ORGANIZATION AND LOCATION OF THE DCI HISTORY STAFF

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CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8
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RIPPUB
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C
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17
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
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November 12, 2009
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7
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Publication Date: 
October 19, 1983
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MEMO
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDPO1-00569R000100070007-8 0 a 19 October 1983 MEMORANDUM FOR: THROUGH FROM Charles A. Briggs Executive Director Thomas B. Cormack Executive Secretary J. Kenneth McDonald Chief, History Staff SUBJECT Organization and Location of the DCI History Staff 1. This is to explain why I am convinced that the History Staff must remain independent and in the Office of the Director of Central Intelligence. 2. Although last summer told me some of his ideas about expanding the Center for the Stu y of Intelligence, including an Anschluss of the History Staff, I have seen no written proposals. There are, however, two questions involved in Paul's or any other proposals to change the DCI History Staff's present organization or location. These are: A. Whether to take the History Staff out of the Office of the DCI and place it in one of the four directorates. B Whether to consolidate the History Staff with other offices--e.g. DDI's Historical Intelligence Collection, DCI's Academic Coordinator, or DDA's Center for the Study of Intelligence and Studies in Intelligence. 3. In fact, the History Advisory Committee and top Agency management considered both of these issues carefully in 1980 when they examined the question of resurrecting a CIA History Staff. For clarity, I shall treat each of these two questions separately. 4. Since General Walter Bedell Smith created it in 1951, the History Staff has always been in the Office of the DCI, except for a sojourn in the Directorate of Administration from mid-1973 to the end of 1979 . In DDA the History Staff withered away from a staff of 23 in 1973 to one historian--Jack Pfeiffer--in 1975, and on to extinction at the end of 1979. In November 1980 when the History Staff was re-established, it returned to the Office of the DCI, as the all-Agency History Advisory Committee, chaired by had recommended in its report to the DCI of 15 July 1980 (Attachment 1). 5. In explaining its recommendation that the Office of CIA Historian be established "as an independent office under the Director of Central Intelligence," Committee quoted generously from a 15 June 1980 study (Attachment 2) prepared for them by the distinguished military historian, Dr. who served as consultant to the Agency and the Committee: CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDPO1-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDPO1-00569R000100070007-8 0 "Certain characteristics of the Agency) Iwrote], both structural and procedural, militate against the establishment and performance of an Historical Activity, and they should be clearly recognized and hardly minimized. Among them are the decentralized nature of the Agency's operational framework; the virtual independence of the major components; compartmentation control; the extreme sensitivity of much of the Agency's production; and the understandable reluctance, particularly on the part of the Directorate of Operations, to record actions and events." 6. To overcome these and other difficulties, concluded that the Agency's Historical Activity should be "organizationally located at the top, as a separate entity directly under the Director." He found this essential first, "to break down the compartmentation control;" and secondly, "to indicate to the Agency that the Activity enjoys the fullest support and confidence at the highest level." 7. On 25 August 1980, in approving all of recommendations, the DCI wrote to the DDCI: "Specifically, I think we should put the Historian in the Executive Secretariat....On the one hand, I think we'll need that proximity to the front office to attract a good Historian; on the other, it makes sense for the Executive Secretary to feel responsible for keeping the Historian posted on what is going on....I'd like to make the Historian an SIS position up to SIS-4 (that's GS-18 I hope)". 