PALESTINIANS' MUNICH DISCLAIMER TAKEN WITH A GRAIN OF SALT

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CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5
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September 16, 1972
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CITRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R00a010110101-5 1 6 SEP 1972 'Palestinians Munich disclaimer taken with a grain of salt Special to The Christian Science Monitor Beirut, Lebanon The belated statement by the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) disclaiming responsibility for the Munich attack by the Black September organization is a formal and tactical move that should not be taken too literally. Much of its significance turns on the meaning to be given to the word "responsi- bility." If this is taken to mean "with the prior knowledge and the prior approval of" then the PLO can truthfully deny its responsi- bility. It had no prior knowledge because Black September is the one Palestine guerrilla group that has managed to maintain tight secrecy around itself and its operations, and it is well known that there is little or no secrecy in the PLO. And there would not have been prior approval, for the young men and women in Black September broke away simply because of what they felt was the pussyfooting moderation of the older organi- zations grouped in the PLO. (Till as late as 1969 Al-Fatah, the largest group, was insist- ing that its attacks should be on military targets and personnel.) But if "responsibility" means "with the approval of," then the PLO was telling a tactful tactical untruth in disclaiming respon- sibility because Palestinians at all levels ? from university professor to truck driver 7 approve of Black September unanimously, proudly, and defiantly. This approval, subsequent to the event, is certainly felt, privately, by members of the PLO executive committee which issued the disclaimer. After all, only one Arab ruler, King Hussein of Jordan, has expressed disapproval of Munich. There are, of course, precedents for such formal disclaimers. The State Department would deny responsibility for some of the activities of the Central Intelligence Agen- cy's undercover operations. And, more apro- pos, the Jewish Agency in the 1940's always denied responsibility for the violent acts of the Stern Gang and the lrgun Zvei Leumi, though it is now known, backed by a decision of the Israeli Supreme Court, that they were all part of a single overall organization. The PLO is thus simply stating its position for the record. The Israelis are unlikely to believe it because Tel Aviv newspapers are issuing what they claim to be lists of the names of leaders of Black September which link that group which Al-Fatah. But these are no more than guesses and part of the propaganda game. More important is the fact that in its last few meetings, the PLO executive committee made progress, though painfully slowly, toward the unification of its various groups. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 ) Approved For. Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01 WASl11 TON POST 71T ji 67F (enr LI U./ ti)6ii. - Ly Jack Anderson An estimated 1,500 intelli- gence agents have quietly in- filtrated the State Department where they carry on their spying activities in diplomatic Operatives from the Central Intelligence Agency, Defense intelligence Agency and Na- tional Security Agency have taken over many key posts, 7 AUG 1972 ?1 i. I Jb. t-i' Q.-:", 't K- fL; 0 !.: ,e-O ,eili ' ' ,es .0.-r, 1 ../q ./ ' i ..L.'. ?i....., ii Li,/ This has caused considera- ble grumbling and grievances among old-line foreign service officers. They have charged privately that promotions have been rigged, transfers ar- ranged and even a few resig- Lations -forced to clear -foreign service officers out of the way so intelligence agents ?can take over their jobs, One grievance case, hushed up by the State Department, involves foreign service offi- cer Charles Anderson, who ,clahns he, was bumped from his political job in Sofia to make room or a CIA agent. When Anderson complained about the transfer, he .41lOt a Jew efficiency rating for his pains. Anderson refused to corn- .(7) ./.,; 11 j.4d Lri State Department sources de- (D?Ala.)has scheduled a closed A spokesman for the A scribed how the cloak-and-dog. session to consider the latest can Banking Associalum ne-? ger boys were moving into the bonanza for the banks. This knowledged that S.:31.552 had diplomatic service. The 1,500 bill, carried on the Senate been drafted by the hankeii;.; figure came from personnel docket as 5-3052, was actually but claimed it merely chained officers. An official spokes- drafted by the American recommendations made by the man, however, refused to com- ment on the number of CIA and related spies in the de- partment. Bank Benefits The nation's tax laws have sprung so many leaks that, half the money due the gov- ernment now escapes into the much as a billion dollars- a pockets of the privileged. year in tax revenues and pos- Treasury experts claim the tax sibly more.". rate could be cut in half, with Citing figures supplied by Bankers Associatiom Federal Reserve ' Board. The A Senate, staff study, dated bill was introduced, he said, Aug. 1 and stamped "Gonfi- by Sen. Wallace Bennett (it- cliental," calls the bill "the 'Utah) at the request of the most unconscionable example bankers. of special interest legislation n, r 1 (I.:Aleut Grpnrf.t (we) have seen" recently. The staff estimates that the George INIeG-overn, in his hill "thald cost the states as search for a new running mate, first tried Ted Kennedy, then Hubert Dumphrey. Both men turned him down but of- fered to campaign for him ... out reducing federal revenue the Federal Reserve. Board, IluillPhroY found his old a slugle cent, if Congress the memo alleges that the av- friend McGovern despondent would only plug the tax loop- crane business firm has a rela- over the ordeal of choosing a- _ holes. Instead, Congress keeps poking new loopholes in the laws until the taxpayers have their dander up. Few special interests have tivo state and local tax bur- running mate . . . -.Atet,or ern den four times greater than never asked his former run- commercial banks. It add-s: ,fling mate, Tom Eagleton, for "Once state legislatures ins .opinion on a succi,531', But ?? g thought f o r in e r Dcroo mai c Ea{`,1eton told us he wake up to this great dis?par- Pri-vatelY, 't * they-,' IA ? ?11. --1. . ..,.- .... wangled more benefits out of to raise the low level of taxes Party Cl4e1- Larry a?ft`.1e-11\7as Congress than the banking I paid by banks. If banks were the best available man, . . . lobby. Banking legislation -is i taxed at the same rate. as -.11cGovern was uneasy, inci- handled by the Senate and other business firms, state and dentally, that . head sl rong House Banking Committees, local tax revenues would be members of the Dernocrai ic. which . always seem to be increased by $2.2 billion," National Committee might not dreaming .up new benefits for This bill, warned the *memo, 'act_ept his recumn'endy'ii`''l he banks, . would block the states from and ,mi2;h1.-.. Put up Ike r charging banks the same tax candittC 1-,-)C 'v,i,:! 3.1----?:dent. rates as other businesses_ . C u. ? 'Tient, but ? his friends told us For Tuesdv, . Senate Bank- about his grievance. Other Lug Chatrxnan John Sparkman Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 STATI NTL D li6jIIIIIP Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-IWO-0 III P June 28, 197'2 CONGRESSIONAL RE on 16 of the issues, I believe, and we executive branch participating in foreign accepted 11. We think the ones we got policy matters. I suppose anyone who them to recede on were perhaps more im- has taken a look at the broad field of portant than the others, We had to corn- the executive branch of the Government promise on something, and this is one would recognize that shifts in responsi- of the things we reluctantly compro- bility might be made. The President has mised on. suggested certain shifts and consolida, Mr. MAILLIARD. Mr. Speaker, the tions within the executive branch, but chairman has explained the problems in in the field of foreign policy I would sup- this conference report. I rise in support pose there is not going to be any major of this report on the conference with restructuring of my Government clo- the Senate to resolve differences in the partments or agencies. authorizing legislation for the Depart- We are supposed 1,0 authorize this ment of State, the U.S. Information Commission to make recommendations Agency, the U.S. Arms Control and Dis- with respect to "more effective arrange- armament Agency, and the Peace Corps. ments between the executiye branch and I am pleased to report that your con- Congress, which will better enable each forces were generally successful in pro- to carry out its Constitutional responsi- tooting the House position. bilities." Well, Mr. Speaker, I know We had a vigorous discussion of the that there are Members of the other Senate language establishing a grievance body which have a kind of persetution procedure for foreign service personnel, complex with respect to the executive While I agree that a grievance procedure branch in the field of foreign policy. ?t should be established, I am plea sed that may be they want some kind of instru- the Senate conferees agreed to. let us mentality to help define what the vela- handle the legislation in a more orderly tionships should be between the executive manner. Our subcommittee on State De- branch and the legislative branch in this partment Organization and Foreign Op- area, but I would think this search for orations began hearings this week mid "more effective arrangements" is going will eontinue them on July 18, following to be a difficult responsibility. the recess. What are we alining at? What kind of However, I am not pleased with the ,more effective arrangements between the necessity of our acceptance of the Sen- executive branch and the Congress could ate proposal for a Study Commission re- a commission suggest that we legislators lating to foreign policy. We did ,succeed might not think of if we do not think the relationships are good? They are also supposed to make recom- mendations for 'improved procedures among departments?to provide im- proved coordination"?I suppose it was just an accident that they speak of im- proved procedures to provide improved coordination. No one doubts there is need for coordination in the field of foreign policy within the executive branch. In- deed, this conference report pinpoints a major responsibility in the Department of State by designating a new position of Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs. In the field of foreign economic: Policy, there is unquestionably need for additional coordination and control with respect to the foreign policy questions, but I doubt very much whether any commission is going to throw much light on what should be the proper relation.- ships between the various agencies of our Government. The responsibilities in subparagraphs (4) and (5) on page 10, include "the abo- lition of services, activities, and functions not necessary to the efficient conduct of foreign policy"?that could point in any direction or in no direction. What ac- tivities of the Federal Government in the field of foreign policy are not necessary to its efficient conduct? I suppose there must be some. The Senate must have had something in mind, or the sponsors of this proposal must have had something in mind, in making this suggestion. In sum, what I am saying, MT. Speaker, is that we need to be careful about a pro- posal of this kind, because the field is so because the responsibilities of both the executive and legislative branches of our Government arc so intermixed that a commission with the best of intentions might muddy the waters. And if a commission were to do thor- Mr. BINGHAM. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman for yielding. I rise in sup- port of the conference report. Mr. Speaker, rise in support of this conference report. I believe the confer- ees have done a fine job under the eir- cums Lances. I am, of course, gratified that adop- tion of this conference report will rep- resent final action by the Congress in approving the $85 million of aid to Israel to help with the resettlement of the Jew- ish refugees from the Soviet Union which I proposed, along with Congressman HALPERN and many 'cosponsors in H.R. 13022 on February 8, 1972. I sincerely hope that the Appropria- tions Committee will act promptly to Provide the fluids required to carry out tins authorization. Mr. MAILLIARD. I yield such time 'as he may consume to the gentleman from New York. (Mr. FRELINGIMYSEN asked and was given permission to revise and ex- 410 his remarks.) Mr. FRELINGHUYSEN. Mr. Speaker, as a conferee on this conference report, I rise to support it, but I do so with some reluctance. My reservations about the report have to do with the proposed study commission relating to foreign policy. I might point out that one House conferee did not sign the conference report at all?Mr. THolasoN of Wisconsin. I do not in improving the Senate language, but 1 ' wish to speak for him, but I know he, too, find little merit in the proposal. It is not has serious reservations about the wis- at all clear to me what useful purpose dour of authorizing a commission of this this Commission is supposed to serve. kind. I would like to suggest that the This is the first time funds have had Appropriations Committee take a very to be specificallyauthorized for the De- close look at what is -proposed, take a partment of State and USIA as required close look at what a commission of this by a provision of last year's Foreign As- kind would got into, and how much it sistance Act. The authorization for State would cost. The chairman of the Foreign Affairs Department includes funds for admin- istration of foreign affairs, international Committee said that none of the House organizations and conferences, educa- conferees is very happy with the pro- tional exchanges, and migration and Posal, and the gentleman from California refugee assistance. These amounts total said that at least the commission will $648,354,000, of which $65 million is to die in 1974. My view is that we should assist in the resettlement of Soviet Jew- really not allow it to be born. The very ish refugees in Israel. broad mandate which it is given has to The USIA authorization amounts to me the earmarks of a fishing expedition. $200,249,000 for fiscal year 1973. Of this It takes the form of a little Hoover amount, $194 million is for salaries and commission with 12 members, eight of expenses, including the funding of van- whom are to be appointed by the legisla,- ous media programs. The remaining two branch of the Government. funds are largely for international ex- Take a look at the language regarding hibitions. what should be its duties. I refer to the The Arms Control and Disarmament language on pages 9 and 10. It begins at the bottom of page 9! Agency would receive an authorization " In the amount of $22 million for the .2 It says: The Commission shall study fiscal years, 1973 and 1974. The recent and investigate." I am not sure what that means. Is to study something else SALT agreement is, I believe, ample evi- dence of the value of ACDA's work, than to investigate? It goes on: "the organization, methods of operation, and The Peace Corps authorization is for powers of all departments, agencies, in- $88,027,000, tho amount agreed to by dependent establishments, and instru- both the House and the Senate. mentalities of the United States Govern- I urge approval of this conference re- ment participating in the formulation port, in spite of my reservations con- and implementation of United States f or- cerning the creation of another commis- eignpolicy." It 'aCies on to say the Com- sion whose function is of dubious value. nussion "shall make recommendations iny judgment. which the Commission considers al)- Mr. MORGAN. Mr. Speaker, I yield as propriate to provide improved govern- much time as lie may consume to the mental processes and programs"?I am gentleman from New York (Mr. Dirra- not sure what that means. HAM). The specific recommendations have (Mr. BINGHAM asked and was given to do with "the reorganization of the de- permission to revise and extend his partments, agencies, independent estab- remarks.) lishments, and instrumentalities of the ough job, they would require, I would Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 HARPER' S STATINTL AEroved For Release 2004,Liasi,61,47:2CIA-RDP80-01601R0014 IIP OMATIC NOTES The Ten Commandments of the foreign -affairs bureaucracy by Leslie H. Gelb ? and.Morton H. Halperin r3-HE AVERAGE READER of the New 14, York Times in the 1950s must have asked: why don't we take some of our troops out of-Europe? Ike him- self said we didn't need them all there. Later, in 1961, after the tragi- comic Bay of Pigs invasion, the reader . asked: how did President ? Kennedy ever decide to *do such a damn fool thing? Or later about Viet- nam: why does President Johnson keep.. on bombing North Vietnam when :the b?ombing prevents negotia- tions and doesn't get Hanoi to stop, the fighting? Sometimes the answer to these questions is simple. It can be attrib- uted squarely. to ?the President: He thinks it's right. Or he believes he has no choice. As Often as not, though, the ans-wer lies elsewhere?in the spe- cial interests and procedures of the bureaucracy and the convictions of the bureaucrats. If you look at. foreign policy as a largely. .rational process of gathering information, setting the alternatives, defining the national interest, and making.decisions,.then much of what the President. does will not make sense. But if you look at foreign. policy as bureaucrats pursuing orga- ? nizatiorial, personal, and, domestic political interests, as well as their own beliefs about what is right, you can explain much of the inexplicable. In. pursuing these interests and be- liefs, bureaucrats (and that means everyone from Cabinet officials to political appointees to .career civil servants) usually follow their own version of the' Ten Commandments: 1. Don't discuss domestic pol- ities on issues involving war and Peace. . On May lAriplimillscliraprIRetira Truman held a meeting in the White House to discuss recognition .of the L _.r q 4 .1;711,,7' , ? ASSU.., tar. Pasimit... STATINTL? new state of Israel. Secretary of State George Marshall and State 0 Under- secretary Robert Lovett spoke first. They were' against it. It would un- necessarily alienate forty million Arabs. 'ft-tin-Ian next asked Clark Clifford, then Special Counsel to the President, to speak. Arguing for the moral element of U.S. policy and the need to contain Communism in the Middle East, Clifford favored rec.. ognition. As related 'by Dan Kurzman in Genesis 19-18, Marshall exploded: 'Mr. President, this is not a matter to be determined on the basis' of politics. Unless politics were involved, Mr. Clifford would not even be -at this confetetice. This is a serious matter of foreign policy determination . . Clifford remained at the meeting, and after some hesitation, the U.S. rec- ognized Israel. The moral merits of U.S. support of Israel notwithstanding, no one doubts Jewish influence on Washing- ton's policy toward the Middle East. And yet, years later, in their memoirs, both Truman and Dean Acheson de- nied at great length that the decision to recognize the state of Israel was in any way affected by U.S:domestic politics. A powerful myth is at work here. It holds that national security is too important, too sacred, to be tainted by cross domestic political considera- tions. It is a matter of lives and the safety of the. nation. Votes and in- fluence at home .should count for nothing. Right? Wrong.- National se- curity and domestic reactions are in- separable. What could be clearer than the fact that President Nixon' Viet- nam troop reductions are geared more to American public opinion than to the readiness of .the Saigon foices.to for an American-su tfl invasion defend the elves?. Yet the myth makes, it bad form for government officials to talk about domestic poli- tics (except to friends and to repor- ters off the record) or even to write about politics later in their memoirs. And what is bad form on the inside would be politically disastrous if it were leaked to- the outside. Imagine the press getting hold of a. secret goV- eminent document that said: ''Presi- dent Nixon has dedided to visit China to: capture the peace issue for the '72 elections. He does not intend or ex-: 'pect anything of substance to be achieved by his trip--except to scare the Russians a little." Few things are more serious than the charge of play- ing, _politics with security. Nevertheless, the President pays a ? price for the silence imposed by the myth. One cost is that.the President's assumptions about what- public opin- ion will and.will not support are never questioned. No official, for example,. ever dared to write a scenario for President Johnson showing him how to forestall the right-wing, McCarthy- ite reaction he feared if the U.S. pulled ,out of Vietnam. Another cost is that bureaucrats, in their ignorance of Presidential views, - will use their own notions of -domestic politics to screen information from the Presi- dent or to eliminate options from his consideration. 2. Say what will what you believe. In the early months of the Kennedy Administration, CIA officials respon- sible for covert operations faced a difficult challenge. President Eisen- hower had permitted them to begin training a group of Cuban refugees cod RCM 4041 T5t. carry convince, not e eII ? ? i e t'?ele mos of t e :rook. ings Institution and tomer officials of the out the plan, they then had to win ap- national,security bureaucrac; n-oval from ? P i 1 a skepticalnew res ent Approved For Release 2Ottia3/0410C1AIRDPV:0-01601R MAY 1972 (Or Bureaucratic Survival For Fun and Profit) STATI NTL DAVID D. 1-1EMOM 1IN the field; Foreign Service officers receive tantalizing hints of the complexity Of foreign policy making. They deal with members of the country team representing Other agencies. They ?witness the some- times 'tortured replies which come back to requests to the Department. In the field, diplomats, have been protected by .the fact that the De- partment had the ultimate responsi- bility. They make recommenda- tions; they could indulge in advoca- cy, but in most cases theirs is not the final. word. In the Department there is no recourse. How can FSOs best ?contribute to that leadership in foreign affairs for which we in the Department are'responsible? First, it is essential to understand the environment. Don't rail against. the complexity. It is there. Learn its demands and requirements. The President of the United States needs answers in times of crises. He needs recommendations for longer-range problems. He needs them quickly, concisely, and Mr. Newsom has been Assistant out must Secre- tary of StateAbff July 1969. Ar # nEst041641 ffgreaseL? e 4 . t- part of it, must recognize it and Foreign Service and President .of the 197L work with it. The Foreign Service is accurately. He needs them within a broad framework of his own policies and politics. Furthermore, the field of foreign policy?while of great importance to him?is only one of several critical areas in which he must make decisions involving do- mestic policies, other international obligations, public mood and public opinion, the Congress, the personal- ities around him, his own broad objectives. He and the men around him have no time for patience, for prolonged arguments or for costly mistakes. The Secretary of State and the Department ? beneath him must Association. He has served at Karachi, provide- prompt, intelligent and effective responses in the field of foreign affairs that 'will mean suc- cess both internationally and do- mestically or the President will look elsewhere. That is what contem- porary controversy about State is-all about. This.broader view seems,to come hard to an FSO. They resent those looking over their shoulders whom they classify as outsider's or "politi- cals." FSOs forget that, even though professionals, they are part of a system based essentially and happi- ly on a democratic political process. They are not truly sensitive to the fact "the outsider" may have corre- sponding doubts about the profes- sional. The career man is not associ- ated with an administration, has not faced the battering of a political campaign, and does not depend upon the political success of an ad- ministration for his future. In Washington; therefore, For- eign Service officers have no special status. They are, in fact, members of a group which traditionally in the White House and by the political level of the Department is often regarded with suspicion and doubt. To be effective in Washington, they must prove their understanding of SOM is. a member of the Board of the Service League Career service award in d ? 