PREPARATION FOR DCI'S MEETING WITH REPORTERS' BREAKFAST GROUP AND 'MEET THE PRESS.'
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CIA-RDP79M00467A002700050020-6
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Document Page Count:
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Document Creation Date:
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Publication Date:
February 17, 1976
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ATINTL
fATINTL
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17 February 1976
MEMORANDUM FOR: Morning Meeting Participants
SUBJECT Preparation for DCI's Meeting with
Reporters' Breakfast Group and "Meet
the Press."
The Director might want some briefing before he goes on
"Meet the Press" on 22 February. He also might want some
briefing before the Budge Sperling reporters' breakfast on
Thursday, 19 February.
Attached are some first whacks at questions and possible
answers. If you have any suggestions, corrections, or additions
please tell me,
our secretaries on
matters, e.g. China, which doubtless will come up.
or dictate to one of
Please note I have not dealt with substantive intelligence
STATINTL
Angus MacLean Thuermer
Assistant to the Director
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? S
Possible Questions and Answers
for Sperling Breakfast and
Meet the Press
Question
Why won't you make public the names of newspapermen who
have been associated with CIA in the past? A number of
leading newsmen have felt that this would clear the air.
Answer
I think we've now gone about as far as we can in this
matter. This is an area where I would especially hope
for understanding on the part of the press. As a matter
of sheer practicality, this country cannot run a secret
foreign intelligence service if we go around talking
about the people who work with us. This seems pretty clear
and fundamental to me. We want the same sanctity for our
sources you newspapermen want for yours.
Question
Your press release didn't include such persons as
photographers.
Answers
No, it didn't. And it. didn't include copyboys and copygirls,
either. Our statement was meant to convey our intent.
It was not a finely-tuned legal document. I think we're
going to have to stand on what we've said.
Question
Did your statement refer only to U.S. newspapermen?
Answer
No. If you look at the statement, you will see that it
says, "any paid or contractual relationship with any
full-time or part-time news correspondent accredited by
any U.S. news service, paper, periodical, radio, etc., etc."
In all of the hue and cry about newspapermen, I was
interested to hear of a commentary by one of your colleagues
(Eric Sevareid). He drew a parallel between now and the
frenzy of the McCarthy period. He mentioned the phrase,
"are you now or have you ever been?" in connection
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with those alleged to be Communists. He added that
the phrase once again is "are you now or have you ever
been?" an associate of CIA for exactly the opposite
reason: for being thought to be an ardent anti-Communist.
As we've mentioned often, none of our associations with
newsmen were aimed at influencing the content of the
American press. As you people know best of all, a
newspaperman has access to people and places that other
people simply don't have. You can just come to your own
conclusions about what this means for an intelligence
organization.
And incidentally, the suspicion in some closed societies and some not so closed -- that newspapermen are close
to their government certainly did not arise with the birth
of the CIA. Long before the Agency was born, friends'of
mine, correspondents in police states, have been grilled
on the suspicion that they were intelligence personnel.
This suspicion on the part of totalitarian governments
is not going to go away no matter what I or you or anyone
else says. It's just one of those facts of life.
uestion
How many persons are involved in this phase-down of
newsmen you've mentioned in your press statement?
Answer
My recollection is that it's somewhere less than a score of
persons.
Question
You've said that you won't have any secret relationships
with any clergymen or missionaries. Wheat does that mean?
Answer
It's all pretty simple. It means that here and there in the
Agency there are a few cvertly employed persons such as
lay preachers and part-time religious leaders.
Question
What do you think of the ViZZage Voice publishing 24 pages
of what it says was a version of the Pike Committee report?
Answer
The White House has spoken out on that subject and the
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Secretary of State has had a few words to say, and I can
only add that we have never favored its publication but
we don't want it suppressed: we want the secret stuff
taken out of it.
Question
Are you going to take any legal action against the leakers?
Answer
That's a matter for the Justice Department.
Question
You've been at the Agency now for a couple of weeks. What
changes do you have in mind in the structure of the Agency?
Answer
Draw on Presidential statement.
Question
Do you favor a single joint oversight committee?
Answer
I don't have any set thoughts on that. Naturally, that is
the Congress's own business but I do think that reporting
in to six committees is a bit much- We've seen the secrecy
problems that are inherent in the present situation. But
of course, we'll adjust ourselves to anything the Congress
decides.