8. The Chief Historian was established as an SIS position, and I accepted the appointment on the assurance from Ben Evans and the members of the search committee that the History Staff was in the Office of the DCI, and that I would report to the DDCI and DCI. I can now observe that the History Staff's location with the Executive Secretary in the Office of the DCI has in fact supported its independent role, by giving us the benefit of Tom Cormack's counsel, as well as the important support of the Executive Registry in getting access to the documentation we need. 9. My own two years' experience with the new History Staff, along with the History Staff's previous history from 1951 to 1979, fully confirm the wisdom of the History Advisory Committee, and top Agency management in opting in 1980 for an independent History Staff in the Office of the DCI. To write comprehensive and objective history, the History Staff must not be identified with or subordinate to any one of the four directorates, and it must have DCI-level access to documents and people across compartmentation lines. Our experience last winter with the proposed study of congressional relations demonstrates how even a topic accepted by all four Deputy Directors and the Executive Director (acting as CIA's History Advisory Board) still needs the imprimatur of the DDCI and DCI. As histories are produced, we shall need the same levels of approval in the review of manuscripts and for decisions on dissemination of the studies. In sum, the History Staff can only do its job if it has, and can clearly be seen to have, the full confidence and support of the DCI. 10. On the second question, there is little to recommend merging other components with the History Staff if the History Staff's proper location is in the Office of the DCI. Nevertheless, I should perhaps explain the CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDPO1-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDPO1-00569R000100070007-8 411 CONFIDENTIAL a implications for the History Staff of associating it with each of the offices that have apparently been discussed as candidates for consolidation in CSI. 11. Historical Intelligence Collection. Since the principal role of HIC's curator seems to be to maintain and build the collection, and to answer reference questions, HIC seems well placed now in DDI's Office of Central Reference organizationally, and adjacent to the CIA Library physically. Although a case could be made for putting the Historical Intelligence Collection under the History Staff, owning it would be more hindrance than help in our work. Moreover, I can see no advantages for either HIC or the History Staff in having both part of some other entity. 12. Coordinator for Academic Relations. This is an "outreach" function to universities, which seems properly placed in Public Affairs. It would appear foolhardy to associate this function with the History Staff, which has compelling reasons for not reaching out to provoke or encourage outside interest--especially from academics--in its classified internal work. 13. Studies in Intelligence. A case could be made for the History Staff to publish this professional journal, since Studies publishes a good deal of historical writing, and since the History Staf as published it in the past. Yet while it might be useful to have the Chief of the History Staff on the Board of Studies, I can find no advantages for either Studies or the History Staff in having both part of some other entity. 14. Center for the Study of Intellience. The role of CSI seems to be to encourage and arrange certain types of relatively short-term internal individual research projects, to sponsor occasional external contract research, to organize both internal and external conferences, and to publish Studies in Intelligence. Association with CSI's "outreach" role (as in the forthcoming conference for university professors teaching intelligence courses) could jeopardize the History Staff's work, while CSI's internal training and fellowship programs have virtually nothing in common with our historical work in purpose, focus, organization or staffing. 15. In light of the disparate--and in some respects incompatible--roles of the History Staff and these other components, I can find no case for their consolidation under a new layer of administration. Moreover, for the History Staff to join CSI in DDA's Office of Training and Education would raise all the problems we identified in paragraphs 5-9 above, in discussing the vital importance of our present location. 16. The History Staff can best--and probably only--do its job by maintaining its independent role in the Office of the Director of Central Intelligence. J. Kenneth McDonald Attachments CONFIDENTIAL Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDPO1-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8-Bistry 15 July 1980 MEMORANDUM FOR: VIA: FROM: Director of Central Intelligence Deputy Director for Administration airman, History Advisory Committee SUBJECT: Report of the History Advisory Committee { 1AB A) 1. Since its appointment in January of this year, the History Advisory Committee has met almost weekly to investigate and discuss the past and present state of the Agency's history program with the objective of determining a proper role and scope for a future history program. We have interviewed, officers associated with the program in the past and held meetings with representatives of concerned components. We have benefited from the investi ations and advice of an eminent historian, Throughout, we have taken a deliberate and open approach to the question of what the Agency needs and should have in the way of a history program. 