STUCK TO A TAR BABY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP99-00498R000100200117-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 15, 2007
Sequence Number: 
117
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 13, 1980
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP99-00498R000100200117-3.pdf92.14 KB
Body: 
Approved For Release 2007/06/15: CIA-RDP99-00498R000100200117-3 BOISE IDAHO ST'ATaMAN (ID) 13 PAprii 1980 Stock".-Io a.., arba The CIIC d we. journalists have forgottena painful lesson in a reemaT ably:short-timer-The lesson, learned in the exami- nation of-covert activities that followed the Watergate affair,, is this: Reporters: should not be-working as;contacts for the-- CI..Nothing is going to happen to change it r CIA. Director Stansfield Turner::said last;:iveek that three .American news correspondents'had.agreed = since the lessor ' was learned `-.to be,ClA informants---But even though Turner said the CIA did nottap the reporters as sources of informa thin, the---credibility ..of -the press was again compromised 1 l h is -] .through an,association with.-the- U.S.-:intelligence estab rnent. The- CIA;tar:baby,-once=touched, is awfully hard to pull.' free from. The CIA set a policy- three years ago against the use of cor- respondents as agents-'. Turner changed that policyT.-.in a de- velopment the press apparently-.overlooked,.He claims report- would be used as CIA contacts only in'exceptional situa: ers s pers en e h had ion -- - al g.. .ant -rr- - _ ___ ances aren't enough. If ; Turner, doesn't reinstate ..the policy against using reporters- as `-contacts, .the :credibility of thee::. media will be permanently damaged: - he foreign correspondent ? has. a special - role ' to play in a troubled cornerof the world. When trouble strikes, he is some- times the only person to whom_the.world cam listen with any assurance that it is hearing the.truth..His credibility is vital. -Sometimes the dispatches-of foreign correspondents are a " much utter: insight. into chaos than the measured pronounce- ments- of-the:U.S-:State Department Such is the case in El Sal-. vador, where political killing isa daily. occurrence and a per71. plexed U.S. government can't seem to come up with any better'___**_, policy than to- keep sending money to a military junta that -re- portedly condones the killingof its subjects :~ .What of situations in:which_U.S. government policy has been found wanting?=Vietnam= comes to mind. Would-readers'-and -viewers of the news feel confident-that theywere hearing the: foreign truth if they-,knew the ET.government might4have. correspondents on.its payrolls a _=# ~~~ ` - -Despots don't need- reasons-to throw correspondents out'of; their countries when news reports start to rankle:; But`Stans field Turner hasgiven:them a:,.valid excuse :for; banning A.meri- cam reporters from-their countries.--- - " - - .Turner claims that; journ alists. don'tneedpolicies_to protect' their ethics and'wouldn't_loseatheii freedom.toreport if they; ' t under- ,were to accepLan,assignrnent--from the CIA.He doesn -. ics are being breached or.:rights are being threatened: ' _?, ,,. Approved For Release 2007/06/15: CIA-RDP99-00498R000100200117-3