THE MYSTERIOUS DOINGS OF CIA

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CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5
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K
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6
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December 27, 2016
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November 8, 2013
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25
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November 6, 1954
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, ":" ? , THE SA Declassified and Approved For Release @ 50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 MIX .Asego" ' AMERICA'S SECRET ".XG.EiTS:-- The Mysterious Doings of CIA A By RICHARD and GLADYS HARKNESS A special Post report, answering questions most often asked about the super- secret Central Intelligence Agency: Have communists worked into its ranks? Do we have agents inside Russia? How does CIA get its men?and women?operatives? S often as once a month the supersecret Cen- tral Intelligence Agency, our first line of defense in today's underground war with Russia, apprehends a communist attempt- ing to penetrate its world-wide network of anticom- munist counterespionage. Communist sympathizers, few in number, have been uncovered and rooted out of low-level CIA positions. But before the secret police of the Soviet KGB crow over these revelations, let the men in the Kremlin ponder this: The CIA has clandestine channels leading to high satellite officials ' who were hand-picked by the Russians as slavishly loyal communist puppets. Acknowledging only that the Reds are constantly 'probing CIA for avenues of infiltration, Allen W. PART TWO Dulles, the agency's first civilian director, has gone about the business of making America's intelligence service communist-proof. Safeguards include a most stringent security clearance and a general rule against accepting anyone who makes an unsolicited application for a job ? thus barring one obvious com- munist approach. The CIA maintains its own re- cruiting system. Youthful college students do not even know that they have been quietly marked as possible intelligence officers. To guard against se- curity risks, prospective employees in the more sen- sitive positions submit to lie-detector tests. Despite such precautions, charges that commu- nists have wormed their way into CIA have been leveled against the agency by Sen. Joseph R. Mc- April 26, 1954: Mrs. Vladimir Petrov. wife of an MVD agent Who spilled spy secrets in Australia, was being returned to Russia by these Soviet strongmen when she was rescued. Carthy. Dulles promptly labeled these accusations false. A special task force of the Hoover government reorganization commission under Gen. Mark W. Clark is now examining the CIA organization. It is also weighing the reliability of CIA national esti- mates prepared for President Eisenhower and the National Security Council, on Russia's military po- tential and intentions. These correspondents set out a year ago, on as- signment by The Saturday Evening Post, to give the public as complete a report as possible?within the bounds of security ? on every phase of CIA opera- tions, both "white" and "black." Our coverage in- cluded lengthy interviews with intelligence sources who must remain anonymous, and talks with offi- UNITED PRESS to. Declassified and Approved For Release @ 50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 7e/;,.). ? , Declassified and Approved For Release @ 50-Yr2013/11/08 : CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 THE SATURDAY EVENING POST THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY ?Mi CYRUS H. K. CURTIS, President, 1883-1932 4. BEN HIBBS, Editor ROBERT FUOSS, Managing Editor KENNETH STUART, Art Editor MARTIN SOMMERS, Foreign Editor BEVERLY SMITH, Washington Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS: E. N. BRANDT ? RICHARD THRUELSEN ? STUART ROSE ? PETE MARTIN ? DEMAREE BESS JACK ALEXANDER ? FREDERIC NELSON ? ARTHUR W. BAUM ? HARLEY P. COOK ? MARIONE R. NICKLES ? WESLEY PRICE ? PEGGY DOWST REDMAN STEVEN M. SPENCER ? HUGH MORROW ? HARRY T. PAXTON ? ROBERT MURPHY ? ERNEST 0. HAUSER ? H. RALPH KNIGHT ASHLEY HALSEY, JR. ? HAROLD H. MARTIN ROBERT L. JOHNSON, JR. ? JAMES P. O'DONNELL ? MERRILL POLLACK DAY EDGAR, Assistant to the Editor ? WILLIAM J. STEVENS, JR., Assistant Managing Editor FRANK KILKER, Associate Art Editor ? DOUGLAS BORGSTEDT, Photography Editor EDITORIAL ASSISTANT.: EDWARD H. SAILE ? WILLIAM J. BAILEY ? RICHARD L. LEHMAN ? GWEN LYSAUGHT PATRICIA WALSH ? J MIN R. WELLS ? JANET M. HARPER ? BILL BREISKY ? BEN ALLEN ? PETER F. PETRAGLIA HF) TrrilOo November 6, 1954 227, No. 19 4 SHORT STORIES THE WILLFUL HEART DEATH WARRANT SOUTH OF SINGAPORE THE FRIGHTENED PILOT 7 ARTICLES John Reese 22 David Karp 26 William Ashley Anderson 31 Frank Harvey 36 DOCTOR KALLMANN'S 7000 TWINS Morton M. Hunt 20 THEY DIDN'T MEAN TO KILL Ashley Halsey, Jr. 24 THAT SASSY YOUNG COACH AT IOWA Tom Siler 27 THE MAN WHO INVENTED A COLLEGE Ralph A. Burns, with Joe Alex Morris 28 MY OLD MAN GROUCH? (Last of eight articles) Arthur Marx 30 ? _241 SCARED ALL THE TIME" Murray Morgan 32 America's Secret Agents: THE MYSTERIOUS DOINGS OF CIA _._.