2. As recorded in our interim status report, we found that the history program which flourished in the 1960s and early 1970s is essentially dormant, if not dead. The two clerical employees remaining from the original staff manage to answer the most pressing requirements for historical data on a catch-as catch-can basis; nothing else is being done either to identify and capture historical documents or to exploit existing mar,-.ti-;.,, F -1 is a model charter':"whichydirects the performanceAofuproper3} historical functions and grants the historical staff access to the records, but it is a dead letter. Indeed, from 1973 onward the historical program progressively declined to its present moribund state. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 25X1 .._.-.... ,....-... ..-.. mW..?-.............. .. _..... ,,.. ..... -... ,.......~.....:..a....n.rnav,.m,+1rx..:W#Ya'i:."i6':l{QT, Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 SUBJECT: Report of the History Advisory Committee 3. We found that past efforts to create and maintain historical records proceeded from a general misunderstanding of the value to the Agency of an effective historical program. As a result, the program suffered from peaks and valleys of executive and organizational interest, from competition for space, funds and personnel, from conflicting perceptions of its benefits and costs, and from precipitate and short-term actions. Even during its most productive period, the program yielded results ranging from good to horrid; component support has varied from grudging tolerance to lethal opposition. 4. Yet we find at the beginning of 1980 wide support within the Agency for a program which will provide an accessible record of Agency activity, a teaching resource, a means of more easily and reliably providing data to the Congress and the public, and a way to respond to the requirements of other agencies involved in the maintaining and recording of Government histories. Although there is no strictly legal requirement for the Agency to write histories or even to maintain records purely for the preparation of histories, there is a, strongly felt demand from the Congress, from academia, from the Departments of State and Defense, and from the press that the Agency be able to produce authoritative accounts of its activities, particularly those undertaken as part of larger Government programs. We found a keen awareness of this demand among all the component represen- tatives we interviewed, and a desire. that the Agency put itself in. a better position to respond to external demands and internal requirements consistent with the 'DCI's responsibilities under the law to protect intelligence sources and methods. S. This change in perception can be accounted for by the Agency's having been required to "go public" since the mid-70s as a result of new,Congressional and Executive Branch oversight requirements. In the course of responding to these demands for accounting of past Agency activities, our managers and employees have had to devote enormous time and effort to not-always-successful attempts to recapture knowledge of facts and events from the past -- not to mention documents. At the same time, with the passing into retirement of the Agency's founding generation, much of a quarter century of institutional memory has faded away and should be recaptured. A new generation of operators, analysts, and managers finds itself reinventing wheels, systems, techniques, and paper- clips simply because lessons of the past have not been recorded and passed on. 6, ~in his succinct y why the Agency shouldI,oandtindeedCmust, embark onaaed respectable program of historical accounting: a 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 T1 ~. i u 9 9 .,. 4 c a a: L SUBJECT: Report of the History Advisory Committee consideration of our own findings and of Dr. advice (a co f py o as a his full report is attached the Tab follB),owing: the History Advisory Committee therefore recommends a. Establish an Office of the CIA Historian as an independent office under the Director of Central Intelligence. The CIA Historian, occu SIS slot, will in effect sit at the Director's left rhandel (so that he may record history) and enjoy DCI-level access to programs and documents (so that he may determine the requirements'of an historical program). b. Recruit an historian of professional stature to head up the program and oversee its organization and development. The professional officers staffing the office can come from a variety of sources. Most of these people will be professional or practical historians; some few may be officers detailed or contracted to the office to write up historical data for rewriting into professional histories, assembling reference materials and conducting oral histories. These include: PAL "An Historical Activity -- I use the term to denote the totality of an historical effort, its personnel, program and activities -- is not a luxury but' rather a legitimate tool that can and should facilitate the Agency's work. ' Certain characteristics of the Agency, both structural and procedural, militate against the establishment and performance of an Historical Activity, clearly recognized and hardly minimized. Amoney them are ld are the decentralized nature of the Agency's operational