THE ROLE OF THE CIA

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CIA-RDP75-00149R000200830003-9
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RIPPUB
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K
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2
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November 11, 2016
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February 22, 1999
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3
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Publication Date: 
February 27, 1967
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OPEN
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_ dis- accnt like ylene- =i not -eum- ciuest ~~i foi n~ ils ;i:,tc. fin its ?e rec- 1ti5nr- ~~ss its which Peti- upon he nl- LlpOn ;;ion of ttly by _lly re- rcgula- imple- ~lou. I ,mobile -ral law United teed in td mast arch in grogram on pro- ~ate air - to the ition on minister mss. Re- b,he [ed- the U.S. nd keep eria and such crl- STATINTL FeUruar~ ~a~hi~~~~d - Appr~S~~~~~51~~.~es~~~~~t~~~v~ 149R000200830003- fMr. As1r9ROOlc7 served as a member. I include ill the body of today's RECORD an article by Jack Steele in the Columbus Citizen-Journal, on Monday, February 27.1tJG7: PgWF.r,I, CASE; ASIIBROOK CALLED TVRN IN 1963 (By Jack Steele) WAS[lINGTON.-IP the House had paid at- tention to Rep. John M. Ashbrook (R-O.) bnck In 1963,lt might have avoided the pres- ent hassle over seating Adam Clayton Powell. Ashbrook, in a House speech on March 12, 1963, accused Powell of falsifying an ofncial expense report he had filed with the House on a 19G2 junket to Europe. Tllis was Powell's notorious six-week Jaunt to l,c~ndon, Paris, Venice, Rome, Athens, Delhi and other watering places with two women members of his staff, beauty-queen Corrhtc Huff and Mrs. Tamara J. Wali. The Chrce had luxuriated at London thea- ters, Paris nightclubs and at a beachhouse !n Greece. Ashbrook charged that Powell had drawn far more In foreign currencies from the State Dcpnrtmcnt to finance the junket than he ]Ind reported spending to the House. Powell ignored his charges. The State Department refused to divulge how much it had turned over to Powell and life companions in foreign currencies-most of It counterpart funds generated by the for- eign aid program. 'nc~ House Administration Committee, which now aspires to serve as the guardian of congressmen's ethics, disclaimed any re- sponslbllity for checking up on Powell's trnecl expenses. 'fhe House collectively yawned. Now-nearly four years later-the special House committee which investigated Poweli's fir,ness to be seated finally has confirmed that Ashbrook's charges were correct. The cammlttee's report disclosed that Powell and his two fellow travelers collected :A10,G07 in foreign currencies from the State Department for their 1982 European Junket. Control But they reported to the House that they only in hnd spent less than half this on the trip- csire for t493A. The report does not say what hap- ambient pened to the rest of the money. " e federal The committee dug into Powell's foreign n should trips because one of its members, Rep, Ver- te states non W. Thomson (R-Wis.) remembered sect upon Ashbrook's charges and demanded that State >y special Department records be subpenaed, if neces- =~d a spe- nary, to check on them. ability in The records show that In the years 1981 ial privi- through 1964 Powell drew X13,814 in foreign mportant ti consid- ~ir pollu- 3 are: the - industry onsultant organiza- Air Pollu- ycs, even !dent. IN 1963 request zission to lit in the cius mat- ~~caker, I on March nrN AsH- _hia bor1Y Of ADAM lenses of rem New -hairman -om Ohio currencies for his own trips abroad and listed only $G902 in expenses in his reports to the House. (Mr. DORN asked and was given permission to addretss the House for 1 minute and to revise and extend his remarks. ) f.Mr. DORN addressed -the House. His 1^emarks will appear hereafter in the Appendix.] NEii,D TO REVISE SELECTIVE SERV- ICE LAW-XXIV: THE NEGRO AND THE DRAFT (MI?. KASTENMEIER (at the request of Mr. KnzEx) was granted permission to extend his remarks at this Point in the RECORD and to include extraneous matter) Mr. KASTENMEIER. Mr. Speaker, at the House Armed."Services Committee Ilcarings last June, our colleague, the distinguished gentleman from New York (Mr. PrxE7, asked General Hershey if the percentage of qualified Negroes drafted 'was higher than that of qualified non-Negroes. The Director of the Se- lective :iervice responded; No; I don't think so, because in the first place the population is somewhere around 11 or 12 percent, so that leaves in all other groups about 68 percent and I doubt very seriously that the 88 percent isn't furnishing a higher percentage, relatively, than the 12 percent. The results of a study of the draft figures for 1965, however, dispute Gen- eral Hershey's thoughts on this matter: 1,037,78!3 whites were given preindttction examinations; 630,592 were found ac- ceptable-60.7 percent of those ex- alnined; 194,696 were drafted-30.8 per- cent of those found acceptable; 163,425 nonwhites were given preinduction ex- aminations; 47,792 were found accept- able-29.2 percent of those examined; 29,608 were drafted-61.9 percent of those found acceptable. While it is convenient to cite file fact are conscripted, and this essentially means the Negl?o, at