QUOTES SEYMOUR HERSH

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100011-3
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
5
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 21, 2000
Sequence Number: 
11
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 26, 1972
Content Type: 
OPEN
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PDF icon CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100011-3.pdf310.42 KB
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RADIO TV REP( ;TS, INC. I Approved For Refuse 2001/03/06 : CIA-RDP84-004eR001000100011-3 4435 WISCONSIN AVE. N.W.. WASHINGTON. 0. C. 20016. 244-3540 PUBLIC AFFAIRS STAFF PROGRAM Non-stop News DATE March 26, 1972 11:18 P.M. QUOTES SEYMOUR HERSH WTOP Radio Washington, D.C. FRANK QUITUS: Author Seymour Hersh says an agent for the Central Intelligence Agency misled the planners of the ill-starred 1968 attack on Mylai by telling. them they would find a Viet Cong battalion there. The agent denies it. The assault units met only old men, women and children in the South Vietnamese village. Many were killed by the American troops. Hersh, who won a Pulitzer Prize for breaking the Mylai story, identifies the agent in a new book as Robert Ramsdell, now a private investigator in Orlando, Florida. Hersh writes in Cover Up, published today by Random House, Ramsdell refused to speak specifically about the information he provided Task Force Barker before the Mylai 4 operation, but acknowledged that his intelligence undoubtedly was a factor in the planning for the mission. Ina telephone interview with the Associated Press, Ramsdell denied Hersh's allegations. He said that although he was working for the CIA in the Mylai area at the time of the killings, he had nothing to do with intelligence reports to the Americans. Approved For Release 2001/03/06 : CIA-RDP84-00499RO01000100011-3 . 'AIR WAR Approved For ReleSe 2001/03/( pR gA-RDP84-004 8001000100011-3 CIA and Mercenary Air Farces ? CIA and local Asian air forces are playing a growing role in the air war as the Adrginistration seeks to minimize overt American involvement. There is abundant documentation pointing to the participation of these air forces in opium smuggling as well as in combat. (See Ramparts, 4/71 for a fuller account.) Local, Asian air forces--supplied, maintained and directed by American "advisors"-are doing an increasing amount of the bombing. The size of the Vietnamese Air'Force (VNAF) has increased dramatically, and the Royal Lao Air Force (RLAF), the Royal Thai Air Force (RTAF), and the Cambo- dian Air Force at slower rates. Although all the aircraft are piloted by Asians, Americans do everything else, from directing bomb loading to spotting for strikes. Air America'and Continental Airlines, privately owned, profit-making companies, operate under. CIA direction and wage much of the supportive air war in Laos and Cambodia. The "charter" companies' planes perform troop transport and supply functions, spot for bombers, and engage in rescue operations for downed pilots. Air Force helicopters, helicopter gunships and giant C-130 cargo planes are "rented" to Air America for $1 a year in Laos. . . u u11111111111111111?1?11111111111111 III ru 11n 1e 111 an 1^n11111111111111E 111116111111111111111A111111111a 161111111111111111111111611 ASIAN AIR FORCES American aid to VNAF, FY 1970-72:.$922 million American aid to RLAF, FY 1970-72: $128 million (Do.D, CR,. 8/3/71) "The Nixon Doctrine . . . was premised on the assumption . . . of increased U.S. military assistance." (Undersecy. pf State U. Alexis Johnson, FY 1972 DoD Authorization Hearings). "An important-- factor in carrying out the Nixon Doctrine will be-our military assistance program. We are requesting 48 million for de- velopment and 70.4 million for procurement of the International Fighter. In addition, we are requesting 10 million for initial spares. This aircraft is needed to provide an air de- fense capability for [our) Asian allies." (Secy. of. Air Force Robert C. Seamans, FY 1972 Senate DoD Appropriations Hearings) Sen. Symington: "Are we going to continue to put these billions into Southeast Asia? Is that the overall plan in the U.S. today?" Secy. Seamans: "For the forseeable future we are going to continue to spend sizeable dol- lars in Southeast Asia." (Ibid.) VIETNAMESE AIR FORCE "South Vietnamese military officers con- tinue to dual in large quantities of heroin and to transport it around South Vietnam in military aircraft." (Rep. Robert H. Steele, House Subcommittee on Europe, 7/7/71) . Fixed Wing Heli- Total, inc: Year Attack Aircr. copters Cargo, recon. 