framework; the virtual independence of the major components; compartmentation control; the extreme sensitivity of much of the Agency's production; and the understandable reluctance particularly on the part of the Directorate of Operations, to record actions and events. Despite these conditions, a competent Historical Activity, if properly supported, directed and managed, can and should contribute to the Agency's missions, roles, and functions. The Agency should significantly expand its Historical Acfivity to enable it to serve the Agency and to hel discharge its obligations." p it Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 t/ a S t lr:~~ A rT$ . SUBJECT: Report of the History Advisory Committee (1) Professional historians hired permanently, temporarily, or part-time to turn existing data into finished histories. (2) On-duty Agency personnel who are qualified historians assigned rotationally to the office to complete specific historical projects (possibly as "Historical Fellows" similar to the present DCI Fellows at the Center for the Study of Intelligence). (3) Annuitants hired to record historical data or write finished histories of programs or components. C. Transfer the existing three positions and the two incumbent clerks to the new staff. In addition to the slots, clerical personnel, and holdings of the existing historical program, the new office should eventually absorb the Historical Intelligence Collection and its personnel. from the Office of Central Reference to assure the continued functioning of that collection and the services it now provides. Likewise, any collection of historical artifacts should, in time, be housed within the new office, and the records of the various "museum committees" of the past should be reviewed to this end. d.` Provide as a deputy to the historian a career operational or analytical intelligence officer selected primarily for his/her knowledge of the Agency, preferably chosen in consultation with the Historian. e. Provide a seasoned executive officer to help the Historian preserve current documents for historical purposes and provide the practical. administrative support required for the exploitation of existing records. Even more important, according to is the assignment to our Records Management Program of a full-time, in-house Archivist to help the Historian identify and preserve records of potential historical value which, according to present criteria, will otherwise be destroyed. f. Reinvoke the provisions of HNF__1as a charter 25X1 for the program. 8. Nothing in these recommendations should be considered as binding on the CIA Historian to be hired, except that some initial organizational steps might be taken if the search for a qualified historian from outside is protracted. 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 q,~r Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDPO1-00569R000100070007-8 ? - Is SUBJECT: Report of the History Advisory Committee has recommended a number of qualified h' candidates, and he is available for further consultation as the Director, consultationlbye parallel those of 11 n iderable extent, our recommendations we have had from t and the CIA many Historian to be y Agency officers consulted the advice Director and the De ppointed, in consultation with theist the in how the office iputy Directors should have the kes staffed and how it functions, y role Attachments: Tabs A & B 4'. .~ i d 5 'lam Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 A- Ala 15 June 1980 WHY THE AGENCY NEEDS AN EXPANDED HISTORICAL ACTIVITY AND HOW TO GET IT: SOME OBSERVATIONS, THOUGHTS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS General Statements An historical program or activity is valid and can be justified only if it is useful to the organization that shelters and nourishes it. So too at CIA. A strong and competent Historical Activity, if revived and supported, will indeed by useful and prove to be valuable. An-Historical Activity -- I use the term to denote the totality of an historical effort, its personnel, program, and activities -- is not a luxury but rather a legitimate tool that can and should facilitate the Agency's work. An Historical Activity performs a staff function.. It serves the Agency's line officers. Certain characteristics of the Agency, both structural and procedural, militate against the establishment and performance of an Historical Activity, and they should be clearly recognized and hardly minimized. Among them are the decentralized nature of the Agency's operational framework; the virtual independence of the major components; compartmen- tation control.; the extreme sensitivity of much of the. Agency's production; and the understandable reluctance, particularly on the part of the Directorate of Operations, to record actions and events. Despite these conditions, a competent Historical Activity, if properly supported, directed, and managed can and should contribute to the Agency's missions, roles, and functions. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 y UI 11111 11 11 Ii R IIIpp111lull I II IIf I11 I I't#11N11qI1~Jf @ X1111 1 " L W-1 111(11 j1PLI111 L1 Jf91119[1I Il lUFUFI I~ 11 I1 IFl '~I Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 0 15 June 1980 WHY THE AGENCY NEEDS AN EXPANDED HISTORICAL ACTIVITY AND HOW TO GET IT: SOME OBSERVATIONS, THOUGHTS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS General Statements An historical program or activity is valid and can be justified only if it is useful to the organization that shelters and nourishes it. So too at CIA. A strong and competent Historical Activity, if revived and supported, will indeed by useful and prove to be valuable. An"Historical'Activity -- I use th t e erm to denote the totality of an historical effort, its personnel, program, and activities -- is not a luxury but rather a legitimate tool that can and should facilitate the Agency's work. An Historical Activity performs a staff function.. It serves the Agency's line officers. ' Certain characteristics of the Agency, both structural and procedural, militate against the establishment and performance of an Historical. Activity, and they should be clearly recognized and hardly minimized. Among then are the decentralized nature of the Agency's operational framework; the virtual independence of the major components; compartmen- tation control; the extreme sensitivity of much of the. Agency's production; and the understandable reluctance, particularly on the part of the Directorate of Operations, to record actions and events. Despite these conditions, a-competent.Historical Activity, if properly supported, directed, and managed can and should contribute to the Agency's missions, roles, and functions. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 Background About a decade ago, th e Agenc sponso e d h effort of some magnitude, and enti " r dated 8 an is August torical 1973 tled CIA Historic Activity to fulfill three record of the Agency's act past events; and 3) monito vation of important documen A e al Progra major fun ivities; r the rec ts relat m," dire ctions: 2) write ords to ing to t cted the 1) histori insure t he bict^ Historical es' a he preser- f g ncy, To fulfill these r esponsib iliti g o ede 25X1 es the Historical Activit a r ed y ccess to all the ecor s without regard to compartmentation control. The missions thus outlined and the' permission thus granted established the basis of an adequate and satisfactory historical program that could be successfully executed. Unfortunately, I suspect, misunderstanding at higher Agency levels of the legitimate historical functions led to a misdirection of the effort and to mismanagement of the historical resources, Lessening interest in and support of, perhaps mounting opposition to, an Historical Activity prompted the Agency to move the Historical Activity organiza- tionally from the Office of the Director, specifically the Office of the Comptroller, to the Directorate of Administration. As a consequence of,.these developments, the Activity began to wither away, to decline and er virtual atrophy. About _persons were engaged Historical Activit Histor ode to in the ical y aroun 1970; today there are 25X1 2oA] the re Y ' `'1`L1 l eniains in ettect, personnel' reductions obviously.make it impossible for the historians to fulfill the responsibilities outlined in t h --r I The Present 'Situation early this year, they worked under the direction and supervision of an Historian whose time was mainly devoted to writing a long-range and, I have no doubt, scholarly and sound history of the Bay of Pigs. Since about January 1980, when the Historian was removed from the Historical Activity and reassigned, the maladies have faithf ll u y endeavored to sustain and. to 25X1' Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDPO1-00569R000100070007-8 fulfill a single facet of the historical functions. They are responding, as best they can, and with informal guidance from the former Historian, to requests for historical informa- tion. These come for the most part from other governmental agencies, for example, the Departments of State and Defense. A few come from inside the Agency itself. The requests for information number about ten to fifteen per month; responding to them requires identifying, retrieving, and dispatching appropriate records and making certain that these documents are returned to the Agency. In addition, the ladies respond to about ten or fifteen requests per month by answering them over the telephone. The historical holdings the ladies use to identify sources of information into their work consists of: 1. About 360 "histories" written approximately between 1953 and 1968. These are documented texts, and sometimes the supporting papers are filed with the llhi story " S s . , ome others in the Archives """11'' 25X1 Thes "hi " e stories appear to be, in reality, historical studies and monographs, sometimes little more than lists of events. They are more or_less ambitious in scope, and their individual value as historical sources ranges from poor to excellent. (Not long ago -- a year or so perhaps -- a Congressional committee or sub-committee asked to see one or more histories, and the Agency complied and was subsequently embarrassed; had these works been labeled "preliminary studies: instead of being dignified by the. term "histories," they would no doubt have been recognized for what they are, actually reference materials.) 