times may approxi- mate the percentage of Negroes in our population, the significant fact is that a smaller proportion of Negroes meet the physical and mental standards' for in- duction, and of these, a larger proportion are drafted. Statistically, then, the Negro qualified for induction stands twice as great a chance of being drafted as does the white who is qualified for military service. ' SOUTH AFRICA MUST RE-EXAMINE I'PS RACIAL POLICIES (Mr. FRASER (at the request of Mr. KnzEx) was granted permission to ex- tend his remarks at this point iri the RECORD ?Zr~d to include extraneous mat- ter J Mr. F'T3:;SElt. Mr. Spcal:cr, the strict segregation of the races that is attempted by the Goverlunent of South Africa is bringing" it more problems every day. The Christian Science Monitor for February 17 points out that South Afl-ica must ".find the will and the means to bring all of its inhabitants, regardless of color, into a fuller participation in all aspects of national life." I commend this editorial to the atten- tion of othel? Members of the Hollse. NE;W DILEMMA IN .SOUTII AFRICA A dispatch to this newspaper from Cape Town recently revealed another of the ser- ious difficulties facing the Republic of Sottth Africa. In its efforts to increase the white percentage of the population, the govern- ment has been encouraging European immi- gration. Now, however, there is a rising de- mand from within the Afrikaans-speaking community that such immigration be halted. And the reason? Because most of the new- comers were found to be joining the English- speaking sector, arousing fear among the Afrikaners that their present firm grip on the government might some day be swept away. Thus the government finds itself In a cleft stick. On the pne hand the white popula- tion (both Afrikaans- and English-speaking) came to less than one in Query flue South" Africans in the 1960 census. Furthermore; the nonwhite majority (black Africans, Cape Coloureds, and Indians) has a far higher birthrate than the whites. Therefore, 1f there is no immigration, the whites will be- come asmaller and smaller minority year by year, On the other hand, the Nationalist govern- ment has clearly found It imposlble to find adequate sources of immigration (the most likely being German and Dutch Protestants) who can be expected to meld with the Afri- kaner portion of the white population. Thus any other kind of white inflow raises its own throat to Nationalist sway-that of seeing English-speaking whitedom take over the running of the country. This dilemma is but one of the forces. which will inevlttibly force the Republic of South Africa into a thoroughgoing reexami- nation of its basic racial policies. It be- comes increasingly apparent that the funda- mental need is for that land to find the will and the means to bring all of !ts Snhabl- tants, regardless of color, Snto a fuller par- ticipation in all aspects of national life. This is an inescapable obligation, as the increasing contradictions of any other course of action show. THE ROLE OF T~iE CIA (Mr. FRASER (at the request of Mr. KAZEN) was granted permission t0 ex- tend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and t0 include extraneous mat- ter.) Mr. FRASER. Mr. Speaker ,the recent disclosure of the secret relationship be- tween the CIA and sevel?al pl?ivate or- ganizations and of cel?tain LlSIA activi- ties has prompted considel'able public discussion as to the proper role of these two groups. Edward P. Morgan, news commentator for ABC, has expressed some penetrating observations on the danger:. he sees in allowing these types of activities to con- tinue. I have unanimous consent to have these comments printed in the RECORD, as follows: F'EHRUARY 14, 19G7. According to the late George Orwell, the brilliant and iconoclastic British writer, Blg Brother was not supposed to take over until 1984. But thanks to the assiduous stupidity of the Central Intelligence Agency and the well- if covertly-budgeted activities of other do-gooder bureaucracies within the U.S. gov- ernment, the realization oY that happy day of total domination of a citizen's life by higher authority may be hastened by a full 10 years Sf, indeed, it is not alrrady upon us. This may come as a surprise to the Kremiln which had been under the Smpression that 1t was unchallenged in totalitarian pursuits. The jarring realization that the Americans are not only in the running but could con- ceivably claim the laurels is almost enough to blight the 60th anniversary celebration of the Bolshevik revolution which the Rus- sians are now preparing for October. But after a11, that's the risk the Marxists run In trying to compete with a free society which has a budget so big that it can afford to pro- duce, not only color television seta but c4m- pus scholarships, in effect, for training in the arts of subversion and espionage, without really knowing what it is doing. Ah, there's the rub-without really know- ing what it is doing. No master demon is actually sitting in Washington conspiring to brainwash the American prople and rob thorn of their rights. Nevertlleleas, this in- eldloua operation ie underway before our very eyes ands we hardly know it !s happellfng. It la not too late to understand what is going on and reverse !t. But this Involves a reall- cation of what well-intentioned officials can Sanitized -Approved For Release :CIA-RDP75-001498000200830003-9 Sanitized -Approved For Release :CIA-RDP75-001498000200830003-9 ' H 1800 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -HOUSE February ,27', 1967 do, are doing and have done, with budgets "I@;norance , Is Strength." They'd sound that have become bigger than the average pretty good, wouldn't they, under govern- mind can comprehend, and with the unques- ment subsidy? tinned purpose of furthering the national 'Phis is Edward P. Morgan interest. But who defines the national in- night from Washington. terest these dayaT The Defense Department has asked for 73 billion dollars to protect it. Inevitably, in e, spending that much money the Pentagon puts its own interpretation on the national interest, which bidders for defense contracts are not likely to challenge too sharply. The CIA's budget is chicken feed by comparison. It is secret but the New York Times in a re- vealing series on the agency last year esti- mated it as upward of half a billion. Even at current prices, that wlll feed a lot of chickens. The trouble is now another CIA turkey Iras come home to roost. Eclipsing its ex- pose last spring of how a Michigan State University project for training Vietnamese police had become a front for the agency, an irreverent monthly magazine called Ramparts now reveals this: The CIA for about 16 years has been subsidizing the in- ternational staff of the biggest, most moder- ate and most "respectable" campus organi- zation in the country, NSA., the National Student Association. How patriotic, how appropriate, how economical! Teach red- blooded young Americaxts how to spot a revolutionary at a World Youth Congress, then let these budding James Bonds come back and report. There is, in fact, great merit in briefing youth on the sinister facts- and they can be sinister-oP international po[itical life. But the place for this is not in some secret school for Junior G-men but openly, in public and private education. The ghastly trouble now is that the public doesn't really know whether some university training project is being secretly financed. Just as the Michigan State-CIA liaison was being revealed, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with reluctance and embarrass- ment, publicly severed its ties with the agency which had helped establish, with a x9300,000 grant, MIT's Center of International Studies fn 1951. With six million dollars to spend, the U.S. Army hired a special task force from American University in Washing- ton to conduct a secret study of revolutionary situations In Latin America in 196b. Fortu- nately it was exposed and blew up before it did much diplomatic damage. Even earlier educators were debating tfle dubious merits of disguised federal support for special "edu- cation" projects. How can you fertilize academic freedom 1f the administration 1s not free to say why or whence the cash is coming? The New York Times revealed two Sundays ago that ROTC cadets in seven western states have been given "confidential instruction that association with certain political orga- nizations could endanger their being granted a commission." An interesting military invasion of a civilian province which the De- icnse Department confirms. The U.S. In- formation Agency in the past has secretly 'contracted with authors to write books, whose federal sponsorship was not known. The USIA has lamely complained that only a "few" such instances were involved. Why don't the master minds in the CIA, the Pentagon, the USIA and elsewhere in government stop to think sometimes what their pretty plans are likely to do to the very free institutions they are supposed to be helping protect? The CIA found the virginal Peace Corps almost irreaiatible but Preaf- dent Kennedy .extracted Director Allen Duilea' solemn pledge 1ta honor would not be violated with spies, Presumably !t re- mains pure as the driven snow but the CIA seduction of the NSA now unfairly raises insidious doubts, In George Orwell's book "1994" Big Brother's one-party system has three slogans: "War 1s Peace;' "Freedom is Slavery;' and THE TRICK IS PEOPLE good would argue that we can. even go beyond this to help create energies for development. We can help instill the idea in individual men ,/~ and women that their action, especially when combined with that of t'~eir neighbors, can f KA7,EN) was granted permission to extend his remarks at this point in the Recoxn and to include extraneous matter.) Mr. FR.ASER,. Mr. Speaker, a pene- trating analysis of the process necessary for modernizing society in ills developing nations was presented last weekend by the gentleman from Massachusetts [Mr. MORSE 7 . His emphasis on the strategy and techniques for involving people in run- ning their Own affairs deserves careful reading by all Members as a basis for shaping foreign aid legislation for fiscal 1968. The remarks follow: THE TRICIfi IS PEOPLE (Remarks of Congressman F. Bradford Morse, Republican, of Massachusetts, before the conference on "Societal Change in Devel- oping Countries: Alternatives to Revolu- tion" Institute of International Relations, Stanford University, February 24-28, 1987) It 1s mast impolite for a guest to criticize the topic of his host's conference. Neverthe- less, Tfeel Imust take issues with the "Al- ternatives to Revolution" portion of the con- ference theme, for I am convinced that there is no alternative to