AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCURMENT, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MISSILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RESERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH

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CIA-RDP71B00364R000300100001-3
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August 13, 1969
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Approved For Release 2004/11/30 ?CJA-RDP71%)364R000300100001-3 August 13 1.969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENA was gathered as he taxied the ship up to the grand stand. While passengers told re- porters, "We've never been more comfort- able or less wearied," Gloria Swanson chris- tened the plane from New York with another bottle of grape juice. In two days and two nights, 20 people in two airplanes had crossed the continent- 2,343 miles by air and 970 miles by rail. No other scheduled passenger carrier had ever done that before. And so it all began with fanfare, signals flashing across the country and movie stars. A few years later, the diary writer noted, "if we can believe what they are telling us about new planes coming along, some- day another young Lindbergh, flying in a fast jet-propelled or rocket ship will make the trip so fast that he'll get there before he started." And so it may be in the '70s? because of the three-hour difference on the clock, a supersonic transport will arrive in Los Angeles before it leaves New York. RECESS Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Presi- dent, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate stand in recess, subject to the call of the Chair. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. (At 12 o'clock and 29 minutes p.m., the Senate took a recess, subject to the call of the Chair.) (At 12 o'clock and 48 minutes p.m., the Senate reassembled, when called to order by the Presiding Officer (Mr. EAGLETON in the chair.) Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres- ident, I suggest 'the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The bill clerk proceeded to call the S 9965 it I and ordering conceive it as an from Wisconsin planned to debate . changing had already made some other plans imaginary instrument and then moving concerning other matters that I must from that imaginary stage into the re- look into in my home State. alities of the hardware and the putting I called the Senator from Wisconsin together of the pieces and the creation this morning and explained the situation. of a powerful item, like this plane, that We had an understanding that each of will really operate. We have to imagine this crisis over a 6- or 7-year period and the changes that will come about, the competition for the engineering talent and the scientific talent, the competition for various kinds of metals, the competition even in the skilled labor field and all of the things that go over a 6- or 7-year period. That is the time over which this contract has run. I point out in the beginning that I strongly support the items now in the bill and the C-5A. However, I do not approve of the kind of contract that This was first us would proceed when we could. So in view of these other pressing matters, I am going to proceed, and I hope that the Senator from Wisconsin will be here be- fore too long. I believe that he will. Mr. President, the pending amendment concerns what we call the C-5A, which is a new, large cargo-carrying plane. The aircraft carries Army men and cargo as well as for the Air Force. It has just reached the point where we are close to having the production line product roll out, ready for use. Mr. President, earlier in life one of my favorite teachers?one that I have re- membered all of these years, not only for what she was, but also for many things that she said?laid down a cardi- nal guideline for her students in a spe- cial talk one day when she said, "Always keep your eye on the ball." Regardless of all the things that may come up about the contra& who nego- tiated it, who signed it, who proposed it, and who went into the matter, the ball that we must keep our eye on is our na- tional security. The C-5A aircraft is an essential part In these modern times of the military plan for our national protection and our national security. Part of that plan for our national security is that we think it Is necessary to protect certain other areas of the world as part of our front line was used in this case. s was large trial that that type of contract had. It will be fully explained later in the debate. I am just debating the matter now to hit the high points for the RECORD so that it might be read during the recess. That contract will be explained fully and critically by each side of the debate, I think, but certainly I do not defend it. I know it has been proven to be a bad type of contract, a type that should not be employed any further. Perhaps one of the reasons it worked so badly in this case was because, without having prior use, it was used for one of the largest contracts that we have ever gone into. At any rate, it did not work out for this case. It was bad for the Government and It was bad for the contractor, too, as will defense. very readily appear. roll. This large cargo plane will replace The point I want to emphasize is that Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I ask others that we have in use at the present we must keep our eye on the ball. Ac- unanimous consent that the order for time that are not as adequate and do not cording to all the testimony, I believe the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without have the qualities this one possesses. This we have a good product. We have a good isa modern plane. plane. We have one that is beyond the objection, it is so orde As a member of the Armed Services expectations of the Air Force, beyond Committee and the one member of thatthe requirements of the specifications. It AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- committee with special responsibility at TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 this time, I have been disappointed re- FOR MILITARY PROCURMENT, RE- peatedly this year by the lack of sur- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND veillance over several contracts that has FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- been exhibited by our Department of SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- Defense. I have not only been disap- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- pointed in it, but frankly, I have been SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH greatly surprised. The Senate resumed the consideration I have said several times during the of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- last several years that whatever might be priations during the fiscal year 1970 for said about the past Secretaries of De- procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval fense concerning their judgment, the vessels, and tracked combat vehicles and acts they performed or did not perform, to authorize the construction of test and what advice they gave or did not facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and give to the President, I thought that we to prescribe the authorized personnel were superb in our standing at the buss- strength of the Selected Reserve of each ness table, at the contract table. Reserve comronent of the Armed Forces, I really have been greatly surprised by and for other purposes. the lack of surveillance and lack of at- Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, what is tention given a number of these larger the pending business? contracts. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. I emphasize that if we really want to ALLEN in the chair). The pending busi- understand the matter, we must get on ness is amendment No. 108 offered by the the ground and appreciate the great Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. PROXMIRE) . problems that go with acontract to cre- Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Chair. ate something that is not in being, to Mr. President, this matter was made create a new concept of a plane, a mis- ' the pending business yesterday. It was sile, a ship, or a submarine, to conceive my impression at that time that there it in our minds from the beginning and would be no debate on the amendment. get it on paper, and finally, through trial However, I learned later that the Senator and error, starting and stopping, and has had its usual bumps during the trial-and-error period, but there is no evidence that it is not going to come through in a fine way, and its per- formance is beyond expectations and requirements. I refer to one witness, the Senator from Arizona. I requested him to go down there and go through this plane, go over it, and I was very much pleased when he returned with his report. He not only looked at it but also flew it, and he will give a report on that. We move now to this amendment. The amendment, Mr. President, seeks to strike from this bill $533 million for the procurement of 23 of these aircraft and certain lead funds. We have what we call the No. 1 run, run A. That is composed of 58 planes in all-5 for research, development, and testing, and 53 for regular type, the finished product. All that has been taken care of by money that already has been authorized and appropriated. It