DDCI STATEMENT BEFORE THE SENATE SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE ON INF MONITORING RESOURCES

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CIA-RDP90M00551R000700350042-0
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February 17, 1988
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Next 178 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Paul H. Nitze -urrent Policy No. 1034 Following is an address by Paul H. Nitze, Special Adviser to the President and the Secretary of State on Arms Control Matters, before the National Press Club, Washington, D.C., De- cember 15, 1987. Before getting into the future, let me say a few words about the past. When I was appointed to head the U.S. delegation to the INF (intermedi- ate-range nuclear forces] negotiations at their outset in 1981, I made two immediate decisions. First, we would prepare a draft of the "zero option" treaty we wanted be- fore the negotiations began. Second, we would keep an issues book in which we would enter, day-by- day, what had been said by either side on each issue that arose in the talks. At the end of the first year, there were 35 issues in our book. Of those 35, five issues were clearly the most impor- tant, so we focused on those five. Over the succeeding years, especially at Reykjavik, we finally removed the five Beyond the Summit: Next Steps in Arms Control United States Department of State Bureau of Public Affairs Washington, D.C. list, and he said there were 35, of which five were the most important. I concluded that it is inherent in the human mind, when confronted with a very complex situation, to simplify it to 35 considerations, and then to 5. Next Steps During last week's meetings, President Reagan and General Secretary Gor- bachev accomplished a lot. They signed the INF Treaty we had been seeking for 6 years. They issued a joint state- ment which.significantly advanced us toward a stabilizing START [strategic arms reduction talks) treaty. And they agreed on language on defense and space which narrows the issue and promises to make them more manageable. Where do we go from here? There are many tasks that come to mind; by rough estimate, about 35. But allow me to concentrate on the most important five. These are-- .Ratifying the INF Treaty; ti i k START ? C on nu ng our wor on a issues. But having removed those boul- / ders blocking an agreement, we still treaty; ? Dealing with defense and space faced a lot of rocks . This past October, after the 2-day' issues; .._ . ^ _ ?ee.,_... .. . l ltz and tar Sh Mi i te Sh ; u n -.1p. s e . Maintaining ourfocus on the ardnadze in which the INF issues that %,_,,,,,,__ f T, a e,.-: o ieiL LnaL aoviei. rimoassaaor viKLor Karpov and I were to try to resolve the remaining issues the next day. I asked Ratifying the INF Treaty Clearly, our most immediate and im- portant task is to get the advice and consent of the Senate in favor of ratification of the INF Treaty. All of our other efforts depend on this outcome. Why should the Senate so advise the President? Because this treaty enhances ,.he security of the United - States d it ,and it-eent s the ibTr- measures necessary mon viet compliance with confidence and to detect any militarily significant noncompliance in time for us to respond appropriately. To determine how the treaty en- hances our security interests, one must recall how the INF issue and the ensu- ing negotiations arose in the first place. In the late 1970s, the Soviet Union began deployment of SS-20 intermedi- ate-range missiles, greatly enhancing the nuclear threat to both our Euro- pean and Asian friends and allies. This raised concern, particularly among Eu- ropeans, of a significant imbalance in the spectrum of nuclear capabilities di- rectly affecting not only NATO Europe but also other countries on the periph- ery of the U.S.S.R. In its 1979 dual-track decision, the alliance determined to redress this im- balance. It decided: First, to deploy comparable mis- siles of its own; and Second, to seek to minimize, through negotiations, the number of such missiles either side would deploy. In 1981, President Reagan proposed NATO's preferred outcome: the com- plete elimination of all U.S. and Soviet Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 missiles of this class, or the "zero op- tion." In meeting after meeting since, the NATO allies, and our Asian allies as well, reiterated their preference for this global zero outcome. This, of course, is what we have now achieved. With the elimination of the SS-20s and all other Soviet missiles of this class, the Soviet Union will no longer possess INF missiles capable of threatening targets in Europe from So- viet soil. This perceived weakness in the structure of deterrence has been removed. In sum, a security threat was iden- tified, a strategy to address the threat was conceived and implemented, and an outcome was achieved that removed that threat. This is a NATO success story, enhanced by the fact that the reductions are decidedly asymmetric in NATO's favor, leading to an equal end point. This sets a good precedent for future arms reduction efforts. It appears that much of the ratification debate will center on ver- ification. In conducting this debate, it is important to understand the purpose of verification. We negotiate arms con- trol treaties to limit the military ca- pabilities of our adversary. The purpose of verification is to ensure that the treaties serve their intended purpose. That is, we want to be sure that the other side has not moved beyond the intended limits in any militarily signifi- cant way, and, if they do, we want to be able to detect such violations in time to respond as necessary. Of course, our ability to detect and respond to violations serves to deter the other side from committing them in the first place. The type of verification regime I have described is what the President has in mind when he calls for effective verification. And we have it in the INF Treaty. You have undoubtedly heard much about the INF verification regime. Sim- ply put, we are entitled to onsite in- spection to count Soviet INF missile systems and structures, to watch them being destroyed, to determine that no more are left after the elimination pro- cess is completed, and to check the for- mer INF sites on short notice to make sure no missiles secretly return. We also will monitor the output of the pro- duction facility where SS-20 missiles were assembled in the past and could most readily be assembled in the Lfuture. Does this mean that we are guar- anteed that the Soviets cannot hide an INF missile somewhere on their ter- ritory? No. Only anytime, anywhere inspections without a possibility of refusal would provide hope of such a guarantee. and we believe that ceding the same right in the I N F Treaty to Soviet inspectors on our territory is not in our own interests. But if the Soviets were to succeed in secretly retaining some missiles, they could not test them, train troops in their operation, or maintain the bas- ing infrastructure necessary to support tFiem, all of which we could detect. Without these, the Soviets could not maintain a militarily significant ca- ap bilit_y. Thus the regime meets the standard of effective verification. There is one final point I wish to make on the subject of INF ratifica- tion. From both sides of the Senate, we hear talk these days about the pos- sibility of attaching reservations to the treaty, and one reservation often sug- gested is to delay final implementation of the elimination of INF missiles until the conventional imbalance is resolved. Alternatively, some suggest holding up a START agreement for this purpose. I believe that either course of ac- tion would be most unwise. We have signed the INF Treaty because it is in our security interest, as I have ex- plained. Similarly, the START agree- ment we are seeking would be in our security interest. If we succeed in reaching such agreements, we should not be barred from putting them into effect. The conventional imbalance is a se- rious matter, but it is not a problem caused or exacerbated by an INF agreement. Indeed, one of the forgot- ten facts about INF is that, prior to 1977, when there was no perceived need by NATO for INF missiles, NATO faced a conventional imbalance and a large force of Soviet INF missiles- SS4s and SS-5s-for which NATO had no corresponding systems. After the INF agreement; we will return to the pre-1977 situation, except that even the SS-4s and SS-5s will be gone. The way to address the conven- tional force problem is through uni- lateral NATO programs and at the negotiating table, and we are working on both. We and our allies are currently seeking to establish a mandate for con- ventional stability talks between NATO and the Warsaw Pact, and we are dis- cussing with our allies improvements in conventional capabilities. But any realistic assessment of prospects in this area would lead one to conclude that it will be at least a year or two before the problem is resolved. In the meantime, why should we alloy. the SS-20 threat to Europe and Asia to remain, and why should we allow the promising momentum of the START ne- gotiations to be dissipated? As we move forward with INF and START, however, there should be no doubt that we will maintain the ca- pabilities necessary to deter Soviet ag- gression. In Europe, this will include maintaining, after the elimination of INF missiles, approximately 4,000 nu- clear warheads on a variety of delivery systems, some of which can reach deep into the Soviet Union. Trying to resolve all of our security concerns in one fell swoop is just too difficult a task. As pieces of the prob- lem are resolved, those solutions should be implemented, as long as they do not exacerbate other problems. Both INF and the agreement we seek in START would resolve critical security problems without aggravating others; we should move forward on them now. START Now let me turn to the START area. In our talks last week with the Soviet arms control experts, we emphasized three groups of START issues: counting rules, sublimits, and verification. Sig- nificant headway was made on all three. Counting rules-that is, the agreed standards by which the sides determine how the systems and components to be limited will be counted against the lim- its-tend to get passed off as part of the technical details of arms control, but these rules can have a profound im- pact on an agreement's effects. To agree on rules by which the number of warheads carried by missiles and bombers are to be counted is not an easy matter; an agreement that ap- peared to be equal could be anything but if it undercounted the