LETTER TO PETER SHARFMAN FROM CHARLES A. BRIGGS

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90B01370R000300390001-6
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RIPPUB
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K
Document Page Count: 
13
Document Creation Date: 
December 21, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 6, 2008
Sequence Number: 
1
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Publication Date: 
November 28, 1984
Content Type: 
LETTER
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90B01370R000300390001-6.pdf388.01 KB
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Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 4 - Central Intclligpxe Agncy 2 1 DEC 1984 Mr. Peter Sharfman Program Manager International Security and Commerce Program Office of Technology Assessment United States Congress Washington, D.C. 20510 COPY I am writing in response to your letter of 28 November 1984 requesting additional support from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) for the Office of Technology Assessment (OTA) in connection with your study on Soviet ballistic missile defense. As you know, the CIA has provided OTA with a great deal of assistance on this study. Since August 1984 some 17 Agency intelligence officers, including--at your specific request--the National Intelligence Officers for Strategic Programs and for the Soviet Union, have participated in three separate briefings for you and your colleagues. The most recent of these briefings occurred on 10 December, involved seven Agency officers, and lasted three hours. In your letter of 28 November you also requested access to six classified Agency reports, including two National Intelligence Estimates and a typescript manuscript whose dissemination was limited to its requester. Senior managers of the Agency have carefully considered your request for access to these documents. It has been determined, however, that your request must be denied because of the particularly sensitive intelligence sources and methods used in preparing the documents. As you know, the Director of Central Intelligence is required by statute to protect intelligence sources and methods, and this responsibility requires us to withhold the documents in question. We note, however, that the documents--with the exception of the limited distribution typescript which is an internal document--are available to the Congressional Committees (Senate Foreign Relations and House Armed Services) that commissioned your OTA study should they need to review them. Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 In your letter you cited your experience in 1980 when you and other OTA staffers were given special compartmented clearances in connection with your study on the MX missile. You have been able to retain these special clearances, but retention of such clearances does not ensure your access to reports bearing that classification. Indeed, access to reports is governed on a strict need to know basis and by the Director's statutory mandate to protect sensitive intelligence sources and methods. We hope that you and your associates have found your briefings from CIA officers helpful to you in your study. We regret that we cannot provide you additional assistance at this time. Sincerely, /s/Chc.rles A. Eri;;;s Charles A. Briggs Director, Office of Legislative Liaison Distribution: Orig - Addressee 1 - OLL Record 1 - OLL.Chrono 1 - D/OLL 1 - DD/OLL 1 - DDI 1 - C/Legislation/OLL 2 - Liaison OLL/L (14 Dec 84) STAT Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90B01370R000300390001-6 MEMORANDUM FOR: " Chyer-,-' G N S", John thinks this letter is appropriate way to handle this. He,s g thet rou odviseuour Oversight Committees of the situation and tell them wemig `need them to'intercede for us if Sharfman comes back again. STAT J ALL A>D 75- STAT Date 21 December 1984 FORM 5-75 101 USE PREVIOUS Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Director, Office of Legislative Liaison 19 December 1984 NOTE TO: EX DIR DDCI REF: Office of Technology Assessment Request o I think you both ought to weigh in on this issue. o I have discovered several recent examples of the absence of institutional memory here, occasioned by reorganization and rapid turnover of personnel, being the cause of distrust between the Agency and the Congress. o In fact, Ed and I have concluded that the root cause of almost all of our current difficulties is distrust: us of them in a security context; them of us in a information denial context. o I'm asking, with regard to the attached exchange with OTA,whether this is the smartest way to go. Charles A. Briggs Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 STAT Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 T I Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO137OR000300390001-6 ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET SUBJECT: (Optional) FROM: OLL/LD ExrewsioN 7B02 Hqs NO. OLL 84-4571/1 S . DATE 14 Dec 84 TO: (Officer designation, room number, and building) DATE OFFICER'S COMMENTS comment to show from whom h MCEWED FORWAMM INITIALS ~M aa ws column after DDI Q For your coordination. This is consistent with your 2? conversation with Chuck Briggs about giving documents to OTA. 3. ST 4. D/OLL S. 6. 7. S. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. FORM I-79610 EDIT Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 TAT IHI AT Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Office of legislative liaison Routing Slip 3. Admin Officer STAT STAT If 02 - ' KY A Lj STAT STAT STAT Date Name/ Date Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 ? TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT BOARD MORRIS K. UDALL. ARIZ.. CHAIRMAN -TED STEVENS, ALASKA. VICE CHAIRMAN ORRIN G MATCH. UTAH GEORGE E. BROWN. J. CALIF CHARLES MCC. MATHIAS. in.. MD JOHN D. DINGELL, MICH EDWARD M KENNEDY. MASS LARRY WINN. J... KANS ERNEST F HOLLINGS. 