(Second of three articles) Richard and Gladys Harkness 34 2 SERIALS OTHER THE AVENGING TEXANS (First of five parts) Alan Le May 17 HOUSE OF HATE (Fourth of six parts) Storm Jameson 40 FEATURES ' LETTERS EDITORIALS 10 VERSE 44, 60, 76, 81, 89, 100 KEEPING POSTED 112 ? -4 POST SCRIPTS?? 38 Tioz WI/os90 comla) Let us theorize that Mr. Pot tleigh abandoned his diet to make other peo- ple happy. At breakfast he thought he sensed sadness on his son's face as the lad ate all the pancakes and poor daddy ate juice. At luncheon there was no doubting the distress in the wait- ress' lovely eyes, and the compassion with which his friend packed away spaghetti hile he himself nibbled bunny food. And at dinner, when his wife slipped him an apple, her obvious remorse so tore at his heart that he looked as if he were not grateful for the apple. So he heroically decided, / will sacrifice my diet, and eat! I can't go on making other people so unhappy! Has painter Sargent missed the point of this cover? He seems to think Mr. P. just got fed up with starving. The Saturday Evening Post, copyright 1954 by The Curtis Publishing Company in U.S. and Great Britain. All rights reserved. Title registered in 0.S. Patent Office and foreign countries. Published weekly by The Curtis P?tblishing Company. In- dependence Square, Philadelphia," Pa. Entered as second- class matter at the Post Office at Phil 4delphia, Pa. Entered as Second Class Matter at the Pont Offi T Department, Ottawa, Canada, by Curtis Distributing Cr nirany,, Ltd., Toronto, Ont., Canada. The name, of chatncters used itj al Pon fiction and semi. fiction articles are fictitious. Any r nemblance to a living person is a coincidence. Subscription Prices: U.S.. U.S. ,'oslesnotts and Canada, 1 Yr., $6; 2 Yes? .310; 3 Yrs, $14; 1 Yrs, $18. Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Gusuntmla, Haiti, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Philippine Isl ?nds, Republic of Hon- duras, Salvador, Spain and Soot.. America (except the ';uianas) ?1 Yr., $8. All other coffin,,, 1 Yr., $11. Remit by Money Order or Draft on a bank in the U.S.. payable in U.S. Funds. All prices subject to change without notice. All subscriptions must be paid for in advance. Unconditional Guaranty.We agree, upon request direct from subscribers to the Philadelphia office, to refund the full amount paid for any copies of Curtis publications not previ- ously mailed. How to read etpiration dates front your address la- bel on the cover: The first number shows the expiration issue, the second the year. Post Nutnber 1 i5 the first issue in July (the number of this issue appears on this page). A few ex- amples: 52-55 or June 25, 1955; 22-55 or November 26. 1955. You always count from the previous July first. The Curtis Publishing Company, Walter D. Fuller, Chairman of the Board; Robert E. MacNeal, President; Mary Curtis Zimbalist, Sr. Vice-Pres.; Cary W. Bob, Sr. Vice-Pres.; Benjamin Allen, Sr. Vice-Pres. and Director of Circulation; Donald M. Hobart, Sr. Vice-Pres. and Director of Research; Arthur W. Kohler. Sr. Vice-Pres. and Director of Advertis- ing; Lew0 W. Trayser, Sr. Vice-Pres. and Director of Mann- factoring; Brandon Barringer, Treasurer; Robert Gibbon, Secretary; Edward C. Von Tress, Vice-Pres. and Executive Director of Advertising; Morton S. Bailey, Vice-Pres. and Advertising Director of The Saturday Evening Post. The Company also publishes Ladies' Some Journal, Country Gentleman, Jack and Jill, and Holiday. CHANGE OF ADDRESS: Send your new ad- dress at least 30 days before the date of the Issue with which it is to take effect. Address THE SATURDAY EVENING POST INDEPENDENCE SQUARE, PHILA. 5, PA. Send old address with the new, enclosing if possible your address label. The Post Office will not forward copies unlm you provide extra postage. Duplicate copies cannot be sent. Published here monthly . . . Column No. 189 The greatest star of the screen! He was the glass of fashion and the toast of Europe. He was the despair of kings, the envy of men and the rage of women in the Age of Splendor. He was Beau Brummell! ? * * * * The dashing adventurer...who added his name to every language (not omitting love) makes an elegant entrance in M-G-M's "Beau Brummell"?a glit- tering Color-chronicle that will surely make a bid for a place among M-G-M-'s all-time greats. ? In the title role, Stewart Granger is a reckless romantic rogue. This is the part of his story they don't teach in school! * * * * Opposite him, especially beautiful in color, Elizabeth Taylor adds, as Lady Patricia, a further fire to her ever-glow- ing dramatic fame. * * * * The virile screenplay was written by Karl Tunberg and based on the play written for Richard Mansfield by Clyde Fitch. * * * * And