is not involved in this bill. So that moves us over to run B, under the contract referred to as run B, and that will consist of 57 planes in addi- tion to the 58 I have mentioned; but this bill contains money for only 23 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 oionsig&r-a DP71B00364R000300100001-3 CORD ? SEN S 9966 Approved For Relem planes out of run B. At issue Is the sum of $533 million for 23 C-5A aircraft. What would be the effect of taking this money out of the-bill with the adop- tion at this amendment? It should be understood that we do not have a single plane yet for use; but they are on the assembly line; they are moving. If this amendment is adopted. it would require a report from the GAO in 90 days; but that is purely incidental. It would take away the money for the plane. At the very best, we would, lose 1 year. There would be a delay in the entire program. More money must benautherized by Con- gress; otherwise, the production lines will soon come to a grinding halt. We will have a standstill, That is just a fact of life regarding this fine product which is just coming to fruition and which wanted. If we were to cut on the money, if we ever were to get any planes for use, the company would have to proceed solely with its own money to complete the first run of 58 planes, run A It is estimated that if this should happen, the company would sustain a loss of at least $600 mil- lion. I doubt that any company can Stand such a loss. Incidentally, I wish to point out that no one estimates that this company is going to make a great deal of money even if it gets all the contract?the planes beyond the number called for by this bill. Various estimates have been made. The Air Force has estimated that the com- pany will lose a certain amount, and the company says they will lose less than that. But all agree that there will be a loss to the company under either situa- tion. According to the contractor, Lockheed, if all the aircraft in run B are bought, its loss would be in the neighborhood of $13 to $15 million. The Air Force says that if we buy all it is possible to buy under run A and run B. they think the Lockheed loss will be in the neighbor- hood of $285 million. I mention that just to indicate that by no kind of figuring or estimates is this a contract in which the contractor is going to make money. There will be a loss either way it goes. We talk about a 90-day investigation by the GAO?whatever that may mean. I will return to that later. But what the amendment really does is to take the en- tire project out of the bill and disallow e money. There is one thing fui ther about the number of planes involved, and it is not in the bill, and it does not have to be decided now. If the Senate keeps the money in the bill?as I trust it will do? there still will be a question of whether or not we are going to buy 34 additional planes at a later date. That is a matter that would be left up LI the Defense Department initially. I do not know what their decision will be. I do not know what their recommendation will be. We cannot decide that now. That is just another rnileboard down the road. We cannot possibly come to it now. It is not involved in the bill. That is a judgment to be made by the Secretary of Defense. It would be up to him to make that judgment and to give Con- gress a recommendation Mr. President, if this program is killed now as a result of the failure to provide funds in the bill for the 23 aircraft now in question, additional Government costs will be over $100 million because there will be termination costs of at least $30 million and $72 million in long- lead funds approved last year and al- ready committed. Those are costs that are involved in the termination of a contract. Sometimes we have to incur them in the termination of contracts. However, it is a necessary part of any contract involving manufacturing of extensive products like this. It is a cost of doing business. It certainly is to be considered and measured when we get into the question of whether or not we are going to terminate the manufacture of a product that is more than good, it is essential, and a product that we ac- tually need in the years to come. Mr. President, when these planes are placed in operation they will replace other planes and actual savings will be had in connection with the operation. In connection with the matter about the General Accounting Office?and I mention this with all deference to that fine agency of the Government that is certainly a great deal of help to the Committee on Armed Services?they have advised me that this amendment provides for them to make a study and to report in 90 days. They have inform- ally advised me that at the best, any study would take at least 6 months, even in connection with those items they are competent to study. They are not com- mitting themselves by any means to say- ing they are competent and have the type men with the type training that would be necessary to carry out all of the requirements. Mr. President, just a word about a matter that was in the newspapers lately. I wish to pause at this point to say that I think the Senator from Wis- consin has done a lot of fine work in this matter. He is diligent and he always pursues a matter. He is frank, clear, and forceful in giving a report to the Senate about his work. I am proud he is that type man. It is a pleasure to work with him in the Senate. There has been a great deal of pub- licity and many fancy names used about this contract. They have called the C-5A contract the Golden Handshake, and so on. However, let us remember that the main questions are whether it is a good plane and whether we need it. There has been a crack in the wing in the testing A crack occurred in the wing in a static test on July 13. I am advised over and over by those who know?and other members of the committee would be more competent to speak on this mat- ter than I am?that that is a normal expectation in every aircraft develop- ment. The failure occurred at 125 percent of the load for which the airplane was designed. Every aircraft wing, as I understand it, is tested upward and upward to the point of breaking. That is how they find out the terminal point. Where does the strength of this mighty wing stop after ? all? ATE August 13, /969 In this case it did not crack mitt' it had reached the point of 125 percent of the weight for which it was designed. As I said, almost all aircraft, partic- ularly the heavier ones, have experienced failures of some components during static testing. 'That Is what static test- ing is for. To determine the amount of stress and learn its breaking point Wieg failure occurred on the B-52A, our present so-called big bomber, at 139 per- cent of the design load. In the C-130A it occurred between 127 percent and 135 percent; in the C-1-0B it occurred at 139 percent; in the F-1040 It occurred at 135 percent; and the C-141 had a math landing gear frame failure at 129 percent of loan, a vertical tall failure at 135 per- cent, a fuselage failure at 120 percent, and a men landing gear failure et 145 percent. Many additional examples could be cited. Failures of this kind are not unex- pected. In fact, it is a part of the de- velopment and testing process regular- ly to be expected. They reveal these pos- sible weaknesses in the structures at an early stage of development to permit design modifications in the production of aircraft. We have had much debate here about the amount of money in this bill for re- search and development. This is an il- lustration of how Par removed from real research, as we ordinarily term this, is this testing we have been talking about. Over and over again a good part of the money for research and develop- ment is really research, development, test, and evaluation. If I have any bearing at all with the Department of Defense when they bring over the recommendations next year, they will have this research and devel- opment account, as they call ft. broken down with more commonsense and divided up into categories where Sena- tors will have at better opportunity to know what they are passing on. What is the need for the C-5A? Certainly that has already been estab- lished, Or there never would have been such a plane devised and contracted for. Six squadrons of the C-5A's will per- mit the phasing out of such obsolete and inefficient aircraft as the C-124's and the C-133's. "C" means here "cargo," Mr. President. With the C-5,A's we will reduce the number of airlift aircraft in the fnrce by one-half while providing more than three times the transport capability. Mr. President, that is the key fact in this whole debate. Times have changed. Modern aircraft are altogether different. Versatility of the C-5A is greater and its capability more. Thus, I repeat, with the C-5A', we will reduce the number of airlift aircraft in the force by one-half, while providing more than three times the transport capability. When we reduce the number of aircraft by one-hail, we also reduce the number of pilots, navigators, and the rest of the crew members, including maintenance men?all will be reduced, including repair parts and all other items that go to Make up the expensive line of operation. At the Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 ? CIA-RDP7MQQ3_64R000300100001-3 August 13, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RtCURD? SEN ATE S 9967 same time, we will have three times the