THOSE TITILLATING HIGH-LEVEL RESIGNATIONS

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CIA-RDP91-00901R000600190014-0
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RIPPUB
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K
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6
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December 19, 2016
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November 15, 2005
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14
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Publication Date: 
March 14, 1986
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NSPR
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For Release M1d5A99*4T RDP91-00901R00060019 014-0 l~- 14 March 1986 Those Titillating High-Level R By STEPHEN ENGELBERG Special to The New York Times WASHINGTON, March 13 There is nothing like a high-level resigna- tion to get people talking in this city. After all, this Is where a shift of White House office assignments and the type of plane given a senior offi- clal.for a foreign trip can set off days of speculation. When somebody actually leaves the Government, vague official state- ments citing the ever-popular "per- sonal reasons" are seen as inherently suspect. Journalists, lobbyists and players in the power game suspect that darker meanings lurk just be- neath the surface of such seemingly innocuous announcements. So it was .the other day when the White House announced that John N. McMahon, the No. 2 man at the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency, was ending his 34-year career with the agency. The White House said he was;leaving for unspecified personal reasons. But the speculation began immediately and has continued, both in print and among those who follow the twists and turns of the intelligence agencies. Did he jump? Was he pushed? Was his leaving some kind of protest? Critics of the agency, contending that Mr. McMahon had opposed cov- ert aid for insurgencies in Afghani- stan, Angola and Nicaragua, saw his resignation as proof that those pro- grams would soon be stepped up. Tass, the Soviet press agency, offered a similar hypothesis. And two conser- vative groups that had been pushing for Mr. McMahon's dismissal im_ mediately claimed credit. All of which led Mr. McMahon to vehemently deny all the theories, which made some of the speculators all the more convinced that their as- sertions were correct. Goals of the Lobbying Groups The conservative lobbying groups, Free the Eagle and the Federation for American Afghan Action, have been pushing for a more confrontational American policy in Afghanistan. They would like the United States, for example, to provide expensive Amer- ican-made arms to the rebels fighting the Soviet-backed government of Af- ghanistan. Foreign-made arms are now provided to the guerrillas on what officials call a "covert" basis, meaning the weapons cannot be di- rectly traced to American sources. But the two groups have also been trying to build their reputations, and a letter-writing campaign against Mr. McMahon has beeiSi a primary tactic. The groups said repeatedly that Mr. McMahon was opposing an in- crease in the size of the Afghan pro- gram. Officials said his concern was that more aid would only be lost as it is moved through Pakistani middle- men to the Afghan guerrillas. "We said, 'Hey, McMahon's the bad guy,' " recounted Neal Blair, president of Free the Eagle. He said that as a result of his group's efforts, more than 10,000 letters were de- livered to Donald T. Regan, the White House chief of staff. The conservative lobbying groups have had mixed success in getting people to believe their claims in Washington, but they seem to have had little trouble, convincing Moscow of their prowess. Tass, in its article on Mr. McMahon's resignation, said the White House had been pressured by "the ultra-reactionary group Free the Eagle." This assertion is a favorite theme of the Soviet press, which regu- larly portrays Mr. Reagan as being a prisoner of the far right. Tass also suggested that Mr. McMahon had resigned in protest, saying he had "dared to express doubts on the utility of giving military aid through the C.I.A. channels to the anti-Afghan rebels." McMahon Is `Dismayed' All of this apparently infuriated Mr. McMahon and led some allied in- telligence services to think that the agency was undergoing some sort of internal upheaval. Within a few days the C.I.A. was issuing a statement under Mr. McMahan's name intended to quell all the speculation, "I have been dismayed and an- gered by the reaction of those in the press and special interest groups who have sought to interpret my retire- ment from C.I.A. as an expression of discontent with the President's poli- cies," he wrote. "Nothing could be further from the truth. I must draw the line when these uninformed and erroneous reports provide fodder - as indeed they already have - for propaganda in the Sandinista press in Nicaragua and others abroad." Administration officials who have known Mr. McMahon for