1 69 approx. 100 approx. 125 approx. 575 1/72 (total FW $ heli. 750+) 1,0004- 1/73* 300-400 500-600 ,. 1,200 *projected (1969 and 1973 figures, Cornell study. 1972 figures, DoD) VNAF PERSONNEL 1968: 20,000 .(slightly under) 1972 (Jan.): 45,000 1973*: 50,000 *projected (Ibid.) Year Indochina 19 88 2,250/mo. 1970 3,150/mo. 1971* 3,490/mo. *as of July, 1971 (Cornell study) Laos Cambodia none none none 820 40 1,100 "Mr. Seamans. acknowledged that the Viet- namese 'will never be able to build the capa- bility to do all that the United States Air Force has. been doing-in Laos. The Vietnamese Air Force . . . does not possess either B-52s or .F-4s, the jet planes that do most of the trail bombing, and there are no plans,' Mr. Seamans said, 'to give it any."' "The South Vietnamese Air Force is the (Craig Whitney, NYT, 12/6/71) sixth r es ai~o?rc i the w r " (Michax" F6* 20 1/03/06: CIA-RDP84-00499RO01000100011-3.,.;, Approved For Release 2001/03/06 : CIA-RDP84-00496RO01000100011-3 "VNAF is being geared to fight a war where it will continue to have complete air superiority." [This superiority will- appar-ently be provided by U.S. aircraft operating from Thailand and carriers in the South China Sea.] (Brig. Gen. Kendall S. Young, chief Air Force officer for Vietnamization) Gen. Ryan: "They will not be able to supplant the complete U.S. Air Force in South Vietnam." Sen. Case: "At any time?" Gen. Ryan: "That is correct." (Gen. John D. Ryan, Air Force Chief of Staff, Senate FY 1972 DoD Appropriations Hearings) ASIAN BLOOD, AMERICAN MONEY "Lao T-28 bombers have attacked towns, Saravane being a well-known.case in point. . . Laos Air Force pilots are . . . paid a bonus for each sortie so that there is an incentive not to adhere strictly to the rules of en- gagement [forbidding random bombing]." (Senate Foreign Relations Committee Staff Report on Laos,' 4/71) "There is a growing concern of the ten- dency of Laotian air force pilots from Luang .Prabang and Long Chang to dump their bomb loads on unauthorized targets, which is con- firmed by U.S. military personnel. Only minutes after taking off the pilots reported- ly hurry home to reload--and. collect a dollar bonus for every sortie they-fly. The indis- criminate bombing is causing loss of life on the ground and forcing villagers to flee their homes." (D.E. Ronk, Far Eastern Economic Review, 9/4/71) "The VNAF bomb villages indiscriminately. They don't care where they bomb. A lot of times they'll wipe out a village because they or their commander has a grudge against it, maybe it wouldn't make the proper payoffs." (Ronald Ridenhour, former G.I. whose insistent prodding broke the My Lai story, in a PAW interview) CIA AIR FORCES "There is a large U.S. civilian (para- military) fleet operating in Laos run by Air America, Continental Air and Lao Air Trans- port . . . under contract with AID, although funds are provided'by AID, the DoD, CIA, and the State Department. The funding arrange- ments are worked out in Washington." (Foreign Relations Committee Staff Report on Laos, 4/71) "Air America-is under the management.of George Dole, a CIA employee. . . . He is looking to the future, carefully developing the airlift capabilities of other companies Transport. . '. The sole purpose for the existence,of SAT is that the agency be ready for the contingency that some day it will have. to ferry men and material to some Latin American country . . . without of course having to contend with the Congress or any- body else." (Victor Marchetti, highest ranking CIA official to "go public," a former participant in CIA daily staff meetings chaired by director Richard Helms.) CIA-DIRECTED AIR FORCES IN LAOS Inventory 20 helicopters 12 C- 123s* 7 C-7As* 10 Porters 7 C-46s- 1 Volpar Estimated Cost FY 1970: 23 million FY 1971: $26.2 million 'Personnel ? Air America: 276-415 .