transport capability. Second, the C-5A's operating cost per ton-mile will be way lower than any other airlift aircraft. It will be 2.9 cents for the C-5A against 5.3 cents for the C-141. That is the operating cost per ton-mile. It will be almost one-half as much for the C-5A as it is for the C-141 that is now in such extensive use. Three, under any theory, the 23 air- craft in the fiscal year 1970 request are needed. They are ready now to start com- ing off the assembly line. These will take us only to four squadrons?the number I am talking about-81 aircraft versus the six squadrons of 120 aircraft, to be approved as a minimum requirement by the Secretary of Defense and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. That is under review by the Joint Chiefs all the time. As I pointed out a few minutes ago, that will be a determination for the Sec- retary of Defense, as to whether the last purchase is made. It is not before us now. If he decides to quit at the end of the 81 aircraft that the bill will build up to, that is a matter of judgment, and also a matter of judgment for Congress whether to approve it, if the Secretary of Defense does recommend it. But this is no time to stop on a good plane just as the first ones start coming off the line for use. Mr. President, despite cost overruns, every indication is that the Air Force will get an aircraft with fine performance characteristics. It is the only aircraft which can carry weapons and equipment of any Army division; namely, tanks, bridge launchers, armored personnel carriers, and helicopters, concurrently with the personnel associated with the equipment. If the C-5A is used to carry only man- power, light equipment, and the lighter weapons, it is so large that it can carry an enormous load with great rapidity of movement. Mr. President, we have heard a great deal of talk about overruns. I am going to be quite brief on that matter, but the idea is false that there can be a cer- tainty and a fixed final figure in a con- tract like this, without running into a lot of big money, and it would cost just as much to the Government in dollars, even though not called overruns. This contract had a form of sliding scale. If there had not been a sliding scale as to cost, any contractor, in order to protect himself, would have required a fixed amount, in much larger propor- tions, in order to provide a cushion of protection, even before we get to the concept of profits. I have already mentioned profits. As I pointed out, so many changes came about that it not only caused the so- called overruns, but absorbed chances for profit. I would in no way try to defend over- runs as such in any kind of contract. I point out, however, that one reason for the genuine overruns has been the in- flation which has been raging in our eco- nomy since 1964. There was a clause in this contract which covered part of the inflation, but we had an extraordinary situation existing during those months and years, which made the situation different from what it had ever been. I covered this point in my opening remarks on this entire bill, and I would like to restate my remarks at this time, which occurred on page S7702 of the CONGRES- SIONAL RECORD of July 8. MAIN REASONS FOR OVERRUNS The committee has found as a general proposition that the principal reasons that the original cost estimates in these programs have been invalid in recent years are as follows: First. Subsequent to the original esti- mates there were changes in the weap- ons programs, that is, revision to the total number of weapons to be produced and the schedule at which they would be produced, both factors causing an increase in the unit cost. It is possible to alter these two factors in such a manner that unit costs will be reduced. However, such decisions in re- cent years have resulted in increasing the costs of these programs. The assumptions on which original estimates were made were therefore invalidated to the extent of these changes. I think we have moved too rapidly from research into procurement with re- spect to some of these goods. In some cases, the need exists, accentuated by the war. So we had to move forward regardless of cost. Second. The military services them- selves have requested changes in the weapons through either a change in technology or a policy decision which caused an increase over the original estimate. Third. There appears to have been a lack of sufficient management supervi- sion over these various programs to take timely action to either correct or recog- nize, early, the overrun problem. Fourth. There has been the fact of abnormal inflation since 1964, which has reduced the Defense procurement dollar to a substantial degree. There is no pre- cise index on the effect of the. Vietnam war on the procurement dollar itself. Some estimates, however, indicate that the overall loss of purchasing power of the defense procurement dollar would approximate 25 percent. Inflation since 1964 has affected not only Defense moneys but many other activities in the economy. Between 1964 and 1968 the interest rate on 3 months Treasury bills rose from 3.5 to 6.15 percent or an increase of 75 per- cent; the interest yield on FHA home mortgages from 5.45 to 8.05 percent, or an increase of 48 percent; services?less rent?rose 21.6 points from 117 to 138,6 or an increase of 18 percent; the cost of food rose 12.9 points from 106.4 to 119.3 or an increase of 12 percent. I point this out not by way of excuse. I am not defending any of those con- tracts. The military as such and civilian groups as such were given some of the hard reasons why some of the increase occurred and have been given some com- parison. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, without attempting to fully cover all the ramifi- cations of the contract and the plane, I have presented the high points of what the original conception was, the need for the plane, the contract, and the type of contract which was entered into in 1964. I have covered the fact that it proved to be the wrong type of contract. I think one reason why the Depart- ment of Defense got into the contract for this large plane, involving so many millions of dollars, was that it just did not take time to try out that type of contract on smaller missions or smaller projects. If it had, these defects in it would have shown up. But that is all be- hind us now, and nothing can be done about it. We have to start from where we are. This program is in fine form now, right to the point where the planes are going to start coming off the assembly line. We certainly will need the ones we have already appropriated money for. The number is 58 in run A; and, by all standards, we are going to need the 23 out of run B, as provided in the bill. A great deal of testimony on this sub- ject was taken by another committee. It is entitled to consideration, of course. We considered this item from every view- point. Then for all of the public who were interested, we had 2 full days of hearings, in which that testimony was taken. Nothing came out, either in public or private, that attacked the plane, or the product. Nothing came up that ques- tioned the motives or questioned the im- partiality of the Defense Department in awarding the contract. All the evidence is that, whichever way it goes, it is not going to be a profitable contract for the company. It is going to lose money, ac- cording to its own estimates and accord- ing to the Air Force. It is going to cost more money than we or they thought it would. We regret that, but it is another illustration that, over these long periods it is impossible to foresee what the future holds. Who can contract with certainty about the cost, particularly with things moving forward as rapidly as they are now in the field, for example, of elec- tronics. It has gotten to the point where over half the cost of a plane is in elec- tronics. In preparation of this vast matter, we prepared a series of questions that re- lated to the financial status of the pro- gram and the developments and effect of various lines of effort. We sent those questions to the Department of Defense for answers. I have the questions in my hand. The questions are ours. The an- swers are those of the Department of Defense. Having checked through those an- swers, I believe they are substantially correct. The staff believes they are gen- erally and substantially correct. For the information of other Senators and all interested parties, I ask unani- mous consent that the questions of the Senate Committee on Armed Services and the answers of the Department of Defense thereto be printed in the RECORD at this paint. There being no objection, the ques- tions and answers were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Question No. 1: Financial Status of the Program: (a) How much has been obligated to date? Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9968 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 ,? CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE August 13, 1969. (b) How much has been expended to date? (a) On what date will present funds be expended? Specify these funds by fiscal year and those under the continuing resolution. AS OF JUNE 30, 1969 [Dollars in millions] R. & D. Aircraft procurement Fiscal sear Obligations Expendi- Expendi- tures Obligations tures 1964 1965 10.0 42.0 10.0 42.0 1966 158.9 158. 9 1967 278.6 278. 6 1968 340.7 314. 2 196) 123.6 68. 