11. jUU Art . 2 4 APR 1972 Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-ROM-NW Decline a . By ROBERT KEATLEY i WASHINGTON?The Japanese have de mended equal time and will get it: Henry Kissinger, at liberty between Mexico and Moscow, will soon spend three days in Tokyo explaining U.S. policies to business and po- litical leaders there. From Japan's viewpoint it 'seems only fit- ting. After all, the Chinese were awarded . three visits by the senior White House adviser and the Russians will soon get their turn?so why not the Japanese too? Japan is dismayed ,by some Ameridaii diplomatic tactics, and leaders want an explanation from someone who, in their eyes, really counts. For Mr. Kissinger, it's an opportunity to do vital service. Japan remains the main U.S. friend in Asia, as the President repeatedly states, and so reassuring Toyko is important work. Though the White House aide has lim- ited respect ihr Japanese sophistication in foreign affairs, his usual erudition and intel- lectual brilliance may well calm Tokyo's as- sorted fears. . But back at the State Department the dip- lomats are increasingly dismayed. The com- ing Kissinger journey is just one more sign? in case another is needed?that foreign policy ! ! has become a White House preserve, and that influence of the department and Secretary of State Rogers is often marginal at best. Two Questions Much has been written about this shift of authority from Foggy Bottom, as State's neighborhood is rather inelegantly called. So perhaps two questions should be raised: Who really cares? And what difference does it make? - Well, some people do care a great deal. Foremost, of course, are the foreign service officers themselves. About 3,000 strong, at home and. abroad, they joined the diplomatic ranks under the illusion they would help steer the ship of state. Now they often find them. selves shuffling papers for Henry Kissinger, deeply suspicious that the White House is burying them in busy work while it makes the decisions on its own. They have little sense of Participation, and a spreading belief that their chosen profession has grown irrelevant. Assorted internal bureaucratic problems add to their gloom. The service is top-heavy With rank just when its overall size is shrink- ing for policy and budgetary reasons; this -rneans fewer promotions and fewer challeng- ing jobs to go around. Moreover, the genial Mr. Rogers displays only intermittent interest in the bureaucracy he nominally heads. His loyalty is basically to Mr. Nixon. Many diplo- mats think he just doesn't care much about State's complex problems, and many subordi- nates complain that he doesn't work hard enough. But outside these directly affected bureau- crat% there seem to be few worries. Sen. Pulbright and a few other legislators talk oc- casionally about putting affairs of state back in the State Department. And some Capitol Bill staffers?former foreign service officers 8 among them?also wring their hands, while e State DeparVnent_press ,y1WMIP.VIFAyi4s revives the issiaPIREQtVaWnE OMR nd Fall at Fo ' say Inez tne power transfer is not a matter of great public concern. So What does it matter? Can critics prov that U.S. foreign policy is bad because State' . experts oftert neither devise it nor execute it Doing so would be difficult. Even some o the most righteously indignant diplomats con cede admiration for the main lines of Nixon foreign policy. He is pulling troops fron Southeast Asia rather than sending more in (The current air buildup is dismissed, to lightly perhaps, as a temporary aberration) Two decades of misguided China policy have been reversed, and to popular acclaim. More serious negotiations, about more things, are now ? under way with the Soviet Union thai ever before. Meantime, relations with West ern Europe?still the prime U.S. foreign pol Icy concern?seem smoother than during the 1960s. Indeed, many argue that policy is now more innovative precisely because it has been wrested from a sluggish State Department. Bottom foreign service officer, who adds candidly; "He is often right about that." Long-Range Considerations All these reasons may expla In why State has suffered even if foreign policy has not, at least not so far. Yet there are some longer- range considerations that suggest the Nixon- Kissinger management could eventually do L. disservice to the national interest. For one thing, many thoughtful officials ? believe policy revolves too much around the person of Mr. Kissinger?no man to allocate authority and acclaim to others. Despite he- roic workdays, he just doesn't have time for eVerything, and important matters can slide while his attention is focused on the crisis of the day. For example, South Asian policy may have gone sour partly because the White House worried mainly about strategic arms limita- tion talks and China, ignoring early warnings from State. By his own admission, the senior advisor has little interest in international eco- nomic problems; he has tended to slough them off. Even Mr. Kissinger's own staff grumbles about its inability to get his atten- tion when some alleged crisis preoccupies him; the system funnels everything to him and has no other outlets. Likewise, the Security Council system has grown complex partly because the Nixon-Kis- singer team believes State incapable of initia- tive and action. Yet this alternate structure seems sure to stifle innovation; despite the administration's talks about seeking "op- tions," the structure it relies most upon often . Chokes off backtalk and rival policies. For some, it .seems an attempt to ? cure State's stodginess by guaranteeing that it will grow even inore dull. Diplomats wonder if encouraging such me- diocrity is really what the White House wants. Unless some practices are changed, they see a foreign service stripped of its best men (many now seem to be ?seeking other work), leaving plodders charged with representing U.S. interests abroad. Some even say the quality of young people seeking jobs at State has dropped. This doesn't bode well for ira- pdrtant international negotiations, nor for the vital flow of information needed for policy- making. Bad intelligence can only lead to bad policy, these diplomats contend. Finally, State's denizens grumble becduse outsiders so clearly realize where power now les. The Japanese, for example, weren't sat- shied with the visit last March of Assistant Secretary Marshall Green, the top Asian hand at State. In requesting a higher-powered per- sonage, they didn't ask for Mr. Rogers; they asked for Mr. Kissinger. This transfer wasn't a simple matter of a nimble Kissinger out-flanking a lethargic Rogers, as some would have it. Mr. Kissinger Is a rather cunning bureaucrat in his own right, with proven ability to operate within the framework of President Nixon's work style and prejudices.. But as the principals ex- plain it, the power shifted basically because Mr. Nixon wanted it to, He sees management of the federal bu- reaueray as a key problem of any presi- dency. Bureaucracies, he thinks, spend too much time administering themselves and pro- tecting their own interests and not enough in creating and administering innovative poli- cies or in responding to the President's de- sires. Mr. Kissinger seems to share .this view. Mr Kissinger, for example, believes the policy meetings he heads are leaner than those run by senior State Department offi- cials. In his view, 'he is ruthless about who can attend; State lets in anybody with a mar- ginal interest in the subject at hand. His meetings end with crisp decisions; State's ramble on to mushy compromises. When ap- propriate, his give Mr. Nixon a range of op- tions to choose from; State too often serves up a bureaucratic consensus for the Chief Ex- ecutive to ratify or reject in its entirety. Close observers believe there were other, more personal, reasons that Mr. Nixon wanted foreign policy shifted to the White House. They think the President has held a grudge against State ever since Alger Hiss days, when he attacked the department Vigorously. Intensifying that grudge may be galling mem- ories of the 1960s, when Mr. Nixon, a political loser, traveled widely. Sometimes he got off- hand treatment from U.S. embassy personnel who saw him as a has-been; he is not a man to forget such slights. The President may also still see himself as a poor California boy bat- tling an entrenched Eastern establishment. More generally, Mr. Nixon is said to con- ider the entire federal bureaucracy a Demo- retie enclave opposed to Republican rule a teD esult of the FDR days. "He also_ logiallau- e20.01403104w:-ZikR 3,60 hink in slyeeping, global terms," says one Time and Trends The problem is that the White House ad- viser hasn't time for all who demand his at- tention?even if he had the urge to see them. Meantime, the structure designed for such business calls, over at State, is under-used. . 1R001400130001-41 NEWSWEEK Approved For Release 2001/03/8414:165\j*Fmouoi ROO BY STEWART ALSOP THE GHOST AT FOGGY BOTTOM WASHINGTON?Secretary of State ham Rogers is an able and likable man, but there is beginning to be something faintly translucent about him. Despite his. claim a few days ago that he was "not dispirited" and that in Peking he did not feel "excluded at all," there is a certain ghastliness about the Secre- tary since the Peking journey. A major political figure in this cruel town becomes ghostly as soon as it is generally believed that he is on his way out. A chief subject of speculation in Washington now is not whether but when Secretary Rogers will leave the State Department, and thus he has be- come a ghost. ? Secretary Rogers was already, as in the children's game, two-thirds of a ghost before the Peking trip. He began to look a bit translucent long ago, when it first became evident that henry Kis- singer had far more real influence on .foreign policy than the Secretary of State. But it was Mao Tse-tung and Chou En-lai who really made Rogers . a ghost. It has been widely assumed that his old friend, President Nixon, humiliated the Secretary of State for reasons of his own when he excluded him from the key meetings with Mao and Chou. But ' that is not really how it happened. . What really happened is that the Presi- dent, as soon as he realized that Rogers was in an embarrassing position in Pe- king, made a real effort to save his Sec- retary's face; but the Chinese refused to cooperate with the face-saving effort. SURPRISE On the same day the President land- . ed in Peking, he was summoned to a meeting with Mao. Henry Kissinger? and no one else?was invited to the au- dience. The President, taken by sur- prise, acquiesced. He also acquiesced in the arrangement for the negotiating session starting the next day, in which he and Kissinger met with Chou En-lai, while Rogers was assigned to confer ; fruitlessly with the 'newly appointed Chinese Foreign Minister, who ranks low in the party hierarchy. When the President realized that the exclusion of Rogers from the key meet- ings was being interpreted at home as a humiliation for Rogers, he set about trying to restore his Secretary's pres- tige. H cat__gin rhoetween Rogers a#1rattMilinlieCkrOMbilaS answer, and Rogers had to be satisfied Chou, plus a conversation on a plane. The President had naturally expect- ed that he would himself have a final, wrap-up meeting with Mao, if only for ceremonial purposes. He made it clear that in -a second meeting he expected Rogers to accompany him. Again, the answer was dusty?and there was no second meeting. In short, there seems in retrospect to have been a conscious intention on the part of the Chinese to exclude the American Secretary of State from seri- ous negotiation, and thus downgrade him. There are several theories. .to ex- plain this intention. One is the obvious one?the Chinese believed that the real power of decision lay with Nixon and Kissinger, not with Rogers: SECRECY The Chinese may also have been de- termined to keep the meetings as small as possible because they wanted to keep the substance of what was dis- cussed as secret as possible?especially from Moscow and Hanoi. They knew that bringing in Rogers meant bringing in the State Department?and the State Department might leak. They may also have been concerned that stories pic- turing Mao as old and unwell?which he is?would emerge from any larger meeting. In any case, it was the Peking mission that made Rogers one of Washington's ghosts. To see why he has become ghostly, it is only necessary to imagine President Truman taking Sidney Souers ?the Kissinger of that era?into major summit negotiations and not Dean Acheson; or President Eisenhower tak- ing Robert Cutler and not John Foster Dulles. Acheson or Dulles would have resigned on the spot. . This difficult exercise in imagination also suggests the low estate to which the Department of State has fallen. It has never been lower?not even when Joe McCarthy was snapping at Ache- son's heels. In those days there was at least no doubt who was the real Secre- tary of State and where foreign policy was really made. The low estate of the Department of State is a most serious matter, The Unit- ed States does, after all, need a foreign office to carry on its relations with other wildly popular in the State Depart- countries. The State Department has ment. But it is hard to think of anyone been ailin for years, but it is now mori- else who could make the State Depart- e 200n1Y06 with the dream of establishing a secret office of 30 people or so to run foreign policy while maintaining the State De- partment as a facade in which people might contentedly carry papers from bureau to bureau." The State Depart- ment is now precisely such a "facade" ?except that the paper carriers are by no means contented. This is not surpris- ing.. There are many able people in the State Department, What keeps able people in Washington is power, a com- modity as important in Washington as money in Wall Street. The State De- partment has been drained of all real power, which is why it is moribund. It cannot now be revived by William Rogers. Rogers has introduced useful reforms in the department. He has per- formed usefully in other areas too?no- tably on Capitol Hill, where he has been an expert pourer of oil on trou- bled waters, and in the Middle East, the one foreign-policy area in which his influence has been real. Moreover, the President is clearly determined to ."tilt" toward Rogers, in an effort to patch up his prestige. REVIVAL ? But it is universally assumed that Rogers will leave the State Department fairly soon, although probably not be- fore the election. It is this universal as- sumption that accounts for the Secre- tary's ghastliness. A chief subject of speculation is the identity of his succes- sor. Most of the speculation centers on . Nelson Rockefeller or Elliot Richardson. . Rockefeller and Richardson are both strong-minded men. Neither would be inclined to play second -fiddle, and both would try hard to revive the State De- partment. What the State Department needs for its revival is a Secretary of State with the absolute confidence of the President, unlimited energy and toughness, total mastery of the bureau- cratic machinery, and great expertise in foreign policy. This is a tough bill to fill, and neither Rockefeller nor Richardson entirely fills it. There is one man who does?Henry A. Kissinger. Admittedly, it is a bit diffi- cult to imagine a Secretary of State with a German accent, however faint. Admittedly, Henry Kissinger is not ? I. beekei-ROPetp-9,1601 R cunt *Mai yiuOt to be and d ? " t divert himself of power. Arthur Schlesinger wrote t at resi- on s true centers with a'? pro forma hotel meeting with dent Kenne y use o IVA.SHINGION POST' Approved For Release 2001/03/04MAC14,13DIDTATd4B1R gers Policy R ? By Murrey Marder Washtnaton Post Staff Writer :Senate concern over the "erosion" of the State Depart- ment's theoretical primacy in foreign affairs was disputed and brushed aside yesterday by Secretary of State William P. Rogers. "I am perfectly satisfied with the way it ; operating," said Rogers. The State Depart- ? ment is "happy to play a role" . in foreign policy, and "Mr. ' Kissinger has a role," said Rog- ers, but "the people elected the President" to "make for- - eign policy." ? Rogers refused in that fash- ? lion, to debate whether he is ? ;being overshadowed by presi- dential security adviser Henry A. Kissinger. That conformed with his insistence on Monday that, "I didn't feel excluded at all" during the President's trip to China. As a result, Rogers' words deflected the Senate Foreign Relations Committee yester- day from its own groping ef- forts to enhance the State De- partment's: share in formulat- ? ing foreign policy.. The .committee, headed by Sen. J. William Fulbright (D- Ark.) held its first hearing , on $563 million requested in , authorization funds for the ? State Department as required' by a rider it attached to last ? year's foreign aid act. A major ' purpose, as Fulbright noted yesterday, is "restoring Con- gress' proper- role in the mak- ing of foreign policy." With Kissinger beyond The official reach of the committee because he is a White House adviser, Fulbright and other senators hoped Rogers would Join in seeking to strengthen State's hand in policy making. In theory, that would strengthen the role of Con? - gress, because State is obliged to be more resonsive to Con- gress than is the White House.. Rogers, however, pro- flounced himself quite satis- fied with the status quo. He disclaimed , any concerni eferids tate e ar men le at Senate Heailng about having State Departmen positions lost in the National Security Council staff machin- ery that Kissinger controls. If anything develops "contrary to what I think should b done," said Rogers, "take it u with the President." "The system is working ver, well," Rogers insisted. e foreign policy is very effec tive " Rogers also came uncle' close questioning yesterday 1 about the need to jettison what several senators called (remnants of the cold war. Sen. Frank Church (D-I- 1, dent's China trip, said it is. time to eliminate all vestiges, of the "China demon fixation" in U.S. policy. Church said there is "no relic" that more deserves being "tossed in the ash can" of history than the. Southeast Asian Collective De- fense Treaty of 1954. i The SEATO treaty is "a corpse," said Church. long abandoned by France, Britain and Pakistan: invoked as "an after thought" to help justify U.S. involvement in the Indo-1 china war, but now deserving ! "decent burial" to avoid use in other entanglements. ? t ous" and would suggest "a bright suggested various ap- ' 180-degree turn" in U.S. pol- icy. Church countered that since ancient Rome, "no other coun- e try in history has undertaken P so many formal commitments as the government of the Un!tei States?to 44 coun- tries." Bogers also was challenged by Ftdbright and Sen. Stuart '1 Symington (D-Mo.) on adminis- tration support of funds until. June 1973 for Radio Free Eu- rope and Radio Liberty. They were previously financed cov- ertly by the CIA. The dispute is in a Senate-House confer- funding only until June 30 of . this a o), commending the Presi- ? ? 'ence, with the Senate favoring ? year. The U.S.-C commu- nique, pledging peaceful co-ex- I i proaches for strengthening the State Department's posi- tion in foreign affairs, includ ing a -"unified budget for for eign affairs." Rogers said that would be "too complex." Ful- bright noted that other agen- cies, including CIA and De- fense, haVe "seven or eight times as many people in our embassies as the State Depart- ment does." Rogers said State has only 16 per cent of its own employees in embassies over- seas, and State's total employ- ees were listed at 13,236 - Rogers disagreed, however, with Fulbright's claim that the growing National Security Council structure, which Kis- singer beads, has overstepped ts intended authority. Rogers, however, told Church "your timing is partic- ularly unfortunate." Following the President's China trip, said Rogers. the United States is now reassur- ing its Asian allies that it will abide by all --its "c ommi t- ments." To abandon the I SEATO treaty now, said Rog.' ers, could be "quite danger- i ? _ istence, Fulbright said, 'is quite inconsistent with what you are doing in Russia." The broadcasts beamed into the ; Soviet Union, said Fulbright, g continue "old, obsolete pro- ! grams created at the begin-j fling of the cold war, at the height of the McCarthy Pe- ? riod." ? Fulbright claimed 'that con- tinuation of such broadcasts could result in `.'a lack of cred- ibility" about U.S. intentions to negotiate in the strategic arms control talks (SALT) and to reduce tensions. Rogers dis- agreed. He said he sees the radio as no "interference in the internal affairs of other countries," and he? expressed _optimism for a SALT agree- ment this year. ?? - - ; During the hearing, Ful) .TATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04.: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 PITTaT tCTE27C:13 Approved For Release 2001/03/04 :REEK6RbP89.V1011p0 View from the fudge factory By David ? Washington It looks the same, outwardly ? endless antiseptic corridors; subdued lighting; anon- ymous doors opening into hushed offices; the flags and the globe and the slippery floor of the diplomatic entrance -on C Street. . . . This is home to that body of men and women whom Franklin D. Roosevelt called "cookie pushers," and whom John F. Ken- nedy characterized as "those people over there who smile a lot"?the professional ?-diplomatic corps of the United States. But the "fudge factory" .