would be tanta- mount to restraining the Commander in Chief from the most,efficient possible per- formance of the responsibility which the Constitution places upon him. There are some who express a fear that the creation of this office will lead to- ward dictatorship. I urge those who voice such views to be more objective in their thinking. The Secretary of Na- tional Security is being given no ? new powers by this bill. He is a full-time Presidential representative exercising delegated Presidential power to assist the President in carrying out his responsi- bility to the Congress, the Nation, and the armed forces. Not since our Nation was young and relatively small has the President been able to assist adequately the Congress in obtaining an over-all picture of our security needs. This bill provides an officer short of the Presi- dent who can accept in part the Presi- dent's responsibility to keep the Congress fully and continuously advised of the needs of the' armed forces. Some have feared that this Secretary would be a meddler who would tamper with our military departments. Even a casual reading of the bill will disclose that the administration of the depart- ments will be left to their respective secretaries and that the military threes will be commanded by their respective heads. The sort of order or direction which would be exercised by the Secre- tary is well illustrated, in my opinion, by the 29-word directive which was issued to General Eisenhower for the invasion of Europe. That directive reads as follows: You will enter the continent of Europe and, in conjunction with other Allied Nations, undertake operations aimed at the heart of Germany and the destruction of her armed forces. r This pointed the direction in which the effort was to be made and stated the ultimate mission or goal. It did not say how itlyas to be done or deal with details. ? d For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE Nor is it intended under this bill, Mr. President, that the Secretary be con- cerned with details. His task is to keep *our military forces heading toward a common goal and to see that they work In harmony and with efficiency. How. each Oen-rent accomplishes its task will be left to the secretaries of the depart- ? ments arid the military commanders, with the advice and assistance of the joint bodies upon which there is equal representation for all. During the hearings before your com- mittee there was much discussion about the possibility of the Secretary deter- mining the specific roles and missions of the various elements of the armed forces. I think it might be well at this point, Mr. . President, to clarify that subject for ? those Senators who have not had time to study the hearings. Congress has been given the responsi- bility under the Constitution to deter-....._ mine what kind of military forces the Nation shall have and how large they shall be. The mere creation by the Con- gress of a Navy or an Army implies a basic reason for its existence and sug- gests its general mission. Provision for an air force, for instance, implies that ? it will be_used in air combat; similarly, the law providing for artillery assumes that it is a ground force. The specific combat tasks, however, that are to be performed by any element of the armed ' forces have never been written into law,. because the way in which our military forces are used is the responsibility of the Commander in chief.. As the Chief Ex- ? -ecutive and Commander in Chief, it is the President's day-to-day responsibility, in ? war and in peace, to give direction to the military forces in the light of current scientific developments and ? current in- ternational balances. For us tg.fix by law the specific combat missions of our armed forces would characterize us- as being Maginot-line minded. Specific roles and missions could be specifically assigned if we were limited to a small battlefield instead of' the whole world and if we knew in detail what kind of war the next one would be, but to set them in the concrete of per-, manent law, under .the conditions of modern total warfare, would prevent the President from exercising the discretion- ary authority which is wisely provided for in the Constitution. It is riot intended that the President will delegate the authority to assign com- bat roles and missions to the Secretary of National Security. When the Secre- tary of War and Secretary of the Navy ? presented their joint agreement on uni- fication to the President, they suggested that he issue an Executive order con- temporaneously with the approval of this bill, setting forth the current roles and missions of the armed forces. This the President agreed to do, and the draft of the rder has been approved by both the Army and the Navy. These combat roles .and missf,ons, once established by the - President, can be changed only by him. The Secretary cannot do it. The whole purpOse behind the sug- gestion of writing combat roles and mis- sions into the law rather than leaving them to the President as we have tradi- tionally done for 170,years was that fear, had been expressed that one or more components of the armed forces might be discriminated against by a designing secretary who sought to eliminate them. What kind and how many military forces we have, I repeat, is the responsibility of the Members of Congress, which they cannot delegate to anyone else, even if they wanted to. It is inseparably linked to the control of the purse by Congress. It may well be that the advice of the military experts on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which has equal representation from Army, Navy, and Air Force, will be sought in making a decision as to what forces we shall have, but the final deter- mination is still for the Congress and for no one else. Therefore, Mr. Presi- dent, I say that the fear of the elimina- tion of some element of the armed forces resolves itself into a fear of the Members of Congress of its own power, and not that of the Secretary, who must work With what Congress provides. Neverthe- less, to make doubly certain that the in- tent of the bill was made crystal clear it has been amended by your committee to safeguard the Marine Corps and naval aviation by specific language, as follows: ? SEC. 208 (b). The provisions of this act shall not authorize the alteration or diminu- tion of the existing relative status of the Marine Corps (including the fleet marine forces) or of naval aviation. Representatives of the Navy Depart- ment, including the Commandant of the Marine Corps, agree that this language makes it unmistakably clear, that the interests of, the Marine Corps and naval aviation are being protected. z Now, I should like to turn to another matter which has been given a great deal of attention in considering this legisla- tion?the matter of procurement and services. - Most of the examples of wasteful du- plication which have been pointed out as a deficiency in our conduct of the war have to do with services and supplies. Many situations existed where the Army and Navy maintained duplicate facilities not fully utilized by either. Wasteful 'competition and overbuying existed in the procurement of common-type sup- plies. The elimination of these faults of, operation should therefore be a source of great economy. I may interpolate here that the evi- dence leads me personally to believe that about 67 percent of the Army and Navy needs are common items, and that under the committees so far established there have been combined purchases in about 11 percent of them. Therefore, in that respect there is an important goal to be attained and quite a saving in prospect? the difference between 11 percent and 67 percent, It is essential, in my opinion, Mr. Pres- ident, that we seek to economize by elim- inating unnecessary expenditures of manpower, strategic materials, and nor- mal supplies. One solution which has been considered is a centralized procure- ment agency within the National Secur- ity Organization. At first blush this might seem to be a good solution. Care- ful study of the subject, however?and I assure you, Mr. President, that it re- ceived very careful and thorough study- 8465 Indicates that the solution offered by this bill is much to be preferred. During the war our two executive de- partments which performed most of the services and purchased most of the sup- plies commenced operation in these fields as totally independent and self-sufficient entities. Before the war was over, by reason of sheer, necessity and in the ab- sence of any laws to facilitate close col- laboration, there had been created some 2,200 committees to try to bring about some semblance of joint action. For the most part they were unsuccessful. In my judgment, a joint procurement agen- cy or jointly operated services would . have been almost as bad. We would then and would now disrupt efficient organiza- tions of the military forces to create a new joint organization for the purpose. What we needed then and what we need now is a joint?staff?agency such as the Munitions Board which can determine after study by representatives of all the arms, the agency best qualified to pro- cure what item and to perform what service. Once a decision is made upon a given subject we put a stop to duplica- tion, overlapping waste, and the 'unnec- essary expense which accompany them. At the same time we will not thereby in- terfere with the integrity of any service or disrupt or scramble it with another. We call this cross-procurement and cross-servicing. It is a sound method of operation, which has the support of all the services. It will save money and men. Under this method the using serv- ice, retains the responsibility for procur- ing specialized items peculiar to that service, while at the same time the door remains open to single procurement of Items common to several components of the armed forces. This method also per- mits standardization of specifications for a multitude of common use items, in it- self an important saving device. Such standardization has the cumulative ef- fect of making manufacture cheaper and easier, and of simplifying packaging, storing, and distribution. It is thus clear that all the savings vis- ualized by the advocates of centralized- '? pracurement can be effected under the - ? system of cross procurement provided for in the bill, without distinting pres- ently operating procuyement agencies which are experienced and efficient in their fields. Critics of unification often demand to know?with tongue in cheek, think? how much in dollars and cents Will be saved each year by unification. I con- sider the question wanting in frankness because, obviously, no one can spell out in microscopic detail the amount of the dollar savings that will result, ?_ But that there will be savings from unification of the Armed Services?and substantial ones?is crystal clear to any- one making even a casual examination of the legislation. Personally, I think the savings will be astonishingly large because, if for no other reason, our pres- ent system is so horribly uneconomical, The bald fact is that as our security system is now constituted there is no one - directly Concerned with the defense establishment who has the authority to effect the savings which the taxpayers,. have a right to expect. - g466 ) ved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE '-When Secretary Patterson testified be- fore your committee, he said in part: Every year I have been asked, when I go clown to the Appropriations Committee of the House, how this program fits* in with the Navy Department's program. My answer is always, "I don't know." They will say, "Does General Eisenhower know?" I say, "No; he does not know." They say, "Hasn't he ever studied the Navy budget?" I say, "No; it is not his duty to, and it is not my duty to." And, of course, the same thing is true of the Secretary of the Navy and the Chief of Naval Operations. We could not possibly tell any committee of Congress how the two programs fit. Unfortunately, this little colloquy is as truthful as it is ridiculous?I have heard it many times myself. , Clearly. we will ' not have real economy in our defense organization until we take the obvious first step of giving someone the authority to effect economies and the opportunity to effect those economies with full. knowl- edge of their impact upon our national security. The bill takes that step by - setting up a Secretary of National Secu- rity. ' The bill before the Senate for con- sideration, in addition to, the elements included in the National Security Or- ganization, provides for the creation of a National Security Council. This Coun- cil, reporting to the President and having as permanent members, the Secretary of St ' the Secretaryfof National Secur- ity, .4ecretaries of the military de- pares, and the Chairman of the Na- tional Security Resources /Board, gives us for the first time a permanent organi- zation for the thorough integration of our foreign and military policies. Rec- ognizing that military policy is an ex- tension of foreign . policy, it gives us a means of developing our foreign policy upon the basis of our military and eco- monic strength: This function is now performed by the State, War, and Navy Coordinating Committee. As an important adjunct to the Na- tional_ Security . Council there is _pro- ' 'rision for a 'central Intelligence Agency, which fills a long recognized demand for accurate -information upon -'which:irn -portant_decisions, relating, to fp_r_e_ign.and military policy, can be based. --Th-e--1V6Ii61ii1?SeaiiiifY Resources Board, headed by a chairman and com- posed of the heads or representatives of such departments and agencies as the President may apoint, will in time of peace advise the President concerning the coordination of military, civilian and industrial mobilization to provide him with a sound basis on which to evaluate the elements involved in our domestic, military and foreign policies. In time of war it would be made the effectuating agent for putting mobiliza- tion plans into operation generally, and for determining the needs of the civil and military elements of the nation and allocating material and facilities among them. By means of the National Security Resources Board, Mr. President, there would be established adequate and timely provision?provision now des,- perately needed?for the protection and planned employment of our national resources; for We canot afford ever again to dissipate those resources in the pur- suit of extemporized plans, conceived in haste and executed under the pressure of emergency. Mr. President, before I close, I want to recognize and refute the charge that no nation which unified its forces ever won a war. Critics of unification have con- tended that Germany, for example, had a single military establishment. Let us be clear on this point. When General Eisenhower appeared before our Senate Military Affairs Com- mittee during the last Congress, he said: The facts are that Germany never had a single department, nor even unity of direc- tion. One of the major contributing factors to the Nazi defeat was the utter lack of unified direction over the Luftwaffe and the Wehrmacht, both in the Mediterranean and in Europe. What about defeated Japan? Japan had two separate departments; one for' the Army and another for the Navy, with ,no coordinated, unified command. ? What about defeated Italy? Italy had three separate departments; one for the Army, another for the Navy, and a third for the Air Force, but no unity of com- mand over the three. And all three of those nations were defeated. The problems of America's defense are peculiarly America's problems. We should look to other nations and to the experiences of their forces only for the purposes of guidance?but as we look at. the experiences of other nations, we can certainly find nothing to recommend separate and uncoordinated defense-, forces. Mr. President, many grave problems face the Eightieth Congress? problems calling for prompt and sound solutions. None, in my opinion, transcends in im- .portance and urgency the proposal be- fore the Senate today to unify the armed forces. The profound significance and far- reaching effect of the legislation may well change the course of history. I am sure the Senate understands that there is involved here more than a prob- lem of organizing armies and fleets and - air forces. There is embraced in the legislation the far greater task of laying the foundation and planning the struc- ture of total national effort in event of total war?and it is .perhaps the most challenging organizational problem that any nation can face. It is not being an alarmist to point out that, with the development of supersonic planes and guided missiles with atomic warheads, the cushion of distance pro- vided by the Atlantic, Arctic, and Pacific Oceans will no longer provide a corre- sponding cushion of time in which we may react to attack and mobilize our .forces. It is not being an alarmist to point out that in the event of another global war hostilities will be initiated without prior warning, and by an attack as complete and devastating as lies within the capabilities of the nation which launches it. Clearly, Mr. President, the time to plan?the time to prepare?is now. - - And yet much of the planning of our Military services has had to mark time? . 001-1 JULY 7 has necessarily had to wait for long months while these basic problems were debated and studied and finally resolved., It is now within the power of the Con- gress?it is now its responsibility?to give those services improved procedure and adequate agencies to help them with their tremendous task. It is now within our power to shun any display of Weakness and vacillation which might encourage aggressors or lessen the faith of free peoples in our steadfastness of purpose. It is now within our power to give the President the help he so urgently needs, and to replace the security organization of 1798 with the organization of 1947. It is now our responsibility to act, for I say to the Senate, in all sincerity, to ? procrastinate is to invite disaster. Mr. REVERCOMB. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. GURNEY. I yield to the Senator from West Virginia. Mr. REVERCOMB. I ask the Senator to yield for a question because I am very much interested in the statements which he made with respect to the lack of ef- fectiveness of the German forces and the Italian forces because there was no uni- fication between the various departments of the army and of the navy. What was the situation with respect to the British forces? Was there unification betweeen the navy and the army such as is advocated by the Senator? Mr. GURNEY. Not entirely so. How- ever, their basic law is much better than ours; and the white paper recently issued does unify their forces in a much better way than during World War II. Mr. REVERCOMB. But there was not the unification which the Senator advo- cates, between the British -Navy and the British Army. Mr. GURNEY. No; not entittely,dur- ing the war. Mr. REVERCOMB. I thank the Sen- ator. Mr. GURNEY. However, there was a unification between their combined staff and our combined staff. There was also an over-all allied combined staff. But we lose that combination and authority of combined forces just as soon as the war powers become inoperative, as soon , as we reach the point where they can- not mutually agree, as they had to do during the war. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. JEN- NER in the chair). The question is on agreeing to the committee amendment. Mr. LODGE obtained the floor. ALL IATION OF DAMAGE FROM FLOOD R OTHER CATASTROPHE ? Mr. PIIEN. Mr. President, will the Senator frem Massachusetts yield to me? Mr. LODCI I yield. Mr. AIKEN. Mr. President, Senate F\ bill 1515, Calendar, No. 447, provides for making surplus ploperty available to States and local goveNiments to alleviate '1 the suffering of , the vietits\1 was unani- mously flood and,-- other catastrophe. The reported Iran the Committee on Expenditures in the ExecutiDepart- l ments last Thursday, but unfo nately .there was no opportunity to brin lkbe- fore the Senate at that time. I have discussed the bill with the lead- ers of 'the Senate on both sides. I find 2 vey For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200?41- 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE no objection to it. It is essential, if it is to be of value to the sufferers from the recent flood and other catastrophes, that it be passed without delay. So I ask unanimous consent that the unfinished business be temporarily laid aside, with the understanding that we shall return to it immediately following consideration of the bill, and that Senate bill 1515 be considered at this time. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be statedthY title for the informa- tion of the Senate'.s Th ,e LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A bill (S. 1515) to make surplus property avail- able for the alleviation of damage caused by flood or other catastrophe. The PRESIDING 01010ICER. Is there objection to the present consideration of the bill? Mr.. REVERCOMB, Mr. President, I do not rise to object to consideration of the bill. I merely wish to ask a ques- tion. I)oes the bill apply only to certain properties? I may say that I have dis- cussed the bill with the able Senator from Vermont, and I am in favor of the objective; but does it apply only to cer- tain kinds of property which will be use- ful in food relief and in the replacement. of building and structures which have been destroyed by floods? Mr. AIKEN. That is true. It applies only to the victims of catastrophe such as flood, explosion, or any other catas- trophe which brings about human dis- tress. Mr. :REVERCOMB. Does the surplus property go tO State and municipal gov- ernments rather than to individuals? Mr. AIKEN That is correct. The bill provides, first, that the President must make a deeermination that a catas- trophe has occukred. A good example ? was the Texas City catastrophe. An- other good example is the recent catas- trophes from floods and other causes. When the President 'makes a determina- tion, then the War ssets Administra- tion is authorized to turn over to the Federal Works Adminiskration any prop- erty which may be useful in allevi- ating the suffering of thk, victims. The Federal Works Administration will dis- pose of such surplus prope ty to States and local governments, wit or without compensation. Then the States and local governments will have the?, property wholly in their hands, and Will make such arrangements as can be mak to re- habilitate the people within theiitates or cities, under agreement, of curse, with the Federal Works Administratkion. Mr. REVERCOMB. As I understa4).d, the property goes no further than the State or r-inicipal government; in ?the' words, ,ikJ State -or municipal govern- ment cannot dispose of it to individuals. Mr. AIKEN. Yes. Mr. REVERCOMB. Can it convey title and ownership? Mr. AIKEN. The property must get into the hands of the individual in some way: but the committee did not feel that' - the Federal agency should deal directly with individuals. r. REVERCOMB. I do not mean that the individual may. not use the prop-' erty; but is the sproperty eventually to be a gift from the Federal Government to the State government or to the city government? After the property leaves the municipal government does it go into the hands of individuals as gifts to them? I have in mind construction machinery, such as bulldozers and concrete mixers. To whom will such property belong? Mr. AIKEN. That kind of machinery will belong to the State or municipal government. It is not contemplated that surplus property of that kind shall ? be given free of charge. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, a paf- liamentary inquiry. \ , ' The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator will state it. Mr. GURNEY. As I understand, the bill about which the Senator from Ver- mont is speaking has not yet displaced the unfinished business. The PRESIDING OrTICER. It has not as yet. Mr. GURNEY. Reserving the right to object, I ask the Senator from Vermont If he is willing to defer the consideration_ of the bill if the debate on it takes longer than 10 or 15 Minutes. Mr. AIKEN. That is correct. I am willing to desist if the debate seems to take too long. Mr. GURNEY. With that under- standing, I have no objection. The PRESIDING OVFICER. The ,Senator from South Dakota can call for the regular order at any time. ? Mr. AIKEN. Let me say in reply to ' the Senator from West Virginia that it is not contemplated that equipment which has permanent value shall be given to the States or municipalities. They would be able to purchase it from the War Assets Administration if it were necessary to rehabilitate their people in a hurry. However, with respect to such things as medicines, temporary bedding, and other similar items of property, it ? is not believed that a charge should be made for them. Such property could be given in the nature of a grant. ? Mr. HICKENLOOPER. Mr. President, Will the Senator yield? ? Mr. AIKEN. I yield. Mr. HICKENLOOPER. As a member of the Committee on Expenditures in the Executive Departments, of which the Senator from Vermont is chairman, have had something to do with the bill ? in addition to being one of its sponsors. I feel that the bill meets a drastic . emergency need. I heartily joint with the chairmant of the committee in his representation of its emergency nature. I am satisfied that sufficient safeguards have been thrown around the disposi- tion of surplus property so that the prop- erty will not and cannot do to the indi- ? vidual use of any persons aside from municipalities or public bodies. Is that he understanding of the Senator, too? \ Mr. AIKEN. That is my understand- trig. Mr. HICKENLOOPER. Equipment -such as bulldozers and other earth- moving equipment and heavy equipment of a permanent nature can either be ? leased, with a return provision when the emergency has ended, or it can be sold for its reasonable value, if that procedure Is deemed to be sound. 8467 I invite the attention of Members of the Senate to one further point, and that is that the bill is restricted, first, to the declaration of a catastrophe or emergency in a particular section or location. Secondly, the property is to be available for use only in an emer- gency or catastrophe. I ask the Sen- ator from Vermont if that is his under- standing. Mr. AIKEN. The explanation of the Senator from Iowa is entirely correct. Mr. HICKENLOOPER. Permanent property, such as earth-moving equip- ?ment, can and probably will be returned to the agencies from which it was ob- ? tained when the catastrophe has been ended or the repair has been accom- plished. Mr. AIKEN: That is correct. Mr. HICKENLOOPER. As the Sen- ator from Vermont pointed out, ex- pendable goods such as medicines, and perhaps in some cases food, will be con- sumed in the 'process. But I assure the Senate that in my opinion ample safe- guards have been established not only to meet the emergency, but to protect and safeguard property-, Mr. AIKEN. The ? Senator is correct. Mr. WHITE. Mr. 'President, reserv- ing the right to object, I was called from the floor for a moment ,and I did not hear the Senator's request. Will he repeat his request? Mr. AIKEN. The request was to lay 'aside temporarily the unfinished busi- ness so that the Senate may consider the bill which was reported last Thurs- day:- providing for the use of surplus. property for victims of flood and other catastrophe. Mr. WHITE. Is the bill on the cal- endar? Mr. AIKEN. It is. Mr. JOHNSON of Colorado. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. AIKEN. I yield to the Senator from Colorado. Mr. JOHNSON of Colorado. I do not wish to take up time to suggest the ab- sence of a quorum, but some of my col- leagues on this side are not present, and I should like to ask the Senator if the report from his committee is a 'unanimous report, or was there any objection? Mr. AIKEN. The report was unani- mous. I believe there are eight or nine Members present out of the 13. Mr. JOHNSON of Colorado. In that case I shall not ask for, a quorum call. I am heartily in favor of the measure, but I thought that there might be some objection on the part of Senators who are not present. ,Mr. AIKEN. I discusse'd the matter with several Members on the other side of the aisle and found no objection. The minority leader, however, is not present, but I have confidence enough in the humane spirit of the minority leader to feel that he would not object if he were present. Mr. JOHNSON of Colorado. The mi- nority- leader, I understand, has no jection 'to the consideration and passage of the bill. - Appaed For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020C4 01-1 8468 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE ? The PRESIDING Or .v.I.CER. Is there objection to the present consideration of the billk There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider the bill (S. 1515) which had be-eu reported from the Corn- rnittee on Expenchtures in the Executive Departments, with\ an amendment to strike out all after t e enacting clause and insert: . That, notwithstanding a 7 other provi- sions of law, the War Assets Administration shall, whenever the President shalkdetermine it to be necessary or appropriate b'Seause of flood or other catastrophe, transfer, *i,thout reimbursement, to the Federal Works Agency such articles of personal property, which have been declared surplus under the provision of the Surplus Property Act of 1944 (58 Stat. '765), as amended, as in the judgment of the Federal Works Administrator and the War Assets Administrator can be presently uti- .11zed in alleviating damage, hardship, and suffering caused by such flood or other catastrophe. SEC. 2. The Federal Works Administrator is. authorized to loan or transfer, with or with- out monetary consideration and upon such terms and conditions as he may prescribe, to States and local governments situated in any area struck by any such flood or catastrophe, any property transferred to the Federal Works _,,'Agency for such purposes pursuant to the ?provisions of this act. All receipts from such transfer shall be covered into the Treasury of the United States to the credit of miscel- laneous receipts. SEC. 3. In carrying out the provisions of this act the Federal Works Administrator is authorized to utilize, and act through, any ? other Federal agency or any State or local government and he may utilize, without re-. Imbursement therefor, such officers and em- ployees of any such agency or State or local , government as may be found necessary in carrying out the purposes of this act. In order to facilitate carrying out the purposes ?of this act, other Federal agencies shall coop- erate with the Federal Works Agency and the War Assets Administration to the fullest ex- tent consistent with the objective of this act. SEC. 4. To carry out the provisions of this act, including administrative expenses in connection therewith, any funds available to the Federal Works Administrator or Agency for use in connection with the transfer of stsplus or other excess property, under Pub- ? lic Law q 697, Seventy-ninth Congress, are hereby made available; and for such purpose there is authorized to be appropriated such additional sums as may he necessary therefor. The amendment was agreed to. The bill was ordered to be engrossed for a third reading, read the third time, and passed. MESSAGE FROM THE HOUSE A message from the House of Repre- sentatives, by Mr. Swanson, one of its reading clerks, announced that the House had disagreed to the amendments of the Senate to the bill (H. R. 3647) to extend certain powers of the President under title III of the Second War Pow- ers Act; agreed to the conference asked by the Senate on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses thereon, and that Mr. MICHENER, Mr. SPRINGER, and Mr. CRA- VENS were appointed managers on the part of the House at the conference. ENROLLED BILLS SIGNED ? The message also announced that the Speaker had affixed his signature to the following enrolled bills, and they were signed by the President pro tempore: H. R. 195. An net to authorize the Secre- tary of Agriculture to sell certain lands in Alaska to the city of Sitka, Alaska; H. R. 325. An act to transfer Blair County, Pa., from the middle judicial district of .Pennsylvania to the western judicial dis- trict of Pennsylvania; H. R. 599. An act declaring Kenduskeag Stream, Penobscot County, Maine, to be a nonnavigable waterway; H. It. 770. An act for the relief of Norman Abbott; H. R. 837. An act for the relief of the estate . of Abraham Banta Bogert; H. R. 959. An act to amend section 3179 (b) of the Internal Revenue Code; H. R. 1513. An act for the relief of John C. Garrett; H. R. 1610. An act to amend the act of June 14, 1938, so as to authorize the Cairo Bridge ommission to issue its refunding bonds for th purpose of refunding the outstanding bonti issued by the commission to pay the cost o certain toll bridge at or near Cairo, Ill.; H. R. 185 An act for the relief of A. J. Davis, Mrs. ene Griffin; Earle Griffin, and Mary Musgrove; H. R. 1866. An qt for the relief ,,Of Paul Goodman; Pl. R. 1893. An act tb authorize the 'sale of the bed of E Street S , between Tbvelfth and Thirteenth Streets, hi.,the Distrlet of Columbia; H. R. 1945. An act to amend ections 2601 ?(e) (4), 3043 (b), and 3045 of the Internal Revenue Code; , H. R. 1946. An act to amend secti\o'n, 2801 (e) 04, the Internal Revenue Code; \ H. It. 2302. An act for the relief of the New Jersey,. Indiana :.,?t Tl1I Railroad,;, H. R. 2470. An act to authorize the estab- lishment of a band in the Metropolitan Police force; H. R. 3072. An act to authorize the prepara- tion of preliminary plans and estimates of cost of for the erection of an addition or extension to the House Office Buildings and the remodeling of the fifth floor of the Old House Office Building; H. R. 3235. An act to amend the Code of Laws of the District of Columbia, with re- spect to abandonment of condemnation pro- ceedings; H. R. 3251. An act to amend the act of July 24, 1941 (55 Stat. 603), as amended, so as to authorize naval retiring boards to con- sider the cases of certain officers, and for other purposes; H. R. 3515. An act ,to make it unlawful in the District of Columbia to corruptly influ- ence participants or officials in contests of skill, speed, strength, or endurance, and to - provide a penalty therefor; ? H. R. 3311. An act making appropriations for the Departments of State, Justice, and Commerce, and the judiciary, for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1948, and for other pur- poses; and H. R. 3547. An act to authorize funds for ceremonies in the District of Columbia. ? IN i.t.fitSTATE WA.i."1-t RIGHTS IN COLORADO RIVER SYSTEM ? Mr. KNOWLAND. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD a copy of Senate Joint Res- olution 145, to authorize commencement of action by the United States to deter- ? mine interstate water rights in the Colo- rado River. The resolution is now pend- ing before the Senate on a motion to ap- peal from the decision of the Chair maide by the Senator from Arizona [Mr. HAY- DEN]. Copies have not been printed, and . I thought it would be helpful to the Mem- bers of the Senate if the joint resolution were printed in the RECORD so that it would be available when the matter is JULY 7 under consideration tomorrow under a special order. There being no objection, the joint res- olution (S. J. Res. 145) to authorize com- mencement of an action by the United States to determine interstate water rights in the Colorado River was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Whereas the development of projects* for the use of water in the Lower Colorado River Basin is being hampered by reason of long- standing controversies among the States in said basin as to the meaning and effect of the Colorado River compact, the Boulder Can- yon Project Act, the Boulder Canyon Adjust- sment Act, the California Limitation Act (Stats. Cal. 1929, ch. 16) , various contracts executed by the Secretary of the Interior with States, public agencies, and others in the Lower Basin of the Colorado' River and other documents and as to various engineer- ing, economic, and other facts: Now, there- fore, be it ? Resolved, etc., That, for the purpose of avoiding a multiplicity of actions and expe- diting the development of the Colorado River t Basin, the Attorney General is hereby di- rected to commence in the Supreme Court of the United States of America, against the States of Arizona, California, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah, and such other parties as may be necessary or proper to a determine.- tion, a suit or action in the nature of inter- pleader, and therein require the parties to assert and have determined their claims and rights to the use of waters of the Colorado River system available for use in the lower Coloradn_RlYer_Basin..._ UNIFICATION OF THE ARMED SERVICES The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 758) to promote the na- tional security by providing for a Na- tional Defense Establishment, which shall be administered by a Secretary of National Defense, and for a Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, .and a Department of the Air Force with- in the National Defense Establishment, and for the coordination" of the activi- ? ties of the National Defense Establish- . ment with other department sand agen- cies of the Government concerned with the national security, Mr. LODGE. Mr. President, let me say at the outset that I am opposed to ? any bill which endangers the civilian character of our Government. I am op- posed to any bill which in any way weak- ens or dilutes or impinges upon the au- tonomy, the morale, and the esprit of our existing services, the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, and the Coast Guard. I am opposed to censorship or muzzling or preventing any men from .fully expressing themselves. Let me place all those sentiments in the RECORD at the beginning. I would not be in . favor, of any of those things. I should like to have that understood before I be- gin. If Members of the Senate are wonder- ing how they shall-vote on the pending unification bill, I ask them first of all to --try to visualize in their mind's eye what the war of the future will be like. Once they have done this I have not much doubt what their conclusion will be. What will this dreadful war of the future be like? I. quote from an expert, 'Lt. Gen. Lawton Collins., We 'could expect?. ? ? Ap d For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE He says? that the war would start very suddenly and come through the air and that the enemy would try to eliminate the United States at the outset, not making the same mistake as last time of taking on somebody else first and allowing us to prepare. The attack would be primarily at the great cities and would cause great destruction both to physi- cal structures and the people. It might in- volve atomic bombs, radioactive materials, biological warfare, and crop-destroying chemicals. The atomic bomb would prob- ably be used against cities in,preference to military targets. We would have chaos, with communications disrupted, millions of persons sick, wounded, and dying, civil dis- order and sabotage. The initial bombing attack would likely be followed by airborne troops. There is also the possibility of long- range submarines popping up offshore and directing guided missiles to targets on this continent. There is the opinion of the responsible professional. Can Senators imagine it? Can they visualize this country with its cities in smoking ruins, its railroads de- stroyed, its major bridges blown up, all communications such as telegraph, tele- \ phone, and mail obliterated? Can they see the dead and the wounded and those who have been artificially made sick by radioactivity and by the germ& of bio- logical warfare? Can they comprehend it? It is hard for us Americans to do so, because never in the lifetime of n single American has our country ever been. really stricken by a foreign foe. But we might as well start thinking about it now, because if there is another war, that is , the way it is going to be. Then what happens? While we are groaning and suffering, before we have even had time to bury the dead?the air- borne attack will come and maybe we will be hit by amphibious attacks from sub- marines and new-type naval craft. They would, of course, try to invade with actual armed troops just when our demoraliza- tion is at its worst, before we have had time to put out the fires, to repair our roads and railroads, while we are still coping, with defeatism, demoralization, and disorder. This is no fantasy. This represents the thinking of many serious and experi- enced officers. One military expert says our bomber effectiveness could be wiped out over- night. It could be done by simply loading some shock troops into a half-dozen old transport planes and flying them to each of our six strategic air bases, where they would kill off our few trained bomber crews. It would be a year before we could train new crews. Could we reasonably expect to have another year? lam not an expert; I am 'merely a student who tries to keep track of what experts think. Students of the problem place great emphasis on the enemy working through a powerful fifth column', using sabotage with trained enemy sympathizers oper- ating within our country, taking full ad- vantage of any subversive elements who happened to be here.- Therefore, they say, all key installations, Whether they, be civilian public utility plants or military air bases, would have to be guarded against this particular type of attack. No. 128---3 ? vedZioai Mr. President, the conflict which these experts describe would not be merely a subject of civilian defense. It would not be something which could be met with a police force and a few civilian defense volunteers. It would be war?and the worst this country would ever have known. Probably every man, woman, and child would have to rally to the common de- fenses. There would be American troops to mee:: enemy troops, but the entire Na- tion would have to seek and destroy the scattered air-dropped enemy soldiers, discover and eliminate the spies and saboteurs, fight the fire and pestilence, aid the wounded and maimed, and take part in every other conceivable kind of disaster relief. Our armed forces would comprise only a part of this effort, for the holocaust would be so widespread that nobody anywhere would be safe. The possibility of panic and anarchy as the enemy bombarded a shocked and shattered people with persuasive propa- ganda urging us to quit, and promising- us what they would call a just peace would also be a tremendous danger. Above all remember this: Each part of the United States would be isolated from every other. These isolated areas, or pockets, or islands?call them what you will?wculd in all probability be wholly unable to reinforce each other, either with men or with ammunition, " food or other supplies, because roads, railroads, and airfields would be de- stroyed. The initial force of an enemy invasion would have to be met by troops in the area at the time the blow fell, but again I warn that our own troops would not be in sufficient numbers to repel attacks from 'every quarter; prob- ably every citizen have to rise against the foe. Mr. Presideht, there is one picture of what the beginning of future war might be like. Can you see the confusion? Can you picture to yourself what chance we would have of ultimate victory if we had to sit down among the smoking ruins and then try to set up a military command which could take charge of the situation, restore order, 'repel and destroy 'the invaders, and conduct the counterattack which would lead to vic- tory? I repeat, Mr. President, because we must say it over and over and over again to ourselves that whole Sections of the country will be cut off from the others. One might sayi "Headquarters at Wash- ington will simply send a telegram naming General So and So or Admiral Such and Such to be in command inNew England or in California or in Washing- ton or in the Tennessee Valley or wher- ever the blow or blows might be falling." But, Mr. President, will there be a head- quarters at Washington? May it not have been wiped out? Even if there were a Washington with men in it, who could write out orders, is it likely that the orders would be sent or received? I realize that there are students of the art of war who picture a wholly different type of attack. They argue that the rockets alone will settle the issue, and 8469 will do so in a matter of days, and that manpower is not so important aS$SOMe of us think it is. In a brilliant and provocative book entitled "There Will Be No Time," William Liscum Borden makes observations which certainly de- serve attention, if not agreement. Bor- den is impressed by these two facts: First, that a single bomb destroyed three-fifths of Hiroshima; and, second, that Ger- man V-2 rockets reached a speed of 3,500 miles an hour. He cites the statement, in General Marshall's 1945 report, that? Goering stated after his capture that it was a certainty the eastern American cities would have been under rocket bombardment had Germany remained undefeated for two more years. The first attacks would have started much sooner. . Borden then declares: According to Col. John A. O'Mara, of the Air Service Technical Command, the 250- mile extreme range of Hitler's V-2's could be tripled 6 months after VE-day, and flights of 12,000 miles are the foreseeable goal. The United States Army, aided by German scien- tists, imported fliom Peenemunde, has con- ducted successful rocket soundings of the ionosphere over New Mexico; the Navy claims a rocket motor whose thrust exceeds that of the original V-2 by one-third; and Britain has engaged 30,000 square miles in southern Australia as a huge proving ground. The famous multibarreled katusha gun vouches for a long-standing Soviet interest in rock- ets; experimental robots have recently strayed across the Swedish and , Norwegian borders; and at least three U. S. S. R. agencies are known to be active in ionosphere. re- search. All signs indicate that the time lag between Nazi long-range missiles and round- the-world improvements will be short. Be- fore World War, II, Belgian fighter pilots found it difficult to attain top speed. with- out overrunning the boundaries of their small country. The great powers are con- fronted with a similar, problem in testing out rockets whose vast range will carry them far beyond national frontiers. The United States Joint Chiefs of Staff have already rec- ommended surveys for h range on which mis- siles may be fired at targets 2,000 miles away. A related problem now vexing inventors is how to prevent improved V.-2's from drift- in g off into space because of the earth's low gravitational pull at altitudes above 500 miles. The accelerating pace of inventions under- lines the importance of weapons as yet un- known or undeveloped. Occupation of Japan exposed research, upon a death ray capable of killing rabbi* at a distance of 40 yards, while the Germans experimented with a sound machine whose pressure waves would' theoretically disable troops over a considerable area. Developments in the field of missiles include the Felix, a target-seek- ing bomb responsive to heat; the Glomb, a television-controlled bomb; and the Bat, 'Whose radar homing instinet caused it to change course relentlessly in pursuit of zig- zagging Japanese ships. Maj. Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, the Army Air Forces research di- rector, has actually predicted space vehi- cles as a likely development of the next few years. In this category might be included satellite rockets which would revolve ,in an orbit around the earth and when war came, plunge down on the enemy. Planners at the Army's Wright Field testing center foresee artificial planets propelled into the. iono- sphere, there to form bases for meteorlike bombardments. Under serious study are methods for diverting the ocean's currents and for impregnating clouds with fission by- products, so that subsequent raindrops would ? ed For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020 8470 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE bristle with radioactivity. No possibility is too ;,.l-jrfetched for investigation, not even that of detonating atomic bombs in the antarctic polar regions, which might cause so much ice to melt as to raise the level of the seas, which in turn would inundate such coastal cities as New York. Most awe- some and threatening of all is the theory that ionospheric layers shielding the lower atmosphere from the sun could be thinned out, over an enemy country. The sun's pow- erful radiations would then pour through unfiltered and incinerate all life on the ex- posed terrain. ? ? In the field of 'poison gas, 1,500 chemicals were tested at a secret University of Chi- cago Toxicity Laboratory; and Germany developed an almost odorless series known as the Tabum gases, said to be far more toxic than any previously discovered. Dead- ly fungi, rickettsiae, and bacteria can now be mass-produced for use against men, ani- mals, and plants. Mr. President, I have just been read- ing quotations from the book There Will Be No Time, by William L. Borden, who writes of some of the things we can contemplate in the war of the future. I shall make four or five quotations from his book, because it is a new one and I think it is extremely interesting. Borden then speaks of the relative ease. of launching rockets in World War II. He says on page 49 of his book: Launching emplacements consisted of metal tables only 12 feet square? That occurred during World War II; that is Something which was in existence during that war? small enough to be transported in trucks, and German ground crews were capable of setting up the complete firing apparatus in one-half hour. The rocket-borne . atom bombs would require exactly 5 minutes and 6 seconds to reach cities in Britain 200 miles distant. -A radar altimeter or even a simple aneroid pressure device would cause the war- heads to detonate between 1,000 and 2,000 feet in the air, as at Hiroshima, so as to maximize blast effect. German 17,2's were not perfectly accurate; but, of those crossing the English coast, a majority struck within 4 miles of their targets, near enough for atomic effectiveness. Casualties from the Hiroshima bomb were closer to 150,000 than 100,000. Taking the latter figure as a con- servative estimate, a hundred V-2's could in 6 minutes account for 10,000,000 people, or nearly one-quarter of Britain's total popu- lation. Such an attack, far from being a futuristic dream, may have been practical as early as 1945 in terms of the weapons already used successfully in combat. Allowing for developments which must be regarded as a certainty, this are of rocket vulnerability will soon come to include every nation on earth, notably the United States. . On page 52, the author I am quoting makes this statement: The atom is potentially endowed with such destructiveness that if a rocket-borne nu- clear bomb were aimed at the White House in Washington, and actually struck in Bethesda, Md.., the Capital City might still fall within the scope of devastation. In time the principal demand on a rocket carrier may be to land the explosive within a territorial area the size of Delaware?especially if the warhead be designed more to scatter radio- active material than to maximize blast!' Will we have a. long warning Of the approach of danger? He tells us: Assuming that the present armistice en- dures until long-range missiles overshadow the heavy bomber, the sole overt warning the United States may have of an enemy. attack is a fright of unidentified rockets on her radar screens. In this initial blow each American community of 5,000 people or more could theoretically call forth a separate rocket. Germany manufactured 650 V-2's per month at a unit cost of some $35,000. Prof. J. Robert Oppenheimer, former in charge of the Los Alamos, N. Mex., laboratory, has estimated that without any change in. exist- ing techniques mass production will reduce the expenditure on one atomic bomb to around $1,000,000. Since there are only about ,100 United States communities with a pop- ulation in excess of 5,000, the money cost of directing a rocket-borne atomic bomb at each in a single mass assault might not ex- ceed $5,000,000,000, hardly a prohibitive sum in wartime. It is conceivable, though un- likely, that a sneak attack would give no clue to the enemy's identity. Thus a revived Japan might strike at America, riot by firing rockets eastward from her home islands, but by firing them westward across Asia, Europe,. and the Atlantic Ocean. The inference would then be that our enemy lay in Europe. Hos- tile rockets may well be powered with atomic energy, but there is little need to explore that possibility, real as it is. The enemy will hit with at least the suddenness of a V-2, whose average ground speed of 2,400 miles an hour has long been an accomplished fact. Assuming that we have been attacked, what happens next? Borden provides this answer: If our counterattack were built around rockets guided by human pilots, men would have to be alerted and assigned targets at a briefing. They would lose time adjusting headsets, parachutes, shock absorbers, and the Martian equipment requisite to protect bodies from the terrible heat created by at- mospheric friction on a rocket's outer skin, as well as ionospheric extremes of warmth and cold. The men would have to be trans- ported out to dispersal areas and strapped in their ships. They would take off and acceler- ate slowly for fear of physical injury, and when they curved from vertical to horizontal flight the surge of centripetal force would require deceleration?giving the enemy longer to gear his defenses. By the time our rockets were ready for bombs away, several hours might have elapsed, long enough for the op- ponent to secure an important and perhaps decisive advantage. On the other hand, robot-controlled rock- ets could be on the launching ramps, aimed, and ready to fire as soon as unfriendly mis- siles appear to our radar sentinels. In the event that the identity of a potential enemy were uncertain, a separate set of ramps could be held in readiness especially for each pow- erful foreign state. If one attempted a rocket Pearl Harbor, countermeasures would ? go into effect before the aggressor's missiles exploded over North America and hampered our ability to retaliate. Listen to this: We cannot relax in the thought that an- other aggressor will resemble Hitler, and that hence we shall recognize him in time to take defensive action. The first victim may not be a small neighboring land or a hap- less .colony. Any incident reminiscent of Manchuria, Ethiopia, or Czechoslovakia would immediately serve notice that the whole world was being attacked, the United States Included. Instead, the aggressor might by- pass his small neighbors, postpone his colo- nial ambitions, and fire rockets directly at the United States, which has been under-. estimated in two wars and which now stands forth, clearly as the main challenge to any World conqueror. The little countries could be dealt with more easily and much more safely after the United States was out of the way. There seems to be little likelihood of an unfolding, step-by-step pattern ofy 01-1 JULY 7 aggression, beginning with persecution of minorities, passing through ideological at- tacks, and culminating with the seizure of one small nation after another. So much depends on surprise that the aggressor-to-be may be expected to use diplo- macy not to alert his victim but rather to lull him into a cozy sense of security. The time for a future Hitler to ready his rockets and atomic bombs is not after the presenta- tion of an ultimatum but after an inter- national conference in which he has made every reasonable concession. The time to attack is not after the- aggressor's diplomats have walked out of the United Nations but after the speeches in which they have praised It and declared that nations must cooperate or perish. Here is the way diplomacy, one of the important weapons of war in peace, could be used to reap the full advantage of surprise. It may be objected that this technique is too cold-blooded and treacherous even for a regimented population to tolerate. It is said again and again that the majority of people everywhere desire peace. Doubtless the statement is true, and hence the people might be expected to revolt against a dic- tator who followed up a peaceful diplomacy with an unprovoked aggression. The fact is that in any country where power is con- centrated in the executive, a dictator can justify treachery merely by whispering to his people, as did Hitler. Of course, there will be new forms of sabotage and new forms of Trojan horse tactics. This is how this, author de- scribes them: Perhaps an American rocket site in North Dakota will be so deep undergrbund and so cunningly protected by countermagnetic fields, heat neutralizers, and decoys as to baffle an aerial attack. In that event sabo- teurs might drive a large moving van con- cealing an atomic bomb into the fortress' vicinity and thus pave the pay for its elim- ination. Another famous weapon of war in peace? propaganda?may likewise be tailored to help the offense achieve total surprise. The pur- pose will be to relax tension in nations being, fattened for the kill. Where there is little tension, appropriations for national defense are cut to the bone. Scientists resign from research for the government and return to private universities. Therefore, hostile \propaganda might lose its old virulence and take on a conciliatory tone. Political parties which acted as the aggressor's sounding board could be ordered to speak in softer tones than before and to form a united front with moderate groups. Thereupon the vie- tim's fears would tend to dissolve. In addi- tion, much propaganda capital could be made of mankind's yearning for world peace. A reincarnated Goebbels would speak of out- lawing war and of one world or none, echoing the very phrases most expressive of peaceful hopes. Far from advocating rebellion and barricades, the new propaganda might even be used to reenforce democracy. From the aggressor's point of view; democracy is the form of government most likely to be caught off guard in a surprise attack. Hence, it might profit him to bolster a government which in the past has usually waited for an armed attack before taking war seriously. Should the democracies awaken to the danger of surprise and therefore ready their defenses for instant use, the aggressor might foment criticism of such defenses as a barrier to international good will. He concludes that victory depends on "our readiness to fight on a moment's notice, -in terms of preexisting stock- piles. We fight with what we have got. Our armed forces should be designed to ,4Re ea? 151124 Apt" For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE fight independently, regardless of condi- tions on the home front." It will be seen that his view of future warfare differs markedly from that held by many of the professionals whom I Quoted at the beginning of my speech. But he, too, radical thinker that he iSti% draws the same moral from his conteni- plation of these horrors. He says that if headquarters A in Arizona were knocked out, headquarters B in Alaska would take over direction of the war, and if it in turn. were destroyed, headquar- ters C in Puerto Rico would assume command. In other words, he visualizes a command and a plan already in ex? istence, because he is sure of what I am sure of, and of what other experts are so sure of, that every part of our country? will be cut off from every other. So, in the last quotation which I shall make from his book; I read this brief para- graph: On the political front our national policy should give precedence over all internal prob- lems to defense. There is only one funda- mental issue: Whether or not the Nation will survive. Except as they affect our ability to remain strong, strikes, price control, business .regulation, penstons, and other domestic questions are of the most trivial consequence. We need an arrangement with Canada for joint defense of the Canadian Arctic. Fortu- nately, both countries have a stake in close mititary cooperation, since any rocket threat to either would loop over the top of the world. American secret intelligence should be under Army-Navy control and not in any way con- nected with our State Department?an or- ganization which has sufficient worries of its own without trespassing into the military sphere. It is not too soon to consider the problem of national disaster precautions and perhaps building codes which would require earthquake-resistant materials to be used in .new urban structures. The need for a whole war's supply of weapons on hand in advance of any fighting, for a unified Department of 'Defense, for ocean bases, and for sufficient *trained professional soldiCrs has already been stressed. Not