STALKING A PERFECT EMBASSY AND MONEY TO BUILD IT

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000302630049-8
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 25, 2012
Sequence Number: 
49
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 19, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000302630049-8.pdf130.94 KB
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SIT AD-reclassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/25: CIA- ARTICLZ rr ON RAGEN-31114.....? NEW YORK TIMES 19 February 1986 State Department Stalking a Perfect Embassy and Money to Build It RDP90-00965R000302630049-8 By BERNARD GWERTZMAN Special to The New York Times WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 Secre- tary of State George P. Shultz said re- cently that in the wake of the Beirut bombings and other attacks on Amer- icans, United States diplomats and their families "are on the front lines ? they are being shot at, they get killed and we owe it to them to do all we possibly can to see that a secure environment is created." With that in mind, and despite the budget-cutting mood in Washington these days, the Reagan Administra- tion is asking Congress to approve a $2.8 billion program to replace many American embassies abroad with what officials say will be the most bomb-resistant, spy-proof buildings ever constructed. Other structures will be strengthened. Robert Lamb, who heads the State Department's new Bureau of Diplo- matic Security, says the new struc- tures will have extra-heavy floor sup- ports, reinforced concrete walls with fewer windows, full sprinkler fire protection and special computer and communications facilities. The buildings will also be set back from the street at least 100 feet and will be surrounded by walls, he said. None will have underground parking garages. And lobbies will be designed so that detection devices are unobtru- sive but more effective than those now in place. Part of a $4A Billion Request The State Department has already been strengthening security at exist- ing embassies. In fact, officials today credited special security guards at the American Embassy in Lisbon for finding a bomb in a diplomat's car be- fore it went off, thus preventing ex- tensive damage or injuries. The construction program would start in the current fiscal year, and is part of a request for $4.4 billion in emergency supplemental appropria- tions that the department wants to spend on security over the next five years, some of it for salaries for more new guards and for special protection equipment and devices. Will a cost-conscious Congress go along with such an ambitious plan? Representative Daniel A. Mica, Democrat of Florida, who heads the Foreign Affairs subcommittee charged with approving the requests, said "it is going to be very hard" to find the money "while we're cutting possibly pensions and domestic pro- grams at home." "I don't know the way out," he added, "but the concern is real." Even some of the program's most ardent supporters on Capitol Hill say that the goal of having what are, in ef- fect, perfect embassies may have to be scaled down. Nevertheless, at this stage in the debate, when the State Department has just informed Con- gress of the confidential details of the program, the Administration does not seem disposed to accept less. Mr. Lamb fiercely defends the costs. In an interview, he character- ized the proposal as "a Presidential priority," not just a State Depart- ment request. "We are going to argue for the eri- tire amount on the Hill," he said, "and frankly our support has been en- couraging." According to Mr. Lamb, special task forces from the National Acad- emy of Sciences have been asked to provide specifications for the new buildings to prevent takeovers of the type that occurred in Teheran and bomb blasts of the type that de- stroyed the American Embassy in Beirut, and to give embassies in Sovi- et-bloc countries such advanced shielding technology as to frustrate spies' efforts to penetrate the walls electronically. "We found that no one has the same kinds of security requirements as an embassy," Mr. Lamb said. "We're in an environment which, in many cases, is totally hostile. But we're not forts like the military. We can't close off our base. We have to provide serv- ices to the public. "In some cases, thousands of peo- ple a day come into our embassy for service. We have to be able to deal with them efficiently and courteously while screening out the handful of people who might do harm." Following are estimated costs for some of the more expensive new em- bassies and other buildings, as de- scribed in a project list the State De- partment provided Congress last week: 1986? Santiago, Chile, $51 million; Kingston, Jamaica, $55 million; Amman, Jordan, $45 million; Mus- cat, Oman, $31 million; Mogadishu, Somalia, $34 million; Khartoum, Sudan, $36 million; a building for arms control delegations in Geneva, $59 million; Istanbul, Turkey, $46 mil- lion; Caracas, Venezuela, $45 million. 1987 ? Vienna, $89 million; Brus- sels, $53 million; Sofia, Bulgaria, $38 million; Bogota, Colombia, $58 mil- lion; Prague, $71 million; Budapest, $52 million; Tel Aviv, $83 million; Jerusalem, for the consulate, $41 mil- lion; Lima, Peru, $68 mullion. 1988 ? Algiers, $39 million; Ran- goon, Burma, $39 million; Copenhag- en, $54 million; Quito, Ecuador, $63 million; Panama, $65 million; Ma- drid, $51 million; Bangkok, Thailand, $61 million. Mr. Lamb says that to build the "perfect" embassy in the Washington area would cost a minimum of $158 a square foot, or $15.8 million for a modest 100,000-square-foot structure,. but that to build the same structure overseas would cost about three times as much. Asked why, he replied, "We go into places where we don't even have basic services, like our own electrici- ty, places that don't have sewage;" "We have to provide things don. er by civil authorities in 'other countrieti," he said. And because of securityte- quirements, he added, there are lor- tions of the embassy that we have to bring in American laborers, with.se- curity clearances, and this adds ap- preciably to the task." Mr. Shultz, in talking receatly about the security needs, said, "Many of our overseas posts front onto tipsy streets." "Some have, extensive glass . fa- cades," he said. "Some share walls with non-U.S. Government tenants. All this is generally undesirable )ind simply unacceptable in a great many situations. The program places' its highest priority on buildings at loca- tions where the security threat is greatest ald which are substantially below the new standards." . Buying a Gas Station In one country, which Mr. Lamb would not name, the United Stptes plans to spend $6 million to buy a. gas station next to the embassy becioise of concerns that the station might be- come a staging area for an attack. In Athens, it plans to spend $10 million to buy property near the embassy to give it more isolation. In addition to $2.8 billion for con- struction projects through 1990, the State Department is seeking $1.6 bil- lion in salaries and expenses for-new security personnel, bringing the total in emergency supplemental appro- priations being sought to $4.4 billion. But the department's regular budget also includes an additional $6.2 billion for security for those years, making the overall total $10.6 billion. Senator Jesse Helms, Republican of North Carolina, asked Mr. Shultz at a recent hearing what he was doing to bring other costs down. He reglied: "1 think we have to look at whether we need all the posts there_ are, ' whether the posts need to be staffed in the way they are staffed." Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/25: CIA-RDP90-00965R000302630049-8