what a rattling good story we're flung head over heart into! Life was cheap but living expensive. And Beau set the pace?in foppery and audacity. * * * * Who else would dare insult to his face the chubby Prince of \Vales (the self- indulgent future George IV, a screen portrait by Peter Ustinov that ranks with his unforgettable Nero). * * * * Who cite could woo the incredibly de- sirable Lady Patricia as if she were a chambermaid? * * * * Ordinary mortals, especially her power- ful fiance, had always put her on a pedestal. Beau was the first to put her there just to get a better look! * * * * No wonder Lord Byron called him the greatest man of his day! Here, in all its power-lusting prodigality, that day tumbles to life, under the meticulous care of producer Sam Zimbalist and director Curtis Bernhardt. * * * * You'll see and remember Robert Mor- ley's rare portrayal of the mad monarch George III; scarlet coats riding to hounds; whole kingdoms going to the dogs; tumultuous canvases of harsh Hogarthian humanity: Regency beaus and Gainsborough belles; russet Turner landscapes spilling into the morning mist. * * * * Imagine all this pho- tographed in East- man color, print by Technicolor! * * * * Yes, a hundred styles and many kings later, "Beau Brummeln is still setting the pace?in entertainment!, ?.Bea Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 WIDE WORLD Donald Maclean and two of her children, before they disappeared behind the Iron- Curtain. The CIA still is baffled by the defection of her husband with another British diplomat, Guy Burgess. cials and members of Congress. Specifically, we asked questions?and found answers?such as these: Q.: Can the country be assured, as it has every right to be, that our intelligence system is fully pro- tected against communist spies? A.: Reds seek day and night to infiltrate CIA and, on rare occasions, communist sympathizers have been detected in minor jobs. Once discovered, these enemy operatives are not always discharged immedi- ately. Instead, CIA counteragents put them under twenty-four-hour surveillance to spot their contacts higher up in the Soviet spy apparatchik. That strategy is not only fruitful but it is safe. The CIA is so compartmentalized that a disloyal em- ployee, limited to one small facet of one particular phase of CIA work, could give scant aid to Moscow. This compartment structure of CIA reaches to the top rung of agency officials. A subordinate in intelli- gence, for example, will know no more than any out- sider about the work of the operations branch. Dulles alone knows everything. On some projects or cases, he shares his knowledge with his deputy director, Air Force Lt. Gen. Charles P. Cabell. As further protection against spies and leaks, CIA- approved doctors and nurses are in charge when agents become ill or are hurt. Drugs or a coma might cause an otherwise tight-lipped person to babble. CIA-screened psychiatrists are on call to straighten out operatives who succumb to the pressure of lead- ing double lives and suffer nervous breakdowns. An agent who has been in the field must undergo a psy- chiatric assessment upon returning to this country. Dulles is as certain, then, as any official can be that his organization is communist-proof. However, currently active communists, as well as former communists, are being used by CIA to serve 35 WIDE WORLD Dr. Otto John. The Reds claimed a roundup of Western agents after he defected to East Berlin. the national interest. No known Reds are employed directly, nor do they have contact with CIA. This isolation is maintained by what is known in intelli- gence jargon as a cut-out ? a bit of trickery whereby a go-between, posing perhaps as a fellow traveler or a party-liner, elicits information from a communist who does not suspect that he is being used. If such business is risky, it also is necessary, since so few Americans are experts on Russia or on China under the communists. Moreover, only native-born Russians can hope to carry out certain types of es- pionage missions with any chance of success. It also may be revealed, with no elaboration, that CIA has intelligence lines to communist officials in positions of power and knowledge in certain satellite nations. Plainly, these men are of more value to the American cause by remaining in Country A or B and continu- ing their " covers" as . (Continued on Page 64) UNITED PRESS Shah Riza Pahlevi (left) returned to power in Iran last year after a CIA maneuver. `ft...4%417e, Premier Zahedi salutes as the mayor of Teheran welcomes Queen Soraya. WIDE WORLD Walter Bedell Smith and Allen Dulles, past and present directors of our "silent service." CIA employees number "around 10,000." Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 .00 ,Acra., ? Declassified and Approved For Release 50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 V .1,11.1111,7 V7.JJ.. THE MYSTERIOUS DOINGS OF CIA 41PKGB, the Red spy and sabotage bu- reaucracy, to give the agency the in- formation it must have if CIA national estimates are to be valid. The little publicized KGB was es- tablished by the Kremlin in April, of this year, to conduct Red espionage against the west outside Russia. The better-known communist MVD of ter- rorist secret police is charged with re- sponsibility for internal security within the U.S.S.R. Q.: Yes, but the free world saw, last summer, Dr. Otto John, of West Ger- many, cross the border into East Berlin. There were the defections of Guy Bur- gess and Donald Maclean, of Britain. Hasn't Russian intelligence profited? A.: Those incidents hurt grievously. As chief of the Office of Internal Se- curity, John was " West Germany's J. Edgar Hoover." He was responsible for anticommunist security in his country. Only hours after John crossed into the Soviet zone, the Reds claimed a round- up of alleged Western agents. Shortly before his defection, John, a personable, smooth-talking, bibulous, forty-five-year-old German, had vis- ited Washington. He was guest at a dinner given by Dulles. It was a social function only, and no CIA business was discussed, but the point remains?John was accepted as an anti-Russian ally. As for Burgess and Maclean, the two British diplomats who preceded John behind the Iron Curtain, they have never been heard over any Red radio, have never been quoted in Pravda, and have never been reported by a source considered reliable by the CIA as hav- ing been seen. Q.: How does the CIA obtain its per- sonnel? (Continued from P4e 35) loyal Reds, than if they should openly defect and come to Washington to carry on their work against Moscow at long range. . Q.: If Russian spies work to pene- trate our intelligence system, are we not also attempting to infiltrate the communist apparatchik? A.: If CIA must be ever alert against subversion, neither can the MVD be complacently certain that its system of cells and rings has not been pierced by agents operating from our side of the Iron Curtain. Spasmodically, Moscow announces the capture of iin "imperial- ist spy and provocateur," usually timing the charge to try to neutralize a Wash- ington demand that the kremlin recall Russian diplomats uncovered by the FBI as spies. , How legitimate are these announce- ments from Radio Moscow? A good guess would be that the Russians have actually apprehended an American operative one time out of three. The CIA will admit for the recird only that the life of a man or woman sent behind to ? is in World the Iron Curtain day is ten times as difficult and hazardous as was behind the rear lines of the Na Wall. t A main source of inforrnation from inside Russia and Red satellites these days is the defection of key communist diplomatic-intelligence officers of the KGB and secret-police officials at- tached to the MVD. The;most recent defector was the fat-faded, owlish- looking Jozef Swiatlo, high-ranking internal-security officer in Poland. Swi- atlo fled to West Berlin last December, was kept under cover in, the United States for nine months While he was secretly pumped of all information, and finally "surfaced" at a Washing- ton news conference in late September. The turncoat Polish Red revealed, kir the first time, the arrest of the three Fields, Noel and his wife, Herta, and Noel's brother, Hermann (Saturday Evening Post, Dec. 15, 1951). Much CIA information, direct from Moscow, comes from Russians who served under the liquidated fleria and defect to our side, pouring out secrea'in return for political asylum. Such a man was Yuri Rastvorov, who deserted the Russians in Tokyo. And then, there was the Petrov case, which began With the urge of a lady to throw a piece of pie. In the Russian Embassy in Can- berra, Australia, last NewsYear's Eve, the vodka was flowing freely. Mrs. Vladimir Petrov, the wife of the Mos- cow spy who held the cover rank of em- bassy third secretary, hurled her dessert at Mrs. Nikolai Generalov, the spouse ogthe ambassador, in a fit of anger. Ambassador Generalov reported the incident to Moscow, adding the prob- ably fatal hint that Petrov had been a Beria man. Fear beset Petrov that he would be ordered home to face an MVD , firing squad. In April fie asked for refuge with the Australian Govern- ment. Petrov revealed, in exchange for !protection, the operation Of a Red spy apparatus based in the 4ussian Em- bassy in London, and covering Britain, the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and South 'Africa, with special emphasis on our atomic secrets. Men such as Petrov have been close to Moscow. They have mote to disclose than mere communist espionage meth- ods, which the CIA aheady knows. They have been high enough in the .4c4,:.... ? 