to be overlooked is the neces- sity of legislation authorizing the armed forces to act instantly in case of attack, re- gardless of whether Congress is in session, how little diplomatic tension exists, and what time of the day or night the attack comes. Indeed, we could not improvise a plan. We could not take our time as we did in the last war to decide that General X should command one theater and Ad- miral Y should command another. We could not, after the blow has fallen, in- dulge in the luxury of that careful, de- liberate, advance planning which we have come to associate as being so vital, to military success. The plan and the commanders would have to be ready in anticipation of the attack. There would have to be commanders set up to provide . for every kind of disaster with staffs and N,,plans which would enable them to con- duct operations on land, sea, and air. If the unified command is not in operation before the blow strikes, we shall never survive. The first battle may well be the last. As General Eisenhower told the Comp- ton commission: The decision in a future conflict will be determined by our ability to act and react in, luls first tO days, rather than in the twelfth, eighteenth, or. twenty-fourth month, e.s in pazt wars. One must be ready when the whistle blows. If he is not ready, the whistle, so far as he is concerned, will be the last trump. Can it be wondered that the Compton commission, which has just finished its survey of what the war of the future will be like, comes to this conclusion? I quote one paragraph: Because the striking force and the other elements, necessary to support it would en- tail use of air, sea, and ground strength and because all other phases of future war would similarly involve the most coordinated use of our military and civilian energies, we con- sider it a matter of extreme urgency that there be immediate unification of the armed forces. There can be no realistic planning or preparation without unity. The reluctance of Congress and some branches of the Mili- tary Establishment to move wholeheartedly toward unification has been a powerful de- ? terrent toward acceptance by the public of the idea that unity of purpose in our national life is the foundation stone of our security. I have heard some high-ranking offi- cers say that, of course, unified command is absolutely essential in what the strate- gists of the last war called the forward areas, but that it was not necessary in the continental United States. In the war of the future every area is a "for- ward area." As the Compton commis- sion declares: The addition of the atomic bomb to the in- calculable horrors of modern war has nated the concept of zones of safety in, any future attack on .this country. What happens to the engines of mod- ern war in a case of that kind? How long can the Navy, for instance, continue ,if all heavy industry is knocked out, if all refueling facilities are destroyed, if pipe lines, tank cars, and all those things are gone? How can the Army or the Air .Force hold out since they are dependent on heavy industry? It has been hearten- - ing for me to note in recent conversation with friends in the Navy their keen ap- preciation of the importance of the so- called zone of the interior and of the vital need for a unified command here in the United States, if we are ever to sus- tain our military power away from our. shores. So there, Mr. President, is my first rea- son for favoring unification. Without unification we are doomed by the nature of future war, the first effect of which will be to disunite us tactically. I say with all the vigor and all the sincerity of which I am capable, without unification - we cannot even begin to fight. What are some other reasons? Let me assume that we have staved off the first attack?that we have pulled our-, selves together and have begun counter- attack and counterbattery. Supposing that we are lucky enough once more to be fighting an overseas war along more or less conventional lines. We know from experience, Mr. President, that we can- not win such a war without a unified command. , I hasten to add that I would be vigor- ously opposed to any so-called merger bill in which one branch of the service gobbles up another. I want to preserve all the glorious traditions and esprit de corps and effective autonomy of the Air 1 8471 Force, the Army, the Coast Guard, the Marine Corps, and the Navy. Let me say, too, that I am opposed to anything which in any way threatens the/civilian char- acter of our Government. In my judg- ment, the bill before us contains none of these dangers. Perhaps I can point out, without being considered too personal, that, emotion- ally, I feel allied to all the services. Close relations of mine spent their lives in the Regular Navy; my father was in the Navy in the Spanish War, and my brother and ?, my son were in the Navy during World War II. I have relatives and many close friends in the Marine Corps and the Air Force, and, of course, I myself have been in the Army Reserve during all my adult life. I received my first military train- ing at a camp operated by personnel of the United States Marine Corps. As a 's newspaperman, I made a special study of naval matters and became a director of. the Navy League of the United States. To this was added the experience of writ- -ing on naval matters for the New York Herald Tribune and other publications, as well as membership in the United \ States Naval Institute, the Naval His- 'torical Foundation, and the Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy at Annapolis. When I first came to this body, in 1937, I tried to continue my study of national defense questions. I was a member of the Committee on Military Affairs and was the ranking Republican member of the subcommittee on naval appropria- tions. Throughout this whole period I was regularly performing short tours of active duty in the Army, where I learned many things which were of immense - value to me when I actually went to war, and which experience also taught me many things about human nature in its relation to military problems. It so happens that I was first commis- sioned in the horse Cavalry and later was transferred to the Armored Force, which was the World War II descendant of the Tank Corps of World War I. I remember how long it took for the horse to die out in the Army. I think there is a bill on the calendar now, by which the Re- mount Service is transferred to the De- partment of Agriculture; which, I sup- pose, marks the formal end"of the horse in the Army. It took a long time. I re- member in particular certain Horse Cav- alry maneuvers in Texas in which we marched all day alongside of the road while trains and automobiles whizzed by. Every day an old, emaciated-looking tramp used to start out with us in the morning. Regularly in the evening he would pass us. I wondered why it took the Army so long to consider the Horse Cavalry in its proper perspective when it seemed that everyone outside the Army was perfectly clear about it. Later I realized that it was because there were certain persons who had made a life study of the horse and his place in war- fare and were naturally convinced that there was nothing which could take his place. I do not say for a minute that these men clung to the horse for selfish reasons or because they thought that if the horse disappeared their chance for distinction, prestige, and promotion ved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020 8472 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE would vanish, although some uncharita- ble persons made that statement. I am perfectly willing to believe, and I do, that these Cavalry officers were honestly convinced that it was vitally necessary to maintain large units of horse Cavalry. Horse Cavalry was what they knew and they had advanced too far in life to learn something else. I do not doubt that in the Navy there are also officers who cling to weapons and methods that become outmoded and, for all I know, there are some in the Air Force, even though it is such a new type of warfare. We may develop a guided missile or rocket which does not require anyone to be in it, and there may be found heavy-bombardment advocates who will be holding back and not favor- ing the use of the guided missile because they cling to the old traditions. I think we all realize that there are also men of that type in business and the professions and it is something with which one must cope--gently if possible, but certainly effectively. The human tendency for men to di- vide themselves off into groups is very strong. In the Army there is consider- able so-called "branch consciousness"? much too much, to my way of thinking. Of course, I am not talking about the question of unit pride?that conviction held by the members of an air corps squadron or a destroyer or an artillery battery that their outfit or ship is the best in the Army or Navy. That is some- thing entirely different. That is whole- some and good?something which every commander strives, with justification, to inspire in his men. That is something which applies to young men in combat. But I never could. see why it was neces- sary for a coast artilleryman to think he was better than a quartermaster, or for an infantryman to think he was bet- ter than a tank man. It is just like say- ing that apples-are better than steak. The two are not comparable. I feel the same way about the old Army and Navy rivalry. I always get a little suspicious when I hear someone say that "the in- fantry is the queen of battle and the land battle decides the war", or that "sea- power determines the victory", or that "airpower is everything in modern war." It is all right for college boys to cheer themselves hoarse about Annapolis and West Point or Harvard and Yale, but when manhood is reached that sort of rivalry and separatism seems utterly out of place. I have lived long enough to realize that it is a very real factor in human nature and is not confined to col- lege boys?grown and otherwise mature men are quite sincere about it. It ex- ists not only in the armed services. I have seen this old school-tie spirit as it might be called, among members of the legislature and Members of Congress. In politics George Washington called it the spirit of the party. It is something which can never entirely be eliminated. The danger is not that this separatism will be abolished; the danger always is that it will go too far and create so much divi- sion that effective action is impossible. We hear it said: "The old methods served us well, therefore why change?" Or: "It is better to do nothing at all than to make a mistake." Whatever validity these philosophies may have had in the past, they are definitely and indeed dan- gerously out of line today. We must be bold nowadays and we must be pre- pared to accept new ideas. One often saves more life by experimenting than by being conservative. My overseas wartime military service began in Libya in 1942 where the Ger- mans had superiority in the air and on the ground and in the Mediterranean. When we heard a plane in those days, the chances were that it was a Ger- man plane. I shall never forget the at- mosphere of the battlefield at that time?it was so different from anything I ever ran into later. Senators may re- member that the British had lost con- trol of the Mediterranean and that the Germans could come across practically at will. The British had to send their Shipping all the way around Africa with enormous delay and expense. It was an object lesson to me in the vital import- ance of maintaining seapower and sea communications and 'showed the un- speakable things which happen to a ground Army-when it is not supported by an adequate Air Force. That is just -one little object lesson which I learned through my own little humble experi- ence, which is very similar to that of millions of individuals. In" Sicily later on, as an observer, I saw General Patton's march along the northern coast road. On the left of .this ' road was a steep precipice below which was the ocean. At the right the moun- tains rose steeply. When General Pat- ton wanted to make any kind of a flank. attack he either had to use mules in the steep Sicilian mountains to go around the right flank or to use naval vessels if he wanted to go around the left. Sena- tors may remember that he had several flank attacks which were carried out by the Navy, and that he had the most har- monious and efficient working relations with the Navy. The result of it all was that the campaign was over in 38 days, which I believe is remarkably quick. If any one factor were to be singled out to explain such a success it was the com- pletely enthusiastic, hard hitting and unreserved teamwork between land, sea and air, teamwork that went ahead with- out quibbling or pettifogging or suspicion of motives. Once again, as an observer, I was in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. While I did not witness any actual com- bat in those areas, I saw enough of those who were engaged in the operations to . realize that the whole war out there was a type of leapfrogging in which the Navy and the Army sought to make possible the acquisition of landing fields for the Air. Force, whereupon they leapfrogged each other and went forward again, by- passing some islands and landing on others. I do not know whether ttiere is such a word, but I would say this , was a completely triphibious type of war. Admiral Halsey, one of the great leaders of all time, in my opinion, for whom I have a limitless, admiration and a deep affection, and who accomplished such ? miracles in the Pacific, actually had one unit under his orders which was com- manded by a general in the Army, with JULY 7 a captain in the Navy as chief of staff, and a colonel in the Marine Corps in charge of operations. That is how far it went. Everyone liked it, and everyone up and down the line was in favor of it. My next experience was in Italy where I served in an outfit which was on the west flank and went up the Italian shin- bone. There, as everywhere else during the war, I often bumped into naval per- sonnel because the Navy was supporting the detachment -at the Anzio beach- head?it will be remembered what a rugged time that was?and doing so under tremendously difficult conditions. There was nowhere one could go where the enemy was not looking right down one's throat all the time. The whole harbor was under enemy observation and artillery fire.' I witnessed the enormous air bombardment at Cassino and like - every other experience in the war it showed the absolute necessity for team- play between the different combat ele- ments. Finally I was one of the many who took part in an amphibious operation?that is an- experience in which millions and millions of Americans have shared? which was the landing in southern France, and saw with my own eyes both the plans and the elements of land, sea, and air which participated in it. It was impossible to see the planes coming overhead and to have the Navy pick us up and put us on the beach at the right time and the right place, without giv- ing us a proud feeling that we were all part of a team and that the essential thing was the fact that we were all mak- ing our contribution to victory together for our country. One cannot go through such experi- ences as that?and they were typical average experiences which I know mil- lions and millions of men in this war un- derwent?without coming to some pretty strong general conclusions about the way In which our national defense set-up should be established. I am not going into technicalities because I am not equipped to do so. In fact, if there were any real differences of opinion between the officers of our Army and Navy who were charged with studying this matter, I might not be speaking today. The fact, however, that they have agreed on a proposal to unify the services and have done so only after great soul searching and great difficulty, makes me feel very- strongly that any man is bold indeed to be the instrumdnt which breaches that agreement. I mean, of course, one who breaches that agreement because of any military considerations. Those who fear that it will set up a power in the Govern- ment which will threaten the civilian character of our Government are in a different category. I do not happen to share that worry because I cannot see that it creates ? any 'more power than exists already in the President. In my opinion, former Secretary of War Stim- son made the complete answer to the 'charge of so-called military dictatorship when he said: The Secretary of National Defense will be' a powerful officer. That is .entirely proper. He cannot successfully exercise his functions without adequate and flexible power. But it should be observed that he is given no Rowers For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE which do not already belong to the President as Commander In Chief. What this bill does is to delegate to a recognized officer of the Government a part of the authority over the M;litary Establishment which in the end al- ways belongs to the President. Under this bill the President as Chief Executive retains his powers unchanged; he is provided with a suitable officer for the proper exercise of these powers; that officer remains under his entire control. This appears to me to be a wholly proper and natural step, entirely in keeping with our best administrative ?prac- tices. In other words, to charge that the Sec- retary of National Defense will be a mili- tary dictator, or a czar, or what have you, is simply to level the same charge against the President, since his powers are given as Commander in Chief under the Con- stitution. If these charges are justified, then we have been living under a military dictatorship during the lifetime of our Republic. Prof. Barton Leach, of Harvard Law School, who held several important posts in the Army during World War II, has this to say: It is a basic reality that a leader of a military establishment must have authority if he is to be effective. You cannot run armies by negotiations. Authority and dis- cipline are the military counterparts of ne- gotiation and discussion .in civilian affairs. The Constitution of the United States recog- nizes this reality by placing in the hands of the President both civilian authority over the executive departments which control the armed forces and Military authority over the forces themselves. In Washington's time the burders of the office of President were such as to make it possible for the President to be, in reality, the civilian and military leader of the very limited ettrmed forces we had at that time. The principle that au- thority is needed? has not changed. De- mands upon the man, who, under the Constitution, holds the joint position of ci- vilian and militar.y leadership, have seriously changed. In order to make the President's unified control a reality this bill proposes to give to him a single civilian official who, in pursuance of the President's power and u:ad.er the President's direction, provides the single authority over the armed services which the Constitution envisaged. Far from being a departure from the wisdom of the fathers, this bill is an implementation of that wisdom and an adaptation of the prin- ciple of singleness of control to the realities of our present-day institutions. I do not favor unification, however, . merely because the armed forces have agreed upon this bill, although I think., this is a persuasive consideration. My Prime reason for favoring unification is that I think it is utterly vital to have the chain of command clearly set up ? and clearly e.s?blished. During the course of these remarks 1 have, first, ex-. amined this proposition from the stand- point of the war in the future. Then I examined it from the standpoint of the war in the past World War II, through which we have lust come. No matter how we look at it we are brought. to .the conclusion that there must be unity. My feeling as to who should occupy the places in that chain of command is as nothing compared with my belief in the importance of having such a chain, It would be all right with me, as one Whose militaNy experience was . in the ground ,Army, to have all the top posi- tions filled by the Navy or the Air Force so long as the chain of command and the unified team play is a guaranteed fact. It cannot be improvised quickly, and if there is another war, I repeat for the tenth time, we cannot expect to have 2 years in which to argue these things out. This is something which much be ready when the whistle blows. My second principal reason for favor- ing unification is that it will result in a definite well-thought-out procedure for the allocation of our available supply of military manpower. Saving money is, of course, of vital importance. But to save manpower is even more crucial be- cause we have a definite shortage of manpower in this country for all of the things that we need to do. If we take the age,group of young men physically fit for military service and then deduct the ones who must remain in essential nonmilitary activities, we have not a great deal left. It is too important a matter to leave the allocation of this manpower to last-minute horse trading between the Army and the Navy and the Air Force, as was the case during the war. There must be a definite system of allocation. This is one of the results which. will flow from having the machin- ery to take care of the problems which all the services have in common. Third on my list is the economy which will come from the elimination of dupli- cate facilities. The distinguished chair- man of the Armed Services Committee, the Senator from South Dakota [Mr. GURNEY] has gone into that question in detail, and I shall not repeat what he said or try to duplicate it. We may differ as to how much money it will save; but it will certainly produce some very real economies. Fourth, I notice that in this bill the National Security Resources Board is given as one of its functions the duty of advising the President on policies to establish adequate reserves of strategic and critical materials and for the con- servation of such reserves. The adop- tion of an intelligent policy with respect to our diminishing raw materials of all kinds is of vital importance and can mean the difference between defeat and victory in case of war. I have heard a good deal said about the cooperation which has been achieved so far by using the present system. I was not at a sufficiently high level during the war to speak from personal knowl- edge of the way the high command func- tioned; but from what I have read and conversations I have had, I am perfectly prepared to believe that much good work has been done. I do, however, suggest that such integration as has taken place has been due to the pressure of events during the war; and I would not be sur- prised to learn that some of it was due to the fear of legislative action here in Congress, which would naturally tend to force officers who are not in favor of uni- fication to take some sort of action in order to avert what they might consider was a greater evil. Mr. President, these are my reasons for favoring unification. Of course, with respect to every legislative proposal, as we all know who are here in the Senate, 8473 there are always arguments on both sides. There is only one argument which has been made against the bill which I think would? have merit if it could be sustained. That argument sug- gests that unification will tend to destroy the autonomy and the esprit de corps of the different branches of the service. I tell you very frankly, Mr. President, that any legislation which I thought would destroy the esprit de corps, the morale, the traditions and the fighting efficiency of the Navy or the Marine Corps or the Army or the Air Force would incur my strongest opposition. I not only do fail to find anything in the bill which would enable that to be done, but I simply cannot conceive of any re- sponsible officer in any of our services desiring to do such a thing. We want to preserve all the strength that we can. The traditions and the morale of a crack outfit like our Marine Corps, for ex- ample, are a tremendous national asset; and I have never met an officer in any other branch of the service who thought was intelligent and who has been successful, who did not agree. ? I do not think-that we here in Con- gress can legislate very far into the fu- ture, although it is our job to make the best estimate of the future that we can make. That is what makes our job so difficult. In this case, what I want to see above all is the seed planted and given a chance to grow. I have faith in the teachings of experience, in the impact on this plan of the personalities of the men who will administer it, and I believe they are sure to be able men of great char-. acter and ability. I have faith in the fact that circumstances will mold this scheme in a realistic way. All I have tried to.say today is that in union there is strength. This is as true in the field of the armed services as it is in the held of public affairs. Modern science has made union more desper- ately necessary than ever. We must unify or we will perish. The PRESIDING OF.VICER (Mr. MARTIN in the chair). The bill is before the Senate and is open to amendment. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming ob- tained the floor. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for the purpose of sug- gesting the absence of a quorum? Mr. ROBERTSON _ of Wyoming. I yield. ? Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, I sug- gest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ab- sence of a quorum is suggested. The clerk will call the roll. The Chief Clerk called the roll, and the following Senators answered to their names: ? Aiken Connally Baldwin Cooper Ball Cordon Barkley Donnell Brewster Dworshak Bricker ," Ecton ? Brooks Ellender Buck Bushfield Butler Byrd Cain Capehart Capper Hawkes Chavez , Hayden --Ferguson. Flanders Fulbright? George Gurney Hatch Hickenlooper Hoey Holland ? Jenner Johnson, Colo. - Johnston, S. C. Kem Kilgore Knowland Langer Lodge Lucas McCarran McCarthy ????????????????????=.?1 oved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020 04 0-01-1 8474 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE McClellan O'Mahoney Taylor McFarland Overton Thomas, Olds. McKellar Pepper Thye McMahon Reed Tydings Magnuson Revercomb TJmstead Malone Robertson, Va. Vandenberg Martin Robertson, Wyo.Watkins - Millikin Russell Wherry Moore Saltonstall White Morse Smith Wiley Murray Sparkman Williams O'Conor Stewart Wilson O'Daniel Taft Young The PRESIDING OFFICER. Eighty- four Senators having answered to their names, a quorum is present. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, I desire to speak on behalf of the avowed objectives of Senate bill 758, and to propose. amendments which will enable it to achieve its goal. To the bill. itself--as it now stands?I am unalter- ably opposed. I cannot by any flight of imagination regard it as an effective in- strument for the attainment of its as- * serted objectives. I cannot, indeed, re- gard it as even a worth while effort to achieve them. Aside from its pretentious title, and a pious declaration of policy thrown as a sop to those whose criti- cisms could not be completely ignored, there is nothing in the bill which prom- ises any substantial improvement over s the existing security structure of the Na- tion. There is much, on the other hand, which will subtract from, rather than add to, the national security. Mr. President, at the outset I want to state and I desire it to be publicly known that I am 100 percent for unification of our armed forces. I am for the unified command of all forces in every theater of operations in wartime or in peace- time--which we have today. I am op- posed to a "merger" of the armed forces; and when I say that, Mr. President, it seems to me unnecessary to say that I am opposed to Senate bill 758 in its present form. In this form, Mr. Presi- dent, the bill is first and foremost a merger of the armed forces. According to the dictionary definition of the word "merger," it means, "To sink the identity or individuality of; cause to disappear, be combined, 'or be swallowed up; to lose identity or individuality; be lost to view or absorbed into something else." I repeat that I am for the unification of the armed forces, but, Mr. President, in order to obtain real national secu- rity, I am for the unification and coordi- nation of much more than the armed forces. I am for the coordination of ,very phase of our national life which affects national security. I am for the unification and coordination of those' phases cif our national life, together with the armed forces of the Nation. I am for the coordination of every department and agency of the Government con- cerned with national security?which the title of this bill sets forth, but never per- forms. Mr. President, the Armed Services Committee of the Senate started open hearings on this bill on March 18, and continUed them through April until May 9. Members of the committee who attended these hearings found that they left them but little time to attend to other important Senate duties:- Almost daily the committee was unable to prom ceed with the hearings on account of the lack of a quorum, and often the hearings were delayed from 30 to 45 minutes. This, Mr. President, was no fault of the members of that committee; rather is it the fault of the Reorganization Act under which we are working. Let me call the attention of the Senate to the fact that in this Eightieth Congress, the Armed Services Committee is a "merger" of the Military Affairs Committee and the Naval Affairs Committee of the Seventy-ninth Congress. . Each of those committees, Mr. President, had 18 mem- - bers, making a total of 36. This Armed Services Committee has a membership of but 13 members. Yet, there are just as many functions to be performed by those 13 members, just as many bills to be con- sidered, just as many important hear-, ings to'be held by those 13 members as there were by the 36 Senators of the two committees in the Seventy-ninth Con- gress. With the Senate meeting almost daily_ at noon, it does not take a mathematician to figure out the limited time of each day's committee hearing. Although the committee is scheduled to meet each morning at 10 a. m., it was rarely that the hearings started before 10:30, and on. many occasions not before 10:45. Again I say, Mr. President, that this casts no reflection on the chairman or on members of the committee. The bald truth of the matter is that under the present system?that is, under the Reor- ganization Act?it is a most difficult mat- ter to get a quorum of the committee in all instances. There is another angle to this matter, and that is the waste of valuable time that is caused the many witnesses the committee has to hear. The Armed Services Committee provides an excel- lent example of this waste of time of im- portant witnesses. Illustrative of this is the calling of the committee, we shall say, to hear the Secretary of the Navy, Mr. Forrestal, and the Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Nimitz. The com- mittee is called at 10 a. m. It is 10:45 be- fore a quorum is present, and there is only time to hear Mr. Forrestal; and even VA hours is all to short a time to hear the Secretary on such an important bill. Admiral Nimitz has to go away to come back the next day or at the next meeting of the committee. The same thing hap- pens With Secretary of War, Mr. Patter- son, and General Eisenhower?and not only with these top officials but with countless others who come to the com- mittee hearings, expecting to be called, and then go away and are asked to come back another day. I do not know wheth- er the Army or the,Navy or the Marine Corps keep a record of all calls to, and aPpearances before, Senate committees, but it would be interesting, and I ven- ture to say amazing, to learn the num- ber of man-hours wasted by officers and men of the armed services as a result of our operations under the Reorganization Act. After the open hearings closed on May 9, a number of executive committee meetings were held between that date and June 5, the date on which the final executive session was held; and the bill JULY 7 was voted on to the calendar on June 6, 1947. During all that period, Mr. President, from March 18 to June 6, the Armed Services Committee was practically un- able to consider any of the vast number of bills which were before it. For 11 weeks, out of a total of 27 weeks Con- gress has been in session, S. 758 was be- ing considered by the Armed Services Committee. I repeat, Mr. President, this Is no reflection on the chairman or any members of the committee, but to reduce 2 major committees of 18 members each to 1 committee of 13 members is just not feasible or workable, and certainly is not in the interest of efficiency. Mr. President, I firmly believe that the most important thing that we, the Sen- ate of the United States, have to con- sider is the security of the United States. Everything else pales into insignificance compared to the security of the Nation. This is no party question?it is a national question. National security does not belong to any party, any group, any ma- jority, or any minority. It affects every man, woman, and child in the United States. But more than that, Mr. Presi- dent, our national security, or insecurity, today affects every soul in the world. If the United States should for any reason Whatsoever lose or be unable to maintain its position of national secu- rity, then the people of no nation in the world could be considered as secure. Many of the nations of the world today have no national security. Mr. President, when I speak of na.- tional security, I do not mean an army, a navy, or an air force, as these are but the physical means of fighting a bat- tle to maintain security, or to repel in- security after all other peaceable means have failed. . To be the only Nation to be well fed, where almost every family has an auto- mobile, where the highest wages in the world are paid, where the greatest profits in the world are made, where production is, and can be, greater than in almost all the other nations in the world com- bined, where Our wealth and national in- come are beyond the dreams of almost any other nation in the world?that is not national security. If we do not take care of these funda- mental assets of our nation, and co- ordinate them all into one great security program, then we lay ourselves open to the possibility, maybe probability, of having our great national security threatened by insecurity. Mr. President, Senate bill 758 bears the impressive title of "A bill to promote the national security by providing for a Na- tional Defense Establishment, which shall be administered by a Secretary of National Defense, and for a`Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, and a Department of the Air Force within the National Defense Establishment, and for the coordination of the activities of the National Defense Establishment with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security." It is indicative of the thinking of the framers of this bill, S. 758, that in the original bill, title I, entitled "The Na- Ap d For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE tional Defense Establishment," should be purely military, and that the National Defense Establishment, according to the bill, was to consist of: Section 101: Establishment of the National Defense Establishment. Section 102: Secretary of National De- fense. Section 103: Military assistants to the Secretary. Section 104: Civilian personnel. Section 105: Department of the Army. Section 106: Department of the Navy. Section 107: Department of . the Air Force. Section 108: United States Air Force, Section 109: Effective date of transfers. Section 110: War Council. Section 111: Joint Chiefs of Staff. Section 112: Joint Staff. Section 113: Munitions Board. Section 114: Research and Develop- ment Board. Title II of the bill was outside, separate and apart, from the Defense Establish- ment, or, as it is now called, "The Secu- rity Organization." Title II was entitled "Coordination for National Svurity," and consisted of ? / Section 201: National Security Council. Section 202: Central Intelligence Agency. Section 203: National Security Re- sources Board. In an effort to bring a realization to the members of the committee that we were seeking a national security organ- ization and not a national military establishment, I was able to have the committee amend the bill so as to make title II, "Coordination for National Security," Title I, thus at least placing first things first. I must take immediate exception to the application a the term "National Se- curity Organization" to an establishment which is patently a military establish- ment. National security encompasses far more than the activities of the mili- tary departments and the armed serv- ices. It is the concern of every citizen? of every man, woman, and child in the United States. It is not only their con- cern?it is something to which they have In the past contributed and must in the future contribute a substantial portion of their time and their toil. Can my colleagues say to the farmer in his fields, the worker in the factory, the teacher in the classroom, the scientist in the laboratory, or the civil-defense worker patrolling his rounds?can my colleagues say to these citizens: "You are not a part of the National Security Organization. None but military forces contribute to the security of this country." I cannot do so, and I do not believe any of my colleagues can do so, either.' Yet S. '758 says that, and we are asked to make that . statement law. The drafters of S. 758 could be excused for such a palpable misuse of the term "National Security Organization" if there were evidence that they were otherwise conscious of the importance of the civil- ian population and the civilian economy in the achievement of national security. We might excuse them of any intent to deny this importance if elsewhere in the bill there appeared some recognition of the vital role which the civilian segment of the Nation plays in maintaining its security?if there were due provision to take their viewpoint, their contribution, and their requirements into account. Much needs to be done to perfect the securtiy of our Nation?but it cannot be perfected if we confine our operation to the province of the military. The lessons of the past great war have indicated that Inadequate coordination in and between the departments and agencies of the Government representing the civilian elements of the Nation were of no less importance than the shortcomings of the military departments and the armed services. In spite of strenuous efforts to bring about coordination between civil- ian elements, and between civilian and military elements, the results were far from satisfactory. Notwithstanding the overwhelming evidence that a most fertile field for integration of the elements of national security lies among the civilian depart- ments and agencies of the Government, or between the civilian agencies on the one hand and the military agencies on the other, the framers of S. 758 have made no 'attempt to solve this most im- portant aspect of their problem. According to its title, this is a bill "to promote the national security by provid- ing for the coordination of the activities of the National Security Organization with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the na- tional security." Wherein does the lan- guage of the bill itself support such a title? If such language appears in the bill we should expect to -find it in title I? Coordination for National Security? and more particularly in the provisions relating to the National Security Coun- cil. From its name and its status as the principal advisory body to the President in matters relating to national security, one might imagine that this body would bring together all the diverse elements of national security', where the poten- tialities and the requirements of each element could be weighed, and responsit bilities apportioned. Surely this is the common ground where diplomacy, agri- culture, industry, labor, education, sci- ence, and all the other civilian elements of national security would meet with the military and together come forward with balanced programs for the security of the Nation. Surely, in addition to the military departments and the Depart- ment of State, we should find represent- ed here, the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Labor, Interior, and the Treasury, the Director of the Atomic Energy Commission, perhaps the chair- men of the congressional committees most vitally concerned with problems of national defense. But not so. Observe Its narrow membership. Other than the President, there are the Secretary of State, the four military secretaries, and the chairman of a national security re- sources board. What have we represent- ed here? Foreign policy, military policy, and, to some extent, economic policy.. But what of the other elements of na- tional security? They are simply not in- cluded. . If the language relating to the Nation:- al Security Council fails utterly to sub- 8475 stantiate the claim of the bill's title that It provides for the coordination of the activities of the National Security Or- ganization with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with national security, what other lan- guage is there in title I or in any other title of the bill to support such a pre- tentious claim? Mr. President, I have looked searchingly and without success for some evidence that something more than lip service has been paid to the ci- vilian elements of national security? diverse elements of no less importance than the military elements, though less obvious and certainly less vocal. I have sought in vain to find some recognition of the fact that coordination and inte- gration of these elements is one of the real problems facing us today. I have found no such evidence, no such recogni- tion. If the bill does not coordinate all ele- ments of .national security, then what is it intended to do? My colleagues need not turn to the so-called declaration of policy for an answer to this question. The declaration of policy is a soporific to dull the perceptions of those who seek to understand the bill. Let my colleagues read the language of the bill itself; there, we can find an answer if we look closely enough. The real intent of this bill is to create a vast military empire, one in which am- bitious men will wield greater power over the Military Establishment than has ever? been heretofore granted to nonetbcted individuals, and one which will wield untrammeled power over the entire so- ( cial and economic structure of the Na- tion. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield, or would he prefer not to yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I am yielding to the Senator from Massa- chusetts. ' Mr. SALTONSTALL. I should like to ask the distinguished Senator, from what provisions of the bill does he draw the inference that there is to be greater military power given to any one man than is the case under the existing law? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, when the pending bill, as it does, creates the Secretary of National Security, over the three Secretaries of - Army, Navy, and Air, it puts a greater responsibility on 'that one man than rests on any man in the set-up today. Mr. SALTONSTALL. But when the distinguished Senator says that the Sec- retary of National Security is over the three Secretaries, is that strictly true? The Senator from Wyoming had much to -do with the argument pro and con in the committee that finally reported the bill in its present form. Does not the bill specifically give the Secretary of National Security limited powers, which are spe- cifically enumerated and set forth, and that all other powers are left in the hands of the present Secretaries? Is that not true? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. It is not true in its entirety. I shall deal with that point as I come to the question of the merger, Mr. President. I shall take care of the Senator's question at that time, ved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020 01-1 8476 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE Let us not delude ourselves as to the character of the Military Establishment which this bill would create under the inaccurate title of a 'National Security Organization." Here we have a merger of the armed forces, sententious declara- tion of policy notwithstanding. I doubt seriously if we would today be considering this proposed piece of legis- lation had not the Army long ago set its sights on the merger of the armed serv- ices into a single service under a single Secretary, a single national Chief of Staff, and a single national general staff. The Navy's objections, supported by a sub- stantial portion of the Congress and the public, resulted in a partial retreat of the Army from its original proposal for a single department and a single service, and a resort to more devious tactics to achieve the same end. The present pro- posal is a step in the direction of the Army's utlimate goal. It provides a single establishment in which the three military departments and the armed services retain Alit semblance of auton- omy, but not I's substance. In the absence of the eubstance of auton- omy, the elements of the Military Estab- lishment will find it increasingly diffi- cult as time goes on to resist the Army pressure to achieve their ultimate goal. The Army was reluctant to agree to the insertion of numerous clauses that apparently preserve the autonomy of the component departments and services. These supposedly protective 'clauses lose all their effectiveness?and I am sure the Army was aware of this, when they con- sented to their inclusion?in the Presence of other clauses which give unmistakable, complete authority to the head of the Military Establishment, the misnamed Secretary of National Security. First, let me read the merger provi- sions, which compromise eight lines. This is the answer to the question of the Senator from Massachusetts. I quote from title II, section 201 (a) : There is hereby established the National Security Organization, and-a Secretary of Na- tional Security, who shall be the head thereof. Let us mark that. The Secretary of National Security shall be the head of the National Security Organization. Subparagraph (b) describes the com- position of the National Security Organ- ization, as follows: The National Security Organization shall consist of the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Depart- ment of the Air Force, together with all other agencies created within the National Security Organization. The list. of those agencies is given in the first pages of the bill, and in this case they are almost entirely military agen- cies. But there, Mr. President, is the merger. Those eight lines in section 201 (a) and (b) create the merger of the armed forces. Countless persons have written me or told me individually, "I am against the merger of the armed forces, but I am for unification." Many Senators have said the same thing. I firmly believe the majority of the Corn- ' mittee on Armed Services are opposed to a merger but in favor of unification. Yet' lines 7 to 14 on page :77 of the bill, which ' I have just read, create the merger of the armed forces of the Nation, and place one Man in charge of those merged forces. It does not require a lawyer to Interpret the words of section 201 (a) and (b). They are clear and decisive. They are the root of the whole bill, and so long as they stay in the bill it is a merger bill, and the press have always been correct in their headlines or re- leases in giving the name "merger" to the measure. Only this morning in one of the Wash- ington newspapers I came across this language: MERGER BILL EP IN SENATE The Senate today opens debate upon the Army-Navy unification bill fOrewarned that failure to enact it would make the United States the "only major power which has not modified its Military Establishment"? ? And so forth. The article goes on to say: The measure, requested by President Tru- man after a more thoroughgoing merger was spurned by Congress last year, would leave the War and Navy Departments intact but would place over, them a Secretary of Na- tional Security with power to exercise "gen- eral direction, authority, and control" over the two war arms. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I should like to call the Senator's attention to a clause on page 31 of the bill with which I know he is familiar, because we discussed the matter at length in the committee. The declaration of policy is stated on pages 30 and 31, and on page 31 it is specifically said: "To provide for" three military de- partments, and to provide for "unified direction but not to merge" these de- partments. "Not to merge" them. Now how can the Senator say that the bill is a merger bill when the declaration of policy spe- cifically says it is not a merger bill? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, I say the declaration of policy ienot a part of the law. It simply states in general terms the policy. If that language is followed absolutely in the bill then I have no argument with the Sena- tor, but until section 201 (a) and (b) is eliminated it is in contradiction to the declaration of principles. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield again? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. If the Senator Is correct in his statement, then what language in the bill provides for merger? What words in the bill are merger words? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I have just read them to the Senator. ' I shall be glad to read them again.. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I heard those words read, but is there anything in those words that provides for a merger? Do not those words provide for a unified di- rection rather than a merger? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. No, Mr. President, I do not think the Sena- tor is correct. When one man, the Sec- retary of National Security, is placed at the head of the organization that makes It a complete merger, and he has com- plete authority over the various depart- ?JULY 7 rnents within that merged organization. ' Let Us for a moment see what the duties and powers of this misnamed Sec- retary of National Security are. I read from section 202: (a) The Secretary of National Security shall? (1) Establish general policies and pro- grams for the National Security Organization and for all the departments and agencies therein; (2) Exercise general direction, authority, and control over such departments and agen- cies; (3) Supervise and coordinate the prepara- tion of budget estimates; formulate and de- termine the budget estimates for submittal to the Bureau of the Bud-get; and supervise the budget program of the National Security Organization. ? Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Yes. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Is not the final determination of the budget the duty of Congress, and if it is the duty of Con- gress, how can supervision of the work of getting the figures together and coordi- nating the figures, becomes such an im- portant power as to create a merger or to give the Secretary of National Secu- rity more power than he should have? _ Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. No: the fact that he has such powers does not create the merger. The result of the merger is that he has those powers, and he can coordinate the budget, and the estimates all in one lump sum, for the three armed forces. Mr. SALTONSTALL. But the Con- gress has the final decision? Mr.,-4ROBERTSON of Wyoming. The Congress makes the appropriation. Mr. LODGE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. LODGE. Does the Senator think that under those words the Secretary of National Security could modify the uni- forms, and take officers out of one branch and put them into another branch, or anything of that kind? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I think he would have such power. Mr. LODGE. Does the Senator know exactly what provision of the bill gives him power of that kind? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. The power, I believe, comes by reason of his being the head of these three organiza- tions. He is the head of the organiza- tion, and he has the power to do any- thing with respect-to functions. I agr,ee with Under Secretary Royall when he says that not only has this man the power to change functions but he must exercise them. Mr. LODGE. If the Senator will per- mit me in his time, I should like to say that I would certainly be opposed to any- thing of that kind. I want to preserve the traditions and the esprit de corps. and the autonomy. I think the bill would preserve them. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I know the Senator is honest when he says that he would not agree with the bill if such a provision were in it, but I assure the Senator that that is how I read the bill, and as I have read it from the first. ? d For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200Z0 1 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE That is why I am on my feet today opposing it. Mr. ELLENDER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a question? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. ELLENDER. I was very much in- terested in the statement made a moment ago by the distinguished Senator from Wyoming when he said that under the bill a vast military empire can be created. I should like ,to ask the Senator, how could such a military empire come into being when under section 8 of' article I of the Constitution appropriations for? military purposes cannot be made for a longer period than 2 years? In other words, it is up to the Congress, as was pointed out by the Senator from Massa- chusetts, to provide the wherewithal to keep the military and the naval de- partments operating. If, under the Constitution, which I am sure the bill does not change, it is up to the Congress to provide funds for, only 2 years, I was simply wondering how such an empire could be created' as the Senator en- visaged. ? . Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I shall develop that much more fully. as I proceed, if the Senater will bear with me. Mr. ELLENDER. I am very much in- terested in that point, and I should lile to hear the Senator's position with re- spect to it. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, I just recited the powers and duties of this misnamed Secretary of National Security. I should be grateful if some of my colleagues could point out to me just one thing that the secretary of any executive department could do within his department which the Secre- tary of National Security oould not do within the National Security Organiza- tion under these grants of authority. Except for the dubious right to -squeal when stuck, we have given no autonomous rights to the subordinate secretaries. The provision that each department within the National Security Organiza- tion shall be administered as an individ- ual unit is inconsequential. Every bu- reau in an executive department is ad- ministered as an individual unit, just as every battalion within a regiment is ad- ministered as an individual unit. This Is not autonomy; it is simply routine administrative organization. Nor is its significant provision that all powers and duties not specifically conferred upon the . Secretary of National Security shall be retained by the subordinate Secretaries; for there are no powers or duties of con- sequence which have not been conferred upon the super-secretary. The plain fact is that S. 758 creates a new executive department on 'a grand scale and cloaks the secretary at its head with every power which ordinarily pertains to the head of such a department. ? My criticism, however, is not so much that we are providing insufficient safe- guards against abuse of power by the head of the National Security Organiza- tion, but rather that we are creating such an unnecessary and undesirable organi- zation at all. We are building a new military empire where none was needed, and in doing so we are-creating aFrank- .No. 128-4 enstein monster which may work to the detriment rather than the enhancement of national security. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, Will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. The Senator has stated that the bill would create a Frank- enstein monster, and has used various other words which would indicate one man was being given tremendous power. ? I should like to ask this question: If he has only the powers set forth on pages 37 and 38, where the language occurs designating his powers, and all other powers are retained in the present secre- taries, how would a Frankenstein mon- ster be created? /What implied powers are being given to him that would create within him such tremendous force? ? ? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. In the first place, as I have extilained, he is the head of the Department of the Army, -the Department of the Navy, and the De- partment of the Air Force, together with all other agencies created within the Na- tional Security Organization. I think it would be well to refer to those agen- cies at this time. They are to be found listed under title II, the National Secu- rity Organization, sections 201 to 214. I think I have already read them, so there is no need of my repeating them. The Senator has them before him, on page 30 of the bill. ? In addition, we vest the super-Secre- tary with powers to exercise general di- rection, authority, and control over such departments and agencies. As I previ- ously stated, he is to have the power to supervise and coordinate the preparation of budget estimates, and so forth. , He is to have the power of establishing gen- eral policies and programs for the Na- tional Security Organization. That means the National Military Establish- ment. He is to have the power to estab- lish policies and programs for all depart- ments and agencies thereunder. I do not see how we could possibly give any man more power than it is proposed to give to the super-Secretary. What are the arguments for the erec- tion of a superagency for the coordina- tion of the military efforts and activities of the Nation? For one thing, it is stated ,that there has been inadaquate 'military coordination in the past. The evidence presented by the military wit- nesses during the course of committee hearings have brought out instances in which coordination and cooperation could have been improved. The other side of the picture was generally neg- lected by the administration witnesses. Admiral Carney took notice of this when he said: I have the feeling that in many instances proponents of merger have overlooked the fact that a great amount of integration has already been accomplished. 8477 the services. The simple fact seems to be that when the need was belatedly rec- ognized, military officers were able to co- ordinate and cooperate with ease, dis- patch, and effectiveness. Now that the - lesson has been learned, I do not think it will ever be forgotten. We are all familiar with the excellent job of coordination which was accom- plished in the field by the unified field commands. We are little less familiar with the equally splendid job of command coordination which was effected here in Washington by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. I have yet to hear any witness challenge the correctness of the decisions of the Joint Chiefs of Staff or offer a valid criti- cism of the speed with which they were arrived at. It does not require a merger to perpetuate the principle of unified field commands, or to perpetuate the Joint Chiefs of _Staff here in Washington. Both are here to stay, with or without a merger. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for'a question? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. The Senator stated earlier in his argument, if I cor- rectly understood him, that he was for unification and coordination of more than the armed forces. He has stated that there was unification in the field, and that there was unification in the armed forces in Washington. If this bill, in peacetime, seeks to legalize that uni- fication and continue it, what is the ob- jection to a bill of this character? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. The objection to the bill, as I have endeavored to show so far, and shall continue to endeavor to show, is that the bill is a merger of the armed forces, and very little else. As the Senator knows, I have always claimed that it was absolutely necessary that the Secretary of National Security should be under ,the President of the United States, and should be Sec- retary of the entire national security picture, and not merely Secretary of_the armed forces, displacing the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force as Cabinet- officers. ? Mr. DONNELL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Does the Senator from Wyoming yield to the Senator from Missouri? