TURNER 'VERY OPTIMISTIC' ABOUT CIA'S FUTURE

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-01208R000100070042-0
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RIPPUB
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K
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2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 22, 2011
Sequence Number: 
42
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Publication Date: 
February 5, 1980
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OPEN SOURCE
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Second of two articles ~~? y Can't Do Goody Jo Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/02/22 : CIA-RDP90-01208R000100070042-0 03 PAGS_/_ THE WASHINGTON STAR (GREEN LINE 5 February 1980 T, lyrn r liv e, 0 b M S Abouff But Critics?Despair That Spy Agency By Henry S. Bradshee-- L Washington?SterStaff Writer', rF- Looking,casual in. a `.navy blue' cardigan but speaking intensely..: Stansfield Turner gazed out the glass, wall of.his office, atop. the CIA'head- quarters at Langley, over the bare dusky woods toward the distant. -lights-of Washington and: exaded ` confidence about his organization. "I'm just very optimistic these days," Turner said. "I've been very ' impressed .by the quality.. of: our' human intelligence activities" the.:" CIA director said. And. US. technical intelligence is superlative, be added.-'.. In other government offices in the :.city,, most.of:them looking-:across concrete courtyards at other'-offices instead of having spacious '.views, in.- the private. offices of people who have left the government;;in small: restaurants, in telephone'calls from. coast to coast, 'others talk about the . CIA too:. Some, like:former=CIA'Director' William E. Colby-and former Deputy: Director.--Enno .Henry Knoche,'talk.. for quotation about.things'like re- strictions .on-the agency-But-most :.'prefer-to discuss the agency's,,prob-' lems from-:=the protection of::: anonymity. p `? Turner. understandably is angered by: this,. especially on ,the most emo=' tional aspect of his three-year tenure;:- at Lanelev::the'forced retirementof you," -he said, ''that.Turner ts:the ices. He argues that:he:rejuvenated_ ago'! foLclandestine operations.: p. man's game, and we are .better equip- the agency out.here;.look.:at..the. -The CIA is composed of three main branches. The.clandestine or opera tion$ branch handles. spying and covert operations, like -intervening secretly in other countries'. affairs or. organizing guerrilla movements.. Another branch supervises techni- cal intelligence, including recon- naissance satellite photography- and communications intercepts. An.ana-? lytical', branch` pulls, information together for government policymak- ers The controversy that' has marked -.Turner's almost three years at the agency focuses Ion the' operations branch..There is also widespread but less .:,.publicized, distress around.- Washington about analysis, In' both cases, .Turner inherited` problems. His' critics ,say. he'exacer, bated:them; his supporters contend that he.has done much to clear them Once Was Twice as Large _.,:, The Vietnam war and -th e' CIA's "secret army". in Laos, added.-.to worldwide spying; pushed the num- ber of agency operatives to 8,500 in the late 1960s- roughly double its present-size: As the Nixon adminis- tration began to reduce U.S. commit- men'ts-an Indochina,'personnel.had to-be reduced by attrition, transfers and.other means During his brief tenure- as,QIA- directory -James ;. R:= Schlesinger speeded up a cutback. Colby, his. successor, ,continued the program, and:so.did George Bush during his year' as' director:. Most sources agree . that they were handled sensibly.- Then-President ..Carter took -..Turner from his navy admiral's com mand and sent.him to, Langley. He arrivedwith what the old CIA bands !.hostile, attitude:,:::. that he simply wanted: to bring bet- ter management to a sometimes .un-. i-coordinated 'operation: His .suspi- cions of the need for drastic.changes - were quickly _reinforced .by the, year-old agent in the unsuccessful ' CIA effort in Angola. Stockwell charged that a clique of burned-out, old clandestine services : officials was running the agency into the ground. Turner heard this Wand other grievances, rejected ad vice on alternatives for. dealing with -I them and launched the "Halloween.; massacre. After announcing in.:August 1977;; :-that' 816 :jobs .in the'.operitions..1 branch would be . cut by 1979, Turner'.( sent out :tle-first-212.pink slipson,l~ Oct 31,1977. Although- smaller thaa;:previous;-" -cuts, this one:was handled'differ-I, ently.-and?. hit harder.. at lifetime-i -.professionals in the spying and para-.1 .military trades. g Says Cuts Helped A ency "The cuts in personnel that everyone still complains to me about have: strengthened the agency's covert ac- -'tion capabilities," Turner said-""' "You don't run' 'a good, strong paramilitary or covert action- pro-,. .gram witli".a bunch of 55-year.olds;"', he said.."What I've done is'cut'our high-grade superstructure .:....:and doubled the input into the'clandes- tine services..