FORMER U.S. INTELLIGENCE AIDES ASK: WAS A LESSON OF THE 70'S FORGOTTEN?

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CIA-RDP90-00965R000504490001-2
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RIFPUB
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K
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2
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December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 27, 2012
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1
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Publication Date: 
December 22, 1986
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OPEN SOURCE
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/02/28: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504490001-2 ARTICLE APPEMW NEW YORK TIMES ON PAGE 22 December 1986 Former U. S. In teffig6nce Aides Ask: Was a Lesson of the 70's Forgotten? By CHARLES MOHR Specul to The Mew York Tines WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 - Whether Lieut. Col. Oliver L. North, when he was a member of the National Security Council staff, acted on his own to divert money from the Iran arms sale to as- sist Nicaraguan rebels intrigues sev- eral former officials and practioners of the craft of intelligence. But if Colonel North did not act on his own, these former officials and others say, they are mystified as to why his superiors apparently entrusted him with such functions as evaluating, plan- ning, managing, financing and conceal- ing the existence of the diversion to the contras and other covert actions. The Iran arms sale, these former of- ficials say, reinforces old lessons about the hazards of covert intelligence ac- tions and underlines a newer lesson about entrusting the direction and ex- ecution of secret operations to ama- rteurs and deputized private citizens. Breaking Proactive Barriers The former officials say White House officials may have forgotten or misun- derstood a series of mishaps that crip- pled United States intelligence circles in the 1970's. Several of the former officials said one of the more obvious mistakes was a try to avoid legal and customary prac- tices of notifying Congress of covert ac- tions. But they said an even graver criticism would be that the laws and Presidential directives on intelligence activities enacted in the Ford and Car- ter Administrations, and in theory car- ried on by President Reagan, appar- ently were ignored or failed in practice. The intent of these mechanisms was to insure Presidential accountability for covert operations, said Morton Halperin, a former member of the Na- tional Security Council staff and an of- ficial of the American Civil Liberties Union who worked with the Senate and House select committees on intelli- gence to write new legislation in 1980. "A major motive was to get rid of the whole concept of Presidential deniabil- ity," Mr. Halperin said, "to make sure that covert operations could not be un- dertaken without the President's knowledge and informed approval." Kenneth Bass, the Department of Justice specialist on intelligence law in the Carter Administration, agreed, saying: "People were sick of argu- ments over whether it was Bobby Ken- nedy or Jack Kennedy who approved trying to poison Castro. The aim was to insure Presidential accountability." Maintaining 'On-Line' Control Stanfield Turner, the Director of Central Intelligence in the Carter Ad- ministration and a retired admiral, said the procedures to prevent the mttt- ation of covert actions without Presi- dential knowledge "were a very impor- tant concept." He added, "The kind of off-line operations permitted in the Reagan Administration are bound to lead to trouble." The C.I.A. has always used non-Gov- ernment personnel and "outside as- sets." The distinction of Colonel North's case, experts said, is that in the past the "off-line operators" were not used to manage, direct and evaluate covert operations. "There is nothing unusual or wrong in contracting with an international arms dealer to furnish a given supply of weapons for a project," said Admi- ral Turner, who is believed to have done just that to assist Afghan rebels and in some other cases. "But there is no reason the arms dealer has to know the destination and the group the arms are being delivered to." Richard Moe, the chief of staff for Vice President Walter F. Mondale, said it appeared that the Reagan Adminis- tration had made the mistake of "privatizing covert action, diplomacy and even war." Need for a Political Base In its final report in 1976 of its inves- tigations into past intelligence scan- dals the Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities," popularly known as the Church com- mittee, said: "The committee has found that when covert operations have been consistent with, and in tactical support of, policies which have emerged from a national debate and the established processes of government, these operations have tended to be a success." That conclusion is still embraced as true by almost all those familiar with the history of covert operations. said, "In other words," said one former in- telligence operator, "you can get away with spooky business if it advances a cause the country as a whole is agreed on and the Congress approves." Secrecy Taken Too Far The outside critics uniformly as- sumed that a primary reason the White House tried to conceal the Iran arms sale and the diversion of proceeds to the Nicaraguan rebels was that it knew it did not have and could not obtain the approval of Congress, or even of senior Cabinet members. One expert said that while it was dif- ficult enough to keep a more orthodox covert action secret, the Reagan White House apparently compounded its diffi- culties by trying to keep the Depart- ments of State and Defense and at least parts of the C.I.A. in the dark as well. "It simply won't work," Admiral Turner said. "Colonel North appar- ently got in trouble, first crack out of the box, at the Lisbon airport, and had to turn to the C.I.A. to