systems pos- sessed mainly by one side and over- counted the systems emphasized by the other. Last week, we made real progress on counting warheads on ballistic mis- siles and ALCMs [air-launched cruise missiles] on heavy bombers. For the former, each side has declared the number of warheads deployed on each type of existing missile, and the other side will verify it through agreed pro- cedures, including onsite inspection of deployed missiles. For the latter, the problem is some- what different because, unlike with bal- listic missiles, ALCM loads for bombers are normally less than the theoretical capacity and can also be changed read- ily. The Soviets agreed to our idea of attributing for counting purposes a cer- tain number of ALCMs to each type of heavy bomber, regardless of the maxi- mum number that bomber could carry 2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 and the specific number it might be carrying at any given time. This ap- proach reduces verification problems and takes into account operational realities. The sublimit area is one on which we have been concentrating for some time. We have emphasized that 50% re- ductions are not inherently stabilizing; it is necessary to ensure, through sub- limits, that a side cannot retain a pre- ponderance of the most destabilizing systems. Previously, the Soviets had agreed to a sublimit on heavy ICBMs (inter- continental ballistic missiles], the most destabilizing systems of all, at 1,540 warheads on 154 missiles, or 50% of the current Soviet level. Last week, they agreed to another sublimit, this one on ballistic missile warheads at the level of 4,900. This sublimit would force a re- duction of slightly more than 50% in the warheads on the fast-flying Soviet ballistic missile force. In .982, Presi- dent Reagan proposed 5,000 for this number, so again, we have achieved a longstanding U.S. objective. In the verification area, we were able to build on the foundation provided by INF. The Soviets agreed that START would include all of the types of inspections I mentioned earlier for INF, as well as, at least in principle, suspect-site inspections and more ex- 4..,OF tensive monitoring of production facili- ties. This is necesary in START because we will be placing numerical limits on systems rather than banning them. So where do we go next? Our nego- tiators in Geneva have created a joint bracketed treaty text, just like the one we had for INF last summer. Wherever the two sides disagree on an issue, their positions are included in brackets. The fact that we are far enough along to have such a text is promising, and the document helps to focus nego- tiating efforts, but many brackets cur- rently remain, including in the three areas I have just discussed. We still need to agree on the number of ALCMs to attribute to each type of heavy bomber and to establish procedures for verifying the number of warheads de- ployed on each type of existing ballistic missile. We need to address the U. S. proposal for a sublimit of 3,300 on ICBM warheads. And there is much work to be done in working out the details of verification procedures. Beyond these questions, there are many more issues, such as the U.S. desire to ban mobile ICBMs, the number of SLCMs [submarine-launched cruise missiles] we allow outside the aggregate ceiling of 6,000 warheads and how we verify that limit, and the question of a possible linkage between defense and space and START. Despite all the progress we've made in START, the list of remaining issues is daunting, and the question arises of whether it is possible to com- plete a treaty during this Administra- tion. My own belief is that it will be very difficult but not impossible. We will be pushing forward intensively, and we will do our best to finish the job. Defense and Space Since Reykjavik, the defense and space area has involved three primary issues: the length of time during which the sides would agree not to withdraw from the ABM Treaty in order to deploy de- fenses, what happens after the period, and what happens during the period. All three issues were discussed in de- tail last week; the differences remain, but progress was made on all three. On the question of what happens after the nonwithdrawal period, the So- viets agreed that, unless the sides agree otherwise, "each side will be free to decide its course of action." This pre- serves the right to deploy we seek. On the question of what happens during the nonwithdrawal period, we included language stating that the sides would observe the ABM Treaty "as signed in 1972," as well as language stating that the sides would "conduct their research, development, and test- ing as required, which are permitted by the ABM Treaty." This should take the sharp edges off the ABM debate, while assisting in protecting our program to proceed with SDI (Strategic Defense Initiative] research, testing, and devel- opment as a matter of national security need. Over the next several months, as we push forward'in START, we intend also to continue dealing with the three main defense and space issues. Non-Nuclear Arms Control Our non-nuclear arms control efforts in- volve primarily conventional forces and chemical weapons (CW). As I men- tioned earlier, we are in the midst of mandate talks for new negotiations on conventional stability. These negotiations would involve the 23 countries of NATO and the War- saw Pact and would address conven- tional forces in Europe from the Atlantic to the Urals. Our objective in the conventional stability talks is a verifiable agreement that would lead to a stable balance of conventional forces at lower levels. This will require far greater reductions in tanks, artillery, and other equipment on the Soviet side to eliminate the capability of the War- saw Pact for surprise attack and sus- tained offensive operations and thus to restore equality and stability in conven- tional forces. We hope the mandate talks will lead to actual negotiations as soon as possible, perhaps as early as next year. In the meantime, we will continue our current efforts with our NATO allies to put together a sound NATO position that we can introduce at the outset of the negotiations. As for chemical weapons, the United States remains committed to achieving a comprehensive global ban, encompassing all nations with chemical weapons capability. We tabled a draft treaty calling for such a ban in 1984 in the 40-nation Conference on Disarma- ment in Geneva. Since then, we have negotiated hard to bring it about. The key is getting a treaty that is both effective and verifiable. We are encouraged by recent Soviet agreement in principle to mandatory challenge in- spection with no right of refusal and an early bilateral exchange of data. However, there are a number of crucial issues remaining to be worked out. We have agreed with the Soviets to concentrate our bilateral talks on maintaining security during the de- struction of CW stocks, protecting sen- sitive non-CW-related information during inspections, and the need to strengthen verification in light of new technologies, increasing proliferation, and a dual-capable chemical industry. The Broader Context Attaining progress in the various arms control areas is only part of the com- plex equation of the difficult U.S.- Soviet relationship. A long-term, sus- tained improvement in the relationship will depend greatly on resolving differ- ences in other crucial areas. For 2 years now, we have worked hard to establish with the Soviet Union a process that addresses a full range of issues-what we call the four-part agenda that encompasses arms reduc- tions, human rights, regional conflicts, and bilateral relations. Serious differ- ences in all of these areas have accumu- lated over the last four decades, and they are the source of the profound mistrust and suspicion that characterize East-West relations today. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 . We recently have seen greater Soviet willingness to discuss these matters in detail, and this has led to progress in some areas. For example, agreements reached over the last 2 years have greatly increased the oppor- tunities for contact between U.S. and Soviet citizens. President Reagan and General Secretary Gorbachev have agreed that the effort to foster greater cooperation and contact on the basis of genuine mutual benefit should continue. In two other areas-human rights and regional affairs-there remains a long way to go. We have recognized and welcomed recent Soviet human rights steps but have pointed out that human rights will. remain a source of tension in East-West relations until the Soviet Union fully observes its international human rights obligations. Similarly, we have made clear that Soviet involve- ment in regional conflicts-whether di- rectly, as in Afghanistan,. or through Bureau of Pudic Affairs United States Department of State Washington, D.C. 20520 If address is incorrect please indicate change. Do not cover or destroy this address label. Mail change of address to PA/OAP, Rm 5815A, support for such regimes as Vietnam or Nicaragua-inevitably will affect West- ern perceptions of the Soviet Union's ultimate intentions. The United States is ready to ad- dress all the problems candidly and constructively. In the end, however, the Soviet Union must demonstrate that it is willing to deal with its own people and its neighbors through dialogue, not intimidation. The burden both sides will bear for the foreseeable future is to manage our competition peacefully and to build a more stable and constructive relationship. Conclusion Thus, we have a very full agenda in the days ahead. We have no intention of resting on our laurels; to the contrary, DOUGLAS GEORGE 1939 VIRGINIA AVE MCLEAN we want our success in INF to be the springboard for progress in other areas. If we are to find further success, it will be because we will succeed in rep- licating the elements that led to the INF Treaty: strength, domestic co- herence, and unity with our allies. With these assets, and with -patience, we can take further steps down the road to- ward a safer and stabler world, with lower levels of offenses and increased reliance on effective defenses, should they prove feasible, and with a less- ened risk of war. That is our ultimate goal. ^ Published by the United States Department of State ? Bureau of Public Affairs Office of Public Communication ? Editorial Division ? Washington, D.C. ? January 1988 Editor: Cynthia Saboe ? This material is in the public domain and may be reproduced without permission; citation of this source is appreciated. BULK RATE POSTAGE & FEES PAID U.S. Department of State Permit No. G-130 13394 VA 22101 