(as the State Department has ingloriously been dubbed) is not the same at all, really. To a vvitser__ returning after several years, it is even more subdued than it was in the late 'CO's. It feels even less in the mainstream of U.S. policymaking than it felt in Lyndon John- son's day; morale is low, and the talk of the building is often about what might be done to redress the balance. ? ? The thoughts come thick and fast as Presi- ? dent Nixon's party heads to Peking. Dip- lomats at the State Department welcome Mr. Nixon's initiative toward the People's Republic. They want to see it succeed. Some of them helped in preliminary staff work, writing papers for Dr. Henry Kissinger and his national security staff. And yet, even those officials who would normally expect to know the ins and outs of evolving U.S. strat- egy toward Peking were frank to admit in private conyersation a few days ago that they did not know the exact state of play. It hardly .needs 'restating: Major Ameri- can foreign policy is formed and executed largely in the White House these days. The Kissinger staff, according to a late report, numbers 46 assistants, with 105 adminis- trative personnel. Both Mr. Nixon and Dr. Kissinger like to plan quietly?and to move quickly. Neither demonstrates much regard for the diplomatic bureaucracy. They ask it . questions, but not for crucial policy recom- mendations?or so one is led to understand. They do not ignore it entirely, but neither do they keep it informed of just who is say- ing what to whom when Dr. Kissinger makes his dramatic, secret journeys: to Pe- king, to Paris. Some diplomats, unsurprisingly, don't like it at all. No one man, or two men, no matter how brilliant, can cover every nu- ance in dealings with nations such as China or North Vietnam, they say. Others are seriously concerned with the quality of recent appointments to the rank of ambas- sador: former Treasury Secretary David Kennedy to NATO, for instance (consid- ered by some too old, by others too inex- perienced); Borg-Warner's Robert Inger- soll to Tokyo (recognized, as a gracious businessman, an expert in business, but largely inexperienced in Japanese affairs outside business, and a newcomer to Asian diplomacy i ppro wad nFic? lb RedeaSt0 play what the professionals consider an enormously significant part). K, Willis Granted, it is said, that Mr. Nixon has dis- liked the Foreign Service since 1954 when the Republicans came to power with a fistful of new slogans such as "massive retalia- tion." And Mr. Nixon was right: The pro- fessionals didn't like him, or President Eisenhower, or John Foster Dulles.. But those days have gone. The world has changed. Issues are increasingly complex. The bu- reaucracy of State and the Central Intelli- gence Agency does possess expertise., built up over the years. True, bureaucracy grinds slowly?and true, it needs shaking up from time to time: prodding, cajoling, pushing. Yet, by cutting State out from the crucial decisions, the view maintains, the White House runs clear and definite risks, both now and for the future. How, then, to marry professional exper- tise to the need of the White House to move fast and flexibly? One answer: the White House could cut in six or .seven top profes- sional diplomats on China and Vietnam strategy. This could serve several purposes, it is said: ensure that .all? policy bases are covered; prevent further atrophy of State, which is becoming more and more cautious about making firm recommendations to Dr. Kissinger's people ("Where is Henry right now, while we're talking?" asked one source with a grin; "in Pyongyang? Could be . . ."), thereby lowering its standing in the White House still more. It could even help prevent "leaks" from the bureau,cracy of the kind that Mr. Nixon detests. Where no one knows anything, the argument runs, disgruntlement can lead to erroneous specu- lating to friendly journalistic ears; it is safer, paradoxically, if a few people know a lot. Professional diplomats have deep respect for Dr. Kissinger, and, they say, for Mr. Nixon's approaches; privately, however, many feel that the quality of the national security staff does not equal the best men in State. The professionals acknowledge that State needs to find ways to keep se- crets better?to show Mr.. Nixon that it can indeed be trusted. It asks for the chance. David Willis, Monitor American news editor, was this newspaper's State De- partment correspondent for four years from 1965. 20011031?: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001.-5 Los 1.:cELEs nras Approved For Release 2001/p/q/3 9h-RDP80-016 Hopes PinneCi on Vast Refora at Staid Dept. ? BY PAUL HOUSTON ? ?-Times Stall Writer ? WASHINGTON?As is the.. practice of diplomats, William B. Macomber ush- ered the visitor away from his -desk and over to the more 'relaxed setting of couch and side chairs. ? "Somebody said the on- ly thing that had changed in American diplomacy over all these years was _ ganda) into the foreign . . __ policy arena in a big way. recently retired. "A lot of. State was slow to learn the old corps spirit has that it was losing prom- been not only permitted to inence by dealing with die but encouraged to die." t h e s e "interlopers" at What rubs old guards- arm's length. . men most is the develop- ment of a collective bar-. Security Council Rises gaining 0 unit among Meanwhile, Congress in foreign service officers 1047 established a Nation- sasai the establishment of al Security. Council to re- strong employe grievance view, coordinate and con- procedures. . . . trol American foreign poli- One disgruntled senior cy. This led to the eclipse official says, "There's a of State's traditional quar- great deal of outcry for . te.rback role in the foreign rights and benefits, but policy process. there is very little talk of - It is the hope?some say duty." the vain dream?of many ' 400 Changes Made in the foreign service that reforms will .persuade fu- Despite these criticisms, ture presidents to have the reform ? s.eern to have the State Department take gained wide acceptance in over some of the National a bureaucracy that- must . Security Council's duties. have the biggest group of the invention of Abe ?tele; There is not much belief ? frustrated intellectuals in graph," Macomber that President Nixon will government. ? ?-? laughed. "Well, now we change his preference for ? Macomber, 'noted that ? have about 400 0th e.r a National Security Coun- 400 recommendations for thing i s." - ? 0 cil directing foreign policy change have been mple- ? Macomber, deputy un- . under a special assistant, mented out of 500 put for- dersecretary of state for. Henry A. Kissinger. ward in an inch-thick plan management, is in charge Charles W. Bray III, f-ls, 17 months ago. of implementing a vast re- 1.s one of the aging "Young He cites the following form program that rather Turks" who prodded the changes as ''solid and sig- desperately seeks .to re- State Department into in- nificant, although not the store to the State Depart- siituting a massive intro- millenium"; - merit some measure of its spective study that led to ?Modern management old clout-4f not its former the reforms. - techniques have been in- preeminence, . - "Historically," he says, stituted using s y s t e in s New Catchwords ? 'the foreign service has analysis a n d ? interdisci- ? ? Hence, Foggy Bottom been a very closed corpor.. plinary teams of senior of- hasation with a highly pater- f? ? I TI ? ? t 'cl icia s. -ie aim is o i en- nalistic system of internal tify priority issues, assign some new catchwords: more contact with the rest administration. . .. the right kind of manpow- --"Openness" (seeking ? of the foreign affairs corn- "To some of us; the de- er to each issue and re- munity); partment's isolation from view policies periodically --"Creativity" -' (encoUr-- the American mainstream in toughminded adversary aging more dissent from and its declining influence ' proceedings.the official line); -- , in Washington, were in- Computer Indexing ? ?"Democratization,' tolerable." With the micromfilming (ridding foreign. missions As . one indication of and- computer indexing of of the hierarchal struc- changing department atti- 25,000 documents requir- ture topped by an authori- tudes, there was a time ing action at the State De- tarian ambassador); when Bray's foreign .ser- partment every year, it is ?"Functional speciali- vice career was in doubt. hoped ,there will be no re- zation" - (turning all-pur- His agitating almost got peats of the kind of mbar- pose diplomats into politi- him ? exiled. But then, 9. rassment that hit the de- cal, economicaadministra- reform became the "in partment in .1967 during tive ' and consular?visa- thing, Bray rose with un- the Arab-Israeli six-day stamping?specialists), c o M in a n swiftness last war. . After World War II, the February to become the.. American officials could accelerating complexity of department's spokesman not find the copy of a.cru- i n t e i n a t lo nal affairs at daily press briefings.. cial letter former Secreta- brought many other As might be expected, .ry of State John Foster government .departments the reforms have not been Dulles had written to Is- (Defense, Treasury, Corn- universally cheered. ? raeli Prime Minister Da- rnerce, Agriculture, ?etc.) "A lot of schisms have vid Ben-Gurion in 1956. and agencies (for Intl- been created," co. mplains a Sheepishly, the State De- Fpiicitgraanipbtacravoomvirdinpyroecgraupgraet iigence, ?New ideas, divergent opinion and "creative dis- sent" have been encour- aged, Macomber says, through the use of Special 'message channels, n w staff functions and some- thing called the Open For- um Panel. At weekl y, closed-door meetings of the panel, younger officers take issue with various American policies and ad- vance their views in pa- pers to the Secretary of State. ?A complete overhaul of the controversial "selec- tibn out" and promotion system also is aimed at en- couraging. officers to take unpopular positions. Automatic Retirement - Formerly, a. lower or middle - grade officer had to think twice about stick- ing his neck out, because if he failed to win a promo- tion to the next grade ? within a certain number of years, he was involuntari- , ly retired without a pen- sion. The system, when fairly. administered, was inval- uable in' shedding dead wood. But was widely judged to be unfairly arbi- trary 'in many cases?in- cluding that of Charles Thomas. After Thomas, the father of three. was selected? out at the age of sI6, he had no success with 2.000 job am plications (b eing over- qualified or over- age). Last May he shot himself to death. The suicide stirred a furore and prevented for- mer State personnel direc- tor Howard P. Mace from being . confirmed by the Senate as ambassador to Sierra Leone. Now, after a junior offi- cer passes a certain low threshold, he is guar- anteed tenure of 20 years plus a pension?and may gain promotions in compe- tition. with others in his specialty, A major problem re- mains, however, and . it will be aggravated by the tenure system. State is topheavy Nvith senior offi- STATI NTL ??ecritater?!al -13 ;Di YORK 'TINES Approved For Release 2001/Mp1971A-RDP80-01601R Rogers Eases Cut of Personnel In Intelligence From 33% to 13% - - WASHINGTON, Feb. 3?Sec- retary of State William P. Rogers has reversed a decision to cut the State Department's Intelligence branch by approxi- mately a third, department of- ficials said today. They said that, as moddied, the reduction would be limited briefs Secretary Rogers on glo- to approximately 13 per cent hal developments once a week and would involve a shift of and briefs the four under sec- 45 intelligence specialists from retaries and the assistant sen- a total of 300. The specialists, who are preponderantly For- eign Service career officers, will be shifted to other State Department assignments. By BENJAMIN WELLES Breda? to The New York Times States diplomatic missions over- seas and from the Central In- telligence Agency, satellite pho- tography and electronic inter- ceptions. The bureau, which is headed by Ray S. Cline, a Harvard- trained historian and former deputy director of the C.I.A., retaries in charge of geographic bureaus daily. A State Department spokes., man who confirmed that a cut of 30 per cent in the Intelli Career diplomats who have gence Bureau had been under recently retired and others with active consideration insistedthat extensive experience in al? the reversal of the decision. State Department's Bureau cef had been made solely by rank- Intelligence and Research sa;?,, ing departmental officials based that the cuts will force further on internal discussions. diminution of long-rang, polit, Other sources disclosed how-i ical and economic analysis mi ever, that reports of the favor of concentration on cur- planned cuts had attracted the rent cri$is reporting. attention of the White House, the President's Foreign Intelli- gence Advisory Board headed by Adm. George W. Merrson and fringe" areas as Scandinavia members of ? the intelligence ui favor of concentration on community. The reversal fol- the Soviet Union, China andlowed. The cuts reflect a White House order last August to reduce personnel levels through neat Government by 5 per cent. They predicted diminished littehtion in the future to Latin America, Africa and such other crisis areas. The chief function of the in- telligence and research bureau, these sources said, is to collate and analyze for the Secretary The State Department, with an over-all strength of 23,500? ha..lf American citizens and half foreign nationals ? is trying of State and his senior policy- Making officials information from all sources hearing on foreign political and economic to limit cuts overseas and make 'developments. The sources in- the bulk of the planned re- 4lude reports from 120 Unitedductions here. ? STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04. :MAlleP80-01601 See Also IFu ge, Verb Transitive THE FOREIGN AFFAIRS FUDGE FACTORY. By John Franklin Campbell. Basic Books. 298 pp. $6.95. AAIION EGAL Mr. Segal is associate professor of govern- ment at Cornell University. We are living through the end of the American Empire. It is a painful process, still far from complete, that drastically alters the relationships between this coun- try and the rest of the world. We are used to calling, the shots. We have in- herited from the days when we were indisputably on top a grotesque machine for making foreign policy that Joseph ? Kraft wittily dubbed "the foreign affairs fudge factory." The late. John Franklin Campbell was a product of that fudge factory and one of its most intelligent critics. He had a vision of a world in which the United States was neither dominant nor isolated, and in which its foreign policy was sub- ject to rational control and direction. A graduate of Harvard and Berkeley, he I entered the U.S. Foreign Service in the halcyon Kennedy days when the United States still had a sense of world mission. His rapid career rise contradicted the nor- mal pattern of a -diplomatic corps that has many of the symptoms of a geron- tocracy. He served as an assistant to Under Secretary of State George Ball, and then had an assignment as U.S. con- sul general in Asmara, Ethiopia. His superiors had him marked out for still better things and choice Washington posts were offered to him. John Campbell was a man of exuber- ant humor. He took a temporary leave 'of absence from the State Department to write. this book and to edit?the new and lively anti-Establishment quarterly, For- eign Policy. His journalistic talents as well as his comic sense found their ap- propriate exercise in exploding the porn- posities of the bureaucracy in which he had served his apprenticeship. Yet he fully intended before his unexpected death at 31 to return to the State De- partment and a diplomatic career. Un- like many of his contemporaries who abandoned liberalism and its ideals of public service in disillusion, John Camp- bell was committed to gradualism and to working within the system. His mind focused on the machinery and how to reform it, and he has left 'us a sturdy and useful book on the subject.. one from the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy to the organization experts, bereft of friends in Congress, and with a budget inadequate for its mission, the State De- f?artment fights to get an occasional word in edgewise on foreign policy matters. Outweighed by the CIA, the Pentagon, the Defense Department, the National Security Council, and thirty other agen- cies of the federal government who have permanent staff overseas, it has reacted to its loss of political importance with.a singular bureaucratic stunt: it has enor- mously expanded its staff. The result is an organization that must be cut in half if it is ever to function effectively. As an insider, at once committed and detached, Campbell analyzes the evolu- tion of the foreign policy-making ma- chinery during the growth of the United States as a global superpower. He traces the effects of numerous commissions, studies, reforms, and Presidents which amount to the steady erosion of the power and authority of the State De- partment, and the substitution of Presi- dential policy making through the White House entourage; the last Secretary of State who had the ear of a President was John Foster Dulles. One result is an over- emphasis on military and defense con- siderations, which are in any case more than adequately represented in the Na- tional Security Council and other White House channels. Indeed, the State Department was never in the bidding for control of the new instruments of foreign policy: in. Campbell's terms, the economic bureau- cracies and the intelligence and prop- 7 aganda complexes. The CIA and theV Defense Department, to name only two of the agencies involved, have a global intelligence apparatus which dwarfs that of State and which is in no way respon- sible to U.S. ambassadors. The Treasury,. Commerce and Agriculture Departments have taken international economic policy away from State. Even the less glamorous task of exporting the. American ,image has been captured by the United States Information Agency. In spite of its being out of a job the State Departmcnt carries on its personnel numbers game, and uses its resources chiefly in make-work. House, physically and spiritual ; abolish USIA and turn over U.S. cultural pro- grams overseas as well as the Peace Corps to quasi-independent agencies. The competing intelligence networks would also be made subject to State Department control and direction, and the National Security Council be confined to narrow military issues. Foreign economic policy would be coordinated in a sub-depart- ment of State. It is odd that so astute an observer should propose to renovate State through executive action while bypassing Con- gress, and fail to discuss the question of the caliber of the Secretary of State compared to that of other Presidential appointees. Unable to gain Congressional or popular support, State is in fact in- capable of reforming itself and unwilling to allow others to do the job. At bottom, then, this thoughtful, sensible book tells us how to tinker with the machinery but leaves aside the question of where the vessel should be headed. The foreign affairs fudge factory remains intact be- cause we are not yet ready to abandon the global remnants of the American Empire in favor of new relationships. Probably that policy will have to change before we can expect the house that it built to fall to the ground.' On the other hand, the example of the Byzantine Em- pire shows that the trappings of power, including the hordes of redundant civil - servants, often outlive the imperial sub- stance. When the substance itself is fudge, who can say how long the trap- pings can carry on with their fudging of foreign affairs? Campbell's response to these con- ditions was a program to resuscitate the State Department and make it once more an important instrument of foreign policy. He proposed a leaner department that would control a single U.S. foreign It is clear that the State Depart- affairs budget, with all overseas repre- ment has lostippirArAfpzen cifFeigri;roilipaseie2lovriff3f02F 4eITALtR131b800601R001400130001-5 Despised by fnewiruris s as a aven or wan ed o move it c oser to the ite incompetent snobs, raked over by every- . _ _ J J INE Approved For ReleaseNTOTER.21a8P80-01601 vs Zart,103 ? WASHINGTON. what sort of propaganda about the United States are the Commie ratf inks of the Krem- lin dishing out these days to the Rus- sian people? Perhaps only Richard Helms and Harry Schwartz know in detail, but it has lately been stated in Moscow by Pravda, the Commu- nist party newspaper, that "the well- known American journalist Art Buch- wald" turns out his satirical columns .about the Nixon Administration un- der instructions from the Federal Government, "as a deliberate safety valve to reduce the impact of such THOMAS MEEHAN is a frequent contributor to The New Yorker and to this magazine. -------..------...