years say that there was no hidden meaning in his retirement and that he had talked about leaving Government service for several years. These associates contend that, in this case, it was accurate for the White House. to say he was resigning for personal reasons. The timing of Mr. McMahon's decision, they said, was linked to such prosaic factors as pending Federal legislation that would lessen pension benefits to reti- rees. It is true, they say, that Mr. McMahon has sometimes been a doubter when it comes to expanded covert programs. But they say he had proven to be a loyal soldier once a particular policy was decided. "Why wouldn't he have left years ago if he had such problems with cov- ert programs?" one official asked. Others said that Mr. McMahon, to all indications, had retained the confi- dence of William J. Casey, the Direc- tor of Central Intelligence, who is a leading proponent.of the Administra- tion's covert aid to insurgencies. Mr. Blair, of Free the Eagle,.is not persuaded. "McMahon was right in the middle of this, and it appears he lost out," he said. "The indications are persua- sive." Asked if he knew for 'a certainty that Mr. McMahon had been forced from his job, Mr. Blair said: "I can't think of one resignation where we've ever. really known what happened." Approved For Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901R000600190014-0 WASHINGTON POST 14 March 1986 Those Allegations Against a CIA Deputy Approved For Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901R0006 There are only three accurate parts of The Post's March 5 story entitled "CIA Deputy Chief McMahon Re- signs," These a= ^ John McMahon resigned as deputy director _lutelli_ gen-ce; ^ The picture is indeed of Mr. McMahon; ^ Deputy Director for Intelligence Dr. Robert Gates has been nominates) by the president to succeed Mr. McMahon. Numerous allegations against Mr. McMahon contained in the rest of The Post's story are false. Notably: ^'The Post implies that Mr. McMahon retired because an "inter- agency group in charge of covert operations decided on a significant es- calation of four paramilitary opera- tions." That is incorrect. As Mr. McMahon said, and as the White House's announcement of Mr. McMahon's resignation stated, he re- tired for purely personal reasons. The Post leads its readers to believe that its "anonymous" sources know Mr. McMahon's mind better than he does. f The Post asserts that "the depar- ture of McMahon ... clears the way fora more activist policy of CIA inter- vention that' t is agency s erector William J. Casey, has been promot- ing." s e Post should be aware whatever administration is in power- President Reagan's in this case- makes oreign policy not the ral Intelligence Agency. The CIA's func- tions are o co ec , ana yze and dis- seminate information on forei policy, I could go on, but enough said. developments to those who do make It is a pity that a distinguished policy-the president and his National agency officer and public servant who Security Council-and to assist them has given 34 years of his life in out- in the decision-makin process. Mr. standing service to his country should Casey is an adviser tote NbC, but is be so maligned when he regretfully re- not a voting member. 'tires for truly personal reasons. The CIA also is charged with con- GEORGE V, LAUDER ducting counterintelligence overseas Director, Public Affairs afid undertaking such other activities Central Intelligence Agency Washington as the president may direct. ch deci- sion by the president to task CIA with such activities, sometimes referred to as "covert action," is re rted to the over- sight committees in Congress within 48 hours, Lost suggests, have its own foreign poli- cy Mr. McMahon's presence or depp - ture from the a ens will not in itself decide the course of U.S. foreign policy. ^ According to The Post, "McMahon opposed increased U.S. in- volvement in Third World conflicts." Nothing could be further from the truth. As Mr. McMahon has stated, "I support the president's policies in Af- ghanistan, Nicaragua and the Third World at large and execute his direc- tives to the fullest extent." Congres- sional testimony makes clear that Mr. McMahon is not discontent with the president's policies in these areas as The Post and others have alleged; he has, in fact, been a strong supporter of these policies. ^ The Post reports that a lobby has taken credit for Mr. McMahon's resig- nation. Such a claim by a misinformed and misguided group is absurd and de- serves no further comment. Approved For Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901R000600190014-0 Approved Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901 R000600190014-0 Casey's choices at the CIA ARNOLD BEicRMAN hen President Reagan appointed William Casey director of Cen- tral Intelligence in 1981, he selected a man who had sev- eral qualifications for the post. First, during World War II he had served in the Office of Strategic Ser- vices, a more modest version of what in time became the CIA. Second, Mr. Casey knew inti- mately