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Iq Next 24 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 THURSDAY, 4 FEBRUARY 1988 NEW YORK CITY TRIBUNE Heated Debate Over the INF Treaty Throwing the Pentagon Into Disarray BY PETER SAMUEL - Mne Ya * Q& Tnbw Cw+e100+dwr WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 - Debate over the Intermediate Nuclear Farces (INF) treaty has split the top echelons of the Pentagon and thrown it into disarray. Last Thursday three top Pentagon officials met to try and resolve the intelligence disputes over the DW treaty, which one contingency argues concedes the Soviets the right to maintain a substantial covet missile force Meeting in the sears "tank" at the Pentagon were Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Admiral William Crowe and the direc- the Defense Intelligence Agency, Leonard Paroots. Carlucci and requested that Peroots reduce his estimate of the an of the Soviet SS 20 farce, sources say. The Soviets have dedared they have 650 of these missiles and Secretary of State George Shultz is an record as saying he accepts the Soviet number. Under the terms of the treaty, the Soviets must destroy their declared number of 1NF missiles, which will be included in a data base supplied 30 days after the treaty is fully ratified and corns into effect. Trouble for the administration, which is desperate to get the treaty ratified. comes in the form of the "majority agreed oxwe sus National Intelligence Estimate for 1988," which states that there are 950 SS-30s in existence. This means that the Soviets will maintain the right to save at least 300 of the 3 FEBRUARY 1988 impressive 3-warhead missiles. The 950 number is contained in the draft document of the major annual US. government intelligence assessment, which has the notation 11-4/88. The "majority agreed consensus" for the NIE is the product of long dis- cussions and compromises among a number of the top intelligence analysts in the various agencies that compro- mise the US. intelligence community. Arriving at agreed numbers on conten- tious issues may involve the estimates of upwards of several hundred of analysts. The majority agreed estimate is one acceptable to more than one half of the analysts to the working group on that issue. The intelligence and research div- ision of the Department of State and the CIA both estimated last year that there were between 550 to 600 SS-20 missiles and they were considerably embar- rassed when the Soviets derived 650. State aid CIA have since upped their SS-20 estimate to 700, indicating a belief that the Soviets are substantially honest in their declared number. The Defense Intelligence Agency currently estimates that there are be- tween 1,000 and 1?00 SS-3D missiles The Pentagon has always reported. that the Soviets have at asst one refire missile per launcher, making 800 to 900 deployed in the field, with 200 to 300 in store Other DIA estimates have involved numbers as high as ?250 based an two separate indications that there is a 5-1 ratio of missiles to launcjem In the contentious meeting in the Pentagon tank last Friday, Penmoots was apparently under pressure to re- duce his agency's estimate of SS-20 numbers According to one usually reliable official source, the general was ordered" to reduce his number and was told that if he stuck with his number he could be blamed for severely embarrassing the administration and might jeopardize the ratification of the treaty. At the least it is clear Penroots was under pressure to issue an SS-20 estimate more in line with the Soviet declared numbers. If the administration can crack the high number estimates, it can come out with an "majority agreed" National Intelligence Estimate of SS-20 numbers close enough to the Soviet numbers to undercut those who say the Soviets have violated the treaty even befort it has been ratified and who use this as evidence that the Soviets intend to maintain a substantial covert missile fort Pe roots, the source said, refused to budge, saying that there was no new intelligence that cast doubt on the 1,000 to 1,2D0 estimate and his job was to produce the best intelligence estimate. The meeting was inconclusive. Unless a further effort to twist Peroots' arm succeeds, senators may have to face up to the likelyhood they are being asked to sign a treaty that removes a whole class of American missiles and leaves the Soviets with a substantial force in place. Another major problem is that the administration has so rushed into the INF treaty that it has conducted no systematic staff studies of its associated verification problems - despite Presi- Pg. 6 dent Reagan's frequent heavy emphasis on how unprecedented are the measures for verification. The Arms Control and Disarmament Act of 1961 as amended at the initiative of then-Congressman Ed Derwinski in 1977, section 37 says that the Director otter Arms Control and Disarmament Agency shall report to Congress the degree to which each element of any significant arms control proposal can be verified The report must assume that measures of concealment will be em- ployed that the US. surveillance and inspection will have to overcome. The Republican leader of the Senate Foreign Relations committee, Jesse Helms, has written chairman Claiborne Pell, drawing his attention to this so. called Derwinski Amendment Helms raised the lade of a legally required verification report on the INF to the directordesignate of ACDA, Gen. William Burns during his confirmation hearings fast week. Burns agreed one was needed and said it was underway and would be expedited. Helms in a letter to Pell today suggested that the completion of INF Treaty hearings and markup be de- feted until an adequate verification report is received from ACDA. Most major internal assessments done to date have concluded that with present and planned satellites and other sensors, the United States has a very small capability for discovering mobile missiles the Soviet Union wishes to conceal. Conservative senators may use the inadequacy of verification - in the face of evidence of a substantial covert missile force - as a flag around which resistance to the treaty can be rallied. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 -ne 1vasr-ingior Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 The Washington Times The Wan Street Journal The Christian Science Monitor ?3 New York Daily News USA Today The Chicago Tribune INF Treaty specfts *tW can and can't be kegt Od W is be iNbO"d SOVIET UNION U4 (170 wi - ____ Missile, missiis trWwatsr velrola, 1`11111wsis erector, Isurch sesrd, piopsM~R tantc A atiarraL Week SK-" 04 mboft& Misds. Wreh canow WWI" W12 (M atbsiss, = dIlpig" M. *rCher...seen/ Varl/plsrArty W23 (M womfte. IV dmphjp4 meaie. W chr Name rsmpoWr wilier U TED STATES 2 - -_._ in doom" Mlssds, Wsrc"W, WaeA pd SPA MW sirs tes1* e*Mdb OW Eft, 31111 dqftVmo Miaails. inc. uhsrWwah _ ft W 1~urAA (M -milA w 4oM Maw. ,3 Fica 49 48 ITreaty critics aim beyond r ' anfication s I nnQP rl7 ati r nh, s-;,,.s . ~.. ?1,. .. TACT - - could frame the debate over cuts in long-range nuclear missiles. By Peter Grier ,'ar f, ,e, _ -,e s, an ice^ce uor lo, Washington Critics have come out swinging in the opening rounds of Senate hearings on the L'S-Soviet treaty banning medium-range missiles. The Reagan administration and Senate arms control proponents have clearly been put on the de- fensive by the arguments of Sen. Jesse Helms l R l of North Carolina and other conservative opponents of the pact. Senator Helms's complaint that the treaty would not literally de- stroy warheads received so much attention that Secretary of De- fense Frank Carlucci, on Monday, felt compelled to bring missile models before the Foreign Rela- tions Committee to demonstrate what would and wouldn't be scrapped. . The intermediate-range nuclear forces (INF) treaty itself still seems headed for relatively easy Senate ratification. Critics appear to be using the IN T hearings as a soapbox from which to influence crucial national defense decisions that will be made after treaty ratification. In particular. they seem to be aiming ? at the current strategic arms reduction talks (START) in Geneva on 50 percent cuts in long- range nuclear arsenals. "The right wing ought to be trying to kill START through INF." says a con- gressional aide who follows arms control. Conservatives deny they are trying to stop strategic talks out- right. Among positions that INF pact critics have taken: ? There should be no reductions in strategic weapons without agreement to reduce conventional arms in Europe. In making this point Monday. retired Gen. Ber- nard Rogers. former military chief of NATO, complained that the United States "should have at least tried" to link conventional reductions with the INF treaty. ? A strategic weapons treaty should have even stricter verifica- tion provisions than the INF pact. Defense Secretary Carlucci has agreed with this point, saying that any START treaty would have to include a provision allowing US inspectors to visit any suspect So- viet missile site they want to. ? The US ought to be prepared to withdraw from the INF pact if the Soviets cheat. "Some kind of language to that effect" ought to be in the treaty. General Rogers said. Rogers has long said bluntly that the INF treaty gives him "gas pains." His successor as NATO commander. Army Gen. John Gal- vin. said the treaty will not under- cut the alliances ability to main- tain peace in Europe. "The treaty, if ratified, will still allow me to carry out my mission, which is to maintain deterrence," General Galvin told the Senate Armed Services Committee yes- terday. Galvin said NATO needs to improve its conventional forces but said they present "a real de- terrent to the Warsaw Pact." Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Z. Rogers's criticism of the treaty was praised by conservatives such as Sen. Dan Quayle (R) of Indiana and Sen. Steve Symms (R) of Idaho. Helms, however, has clearly led the treaty opposition. From his seat on the Foreign Relations Committee he has gleefully badgered administration witnesses. One of his primary charges has been that the Soviets are already violating the pact concealing between 165 and 300 SS-20 missiles. This charge is based on a past estimate of the arsenal produced by the Defense to ence Agency Adnu ustration othcials countered that the Central Intelligence Agency had a lower estimate of numbers, and therefore be- lieves that the number t Fe Soviets say they possess is accurate. Carlucci said that in any case. the USSR would not be able to test missiles from such a hidden cache. and thus they would quickly lose any military effectiveness Helms also garnered much publicity for com- plaining that the treaty does about missile warheads not require destruction of actual warheads. Thus nuclear explosives could be re- moved from SS-20s and simply rebolted onto new weap- ons aimed at the US. he charged. Administration officials admit that the INF pact does not literally require warhead destruction. Though launchers. missile boosters, and nose cone shrouds would be shredded. important interior portions - radars. warhead packages containing fissile material, and gwd- ance systems - can be kept intact. First of all, Carluccs said. destruction of fissile material is a "virtual impossibility." Second of all. he said, it is in the US interest to keep these interior portions around. as it is much easier for the Soviet Union to produce crucial uranium and other radioactive elements. Finally, it is not true that SS-20 components can simply be screwed on to other missiles, Carlucci said "This could not be done without some redesign and some testing," the defense secretary said. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 "asnington limes The Wall Street Journal The Christian Science vor-ic, New York Daily News USA Today The Chicago Trit-une Lk PI Date .,~ F E L3 L`F gets broad dip_dr.,atic, ..___tary backing By 0;, Z?iA wALK- WAS:-EN 1 N (U-PT) The =atder, a key ambassador and five _`orr-ler U.S. defense secretaries are endorsing the D7 treaty under review by the Senate, b t reservations about guarding against Soviet decection. y L-i the second week cf -earires on t -e intermediate `n'uclear Forces accord, en. ^, lvi ssador Richard Burt and ex-?e-taecn chiefs tc=-e.ators t.ey generally s.:pport !:e pact ;T gat ^g suPercower -L z w:tn ranges of 300 to 3,400 miles, 1 -costly dep~oyed in F`.:_ ote . However, the witnesses acrepc `.esday, past Soviet cheating on treaties is deserving of Senate attention and warrants a specific U.S. response plan. Galvin and NA-.&--nat:o~ s.:cn as Burt, t: e ambassador to west Germany, were asked to restate t.e:r cases today before the Senate Foreign Relations Corr-ttee, _on heard fear, the fcr-ner defense secretaries Tuesday. y~ ` Four ne bers of t'~e ~_ ate`s of Staff, meanwhile, were s"7-rcned by the Arned Services Co-T-:ttee one day after Galvin and Burt testified here. CFA Director W11-la- ?:e_s-er was to d-s.:ss today with the Senate ` she treaty priva*e_ Burt told the defense one one L^?F d 'e co ate constitutes l ` "a bathe or ".e soul of "rope' ' re2 of ? _ ~t ` ~.. she :,act or adoption of any killer we have ` - the allies over seven an years.'' He explain that one _-ea- reflects the - Fa=c^ of Z:roFean allies, ~strong cppos_-ice: cy the peace mcveT-e- their countries, that ne ~ United States depicted _ts ?ersn n 2 and c ~_se missiles : n ^ ? 1 ~.: rope in 1983 as a way to get he Scv:ets n-e negctia -- t bI ` g to tee. The for-her defense secretaries Caspar we~serder, Harold Brown, James Schlesinger, Robert M Na -aranand - hat teat ^~..~ea;t =----C` ~ ____. dscn s:pported a_., by er n~,hasiz:. d the Soviet fear of 2 -: Kre-tin leaders are ? nordinate-y afra:d of ones?e c 2'' y-es. because from, a launch in :D-rope _t could rsn.g 2 neadq uarters , Brown sa:.. Soviet leader Mtkha:l :~ rbac~e. no sl=ed one L.'= treaty w; th President Reagan two o ; a~ y _o , a dives-7 ?.:p ~-te a ~ c' to get one thing that he urge^.t_: ,ants, sa_d ;:ems hercer, eferr - ~to the Pershing removal. V - The Soviets would lore : -ss?ies ca are! to f -8 - r United States under ~e a~-~ h o the - -1 st be rcved by two-t of the Senate. --~- The numbers reporter: t .e nave by treaty s main critic, Se~ . Jerre difference in CIA and __ _ -- -e R-~.~^. , .~^o `; _-aces a _.te:_-Dense Acency estt aces cf hero non. CcaWued Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Pa, e 2 Soviet SS-20s exist. weinberger addressed `hat concern. -esday I:t echoes t-:e state*-ents of other exaerts who have sat.. the -treaty wot,:'d na:~ce i? so tol:c . to -_ any hidden r ssiles without ,ett~.,ca:g^*_ ha` they soon would ben ~ itar ly unreliable. I don't know whether they nave 2 O -acre r^iss~les or not, Weinberger told HeL'rs. one nas claimed that he verification is percent perfect.'' Agreeing with He,-.s that specific resocnse c_a^.s are warranted; Weinberger said, Theres been 3 1--t of Scv:et cneat_.g in. the Their definition of t^atyn ... is __ ___- e^_ they. er` frog ours. wee expect they will cheat-11 I think t-hey'll cheat ys_ to stay in practice, -ie.rs retorted. Schlesinger expressed the -cst reser-,at:cns ar-cn7 the former Pentagon ch.iefs, warring na_ one new accord has Strained --he wester alliance and that danger Lies _-.'-sing its ver:f:cc at_or easu~ es as ' Precedent for more ca_ren~~s _ .?e =. -ire a;ree-ends , s.:cn: as a treaty on for der-range strategic weacris. The conclusion is stear, Sc.lessu:der said. Caution is the - watc."word. '' E t re verification rte::rte-~-. were expected to re addressed today in a study by the n-er:=3n tero~ se' st a conservative research and policy cr-=n,o3t .:..cseyres:yen: scnotars i ?a ^ clu,.e f.,r-)er ...N. A7rbassador .;eane fog--per Defer-se Secre:aV-: ':chard Perle. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 QueeLLMLNIAL: wr,uNt:JUAY, Z/ JANUARY 1y06 / II I-EGIB Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 OPINION 9=11 LM7~ I I P; -111 lit'-of qI.A.T. ~ , - 0A I Pg. 5 The Case Against the INF Agreement for the removal of nuclear weapons. President Reagan and his senior advisers are promoting the agreement on Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) as a major 'breakthrough" in arms control. It includes on-site inspec- tions inside the Soviet Union and permanent monitoring of Soviet compliance. The agreement will cut four times as many Soviet warheads as American, eliminating a whole cate- gory of nuclear missiles. Moscow's accurate SS-20 mobile missiles will be banned worldwide. With all those benefits, what can be wrong with this agree- ment? Here are a few things: is The Soviets are continuing to violate existing agree- ments, including the ABM treaty. ? It eliminates the weapon the Soviets fear most, the Per- shing If medium-range fnissile. ? It bans non-nuclear ground launched long-range cruise missiles, in which U.S. technology is superior. ? It begins the denuclearization of Western Europe. ? It leaves in place the huge Soviet and Warsaw Pact con- ventional forces that threaten Western Europe. ? The Soviets can simply retarget some of their SS-25 ICBMs on the SS-20's targets. ? It promises the impossible: effective verification of small mobile missiles in the huge Soviet land mass. ? It is a long legal document with numerous ambiguities, and could easily be undermined by Moscow. ? It creates a new, unrealistic arms control euphoria that is leading to a new detente. ? The administration has no program to enforce Soviet compliance with the agreement. ? The administration is doing nothing to strengthen NATO's non-nuclear defenses. These are serious concerns that deserve consideration. The Soviet violation of existing agreements must come first. Six times in the last four years Ronald Reagan has issued reports of Soviet violations of arms control agreements, in- cluding significant violations of the anti-ballistic missile (ABM) treaty. It is generally acknowledged that soviet com- pliance with existing agreements should be a prerequisite of any new agreement, yet the administration has failed to insist on a prior resolution of these issues. The INF agreement is popular in Moscow because it elimi- nates the Pershing 11, the one weapon in Europe that can strike Soviet territory with great accuracy in just 10 to 12 minutes. Moscow has tried for eight years to kill the Pershing 11. The INF agreement finally accomplishes that goal. The agreement removes the most effective deterrent to the Soviet forces that threaten Europe, where two conventional wars this century have killed tens of millions. Nuclear weap- ons, however. have protected Western Europe for over 40 years and steps leading toward their elimination will restore the spectre of conventional war to the continent. The denuclearization of Europe has long been a principal goal of Soviet policy. Now, Moscow and Bonn are eager to eliminate the short-range tactical missiles that will remain after the INF agreement. This could lead to a nuclear-free Western Europe open to intimidation by the Red Army, a Germany drifting toward neutrality, and the gradual dissolu- tion of NATO. It gives a huge boost to the radical left in Europe, which opposes U.S. policy and has long demonstrated 6 41 Then is an inclination to say that our European allies brought this on themselves, by relying on the United States to provide much of their defense, and by refusing to make the hard decisions needed to defend Western Europe against the 50,000 Soviet tanks and other conventional forces that threaten it. But does the United States really want a neutral Western Europe more subject to Soviet pressures? A major concern with the INF agreement is its lack of effective verification and compliance. The president boasts that the agreement has the most effective verification ever. That is undoubtedly true. But even the best verification is still inadequate when the things being verified are small and mo- bile. What good is it to inspect agreed upon sites with dili- gence when Moscow may be violating the agreement at other locations? What good is it to ban SS-20s when Moscow is building SS-25s that can strike the same targets? The small mobile missiles covered by this agreement can be hidden under any roof and cannot be seen by satellites. They can be moved rapidly to new locations. And the numbers of Soviet weapons have been provided by the Soviets themselves. The Soviet SCUD B is a battlefield missile with a range of 300 kilometers.