(Senate Foreign Relations Committee Staff Report on Laos, 4/71) "The CIA has changed its rules in an attempt to stop the use of-its private air- line, Air America, for transport of drugs [opium and heroin] in Laos. Although only two months ago CIA director Richard Helms adamantly denied there had been any agency involvement in this traffic, he is now said to have told a secret Congressional hearing that there was involvement but it has stopped." (Flora Lewis, Post, 7/23/71) "The CIA has involved us in this covert operation, an opium war. The clandestine yet official operations of the U.S. government could be aiding and abetting heroin traffic here at home." (Sen. John Tunney in a campaign speech before the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce) "John E. Ingersoll, director of the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, in -testimony before the House Select Committee on Crime, said that middle-level government officials and military men throughout South- east Asia were deeply involved in the traffic in opium, the product from which morphine and heroin is refined." (Felix Belair, NYT, 6/6/71) he runs ppmvedForcRekeaseeh2DO b03/06 : CIA-RDP84-00499R001000100011-3 Approved For Release 2001/03/06 : CIA-RDP84-004&9R001000100011-3 T E T hhd 0Ndod- k WAR A HANDBOOK PREPARED BY PROJECT AIR WAR AND THE INDOCHINA RESOURCE CENTER MRCH 1972 COPYRIGHT 1972 BY THE INDOCHINA RESOURCE CENTER 1322 18TH STREET, N, W. WASH I(TON, D. C. 20036 PERMISSION TO REPRODUCE THIS MATERIAL IS GRANTED TO NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS. PLEASE CREDIT AND FORWARD TV,0 COPIES FOR OUR FILES. k PRICE: $1.50; 10 or more, $1.00; Add 20% for shipping. Approved For Release 2001/03/06 CIA-RDP84-00499RO01000100011-3 c:nt,f rued Approved For Rele'e 2001/03/06 : CIA-RDP84-0041001000100011-3 Project Air War and the Indochina Resource Center are projects of the Indochina Education Council which was established by agencies of the United Church of Christ, the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., and the United Methodist Church to help meet the crucial need for informing the American'people about the ongoing war in Indochina. PROJECT AIR WAR is one of the major information centers in the country studying and analyzing the ongoing war, a conflict which has escalated in the air even as U.S. foot-soldiers have been withdrawn. The Project provides both authoritative statis- tical data about today's automated war and a tragic picture of what life is like for hundreds of thousands of Indochinese peasants living under constant bombing. Project material has already appeared in The New York Times., Washington Post, Time, ':oston Globe, St. Louis lost-Dispatch, San Francisco Chroni.- cle, Congressional Record, CBS and NBC national news, the Mutual Radio ne.tworc, transcripts of Congressional hearings, and a wide variety of other publications. Project staff members speak at com- munity meetings, college campuses,, and academic gatherings; are called upon frequently by congressional of- fices and media representatives for background information; and work closely with several national peace groups. The INDOCHINA RESOURCE CENTER serves as an independent clearinghouse for information on contemporary Indochina. The Center incorporates nine general sponsors from the academic community and sixteen academic associates who provide a wide range of inputs. The Center provides reliable, up-to- date information from specialists on the social, economic, cultural, polit- ical, and historical realities of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. This in-. formation, which is often otherwise unavailable, is made accessible to Congress, journalists, peace groups, and others concerned with Indochina through the twice-monthly newsletter, Indochina Chronicle, in books and articles, as well as..by direct con- tact. The Center also provides dir- ect answers to specific requests, sets up briefings and seminars, and is currently developing a series of audio-visual exhibits on Indochina for loan. Cover and following essay by a 29 year old Lao refugee. "There was a pagoda on the hill right next to my village. The airplanes shot it and started a fire. Two monks were killed there together. On account of the war. The planes thought that there were soldiers in the pagoda so they shot it. But there weren't any. Only the monks died. --from Voices from the Plain of Jars, ed. by F. Branfman, Harper and Row, 1972. Original collection of essays and drawings by Laotian peasants. 701 A.... H..M.Y.IQ71 Approved For Release 2001/03/06 : CIA-RDP84-00499RO01000100011-3