Washington's bureaucratic, byways, having served earlier in several executive government posts. Third, Mr. Casey, unlike several of his immediate predecessors, had no illusions whatsoever about the So- viet Union. Fourth, and probably most impor- tant, he enjoyed the fullest confi- dence of President Reagan, an attribute in which many of Mr. Casey's forerunners under other presidents had been notably defi- cient. Mr. Casey's first designee to a leading CIA post almost brought him down. As his deputy director for operations, the "chief spook:' as he is known at Langley, Mr. Casey ap- pointed not someone from the CIA itself but an "outsider," a business- man who had reportedly done a f irst- rate job in the 1980 Reagan pres- idential campaign. The appointee suddenly found himself being inves- tigated for alleged crimes, and be- fore he had even warmed his seat he withdrew, rather than allow himself and the administration to be dragged through the mud. T he following year, 1982, when Adm. Bobby Ray Inman, the legendary intelligence pro- fessional, retired as deputy director of Central Intelligence, Mr. Casey, under pressure from Congress, took an "insider," John N. McMahon, then CIA executive director, to replace Mr. Inman. Mr. McMahon resigned WASHINGTON TIMES 19 March 1986 his post last week, effective Marcn 29, apparently on his own volition. Succeeding him as second-ranking official at the CIA was another mem- ber of the CIA career bureaucracy, Robert M. Gates, the agency's deputy director for intelligence. Prior to this appointment, which re- quires Senate confirmation, Mr. Gates was chairman of the CIA's Na- tional Intelligence Council, which analyzes all information collected by U.S. intelligence agencies. This replacement of one high CIA official by another demonstrates the tremendous power the CIA career bureaucracy has developed over the years. In addition, career officers are today endowed with an impor- tant action base in the House and Senate intelligence oversight com- mittees. These bodies constitution- ally outrank the CIA itself because they are empowered to oversee the. agency's activities and finances, no matter how secret, how confidential, and how sensitive. No classification can truly ex- clude the committee members from knowing, if they want to, whatever the CIA knows and does. In other words, while Mr. Casey nominally is on the top of the Central Intelligence pyramid, his subordinates have in- evitably developed a lateral relation- ship with powerful congressional leaders, some of whom have indi- cated that they put greater trust in CIA career officers than they do in Mr. Casey himself. What gives the career officers even more muscle is that, as the di- rector of Central Intelligence, Mr. Casey has, as is the case with any executive in-chief, a limited time span for dealing with issues and de- cisions. There is simply too much to do in an agency like the CIA, even for the director. He must, therefore, se- lect those issues which have a prior- ity for him and in, Mr. Casey's par- ticular situation, for the president. S uch a priority issue for President Reagan is the Strategic Defense Initiative. Whatever one says about Mr. Reagan's putative waffling on various issues and what- ever suspicions may be raised among some ultraright commenta- tors about his anti-Communism, Mr. Reagan hasn't yielded an inch on his No. 1 priority, the SDI. The pres- sures at home and abroad to compro- mise with the U.S.S.R. have been enormous .but he hasn't budged, perhaps bn the assumption that if the United States wins on SDI, all other Soviet-U.S. issues may lose their confrontational significance. Nicaragua is another priority is- sue for Mr. Reagan. Thus Mr. Casey has made the president's handful of priorities his own; the CIA career officers can take care of the other issues. T o some extent both men share a belief that when they are right they are right, and they will not be moved. Such an example was afforded the inner Washington world when Mr. Reagan let it be known that he was planning to meet at the November summit in Geneva one-on-one (except for interpreters) with Mikhail Gorbachev. There were protests, entreaties, warnings from many directions that it would be a calamity for Mr. Reagan to meet alone with the Soviet party general secretary. Mr. Reagan paid no atten- tion to all the advice and spent five hours alone with Mr. Gorbachev. 