7 Total _ 953.8 872.4 385. 6 383. 7 414. 2 394. 7 443.7 414. 2 I. 243.5 1, 192. 6 On July 28, 1969, the Department of De- fense, under the authority of the continu- ing resolution for FY 1970, approved addi- tional funding in the amount of $100 million to protect production continuity. Of the $100 million, $80 million has been obligated. The difference of $20.0 million will be obli- gated to the most urgent requirement con- sistent with the financial management of the total program. Based on the present rate of expenditure, presently available funds may be exhausted by 1 October 1969. Question No. 2: Provide a summary of funds that have been authorized prior to fiscal year 1970 and indicate how they have been ex- pended or obligated. Answer: R. & D. AND PROCUREMENT AS or JUNE 30, 1969 [Dollars in millions' Fiscal year Program Expended 1964 10.0 10.0 1965_ 42. 0 42. 0 1966 _ 158.9 158.9 1967 667. 0 662.3 1968 781.9 708.9 1969 624.7 482.9 Total 2, 284. 5 2, 065. 0 Question No. 3: Provide a summary of the effect on the present 0-5A aircraft program If no fiscal year 1970 procurement funding is forthcoming and the program is delayed one year. Answer: Failure to provide FY 70 pro- curment funding would Void the current contract option commitments for Run B. The contract options between Lockheed and Gen- eral Electric and their subcontractors and suppliers would lapse. The Air Force would be obligated to pay the $30.5 million Run B termination liability if requested by Lock- heed. The $225 million over ' target funds re- quested for FY 70 would still be required to fund the contracts from target to cell- sag for Run A. Additional funds would be required because of the additional target and ceiling associated with the repricing appli- cation of the Run B option exercise in Jan- uary 1969. These additional funds would not finance Lockheed until FY 1971 funds could be made available. IS is doubtful that Lockheed would be able to finance on its own the coats of continuing the Run A pro- duction during this time period. As a result, there is a substantial likelihood that the contractor would be forced to default the contract for the Run A aircraft. If it is assumed that the costs of continu- ing the current Run A production could be sustained by the ootnractor there would still be a production gap of about 18 months between Runs A and B. During this gap, as many as 40,000 employees could be affected. Hp to 20,000 at Lockheed would probably be laid off and 20,000 involved with subcontrac- tors and vendors either laid off or put on other work. The rehire and/or retraining of these people would be extremely difficult. Negotiation of the prices of the Run B air- craft after this delay would be in a sole source environment with no contractual commitments or price options available. A rough estimate of the cost increase is from $400-$550 million for Run B. Reduction in the Run A production rate In order to stretch Run A and avoid a pro- duction gap would void the existing contract. Neogtiation of the stretch in Run A produc- tion would probably permit Lockheed to recover most of its presently projected losses on RDT&E and Run A. This. negotiation would be essentially sole source and again with no contractual commitmente or price options. It is likely that the program cost increase would equal or exceed the cost in- crease associated with the gap in the produc- tion line discussed earlier. In addition, while the total number of employees affected would be reduced, the lower production rates would require almost immediate lay-offs of people by both Lockheed and their subcontractors and vendors. Question No. 4: What have we received for this money so far? How many airplanes will be delivered from prior appropriations? Answer: Thus far, the bulk of the R&D ef- fort has been completed. Five R&D aircraft have been completed and about 600 hours of flight testing have been accomplished. About nineteen production aircraft are in various stages of assembly. A substantial amount of maintenance and operational training equipment has been delivered. The first operational aircraft is scheduled for delivery in December 1969. We have high confidence of securing a much needed stra- tegic airlift capability with the delivery of an aircraft that will meet all of its performance guarantees. Fifty-eight (58) aircraft are con- tractually required to be delivered from prior year appropriations. Question No. 5: Give a complete statement of the effect of the repricing formula and the reverse incentive on the procurement of the 23 aircraft proposed in the bill. Answer: Our interpretation of the present contract is that the repricing formula came into effect when we exercised the Run B op- tion in January 1969. It will apply to the 23 Run B aircraft requested for FY 70 and will result in a new target cost and ceiling price for the 76 production aircraft. This means that some, but not all of the contrac- tor's RDT&E plus Run A over-ceiling condi- tion will be eliminated. This over-ceiling re- lief would be only a fraction of that which would obtain by applying the repricing for- mula to all 57 Run B aircraft. No reverse incentive (see questions 10 and 20) exists with the 23 aircraft being re quested for FY 70. We are negotiating with Lockheed to eliminate the possibility of a reverse incentive, before more than the 23 FY 70 Run B aircraft are procured. Question No. 6: What could the Air Force be expected to receive in the way of opera- tional C-5A aircraft in the event no addi- tional funds other than the $225 million for over-target costs on Run A in the present bill and prior year funds were available? Answer: Contractually, the Air Force can expect to receive 58 aircraft when the $225 million is added to the Run A contracts. Realistically, in view of Lockheed's projected loss on the sale of only 58 aircraft, it is questionable whether the contractor could proceed if a decision were made not to buy any Run B aircraft. If the contractor de- faulted the contract, it is possible some 10 to 20 airplanes could be delivered. Lockheed is contractually committed to provide the 58 R&D and Run A aircraft. The Government is committed to provide the $225 million over-target funds requested in the FY 70 Budget plus whatever additional costs may result from the application of the repricing formula relative to our exercising the Run B option in January 1969, If Run B were terminated, an additional $30.5 million of termination liability would be also required. Question No. 7: Is the company not legally committed to furnish 68 aircraft under Run A? Answer: The company is committed to furnish five test aircraft under RDT&E and 53 operational aircraft under production Run A, a total of 58 aircraft. This commitment is legally binding so long as the Government meets its commitments. This means that funds must be provided in a timely manner for the allowable costs associated with pro- ducing these 58 aircraft. Question No. 8: What changes, if any, are being considered in the contracting methods, i.e., repricing formula, abnormal escalation, etc.? Answer: It is the Air arce's intention to change the C--5A Lockheed contract as fol- lows: a. Remove the reverse incentive possibility feature from the repricing clause, which does not arise until more than four squadrons are procured; b. Incorporate a new delivery schedule in the contract; c. Modify the methods Of procuring/pric- ing spare parts; d. Negotiate the disagreement as to the intended application of abnormal escalation. Other secondary issues and attendant mat- ters will be clarified and resolved within the overall negotiation package_ e. Negotiate the scope and operation of the Correction of Deficiency Clause so as to better clarify its meaning and to facilitate Its administration. Question No. 9: Summarize in simple terms the cost elements of Run A. Answer: The cost elements for R&D plus Run A may be expressed in the following way. These are based on the assumption that only three squadrons are procured and no repricing is involved. Cost to Cost to Government produce Lockheed-Georgia Co __ 1,764 2,436 General Electric Co 534 558 Other program costs 214 214 Initial spares 201 201 or R. 8.1. & E 1,003 1,246 Procurement 1,509 1,962 Initial spares _ _ 201 201 2, 713 3, 409 2,713 3,409 Question No 10: ?tarnish a graphic analy- sis of how the reverse incentive operates. Answer: Price adjustment in accordance with Air Force position: (Applicable Run A actual cost $1526M, Run A target cost $832M). Increase in Increase in Overall con- overall tract ceiling contract for each $1 Quantity of Run a ceiling price over run A Aircraft (millions) ceiling AT-23 AT-33: AF position ___ 393 Lockheed position 558 AT 57 680 $292 0.66 .89 I. 01 1.54 Reverse incentive No. Na. "yes. Yes. Question No 11: Can the Air Force give assurance that the reverse incentive pro- vision will be deleted frorn the contract? Ex- plain the manner in Which the repricing Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 13, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE S) formula will operate on the proposed pro- curement of 23 aircraft.' Answer: As Dr. Seamans publicly stated, the nature of the Air Force commitment beyond the 4th squadron is dependent upon the results of negotiations. In large meas- ure, these revolve around the deletion of reverse incentive feature in the contract. This deletion is a prime negotiation objec- tive of the Air Force prior to