WILL AMERICAN-MADE COMPUTERS HELP SOVIETS PUT DOWN DISSENT?

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-01601R000300340052-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 8, 2001
Sequence Number: 
52
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 12, 1972
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP80-01601R000300340052-8.pdf119.51 KB
Body: 
Hu, 11 Ey'rius. Approved For Release 2001/0304 rERA9RDP80-01 Drugs Used as Well STATINTL Will , Arrierican-~V19ade Computc~1o! p . Soviets By PAUL SCOTT 1. . rui vown visson f The proposed sale of large, modern American computers to the Soviet Union has raised an explosive moral issue in addition to a security one for the Nixon Administration. The moral question, now being sharply debated at the highest levels of the gov- ernment, involves whether the U.S. should provide the Kremlin computers that can be used to tighten government control over the lives 'of Soviet cite-ergs and to help suppress the growing polit- ical dissent in that country. In an article being carefully studied at the White House, the distinguished PYnert on Soviet affairs, Victor Zorza, described the growth of the massive com- puterized information system in Russia and the way Soviet planners intend to use all internal political dissent. it as.a weapon of thought control. Zorza Soviet computer specialist Alexander wrote: Lerner, dinner host recently to Rep. "...The main purpose of such system James H. Scheuer (D.-N.Y.), who was would be to prevent any disloyal ideas' expelled for the meeting, confirmed from even taking shape in the heads the use of computers by the government of Soviet citizens.. The full records there to smash dissent. of his psychological characteristics and Rather than be a party to the Krem- actions could be used to devise an ap- lin's effort to control the minds of Rus- proach that would quickly persuade him sian citizens, Lerner risked being sett ..that his best interests require him to to a mental institution himself by sign- conform to the political guidance of his ing an open letter with eight colleagues spiritual adviser at the KGB [the Soviet secret police.]" appealing for support to leave the coun- The Zorza report, along with other information gathered by the Central Intelligence Agency, clearly shows how the power of a computerized in- formation system, coupled with mood creating or altering biochemical dis- coveries, provide a new tool for sup- pressing dissent in Russia. One of the CIA's documents is a 200-? page account of Soviet perversion " of psychiatry and computers into weapons of political repression. The account was smuggled out of Russia by friends of some of the KGB victims. It stresses how the new technology, symbolized by computer power, is be- coming the operative arm of the Soviet government's program of locking polit- ical dissenters in mental institutions. . A conclave of the Bishops of the Rus- sian Orthodox Church.outside of Russia, of Scheuer, KGB officials appeared a lot more interested in what information, if any, Lerner might have passed on about what Soviet computers are being used for than anything else. The incident and the raising of the moral issue have given Defense 1)e- partment officials, who have been op- posing the sale of American compu- ters to the Soviets on security grounds, new hope that the State and Commerce departments might with- draw their support for sales to the Russians. Instead of supporting computer sales to Russia, the Defense' Department officials argue that the State Department should be going. all-out to support an international move to condemn the Russians' perversion of computers and psychiatry into tools of political repres- sion. The Canadian Psychiatric Association, on the initiative of Dr. Norman B. Hirt, of Vancouver, has called on all medicai and psychiatric societies-including the World Health Organization of. the United Nations-to denounce the So- viet's new form of tyranny. The move has been getting good sup- port from most Western governments except the United States. Dr. Henry Kissinger, the President's chief foreign policy-maker, reportedly has blocked support on the grounds "such action might jeopardize relations with the So- viet Union." The President must now decide whether this policy will be ap- plied to computer sales. in Frankfurt, Germany, issued a little- dicated by the swift reaction of the KGB noticed but moving "Declaration to to Lerner's meeting with Rep. Scheuer. Christiap f'j ) j IkEl6gVr2aogyOW04upd1~4 a-?l.edIR000300340052-8 Scheuer on the spot. in their questioning about the new method of destroying dissent in Russia. In their opening para- graph, the Bishops warned: "Terrible news has reached us from Russia. Religious people, and those, citizens vindicating their right to think otherwise than in terms of party direc- tions, have been whisked away to so- called 'Special Psychiatric Hospitals.' Subjected to drugs, they are numbed and can no longer defend their faith." The Declaration of Frankfurt never' caused much of a stir in U.S. official circles until recently when a Soviet defector revealed that the Russians were using Western-made computers to gather information on all dissenters as part of their new drive to destroy try. Lerner in his talk with Americans fur- nished details of the 'Special Psychiatric Hospitals,' collaborating with the KGB and their use of computers, in Moscow, Leningrad, Kaluga, Minsk and other cities. With the Russians seeking to pur- chase upward of 15,000 -computers in the U.S. and Western Europe over the next five years, Soviet defectors have warned that many of these will be put to work controlling and suppressing'dis sent.within. the Soviet Union. The American-made computers, they report, also are being sought for use in the Soviet's space and weapons pro- grams which could greatly endanger this country's security and lead in several strategic fields.. . The importance that the Soviets- give to computers and their operations is in-