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. ? - Mr. DONNELL. I should like to make an inquiry of the- Senator from Massa- chusetts [Mr. SALTONSTALL]. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield for that purpose. Mr. DONNELL. I observe, on page 38 _of the bill, in line 14, this language: All powers and duties not specifically con- ferred upon the Secretary of National Secu- rity by this act are retained by each of the respective secretaries. - I observe, on page 37, as prev:ously quoted by the Senator from Wyoming, that the Secretary of National Security shall, under the direction of the Presi- dent, perform certain duties, among which are to? / After considerable prodding, other wit- nesses reluctantly admitted that a nota- ble improvement in coordination was actually brought about during the course of the war, and that by its end most of the problems of coodination had been ef- fectively solved?and without merging c ved Far Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002 8478 - CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE (1) Establish general policies and pro- grams for the National Security Organization and for all of the departments and agencies therein. (2) Exercise general direction, authority, and control over such departments and agencies. The question upon which I should like to have the comment of the Senator from Massachusetts is this: What powers and duties are there which are not spe- cifically conferred upon the Secretary of National Security by the bill? There- fore, what powers and duties are retained by each of the respective Secretaries, in the opinion of the Senator from Massa- chusetts? Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield in order that I may answer the question? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield to the Senator from Massachusetts. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I think it was the general feeling in the committee when that language was drafted that the general policies referred to, and the duties which the Secretary would per- form under the direction of the Presi- dent, were with regard to laying out the general policies of national defense and natiimal security. He would have noth- ing to do, for, instance, with the educa- tion of a naval flier; he would have noth- ing to do with the education or training of the operator of a tank or with the kind of tank that the Army should use. He could not necessarily say that we should have more jet planes or more planes of another character. Those are problems which are to be worked out, respectively, in the air department, the ground forces, 'and the Navy. He should, however, have an idea of how-those three elements of the national force should be used to- gether to unify all possible methods of establishing our national defense. Mr. DONNELL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a very brief obser- vation? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. DONNELL. I thank the Senator. from Massachusetts, although I am quite puzzled as to how it is possible for any , powers and duties not to have been specifically conferred upon the Secretary of National Security by this bill, when by the very language on page 37 it is pro- vided: Under the direction of the President he shall perform the following duties: (1) Establish general policies and pro- grams for the National Security Organization and for all of the departments and agencies therein; (2) Exercise general direction, authority, and control over such departments and agencies; ? (3) Supervise and coordinate the prepara- tion of budget estimates; formulate and de- termine the budget estimates for submittal to the Bureau of the Budget; and supervise the budget program of the National Security Organization under the applicable appro- priation acts. It would seem to me that that lan- guage is certainly susceptible of the con- struction placed upon it by the Senator from Wyoming [Mr. ROBERTSON] that it gives the ultimate determination, direc- -N, tion, authority, and control over these ?"'n-artments and agencies to the Secre- f National Security. It Is cer- tainly susceptible, it seems to me, of the construction placed upon it by the Sena- tor from Wyoming to the effect that all powers and duties are specifically con- ferred upon the Secretary of National Security and that all that are left to the various departments and agencies there- under are the powers and duties to act as subordinates under the ultimate con- trol of the Secretary of National Se- curity. May I inquire of the Senator from Wyoming if I have in substance stated his position on the matter? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. The Senator from Missouri has stated my position very clearly, and I thank him. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator from Wyoming yield further? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield to the Senator from Massachusetts. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I know that the Senator from Missouri is a very careful student of legislation. I would call his attention to the declaration of policy on page 30 of the bill. The declaration of policy, Perhaps, is not a part of the pro- posed law, but it certainly could be used in interpreting the words of the bill. If the Senator reads that declaration of policy I believe that he will answer the question as the Senator from Massa- chusetts has answered it. Mr. DONNELL. I thank the Senator from Massachusetts, and I shall not tres- pass longer upon the time of the Senators. Mr. LODGE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. LODGE. Responding to the point raised by the Senator from Missouri, it is my understanding that the Secretary of National Security shall confine him- self entirely to' those things which are general and not to those things which are special. In the military service those two words have a very clear meaning. I cannot conceive, under this language,' and particularly under the language in line 10 on page 38, that he would exercise anything other than general functions for those things which the services have in common. In other words, it would seem inconceivable to me that he would , concern himself with questions of uni- form, equipment, supply, tactics, train- _ ing, or any of the other things which take up nine-tenths of the time of a mili- tary organization. ?Mr. DONNELL. Mr. President, will the Senator from Wyoming yield fog a brief response? Mr. ROBEHTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. DONNELL. I am not familiar, as doubtless is the Senator from Massachu- setts, who has just spoken, with the con- struction of this language in the Army, but it would appear to me that it is per- fectly clear that the construction ordi- narily given to such language as "exer- cise general direction, authority, and con- trol over such departments and agencies." I say the general construction of that language in law would certainly imply that the official who has that authority , has the ultimate general authority, which, as I see it, is the final authority. 001-1 JULY 7 and control over the departments and agencies involved. I shall not labor the point or trespass upon the time of any of the Senators, but it seems to me that there is very much to be said in favor of the construction of the Senator from Wyoming, whether we agree with the ultimate conclusion. ? Mr. LODGE. Mr. President, will the Senator be generous enough to yield again? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. LODGE. I think there is a mis- understanding of the meaning of the word "general." In most military organ- izations with which I am familiar there Is a general staff. Most of the activities to which the new Secretary, as I read the language, will devote himself will be gen- eral, matters which the services have in common. Most of the things done in point of time, in point of money, in point of administration are things that they have always handled and will always continue handling. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, will the Senator from Wyoming yield for a brief observation? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. GURNEY. I wish to call to the attention of the Senator from Missouri especially the fact that Congress cannot itself relinquish its responsibility. Con- gress must retain its power to regulate national security, under the Constitu- tion, wherein it is provided that Con- gress shall provide for the common de- fense. The power of the purse is all-important. Therefore, I call the Senator's special attention to section 308, page 59, of the bill, wherein it is pro- vided that the budget must be sent to Congress not just as the National Secu- rity Secretary wants it, but in minute de- tail as to the manner in which the secre- taries of the branches of the service make their requests to the National Security Secretary, - Mr. DONNELL. Mr. President, will the Senator from Wyoming again yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming.. I yield. Mr. DONNELL. It ,seems to me that the point made by the Senator from South Dakota certainly indicates that there is detailed statement in the bill as to the requirements of the annual budget, but to my mind he does not answer the proposition submitted by the Senator from Wyoming as to the construction to be placed upon the language on page 38 of the bill, that all powers and duties not specifically conferred upon the Secretary of National Security are retained by each of the respective secretaries. Looking at that language we immedi- ately search the bill to find what powers and duties are not specifically conferred upon the Secretary of .National Security, and we find on the preceding page, which is page 37, that instead of any limitation on his powers, apparently the very broadest possible power is conferred upon the Secretary of National Security, for, --Vaithout repeating in undue detail, section 202 (a) provides as follows: Under the direction of the President he shall perform the following duties: (1) Establish general policies and pro-- grams for the National Security Organization ? ? Ap For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE and for all of the departments and agencies therein. (2) Exercise general direction, authority, and control over such departments and agencies. I should like to ask the Senator from Wyoming, or either the Senator from Massachusetts [Mr. SALTONSTALL] or the Senator from South Dakota [Mr. Gila- 's:TEI(], whether there is any definition of the word "general" in decisions of courts which would enable us to arrive at the proper conclusion to be placed upon the language, "Exercise general direction, authority, and control over such depart- ments and agencies." Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I shall have to leave that to my legal friend from Massachusetts [Mr. .SAL- TONSTALL] to answer. Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. yield. Mr. McCARTHY. I should like to ask the Senator, since competent legal minds differ as to the interpretation that should be placed on this language, if that fact alone does not indicate that the powers which are so conferred are so indefinite ? that they may be dangerously indefinite? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Defi- nitely dangerous, Mr. President. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. GURNEY. For the purpose . of further answering the Senator from Wyoming, let me say that the responsi- bility for performing the roles, missions, and duties to be performed by the branches of our National Security set-up rests entirely with the President of the United States. Under this bill, they are not taken away from the President at? all. Under the bill, the Secretary of National Security cannot take them. away from the President. They are not changed in any.' way by the bill. The President himself is the Commander in Chief, and he will remain the Com- mander in Chief under the Constitution. He alone can set the roles and missions of each branch of the service. Certainly the Secretary of National Security, under . the language on Page 37, I believe, to which the Senator has referred, could not superimpose himself as the one hav- ing the authority that is, of course, retained in the President. Mr. DONNELL. Mr. President, will the Senator further yield to me? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. DONNELL. I quite agree with the Senator from South Dakota that the language of section 202 (a) does not, superimpose the Secretary of National Security upon the President. In fact, as I have indicated previously, the language is specifically "under the direction of the President." But as I understand it, the point made by the Senator from Wyoming is that as between the Secretary of National Security and the heads of these various other units, namely, the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Department of the Air Force, the Secretary of National Security is su- preme, subject only to the direction of the President of the United States. I ask the Senator from Wyoming whether I correctly understand his po- sition.. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. The Senator is correct as to my position. Mr. AIKEN. -Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield to the Senator from Vermont. Mr. AIKEN. The Senator from South Dakota said a few moments ago that the Congress cannot yield the power of. the purse, but must retain it. But 'under- paragraph (3) of section 202 (a) it is stated that one of the duties of the Secre- tary of National Security shall be to? (3) Supervise and coordinate the prepara- tion of budget estimates; formulate and de- termine the budget estimates for submittal to the Bureau of the Budget; and supervise the budget program of the National Security Organization under the applicable appro- priation acts. Does not that mean that insofar as the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force are concerned the Congress by this act delegates the power of the purse to the Secretary of National Security? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Myi own interpretation of that clause is that it means that the Congress surrenders to the Secretary of National Security, ab- ? solute power of the purse, as well as practically everything else. ? Mr. AIKEN. I can see no other inter- pretation to be made of that authoriza- tion. . Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, in connection with this mat- ter, I should like to read something which I think answers practically all the ques- tions that have been asked. I refer to the testimony of one of the witnesses 1 who was one of the -proponents of this namely, the very able Under Secre- tary of War, Mr. Kenneth Royall. I quote now from pages 356 and 357 of part II of the hearinks on Senate bill 758, the national defense establishment bill: Mr. ROYALL. ? ? ? I want to say on the functiona, I think I stated it later on in -the statement that the change of functions can be made in three ways. The President, by Executive order, can delegate that to the Secretary of National Defense, or he can per- mit the Secretary of National Defense to ex- ercise the powers given him by the bill, but that would be subject to the direction of the President. Senator ROBERTSON. On page 3, in para- graph 5, you say for the bill to have any real value, for it to accomplish what it is expected, the Secretary of National Defense must exercise as well as possess. Mr. ROYALL. That is right. Senator ROBERTSON. Broad authority as to functions. Mr. ROYALL. That is right. That is right, , sir. Of course, that is under the direction of the President. May add this, Senator, and I assume that, of course, the bill provides for three separate departments. This does not mean to indicate that the bill contemplates or that any sensible Secretary of National De- fense would make changes in roles, missions, and functions, first, unless it was satisfactory with the President or. some acquiescence by the .President; and secondly, it was to pro- mote either efficiency or economy or security of the country. 8479 Senator ROBERTSON. But, as I gather it, your reading of the bill provides the Secre- tary of National Defense with the broad au- thority as to functions, services, procure- ment, and the like. Mr. ROYALL. That is right; subject to the direction of the President, and if the Presi- dent does not himself act in that 'field, and he has in the case of functions and roles and missions suggested that if this bill is enacted, he will issue an Executive order dealing with that, and the Executive order has been agreed on between the services. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of ' Wyoming. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. To answer the question asked by the Senator from Ver- mont, let me say I think he should read section 308 (a) in connection with the budgetary powers given the Secretary of National Security under section 202 (a), subparagraph (3). Just the first few words of section 308 (a) are: BUDGET ESTIMATES SEC. 308. (a) So much of the annual budget transmitted to the Congress by the President as contains the estimates of ap- propriations for and expenditures by the National Security Organization and the de- partments therein shall be so arranged as clearly to show? And so forth. In other words, the Na- tional Security Secretary will coordinate .,the budget, and the President will sub- mit the message, and the Congress will have all the powers it now has under the Constitution and laws of the United States. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, the coordination effected in the administration, training, and supply of the armed services is less well known, because it is less spectacular and far more complex; but it was, and is, in many respects as effective as ?that achieved in the strategic command of the forces. It was brought about by cooperative endeavor and by the more formal efforts of such bodies as the Aero- nautical Board, the Army and Navy Munitions Board, the Joint Research and Development Board, and numerous other agencies. Some of these need to be per- petuated by legislation, while others will continue without special statutory recog- nition. None of them require a merger of the armed services to continue their effectiveness. Mr. President, I should like to say in this connection that the Armed Services Committee has considered House bill 1366, which has passed the House of Representatives. It is a bill to facilitate procurement of supplies and services by the War Department and Navy Depart- ment. ? Let me cite some of the methods of effective coordination which came about without benefit of merger. I quote from the testimony on Senate bill 753 of the Honorable W. John Kenney, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, before the Armed Services Committee: . First, there is the collaboration of buyers, wherein the buying agencies of the services are located in the same building and work side by side. Physical proximity and mutual helpfulness are relied upon for results. This is the method which is used for pur- chases of textiles and petroleum. Second is 9 ved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002 880 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE the joint buying agency, which is an agency set' up solely to purchase specific commodi- ties for the joint account of the Army and Navy. The Joint Army-Navy Medical Pur- chasing Agency is an illustration of this. Third, there is single service, or cross-pro- curement. Under this method, one service buys all of a commodity required by both the Army and the Navy. Thus the Army buys practically all food for both services and, to cite a different basis for division, all pur- chases from Pratt & Whitney are made by the Navy, and all purchases from Curtiss- Wright by the Army. Mr. Kenney went on to say that the purchase of the following styles of ma- terial has been coordinated: Landing craft; aircraft engines and propellors; chemical-warfare material; specified items of construction equipment; gaso- line, fuel, and lubricants; medical sup- plies; specified items of ordnance mate- rial; subsistence; textiles; internal-com- bustion engines, hulls, and machinery repair parts for certain vessels; solid fu- els; lumber and allied products; specified items of marine life-saving equipment. Further on in. his testimony, on the subject of utilization of facilities, Mr. Kenney had this to say: Much has already been accomplished in this field of utilization -of facilities as a re- sult of the work of such agencies as the Aeronautical Board, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joint Research and Development Board, and the Army and Navy Munitions Board. Each case must be analyzed and-solved on its own merits. The following are illustrative of ac- complishment in this field: (a) The Army-Navy Air Facilities Commit- tee, formed to facilitate the exchange of fa- cilities, has arranged for the exchanges of complete airfields and joint use of fields. The Navy has taken over 15 or 20 air stations from the Army and has in turn released 2 to the Army and their operation. Eighteen air- fields are used jointly and six primary gun- nery and bombing ranges are in joint use. (b) All explosive shipments in the Pacific will be handled through naval ammunition installations which permit deactivation of Army facilities. (c) There is joint use of the military in-. stallations on Johnston Island, Kwajalein, Guam, Okinawa, Alaska, and other areas in the Pacific. This Joint use of facilities is not a new development. As an illustration, the Army B-29 that took off from Tinian with the atomic bomb for Hiroshima took off from a field constructed by Navy Seabees and was fueled with gasoline purchased and trans- ported to the Pacific by the Navy. The Army and Navy personnel who manned the plane were fed by food purchased by the Army and transported to the Pacific by the Navy.. The bomb was transported to Tinian on a naval ve.:,sel, loaded on the plane by Army person- nel., armed in flight by a naval omcerv- 'rhat means given final preparation for detonation? and released by an Army officer. - All this marvelous coordination with- out merger. Let me cite some further instances of coordination achieved without benefit of merger. Again I quote Mr. Kenney, who has made an admirable presentation of the brilliant record achieved by the Army and Navy along these lines; The Army proving ground at White Sands, N. Mex., collaborates with the Navy in the utilization of specialized techniques, such as the telemetering of missiles developed by the Navy. 'Eventually the personnel will be equally divided between. Army and Navy. The naval air missiles test center at Point Mugu, Calif., which is used to test guided missiles, rockets, and pilotless aricraft, is available for use by both the Army and Navy. Navy ordnance unit at Newtown Neck, Md., ls being disestablished and the activities are being transferred to the Army testing station at Aberdeen, Md. The Army furnished all naval chemical warfare materials, and trains naval personnel in its chemical warfare schools. The school for the disposal of bombs, mines, and similar missiles is run by the Navy at Indian Head, Md.,,for both services. The Army arsenals at Frankford and Rock Island are manufacturing large ordnance parts for the Navy. The Army arsenal at Pickatinny, N. J., ren- ders -various services for the Navy installa- tion at Lake Denmark to preclude duplica- tion. The Army tests all-Navy flares and illumi- nating projectiles, and the Navy tests Army 75-millimeter projectiles, 40-millimeter car- tridges, and Air Force rockets. -- , Mr. President, I do not want to tire my colleagues with. an endless list of theSe fine instances of coordination which have been effected out of Army-Navy wedlock, but I do believe that it is important, when we have been belabored with changes of waste and duplication in the services, that we hear the other side of the story. We stand indebted to Mr. Kenney for giving us the other side-i--the bright ? side?the side which has been purposely ignored by the vast majority of those who seek a merger. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. Presi- dent? The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Does the Senator from Wyoming yield to the Senator from Massachusetts? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Will not the Senator agree with me when I say that each of the witnesses whom he has just mentioned, Mr. Kenney and the repre- sentatives of the Army and the Air Force who told us abouCthis great cooperation, stated that he believed that some plan similar to that now proposed should be put through while the present personal- ities were still in the Army, the Navy, and the Air Forces, so that they could work these matters out while they were still carrying them on in an informal way, or under an Executive order? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I think the Senator is correct. -- Let me now give a little more of the picture Mr. Kenney has revealed. I again quote his testimony as it appears on pages 247 to 278 of part 2 of the hear- ings: Army engineers are undertaking construc- tion work for the Navy at Sangly Point in the Philippines and the Navy is perform- ing some construction work for the Army in Alaska. The Navy is making pier space available at Oakland so that the Army may give up certain leased piers in San Francisco. The Army has made a deep-water berth available to the Navy in New Orleans for a floating drydock; the Navy is in turn making berths available as required by the 'Army thereby obviating the leasing by the Navy of deep-water space. Steps are in hand to reopen Navy cold- storage space at Cheatham Annex, Norfolk, at, the request of the Army. Joint use of JULY 7 the Army's in-transit depots at Auburn, Wash.; Lathrop, Calif.; and Yermo, Calif.; was expected during the war; the combined total space at the three depots was 3,- 000,000 square feet. Since the war the Army has transferred the Yermo facility to the' Navy as a subcommand of the Marine Corps Depot at Barstow, Calif. Many naval patients are in Army hospitals, and many Army patients are cared for in naval advance base hospitals. in. fact, an agreement has been reached whereby a bed in any governmental hospital is available to any governmental patient. A Joint radio circuit exists between Wash- ington and Rio de Janeiro. The Navy trains Army personnel for multi- channel .radio teletype equipment. Messages are transferred between many communication centers for delivery to points served only by one service. Common uSe is made of Army telephone circuits in some overseas areas. Mr. Kenney continues: This represents a brief description of some of the areas where there has been common use of facilities. Studies are going forward for increasing the field of common use and particular attention is being directed to the following types of facilities: (a) Harbor and port facilities at New York, San Francisco, Seattle, and New Orleans. ( b ) Communications. (c) Medical facilities. (d) Transportation. (e) Service facilities, such as laundries, commissaries, and bakeries. (f) Post exchange stores and ships' service stores. (g) Recruiting. (h) Supply depots. (i) Supply centers. (j) Cost inspection. (k) Material inspection. (1) Audit and accounting. All the instances of existing coordina- tion which Mr. Kenney cited?and I ask you to bear in mind that he made no -claim of covering the whole field?are evidence that great achievements are at- tainable when there exists a will to work together and to solve problems of mutual importance. No evidence has been ad- duced which indicates that the proposed merger could do better than has been done, is now being done, or would be done Without a merger. It is a slur upon the records of the fine officers responsible for the achievements cited?as well as countless other achievements not men- tioned?to imply that the efforts of these officers will cease now that the fighting is over?that we must hold over them the threat of compulsion by a supersecretary to force a continuation of the work they have thus far carried on through their own initiative, understanding, coopera- tion, and perseverence. Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. McCARTHY. I have very care- fully read the bill which was introduced by the Senator from Wyoming, a bill which I think contains all the good fea- tures of Senate bill 758, with none of its dangerous features; a bill which I think creates and maintains a balance of power between the military and the civilian economy. I hope I shall have a chance to vote for the measure introduced by the Senator from Wyoming. At this Appf,ej For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004 194'7 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE time, I should like to know whether or not the Senator from Wyoming intends to offer his bill as a substitute for Senate bill 758. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. No, Mr. President; it is not my intention to do that. I shall offer a number of amendments to Senate bill 758, which, if accepted, would very nearly achieve what I set out to do in the bill I intro- dticed. Mr. DONNELL. Mr. President, would the Senator be willing to yield for a ques- tion? If not, I shall not interrupt him. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield for a question. Mr. DONNELL. Reference was made earlier this afternoon to the importance of the declaration of policy, as tending to indicate the defect in the position of the Senator from Wyoming. In the dec- laration of policy, among other things, it is stated, on page 31, in line 4: To provide for their authoritative coordi- nation? That is to say, the various branches, the Army, the Navy, the Marine Corps, and the Air Force? ? To provide for their authoritative coordi- nation and unified -direction under civilian control but not merge them? I emphasize the words "unified direc- tion under civilian control." The ques- tion I should like to ask the Senator is this: Is there anything in the pending' bill which requires that the Secretary of the Army, under the bill, shall be a civil- ian? I fail to find anything of that kind, and I am wondering if the Sena- tor has located any requirement to that effect. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I do not know that that is mentioned in the pending bill. I do not recall it. The Senator would be able to know better than I do, whether the Constitution or the existing laws call upon the President, in appointing a secretary, to name a civilian. According to my recollection, the appointee has always been a civilian. I do not recall any exception. Mr. DONNELL. I may say to the Sen- ator that I am not an expert on the sub- - ject, but I do not recall any provision in the Constitution, certainly, that would require it. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. The Senator is an authority on that. Mr. DONNELL. No, I do not claim to. be an authority; but I do not recall any such provision. I should like to ask the Senator whether there is, to*his recollec- tion, any provision in the pending bill requiring the Secretary of the Depart- ment; of the Navy to be, a civilian. ' Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. So far as I know, there is none. Mr. DONNELL. observe at page 41, lines 12 and 13, that the Secretary of the Air Force is required to be appointed from civilian life. The point I am mak- ing and the question I would ask the Senator is this: Assuming that there is nothing in the bill which requires the secretary of the Army or the Secretary of the Navy to be a civilian, does not the declaration of policy, which states that the intent of Congress 46 to provide for the authoritative coordination and Uni- ? fied direction under civilian control of the various branches mentioned in the declaration of policy, substantiate the position of the Senator from Wyoming, when he takes the view that the effect of sections 201 (a) and 202 (a) was to give a unified control in the Secretary of National Security? The Secretary of National Security, as the Senator will recall, is to be appointed by the President,, so section 202 (a) says, from civilian life. I have not very clearly ? stated it, but? the point, if I may repeat it very briefly, to which I invite the Sen- ator's attention and on which I ask his opinion, is this: If there is no require- ment in the pending bill that the Secre- tary of the Army or the Secretary of the Navy shall be a civilian; if there is no provision in the Constitution that re- quires those two officials to be chosen from civilian life, when the declaration of policy provides that it is the 'intent of Congres to provide for the authoritative coordination and unified direction under civilian control, would it not follow that that language in the declaration'of pol- icy, instead of tending to defeat- the in- terpretation of the Senator from Wyom- ing, would tend to substantiate it, be- cause the only man, with the exception ?of the Secretary of the Air Force, that I have thus far found is required to be appointed from civilian life, is the Sec- retary of National Security? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. It undoubtedly would tend to substantiate the position I take. Buii I may say to the Senator, that I feel a civilian ap- pointed Secretary of the Army or Secre- tary of the Navy becomes a part of the Army or the Navy, as the case may be, by the very contact that he has with the high officers of the Army and Navy, and he naturally is saturated in Army and Navy lore and represents the Army and Navy, although he is a civilian. Mr. DONNELL. I,should like to say, Mr. President, if the48'enator will yield, that I do not mean by these inquiries necessarily to coincide with the ultimate conclusion of the Senator as to whether or not the pending bill should be passed, with or without amendments, but the point I am trying to make is that is seems to me that there is very much to be said in favor of the validity of the Interpretation placed by the Senator upon the powers of the Secretary of National Security. I see the Senator from Massachusetts is again at his seat on this side of the aisle, and I would ask the Senator from Wyoming if I might very briefly put to the Senator - from MassachUsetts the same question I put to the Senator from Wyoming a moment ago? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield to the Senator from Missouri for that purpose. Mr. DONNELL. I will state to the Senator from Massachusetts? Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, I heard the Senator's questjon. Mr. DONNELL. I did not know that the Senator had heard the question. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I would say in reply, I do not agree with that interpre- tation, at all; because while the title of the Secretary of War is changed to 8481 Secretary of the Army, his powers re- main as they now are in the statute. The title of the Secretary of the Navy was not changed, because it was not necessary; and a new Secretary of Air Force has been provided. That is why the word "civilian" was used in con- nection with the Air Force. I cannot say it definitely, but I believe that both the Army and the Navy, in the statutes are under civilian heads, and that the language used for the Air Force is broadly speaking the same language as that which is found in the statutes for the Army and the Navy at the present time. Mr. DONNELL. With the Senator's permission, may I ask the Senator from Massachusetts if there is anything, so far as he knows, in the pending bill which delegates the appointive power to select the Secretary of the Army or the Secretary of the Navy from civilian life? Mr. SALTONSTALL. I would answer that question in the affirmative, for the reason that I believe it is in the present .law, and I believe the President must therefore give effect to the present law In appointing the Secretary of the Army and the Secretary of the Navy. Mr. DONNELL. The Senator, I take it, does not consider that the Secretary of the Army and the Secretary of the Navy are new officials but they are simply old officials with the names changed; is that correct? Mr: SALTONSTALL. That is ab- solutely correct. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. The Senator is correct. Mr. DONNELL. I thank the Senator. Mr. WHERRY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield to the Senator from Nebraska. Mr. WHERRY. How does the pro- vision in title III relating to succes- sion to the Presidency, affect the present set-up? Is it discretionary in the Presi- dent to name under secretaries who could fill the offius of Cabinet members? I read the language on pages 53 and 54: SEC, 301. The first section (4 the act en- titled "An act to provide for the performpucc" of the duties of the Office of President in case of the removal, death, resignation, Or inability both of the President and of the Vice President," approved January 19, 1886 (24 Stat. 1), is amended (1) by striking out "Secretary of War" and inserting in lieu thereof "Secretary of National Security," and (2) by striking (mit "or if there be none, or in case of his removal, death, resignation, or inability, then the Secretary of the Navy." Is it the intention of the legislation to provide that that shall be the line of succession for the Presidency? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. That Is what I understand, to be the intention of the legislation. Mr. WHERRY. Is there any statute under which the President can name anyone else to his Cabinet in addition to the two Cabinet officers in question? ? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Does the Senator ask me if there should be? Mr. WHERRY. Well, yes. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I am not able to answer that question. As I understand, the language under the heading "Succession to the Presidency," oved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002 8482 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE means that in case the President were unable to perform the duties of his office, the Secretary of National Security would step in, and if the Secretary of National Security did not qualify, then the Secre- tary of War, and then the next in line would be the Secretary of the Navy, and thereafter the Secretary of the Air Force. Mr., W1-1-FRRY. That is the point I was making. The language beginning at the bottom of page 53 provides that the line of succession shall be first the Secre-_ tary of National Security, and in the event the Secretary of National Security does not qualify or is under a disability, then the Secretary of the Navy? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. No, the Secretary of War is next. Mr. WHERRY. Let me read the language again: SEC. 361. The List section of the act en- titled "An act to provide for the performance of die duties of the Office of President in case of the removal, death, resignation, or in- ability Th-oth of the President and of the Vine President", approved January is, 1886 (24 Stat. 1), is amended (1) by striking out "Sec-, retary of War" and inserting in lieu thereof "Secretary of National Security." I take it the Secretary of National Se- curity is first in line to succeed to the Presjdency after the Secretary of State, following the official who was designated In the succession bill recently passed. M::. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I agree with the Senator that that should be the interpretation. Mr. WHERRY. If the Secretary of Na- tional Security does not qualify or is un- der a disability, then at least under the provisions of the pending bill, the succes- sion would go to the Secretary of the Navy, who is next in line. Mr. LODGE. No, Mr. President. Will the Senator yield? Mr. WHERRY. That is what is pro- vided in the language of the bill. Mr. LODGE. The language is "amended (1) by striking out 'Secretary of War' and inserting in lieu thereof 'Secretary of National Security; and (2) by striking out 'or if ;there be none,,, or in case of his removal, death, resigna- tier., or inability, then the Secretary of the Navy.' " Mr. WHERRY. Very well. Let me ask this question. Do the Secretary of the Army and the Secretary of the Navy remain Cabinet officers under the bill? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Not under the pending bill: Mr. WHERRY.---Is the Senator sure thz.,, it is not a discretionary right with- in the President to appoint them to the Cabinet. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. The concept of the bill is that the Secretary of National Security becomes a Cabinet officer, and that the present Secretaries of the Army and the Navy are no longer Cabinet officers. Mr. WHERRY. I thank the Senator. And for the purpose of succession there is simply the one Secretary of National Security, and in the succession line, in which I am very much interested, the Secretary of the Army and the Secretary of the Navy are eliminated, and only the Secretary of National Security is in the line of succession. - Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Yes. Mr. WHERRY. And that line of suc- cession is mandatory under the terms of the bill? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Yes. Mr. WHERRY. I thank the Senator. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, there has been much talk? clothed in sweeping generalities?of the savings which will accrue from the pro- posed merger. Efforts of the Committee on Armed Services to bring forth some concrete instances of such savings have been to no avail. The merger propon- ents have been asked to give us a blue- print of the proposed structure, indi- cating what new demands would be mad q upon the national purse, what returns would be made thereto. We have had no reply, save for a somewhat ridiculous estimate that the establish- ment of the proposed new departments would cost some $982,000 per year. Even the most ardent friends of the merger on your committee could not stomach this. Mr. President, we were asked to believe, for example, that the office of the New Secretary of Air Forces would involve an added expense of only $107,000 a year, representing the salaries of the new sec- retary and Under Secretary, two assist- ant secretaries, and 10 clerical and ad- ministrative personnel. I could not re- frain from pointing out that the proposed clerical staff for the Secretary of Air was just about the size of the secretarial force of a Senator from one of the larger States. The absurdity of such an esti- mate was even more apparent when the salary figure of $107,000 was compared with the similar current appropriation for the Office of Secretary of War, $7,- 542,000, or again with the salary appro- priation for the Office of the Secretary of the Navy, $4,785,000. The estimated extra cost of a separate Secretary of the Air Force cheerfully omitted any mention of contingent ex- pense which would be something com- parable, I should imagine, to the cur- rent figures of $3,000,000 for the War Department, or at least the $1,250,000 figure for the Navy Department. We were asked at the same time to believe that the Office of Secretary of National Defense?this is the top super secre- tary?would get along with some 100 civilian clerical and administrative per- sonnel at a total cost of $663,000 for salaries. Such an estimate, Mr. Presi- dent, shows a clear ignorance or wilful disregard of the facts of life. If anyone who is familiar with the Washington scene imagines that an office directing the destinies of several million indi- viduals and spending one-third of the national budget is going to operate with a civilian force of 100,persons he should see his physician at once. Washington simply does not operate that way. These ridiculous estimates concerned only the very top level of the men of the new de- partments, of course. Beneath these new department heads we can expect to see the same flowering of bureaucracy that we have never_yet failed to perceive when -a new departmental seed is planted in our Government. Indisputable evidence of I I it 001-1 JULY 7 this natural process confronts us on every side at every moment of the day and night. Mr. President, the board of directors of any business firm, large or small, would summarily dismiss an executive who proposed a reorganization of the business based on such vague promises of operating efficiency and economy as have been made to your committee dur- ing the course of its hearings. Granting that it has been the custom of Congress to be less than exacting in its demands for facts relating to the establishment. of new bureaus and agencies of the Gov- ernment?the history of the past decade and a half bears ample witness to this? still there must be a limit to congres- sional patience in the face of such cava- lier treatment. Surely it is not too much for Congress to ask and receive accurate and detailed estimates of the costs in- volved in the establishment of new agencies of the Government, and the savings to be realized. Or is this too much of a detail for us to concern our- selves with?a detail to be handled by the executive branch in its own inimita- ble manner? When officials of the executive branch are proponents of a reorganization, they inevitably anticipate great savings and insignificant costs. The proponents of this merger are no exception. But let us look at the opinion of an official who only a few years ago was opposed to a similar merger of the -armed services. Let us observe what Gen: Douglas Mac- Arthur thought of the prospective econ- omies of a single department when he was in opposition to such a merger. General MacArthur wrote as follows, and I am quoting from the CONGRES- SIONAL RECORD of April 30, 1932: The history of the Government demon- strates that the parasitical development of bureaucracy springs from the setting up of superfluous echelons of control such as the one proposed. Although I recognize the possibility of effecting relatively -unimportant economies in isolated activities, the ultimate cost of this superimposed structure would, in my opinion, exceed by millions any economies that could be safely effected. The super- Cabinet officer at its head could not fail to be the acquisitor of one of the largest and undoubtedly most powerful governmental organizations the -United States has ever known. Continuing, General MacArthur goes. on to say: Rather than economy, this amalgamation would, in my opinion, represent one of the greatest debauches of extravagance that any nation has ever known. Mr. Presideht, I believe that General MacArthur's observation is as true to- day as it was 15 years ago, with the pos- sible exception that 15 years ago we were still accustomed to think of Government extravagance in millions. Today we think of it in billions. I regard the erection of a vast new military empire, merging the armed services and setting up a gigantic new echelon of command on top of them, as not only profligate in the extreme, but highly dangerous as well. ? Ap[ove)J For Release 2006/12/15: ClA-RDP90-00610R00o2000GQ6T1 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE Let me commence my discussion of this phase of the problem by reading an extract from an editorial which appeared In the Boston Herald on April 5, 1947. It exhibits a breadth of perception which this Nation could use more of today. Quoting from the Herald editorial: Now that the military have vacated the common, and we've had our fill of buzzing war planes, martial music, and the grim , presence of war machines,lt may be well to ponder one of the more subtle threats to our liberties. It is the threat of the "military mind," and no small threat it is in a world in which the greatest exterior menace to our Nation is a totalitarian regime, whose war plans are made secretly, and whose attacks in an age of atom bombs and bacteriological warfare, would surely maximize the element of surprise. In such an age of excessive jitteriness we are all in awe of the military who must pro- tect us. Therein lies the danger to which we have reference here. It is the possibility that we may forget our traditional subordina- tion of the military to the civil authority. We must not let our fear of the communist - menace blind us to the danger of military domination. For the thing that could most surely end civil liberty in America would be for the Army General Staff to gain such con- trol over the Nation's civil government as to make us all vassals of -the military mind. One ha S only to recall the history of the German General Staff to know how true this is. This ends the quotation from the Her- ald editorial. But let me continue per- haps at some length on the subject militarism and the General Staff, for as I shall. point out presently, the bill we are now considering is a bill in the General Staff pattern, and a bill which paves the way to the dominant militarism of al general staff. Within a democracy such as ours the armed forces occupy a very definite place. Those who founded our system of Gov- ernment were determined that the mili- tary power of the country should be sub- ordinate to the civil power. Only on such a basis could our system of Government be democratic. Not since a small but ambitious group of officers proposed that George Washington declare himself king--a proposal that Washington re- fused with a burning rebuke?has there been a serious threat to our democracy by any of its military agencies. Today, however, there are sincere stu- dents of government who believe they can detect symptoms of militarism in the thinking and conduct of the relatively small--approximately 5,000?but tre- mendously powerful War Department General Staff. Mr. LODGE. Mr. President, will the 'Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. Mr. LODGE. Is the Senator referring to the War,Department General Staff, or the General Staff with troops? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. The War Department- General Staff, of ap- proximately 5,000. Mr. LODGE. That does not include the General Staff with troops? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. -No; the War Department General Staff. That such symptoms should manifest themselves within the General Staff is infinitely more serious than if militaris- tic proposals should be made in an occa- sional article or speech by an individual army, or naval officer. In such a case It would quite probably represent only the opinion of an individual, and as such would not constitute a threat. Evidence of militarism from within the General Staff is not to be taken so lightly. Gen- eral staffs are by their very nature fertile fields for the seeds of militarism. I most emphatically do not mean that army general staffs as purely military institutions are bad. On the contrary, I believe that a general staff system is vitally necessary for the efficient control of a nation's army. General staffs are required for all larger field organizations, as well as for the top level direction of modern armies. When kept within the framework of the organization of the Army, which is suboordinate to the civil authority of the government, a general staff is both desirable and indispensable. However, when a general staff forgets its, proper relationship in the system of gov- ernment and seeks to expand its author- ity over more and more governmental activities, usually doing so under the pre- text of promoting military efficiency, then that general staff ceases to be a factor of governmental security, and is instead a mortal threat to the govern- ment that supports it. It is almost axiomatic that militarism in any country increases proportionately to the power of the Nation's general staff. Of all the nations of the modern world none has brought more suffering to man- kind-through war than has Germany. In no nation has militarism been more carefully developed according to plan. In no modern nation of the western world has a general staff enjoyed more power. The history of the German Gen- eral Staff was one of constant struggle for more and more authority and inde- pendence within the government. ?We would do well to compare with it the growth of our own general staff. From the time that Scharnhorst took - charge of reorganizing the Prussian Army?particularly the general staff? after its defeat by Napoleon at Jena, the German General Staff increased in power. Gradually, but ultimately, the Minister of War lost control over the general staff. By 1866 the chief of the , general staff, Von Moltke, had reduced even the Emperor to the role of a figure- head who rubber-stamped Von Moltke's plans for battle. The German General Staff constantly asserted its power in wars against Denmark, Austria, and France, until defeated by the Allies in 1918. Although condemned to abolishment by the Treaty of Versailles, the German General Staff continued to exist under cover until Adolf Hitler decided in 1937 that the time was propitious to reestab- lish it officially: As Germany continued to prepare for the World War II, the guiding influence of the renascent gen- eral' staff was ever evident. With each reorganization and further centraliza- tion of military authority the general staff gained more power over the nation. It has been said that Adolf Hitler, by taking personal supreme command, superseded the power of the general staff. But as the war went sour for Ger- many and defeat eventually came, it be- 8483 came more evident that instead of being superseded, the German General Staff had trapped Hitler. Again, as in 1918, when it created the myth of "Victory in the field?defeat at home," the German General Staff had craftily avoided much of the popular?and official?denuncia- tion for the defeat of the German Na- tion. Adolf Hitler stands eternally guilty before the bar of history, but the German General Staff, the spark plug of German militarism, has avoided indict- ment as a collective war criminal. We must understand the history and functioning of the German General Staff if we as a nation hope to avoid the disas- trous consequences that accompany ma- licious militarism generated by an am- bitious and excessively powerful general staff. Study of German General Staff history discloses certain procedures or events that served as the stepping stones to the ultimate militarization of Germany by the general staff. They are: Continuous and accumulative acquisition of power through repeated reorganization of the general staff and the war ministry; an official, army-controlled medium of propaganda; universal military training; and continuous effort to centralize all control of the armed forces under one agency. Our Army General Staff was originally established in 1903 as a result of the in- sistence of the then Secretary of War, Elihu Root, a sincere public servant,- who realized that a general staff was indis- pensable to any great army. Yet, even then the establishment of the General Staff was not affected without opposi- tion from those who warned of its por tential danger. Fortunately, Elihu Root and his con- stant adviser, Brig. Gen. William H. Car- ter, were no more aware of the necessity for a general staff than they were of the fact that many features of the German General Staff properly belonged to a -militaristic system of government rather than to a democracy. Our Nation, in establishing a general staff, borrowed from the German General Staff concept, but did not borrow the German General Staff philosophy. Thus, as originally es- tablished, our General Staff was closely Integrated with the Army War College, which resulted in the General Staff being drawn toward purely military matters and away from politics. Our General Staff was to plan how to carry out? the policies of the Government, rather than to make such policies. Unfortunately, although the founders of our General Staff exercised extreme care in estab- lishing a staff that conformed to our theory of government, they could not insure against the future growth of the germ of militarism that clung to any fragment of the German General Staff. As a result of the experience of World War I, our General Staff was reorganized. This reorganization was restricted to ef- fecting improvements in organization and technique. Such basic changes as were made were adopted from the French General Staff system, not the German. Our General Staff still retained its sig- nificant relationship with the Army War College; continuing the staff's emphasis upon purely military planning and co- Q 4 1 ruied For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000201-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE ordinating. It was still a military in- stitution well subordinated to the civil authority of the Government, occupying a proper place within the framework of the armed forces and our system of gov- ernment. The reason this 1921 reorganization was not a step toward extension of the powers of the General Staff was largely due to the character of the individuals who were members of the War Depart- ment board which effected the reor- ganization. The board was headed by Maj. Gen. James G. Harbord. Included among its members were Col.?later Brig. Gen.?John McA. Palmer and Col..?later Lt. Gen.?John L. DeWitt, two of the outstanding military thinkers of recent times. These officers were keen students of the history of military institutions, and they knew the proper place of a general staff within the army of a democracy. Under the General Staff system which they helped formulate, the germ of militarism was effectively sup- pressed. During the long span of years between wars the General Staff continued largely as devised by the Harbord board, and during this time no one could with rea- son' accuse our General Staff of being an instrument of militarism. But by the outbreak of World War II, the members of' the Harbord board had been retired or were no longer in a position to decide General Staff policy. Further reorgan- ization of the General Staff occurred in 1939, 1942, and 1946. These later reor- ganizations effected the abandonment of the concept of close relationship with the Army War College?a relationship that had emphasized the essentially military aspects of the General Staff. It is sig- nificant that since its disassociation with an educational institution, the General Staff has veered sharply from intellectual military pursuits. Like the ? German General Staff, our War Department Gen- eral Staff became increasingly interested in civil affairs as it was subjected to re- peated reorganizations. The existence of an officially controlled medium of conditioning the thinking of Army personnel?and indirectly the ci- vilians?was considered important by those who helped create the German General Staff and design the plan for the militarization of Germany. A program for thought-control of an army is a pre- requisite and infallible characteristic of militarism and the dictatorship that in- variably follows. Today our Army con- ducts an Army Information School. Graduates of this school are assigned to duty as public information officers- to furnish information to the public, or as . information-education officers to furnish information to the troops. An Army Information Digest is distributed to all commands, down to and including regi- ments, and this digest lists the numerous subjects on which Army talks, sponsored by the War Department, have been pre- pared and are available for distribution, to information and education officers throughout the Army. When we con- template the potentialities of such a great and yet tightly controlled medium of spreading official- Army information, we are constrained to remember that when Scharnhorst began his reorganiza- tion of the German General Staff and planned the militarization of Germany, one of his first proposals for effecting thought control within the Prussian Army involved the establishment of an official periodical to be read to the troops. Universal military training conducted by a militaristic general staff would be disastrous to a democratic nation. Uni- versal military training subject to proper supervision by properly constituted civil authorities of the Government will in- crease the security of our Nation. The constant and clamorous support of con- scription by the War Department General Staff engenders a strong suspicion of the Prussian procedures being employed by that organization. Just prior to the opening of the present Congress, the War Department bombarded Members of Congress with pamphlets supporting con- scription. Use of taxpayers' money by the War Department for propagandizing in favor of universal military training is an overt act of high-handed militarism equaled only by the machinations of the German General Staff. The development of the German Gen- eral Staff has been characterized by con- tinued efforts to bring all elements of the armed forces under control of a single agency directly or indirectly controlled by the general staff. Without going into the separate problem of what form the so-called merger of our armed forces should take, we should remember that any plan that Viould place all armed forces directly or indirectly under the War Department General Staff or any agency indirectly 'controlled by it would conform to a method by which the Ger- man General Staff militarized Germany. The arguments voiced by our War De- partment for its plan for unification of the armed forces and creation of a high command seems inspired by the philos- ophy expounded by those who militarized Germany. For example, we find the fol- lowing statements offered by high rank- ing representatives of the War Depart- ment before the Senate Military Affairs Committee during hearings on the merger proposal in October and Novem- ber of 1945. Gen. H. H. Arnold said: I am fully convinced that both effectiveness and economy will 'be best served through the establishment of single executive De- partment of National Defense. Lt. Gen. James H. Doolittle stated: It is my earnest conviction that the most sound, efficient, and economical defense es- tablishment can be achieved only through- a single Department of National Defense which will coordinate the activities of the three components. Gen. Jacob L. Devers testified: To fight a war of the future will re- quire * * * a single department with Its resultant evolutionary unification of the Army, Navy, and Air Forces. Maj. Gen. Millan G. White repeated the need for a: single department for the armed forces. Gen. Carl Spaatz also advocated a single department. Gen- eral Bradley said: It is my opinion 'that the needed results can best be attained by establishing now a unified, single department for the armed forces. ' JULY 7 Gen. Brehon Somervell also testi- fied in favor of a single Department of National Defense. The repetitious use of the same term- inology not only indicates a carefully planned program of thought-control within the War Department, but the col- lective testimony is all the more startling when we compare it with the following quotation: . Unity of military leadership in a nation can be achieved only by placing all branches of the armed forces under the supervision of a single defense authority. This depart- ment must be in charge of all military prep- aration as well as the actual prosecution of the war. - This quotation is not taken from the testimony of the Army high command before the Military Affairs Committee as were the other quotations above. To the contrary, it is found in The Axis Grand Strategy, a compilation of the writings of Germany military writers who contributed to the militarization of Germany and the rise of the Nazi dic- tatorship. When the high officers of the War Department offer testimony that is practically interchangeable with a key passage in Germany militaristic litera- ture, can we come to any conclusion ex- cept that our War Department General Staff has adopted the philosophy and the methods of Scharnhorst, Von Moltke, and Keitel? Again, we are contrained to recall that the early proposals for cen- tralized,control of all our armed forces emanated from our General Staff. It is thought-provoking and not a lit- tle frightening when we realize that our War Department General Staff is follow- ing so closely the formula by which the German General Staff gained control of that Nation and brought on two great world wars. When considered individu- ally, adoption by our War Department of each of the four German General Staff steps toward malicious militarism might_ be of only questionable significance. But when we find all four of the German tools of militarism?repeated reorgan- ization of the general staff, an official army-controlled medium of information, universal military training, and contin- uous effort to centralize all control of the armed forces under one agency?all being so intimately connected with the conduct of our Army General Staff, we cannot pass off such evidence as mere coincidence. We can come to but one conclusion: Our General Staff is foster- ing a program of, militarism, a program that utilizes the means by which the German General Staff enslaved a nation and almost destroyed a civilization. Thus far the War Department Gen- eral Staff has been defeated in its ef- forts to establish a single military com- mander over the armed forces?not as a result of public recognition of the dan- ger to the Nation inherent in such a step, but because of the recognized harm to the military services which would accrue. But in the provision of S. 758 for a Joint Staff to the Joint Chiefs of Staff there has been implanted the germ from which the great National General Staff is ex- pected to emerge in time. The great general staffs of other nations sprang from no more innocuous seeds than this. Our own War Department General Staff, , d For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200\540Q0-1 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE when first created, was limited to some 40 - officers. Today-, the Pentagon is 0 scarcely large enough to house it. Nominally, the Joint Staff is to pro- vice assistance to the Joint Chiefs of Stail?a function performed satisfac- torily heretofore by a secretariat. S. 758 makes no provision, however, that the joint ? Staff shall. be confined to secretarial duties, nor that there shall_ be any limitation to the tenure of office of its members or its director. By vir- tue of its permanence, its availability, and its invitation to the Secretary of -National Security to bypass the Joint Chiefs of Staff and place reliance upon it for the administration of the military ) ? services, the Joint Staff will inevitably expand, accumulate executive authority, ..1_,4?.......i nr,id become the fountainhead of policy M?fection for the. Military Establish- at. Its members will become a per- m. te.nt national general staff corps, an inner circle of professional military men 44' the Nation, just as the Army General' ? Staff Corps did within the War Depart- ment. It will be a short Step indeed fro:: such a position of actual power to a pesition of titular power at the head of our military forces and a position of Al tlimiinance in the affairs of the Nation. The manner in which the military 1 I mind?the general staff mind?will ex- ert its control over the life of the Nation, ir once it has established its control over - - tie merged armed forces, is not difficult to discern in the structure of and the _ relationships between the several bodies and agencies set up under S. 758 for the avowed objective, of coordinating the MI iitaley Establishment with other ele- *r,.:..eits of national seeurity. Earlier we 7:?ted the lack of an adequate civilian' ?vOce in the national security structure. We are now in a position to see that this c,niission was not an oversight. It bears, / -..,:.11 the sifens of cynical intent. I c. The formidable struggle which went on between military and civilian interests in the past war has been ably described by' Mr. Donald Nelson in his book, The Arsenal of Democracy. Let me recite a ,few quotations from that source. In his introduction, Mr. Nelson makes the following statements with regard to the relationship between the War Pro- duction Board and the Army: Our disagreements with the Army are well known and cast no discredit, I believe, upon either party. The cause of almost all these disputes was perfectly simple: The Army al= r,sried to assume greater control over ?