Question
I see that you were out on the West Coast where one paper
said that not that you lost your shirt but that you lost
your underwear. Would you care to say what you were doing
on the West Coast?
Answer
When I see some of the great intelligence puzzles that are
solved by our experts at the Agency, I sometimes wish that
they could be unleashed on the problem of airline baggage.
No, I was not out to the West Coast to lose my shirt or my
shorts, or anything else. I was out for some official
briefings.
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uestion
Did you see former President Nixon when you were out there?
Did your trip out there have anything to do with Mr.
Nixon's trip to China? What do you think of Mr. Nixon's
trip to China.
Answer
No, in no way. I did not see former President Nixon. I
was engaged solely in official Agency business. I do know
Mr. Nixon is widely respected in Chinese governmental circles,
and the popularity enjoyed by Julie and David Eisenhower is
quite evident. Other than these observations, I'd rather
not get into any commentary on his trip.
Question
Some have said that you were about to open up a big publicity
campaign at the Agency. Would you care to comment on that?
Answer
There's no hiding the fact that the A
en
h
g
cy
as a problem
in some parts of the country with what has become known as
"image". I'm certainly not going to mount a great publicity
operation; on the other hand, I hope to meet occasionally
with newspapermen -- as I'm doing today -- and make a few
public appearances, as I did on "60 Minutes" last week.
This will be part of my effort to explain to the American
people just what intelligence is, how important it is, and
its role in our government. There's a lot of myth about it
and I feel that. we should have some facts floating around
as well.
Let me take this opportunity to say how impressed I've been
by the quality of the people I have met out at CIA, and .
in the intelligence community generally. We could staff a
medium-sized university with the Ph.D.'s we have around there
at Langley. You want to know something about aerodynamics,
and you press a button and the man who knows shows up. I
simply have to say that in the short time I've been out
there, I'm impressed.
Question
Mr. Bush, there have been a number of comments about your
very active political past and the tradition that such
political persons as yourself should not be appointed to the
post of Director of Central Intelligence.
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Answer
Use material from your hearings, and from your statement
the day you were sworn in. Good stuff.
Question
What is your view on covert action?
Answer
Use material used at the Frank Shakespeare. meeting in
New York. It was excellent.
uestion
What do you think about advance notice to Congressional
committees on proposed covert action?
Answer
I think we run into a constitutional question here. The
conduct of foreign policy is a prerogative of the Executive.
Under the present arrangements, the "timely" notification
of Congress of covert action of which the President has
approved in practice follows almost immediately after the
Agency gets approval. There are a number of chances for
Congressional members who don't like the proposed operations
to make their feelings felt. Just because the Agency has
approval doesn't mean the operation starts off like a rocket.
There's plenty of time for legitimate discussion. with the
President himself, if need be, by Congressional members
who don't like what is proposed.
uestion
You have a lot of old friends up on the Hill. Will you be
up lobbying for the Agency?
Answer
Not only do I have friends up: on the Hill but the Agency
itself has a lot of friends up on the Hill. I certainly
will make myself available to any member who wants
information about the Agency or its position on subjects
bearing on intelligence.
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Question
What do you think about the suggestion that the Defense
Intelligence Agency should be abolished?
Answer
That's nonsense. The DIA has a broad and vital role in
the military structure and in the intelligence community.
In addition to its significant input in the total
intelligence community, it also does a tremendous amount
of absolutely necessary departmental level intelligence
which our Armed Forces simply must have.
Question
We've had reports about low morale at the Agency and that
intelligence gathering has been adversely affected and
that foreigners won't cooperate with CIA any more. Is
that really true?
Answer
Give a pat on the back to employees: good morale in bad
situation, steadfast folk, etc. But underscore the
seriousness of revelations, the genuinely bad effect on
operations. You might wish to mention the London Daily
Telegraph article, "Is America Going Mad?" in this context.
(copy attached.)
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IS . A ME ICA' GOJ'NG, . AD?
*
IT IS TIME America's friends spoke out,ivith some nasty
questions to'the so-called "liberal" east-coast establish-
ment. By that we mean sections of the Press, sections of.
Congress, - television - commentators : and comedians,
-university 'pundits and a ? lot of other people who may
think there is a dollar to be made out of denigrating their
country's institutions and leaders. - We all know about the
' trauma " of Vietnam and Watergate, but it's getting
a bit boring. ? How long has?t e rest of-the free world got
to put up with these tender-minded people recov~rjg?from
their " trauma'"? '?Jndefirtitely?