procurement of the balance of Run B aircraft. Presently, operation of the reverse incentive on the proposed FY 1970 buy of 23 aircraft depends upon whether or not we procure the fifth squadron. If we stop at 23 aircraft, repricing of the contract Orget cost and ceiling will be made only on the basis of the items actually ordered. The total amount of Run B costs to be treated in the repricing formula will be just the target cost associated with the 23 aircraft and associated support. It is specifically noted that the procure- ment of the 23 aircraft does not involve any reverse incentive feature when the repric- ing formula is applied. Question No. 12: Explain in precise terms the elements of the C-5A aircraft contract which will be controlled by military person- nel and those elements controlled and ad- ministered by civilian* personnel. In other words, what is the chain of authority for the contracting and administration of the pro- gram? Answer: Authority and responsibiity for procurement decisions concerning major Air Force systems, such as the C-5, rests com- pletely with the Secretary of Defense and Secretary of the Air Force. Military people evaluate technical material, selection data and procurement approaches and make rec- ommendations when required. Final deci- sions clearly and completely rest with the statutory civilian appointees with the De- partment of Defense. Statutory procurement authority for ex- ecuting contracts for the government within the Air Force flows from the Secretary of the Air Force through the Chief of Staff to the Deputy Chiefs of Staff (Research and Devel- opment) and (Systems and Logistics) and to the Director of Procurement Policy in Air Force Headquarters and then to Air Force Systems -Command and Air Force Logistics Command. Under this authority the Deputy Chiefs of Staff and the Director of Procurement Policy are responsible for providing the Commands with broad policy and procedural guidance resolving issues beyond Command jurisdic- tion, assessing Command compliance with established policy and guidance, and for supporting the Air Force Secretary in con- nection with his statutory and administra- tive responsibilities to Congress. In the C-5 aircraft and engine procure- ment, the Air Force followed its standard source selection procedures. The Air Force Secretary was the Source Selection Author- ity. The Source Selection Advisory Council and Evaluation Board functions were carried out by senior military members of the Aero- nautical Systems Division and C-5 System Program Office respectively at Wright Field, Ohio. Contractors submitted proposals cov- ering all elements in great detail. Proposals were evaluated by a large, highly skilled group of specialists specifically picked for the task. Recommendations of these Source Se- lection bodies were reviewed at appropriate levels in the Command chain up to the Air Force Secretary. Based on a detailed review of these recommendations plus those of the major Commanders and Chief of Staff, the Air Force Secretary determined that the rec- ommendation of General Electric for the en- gine would be accepted and the award of the airframe contract to Lockheed was in the best interest of the Government. The Air Force Secretary provided a detailed report to the Secretary of Defense. In addition to source selection decision, others are required during regularly sched- uled program reviews, program change re- quests, or when a program varies from the cost schedule or performance requirements of the contract. Again, these decisions are made by the Secretary of the Air Force or Defense. Question No. 13: The current cost esti- mate under which you are operating is based on a study culminating in late October which Is now ten months old. Lockheed and the Air Force have serious disagreement about cer- tain provisions of the contract and how they apply. The question is, if the October 1968 estimates should be substantially wrong? substantially lower?and the alleged ambi- guities in the contract should be decided in favor of Lockheed, how does the Government exposure change? Answer: The Government exposure will Increase if our October estimate to complete production Run A (53 aircraft) is substan- tially low. This is so because in exercising the Production Run B option in January 1969 we activated the price adjustment clause. The Government exposure is the contract ceiling price and the price adjustment clause adjusts the contract ceiling price. Opera- tion of the price adjustment clause and the resultant increase in ceiling price, is dic- tated by (1) the cost to complete Run A air- craft, and (2) the total number of Run B aircraft procured. In addition, if the abnormal economic escalation estimates increase, the contract ceiling would increase further by that amount. The current negotiations with Lockheed are being conducted with a view toward mu- tual resolution of all of the ambiguities presently in the contract. One of the prin- cipal ambiguities relates to the use of the abnormal escalation in the repricing formula. Should we be unable to resolve these ambi- guities in negotiation, the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals (ASBCA) and/or the courts would be resorted to. A judgment favorable to the contractor in these cases would also increase the Government ex- posure. Question No. 14: Based on the October cost data, what was the estimated cost per aircraft (a) Under Run A with 53 aircraft? (5 R&D not included) (b) Under Run A plus 23 aircraft of Run B? Answer: The procurement cost for the 53 Run A aircraft (assuming completion of the Run B buy) was estimated at $1,901 million for an average cost of $35.9 million per air- craft. If we had decided at that time not to buy Run B, the repricing formula would not have become effective. The procurement cost of the 53 aircraft would have been $1,509 million for an average cost of $28.5 million. It is very unlikely that this cost would be valid if we decide now (after exercising the Run B option in January) not to buy Run B. The cost of the Run A aircraft would probably be decided in court, if the aircraft were produced at all. The average price would probably be substantially higher than $28.5 million. As noted earlier, however, there is no assurance that Lockheed would be able to complete Run A if Run B is eliminated. If we procure Run A plus only 23 aircraft of Run B (76 production aircraft), consid- ering the effect of the price adjustment clause, the average procurement (flyaway plus AGE, training, and data) cost for the 76 aircraft would be about $29.9 million. Question No. 35: On page 24 of the C-5A study the following appears: "It should be noted that the costs to the Government reflected above are based on the detail cost review completed in October 1968. There is a distinct possibility that costs may continue to increase. A quick look cost re- view is now in the process of being completed by the Aeronautical Systems Division (ASD). Preliminary information from this cost re- view indicates that the estimated cost to complete the program (i.e., the contractor's cost) may increase above the October 1968 estimates." Furnish some estimate as to what the maximum cost to completion will be, based on the information now available. Answer: A revised cost estimate is now be- ing completed by the System Program Office. Preliminary information indicates a poten- tial increase in the two to four percent range for the six squadron program. Part of this increase is associated with the schedule slip. The October 1968 estimate was based on a Run B production rate of four aircraft per month. The Air Force changed to three per month in order to extend the decision time for the fifth and sixth squadrons pending more definitive cost data. That action ex- tended the production period several months and results in some increased cost in Runs A and B. These factors combined with in- creased inflationary trends contribute to the potential cost increase. Question No. 16: How will the spares be provided and how will it affect the contract? Answer: We are now negotiating with the contractor to determine specifically how the spares are to be provided and how their pro- curement will effect the contract. Our in- tent is to get good spares at reasonable prices.' We intend in our negotiation to establish a reasonable break-out of the spares and in- sure that we procure from Lockheed only those spares and equipment that cannot ef- fectively be procured directly from the sup- plier. We do not intend for the procure- ment of the spares from Lockheed to off-set the losses expected to be incurred as a re- sult of their RDT&E and Run A efforts. Question No. 17: Is the aircraft meeting all performance specifications, specifically, the sink rate, the lower flap speeds, and wing failure? Answer: The aircraft is predicted to meet or exceed all of its mission performance guarantees. Its weight empty is projected to be exceeded by less than 1%. However, the aircraft is more streamlined (less drag) than required and this more than offsets the slight additional weight and permits it to meet or exceed the performance guarantees. Some minor changes were made to some specifica- tions. This was done to produce a better air- plane through a more balanced design and to reduce cost to the Government. No deg- radation of safety or mission performance resulted. Equitable consideration was re- ceived by the Government. The