THE PRESIDENCY---V EVALUATION OF NEW INSTITUTIONS THAT HELP PRESIDENT KEEP UP WITH PACE OF HISTORY

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CIA-RDP70-00058R000100130119-5
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RIPPUB
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K
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2
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November 17, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 3, 2000
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119
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NSPR
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MORI 13UNDI Approvet1 For Release 2000/08/24: CIA-RDP70-00058R000100130119-5 PAGES DATE BEST COPY AVAILABLE Approved For Release 2000/08/24: CIA-RDP70-00058R000100130119-5 -.11.:W WU IMF: - ji) N 4; 4 IJJ Approved For. Release 2000/08/24: CIA-RDPVIRICE0b5 The Presidency?V 111 Evaluation of Yew Institutions That Help President Keep Up With Pace of History? sy wits items CPYRGHT smug is rse ere tosi WASHINGTON. lune 11 -- ? The American Presidency, like most other natiOnal institutions, Is in a race with the pace it House of American history. So swift is that pace and so vast the growth of the American Toda the Cabinet (minus Republic and Its reaPonalkatiaa? joke Foster Dulles, Secretary of. that all national institutions? State, who was off in California and the habits of the mak Who Scalding Nikita S. Khruitischev, tun them__Anevitably lag behind. his favorite target I arrived at This is true in a special sense of all political institutions. It is true, regardless of the party in power, not only of the Presi- dency but of the Congress with Its multiplicity of overlapping 'committees and its cult of sen- iority. It is true not only of the ma- emery for electing Presidents but also of the methods of se- lecting powerful assistants to the President. And the problem of change in Washington is es- pecially difficult. For change depends most of the tirne on the men who have benefited by the political habits and machinery of the past. In this series of articles, of which this is the last, an effort has been made to draw a dis- tinction between the President and the Presidency, and to re- port on some of the men and Institutions that carry on the Va., for s survey of problems. burdens of the office during the with the lords of the Pentagon, President's illness. representatives of all the Cabi- All these men are caught in net members met at the White this race with the fierce transi- House. They recorded whatever tion of the time. They are all decisions had been taken 80 that conscious of the need of change. tbuy could follow up on the And while they do not change as action promised. fast as events, it does not fol- Different From British low that progress has not been made. Cabinet Meeting Day This, for example, was Cabi- net meeting day in Wadhington is usually on Fridays). The only resemblance it bore to Cabinet meetings of Franklin D. Roosevelt's time Trails that it was held in the W Cabinet Room. The. Cabinet under F. D. R. was a story-telling bee?infor- mal, unprepared, and unrecorded. When, after the war, officials and historians wanted to know what happened in these Cabinet the White House, eaLh with his black Cabinet diary. secreary to the Cabinet, II IC MftentelligiNierklid prepared an agenda. For each Item on the agenda there was a background memorandum, set- ting out the points at issue, and a fa:sandhi statement. indicating what the various proposals would cost, if adopted. When Vice President Richard M. Nixon, pinch-hitting for the Provident, called the meeting to order, the Cabinet members did not have to be told the back- around of the problem (this took up most of the time in the Roosevelt meetings). The prob- lems had been defined and thai papers circulated to the mem.' bora by the Cabinet secretariat earlier in the week. Furthermore, a record of the meeting was kept by Mr. Rs.bb. And as soon as Mr. Nixon endedi the meeting to go to Quantico, This is not to say that the Cabinet is now an agency of the Presidency comparable, say, to the British Cabinet. It does not have the power of decision, as the British do under the system of Cabinet responsibility. Nor does it deal with national se- curity matters. Its responsibility is to report and recommend policy on nome matters---agriculture, natural sources, justice, etc. Nations) security questions are dealt Is it h In the National Security Council. The council is now the most powerft.1 agencyf tl o. r.- Aet of 1047, as amended in 1041. This act did four things: 1. Itstablished the Department of Defense (instead of sepa- rate departments of Army, Navy and Air Force). 