America is accustomed to, and' has merited,-a. good
'deal of deference from: her' allies. -.But deference can be
a disservice:-`114, United States should know? that her
European cousins' and allies are appalled and disgusted
by the present. open disarray of her public life. The
self-criticism and self-destructive tendencies are running
mad, with no countervailing force in sight. She has no
foreign policy any more, because Congress will not allow
it. Her intelligence arm, the C I A, is being gutted and
rendered inoperative, the names of its staff being published
so that they can be murdered. Her President and Secretary
of State are being 'hounded, not for what they do but
simply because ' they 'are people there,'to be pulled down
We hope, and .believe that the vicious antics, of the
liberal east-coast establishiiient, which are doing all this
untold harm, do not' reflect the feelings of the mass of
the country. But it is a matter for wonder, ? Is the country
as a whole becoming deranged? Surely not.. Perhaps the
Presidential election later this year will clear the air. ? Yet
that is still .l1 months away, and in the meantime there' is
all the campaigning to be gone through. Please, America,
for God's sake pull yourself -together.
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TRANSMITTAL SLIP
DATE19 FEB 1976
TO:
DCI
ROOM NO. BUILDING
REMARKS:
FROM: Angus MacLean Thuermer
ROOM NO.
BUILDING
EXTENSION
If FEB 55 24 REPLACES FORM 36-8
WHICH MAY BE USED.
7 6 -~v~ ~313/i
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?
Addendum to
Possible Questions and Answers
for Meet the Press
(Mr. Warner)
Question
Isn't the legislation to protect sources and methods
similar to the British Official Secrets Act?
Answer
No. It is a far more limited piece of legislation. It
is designed to provide criminal sanctions for disclosures
of intelligence sources and methods to unauthorized
persons. Furthermore, its application is limited to
employees and former employees and employees and former
employees of contractors. It applies only where there
is a privity of relationship and the individual receives
sensitive information because of his relationship to
the Government. By its terms it specifically excludes any
application to persons who have had no such privity of
relationship, thus effectively and purposely excluding
representatives of the media. Also, the legislation pro-
vides that the Attorney General could apply to a court
for an injunction restraining publication or other acts
which would disclose in an unauthorized fashion protected
intelligence sources and methods.
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Mr. Thuermer
ACTION ( DIRECT REPLY
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1-67
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MEMORANDL.IMi FOR TEE RECORD
29 January 1976
g o s i e it back. I said I would be willing to
consider that. He said he would not make this public until-
d
was announced to come out a day or.two after the" 22nd, we
mi ht want t ]'d
, nor..
did I think anyone at the White House, and so we agreed that
told him that I didn't know when that was going to be
y a wanted to have it right after the release
of the President's report or recommendations on reform- T
I. committed to him to be on "Meet the Press" on Sunday,
Februa 22 H
r
Bill. Monroe- "Meet the Press"
ten
ays before the 22nd.. (cc: Mr. Thuermer)
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IRVING WALLACE
308 SOUTH BRISTOL AVENUE
LOS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA 90049
February 18, 1976
sculive egistry
f
Mr. George H. Bush
Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
My dear Mr. Bush,
I have enclosed an advance copy of my latest novel,
THE R DOCUMENT. You may note that the book opens
with an epigraph In 1787, after the delegates in Philadelphia signed
the new United States Constitution, a woman approached
Benjamin Franklin. "Well, Doctor," she asked, "what
have we got, a republic or a monarchy?" Franklin
replied, "A republic, if you can keep it."
Of course, we must and will keep it, and it was to
underline this necessity that I wrote this hook.
+y novel is about a day in the very near future when
an effort is made, by a majority in the government,
to tamper with the Bill of Rights, to find a legal
means to suspend it indefinitely when necessary. I
have not attempted a scholarly tract on the subject.
I am a novelist and a storyteller, and I felt I could
best dramatize the vital importance of our first ten
amendments in the form of a highly dramatic, suspenseful
story.
Because I thought the book and the theme might be of
special interest to you, I am taking the liberty of
sending a copy to you.
I hope you will enjoy the hook.
Sincerely yours,
;1' le i /7/ 7.'- Irving Wallace
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Coifeie Iwrse a rche College Marketing
Et Recherche And Research ?