sink rate, flap speeds, etc., all meet established mili- tary standards. Critics who do not under- stand the technical details may allege the Air Force reduced criteria to "help" the con- tractor. This is not the case. For instance the sink rate was changed from 10 feet per second maximum to nine feet per second. The FAA standard is 10 FPS; but the FAA allows a lower weight for 10 FPS. The Air Force nine FPS at a higher weight is equiv- alent to the FAA standard of 10 FPS at its lower weight. The flap speed criteria change affected only the use of full flaps. The criteria for use of partial and take-off flaps were not changed. Since the flaps on the C-5 are not consid- ered a braking device, the reduced speed for use of full flaps will impose no diverse limit- ation on operation or performance. The static test failure in the wing of the test article was not related in any way to any specification changes made. This failure was not unusual for the static test program the purpose of which is to demonstrate the aircraft capability to withstand flightloads up to 150% of its design limit load. Question No, 18: How many significant Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9970 1 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 131969 changes have been made and have any of them resulted in a degradaZion of the per- formance specifications? Answer: Only minor changes have been made in the specifications as outlined in the answer to Question 17. None have resulted in any degradation of the mission perform- ance of the airplane. Question No. 19: How real is the threat Of termination if no funds are available by the end of August? Answer: The contract, as amended, permits Lockheed to request termination if Run B funding is not provided before 1 September. The contract also permits equitable cost and schedule adjustments associated with the funding delays. The purpose of these provi- sions is to maintain program continuity and to protect vendor commitments. The risk of termination, depends largely on the con- tractor's confidence that ry 70 funds will be ultimately provided. Both contractors have a number of subcontractor funding commitments which must be met. The Air Force would attempt to assist in this interim funding problem. It is likely, however, that there would be a cost increase to the program. If funds were delayed for several months after the 1 September date, it is probable that a number of the vendors and subcon- tractors commitments would lapse. There would be a substantial cost increase and a schedule slip. The General Electric contract does not permit them to request termination if funding is delayed but price and schedule adjustment could result, depending on the extent of the delay. Question No. 20: Define in simple terms: (a) The meaning of the repricing formula (b) The reverse incentive as it applies to the repricing Answer: (a) The intention of the repricing formula was to preclude catastrophic losses to the contractor. A formula was devoloped In rec- ognition of the early commitment to opera- tional aircraft prior to development. The clause provided that if the actual costs as- sociated with the production of Run A air- craft exceeded the contract target costs for that effort by a specified amount or greater, the contractor is entitled GO an adjustment in the overall target and ceiling price. The amount of this adjustment and the changes to the contract prices are determined pur- suant to the application of the formula. Un- til the target for Run A aircraft are exceeded by 130%, the repricing formula is not in- voked. (b) A point can be reached where, for each additional dollar of oast occurring in the production of Run A aircraft, the result is an increase in total contract target and ceiling of more than a dollar. This potential could encourage a contractor to add costs to Run A so as to reduce his overall loss on both the Run A and the Run B production. Question No. 21: What would be the im- pact of delaying appropriation of FY 70 funds for procurement of the Run B aircraft until after completion of a 90 day review of the program? Answer: The Air Force has requested $533 million for the 23 FY 70 aircraft of Run B. In the event the appropriation of FY 70 funds is delayed 90 days, the actual delay in applying these funds to the C-5 contract would probably amount to four or more months. The Lockheed contract as amended requires FY 70 fun& for the 23 aircraft to be on contract by 1 September 1969. The contract stipulates that if such funds are allotted after 1 September, an equitable ad- justment in the price, delivery schedule, Or both may be made provided the contractor has incurred additional costs or delay due to the funding delay. Further, the contrae- tor can request termination for convenience of the Government in the event funds are not allotted by 1 September. There would be a substantial impact as- sociated with this funding delay. Existing contract options between Lockheed and Gen- eral Electric and their subcontractors and suppliers would be voided. As a result, pro- duction costs would increase by about $140 to $170 million depending on whether the Run A delays were stretched to preclude a production line gap or not. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, for the time being, that will conclude my re- marks. I believe they are the main high points. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I yield to the Senator from Virginia, a valuable member of our committee. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. Mr-President, I would like to say a fey words with re- gard to the Senator from Mississippi. This is the sixth week that the Senate has been debating the pending legisla- tion. During all this time the Senator from Mississippi has been on the floor and he has carried the burden of answering the many questions?proper questions-- which have been put to him as commit- tee chairman. I doubt if there have been any commit- tee chairmen in recent years who have been under such intense pressure in re- gard to work here on the floor for such a long period of time as has the distin- guished Senator from Mississippi in han- dling on the floor of the Senate this very important and very difficult bill. When the legislation was first sub- mitted, the budget request sought by the Johnson administration totaled $23 bil- lion. Then the new administration came into office, and the budget request was revised somewhat to $22 billion. Then the Committee on Armed Services, of which the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. STENNIS) is chairman, went over this proposal in great detail. The bill which finally came before the Senate represents, in round figures, a total of $20 billion for procurement of military weapons for the fiscal year 1970. So the committee brought about that reduction and now recommends to the Senate that the budget request of the Nixon administration be reduced by $2 billion. I favor such a reduction. That is, in round figures, a 10-percent reduction. The committee is aware of the need to carefully scrutinize all items in the budget, whether it be a budget for the Defense Department, or a budget for the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, or any of the other departments of the Government. The committee went into these matters very carefully and, as I mentioned be- fore, has recommended to the Senate that the authorizations for military pro- curement be reduced from the amount originally requested by $2 billion. That is a substantial reduction, but I think it is one that can be sustained. I think that we can accomplish, with the reduced amount of money, all that Is necessary to be done to protect the security of the United States. I say again, Mr. President, that I have great admiration for the way the dis- tinguished chairman of the committee, the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. STENNIS) has handled this legislation on the floor of the Senate during 6 difficult weeks. The hours have been long each day, and there has been a keen debate. I say to those whose viewpoints have differed from those of the Senator from Mississippi and the Senator from Vir- ginia that I think it is important and desirable that Senators do just what they have done for the past 6 weeks: go into these budgeted figures item by item, and require justification. I believe that the Senator from Mis- sissippi has fully Justified what the com- mittee has recommended, and I state again that I am pleased to be astociated with the distinguished Senator. I com- mend him on his handling of a very dif- ficult problem over a long period of time. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Virginia for his gra- cious remarks. What little I have done required much help, and help was forth- coming from many different sources, in- cluding the Senator from Virginia. He played an important part in the making of this bill, in tearing it apart, as it were, and then putting it back together. We all owe him a debt of gratitude for his fine work; I do, particularly as chairman of the committee. / appreciate his state- ment, and I give him fair warning that I am looking forward to getting a lot more work out of him. Mr. President, I yield the floor. Mr. PROXIVIIRE. Mr. President, be- fore I yield to the Senator from Indi- ana, which I shall do in a moment, I wish to say that I concur in everything the distinguished Senator from Virginia has just stated about the distinguished Senator from Mississippi. This has been a very difficult and trying 6 weeks for him. He has done a magnificent job. I, as one who has disagreed occasionally with the Senator from Mississippi, can say that he has been most helpful and accommodating, though he has certainly been under unusual pressure. Rarely in the 12 years I have been in the Senate has any chairman, had to meet chal- lenges as often as las the Senator from Mississippi on this measure; and he has done the great job of meeting them. I agree wholeheartedly that this de- bate is certainly in the national inter- est, as well as in the interest of a more intelligent and healthy fiscal policy. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Wisconsin. There has been a little effort, from some sources, to try to drive a wedge between Senators who might have differing viewpoints. I am proud of the Senator from Wiscon- sin for not letting them do it. I, too, did my Part in not letting them do it. After all, we are all here working for the same cause. I do not deserve any credit for the days I have spent on this floor; for It is a privilege to be a Member of this body. It has been a little bit rugged at times, but it is a privilege, and I think trying to do our duty is reward enough for all of us. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I think every Senator is proud of the way Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 200411100 ? CIA:RDPUBOR64R0003oo100001-3 August 13, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? StiNA that the Senator from Mississippi has done his duty and handled his work on this measure. I yield now to the Senator from In- diana. Mr. HARTKE. Mr. President, before I begin my prepared remarks, I, too, would like to express my appreciation for the outstanding work done by the Senator from Mississippi. He is well versed and well informed, and takes the debate in his stride, in a manner he might not do if he did not have the feeling that the debate on the Senate floor is entirely sincere on both sides, and with good purpose, and that differ- ences of opinion do not necessarily mean that those who hold them are disagree- able otherwise. The Senator from Mis- sissippi has stood up extremely well un- der the strain, and I compliment him, before he leaves the floor for a well deserved recess, for the fine work he has done. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator from Indiana. He has always been an important contributor to the debate on these matters. F?I4 : A $25 BILLION MONUMENT TO THE PAST? Mr. HARTKE. Mr. President, the pending military procurement bill con- tains a $239 million authorization for the purchase of a new Navy fighter plane, the F-14A. This item is significant be- cause it marks the first procurement re- quest for a new fighter system which may run to a cost of nearly $25 billion over the next decade. In this year of the taxpayers' revolt, I believe that no new system of such major proportions should escape close congressional scrutiny. My own interest in the F-14A has been heightened by some disturbing news?I have been informed that according to a recent cost comparison study conducted by the Pentagon, the relative cost of carrier-based fighter strength far ex- ceeds the cost of comparable land-based strength. The F-14A, a carrier-based fighter, will require reevaluation if these high costs can indeed be avoided by bas- ing our air strength on land. At any rate, our consideration of the F-14A should be undertaken with full knowledge of these cost relationships, and so I am re- questing today that the Defense Depart- ment release to the Congress this most recent study of the problem, which clari- fies the economy of land-based air strength and which adds measurably to the doubts which already surround the proposed F-14A. I have sent a letter to the Secretary of Defense requesting the immediate release of this revealing cost comparison study. It will be difficult, of course, for the U.S. Senate to conduct its own study of the F-14A. This new fighter aircraft is an enormously complicated weapon, just as complicated as the ABM or the MBT-70. The features of the F-14A must be described in a technical jargon which requires our closest attention; the need for the F-14A must be measured in un- certain probabilities about the future; and the high cost of the F-14A must be judged against the far higher cost of in- adequate military preparedness. But we must not let these difficulties prevent us from taking a hard, critical look at the F-14A. Whenever the ex- penditure of so much money is at issue, the Congress has a responsibility to do no less. Accordingly, I shall outline some of my own doubts about the F-14A, and suggest some alternatives to the blank- check approval of that weapons system which is found in the bill as it reads today. In the words of Secretary of the Navy John Chafee, the current F-14 program is an outgrowth of the cancellation of the F-111B, the Navy version of the ill-fated TFX tactical fighter-bomber. In fiscal year 1969 .Congress appropriated $130 million to finance engineering develop- ment of this new plane; and now, for fiscal year 1970, the Senate Armed Serv- ices Committee has recommended ap- proval of the $224.6 million F-14A pro- curement request, with an additional advance procurement of $14.4 million. These funds represent new obligational authority for development only?techni- cally, real production of the aircraft will not begin until fiscal year 1971, accord- ing to Assistant Secretary of the Navy Robert A. Frosch. This year's money will be spent building airplanes, but test and evaluation models only, not full-scale production models. The F-14, when fully developed, will be a multipurpose carrier-based fighter. The A model, designed to become opera- tional in 1973, will be a swing-wing, tan- dem seating, supersonic aircraft?with a new airframe design incorporating the engine and the avionics of the now abandoned and ill-fated F-111B. It was envisioned as a replacement of the Navy's F-4 Phantom, to perform a fleet air- defense mission, carrying the yet-to-be- developed Phoenix air-to-air missile. The F-14B and F-14C models will be- come operational in the middle and late 1970's as advanced technology engines and advanced avionics become available to replace the older component systems planned for the F-14A. Doubts about the wisdom of producing the F-14A in quantity stem in part from this mismatch between a new airframe and an old engine. By producing the F-14A, the Navy hopes to replace our F-4's by 1973, 2 years before the F-14B is scheduled to become operational. This may be a worthy goal, but it is not yet clear that a hybrid aircraft such as the F-14A is the proper means to reach that goal. By rushing the F-14 airframe into production before its engine and avionics components are fully developed, the Navy may find itself saddled with an expensive, low-performance substitute for what it really needs, resulting in the worst of both worlds. Surprisingly, well-known flaws in the F-14A design are not even mentioned in the committee report. That report de- scribes the F-14A as an aircraft of "su- perior range, endurance, and maneuver- ing performance over the F-4, allowing greater utilization of its supersonic capa- bilities in the combat situation." This evaluation is misleading because it does not mention the fact that the air combat performance of the F-14A has been com- promised by its multipurpose specifica- tions and its hybrid design. The airframe of the F-14A was not designed to carry S 9971 the heavy weight of the F-111B engine, and when fully loaded with the 1;000- pound Phoenix missiles, the aircraft will not be capable of anything approaching "superior performance." I have learned that the acceleration of the F-14A, when it finally becomes operational in 1973, will be less than the best Soviet fighter in operation today, in 1969. The committee report also fails to mention the serious difficulties which have plagued the Phoenix missile, the complement to the F-14A. I have learned that the Phoenix, which has been under study and development since 1957, was tested live for the first time only last year. These tests, however, did not meas- ure the capability of the weapon against maneuvering targets, multiple targets, or jamming. The Phoenix missile is fan- tastically complicated?five times as complex as our next most sophisticated radar missile?and we must not take its successful development for granted. Finally, and perhaps most important, the committee report failed to mention the conceptual flaws of the F-14A sys- tem. Technical difficulties aside, it is simply not clear that a carrier-based fighter is needed in the 1970's. This brings me back to my point about the relative costs of land and sea based air strength. But it also raises the question of just what mission the F-14A would perform. The F-14A was originally de- signed to protect the fleet from a Soviet bomber attack, but as we know, the Soviet bomber threat has never ma- terialized. Chairman MAxoN of the House Appropriations Committee made this point clearly enough during hearings in 1968 when he said: The bomber threat against the fleet, as you know, has been predicted by Navy offi- cials for some time. It has not, of course, developed to date. I understand that Chairman MAHON has expressed concern again about the substances of