2. Miscellaneous "histories," for the most part unfinished studies, and miscellaneous documentary collections. The Historical Activity obtained them because the authors and collectors offered them out of the goodness of their hearts in order to prevent their destruction. 3. About 35 oral "histories" obtained in the same manner as above. Some of the tapes have been transcribed. 4. The most important: an impressive and excellent card index (36 cubic feet of 5" x 8" cards) referenced and cross-refe o reco d h r s t at can be retrieved STAT from files the work o in the Agency. Unfortunately, eeping the refe rence cards up-to-date with the records came to an end about ten years ago because of redi:ctions in historical personnel. ' Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 tft Minimum Action Action order to Maintain e y ve this rud' , the following actions should be be taken Historical 1 ? and 'Compile and Monographs additi to write - studies the years cover the onal short subsequent to the end Agenof~s activitie the s during 2. Update "histories,, ? events and key personnel, aids program; 1968, when Y personnel, chronologies s 71 index card this work ceased; es lists of etc. beyond of the Monitor the Agency-s recenteandds to keep abreast and This re current act and ivities, informed additions pe Agency su 1 personnel, PP?rt historical leadership hold Bn But this, I believe, di g operation essentiaWoud lly be a Mal effort gnity, and im Y unworthy of the ' a Place in th status, e government IstructueWhat Should be , well-recognized Done and A~ Activity t uld The Agency sho significantly o enable discharge its obligationsserve the Agency its Historical Y and to help it A well-defined Historical Activity should: l Create and . A preserve an inst should: the Agency onal Activity would be Properly functioning information able to e Historicalry requires from within theeAgen d to o requests for insight .an no Historical Activit Y and without changing nt apast operations Ywknowledge Of and We mi organizational structure fu names nction, events, etc. 2. Present to and credible narrativthe es Public from ti meats. All of time to People , andhe g?ver ment Y' d a This agencies of the gent time rate the American s work and is s .9 to the extent that the CIA should are accountable mPlish- sensi p.err~it Denying or deliberate) ty of be no endeption? mission a thi that Y overlooking materials o s obligation Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDPO1-00569R000100070007-8 leaves it to be fulfilled b individuals outside the ohmergtanizatns the s disgruntled ex-em , and in a more or lessPdistortedtc. Their descriptionsrreSult That in turn denies the Picture of what the Thte to n den also undermines Public reco Agency does nition activities. Public confidenceo nuts CIA histories can and should public image. We might call this the Writinrrect the (Some writing will be done for the function. Records Purpose o reference.) In order for the Historical Activity to ful;' Reference and Writin research . Historical functions' it must be 1111 both re iti'rch , whether able to perform g, is impossibresearch for Reference le without records. Although records collection historical responsibility, the historical it is not a primary is closely be reasonably certainsthaththe~re?ords l Activity to thbed preserved are being must and will continue tocbelectd to proper historical research. Activity take Although t e germane it should have no active part in grecordslmanagement with the recordsome ad tin ry connection or ass 1973 g process, as ciation indicated and directed. 8 August Collecting and preser - of records managers and g records are responsibilities records managers are concerniedvists. If I may oversimplify, while archivists are primarill more close with disposing preserving historical papers. y concered with In view of the tremendous rouct Of the Agency, it is no wonder or accidentothat and senior archivist is paper at managers. On the other presentl no professional the records hand y employed the records shedees managers, ' it is rny fair r to state that folloclosely and their records of the National and scrupulousl management Archives on what historicaltree cordsatoe preserve. This guidance comes from published regulations and directives, ublished Archives r National call s tive pec who makeSor the Agency by a Nationalified and interpreted occasional or periodic visitsc tov the r Agenency. to the Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 pen_ The Historical Activity must be bound by the same rules and regulations imposed on all components of the Agen~c h one exception: compartmentation control. If is indeed still in effect, there But perhaps permission of access to A enc is no problem. (and officials) should be restated, g Y-wide records Organizational Placement The Historical Activity should be organizationally located at the top, as a separate entity directly under the Director. This is necessary for two reasons: 1) to break down the compartmentation control; and 2) to indicate to the Agency that the