5.C CLARENCE E. MILLER OHIO CLAIBORNE FELL RI COOPER EVANS. IOWA JOHN H. GIBBONS Congrtgg of tfjt 11nittb btatts OFFICE OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT WASHINGTON, D.C. 20510 JOHN H. GIBBONS DIRECTOR usau-nE LIAISON 07 - November 28, 1984 Office of Legislative Liaison Room 7BO2 Central Intelligence Agency Washington, DC 20505 STAT STAT This letter responds to our telephone conversation today, in which you confirmed that "senior management" at CIA (specifically the DDI) had instructed you to reject our requests for documents, and to seek more information regarding our requests for meetings. These requests are contained in our letter of November 20, a copy of which is attached for reference. I understand that before you feel able to schedule the requested meetings with CIA analysts regarding Soviet policies and attitudes towards ballistic missile defense, you want a more detailed statement of the questions we wish to discuss. We have drawn up such a list, and it is attached to this letter. Of course, we are quite aware that most of these questions cannot be answered with high confidence, and that some of them are difficult to answer at all. For our purposes, it is just as important to gauge the degree of uncertainty and gaps in information which confront American policy-makers as it is to understand what it is that we do know. It is for this reason, among others, that we want to talk at least briefly with some of your most senior analysts. With regard to the documents we wish to read before these meetings, I am frankly astonished to encounter a response so inconsistent with our previous experiences with the Agency. CIA policy has been that OTA staff can have access to appropriate CIA documents when these documents are pertinent to an ongoing OTA assessment approved by the Congressional Technology Assessment Board. While the CIA has never permitted us to review intelligence products routinely in order to discover whether some new development might call for a technology assessment, we have never before been refused access when the specific need-to-know was for an existing OTA project. It as been my understanding, based on conversations with of your office at the time STAT (1979-1980) when OTA staff first received codeword access, that while CIA would not necessarily give us access to the most Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90B01370R000300390001-6 sensitive material, we could (given a bona fide need-to-know) review any of the documents that are widely available within the national security community, and that we might request access to information in the smaller intelligence compartments on a case- by-case basis. We have further understood that while CIA was willing to let OTA have copies of less sensitive collateral intelligence analyses, we would have to visit CIA headquarters to read anything codeword and/or sensitive. On the basis of this understanding, OTA staff members have from time to time received access to NIEs and to documents of roughly equivalent sensitivity. For example, in the summer of 1980 Jeremy Kaplan and I reviewed all the_volumesof NIE 11-3/8 in the course of OTA's study of MX Missile Basing. In the spring of 1981, I reviewed a contractor report on Soviet silo design and silo hardness in support of the same study. Approximately one year ago, Bruce Blair (the Project Director of our study of Strategic C31) reviewed sensitive materials relating to Soviet command, control, communications and intelligence. You mentioned on the telephone that it is CIA policy to restrict access to sensitive materials to those Congressional committees whose duties require such access. This is why our November 20 letter called attention to the fact that our study of ballistic missile defense technology is being carried out at the request of two Committees (House Armed Services and Senate Foreign Relations) whose staffs have routine access to sensitive intelligence materials. Finally, I call to your attention a provision of Public Law 92-484, the "Technology Assessment Act of 1972," which established OTA. Section 6 (d) reads as follows: "The office [of Technology Assessment] is authorized to secure directly from any executive department or agency information, suggestions, estimates, statistics, and technical assistance for the purpose of carrying out its functions under this Act. Each such executive department or agency shall furnish the information, suggestions, estimates, statistics, and technical assistance directly to the Office upon its request." You will note the inclusion of the word "estimates." Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90B01370R000300390001-6 Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 I hope that you will be able to act expeditiously on this request, in view of the fact that the requesting Committees have imposed rather tight time constraints upon us. Please call me (226-2020) if you have any questions. Sincerely, Peter SaH'r an Program Ma ager International Security and Commerce Program cc: Alex Gliksman (Senate Foreign Relations Committee staff) Warren Nelson (House Armed Services Committee staff) Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 TtCINOIOSV ASStssMSNT - Coup of tit etiteb OU&S MOIMn$ K. UOAIL AM- CH*JI AN OFFICE OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT TED STEVENS. AUISKA VICE CNAI AN OIOrII a. IMTCK MAN MOON I. OQOMIR LL CUP. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20510 CIUNat$ MCC. NATMA$. a.. W. JOIN S. ONONL UM WWAW M. ROIMOV. MASS. -Am wMa JL NAIIO. 08MV f. HOLL1gR S.C. ~ . H.~OIOO CL.'nom P.L Ill November 20, 1984 JOHN H. GOWNS oNlcTOII STAT Office of Legislative Liaison Room 7B02 Central Intelligence Agency Washington, DC 20505 As you may recall from my letter of August 10, 1984, we at OTA are conducting a study of ballistic missile defense for the House Armed Services Committee and the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Our visit to the CIA following that letter was extremely helpful, and we would like to make at least one more visit to read certain documents and to confer further with appropriate CIA personnel. I understand that Dr. Robert Rochlin telephoned you yesterday about our request. We would like to neet info with Larry Gershwin, Fritz Ermarth, and any other people you may STAT suggest, to discuss Soviet policies and attitudes regarding ballistic missile defense, the ABM Treaty, and strategic arms control in general. There would be no need for formal briefings. We would be glad to meet with these people either separately or together, to suit their convenience. (Mr. Ermarth invited us to visit him, and Messrs. Gershwin and 0 have also indicated STAT willingness to meet with us, but no dates have been fixed as yet.) Before holding these discussions, we would like an opportunity to read appropriate documents, including the six listed below and any other available CIA reports which cover Soviet ballistic missile defense activities and policies. If possible, we would like to arrange to read the documents in the morning and then meet with CIA experts that afternoon. STAT Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 The five OTA staff members who would like to make this visit are as follows: Gerald L. Epstein Thomas H. Karas Robert S. Rochlin Peter J. Sharfman Alan H. Shaw I believe SI/TK clearances for all of them are on file at CIA. Our preferred dates for this visit are December 3, 6, o Please phone Dr. Rochlin (226-2021) or me (226-2014) to let us know whether one of these dates would be satisfactory. Thank you very much for your help. Sincerely, Thomas H. Karas Project Director STAT Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6 Iq Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied STAT Approved For Release 2008/11/06: CIA-RDP90BO1370R000300390001-6