NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE MUSEUM PUSHED
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP90-00806R000200790013-9
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
July 7, 2010
Sequence Number:
13
Case Number:
Publication Date:
November 4, 1983
Content Type:
OPEN SOURCE
File:
Attachment | Size |
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Body:
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/07: CIA-RDP90-00806R000200790013-9
ARTICLE
ON--PAGE `'J
It-
WASHINGTON POST
4 November 1983
National Intelligence MuseithiP~th~d
By George Lardner Jr.
Washington Post start writer
Walter Pforzheimer kept a wary eye on his priceless
collection as the audience of retired spies, intelligence
buffs and other unidentified characters milled about.
At one spot on the crowded tabletop was .a photograph
of Mate Hari and her:last.applicauon.to.enterprance, -
where she was executed.in.1917.. At another wvas ashort
'hand transcript of the trial of John the Paintee, (James :
Aitkin), the only American convicted of'sabotege. in Eng. i
]and during the Revolutionary. War: _ -?;r; ;; .
Aitkin-set fire to the Rope House at the Royal Dock
Yard in Portsmouth in December- 1776,.destroying a
'hefty supply of the British Navy's hemp and rope. "Re-
grettably," Pforzheimer concluded, "he was caught, tried
and hanged in March, 1777."
The occasion for the impressive display ranging from
a 1777 letter from George Washington on "the necessity
of procuring good intelligence" to an 1864 Confederate
bill to create a "special and. secret service"-was a Senate
Select Intelligence Committee,hearing on plans to estab-
lish a National Historical Intelligence Museum= ,. .
Pforzheimer, whose ' own world-class collection of al-
most 5,000 rare books, manuscripts and other items has
already been bequeathed to Yale University, his alma
mater, said he hoped a place in the nation's capital could
be found for rotating exhibits, possibly including loans
from his own holdings. He warned that much of the ma-
terial that might be displayed-such as the photographic
blow-ups. used in the Cuban missile crisis-"is" now scat-
tered through the country and most of it, I fear, is per-
manently lost.".
Pforzheimer, who served as the CIA's first legislative
counsel, and other museum backers think a wing of the
Smithsonian's National Museum of American History
would be just the spot.
"Think of the impact of such rotating exhibitions,"
Pforzheimer said, "hot only on the grown-ups who are
drawn to tales of intelligence and spies, but also on, the
kids who are so fond ofgadgetry and the kind-of exhibits
that could be mounted." ~... . .
CIA Director William J. Casey, the leadoff witness,
heartily endorsed the idea so long as everyone -realizes
that what the CIA can contribute will-almost.certainly
be quite limited . - .. I would not want to mislead any-
one into expecting us to be a major source of exhibits for
this projected historical intelligence museum."
The. committee is co-sponsoring a resolution of moral
support for the museum, but has not. called for any fed-
eral financial support. - ,
Committee Chairman Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.) said,
"We want to encourage private donors to assist in its con
struction and displays." .
Goldwater,, before leaving for Senate floor debate on
the CIA-funded. "secret war" in. Nicaragua, added, "In
-other words, passage of this resolution will not cost the
U.S: government money."
.'Martin Cramer, a veteran of the CIA, State Depart-
ment-and'U.S.1nformation Agency who now heads an
ocgariization promoting the museum, said its backers are
planning on a. fund-raising -drive next year to raise. $2
million from private sources.
.`Although -collection of artifacts from existing muse=
urns, private collectors and elsewhere will not be easy,'
Cramer said, "the location of many has been identified."
He suggested that museum visitors would not only be
able to look at the "bugged eagle from our embassy in
Moscow" but also inspect enlarged microdots and learn
how radio direction-fording equipment works.
- For museum display, Joseph Persico, author of "Pierc-
ing the Reich,". nominated a special radio-transmitter
that Office of- Strategic Services agents outside Berlin
used in 1945 to guide allied bombers to their targets. Lt.
Gen. William W. Quinn (U.S. Army-Ret.) urged that
"tactical intelligence" exhibits be included, such as hedge.
row maps and tide tables. Former CIA director William
Colby added that a museum would go a long way toward
showing that intelligence work k"an honorable profes-
sion."
Pforzheimer emphasized, however, that it would be
very difficult to raise all the millions that would be
needed to put up anew building as well as to fund a cu.
rator and staff. "An existing facility here appears to me
to be the answer," he said.
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/07: CIA-RDP90-00806R000200790013-9