- It will be permitted under the INF agree- ment. The 500 kilometer range SS-23, however, will be banned. What is to prevent the Soviets from extending the range of the SCUD B or building a follow-on to it with greater range? How would the West know the range of such a weapon if the Soviets did not test it at its full range? But even more serious than verification is compliance. The United States has been able,to verify many Soviet arms con- trol violations, but the government has been unable or unwill- ing to take the next step-to try to make the Soviets comply fully with the agreements they have signed. Without effective compliance, even the best verification is meaningless. One would expect the Western Alliance to move promptly to improve its conventional defenses to compensate for the elimination of the Pershing Its and cruise missiles. An impor- tant step would be to deploy anti-tactical ballistic missile defenses as soon as possible, both to protect NATO against the short-range ballistic missiles that will remain and to pro- vide insurance against Soviet cheating on the INF agreement. Another option would be to increase Western offensive weap- ons. such as sea-launched or air-launched cruise missiles. But today neither the administration nor the NATO allies are willing to take the steps needed to strengthen the alliance. Probably the most serious deficiency of the INF agreement is the atmosphere it creates. It promotes the illusion that Western security can be assured cheaply and easily by arms control agreements rather than defenses. It encourages the Western allies to cut their defense budgets, neglect the need for defenses against ballistic missiles and to disarm, even as the Soviets maintain and modernize the military forces they use to intimidate opponents and advance their goal of global expansion. This agreement is no panacea. Authoritative figures, including Henry Kissinger, have said the INF agreement is badly flawed, but it must be ratified anyway or the US. will undermine its NATO allies. This is an argument for national irresponsibility. The Senate is responsi- ble under the Constitution to give the agreement full and careful consideration, and to amend or reject it if it does not serve the interests of U.S. national security. The Senate owes it to the American people to do no less. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 SUPPLEMENTAL: WEDNESDAY, 27 JANUARY 1988 CONGRESSIONAL QUARTERLY Pg. 150 Rules, Timetables: What the Pact Would Do The U.S.-Soviet treaty banning intermediate-range nuclear-force (INF) missiles would eliminate a total of 859 U.S. missiles and 1,836 Soviet missiles, according to data exchanged by the two governments when the treaty was signed Dec. 8. The number of nuclear warheads that would be removed from the front lines cannot be directly calcu- lated from those totals, since they include missiles that are not deployed and that carry no warheads. According to an estimate by the staff of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the treaty would remove from front-line service nearly four times as many Soviet warheads as U.S. warheads: 1.667 Soviet weapons com- pared with 429 U.S. ones. One-third of the Soviet mis- siles covered by the accord are SS-20s carrying three warheads each. The treaty. ? Requires elimination within three years of all U.S. and Soviet ground-launched missiles with ranges be- tween 1.000 and 5,500 kilometers (roughly 600-3.300 miles). These include the U.S. Pershing II and ground- launched cruise missile (GLCM) and the Soviet SS-4. SS-5, SS-20 and SSCX-4 missiles. ? Requires elimination within 18 months of all ground-launched missiles with ranges between 500 and 1.000 kilometers. These include the U.S. Pershing IA (no longer, deployed in Europe) and the Soviet SS-12 and SS-23 missiles. ? Requires removal from Europe of U.S. nuclear war- heads earmarked for use on West German Pershing IAs. The West German missiles are not explicitly mentioned. ? Specifies in great detail the procedures by which the barred missiles and associated launchers must be destroyed. For instance, it provides that GLCMs (which are small, robot jet planes) must be cut in half, separat. ing the wing section from the tail section. ? Permits removal of the guidarfce systems and nu- clear warheads from the banned weapons before they are destroyed. While the warheads might not fit other missiles, the nuclear fuel they contain could be salvaged and used to build new warheads. ? Permits destruction of up to 100 missiles by launch. ing them, rather than cutting them up. ? Bars all further manufacture or flight testing of missiles with ranges between 500 and 5,500 kilometers. ? Requires each country to provide an inventory of all missiles covered by the treaty (and their associated launchers and support equipment) together with a list of all sites where such missiles and equipment have been manufactured, repaired, tested, deployed or stored. In the "memorandum of understanding" containing these data, the Soviet Union listed 128 sites and the United States listed 30 sites. ? Provides that either country may withdraw from the treaty on six months' notice, if it decides that events related to the subject of the treaty jeopardize its "su- preme national interests." This is a standard clause in security-related treaties. ? Bars either country from "assuming international obligations or undertakings" that would conflict with the treaty. The treaty specifies in considerable detail the pro- cedures by which each country can monitor the other's compliance. Like earlier U.S.-Soviet agreements limit- ing longer-range "strategic" weapons, the pact forbids interference with reconnaissance satellites and other "national technical means" for each country to verify the other's compliance with the treaty. Moreover, to prevent testing new missiles under cover of disposing of old ones, it forbids the encoding of data transmitted from the 100 missiles that can be dis- posed of by launching. But the most widely touted as- pect of the treaty's verification regime is its extensive provision for "on-site" inspection of each country's com- pliance by officials of the other. The treaty permits: ? Teams of inspectors from each country to visit all designated sites in the other country at the start of the treaty period to verify the data concerning the number of missiles, launchers and other components at each site. ? A "close-out" inspection of each designated site after the INF missiles have been removed and the re- lated facilities razed. ? On-site observation by each country of the other's destruction of INF missiles and equipment. ? Each country to station a team of 30 resident in- spectors for 13 years at the gates of one missile assembly plant in the other country, empowered to inspect all shipments from the plant to ensure that none contains forbidden missiles. The Soviet facility is a plant in Votkinsk, near the Ural Mountains, where SS-20s were manufactured and where the SS-25 intercontinental missile currently is manufactured. The SS-25 is not covered by the treaty, but sections of it are very similar to the SS-20. The corresponding U.S. facility, where Soviet inspectors will man the gates 24 hours a day for 13 years, is a plant in Magna. Utah. Pershing Its once were built there; now the plant builds part of the Tri- dent II sea-launched missile. ? Each country to conduct "short-notice" inspections of up to 20 designated sites (except for missile produc- tion facilities) during the first three years after the treaty takes effect. Inspection teams would be permitted to fly into designated entry points without announcing in advance which site they intend to inspect. Once they had landed and declared their destination, the country being inspected would be obliged to transport the in- spectors to that site within nine hours. ? Up to 15 such short-notice inspections in the five years beginning three years after the treaty takes effect. ? Up to 10 short-notice inspections in the following five years. The treaty also requires the Soviet Union to take certain steps to facilitate U.S. verification that SS-20s are not deployed at certain sites where the similar but larger SS-25 is deployed. Six times annually during the first three years the treaty is in effect. the United States can demand that the Russians expose to the view of reconnaissance satellites all missiles and launchers at any SS-25 base. Normally, the missiles and launchers are concealed in "garages." -By Pat Towell Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 E very week in "Outposts," Outlook examines contemporary ideas that are changing our lives and expanding our intellectual frontiers. This week, John A. Adam looks at new verification technologies necessitated by arms-control agreements. Adam is an associate editor of IEEE Spectrum, the monthly journal of The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers ARMS CONTROL. Verification: Keeping Ivan Honest By John A. Adam WHEN THE SENATE begins hearings Mon- day on the INF arms- control treaty, a cru- cial issue will be whether-and how-the United States can detect potential Soviet violations. The subject is critical because both the INF accoard and the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) now being negotiated in Geneva will require unprecedented verification technolo- gies. Unlike previous arms accords, which involved watching large struc- tures such as fixed missile silos and bombers, INF and START would re- strict individual small missiles. Consequently, America's traditional monitoring systems-surveillance sat- ellites and electronic intelligence-will not be sufficient. Extensive cooperative measures will be needed Trucks and railroad cars must be inspected; plant gates, grounds and fences watched; small weapons examined for nuclear content. And the INF pact requires new systems for continuous monitoring of missile-production facilities. Exactly what kind of sensors the United States will place on Soviet soil is still being decided. But U.S. research on on-site inspection systems-involv- ing tamper-resistant fiber-optic seals, video alert and data-encryption sys- tems, infrared surveillance arrays and more-is already well underway, much of it at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, which AT&T runs for the Department of Energy. Overcoming Mutual Mistrust problems abound when working in an adversary's territory. The Verdii.ation nvstam m,iat ane?rs of the on-site data, producing a para- dox: The Soviets must be assured that information. gathered is for verification only-not espionage-and that it agrees with the facts. Thus, data can- not be encrypted. But the United States must be confident that streams of data, traveling through open chan- nels in Soviet territory, are not forg- eries. Thus some form of encrypted authentication code must be used. Cracking that puzzle falls to Sandia's Gustavus J. Simmons, a mathematician with a foot-long beard and a flattop coif who has been solving such brainteasers for 20 years. Simmons and his col- leagues are perfecting a data system that guarantees integrity. The tech- nique that the United States will p.o- pose to the Soviets is the least sophis- ticated of Simmons' schemes. [See box.] But it has already passed the scrutiny of codebreakers at the Nation- al Security Agency and was discussed with the Soviets in the '70s during the : Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty talks. Moreover, it has proven reliable