-: so that we have a group-of young tigers,' and there's enough -accumulated experience. and expertise, around to guide{ them." This is strongly challenged by peo- "Whatever Turner says, they can't put on a show," says a Pentagon offi-, .,CIA's_presentoperational capabil:_- ities:: "Wek know'that-over:in'thisl.` Other sources spell this :Out'in_ more detaiL One says-the CIA's corps- . f paramilitary specialists who could; help- organiie, for. instance; ?a more .effective-Afghan resistance to.Soviet' control has declined -from ' about.200 to.80;-andmany:of'the'80 lack the ? broad experience needed..for.effec tiveness-.;;_ `-. But Colby comments that,'ifthe: ..people in an operational area :feel ' CIA help is vital, they- will: find' ways.' to-speed it up.:.r The _ worst part , of; ;Turner's , , changes, numerous present and `re=:_ tired officials say; is what. they did to. CIA. morale: While".;he recognizes that morale suffered; but contends its is-now coming back up :others sayf 'that it is at?best bumping. along.side-. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/02/22 : CIA-RDP90-01208R000100070042-0 CQ TINS _ _L I . 11.L'1_L -- . 11 1 I Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/02/22 : CIA-RDP90-01208R000100070042-0 Several sources cite cases vi i urn* er's failure to back up agents who got in trouble taking risks that were known and accepted by the agency in advance as normal for the job. -: Knoche, who was the deputy CIA director when Turner arrived and' worked for. him a few months, says , that "the premium has been in the last few -years on not rippling the'.; water; on being non-controversial and not getting in trouble. In this .profession, that's the wrong attitude,, and now -the chickens may have : come. home to roost" as a result both- of too much congressional oversight -1 sand of Turner's policies. "A spy agency, is always going to have some people who bend rules or ; play close-to -the- limits of them,". Knoche added. "In peacetime they can be a bureaucratic nuisance,.but, they may be just the kind of. people you need when , you. run into . _a crisis.. They are`ihe.kind'of people who have not fitted' into Turner's desire for or. managerial.: tidiness and. career-! regularity The result; many, sources say, is-that the CIA is poorer without them.-and so is the . country. , r-. The picture derived'from exten, siv,e inquiries,_is.' of a I ..deadened, demoralized :;organization: -'But. Turner'conten'ds otherwise "When. I.-got here," 'he said,* ',"the* agency. was just about-maturing 'in? the end:ofits.first working genera- tion, 30; years roughly, and. a lot'.of_ the procedures: were. still geared` to, the'small Ivy League club that came. out of the.OSS.,(the World-War 11 Of-. -fice of: Strategic Services);and'a.lot of the Procedures ...were stultified after' 30 years, and if- there's one, thing you have to have in this kind of business its dynamic; imagina- tive, forward-looking-people. "The principal things I.have tried to do-have been to instill that sense, ' Turner said.' -^-; Turner..wenrmthe old lvy League club in an effort to improve the qual- ity of-CIA analysis. He pur-the anal- ysis;branch.under.Robert R.- Bowie,:,-who atheageof.68in.1977 had been-, the head: of:the.State Dpartment's'' . policy planning and,then.had run Harvard's Center for International; Affairs for 1$ years.--, -80wie:.Y- expected-to: be. asenior, intellectual.i.n -residence.to`.advise- Turner. Instead, he had to supervise? some. 1,500-analysts. "By. most-a674 . counts, it. was. a bureaucratic failure that did-riothing.to sort out organiza=;. tional:problems;in,analysis or im prove the.quality'" "._ Colby had sought. improvements' by establishing a system of national intelligence officers-(NIO), with,1 each NIO responsible-for final judg-, ments on a particular country.or ; area, If the system ever worked, it-is: working poorly now, a number of ex- perts in the intelligence. community In some cases the NIO's lack the background. for making final.iudg ments among conflicting interpreta-. tions. The present NlO for .a very important. country, for instance; was' distinguished several years.,.agof when he was :a .diplomat.,in country. for being' totally'wrong about its political developments. ;Sometimes all of the experts'from., around town on a particular country.'; or subject are assembled; by the. CIA'. -to, discuss it. But what the NICt later,,. writes up bearslittle resemblance to, the collective: wisdom, some experts. complain-'And .Turner ;himself has' been: known, to change analytical". conclusions. before sending them to.. the White House The result is worse than:frustr'a--, .tion for many experts. It is a'feeling.' that the kind of myopia that led-,to.a. 1978'CIA finding of the shah's being=: solidly. in control. can be too easily repeated -_ although. there. now; seems to be a developing tendency.at', ..; the agency to adopt A 'protective pos ture of-leaning over'the other direc-:' ` tion by being free with warnings of trouble. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/02/22 : CIA-RDP90-01208R000100070042-0