get him out of trouble." Admiral Turner seemed to be allud- ing to reported testimony about the second arms shipment. of Hawk an- tiaircraft missile components, in November 1985. The shipment went as far as Portugal, but then no aircraft could be found to transship the parts to Iran. According to sources who heard the testimony about the problem, Colo- nel North had to telephone a senior C.I.A. official, Duane Clarridge, who put Colonel North in touch with an air charter company previously owned and used by the C.I.A. That event reportedly caused John McMahon, who was then deputy direc- tor of the C.I.A. but who has since re- tired, to become angry and to insist that established procedures be fol- lowed for subsequent arms shipments by obtaining a written "intelligence finding" from the President. Tinkering With the Law The outside critics regard the White House's apparent disregard or modi- fication of the "finding" procedure as one of the most fundamental mistakes of the Iran arms sale case. The finding concept became law in' the so-called Hughes-Ryan Act of 1974 and was recodified in the Intelligence Act of 1980. In a finding authorizing a covert action, the President is required to certify that the action is "important to national security," a protection against frivolous acts. The require- ment for a Presidential finding is in- tended to insure that covert acts can- not be concealed from the President himself. Lastly, the preparation of drafts of a written finding is intended to insure that the practicality and desirability of the contemplated covert action will be reviewed by responsible officials from several departments of Government. "Restraint is the most important function of the President's advisers." Mr. Moe said, "There is so much than can and often does go wrong with cov- ert actions." But another former official asserted that restraint "is just what the White House people apparently didn't want." Their motive for secrecy was not only. to conceal this from Congress but from George Shultz," who is Secretary of State and who disapproved of the plan. 'Gentleman's Agreement' Broken By law, the Presidential finding ap- proving a covert action is to be com- municated by the Director of Central Intelligence to the two intelligence committees of Congress at some time. The law permits delay in some cir- cumstances, but according to experts, Continued Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/02/28: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504490001-2 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/02/28: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504490001-2 almost every C.I.A. director has made an extra-legal "gentleman's agree. ment" with the oversight committees as to when and how the director will in- form Congress of covert actions. Trail of graisss Premises Admiral Turner, according to a for- mer White House official, had an agreement to inform the committees within 48 hours of the time President Carter signed a finding. He did not do this when Mr. Carter signed a finding approving the rescue of American citi- zens harbored in Iran by the Canadian Embassy. But his failure to do so caused no controversy because it was an action in support of a popularly ac- cepted cause, and one that risked no major embarrassment if it were ex- posed. William J. Casey, the current C.I.A. chief, also had an "ad hoc, common- sense gentleman's agreement, even though it was forced out of him, with the committees," an intelligence spe- cialist said. However, according to several ex- perts Mr. Casey had repeatedly and seriously violated the agreement long before the present controversy. For instance, in April 1984 Senator Barry Goldwater, then chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, sent Mr. Casey an angry letter berating the director for not clearly informing the committee of a program to mine Nica- raguan harbors. Mr. Casey apologized in writing and, reportedly, made a new gentleman's agreement. But, according to recent testimony, he urged that the finding ap- proving the Iran arms sale not be re- ported to the committees. Describing those past controversies in his 1985 book on the C.I.A., "Secrecy and Democracy," Admiral Turner wrote of the Reagan Administration, "The Administration's willingness re- peatedly to flout the Congress reflected a view that oversight was an impedi- ment rather than a necessity for good intelligence in a society like ours." Sloppy Intelligence Work Some of the critics of the way the Iran operation was conducted said that the use of off-line management and deputized private individuals in man- agement roles goes beyond bad politics or borderline illegality. They say it also makes for sloppy intelligence work. Some, for instance, were shocked that Colonel North and the former na- tional security adviser, Robert C. McFarlane, who had the highest level of national security secrecy clearance, would go personally to Teheran where they conceivably could have been de. tained, made hostage and interrogated or even tortured about United States secrets. Representative George E. Brown Jr., Democrat of California and a member of the House Intelligence Committee, said that although it was unlikely that the Iranian Government would have arrested the two men, it was probably "highly imprudent" of them to have gone to Iran. Other manifestations of amateurism were pointed out by several experts. One involved the supply flights to con- tra forces within Nicaragua that led to the crash of an aircraft, the capture of Eugene Hausenfus and the death of the rest of the crew. The Administration has denied that it was directly involved in the flights, but the Assistant Secre- tary of State for Inter-American Af- fairs, Elliott Abrams, publicly ap- plauded the program. A former intelligence official said, "Real professionals would have had an extraction program to rescue crews once they ended up on the ground." Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/02/28: CIA-RDP90-00965R000504490001-2