---;-- contemporary American civilization stuffs it into his shirt pocket. That developments as Negro and student appears three times a week in some riots." In short, Pravda was suggest- is the extent of his research oper- 500 newspapers (400 in the United ing that I3uchwald is in the pay of ation. Indeed, his staff consists en- States - and another 100 in foreign the White House, which should cer- tirely of Miss Collenberg, an attrac- countries), Buchwald today is by far tainly come as news to President tive, somewhat Junoesque ash-blonde the country's best known and finan- Nixon, who is known to have been of 27 who is originally from New cially most successful writer of hu- exceedingly annoyed by several of Orleans and is a graduate of Pem- mor. So, what is this 5 - foot - 8, be- the satirically barbed columns that broke College. spectacled, somewhat plumpish, cigar- Buchwald has written about him. At about a quarter to 10 on this smoking agent of the C.I.A. really Says Buchwald of the charge that like? particular Friday, Miss Collenberg he's secretly on the Government pay- roll, "True-1'm an agent of the C.I.A. T,-7 And every third word in my columns L'...1,T 9:30 A.M. on a recent Friday is part of a coded message to one of morning, Buchwald ambled into his my fellow agents in Moscow." , office, which is Suite 1311 on the Oddly enough, Buchwald's columns 13th floor of a new office building ' are often reprinted in Russian at 1750 Pennsylvania Avenue, not newspapers, although they're usually far from the White House, and con- run there not as comic flights of sists of a small outer reception room, fancy about Nixon & Co. but as where his secretary has her desk, straight news dispatches from Wash- and a book-lined inner room, where ington. A while ago, for instance, he does his writing. (Pravda notwith- Buchwald wrote a column in which standing, Buchwald has yet to be he revealed that a top-secret Govern- invited to the White House, and his ment study, the Dawk Report, had chances of getting an invitation in recommended that the State Depart- the near future don't look terribly ment be shut down because its duties j had been taken over by "the Defense i Department, the C.I.A. and Henry Kissinger," and Russian readers were presented with this as the Buchwald, of course, gets no money for his ceApprClrf edtfOiruRetea who print them without bothering to ask his permission, but high Wash- Mitrocapal aza 7211maaiit. By THOMAS MEEHAN STATINTL ington officials have nonetheless ton Post and The New York Times, complained to him about the fact and so getting through The Wall that his columns are being used by Street Journal completed his morning the Soviets as anti-American propa- stint of catching up with the news. ganda. "I have a two-word answer unlike most Washington-based jour- to White House types wno come to nalists, Buchwald does no leg work me with that complaint," says Buch- to gather material for his column. wald with a smile, "and my answer "I never talk to anybody. Facts just is, 'Stop them.'" get in my way," says Buchwald. So, he instead gets just about all of his That Pravda should single out ideas for columns from reading news- toolBuchwald for special mention as a papers, or from scanning such of the White House is indicative zines as Newsweek and Time, or maga- of how enormously famous Buchwald from watching TV news programs. has become both in the United As he .goes through newspapers and States and abroad during the last magazines, he frequently clips a story several years. Indeed, as hisi syn- that he senses might be a taking-off dicated column of ' mild - mannered point for one of his columns and he satire on politics, domestic goings- then either places the clipping in a on, and assorted other aspects of ? ? ? ? file folder or more often simply trooped into Buchwald's, inner office ?the door to which, even when he is writing his column, is. never closed? and placed a stack of some 20 letters, the morning mail, before him. Buch- wald receives an . enormous amount of mail from his millions of readers, and he 'frankly finds most of it a time-consuming pain in the neck to answer. "I could be a son-of-a-bitch and not answer reader mail, but I somehow can't quite bring myself to do it," says Buchwald, and so he spends about half of each of his working days in the office answering 1,etters from readers. People often good.) Buchwald smilingly greeted send Buchwald amateur manuscripts, his secretary, Islfargi Collenberg, and most of which are painfully lame then roamed inside to his desk to attempts at humor, and to the writ- read The Wall Street Journal. At ers of these he has contrived a pair truth.home, in his minimansion in ?the of standard replies: either "Your fashionable Wesley Heights section sample of humor was magnificent? . Z01:001P4I'llokrteldb tit#004114 agriniier he'd already seen The Washing- than anything I've ever read by Rus-cont irmeci . NEW XORK TIMES Approved For Release 2001)4110419n1A-RDIgEWM-pq ROO U.S.DiplomatsinWetnam Said to Face Moral issue . By BENJAMIN WELLES Special to The New York Times ? WASHINGTON, Dec. 29?As- signments to Vietnam?par- ticularly to the pacification -when we're given thel facts," a Pentagon spokesman said, "we always look into .... The article . Says that the sonne or ie nam, Vietnam experience has "sharp- jority enjoy the experience ened the generation gap" be_ tween young and older diplo- once they go." mats. The younger officers, it Living conditions often are says, often returned disillu- pleasant and, the article says, they find "the country and sioned with what they regard as deliberate suppression by especially the women fascinat- , senior officers of criticism eith- \ er of the Vietnamese authori- V. hen these officers are as- ties or of the United States signed elsewhere, it states, "the military return to a more traditional The political section of the Foreign Service assignment is atrocity charges." huge United States Embassy in often letdown." programs there?have caused I The magazine article is siane Saigon is especially subject to many young career diplomats! with the name "John Cray- ,e'riticism on these grounds, the to face a serious "moral dilem-I more," a pseudonym, the jour-'article asserts. ma," according to an article in! nal explains, for a former dip- "Almost all foreign service the December issue of the For-I lomat who served in Vietnam officers who served in the paci- and whose primary reason for fication programs and most jun. subsequently resigning from the ior members of the embassy Foreign Service was "disagree- staff itself give examples of men,: with United States policy how their reporting was distort- a a eign Service Journal. The critical question, the ar- ticle says, is how far they should go in exposing incidents on Efiutheast Asia." ed and suppressed in Saigon "which they knew to be. ClAgressional and diplomatic in order that the embassy soueces have identified the au- might be consistent with the wrong." thor as John. D. Marks, who ,prevailing 'line' in dispatches . One Foreign Service officer, served in the pacification pro- to Washington," the writer de- now back from Vietnam and gram in Vietnam from 1966 to dares. on his way to another overseas 1968 and later resigned to be- Combat Experience .., . assignment, is reported by the come a foreign policy consult- ?Statistics they knew to be ' article to possess a file of ant to Congress. Mr. Marks has "documented atrocities, includ- confirmed his authorship. !stantly being quoted by the merely worthless were con- ing photographs." The Foreign Service Journal 1 'd f the United States "He has written extensive has a circulation of approxi -I as an indication that progress reports on these apparent war mately 10,000 copies through: was being made in Vietnam," crimes he investigated in Viet- out the executive branch and in it says. Viet- nam," the article states. "As . . Congress. It is published month- Other points made in the far as he knows, no action has ever been taken to punish the ,ly by the American Foreign article included these: CWhile there was no clear guilty," it says. ? The article, which is entitled ? "Vietnamization of the Foreign Service," goes on to say that the owner of the file will not.combat operations and even make his information publi0 The article notes that nearly I ; because he is a "supporter of 3 million Americans have nowcalled in air strikes or artil- Ilery fire on enemy positions; the President's Vietnam policy served in Vietnam, including I qThe State Department de- and fears the effect on that 'career diplomats, or policy of additional war crime' approxi- mately 20 per cent of the For- eign cided during President Lyndon controversy." Service. B. Johnson's second term that He is also "aware of the . Approximately 350 ? the it must contribute 150 diplo- have on . his career negative result disclosure would .great majority of them junior mats to the approximately the earticle states. prospects,", ? .officers?have been assigned to the pacification program. 1,000 United States personnel Press Reports Cited known as Civil Operations and7Lmil1tary as well as aid, in- State Department sources Revolutionary Development telligence and other civilians? said that the alleged atrocities' Support, or CORDS. They have in the CORDS program. Its poi- were investigated by the de. functioned as advisers to theicy of making duty in the pac- . South Vietnamese civilian and partment and were also re ification program mandatory military administration ? ?try- ported in the United States for junior officers split the press on Jan. 12, 1970. They jag, the article says, to make are said to have concerned the the Government of South Viet- Foreign Service until it was South Korean "Tiger" Division, nam "a viable force in the scrapped last August. Now as one of two South Korean infan- countryside." the United States presence In try divisions serving in Viet- Generation Gap 'Sharpened' Vietnam is reduced, only vol- unteers who have previously served in at least one other diplomatic post are being sent. CA few Foreign Service offi- Service Association, a voluntary State Department policy, most group comprising approximate- Foreign Service officers in the ly 8,000 active and retired field were expected i to bear Foreign Service personnel. arms. Many participated n nam, and not United States.Service in Vietnam, the ar- A State Department spokes- forces. ticle says, is a unique experiman - *ence. In no other country have "cl that "implications. perhaps 20 per cent of the cers have resigned as a result the article that United States forces were involved or that foreign service officers experi- mented with soft drugs, but of disagreement with the Viet- there was a cover-up by the - State Department are just plain "that is the case in Vietnam," nam war, but "they are def and misleading."it asserts. it e 'nitelv the exception and in "And in no other A Pentagon spokesman said country," each known case they have that officers in its Southeast adds, "do foreign service offi- cers have their own personal been very junior officers." Asian section had not been , able to obtain ti ert rdains AD PrOVagdu tri , ti i0e01:604 R001400130001-5 of the Foreign Service Journal Ott -1-41#11Ww 1/6141Foreign Service per- andnade-launcher before they go. thus could not comment. STATI NTL W.LSHINGTOLE F0311 Approved For Release 2001i053R4: Ek-Rg12,810411k01R Murrey. Murder A Double Setback at State SECRETARY OF STATE ceives what attention in the the State Department, that's William P. Rogers at- White House pecking order, his prerogative. Every Presi- or by whether the Foreign dent has his own ideas tempted at year's end to lift s ervicehappens to be happy about how he wants to oper- the crumpled morale of the or glum?. The blunt answer ate; that's his ? choice." Foreign Service out of a is that in many respects it What is lost in this proc- matters little or not at all in ess, others protest, is not slough of gloom with a burst national dimensions. What ? only morale but the full of holiday praise. m If effusive words alone does 'atter to the nation is range of expertise and hal- whether its resources in di- ance that can be brought to could suffice, the Secretary, plomacy, as in other fields, bear on a given interna- who is a professional opti- tional problem, uncolored are used fully and wisely. mist, would have accom- by the political-cen tered plished a small miracle. But FROM their own view. focus of the White House. to diplomats to specialize in Point, which is not wholly It is the prerogative of the soft verbiage to cloak hard impartial, a very large num- White House to accept or re- ject this advice, it is argued; realities, the warm corn. ber of the most experienced what is important is that the menclation of the Foreign professionals in the Amen- President have access to it. Service for "outstanding can Foreign Service deplore Dr. Kissinger maintains that work" carried about as what they regard as the his is precisely what is pro- much comfort as a diplo- wholly inadezuate use being vided for in his elaborate matic communique express. made of their talents. National Security Council Ing "agreement in princi- This past year brought a system. But the realty, in- siders protest, is that the plc." ? double blow. The State De- most important policy deci- This has been "a good partment long had been sions never enter that elabo- year in terms of foreign af- eclipsed in this administra- rate mechanism. fairs" said Rogers on Thurs- tionby the Kissinger opera- With a critical election on in the White House;' year ahead, the process of day; brimming with enthusi- policy making is shrinking suddenly State was n asm over his listing of "very with increasing secretive- su bst antial accomplish- empted from another, unex- ness into the confines of the ments." But for members of pected direction?the Treas- White House. What is emerg- the American Foreign Serv- ury Department, where free- ing is soaring optimism in . place of realities about the wheeling Secretary John B. Ice, it has been indeed been outside world. This, too, is a poor year. Connally suddenly vaulted not without precedent in an The main body of profes- into a dominant position election year. The risk ional American diplomats across the economic-foreign conies, as the Johnson ad- atpolicy horizon. ministration discovered, State was frozen out of when the optimists let them- most high strategy-making State found itself not only selves be engulfed by their In 1971, they ruefully con- operating on the fringes of own product. high strategy, but perform- eede. Ing what one chagrined dip- Even Rogers himself re- lomat called a "sweeper's ceiVed only the most fleet- role": sweeping up and big mention in the White trying to piece together the House citations of the year's shards of allies' egos shat- foreign policy accomplish- tered by the shock of the ad- rnents, in comparison to the ministration's bold ventures great pre-eminence accorded in China and in interna- to -presidential national se- tional monetary and trade curity adviser Henry A. Kis- policy. singer. Rogers even ran a A minority inside the tention on the White House distant third in personal at- State Department responds, accounting to the space and as one expressed it, "So prominence given to presi- what? What is so bad dential counsellor Robert If. about being a 'service' or- Finch's "mission to six na- ports in Latin America." ganization? If the President Is the conduct or state of wants to centralize all poli- AreTle,lryic:rfifeetfef rw9Yer5 Pihrst?kOltigi tiet0/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 FOREIGN SERVICE JOURNAL ' Approved For Release 2001/08VO4NMAIMIDP80-01601R0 "CORDS comes home to Washington, Pacification has just begun, Still so many hearts and minds to be won." --from "Songs to Alienate Hearts and Minds By" EARLY three million Americans have now served in Vietnam. Of these, about 600 have been Foreign Service officers. Thus, roughly .20 percent of the Foreign Service has been exposed to many of the stimuli which have turned "nice" kids from Middle- America into peace freaks, hawks, junkies, and even assassins. For the FSOs, however, the ex- perience generally has not had the radicalizing effect that it has had on many of the military men. The FSOs tended to be older and less malleable than the American sol- diers in Vietnam, and their personal thought processes were more subtle and less striking than those of the GIs. Some FSOs were essentially untouched by the whole experience, reacting no differently than if they had been in Paris or Rome. But for most, and especially the young, Viet- nam meant change. It meant a violent breaking away from the tra- ditional diplomatic life and an ex- posure to the realities of war. About 350 FSOs have been as- signed to the Pacification program (CORDS). They functioned as ad- visors to the Vietnamese civilian and military administration in an effort to makArEttieednireat Rl Vietnam a viabrerforce in the coun- tryside. Few, if any, had any back- STATINTL _Viistrtamization the ftrgn Serviice JOHN CLAYMORE John Claymore is the pseudonym of a former FSO who served in Vietnam. The primary reason for his resignation from the State De- partment was disagreement with US policy on Southeast Asia. He is not using his real. name because of a limitation on publishing in his current job, but he would be glad , to correspond or meet with any- one interested in discussing his article. ground for this assignment; yet most have acquitted themselves well, within the context of the programs they were working in. Nevertheless, FSOs have been affected by the same pressures that have ?been widely reported in rela- tion to the military. Many served in proto-combat roles with command responsibility. While not participants, they re- ceived reports of war crimes and what often seemed like the unneces- sary loss of human life. Some were faced with the moral dilemma of how far they should go in exposing incidents which they knew to be wrong. easiVOYA513/Nre.ViAtikg[S4-. 01 as ington possess s a documented atrocities including photographs. He has written exten- - sive reports on these apparent war crimes he investigated in Vietnam. As far as he knows, no action has ever been taken to punish the guilty. Because he is a supporter of the President's Vietnam policy, and ? because he fears the effect on that policy of additional war crime con- troversy, he has not chosen to make his information public. He also is undoubtedly aware of the negative. result disclosure would have on his career prospects. His example is extreme, but it points up the fundamental proposi- tion that serving in Vietnam is not like serving elsewhere. With respect to no other country could it be said that perhaps 20 . percent of the FSOs had experi- mented with soft drugs, but that is the case in Vietnam. And in no other country do FSOs have their own personal automatic weapons and receive training in how to fire a grenade launcher before they go. Vietnam is different. VIETNAM has undoubtedly sharp- ened the generation gap between young and old FSOs. In some of the oworgo I.A)1 swrio6ttioo nva tieelty. nam. Almost all return with a Cont e v Approved For Release 20ot/6/3/04trCIA:RDPER, Approved For Release 2001/03/04 CIA-141j080 STATINTL Approved For ReleaseP2004483/045-)C114cRDP81141601R001 lit NOV. 1911 The Foreign Affair Fudge Factor bornly pursued an irrational and immoral policy in Viet- nam; and how they could have haggled for 10 weeks over the shape of the Paris negotiating table?and then have negotiat- ed on a casual once-a-week ba- sis for three years while hun- dreds of Americans and thou- sands of Vietnamese were dy- eri McNamara and us en a- whether such an irreverent ex- their computers, slide rules just have) arid coneicler gon "whiz kids" who, with all I and super-techniques,. ?miscal pletive might at least have culatecl the cost of the war by discouraged the muddy mean- inglessness - $16-billion in 1985 and 1966. of the following When decision-makers tolerate .errors of that enormity, the budget-making process that concerns Mr. Campbell shrinks. Philip Til. Stern is the author to peripheral importance. Why did the State Depart- By John FrankUn Campbell. of "The Oppenheimer Case; 292 pp. New York: Security on Trial." ment bureaucracy go along ; Basic Books. $6.95. , ? - . with our immoral war policy? . .One learns less about that By PHILIP M. STERN the next. ing between one meeting and question from Mr. Campbell's ., Why the self-proclaime'd book than from a Time maga- Leader of the Free World has zine report of "The Rules of embraced such repressive au- the Bureaucratic Game," as re- counted by two ex-Pentagon tocrats as Franco, Diem, KY, officials who participated in Thieu, Chiang, Stroessner and the Pentagon Papers study: Papadopolous while self - right- Morton Halperin, one of the eously (if not childishly with- h analysts, and Leslie Gelb, the holding recognition from Cas- study's director. Rule One: governs one-fifth of the world's "You don't resign, you don't tro and, until recently Mao (wild population). e carry your case to the public." Gelb observes that while Why the SALT-talk minuet George Ball appear ? to have has been so maddeninlys- I ew, "felt very strongly" about the , dealing, as it does, with an war; he "didn't take the next arms race that could annihi- step" (of resigning 'publicly) late us all. , "even though his departure in itself would have had an enor- mous impact." (Think of the reverberations if the doubt? torn Robert McNamara had re- signed with .a blast!) Rule Three says, "Argue tc convince, not to be candid.'' In pursuance of this rule, Hat- are tempted to conclude that . perin comments, many of th( this is an earnest study of mat- of the State Department: Obi- ters of the most massive ir- ously, the Pentagon. the C.I.A. relevance?irrelevant, at least, .to the foreign-policy questions and, more important, Congress and the White House figure of any real consequence. significantly in major decision- Take, for example, the au- k? a But the State Depart- 'Initially, this book arous- es, considerable expectations. Dealing with the State Depart- ment and its organizational foibles,, it comes extravagantly recommended by such foreign- policy luminaries as George Kennan, George Ball and John Kenneth Galbraith. And it be- gins auspiciously with some graphic examples of bureau- cratic foolishness df the kind that impelled columnist Joseph Kraft to christen the Depart- ment a "fudge factory"; exam- ples of the kind that could Why the Alliance for Prog- ress. never became more than only have come from a State a diffidently supported United Department insider?as John: States slogan?and why, in- Franklin Campbell was for nine .deed, the United States weighs years (he is now on leave, and in so consistently on the side is managing editor of Foreign of the elitists .and against the Policy). One's hopes rise. Tune populists around the world. in 272 pages later, and you It would be unfair to lay all f the abovesolely at the door nor's first three areas of sug- e? merit rarely inveighed force- Department reform: Yes, the State honest policy. fully (and almost never effec- Department is an obese bu- But Rule Two is the most tively) against Such foreign- reaucracy that would probably nsicuous: "If you disagree i policy nonsense and the expla- i Improve if drastically thinned; with the bureaucracy's shared nation does not lie in the De- yes, the Department should be mages, you must bide it, or partment's size, location or i charged with making an over- no one will take you serious- budget processes. Yet Mr. all foreign policy budget for ly." That describes the root Campbell is far more con- all United States agencies; yes, it might be better if the high cerned with Organizational problem: institetional incest, State Department meetings are lines and boxesnand? manage- command of a -Streamlined (as the Pentagon merit techniques than with endless but State Department moved back official memoranda unveiled is he Pentagon Papers were not believed even by those whc wrote them. Under such ground rules, even the best-organized State Department would be hard-pressed to produce an -s, Papers suggest) the delibera? .to its historic offices next to l ee' ee? -tors almost never question ba the White House, so as to have ' Greece and the Alliance for sic premises. From my owr While the ? percentage of Ivy more influence there. That the Progress rate only one-word brief tenure at State, I car Leaguers has declined from Department's size, Washington mentions; but you'll find ex-. testify to the utter inconeeiv 50- to 25 per cent since the address and budget powers are tensive discussions ?of the re- ability of anyone ever, evei twenties, three quarters of the shaking - awake a Departinen; F.S.O.'s still come from the utterly peripheral . to such cruitmeat and deployment of questions as: - State Department personnel, meeting with a loud [choose East and West Coasts. (Where .How a group of supposedly and about the virtues of "pro- your own 'expletive]. If that does that leave the South and ? .intelligent and moral - men gram budgeting." Mr. Camp- sounds frivolous, just open the Midwest?) And as recently could have Xevised and stub . bell casts admiring glances at Pentagon Papers at random (as as 1961, out of 3,700 F.S.0.1s, ,7:6,110a Department memorandum: "In general the working group isagreed that our aim should be to maintain present signal strength and level of harass- ment, showing no 'signs of less- ening of .determination but also avoiding actions that would tend to prejudge the basic de- cision." But the discussions within State are comfortably closed; the policy-makers are spared any challenge by the sharpest of _ outside critics. Secrecy shields them from being held publicly responsible for th'e immoral and perhaps illegal policies they devise under "Top