CONTINUATIONOF AQUATONE BEYOND 1957
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP33-02415A000100070027-3
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
T
Document Page Count:
5
Document Creation Date:
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date:
March 13, 2001
Sequence Number:
27
Case Number:
Content Type:
MF
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CIA-RDP33-02415A000100070027-3.pdf | 264.78 KB |
Body:
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MEMORANDUM FOR: "Director of Central Intelligence 19 April 1957
Deputy Director of Central Intelligence
SUBJECT : Continuation of AQUATONE Beyond 1957
1. Problem: As stated in an earlier memorandum, it is becoming
increasingly urgent to decide (a) whether the AQUATONE capability is to
be maintained in civilian (CIA) hands beyond the end of the photographic
season that is now beginning, and, (b) if so, on what scale and in what form.
2. Reasons for Urgency: The existing AQUATONE organization was
geared to a relatively brief, intensive operation. Faced with protracted
inactivity and uncertainty and with the repeated postponement of decision,
its morale and effectiveness are already impaired and it cannot be held
together much longer without a new sense of direction. Accordingly, it
is essential either to begin the conversion of this organization to one designed
to maintain a standby capability with only occasional and limited use of that
capability or else, if it is not going to be used this summer, to begin to
phase it out of existence. If, moreover, only very limited operations or
none at all are going to be permitted this summer but the capability is to be
kept in being for another 18 months or longer, a great deal of planning needs
to be done and many decisions need to be made on such matters as personnel,
procurement, further development of equipment, budget, and Air Force and
Navy support. It must be emphasized, that a high price will be paid in terms
of lowered effectiveness and lost opportunities if the decisions referred to
in paragraph t above are not made reasonably soon.
3. Considerations Bearing on the Problem:
a. The Life of the U-2: It appears likely that the RAINBOW develop-
ment will sufficiently increase the difficulty of intercepting the U-2 to
prolong its useful life at least through 1958. This probability is
strengthened by the possibility that the performance of the U-2 aircraft
might be somewhat further improved through intensive development
efforts this summer resulting in modification that could be carried out
next winter.
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25X1 C4a
b. The Deterioration of Cover: After careful review it is my
judgment that the present cover for the AQUATONE operation cannot
be maintained much beyond next fall.
25X1 C4a
c. The SAC U-2 Program: The presently planned surfacing of
the SAC U-2 Program will if carried through gravely impair our cover.
Not only will the fact that the U-2 is a reconnaissance aircraft become
known to a very much larger number of Air Force personnel but, in
the course of listing the U-Z in the Air Force inventory and handling
its support through normal channels, the unusual procedures employed
up to this point in the procurement and support of these aircraft will
be widely revealed. Inevitably, much curiosity will be aroused about
the aircraft and its mission. It will be impossible to conceal the
existence of another earlier U-2 program outside of the normal Air
Force organization. Many unauthorized individuals will correctly infer
that this was an Agency program. Already the flow of routine reports
and documents concerning engine and aircraft performance through
normal Air Force channels to the manufacturers is giving rise to this
suspicion on the part of unauthorized persons both in the Air Force and
in the companies concerned. I do not believe it is an exaggeration to
say that the surfacing of the SAC program will absolutely compel the
liquidation of AQUATONE under its present cover, will reveal widely
after the fact what the mission of AQUATONE was, and will make it
difficult to build convincing new cover for a maintained U-2 capability
in Agency hands.
d. Air Force Support for a Civilian Capability: The principal
original justification for developing the AQUATONE capability within
a CIA framework rather than the Air Force was to maintain greater
security, better cover, real divorce from military control and there-
fore a better possibility of plausible denial in the face of Soviet charges.
Translated into operational terms, the justification was that civilian
control would increase the likelihood that our own political authorities
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would permit overflights to be made. In the light of a disappointing
12 months, the validity of this assumption is being increasingly
questioned, at least in the Air Force. Moreover, it was always
contemplated by the Air Force that the Project would continue for no
more than two years and SAC presently assumes that the bulk of
AQUATONE's assets will be transferred to it beginning next fall
after which date the AQUATONE mission will be a SAC responsibility.
Unless therefore the validity of the original justification for a non-
military organization can be firmly re-established to the satisfaction
of senior officers in the Air Force, they will see little reason for the
maintenance of this capability in a CIA framework beyond the end of
the year, with all the inconveniences this would involve for them.
4. Conclusions: The following conclusions reflect not only the con-
siderations set forth in paragraph 3 preceding but also the results of staff
work on technical possibilities, the organization appropriate for a continued
AQUA TONE project, and the building of new cover to replace that currently
being employed.
a. It would be feasible to reorganize and to develop new cover for
AQUA TONE with the mission of maintaining a substantial U-2 capability
throughout the effective life of the aircraft in such a way as to support
continued operations at a low rate if permitted and bursts of intensive
operations if and when required. It is tentatively proposed that the
reorganized project would have one detachment readied for carrier 25X1X4
operations, and one 5X1X4
operating an rea y to operate in Europe but probably stationed in the
ZI and trained and equipped for extreme mobility.
b. The extension of AQUAT?NE in this fashion would permit a
significant reduction of manpower, amounting perhaps to a quarter to
a third of present strength. It could probably be fi*aace d through
Fiscal Year 1958 within the limits of the present amounts budgeted
for AQUA TONE but would preclude the turnback of any surplus funds
from the AQUATONE Fiscal Year 1957 budget because the Fiscal Year
1958 budget provides for only six months' operations at roughly present
strength. Some financial provision would be required in the Fiscal
Year 1959 budget but an annual rate probably no more than half that
budgeted for the current Fiscal Year.
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c. Continuation of the program will be difficult unless (1) the
surfacing of the SAC program is postponed for three or four months
at least and (2) procedures are carefully worked out and accepted by
SAC to prevent the surfacing of that program from revealing the history
of procurement and supply outside of Air Force channels.
d. The maintenance of the AQUATONE capability in the CIA
framework beyond next fall cannot be justified in the national interest
unless there is reason to believe that such divorce from military control
and the resulting greater possibility of plausible denial would signifi-
cantly decrease the political risk involved in its use, and therefore
increase the likelihood of its use, in a cold war situation.
e. The extension of AQUATONE will not be feasible (whatever
in fact its political advantages might be) unless the Air Force is con-
vinced that it is justified by the foregoing standard.
5. Recommendation: It is recommended that as a matter of urgency
the DCI secure a determination as to whether the AQUATONE capability is
to be maintained in CIA hands beyond next fall, that is, through the 1958
season or even longer. It is believed that the securing of an affirmative
determination will require the following two steps:
a. A determination by appropriate authority, it might be the President,
the Secretary of State, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, or any combination of
these, or the DCI himself, that a clandestine U-2 capability is for political
reasons more useable than that being developed by SAC, and is more
useable to a degree which justifies the trouble and cost involved in its
retention.
b. Full agreement by the Air Force that the retention of this separate
capability is in the national interest and is sufficiently important to justify
the acceptance by the Air Force of some delay to the SAC Program and
of very considerable inconvenience.
If an affirmative determination is made, detailed planning and actual prepara-
tions for the extension of AQUATONE can proceed and will, it is believed,
raise few major policy questions. If the determination is negative, it would
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seem to follow automatically that the Project should be liquidated in an
orderly manner but completely beginning with the phase out of Detachment A
25X1A9a
RICHARD M. BISSELL, JR.
Project Director
RMB:d jm
1-DCI
2-DDCI
3-Pro. Dir. Chrono
4-Pro. Dir. Subj
5-Dep. Proj. Dir.
6-Proj Chrono (Hold)
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