'Ib return to the instant subject, the appointment of Mr. Gates to suc- ceed Mr. McMahon may be a tri- umph for the CIA career bu- reaucracy and, indeed, Mr. Gates is I probably an excellent appointment, judging by his past record. The point is that, so far as Mr. Casey and his patron are concerned, on those is- sues which both men regard as top priority they will neither yield nor compromise, regardless of Con- gress or the CIA bureaucracy. Arnold Beichman, visiting scholar at the Hoover Institution, is studying congressional oversight of the intelligence agencies. Approved For Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901R000600190014-0 U.S.NEWS & WORLD REPORT ON FACE Approved For Releasq 20 IZI 4 I Cy RDP91-00901 R000600190014-0 TOMORROW A LOOK AHEAD FROM THE NATION'S CAPITAL UPROAR The resignation of the CIA's No. 2 man, Deputy Director John McMahon, AT THE is just the overt side of the covert turmoil inside the agency. CIA Intelligence insiders say McMahon was fired and that Director Casey was behind it. Administration aides accuse McMahon of leaking inside information to Congress and the press, but behind the accusations is McMahon's long resistance to Casey's plans for more covert aid. McMahon had hoped to survive as the agency's conscience, but that only put him at further odds with Casey. Casey's commitment to Reagan has offended CIA professionals dedicated to nonpartisanship, but it gave him the leverage to oust McMahon. The new deputy director, Soviet expert Robert Gates, is more enthusiastic about backing anti-Marxist "freedom fighters," but he will meet opposition from the agency pros. Many of them are now expected to leave "the company." Approved For Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901R000600190014-0 '~~~ 1 For Release ' '~MaQih94~1 tA-RDP91-00901R000600190014-0 (bk By STEPHEN ENGELBERG Special to The New York Times WASHINGTON, March 13 - There is nothing like a high-level resigna- tion to get people talking in this city. After all, this is where a shift of White House office assignments and the type of plane given a senior offi- cial.for a foreign trip can set off days of speculation. When somebody actually leaves the Government, vague official state- ments citing the ever-popular "per- sonal reasons" are seen as inherently suspect. Journalists, lobbyists and players in the power game suspect that darker meanings lurk just be?? neath the surface of such seemingly innocuous announcements. So it was the other day when the White House announced that John N. McMahon, the No. 2 man at the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency, was ending his 34-year career with the agency. The White House said he was leaving for unspecified personal reasons. But the speculation began immediately and has continued, both in print and among those who follow the twists and turns of the intelligence agencies. Did he jump? Was he pushed? Was his leaving some kind of protest? Critics of the agency, contending that Mr. McMahon had opposed cov- ert aid for insurgencies in Afghan.. stan, Angola and Nicaragua, saw his resignation as proof that those pro- grams would soon be stepped up. Tass, the Soviet press agency, offered a similar hypothesis. And two conser- vative groups that had been pushing for Mr. McMahon's dismissal im- mediately claimed credit. All of which led Mr. McMahon to vehemently deny all the theories, which made some of the speculators all the more convinced that their as- sertions were correct. Goals of the Lobbying Groups The conservative lobbying groups, Free the Eagle and the Federation for American Afghan Action, have been pushing for a more confrontational American policy in Afghanistan. They would like the United States, for example, to provide expensive Amer- ican-made arms to the rebels fighting the Soviet-backed government of Af- ghanistan. Foreign-made arms are now provided to the guerrillas on what officials call a "covert" basis, meaning the weapons cannot be di- rectly traced to American sources. But the two groups have also been trying to build their reputations, and a letter-writing campaign against Mr. McMahon has been a primary tactic. The groups said repeatedly that Mr. McMahon was opposing an in- crease in the size of the Afghan pro- gram. Officials said his concern was that more aid would only be lost as it is moved through Pakistani middle- men to the Afghan guerrillas. "We said, 'Hey, McMahon's the bad guy,' " recounted Neal Blair, president of Free the Eagle. He said that as a result of his group's efforts, more than 10,000 letters were de- livered to Donald T. Regan, the White House chief of staff. The conservative lobbying groups have had mixed success in getting people to believe their claims in Washington, but they seem to have had little trouble convincing Moscow of their prowess. Tass, in its article on Mr. McMahon's resignation, said the White House had been pressured by "the ultra-reactionary group Free the Eagle." This assertion is a favorite theme of the Soviet press, which regu- larly portrays Mr. Reagan as being a prisoner of the far right. Tass also suggested that Mr. McMahon had resigned in protest, saying he had "dared to express doubts on the utility of giving military aid through the C.I.A. channels to the anti-Afghan rebels." McMahon Is 'Dismayed' All of this apparently infuriated Mr. McMahon and led some allied in- telligence services to think that the agency was undergoing some sort of internal upheaval. Within a few days the C.I.A. was issuing a statement under Mr. McMahan's name intended to quell all the speculation. "I have been dismayed and an- gered by the reaction of those in the press and special interest groups who have sought to