Activity enjoys the fullest support and confidence at the highest level. (The Activity should not be structurally co-located with the Public Affairs Office, which performs an altogether different function. The'Historical Activity should respond to Public Affairs requests for information, and Public Affairs should be represented on any review board deciding whether or not to publish a particular open historical work. Nor should the Activity be placed in the Directorate of Administration, which has interests and concerns wholly different from those of historians.) Expected Results A strong and professional Historical Activito the support of the Director, if it performs properlynanding effectively, will relieve Agency components in large art from having, as at present, to act as their own historians. In addition to providing helpful reference guides and materials, it can produce historical case studies and other instructional materials for use in Training. It will by enhance the public image of the Agency,' its publications, Personnel and Duties There should be a Chief Historian. He or she should be a senior person who is vigorous, competent, and likable. He/she should have stature and reputation in the academic world and probably should have written several good books. He should have proved his prior success to manage programs and people. He should be acquainted, even familiar, with the government, preferably the Washington scene and its bureaucracy. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDPO1-00569R000100070007-8 This person will be difficult to identify, and it will be difficult to persuade him to join the Agency. Two things will have to challenge him: the opportunity to create and direct a meaningful historical program; and the opportunity to write history for the public. He should have access to whatever documents and officials (for interview) that he deems necessary in order to perform his duties. He should be invited to attend as an observer the regular and important meetings and conferences at the highest Agency levels. He should have knowledge of all the activities engaged in by the Agency so that he can record decisions, events, personalities, processes, organizational shifts, and the like. He should be exempt from rotational assignments. He and his professional staff should have a special career track to insure promotions, commendations, and the like. There should be a Deputy Chief Historian to run the shop and to act in the absence of the Chief Historian. He could come from within the Agency, and if so, should be well-known and well-liked, but he too should have proper historical credentials, probably have written a book or two, and have what is called the historical temperament and outlook. Beyond that, the staff should grow as the program develops. To set forth specific personnel requirements at this stage seems premature. The Chief Historian, with the help of his Deputy, should fashion a program and lay out his requirements for personnel, space, clerical assistance, etc. His office and at least some of his staff should probably be located at Headquarters. Desirable Actions It would be helpful to have an Historical Advisory Committee formed somewhat later of three to five members. They should visit the Historical Activity annually, meet with the historical staff, discuss historical problems, and the like. This can be done without compromising sensitivity and classification. I would be glad to help establish an expanded Historical Activity, but I suggest as being better qualified. For many years until his recent retirement, he was the Chief Historian of the AEC. He created and managed Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8 1-7 ? ~ i.i, d an historical program that might well be a model for the Agency. Operating in a sensitive area, he performed the various historical functions, including publishing several excellent volumes of official history. I do not know him personally, but I recommend that he be requested, under contract, to help set up the detailed guidelines, procedures, methods, and relationships necessary to establish and maintain a strong Historical Activity at CIA. Conclusion Such an Activity will, above all, serve the Agency by providing an institutional memory for internal use, being a point of contact with other governmental agencies and departments, and eventually enhancing'the stature of the Agency in the public awareness. Recommendations To recapitulate, I recommend that: 1. A decision be made to strengthen the Historical Activity and to place it directly under the Director; 2. A Chief Historian be appointed; 3. A Deputy Chief Historian be appointed; 4. be asked to help establish the Historical ctivity; S. The Chief Historian and his Deputy formulate a charter to establish and govern an historical program might be enough); 6. An Historical Advisory Committee eventually be appointed. I venture to guess that, in the best of circumstances, it will take at least a year or two for the Historical Activity to gain the confidence and cooperation of the Agency at large. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2009/11/13: CIA-RDP01-00569R000100070007-8