at re- mote U.S. seismic stations in Norway that glean data from Soviet under- ground nuclear tests. The system works by autonhatically attaching an authentication "word" to the output of a monitoring device such as a camera. The output, in the form of ~ a long binary sequence (strings of Os and is), is fed into a computer, which breaks the data up into small blocks of, say, 64 bits. The first block is en- crypted with a secret key which pro-' duces a 64-bit cipher held in the com- puter's memory. As the second block of' data arrives, each element in the cipher . is matched with its corresponding el- ement in the second data block. If the' two elements are alike, a 0 is recorded; if different, a 1. This produces a new: 64-bit number, which replaces the first' cipher and is in turn encrypted with the key. This new cipher is then matched that each side can trust the authenticity against the contents of the third block data- One It-q- official called it a "good Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 of data, which begets yet another new cipher and so forth. The end result, after processing an entire data stream thousands of bits long, is a final 64-bit cipher incorporating information about each bit of data in the whole stream. This final cipher, or authentication word, is appended to the unencrypted monitor output and sent. Nothing in the process prevents the Soviets from scrutinizing the data while it is sent. And the United States can verify the result by running the re- ceived data through the same encrypt- ing procedure using a copy of the se- cret key. If the final cipher generated matches the one that was appended to the original monitor output, then the data are genuine. Just as increasing the number of grooves in a housekey makes it harder to pick the lock, the more variables there are in a cipher key, the less the likelihood of cracking the code. Shortly before the 1986 summit in Reykjavik where the Soviets. agreed to U.S. proposals regard- ing on-site INF monitoring, Roger L. Hagengruber, vice president of sys-, terns analysis at Sandia, got a phone call from the Pentagon. DOD wanted a full-scale test facility built to examine schemes for continuous monitoring of a Soviet weapons-production plant. It also wanted a working model of the site. The project was given top priority. Within two months, the Sandia team produced a tabletop model showing the section of a typical Soviet missile factory which includes the main portal. [See illustration.) The Pentagon dis- played the model to officials from the White house, State Department and Congress, demonstrating how a mis- sile-carrying truck triggers a suite of sensors to record weight and other Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 VGTON POST SUNDAY, JANUARY 24, 1988 C3 marketing toot that helped policyrnak- ers visualize potential problems. Both the United States and the So- viet Union have agreed that INF mon- itoring systems for the exits will in- dude "weight sensors, vehicle sensors, surveillance systems and vehicle di- mensional measuring equipment." In addition, "non-damaging image- producing" gear will be installed to ex- amine contents of shipping containers and launch canisters. The goal is to devise a system that automatically col- lects and records data 24 hours a day. The monitoring system must be accu- rate enough to detect potential viola- tions but work fast enough so traffic flow is not unduly impeded. And be- cause deployment within Soviet bor- ders precludes use of trade-secret equipment, engineers must create highly reliable systems composed main- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved One such device is a verucat ana horizontal array of infrared sensors to measure rapidly the length and profile of various vehicles leaving the plant. Like radar, the system would sendout its own energy beam to sense objects day or night and in adverse weather. For weighing, Itagengruber says com- mercial scales can be modified to assess a moving truck or to weigh loads on freight trains. Railroad cars in some respects are easy to monitor because they are constrained to tracks, have a fixed geometry and uniform velocities. But they also pose special problems because they may weigh much more than their freight and the cars may come in a mix of gondolas and box cars. To skirt this problem, Hagengruber says they may negotiate that only cer- tain types of train cars are allowed into the plant. If a vehicle is Large and heavy enough to be carrying a prohibited mis- sile, its cargo will be examined by non. destructive imaging, most likely by X- ray sensors tuned to appropriate inten- sities. X-rays can take measurements and determine material composition and are generally hard to deceive. Manufacturers of rockets routinely use them to inspect solid propellants for cracks. For verification, however, the scans must occur faster than industrial applications, and probably be less in- trusive too, says Hagengruber. Sandia is also examining tamper-re sistant seals that would reliably indicate if enclosures had been breached. In one such device, a loop of multistrand plas- tic fiber-optic cable is cut to desired length in the field. Its ends are put into a one-piece seal body which contains a serrated blade that randomly severs a portion of the cable fibers. The result is a unique "signature" of the uncut fibers. That pattern is photographed. If the fiber-optic loop is later released, the blade is designed to cut additional fibers and change the signature. During in- spection, a second Polaroid shot is ta- ken for immediate comparison with the original signature. Warheads and Holograms Authorities note that it is much easier to verify a ban than a re sidual force of, say, 100 missiles. Consequently the START pact, be- cause it seeks to halve levels of stra- tegic warheads, will requite more strict measures. In addition, the two superpowers are discussing in Geneva how to limit nu- clear-tipped cruise missiles on ships and submarines. Such controls pose special monitoring problems because the missiles are much smaller than oth- er strategic weapons and because some for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 i CS d IICla I""' ...??.?? ?.???.?????--?e techniques to "tag" concealable mobile nuclear weaponry. The challenge is to design a system that permits counting for verification but does not allow tar- geting by the military. Fred Holzer, deputy leader of ver- ification at Lawrence Livermore Na- tional Laboratory, outlined further con. straints during a 1986 interview. The tags must be tamper-proof and impos- aible to duplicate; and they must in no way interfere with the missile's oper- ation, he explained. Moreover they must be designed so they cannot be used-or even be perceived to be us- able-as a homing device. Numerous schemes exist. For new missiles, tags might be installed at the production line. One possibility is to make a special mold with an intricate surface pattern for producing a tag. After the required number were pro- duced, Holzer said, the mold could be broken. Another possibility, for new or existing weaponry, is to make a pho- tornicrograph or acoustic hologram of a small patch on the missile. Each weap- on examined could then be checked against a database of the fiber patterns of "legitimate" missiles. Yet another option is to use a micro- chip tag that could be queried on in- spection. The basic technologies that might be used are. being employed by auto manufacturers including BMW, Fiat and Honda. BMW's assembly line uses chips coded to contain such infor- mation as paint color, options to be installed and so forth for each chassis. The chip is queried during assembly stages and the specified actions taken. Honda uses an intrinsic property, like fiber grains, to guard against piracy in spare auto parts. Other scenarios are akin to existing methods of satellite tracking of caribou. A U.S. satellite monitors free-roaming herds fitted with radio transmitters in northwestern Alaska to an accuracy of 0.8 kilome- ters. Holzer says that "these kinds of techniques are being developed rather rapidly." A senior administration official observes, however, that despite all the studies no practical tagging schemes have yet emerged. START verification might include a plan to designate assembly areas to make missile production more trans- parent to surveillance satellites. But satellites cannot provide the sort of information that Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev mentioned in his summit farewell speech, when he shocked many observers by declaring that the Soviets had a technique that would re- motely "identify not only the presence, but also the capacity of the nuclear warheads" aboard mobile vessels. If it exists, such a device probably emits a pulse of high-energy neutrons to induce a small amount of fission in any nuclear warhead. The pulse would have to be weak enough to prevent the degradation in the reliability of the nu- clear weapons but strong enough to produce a recognizable signature of gamma rays or neutrons. But because of the rapid degradation of this signa- ture in the atmosphere, such measure- ments must be made from close range. Moreover, shielding by lead or water could foil the inspection. More detailed schemes must be fielded for effective START verification. A November 1987 report by the House Intelligence Committee was unanimous in saying that the Execu I L L E G I B Branch provides "no central direction and prioritization of research and de- velopment to improve arms control monitoring capabilities." It placed the blame largely on the intelligence com- munity. Indeed many technologies for use in the INF treaty were developed for oth- er purposes. Participants say some an- alyses, such as whether inspections of suspect sites should be allowed, were done hastily. Although INF negotiations began in November 1981, money for the major INF monitoring program started flow- ing several years later. The Depart- ment of Defense was the surprising source, including the international se- curity policy branch formerly headed by Richard N. Perle, popularly known as a bete noire of arms control. In spite of budget constraints, Con- gress supplemented administration re- quests for verification research for fis- cal 1988. Whether that results in in- novative techniques for monitoring the strategically sensitive START pact remains to be seen. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Secrets and Ciphers T HE DRAWBACK in the simplest version of Gus Simmons' scheme is that the Soviets would not know everything being sent. But the secret key used to authenticate old messages would be periodically supplied to the Soviets, who could then exactly reconstruct the authentication words to determine whether espionage information existed. The Soviets could also dis- mantle a similar piece of authentication gear to discern its intelli- gence potential. In that simple approach, the same key is used to encrypt and de- crypt a message. In 1976, however, a different method emerged. Called public-key cryptography, it uses one key to scramble a mes- sage and a different key to unscramble it. Hence the ability to de- crypt a message does not also permit one to make forgeries. Such a scheme is ideal for verification work, for it allows authen- tication without secrecy, and it can prevent some convoluted ways of cheating. The United States would encrypt the entire message and share the decrypt key with the Soviets and any other third par- ty. All parties could decipher the data as it was transmitted. Sim- mons' group at Sandia uses the Rivest-Shamir-Adleman algorithm where the encrypting party bases its key on a pair of prime num- bers P and Q that are kept secret and are so large that factoring N = PQ is beyond all projected capabilities of computers. The United States would be confident that the data were genuine because it would be practically impossible, even with supercomputers, to de- termine the encryption key in time to alter the data. But under that scheme, the party doing the encryption could send a forgery. Because of that ability, the Soviets could disavow any incriminating message, telling the United Nations, for example, that U.S. data indicating a trainload of illegal SS-20 missiles was a fabrication. So in 1980, Simmons' group devised a method whereby the United States and the Soviet Union would collaborate in the en- cryption. i But several years ago, it was realized that unilateral action of ei- ther party-saying its secret encryption key had been compro- mised, for instance-would circumvent the system. So Simmons, in his fourth iteration, proposed that a third party do on-site encryp- tion using the public-key technique. With at least three parties con- tributing to the message-scrambling, the system was immune to impeachment by unilateral actions. "Each time you solve one problem and peel off that layer of diffi- culty," says Simmons, "you find a more subtle one inside." But for now at least, he thinks the problem is finally solved If the Soviets do not agree on his first-generation system, there are many alternatives. -John A. Adam Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 TAT - - -,L' - L ? -- -- LL - A - T--- - --- A T_ ?' e T Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Illy MICHAEL R. GORDON ar?eil Y ltrt Nn YYn Tw WASHINGTON. Jan. 27 - On Dec. 6, two days before Mikhail S. Gorbachev and President Reagan were to sign a new missile accord in Washington, American and Soviet negotiators were still arguing in Geneva about a key treaty detatt As the evening wore on. Maynard W. Glitman, the chief American negotia- tor, angrily accused his Soviet counter- anandd jeopardizing agreement over stalling the issue - the American insistence that inspectors should be able to look inside Soviet structures big enough to hide rocket stages, but too small to hide the SS-20 missiles that were to be elimi- nated under the terms of the treaty. "I've had it," said Mr. Glitman, sug- gesting that the issue be taken up the next day. "I'm leaving." Just a Misunderstanding But finally, Mr. Obukhov gave in. The entire dispute, he said, had simply been a misunderstanding. Shortly after midnight, the senior negotiators initialed the final treaty text, which gave the Americans the in- spection rights they wanted, and brought six years of negotiations to an end. In the Senate hearings on the new missile accord this week, the way the treaty was negotiated - and whether the United States agreed to flawed provisions to meet the summit dead- line - have emerged as key issues. On Thursday, Paul H. Nitze, the senior arms-control adviser to Secretary of State George P. Shultz, will testify be- fore the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Interviews with American officals familiar with the secret negotiating record reveal that the American post- Late in the game, Washington's position was still in flux. and Eduard A. Shevardnadze, the Soviet Foreign Minister, only two weeks before the summit meeting. But once the general outlines of the verification plan were defined, the Rus- sians appear to have made most of the r concessions on Important details of how the plan would be carried out. The question of how to make sure the Soviet side observes the treaty has been a central concern for both the Ad- ministration and its critics since the negotiations started. One important issue was what kinds of installations on either side could be inspected at short notice. Another was how the United States would make sure no prohibited missiles were being produced in Soviet installations. The Administration initially wanted a broad right to carry out short-notice inspections virtually anywhere in the Soviet Union where banned missiles tton an key verification issues was in- deed in flux until suprisingly late in the negotiations. In addition, American of- ficials say, the Russians tried to back away from some concessions they made at a meeting between Mr. Shultz could be kept - a position promoted by civilian Pentagon officials and known as "anytime, anywhere." Then American intelligence experts, military officials, and Government weapons developers began arguing that letting Soviet inspectors check sites "anytime, anywhere" in the United States was not desirable at all. Last summer, once the Russians agreed to the principle of eliminating, rather than limiting, medium- and shorter-range missiles based on land, the Administration made less strict de- mands on verification. The Adminis. tration explanation for the reduced de- mands was that a ban on such missiles would be easier to verify than limits. The 'Froot Loops Plan' But last fall, the American delega- tion was alerted in a cryptic cable that the Administration was reviving the idea of "anytime, anywhere " Inspec- tions. In mid-November, less than a month before the summit meeting, the chief American arms negotiator, Max M. Kampelman, and a National Security Council aide, Col. Robert E. Linhard of the Air Force, arrived in Geneva, and Colonel Linhard made a proposal known as the "Froot Loops plan" to the Soviet negotiators. Under this plan, if the Russians asked to inspect an innocent American installation - Colonel Linhard used the example of a factory that made Froot Loops breakfast cereal - the United States would consult with the private concern and allow the inspection to proceed. But if the Russians asked to inspect a highly sensitive installation, the United States would have the right to turn down the request. As Colonel Linhard reportedly explained it, each country would maintain a list - kept secret from the other side - of installations, like sensitive intelligence sites, that would not be open to inspection. U.S. Negotiators' Qualms The American negotiating team in Geneva was dubious about this plan, which conflicted with what they hod al- ready told the Russians. What would happen if the Russians put too many in- stallations on their secret list, some of them wondered. Others worried that some American installations were too the Americans that Moscow had no in- secret to be put on a list that might tention of providing a photo of the SS-20 somehow be made public. missile because the Americans would Yuli M. Vorontsov, then the top never see an SS-20 missile outside of Soviet arms negotiator, abruptly dis- the canister. The Americans rejected ! missed Colonel Llnhard's suggestion. this position. On American insistence, The Administration decided that the the Soviets sent a telephoto of the mis- proposal would never succeed, and, Bile on the morning the treaty was The negotiators finally agreed on short-notice inspections only at sites on an agreed list of installations for medi- um-range and shorter-range missiles. Critics see this more limited approach as a serious flaw in the treaty, while the Administration asserts that the total package of verification measures provides sufficient protection against possible Soviet cheating that would have military significance. Closing the Gaps By all accounts, the critical meeting that closed the gap between the two sides on key verification issues was the one in Geneva between Mr. Shultz and Mr. Shevardnadze, just before Thanks- giving. During several days of intense talks, aides to the two officials worked out the basic arrangements for short-notice in- spections, and drafted treaty provi- sions to make it.easier for American spy satellites to determine that no pro- hibited SS-20 missiles could be hidden at SS-25 missile bases. The two sides also worked out the l basic procedures for monitoring the Russian missile assembly plant at Vot- kinsk, west of the Urals, by stationing inspectors outside of the gates, a moni- toring plan originally devised by Amer- ican experts. That monitoring was necessary be- cause the Russians had earlier in- formed the United States that the first stage of their long-range SS-25 missile was very similar to that of their medi- um-range SS-20 missile, which was Lo- be banned by the treaty, and that both were assembled in Votkinsk. In return, the Americans agreed to allow the sta- tioning of Soviet inspectors outside of an American missile assembly plant in Magna, Utah. In announcing these breakthroughs, Mr. Shultz told reporters in Geneva: "We have now completed agreement on all of the outstanding I.N.F. issues." But, as it turned out, a lot of hard bar- gaining Jay ahead. For one thing, the some critical de- tails of how the monitoring was to be carried out had not been worked out. For another, the Russians began trying to renegotiate some already agreed upon compromises. Soviet negotiators began arguing that agreement on carrying out short- notice inspections at factories that made launchers for ground-launched cruise missiles meant that the Soviet factory at Volgograd that made launchers for ballistic missiles covered by the treaty should be exempt. The' Americans. rejected this argument and prevailed. At the Shultz-Shevardnadze meeting, the Soviet side had appeared to accept the principle that the United States could keep inspectors outside any new Russian installation that assembled SS-25 missiles if one was ever built. But now, Soviet negotiators were saying that the Americans could conduct monitoring only outside of the Votkinsk plant. The Americans objected and prevailed here, too, but