Seder stamps. But the question of secrecy and the outrageous over-classification of documents rate no mention in Mr. Campbell's book. .Indeed, if anything, Mr. Campbell seems to want for- eign Policy-making to be more, - rather than less, of a closed, circle, inner-club affair:. Every- one other than State Depart- ment careerists of long stand- ing gets a fishy stare. The au- thor bemoans, for example, the dilution of the small and ex- clusive cadre of Foreign Serv- -- ice Officers (F.S.O.'s) by the infusion, in the fifties, of sev- eral thousand civil servants who did not wear the F.S.O. Old School Tie; he dismisses ? the Peace Corps program and its young volunteers as satis- fying more a domestic political than a foreign policy need. But 'above all, Mr. Campbell wishes that politically appointed off'- dais, especially on the White House staff, would keep their amateurish -hands out of for- eign policy-making. ' Another question: How rep- resentative of the American public are the career officers to whom Mr. Campbell would entrust out _ foreign policy? pproved For RePedwer2GOITEP3/0r4R?.1CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 0040. . FOREIGN AP2AIRS Approv,rdh..3.1, 140 .A. IT, I GN I) 0 L G Y ? STATiNTL ? By Giiii4.1es W. Yost . . V.7-s1HER.E arc 'many different- ways of conducting a govern- .],' merit. In the United States the executive authority is both ' More formally centralized in the President and more sharply separated from the legislature than in most democracies. This is particularly true of the conduct of foreign, affairs, where the authority of the President has been seriously challenged .. only in those rare instances, such as the Versailles Treaty or the Vietnam war, when he seems to be grossly ignoring or overrid-? ing the opinions both. of the Congress and of the public.? In general, he has been free to conduct foi:eign affairs more or less as he chooses, to use traditional instruments, to set up new ones or to carry on diplomacy..from his Own hip pocket. There. .is little use arguinb. whether or not he has the constitutional right to do SO. AS our government is organized, he, has both. the re- sponsibility and the power. Critics in or out of the Congress can make 'things .difficult for him, but they can neither conduct for- eign affairs themselves nor prevent him from doing so. Of course; -a wise President will consult the Congress closely, in fact as well . as in form, on matters of major import, which recent Presidents ? ' have often foolishly failed to do. Our doncern here, .however, is with the instruments which Presidents use for the conduct of foreign affairs. Up until the .19305 the instrument W2.s almost always the traditional one, the Secretary and Department of State, except in those not infre- quent cases where a strong President,' such as Theodore Roose- velt and Woodrow Wilson, Chose to carry on a particular exer- cise in diplomacy himself, sometimes with the help of a personal adviser or. emissary. Nevertheless, as late as 1931, President Hoover,- though . not himself inexperienced, in foreign affairs, relied. on. Secretary Stimson .to deal, in so far as the United States was prepared. to deal, with the Manchurian crises. Franklin D. Roosevelt, however, just at the moment when the rise to power of ambitious dictators in both Europe and. Asia made inevitable much deeper AllieriCall involvement in foreign. affairs, named as Secretary of State, almost entirely for domestic political reasons, an eminent Senator, Cordell I-Iu1.1,- who had -unhappily neither the taste nor 'the talent for the conduct of foreign affairs. Nevertheless, .again for domestic political rea- - sons, he remained in office for nearly 12 years, longer than any previous Secretary of State. This did not seriously disturb FDR, who was contemptuous of the diplomatic establishment and overestimated his own capacity-to direct domestic and for- eign, and later military, affairs personally and, simultaneously. - *Even Roosevelt, however, while bypassing 'Hull as much as he 'could, at first placed his own men, on whom he did to some ex- tent rely, inside the State Department itself?Welles and later Stettinius as Under'. Secretary, Molcy and. Berle as. Assistant Secretaries, and Bullitt a.nd. KuJie ,..as hq s hs / - -1 APPRAVRCL,WRR.PrINALUAlil !'_y IR11?0)-114 11 JO 71 ... a 0130001-5 contintlea Approved For ReleaseM93149flociA-RDP80-01601R 0.11 . , .From limb to time the. question is ask-cd why liewspapers -never seem to get anything right and one answer, of course, is that. we try, but that we arc only human. Another answer, however?and better that in the complex and delicate in- terworkings of the press and the government it takes at least a little cooperation by the government ill the public is to get -aversion of events which can 1.1roperly be said to he. right. As a case in point, we -would like, strictly For Your Information, to walk you through a brief case history involving a news story on Page One of The Washington Post, on Sept. 3, and a subsequent article on this page on Sept. 8. both of which asserted that the Federal Pureau of investigation had employed lie detector (polyk-sraph) tests in an investigation of State De- parly:-;ent employees. The original story said three or four officials were interrogated in this fashion as part of ..a government-wide inquiry into a heal:. of .classified Mei:illation having to do with the Ameri- CiM position kin the SALT negotiations, Today, in the letters space on the opposite page, FBI Director Hoover states categorically that both stories were -rtotally and completely untrue" and _that "at 310 time did the- 1'13I use polygraphs, as allegod, in its investigation." Ile takes us sharply to task for "this -inept handling of information." Well, we. have looked into the matter and h. is clear that. we were wrong about the FBI's use or hic, detectors. We are pleased to have this -oppor- tunity to express our regrets to Mr. Hoover and to set the record straight. But we are not prepared to leave it at that, if only because the implication of Mr. Hoover's sweeping denial ("totally and com? pletely untrue") is that the original story was en- tirely wrong----that no polygraphs in fact -were used upon ,.-tt.ate Department employees and this is clearly not the case. Nor is it quite so certain whose handling of this information was "inept." The facts arc, from nfl we can gather, that polygraph jests were administered to State :Department officials by employees, and with equipment belonging to an V outside agency?presumably the Central intelli- gence Agency which has these instruments avail- r (1. o STATI NTL able for regular use in security checks of its own personnel. ? \ _ In other words, we had the -Wrong agency, which is an important error and one we would have been happy to correct immediately, before it had been compounded in the 'subsequent article on Sept. 8, if somebody in the 'government had chosen to speak up. But the FPI was silent until Mr. Hoover's letter arrived 1.0 days later, and Secretary of State Rogers,. who was asked about the story at a press conference' on Sept. 3 in -a half-dozen different ways, adroitly avoided a yes-br-no answer every time. 'That is to say, he did not confirm the role of the. Fill', but neither elid Ile deny it; he simply refused to discuss meth,ods,-,thile upholding the utility of lie-detector test S in-establishing, probable innocence, if not prob- able guilt. And that remains the State Department's position, even in the face of Mr. Hoover's denial.. No Clarification, no confirmation, no.-comment-- despite the fact that the original story in. The Post had been chocked with the State Department and the role of the FBI had been confirmed by an offi- cial spokesman on those familiar anonymous, not- for-attribution terms which government officials resort to when they don't want to take responsibility publicly for what they say, and which newspaper reporters yield to when there is no other way to attribute assertions of far.kt. The result or this protracted flim.-11;kin was, first. of all, to leave the Justice Department and the FBI falsely accused of administering lie detectors to: officials of another agency, and then, with 1`.1r. Hoover's denial, to leak.'e the impression that no polygraphs were used at all, and you have to ask yourself what public interest is served by having tins sort of misinformation circulating around, gath- ering credence. It is not an uncommon practice, of course, for the government, when it is confronted in print with an embarrassing and not altogether accurate news story, to clam up completely rather than help straighten ;out inaccuracies-- especially when clarification risks confirmation of that part of the story which is accurate. hut ii is not a practice that does much to further public knowledge. And. still less does it help the newspapers get things right. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 -.1b7 ? 1/AIINIL Approved For Release 2001/03704 i)tIA-RDP80-01601 : Fq (.24 '1 7' 1' ? - Jrai V er rrN (';i)?3,i) ? -11 0 (r\ (" J:} f ; ; -6? I 1). f Cs, ( L't 1/4 W .t 1/4, e,w , My attention has been called to an article entitled "FBI Uses ?Li.e Test3 in Probe of Lealcs. at State" by Murray Marck,r in the September 3, 1971, issue of true l'.:?ashington Post and a column, "Fxtracting the Truth: Tea Leaves or Polygraph Tests?'? by Alan. Barth on September 7, 1971. Both' of these ROMS .eatecorically assert. that the-TPA used .polygraphs during an Investigation of al: leged "leaks" of confidential information at the Departutent or State. These statements 1%7' Messrs. Marder and Earth that the FBI used polygrc.pbs .in this investigation are totally and comp-Wtely un- true.. For the information of your readers, the, Dopartmerat of Justice on July 30, 1971, in- . qructed the FBI to conduct a complete in- vestigation, which entailed rOfilc: interviews at the Department 'of State, with regard to ,alleged unauthori-Led disclosure of classified information as a potential violation of the espionage laws. We?innuediately instituted Ofl i51vestition,141 complisnce with thej)c- ? partment of Justice's instructions, However,? " at no time did the FBI use polygraphs, as al- leged, in its investigation. Surely, it is. in the interest of responsible journalism that the basic facts be accurately ,and. honestly reported. 'I.'his inept handlin-,!, of information betrays the sincere desire of . your readers for a factual knowledge of the ? news of the clay. ?. ? .T. EDGAR noovER, DIrcc_tor, rbeln-al 3*:,or.utu or Invc7,t;gation. WaShirigt011, 7.1c: American Polygaph itIoll takes silong exception to both the tone and content of the article by Alan Barth on. the editorhl page of titli.e* Post On September 7. We are disappointed that a paper Of the stature of The Post saw fit to dignify with publication the compendium of half truths, untruths, and rather sophomoric sarcasm rePrest'uted by Mr. Barth's -article. We pre perhaps naive, knowing that alto Post has never been a believer in the polygraph but we assert our profound eonvietion that you should require factual accuracy, even from Nvriteis on your opinion pages. Mr. Barth closes with the comment that polygraph test is so insulting:, so demeaning and. so limn-Hinting, that anyone who Vmuld! either administer nr submit to such en ex- amination is unfit to, represent the United liospite his assertion that this can be 'taken for granted, the ABA believes that such strong statements should require some modicum of proof. Exactly why a person is humiliated, demeaned, and insulted by lining given an opportunity to establish 111.; inno- cence'of serious charges is bayond our corn- prehension. Mr. Barth apparently delights in' esoterie. knowlode of variotu..? forms of ord04,,1 but conveniently ignores the fact that it was just because of such in6Ahods of soothsaying that the polygraph was developed. We of the ABA would rather stake judgment of our veracity upon the objective analysis of a set of polygraph charts than upon the swirl of tea leaves, even whoh stirred by a person of 17.if e r- ? ' such perception and sensitivity as Mr. Barth, We find ourselves troubled by vicious at- tacks such as those by Mr. "P..t.rth, because noWhere does beset forth a :-iy..;tein to re- place the. one which he is attacking, lie ap- patently is establishing a new constitutional priyilege: The right to lie with impunity. Mr. Barth and ethers of his ilk would bar effective investigation, would bar psycbs)10;-:,. ical testing, would bar polygraph examina- lions, and would, in general, bar any _means thus far developed for getting at truth in matters of controversy. it is a fact, for example, that even &Arne- 'cors et' polygraph testing concede minimal accuracy of the technique to be in the 70 per 'cent 'nage. Other scientists of impecable Icredentiels, which far exceed the:,,, (.2 thr,s, APA and certainly Mr. Earth, have es- tablished accuracy of the. techni slue in. the 90 per cent range. With all due modesty the APA believes that this may oven exceed the accuracy of journalistic repoi-ting. The recent statement by the SecqvAary of State that be believes the poly.su.aph can be effiective in clearing the innocent but not in identifying the guilty, though somewhat par- adoxical, is acceptable to the APA. We have always belie', adthat the greatest service our members can perform is that of assisting persons who are falsely'accused in establish- ing their innocence. RAYMOND j. 311. prezmcnt-v:wt, ' ANcr1c,,,nyc1yi7s1.th Associaticsi. 'Washington. Approved For Release'2001/03/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 VASE1.0C4TON Approved ForK41-001/01390:tS19)(IA- 0 for hrg-activ s ,?policies and 'depended 6T).071 (7?11 (Thr-'9 inere-isinqlv upon "-t new breed of mil- , .` ? . itary strategists and academic social scientists"; and Lyndon Johnson, 19 whose secretive, idiosyncratic ways, 117411 fondness for contrived diplomatic spec- taculars, and repeated tinkering with State's administrative in fur- ther eroded State's waning influence. Pu.blicly exhorting, the State DepOrt- meat to take charge of the foreign p01- icy-making process, Kennedy and John- 1: son tacitly denied the department the By William L. Givens backing it needed to do so, allowed rival agencies to dominate State in the bureaucratic rough-and-tumble, and ....gradually transferred power to a bur- geoning National Security Council staff in the White House. is a Wistful 11-44-- Widll "Throughout the careerist ranks ? yearning for good old days that really never were, a diplomatic Walter Mittyland in ehich an elite corps of professional 'diplomats, all looking and acting like George Kennan, have the President's car . ." The (1,YthQr_ aPC1.1110-ngrk.-?-6 taff.ejSRACIV:aLpijlar.... F' ALL THE foreign service offi- cers who have written Master Plans for reforming the State Depart- ment were laid end to end they would reach froin Washington to Harvard University, where they would find still more foreign service officers, On leave or retired, writing still more Master Plans. The-latest and by far the best writ- ten work yet in this bottomless genre Is "The Foreign Affairs Fudge Fac- tory" by John Franklin Campbell, a. ? 30-year-old former staff assistant to under secretaries of state GeorgeTall ? and Nicholas Katzenbach. Camp- bell is a first-rate journalist and an ar- ticulate advocate for the clitist----or, as he puts it, Hamillonlan?approach to the management of American foreign policy.- For all its stylistic superiority, however, "Fudge Factory" turns out to .be yet another apologia for our career diplomatic establishment and a plea to . the President to restore the careerists to their "rightful" predominance in the foreign policy process. ? ?It is a familiar refrain. Since World War II, the rationale goes, the State. Department has been badly used by 'a succession of Presidents, most notably ? Franklin Roosevelt, who .distrusted the:foreign Service ("the profession of VI it a- clear charter and the authorl',.y, it needs to carry out its responsibilities,. For State, this has been done repeat- edly; the foreign Service simply has not ntsaisdke.rable evidence that ;becTnhi. There to the. _ the real problem is not State's organiz- tion or lack of authority, but the. diplo- mats themselves-----that they would be no more competent to manage the new, streamlined State Department they dream of than they have been to run the old one, and that the authority they are pleading for would soon, like Pinocchio's five gold pieces, slip again from their grasp into the hands of pred- ators. C4.9 m ITEM: One of John Kennedy's first S ' trealini ib ng Prescribed acts upon taking office in 1961. was to A S A CONSEQUENCE of all this, issue a.letter to all American ambassa- the careerists tell us, the State De- dors, authorizing and dirtcting them to partment has lost control of the for- "oversee and coordinate all the activi- eign affairs machinerY it is supposed ties of the U.S. government" in their . to be running. its. ranks swollen by countries. Through Secretary of State military,. intelligence and economic Dean Rusk. he expressed the "active specialists, administrators, piopagand- expectation" that State would "in fact ists, and sundry other nondiplomatic take .charge of .foreign policy." Presi- , outsiders, the department is far too dent. Johnson in 1960 instituted a top- big, both in Washington and overseas, level foreign policy-making body called and its authority fragmented among the Senior Interdepartmental Croup'. other agencies, most notably the De- (SIG), installed State at the head of it,' fense Department and the CIA. ' and directed Secretau Rusk to "as- What must be clone, -Campbell sume responsibility to the full extent prescribes, is. to streamline the State permitted by law for the over-all diree- tient; coordination ,and supervision' or Department by reducing its personnel by half, reorganizing the remainder oh interdepartmental activities of the U.S. government ovorseas," in what was .? leaner 'lines, ahd trimmin-g- o-tit excegsT pointedly identified as "formal and.' layers and extraneous functions. Over- specific over-all directive authority.' seas missions should be drastically !from the President." . pared, largely at the expense of the - - ? At the same time there was el-stab: other executive agencies, and d in the State ambassa- ? lishe 1--,rtment court... dorial authority restored over all per- ' ? -?. - trY, director for each ration, who was ? sonnel in - each American embassy. State should be given the authority .1.0 assume the interdepartmental ? and responsibility to prepare a single, "direction, coordinaftn, and bupervi- unified foreign affairs budget for the sory" role at the working level and entire government, and to control gov- serve as a Washington counterpart to eminent personnel assigned overseas the ambassador in the field, Here, by all agencies. Horizontal clearances - ? pacKage, was all the authority a Presi- should be eliminated, and "each mat- ? dent can convey. But tho diplomats ter requiring action should be assigned were ever able to find the handle. to a single officer -who must hiniself ? r take responsibility for consulting (but Tougher, Envier bureaucrats from the other -agencies Slate w.s _supposed to not obtaining clearances -from) other interested parties in the decision" to be leading continued riding roughshod act. Finally, this new, lean State De- over the department's prerogatives partment should be moved back into - and driving ever deepening inroads the old .Executive Office Building, into its influence. By mid-1960, the where it was housed in its pre-World II ,r-oung Turks" of the foreign rervice, halcyon days, .and where it could be in that year's version of the Master Re- closer to the President. . form Plan; were pleading once mono Well, fine. But if it is all se clear and for tho President to "make clear that simple, why don't they quit writing he regards American -ambassadors ss- plans and do it? The careerists appar-. 1.1i,3 (their emphasis) personal repl-e- entlY feel it is the President's responsi- sentouvos to ox e6rots., en his behalf, Inlay. But, alas, the President can't ad- control over all United States govern- perfection") and turned for advice to App rovedyF Release1004/0,. John Kennedy, who quickly grew frus. trate(' with -State's lack of enthusiasm _ other duties, Al that a Presi en ? can- ? ?_ do for any executive agency is to give _ omtinued ?'US Approved For Release 29Ct11.03-1it : CIA-RDP80-01601R0 c\r,0 -.material that -was , pub- ( 4% The. investigation of this article", however; appears I- :I:rt.'. tO , be - the broadest and deepest of its kind in at least a decade. The lienne- 0 dy 'and Johnson achninis- I. c-71 ''' ? re, nations bot h sought the ,",se.U!i? ,t, ...7 Vld A .".:,1 sourceoof news leaks from ( . BY ROI1E.1;:t?T C, TOTH , . time to true but never in. ? ? as sustai'ned or exhaustive fashion .as that begun after ; ? \VAST f INGTON---- -FBI. agents have the July 23 story on the Central Intelli I some in ence questioned State and Defense de- ' the ' g- anns,talks. . - - ` ? . - Use of the polygraph, if ? partment officials?and ? reportedly true, may be a precedent, Agency - and White: House. -- in altbeugh there .were? un- seiirch of lieWE, ?leaks? in recent confinne.do reports of the ? months. .. ? ? detector's usp during- the At a press briefing i Thursday, F. i S...enhower - administra- State' D e p a r t m e n t spokesman tion. The four officials Robert J. McCloskey was asked. ,simjc,:ted" to -the test, the whether polygraph (lie detector) Ap reported, had all ac- tests had been used in the investiga- knowledge(' talking to the lion. . . . writer of the New York While confirming FBI activity at Times "article, W i I 1 i a in his and "other agencies," he declined fThecher, but all denied to say what kind of equipment was :.iiving him the informa- . used. Phone taps and the taking of Lion and were cleared by affidavits normally would be used in !ht.,: device. - ? ? such work. ? "Bceeher's story said U.S. . . . The Associated Press reported no.aitia tors had proposed that four State Department officials a mutual halt in construe- were given polygraph tests. The de- t ion of land and subma- -partraent refused to commeut on the riiie-- based missiles " and report. " ? . . curtailment, of antimissile deploymentS. The State None Diseiplincd or Reprimanded Department termed the No State DepartMent official had anicle at the time "A?most -been disciplined or reprimanded, unfortunate breach of se- mecioskey said. Of her sources said curity and violation of our -all State Department :personnel who u ?-iderstancl Mg with - the were . questioned had been cleared. Soviet Union that neither McCloskey indicated that tho. in- side. ? will discuss - these vestigetions' began earlier this year talks while they are in and were still going on but he re- progress." o - . ? -fusedlo pinpoint the number of sub- subjects Identified jects- of . stories under scrutiny as Stat e Department ? offi- well as the .