4, , r A.: The agency is exempt from the red tape and restrictions of Civil Serv- ice. It has its own employee recruiting, training and testing program, which is more exacting and more thorough than the Officer Candidate Schools of the Army or the recruiting program of the Atomic Energy Commission. The CIA system was instituted by Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, the immediate past di- rector of CIA and later Under Secre- tary of State, to develop a career serv- ice in intelligence. Smith, home from World War I as a youngheutenant, wanted to go perma: nently into G-2, the intelligence branch of the Army. Collection of information was a responsibility at that time largely assigned to military attach& in our embassies abroad, who often did little more than pick up social gossip. Smith was asked, when he applied for G-2, "How much private income do you have?" The lieutenant said that he lived on his salary of $166.67 a month. He was turned down. His experience led to his determination to form a career intelligence corps. "My big job," he said while head of CIA, is to get the best brains in the country, persuade them to leave fame and fortune for a Government job where they'll study secrets they can't even discuss with their wives. And next, we'll have to persuade them to stay on after all the inevitable disap- pointments and frustrations. Intelli- gence isn't a gay lark; it's a serious business. A CIA agent cannot hope to be a hero. All he can win is a notation on a secret record: 'Well done.' " Dulles faces the same difficulty. "My big problem is getting competent per- sonnel. We can pay a top salary of The Perfect Squelch DEAN WALTER WILLIAMS, who founded the Utliversity of Missouri's noted school of jour- nalism and later became president of the university, was indulgent with industrious and talented students, but quickly grew im- patient with the lazy ne'er-do- wells who occasionally infiltrated his classes. One soft spring day Williams had trouble getting any kind of response from a class. No one seemed properly prepared, stu- dents stared droAr'aily at thetlesiiVer? -- brightest sallies and, to add insult, the campus dog awoke from a nap under a back-row chair and began scratching fleas - At that, Williams sprang into action and ushered the shambling canine firmly out the door. As he returned, he said pointedly to the class, "After all, you have to draw the line somewhere." -MONA DIEHL. November ft1,914, fourteen thousand eight hundred dol- lars a year to a few people, but very few; while our need is for those who would get fifty to a hundred thousand a year in private industry." Slowly but surely Dulles is instilling a prime quali- fication for a top-notch intelligence service? the quality of pride such as the British have developed in the mom than 300 years of their "silent service." At present, CIA recruiting is being held to a minimum. But the agency is al- ways on the lookout for competent in- dividuals who will make intelligence a lifelong job, and qualified key people whose natural covers in the field of let- ters, science, business, labor, agricul- ture or the professions fit them for spot assignments. For its regular operating personnel, CIA recruits many employees from our colleges and universities through a t process beginning even before indi- vidual students realize that they are being singled out as possible CIA tim- ber. Former G-2 and OSS officers, now members of the faculties of some eighty of our top institutions of higher learn- ing, look over members of their junior- year classes with an eye for prospective CIA material. Not until the youths be- come seniors and are thinking about postgraduate employment does the CIA conduct interviews. Then students take special aptitude tests devised by: the Educational Testing Service at Princeton University, and CIA assess- ment teams weigh each student's per- sonality and physique. CIA selected, in a recent spring, only 100 from the top 10 per cent of college graduates. One fifth of the group were young women; all held A.B. or B.S. degrees; 40 of the 100 had M.A.'s or had earned their Ph.D.'s. Q.: How are CIA recruits trained? A.: Those 100 college graduates went through a concentrated preliminary course of training and testing in CIA classes at secret locations. Subjects cover more than sixty languages, in- cluding such obscure tongues as Azer- baijani. Most beginners must learn Russian as a basic intelligence require- ment. Students, sitting in cubicles for hours with their ears glued to tape re- cordings, become able to read such Soviet publications as Pravda and Izvestia in six to eight weeks. Other courses feature rapid reading and re- port writing. All the while CIA ob- servers keep a watchful tab on the quickness of each trainee's mental re- action, his initiative, his ability to sub- ordinate himself to team play and dis- cipline. They also check his possible political insecurity. Once over this make-or-break period, the schooling of the CIA hopeful has only started. Ninety per cent of intel- ligence work is rarely melodramatic in the tradition of seductive blondes, exotic disguises and secret codes. The pay-off comes, in large measure, through laborious, dull and systematic research. A Czech-American CIA re- searcher might profitably spend months combing the latest telephone directory slipped out of Prague, searching for names -olnew. ly arrived Russians arid checking off names of Czechs recently departed from familiar addresses. The appearance of a Russian general known to be an expert in tank warfare would be a sign of new mechanization of tho Czechoslovak Army. So, for the second step in CIA train- ing, selecthes slated for research jobs? or " white " positions? may be as- signed to special courses in foreign economics, postgraduate studies in international law, training in science in (Con?tinoteon Page 66) mos ' 44' Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 , ? 1' Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 = THE SATURDAY EVENING POST Nov&Ilber 6,195 Before you go to bed moacivirrim voila Mt ' 11rE RUE Or NEltrws WITH A 2-DROP BATH OF MURINE Among those small, personal at- tentions that bring the day to a pleasant close?don't forget a 2-drop bath of Murine for your eyes. Just two drops in each eye seems to float away the day's ac- cumulated annoyances in mere seconds?and then sleep can come so much easier. Again, when you arise, Murine helps your eyes begin the new day feel- ing wide-awake and eager. And later on, if they get a dull, heavy- lidded feeling, they'll feel re- freshed quick as a wink from a simple application of Murine. It's gentle as a tear, so you can use it whenever your eyes would like. A 2-drop bath of Murine at regular intervals is such a pleas- ant daily custom?and helps promote a clean, healthful con- dition. Murine makes your eyes feel good. /URINE -for your eyes* *TRADEMARKS REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. (Continued from Page 64.) order to be able to assay Russian technical journals, or to special-area curriculums covering specific geographic sections of the world. To become an agent in the espionage branch, a man or woman must change, in effect, into another, entirely different person. Operatives being drilled for an assignment in Country X, for instance, are supplied with cover stories. They receive new names, new birthplaces, a set of relatives complete with snap- shots, and even an educational back- ground?all in Country X. Trainees must be able to recite their stories down to the last detail, even when routed from a sound sleep. Above all, an agent must be a person of unquestioned in- tegrity, although he is required to lead a two-faced existence. For the last five years employees in the covert branch have been taking lie- detector tests?not so much to uncover falsehoods as to delve into possible weakness of character. In training for a life of deceit, there is the simple yet life-or-death matter of dress. It might be signing one's own execution order to pose as a European while wearing a pair of American red galluses. The buttons of an American man's suit are generally sewn on by parallel stitches, while European tai- lors employ a cross-stitch. Another dead giveaway would be to walk down a street in Bucharest in a pair of leather- soled, rubber-heeled shoes. (Rumanians are wearing only paper-soled shoes.) It would be suicide to be caught be- hind the Iron Curtain with American cigarettes or English matches in your pocket. To survive in the grim game of cops and robbers in Red territory, an Amer- ican must acquire the automatic re- actions of a native. The CIA drills agents in such minute but telltale de- tails of everyday life as mailing a letter in Sofia, riding a commuting train in East Berlin or ordering the brew of beer preferred by workingmen in the Russian zone of Austria. And since any agent is only as safe from detection as his credentials appear to be genuine, another CIA espionage course is "authentication" ? to report it baldly, the art of forging passports, visas, work- ing permits or ration books. Standard equipment for any operative is a special concoction of potent sleeping pills. "The better," an old intelligence hand explains with a shrug, "to withstand torture by the MVD boys, who have their own cute little ways to persuade a man to confess." But an agent roaming freely behind the Iron Curtain is not enough. An operative's value depends on his ability to communicate his information to the nearest CIA "post office," and ulti- mately to headquarters. CIA employs all the tricks of the espionage trade, including microfilm, special inks, friendly underground couriers. Q.: How do women fit into CIA? Are they used as agents? A.: There are feminine operatives in the undercover branch of CIA?and good ones, too ? as well as research workers. One woman, who has a wooden leg, has parachuted into enemy territory at least twice. At a parachute school conducted by OSS during the war, an Army colonel trained 3800 men and 38 women. The officer super- vised 20,000 jumps in all and had only 50 refusals ? none by women. Dulles feels so strongly that women are mak- ing a contribution to current CIA operations that he appointed a special committee of feminine employees to onsult with him on means of encour- aging