=?-? ..roc.iuction and civilian econoiny, than the War Production Board deemed it prudent for it to have. On page 363, after relating many in- stances which .are .illustratiye of the struggle between military and civilian in- terest, Mr. Nelson sums up the situation ? by saying: I have no hesitation in saying that from 1912 onward the Army people, -in order to gain control of our national economy, did thair best to make an errand boy of WPB. And on page 384: A friend of mine in the Army.once toid?me that the primary mission of the Army is to en.force As will on the enemy. Considering my own ex:wile:aces, I believe this to be true. The only thing I can _add is that sometirnes No. 128-5 ? the Army doesn't seem to know the difference between its enemies and its friends. I realize that there may be many among my colleagues who will not wish to accept the opinion of Mr. Nelson on this subject. These colleagues I respect- fully refer to an official publication of the government, The United States. at War, put out by the Bureau of the Bud- get. You will find expressed therein many of the same conclusions which Mr. Nelson presented in his book. It is on the National Security Council that the undue influence of the military will be exerted at the highest level. There it will have its effect upon the de- termination -of foreign policy and upon the most significant questions of do- mestic policy. We will have lost our tra- ditional concept that the military forces ara the instrument of ,national policy? they will have become primarily respon- sible for shaping such policy. It is one thing fo: the Nation's highest advisory ?body to have available to it information .relating to the military means available for enforcing policy decisions, and relat- ing to the requirements of the military forces to implement such policies as may be decided upon. It is quite another thing to pack that body with military spokesmen and thereby place them in a position to decide what the" policies shall be. It is the latter alternative which Senate bill 758 has chosen. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wy9ming. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I call the Sena- tor's attention to section 101(a) on page 31 of the bill. I know he has read this paragraph, and perhaps there is merely a disagreement of interpretation. I am referring to the third paragraph of that section. The function of the. Security Council, as I interpret that paragraph, is to make it possible for the civilian departments of the Government to co- operate with the military departments so as to 'advise the President how the military can best ?protect the national security. The National Security Council is set up principally for the purpose of helping the military to gain knowledge of the civilian departments, in order that they may act more intelligently for na- tional security. It' certainly is not, as I understand, the job of the National Se- curity Council and the military mem- bers to advise the President how to handle his office or how to handle civilian affairs or how to handle civilian diplo- matic relationships with other countries, Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Four .of the seven named members of the National Security Council are to be the civilian heads of the military depart- ments?the Secretary of National Se- 'curity and the three lower-caste secre- taries?really under secretaries, who are to execute in their respective depart- ments' the directions of the supersecre- tary. ? It has been repeatedly asserted by pro- ponents of this merger that the four, secretaries, by virtue of their civilian. origin, will think, talk, and act as civil- ians.. This is utter nonsense. 8485 I wish the Senator from Missouri [Mr. DONNELL] were here, because this would more fully answer his question than I was able to answer it at the time he asked the question. One has only to listen to Secretary Patterson or Secretary Forrestal to real:- ize that they are, as they should be, the spokesmen of their Departments?that they reflect the military viewpoint of the service officers who daily surround them, who provide them with the information on which they base their decisions, and .who analyze that information for them. This is not to detract from the esteem and admiration that I?that all of us? have for these two gentlemen. We would, in fact, look askance at them if their loyalty to the' services which they head were one whit less than it is. But the simple fact is that any civilian who Is placed at the head of a military de- partment is?by the time he is suffi- ciently familiar with his department to represent it?so steeped in its philosophy that he cannot help but exUde it. It is only realistic to accept the fact that the civilian heads of the military departments?the four of them on the National Security Council?will give that body a 4-to-3 military majority, and an unmistakable military complexion. It is inescapable that when an issue arises on which military interests are alined on the one side and civilian interests on the other. the majority vote of the Security Council will go to the military side. If the National Security Council is to be the body on which the influence of the military is to be felt at the highest level, it is through the relationship between the national Security Resources Board and the Munitions Board?the latter a strict- ly military body?that the influence of, the military is to be made effective at , a working level?at least, insofar as domestic economic policy is concerned. There, Mr. President, we have a most interesting picture, and a most enlight- ening one if we only stop to think about it. Military requirements are to be taken care of by the Munitions Board? and I have no doubt that they will be well ,taken care of, for the Munitions Board will function day in and day out, in peace and in war, with ample per- sonnel and facilities to do the job re- quired of it. We may rest assured that exhaustive studies will be made of mili- tary requirements, and 'comprehensive plans prepared to meet them. When M-day comes the military will be ready with their solution?ready after years of painstaking study and analysis of their needs and of the resources and facilities available to satisfy them. And what of civilian requirements? It looks as though the civilians are going to have to rely, not on a going agency like the Munitions -Board, but on an M-day, revival of some of the slumber- ing relics of the past war. The civilian is not going to have a blueprint of his re- quirements prepared for him through painstaking daily work during years of peace. No one is going to go out look- ing for factories to produce his needs. In time of war. .No, indeed. The only blueprint he is going to have on M-day For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040,0131*), - ? 8486) CONGRESSIONAL is one that shows the agencies which will then be activated to see what can be done for ' him. The National Security Resources- Board is not the agency which is going to prepare the blueprints for mobiliza- tion. These blueprints are to be pre- pared for the military forces by. the Mu- nitions Board, for the civilian elements of the Nation by civil agencies to be set up under the National Security Re- sources Board on M-day. The function of the National Security Resources Board Is to take the military and civilian re- quirements as presented to it by the Mu- nitions Board and the revived civil agencies and translate them into over- all requirement programs and procure- ment schedules?in short, to integrate the military and civilian requirements. Under these circumstances the same thing will happen in the future that hap- pened in the past. On M-day the mili- tary experts on the Munitions Board, will come up with a laboriously conceived plan for industrial mobilization that meets military requirements. The civil agencies, still wiping the sleep from their eyes, will have nothing yet to offer. The National Security Resources Board will either have to take the military blueprint of the Munitions Board or stand by and wait until the civil agencies have had the necessary months to get under way. At the beginning of the last war the same situation confronted us. The military had a plan for industrial mobilization and the civilians did not. The military plans were so militarily biased that they were discarded. The result was, in the words of the Navy study, "the confused plan- ning and the hasty, often misdirected, efforts of the first war years." When the next war comes, if there be one, there will be no opportunity to discard biased military plans and wait while mobilila- ton plans are prepared which consider all aspects of the problem. The National Security Resources Board will have no alternative but to accept the military plans for mobilization and hope that the -national economy can stand it. , In its relation to the proposed Muni- tions Board, the proposed National Se- curity Resources Board is not unlike the existing National Defense Council in its relation to the existing Army_ and Navy Munitions Board. In the years leading up to World War II, the Army and Navy Munitions Board had the necessary work- ing staff to do the job of economic plan- ning for war, and actually did so, while the National Defense Council, with no subordinate civilian agencies to assist it, stood by with its hands in its pockets. It should occasion no surprise that the planning done by the Army and Navy Munitions Board took, into primary ac- count the requirements of the military agencies, and left the residual resources, If any, for the civilian segment of the population. Nor should it occasion any surprise that the biased plans of the Army and Navy Munitions Board had to be discarded at the start of World War II. The basic objection to the relationship between the National Security Resources Board and the Munitions. Board thus springs from the reliance which the Re- sources Board must inevitably place RECORD-SENATE JULY 7 upon the military Munitions Board as its only continuously functioning subor- dinate agency for the preparation of plans for industrial mobilization. The Resources Board not only has no active subordinate civilian agencies, but does not even have an adequate staff which could perforril even a few of the func- tions of such agencies. For that matter, in the absence of a suitable staff it is difficult to see how the Resources Board could even perform its assigned func- tions, let alone those of inactive civil agencies. A real clue to the reliance which is to be 'placed on the Munitions Board is- to be found in some of the activities of the existing Army and Navy Munitions Board, the predecessor of the Munitions Board to be set up by Senate bill '758. According to an article entitled' "The Army's Plans for the Next War," which appeared an the February 1947 issue of the American Mercury: The Board is setting up some '70 in- dustrial advisory committees to deal with all phases of governmental- and industrial war activity. Army and Navy procurement officers are in the field inspecting potential war plants. The part each of these will play in the national defense, the weapons it will make, and even the schedule upon which it will turn them out are being determined now. Mr. LODGE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield: ? Mr. LODGE. I may have misunder- stood the distinguished Senator from Wyoming, but I thought I heard him say that in the War Department General " Staff there are 5,000 officers. I have just looked up that matter, and I think it is correct to .state that at the present time In the War Department General Staff there are. 810 officers. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I am advised that the General Staff of the War. Department was 5,000, but is slightly below that number today. Mr. LODGE. I wonder whether the Senator included in that number the staff officers with the troops. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. It may be that the Senator from Massachu- setts is correct as to that. , Mr. LODGE. Of course that is en- tirely different. There are staff officers with the divisions in the field. But in the War Department the staff officers are 810. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I have the chart for the total number, but prob- ably the Senator from Massachusetts is correct when he says that the number I have stated would include the officers in .the field, as well. Mr. LODGE. L thank the Senator. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, here indeed is indisputable evidence that the present Army and Navy Munitions Board is taking the mobiliza- tion of American industry completely under its wing. Now let me quote a pro- vision of Senate bill '758: When the chairman of the Board first ap- pointed has taken office (the chairman of -the new Munitions Board, that is), the Joint Army and Navy Munitions Board shall cease to exist and all its functions, records, and personnel shall be transferred to the Muni- tions Board. In short, Mr. President, the Munitions Board is to continue to regard as its do- main the whole of American industry. As a matter of fact, the Army and Navy Munitions Board is not only going into fields that are to be the concern of civil agencies under the Resources Board? , after M-day, of course?but is also going into the problem of how those civil agen- cies are to function. The same article in the Mercury Magazine which I quoted a moment ago goes on to say: Among the other activities sponsored by the Board is a probing analysis of the record of the War Production Board. It has called in- a group of outstanding civilians who served with the WPB to dig through its his- tory and make recommendations for the or- ganization of a new WPB in any future war. In short, Mr. President, the military is going to make sure that in the next war it will not meet the civilian opposition to its schemes that it met during the. last war. I hardly need suggest that the out- standing civilians will be those whose views, while members of the WPB, coin- cided with the Army's views in the dis- putes between the WPB and the General Staff. While on the subject of the American Mercury article, I do not think I should fail to give you one more quotation which is illustrative of the ambitious plans of the military mind: The Army is also anxious for legislation which would provide for a labor draft in case 'of World War HI. Overtures are now being made to the CIO and the AFL,to win organ- ized labor's support for such a measure. The final clincher in the military de- sign to secure control of the National Se- curity Resources Board, and thereby to secure control of the national economy in time of war or emergency, is the inter- locking membership between the Re- sources Board and the Munitions Board. This exists, not as a fact but as a possi- bility, though a real one it is, since the membership of the Resources Board is unspecified, except for the Chairman, who is to be appointed from civilian life. Many proponents of the merger have, suggested, in fact, that an interlock- ing membership would be a desirable arrangement. I think it would be dis- astrous. The pattern of military control of the I t ation is carried forward another im- ortant step in the provision of the bill hat the Director of Central Intelligence ay be a military officer. The bill really oes further than this; by its emphasis n provisions relating to a military direc- or it suggests that the Director should be a military officer. Originally, the bill required a military director; the modi- fication to permit a civilian to serve as Director was inserted only after opposi- tion to such an obviously improper re- quirement. The mere fact that the bill ' still permits a military officer to serve as Director is sufficient indication, to my 1 way of thinking, that the drafters of the bill still expect the President to appoint , a military officer to the Director's job. . It is necessary to go to Executive order *-'to find out what the functions and ' powers of the Central Intelligence 1947 Apeviatl For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE Agency are, to be. Many of those who have taken the trouble to do so?and I alcomment parenthetically that it should be unnecessary to go to an Executive order to interpret a statute?have, re- ported that the proposed Agency has all the potentialities of an American gestapo. Needless to say, it would be an invaluable asset to militarism. From, all- that I have so far said I hope it will have become apparent to my col- leagues that we are being asked, in Sen- ate bill 758, to create a military empire 'which cannot be justified on the grounds advanced for it, namely, those.of in, creased effectiveness and economy, and one which is designed to immeasurably enhance the power Of the military over ? the general affairs of the Nation. There can be no compromise on this question of military versus civilian con- trol of the policies of the Nation. There - likewise can- be no compromise on the - .. basic military philosophy on which our, armed services are to be Organized. The Army and the Navy hold diametrically ' , opposite views on this philosophy. Unless we wish to make our Military Establishment an arena for a continuing struggle Which may *well plunge us down the road to military defeat and national downfall, we must recognize these funda- mentally incompatible points of view, and make a choice between them at the very outset. - The Army General Staff is completely sold on the theory that everything that flies through the air should be put in the Air Force, everything that Walks or rolls bn land should go to the Army, while everything that sails on or in the water belongs to the Navy. The Army calls this the ideal philosophy. for the organ- ization of the 'armed' services. This philosophy of the Ariny is known as the :,,ri-,elemental philosophy, Since it segregates the components of military power according to the natural elements In which they operate. It might also be called the authoritarian - philosophy, since it was the accepted philosophy of ,.--- Napoleonic France, of Von Moltke's and Hitler's Germany, and of Mussolini's Italy-. It is the Russian military phi- losophy today. ? ? Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I yield. . Mr. GURNEY. I understand that the Senator from Wyoming -would prefer to conchtde his remarks on Wednesday, for I understand that tomorrow we are to have other business before the Senate. As chairman of the committee and Sen- ator-in-charge of this bill, it -is not my inteation in any way to hold any Sena- tor on the floor tonight.' I should have 0 no objection to some understanding, at least, that the Senator from Wyoming could have the floor again on Wednes- day when this bill would come up for consideration as the unfinished business. If that is agreeable to. the Senator from Wyoming, I would just as soon have the Senate take a recess at this time. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, I am in no sense a filibusterer, and I: would, indeed, appreciate- having such action taken. Mr. WIIITE. Mr. President, the un- derslanding is that tomorrow the Sen- ate will proceed with the disposition of the Doosley nomination. The Senate will meet at 1`1 o'clock, and the vote will oc- cur at 4. 1 would be my hope that we might then .oceed, after 4 o'clock, to dispose of oth matters on the Execu- tive Calendar. The PRESIDE T pro tempore. The Chair will state t'q the Senator from Maine that there is also an agreement that after 4 o'clocl a parliamentary point of reference resp ting Joint Reso- lution 145 is to be sett d. Mr. WHI.i'E. .Then y suggestion would not be a happy one, but from 11 o'clock until 4 the day woll*cl be given to the consideration of the Dobley nomi-? 'nation. The PRESIDENT pro tempbre, The time from 4 to 6 is to be given- bo the appeal from the decision of the Ckair. Mr. WHERRY. Mr. President, Nin keeping with what the majority leader has said about the program for tomor- row, I think it should also be stated, so that Senators can prepare for the bal- ance of the week, that the policy com- mittee desired to have it announced that, if it meets with the pleasure of the Sen- ate, at the completion of action on the unification bill, which it is hoped will be by Thursday afternoon at least, the tax bill will be ready to be. reported, and will have the right-of-way on Thursday and Friday, if, as I have stated, action on the unification bill shall be concluded on Thursday. It is the intention of the policy committee to have the Senate sit on Saturday, if necessary, in order to complete the consideration of the tax billt if that is possible. So that Senators should hold themselves in readiness for a session Saturday, if it becomes nec- essary that One be held. Mr. MORSE. I am wondering if the ? Senator has in mind a meeting on Sun- day, as well. Mr. WHERRY. I will say with a great deal of optimism that it is my hope that it will not be necessary for the Senate to meet on Sunday, but such, an emer- gency might arise. NOMINATION OF JOE B. 'DOOLEY Mr. CONNALLY. Mr. President, as in executive session, I ask unanimous con- sent that there be printed' in the RECORD endorsement of the nomination of Mr. Joe B. Dooley to be United States district judge by 15 former presidents of the bar association of the State of Texas. - There being no objection, the com- munications were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: DALLAS, TEx., July 5, 1947. Senator Tom CoNrivim.y, Senate Office Building: As former presidents of the State Bar As- sociation of Texas we unanimously certify to the character and ability of Joe Dooley and endorse him for United States district judge. D. A. Simmons, of Houston; Robert W. Stayton, of Austin; T. W. Davidson, ' -of Dallas; A. H. Britain, of Wichita Falls; Henry P. Burney, of San An- tonio; H. C. Pipkin, of Amarillo; Ben H. Powell, of Austin; John C. .Townes, of Houston; Few Brewster, ,of Temple; Gordon Simpson, of # Tyler; James L. Shepherd, 'of i; Houston. , 8487 HARLINGEN, TEX., February 4, 1947: Senator Tom CONNALLY, Washington, D. C.: I respectfully endorse the nomini-ition of Hon. Joe 13. Dooley, of Amarillo, for judge of the western district of Texas. He is held in high esteem by the bench and bar of Texas and in my opinion his appointment is one of the best made during my legal experience. He posses the attributes of character, judicial temperment, and moral integrity of. the high- est degree and will reflect credit upon the Federal judiciary if confirmed. ,- CLAUDE E. CARTER, Former President, State Ear of Texas. BEAUMONT, TEx., February 5, 1947. Hon. ALEXANDER WILE'Y, United States Senator, Chairman of the, Senate Judiciary Committee, Senate Office Building, Washingtoz, D. C.: I notice that the Senate Judiciary Com- mittee is considering the appointment of Mr. Joe B. Dooley, of, Amarillo, Tex., for judge of the United States District Court for the western district of Texas. I know Mr. Dooley to be an able, outstanding lawyer, and legal scholar during my term as presi- dent of the State bar of Texas, 1943-44, during which time he served as vice presi- debit of such State bar. I had occasion to be tiksociated with him often and to hear comments of the Texas lawyers as to him. From this I feel, and believe that a large majority\ of the Texas lawyers feel that he is fully qualified to make an able judge of the United. States District gourt. Accord- ingly I desir'6 to add my name to those recom- mending hirsi\to your committee. MAJOR T. BELL, _Former President, State Bar of Texas. DALLAs?TEx., February 5, 1947. Senator ALEXANDER WILEY, Chairman, SenatkJudiciary Committee: Mr.' Joe Dooley, nominated for district judge, northern district of Texas, is a man of the highest integrity and a lawyer of the first order of ability.\ He has had wide and varied experience, and is one of the 'most outstanding lawyers of Texas. He possesses the personal qualities of courtesy, patience, fairnes, and courage. He is thor- oughly grounded in the principles of the Constitution and the body m of\the law, and 'as a judge will perfor 'his dut impartially and fearlessly. The lawyers of 'Texas over- whelmingly approve his appointMent. I was formerly chief justice of the emirt of civil appeals at San Antonio and was '-last year president of the State bar of Texas,?.succeed- ing Mr. Dooley in the latter position. I make this personal reference to give'\ assur- ance of my basis of opinion and to 'afford the committee, in considering the nomina- tion, the assistance that is due from the. bar. JOHN H. BICKETT, Jr., . Former President, State Bar of TexaS. DALLAS, TEX., July 7, 1947. Hon. Tom CONNALLY, Senate Office Building: Please add my endorsement, Joe Doolef; was not present when other past president Texas bar endorsement was sent. ANGUS G. WYNNE'. , Mr. CONNALLY. Mr. President, I al- so ask to have printed endorsements of Mr. Dooley's nomination from repre- sentative members of the State bar in Texas. ' There being no objection, the com- munications were ordered to be printed In the RECORD, as follows: 8488 ( plSved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002010494901-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS, SEVENTH SUPREME JUDICIAL DISTRICT, Amarillo, Tex., June 12, 1944. Hon. TOM CONNALLY, United States Senator of Texas, Washington, D. C. DEAR SENATOR CONNALLY: It seems to be generally known that there will soon be a vacancy due to the retiring of one of the ?juclz,es of the United 'States District Court of the Northern District of Texas, and we are all interested in seeing a good, strong, active successor appointed. Since the western and northwestern part of the district has never had a man on the court, we feel that we are in a position to urge a most earnest consideration of the ap- pointment of a good man who we believe would be the most acceptable man to the bar generally in the district. We recommend without reservation and urge the appoint- ment of Joe B. Dooley, of Amarillo, when the vacancy occurs. Mr. Dooley s well and favorably known throughout the State. He has the qualifica- tions and we think he possesses the natural ability 'for such a position. He has never been in politics but has exercised consider- able influence in strengthening the judiciary and in trying to keep it above criticism. He has been closely identified with the organi- zations of. the legal profession, is an out- standing and popular leader within their ranks, and has their confidence and respect. He is a merriber of the law firm of Under- wood, Johnson, Dooley & Wilson, of Amarillo, and enjoys a good practice: He is old enough to be settled and deliberate, yet- young enough to be active and alert, with the pros- pect of at least a score of years of valuable service ahead of him. Hoping this matter will have your most earnest consideration at the proper time, and assuring you of my. personal regards, I am, Very truly yours, E. L. Prrrs, . Chief Justice. STAMFORD, TEX., February 16, 1947. Hon. Tom CONNALLY, Senate Office Building: Advise Dooley if prairie-dog law,yer can assist to call me collect. He is suited and Qualified for appointment by nature, char- acter, balance, integrity, experience, ability, and judicial temperament. A vast majority of the lawyers of the district will be pleased by hls confirmation. CHAS. E. COOMBES. AMARILLO, TEX., February 9, 1947. Senator Tom CONNALLY, United States Senate, Washington, D. C.: My occupation is that of a cattleman and farmer. This expression is prompted by no one. I have known Joe Dooley as a gentle- man and friend for 25 years. I' have no ax to grind. As a student of the law he is re- garded very highly and thorough. In my opinion-he will discharge his duties on the Federal bench in an honorable and unim- peachable manner. Respectfully yours, BEN MASTERSON. . STOCKTON, Tgx., February 25, 1947. Senator Tom CONNALLY, ? . Senate Building: ? Believing; the vast majority of the lawyers of Texas desire the appointment of Joe B. Dooley, of Amarillo, as district judge for the northern district of Texas, I want to express my appreciation' of your continued efforts -on his b,..half. TRAVERS CRUMPTON, ' District.,Attorney, 4;ighty-third Judicial District of Texas. EL PASO, TEX., February 24, 1947. Hon. TONI CONNALLY, Senate Chamber: As an outstanding lawyer and gentleman, Joe Dooley is entitled to the appointment as United States district judge, northern district of Texas. We earnestly urge your continued support. MAURY KEMP. EUGENE R. SMITH. J. M. GOGGIN. WYNDHAM K. WHITE. EL PASO, TEX., February 24, 1947. Senator Tom CONNALLY: We are enthusiastically endorsing the ap- - pointment of Mr. Joe Dooley as district judge. CYRUS H. JONES. THORNTON HARDIE. ALLEN 11: GRAMBLING. HEN R. HOWELL. ? WILLIAM B. HARDIE. -,Et. PASO, TEX., March 6, 1947. Senator Tom CONNALLY, Senate Office Building: Heartily approve your stand on appoint- . ment. of Joe B. Dooley and will appreciate your continued efforts on his behalf. .7. L. RASBERRY. SAN ANGELO, TEX., February 26, 1947. Hon. Tom CONNALLY, United States Senate: The undersigned attorneys of San Angelo and, we think, Practically our entire bar here strongly commend your stand on appoint- ment of Dooley as United States district judge. He is worthy of the honor and we wish you success in your effort to secure his confirmation. Lloyd Ker, Louis Gayer, B. W. Smith, W. A. Griffis, Travis Baker, Herschel Upton, Lee Upton, Tom Lear, C. T. Dalton, James P. Farrell, Olin Blanks, John Logan, H. E. Jackson, Scott Snodgrass. DALLAS, TEX., July 4, 1947. Senator Tom CONNALLY, Senate Office Building, Washingtem, D. C.: The 1911 law class of the University of Texas of which Joe B. Dooley, of Amarillo, is a distinguished member held its thirty-sixth annual reunion in cooperation with the State bar in Dallas today. Forty-six members con- sisting of more than two-thirds of the sur- viving members of the class were present representing every political thought in Texas today. By unanimous vote the class in- structed the undersigned to assure you that Joe B. Dooley is an outstanding lawyer of the very highest personal integrity, Tully capable of discharging any responsibility and de- serving of any honor that may be conferred upon him. Copy of this telegram is being sent to Senator W. LEE O'DANIEL. C. M. CALDWELL, Abilene, Tex., President. EUGENE L. HARRIS, of 'Houston, Secretary'. Mr. CONNALLY. I also ask to have printed a tabulation of the civil cases handled in the United States Federal Court for the Northern District of Texas.. There being no objection, the matter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Tabulation of civil cases, U. S. Federal Court, Northern District of Texas Fort Worth 1,212 Amarillo 816 Lubbock 603 Abilene - 446 1 JULY 7 Wichita Falls 388 San Angelo 184 Amarillo and Lubbock 1,319 Abilene, Wichita Falls, and San An- gelo 1,010 Amarillo, Lubbock, Abilene, Wichita Falls, and San Angelo 2,337 -The above tabulation is based on letters from the clerks offices at the several cities named covering the number of civil suits filed at said respective offices of the Federal court in the northern district of Texas since the effective date of the Federal rules of civil procedure, which was September 16, 1938. The Fort Worth letter is dated October 11, 1946, the Amarillo letter October 15, 1946, and the Lubbock, Abilene, Wichita Falls, San Angelo letters all dated October 14, 1946. 'ADDITIONAL REPORT OF SPECIAL COM- MITTEE TO INVESTIGATE THE NA- TIONAL DEFENSE PROGRAM?IWPER- AMERICAN HIGHWAY (S. REPT. NO. 440) Mr. FERGUSON. Mr. President, I wish to file with the Senate a report from the Special Senate Committee Investi- gating the National Defense Program on its investigation of the Inter-American Highway. I ask unanimous consent to submit the report, and request that it be printed with illustrations. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. With- out objection, the report will be received and printed as requested by the Senator from Michigan. Mr. FERGUSON. Mr. President; be- fore sending the report to the desk, I desire to make a brief statement con- cerning the committee's investigation. In one respect, Mr. President, the corn-? mittee's investigation of the Inter-Amer- ican Highway differs from many of the other investigations the special commit- tee has conducted. This investigation - was a job given the committee by the Senate itself. It was not a matter which the committee had decided to go into from its general investigation of war ex- penditures. I think it would be helpful for the record to recall, briefly, the cir- cumstances under which our committee undertook this work. In June, 1945, Fulton- Lewis, Jr., the. commentator, in a series of radio broad- casts, attacked some aspects of the manner in which sections of the Inter- American Highway in , Central America had been built by the Army engineers. Mr. Lewis recited information obtained , from people who had worked on the project. Transcripts of these broadcasts were made a part of the CONGRESSIONAL RECORD by certain Members of the Sm- ate. A number of Senators, during the course of the debates, urged that the matter be thoroughly explored by the Special Senate Committee Investigating the National Defense Program.. As one of the Senators on the floor at that par- ticular time, I. as a member of the com- mittee, thought the program should be investigated by the Senate committee, and so expressed myself. On June 19, 1945, former Senator James M. Mead, then the chairman of the committee, announced in a speech on the floor of the Senate that the com- mittee would undertake the investigation. Subsequently, a subcommittee was ap- pointed, of which the chairman was the nrsrnvc "0a40001711eR -? Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 _Enr Rele.ase 2006/ .5 ? _CIA:RDPqn-OnAl 0R000200040001-1 94,7 AppFoved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 CONC-111E,SL,NL.1_, 2E7'0 F)-SENATE " '(C) Acalinted gross income less than aaf,aa: :if the aefjusted gross income is less than $5.0:00, the, standard deduction shall be an aricanta, equal to 10 percent of the ad- justed .aroas income upon the basis of which the 'Lax' applicable to the adjusted gross in- come of --.the taxpayer is determined und.er the tax ta 'al0 provided in section 103: "(c; be years to which applicable: The amaindaments made by this section shall be applicablca.with respect to taxable years Walla ag after :December 31, 1947. For treat- ment G: taxable ,years beginning in 1947 and enc....g in 1046, see section 6." ICCTICF OF MOT.:f..PN TO SUSPEND THE -- AMENDMENT TO MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT PROPRIATION BIL Mr. GURNEY subrnitted the following notice :in v.7riting: :in accordance with XL:- of the .nding Rules of the Senate, I hereby : notice in wri'iing thak it is my in- Eon to move to suspend paragraph of rule XVI for the purpose\ of propos- ing to the bill (H. R. 3378) Making 'ap- propriations for the Military Eatablish- meat for the fiscal year ending ;Jane 30, IC L3, and fcr other purposes, the f I:low- ing amendment, ria On page 50, after section 17, insert a, ew section aea,ding as follows: . 'Sac. 11. Tile limitation imposed by sect 7.a. la of the Oct of May 24, 1946 (60 stata. , El:an not apply during the fiscal year loaa to ouch personnel as the Secretary of War may dater:nine: to be necessary in lieu of military personnel authorized and appro- priated for to carry out the purposes of this act: Paavie,ea, That not to exceed 25,000 civilian employees may be employed under the authority ca -Ills section." Mr. GURN-1.? also submitted an amendment, intended' to be proposed by him to tdc ate bill 3673, making appro- priations for the Military Establishment foi? the fiscal year ending June 30, 1948, and for other purposes, which was or- dc:-0:, to lie on the table and to. be ? (Por text, of amendment referred to, see the foregoing notice.) ? . 0:F THE REMAINS OF MEMBERS ? OF ARMED aaORCES KILLED IN WAR Ma. LODGE. Mr. President, at the last ca2.1 of the calendar objected to the unaiiiiiieus consent cora:: ..ntion of or- dor No. 504, House bill aa:. 3 amend the aa,. entitled "An act to provide for the e- nos and return of the remains of certain persons who died and are bufiod o:itsida the continental limits of the United States," approved May 16, 10-:.3, in order to provide for the ship- ment o: the remains of World War II dead to the. homeland of the deceased or of next of kin, to provide for the dispo- sition of group and mass burials, to pro- vide for the burial of unknown American World War II dead in United States mili- tary cemeteries to be established over- 'seas, to authorize the Secretary of War to accaaire land overseas and to estab- Loh United States military cemeteries thereon, and for other purposes. Since making that objection I have conferred with officers in the Department in charge of this function, and I find that all the doubts I. had entertained are resolved. I therefore withdraw the ob- jection. The De.7,2i2ID:12,NT pro 17;oes the Senator desire the present consider- ation of the bill? Mr. LODGE. No; I do not desire that. I merely want the REconD to show that I have withdrawn ray objection. MEETING OF COMMITTEE DURING SENATE SESSION Mr. WHERRY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Subcom- mittee on Health of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare be permitted to hold a hearing during the session of the Senate today. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. With- out objection, the order is made. MORALS OF SELLING LIQUOR- ICLE FROM KIPLINGER [Mr. CAPPER asked and obtained, leave to have printed in the REcoan an article entitled "Morals of Selling Liquor," published in the July 1947 issue of Hiplinger magazine, which appears in the Appendix.] k'Ul LE SOVIET AGREEMENTS -EDITO- RIAL FROM THE WASHINGTON DAILY NEWS [Mr. MoCLELLAN asked and obtained leave to have printed in the Rsoorm an editorial entitled "Futile Soviet Agreements," pub- lished in the Washington Daily News of July 9, 1947, which appeals in the Appendix.] BET .a.alat GOVERNMENT-EDITORIAL FROM THE WASHINGTON DAILY NEWS \[Mr. McCLELLAN asked and obtained leave toahave printed in the REaorm an editorial the ashington Daily News, July 9, 1947, entitled "Better Government," published in whichl,ppears in the Appendix." A CAPITALIST LOOKS AT LABOR- ARTICLE' BY CYfaU5 EATON [Mr. MORSE asked and obtained leave to have printer' In the RECORD an article entitled "A Capitalist Looks at Labor," by Cyrus Eaton, published in the University of Chicago Law Review for April, 1947, which appears in the Appendix.] REFUSAL TO ACC= GOVERNMENT SUB- SIDYLETTER F2a01,1 JOE M. BAKER [Mr. WILEY asked 'and obtained leave to have printed in the I:Zucca:a a letter from ? Joe M. Baker, district fireproof Lades man- . ager of the Milcor Steel Co., of Washington, D. C., together with an article by Edwin A. Lahey, which appear in the ',Appendix.] WALTER CHANDLER-AD7RESS BY WALTER P. ARMSTP.CNG STPI, a/ART asked and obtained leave to have printed in the RECORD an address entitled "Walter Cha.ncller-Citizena Lawyer, Soldier, Public Servant," delivered by Walter P. Armstrong, of the Memphis bar, at a_ testi- monial dinner given to Walter Chandler in Memphis on September 20, 1946, which ap- pears in the Appendix.] AUTHORIZATION FOR RE.- 'T FROM, FINANCE CONIMITIEE' Mr. MILLIKIN. Mr. President, Committee on :Finance has favorably re- ported House bill 3050, a bill for the re- duction of taxes. I ask unanimous con- sent to be permitted to submit a .report by midnight tonight. The PRESIDING 0.10.eaCER. Withou objection, permission is granted. MRS. MrLDRED WELLS MARTIN The PRESIDENT pro tempore laid' be- fore the Senate the amendments 9:Z the of Jtejorcsentatives to the bill (S. MO) lea tie relief of Mrs. Mildred Wells which were, on page 1, line 7, ii.:"i-fisert "; to pay the aura of ;;'2,523 to ties. Mabel Jones, of Camden, S. C."; Gn page 1, line 10, strike out "the' said Mrs. Mildred Wells Martin" and insert "them"; on page 1, line 11, strike out "she was" and insert "they were"; on page 1, line 11, strike out "a pas- senger" and insert "passengers"; and to amend the title so as to read: "An act for the relief of Mrs. Mabel Jones and Mrs. Mildred Wells Martin." Mr. MAYBANK. Mr. President, I move that the Senate concur in the. amendments of the House.. The motion was agreed to. MESSAGES FROM THE PRESIDENT- APPROVAL OF BILLS Messages in writing from the Presi- dent of the United States were com- municated to the Senate by Ma. Miller, one of his secretaries, and he announced that on today, July 9, 1947, the President had approved and signed the following acts:. 5.394. An act authorizing the issuance of a patent in fee to Raymond Wesley Doyle; S. 396. An act authorizing the issuance of a patent, in fee to Thurlow Grey Doyle; S.397. An act authorizing the issuance of a patent in fee to Lawrence Stanley Doyle; S..393. An act authorizing the issuance or: a .patent In fee to Spencer Burgess Doyle; and S.399. An act authorizing the issuance of a patent in fee to Gladys May Doyle. EXECUTIVE MESSAGES REFERRED As in executive session, - The PRESIDENT pro tempore laid be- fore the Senate messages from the Fresi- * dent of the United States submitting ?sundry nominations, which were referred to the appropriate committees. (For ? nominations- this day receia see the end of Senate proceedings.) MESSAGE FROM THE HOUSE-ENROLLED BILLS AND -JOINT RESOLUTION SIGNED A message from the House of Repre- sentatives, by Mr. Maurer, one of its read- ing clerks, announced that the Speaker had affixed his signature to the following enrolled bills and joint resolution, and they were. signed by ?resident pro j tempore: s. 640. An. act to authorize the Secretary of Commerce to sell certain property occupied ? the Weather Bureau at East Lansing, Lich., and to obtain other quarters for the s Lid Bureau in the State of Michigan; S. 1316. An act to establish a procedure for :aicilitating the payment of certain Covent- ;.lent checks, and for other purposes; H. R. 494. An act to reorganize the system of parole of priscahers convicted in. the Dis- 1 aict of Columbia; H. R. 3737. An act to provide revenue for aim- District of Columbia, and for other pur- poses; and H. J. Res. 170. Joint resolution authorizing of a memorial to Andrew. W. Mellon. UNIFICATION OF THE. ARMED SERVICES The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 758)' to promote the na- tional security by providing for a National Defense Establishment, which shall be adminia ..red by a Secrc ..ary of National Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020 040001-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE JULY 9 Dcfense, and for a Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, and a Department of the Air Force within the National Defense Establishment, and for :.be coordination of the activities of the National Defense Establishment with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security. ? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming ob- tained the floor. Mr. WHERRY, Mr. President, I sug- gest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The? clerk will call the roll. The Chief Clerk called the roll, and the following Senators answered to their names: . Aiken Bl5whi :3all L rkley Ero'vster Bricker Bridges Brooks 3ucl; 13mhfreld Butler Byrd Cam Capper. Chavez . Connally Cooper Cordon Donnell Dworshak Ecton Ellender Ferguson Flanders Fulbri.ght George Green Gurney Hatch . Hawkes Hayden O'ConOr Hickenlooper O'Daniel Hill O'Mahoney Hoey . Overton Holland Pepper - Jenner Reed Johnson, Colo. Revercomb Johnston, S. C. Robertson, Va. Rem Robertson, Wyo. Kilgore Russell Knowland Saltonstall Smith Sparkman Stewart Taft Taylor Thomas, Okla. Thye Tydings Umstead Vandenberg Watkins Wherry White Wiley Williams Wilson Young Langer Lodge Lucas McCarran - McCarthy McClellan McFarland McGrath McKellar McMahon Magnuson Malone Martin Maybank Millikin Moore Morse Murray Myers Mr. WHERRY. I announce that the Senator from Indiana [Mr. CAPER/1AT] is absent by leave of the Senate. The Senator from New. York [Mr. .lives] is absent by leave of the Senate because of a death in his immediate family. t! The Senator from New Hampshire [Mr. TOBEY] is necessarily absent be- cause of illness in his family. Mr. LUCAS. I announce that the Senator from California [Mr. DoWNEY] is absent by leave of the Senate. The Senator from Mississippi [Mr. EASTLAND] is absen a public business. The Senator from 'Utah [Mr. THOMAS] is absent by leave of the Senate, having been appointed a delegate to the Inter- national Labor Conference at Geneva, Switzerland. The Senator from New York [Mr. WAGNER] is necessarily absent. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Eighty-eight Senators having answered to their names, quorum is present. 1V1r. ..OBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. . President, when consideration of Sen- ate bill 758 was temporarily suspended on Monday I had, up to that time, en- deavored to show that the bill provided for a complete merger of the armed forces in every aspect. I had also en- deavored to point out that the savings which were estimated to result from the paesage of the bill would not in fact re- sult; that on the contrary the set-up as envisioned under S. 758 would vastly in- crease tlie .cost c the operation of our armed services. I had also pointed oat many, many in- stances of coordination between the Army and Navy which. had taken place without the benefit of any merger, and which were increasing day by day until there Was almost complete coordination in practically every function of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force which it was possible to coordinate. I had also endeavored to point out to the Senate the dangers of the military dominance of not only the military sys- tem of the country but of our whole economic system. Now, Mr. President, I desire to dis- cuss for a short time the different con- cepts of the Army, Navy, and Air Force with regard to the basic set-up of our armed services. The Army General Staff is completely sold on the theory that everything that flies through the air should be put in the Air Force, everything that walks or rolls on land should go to the Army, while everything that sails on or in the water belongs to the Navy. The Army calls this the "ideal" philosophy for the organization of the armed forces. This philosophy of the Army is known as the "trielemental" philosophy, since it segregates the components of military power according to the natural elements in which they operate. It might also be called the "authoritarian" philosophy, ?since it was the accepted philosophy of Napoleonic France, of Von IVIoltke's and Hitler's Germany,- and of Mussolini's . Italy. It is the Russian military phil- osophy today. The paper simplicity of trielemental concept is its leading attraction for those who are unfamiliar with military prob- lems. There is something very alluring about a concept which puts the various military components into such neat com- partments. It looks obvious and eco- nomical to have all aircraft under a single management?the same with ships and ground troops. But those who are familiar with all the ramifications and problems involved know that the sim- plicity and the economy are not realized in a practical application of the concept. ? The truth of the matter is that the conduct of warfare becomes more rather than less complicated under the triele- mental philosophy. The reason for this lies in the fact that the trielemental con- cept makes every major military opera- tion a joint operation. Even amateur students of warfare know that ground operations require close air support as well as aerial observation, reconnais- sance, and spotting of artillery fire. They know that naval operations rely heavily upon aviation for attack on sur- face targets, and for reconnaissance, gunfire spotting, and aerial defense. They know also that amphibious opera- tions require the highly coordinated use of ground, sea, and air forces. Every major operation thus demands the par- ticipation of at least two of the military components which are completely segre- gated by the trielemental concept. Since the trielemental philosophy makes every important operation a joint operation it forces on us the necessity of habitually maintaining joint com- mands, joint administrative echelons, joint logistic structures, all of these in addition to the completely developed structures set up separately to admin- ister the ground forces, the sea forces, and the air forces. Instead of the sim- ple and economical structure hoped for, the trielemental concept in its prac- tical application requires us to maintain an exceedingly complex and costly over- head structure replete with duplications. The objections of complexity and cost are secondary, of corse, to the primary question of military effectiveness, and here the objections to the trielemental concept are even more cogent. The co- ordination of ground, sea, and air ele- ments in a modern campaign is a most difficult problem. Split second timing, rapid shifting of forces, and. intimate familitarity of one element with the problems of the others are of para- mount importance. These are not easily achieved, if they can be achieved at all, in a trielemental system where mixed forces must be assembled for each job, under a temporary joint command. The question may well be asked, Why, in the face of these objections which are obvious to any 'Military dilettante, would the Army and the Air Force support such a philosophy? The answer lies in a cor- ollary of the trielemental concept?a corollary which says that one element of the armed services should dominate the others. In the past, when the triele- mental concept has held sway, the domi- nant element has been the Army?hence the attractiveness of this philosophy for the Army. In the future the Air Force hopes to become the dominant element? hence the attractiveness of the triele- mental philosophy for the Air Force. The corollary of armed services combi- nation by a single element springs largely from the premise that an ele- ment which is common to all operations should occupy the key position. The Army points to the fact that all warfare reaches its final conclusion on land, .hence they argue that the land element is the common element and should domi- nate. They fortify this argument by re- citing the relative strengths of the vari- ous elements and by pointing out that even navies and air forces require land bases and are to that extent always de- pendent on the land forces for a place from which to operate. The. German Army used this same argument effec- tively in establishing its own dominance of the German armed forces. The Air Force does not go along all the way with this line of reasoning, of course. They are willing to agree to the general premise that if there is a common ele- ment to all operations it should domi- nate the armed services. They think, ? however, that aviation will eventually ? become the common element. The mat- ter of relative service size does not bother them particularly, as they hope the pres- ent size relationship will shift in their favor before very long. They brush'aside as inconsequential the Army's contention that wars are fought from land bases for land objectives. There are other reasons why the Army and the Air Force are intrigued with the trielernental philosophy. Its rigid corn- partmentalization would put naval and Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200046001-1 1947 CONGRESL FCECC::-.D?SE:NTATE Marine Corps aviation out of business or into the Air Force, and would pat the lieet marine force out of business or in the Army. The Army and Air Force have itched for years to take over these elements of the Navy. Such desires of the Army and Air Force are really side however. Their real aim is the donimation of the armed services as a whole. If the ft,C?C'i States accepts the trielemental cc along with its cor- ollary of single-service domination, the stage be set for the most spectacular interservice battle this country has ever seen--the battle between the Army and the Air Force to determine which one will be top dog in the United States defense establishment. It may be that the trielemental philos- ophy, with its corollary of single-service domination, is the correct philosophy for a country which is forced by geography or by other influences to concentrate the major portion of its strength in a single element of its armed forces?for a coun- try which can safely relegate its other' military components to a subordinate role. We have the word of General von Brauchitsch that it was the proper thing for the Germans to do. It may also be ? that it is the proper philosophy for a totalitarian state. No less an expert than General Keitel, Hitler's chief of staff, wrote that the organization of the German armed forces command, the ul- timate embodiment of the trielemental philosophy, represented "the most logi- cal and most efficient solution for an authoritarian state." Before we accept these opinions, how- ever., we shou'id not overlook the misuse , of the German Air Force and Navy which resulted from the German acceptance of the trielemental philosophy, nor should we overlook the historical misuse of navies and air forces by other countries which made the same decision. Without exception, those nations which have em- braced the trielemental philosophy in the past have gone down to military defeat. Let us not follow their example. Opposite the trielemental philosophy is the task force or functional philosophy espoused by the Navy. This might also be called the democratic philosophy, in- asmuch as it is the traditional military -philosophy of the democratic nations of the world. In this concept, land power, s;:a ;Gwen and air power are recognized as the basic elements of over-all mili- tary power, rather than ground troops, ships, mid aircraft. One component of the armed services, the Army, is made responsible for the exercise of land pow- er and is given the necessary forces? primaaily land forces, but including nec- essary air and sea auxiliaries?to do the ? jam By the same token the Navy is given the requisite 'sea, air, and amphi- bious ground forces to wield cl.'