-number of personnel ciii.lis-, beyond being hives,- who came under suspicion, tigated, also have been re-- i, . It was learned, however, that cently warned to be (Hs- - while several earlier stories drew erect in talking to repor- FBI intcres't--7presumably at `t"Vbite ters on particularly sensi- .House direction----the mo,31, intensive ti ye subjects, , :McCloskey investigation began six. weeks ago F,lici. he identified these as after publication by the New -York the arms talks, President Times. of an article detailing this NiY011'S forthcoming trip /com itiry's latest bargaining position to China, and temporarily -' it the secret strate4i;ic -arms limita- on tlie ...Saigon. (1clibera- tion talks with the Soviet Union. tions on a one-man pros- This: particular case may have a idential election, ? : . . pedestrian and even bizarre explan- ation. About the time of .the New York Times article, -a top-secret doc- ument, on the talks was. distributed, in.considerable confusion within the State Department, informants said. ' Yiriv:s Snit WriIer afACO'3.A1CCIld"i\ AP'14 71' It'? (ilf(-I't.t":111' :1 s 1/031 n a. r?-k'e inves .igAons e 64 tAA191D -001601R001400130001-5 should have received none. This urn- this year within the quitont'l document' crinf-aie'-'cl the cies have all lire.on judged ,No ? written caution has issued, McCloskey addcd, "But he said he has us-cd officials to use "commo,. sense" in dis- cussing such topics. 'harmful to the national interest!' be the depart-- ment and the Administra-? lion, Mc C 1 o s Is e y said. They were unrelated to publication of the Ponta- Loll Paper s, informants said.-? ? McCloskey emphaskal that no attempt was being made to restrict the access of newsmen to officials: Ile noted that the depart- ment enjoys the reputa- tion of being the most open foreign ministry in the world to the press and intends to remain so. Informants said that, in addition to State and De- fense department officials, certain CIA and. White house employes hat'. been questioned by FBI agents, They could not elaborate, STATI NTL Approved For Releasel`20090i/04111K2RDP80-01601 13 SEP 197i STATI NTL /71 - 14, , ? . -jt1I. " ?? ! I i lL711JJb fIJ/ Ii By JEFiqt.1,17,-S.r.ANTEVIL Washington, Sept. 2 (NEWS Bureau)---Justiee De-- partment agents have been questioning State Department employes about recent leaks of sensitive information to the newspapers, a State Department spokesman .diselosed Questioned - by newsmen, the McCloskey also said State De- spokesman, Robert J. McCloskey, partment officials have been told would not say how many State to use "discretion and Common Department employes - were in- sense" in talking with netsmen volved or .whether lie detectors ahout sensitive topics such as the were used, But he said no disci_ forthcoming presidential, visit to plinary action resulted. The probe; it. was lem?ned, was China. Department has a deep - Conducted by FBIage.nts. concern when information that could be prejudicial to a national Series of Probes interest in foreign policy is -pub-. McCloskey said the....e was no lished or broadcast," especially single investigation hut a series when it has been disclosed "by of them c.imed at specific news unauthorized person s," the stories. , ? spokesman said. He would not name any of the -IR; added, however, that offi- articles, but other officials said culls have not been told to limit t vo recent, incidents involved their contacts with reporters. Be. ;.eparate New York Times' sir,- ac-_!clared that the department of- -ries votiiiv from a 1. lets greater access to newsmen than any other foreign, office in the world. Approved by Rogers ? "We have cooperated with agents of the Department of Jus- 1.1ce who have undertaken inves- tigations within the Department of State," McCloskey said. He would not say who ordered the agents into the State Department but he said it was done "with the full concurrence and approval" of - Secretary of State William P. Rogers. to the White House and setting out the U.S.-negotiating posiLioii at the' disarmament talks with the Soviet Union. Another leak under investiga- tion, sources said, was Jack An- derson's nationally syndicated column quoting from a secret government report on the drunk- en ant3cs of diplomat dur- ing Vice President Spiro Ag- riew's recent visit to Kenya in Africa. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 Approved For Release P hi Abents Cluestion Personnel :Us or LiorDetoetors on Officiaft;ileported By FRED P. CRTh721A sznni New York TillICS WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 ? State Department personnel are being questioned by agents of the Federal Bureau of Investi- gation in an effort to determine how recent sensitive informa- tion leaked to the press, the department's press spokesman disclosed today. \ The spokesman, Robert J. McCloskey, said in response to reporters' questions at a press briefing, that the investigation had been prompted by concern that "stories 'harmful to the na- tional interest" were being dis- closed by unauthorized pu'Ls DTI S. ? Ho repeatedly declined to 'make a denial when asked about reports that F.B.I. agents 'were giving State Department !officials lie-detector tests in 'efforts to locate the sources oT the news leaks, Mr. McCloskey said the FALL questioning was ? being done "with the approval of the See- 'rotary of State," but be de.- dined to. say who had. ordered Powell Moore, an official in the Justice Department's infor- mation office, said that the in- iyehstigation had been ordered by that department's Internal Security Division. Mr. Moore: aicl that such action was taken whenever there was evidence of viola- tions of the Federal .security laws,and that the current questioning had extended to other departments, including the Pentagon. The Federal Bureau Of Investigation is an agency' of the Justice Department. The questioning by -F.B.I. and the reported use of lie- detectors has touched sensitive' nerves in the State Depart- ment, where, officials say, the bureau has ,not been active since it investigated charges of Communist infiltration Aiiiirra*elatukob 1..71. YORK TIMES 200VONMIRCIA-RDP80-01601 The State Department has ts own security force that is sup! Posed to hives Ligate security leaks. In recent weeks newsmen who report on the State De- partment have found that peo- ple there would not see them or answer their telephone calls. Today, at his regular noon briefing, Mr. McCloskey was asked a series of questions about the investigation and other official actions that have apparently prompted' officials to close their doors to the press. Taboos Conceded Mr. McCloskey. conceded that certain subjects had been temporarily placed off limits for discussion with the press. by State Department personnel. These include President Nixon's,' coming trip to China and thel one-man election campaign of South - Vietnam's President Nguyen Van Thieu. But Mr. McCloskey insisted, have told them that people need not close doors or refuse. to return phone calls because a subject for a period may be off limits for general distribu- tion." He said there had been no efforts to limit "contacts" between State Department per- sonnel and the press, but only ? to persuade officials to "use their common sense in dealing with the journalists." -- "The State Department has a' deep concern, and I would ex- pect the public in general would understand, that information that could be prejudicial to the national interest in foreign pol- icy is not to he published or broadcast," Mr. McCloskey said. Times Article Mentioned - He said that F.B.I. agents had approached State Department officials "on a number of .oc- casions," but he would not say what news articles had been, involved. Some individAls who were. questioned said that the agents asked about an article by Wil- liam Beecher in The New York. Times of july 22, giving details of United States negotiators' positions in the arms limita- tions talks with the Soviet Union. . Others were asked about an earlier article by Tad Szulc in The New York Times about arms shpiments to Pakistan. Mr. McCloskey said, ''To the best of my knowledge, no dis- ciplinary action has been taken against any person ques- tioned." Asked if a reprimand or notation placed in a Foreign. Service officer's re-cord was a disciplinary action, he said that such a reprimand would not necessarily be considered a disciplinary action. 1200/042464 W tiCISEMP80-01601 R001400130001 -5 da.vits saying whether they had talked to certain reporters. STATINTL Jill !L)II WILMINGTON 1osT Approved For Release 2001/03/' 04 ? CIA-RDP80-01 bid1J/1 (1-.) C. By Miirrey Marder Washiwton Post S aU Writer FBI agents' used lie dace- . tors to question State Depart- Anent officials recently in an inter-agency investigation of news- "leakage" of security in- formation, it was established yesterday. ' State !Department press 17:pokesman Robert J. Mc- Closkey acknowledged at a news briefing that Justice Department agents investi- gated inside the State Depart- ment .and "other agencies." McCloskey said "this has happened from time to time ... ,when certain : information is published" froin tibauthorized ? sources that is. judged to be "harmful to the national inter- ?est." ? This is the first time since the era of the late Sell. Joseph It. McCarthy in the early .3.950s that such a practice in the pose ---- to attempt to find the State Department has come to "leaker," and to serve as a . public attention. Many Fltate l warning.to others. Department officials are them- r lNicCloskey said in answer to I selves concerned about the in- questions, ``We have cooper- -. timidating. effect of the procc- ated with agents of the u ins- :secret Pentagon history on ? durc, arid insist it is limited CCL Department who have Vietnam, start,ing in raid-June, and is no revival of that in- undtak i en nvestigations with- was not the take-off point for quisitional period in U.S. his- in the department z,tt the the current investigating pat. tory. McCloskey said in response to .questions that State Depart- ment officials have been ad- vised with renewed emphasis recently "to use their common sense and discretion" in talk- ing with newsmen about sensi- tive security subjects. But he -denied that any "written in- structions" have been circu- lated to restrict press contact with officials. ri 1 f 4 .! /- r` 4'7 41. - - tion about U.S. bargaining pd sitions in the strategic arinsi limitation talks (SALT) withi,/ the Soviet Union, now under way in Helsinki, Finland. Sources said that a rela- tively "small number" of em- ployees were involved in the' interrogations by FBI agents. ? This group, it was said, in turn was narrowed down to a smaller number, "about three or four," it was claimed. They were reportedly asked if they would submit to tile polygraph tests, "volunteered" to do so, and "came up clean," in effect apparently clearing the State Department of responsibility for the "leak" in this The degree of voluntarism ? acthally involved in such cir- cumstances is often all open ir) (Ps, r 1,b!ji 11 r_ to the Russians. !At that time, . ? State Department officials State labeled the story "a also know, however, that the most unfortunatelfreneh ?I Se-? department carries a special curity." ; burden,. a heritage of the Icy- A Defense Department ty.secority investigations spokesman declined to cojn- which decimated its experts. ment yesterday on investiga- An unusually candid self-ex- {lens there, or to say whether animation of the department lie detectors were used at the last year by its own officials p? said teonit)teigon'ilfiohjta.elitaenti::tat?. practice 15 ism on departmental thinking" Pentagon. warned that the investigatory it the consequences of "McCarthy- the inTestigation of niajOr only began Co diminish "dur- news "leaks," Normai?IY, the ing the 19130s" and that even 'State Department uses its own in the 1970s "some of the bitter security agents for such in- taste lingers on, however, and I gullies, officials said. still inhibits to some degree ' One administration, source the expression of unorthodox question, officials privately I said cam-Her this week thatc views!, concede. Investigations of this ciplinary action has been kind often have a dual pm-- take" over the news leak of proposals in the SALT I talks, but he declined to speci- fy the. agency involved, I 'McCloskey told newsmen !yesterday that, so far as he I knows, the disclosure of the same time that agents also were doing the same in other tern. A general tightening of ac- agencies of the government with reference to stories in . cess to security information which:sensitive information - has been evident in Washing- was ? disclosed on an unauth-i ton for many months, news- orized basis. tillesn t on ottileed .uOinfifsitculall smautgebruot ef "I am not in a position to , major diplomatic negotiations get into detail on the anat.- , . - the new, under way, including. only of that kind of investiga- -?, s.china relations, sons involved, he said. SAI...,T talks and negotiatiott tion" or the numbers of per ' on Berlin, Vietnam and the 'McCloskey said these hives- .,\,.ittue East. Lower-ranking ' tigations have been conducteG ' ' "We arc not trying to . re- with .the "full approval and officials have become doubly strict access by newsmen," , concurrence" of Secretary of cautious about discussing any- McCloskey said emphatically. t - - - _, . thino. 1 State William 1'. Roger . .l.c.,:- - ? .. , Reports and rumors of the or is scheduled today to hold MeClcri:1?-y;i.,7, deputyassistant I -investigations at . F.;tate have! 'his first full press conferenee Seer et us of state and special I spiraled behind the scenes, slime June 13. I assistant to Bogus,. is a vet- however, to the consternation i an professional in the press According to other sources,' e2-- Of many ranking officials who , relations field. He indicated the latet investivation at i are concerned that.the inbibi- yesterday that he had sought .c.,;tz,ite,, involvina the use Of lie Con real or exaggerated, will , to forestall a wholesale tight- , detectors, was touched off by damage morate amid opera- ening of information flow by ; a story on- the nuclear arms -ions. talks th the New york Times. fficials overreacting th , McCloskey doclined to dis- ? I of july 23 by William ns Beecher, tatio on discussing, espe- [cuss whether lie detectors, (-)1:' he 'fillies ' Penh,t,o . 1 . cially sensitive subjects. polygraphs as they are techni t - i; , n i epoi, cif . In my experience," said eally called, were used atlI The white Imuse reP?rtedlY McCloskey the policy of this .. _ . . -.? Oidered a full e investiga -. - I ' department has been exem- StI"t"' it was c?"firmc'd' "w-II tion which spread' to State. .which measure human reac- , officials expressed indirf- plary in terms of our (news) contact. I know of no foreign ever, that the instruments, ,c0,)' i nation over what they called a I office in the world where the ! Tloyed in i --.1;c disclosure of the U.S. position is- adg n -,r ' tions to questions, were em-, put?. tReleasle.c,2001/0.3701r1 CFA . ? ? -RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 degree of access is compara-? irtt ., ,Verning _CUE,. ? STATI NTL ? Approved ForRelease 2001403/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601R CIT3 ZEN JOUR NAI, Li *f.'t ? , fl jrp_ . ? ,,,p? . , ' 0., j j? i! ,,;;;,(,-,,,,,i,,,, t \::::;,. , ?::-C, %.:.,:> 1`,',--, '?.!'..'' 11 a f: t* fl \:::, il L. r t i' . . - )11 0 !If I, -, ' ? " ? V.-: ' -' ? (.. 1 ?By E. Ti. SEACKFORD . that might embarrass the Sr lir is 'jr :; f:ff Wr it cr White Eouse, McCloskey WASHINGTON - .-Secre- snapned: "No comment" lacy of. State William P. The reporter was refer- Rogers is allowing to stand, without denial, a re- ring to a column by Row- port he has ordered state land Evans and Robert No- Department officials to re vak which said the White frain from putting any- House was isolating itself thing in writing that might from the professional ca- 6 in barrass the White Peer officers in the State House. . ? Department. !. This coincides with the The column said Rogers Sect the State Depart- had laid down new rules merit's views on P. broad on secrecy as a. result of range of American foreign. ,"Nixon's passion to keep .policies are being Con- all the important reins in ..veycd to the public these his own and Kissinger's days ? with two simple t - hands and to smother sec- words -- "No comment." ,(,.ond-guesshig about deci- sions already announced." PART OF this turn of events may be tiie. outcome . of the recent publication of the "Pentagon Papers" . ,with their disclosure of embarrassing views held .by White House, State De, .partmer4, Defense Depart- ment an cl, CIA officials. . ' But it also is a result of the exclusion of the State 'Department from partici- pation in many major de.ci-. sions. , :11.1,1ISTRAI'ED s p o I; e s - for the State. Depart- ':-Inent, who used to pride ; :lhemselves on. not -resort- jng. to "no comment" re- : si)olises even though they ; didif_t say much, now uSe that phrase in response to . questions on almost all im- portant subjects. ? . .: Thursday's State Depart- . ment ? briefing was typical. . Department spokesmen Robert j. McCloskey took ,-the "no comment" route : eight limes. STATINTL ' ASKED about the report ? that Rogers has informed ? department officials not to ApprovedlgorReleage 2001,403/04 : CIA-RDP80-01601R0014001.30001-5 Approved For ReleaSigicidefilo3/64T:Itl-]0DP80-01601 2 7 AUG 197 Ey R. It. SHACK/J(1RD ScrlEps-Howrird Slcfi Wrilcr Secretary of. State William Rogers is allow- ing to stand, without denial, a published report that he has ordered State Department officials td refrain from putting anything in writing that might embarrass the White house. The coincides with the fact that the State Department's views on a broad range (4 American foreign policies are being conveyed to the public these days with two simple words ? "Do comment." Part of this turn of events may be the out- come of the recent publication of the "Penta- gon papers" with their disclosure of embar- rassing views held by White. House, State De- partment, Defense Department and CIA offi- cials.- . Fut it also is a result of the exclusion of the itate Departmet from participation in many --majc.!-7 decisions, such .as those on China, Viet- nam and dc.valuation of the dollar. REFUSE, TO COMMENT Frustrated spokesmen for the Slate Depart- ment, who used to pride theMselvcs on not resorting to "no comment" even tho they didn't say much; 110W systematically use that phrase in response to questions on almost all important subjects. 'Yesterday's State Department briefing was typical. Department spokesmen Robert Mc- Closkey ten the "no- comment' route eight different times on as many subjects. Mr. McCloskey's reputation for keep his cool in difficult circumstances also was blown at one point?on the subject of China. The day after President Nixon announced his plan to 20 to Peking, the State Department spokesman told reporters the White House had forbidden the department to discuss the sub- ject of China. ?A, reporter asked Mr. McCloskey yesterday whether there had been any contacts between Washington and Peking officials since the Pe- king visit of Nixon's national security adviser Dr. Henry Kissinger. "No comment," Mrs. McCloskey replied. Asked wh-ethcr the "no comment" was be- STATINTL cause of the White 'House embargo on discus- sion of China still stood or because there might have been some contacts, Mr. Mc- Closkey said it was primarily because of the '.- former, .? "That means the State Department is sill) not allowed .to talk about China?" a reporter asked. . INTERUPTS WITH .SHOUT After a pause; Mr. McCloskey replied: "Al] right. lii let it go." Another reporter replied: "All right. Fil let. it go." , ? Another reporter started to ask: "Bob, en the same subject . ..?" Interrupting with a shout, Mr. McCloskey said:. "I'll let it go," Asked then about the published report that Mr. Rogers has informed officials of the de- partment not to put anything in writing that ? might embarrass the White House Mr. Mc- Closkey _snapped: "no comment." - The reporter was referring to a column by Rowland Evans and Robert Novak .which said the White House was isolating itself frOm the professional career officer in the State Depart- ment. The column said Mr. Rogers had laid dotvn new rules en. secrecy as a result of "Mr. Nix- on's passion to keep all the important reins in his own and Kissinge.r's hands and to smother second-guessing about decision already an- Incomplete as recieved Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 avm:64 i\UG Approved .For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R . h E NA N State's Secrets The Pentagon, it seems, was not the only Government department to make. a top-secret retrospective study of the na- tion's decisions in Viet Nam. In 1968 Tom Hughes, then director of the State t./ Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research, ordered another report, far less voluminous and ambitious but with considerable potential ithpact. Composed by two State Department Asia analysts, the study compared the Kennedy and Johnson Administrations' key 'Viet Nam decisions with the bu- reau's own major judgments during the same period. In almost every case, the in- telligence reports called the shots per- fectly about such matters as the ineffec- tiveness of the bombing campaign, Viet- namese political upheavals and North Vietnamese troop buildups. Daniel Ells- berg is said to have read the study as a consultant for Henry Kissinger in 1969 and reacted: "My God, this is astonish- ing. I thought the CIA stuff was great, but these papers are even more accurate." After publication of the Pentagon pa- pers, the two known copies of the State Department study have been locked away, and Ray Cline, the intelligence bu- reau's current director, has forbidden subordinates to admit their existence. . STATINTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDF'80-01.601R001400130001-5 ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 BES'll COP Available Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 Approved For Release 2001/031/04 : ciAgimigithqj6 C),EVIV,0,11), 011TO PLAIN DELLER -- 609,41`1')1 ? II 565,032. I i t ./.\ .! (??' ,.. !, !..?..., ,---?,.,,,4 ''..;;??? , -,,,,,1,-....,. y !I T - .`Z.1. !:...... ,? , , : . , , .: ;?. ': i, . L. ..! , , . / ..-'..? , :nos( frivolitius and. ? iit;H, ". ? ????? : of th?-.i year Alphabet ,F.:oup award 'zoos to .Basic Pioaks CatopiKiii ex10-1,- ines c.if our ler- for allowing _John . , ? ? .? ? ? eign in:turs structure v?ith boll's serious and sigittiticant its critique of the linitod Stt!'?-e`i gatiic.ations and acronylos foreign policy. ap-paraius to inelyiling, bit CCrti.j.,21y C d uner the limited to, .Vi'SA (American ? ante (if Foreign Service Assoei ci- fa;; (Or). lion): ACDA (Arms Control CrimP71'-'11,C to, ? Disarinirnent J? 1711%., 11 ii C Vie(' of,ficer tl:c -a 11 d 3c)hrif,:0l.; dip) and tins' it1c 1 tilsilISA (Office cif Internizticinl analysis of our ever e::paild- se(qt1 it:, Lffairs)ing , f?t(4[11-1 1 bit C Ii fen :,c Agency), cracy, vvhich he describes as 3?.\.4,ii, murf.au of Inteniir:21,.:?. a machine out of control. The arid, jes (Joint State Department., sa-lvs, is stvollcn with civil SerV1CC lice of :tviannt./y,,ificrit, `.11.11,7 a " ov""- Ilud?