2. Created the Central Intelli- gence Agency for the collee- tion and apprairal, at a cen- tral point, of world intelli- gence relating to national se- curit,y. 3. Set up the National Security Resources Board (now the Office of Defense Mobiliza- tion). 4. Established the National Se- curity Council. The purpose of the N. S. C. was to advise the President on the integration of domestic, for- eign and military policies relat- ing to national security; to "assess and appraise the objec- tives, commitments, and risks of the United States in relation to our actual and potential mili- tary power;" to consider policies on matters of comon interest to the departments and agencies of the Government, ':and to make recommendations .to the Presi- dent in connection therewith." Anti-Free-Wheeling 'Device This was intended to keep the separate departments deal- ing with security matters from running off in all directions? sort of an anti-free-wheeling de-1 vice. And while nobody can ever hope to coordinate as many peo- ple as now work in the security field, it has done extremely sell. The statutory members of the N. S. C. are the President, who normally chairs the weekly meeting on Thursday mornings: Vice President :'icon, the Secre- taries of State (Mr. Dulles) and Defense( Charles E. Wilson), and the dire or of the Office of Defense . hilization, Arthur S. Fie]] mini, Otheis who attend are the di- rector uf h Central. Intelli- gence Agency, Allen W. Dulles, WI,,, opens each meeting with a world intellig.,rre report: the ,?hhil man of the Joint Ctiefs of Admiral Arthnir W. Rad- io-I; the Secretary of the Tress 1.1%, George M. litintrottey, th.? ..ss.stants to the President for disarmament (Harold E. Ste?- seni and foreign affairs ham H. Jackson): of the Bureau of ival 1? 13:tinda meetings, they had to go to the ment. 'Indrt the Vet eIttnt, late Henry L. Stimson's personal the ril( at In' poi tant if t.1 of diaries. For no official record Pregide'n'Y This came into being wider was kept, no agenda was pre- pared, no catalogueof decisions'r2"1,,drrt 11"'" ()^ errience of was preserved. And the only u119 u8" f t ? .v the wt.- 1. tas result of consolation for the historians was that it. probably didn't mat- many Y'atie r cigt tell over the ter, for the Cabinet was not the """1"1 t! tr",!"'. and, place where ttApprolipectsnituRee40:120.0Mit was conducted. me -anierence natitesn N.S.C. and the Cabinet, other titan that one deals with home attains and the other with se- curity affairs, Is that the N. S.C. is far more formal. It does everything on the basis of care- fully pseparad staff work, and llama atwsys deals with ques- 1.102s that require t aped& recommendation to the Peen- des* for policy action. If the President has some- thilig he wants studied, he re- fers It to his special assistant titt -affairs, Dillon An- Mr. Anderson is a con- eerrative lawyer front Texas who has a gift for wry verse, which he does not use on N. S.C. P'Anderson may then refer- the question to the department concerned, or to several depart- ments for their observations. And when the papers are then taken by the N.8. C. permanent staff (most of whose top mem- bers have been there from the start of the agency). The staff prepared them for the consider- ation of the National Security Council'. planning board. , Power of Planning Board Hue& has been written. though' little is known, abou the N.S.C. What is more important is that even lase is known about the council's planning hoard, which does most of the pick-and-shovell work for the N.S.C. and a great 4eal of its thinking. It is, therefore, the principal !planning and coordinating inter 'department obrnmittee in the is-, Isues of war and pesos and, one: of immense power. This, of ' course, is flatly denied by all its Imembers, who are not only 'anonymous" but practically in- visible. The planning board' met ,this afternoon in Room 382 of the Old gtsta Department Building?j, wee men 'Mose names are at-' mist unknown beyond the top. level of official Washington. . 11.2. Anderson, the aforemen- don*1 writer who normally is chalnnen of the planning board., was rot present this afternoon. He wits away ort Kwajalein Atoll' with Lewis L. Strauss, the, atom': energy chief, presumablyi tisk vi 1; to bangs His place was' cal et h.' the man who has ben' 1./..1i' secretary of the N. S. 'n f...ost the beginning, James -S Le% .1.. il... ..(mi.r members on 4 nd the director, '... da) weir! Robert R. Bowe, the. the Budget i H ?.--v t-it te.i cher who la Assist-- Aand riche ,, '? 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