FORMER ANALYST PRESSED ON FEES HE GETS FROM CBS

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000807690003-2
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RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 6, 2012
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 22, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/06: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807690003-2 p'RTICLE APPEARED C Former a-[%M~Ilyst PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER 22 January 1985 ressed*o-taftl fees he gets from CAS J By David Zucchino "Profitable?" Adams asked, visibily annoyed. "Yes, profitable," Dorsen repeated. "No," Adams said harshly. "It has not." But under persistent questioning, Adams said he had been paid a $20,000 advance for a book on Viet- nam intelligence, with $20,000 more due upon publication. He said he had been paid $12,000 by CBS so far dur- ing the more than two years of litiga- lion, although he has not billed CBS for all of the approximately 100 days he has worked on the case. The jurors, who sat bundled in coats, scarves and gloves because the heating system had failed, watched with puzzled looks as Dorsen then asked what hotels Adams has stayed at during the trial Adams listed the Plaza, Essex House and the Hilton - all expensive hotels. Dorsen asked Adams about a letter he had written four days before the broadcast to Col. Gains Hawkins, one of Westmoreland's chief accusers on the program. Adams wrote of the broadcast: "Overall, I think It's reasonably good, but, as I mentioned before, there's a major problem; The docu- mentary seems to pin the rap on General Westmoreland, when it probably belongs higher than that." In a tape-recorded conversation with a TV Guide reporter after the broadcast, Adams said of the pro- gram's use of the term conspiracy to describe Westmoreland's actions: "I was uneasy with the word conspiracy in the sense that you have a bunch of villains sitting around a table con- spiring together." Asked to explain the references, Adams clung to his belief that the broadcast was accurate. . "I am clear there was a conspira- cy." he told Dorsen. He added: "I indicated there was a major problem ... that it did not tell the full story [but] it was accurate in that it por- trayed the massive falsification of intelligence" by Westmoreland's command. Adams said he believed that West- moreland may have been under pres. sure by top officials in the adminis- tration of President Lyndon B. Johnson to distort enemy troop esti- mates, "but that was a separate sto- ry" NEW YORK - For the first time in five days on the witness stand, for. ~.} mer Cl Est Samuel A. Adams was essed yesterday about his per- sonal finances and his paid relation. ship with CBS. Adams, answering grudgingly, told the jury in the t: ial of Gen. William C. Westmoreland's S120 million libel suit against CBS that he was paid 525,000 as a consultant for a disputed documentary on Vietnam. He also said he has been paid $200 a day plus expenses in connection with West- moreland's suit against the network, Adams and two CBS employees. David M. Dorsen, an attorney for Westmoreland, pressed Adams on his finances as he tried to prove that Adams had a financial motive to dis-i credit Westmoreland. Adams, who has contended since 1966 that West.i moreland's command falsified ene- 'my strength estimates in Vietnam, was not identified in the 1982 docu-, mentary itself as a paid consultant in the preparation of the program. That program, The Uncounted Ene- my: A Vietnam Deception, accused Westmoreland of deceiving his supe- riors about the size of the enemy as listed in the official "order of battle" in 1967 and 1968 to make it appear that the war was being won. Adams, Si, was a Vietnam analyst for the CIA 1 at the time. Adams' finances were well-known to the litigants in the case, but they were revealed in detail to the jury for the first time yesterday as Dorsen completed a three-day cross-exami- nation. Reminding Adams that he has testified that he was "proud" to have taken part in the broadcast, Dorsen asked, "Hasn't this whole controversy over the order of battle been rather profitable to you as' well?" Dorsen also confronted Adams with his testimony before a 1975 con- gressional committee. In that testi- mony, Adams said Westmoreland's command had underreported enemy infiltration in South Vietnam only "a little bit" and had been "fairly hon- est." The broadcast accused the com- mand of suppressing intelligence es. timates in late 1967 and that there were about 125,000 more infiltrators than Westmoreland was reporting back to Washington. Adams said be was referring to the reporting of Westmoreland's com- mand from 1968 to 1975 - and not the five-month period in 1967 dis- cussed in the broadcast. Adams said he relied, in part, for his infiltration estimates on a West Point book about the Vietnam War giving infiltration estimates much higher than Westmoreland's com- mand had reported in late 1967. Asked if he had been aware that the book had been dropped from the curriculum, Adams replied, "I didn't feel there was any reason for me to find out." Continued Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/06: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807690003-2 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/06: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807690003-2 He added that he learned after the broadcast that the book was dropped because it described the enemy's Tet offensive of early 1968 as the "big- gest [military) surprise since Pearl Harbor." The broadcast said West. moreland's alleged deceit left the U.S. unprepared for the scope of the offensive. Asked by Dorsen to interpret the Pearl Harbor reference, Adams said, "If it was the biggest surprise since Pearl Harbor, it was certainly a big surprise." Later, Dorsen questioned Adams repeatedly about different numbers he has given over the years about the ratio of enemy killed to enemy wounded, and about enemy guerrilla strength. Both subjects were dis. cussed in the broadcast. Under questioning, Adams conced- ed that he had told a CBS producer before the broadcast that Gen. Jo- seph McChristian, a key accuser of Westmoreland, "loathed" Gen. Phil- lip Davidson, his replacement as Westmoreland's intelligence chief. Davidson, who was implicated in the reported deceit by the broadcast, has testified on Westmoreland's behalf. Dorsen's strategy appeared to be to persuade the jury that McChristian's accusations stemmed from a person- al vendetta Dorsen ended his cross-examina- tion by asking Adams if he had ever met Westmoreland prior to the trial. "No," Adams replied. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/06: CIA-RDP90-00965R000807690003-2