-,et) NSC whehried by the iticwe ourity 01-11;ed (Op- 1(11?clre erstions Keduclion), S IL ii &lJLm&Senior 1311: rdepa utmental AM, -USIA. Nrj.'di..PAIS 0:.;1-? Group). gOVC311111CIL ante , , ciamoix or:ivelv departmeiits. Ogether, , . his viin,) i lit ough this me ci have P"ecmPtf'd cratle thicket to 110ii.V ho D W c-iPartment's ,?"end- rol. as the formulator of our 1- - tired wcalc, friiiiilened and foreign polie3?? ? impotent.: by Joe illicCarity's THE att:..teli.E in ihir 'Os and of-? the' title comes from a by personnel poiiiiics 391i3 l'emzer's of coluillniit dentaled the Ci Joseph 1,fraft who .used thk, its mast officio a, ? term in cleseribing the de-i has in the htist r ye ac's sci- dine of the Slate DeP:irt- re-iv:I:Ted more and more xml meet. Dut I si.ipposo there its traditional historic Pre factories which ilia%c functions to the military, the good fudge and factories intelligence agencies and to cicnt factories Di,: (ipcia the White rif.!s, and the whimv of the trot of the esident. This as inefficient fudge j louse vildcr the direct con-. that. make had cfri- titlo demean3 .the de'adly serious intent of the tent. SOH, gaSir011,:)111:1 ? SiOnS SeClri to be ir.re:-.:istible in dealing with the State Do-. imdment. President Ic.crine- Cy cane 1 it a. bov,-1 of. jelly and former Undersoccoti:try of Slate Nicholas Katzen- . . ? diffusion of pOwer 'incl sponsibility Itas brought tis,'' to the point where there is no effeetiVC control of foreign, policy-. or -of- pcirsonnel. thUt ?unless this Puhrauctiatic monster is brcilit mirier control end cut to acre ageable slit?ie, the cold war, .: wi:ich was the fintion for tii?e? piling of? struetuitio upon structure , with supc:rstruetinies arid frcistructures, will drag On' indefinitely 'while the State----1 D?.pal-tment strugc,iles rift itS ov,-n 101) envy edifice at the expense of diplomacy. ? If President Nixon's "ora.:i of negotiation." is ever to be- yin, it rilust be preceded by ? burceuci:Oic reform.. This message has been dc- livered. - before lip meay' others,- ii7clutilin Henry ??? ? l'AcCie:i??,-;(..i ? fluncly, -George lii, George Kennari.-. and John Kenneth (lab:. -braith, but John Ctiimpbc1.1 -; has perform eia a valuable service in compiling the whole chamber of horrors one book and. by suggesting how. the demon might be exorcized. ?? .? ; ?? . ..? f ? 1 bnh co.;,-,pareciA#0$0d For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 ' cy-mai;ing process ti 0 STATI NTL Approved For Release 2001/03/04.: CIA-RDP80-01601R0 110"111.I.FS, AflIZ. HERALD E -- 3,027 R. 7 ? . ports by comiSsions and ta!lr. /..' m forces, all the way back to lc`,,V1,:- that have called for -reform ni 1 the State Department, and he THE FOREIGN AFFAIRS quotes dozens of diplorriats, . FUDGE FACTORY. By John White House aides and forme' Franklin Campbell. Basic Bc.loks. bureaucrate on the massive en- . tanglements of the system. : ? The author has tackled two Uncierlying his analysis ol .questiOflS? What's the matter, government operatio.fs 1: ? the with the Stato..Pepartment and ? I,a that American foreign Pot the Foreign Service? What can icy no longer is so expansive it way 25 years ago. ? ' ?' ? be done about. i '. inn a; and a sharpuing of elimination of many 0 ? ls for reform are. Basically his argument is that ,eyed to major reductions 1 'Ti. ' rorosa s . ' .America's foreign affairs, sinceI Ki \ World War IT, have becom:iPers"nel' , agencies, bogged down h a grossly the State Department's author-' ..cd, over-manned bureaucracy iv backed up by tighter bud- that is incapable of making de-1 i ? ' - cisions because it has been frae-,.1 getarY control. me,nted into too many partici- CarrIPb?11 has 11:''d more than ' paling agencies. eight years experience in the . He declares that vac, stat,..,, foreign service and now is on Department has been weak for A leave to hell) start a- ilev`. maga- ncause it i /Inc on foreign policy. ? many years, partly b :?.? bas been overshadowed by the foreign operations of the penta- gon, .the Central Intelligence. Agene.y an?d. the White House,'. Pus about four dozen other, agencies that extend their oper- ations into foreign countries;? and partly because the White House, for several administra-. flops distrustful of the profes? atonal diplomats, has developed, ittll ?e)zectitive staff to handle'. oreign problems. ,Campbell cites numerous re-' Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 - Approved .For Release 2001/0p9C gf-RD080-01601 ? tarLte JDep0 ?T.n,, ?By Marilyn Berger , Washintton Pott Staff Writer ....._ ._ ... .- - - - . ... : The State Department an- and a? hardening .of . the nounced yesterday the cre- "creative- arteries" through a Ption of a 'top-level evaluation "crucial" gap in leadership. . grouP to check into how U.S. The reforms, summed up In' a progress report by Macorn- 4oreign policy is being carried h s her, are practical measures .,out, but with the more basic, intended not to change the 'function of asking the tough structure, which is basically s question: Does this policy sound, but to change attitudes s and practices to make that Make sense? - . ? structure work more effec- . .The establishment of this tively." . .Mangement - ? Evaluation One goal Is to make room :Group (MEG) Is part of an for dissent and to encourage -overall reorganization of the creativity among department top echelons of the depart- employees. In addition to es- 'anent announced yesterday. - ' tablishment of the group to 0 Promotion reform. Career etnam in the Pentagon papers By coincidence, the forma- evaluate U.S. policy, the fol- tion o the evaluation group lowing other change were an- follows the massive disclo- flounced yesterday: sures about U.S. policy in VI.- foreign Service Officers will ,in which a recurrent theme is be. allowed to remain at the :sounded: that U.S. policy took same grade without promotion Secretary's ranking deputy for on a momentum of its for 20 years. Previously, the the management of the depart- and the question of own whether , so-called selection-out process merit but also that of principal ' the policy made sense was lost meant that failure to be pro- coordinator in behalf of the , In the shuffle. meted every few years spelled Secretary of the overseas ac- Ambassador Thomas W. Mc- , dismissal from the Foreign tivities of. all U.S. government : :Elhiney, a senior career For- Service. agencies." Pign Service Officer, has been The selection-out ? process 0 Deputy Under Secretary. named to head the group, was blamed, in part, for the for Economic Affairs to be which is under the office o suicide of a former Foreign raised to Under Secretary for f the Inspector General. Accord- Service Officer, Charles W. Economic Affairs; ing to a departmental press re- - Thomas, 48, who was forced to 0 Deputy Under Secretary 'lase, the MEG "will be the de- l retire without a pension be- for Administration to be desig- partment's instrument for in- cause he was not recom- nated Deputy Under Secretary for Management. ? . ? ment of senior executives. These initial changes are de- signed to reduce these pres- sures during mid-career." - 0 Policy Analysis and Re- source Allocation. This is de- scribed as "a systematic proc- ess for better identifying is- sues, interests and priorities for all U.S. government activi- ties abroad, matching re- sources and policies and peri- odically reviewing real and po- tential issues." The reorganization also calls for a number of changes in ti- tles .of: some principal depart- ment officers that will require congxesgional approval: ? The Under Secretary (now John N. Irwin II) to be named Deputy Secretary "to reflect not only his position, as the tlependent, institutionalized ,evaluation of the activities of .the department and missions .abroad." It will also carry on the original functions of the insuring that he will receive a Inspector General's office. to evaluate personnel abroad. pension when he retires.. For ? The reorganization grows out of a year-long self-exami- nation, by members of the State Department itself. It cul- minated in a 610-page report entitled "Diplomacy for the- 10s." Since the report was re? leased six months ago a task force under Deputy Under ti7 Secretary for Administration William B. Macomber Jr. has been at work to institute man- agement reforms to meet the ? ,shortcomings exposed in that mended for promotion. The new system will guarantee that any officer who reaches a certain grade (Calss 5) will be givn tenure for 20 years, thus those who enter the Foreign Service at the lowest grade (Class 8), it takes an average of seven and a half, years to reach (class 5). Title change, according to the management reform bulls.. .tin announcing the new provi- sions, "Is the initial response to the conclusion ... that the highly competitive promotion .system tends to make caution a virtue, inhibits such gunn- ies as initiative, persistence report. and creativity, and discour- ? It said the State Depart- ages officers from accepting ? ment had for two decades suf- training, assignment to other - fered ?,"intellectual atrophy" agencies, or other types of un- usual 'boradening' assigns_ Approved For Releasee2004463/04a1WRDP80-01601 R001400130001 -5 STATI NTL %Sig Sitri'O.RDAV inivren 19: Approved For Release 2001/U3/aub-- 04 : CIA0:RDP80-01601,R0 THE FOREIGN AFFAIRS FUDGE FACTORY ? by John Franklin Campbell Basic Books, 292 pp., $6.95 State began to decline in President Franklin D. Roosevelt's time throngi his use. of personal and, to a large ex tent, mili tau diplomacy. The MeCarth era subdued State's-personnel into cau ? tious conformists, relegating .some o its ablest officers to oblivion. Moral and performance suffered further from .arbitrary reforms from the outside, in- cluding efficiency-expert methods that could not possibly assess the quality of professional knowledge, negotiating skill, or political judgment. Moreover, State's budget and ex- pense account continued to be small compared with many other agencies in the field, as well as the diplomatic services of other big countries. (Not so long ago, the American ambassador in Bonn had at his disposal for personal expenses and entertainment one-third of what the West German ambas- sador spent in Washington.) State, for instance, must rely on another govern- - ment agency for financing its communi- cations abroad. And State, in common with other dePartments, is caught up in the habit of multiplying and com- plicating its structure with inter-this ? and inter-that committee, meetings, clearances, and the rest. - John Franklin Campbell would whit- tle down the sizeand structure of the department, and he ivould eliminate its duplicative agencies. The bureaucratic :layers inside State and among all the _ Reviewed by Nicholas King Li What's wrong with the State Depart- ment? This question has rung like an echoing gong down the decades. It has been asked by Presidents, by the pub- lic, and by almost everyone in the State Department itself. John Campbell's book provides a full and reasoned an- swer, forthrightly written and con- vincingly documented. Despite the title, the problem is handled in The Foreign -Affairs Fudge Factory with sympathy and insight. The basic malady is the growth of a monstrous foreign affairs apparatus that has overwhelmed the State De- partment and its control of?and voice in?foreign policy decisions. The De- fense Department and the Agency for International Development, for exam- ple, have more men in their overseas missions than State, according to the latest available figures. The Central Intelligence. Agency's strength .abroad is not known, but anyone acquainted - ?'foreign affairs foreigaffairs pie-sharers in Washing- \ Le--:--/2'54'0.7:_n'S-2es ? ton have created an absurd procedural system, often with the experts at the with our embassies is aware that CIA bottom (as in the Bay of Pigs and Vietnam) while the ideologues and officials, under diplomatic cover, are prestige hunters flourish at the top. Mr- numerous. They have their own (often overlapping) sources of information, Campbell knows that, although bureau- cratic methods are necessary to the their personal communications, and government's functioning, the fragmen- handsome. budgets. Also, based uponoutdated ideological or Cold War pre- mises, they usually have their own foreign policy. So do the Labor, Com- merce, Agriculture, and Treasury de- partments, which send officials to em- bassies to represent their domestic interests; all of them are backed up by hordes of weighers, sifters, newspaper readers, and decision-makers back home in Washington. Added to this is the President's foreign policy staff in ? the White. House, a separate bureau- cracy instead of, as the author recom- mends, a small and flexible staff of ad- visers who. could supply the President, the ultimate policy-maker, with what he needs to know. Yet Presidents desire a strong State Department. A tough Secretary of State could be one of the truly com- manding figures in the government, an influence in all projects and expencli- Approftfr FitSFR61414ec ?t irougn his am assacgitti.Cs it*Ph4 does what out of which embassy. For several reasons this is not SO. tation of authority tying up foreign policy formulation is a fundamental cause of today's confusion and ineffi- ciency. Foreign officifils never cease wondering what precise government in Washington such-and-such a duly man- dated emissary is speaking for, or on whose exact behalf there he is spending money. - The author of this well-grounded, perceptive study realizes that what is wrong cannot be put right at one stroke, or even by one President. But, basing his thesis on past criticism as well as on his own experience in the Foreign Service, he calls for a num- ber of specific, workable reforms that could gradually bring order, intelli- gence (in the ordinary sense) and .flow to the making of modern American foreign policy. STATI NTL Nicholas King was press attache for :ieliVRI3P811101604RIY019400130001-5- or to that he was an editorial writer for the New 3ork Herald Tribune. FOREIGN AliVARIS Approved For ReleaseAQUO4q4 : CIA-RM-V601 THE. ECLIPSE OF THE STATE DEPARTMENT By Dean Zcheson ? TiOR over a decade it has been received as accepted truth in the highly charged political atmosphere of Washington that " the role, power and prestige of the Secretary and Depart- ment of State in the conduct of foreign affairs have steadily de- clined. Accompanying this decline, and accused of causing it, is said to have been an increasing part played by the President himself in this alluring, fashionable and important activity, accentuated, perhaps, by the appearance in the White House of a court favorite--a modern Leicester, Essex or Buckingham-- served by over a hundred attendants and constantly advising the monarch on these matters in the antechamber. The New York Times, in a series of articles published in January 1971, dates. 'these developments from FDR's time, though adding that the trend was arrested "during the Truman and Eisenhower years [until] the death of John Foster Dulles in 1959." Opinions have differed widely whether the eclipse noted is total or partial, radical and sinister, or within constitutional limits and historical precedents in relations between presidents and the first state secretary and dep'artment created by the first Congress. A great deal of the resulting debate has been based on wholly erroneous ideas of the nature and source of the national power to conduct foreign affairs, so we might do well ?to get this , straight before going further. II The Supreme Court has left no doubt that the federal power over external affairs--unlike the power over internal affairs? is not the creature of the Constitution. The Union, it has pointed out, existed before the Constitution, and, with independence from Britain, the power to act "in the vast external realm" passed from the British Crown to the corporate unity, the United States of America. The Constitution strictly limited participation in the exercise of this power. "The President alone has the power to speak or listen as a representative of the nation. He makes treaties ?with the advice and consent of the Senate; but he alone nego- tiates. Into the field of negotiation the Senate cannot intrude; and Congress itself is powerless to invade it." The Court quotes the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations as reporting to the Senate on March 7, 1800: " . . the President is the constitu- tional representative of the United States with regard to foreign nations. He manages our concerns with foreign nations and must necessarily be most competent to determine when, how, and upon what subjects negotiation may be urged with the greatest pros- pect of success. For his conduct he is responsible to the Constitu- tion. The committee consider this responsibility the surest pledge 4.0 VOldi fOlajtik* 0:0-?09iA 1400130001-5 ena c tne irec -ton o ore4,5-n nego tati s c, coutinnod SiiiGiOfl POST Approved. For Release 260/0/0ifliCIA-RDP80-01601R -Itt,oult0 -(trt Mo ?? On ? a Lic 113' 11 vi-IL 7 -tiff -)ve, rt: 0 By . Marilyn Berger - closures would not affect foreign 'governments involved Washington Post Staff Writer security interests. . in the Pentagon .documents - The S tate Deartment, it was not expected that would not .be approached. P such a council would signiti- The British government, prodded. into action by the cantly cut down on the sclec- meanwhile 'said yesterday massive leak of secret infor- tive relea i se of classified in- ' that ? t ? was informing the .mation in the Pentagon pa- formation by those officials United States of its "concern" perS, has ' speeded up moves who do "leak" classified infor- about revelations of diploma- to form a committee to au- maiien, and sometimes because they sometimes on orders tic ' discussions through pub- ? ? thorize disclosure , of classi- hcation of the . Pentagon ' believe the disclosure would documents. dpapers. .. . - a - be useful for any one of ? ' ?It was learned yesterday number of purposes. The 'Foreign .. Office an- that plans are being discussed The council could pass on flounced that Lord Cromer, to create a review council, release of information re. the British ambassador in staffed by top departmental quested by anyone and could Washington, "has been in- officials to review methods of also consider suggestions from U.S.tructed to express to the declassification and to author- forei ' gn service officers who government the British, ize foreign service officers to government's concern at the. wish .to . disclose the contents give out information they con- of classified documents in the threat ' to the 'confidentiality skier to he in, the public in- belief that the advantages of of diplomatic exchanges in terest.. ? ? such disclosure outweigh the the light of the ? publication -The council is expected to disadvantages. i of the papers." ? - . be headed by an official .at Besides this council the The announcement added, the level of assistant secre- State Department is also look- "We are concerned at the tary or deputy under secre- ing into ways of speeding up status of exchanges of an in- Jary. . declassification of historical tergovernmental nature. The Leisurely Consideration was documents. A State Depart- point we have made is that 'given to the creation of such meat official also said mem. there is a general problem a council after. the Jan. 15 bers are .still to be aPpoin.ted which we would like the U.S.? order by President Nixon to to the interdepartmental task government to bear in mind." review: government procedures force dealing with the Ponta- Paul C. 'Warlike, former for, classifying documents. The gon documents that have been assistant Secretary of De- idea has been under more distributed to a number of cense 'for International Secur- 'active review this .week. ? It newspapers. ity Affairs, 1-Vedpesday said was suggested that such a A State Department official the portions of the Pentagon council could clear current in- said yesterday that in de- Papers dealing with diplonA,- formation for release to news- classifying documents foreign tic exchanges were of a suf- men, congressmen or .the pub. governments are not normally ficiently sensitive nature to' lie if its members decided that contacted, even when they are warrant p r i 0 r restraint disclosure would not be con- involved as a subject of the against publication. frau to national security and papers. If it is a joint agree- The Chinese ambassador would not affect foreign ment that is being declassi- to Washington; James C. H. governments or intelligence Lied, the official said, the gov? Shen, said yesterday" that sources. . ? ernment will be contacted. But publication of the documents At best, such an institution- if the paper is a telegram from hampered diplomatic ? conduct, alized procedure could help a U.S. embassy abroad that "As a government official," erode the ingrained reluctance contains information?provided Shen said, "I would feel very on. the part of State Depart- by another government, .that happy knowing that what I meat officials to provide in- government would not be ap- say today in negotiations with formation about current dip- proached for clearance. ?American officials would not lomacy,. eyen. when such .dis- . This official said ? that be published." .. . .... ......? _ . , .? ....?.......... .. STATI NTL. Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 Approved For Release 200WailYPbRADP80-01601R 1 8 JUN 1971 STATINTL -'2-DAY SEARCHIi - S ?MEI- on c r2 Dr), foy By GEORGE SHERMAN Top officials of the depart: ? Star Staff Writer ment?and even not-so-top offi- cials?often leave personal files. behind containing classified in- formation. They get the same security treatment as State De- partment files: But he officials concerned have a right to return to these personal files for any memoirs or articles they may be writing. So it is today with William Bundy. He has been 'given use of a corner in room 5310 of the State Department. Something like two of the 10 filing cabinets in the room are his, 'that is open to him and his secretary, Blanche Moore, whom he has kept on at .his own expense. Bundy is writing a book about the same subject as the Penta- gon subject?the history of the policy-making process on . Viet- nam. N at ur all y, these archives would be of great use to him. Bundy, who is now visiting Lon- don and works out of the Center of International Studies of MIT in Boston, is reported to make. frequent use of his files here. Sometimes he comes to room 5310 three times a week. When the book is completed, Bundy?lihe all other former de- partment officials?will have to have it cleared by the Historical Office of the State Department. There its pages will be gone over to make certain no classi- fied material in the .personal files is going into print. Security people in the State Department are still musing over how two copies of the mam- moth Pentagon archives on Viet- nam policy could have been in the State Department without anyone in authority knowing it. It took Secretary of State Wil- liam P. Roger's staff about 48 hours to find the copies of the 47-volume studies. The reason ? they had gone directly into the "personal files" of former Undersecretary of State Nicholas deB. Katzenbach and William Bundy, key depart- / mcnt aide on Vietnam under President Johnson. Two copies ? from the 15 made ? were sent by the Pentagon by person- al courier, outside official ellen- nels, to both men toward the end of the past administration in 1988. ?The volumes were not regis- tered with the central filing of- flee of the department. They were not gone through by the security office to cheek whether any documents needed to be du- plicated for the department's own files. They were put under lock and key in the filing cabi- nets of Katzenbach and Bundy, tiiho ? in the haste of the transi- tion -- neglected to tell their successors of their existence. ?.Officials say they see nothing peculiar in their procedure. Se- curity was Dever violated, they say,?in fact, the volumes were so secure almost no one knew ,about them. , ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5, Approved For ReleaseA2A1 #47 i? jETTAI-WDP80-01601 *JOURNAL MEMO STATI NTL CIA STUDY some time back developed likely "scenarios" for thaw in Red China's belligerent stand against U.S. One initial Chinese opening predicted: Reds would invite U.S. ping 'pong team to tour People's Republic of China. State Department, in written comments, ridiculed the suggestion, JOURNAL has learned from impeccable sources outside of the intelligence community. ? Approved For Release 2001/03/04: CIA-RDP80-01601R001400130001-5 Approved For Release iiiitifigi:042,:6A-RDP80-01601 1AlmO'," t9),T, CiT1 Avolop DOD3 )i tifi,fipy-,1 iiL olAuiad. 