Canada Canada
CONFIDENTIAL
=_ . e orge Bush
_n Intelligence Agency
~-/McLean, Vg.
/ ~^ington, D.C. 20505
Bush:
~-/O5~?fo
?'
w = M a ations on your appointment and confirmation. You will do
cre to the Presidential choice as you did:as congressman from Texas,
-Nations ambassador, chairman of the Republican Party, and envoy-
M.) o ei china.
_-erican people and the United States government still do have
fr. =s in other countries. Friends who agree with the need to remain
T ;__~m t in order to defend freedom and.democracy - even to the extent
o=rye--er knowing what friendly neighbouring countries are doing. ..
realize that the Job of the Central Intelligence Agenc
i
.,
y
s
recent congressional and media
--e_i.-ties. And we would like to help you and the CIA.
4 e a offering the use of our nationwide network as a better
th
d
me
o
.
of- theri.ng needed information such as topics of oil and gas from
3--.r and other areas of the Canadian west and north, TIME/Readers
MEee- and border tv stations, etc. Issues and potential problems.
- are also prepared to accredit your people as representatives of our
s=__-ry, News/Fotos Canada America/U.S.A. (CriRC) Limited, and arranges
of their material in other publications or our own newsmagazine
currently in the works.
contact on the matter for any one to reach is Mr. Lime-Kirk.
.-Ts _ forward to hearing from you soon.
. ,,-4 en
Pre_=ent
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Cal( e ~ ene elease 2 03jPeW3 Aac jfAQP79M
Et Recherche And Research
Canada Canada
CMRC' UNSv SITIES AND COLLEGES
.. a - Calgary - Univ. of Calgary Mau. - Brandon Univ. of Brandon
- Edmonton - Univ. of Alberta. - Winnipeg - Univ. of Ma a. .
- Caazrose - Camrose Lutheran College - Univ. of Wpg.
- Lethbridge - Univ. of Lethbridge St. Andrew's
of B.C. R.B. - Moncton - Univ of Moncton
7~couver - Univ
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Baby - Simon Fraser Univ. - Fredericton - Univ. of R.B.
7ctoria - Univ. of Victoria
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- --- lton - McMaster Univ., Mohawk College
- ="don - Univ. of Western Ontario, Fanshawe College
- Kingston - Queen's IIniv., Royal Military College,. St.
- `--awa - Carleton IIniv., Univ. of Ottawa
- Peterboro - Trent Univ.
Catherines - Brook Univ.
- Sd'flvey - Laurentierne IIniv., Univ. of Sudbury
- "=order Bay - Lakehead Univ., Confederation College
Lawrence ._ C ollege
- =r-onto - Univ. of Toronto, York Univ., Ryerson Polytech Institute
- 7aterloo - Wilfred Laurier Univ., Univ. of Waterloo, Conestoga College
- i d.sor - Univ. of Windsor, St. Clair College.
21.3.1 0
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- Charlottetown - Univ. of P.E.I., Holland College.
- L?ennoaville - Bishop's Univ.. Champlain. College
- Sherbrooke - Univ. de Sherbrooke
- Quebec City - Laval Univ., Univ. de Quebec .
- Montreal - McGill Univ.. Concordia Univ. (SGWU),.Univ.
St. John's - Memorial Univ., Queen's College
eginia - Univ. of Sask.
- Saskatoon - Univ. of Sask., St. Andrews College
de Montreal
- Detroit - Wayne State Univ., Univ. of Detroit, ?Marygrove College
Detroit College of Law, Madonna College, .Mercy College
^ ~? 1'O FIDE MILLION STUDENTS IN CANADA AND. THE U. S.
.?-O. 3cz `147-A CMRC?- An Equal Opportunity Organization
"3rvm.. C. MSW 1X8 CMRCO - Une Organisation de Chances Egales
i ~,'3-6000 CMRCa -- Una Organizacion de Oportunidades Iguales
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PUBLIC AFFAIRS STAFF
=ROGRAM STATION
CBS Evening News WTOP TV
CBS Network
CITY
February 11, 1976 7:00 PM Washington, D.C.
Commentary by Eric Sevareid
ERIC SEVAREID: Various institutions of the press,
print and broadcast, find themselves in an odd and oddly
difficult situation as the secrets of the very porous secret
intelligence establishment spill out in public.