they had some last-minute wrangling over the ar-I rangements. Initially, the Russians said American inspectors would be able to look inside only every 30th missile canister that came out of the plant. The Americans] wanted to be able to conduct more Ire- quent inspections at random. It was thus agreed that inspectors could look inside the canisters eight times a year. Soviet negoqtiators said that each side; should be allowed to have 10 inspectors at each installation. The Americans wanted 40. It was agreed that each side could have 30 inspectors. The 'Stages Problem' Even after the treaty terms were agreed on, there were last-minute hitches. Maj. Gen. Vladimir Medvedev, one of the Soviet negotiators, informed signed, Dec. 8, and later sent a glossy original. By Sunday night, Dec. 6, the two sides were down to the "stages problem" that so exasperated Mr. Glitman. The Russians were insisting that they be able to look inside structures that could hide individual rocket stages, since the American Pershing 2 missile is trans- ported in stages and assembled on its launcher. But the Russians said that American inspectors should not have the same right. They argued that because their SS-20 missiles were transported in can- nisters, American inspectors should be allowed to look only inside structures that could hide entire missiles. The Americans demanded reciproci- ty, seeking to close any possible loop- hole in the treaty. After saying the Soviet delegation lacked the authority from Moscow to make such a conces- sion, Mr. Obukhov relented. The next morning, the Americans de- layed their departure from Geneva until early afternoon to review the final treaty language. Soviet negotiators had been in- structed to complete the treaty in time for Mr. Gorbachev's arrival in Wash- ington that afternoon, and Mr. Obukhov and General Medvedev hitched a ride with the Americans, who were bringing copies of the treaty with them on a camouflaged Air Force C-141 plane. One member of the American team took an extra precaution to. make cer- tain the treaty arrived in Washington for the Tuesday signing. He sent a copy by Federal Express. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0 A- Helms and Shultz Are in High-Stakes Duel Over Verifiability of Pact, Missile Numbers ItY PCItR SAMUEL Aby a ere rlita.. C-w/--eeee WAS i N. lan, 36 - While Re publican and Disriocretic sonatas joined form today sedmng to discredit him Sea Jesse Hear, R-N.C. has saga seamy of Sete Geese Shunts in a high-stakes battle over the rim5cati w of the D'tF Duty. At mdays tenaawry before the Saute Purge Relations Committee. the top US arms cintrd g corset Gana, Max Kampdma and MaYnhad Grimm aid the arty adhere the goal of eliminating Soviet madiuru, thmge misib a a military threat to Western Europa and a political tart to the stability of the NATO alliance They told the o auuwnse that daavo- bon of the mists a the areal ern because that meant that >,arttads could no longer be de iverad m that mgna Destroying the warheads thensdves might be dangerous. Kampetbtmt and Grimm aid, became roan U.S. ma- A 3 PACT... CONTINUED ing them baying then underground or exploding them after an serial latridh- Ing. 'lla fasianable arterial by itself is. not dangerVA" Kanpelnoo_ aid. 'ylhe danger, involved is when it a raked to that which shoos it direcs it outs it to aplode A big atom of the warhead does go damoyed, doe get though. has aved his wrath for Shur. who has give ratification of the Duey high priority in the find yin of the Raga admineramai Hebua and his sail are deeply onmmitad in der view that the easy a deaCnend to the amity of the United Shares and la anie, and my, privately. the anty s being aid with lit, They my that the adminsaamon is pleading the American people on two central muss attuned up in the tetras -Manitmability' and -Orly M'- ' SS 3DC Monitaabihty riders to the ability of United Sate intelligma sold veifi- caom itspectos to adequately tract gad identify Soviet missiles std dead vioieno s The 'Only iO ' sea reform in the credibility of the Satrino' dsdzr- a = char it ha any t160 S&20 sssilss. which will be dstroysd refer der arm of the iNF tray. . The phb& has been ahawn only the sip d the ioebrg of this dsp to the swarm ssya and an Monday he illustrated his pow drag the public him i by having an aide want ataa the soon and deliver in Shills a top sash repot which Helm said was of .paramount m?arams to our national rarity" In apes release he aid em lie that it the daaified material was legitimate he would question -whether thee should be hasher Soar action at this due m din propped arty' Helms mad he pommel confirmation from Shun that the donanoa was gerhume and that he and the president sines is mnata Slacks tfectinsd to open the document, drag the Pis of rasa is the use Hasa than shggaed else der asp maw foidr ?aid named aimed to a oar be had weisa him. Sbuitt pidmd up 'Well [ is... it ntprsetas sold a being a at of quotations from highly classified tu- aiaM dot we a the hands of the imeiigence -. Hdmr Yta - Shultz And how you name to have that. I have an ids You have better a? than I do to whatever they (due stdligaha papiel are doing .. The Seam, of Sao then aid *AL from what he had beam able to ass- tam the probi?s raised in the rave repots 'm be dab with ahishic- torily but is should be disc a ed with the aodligeno people in dad assn Hebrer responded that he was moots. aged Shultz had read his letter. He then put into the Senate retvtd that he had received a hand-delivered letter from CIA Outer Winirm Webster which mduded the stateitmt We have 1e viewed the highly sasidve daatifiad information cited in the amt- ut to yaw Ytor. This afomrdm a, in hi. coo- teed a a rent draft d Vtiawr Two of TAW A6sond Ganiges Faunae 4111.88. The information is ahbmehtvdy as n tea. ahhatgh the final wending in the puhlWhd cram w41. in sea ass, be slightly cider. am. Floss in his keener in Wehaa turgid dot the ate arterial 'di- dam a major vtdaom by the Soviet Union of din peopmed treaty an Inter- mediate Ntdsr Faroe' teo?t Of6csb have been unusually a mmneritag an the contented the secret materials, big the indications am that they bear in put an two matters already reported in the Cit. Tnbhw to the aria publdsd November 1$ 16, 17 and 18 That refs to ? the intelligence conmumcys gnat difficulty in detecting mobile Soviet missiles and its nod for considerably ah7aad ramrta in cedr to be Ibte at detect and identify hest with conf- dma ? initiations from us intomfehce dat do INF-board SS-21) missile is being --* sbe and me slightly lt with is INF-dlowed -mama" the 9125 Two (setae SS-2D bass in the wane steins Union Veklmyays Saida ad Yrya have been oathanf convertsd to sea bas. U usffi- gehce has repoad The 5525 ansms aid garages, which we 10 fat longer than those for the SSA, over the years 1984 to 1987 displaced the shorter testes and gvaaa identified as those in hold 5 . . Analysis a Washington muhdd the bases wee being nursed hat the SS-Ms to ihamitimaisI SS-25L U.S inteligehr mepotad that 36 SS20s that wane though at be "eau.' disappeared from else hate Amdhar sapesatm Is that do at, 98 mown was simply mowd as do bW cimm r and garage idenifsd with 9b25@ and wee give 10 fact of . rum' a part of Soviet plan in to that ability to hide their aaardste range fans In his opening saanem lofty. Serra Republican L- Robert Dole aid in supported ratification, of the treaty but aid US intelligence would rued hoe resources to do the job. The asnigii chefs I madad cared me that. with adegtar is, smmla, rd I rideacoe that. they cam do the ver+6atiom jo' Dole .id We may well need to bad top or own capability in are dlattivs veif- canna' A 4 ---r-- ~- ...%.- .- ~ pard a Sorrier atpwtioa They air dad do risk of rasbstim mint rk- With other memmes hug agaaat kit. Nelms peed his dace "that usahasry to attw public uaets the lanty dam not demur even one nuclear wrhetd" 'A missile is a carrying case and the pounced a the thing that goo 'boon' and kill you,' Iletna declared. 'A inhale doesn't kin you unless it fans an your had and crass it opna' Kartpdnm said the taty doe permit renoval of faoonabie material and guidance a0 before US and Soviet missiles are demoyd by crush- This s an appaien allusion to intelligence as momma that the United State would only have about a ZD pewit probability of detecting an ilkRany deployed SSZO. and that a pri nipol surveillance system needed to catch for mobile monks - the IedigalaGaae infrared imaging atel- Ise - ha bun grounded by the space ahutde dhssater and the lacii of any US bmvy4dt Ismrh op.bitity. geA Mobile kfsols Task Foe hunt RaTaremm W'aRling Group WG)riepot d ted Dec. 11, 1986 arid addressed to the theater of central intelligence saint -Our, teem capability to meet ad- equately the denude placed an our iaarm to adduct effativety the mobile missile ptobleu is linits&.. A our capability to loan, Identify and tract mobile missiles a evolutionary and will rpmme sign dmit enhance- over pramt capabihina .. It is deer that development of strategies to captive our apebibties will tepteae many tome apes than are cis city available' The 'O*4W scar bars heavily an the eadibitiry of the adminsaaoo, because in is dale to on the tray ratified, I is edosing the Sovies' ddeatim the they have only 660 SS Ma to dosoy. Ye, thin read s repine with artier ssoenena by the adnina? emote enphas?ug that the SS-2D I was built and deploy to reload and firs. The Penaagm's Sorrier Mliay, fbar- publication has always aid this. and is picanli repremmatims of S&70 units at actin have madly shown refire mine The number of refire miaala per ready-to-fire missiles atop their tiansparto recur launcher triacim has, been ati std bet an one and but. Eva with the low atcute of one refine missile per deployed numale, there would with the admasaation's count of Nl deployed msiala, be 882 mina am In addition to tum in the field. every insane syaen ha is stodepak d mssilm held for as firing and replao- mas of theta that on damaged from ?a rips of depbI This has lad der Defense Intelligence Agaiy in enema the SSZD count to be road 14 with other -- based an Soviet phi for four ndae of 7.250. A memaaeduto from Helms to his colleagues dated Jan. 25 discusses this sae at length an page 22 and Z3. It aye that the DIA has -assumed that the SS-2D form was dow to aid even over 1.OOD.' It Was on to any some atrDigeace analysis have estimated the numbers se high an 2250 and adds "This amber is a derived manter not a deuced somber, but it is based tarn some very raimonable assumptions and sa-igm afrmation.. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/12/17: CIA-RDP90M00551 R000700350042-0