COLBY NOSTALGICALLY RECALLS DAYS WITHOUT TESTIMONY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP99-00418R000100100030-8
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 11, 2012
Sequence Number: 
30
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 29, 1975
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP99-00418R000100100030-8.pdf119.06 KB
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/05/11 : CIA-RDP99-00418R000100100030-8 THE WASHINGTON 'STAR 29 JUNE 1975 Colby Nostalgically Recalls Days'Without Testimony. By Norman Kempster Washington Star Staff Writer Careful -to maintain his. cool facade, CIA Director William E. Colby cheerfully answered the questions posed by the man with the day-old beard and the open sport shirt. No, he was saying in ef- fect, the CIA is not engaged in a conspiracy with multi- national corporations. The exchange between Colby and the inquisitive man took place during a re- cess in Coby's testimony to a public meeting of a House subcommittee last week. It passed virtually unnoticed although it was symbolic of an almost revolutionary change within the nation's intelligence community. It is impossible to conjure up a picture of Allen Dulles, the super spy of the Cold .War years, rapping with whoever wanted to get his ear. It is almost as difficult to picture Dulles - or most of his successors - testify- ing in public to a congres- sional committee... BUT TIMES ARE chang- ing. , ...._ -: Although he. admits he isn't very happy about it, Colby has been forced to change the focus of his job. He spends more time on public relations these days than he does on intelligence-gathering. During another recess of the House hearing, Colby told reporters that he de- votes between 60 and 80 percent of his time to de- fending the CIA in talks to congressional committees or public forums. In the earlier days of the 28-year history of the CIA, people just didn't talk about it. Members of Congress didn't want to know what the agency was doing and most of the public was awed. Colby talks about that period with a trace of nos- talgia. talgia. "IN 1947, WHEN the CIA was established, it was re- sponsive to American opin- ion which accepted the old tradition that nations con- duct but do not talk about intelligence," he told the House subcomittee headed byYRep. Bella Abzug, D- N "External supervision in those years was sporadic and sympathetic in tune with the consensus on for- eign policy ' which marked the times," he said. By now, almost everyone knows that as a result of that anything-goes atti- tude, the CIA broke the law. The staunchly establish- ment Rockefeller Commis- sion said that some CIA activities were "plainly unlawful and constituted improper invasions upon the rights of Americans." Colby concedes that laws were broken. His objective is to convince the public that the breaches were trivial in comparison to the value of ire agency to the nation. Colby seems well-suited to the task. A medium-sized and middle-aged man who wears glasses with flesh- colored plastic frames, Colbyypseems most notable for `his unflappable self- control. The casual observ- er would take him for a bu- reaucrat - which, of course, he is - rather than a professional spy - which, despite appearances, he also is. He does not look danger- ous. It is easy to believe him when he says that the abuses spotlighted by the Rockefeller Commission have been corrected and. will not happen again. BUT SOME CIA critics are urging Congress and the public to look carefully at Colby's reassurances. These critics say Colby an- swers only the question he is asked, volunteering noth ing more. These responses! can be -misleading unless the questioner knows just what to ask. Members of the Abzug' committee complained fre quently during their most: recent hearing that Colby's answers given at an earlier session in March were widei of the mark. The director contended that he had said nothing untruthful in March. For example: At the earlier hearing, Colby de-; scribed in_ general terms; some of the events which the Rockefeller Commis-1 sion identified as Operation Chaos. As part of that dis cussion he was asked how 1 many members of Congress were subjects of CIA files.: He said four. i In his appearance last; week, Colby said the CIA1 has files on about 75 mem- bers of Congress. Commit- tee members demanded tol, know how the list had' grown so fast in such al short time. Colby explained! the number collected asl part of Operation Chaos was still four. The other 711 or so lawmakers were in- cluded in other parts of thet agency's file system. Of course, there is noth- ing inherently "wrong with a - person choosing his words with care and saying no, more than necessary. But if ; Congress is determined to; reverse 28 years of "I don't-want-to-know-about it" philosophy and learn' just what the CIA is doing,, the lawmakers will have to, spend more time. on their homework. THE TASK of overseeing) the CIA is made many times more difficult by the complex bureaucratic,' structure of the agency.; Few people outside "the company" have anything more than the vaguest idea of its organizational chart. For instance, the CIA has between 45 and 50 separate; filing systems. A question about files could be answer- ed for one system, leaving out 44 to 49 others. The CIA has several) overlapping and interlock-i ing directorates and; components. In theory, at' least, one segment of the agency may have ended a? controversial practice while another segment is still engaging in it. Once during his appear- ance before the Abzug com-, mittee, Colby gave an indi- cation of the precision with which he uses the language. When a questioner asked about interception of mi- crowave telephone) transmissions and referred to it as a "telephone tap," Colby replied, "That was not a telephone tap - it was an interception of conver- sation by a mechanical means but it was not a tele-Yi phone tap." Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/05/11 : CIA-RDP99-00418R000100100030-8 , ? , low,