more women k on in- telligence careers. Q.: What is the life, a A wife? A.: If a wife has been an agent? which is not unusual, in view of the number of intermarriages in the agency ?she will understand her hus- band's sudden, unannounced depar- tures from home, and his long absences. The uninitiated wife is likely to mistake secrecy for neglect when she gets no answer to her question, "What did you do at the office today, dear?" Q.: Does CIA co-operate with anti- communist resistance and freedom movements in the satellite countries, and in nations threatened by Red sub- version? A.: Besides its spy network and the open CIA function of research, the agency operates a , surlerclandestine third force ? the top=secret activity of aiding and abetting freedom forces where the patriotism of captive peoples may be fanned from a spark into action. In one satellite, where factory work- ers were grousing about Red pay cuts and stepped-up norms, an agent trained in the technique of labor organizations promoted work slowdowns. In an- other country, where the resistance movement is small but daring, a CIA agent dispatched a band of saboteurs to a trestle on the main Red rail supply line. Under cover of night the under- ground leader attached a small piece of gooey plastic explosive to a main timber as simply as a schoolgirl would stick her chewing gum to the under- side of the seat at the moving pictures. The next day the Red-controlled press called for the arrest of "foreign and criminal elements responsible for at- tacks against the state" in blowing up another "people's bridge." Recently, trains from the Soviet zone of Germany have arrived in East Berlin with their old-fashioned cowcatchers piled high with bags of sand?evidence that key rail lines are being mined to derail locomotives. In Egypt the communists were making capital of the lascivious regime of King Farouk. Skilled American political operatives were available to advise leaders of a pro-American Egyptian military junta when the time seemed ripe for a palace coup, and they indicated how such devious matters were best arranged. Another CIA-influenced triumph was the suc- cessful overthrow, in Iran in the sum- mer of 1953, of old, dictatorial Premier Mohammed Mossadegh and the return to power of this country's friend, Shah Mohammed Riza Pahlevi. On May 28, 1953, President Eisen- hower received a letter from Moss-' degh amounting to a bare-faced aft tempt at international blackmail: The United States would fill his bankrupt treasury with American dollars?or else. The " or .else," Mossadegh hinted darkly,would be an economic agreentent and mutual-defense pact with Russia. Mossadegh was 'conspiring with the communist Tudeh Party as it operated from the back alleyways of the ancient Iranian capital of Teheran. He had only one asset to pledge in return for financial assistance from Russia?the resources of the rich Iranian oil fields and the refinery at Abadan, which Mossadegh had seized from Britain's Anglo-Iranian Oil Company under the guise of nationalization. With that economic stroke accomplished, Mos- cow would be in a position to achieve what has been the prime object of Russian' foreign policy since the days of the Czars?access to a warm-water outlet on the Persian Gulf, the free -world's life line to the Far East. A Russian score there would mean the *crumbling of the democracies' position in the Middle East from Cairo to Baluchistan. The White House stalled Mossadeghl for one month; then turned down the crafty premier with a blunt n4. This was a calculated risk at best. It' was a daring gamble, in fact, that Mo4degh would not remain in power to carry out his threat. It was, as well, a situa- tion which required a little doing. The doing began in short order through a chain of stranger-than-fiction circum stances involving Dulles, a diplomat, princess and a policeman. On August tenth Dulles packed his bags and flew to Europe to join his wife for a vacation in the Swiss Alps. The political situation in Teheran was be- coming more conspiratorial by the hour. Mossadegh was consorting with a Russian diplomatic-economic mis- sion. Loy Henderson, United Stakes Ambassador to Iran, felt he could leave his post for a short "holiday" in Switzerland. Princess Ashraf, the at- tractive and strong-willed brunette twin sister of the shah, chose the same week to fly to a Swiss alpine resort. It was reported that she had had a stormy session with her brother in his (Continued on Page 68) bio ? "I see your mother has arrived." THE SATURDAY EVENING POST Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 68 Declassified and Approved For Release @ 50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5 -r THE SATURDAY EVENING POST -/ AC?. fin The Kicks Aro BREAK DOWN AND TELL ME WHY WE'RE SNARLING, DARLING! NAME IT-AND I'LL TAME IT! ITS-IT'S BAD BREATH, PETE! BONE UP ON NEW COLGATE'S, WON'T YOU? PLEASE! NEW COLGATE DENTAL CREAM WITH GARDOL CLEANS YOUR BREATH WHILE IT GUARDS YOUR TEETH! FOR GARDOL, COLGATE'S LONG-LASTING ANTI-ENZYME INGREDIENT, MAKES COLGATE'S - DOUBLY EFFECTIVE! 