These press situations, proud of their capacity to
ferret out the whole truth, do not know the whole truth about
themselves; how man and just who on their staffs or loosely
connected with their staffs were also undercover CIA agents.
And how many and who might still be agents.
They're trying hard at the moment to clear up the
matter, because the practice is intolerably injurious to the
credibility of the press. There is general agreement on that
and agreement -- now by the CIA too -- that not even the non-
staff stringer type of journalist should also be connected to
the intelligence service.
of the inability of the Congress to keep secrets secret.
But at this point a?Iserious problem arises of a moral
mature, whether names of past and present agents working as
journalists should be provided to the companies by CIA if the
companies are to trace the pattern of the practice and clean
it up. Who else is entitled to know these names? Should they
be published by a press that has generally insisted on full
disclosure about the CIA? Should they be given to the Senate
committee, which would almost certainly mean publication, bepause
to be restored. But this act in itself would not ally suspicions
that the list is not complete.
Some leading journalists and press executives think
the answer.is yes to both questions if their credibility is
.. a:eeat suppoed by Rd;.o - Reports. t',c may be used for file and reference purposes or?.ty. It may not be reproduced. so!d or pub&cy dencns7atad or exttibted.
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And what of the individuals named? They had
received assurances of anonymity when they agreed to work
for CIA. They certainly believed they were serving their
country.
And this is troubling to anyone who was here during
the hysteria of the McCarthy period 20 years ago. Then there
were investigators on Capitol Hill busy throwing out the names
of civil servants, teachers and press people accused of once
having been a member of the Young Communist League or knowing
Communists or subscribing to Marxist publications and so on.
Dozens of entirely patriotic persons had their careers
harmed or ruined. The refrain of the Un-American
Activities Committee was: e-a e~you`nowor have you ever been,
etc? Now the refrain from liberal investigators is becoming:`
Are you now or have you ever been connected with American
offical intelligence, an anti-Communist enterprise?
Liberals, including the liberal press, were shocked
at what was done to well intended people in the McCarthy days.
Now some of the same voices demand that the same thing or
something disturbingly close to it be done to men whose crime
seems to be that they were not too pro-Russia, but too pro-
America. One generation's meat is the next generation's
poison.
WAITER CRONKITE: So pervasive have become the
suspicions of CIA activity around the world that today an
Italian magazine, without substantiation, claimed a Roman
Catholic Cardinal had once bugged the Pope's audience and
reported to the CIA.
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February 16.; 1976
TO: Angus Thuermer
For the record, today I talked
to Don Hewitt, the--"producer of 60
Minutes, and Mike Wallace, thanking
both for the editing and program.
Wallace mentioned he may want to-come
here in three months and do something
he felt would be very helpful to the
Agency. I will follow up on this
personally.
GB:lm (16 Feb 76)
Distribution:
Orig - Asst/DCI
1 - DCI
1 - ER
LEO ~3~h,iL
Approved For Release 2002/08/21,: CIA-RDP79M00467A002700050020-6
MEMORANDUM FOR:
Angus M7my -e and g Nels 2
. Approved F ? elease?~002/08rz2 CIA-R
Feb 11 minutes of mo meeting refer
? to a press policy of not talking to any
foreign journalists. I thought Colby and
others had talked to foreign journalists.
Please send me a copy of the policy along
with its rationale.
JATINTL'Ik you,
(DATE)
FORM NO.
T AUG 54
101 REPLACES FORM 10.10
WNJCN; MAY SE USED.
0500
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Approved Release!-2002108i-29 :'E FA-RDP79M0 A002700050020-6
Excerpt from the 11 February 1976 Morning Meeting
Thuermer reported that, according to Simon Winchester (Manchester
Guardian), the Director had agreed to see him after fulfilling requests from
US newsmen. Thuermer and Nelson agreed that the Director should continue
our previous policy of not granting interviews to foreign newsmen.
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~'? SENDER WILL CHECK CLASSIFICATION TOP AND BOTTOM
UNCLASSIFIED - CONFIDENTIAL SECRET
OFFICIAL ROUTING SLIP
TO
NAME AND ADDRESS
DATE
INITIALS
2
3
4
5
.6
~- 1 PV
ACTION
DIRECT REPLY
PREPARE REPLY
APPROVAL
DISPATCH
RECOMMENDATION
COMMENT
FILE
RETURN
CONCURRENCE
INFORMATION
SIGNATURE
Remarks: 1 1
A, LL,
/JiLd
Aik,
FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER
FROM: NAME, ADORESS AND PHONE NO.