. itive sea power? while the -air force is equipped with appropriate air, land, and sea forces to exert strategic air power. Each serv- ice thus constitutes a balanced arm to 077erc:.:se one particular aspect of over- _ military power. - The chief advantage of the task-force philosophy, as contrasted with the tai- -elemental philosophy, is that it provis:...:s a far more en aramairalon of the several eleamaiir of miartny s irena..11. It is well aray: a. that nie enereise of land power hive. -ars a ancat deal more than the efforts of gronnai troops. In particular, it involves the closely coordi- nated use of aviation to provide oaser- vation of the battlefield, to report de- velopments behind the immediate field of operations, to spot and adjust artil- lery fire, and to bomb and strafe enemy troops and positions which are holding up the ground advance. These support- ing missions can be carried out effec- tively only by aviation which is organic to the ground troops, which has trained," habitually with ground troops, and which is under the immediate control of the ground commander. Effective land power thus demands that the ground force be constituted as a balance force comprising not only ground elements, but aviation elements as well. By simi- lar reasoning, organic water-borne ele- ments are also a necessity for a balanced ground force. The ground commander should not be fOrced to call upon a naval commander for the boats required to ef- fect a river crossing. Air power, on the other hand, seeks to destroy the enemy's will and ability to fight, not by attacking his troops on the field of battle, but by direct attack on his seat of government and the main elements of his war economy. It also bears the primary responsibility for de- fending the Nation against aerial at- tack. It cannot discharge these respon- sibilities with aircraft alone. It, too, demands a balanced force. It must have the means to defend its ground installa- tions against surprise attacks from the ground. It must have the antiaircraft troops to complete its aerial defense of the Nation, and it must have the boats and other naval appurtenances neces- sary to operate strategic bombers from seaplane bases. The Navy has always been constituted as a balanced force for the exercise of sea power. It has maintained a sub- stantial aviation component for aerial defense of the fleet, for aerial attack of naval targets, for antisubmarine war- fare, for sea reconnaissance, and for ob- servation and control of naval gunfire. It has maintained a fleet marine force for the seizure and defense of the bases required for .fleet operations. Much of the success of the recent naval campaign in the Pacific was di- rectly due to the fact th?at naval avia- tion had been maintainen for years as an organic part of the Navy, was sub- ject to Navy command, and was thor- oughly familiar with naval operations. Similarly the fleet marine force was an effective force in amphibious operations because it had been maintained as an arm of the fleet, had developed amphibi- ous techniques in conjunction with the fleet, understood fleet operations, and contained a marine aviation component which was expert in the support of am- phibious forces. The taan-forca philosophy leads to economy as well as military effective- ness. Most warfare is capable of divi- sion into well-defined areas where land power, sea power, and air power are ap- plied individually and independently, ex- 8661 cent for the over-all coordination at the very top lavel. Li Europe, after the Normandy land- ings, the cembined armies of the United States, Great Britain, and France en- gaged in ? a tremendous land campaign which embraced all the elements of land power and which was entirely apart from the strategic air offensive against the heart of Germany. The latter was a manifestation of air power. At the same time that land power and air power were being exerted in Europe, sea power was keeping open the Atlantic lanes for the transport of supplies and manpower. In the Central Pacific, meanwhile, sea power was being pushed to the very doorstep of Japan, setting the stage for the exer- cise of air power against the Japanese war potential and the eventual- exercise of land power on the home soil of Japan. It is only in the marginal areas that land power, sea power, and air power are exercised in conjunction with each other, and there only for relatively short periods. Under the task force philoso- phy, such joint undertakings are of a transitory nature, marking the shift in. emphasis in a particular area from sea power to air power, from sea power to land power, or from air power to land power. Under the task force concept, joint operations are therefore of com- paratively rare occurrence and are short- lived. We are not faced with the con- tinual necessity of maintaining joint commands. The task force philosophy thus insures a simple command, admin- istrative, and logistic structure, one which is immeasurably more effective and economical than the dual structure required by the trielemental concept. Inasmuch as the task force philosophy renders joint operations the exception rather than the rule, no single service appears as a common element in every major operation, and ,there is no result- ing corollary that a single service should dominate the others. There is, in fact, no place whatsoever in the task force concept for the combination of the armed services by a single element, since the task force philosophy is the characteris- tic philosophy of nations which must place equal or nearly equal reliance on air power, sea power, and land power for survival. Such nations dare not permit the subordination of any of these ele- ments to another. The task force philosophy has been the traditional American philosophy, just as it has been the traditional military philosophy of all major _democratic na- tions. It is the p1-17,7 :r;phy which has enabled these natie, naild incompa- rable military machinas without surren- dering to them the power of government. It is also the philosophy which has emerged victorious in every modern war. It is obvious that these two philoso- phies are implacably opposed to each other. In view of the manifest impos- sibility of compromising these concepts, and in view of the unwillingness of the Army and the Navy to surrender their conscientious convictions, it is not prising to find that the merger bill now being considered glosses over this all- important matter, leaving it as a subject for .continuing interservice controversy and ultimately for Executive decision. . Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200040001-1 862 CONG.SiLCL RECOF,D' -SENATE JULY 9 am opposed, Mr. President, to such a procedure, for I believe that it is es- sent-.al to national security that the issue be settled now and by action of Congress. If it is true that one philosophy is par- ticularly appropriate to a democratic nation. whose first line of defense lies in its sea power and its air power, then I believe that Congress should make its choice in favor of that philosophy and write that philosophy into law. . I should like to make particular men- 'tion of naval aviation and the Marine Coitis, two components of our armed fors, the maintenance of which is in- dispensable to the task-force philosophy, two components which will not long' exist if the Army succeeds, by the device of Executive order, in foisting upon us its trielemental concept. Whenever these two branches of the service, namely; naval aviation and the Marine Corps, have been mentioned in committee, my colleagues have united to express their admiration and esteem. My colleagues have never failed to utter their objections to any suggestion which would deprive these gallant services of the continuing opportunity to serve the Nation in the future as they have in the ? past. In the face of these utterances, I find it difficult to understand their re- luctance to provide adequate protection in the proposed legislation. I cannot .reconcile their outspoken solicitude for the welfare of naval aviation and the Marine Corps with their repeated re- fusals to set at rest the minds of the thousands of officers and enlisted per- sonnel in those services. ? On numerous occasions there has been evidence pre- sented to us that naval aviators and marines are with good reason appre- hensive of what the future has in store for them. We cannot make a sounder contribution to national security than to give these fine officers and men the as- surance they are waiting for. If we must write a little more detail into the law than some of my colleagues think neces- sary?and I for one. do not regard the necessary provisions as details?then let. us do so, for the reward is overWhelrn- iiigly great. It is the peace of mind of those who should be able to devote their u.ninterrupted attention to the dangers ? .11 threaten from without. . ere as I an of the bitter struggle exists between the two opposing doncepts of military organization, I per- innally find much of substance to the fears expressed by the marines and the naval aviators. One need only look to the 1478 series of papers of the joint Chiefs of Staff for evidence that within the past few years there have been re- peated and strong attempts to restrict the combat functions of naval aviation and the Marine Corps. The very func- tions which have made these services great, the functions in which they have rendered incalculable service , to the Nation. Many of my colleagues will be startled to learn that the leaders of the Army and the Army Air Force proposed, al- most at the outset of this controversy, that the Marine Corps should no longer be accorded an opportunity to continue us leadership in: the development of am- pie ublOus Which is th3 primary paaCatiLia occi,:patiOla of the corps. It is difficult to comprehend how such a proposal could be seriously advanced in the face of hiseorical facts. The Marines brought this highly specialized form of warfare to perfection almost single- handed, starting at a time when the Army was content to accept the lesson of Gallipoli as indisputable evidence that the job could not be done. The Pacific campaign of the war just ended is a tribute to the foresight of the Marines, and to the skill and persever- ance with which tt. -,,yursued their ob- jective. It is no t. 'their credit that they cheerfully ta',,;,;h6 the art of am- phibous warfare to the Army when the latter service belatedly recognized its im- portance on the very eve of war. The 'amphibious doctrines and equipment perfected by the Marines contributed no small share to the success of the Army landings in north Africa and Normandy. It is no less startling to learn that behind public utterances of affection and esteem for the Marine Corps, the Chief of Staff of the Army and the command- ing general of the Army Air Forces proposed variously during the. past 2 years or so that the Marines should be transformed into boat crews, that in time of war their combatant operatior. ? should be limited to feints or demonstrations, or that their units should be lightly armed and limited to regimental size. This is the fate, carefully veiled in mili- tary secrecy, that the leaders of the Army and the Army Air Force have in store for the Marines. What a fate, Mr. President, for the intrepid corps which stormed the beaches of Guadal- canal, Bougainville, Tarawa, Saipan, Tinian, Guam, Peleliu, Iwo Jima, and Oltniawa! What bitter irony that the commanding general of the Army Air Forces should propose such a fate for the gallant corps which fought the bit- terest battle of its illustrious .history at Iwo Jima in order that the B-29's of the Air Force might find a welcome haven when they returned crippled from the bombardment of Japan, in order that the same E-29's might have fighter pro- tection on their hazardous trip to Japan! What a mockery if that glorious symbol of American bravery and self-sacrifice? the raising of the flag on Mount Suribachi?is to 'become the symbol of the passing of the Marines as a com- batant corps! I ask my colleagues if they are prepared to became a party to such a descration? The Army knows that the respect of the Nation for naval aviation and the Marine Corps is too high to permit a summary destruction or emasculation of those services. It is for this reason that the War Department has consented to their nominal continuation under Senate bill 758. But at the same time they have insisted that the basic functions of these services should not be written into law, but should be reserved for determina- tion by Executive order. The method in this is all too plain. Executive orders are written with one stroke of the pen, and can be changed or canceled with an- other. Under Executive order the func- tions of the Marine Corps and of naval aviation can slowly be whittled away, bit by bit, until nothing but the name remains. The probable course of events which would follow the passage of Senate bill 758 is obvious from examination of the proposed Executive order which accom- panied it when it left the White House. In this order the functions of the armed services are set forth in detail. It is an order replete with duplications, just the sort of duplications which this bill pur- ports to avoid. These duplications are purposeful, duplication is to be estab- lished in every controversial "field. Then at some later date, under the guise of eliminating duplication, the Marine ?Corps and naval aviation will be forced to vacate the field in which they have attained original primacy and operated so gallantly and effectively in the past. I do not anticipate immediate and drastic reductions in functions. Drastic reductions, particularly in the immediate future, would invite the attention of Congress and the public to the duplicity of the scheme. The reductions will be postponed, and when they occur they will be in the nature of nibblings, each bite of insufficient size to attract notice, . hut in the aggregate and in the end the result would be the same?destruction or emasculation. I stated that the proposed Executive order was detailed. I think it Was made so purposely, in order to convey to Con- . gress and to the members of your com- mittee the impression that a statutory delineation of functions would be cor- respondingly detailed, and therefore in- appropriate to legislation. Such is not the case. The basic functions of the Army, the waterborne Navy, and the Air Force are simple of statement and rela- tively immutable. Because they border , on the functions of the other services, although they do not duplicate them, the functions of naval aviation and the Marine Corps require slightly great- er specification; but they are still capa- ble of statement with a breadth and brevity appropriate to legislation. It is most fitting and proper that Con- gress should legislate the functions of every service. In the well-chosen words of General Vandegrift: To do so is no more than to state the reasons for its existence. When Congress calls the several armed services into being, it recognizes a specific need for each of the several components of Nation security:- The very existence of each component is predi- catd upon a conclusion by Congress that a mission actually exists?that a role must be filled. As specifically relates to the Ma- rine Corps, Congress should ask itself whether the ti%-:ditional need for an am- phibious fighting force in being still ex- ists?whether the need for a Marine Corps is in fact justified by the events of the past and the forecasts of the future. If it determines the Marine Corps' function is still to exist, then it should be set forth in law?otherwise the implicit will of Con- gress can be utterly and legally ignored. I agreed wholeheartedly, Mr. Presi- dent, with General Vandegrift when he said that. Frankly, I think the position of those who advocate leaving the delineation of functions to Executive order is unten- able. Are we so awed or panic stricken ? S ? A pOd For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004&1-1 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECCRD-SENATE by our fears of the future that we must write a blank check for those to whom we look for military security? Would it be any more absurd if our fears of an economic depression led us to create a huge Government. reconstruction cor- poration, financed with billions of dol- c, and if we left it to the President az an appointed head to decide what the functions of the corporation should be? I am certain that we would write the functions of such an organization with the greatest of care; and I doubt if any- one would have much success in avoid- ing a careful delineation of functions by talking about the evils of freezing organ- ization and making It too rigid. Yet that is exactly what the Army and its friends have told us. They have asked for a blank check, and have-thrown up their hands in horror when we have talked of how it should be spent.. All this talk of freezing things in the pattern of the present leaves me singu- larly unimpressed, particularly when it comes from military officials whom Con- gress has repeatedly had to spur into progress in the past,. Numerous com- plaints have been made that past statu- tory delineation of functions has im- peded progress in the services. I chal- lenge the truth of such statements. The fact is that there was little impetus for change within the services, and it was rare indeed for a military spokesman to come to Congress and, ask that changes be made. The opposite was frequently the case; Congress had to force prog- ress on the military service. If my memory serves me correctly, we would have entered World War II with an equestrian Army if it had not been for the efforts of Congress to separate the? Army from its idolatry of the horse. I think Congress may still have to step in to divorce the Army from the pigeona Those who protest the statutory de- lineation of service functions on the ground of undue rigidity or legislative draftsmanship are seeking to beguile us. So long as there was a possibility that a delineation of functions could be legis- lated which would further the Army ob- jectives with respect to naval aviation and the Marine Corps, there was no ob- jection on the part of the Army's friends to so doing. The President, when he thought a year ago that he had arrived at an accOptable compromise on the sub- ject of functions, recommended that his compromise be written into the law. The Army, however, was not willing to compromise on this point, and seeing that they could not accomplish their ob- jective in the law, determined that it would be settled oufSide the law and to their satisfaction. Mr. President, I cannot speak too strongly on behalf of naval aviation and the Marine Corps, not because of my personal admiration and esteem for members of those branches of the serv- ice, but because to my way of thinking those progressive branches of the serv- ice have a most significant contribution to make to the security of the Nation_ in the years ahead. That contribution will not and cannot be made if these organizations are deprived of the coat- No. 130.----2 batant functions they new perfcrm. I want to see those functions written into law. If the future demands a change in those functions, I am confident that the Navy will have no hesitation in com- ing te ug and asking us to change the law. d I am confident that the Con- gress will meet the demands of the fu- ture with vigor and dispatch. I should like to say, Mr. President, while I am speaking of writing functions into law, that I have observed a marked tendency throughout this bill to leave to determination by Executive order many matters which in my opinion are mat- ters for determination by the legislative branch of the Government. I have just discussed at length the manner in which the functions of the armed services are to be left to the dis- cretion of the executive branch of the Government. Earlier I pointed out that In place of a statutory statement of the functions of the Central Intelligence Agency there is simply an affirmation of functions assigned by Executive order. I might also point out that much of the decision as to what is to be transferred from the Department of the Army to the Department of the Air Force is likewise left to the executive branch. Going-still further, I might call attention to the fact that for a period of 2 years from the date of enactment of the pending bill, ostensibly a transition period during which permanent legislation is to be written, the secretary of national se- curity is to be permited to determine which of the organizational features of the War and Navy Departments, born of Executive orders issued under war powers acts, are to remain effective. It is not without interest to recall that in ?the original version of the bill there was no 2-year limitation on the exercise of such power. I commend my committee colleagues for inserting the 2-year limi- tation, but I shall be greatly surprised If in the course of the next 2 years there are no further attempts to restore the power of the executive branch to deter- mine the organizational structure of the military departments. It is apparent, when one considers the features of the bill which I have just mentioned, that the bill provides no more than a framework for our national se- curity structure, and leaves to the execu- tive branch the task of filling in the de- tails. Some of my colleagues have in fact stated that all this bill should attempt is the setting up of such a framework. If this is my colleague's goal, then I can- not but admit my admiration for the way in which they have succeeded. This is indeed a bill which cannot stand alone; it is a bill which rests upon existing Ex- ecutive orders, and will require countless additional ones to make it effective. I for one do not subscribe to this sort of legislation, if it can in fact be called ? legislation. However much we may have been obliged by circumstances during the past decade or so to confer broad grants of authority to the executive branch of the Government, I do not be-. neve that I misgage the sentiments of the majority of .this body when I say 8663 that the tendency today is for Congress to regain its traditional role as the sole legislative agency of the Government. This wholly admirable tendency will re- ceive a drastic set-back if we revert now?in connection with this bill?to the practice of drafting only in broad out- line, leaving to the executive branch the authority to interpret our intent and to fill in the vacuum we create. I regret, Mr. President, that I am obliged to take so much of my colleagues' time in presenting my objections to S. '758?time on which there are so many other heavy demands. The necessity arises, however, from the difficult position in which a critic of the proposed legisla- tion finds himself. The other side of this controversy is the side which has enjoyed the advantage of superficial plausibility. It is the other side of the argument which has at its disposal the slogans, the catch phrases, and the glib generalities which can be such an effective facade for an unsound structure. The critics of this legislation, on the other hand, are faced with the necessity of. making and pre- senting a patient analysis, of searching for the thought behind the word, of throwing light where light was not in- tended to fall. If I fail to convince my colleagues, it will be because I have not devoted sufficient time to the exposition of my position, not because I have de- voted too much time to it. ' When Senate bill 758 was first intro- duced into the Senate .and referred to the Armed Services Committee, I had made a most careful analysis of its provisions. I found in it so much that cried for cor- rection that I despaired of remedying its defects and deficiencies, one by one, and decided that the preferable course would be to take the avowed objectives of the bill, with which I am in complete agreement, as well as many of its de- tailed provisions, to which I could and do heartily subscribe, and draft a new bill? one which I thought would meet the full approval of all those to whom the avowed objectives of Senate bill 758 are a goal and not a subterfuge. The bill (S. 1282) was the result of my endeavors and was referred to the Armed Services Com- mittee. I was greatly disappointed. As time went on, it became apparent to me that many of my committee friends were dis- posed to accept what I regard as con- siderably less than full attainment of our common goal. There emerged from committee a bill which by no stretch of the imagination can be considered a bill to promote the national security. I would be less than just to my col- leagues if I failed to observe that impor- tant changes have been made in Senate bill 758 in committee. Senate bill 758, as reported by the committee, is dis- tinctly a better bill than it was in its original form. Much still remains to be done, however, if we are yet to enact a law which can be a source of subsequent security to the Nation and of pride to ourselves. The first step which needs to be taken Is to recognize that the "national secu- rity organization" created by title II is, in reality, nothing more than a national 1-0RctOL2U 004 Ai:proved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200 8664 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE military establishment, and should be so designated throughout title II. The next step is to give some founda- tion in fact to the statement in the decla- ration of policy that it is not the intent of Congress to merge the military depart- ments and the armed services. This. we can do only by discarding the concept of the national military establishment as a super department with a secretary at its head, and employing the term "national military establishment" simply as a col- lective term embracing the military de- partments, the armed services, and the various agencies created under title II of the bill. '? By revising our concept of the national military establishment and eliminating the need for a head thereof, we make it possible to place the Secretary of Na- tional Security in his proper position as an assistant to the President in all matters relating to national security. Once we have established the Secretary of National Security in a position where he reflects an over-all viewpoint, as the President's chief assistant in all matters . relating to national security, there need be no objection to his performing, in addition to his broader duties, the spe- cific duties set forth in section 202 with respect to the departments and agencies collectively comprising the national mili- tary establishment, for these depart- ments and agencies will loom no larger in his perspective than any of the other ? Government departments and agencies concerned with national security. By way of illustrating the proper posi- tion of the Secretary of National Security, I call to mind the position of Mr. Byrnes when he was acting as top coordinator of the war agencies. The term "Assistant President" was fre- quently applied to Mr. Byrnes at that time, and I think it was an appropriate title. The Secretary of National Secur- ity should occupy a similar position?one from which he would supervise and co- ordinate all agencies of National Secur- ? ity. Top men of the Nation must be sought for this job. Mr. Byrnes, Mr. Hoover, and Mr. Charles Wilson, of Gen- . eral Electric, come to my mind as men of the type needed. Once we have placed the Secretary of National Securty in his proper perspec- tive, it remains only to transfer those sections relating to him to title I of the' bill, the title relating to coordination for .0.14-11,7ational Security. 1 With _respect_ to the CentraLXntelll- kJ A'gency, I shall kav,eio.other.....critics prqblem otwriting-into-law -a Drop ie_L?.e_t_of functions to ,replac_e_the t, bland reference...0 P_resenLduties _under ;.1 cutiYeQLcte.LAsarnin3ltepin _-Che le,s it ?hould .1 .he made mandatory, howeVer,_tha-t..the director of 'Central Intelligence should at, all times.be,a, civilian who Can..make.S.Uch a position a career. The measure which I have already out- lined, namely, the establishment of prop- er status and perspective for the Secre- tary of National Security, and the cur- tailment of military influence on the National Security Resources Board, will do much ,to give a proper balance to the National Security Council. I would go even further than this, however, and 01-1 JULY 9 broaden the membership of the council \ baffled, and thoroughly disgusted. FBI agents to bring into it, at the very least, the 1 and security police who replaced the highly chairmen of those congressional corn- ? trained military counteragents guarding Oak m Ridge during the war are at this moment ittees most intimately concerned with combing vast grounds and the labyrinth that the broad 'aspects of national security. . cOmprises the electro-magnetic or gaseous Finally, Mr. President, we should give ! diffusion plants of the inner nuclear fission to naval aviation and the Marine Corps works. the assurances of continued usefulness Guards and workers, clerks and scientists Which they have repeatedly asked, and are being interrogated repeatedly as the which SO far have been denied them. We I G-men and civilian Intelligence officers seek need not go into details of reorganization to repair the damaging Security leak by and technique in so doing, but we must nature recoveringof t ht eh edocumentsis be The exact being withheld. mark out for them a clear-cut field of Individuals known to be of questionable endeavor in which they Can function with loyalty, and even those with close kin who a full and lasting consciousness of secu- , are Communist Party members, are working rity and freedom from interruption or 1 at Oak Ridge. The wife of one employee is interservice vendetta, on the staff of the Soviet Embassy here in All these changes, Mr. President, are .1 Washington. Another atomic-energy scien- 1 tist spent his vacation in Canada, visiting embodied in the amendments which- I with Dr. Alan Nunn May, since jailed by will propose. It is ITly fervent hope that . the Canadians for betraying atom-bomb my colleagues will not fail to give them secrets during the war. Others n the sus- their full support and thereby cast a pect list 'work daytime in the atom-bomb vote for real national security. 3 plants and then hang around evenings, ALLEGED. THEFT OF SECRET FILES'.AT ?.?1 apparently out of sheer curiosity. -' It would be a fairly simple matter to climb !OAK RIDGE, TENN. over the fence at Oak Ridge. Guards no Mr. BALDWIN obtained the floor, longer patrol the perimeter of the grounds Mr. HICK LOOPER. Mr. President, as they did in wartime, although this fact came as a surprise to the deputy general counsel of the Atomic Energy Commission, who also was the acting director of security:',, It would be a simple matter also to sabotage ' Oak Ridge, since it is unlikely that anyone would be halted in approaching within 75 yards of the plants. A hand grenade would do the job. ' Representative J. PARNELL THOMAS, Repub- lican, of New Jersey, said when informed of the Sun's investigation that "This comes as no surprise to me." THOMAS recently visited Oak Ridge to check on Communist infiltra- tion in the plant and returned to submit a secret report to the committee that was criti- cal of the security procedures and revealed the presence of known Reds and numerous fellow travelers. The Congressman declared that security patrols are lax and virtually useless. Ile stated further that the FBI has its hands tied,. because under the law agents can only report their suspicions concerning disloyal Individuals. They lack the power to act. Another prominent Congressman, alarmed over the laxity of security, is JA1VIE5 VAN ZANDT, Republican, of Pennsylvania, a for- naval intelligence'officer, who is baffled bl the Sun's disclosures. VAN ZANDT is 011 re rd as approving military security control ak Ridge and at other atomic-energy- Will the Senabpr yield? Mr. BALDW . I yield to the Sena- tor from Iowa. Mr. HICKENLOQPER. Mr. President, I will say to the Se ator from Connecti- cut that I should le to take about 10 or 12 minutes to make a statement on a very vital matter w 'ch I think is of great interest to the Senate and the country. The PRESIDENT pro t pore. The Senator from Connecticut sli.elds to the . Senator from Iowa. ? Mr. HICKENLOOPER. Mi Presi- dent as chairman of the Joint mmit- tee on Atomic Energy, I should 'ke to make a statement concerning a very, dis- turbing article which appeared in \the Ne York Sun this morning. The aqi- cle elates to the security situation at Oak , iclge; Tenn., in connection wit the opkation of the atomic-energy proj- ect ther6 It is particularly alarming to note theris a statement that certain highly clas Tt:d files have been stolen from that ins 'tution. Mr. Presidentot this point in the REC- ORD I ask unanlmous consent to have printed the teletytfe story as it came over the wire a little while ago. The matter has not yet appeared\ in the editions of the newspapers which have been received here in Washington, lnit,I am informed that the teletype copy I hold in my hand is the story upon which the news reports are based. ??? There being no objection, tDi teletype story was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:? \ \ Unknown agents, working from within the atomic-energy plant at Oak Ridge, Tpnn., have stolen several files of highly s?et data on the atomic bomb, an investlgattqn by the New York Sun revealed today. Disclosure of this startling laxity on the part of American security agents who per- mitted the loss of such top secret informa- tion is expected to blast the Nation's atomic- energy set-up into a total reorganization. Full details, when revealed, will rival the Canadian atom-bomb spy story, the alarmed informants of the Sun predict. Congressmen serving on the Joint Com- mittee on Atomic Energy are frightened, at plant Alth ugh the congressional committee will, go slow in putting the finger on Russian agents as responsible for the missing docu- ments bec use of international implications, there are no uch inhibitions connected with the FBI revel tions. Four Soviet agents dur- ing the past 2 ear's have made an effort to wean atom bothi information from Ameri- cans. One or to may have returned to Russia. Two of these agellts attempted to secure information from scientists at Columbia Uni- versity in New York. The other two operated in the field near the binatom plants. None was successful in his efforts, although the FBI remains mum concerning the previous attempts of additional persons who may have been cooperating with the agents. The four were not arrested or jailed, principally be- cause of the weakness of United States laws and because they led the 0-men to other emlin agents. Mr. RICKENLOOPER. Mr. President,. thet,joint committee, in carrying out the duties-,charged to it by law, has been ex- ?ceedingly zealous to observe the security standards not only at Oak Ridge but in act at all installations of the Atomic En- :, -4- AprOed For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE ergy Commission. Our findings at these installations, whatever they may be, have 04 3-ways been brought to the attention of ,._, ,,. Atomic Energy Commission. Corre- spondingly spondingly the Atomic Energy Commis- sion has been exceedingly cooperative in reporting' , its views and findings and. problems to the joint committee. When- ever corrective steps, regardless of their ? importance \or vitality, are considered necessary, they are taken with prompt-. ness and dispatch. So far as the, loss of files at Oak Ridge Is concerned, My committee has no in- formation on ths subject, and presently, no reason to bepeve that important, highly classified, secret documents have been surreptitiously removed or stolen from that institutiOn. However?and I say this, Mr. Preside t, because, while it has been considered tal and important secret information, ye perhaps in the light of this news sto y, specific facts should be given to the Congress and the country?the Atomic Endgy Commission did appear and report to the joint com- mittee that there were certain missing atomic energy files at the '7,,os Alamos Oar- la New Mexico. This information has been known to the joint sommittee for some time. The occurrence took place in March 1946 when two Army sergeants, who had been detailed\ to the . project, then under the War INpart- rnent, took certain documents and in- formation with them when they ere demobilized. The fact that the documents were missing was discovered by the present Atomic Energy Commission in the earl ' part of this year, shortly after it took charge. Those facts were brought to the attention of the FBI and to the attention of the joint committee. The FBI, with immediate vigor and in full cooperation with the Commission, promptly located the two men; and the documents were, as we believe, completely and fully re- Covered. The FBI investigation indi- cates, at least up to now, and I believe that the indications are presently sound, that the individuals were souvenir hunt- ers, and that they did not allow unau- thorized persons to have any access to these documents. We have no present Information that any unauthorized per- sons did in fact see the documents other than the two Army sergeants. The mat- ter, however, is under present considera- tion by the Department of Justice. Mr. President, I can say that, so far as I know, the? members of the joint com- mittee are convinced that no effective breach of security in those instances was accomplished,' and that the Security was In fact maintained, even though there was a surreptitious removal of certai important documents and information at that time. *The documents apparently were pt locked up with the iirivate papers i the ''files of these individti Is. The evidence a \ does not disclose that they were dis- played, as I have said tt, anyone. ? I wish further to report ,to the Senate, to the Congress, and to the public that the joint committee, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the militait, and naval establishments of the Government, all are keenly aware of the transeendental importance of the security of the facili- ties of the Atomic Energy Commission. I wish to state at this time that all pos- sible effort is now being concentrated and will be continued to be devoted to the protection of these installations and the information kept therein. Mr. President, I may say that there are a number of apparent conjectures in the teletype story, perhaps based on suspi- cion, perhaps based upon guess, some of which might be classified as "dope" par- agraphs, if you please, and I feel that the story probably May arouse a wrong con- notation insofar as concerns the secu- rity and the vital protection that are be- ing provided and thrown around the in- stallations in our atomic energy plants and their operations. I may say, Mr. President, that I pre- sume no enterprise, regardless what its size may be, can always be 100-percent secure in all its details against any pos- sible invasion by individuals or any pos- sible access by unwarranted persons. I may also say that our \committee is convinced that while there are always problems of security in connection with these plants, we are convinced that a vigorous and an intelligent effort is being made and an effective program provided to safeguard these plants. I should like to give the Senate that assurance as the overwhelming opinion and belief of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. Mr. McMAHON. Mr. President, will my colleague from, Connecticut yield to me for a very brief observation? *, Mr. BALDWIN. I am glad to yield to my colleague. Mr. McMAHON. I wish to commend the Chairman of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy for the clear and lucid tatement he has made as to the appar- ently indisputable facts of the situation. I vish to congratulate the Atomic Energy Commission for their vigilance in dis- covering the incident to which the chair- man \:,)f the joint committee has referred so soon after they took over control of the organization. I wish\ further to pay high tribute to the Federal Bureau of 'Investigation for their truly' magnificent work in this case so.soon after the Commission discovered the loss in going to work, bringing the culprits to book, and restoring the mate- rial to a place of security. I think it is somewhat regrettable that the story which has appeared has so far deviated from what are the facts in the case, and I am delighted that the Senate and the country may be assured that the Commission to which we have entrusted this great and overwhelming responsibil- been derelict in its trust. UNIFICATION OF THE ARMED FORCES The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 758) to promote the nation- al security by providing for a National Defense Establishment, which shall be administered by a Secretary of National Defense, and for a Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, and a Department of the Air Force within the National Defense Establishment, and for the coordination of the activities of the National Defense Establishment with other departments and agencies of the 1-1 8665 Government concerned with the national security. Mr. BALDWIN.. Mr. President, I rise to speak briefly on Senate bill 758, which has been misnamed by some as the mer- ger bill, but which is really and truly correctly called the unification bill. ? I may say that it is with some regret that I find myself differing with my dis- tinguished, able ? and learned colleague from Wyoming [Mr. ROBERTSON]. He said that Senate bill 758, as it came out of the committee, is a .much better bill than the bill which was originally sub- mitted to the committee. In that I feel he is absolutely correct. I want to say that one reason why it is a better bill is because our distinguished and able col- league from Wyoming, who has this mat- ter very close to his heart, and who has made a deep study and examination of the whole subject, was able to make some very able and worth while contributions to the work of the committee, and the bill bears the imprint, in some very important features, of the contribution which ? he made. I might say also, Mr. President, that when I first considered the bill I was against it. I was against it perhaps al- most entirely for nostalgic reasons. It was my privilege and opportunity to serve on a destroyer overseas in World War I, and in World War II my two older boys served in the United States Navy, one on a destroyer. So I have a deep and abiding interest, indeed an affection, for the naval service, because it was my privilege and opportunity to serve in the Navy at a very impression- able time in my life, and because since I have continued that interest. I was somewhat doubtful as to whether, in a plan of merger or unification, the Navy would eventually get its full share of what it needed in the way of direction, funds, equipment, and all the other things which are necessary for the establishment and maintenance of an adequate and effective naval service. I am confident that there are in the bill guarantees which will enable the Navy to grow and develop in the future as it has in the past; that it will be able to attract able leadership and able sea- men, and that we shall continue to have an increasingly better Navy. I believe that there are safeguards in the bill which do the same thing for the other branches of the service. At the outset there was a great deal of discussion as to what would happen to the Marine Corps. I yield to no man in my admiration for the Marine Corps. There is not now, and probably there has never been a more effective fighting unit than the American Marine Corps. Its history is a glorious one, and in it we all take tremendous pride. Since it was a part of the Navy, I, too, was extremely anxious to see to it that every guarantee was placed in the bill to assure the con- - tinuance of the Marine Corps, enable it to continue to draw to its ranks able leadership and good men, and make cer- tain that it should have funds sufficient for its maintenance and development, and for the equipment which an armed service needs. 061.Q0.02' 860 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000001-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE At this point I invite attention to a provision in the bill which deals spe- cifically with the protection and con- tinuation of the Marine Corps as a sep- arate unit. On page 41 of the bill, in section 206, subsection (b), there is this ;language: (b) The provisions of this act shall not authorize the alteration or diminution of the existing relative status of the Marine Corps (including the Fleet Marine Forces) or of naval aviation. It seems to me that that language throws as strong a safeguard around these two services, preserving them as independent services, and as a part of the Navy, as language is capable of doing. Mr. MAYBANK. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? . Mr. BALDWIN. I yield to the Sena- tor from South Carolina. Mr. MAYBANK. I am very much im- pressed with the provision of the bill which the Senator has just read. Is- it not a fact that before that provision was finally written Admiral Sherman and General Vandegrift agreed to it, and believed that with that amendment the bill was satisfactory to the Marine Corps and to the Navy? Mr. BALDWIN. The Senator is cor- rect. I thank him for bringing that fact to my attention. Both Admiral Sher- man and General Vandegrift were pres- ent, and they were in agreement with respect to the language of the provision. - Mr. MAYBANK. Is it not also a fact that in executive session we had several conferences with General Vandegrift and Marine Corps groups, in which he specifically answered the question on be- half of the Marine Corps, to the effect that the provision was satisfactory to the Marine Corps? Mr. BALDWIN. The Senator is cor- rect, to the best of my recollection. I thank him for his contribution. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. BALDWIN. I yield. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I ask the Senator if the language to which General Vandegrift agreed was not the particular language in regard to the Ma- rine 'Corps. Mr. BALDWIN. That is correct. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. He was not agreeing to the over-all bill, but simply to the specification of the func- tions of the Marine Corps. Mr. BALDWIN. That is correct. As I remember, General Vandegrift was present at -several of our sessions. My recollection is that it was his specific purpose in appearing before the com- mittee to see to it that the Marine Corps was preserved. It was our specific in- tention, not only as a result of our own feelings, but as a result of what he had to say and our admiration and respect for him and his character, to place in the bill language as strong as language could be made. I do not intend to im- ply that General Vandegrift approved of the bill as a whole. I do not recollect that he was asked that question, or that he gave an opinion on the bill as a whole. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? The PRESIDING 01.TICER (Mr. Wittinms in the chair). Does the Sena- tor from Connecticut yield to the Sena- tor from Massachusetts? Mr. BALDWIN. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I remind the Senator from Connecticut that General Vandegrift specifically approved the language with relation to the Marine Corps, which language was drafted in his presence, after several meetings, and after several hours in the last meeting. It is my recollection that he specifically and affirmatatively approved the lan- guage as it now is. ? Mr. BALDWIN. That is my recollec- tion, too. I thank the Senator from Massachusetts for his contribution. Mr. President, there is another phase of the bill which has been discussed at length, and upon which I should like to comment at this point. In all the dis- cussion concerning this proposed legis- lation the position, function, and author- ity of the Secretary of National Secur- ity have probably aroused the greatest interest. There were some who felt that in providing for a Secretary of National Security we would be creating a super- official who would have wide and broad powers over the administration of all the armed forces, including the Army, the Navy, the Marine Corps, and the Air Forces. So a great deal of time was tak- en in the committee in discussing the place which the Secretary of National Security should have. At one time it was felt that it would be wise to make the Secretary of Na- tional Security the chairman or vice chairman of the Security Council, to serve in that position as a designee of the President. I am frank to say that I shared that view, because I felt that 'in accomplishing the unification of the armed forces it might be well to center authority in the National Security Coun- cil and have the organization branch out from there. However, I must admit that the change which was made was a better suggestion. So when we examine the section which deals with the National Security Coun- cil we find that the Council is to be com- posed of the President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of National Security appointed under the act, the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, the Secretary of the Air Force, and the Chairman of the National Resources Board, together with such other mem- bers as the Presideht may designate from time to time. I think it was forcefully demonstrated- that to make the Secretary of National Security vice chairman of the National Security Council would be to place him in a position of too much power and authority. It would place him ahead of the Secretary of State, for example. It was finally decided by a majority of the committee that it would be wise to have him on the National .Security Council, but that he should not serve as the vice chairman; that he should have no dif- . ferent status than that of any of the other Secretaries, including the Secre- tary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force, JULY 9 any one of whom may, for a meeting or for a period of time, be designated by the president as the acting chairman of We National Security Council. So it seems to me that in making the change which was made, by not providing that he should be the vice chairman of the Council, to serve in the absence of the president, we have somewhat curtailed the possibility of power which many were fearful he might exercise in such a position. Mr. President, it is very important that all the armed forces should have ade- quate appropriations. In the bill it is provided that the Secretary of National Security should be the one to submit the budget. Of course, the Departments of the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force, in turn would submit their budgets to' the Secretary of National Security. It would be within the range of possibility and, perhaps, of probability that the Secretary of National Security might feel that more money should be spent on one particular branch of the armed services than on another and that he might want to curtail the amount of money available for a particular branch or division of a branch of the armed services. So, Mr. President, we speci- fically provided in the bill that when the budget is submitted to the Congress, which, after all, is the agency which has the final authority of passing upon the amount of the appropriation, it must show what was recommended by the Secretary of National Security and must also, in turn, show what was recom- mended by the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, the Secretary of the Air Forces, and also what was recommended by the Budget Bureau itself. So that Congress, which is the final arbiter as to the amount of money available for our armed forces, will have before it in the appropriation bill for the armed forces a detailed estimate of what the Secretaries of National Secur- ity, the Army, Navy, and Air Forces recommended. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. BALDWIN. I yield to the Senator from Massachusetts. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Is there not one additional step? Cannot the Secretaries of the Navy, Army, and Air Forces, prior to the budget's actually reaching Con- gress, object to what the Secretary of National Security recommends and make a report directly to the President before he submits his budget? Mr. BALDWIN. That is correct. That is a point I shall now cover. It is also possible for any of the Secretaries to go around the Secretary of National Se- curity to the President himself on any matter. So it seems to me, Mr. President, that we have safeguarded one very important point, namely, the opportunity of the Secretaries of the several branches of the . services themselves to appear before the Congress and make their own recom- mendations as to appropriations, and thus make it a public issue in the Con- gress of the United States. It seemed ,that that was an adequate provision to - safeguard against the possibility of any 1947 , App ed For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE ? 8667 taries, and such other persons as the President may designate. Of course, that Council could bring to its service any officer it might desire. Conse- quently, it is the main coordinating fac- tor, I think, in all our preparations for national security and for our defense. God grant that we shall not have to pre- pare for war, but merely for the possi- bility that it may come, and thus be pre- pared to defend ourselves. , ? ; EnAjej:_th2Soppjcit Ilmje_is.s,stablished a central .intelligence agency to-iii-Ovide . coordthaTed, jaAcciilafej_ intelligence:, for 11*-G-o-ire-E-iiri-e-nt agencies concerned, with national ecurity Wn one leads the I re'coVd 0-r the:Past war in regardfolliat field iiiisIfoirind tha_t. there was mlich-lio be? desired in the way intelligence' was covered, and there was great -Conflict ! 1 about' it:----r say nothing here in depre- I 'dation of the men who were engaged in , the intelligence service, because some re- markable and extremely courageous thing -were - done. Nevertheless, we ' i demonstrated from our experience the peed of a central intelligence_ agency; and-MS-bill provides such an agency. Neither a Nationaf Security Colincil nor I 1 'an intelligence agency now exists. I he bill provides - for a National ' Security Resources Board to advise the President and the Congress on the co- ordination of the military, industrial, and civilian requirements of all national resources for war. It gears the capacity of our national economy to the require- ments .of national security and works closely with the National Security Coun- cil. That Board does not now exist. We had its counterpart in several differ- ent boards during the war, but it took a long time to coordinate them and have them work together. Provision is made for that by this bill. The bill creates a National Security Organization consisting of the armed ' forces proper, together with certain additional agencies whose need has been shown by experience. Such an organi- zation does not now exist, and its absence constitutes a serious lack of co- ordination in the armed forces. Let me say here that I thank the learned and able Senator from Wyoming for his contribution in regard to that particular phase of the bill, because I think he brought home to the committee very forcefully that, after all, we are dealing with two different sets of func- tions, namely, the civilian ones, which we want to provide with coordinating agencies, and also the armed forces as such. It has been through the recom- mendations of the distinguished Senator from Wyoming that the bill in large part has taken its form. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, Will the Senator yield to me once more? Mr. BALDWIN. I yield. Mr. SALTONSTALL. The Senator was discussing the National Security Council and its importance. Does the Senator agree with me when I say that the purpose of creating .the National Security Council is not to set up a new ? function of government with extra- ordinary powers, but solely to provide an organization to give advice to the President, j' not on. general affairs of state, but through civilian groups, on Secretary of National Security arbitrarily reducing appropriations beyond what the Secretary of a particular branch of the service felt was needed. In speeches in the Senate with refer- ence to subjects which we discuss from day to day there is often reference to the history of the past. I think that is most desirable, Mr. President, because, in my judgment, we cannot too often review the things that have happened in this country in the past and the activities . of the great men who have made them happen.. So I was interested in looking up the question of how the C-binet office of Secretary of the Navy came about. In the original organization of the Federal Government under President Washington there was no Secretary of the Navy. There was simply provision f or a Secretary of War. It apparently was the assumption at that time that the Secretary of War would deal with all matters relating to war, but apparently later it was believed that there should be a Secretary of the Navy; because it was felt, perhaps, that too much atten- tion was given to the Army by the Con- gress and that Army officers were too powerful and influential in the Govern- ment. Therefore the Cabinet position of Secretary of the Navy was created. The office of Secretary of the Navy came into being under the administration of President Adams, in 1798. It was ap- parently the intention of those who organized the Federal Government that the armed forces should be unified under one Secretary, and no doubt it was the exigencies of the particular situation, when we had no navy whatsoever, that made it appear advisable that there should be a separate Department of the Navy. But, Mr. President, while the fact that now we may be carrying out what were the original intentions of the found- ers of our Government, or those who set it upon its successful course, does not necessanly imply that we must follow them, there is afforded, it seems tome, an interesting precedent. Erielly, what does this unification ac- complish? First, it provides a National Security Council to advise with the Pres- ident and the Congress on the integra- tion of our domestic, foreign, and mili- tary policies. That is a very important consideration. It is something which we did not achieve in World War II un- til we had had a long and bitter experi- ence with a different situation. We tried to establish it in Washington in a way that would provide the greatest coordination, but we found from experi- ence that there was much delay, much uncertainty, and a lack of a sound inte- gration of policy and program, and it was not until along toward the end of the war that we approached in our or- ganization an establishment which is similar to that provided for in this bill? the National Security Council. True,. the personnel are different, but our ex- perience demonstrated conclusively that we needed something of that kind. So this bill creates a National Security Council. I might point out, Mr. President, that the National Security Council is entirely, as I recall it, a civilian organization. It, is made up of the President,.the &ore"- . affairs of _state affecting the national security and tending to make the mili- tary forces more efficient? Is not that correct? Mr. BALDWIN. I agree whole- heartedly, Mr. President. In other words, it is not essentially an admin- istrative agency. It is an advisory council. Mr. SALTONSTALL. And it is ad- visory on security matters alone. Mr. BALDWIN. That is correct. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. BALDWIN. I yield. . Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Is it not also somewhat of an enlargement upon the existing committee, the State, War, and Navy Coordinating Committee, which reconciles and coordinates the ac- tion to be taken by the State, War, and Navy Departments on matters of com- mon interest, and then establishes its policies on political-military considera- .tions? Mr. BALDWIN. I believe that is cor- rect. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. That committee is in existence, and it now meets every week. Mr. BALDWIN. That committee is not identical with the National Security Council. The Council will take over the functions of that committee. So I think I am correct when I say that we now have no National Security Council; but today in the Government most of the functions covered by this bill are, in large part, and at least as to the great majority of them, being performed. The purpose of this bill is to coordinate and unify the performance of those functions. It seems to me that is the only purpose of the bill Mr. President, this bill provides for a Secretary of National Security as head of the National Security Organization. In effect, that official will, in a sense, be an assistant to the President, just as the Senator from Wyoming has indicated. But he will exercise general direction and control over, and will resolve differences between, the military departments, ex- cept when such differences are of a na- ture to be resolved by the President as Commander in Chief. The Secretary of National Security in no way will diminish the responsibility and authority of the President, but he will merely provide the President with an impartial assistant to view national security problems from the over-all standpoint, rather than from that of any one element of the armed services. ' Of course, Mr. President, as I have pre- viously pointed out, and I should like to emphasize this point again, the mere fact ? that the Secretary of National Security is the man dealing with the armed serv- ices and is the one who is closest to the President, and the fact that it may be said that he rather insulates the other Secretaries from the President, should be considered in the light of the provi- sion contained in this bill that any one of the Secretaries?the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, or the Secretary of the Air Force?can go to the President. So it seems to me that when that specific provision is made, the Secretary of National Security could not ved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200 4 01-1 8668 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE well find fault, as it has been claimed that he might, with a Secretary who, when finding himself in disagreement with the Secretary of National Security, goes to the President, who, of course, as Commander in Chief is the final arbiter of disputes' of that kind. The Secretary of National Security is charged with preparing an over-all budget for the national security, and this, for the first time in the history of our country. That will give the Congress some basis for granting appropriations in proportif to the realistic require- ments, it se'. is to me, rather than on the impractical basis upon which the Congress must act today in many cases. The Secretary of National Security will also be in a position to aliminate certain duplications, inefficiencies, inequities, overlapping, and wastage which result from the present system of two inde- pendent departments, each one pursuing objectives of national security, but with no one, short of the President, to coor- dinate their efforts. Of course, certain military and civilian assistants are proyided for the Secretary of National Security; but it is my recol- lection that he is not to have a military staff as such. Mr. President, it seems to me that with the experience all of us have been through, now is the most appropriate time' in all our history to take this pro- posed step. Now there is great interest in it. Now the recollections of all of us are freshest about our past experience in these matters. Now the records of the past war are available to us and are be- fore us. So now is the, time to take this step. We cannot help but be impressed with the recommendations of the men who have led our armed forces. Many of them recommend the passage of this bill. Among them are General Eisenhower and Admiral Nimitz. It seems to me that these men, who so recently have demon- Strated their abilities, capabilities, pour- , foresight, and judgment, are men whose opinions and recommendations should be given great weight, indeed. I do not mean that the Congress should defer to the military in any sense of the ? word, but I think we are getting advice at this time from men who have estab- lished; perhaps if not the finest, at least one of the finest records that have ever been established for military and naval and air leadership in the history of these United States. Mr. President, this bill establishes the Departments of the Army, the-Navy, and the Air Force?three, whereas formerly there were two. In effect, the present Army Air Force is redesignated as the United States Air Forces, and a new Ex- ecutive department is established for its administration, thus recognizing the compelling lesson of World War II that air power is on a parity with land and sea power. These three departments are to be administered by their respective Secretaries, and will be under the gen- eral supervision of the Secretary of Na- tional Security. It has been ably demonstrated in the rent war, on many a front, Mr. Presi- dent, in spite of the great pride of the Air Force in its effectiveness, that the Air Force without the Army and Navy cannot win a war. It has also been amply demonstrated that the Army can- not do so without the Navy and the Air Force, nor can the Navy do so without the Army and the Air Force. Conse- quently, when we give the Air Force a status equal to that of the other two main branches of the armed services, I think we are not completely throwing overboard the recognition that these three forces must continue to be inte- grated. As was stated several times in the course of the hearings, whatever the Air Force may do in the way of bombard- ment or whatever the Navy may do in the way of bombardment or in the way of bringing material and equipment to the spot and keeping the lines of supply open and beating off attacks on the lines of supply, both under the sea, on the sea, and in the air, it is the man with the gun and the hand grenade, who slogs up the beaches and along the roads and through the fields and gullies and mountains, who, in the last analysis, takes the land and holds it and makes the victory com- plete. I think the mere fact that the Air Force has been so all-powerful means that probably it will be used in the fu- ture as it has been used in the past, namely, to carry that most devastating of all weapons, the atomic bomb. Nev- ertheless, I think that from the testi- mony of various witnesses at the hear- ings it is apparent that they recognize the great importance of the other two branches of the armed services, and rec- ognize that time and time and time again they were entirely dependent upon the other two branches for their support and help and success. Mr. President, specific safeguards for the continued existence of the Marine Corps and naval aviation are provided in the pending bill. I have already. dis- cussed that point. In the bill the National Guard Bureau is perpetuated, and under the bill it will perform the same functions for the new Air Force, Army, that it now performs for the War Department. The bill provides for a War Council as an advisory body to the Secretary of National Security on the over-all prob- lems of the armed forces. Presently no such identical agency is in existence. The Joint Chiefs of Staff are continued as the principal military advisers to the President. The effectiveness of the Joint , Chiefs of Staff is approved by giving to the Secretary of National Security the power of decision in certain matters upon which the Joint Chiefs of Staff cannot agree, and which the President delegates to the Secretary. Mr. President, I doubt if we would ever have in our history a Secretary of Na- tional Security who, knowing that his decision would commit the administra- tion, would not be extremely careful to see that any matter of policy of a mo- mentous or extremely important nature was put up to the President of the United States for his final decision; and that is as it should be, as I see it, under our Constitution. At present the requirement for unani- mous consent before the Joint Chiefs of JULY 9 Staff can reach a decision is generally considered a serious deficiency. I think we were all impressed at the hearings by the testimony of General Eisenhower on that point. He went so far as to say that oftentimes, or sometimes, perhaps even a poor decision was much better than none at all; that is, things had to be decided, they had to be decided so that other things could be done which de- pened upon that decision; and the pro- posal before us makes that more readily possible. A research and development board is established to continue the existing Joint Research and Development Board. The important functions of this Board will be charged ultimately to the Secretary of 'National Security. Each one of these development boards, Mr. President, can be called in by the Se- curity Council, and the knowledge and Information it has will be available to the National 'Security Council and to the President at any time. It seems to me that the set-up under the bill makes a much better working organization than ? we have had heretofore. Many times, when the subject of re- organization of our armed forces has come before the Congress, it has been opposed by some on the basis that it. would pave the way to military control ? of our Government, and to its ultimate overthrow, and military dictatorship. It is very well that Americans should be fearful of that possibility. This suspicion of the military is traditional to our peo- ple, although throughout the history of the United States there has never been any justification for it. The framers of the Constitution, mind- ful of the military tyranny abroad in the world at that time, provided adequate safeguards against military domination in a newly founded government. In the first place, they provided that the civil- ian head of the State, the President, should be the Commander in Chief -of the armed forces, as he still would be under the bill. Congress cannot change the Constitution of the United States. Furthermore, all the executive depart- ments which administer the armed forces are controlled by civilian Secretaries. Of course, the Secretary of National Security will be a civilian. Most important, the constitutional clause limiting military ap- propriations to a period of two years ab- solutely retains ultimate control in the hands of the legislature, in the hands of of the Congress, and consequently, being ? retained in the hands of the Congress, it is retained in the hands of the Amer- ican people. This power of the purse- strings is, in the last analysis, the real guarantee against any military threat. There is another safeguard against military domination, namely, the very character and nature of our professional soldiers and sailors. The nucleus of the American officer corps comes from West Point and Annapolis. Every Member of Congress is certainly conscious of the democratic method by which appoint- ments to these great institutions are made. The graduates of ,the two academies represent a cross section of American in- telligence and leadership in American ? Appre5d For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004 1-1 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE Ideals.. They are in no way regimented or molded into militaristic form. They are a part of our national life. There is no caste system which separates them from the people whom they serve. Fur- thermore, the officers who enter our armed forces directly from civilian life certainly represent a non-military, un- biased viewpoint. Of course, presently we have found that our military and naval leadership, as produced by the academies, is not going to be adequate. The last war demon- strated that that was so, and it probably Is going to be so in the future. As a result, provision is made whereby boys graduating from our regular colleges may seek and find careers in the armed forces. I am happy to say that in my experi- ence, with the Navy, particularly, I find a very keen desire on the part of naval officers of the higher ranks to take in on an even basis men who come from colleges and are not graduates of the Military and Naval Academies. Facili- ties and programs are now under way to make it possible for these men to attain,. technically, as good an education in the armed forces, and in the use of weapons and tactics, and all that goes with mili- tary preparedness and operations, as is available to the men who graduate from the Academies. There is a keen, earnest desire to take them In and make them part of the great body of the officer per- sonnel of the armed forces of the United States. Returning to the question of military domination, some of our foremost sol- diers have become the most ardent civil- ians once they have -laid down their arms. Men like Washington, Andre.7 Jackson, Zachary Taylor, Robert E. Lee, Ulysses S. Grant, J. J. Pershing, certainly cannot be cited as menaces to the Amer- ican system. Neither can such great citi- zens as Secretary of State Marshall, Gen. George Patton, General Eisenhower, or General MacArthur, or any of the other great generals of the war lately con- cluded, be cited as men who would favor military domination. Of course, the im- portant consideration is that the example they have set, both as leaders and as citizens, soldiers and sailors and civilians, is one which has made an impression upon the youth of the country that will. last for ages to come. The question of civilian control, as I have said, has been raised repeatedly in the discussions. Although the armed forces of the United States are at pres- ent under stringent civilian control, and although there has never been any legi- timate fear that such control might be lessened or was becoming undermined, the unification bill, it seems to me, greatly increases civilian control over the Army, Navy, and Air Force. Let us examine into that for a mo- ment. In the first place, the traditional and constitutional control of the Presi- dent as Commander in Chief of the armed services remains unchanged. Secondly, the Congress, with its constitutional re- sponsibility. for the raising and support- ing of armies and navies, will, as in the . past, continue to control appropriations and statutory authority, for the armed forces. . Mr. President, it seems to me those are two very vital matters. First, the President of the United States is bound to be, as he should be, responsive to the will of the people, and certainly the Con- gress is, as it should be, responsive to the will of the people. Next, the Secretary of National Secu- rity is a civilian official who acts as a delegate of the President. The Secre- tary is expressly forbidden in the bill to establish a military staff. In fact, em- phasis is placed on the civilian aspect of his office by the spelling out of four principal civilian assistants to aid him. He is to have no military assistants. The Secretary of each of the Depart- ments which administers the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force is also to be a civilian, as are his Assistants and Under Secretaries. These Departments are en- tirely controlled by civilian heads, and the military personnel therein are sub- ordinate to civilian direction. Certainly these provisions in the bill In ?no way lessen this civilian control. In fact, if anything, they increase that control by one echelon; that is, by the addition of a Secretary of National Security. Not only is there increased civilian control in the direction and mainte- nance of the armed forces, as just stated, but there are several new agencies which will have considerable influence over the military forces, but they are to be pre- dominantly civilian in nature and composition. I think one great thing the bill accom- plishes is that it brings into closer con- tact with the armed forces themselves a larger number of civilians than ever. That was true during the war, and one thing the bill does is that it continues and preserves those relationships with these new agencies, several of which are con- trolled in large part by civilians. For example, the National Security Council is composed of a civilian Secre- tary of State, a civilian Secretary of Na- tional Security, the civilian Secretaries of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, the Chairman of the National Security Re- sources Board, a civilian executive secre- tary, and such other members as the 'civilian President may designate. Mili- tary domination of that body hardly seems likely. Next, we find nothing but civilians in the National Security Resources Board, which is composed of a civilian Chair- man and such civilian heads or repre- sentatives of the various executive de- partments and other agencies as may be designated by the civilian President. Furthermore, the Research and De- velopment Board and Munitions Board are headed by civilians. Also the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency may be a civil- ian, as decided by the President. In addition, the War Council is headed by the civilian Secretary of National Se- curity. The only military agency in the entire bill is the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the reason that is a military agency is that . it is set up to do a purely military job. Actually, the insistency on civilian ? control of the armed forces tends to be- ? come somewhat academie in view of the 8669 nature of modern war.' The great 'Da- tion of the able-bodied men of this coun- try were in uniform in World War II, but civilian control of our Government was not diminished. It was not neces- sary to take?steps to increase civilian control to offset any imagined threat that the military, total over 10,000,000 at the peak of the war, might get out of hand. Lack of civilian control over the military in the United States has not, through 172 years of history, become acute. There has never been a menace to our civilian form of government. I pray God that there never will be. Most certainly, Mr. President, the pending bill makes adequate and complete provision against it. In fact, in a modern war it does not make too much difference whether a citizen is in uniform or not because the entire country goes to war in this day and age. To quote General Eisenhower: War is no longer the concern of the sol- dier alone; in its commencement, its waging, and its settlement, he is only one of many. Although the outcome of battle is depending upon his action, the strength for a victory Is the product of the entire nation behinci, him. The economist, industrialist, scientist, the farmer, worker, and teacher are all nec- essary to the waging of war. Similarly they are likely targets of enemy action. Security against war is a function that belongs to all citizenship. In a word, there has always been ade- quate civilian control over the armed forces. Now that we have found a need for wider civilian participation in the national security, . we are proposing in this bill an increase in the civilian con- trol to be exercised what might be termed the national, not merely the military, mobilization of the United States in the interests of its own existence. In closing, Mr. President, I should like to say simply that the pending legislation, like all legislation enacted by the Con- gress, is not perfect. Many of us still can find fault with some of its provisions; many of us, as individuals, can pick out things that we think might be better, things that might be done more effec- tively the other. way; and it is well that that is so. Let us continue that interest, because it is an evolution through which we are passing. This has not been done before, in time of peace, but the lessons that have been learned both in time of peace and in time of war dictate that we should now take advantage of our great experience, and that now, when our re- collections are strong and the men who have had these experiences in a most bit- ter war are here to advise us, now is the time when we should take a step for unifi- cation of the armed forces. I submit, Mr. President, that the pending bill does that as effectively as any legislation ? which I believe it is possible for us to . evolve and write at the present time. ? Mr. HILL obtained the floor. Mr. MAYBANK. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? `. ? Mr. HILL. I yield to the Senator from ' South Carolina. Mr. MAYBANK. Mr. President, I want to thank the Senator from Alabama for yielding to me, so that I may make Merely a short statement in connection with the pending bill: The subcommit- 3670 ? Apo-oved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000001-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE JULY 9 tee of the Committee on Armed Services, consisting of the Senator from Connect- icut [Mr. BALawin], the Senator from Iowa [Mr. WiLsox] , and I have a most important meeting at 2:30 o'clock, to con- sider the GI terminal-leave bill. It is for that reason that I shall limit my re- marks, and shall make but a very brief statement. . I should like to say first that, last year and year before last, as a member of the Committee on Military Affairs, I attended the hearings, day after day and month after month. This year, as a member of the Armed Services Committee, I likewise attended, whenever possible. I believe that the bill which has been finally drawn and reported to the Senate by the able and distinguished chairman of the Armed Services Committee is far superior to the bill which was discussed and agreed upon last year in the Military Affairs Commit- tee. I am in thorough accord with what has been said by many of the distinguished Senators who have preceded me. En- dorsing the able argument of the Senator from Connecticut [Mt. BALnwiN], I should like to add that before I finally voted for the bill, I was perfectly satis- fied from the testimony of Admiral Nimitz and Admiral Sherman that the Navy was properly protected. I might say that in the hearings, at page 114, I asked Admiral Nimitz the direct question, whether he was perfectly satisfied with the bill as written. He replied .that he was perfectly satisfied with it. I am not one to put my judgment above that of the able war leaders of this country. Last year, before the com- mittee, General Marshall, then Chief of Staff, and others testified on the sub- ject. This year, General Eisenhower, Admiral Nimitz, General Spaatz, and other distinguished leaders appeared and testified. After hearing from all of them, who were satisfied and approved the bill, there was objection from a man for whom we all have great respect and admiration, General Vandegrift, the leader of the Marine Corps. It was at the suggestion of members of the com- mittee that the General was recalled. He appeared twice, later, in executive session, and finally agreed thoroughly with the amendment, insofar as the Ma- rine Corps was concerned, which was read a few moments ago by the Senator from Connecticut. I supported this amendment because of my respect for General Vandegrift. Hence all war lead- , ers agreed. One of the great benefits of the bill, as I see it, Mr. President?and I feel very keenly about it, and always have?is the raising of the Army Air Force to a higher position in the armed services of the country. The Army Air Force per- formed a magnificent service in the war. I am very glad to say that in this bill the status of the Army Air Force, in my judgment, will be raised to that of the Ground Forces and of the Navy, and, above all, the status of the Naval Air Force, which performed so gallantly and contributed so much to our victory in the Pacific, will not be interfered with. I am convinced the amendment protects the Naval Air Force and also protects the Marine Corps. There is little else that I may say. Much has been said on the subject of the Security Council. Much has been said about the powers of the Secretary of National Security, and about other things. But I believe the committee has submitted to the Senate a bill that is worthy of the consideration and vote of every. Senator. I take this opportunity to commend the committee for its untiring work, and to thank the chairman for the many courtesies he showed to all members of the committee during the lengthy hear- ings. I thank the Senator from Alabama again for yielding to me. My only re- gret is that, since I must attend an- other meeting, I shall not be here to listen to the address by the distinguished Senator from Alabama, as he discusses the bill in greater detail. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, will the Senator from Alabama yield for the purpose of suggesting the absence of a quorum? Mr. HILL. I hope the Senator will not insist on that. I prefer to proceed. I thank the Senator very much. I deeply appreciate his offer. - Mr. President, we won the greatest war in history?at a cost of over a mil- lion casualties; a quarter of a million lives and over $300,000,000,000. We won with our industrial capacity, our natural resources and the genius of our people. We won by the heroism and sacrifice of everyone?our men and women in uniform and those out of uni- form. But regardless of wealth, indus- try, and resources, we would have lost World War II but for two powerful al- lies: Time and space. Time was bought for us by the blood of those peoples who were attacked first, time to prepare; time to mobilize; time to plan; time to forge our winning war machine. Time saved us. But it was given to us by others. We will not have thiS gift again. Our other indispensable ally was space. There was a barrier of thou- sands of miles between us and our ene- mies. The weapons of 1941 could not cross this barrier. But?like our ally of time?space will not save us again. The weapons of today can cross that barrier. The weapons of tomorrow will laugh at it. . By VJ- day we had entered a new age of science, of warfare, and of world relations. The United States has at- tained an unprecedented ascendancy among nations. Willing or not, we have acquired new and awful obligations. A large part of the responsibility for the future peace of the world rests with us. The world looks to us for our coopera- tion, but even more it depends upon our willingness and ability to back coopera- tion with the military power to preserve the peace. The peaceful nations of the world know that they can cooperate to preserve -the peace only if they are backed by a strong United States, strong not only in moral values and material resources but strong in military poten- tial. The nations that are not peaceful or cooperative look to us also. Our re- sources make us world enemy No. 1 of any envious or aggressive power. Have no doubt about it; we would be first on the list for any sneak attack. The United States will be tomorrow, if it is not today, within range of immediate as- sault from any portion of the globe. We must quickly adapt our defenses to our new position. To delay is to jeopar- dize our own future safety and the peace of the whole world. Our present or- ganization for defense is geared to the past. Early and favorable action on the pending bill is a necessary first step to reorganize for the future. No effective modern military war plan can possibly be evolved by our present disjointed, compartmentalized, jealous bureaus of War and Navy Departments. We can- not complacently continue an organiza- tion proved imperfect by the past war, and which the logic of the present so obviously proves obsolete. The idea of the unification of the Armed Services is not new. In May, 1944, 1 year before VE-day, I introduced S. 84, a bill for the unification of our Armed Services. This was before the shortcomings of our system were as well known as they are now; before the radi- cally new weapons and means of war re- vealed at the war's end were known to the public. The Senate Military Affairs Committee bill, S. 2044, which was reported out of committee in the closing days of the last Congress, was an improvement and de- velopment of the earlier bill. It was the result of careful, protracted, and exhaus- tive hearings and studies, but no action was taken because of the smoke screen of false issues which -was thrown around this simple, logical, *urgent proposition. What is now proposed has been the sub- ject of thorough thought and long in- vestigations over the years by many authorities. It is not by any means, as some misinformed opponents would have us believe, a new or radical measure. But until World War II there was no working proof of the merits of the idea In modern warfare. Until recent world- shaking scientific developments, there was no compelling urgency to change. The proof of the idea's effectiveness and the need for its adoption are upon us, demanding action now. The urgent recommendation of the wartime Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee has been followed in this bill, in the cre- ation of a National Security Organiza- tion. The Joint -Chiefs of Staff estab- lished the committee in 1944?at the height of the war?to study and recom- ment the best and most efficient form of peace-and-wartime military organi- zation. The committee was composed of two ranking generals and two ranking admirals. It had the advantage of be- ing able, during the war, to visit and ob- tain the opinions of senior military ex- ? perts both in Washington staff positions and in the top positions of command overseas. Every theater of operations ? was visited. The views of 40 generals and a like number of admirals were ob- tained. The basic recommendation of the committee, supported by the views of over 90 percent of all Army commanders and exactly half of the Navy command- ers overseas, was to establish a single organization of national defense. The bill in its present form, however, creates no single military commander of all armed forces: an office which the Joint 1647 Approd For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE Chiefs Committee included. But the basic idea of the bill, the single Security Organization, was the basic idea of the 0 wartime Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee. Great benefit was derived, likewise, from the evidence taken during the lengthly hearings conducted by the Woodrum Committee of the House of Representatives on the same basic issue of a single organization. In 1944?also at the height of the war?that committee took over 320 printed pages of valuable testimony. It took no action, deferring to the comprehensive study then being conducted by the Joint Chiefs of Staff Special Committee to which I have just referred. Of particular interest was the evidence taken by the Woodrum Commit- tee on the subjects of supply and pro- curement, which emphasized the abso- lute necessity of a single Security Organ- ization to prevent the appalling waste and staggering cost to the taxpayer of competing separate supply systems. The bill before us is not an Army plan or a Navy plan. It is a legislative ,plan evolved through a typical example of the working of our legislative process as pro- vided by the Constitution. It comes closest to the plan of the Committee of the Wartime Joint Chiefs of Staff on the military side, and closest to the Eberstadt - plan, devised by Mr. Ferdinand Eberstadt at the request of the Secretary of the Navy on the civil-economicz.industrial , iNsinde eaIttti. 1 National : Securitywouldag ,n c e . Security A geResources providencc Council, Bu onaertihld,, eadequatethe eme National:i n eT nt 1,6a tra_t security , measures at all times, rather than only when hostilities threaten. It creates the ( B-darCand the Research and Develop- ment Board, in order that we may make ? certain that our foreign and military, ? policies are coordinated and mutually supporting; that a central intelligence iagency may collect and analyze the mass of information which is-so essential,for- the Government to maintain peace and. without which the Government -cannot wage.war. successfully ; that scientific re- search and development may be coordi- nated, not only within the military serv- ices, but between the military services ancLother Government agencies and with industrial and educational activities; that intelligent planning may guarantee coordination of our military program with the Nation's resources in manpower,? materials, and facilities; and that all ' these objectives may be accomplished with the greatest possible economy con- sistent with a strong and effective na- tional sec , .:ity. ? The result is a balanced, workable composite of the sound, constructive pro- posals advanced through the long history of this vital measure. In that regard it is significant that the Army-Navy agree- ment evolved by Admiral Sherman and General Norstad and transmitted by the President to the Congress with the full approval of Secretaries Patterson and Forrestal and of Admiral Nimitz and General Eisenhower is in important par- ticulars identical with S. 2044 of last year, which was evolved by the Senate Military . Committee. Thus the pending bill, S. 758, can find its genesis in proposals , No. 130---3 which the Congress commenced to study over 3 years ago and which have through mature and deliberate consideration been embodied in the wise and constructive measure now before the Senate. The bill is simple. In essence it does two things: First, it creates a single Sec- retary at the head of a National Security Organization for general supervision and control of an autonomous Army, Navy, and Air Force; and, second, it creates machinery for coordin'iting military and foreign policy on the one hand and mili- tary and industrial mobilization of re- sources on the other. That is all. But If these things are not done, I fear for our future security. In order that the record may be clear, let me briefly state some things that the bill does not do. First, it does not pro- vide for a merger of the services. We still have an Army and a Navy with an Air Force. They are virtually untouched by this bill or Ly any of its predecessors. I should like once and for all to blow away the biggest smoke screen that has so skillfully been laid around this bill by Its artful opponents. The bill does not affect the Marine Corps or naval avia- tion, or even the Navy. Except for set- ting up a separate Air Department, it does not affect the Army or Air Force. It is not an armed service bill at all. It Is an organization of the constitutional Commander in Chief for his own official family for supervising these services. It is an arrangement of offices in the execu- tive branch of the Government?not of navies and armies?certainly not of in- terior subcommands of the Navy such as the Marine Corps and naval aviation. The United States Marine Corps is no more affected by the bill than is the United States Infantry. The bill deals with civil organizations, not military or- ganizations. The three major services, Army, Navy, and Air Force, will be separate autono- mous entities?not a single merged serv- ice of all arms. But they will form a single team which they do not form today. Each of the three coordinate arms is administered by its own civilian secretary, and commanded by its own military commander. Each has its own staff and personnel. Each continues its own distinctive uniform, perpetuates its traditions, maintains its own esprit de corps. Each arm is left free to develop itself in its own special sphere of ac-, tivity. Each arm alone conducts its own Individual operations and all those ac- tivities in which it alone is expert. But the authority to compel teamwork, to provide for over-all planning, to elimi- nate waste and duplication, to advise the President responsibly and intelligently on interservice differences, is estab- lished in the person of the civilian Secre- tary of National Security. In those fields where spheres of activity and Specialty overlap and conflict, the Sec- retary has the full authority to direct unified, integrated action;. to require planning, training, and operations as a team. That is all. There is clearly no submergence of any service. Furthermore, as I have previously stated, the bill does not set up a supreme ; military commander. No military au- _ ? 8671 thority exists above the commanding officers of the three coequal compo- nents. The Joint Chiefs of Staff is a balanced body drawn from all the serv- ices, and It is only advisory. But unifi- cation of general direction, supervision, and administration resides in the single secretary as the- direct delegate, agent, servant, or lieutenant of the constitu- tional Commander in Chief, and no longer is left to desultory committee ac- tion in which unanimity must be reached before decisive action can be taken. With an understanding of what the bill does and does not do, let us look at its basic idea?unified direction and con- trol of the military departments of the executive branch of the Government. On the 7th of December 1941, the de- fense of the country was entrusted to the hands of two separate and independ- ent organizations. One was the War Department; the other, the Navy De- partment. These two organizations were, legally, as distinct and as unconnected as were the State Department and the Treasury or the Post Office Departments. Practically, they had in some ways be- come even more distinct than these civil agencies are from each other. But their responsibility was single and indivisible. This single responsibility was to defend against and overcome the military forces of our enemies. Their responsibility was single, but their authority was divided. This was almost fatal. Pearl Harbor proved that. We looked to the Army for the defeat of the foe on land, and to the Navy for his defeat at sea. Twenty years after Billy Mitchell we still had the same basic framework under which the Navy fought the pirates of Tripoli while the Army fought the Indians. Yet, above both land and sea there now lay a new battleground?the all-covering third element of the air. A smooth path extended across the historic domains of the older services. Shore lines meant nothing to this new air power. Yet the Army and Navy had their whole machin- ery geared to a line of demarkation at high-water mark. The Japs saw this flaw in our machine and took advantage of it. Pear Harbor was the result. The lesson is still recorded at Pearl Harbor for all to read. It is to be found there in the burned-out hulls of a great part of our Pacific Fleet. It is perpetu- ated there by 3,000 American graves. But the lesson of waste and defeat is proved by a much longer record than? that of December 7, 1941. It extended all through the dark days of 1942. Hun- dreds of thousands of tons of shipping and supplies lie rotting on the bottom of the North Atlantic. The watery graves of thousands of merchant sea- men; the shattered armies, air forces, and navies of England and Russia, Aus- tralia and Holland must be reckoned in the cost. The hulks of the Prince of Wales and the Repulse at the bottom of the South China Sea are further tokens of the blunders that beset the traditionalists of our sister navy in the British service. The lesson that we learned is team- Work?coordination, integration, and unity. We learned it the hard way. It was taught us by the enemy in our de- ,. ? troved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020 001-i 8672 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE feats. This basic truth was forced on us constantly and daily throughout the war, in every aspect of our mighty effort: The armed services can no longer stand sep- arate and apart one from the other. The proof was costly indeed. Impro- vised temporary measures and hastily rigged expedients were powerless to stop the awful waste. With cessation of hos- tilities, still other considerations have arisen which compel us to stem service separatism. I shall speak more about these shortly. But first let me review the major reasons why a single national security organization is so necessary at this time. For this is not something we can safely lay aside again. We cannot just let it slide. To reject unification now might be to risk our survival as a iree people. First, modern military operations re- quire the coordinated action of all -arms and all services. In the course of the lengthy hearings of the Committee on Military Affairs or the Committee on Armed Services not a single witness who appeared, whether of the Army or Navy, military or civilian, for unification or against it, this year or last year, denied what has now come to be accepted doc- trine: The necessary coordination of action in theaters of operation, out where the actual fighting is taking place, can be insured only if some one individual has single authority to direct all land, sea, and air forces within that theater. The truth of this doctrine, now accepted by all, was forced on our separate mili- tary departments only by the urgent necessities of conflict. It was slow in obtaining acceptance. It was resisted by those who were jealous of the power and prerogatives of their department or bureau or service. It was resisted by the very same considerations that now oppose a single organization. But neither America nor the armed forces themselves could then afford delay. We cannot afford it now. Thus, in every theater of war, no mat- ter how diverse the conditions, there emerged one supreme commander: Eisenhower in Europe, MacArthur in the so)^.west Pacific, and Nimitz in the cc :al Pacific. They were supreme not only in operations but in all of the manifold administrative and supply functions in their theaters. These the- aters were virtually single govern- mental departments of the three fight- ing arms together with all their support, operating successfully in the field. No suggestion was then long entertained that equally satisfactory results might be had by relying on voluntary coopera- tion and agreement among the various arms, or that inter-service committees should be tried instead of a single com- mander. The chips were down; the peril was too apparent to debate the obvious action. Departmental preroga- tives were suspended to win the common victory. What was proved to be necessary. yesterday in the hemispherical theaters of war is today even more imperative in global defense. , What was the D-da,y landing on the beaches of Normandy? .Was it an Army show? The Army came through the surf and fought their way inland in one of the greatest military achievements in history. Was it a Navy show? The Navy landed the men and supplies in perhaps the most complex naval opera- tion the world had ever seen. Was it an air show? Air power cleared the enemy from the skies, stopped his reinforce- ments from reaching the battlefield, dropped airborne troops behind him and bombed and strafed away his resistence. Never before were so many sorties flown In a single day. Again, what effected the final sur- render , of Japan? Was it air power, which, operating from bases won by sea and land power, left over 40 percent of the urban areas of the Jap's 60 major cities in ashes, gutted his war industries, killed over 250,000, left 10,000,000 home- less, and held the potentiality for com- plete annihilation by repeated atomic attacks? Was it sea power, which with air power, had swept the Jap's Fleet from the oceans and blockaded his homeland? Was it land power, which with both sea and air power, had won the air, sea and ground bases from which the final as- sault on his homeland could be launched? There is no answer to these questions . except this: All these operations were won by triphibious teams of land, sea, and air. The nineteenth-century rea- sons for two departments are gone with the horse and buggy. We must stream- line for a streamlined age. The need for unity in the last war will be multiplied many. times in the next. Pilotless aircraft, homing rockets, supersonic planes, and atomic explosives will finish the demonstration that the Japanese Zero of 1941 so dramatically began. Any future battle may extend anywhere in the world with forces of land, sea and air. To divide our defense against such warfare along lines that no longer exist is sheer folly. There is even less reason for depart- mental separation in Washington today than there was for separation of the Army and Navy at Pearl Harbor in 1941. Five long years of positive proof has hammered home the compelling need for unity. It simply cannot be seriously or rationally maintained that, although we must have unity of military command in the field, we should not have unity of civilian authority in Washington. There is not one consideration which forced us to adopt unified command in combat that does not, with even greater logic, compel the acceptance of over-all administra- tion of our armed forces here at home. We cannot have effective unity of effort down the line if we lack unity of pur- pose and direction at the top. We can- not fight as a unit unless we are directed as a unit. Neither a man nor, a fight- ing team can serve two masters. We cannot prepare our forces for unified ac- tion unless we train them together. We ' cannot hope for true common action in the battle when there is no single com- mon plan of battle. All this means uni- fication of planning, training, research, intelligence, and supply, as well as uni- fied operations. In other words, all de- partmental functions, as well as field Command, must be unified. There is another cogent reason why Unification is needed in Washington, in addition to the ones I have just stated, JULY 9 and that is that our own country may be a battlefield of the future. Any en- emy strong enough to be a threat to world peace, will have weapons of range and power sufficient to attack our home- land, the United States Itself. If the enemy is going to launch a world war, he will launch those weapons against us. Our clear duty is to admit this fact, and to plan now for our security. If the United States should become a true theater of operations, no one would argue that we should have divided command in this, the most vital theater of all, while admitting the necessity of unity else- where. If we are to be prepared at all to meet the speed of future attack, we must pre- pare in peacetiir . We cannot wait for the distant red glow of another and far more disastrous Pearl Harbor to give us the danger signal. This unification pro- posal lies at the very base of all this country's postwar military planning. We know that this over-all planning function cannot be satisfactorily dis- charged by the President alone in his constitutional role of Commander in Chief. Military planning is a problem of tremendous and growing scientific complexity. It is a problem which re- quires the broadest possible knowledge of the several arms' missions, potentialities and status; it requires a broad vista of foreign intelligence, and of current and future scientific developments. This de- mands not only the full-time individual attention of a single over-all civilian au- thority, but also the integrated effort of a large staff of specialized and capable military and scientific advisors and pro- fessional planners. The President, with the multitude of other demands on his time and effort, cannot be humanly ex- pected to personally make sound initial rulings on the partisan plans brought to him by the separate services. He should be able to rely for such coordination on a single member of his Cabinet, on the head of an organization responsible to him for the national security. The President has made it quite clear, in his successive messages to the Congress, that he needs this assistance. The President is in the best position in the world to know whether he, as Commander in Chief, needs this assistance. This vital national function clearly requires the facilities of a specialized organization. It could not possibly be achieved either by a single deputy at the White House level or by any committee or board between the White House and several separate department heads. All these devices have been tried before, and they have ? never worked. The Joint Chiefs of Staff are not working now?just as General Marshall predicted in 1945. This bill provides a real remedy to the problem of adequately supervising comprehensive security .planning in this new age of scientific warfare. This bill is the first necessary step in solving that problem. Another serious consideration, in ad- dition to the urgent ?need for unified planning, is the problem of joint train- ing. Officers cannot be indoctrinated in the tactics of unified command under a system of separation. Officers and men of each force must absolutely be required to learn the techniques, weapons, ca- Ap ed For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE pabilities, limitations, and functions of their sister services. This is no job for boards or committees for voluntary co- ordination. This is a vital operating job. It requires direction, not debate. All agree that training of each service for its own specially must not be neglected. Also, men must be indoctrinated in the customs and traditions of their own service. Everybody wants all the services to retain the splendid esprit de corps which each has developed throughout the years, but the hand of tradition should go no further. Insofar as it inspires morale, it is good. Insofar as it is allowed to divide our defense force, it is bad. I come now to the question of cost. Here is our big chance to really do some- thing about economy, instead of just talking about it. When the peril was great, we waged war without counting the cost. In peace, this is impossible. We enter the postwar era with obligations, resulting from the last war, Which we know now will last for many years. These obliga- tions require us to be much stronger than our traditional military policy has ever before demanded. The price of ade- quate security has increased greatly with the advance of scientific warfare. Our national, security is bound to be a drastic drain on the Treasury. It will strain our reserves ,of manpower as well as our pocketbooks. Our limited reservoir of technicians and scientists will be drained for years to come. We can never again afford to be as profligate with our assets as we were in World War II?in war or peace. We have learned that our re- sources in men and materials are far from inexhaustible in modern war. We must plan now to hoard and ration them. All our plans must call for their most economical and efficient use. This re- quires a single security organization un- der a single responsible civilian secretary. There is an even more vital aspect of this problem. I speak of scientific re- search. This will require vast sums of money in addition to all other expendi- tures. In the end, if properly directed and coordinated, it may save us much of the cost of war. In any case, our armed forces must continue to move for- ward into ever new fields of development If we are to plan adequately for our se- curity. War has become increasingly a struggle of technicians. It is more and more a struggle between men of science. It requires no great foresight to see that this trend will be progressive. But though research is costly in money, it is more costly in scientific manpower. We may beg, borrow, or steal money, but we cannot conjure up scientists. Yet, be- tween the War and Navy Departments, there has been little or no coordination in research activities. Wi-kat of the budget? What is the remedy? Mr. President, we now have two separate agencies coming before separate committees of the Congress to compete for separate shares of the na- tional budget for the same purpose?the national security.' So long as we con- tinue this practice, we shall continue to be advised, not by judicious counselors, but rather by jealous partisans, special pleaders, each clamoring for. as much money as the traffic will bear. :A single plan and a coordinated budget must be evolved by a single professional agency. Only by means of a single organization under the direction of a single secretary can we hope to obtain a single-balanced plan or a coordinated budget providing for a reasoned distribution of available funds according to military value. In the absence of such an agency, Congress cannot possibly weed out continuing waste, duplication and parallel activities, nor stop needless spending. There is no other way out. The wartime Joint Chiefs of Staff served us well. It was the best substi- tute for unification which could be im- provised at the time. It produced suf- ficient integration of effort to win the war. This country will remain eternally In the debt of those great military leaders who devoted their efforts to making this body work. Although under the pres- sure of war they were able to give us enough coordination to bring victory in World War II, they did not and could not give us the efficient integrated team we will need for a war of the future. While these top military leaders have un- doubtedly done their best to get together on questions of grand strategy, the com- peting departments have kept up their rivalry and their duplciations and in- herent waste. Mr. President, the final major consid- eration which I wish to urge in support of i.the single organization proposed by this bill is air power. World War U demonstrated beyond all argument, speculation, or doubt the ter- rific and overwhelming force of air power. Regardless of handicaps imposed upon it by antiquated military and naval organi- zations acting sometimes as unsympa- thetic stepfathers, air power, by its in- herent might, was able to overcome all these. It clearly established itself in battle as a complete and basic arm which must be employed side by side in an in- tegrated effort with the land and sea arms. Air power has achieved its eman- cipation in fact. At this tardy date, we cannot do less than to legalize the eman-- cipation it has already won by its mag- nificent performance. This bill does that. The question of unification, as I have said, has long been made the subject df the fullest and most comprehensive debate that is possible under a free de- mocracy. The entire problem has been subjected to the most thorough study and restudy. We have had the benefit of re- ports and recommendations originating in civil, in military, and in legislative sources. We have examined all wit- nesses, we know the positions of all par- ties, we have heard all sides. We have heard them at great length. We have heard them to the total exhaustion of the subject. There is no aspect of the prob- lem that has not already been present- ed, re-presented, and presented again. Mr. President, there has been no argu- ment on any side of any phase of this subject that was not presented several times. The evidence has long been com- pletely before us and is completely be- 'fore the Nation. I know of no similar question that has been the subject of more widespread public debate. The country is clearly for unification. 8673 Our military departments are for it. Secretary Forrestal has taken the lead in evolving the Army-Navy agreement which gave the immediate impetus to the bill in its present form. Secretary Pat- terson has been urging unification for years. Admiral Nimitz and Generals Eisenhower, Spaatz, and Vandegrift have all agreed to this bill in its present form. General Norstad and Admiral Sherman, who drafted the agreement, represent the Army Air Forces and naval aviation, respectively. The public and press demand for prompt, action is over- whelming. In the meantime, our Military Estab- lishment, awaiting our action, stands today deprived of the fundamental prem- ises upon which all its planning must be based. It has stood thus for two long years while we have delayed. The state of unrest and uneasiness which the continued pendency of this matter has occasioned is being daily aggravated. Further delay and inaction can serve no wholesome purpose. Our duty to Amer- ica is clear?the urgency is great?the time is now. Senators who support the cause of unification today will be called the statesmen of the future, for the cause is sound, and the national security requires action. Those who oppose unification now may well weigh the consequences of their decision. I speak earnestly because I feel deeply that unification is right, that it is neces- sary, and that it must precede any orderly and sane solution of our security problem. With this expression of my own con- viction, I commend the issue to the Sen- ate. I believe we should act at once. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, at the outset of my discussion of the unifica- tion bill, I want to pay very deserved tribute and commendation to one of the opponents of the bill. I refer to that very distinguished Senator from Wyo- ming [Mr. ROBERTSON]. As a member of the Armed Services Committee, serving over many weeks with the Senator from Wyoming, also a member of that com- mittee, I developed a great respect f or the sincerity of purpose and the intelli- gent approach which the Senator made to this bill, and which he evidenced in offering opposition to certain features of It. As a result of the work of the Sen- ator from Wyoming on the 'Armed Serv- ices Committee in opposition to the bill, it is a much better bill than it was when the hearings were started and when the executive sessions on the bill were begun. Time after time the Armed Services Committee, in a good-faith attempt to adjust differences in points of view with the Senator from Wyoming, accepted a great many of his suggestions. Although the adjustments did not satisfy him in their entirety, I may say that I think the Senator from Wyoming, in turn, appre- ciates the approach which those who are opposed to his point of view in the com- mittee took in our discussion of the bill. In my opinion, the country owes much to the Senator from Wyoming for the fine contribution he made in Committee In presenting his differences in points of view to the rest of us, for we now have ved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200 01-1. 8674 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE a bill which I think avoids the pitfalls which the Senator from Wyoming called to our attention at the beginning of the discussions. Furthermore, as a member of the Armed Services Committee, I want to commend the chairman of the commit- tee, the Senator from South Dakota [Mr. GURNEY] , for his patience, his fairness, his absolute impartiality in seeing to it that all had their full say and that due consideration was given to every sugges- tion made by each member of the com- mittee. There was no attempt in the consideration of the bill, Mr. President, to hasten action in the committee. In fact, at times the members of the com- mittee were criticized because they did not proceed more rapidly in reporting the bill; but each one of,us recognized the vital importance of the bill to the future security of the Nation. Hence, we felt that whatever time it took to make a full disclosure of our points of view and to ? iron out, to the extent we could, our dif- ferences, was time well spent. After those careful deliberations, I, reached the final conclusion that the bill in its present form should be passed by the?Senate of the United States. A CHALLENGE TO ACTION Mr. President, the unification legisla- tion pending before the Senate and known as Senate bill 758 is of as great impor- tance to the United States as any measure awaiting action by this body. It is a sub- ject upon which the Congress must come to a decision without delay or be guilty of dilatory and negligent performance of its duty to the American people. WHAT KIND OF UNIFICATION? This matter of unification has been the subject of a continuing controversy for nearly 3 years. We of the Congress, along with many of our fellow citizens both in and out of the armed services,, have been very much perplexed about this issue as we have tried to enter a fair judgment on it. It has not been so much that we have doubted the need for some kind of unification?that has hardly even been suggested. It has been rather that fears and confusion have arisen as to just what the form and substance of the unification measure we might adopt should be. . The general reasons for some kind of unification have been all too obvious to most of us. We have seen two great but independent organizations, the War and Navy Departments, each going its sepa- rate way toward the single end of pro- viding security to the United States. Common sense alone would be enough to convince any reasonable man that something should be done to bring these. services together. And as reinforcement to the common-sense reasons for unifica- tion, there are many specific examples and conditions, as portrayed to us by expert testimony as well as in actuality, which attest that it is both uneconomical and inefficient for two independent agencies to be seeking to accomplish the same ulti- mate mission. No, Mr. President, it has seldom been doubted that unification as a sound and vital measure in the interest of national security, should be brought about. The controversies which have delayed a deci- sion on this subject have always de- veloped around the specific details of unification. Indeed, there have been raised in the past numerous doubts? most of which have been sincere and legitimate?as to how far toward unify- ing the armed services any unification bill should go. And although nearly everybody has said he favors unification, events have revealed measurably dif- ferent definitions of the term "unifica- tion." It finally became apparent that resolution of the issue boiled down to a removal of the specific objections that have arisen. OLD OBJNCTIONS REPEATEDLY RAISED In certain of the bills which were in- troduced in previous years, there was proposed a single military Chief of Staff, who was feared by many to be a potential "man on horseback"?a military threat to the. civilian control of our Govern- ment. Even with the elimination of the single military Chief of Staff there have been voiced objections that the proposed single Secretary of National Security, albeit a civilian, would have too much power to be safe, would abrogate the powers of the President, and would become a czarlike authority unto himself?a dire menace to our form of government. It has been further contended that to put any man short of the President, whether he be civilian or military, over the armed forces would cause our secur- ity establishment to become unbalanced because the top man might neglect one of the forces through favoritism toward another one. This fear of even civilian control of the armed forces has been per- haps unreasonable since, after all, what kind of control do we want if not civilian? ADEQUATE PROTECTION FOR MARINES, NAVAL AVIATION Throughout the consideration of this bill I have been of particular concern that nothing should hurt or serve to re- duce the effectiveness of the various ele- ments of our great fighting forces. When fear was expressed from certain quarters over the future of the marines and naval aviation, I was moved to join, and did join, with the Senator from Wyoming to do what could be done in seeing that nothing should detract from the useful- ness to the United States of these serv- ices. I wanted to be certain that under the bill they would not lose their identity or their value as members of our fight- ing team. With the other members of the Committee on Armed Services, I made it my business to see that guaran- ties were made to safeguard the marines and naval aviation.