revolution. The problem for 'the developed and the developing society alike is to encourage that revolution to be a quantitative increase in political effectiveness rather than a cycle of violence, coup and in- -stabillty. The deficit in our thtnkiug about develop- ment has been that we have concerned our- selves principally with but one aspect; eco- nomics. Increasingly we are discovering that this is inadequate. It is not enough merely to provide more economic resources. This must be done, of course, but more money, more dams, more transportation networks will not in themselves bring about the broad- gauge development that is necessary to put the developing societies into the 20th cen- tury as cifective nations. We must give equal attention to the devel- opment of human resources, In short, with polltlcal development. Because as John Plank of the Brookings Institution has put it, "political development in the last analysis is something that. occurs in individuals." It is time to stand some of the traditional theories about development on their heads. One need look only at Germany of the 1930's and South Africa today to demonstrate that economic progress does not necessarily lead to political enlightenment. Fortunately, there is evidence, of which this conference is a leading example, of a new interest and at- tention to the political dimension of develop- ment. Another evidence is the enactment of a new Title IX in the Foreign Assistance Act of 1988. The text of Title IX is short and sim- ple. It provides that "emphasis shall be placed on assuring maximum participation through the encouragement of private volun- tary organizations and strengthened local government lnatitutions." Both elements are virtually unknown in much of the developing world. The co-author of Title TX, Congressman Donald Fraser of Minnesota, has stated the thrust of the legislation this way: "The Problem of the developing nation requires at- tention to the soolal and political structures. These must be changed to release the en- attention to poltttcal development, we should in no way insist upon anl- particular polltlcal system, nor attempt to Impose any particu- lar political institutions. ,The encourage- ment of involvement, of popular participa- tion, is the key. Nor do T suggest that we fight the cold war between free and commu- aure, this is still a significant concern as the i famous country/city conflict formulation of ~, Lin Piao demonstrates. It has always been a problem for Americans to understand why, despite generous outpourings of money and t material goods, the developing nations are not more stable, their people not more com- mitted to the "democratic way of life", and the appeal of communism is still so great. Part of the problem is inherent in the I moderation and pluralism of the democratic approach. Part lies In the relative stages of historical development. C. E. Black has put the contrast well: "The societies that modernized relatively '. early were able to adopt a pragmatic approach to their problems and did not bother to think !n general terms about what they were do- i ing. When it comes to presenting a succinct statement of their- experience and Sts rele- vance to other societies, they are at some- thing of a disadvantage as compared with a communist leadership that has gone to great trouble to conceptualize and rationalize its program. In many instances where rapid modernization is taking place with the meth- ods and assistance of the advanced eocletles, the indigenous political and intellectual lead- ers are tacking in ideological goals and incen- tives." What Ss the framework in which we will bo operating to any effort to contribute to the political maturity of developing nations? Many of our historians and political analyGts have listed the characteristics of the mod- ernizingsociety. They include: consolidation of local authorities, creation of a relativell large and effective bureaucracy, increase it citizen participation in government, increases use of a common language, heightened na tlonalism, urbanization, levelling of income education and social differences, growth a mass media, mechanization of agriculture and industrial activities, higher standards c health, disintegration of traditional famil and tribal units, increased application ~ violence, and atomization of the individu; from his traditional sources of security. These characteristics are found in varyln degrees and in varying combinations, but f a large extent they reflect the pattern of d~ velopment qi the western soclet:ies mo nearly than the patterns we have seen far in the developing world. The nations Latin America, Africa and Asia have e perienced more of the negative than t positive factors of development thus f; The disintegrative factors have outpaced t integrative ones. And the job of achievt broad economic and social progress is pre ing far more difficult than imagination a expectation are prepared to accept. T makes political development all the m necessary and urgent. As one scholar 1 said, "it 1s the past and prospective in, equacy of economic and local progress t: argues strongly for more direct action develop polltlcal systems than can ens developing sxieties to contain and man the explosive tensions being generated oontinuning and inevitable economfo social frustratigbs." Sanitized -Approved For Release :CIA-RDP75-001498000200830003-9