interpret my retire- ment from C.I.A. as an expression of discontent with the President's poli- cies," he wrote. "Nothing could be further from the truth. I must draw the line when these uninformed and erroneous reports provide fodder - as indeed they already have - for propaganda in the Sandinista press in Nicaragua and others abroad." Administration officials who have known Mr. McMahon for years say that there was no hidden meaning in his retirement and that he had talked about leaving Government service for several years. These associates contend that, in this case, it was accurate for the White House. to say he was resigning for personal reasons. The timing of Mr. McMahon's decision, they said, was linked to such prosaic factors as pending Federal legislation that would lessen pension benefits to reti- rees. It is true, they say, that Mr. McMahon has sometimes been a doubter when it comes to expanded covert programs. But they say he had proven to be a loyal soldier once a particular policy was decided. "Why wouldn't he have left years ago if he had such problems with cov- ert programs?" one official asked. Others said that Mr. McMahon, to all indications, had retained the confi- dence of William J. Casey, the Direc- tor of Central Intelligence, who is a leading Proponent-of the Administra- tion's covert aid to insurgencies. Mr. Blair, of Free the Eagle, is not persuaded. "McMahon was right in the middle of this, and it appears he lost out," he said. "The indications are persua- sive." Asked if he knew for a certainty that Mr. McMahon had been forced from his job, Mr. Blair said: "I can't think of one resignation where we've ever really known what happened." Approved For Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901ROO0600190014-0 Those Titillating High-Level Resignations Approved For Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901R000600190014-0 WASHINGTON POST 14 March 1986 Those Allegations Against a CIA Deputy There are only three accurate parts of The Post's March 5 story entitled "CIA Deputy Chief McMahon Re- " These are sign, ^ John McMahon resi ned as deputy direct r I~ int?Ili- genncce; The picture is indeed of Mr. McMahon; ^ Deputy Director for Intelligence Dr. Robert Gates has been nominates) by the president to succeed Mr. McMahon. Numerous allegations against Mr. McMahon contained in the rest of The Post's story are false. Notably: ^ The Post implies that Mr. McMahon retired because an "inter- agency group in charge of covert operations decided on a significant es- calation of four paramilitary opera- tions." That is incorrect. As Mr. McMahon said, and as the White House's announcement of Mr. McMahon's resignation stated, he re- tired for purely personal reasons. The Post leads its readers to believe that its "anonymous" sources know Mr. McMahon's mind better than he does. ^ The Post asserts that "the depar- ture of McMahon ... clears the way fora more activist policy of CIA inter- ; vention t Ft" i t is agency s Z _ William J. Casey, has been promot- ing." As The Post should be aware whatever administration is in power- President Reagan's in this case- makes reign policy, no the_ axaL Intelligence Agency. The CIA's func- tions are o co, ect, ana yze and dis seminate information on forei olio I could go on, but enough said. developments to those who do make It is a pity that a distinguished policy-the president and his National agency officer and public servant who Security Council-and to assist them has given 34 years of his life in out- in the decision-making process. Mr. standing service to his country should Casey is an adviser tote MiU, but is be so maligned when he regretfully re- no a vo In mem r. tires for truly personal reasons. The CIA also is charged with con- GEORGE V. LAUDER ducting counterintelligence overseas and undertaking uh other activities as a President may trect. ch deci- sion by the president to task CIA with such activities, sometimes referred to as "covert action " is reported to the over- sight committees in Congress within 48 hours, bince the CIA does not. as Post suggests, have its own foreign poli- cy, Mr. McMahon's presence or dept ture from the agency will not in itself decide e course of U.S. foreign licy. ^ According to The Post, "McMahon opposed increased U.S. in- volvement in .Third World conflicts." Nothing could be further from the truth. As Mr. McMahon has stated, "I support the president's policies in Af- ghanistan, Nicaragua and the Third World at large and execute his direc- tives to the fullest extent." Congres- sional testimony makes clear that Mr. McMahon is not discontent with the president's policies in these areas as The Post and others have alleged; he has, in fact, been a strong supporter of these policies. ^ The Post reports that a lobby has taken credit for Mr. McMahon's resig- nation. Such a claim by a misinformed and misguided group is absurd and de- serves no further comment. Director, Public Affairs Central Intelligence Agency Washington Approved For Release 2005/12/14: CIA-RDP91-00901R000600190014-0