- Such guaranties have now been written, in my opinion, into the bill and are satisfactory to the commanding general of the Marine Corps and to the top naval aviators. Further, the assurances of Generals Eisenhower and Spaatz, of Admiral Nimitz, and of the Secretaries of War and Navy?in whom I share the un- bounded confidence of My colleagues? are safeguards which we can all assume to be as reassuring as any which could be written Into the statutes. JULY 9 on.TrarroNs PROGRESSIVELY ELIMINATED Progressively and with considerable patience on the part of all concerned, these and all other doubts and fears over .the authority and control to be granted this top Secretary have been removed or allayed. Finally, today there is almost unanimous accord that the threats which have been inherent or imagined in pre- viously proposed legislation to unify the armed forces have been erased. This ac- cord has been reached through the dem- ocratic processes of our Government. All parties concerned have been heard and the conflicting views have been blended by compromise?the American way of reaching peaceful conclusions. The legislation before the Senate repre- sents a series of carefully drawn com- promises which reflect a meeting of the minds among those who were once in dis- agreement. From all the negotiations which preceded the final bill there has evolved a workable, sound proposal. The fact that the legislation is practical and beneficial, and at the same time satis- fa -tory to the major interested factions, is, indeed, a high tribute to the American system. OBJECTIONS TO TOP MAN ELIMINATED The traditional civilian control of our armed forces is guaranteed. The civilian Secretary of National Security is superior to the three military commanders? Army, Navy, and Air Force. There is no single military 'chief of staff. The top Secretary views the over-all problem of national security impartially and on a broad basis, and is a principal assistant to the President and adviser to the Con- gress on the general subject. Mr. President, I do not think we should overlook the fact that he will function under the bill as the adviser to the Con- gress. The Army, Navy, and Air Force retain their identities as integral members of the security team. They are adminis- tered by three departments of the Gov- ernment, the civilian secretary of each of which has access to the President. These three secretaries and the senior military officers of each service will be the principal assistants to the President and advisers to the Congress in their own particular fields. Thus, in addition to having the viewpoint of the several serv- ices, the country will have the benefit of an official whose sole job is to study and advise on what should comprise a balanced program of all the services. Lack of such an official constitutes a striking deficiency in our Government today. CIVILIAN CONTROL INCREASED Every precaution has been taken by the Army and Navy representatives who drafted the original bill, and by your committee in amending it to its present form, to insure adequate civilian control. The President, of course, retains the paramount civilian control of the armed forces, as Commander in Chief. The bill actually makes it easier for the Pres- ident effectively to carry out his duties as civilian commander because it gives him much needed assistance in this tre- mendous task. . It seems to me, Mr. President, that we should not overlook the fact that the AppOd For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE President does remain the top civilian controller of our armed services. Under our democratic system we do not have to fear that any military official, be he civilian top secretary under the unifica- tion bill, or a man in uniform, will at- tempt to take unto himself too much power, which some seem to fear might still be possible under the bill. Why do I say that? I say it because the Presi- dent of the United States would soon be apprised of any such attempt on the part of any official under the unification bill. A President of the United States usually likes to be reelected, and if he discovers that there is opposition in the country to an attempt on the part of the Secre- tary of National Security to take more power unto himself that he should have under the spirit and intent of the bill, the Secretary is going to hear from the President. If the situation were such. that the particular President did not want to be reelected, we could be sure that his party would want to elect some- one in his place. So we have under the bill, as we have under all legislation, the ultimate political control resting in the people of the country which will manifest itself if anyone under this bill should attempt to engage in arbitrary or abusive power. I am not at all fearful so long as the President of the United States remains the civilian controller of our Military Establishment, or of any man in uniform, or of any civilian who is a top Secretary, abusing the power granted to him under the terms of the bill. Of course the constitutional power of the Congress to raise and support armies and navies comprises the real civilian control over the military, and this funda- mental safeguard can never be abridged by the establishment of new agencies. We are the ones who vote the funds. The Congress, incidentally, will be aided greatly in. obtaining a balanced picture of the problem of security, for at any time it can call for advice from any rep- resentative of the different services or the several impartial agencies and offices established to deal with the broad phases of the entire matter of security. Under existing circumstances, the Congress is denied such valuable information and counsel as it will be afforded under uni- fication, and is constantly harried by pressures from all sides for this or that phase of national security, without ever getting an appreciation of the over-all picture. ? Mr. President, I served for a time on the old Naval Affairs Committee. It seemed to me our common practice was to move somewhat in the dark as we took up naval affairs matters, which re- lated also to military matters but which fell within the jurisdiction of the then Military Affairs Committee. I feel that the same problem exists within the Ap- propriations Committee under our pres- ent system. One subcommittee deals with naval appropriations, another sub- committee with Army appropriations, and seldom do the twain ever Meet in a common underetanding of their mutual problems, " One of the great procedural and ad- ministrative strengths of the bill, as I , see it, is that for the first time, through the top Secretary provided for in the bill, there will be submitted to Congress an over-all budget report, and over-all advice as to what a balanced program should be for the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force. I now want to say, because the pending bill is not perfect in many respects, that I think one point the Senator from Wyo- ming makes is a very telling point. I do not think the record on the bill shows that any great economy will flow from it, certainly in the early years of its admin- istration. I may say to the Senator from Wyoming that, as a lawyer, I would have to say that I think the preponderance of evidence in the record supports his con- tention that the bill will not produce great economies at first. If one wants to vote for the bill solely on the ground of economy he will find that the evidence does not support such a vote. However, It is not a wasteful bill, it is not a costly bill in the sense that it increases costs for the same functions.as now rendered. It had within it, in my judgment, the procedure which makes it possible for the top Secretary and the Secretaries of Air. Navy, and Army to bring about great economies as they learn to work together in closer cooperation, as I am sure they will, once the terms and pro- visions of the bill are put into operation. I happen to be one who feels that once the law is on the statute books and the Secretary of National Security and his Assistant Secretaries proceed in confer- ence after, conference, they will see a multitude of ways to bring about econ- omy. I have always been, and still am, critical of wastes within the administra- tion of the War and Navy Departments. They go back to roots which have grown for decades. I think we have before us a bill which would make it possible to tear up .some of those roots. I do not believe that the bill goes nearly far enough with regard to the whole question of greater unification for procurement. Further, I would that it provided for greater unification, for ex- ample, in such specific instances as med- ical services; but it does not make it im- possible for that type of economy to de- velop. In fact, I think that type of economy will be possible only under the terms of this bill. It certainly will not come about if we continue the status quo. Let me say frankly that I admit that In my judgment I cannot show from the record any great economies which ? will immediately flow from the passage of the bill. I am satisfied that econo- mies will develop as the officials given responsibility under the bill come to ad- minister it and come to see that the spirit and intent of Congress in pass- ing the bill is to place upon them the responsibility for effecting economies. Then, too, with this bill and the pow- ers given to the top Secretary, it seems to me that we shall be in a much better position when he sits down to advise with Congress when he makes his annual re- ports to us, to require him to show spe- cific cause why certain economies, if they are not in his report, are not made or cannot be made, , I suppose that my economic argument could be summarized in this way: Al- though the bill in its present form does not immediately effectuate great econ- 8675 omies, it does provide the procedure and the administrative machinery for ef- fecting such economies if the top Secre- tary and the three Assistant Secretaries keep faith with the spirit and intent of the act. This bill represents a careful step in the gradual, deliberate chain of evolu- tion which is typical of arriving at change in our governmental structure. No radical departure is entailed. S. 758 does not seriously ,alter the present scheme of things, but does take advan- tage of certain obvious lessons of World War II and gives the country a means to see where other improvements may possibly and appropriately be made. If experience gathered from function- ing under the bill so dictates, further revisions in our national-security struc- ture may be proposed and judged by the Congress and the people. That is cer- tainly not violent, but is the American way of progress. The bill has been so revised from the versions of previous years that some say ? that it is now too weak to be effective. It has been accused of having no teeth to make the improvements that must be made. I have heard it said that so much power is reserved to the Army, Navy, and Air Force and that there will not be the flexibility necessary to make indicated changes. This may be, although I doubt It very much. In any case, the actual op- eration of the bill is the only true test of its effectiveness. -Therefore, if after a ?few years too much authority seems to be vested in the three military depart- ments and unnecessary duplications can- not be eliminated because of restrictions in the bill, the Secretary of National Se- curity and the President may make fur- ther recommendations to the Congress for such alterations as seem desirable. To this end, the bill makes specific provi- sion for further studies and recom- mendations. In any case, the legislation does not go too far. It is a good first step. It not only retains civilian control over the military, but it increases that control. Adtually, there has never been a serious threat by the military in the history of the United States. Our professional sol- diers and sailors have never manifested a desire to run the country. They have always taken pride in their role of pub- lic servant. In fact, during the delibera- -Lions on this unification bill, military leaders have been the foremost in insist- ing that maximum civilian control be provided in all parts of the legislation. . It is a favorite form of cynicism on the part of some critics constantly to throw in the direction of the military very unfair and below-the-belt criti- cisms, I think that has frequently been costly to the prestige of our military, par- ticularly in the minds of the youth of the land. During the war I had an opportu- nity on the home front to pass judgment upon the faith in our .democratic proc- esses of the high military authorities. Frequently I saw them in a position where materials of war were being held up be- came of domoetic difileultiee on the home front, but not once did I hear a high authority in the military take the posi- tion that we should, adopt undemocratic procedures for. the handling of those Aeved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200 8676 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE problems. I want to say to the credit of the military that it has been my ob- servation that they usually demonstrate a greater faith in our democratic proc- esses and in the right of our people to be protected from military abuses than do many of our civilian officials. I was pleased with my observations of our mili- tary government in Germany last fall? to note that in the operation of that mili- tary government first attention was al- ways given the question as to whether any rule, regulation, or administrative order was in accordance with democratic rights. So I am not one of those who take the position that there is any basis in fact?certainly no basis in fact was developed during the hearings and the consideration of this bill?for fear of usurpation of power on the part of the military to the detriment of American domestic processes. Now that the objections against unifi- cation have been met and the fears calmed, this moderate, temperate, and yet progressive bill stands before the Senate for decision. Where unanimity once was lacking, the agreements which have been reached and from which this bill results must surely remove all former obstacles. Where controversy and con- fusion once clouded the issues, there is now, for the most part, satisfaction on all sides. Not even the obstacle of politi- cal partisanship attends this measure. , It has shared the same impartial treat- ment that has been so wisely afforded our foreign policy. One immediate need for the bill lies in the fact that the Army and Navy are in urgent need of some permanent basis for their future organization. Except for certain emergency authority under which the armed forces were drastically re- organized for their successful prosecu- tion of World War II, there is nothing on the statute books under which these forces can shape their postwar organi- zations except the antiquated laws which governed their organization between the two world wars. It is the lessons of World War II which we must now apply. We must look for- ward so that we shall not be caught un- prepared and outmoded if another war must come. If it comes, it will come fast. I believe that that is what the bill would do. It applies those lessons in an intelligent, gradual fashion and provides a means for a further study of the com- plex problems of national security. One of the most compelling lessons of the recent war is that there are imperfec- tions and gaps in the relationships be- tween the military and foreign policies of this country. This bill corrects that situation by the establishment Of the National Security Council, wherein the complex and now uncoordinated prob- lems of bringing foreign policy into har- mony with the military means to enforce that policy may be brought to light .and resolved. A corollary lesson is that the people, the Congress, and the President have no single individual or agency charged with the over-all problem of national secu- rity to whom they can look for impartial recommendations and coordination. This bill provides the Secretary of Na- tional Security, a sort of Deputy Presi- dent, to assist the Chief Executive in the carrying out of his great responsibility as Commander in Chief. Unification will also apply another clear lesson of World War II, and World War I for that matter, and that is that there must be an agency to plan and ad- minister the proper allocation of the eco- nomic and human resources of the coun- try so that both civilian and military needs are adequately met in time of war. The National Security Resources Board is proposed for just that purpose. Under a National Security Establishment wherein the efforts of all the armed serv- ices are brought into harmony?and there is no such establishment today? unnecessary duplications of money and effort can be eliminated. And through the recommendations of the Secretary of National Security to the President and the Congress, continuing improvements in efficiency and economy can be made which will carry out the obvious intent of the Congress. The various civilian agencies and the key civilian officials provided in the bill assure the traditional (and essential, if our system of government is to con- tinue) civilian control of the Military Establishment. Together with the Joint Chiefs of Staff, these civilian agencies comprise an organ which can plan and prepare for the United States to meet the threat of a total war. Mark you, Mr. President, no one longer doubts that the next world war, if it should come, will be a total war. Much of this planning has not even been started, and without pas- sage of this bill it will continue to be delayed. The issues of unification are now clear. Controversy no longer exists. All In- terested persons and parties have had their doubts satisfied, and there is hardly a responsible individual in or out of Con- gress who has cause to oppose this pres- ent bill. There is opposition to details, yes; but not to the great objective of the bill. Even those vigilant guardians of our American way of life, the Daughters of the American Revolution, in their re- cent national convention here in Wash- ington, adopted a strong resolution in favor of this legislation. i The United States must not be forced to depend upon an outmoded military establishment to fight or avert another world war?and may a strong America prevent it from ever coming. The Congress must act now?this ses- sion?in order to give the country and the people the best security for the money spent. The lessons of World War II, only recently so vivid to us all, are dimming as time passes. We cannot ignore them. It would be a shocking incrimination of the Congress, and a welcome scandal for those at home and abroad who decry our form of government, if that which the country and its responsible leaders so clearly want is ignored or delayed by the representatives of the people in the Con- gress. I entreat my colleagues in the Senate, Mr. President, to take immedi- ate and favorable action, to accomplish the translation of the unification bill, S. 758, into enacted legislation so that it may become a law of the land to pro- vide a suitable structure for our postwar 01-1' JULY 9 national security in a world where lack of security may well spell a nation's death warning. STRENGTHENING Tar, UNI I ea) NATIONS Mr. TAYLOR. Mr. President, earlier in the day the junior Senator from Mich- igan [Mr. FERGUSON] submitted a res- olution expressing the desire and the need for strengthening the United Na- tions. I was one.of the sponsors of the resolution. However, a number of my colleagues and I feel that the previously presented resolution is not sufficiently specific and not sufficiently strong. Therefore we are presenting another res- olution. This action is not to be con- strued as a condemnation of the pre- vious resolution, but rather as a more accurate expression of the thinking of some of us on this all-important subject. I might say, Mr. President, that the con- current resolution which I shall send to the desk is one which was approved by a large group of Members of the Senate and of the House of Representatives. The concurrent resolution, as I send it to the desk, is as it has come from the House of Representatives where it is being or has been offered by Representa- tive JUDD and Representative HAYS, to- gether with a large number of cosponsors. I send the concurrent resolution to the desk and ask that the clerk read it, Mr. President. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will read the concurrent resolution. The concurrent resolution (S. Con. Res. 24) submitted by Mr. TAYLOR (for himself, Mr. CHAVEZ, Mr. JOHNSTON Of South Carolina, Mr. Tonle Mr. PEPPER, and Mr. MURRAY) was read and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations, as follows: Whereas all the world deeply desires dur- able peace; and Whereas the United Nations was created as an instrument to preserve the peace of the world; and Whereas experience increasingly indi- cates that the United Nations in its present structure is not fully adequate for this task; and Whereas the United Nations Charter in its article 109 provides a procedure whereby the Charter of the United Nations may be. revised and amended: Now, therefore, be it Resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring), That it is the sense of the Congress that the President of the United States should immediately take the initiative in calling a general conference of .the United Natidhs pursuant to article 109 for the purpose of making the United Nations capable of enacting, interpreting, ad enforcing world law to prevent war. Mr. TAYLOR. Mr. 'President, I ask - unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD, immediately following the print- ing of the concurrent resolution, article 109 of the United Nations Charter. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: ARTICLE 100 I. A general conference of the Members of the United Nations for the purpose of . reviewing the present Charter may be held at a date and place to be fixed by a two-thirds ? vote of the members of the General Assem- bly and by a vote of any seven members of the Security Council% Each member of the United Nations shall have one vote in the conference. ApprOd For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE signed l'ip by one man in a matter of a few days in a city like Baltimore. There ?.being no objection, the petition and the \signature 's were ordered to be printed in, the RECORD, as follows: To United States Senate and House of Repre- sentati es: "Resolved by the United States Senate (the House of RcpresentaliVes concurring)., That the Presiden of the United States shall im- mediately ta :e the initiative in calling a general conf rence of the United Nations pursuant to rticle l09 for the purpose of making the IT ited Nations Capable of enact- ing, interpret g, and enforcing world law to prevent wan" The ?undersi ned who are interested in *strengthening jthe United Nations into at least the begin ings of a world government hereby urge thnt this resolution to strength- en the United Iations be pushed vigorously and that the CI arter of the United Nations be revised and ended in the light of this resolution. - Philip L. S kes, Rosco Bernard, Anne ? B. Jenkin, Anna Syret, Louis Nathans, ,Edward ? H jek, Rodney Link, Sam- ? tel D. 1Kshues, Arthur Krishmer, Fannie H.l Rice, Calvert Cummins, Samuel I. uiorirtz, Rosa Lee Altshul, ? Max Susin, acob W. Barenburg, Harry D. Ambrose, IR. G. Green, Colman Klein, Eli Cohen, Maurice R. Oppenheim, , Isaac E. Davison, Helen E. Romm, Kay ? Solomon, Eta L. Leist, Jesse Ashman, William Kle er, Louise Levin, Charles is) W. Main, B -nerd E. Ster, Borris M. Spector, Hai 'y Yaffe, Alexander J. . Lane, Edwin ohn, David W. French, Henry I. )3on und, Iris B. Jossen, H. Henry Rosen rg, Philip Tachs, Louis ? C. Fried, Juiltia P. Robinson, Paula ? 131rnan, Simoni Nobel Silverberg, Hy- - man I. Cohen, Samuel Rubin, W. A. Schmidt, Willican T. Imid, Julius Krump, Maxwyl Alpert, Herman Punp Ian, Herb at Kaufman, Harry Rapport, Ely Ashman, Abraham .Finkelstein, H. D. Cofran, Jim Finney, Joseph Siegel, Al red F. Dedornenico, Harry Bernstein, rancis F. Commer, Jakob Hesker, Cha les Caplan, Agatha Roenstadt S. S. Zu rcher, Lil Strocket, Anna Cohn, Emma Gardner, Dorothy Adkins, Rose Fagark Fred Mechl, Sr., W. I. Magills, Emanuel J. Riback, Harry Saeffer, Revs Marshall, Allen J. Eisner, Bradford Bloom, Lliwrence Greene- baum, Sophie H. Stec el, Louis Bender, Nathan H. Miller, All T. Cohn, Abner ? J. Weinger, Johnny elis, Jack Norin, Jas. D. Balachow, Emmet Stein, M. A. Cummins, Meter Shapiro, W. Keiles, Allen W. Eaton M. J. Stelnhom, Thomas J. Ringgold, Carlie F. Par- rish, James W. Miller, Mannes Freed- enberg, S. C. , Ka, zoff, Maurice Schoenfeld, Bernard Klein, Samuel ? Vataposky, Nathan Ab amanitz, Abra- ham Kahn, Esther 1 Goldosheides, Frederick J. Freely, Jr., Ethel E. Wahl, William Alvin Wahl, George 0. Biome, Anthony F. Di Domenico, Wm, Weinblatt, Rose S. Zetzer, Allen C. Capone, D. ?M. LeAtinett, Frank M. Merrick, H. LaRue Parke, Anthony I. Gedenico, Jeanne illofmen, Leon A. Rubenstein, H. B. Hofman, Joshua C. Gwin, Harvey D. Bickel, Medford D. Lilly, Alberta Talbott, Marcellus S. Jonas, Martin H. Larsen, Hugh Anthony, F. J. Richardson, James L. Muller, Lottie Friedler,v Herbert Lock- wood, Edwin Greenebaum, Ellis Levin, Jack A. Miller, Lawrence Lockwood, Miss Anna M. Robinson, John Howard Clarke, John J. Smith, Lena DePaul, Thos. W. Pond, E. Joseph, John A. Novak, Aaron A. Baer, Adolph Schick- No. 130-5 elgruber, Louisi Samuels, M. Carolyn Smith, Mrs. qphie f3cheasS, Mrs. Walter Wflkensl Albert J. I,,Tathaniel, Barney H. Schi%artz, Moses Schloss, Genevieve J. En ish, Samdel H. Feld- stein, Madison W ggitti, Mary Meciana, Andrew W. eber, , A. R tert Levinson, Stephen SnIfkl, arb, a M. Hogarth, Erminio Flor t3 Christine Lem- mons, Lillian ',l5aa1, Charles Roth- UNIFICATION OF 'FRE ARMED SERVICES The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 758) to' promote the na- tional security by providing for a _Na- tional Defense Establishment, which shall be administered by a Secretary of Na- tional Defense, and for a Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, and a Department of the Air Force within the National Defense Establishment, and for the coordination of the activities of the National Defense Establishment with other departments and agencies of the Government concerned with the national security. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on the committee amendment. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, I wish to call up an amend- tient for Consideration. It is amend- ment D. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The amendment will be stated. - The CHIEF CLERK. In the committee amendment on page 37, line 3, it is pro- posed to strike out "Security" and insert "Military"; in line 4, to strike out "Organ- ization" and insert "Establishment"; in line 5, to strike out "Security" and insert "Military"; in line 6, to strike out "Or- ganization" and insert "Establishment"; in line 7, to strike out all after "Sec. 201" down to and including "Organization" in line 14, and substitute in lieu thereof the following: "The National Military Estab- lishment shall consist of the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Department of the Air Force, together with all other agencies created under title II of this act"; in line 16, after "Sec. 202. (a)", to insert "There shall be a Secretary of National Security who shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. In addition to such other duties as the President may assign to him in connec- tion with the national security, the Sec- retary of National Security, under the direction of the President, shall perform the following specific duties relating to the National Military Establishment pro- vided for under title II of this act"; in line 21, to strike out "Security" and in- sert "Military," On page 38, line 3, to strike out "Secu- rity" and insert "Military." To strike out all of lines 22 to 25 and Insert: "The Secretary of National Se- curity shall cause to be made for his use a seal of office of such design as the President shall approve and judicial no- tice shall be taken thereof." On page 39, line 16, to strike out "Se- curity" and insert "Military"; in line 17, to strike out "Organization" and insert "Establishment" 8687 On page 40, in lines 4 and 5, to strike out "within the National Security Or- ganization." On page 41, in lines 9 and 10, to strike Out "Within the National Security Or- ganization there" and insert "There." The PRESIDENT pro tempore. May the Chair inquire of the Senator from Wyoming if he desires to have the amendments considered en bloc? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I will explain, Mr. President, that the root of the amendments is the striking out of section 201 (a) and the rewriting of sec- tion 202 (a). The others are merely changes in names which would be neces- sary if the main objectives were attained, The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Then, without objection, the amendments will be considered en bloc. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Very well. Mr. President, I have.been very much interested by the debate which has en- sued during the consideration of the bill on the floor of the Senate. I think the Senators listening to the debate have reached the conclusion that there is a national security set-up which includes not only the Military Establishment con- sisting of the Secretary of National Se- curity, the military assistants, civilian personnel, Department of the Army, De- partment of the Navy, Department of the Air Force, United States Air Force, War Council, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joint Staff, Munitions Board, and Research and Development Board, but also that the National Security Organization in- cludes the National Security Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the Na- tional Security and Resources Board. I think every Senator is of that opinion. I want to say, Mr. President, that that is not correct. The National Security Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the National Security Resources Board are not in the National Security Organization as Set forth in the bill. Those three are contained in title I under the heading "Coordination for National Security," and are something separate and apart from the National Security Organization. I think that is one of the baSic things the Senate must realize before it can thoroughly under- stand the bill so as to vote intelligently upon it. Even the chairman of the Committee on Armed Services in his excellent state- Ment on the bill pointed out that the Secretary of National Security was in effect a deputy of the President, or words to that effect. That, Mr. President, it Is my contention he should be. But it . Is my contention that the bill does not , make him so. I am for the objectives. of the bill as put forward, but they are not in the bill. Hence I offer the amend- ment which will, I hope, help to put them In the bill. Title 'II, deals with the National Security Organization. It should be called the National Military Establish- ment, as it was called in the original bill. ? Title I can still remain "Coordination ? for National Security," which it is. But Approd For Release 2006/12 15 : CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE signed ?iip by one man in a matter of a few days in a city like Baltimore. There ?being no objection, the petition and the signature were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: To United States Senate and House of Repre- sentati es: "Resolved by the United States Senate (the Eolisc of R resentatives concurring)., That the Peesiden of the United States shall im- mediately ta e the initiative in calling a general conf rence of the United Nations pursuant to rticle 109 for the purpose of making the U ited Nations Capable of enact- ing, interpret g, and enforcing world law to prevent wa " The undersi ned who are interested in ? strengthening tthe United Nations into at least the begin ings of a world government hereby urge thnt this resolution to strength- en the United Itations be pushed vigorously and that the CI arter of the United Nations be revised and mended in the light of this resolution. Philip L. Sakes, Rosco Bernard, Anne ? B. Jenkin, Anna Syret, Louis Nathans, ,Edward - H jek, Rodney Link, Sam- ? uel D. Kllshues, Arthur Krishmer, Fannie H.t Rice, Calvert Cummins, Samuel I. luiorirtz, Rosa Lee Altshul, ?.Max Susin, acob W. Barenburg, Harry ID. Ambrose, IR. G. Green, Colman Klein, Eli Cohen, Maurice R. Oppenheim, :rsade E. Davison, Helen E. Romm, Kay Solomon, Eta L. Leist, Jesse Ashman, William Kle er, Louise Levin, Charles W i E. . Main, Bernard Ster, Borris M. Spector, Hai 7 Yaffe, Alexander J. Lane, Edwin ohn, David W. French, Henry I. Bon pund, Iris B. Jossen, H. Henry Rosenberg, Philip Tachs, Louis C. Fried, Juli s P. Robinson, Paula Ulman, Simon Nobel Silverberg, Hy- man I. Cohen, Samuel Rubin, W. A. Schmidt, Willi m T. Imid, Julius Krump, Maxw 11 Alpert, Herman Punpian, Herb t Kaufman, Harry Rapport, Ely Ashman, Abraham Finkelstein, H. D. Cofran, Jim Finney, Joseph Siegel, Al red F. Dedomenico, Harry Bernstein, rancis F. Commer, Jakob Hesker, Cha les Caplan, Agatha Roenstadt, S. S. Zu rcher, Lil Stroeket, Anna Cohn, Emmal Gardner, Dorothy Adkins, Rose Fagar/t Fred Mechl, Sr., W. I. Magills, Emanupl J. Riback, Harry Saeffer, Reva Marshall, Allen .I. Eisner, Bradford Bloom, Lliwrence Greene- baum, Sophie H. Stec el, Louis Bender, Nathan H. Miller, Allea T. Cohn, Abner .7. Weinger, Johnny E,elis, Jack Norin, Jas. D. Balachow, Emmet Stein, M. A. Cummins, Meter Shapiro, W. Kelles, Allen W. Eaton M. J. Steinhom, Thomas 3. Ringgold, Calle F. Par- rish, James W. Miller, Mannes Freed- enberg, S. C., Ka zoff, Maurice Schoenfeld, Bernard iKlein, Samuel Vataposky, Nathan Abfamanitz, Abra- ham Kahn, Esther 1 Goldosheides, Frederick J. Freely, Jr., Ethel E. Wahl, William Alvin Wahl, George 0. Biome, Anthony F. Di Domenico, Wm. Weinblatt, Rose S. Zetzer, Allen C. Capone, D. M. Leitinett, Frank M. Merrick, II. LaRue Parke, Anthony I. Gedenico, Jeanne IHofman, Leon A. Rubenstein, H. B. Plofman, Joshua C. Gwin, Harvey D. Bickel, MedfOrd D. Lilly, Alberta Talbott, Marcellus 8. Jonas, Martin H. Larsen, Hugh Anthony, F. J. Richardson, James L. Muller, Lottie Friedler,; Herbert Lock- wood, Edwin Greenebaum, Ellis' Levin, Jack A. Miller, Lawrence 'Lockwood, Miss Anna M. Robinson, John Howard Clarke, John J. Smith, Lena DePaul, Thos. W. Pond, E. Joseph, John A. Novak, Aaron A. Beer, Adolph Schick- No. 130-5 elgruber, Louis Sam cs, M. Carolyn Smith, Mrs. aphie ScheasS, Mrs. Walter Wilkenst Alber J. Nathaniel, Barney IL Sch artz, Moses Schloss, Genevieve J. Ent ish, Samnel H. Feld- stein, Madison W ggittL Mary Meciana, Andrew W. eber, , A. Robert Levinson, Stephen Snifl, arb a M. Hogarth, Erminio Flor Christine Lem- mons, Lillian a al, Charles Roth- - UNIFICATION OF THE ARMED SERVICES The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 758) to' promote the na- tional security by providing for a _Na- tional Defense Establishment, which shall be administered by a Secretary of Na- tional Defense, and for a Department of the Army, a Department of the Navy, and a Department of the Air Force within the National Defense Establishment, 'and for the coordination of the activities of the National Defense Establishment with other departments and agencies of the Government conCerned with the national security. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on the commit ee amendment. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, I wish to call up an amend- Ment for consideration. It is amend- ment D. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The amendment will be stated. - The CHIEF CLERK. In the committee amendment on page 37, line 3, it is pro- posed to strike out "SecUrity" and insert "Military"; in line 4, to strike out "Organ- ization" and insert "Establishment"; in line 5, to strike out "Security" and insert "Military"; in line 6, to strike out "Or- ganization" and insert "Establishment"; in line '7, to strike out all after "Sac. 201" down to and including "Organization" in line 14, and substitute in lieu thereof the following: "The National Military Estab- lishment shall consist of the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Departrnent of the Air Force, together with all other agencies created under title II of this act"; in line 16, after "Sac. 202. (a)", to insert "There shall be a Secretary of National Security who shall be appointed from civilian life by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. In addition to such other duties as the President may assign to him in connec- tion with the national security, the Sec- retary of National Seciirity, under the direction of the President, shall perform the following specific dUties relating to the National Military Establishment pro- vided for under title II of this act"; in line 21, to strike out "Security" and in- sert "Military." On page 38, line 3, to strike out "Secu- rity" and insert "Military." To strike out all of lines 22 to 25 and Insert: "The Secretary of National Se- curity shall cause to be made for his use a seal of office of such design as the President shall approve and judicial no- tice shall be taken thereof." On page 39, line 16, to strike out "Se- curity" and insert "Military"; in line 17, to strike out "Organization" and insert "Establishment." 8687 On page 40, in lines 4 and 5, to strike out "within the National Security Or- ganization." On page 41, in lines 9 and 10, to strike out "Within the National Security Or- ganization there" and insert "There." The PRESIDENT pro tempore. May the Chair inquire of the Senator from Wyoming if he desires to have the amendments considered en bloc? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I will explain, Mr. President, that the root of the amendments is the striking out of section 201 (a) and the rewriting of sec- tion 202 (a). The others are merely changes in names which would be neces- sary if the main objectives were attained. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Then, without objection, the amendments will be considered en bloc. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Very well. Mr. President, I have.been very much interested by the debate which has en- sued during the consideration of the bill on the floor of the Senate. I think the Senators listening to the debate have reached the conclusion that there is a national security set-up which includes not only the Military Establishment con- sisting of the Secretary of National Se- curity, the military assistants, civilian personnel, Department of the Army, De- partment of the Navy, Department of the Air Force, United States Air Force, War Council, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joint Staff, Munitions Board, and Research and Development Board, but also that the National Security Organization in- cludes the National Security Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the Na- tional Security and Resources Board. I think every Senator is of that opinion. I want to say, Mr. President, that that is not correct. The National Security Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the National Security Resources Board are not in the National Security Organization. as Set forth in the bill. Those three are contained in title I under the heading "Coordination for National Security," and are something separate and apart from the National Security Organization. I think that is one of the baSic things the Senate must realize before it can thoroughly under- stand the bill so as to vote intelligently upon it. Even the chairman of the Committee on Armed Services in his excellent state- ment on the bill pointed out that the Secretary of National Security was in effect a deputy of the President, or words to that effect. That, Mr. President, it is my contention he should be. But it . Is my contention that the bill does not make him so. I am for the objectives of the bill as put forward, but they are not in the bill. Hence I offer the amend- ment which will, I hope, help to put them In the bill. Title II, deals with the National Security Organization. It should be called the National Military Establish- ment, as it was called in the original bill. ? Title I can still remain "Coordination for National Security," which it is. But Approved For Relea e 2006/1 _061 OR0004cinnt Apned For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 8688 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE the Secretary of National Security should be, and in fact must be, the co- ordinator not only of the military estab- lishment, but also of the National Secu- rity Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the National Security Re- sources Board, and in effect be a Presi- dential deputy for national security. Practically every one has named him as such. Everyone feels that he is such under the terms of the bill; but I repeat that the bill does not make him that. The bill merely makes him a super- secretary of the three armed services, the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force. That is set out so clearly in section 201 (a), which I am seeking to strike, that I cannot for the life of de understand why the Senate. should be advised that the Secretary of National Security is over the entire structure. Let me read section 201 (a): There is hereby established the National Security Organization and a Secretary of Y.ttional Security, who shall be the head t Liereof. He is the head of the National Security- Organization, which, as I have pointed out, includes, in title II, the Army, the Navy, and Air Force. But it goes further. Subsection (b) provides as follows: (b) The National Security Organization shall consist of the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the De- partment of the Air Force, together with all other agencies created within ? the National Security Organization. A few moments ago,I read the list, from section 201 to section 214. Mr. President, I wish to emphasize that this Secretary, whoever he may be, is merely the Secretary of the Army, Navy, and Air Force. The existing sec- retaries become mere under secretaries cf those three organizations. They lose' their Cabinet positions. According to the bill, the single secretary is the Cab- inet officer for the armed forces. That is what ,I want to change by my amend- want to place the Secretary of It?4?ational Security over the entire struc- ure.. I want to elevate him to a posi-- . ion where he will be over the National Security Council, the Central Intelli- gence Agency, and the National Security Resources Board, and over the entire military establishment as wen. He is the coordinator. The amendment which the clerk just read would strike out sectiizn 201, from line 7, on page 37, down to line 14. That is under the heading "Establishment of the National Secur4ty Organization." That. Mr. President, is the merger, the rnergin , of the anted forces under one secretary. That is all that it does. It has nothing to do with the National Security Council in any way whatsoever. In oi.:ier to place the Secretary of Na- tional Security in a proper position I seek to amend section 202 (a) in line 16, on page 37, so that that paragraph will ...3.1,d: There shall be a Secretary of National ..iiurity who shall be appointed from civilian , re by the President, by and with the advice :aid consent of the Senate. In addition to such other duties as the President may as- sign to him in connection with the national security, the Secretary of National Security, under the direction of the President, shall perform the following specific duties relat- ing to the National Military Establishment provided for under title II of this act. Those duties are set forth exactly in the same way as they are set forth in the bill. There is no change in the duties. He has every duty conferred upon him that is conferred upon him in the bill, but he is no longer merely the head of the Army, Navy, and Air Force. Mr. President, I do not think I can ex- plain the amendment any more thor- oughly except by repeating myself, which I do not intend to do. The other part of the amendment is merely to change the word "security" to "military" and the word "organization" to "establishment," so that title 2 will assume its correct character and be called the National Military Establishment. Mr. President, that is the amendment. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on agreeing to the amend- ment offered by the Senator from Wyo- ming [Mr. RoBEWrsON] to the committee amendment. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, the Senator from Wyoming has several amendments on the desk. In this in- stance I believe he has selected the most Important amendment in the list. I say that because should this amendment be adopted it would take the heart out of the bill. In. the first instance, as the bill was Introduced, it provided for an organiza- tion known as the National Defense Establishment, similar to the organiza- tion provided for on page 37 under the name "The National Security Organiza- tion." The name "National Security Or- ganization" is more inclusive. I make the statement that this amend- ment would affect the heart of the bill because not only must we have an over- all organization, over the three military branches?the Army, Navy, and Air Force?but also we must have an organ- ization including the War Council, the Munitions Board, and the Research and Development Board. They must all work together. Those civilian agencies are as necessary as the military branches in the allocation of materials and in the devel- opment of plans. Therefore, Mr. President, after 'wres- tling with this question for 11 weeks, our committee came to the conclusion, by a large majority vote in the committee, that the provision should be as it is in the committee amendment. To take sec- tion 201 from the bill would, I repeat, take the heart out of the bill. Therefore I recommend that the Senate reject the amendment. Mr. HILL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. GURNEY. I yield. Mr. HILL. Would the amendment have the effect of placing the Secretary of National Security ahead of the Sec- retary of State in the National Security Council? Mr. GURNEY. That is correct. Mr. HILL. The Security Secretary, the Defense Secretary?the Military Secretary, so to speak?would be placed ahead of the Secretary of State, the of- ficer in charge Of our foreign policy. /s not that true? 1-1 JULY 9 Mr. GURNEY. The-Senator is correct. Our committee did not feel that we should give the Secretary of National Security complete authority over the Security Council which is established to advise the President on security prob- lems. Nor did we feel that the new Sec- retary of National Security should be given authority over the National Secu- rity Resources Board. The Council and the Board were set up to coordinate the activities assigned to them in the bill, and to advise the President. The Secre- tary of National Security would sit on the Council and on the Board; but we did not feel that he should have over- all authority. Therefore our commit-e tee, after much debate, recommended to the Senate that the organization be es- tablished in the manner set forth in sec- tion 21. It might be called an "estab- lishment," but we prefer the word "or- ganization." Mr. REVERCOMB. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. GURNEY. I yield to the Senator from West Virginia. Mr. REVERCOMB. The Senator has argued that it is a part of the plan set forth in the chart on the wall. If the amendment were adopted how would it change the design set forth in the chart on the wall? Mr. GURNEY. Because it would give the Secretary of National Security over- all direction of the National Security Council and also of the National Secu- rity Board, by moving him up in the pre- ferred position, right under the Presi- dent. It would in that way give the Sec- retary of National Security a superior Cabinet rank to that held by the Secre- tary of State, because he would, in a way, be over the Security Council which is presently composed of the Secretary of State, the Secretary of the Security Council, and the Secretaries of the three military branches. The committee did not believe we should give this man that much power over other Cabinet officers, mainly the Secretary of State. Mr. REVERCOMB. The Secretary of State in serving on the National Security CoUncil has an additional duty placed upon him. In other words, the Secre- tary of State as a member of the National Security Council would in no way be dominated by the Secretary of National Security in the performance of his usual functions as Secretary of State except as he would serve as a member of the National Security Council. In other words, he has almost an ex officio posi- tion on the National Security Council. The point I want to inquire about Is this: If we make the Secretary of Na- tional Security next in rank to the Presi- dent and the one to advise with him over the National Security Council, we would not in fact place him over the Secretary of State in the performance of the nat- ural duties of a Secretary of State; it would be one over-all board on which the Secretary of State serves with others? Mr. GURNEY. That Board, I may point out, is the Board that advises the President on all matters of national se- curity. The Secretary of State is not now sitting on that Board as an ex officio member; in fact, his place on the Board - ? r ved .F Release 2 1 15 ApprZd For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004-1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE 8689 which zoists now by mutual agreement is probably one of his most important duoes, and his position on this Board will remain as his most important duty, to advise the military and to have the military advise him. The foreign policy and the military policy in that way dove- tail together so that the President is advised not by one and then by another in a haphazard manner. Mr. REVERCOMB. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for another question? ? Mr. GURNEY. Yes. Mr. REVERCOMB. The able Senator has mentioned only the Secretary of State and the fact of the Secretary of State being a member of the National Security Council as the reason why he would not put the Secretary of National Security next to the President and over that Council. I point out that the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Forces, who, as we know will be under the Secretary of National Security, will also be on the Council_ Mr. GURNEY. I May say to the Sen- ator that the reasons I have given are not all the reasons. In subordinating, so to speak, the Secretaries of Navy, Aotny, and Air, taking them out of the Cobinet, we must not cut down their job or cut down their responsibility; we must keep them at a level where the secretaries of these three branches should ha. Ey giving them 'equal status with Lie Secretary of National Security and the Secretary of State on the National Security Council we are, the committee believes, accomplishing that purpose, be- cause all five of them, with the assistance of others named, will form the policy ad advise the President on matters of national security. Mr. REVERCOMB. I observe from :he plat that the Secretary of National Security is over the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force. Mr. GURNEY. His name happens to be above. Mr. REVERCOMB. If he is not over them, how can he coordinate their work? If he does not have the authority of higher rank, how can he coordinate it? Mr. GURNEY; In a military way they are separate units, and the administra- tion of each branch remains in the Sec- retary of that branch. M. REVERCOMB: But the whole puroose is to coordinate? Mr. GURNEY. That is correct. Mr. REVERCOMB. But if the Secre- tary of National Security?an office which is being created?does not have the authority to direct the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force, I should say he could not coordinate their activi- ties. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a question? ? TOO. GURNEY. I wish to answer the St . from West Virginia, if I may. . he. National Security Council there are brought together the Secretary of State, who is responsible for our foreign policies, and the Secretaries ofthe three - ? military branches and the Socretary of National Security himself. There are five. When we get down to coordinating the military branches, the coordination of the military service does not occur in the Council which works on foreign policy. That coordination in bringing them together comes in the War Council, which the Senator will notice on the chart in a position immediately below the position of the Secretary of National Se- curity. That is where the military policy is brought together. In that way we bring together those branches and give the Secretary of National Security the coordinating authority which is so neces- sary in order to effectuate the purposes which we feel the pending bill will ac- complish. Mr. REVERCOMB. Let me say, then, that if the coordination is to take place through the Secretary of National Se- curity, as I have stated before, at the risk of repetition, it seems to me that the Secretary of the Navy, the Secretary of --the Army, and the Secretary of the Air Force must be under his direction, or, if I may say so, his command. As the Senator has pointed out, they are all brought together under the War .Council? Mr. GURNEY. That is correct. Mr. REVERCOMB. And they are all brought together under the Munitions Board. It seems to me that unless he has direct power to coordinate instead of running around through all the blocks set forth on the plat, the control over them would not be such as to be very effective in bringing about coordination. Mr. GURNEY. If the Senator will turn to page 37 of the Mr. REVERCOMB. I was speaking of the plat. Mr. GURNEY. If the Senator will, turn to page 37 of the bill I am sure he will understand it thoroughly. For instance, in line 23, page 37, it is provided that he shall "exercise general direction, authority, and control over such departments and agencies." I now yield to the Senator from Wyo- ming. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I wish to advise the Senator from West Virginia that he is absolutely correct when he says that the Secretary of Na- tional Security, whom we in committee called the super-secretary, is over the Secretary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force. It is provided distinctly in sec- tion 201 (a) ,on page 37, line 7, as follows: There is hereby established the National Security Organization, and a Secretary of National Security, who shall be the head thereof. Section 201 (b): ? The National Security Organization shall consist of the Department of the Army, the Department of the Navy, and the Department of the Air Force, together with all other ? agencies created within the National Security Organization. ? At another point in the bill the Secre- tary of the Army, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force are given the right to bypass their "boss," the Secretary of National Secu- rity, and go to the President if they see fit to do so. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, let me say to the Senator from Wyoming that the National Security Council is not in- cluded in title II of the bill, and is not included in the National Security Organization. Mr. REVERCOMB. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. GURNEY. I yield. Mr. REVERCOMB. I should like to ask a question of the Senator from Wyo- ming. Mr. GURNEY. I shall be glad to yield the floor, if the Senator wishes me to do so. Mr. REVERCOMB. No; I do not ask the Senator to do that. Mr. GURNEY. Very well; I yield to the Senator from West Virginia. Mr. REVERCOMB. I should like to ask the Senator from Wyoming this question: Does the plat now on the wall, about which we have been talking, fol- low out correctly, from the viewpoint of the Senator from Wyoming, what is now contained in the bill and will continue to be contained in it unless it is amended? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Absolutely. Mr. REVERCOMB. The amendment would remedy the fault, as seen by the Senator from Wyoming, by permitting the Secretary of National Security to take authority over the Secretaries of War, Navy, and Air; and the amendment would not have him bypassed through the several blocs and courses shown on the chart or plat, which portrays the situation under tlae bill as it is now written; is that correct? Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, my amendment would place the Secretary of National Security im- mediately under the President of the United States. I cannot help thinking that the distinguished chairman of the committee, the Senator from South Dakota [Mr. Goinstavl, felt that was the understanding, for when he made his speech introducing this bill, as shown at page 8464 of the CONGRESSIONAL REC- ORD for July 7, he made the following' statement: The Secretary of National Security is be- ing given no new powers by this bill. He is a full-time Presidential representative exercising delegated Presidential power to assist the President in carrying out his re- sponsibility to the Congress, the Nation, and the armed forces. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, I re- iterate that statement, and I believe it to be correct. Mr. REVERCOMB. Mr. President, will the Senator further yield? Mr. GURNEY. I yield. Mr. REVERCOMB. The Senator from South Dakota has made the prin- cipal argument that the Secretary of National Security should not have con- trol over the National Security Council for the principal reason that the Sec- retary of State is on that Council. Would not this whole situation be met by adopt- ing the amendment of the Senator from Wyoming and removing the Secretary of State from the National 'Security Council? That can be done without los- Appned For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 8690 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-:SENATE ing the advice or direction of the Sec- retary of State. He is a member of the President's Cabinet, -arid certainly the President can at any time call on the Secretary of State to advise with that Council or to confer directly with the President. So would not this whole matter be settled by adopting the amendment of the Senator from Wyoming? Would not the objection of the Senator from South Dakota be met by removing the Secre- tary of State from the National Security Council? Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, I call attention to the fact that the bill pro- vides, that the President shall preside over the National Security Council, pro- vided that in his absence he may desig- nate a member of the Council to preside in his place. That is set forth in title I of the bill, on page 31. We do not propose to give the Secre- tary of National Security such standing that he will in a sense be the deputy commander in chief, shall we say? We do not wish to take away from the Presi- dent, in any shape, manner, or form, his constitutional duty as Commander in Chief of the armed forces. With the President a member of the National Se- curity Council and with this board set up primarily to advise the President on matters of national security, our com- mittee did not feel that we should put the new Secretary of this new organiza- tion in a position superior to the one in which he is now placed by the bill, as hown on the chart. The Secretary of State, the Secretary of War, and the Sec- raary of Navy now meet, and they did so all during the war, as a committee of three to advise the President on na- tional-security problems. Mr. REVERCOMB. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me once more? Mr. GURNEY. I yield. Mr. REVERCOMB. I would say that In the United States no one should be placed over the President. The Presi- dent is Commander in Chief of the armed forces. Under the amendment of the Senator from Wyoming, as I understand, the Sec- retary of National Security would be im- mediately under the President. The fact that the President might preside over any of these blocs or boards which would be set up, inasmuch as he is Commander in Chief, and is over all, would not in any way place him in a position inferior to that of the Secretary of National Se- curity, because very often the President may attend the Council meetings and very often he may advise with the mem- bers of the Council. He will remain the Commander in Chief, of course. But it seems to me that if we leave this bill as it is now written thbre will be danger that the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary of the Air Force will have a position equal to that of the Secretary of Na- tional Security. If that be so, and if the Secretary of National Security is not over them, I do not see that the Secre- tary of National Security will have au- thority to coordinate them. Mr. GURNEY. In this bill we are set- ting up a new organization with the Sec- retary of National Security over those three branches of the armed services and the agencies that are concerned with supplying the armed services. Let me say to the Senator from West Virginia that the National Security Council is not in any way intended to be a part of the armed services organization, nor Is the National Security Resources Board intended in any way to be a part of the armed services organization. We might call the armed services or- ganization our policeman. But we be- lieve that the men in the organization, under the Secretary of National Security, will be men of standing, and men who will have knowledge of much value in meeting the whole national security problem. Therefore, taking them out of their positions as heads of the military branches or as heads of the Research and Munitions and War Council Boards, and bringing them up to sit on the Se- curity Council, is of great value. We do not believe that the National Security Secretary should in any way control, by means of a superior position, the conclu- sions which emanate from the Security Council or the Resources Board. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on agreeing to the amend- ment submitted by the Senator from Wyoming [Mr. ROBERTSON] to the Com- mittee amendment. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, as to the National Security Council, I wish to point out that that Council is merely a continuation of the State-War-Navy, Coordinating Commit- tee, which committee reconciles and co- ordinates the action to be taken by the State, War, and Navy Departments on matters of common interest, and estab- lishes policies, based on political-mili- tary considerations. The object of that committee has nothing to do with form- ing foreign policies, as has been sug- gested here. The Secretary of State sits on that committee, as he did on what is known as the committee of three, to which I have just referred, in order to convey to the Secretaries of War and Navy the international situation, so that they may plan accordingly. It is the outcome of the Pearl Harbor disaster, when there was no coordination, ap- parently, between the State Department and the military. That Council will enable the Secretary of State to advise the Secretary of Na- tional Security of existing conditions, so that he may formulate his plans. The fact that the Secretary of War, the Sec- retary of the Navy, and the Secretary of Air Force are placed on that Council has only one significance, namely, that if the Secretary of National Security is the head of the War, Navy, and Air Forces, as he is according to title II, those under secretaries, as they then will be, will re- ceive their instructions from him on that matter, just as well as on any other matter. There is just one more point, Mr. President, which I do wish to emphasize. The Senator from West Virginia is so right when he says that according to the chart on the wall the Secretary of Na- tional Security is nothing more than a secretary of the three armed forces, co- ordinating the other military councils with the armed serVices1 JULY 9 It should be particularly noted that in the case of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, they receive their direct orders from the Pres- ident, and pass them on to the unified commands in the various theaters of war when we are in war, but now, during peacetime, to the unified commands in the Pacific and the Atlantic. Mr. President, this amendment places the Secretary of National Security in the position in which he should be, next to the President, in order to enable him to carry out the instructions of the Presi- dent in the whole national security pic- ture, and not merely from the military point of view. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on agreeing to the amend- ment offered by the Senator from Wyo- ming [Mr. ROBERESON] to the amend- ment of the committee. The amendment to the amendment was rejected. Mr. TAFT. Mr. President, I have been somewhat concerned in reading Title I, Coordination for National Secu- rity, and the language with regard to the National Security Council. The language might justify the idea that all domestic and foreign policies were to be subordinated to the military exigencies. On page 31, line 20, the bill reads: The function of the Council shall be to advise the President with respect to the Integration of domestic, foreign, and mili- tary policies? That covers all kinds of policies; it covers every policy with which Congress deals? so as to enable the military services and the other departments and agencies of the Government to cooperate more effectively in matters involving the national security. That merely states a result. I have suggested to the distinguished chairman of the committee, the Senator from South Dakota [Mr. GURNEY], that we should insert in -line 22, after the word "policies," the words 'f relating to the national security." I think that is clearly the intention of the bill, and I call attention to the fact that in the pre- amble in section 2, page 30, it is said distinctly that the purpose is "to provide for the establishment of integrated poll-- cies and procedures for the departments, agencies, and functions of the Govern- ment relating to the national security." The same question arises as to page 32, where, in paragraph (b), the bill reads: In addition to performing such other functions as the President may direct, for the purpose of more effectively coordinating the policies of the departments and agen- cies of the Government? That is not qualified in any way; it means all functions and policies of the Government? _ and their functions relating to the national security. , Again it seems to me it should be made clear that the limitation relating to the national security should apply to the policies as well as to the functions of the other departments of the Government. Therefore, Mr. President, I move that on page 31, line 22, after the word "poli- cies", the words "relating to the national security" be inserted, and on page 32, line 11, after the word "policies", the words Appped For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 L.) CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-L-SENATE "and functices" be inserted, and in line 12, that the words "and their functions" be stricken out, so that the qualification reating to the national security may apply te the policies as well as the func- tions of the department. The :PRESIDENT pro tempore. With- out objection, the amendments will be coneidcred en bloc. Mr. TAFT. That is correct; it is all one question. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, cer- tainly it is not the intention of the com- mittee, or of anyone having anything to do with the bill, to provide that the Na- tional Security Council should do any- thing other than consider questions of national security. Personally I am glad the Senator from Ohio has brought up this amendment. I have conferred with other members of the committee, and all of us have agreed that not only do both ? the amendments make the purposes of the bill clearer, but we also thank the Senator from Ohio for a little better language. Therefore I am perfectly will- -ince to accept both the amendments. Mr. McMAHON. Mr. President, will the Senator from Ohio yield? Mr.. TAFT. I yield. Mr. McMAHON. I fully approve the- Senator's amendment, except that I should like to point out that I do not think he has helped the situation very much by putting in the language "re- lating to the national security." Was not that the language suggested by the Senator? Mr. TAFT. Yes. Mr. McMAHON. As I see it?and I think the Senator will agree?that is all-encompassing. I can think of no policy having to do with our national existence, our Government, or our na- tional life, that would not come within that language. Mr. TAFT. I think it is a question of degree. Many policies might, but I think most of the domestic policies which we are considering?the question of tax- ation, questions raised by the labor bill, and the like?can hardly be said tcr re- late to the national security in the sense in which those words are used in- the bill. I see no reason why the Council should not volunteer its advice as to something if it thinks it does relate to the national security, but I do not want Congress to be on record as saying that the Council can consider things which do not relate to the national security, and I am afraid that unless the amendment is made, that claim could well be asserted. Mr. HILL. Mr. President, I think the Senator's amendment is a good one, and I certainly think the amendment, read in connection With the declaration of policy in the very beginning of the bill, makes it clear that the whole procedure and machinery are tied to the national security. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on agreeing to the amend- ment of the Senator from Ohio [Mr. TAFT] to the amendment of the com- mittee. The amendment to the amendment,waS agreed to. Mr. TAFT. Mr. Prenident, I should like to ask the Senator from South Dakota a question. Is there anything in the bill which changes in any way the rules regarding the sending of military and naval missions into foreign coun- tries, or is that covered in the Other bill which is now before the committee? Mr. GURNEY. I am quite sure there is nothing in the pending bill which in any way ,authorizes missions to foreign countries. There is before the Armed Services Committee a bill seeking perg mission to send military missions to coun- tries other than those in the Western Hemisphere, which latter can be done under the present law. The Department presently has permission to send missions into 'countries in the Western Hemi- sphere. Mr. TAFT. I thank the Senator. I understood the question was dealt with In a separate bill. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, I should like to answer the- Senator from Ohio in regard to this matter. Senate bill 758 depends largely on an attached Executive order, which the Sen- ator will find starting on page 5 of the report. Mr. TAFT. I read the Executive order, and on the whole, it seems to me that that Executive order is an order; in effect, to the Army, or to the various Secre- taries, to proceed to draw bills. If the bill itself does not contain ? any such authority, I do not see how an Executive order can be read into the bill; that is to say, an order proposed to be issued by the President. At the end of the joint letter by the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy it is said: We are agreed that the proper method of setting forth the functions (so-called roles and missions) of the armed forces is by the issuance of an Executive order cOncurrently with, your approval of the appropriate legis- lation. We attach for your consideration a mutually agreed draft of such an order. The bill may have been changed; we may have changed it. As I understand, the committee says distinctly, on page 9 of the report: After long and serious deliberation, your committee decided against amending the bill O include the basic functions (roles and missions) of the several services. Your coin- Mittee came to this conclusion because it felt that such amendments would seriously linpair the required flexibility of our military forces, and because such action would violate the principle of separation of executive and gislative authority traditional in American government. I do not see how an Executive order can now be issued without conforming to the changes made in the bill, so I do not think we are bound by the terms of the Executive order printed -in the re- port. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. The Senator may be right, because the Execu- tive order could be changed tonight, or on any day, by the stroke of a pen. I do call the attention of the Senator from Ohio, as an outcome of his ques- tion regarding the possibility of the armed forces being sent to service in for- 8391 eign countries, to page 6' of the report, section II, section 2, "Functions of the United States Army," paragraph 3, which reads: To provide, as directed by proper author- ity, such missions and. detachments for serv- ice in foreign countries as may be required to support the national policies and interests of the United States. Mr. TAFT. Yes; but as I understand it, this is a proposed Executive order, prepared' by the Secretary. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. That Is correct. Mr. TAFT. When the President comes to issue an Executive order, it seems to me he must conform the order. to the provisions of the bill itself, and If the bill does not contain authority to do this particular thing?and par- ticularly in view of the fact, I think, there are other laws that prohibit it; I am not certain about that, but I think there are?then it seems to me that what is proposed to be an Executive order becomes of no importance. . Mr. -ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I think that is true, but in view of the Senator's question, I felt it only right to point out that paragraph to him, at least to show the thinking of the authors. of the bill and of others who. consid- ered it. Mr. HILL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. TAFT. I yield. Mr. HILL. The Senator from Ohio is absolutely correct in his interpretation and in his judgment of this matter. Nothing confirms the wisdom of the Sen- ator in this matter better than the fact that a separate bill has been introduced which is now pending in the Armed Serv- ices Committee of the Senate and the Armed Services Committee of the House, to authorize the sending of these mis- sions. That bill has been presented be- cause there is no such authority in the pending bill. Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield?' Mr. TAFT. I yield to the Senator from Oregon. Mr. MORSE. I think the .Senator from Ohio has made a very able contri- bution to the debate on this matter, from the standpoint of subsequent judicial in- terpretation of the bill. I think it is par- ticularly clear that unless the bill itself contains terms of reference in regard to military missions, then no Executive or- der could possibly be incorporated into the bill by reference. It would be nec- essary to include very definite terms of, reference in the bill, and there is no lan- guage in the bill that would justify or support an Executive order in regard to military missions, as was so ably pointed out by the Senator from Ohio. Mr. TAFT. Then there is. the lan- guage in the report itself, later on, in effect disowning, it seems to me, that particular intent. Mr. MORSE. Furthermore, any lan- guage in a report that is inconsistent with the clear language in a bill has no standing in court as carrying any weight In determining congressional intent. '. Annrve F 'iRstease`. R 00610R .020 041.6001i41:- 82 ASIA Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200046t1 -1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE- Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. TAFT. I yield to the Senator from South Dakota. Mr. GURNEY. I shOuld like to make just one more statement so it will be clear in the RECORD that there is noth- ing in the bill which in any way author- izes foreign missions. The purpose, of course, is that any missions which may be authorized by law would be provided by the security organization, but they could not be used in any way unless they were otherwise authorized by some other law. They are not authorized in the bill at all. Mr. TAM'. I am glad to have the opinion of so many members of the Com- mittee on Armed Services who have par- ticipated in the framing of the bill. I think there can be no doubt of the intent of its framers. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The committee amendment is open to further amendment. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, I have another amendment here, but I should like to say I am a little amused, because in committee, in the consideration of the bill, when we were endeavoring to get the functions stated in the bill itself, we were told that that was not necessary, as they would all be taken care of in the accompanying Ex- ecutive order. I now offer amendment No. 7, and ask that it be stated. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Wyoming offers an amend- ment, which the clerk will state. The CHIEF CLERK. It is proposed to amend the committee amendment, on page 49, line 10, by striking out the period and inserting the following: "and shall be chosen in rotation from the three armed services: Provided; That the total service of any officer as Director of the Joint Staff shall not exceed 4 years in all: .4nd provided further, That the combined service of any officer as Director or mem- ber of the Joint Staff shall ni4 exceed years in all." Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. Presider, the object of the amendment is very evident, I think. It is merely to provide for a rotation of the important office of Director of the Joint Staff, and it limits the time one officer can possibly be the Director or a member of the Staff. I hope there will be no objection to the amendment. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, our committee considered this matter some- what. It has-been the custom for a long time for the chief of branch in both the Army and the Navy to serve for a period of years. Without doubt that custom will be followed, because in the Navy each officer is required to have sea duty ever Sc often, and, of course, when an Army officer is brought into Washington to be Chief of Branch, he is only allowed to serve, generally, for 4 years. I hope the amendment will not be brought forward at this time, for the reason that it will in a way disrupt the smoothness Of the bill as it now reads, and the acceptance of it by the several departments. It has been agreed to by the land, sea, and air forces, and I can see no reason why We should accept the amendment at this late date. I would not be authorized, as chairman of the committee, to accept it. I hope, therefore, the amendment will be defeated. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on agreeing to the amend- ment of the Senator from Wyoming to the committee amendment. The amendment to the amendment was rejected. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The committee amendment is open to further amendment. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, I send to the desk amendment No. 8. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Wyoming offers an amend- ment, which the clerk will state. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, I wish to delete certain por- tions of the amendment, and ask the clerk to read that part of the amend- ment which begins "On page 50, strike out lines 8 and 9, and insert the follow- ing." That begins at the bottom of the sheet, and I think goes over to the other side. The CHIEF CLERK. In the committee amendment, on page 50, it is proposed to strike out lines 8 and 9, and insert the following: (2) To advise the National Security Re- sources Board of the military material and manpower requirements in order that they may be integrated in the over-all plans for national industrial mobilization. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. That is all that is proposed. That is the only change I am asking. Again, I say, I hope the committee will accept the amendment. I think it states much more clearly than does the committee amendment the purpose in mind, which is simply to plan for military aspects of industrial mobilization, that the National Security Resources Board, which would largely be responsible in the matter, should be advised. The amendment merely seeks to provide that the Na- tional Security Resources Board shall be advised of the military material and manpower requirements, in order that they may be integrated iri the over-all plan for national industrial mobilization. Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, will the Clerk restate the ?amendment? I am unable to keep track of just which amendment it is. By the way, Mr. President, these alfiendments are identi- fied by letter. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. It is Identified by the letter H, at the bottom of page 1 of the amendment. The amendment will again be stated. The CHIEF CLERK. It is proposed to amend the committee amendment, on page 50, by striking out lines 8 and 9, and inserting the following: (2) To advise the National Security Re- sources Board of the military material and manpower requirements in order that they may be integrated in the over-all plans Mt. national industrial mobilization. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on agreeing to the amend- ment of the Senator from Wyoming to the amendment of the committee. ??The amendment to the 'amendment was rejected. -Approved For Release 200 1 15 R 1 JULY 9 The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The bill is open to further amendment. Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, I offer an amendment which I ask to have stated. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The amendment will be stated. The CHIEF CLERK. On page 41 it is proposed to strike out lines 4 to '7, in- clusive, and to insert in lieu thereof the following: (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of this or any other act, the existing status of the Marine Corps (including the Fleet Marine Forces) or of the Naval Aviation shall not be altered or diminished; nor shall .their existing functions or missions be transferred to other services. Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, the amendment hardly requires any expla- nation. It is obvious from the reading of it that the purpose of the amendment is to provide that neither the missions of -naval aviation nor the Marine Corps, nor their functions, can be transferred to any other branch of the service by the supersecretary. I feel that if, for exam- ple, it is to be decided at some future time that naval planes should not protect shipping, if it is to be decided that the marine amphibious units should be dis- posed of, it should be done by the Con- gress, and not be left to the whim and caprice of some supersecretary who at that particular moment might happen to hold the position of authority. Mr. LODGE. Mr. President, I assured the Senator from Wisconsin that I would here on the floor of the Senate make a statement regarding my personal belief In the value of the Marine Corps, and of my determination, so far as I could do so, always to oppose any move which would cripple or destroy the Marine Corps. I am opposed to the Senator's amend- ment. I am opposed to it in the first place because the bill on page 41, begin- ning in line 4, contains a provision safe- guarding the Marine Corps, which has been approved by General Vandegrift. That is the first reason why I am opposed to the amendment. I am opposed to it in the second place because I think it is most unwise to seek to legislate tactics into the statute law of the United States. I think we have got to leave questions of military strategy to professional men to make the decisions at the proper time, Mr. McCARTHY. May I interrupt the Senator at that point? Is it the Sen- ator's understanding that under the bill as presently written the supersecretary can at will transfer missions and func- tions from one branch of the service to another? Mr. LODGE. I would say in the first place that I never use the word "super- secretary." I think that is a sort of a smear word, and I do not think it is accu- rate. Secondly, I do not think the Secre- tary of National Security possesses a single power in the world that the Presi- dent of the United States has not had for 150 years. Mr. McCARTHY. Let me ask the Sen- ator a further question. Is it the Sen- ator's thought, then, that some of the powers which the President has had for 150 years are to be transferred to the supersecretary, if I may call him that? R 2 6400014 Ap ed For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE Mr. LODGE. Well, the Secretary of National Security, of course, exercises his power subject to the direction of the President. McCARTHY. I should like to get the Senator's thought on this point, if I may. The Senator from Massachusetts has done much work on the bill and given a good deal of attention to it. Is it the Senator's thought that under the bill as presently written the Secretary of Na- tion Security does have the power, for example, to say that naval planes shall no longer protect Navy shipping? Does the Senator think he has the power, for example, to say, "We will completely do away with the marine amphibious force and transfer that function to the Army?" Does the Senator think the bill gives him that power? Mr. LODGE. I am very glad the Sen- ator raised that question, because I ' should like to assure him, and I should like to assure the high command of the Marine Corps, a body to which I .am bound by a great many close ties, and I should like to assure anyone else who may be worried about it, that the fate of the Marine Corps does not depend upon some statute that we pass here in Con- gress. The Marine Corps can no more be abolished or crippled than can the United States Senate. In fact, I think the position of the Marine Corps is more secure, because the United States Senate has its roots in the Constitution, whereas the Marine Corps has its roots in the hearts of the American people. There is no need to be worried upon that point. There is no need to be worried over such flyspecks as where commas are to be placed, or such legalistic matters. That is a matter about which no one need be worried, because the position of - the Marine Corps is absolutely assured. Mr. McCARTHY. I am not so much concerned with the fate of the Marine Corps or the fate of naval aviation, but I am concerned with the strength of our military force& I know the Senator is well acquainted with what is known as the 1478 series. Mr. LODGE. No, I was not at the high level of the Joint Chiefs of Staff ,during the war. I do not know what conversa- tions they had. Mr. McCARTHY. That series was dis- cussed in the Military Affairs Committee of the Senate, and it is now under con- sideration by the House Armed Services Committee. The House committee is studying that matter. It consists of an exchange of papers between the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and -if the Senator were familiar with the contents of those docu- ments I am sure he would be disturbed aboue.the fate of naval aviation and the. fate of the Marine Corps, and conse- quently the fate of our military forces. Mr. LODGE. Let me say to my good f...:end from Wisconsin that one can un- doubtedly find some individual in one of the departments who has at some time written a paper in which he said he did not like the Marines. I know that an Assis;ant Secretary of the Navy came be- fore a Senate committee and said the Navy was a complete force in itself, and ought to take over all sorts of land func- tions. One can always find some Indi- vidual who expresses some such outland- ish opinion. But what I want to point out to the Senator is that if anyone wanted to do anything which would crip- ple the Marine Corps, he would first of all have to get by the President of the United States, he would then have to get by the Congress of the United States, he would have to get by all the con- gressional committees, he would have to get by the press and the radio of the country, he would have to get by the American people, and that, to me, is sim- ply out of the question. Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President? Mr. LODGE. Let me finish my objec- tion to the Senator's amendment. We used to provide by statute the number of men there should be in a company of infantry, and how many corporals and sergeants there should be in the com- pany. I remember we provided in the Defense Act of 1920 that the infantry was to be in charge of the development of the tank. When I was on active duty there developed a demand for a fast tank, and there developed a demand for a self-propelled artillery piece which the artillery would operate. Because it had a caterpillar tread the authorities could not get around the statute in any other way than by calling it a combat car. When we begin legislating tactics into laws of the United States we are gazing into a crystal ball and will be making a mistake. I think the language proposed to be inserted by the Senator from Wis- consin, if adopted, would kick back on the Marine Corps some day. Mr. McCARTHY. I am not trying to legislate tactics. I think, however, it is wrong for us to give to some appointed official power which no man has ever had before. I think if any of the missions or functions of the Marine Corps are ever to be changed, they should be changed by the Congress and not by any super- secretary. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. I yield. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. I want to point out to the Senator from Wisconsin how correct he is in referring to the statements made by the high of- ficials regarding the Marine Corps. General Spaatz, head of the Air Force, said: During the war the Navy developed and employed the Marine Corps as a major force In land and air warfare. This is patently an incursion by one service into the normal roles of the other two services. Such a war- time practice should not be considered as a cogent reason for perpetuating this assump- tion of mission on the part of the sea forces. I recommend therefore that the size of the Marine Corps be limited to small, readily available, and lightly armed units, no larger than a regiment, to protect United States interests ashore in foreign countries and to provide interior guard of naval ships and naval shore establishments. The Chief of Staff of the United States Army said: There is real need for one service to be charged with the responsibility for initially bridging the gap between the sailor on the ship and the soldier on land. This seems to me properly a function of the Marine Corps. I believe the Joint Chiefs of Staff should give serious consideration to such a concept. Approved,For Release 20 1-1 .8693 The need of a force within the fleet to pro- vide small, readily available, and lightly armed units to protect United States inter- ests ashore in foreign countries is recognized. " I quote further: Once marine units attain such a size as to require the combining of arms to accomplish their missions they are assuming and dupli- cating the functions of the Army, and we have in effect two land armies. I therefore recommend that the above concept be ac- cepted as stating the role of the Marine Corps, and that marine units not exceed the regi- ment in size, and that the size of the Marine Corps be made consistent with the foregoing principles. Mr. BALDWIN. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. I yield to the Sena- tor from Connecticut. Mr. BALDWIN. Let me say to the dis- tinguished Senator from Wisconsin that I shared the same feeling with reference to protecting the Marine Corps that he himself has expressed. I felt that they were entitled to all the protection lan- guage could give them, without freezing missions and freezing units so that in ' time of warfare they could not be ade- quately and completely handled. I feel that the bill does exactly what the Sena- tor wants to have done. Let me refer to section 206 (a)? Mr. McCARTHY. Let me interrupt the Senator. If the Senator feels that the bill doe g exactly what I want to have done, in view of the fact that many of us differ with the Senator's interpreta- tion of the bill, can the Senator have any conceivable objection to making sure that the bill does what he thinks it does? Mr. BALDWIN. My objection to the particular amendment lies against the word "mission," because it seems to me that in time of war if the Supreme Com- mand says, "Here is the available air power which we have. It happens to belong to the Marine Corps. We must send it to protect some military trans- ports," it does not want to be faced with the situation that the statute does not permit the use of naval aviation or ma- rine aviation to protect military trans- ports or other things of that nature. It seems to me that the language in section 206 (a) is adequate to do what the Sena- tor wants to do. It provides as follows: The term "Department of the Navy" as used in this act shall be construed to mean the Department of the Navy at the seat of government? That is the administration at Wash- ington? the headquarters, United States Marine Corps? That is here? the entire operating forces of the United States Navy (including naval aviation) and of the United States Marine Corps, includ- ing the reserve components of such forces; all field activities, headquarters, forces, bases, installations, activities, and functions under the control or supervision of the Department of the Navy; and the United States Coast Guard when operating as a part of the Navy pursuant to law. It Is further provided; (b) The provisions of this act shall not authorize the alteration or diminution of the existing relative status of the Marine Corps 1 'CI R g/06,1 04 Aptyred For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R0002000 01-1 8694 CONGRESSIONAL RECORI5?SENATE (including the Fleet Marine Forces) or of naval aviation. It seems to me that we would weaken the provisions of the bill by adopting the Senator's amendment, because subsec- tion (a) of section 206 is a detailed de- scription of what shall constitute the naval forces of the United States, includ- ing all the component parts of the Marine Corps itself, and Including, naval aviation. As I recall, this particular section of the bill received more atten- tion from the committee, from the point of view of time and discussion, than did practically any other part of the bill. This language was prepared with ex- treme care. At one of the sessions Gen- eral Vandegrift and Admiral Sherman were present, and we worked over this language and finally obtained an agree- ment. They indicated at the time that it was satisfactory. M. HILL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. I yield. Mr. HILL. I ask the Senator from Connecticut, with reference to General Vandegrift, if it is not true that the corn- nnttee brought General Vandegrift, Com- mandant of the Marine Corps, into ex- ecutive session at the time it was considering this very language, and whether this language, drafted by the committee in the presence of General Var degrift, was not specifically approved by him? Mr. BALDWIN. That is my recollec- tion. Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, I think that is the whole trouble with the drafting of the bill. We have called in generals from the various branches of the service, and if a!' certain amendment or section met with their approval, it was given no further study. I was not a member of the committee? Mr. HILL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. -Let me finish. Mr. HILL. Certainly. Mr. McCARTHY. I was not a member of the Committee on Armed Services, but I did attend many of its meetings, and watched much of the deliberation. I think that is the principal criticism that could be made of the committee, even though I know that it did an excellent job otherwise. It would call in a general or admiral and ask his advice. As the Senator says, General Vandegrift was called in; and because General Vande- grift said that this language met with his approval, the committee concluded that It was all right. Mr. HILL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. I yield. Mr. HILL. Let me say to the Senator that we did call in many generals and many admirals, as well as many persons who were not either in the Army, the Navy, or the Air Force. We sought the best advice, the greatest possible store of information, and the wisest counsel we could find. We did not necessarily accept a provision because some general, some admiral, or some civilian approved it. However, as the Senator from. Con- necticut has said, we did perhaps give more time to the provision with respect to the Marine Corps than to any other provision. We worked long and hard, because we were all interested in doing everything we could to safeguard and protect the Marine Corps. As I have stated, we counseled with General Van- degrift. He approved this language; and after the committee had weighed it carefully, the committee decided that the provision now in the bill was the best possible language to do that which all of us wanted to do, namely, protect and safeguard the Marine Corps. Mr. McCARTHY. Let me point out to the Senator that prior to the time when the committee called various gen- erals and admirals to obtain their ad- vice, the President, as Commander in Chief, had ordered this particular bill, and that every general and every ad- miral who was before the committee was under specific, definite orders. There is no question about that, is there? . Mr. GURNEY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. I yield to the Sena- tor from South Dakota. Mr. GURNEY. Let . me say to the Senator that if he will read the para- graph at the top of page 9 of the report? I am sure he has already read it? Mr. McCARTHY. I have. Mr. GURNEY. I will not ask the Sen- ator to read it again. It was the inten- tion of the committee to preserve the basic? functions and the required flexi- bility of our entire military force. Per- sonally, I believe that General Vande- grift accepted the language which we presented to him because he thought it was all right. ram sure that our com- mittee accepted it because we thought it was all right. Mr. President, I include myself among other Senators who have made similar statements this afternoon. I yield to no one in my firm resolve to protect the standing of the Marine Corps and of naval aviation?and, in fact, of all branches of the service. I believe the bill does just that. I will say definitely ? to the Senator from Wisconsin that the - Secretary of National Security provided for by the terms of the bill could not, by himself, without the President's direc- tion, change the functions, roles, or mis- sions of the Marine Corps in any way. There is no authority in this bill or in any law which gives him such power. ' Mr. McCARTHY. I suggest to the Senator that the mere fact that the com- mittee may have sold General Vande- grift a bill of goods does not make this provision right. Mr. REVERCOMB. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? - Mr. McCARTHY. I yield. Mr. REVERCOMB. It is very ap- parent that we are all interested in pro- tecting the status of the Marine Corps, and that the Marine Corps should exist In the same status it has today. The Senator's amendment reads: Notwithstanding the provisions of this or any other act, the existing status of the Marine Corps (including the Fleet Marine forces) or of Naval Aviation shall not be altered or diminished. If the amendment were to stop there, Would it not be the same as the pro- JULY 9 vision of the bill in subparagraph (b) of section 206, on page 41? Mr. McCARTAY. Except, if the Sen- ator will refer to page 41, line 4, he will note that I add after the words "this act," the words "or any other act." Mr. REVERCOMB. I have some mis- givings with regard to making provision that none of the missions shall be trans- ferred or changed. The word "missions" troubles me somewhat. As I understand the word, I do not think we should, by legislation, stop the heads of the military forces from directing missions. If we take the status or perhaps the functions and provide by legislation that they shall remain as they are, that the Marine Corps shall be intact as a recognized unit, I think we will have what is desired, and what apparently is the intent of the bill, as expressed even by the Senators ? who have spoken against :the proposed amendment. It seems to be their in- tent. But I myself must express a mis- giving as to the use of the word "mis- sions." That I understand to be the per- formance of a particular service. Mr. ROBERTSON of Wyoming. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. I yield to the Sen- ator from Wyoming. Mr. ROBERTSON of. Wyoming. I am Interested in the discussion of the ques- tion of functions and missions, because I questioned Under Secretary Royall very thoroughly in committee on this very question. The examination will be found , on pages 362 and 363 of the hearings be- fore the Committee on Armed Services, regarding our national defense establish- ment. I read from the hearings, as follows: Senator ROBERTSON. Well, that is possibly what he said when he was referring to the Executive order, but this is the bill he is re- ferring to, and, as I say, I quote him again: "I further understand it that no function of one department of-Government and no organization can be changed from one to the other except under specific provisions of law, and that if the President wants to make such a change, he has to lay it before the Con- gress for approval." That was a quotation from General Eisenhower. Then I asked Mr. Royall these questions: Senator ROBERTSON. Then you feel, do you, that the Secretary of National Defense, or the super-secretary must be given the power to change the functions of amphibious war- fare, of land-based naval aircraft, and of guided missiles, if he sees fit? Mr. ROYALL. I think he should have that power, subject to the direction of the Presi- dent, and I do not think it is confined only to the functions that happened to be performed by the Navy. I think he should have it as to the Air Forces and the Army. I think he should have the right, for example, in the question of the Army Ground Forces which bore the big brunt of this war, at consid- erably more casualties than all of the others put together, including the Air Forces and everybody else?I think he should have the authority. Senator ROBERTSON. You would not exclude the marines from that? Mr. ROYALL. I say "including all of ,the rest": That the Ground Forces had more casualties than all of the others put to- gether. Senator Romarrsom'In proportion to their number more than the marines? Aooroved For R leae 2 1 15 : CI R 00 1OR 000406 ved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R000200 1947 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE Mr. ROVALL. Gross; T do not know about proportion. I am a great admirer of the marines. Mr. BALDWIN. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. I yield to the Sena- tor from Connecticut. Mr. BALDWIN. I recall the question- ing of General Royall on that subject by the Senator from Wyoming ? [Mr. F.'.orezarisoNl, and he went into it very thoroughly. I should like to do him the honor of saying that because of the dis- cuseion and the questioning by the Sen- ator from Wyoming, when we went into. executive session in the committee we put into the bill the language which is in it specifically to protect the Marine Corps. If that point had not been raised, and the Senator from Wyoming had not pressed it so effectively and earnestly, I doubt very much that we would have this language in the bill. It is a very decided change from the original draft introduced in the Senate. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. I yield to the Sen- ator from Massachusetts. Mr. SALTONSTALL. I want to ask the Senator from Connecticut if We did not go further and, as a result of the testimony of Secretary Royal], insert the provision that the three departments, the Army, the Navy, and the Air Force, should retain all their present functions? Mr. BALDWIN. That Is correct. Mr. SALTONSTALL. And that the Secretary of National Security should have the functions given to him by stat- ute? Mr. BALDWIN. That is my recollec- tion, Mr. President' Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, in order to have the RECORD clear, in case this amendment is not agreed to, I should like to ask the chairman of the Com- mittee on Armed Services, if I may, whether he feels that the bill as written does or does not give the supersecretary the power to transfer functions from one branch to another. Does the Senator feel that the bill gives the supersecre- tary the right to say, for example, that naval aviation shall no longer have land- based planes? Mr. GURNEY. To make the answer very simple I will say "No"; there Is nothing in the bill which gives the Sec- retaey such right. It must come from the President, as it has since our Army and Navy started. Mr. McCARTHY. The Senator feels, then, that under the bill as presently written the supersecretary cannot say- that the amphibious operations of the Marine Corps are a duplication of the amphibious operations of the Army, and therefore we shall do away with am- phibious Marine Corps units? Mr. GURNEY. Definitely, the Secre- tary of National Security will not ?have that power. Mr. McCARTHY. I disagree with the Senator, but I am glad to have that an- swer on the RECORD. Mr. CHAVEZ. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. I yield to the Sen- ator from New Mexico. No. 130-8 Mr. ClIAVEZ. 1.:7r. President, I hope the Senator from Wisconsin will insist on his amendment. Irrespective of what some general or so:ae admiral might have done, the fact still remains that they do want to get away from the Marine Corps. I hope that the Sebator will outline com- pletely the thought. Not only that, but when the amendment comes to a vote I hope he will insist on a record vote. Mr. McCARTHY. I thank the Sen- ator from New Mexico very much; and to show how correct he is, all I need do. is refer to the statement of General Spaatz. He said the Marine Corps should be no larger than one regiment. The Chief of Staff said that there should be no duplication on the part of the Marine Corps of things being done by the Army. That is an unqualified statement that he feels that the Marine Corps should no longer have any amphibious units. I think that for that reason the bill as presently written is tremendously dan- gerous. - The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on agreeing to the amend- ment submitted by the Senator from Wisconsin [Mr. McCiamtv]. Mr. LUCAS. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDENT pro tempore.. The clerk will call the roll. The Chief Clerk called the roll, and the following Senators answered to their names: Aiken Hill Myers Hoey O'Daniel Holland O'MahoneY Johnson, Colo. Overton Johnston, S. C. Pepper Kilgore Revercornb Knowland RobertSon, Va. ' i.,oriczer Robertson, wyo. L Russell Lucas Saltonstall McCarron Smith McCarthy Stewart McClellan Taft McFarland Taylor McGrath Thye McKellar Umstead McMahon Vandenberg Malone Watkins Martin Wherry Maybank White Mil]ikin Williams Moore Wilson Morse Young Baldwin Ball Barkley Brooks Butler Byrd Cain Capper Chavez Connally Cooper Cordon Donnell Dworshak Ecton Ferguson George Green Gurney Hatch Hawkes Hayden Hickenlooper Murray The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Sev- enty-one Senators having answered to their names, a quorum is present. The question is on agreeing to the amendment of the Senator from Wis- consin [Mr. McCARTHY] to the commit- tee amendment. Mr. McCARTHY. I ask for the yeas and nays. The yeas and nays were ordered. Mr. REVERCOMB. Mr. President; a parliamentary inquiry. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator will state it. Mr. REVERCOMB. Is an amendment to the pending amendment in order? The PRESIDENT pro tempore. It is In order. ? Mr. REVERCOMB. Then to the pend- ing amendment I offer the following amendment, to strike out the words "or missions", so that the amendment then will read: Notwithstanding the provisions of this or any other act, the existing statua of the AnoFoved For a e 20 /I 15 CIA*R -1 8695 Marine Corps (including the Fleet Marine Forces) or of the naval aviation shall not be altered or diminished; Or shall their existing functions be transferred to other services. Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, I have no objection to that amendment to my amendment, and I shall be glad to accept it. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Inas- much as the yeas and nays have been ordered, the Senator from Wisconsin can perfect his amendment only by unanimous consent. Is there Objection to the perfection of - the amendment as indicated? The Chair hears none; and, without objec- tion, the amendment is perfected as indicated. The question now is on agreeing to the perfected amendment of the Sen- ator from Wisconsin to the committee amendment. Mr. SALTONSTALL. Mr. President,1 shall not prolong the debate, except to say that the amendment of the Senator from Wisconsin was discussed in the committee for a long time. We felt that " it would do more harm than good to the Marines. I. call attention to the fact that the word "relative" appears in the bill, but that word is omitted from the amend- ment. The amendment reads "existing status." The bill reads "existing relative status." The bill does not freeze the Marines in their present status and their present duties, but it allows them to take their relative status as a part of the Navy and as a part of our armed forces in any situation that may arise. We do not know what part the Marines will be called upon to play in these days of jet bombs, atom bombs, and guided missiles. We wish to preserve the Marines in the same relative status to the Navy that they now are In. But we do not Wish to freeze them to their existing status, as we know it today. We want them to go forward, not backward, as Admiral Halsey stated so well at Philadelphia on the Fourth of July. So, Mr. Piesident, I sincerely hope that the perfected amendment of the Senator from Wisconsin will be rejected. Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, I am sure the Senator. from Massachusetts is sincere in telling us that he is concerned about the Marine Corps. This amend- ment was offered in the House, but there, instead of the final four words "trans- ferred to Other services," the word "cur- tail" was used. I understand that is the word to which the Secretary of War ob- jected. The Senator from Massachusetts seems to be disturbed because we omitted the word "relative." That was done advis- edly, because I think it has no meaning whatsoever in that connection, and is deceptive. But if the Senator from Mas- sachusetts believes that word is neces- sary in order to protect the Marine Corps, I shall be glad to perfect my amendment ' by inserting that word in it. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Does the Senator from Wisconsin request unanimous consent that he may perfect his amendment in the way, indicated? ,-006I ?ROW-200040001-, ?( d For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP90-00610R00020004GQQ1-1 833 CONGRESSION AL RECORD-SENATE Mr. McCARTHY. Yes; for the benefit of i,he Senator from Massachusetts, I make that request. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Is there objection to the perfecting of the amendment as has been indicated? The Chair hears none; and, without objection, the amendment is further perfected as ir.d Mr. LODGE. Mr. President, a parlia- mentary inquiry. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Sen alorwill state it. Mr. LODGE. Where is that word to be inserted in the amendment? Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, it is to be inserted before the word "status" in line 2 of the amendment. Mr. CHAVEZ. Mr. President, it is my opinion that the amendment offered by the Senator from Wisconsin [Mr. MC- CARTHY], as perfected, should be agreed to. I approve of the words of the Sen- ator from Massachusetts [Mr. SALTON- STALL] that the Marines should not be frozen, and for that very reason I think the amendment of the Senator from Wisconsin should be agreed to. If we do freeze them, if we do take the advice of some naval officer or army of- ficer in the Department of National Se- curity, who is going to carry out land- ing operations inecase of war? All one has to do is to read the history of the Marines to know their worth. Because we do know their history, because we do respect their valor and their courage, and know how they take their objectives in places which the Army and the Navy could not reach, we do not want them frc.zen. We want the Marines to remain as they are, and as they have been in the past, able to go forward with the per- formance of their duty as they have been in the past, from the inception of the country. Mr. President, it is fine to think of the Army and to think of the Navy. Both those services have done wonderful work. But why at this late day, after a brilliant history, should we do something that would sidetrack the Marines? Mr. President, I do hope the amend- ment of the Senator from Wisconsin will be agreed to. 'Me PRESIDENT pro tempore. The question is on agreeing to the amend- ment offered by the Senator from Wis- consin [Mr. MCCARTHY] to the amend- ment of the committee. The yeas and nays have been ordered, and the Clerk will call the roll. The legislative clerk called the roll. Mr. WHERRY. I announce that the Senator from Indiana [Mr. CAPEHART] is absent -ay leave of the Senate. The Senator from New York [Mr. IvEs] is absent by leave of the. Senate because of a death in his immediate The Senator from New Hampshire [Mr. ToaRy] is necessarily absent be- cause of illness in his family. The Senator from Kansas [Mr. REED], who is necessarily absent, has a general Pair with the Senator from New York [Mr. WAGNER]. The Senator from Maine [Mr. BREW- sTER], the Senator from Ohio [Mr. Emma], the Senator from New Hamp- shire [Mr. BRIDGES], and the Senator from Delaware [Mr. BUCK] are unaVoid- ably detained on official business. The Senator from South Dakota [Mr. BUSHFIELD] , the Senator from Vermont [Mr. FLANDERS], the Senator from In- diana [Mr. JENNER] , the Senator from Missouri [Mr. KERI], and the Senator from Wisconsin [Mr. WILEY] are neces- sarily absent. Mr. LUCAS. I announce that the Senator from California [Mr. DOWNEY] Is absent by leave of the Senate. The Senator from Mississippi [Mr. EASTLAND] is absent on public business. The Senator from Utah [Mr. THOMAS] is absent by leave of the Senate, having been appointed a delegate to the Inter- national Labor Conference at Geneva, Switzerland. The Senator from Arkansas [Mr. Fut- BRIGHT], the Senator from Washington [Mr. MAGNUSON], the Senators from Maryland [Mr. O'CoNort and Mr. TYD- iNGs] , the Senator from Alabama [Mr. SPARKMAN], the Senator from Oklahoma [Mr. Timms], and the Senator from New York [Mr. WAGNER] are necessarily ab- sent. The Senator from Louisiana [Mr. ELLENDER]' is absent on official business. The Senator from New York [Mr. WAG- NER] has a general pair with the Senator from Kansas [Mr. REED]. If present and voting, the Senator from New York would vote "nay." If present and voting, the Senator from Louisiana [Mr. ELLENDER], the Sen- ator from Alabama [Mr. SminvitiN], the Senator from Utah [Mr. Timms], and ? the Senator from Maryland [Mr. TYD- INGs] would vote "nay." The result was announced?yeas 19, nays 52, as follows: --- YEAS-10 Aiken Brooks Butler Chavez Ecton Hayden Hickenlooper Baldwin Ball Barkley Byrd Cain Capper Connally Cooper Cordon Donnell Dworshak Ferguson George Green Gurney Hatch Hawkes Hill Brewster Bricker Bridges Buck Bushfield Capehart Downey Eastland Langer McCarthy McClellan McFarland McKellar McMahon Malone NAYS-52 Moore O'Daniel Revercomb Robertson, Wyo. Wherry Hoey Pepper Holland Robertson, Va. Johnson, Colo. Russell Johnston, S. 0. Saltonstall Kilgore . Smith Knowland Stewart Lodge Taft Lucas ' Taylor McCarran McGrath. Martin Maybank Millikin Morse Murray Myers O'Mahoney Overton . NOT VOTING-24 Thye Umstead Vandenberg Watkins White Williams Wilson Young Ellender Flanders Fulbright Ives Jenner Kern Magnuson O'Conor Reed Sparkman Thomas, Okla. Thomas, Utah Tobey Tydings Wagner Wiley So Mr. McCARTHY's amendment to the amendment was rejected. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The amenclqient of the committee is open to further amendment. Mr. DONNELL. Mr. President, in connection with the construction placed A nnrobvtad .FOr R141P2Se_ 15 ClAR JULY 9 by the Senator from Wyoming on the powers of the Secretary of National Security, as compared with those of the heads of the Departrhent of the Army, Department of the Navy, and the De- partment of the Air Force, there occur- red a day or so ago some colloquy on the floor of the Senate as to the possible effect of the declaration of policy in in- terpreting the meaning of the language In sections 201 and 202. In that con- nection I made the point that the lan- guage in the preamble, that is to say, the declaration of policy, referring to unified direction under civilian control, tended to substantiate the view of the Senator from Wyoming, because of the fact that there is no requirement in the bill that anyone except the Secretary of the Air Pone and the Secretary of National Security shall be anointed from civilian life. It was suggested by the senior Senator from Massachusetts that there may be some statutory provision which makes it obligatory that both the Secre- tary of War and the Secretary of the Navy shall be chosen from civilian life. In order that the record may be clear on this point, I desire to offer and to read into the RECORD a letter from Ernest S. Griffith, Director of the Legislative Reference Service of the Library of Con- gress, dated July 8, 1947, addressed to me in response to my request of the same date as follows: THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, LEGISLATIVE REFERENCE SERVICE, Washington, July 8, 1947. Hon. FORREST C. DONNELL, United States Senate, ? Washington., D. C. DEAR SENATOR DONNELL: This Is in re- sponse to your telephone inquiry of this morning as to whether there is any provision in the Federal statutes or in the Constitu- tion of the United States which would re- quire either the Secretary of War or the Secretary of the Navy to be a civilian. You are advised that neither the Constitu- tion nor any Federal statute requires that the incumbents of these cabinet positions be civilians. However, no officer of the Army on the active list is permitted to hold any civil office, whether by election or by appoint- ment, and every such officer who accepts or exercises the functions of a civil office there- by ceases to be an officer of the Army, and his commission is thereby vacated 110 U. S. C. 576; R. S. sec. 1222). Prior to the act of August 6, 1882 (22 Stat. 238), specifically authorizing such tempo- rary designation, it was held that' the pro- hibition of the above statute was sufficiently broad as to preclude a general of the Army from serving even temporarily as Secretary of War during the absence of the Secretary without vacating his commission as general of the Army (14 Op. Atty. Gen. 200). No statutes similarly restricting Navy officers in the acceptance of civil employ- ment have been noted. ? Sincerely yours, ERNEST S. GRIFFITH, Director, Legislative Reference Service. Mr. President, I submit respectfully that the statement by Mr. Griffith tends to substantiate the point made by the Senator from Wyoming as to the proper construction of the declaration of policy and its effect upon the respective powers of these officials. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. _ The amendment is open to further amend- ment. If there be no further amend-