243,i a; Names in Computer --A1Dplicatio1isrs'3croenoci %.1 I Fl I 1 1 `I I Miss Knight said she had ageney w w ith a.fugitive arrant, been ill for the last three weeks for oCa'ill-ple ? that ,. Person and away- from her desk-. Un- hste.d In the file had applied til She summoned aides to Lac for a Pa-ssPort. ction" a office thia afternoon, site said, . Whether "adverse. she was unaware that Senator woulkl. enS11) was n On of her Ervin had made official inquir.? interest, hid, and she would les about the file or that it was not notify the. subject of ? his a matter of controversy, 'Ille listing in the file. Miss Knight said she would State Department's reply to *Mr. Ervin's vestionnaire Was dated not necessarily notify anyone -- ' l3y 3-.11!:1'-.1; A. F.P.AN!',"LIN Jam.' 4. - ? n . that he was included in the file = spiclalto T:',..e 1:-:v? Yol-k mres yeadlts- Start Veb:23 ? -"' even 11 the "adverS3 EiCti0. II" ? A - . were talten in her own office., .WASI TINCT01.-I, Feb. 10_, .....72,1a,t,ovr, Eorrviiit`f.,',3c, sc111,7,ci.uc?d through ' the denial. of a pa'ss- flee acknowledged today - that before - his snhbommitiee star;;. I, ? `'.! i'l ,-,..-, '"' -'-' -)Or' The United States Pa. ssport of- li" it keeps a secret, coniputerind log Feb. 23 on what 11:,..; has - file_ of 243,135 Americans called the growth. of "police ?whose applications for pass-stat" .,. surveillance and dossier- ' ports may he of interest to it keeping on perhaps 50 million' or to Government law enforce- Americans, most of them ? ac- merit agencies. Persons listed oused of breaking no laws. in the file may never be awarz, The North Carolina :Demo of it. crat'afor%rjlceoris The existence of the fib was state's Supreme Court, said lastdisclosed by Senator Sam J. night that while there might, be 'Ervin Jr., the chairman 'of the legitimate reasons for maintain- Senate Subcommittee on Con- log portions of the Passport or- stitutional Rights, who is a per- fice file, many of the justinca- sistcnt critic of what be con- tions for it given to his sub- ? skiers Government surveillance . committee by the State DePart- and file-keeping abuses, moot were "beyond any reason . In a speech last night before. whatsoever." ? a symposium at Dickinson Col- He said a State Department STATI NTL ? lege in Carlisle, Pa., ?Senator reply to a subcommittee:ques- Elvin said he had discovered tionnaire listed those cl'.::.e. ? the Passport Office file through ZolThs: a reply to his subcommittee's q"individual's actions do not questionnaires. He called it reflect to the credit o. th,2, U.., S. more proof that uncontrolled. abroad (1,0-10 persons)." and undercover Governmentl -.Defectors, expatriates and surveillance was a serious' repatriates whose baekgronad threat to the er:ereisc of the demands fmther inquiQ?'. prior 'First Amendment rights of free to issuance of a pa.ssnort. speech and freedom to asso-1 cPersons v',-anted by a hvy date. . 1 enforcement agency for crimi- . ? File Is Defended nal activity. - In an interviev,? today Miss clindividuals involved In a Frances Knight, the Passport child custody or desertion case. Office director since I055, said, (Delinquents or sn6pected "A passport is a United States delinquents in milita,-y service. document addressed to foreign c.1"Known or suspected Com- Governments in which we are munists or subversives." saying, 'This person is an ? . - 'Orange Cf CC? - - American citizen.'"Senator Ervin said other cal.e.; said that vast majori- gorics included simply "Oran? ty"----perhaps 90 per cent---of card" and "miscellaneous." those listed in the file were "I don't know what 'orange "persons of "questionable citi- card' means, and I don't think zenship" about whom it was they know either," he told the her obligation to be curious and Dich-inson College gathering. icautious in is an official Asi-..ed if hc thought the Cen- document. tral Intelligence Agency had in- A spokesirian for. Senator Er- sorted names in the file, Mr. Vin, however, said today that ?Ervin said, "1 c,n't prove 'it lint the State Department had re-I suspect the CIA, gas just .. ported to him in writing that about anything it wants." V ? the largest p,roup of nmnes on He said the State Department the list WaS in 1,112, "known or had acknowledged maintaining SUS pected Comnumists or sub. a 1;2?cra surveillance file of, ? versives" category and tliat the passport applicantS in NInch number of names under "dou'ot- "tlic individual Is not told that ful citizenship" ranke.d second. 'he 13 in the file" until and un- c .number in each of these less "a.dvers.. action is t....en.. , categories was not immediately It was not clear today?how this: available. Would operate in actual prae-i "We are guarding the integ- i tice. rity of the passport by verify-. Miss Knight saki her. office? inc' United States citizenship," would_ merely report .citliely to Kniat said. Put she ex- atile intdrested t.he APprOyepeharRalieaStet .0=11044 CIAIIRDP10,?"0101 R001400130001-5 number of names on the ist. or a -tate law en . . . ? ? YeRC' STATINTL , ri Approved For Release 200/0049VCIA-RDP80-016 . . - t ' ...'-' , ? . 0 ,' ..... ..0.,/ Cuba, last' September. t....,011 cy -.1 ..,pf s n 1 1 -?. r; c suspicions, based on the, an Lf4c.:J4' L 't ' ' ' of a mother ship, plus twc , conspicuous barges of a I v i .-.? i . . ? I - . ? ----, .,:t. rt.. 4- A:4 4. ~,"--L used only for storing a : VOIAIIII of 1 C tiCC, Ni ? /I, I) './ - f, lear submarine's raclioac '" ' ' ? ? - - ? ? .... . - ' ?? ?-? - ? ? House. That led to int( Following 1.3 the f if ill in a .series of or e4loring the behind-the-scenes. ?,neg re- otia _ . _ . - , . Nixon. Admini.stration's .? and the President's style in foreign policy: - - . _.? - ? - .-- . -,: . .- warning, to MoSeOw not ' - - ? ' ? By BENJAMIN WELLES ? . ? . .serViae ? nuclear armed -s. ... "in or from Cuban bases. ? ? - ? -. ?.,- -- - :... SpecIal to Tile New Yotk '1?-tne; . :. - _ : . WASHINGTON,. Jan. 21 ?.per cent of the total, or about - Career officials .in the ii President . Nixon has become 84-billion, about 82.5-billion of ligence community . resist t dissatisfied with'the size, cosit on the strategic ?intclii?oence ing With reporters; -- -but -ir views over mot and loose codrdination of the t on tactical It con- v tand the res. . . . .. _ , several . mutes -at least 150,000 mem- with l'ecleral officials Government's worldwide in-_ bars of the intelligence staffs, matters, with men ret m deal daily . with intelli ? telligence operations. which are estimated at 200,000' According .. to ornembers of people. ? his staff, he believes that the Overseeing all the activities intelligence provided to help is the United States Intelli- gence Board, set up by secret him formulate foreign policy, orderb ? ? y President Dwight D. while occasionally excellent, i Eisenhower in 1956 to coordi- is not good enough, day afterinate intelligence exchanges, day, to justify its share of , decide collection priorities, as- the budget.- - -; " ? ? - sign collection tasks and help . .-Mr. -Nixon, -it is said, has .1;e. prepare. what are known as na.- . tonal intellioence estimates. gun to decide foe himself N?vhat'. The chairman of the board? . the intelligence priorities ?ri.nistll,vho is the President's repro- si.les, nuclear submarines ! P /s be and where the money should.sentative, is the Director of power' for the talk with russian.s be spent, instead of ieavin? idCentral Intelligence, at on the limitatior presei t - , '-' IRicharcl. Helms. The other mem- st.rategic arins. largel y to the intellig, corn--hers ence co-, . . hers are Lieut. Gen. Donald V. "We couldn't get off ground munity. He has instructed -his Bennett, head of the Defense -at the talks witi . staff to survey the situation Intelligence Agency; Ray s. this extremely sophisticate( and report back within a year ,!Cline, director of intelligence formation base," . an ' off it is iope.d--with recommen and research at the State De- commented. "We don't gi dationsl- ' Adm Noel for budget cuts of as 'partment; Vice , Gayier, head of the. N. ational our negotiators round figures , much .as seVeral hundred mit- Security Agency; ? Howard C. ?about 300 of this weapon. . 1 lion dollars. - - . . , . .1Brown Jr., an assistant general. We get it down to the '284 , Not many years age the manager at the Atomic Energy here,here and ? here.' When , ,? ? dWilliam?- c. our people sit down to nego- o- Central Intellig,ence Agency ?",-,,*"- -?`- 'tiate with the Rbssiairs' they .. Sullivan a deputy director of .and the ' other intelligence -the Federl Bureau of Inv esti_ know all about the Russian a b.i.ireaus we ' portrayed as an gation. ? 1 strategic threat to the U.S.? ' rinvisible empire" controilhig? Intelligence men are aware that's the way to negotiate." foreign policy. behind a veil of the President's disquiet, Too much intelligence has its drawbacks, some sources of socrccy. Now the pendu. but they say that until now say, for it whets the -Admin- 1 .? . \ i,y throughh'. term um has swung.he has never seriously , istration's appetite. Speaking .? . The President and his aides sought to comprehend the of Henry A. KiSsinger, the are said to suspect wide- vast, - sprawling'. conglomera- President's adviser on nation- spread overlapping, duplica.- tion of agencies. ? Nor, they al-security affairs, a Cabinet - tion and considerable vb000. s has ay, he decided libv., best official observed: "Henry's hn- doggling" in the secrecy- to use :their teblinital re- patient for facts." . .- sourcs and personnel---much I Estimates in New Form shrouded ?intelligence "corn- of it ta1ented-4n' formulating . In the last year Mr. Nixon munn.y. .? .-.4 , ' - 1 policy. and Mr. Kissinger have or- In addition- .to' the C.I.A., Two Cases in Point- dered a revision in the national !they include the intelligence Administration use ? albeit, intelligence estimates, 'which . arms of the Defense, State tardy use--of vast -resources in are prepared by the C.T.A. after rand Just.ice De,partrnen'ts ?ar,d sOy satellites and re connais- ! consultation wit'n the other in the Atomic Energy Commi..- sance planes to help police .the telligence agencies. ' Some on Arab-Israeli cease-fire of last future Soviet strategy have August is considered a case in been ordered radically revised point. Another was poor intellt- by Mr- Kissinger. gence coordination before the I "Our knowledge of present a.boi?tive Sontay prisoner-of- Soviet- capabilities . allows war raid of No. 21,-at which Ienry- and' others to criticize time the C.I.A. was virtuall us for seine. sponginess about . shut out ofPentagon planning. predicting i future Soviet pol- By contrast, the specialists icy," an informed source con- point out, timely intelligence ceded. "It's pretty -hard to look helps in decision-making,. ? down the road with the same It was Mr. Cline who spot-- ertainty." , NT ftql49g0101.1QA7- 41ssaar6 Ah ii:iiif ' ... , , 4,7 marine buildup at. Cienfuegos, put and organization of the . .. effluent, alerted the WI from intelligence careers with some on active duty dicate that .President N and his chief advisers ap date the need for high-gi intelligence and "consu_me- ,eagerly. , ? The community, for instE has been providing the P. dent with exact statistics numbers, deployment characteristics of Soviet ? sion. Together .they spend 83.5- . billion a year on strategic into!- . ligcnce about the Soviet Union, Communist China -and 'other . countries that might harm the nation's security. When tactical intelligence in Vietnam and Germany arid reconnaissance by overseas commands is included' the an- - . nual figure exceeds 85-billion, experts say. ThAbtorm partment spends m'aiie -than 8 Helms Said to Pate High "Sources close to the White House. say ? that Mr. Nixon and his foreign-policy advisers- --Mr.. Kissinger and Secretary of State William' P. RogerS and Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird?respect the professional competence- of.? Mr. Helms,' who is 57: and is the first career head 91 the Central Intelligence. Agency. , Appointed by President 'Lyndon. B. Johnson in June, 1066,.. Mr. Helms Ilas been essentially apolitical. He is said to have brought profe.5- sional ability to bear ? in "lowering the profile" of the agency, tightening discipline and divesting it Of . many fringe activities that have aroused criticism in Congress and among the public.. His standing with Congress and among the -professionals is high. According to White Howie soui:ces, PreSident Nixon, backed by the Congressional leadership, recently offered Mt. Helms added authority to coordinate the activities of the other - boz..rd meMbers. He - is reported to have declined. ? - A major problem, according to those who know the situa- tion, is that while Mr: Helms is the-- President's representa- i7? on 11,Q Intellioence Board, 01343.00011.15 abo 10- per cent--$500-million to kkgk:A.i7.a:Vol ? 1?F7 Approved For Release 200f1/0338;r41.:ip/A-16Q.1\-1131-60 ? ? ? I himself satisfied that all was in 1 c-t ,:7' ,:??????-: "r'?' ., 2,-7' "..-A ?.,--,2 ?--- , ....... Despite the transfer of many c.,.0. k V (..i.t foreign-policy functions to the ? ? : 2, .,,--IT - r--1 J. I _ ?? - - 4 , White House, the State Depart- - i t I ?_*- ??.;?-?.(.....t L- 6 z.,, ..c.,..,.., .,,,--, c . ....,,:... t, .,.".1. li. 1.. bulk of day-to-day business * * e ? .7-.".4. (-74 1-',. 1 ment still conducts the groat . with the rest of the world. In ., . second that-it is often unable to, such afeaS EtS Africa and I,,atin *..?? After two y0,-?ra in offic0, clei?-t.th of John 1,,,,,ter Dunes in assert 13adearship over other de-, America, indeed, - the dcpart- , in?q ) ,-,,,,? -, ? .., ,, PITS id:3121; NiX01.1. hC{3 faSill011Cti - c'-- ' , I r,.._id...nts lk.N... do Ii partments, even on se,cond.cy meat rnakes policy simply be.- c'.use the. White Ho ase is too los own s!`yle in forci3n f:;01i.c..,. wItcd. the foreign-p,olicy sc-ne, - matters. The influence of sLeh ./ - ? - i. ! aeencies as the Defense Dena:t- sorbed with otnar matters. cinc,.. in Me tese of his sf-aff. The centralization h , A departmental proposal to ''..3 1?)'-cni flint and tly, Central :In'tei'' Corrc.3po./6"2iltS of The Is i-nost striking under President.. prim A,7;:,ne.).., has ris0n, 1,,1?,,,r'l strive . for -closer communica- Yoth Tbncs 111.11e explored Jigs:Yr....on, who regarls for,sign af-! while, until it has appr.f..acl-,e-a t.'? with 501110 or the icit'It'cen- . foreign polic machincry, .the' fairs as his field of c.pecial co ll.*. that' of tho State D.',-?pirtment. in g governments cir 11.?r th - - , , ? , ! .,..., ?, ? , ,i . Africa recently became -policy ?rolvcr of 1-11,-..- Pr(%-iic,eilt s 0,-.V,Le?Ice- -ills cv--'-i-mr2ct P?.1-rso?il'7"1 l'ecrz Ccord;ination 1 e Hams-3 had. rVISCrS 0, .-1. the iitTaCt ,of Wa;4i- involvcmcnt has often been at, That wouldpose no pro'-ali-an been too busy with thc,* Middle . ? ilk?iv.on's itiC,%01 it/StitliOt2S 0:1,i11( C:::1)C11,7; 0:7 CH? State Dopart-{ if the V.ihite House ?was able lc East .crisis to review it Jot eign policy ecNisioil.3. Th,:imont. 71The 1370 ir,ssage on the' orchestrate all aspects of f.....- The. dePariTh'-'-iit is 0.1-'''-1111'd -rola, of i;2s: State D2parl,:incinL is ;st.i...e.of tile world ?,-;as a case,l'olleY? Laroe sitt.,3 ? into foe geographic 1-jurea,as, explored today in the first of ?feint has become --- Mr. hissim.ar each headed by an assistant sec- a ,sert,as of cuticles! u ..ii-,3 id,E,,,. for a 3-1,:,,jor 3,car.end has 110 people ---- it cannot f.1.0 1 ret and composed of "coun- t try .directors" who are sup- sof- ar,:i in the secondary E:ICIS Yy T.I.,NC,,E; S:',Ilf 1.7. Isom:in-tau of . the Administra? where it counts on the sta.-ta. j-,-,...,..?, posed to cool?dinate all the coin- ?-.s.,:,,,,I*11,..., Ta.:, x*-.,- Yo:k ..i,-.-7,-:parlm.ent v., ro to follo thugh co- , munications and issues bet:v.:eon - WASHINGTON, Jan, 1.7?Thcitio-a's view. Of the world situa- ,-, the United States end a ordination is often poor given becars lion originated, with' some -, ? -,-- ? ,_ * . -Department of State, once the oha *?,,encies ha\ e cleveloi....!d country. It is a? focal job, and a prompting froni the . Snate- the habit of taking their case strong country director, if he, proud and tridisput;1.,d. steward i of ? foreign pcJiicy, has finalh, , b - ? Foreion ? INations Committee- ; directly to the White House. s left alone, can have a major impact on policy -in the coursa .., at tile State DzTartment. Socrell On more than one occasion, . aclo-M,,vledged w:P.21.; ot.h2rs have tary of State \\ ill 11, --1--logrrs, as a cons,>quanee, the Achnin7-s- of routine business, .-Stlell RS ? . -long Itocii sa:;fin.c:,: that ii: 33 210 planned to deliver it Iiiinself! ti Oil has spoken with un- recommending aid. levels and longer in clia-%e of the United at th,e end of 196'9. 1 flictinz, voices. Even the, Uni',ed b initiating exchange progrants. States', foreign affairs ailil that Each gec,caphic bureau .w,,,s, States . Information Agency, * The system reaks down in-ai , , _ tene,...,ca:sy. of countrio,s such as it Ca 01reasonably expect tc.1 called upon to zsul.,:esit rc,aterial.1.?f"'I'c'jt- ?f .ill':' S.'':atc-i 1--W--:?/". ann_y.,...ia, and Jordan, where be SOaa1.1-.1. -. . Ii-v- prokct. genE.,[p.=2,:l considc,r..! mcilt, has begun P.Iticulating an - ? ? . the Winte House has a strong able enthusiasm because it pre-I indePerlecrle line. s over lly its own admission as welt smt.,-,f, ono of th0,-,,,-.I It acloptcd a far firmer stand interest and tnnd to tahe .as the. t2siiniony.cr; its critics, tunities for people at Che v,,ork-iathan the department, for ?ex- during a crisis. The , country - the clepartinont has been.kts-i,--1,-, ing level to play a direc:L rob, inj-ainfi-e, ? ,. ,?..11.....,.... 0,1 .c:,., duced in places like Etarea and. director's influence, Is also rc.- I in its broadcast. ce,n- - 11- ally. f- r 2"u ' p' hl'-'' n''''''rlr''' las' ground in the bureauery foi: a P '.': 6 "3 ? 1.`" a S a 1-k. ' ' --- ? ' ? "-'' ' . ''' . ' .' . ' ' ' ? pOqlt,on . i'viet "duplicity" in the Mid:ale --ial,vall, 'allele the United generation. In the opinion of - '. ' . States mo.intains large military I East --- just at a time when the, ' ' ? , ga? ecd.tiV 1 ... ,.5 ,,,,..111, ? ' ' department was relying on c11.17et missions and the impact Of the Before, the conmilation was; diplomacy to persuadeDefense Department is corres. the Ras- finisbed the White. House staff, sian; to rectify violations of the P0.":1111Z,IY grEiat learned of the prc.1ect, sa-,v thel Suez Canal cease-fire, A major change in the possibilities in it LT Mr. Nixon Reminded in an .extraordinary amount of aid provided under and prc-empted toe idea, The! Ille.in0 from Secretary Rc,t;,N..s the military-assistance program, dery,rtment's draf was th._,/11 that u,s,LA,'s con-gresiiic,a:A, for instance' greatly effects re- turned over to the n2-tion;?.?1-se- charter requires it to . clear lations with the United States. curity staff, which wrote an policy with the State Dei.y..-:ri.- And it is the mililary who de-: expanded 40,000-w,-,rd version msnt, Frank Shake::peare, its termino the rate of assist.ance.. . for release, under the President's director, replied that he . re.- : The diminished role of .tlie' name.ported directly to the Whlte State Department is not a ?new , When Mr. Nixo.1 signed the House. -- . _ phenomenon, but it has reached document in a White Hou.lei A conflict ar0s3 recently Geer a point where its officials ceremou last February, Ftenryi the -Achninistr, ?.tion's attitude acknowledge it in public. A. Kissinger, his spacial assis- toward the West German G:-,--/- "Diplomacy for- the 70's,1' a 61 0- tant for national-security of- croment's controversial polcy paga critique of its shortcom- fairs, stood at his side, flanked 'of improving relations v.-P.:ft ings -published last month, by others on the, White House !Eastern Europe.. The official speak's of the "intellectual at.- staff. No State Deo,.rtment rep- United States Vi Z.17, as outlined ropliy" that besets the depart- rcsentative vies present; Sccre- repeatedly in public by Mr. moot and adds: Rogers, is unqualified endorse- . , "With the exceptions of an plant. But Mr. ? his singer ?Enct active period at the -end of the other members of the , White ninctecn-forties, the departmcrit House stag recently undercut EX, ti -Foreign Service have Ian- that by disclosing personal rc.s- guiclicd as Creative 0?,..:,.ans, crvato B se i, to veral visiting dip- buily imd Cl ?1 happily Chelv.. lomats and to newsmen, ing on the cud of-daily routine Furor' in West Germany , while other - departments, IX:- fense, -C.I.A., the White House Bonn. The West German Gov- The. result was a furor in staff have made important, in- e ernm novativ contributions to for- la at dispe Lei' a high-levcrl eifm policy." . . . en-Liss:11y to Washington to find A, ? . ? e'ements ? 1 4:adf3tititbt is - cItCMCAR:17,49MOTR60 31 --siomtion are th!:: folkrAng: ? Significantly, the envoy went ? to the White House. for his - many people, in the department and outside, the erosion has ac- celerated. sharply during the ? first two y3ars of the Nixon Ad- :ministration. As president Nixon pledgedduring his campaigni he has gathered more and more of the business of foreign affairs in the White 1101120,' He has taken a personal hand in both the broad. scope and mechanical details of. foreign policy, from proclaiming the Niam. Doctrine on the American stance abroad to com- posIng the Covernmcni.,-.7. ?condolences to France on. ?thet . The centralization ? of u death of 03 Gaulle.. tary Rogers and his aides were formulation of foreign policy ini ? the White House has been a, I characteristic of the nue. lca r age, asilen Cio issues have be7 ? tome so coniplex end the con- . sequences of cr,r01' SO grat,C. It .' has, -in fact, been the pattern 'since the days of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Particularly Iiron" Se?c14,- . taries of StattPIR4s9Yr?Me trend during the Truman and F,isenhowor.years, but since the in the Ghanaian ca,.;ita.1., Accra, at the time --- all-Dot as far out in left field as they could be. !`The whole illeidEnt.raiikkA," an assistant to the Secretary re-J called later. "We all felt cheated on that one." Increasing White House con- trol 61 foreign affairs is one of1 rane,,* of factors that hovel caused the 1,000-man State De-1 par-Latent to slip from its ofice-' 00114pitfiSt.t? 20 0449310 m aong -qua. s m foreign al airs. As it is now, it not only stands second but such a weak ? ? "