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Norman Schwarzkopf, at this time took a flying vacation across the Middle East. His itinerary included apparently aimless and leisurely stops in Pakistan, Syria, Lebanon ? and Iran. Schwarzkopf is best known to the public as the man who conducted the Lindbergh kidnaping investigation in 1932, when he was head of the New Jersey state police. But from 1942 through 1948 he was detailed to Iran to reorganize the shah's national police force. Schwarzkopf's job in Iran was more than the tracking down of rou- tine criminals. He protected the govern- ment against its enemies ?an assign- ment requiring intelligence on the political cliques plotting against the shah, knowledge of which army ele- ments could be counted on to remain loyal and familiarity with Middle East psychology. Schwarzkopf became friend and adviser to such individuals as Maj. Gen. Fazlollah Zahedi, his col- league on the police force, and to the shah himself. Schwarzkopf returned to Iran in August of 1953, he said, "just to see old friends again." Certainly, the general will deny any connection with the events that followed his renewal of acquaintanceships with the shah and Zahedi. But as Mossadegh and the Rus- sian propaganda press railed nervously at Schwarzkopf's presence in Iran, de- velopments started to unfold in one- two-three order. On Thursday, August thirteenth, the shah suddenly issued a double-edged ukase: Mossadegh was ousted by royal decree and his successor as premier was to be General Zahedi. The .shah or- dered the colonel of the Imperial Guards to serve the notice on Mossa- degh. Two days later, at midnight of Saturday, August fifteenth, the colonel went to Mossadegh's residence to find himself and his platoon surrounded by tanks and jeeps. The colonel was clapped in jail, and Mossadegh pro- claimed that the revolt had been crushed. The shah and his queen, tak- ing events at face value, fled to Rome by way of Iraq. On Wednesday, August nineteenth, with the army standing close guard around the uneasy capital, a grotesque procession made its way along the street leading to the heart of Teheran. There were tumblers turning hand- springs, weight lifters twirling iron bars and wrestlers flexing their biceps. November 6 1954 As spectators grew in number, the bizarre assortment of performers be- gan shouting pro-shah slogans in unison. The crowd took up the chant and there, after one precarious mo- ment, the balance of public psychology swung against Mossadegh. Upon signal, it seemed, army forces on the shah's side began an attack. The fighting lasted a bitter nine hours. By nightfall, following American-style mili- tary strategy and logistics, ? loyalist troops drove Mossadegh's elements into a tight cordon around the premier's palace. They surrendered, and Mossa- degh was captured as he lay weeping in his bed, clad in striped silk pajamas. In Rome a bewildered young shah prepared to fly home and install Zahedi as premier, and to give Iran a pro- Western regime. Thus it was that the strategic little nation of Iran was rescued from the closing clutch of Moscow. Equally im- portant, the physical overthrow of Mossadegh was accomplished by the Iranians themselves. It is the guiding premise of CIA's third force that we must develop and nurture indigenous freedom legions among captive or threatened people who stand ready to take personal risks for their own liberty. The soundness of this theory has its proof not only in the visible communist setbacks in Iran, Egypt and Guate- mala but in the wails of the Reds. The Communists charge, with growing alarm and frustration, that the CIA is sup- porting such native resistance move- ments as the National Committee for a Free Albania, and the Polish under- ground organization known as W.I.N. Grasping at a wisp of evidence, the communist newspaper, the New York Daily Worker, singled out for attack a $100,000,000 fund voted by Congress in the Mutual Security Act of 1951. The law provided, the Red publicatio said, that the money was to be u for "financing the activities of `selecte persons' who are residing in, or are escapees from, the Eastern European countries `either to form such persons into elements of the military force sup- porting the North Atlantic Treaty, or for other purposes." In all the major purge trials the com- munists give top billing as "villain" to Dulles and his so-called CIA "dirty- tricks" department ? Xoxe in Albania, Gomulka in'Poland, Slansky in Czecho- slovakia, Kostov in Bulgaria. Plainly, CIA's third force is hitting the Rus- sians where it hurts. This is the second part of an exclusive three-part Post report on the CIA. Next week, the authors re- veal some of Allen W. Dulles' unusual adventures. ?The Editors. "And in this corner, wearing . . .11 THE SATURDAY EVENING POST Declassified and Approved For Release @50-Yr 2013/11/08: CIA-RDP74-00297R000601240025-5