ODOM, JONES TOP LIST FOR CIA DEPUTY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP99-01448R000301270035-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 9, 2012
Sequence Number: 
35
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 23, 1987
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP99-01448R000301270035-8.pdf86.4 KB
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STAT I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/10: CIA-RDP99-01448R000301270035-8 1.1'11.',0 ARTICLE APPEARED 1 23 February 1987 Odom, Jones top list for CIA deputy '7 By Bill Gertz ;HE WASHINGTON-TIMES Officials have assembled a short list of candidates to replace Robert Gates as deputy CIA director, but so far they are unable to agree on a choice, according to Reagan admin- istration sources. Mr. Gates, the president's choice for intelligence chief, became acting CIA director when William J. Casey resigned after being stricken with cancer in December. Mr. Gates was inundated with questions about the Iran-Contra af- fair during two days of confirmation hearings before the Senate Intelli- gence Committee last week. Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd said Mr. Gates did not appear to be in any immediate trouble in the Senate. But he said a vote could be delayed as long as a month because of congressional probes into the scandal. "It's unfortunate that the adminis- tration did not nominate someone who was removed from all possible taint," Mr. Byrd told the Los Angeles Times over the weekend. White House officials have said President Reagan does not plan to nominate a No. 2 man until after a new CIA chief is in place. But the White House has put to- gether a "short list" of senior mili- tary officials. The list has triggered a political debate inside the adminis- tration over who should assume the important post, according to admin- istration sources who asked not to be identified. The most controversial candidate on the list is Vice Adm. Donald S. Jones, until recently a former mili- tary assistant to Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger. ? Adm. Jones, currently on leave while awaiting retirement, served as a military assistant to Frank Car- lucci, now the White House national security adviser, in 1981 and 1982 when Mr. Carlucci was deputy de- fense secretary. Mr. Carlucci recently angered some intelligence officials by re- placing NSC Intelligence Director Kenneth de Graffenreid with Barry Kelly, a former CIA official who rose to prominence under the Carter ad- ministration CIA director, Adm. Stansfield lbrner. According to several administra- tion sources, Adm. Jones is a leading candidate for the deputy CIA post, despite Mr. Gates' preference for Lt. Gen. William Odom, the National Se- curity Agency director. One senior administration intel- ligence official said Adm. Jones was nominated to be NSA director early in the administration, but his name was vetoed by Mr. Casey. According to the official, Mr. Casey blocked Adm. Jones for the NSA post because of his ties to Adm. Bobby Ray Inman, who resigned as deputy CIA director in 1982 after clashing with White House national security officials over a series of proposed anti-spy programs. Mr. Casey "didn't want an Inman protege at NSA," the official said. "What you've got is Carlucci put- ting his agents of influence in place at the CIA," said the official. The official said the deputy CIA director's post has increased in im- portance in recent years because of the huge growth in the U.S. intel- ,ligence community. Directing U.S. intelligence "is really a two-man job ? running the community and running the CIA," the official said. Another intelligence source close to the CIA said the general reaction among some senior intelligence offi- cials to Adm. Jones is: "Oh no, not another admiral." The source said Adm. Jones re- presents a faction of the U.S. intel- ligence community, led by such for- mer intelligence officials as Adm. Turner and Adm. Inman, that is "contemptuous of conservatives." Privately, Mr. Gates recently told a Republican senator that he would like his deputy to come from the military and said Gen. Odom was his choice. Gen. Odom, a Soviet affairs spe- cialist, as is Mr. Gates, has the back- ing of administration officials who support the activist foreign policy of covert support for anti-communist resistance movements. In a recent interview, Gen. Odom described U.S. support for the Af- ghan guerrilla movement as a critically important strategic com- petition with the Soviet Union that could eventually lead to the dissolu- tion of the Soviet empire. An Afghan guerrilla victory there, "would mark a dramatic shift in the correlation of forces in favor of liberal democracy," he said. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/10: CIA-RDP99-01448R000301270035-8