DATE
UNCLASSIFIED CONFIDENTIAL
SECRET
25X1A
Approved For Release 2002/08/21 : CIA-RDP79M00467A002700050020-
February 12, 1976
Mr. Angus Thuermer
Assistant to the Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
Dear Angus:
As promised during our telephone conversation today, I am
enclosing the editorial dealing with the Central Intelli-
gence Agency which was aired on WRKO the week of February 9th.
I am also enclosing xeroxes of two responses from our
listeners. I am sure you will find their comments interesting.
Should somebody in the agency wish to amplify or respond to
the editorial, please let me know and I will make the neces-
sary arrangements.
John Hobbs
Vice President & General Manager
JH:hy
attach.
cc: Dwight Case
President, RKO Radio
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T?KO GOERI . flUVLD1fG. GOV RflMf1T C .fTV B, fO$TOfl. mASSnCI s TTS 02114 (617) 793-9000
EDITORIAL #142
RIGHT NOW THERE IS MUCH CONVERSATION ABOUT THE CONSTITUTIO-
NALITY OF COVERT MILITARY AND POLITICAL ACTIONS CONDUCTED BY THE
C.I.A. THERE ARE CHARGES AND COUNTERCHARGES BY A SENATE COMMITTEE
AND THE C.I.A. WHAT IT ALL SEEMS TO BOIL DOWN TO IS THE QUESTION:
DO WE NEED AN ORGANIZATION TO COLLECT FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE WHICH
GIVES US INFORMATION ABOUT THE POLITICAL AND MILITARY CAPABILITIES
AND INTENTIONS OF OTHER NATIONS? WE THINK THE ANSWER IS YES --
MORE NOW THAN EVER BEFORE IN THE PAST. THE ETHICS OF CLANDESTINE
INTELLIGENCE OPERATIONS HAVE LONG BEEN DEBATED AND SOME WOULD DO
AWAY WITH THEM. BUT THE PLAIN FACT IS THAT NO GREAT STATE CAN
ABANDON THEM. THE UNITED STATES NEEDS SOME AGENCY THAT GATHERS
INTELLIGENCE. WITHOUT THIS KIND OF INFORMATION. WE WOULD BE EX-
TREMELY VULNERABLE TO THREATS BY WOULD-BE INTERNATIONAL BULLIES.
WHAT WE NEED TO MAKE THE C.I.A. VIABLE IS SOME SORT OF INTELLIGENT
CONGRESSIONAL OVERSIGHT THAT WOULD ENSURE ALL AMERICANS THAT
OUR FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOM AND PRIVACY WOULD NOT BE ABUSED. WHETHER
YOU AGREE OR DISAGREE, WRITE TO US AND WE'LL FORWARD YOUR COMMENTS
TO YOUR CONGRESSMAN AND SENATOR. WRITE TO WRKO, GOVERNMENT CENTER,
BOSTON, 02114.
(WRKO recognizes its.obligation to provide time for qualified
spokesmen to reply to its editorials.)
WRKO - Broadcast - 2/9/76 - 4:50pm
2/10/76 - (once an hour from 12:50am to
8:50am, 10:50am, 12:50pm)
.RKO GEnERA1L BUILDInG. GOVERnmEnT CENTER. IlOSTOn. fnfSSAOUIUSETTS 02114 (617) 7'12-9000
This is a V/RKO Radio editorial presented in the interests of our listeners. Comments on our editorial opinions are welcome, and we recognize
our obligation :o broadcast opposing views of responsible spokespersons in order to achieve a balanced presentation on this issue.
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,,,Approvec*r Release 2002/08/21: CIA-RDP79M'67AO02700
'.-iRKO
Government Center
Boston, [.:a . 021 14
February 11, 1976
Gentlemen:
Yes, I favor a strong and effective C..I.A..
I also f.evcr a much stronger domestic system
of sur*illance of American citizens involved
>+ee
in subversion. That involves som.mem}Jorc
of Congress in my opinion.
Yours very truly,
DICK BRE NA-:111
r e,
,1t,iU . ~1
Approved For Release 2002/08/21 : CIA-RDP79M00467AO02700050020-6
Dick Brennan
P. 0.Box8
wam, Ma. 01001
413-786-0629