this, even as late as today. Later in 1968, a report on the U.S. tactical air power program by the Senate Armed Services Preparedness Investi- gating Subcommittee, made a similar as- sessment of the Soviet bomber threat, and drew the obvious conclusions with regard to the F-14A when they said: The F-111B was designed primarily for fleet air defense against Soviet supersonic bombers. But that threat is either limited or does not exist; 'and therefore, we believe the Navy should re-examine the prime re- quirement for the VFX-1 (F-14A) as to its most important role, in the light of the most predictable threat to the fleet. If our fleet were to come under Soviet attack in a conventional war situation, of course, Soviet submarines would pose the most predictable and by far the greatest threat to our carrier force. As unlikely as that contingency may be, it Is clear that the F-14A will not be of much help in meeting the danger of a submarine attack. Clearly, the F-14A deserves a more critical appraisal than it has received to date. My own assessment of the F- 14A suggests two alternatives to blank check approval. First, we could prohibit the purchase of any production model F-14A's. Second, we should deal with the Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 G972 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-- SENATE August 11, 1969 conceptual as well as the technical flaws in the system. We should admit to our- selves that a multipurpose carrier-based fighter is never going tote able to provide superior air combat performance. It has been 20 years since the United States has developed a single purpose, air-superiority fighter; in those same 20 years the Soviets have developed four such fighters. Our air superiority over the Soviet Union could be threatened if we continue to develop .110K-type multi- purpose designs. The proposed Air Force F-15 shows more promise than the F-14A for this very reason. There has been a firm deter- mination, reinforced by a directive from the Air Force Chief of Staff, not to com- promise air-superiority capability of the F-15 through corollary mission require- ments. Unlike the F-14A, the F-15 will be a single seat, fixed wing aircraft with a thrust-to-weight ratio of better than 1 to 1. I believe it is a mistake to assume that anything less will provide us with adequate air combat strength, and I be- lieve that we must pass judgment on the F-14A with this comparison in mind. In conclusion, Mr. President, I hope that my remarks will stimulate a more thorough review of this $25 billion wea- pons system. I intend to continue my discussion of the F-14A until all relevant information has been made available to the Congress, and until the troublesome issues which I have raised are fully clarified. I ask unanimous consent to have print- ed at this point in the RECORD a letter written by me to Secretary of De- fense Melvin Laird under date of August 13, 1969. There being no objettion, the letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: AUGUST 13, 1969. Honorable MELVIN LAIRD, ' Secretary, Department of Defense, Washington, D.C. DEAR MR. SECRETARY: As the Senate con- tinues to review the pending military pro- curement bill, it will be helpful to insure Congressional access to all relevant informa- tion detailing comparative out and advan- tages of various weapons systems under consideration. Accordingly, I would like to request the release of a cost comparison study, con- ducted in the Office of Systems Analysis, which measures the relatiVe cost of carrier- based and land-based air strength. Sincerely, Mr. HARTKE. my friend, the from Wisconsin, VANCL FIARTICE, U.S. Senator. Mr. Pre,sident, I thank distingue,hed Senator for yielding. C-5A : AN UNNECESSARY PLANE?A FISCAL DISASTER Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Indiana, and I thank him especially for the substance of his remarks. I think it is most desirable that this very expensive, new plane which is of highly questionable value be critically examined, as the Senator intends to ex- amine it. I think this has a great deal of merit. It is an example of how we can save a great deal of money. Certainly, by means of fiscal pressure, the Senator from In- diana and I will try to hold down the budget and decrease the immense amounts being spent in the military area. I think the Senator has found one area in which we can make substantial savings without any real loss. Mr. HARTKE. Mr. President, I thank my friend, the Senator from Wisconsin. He is well known for his diligence in pursuing such matters. He is trying to cut down on the Government expenses where it can be done without threatening our national security. C-5A: AN UNNECESSARY PLANE, A FISCAL DISASTER Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I thank the Senator. Mr. President, the purchase of the C-5A by the Air Force from the Lock- heed Corp. already represents one of the greatest fiscal disasters in the history of Federal procurement. The purpose of my amendment is to make the best of a bad situation, to suspend pouring good money after bad, to permit an investiga- tion based on current data and the latest analyses. WEAK CONTRACT The C-5A contract is one in which there is now every evidence of a "buy in" bid. That is a deliberate low bid, im- possible of fulfillment, in order to get the award of a major contract. It is a contract in which the target cost has been greatly exceeded. It is a contract in which the "ceiling cost" has also been broken. It is a contract in which there is a $2 billion overrun. The planes are being built in a Government-owned plant, with large amounts of Government-owned machin- ery, and where huge "progress payments" are made which in effect supply the working capital. The Federal Government investment in this matter is very great. The Lock- heed investment is minimum. REVERSE INCENTIVE But, in addition, it is a contract which has a repricing formula in which there Is a blatant reverse incentive. If the costs of the first 58 planes exceed the original estimates, the contractor is rewarded. Each additional plane will cost -more, not less. The contract gives incentives for excessive costs and inefficiencies. Just think of that: the contract gives incen- tives for excessive cost and inefficiency. It is a contract in which the "reverse incentive" becomes effective if any part of the second run of planes beyond the original 58 is authorized. This is the "golden handshake" in which millions are at stake in my amendment. It is a contract under which there is already a 6-month delay in delivery. MODIFIED SPECIFICATIONS It is a contract in which the original specifications have already been modi- fied and reduced. FAA requirements are not to be met. The landing sink rate has been modified. The wing stress failed to meet specifications. It is a contract in which the contractor has thus far failed in meeting key re- quirements in some aspects of quality, timely delivery, and costs; and, under its outrageous terms, the contractor will be rewarded for inefficiency if my amendment is not adopted. HEARINGS BY COMMITTEES The Subcommittee on Economy in Gov- ernment first looked into the C-5A last November. Since that time at least three other congressional committees have held hearings and heard testimony about this contract. In addition, a recent study has been conducted by the Air Force, The Air Force study, entitled "Review of the C-5A Program," was released or July 28, 1969. The striking fact, however, is that none of the investigations of the costs of the C-5A since last year have been able to proceed on the basis of any significant and substantial information gathered since the hearings before the Subcommittee on Economy in Govern- ment in November, 1968. The fact is that even the recent Air Force review. published only a few weeks ago, failed to gather any new cost data. I quote from the Air Force study: It should be noted that the costs to the Government reflected above are based on the detailed review completed in October 1968. The information gathered by the Sub- committee on Economy in Government was also based on the cost review com- pleted in October, 1968. That informa- tion led the subcommittee to conclude that there would be a cost overrun in the C-5A program of approximately $2 billion. Mr. President, I point out that only five of these planes have been produced out of 120, and they already have an overrun of $2 billion in a contract that originally was to call for $3.4 billion. It is costing $2 billion more than that. SPe- cifically, according to testimony received by the subcommittee, the original esti- mate of the cost of 120 C-5A airplanes was $3.4 billion. Because of cost over- runs mainly being experienced in the performance of the Lockheed contract, actual costs would total $5.3 billion. These estimates included the cost of spare parts. I will come back to the sub- ject of spare parts later, because I am sure there will be a dispute on the floor with respect to this matter when we re- turn in September; and there was a dis- pute when I was briefed by the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force, Mr. Whit- taker, as to the actual size of the over- run. The difference is that, somehow, the Air Force does not want to include all the spare parts, including replenishment parts. When they are questioned on it, they admit that the spare parts are es- sential parts of the plane. They have to be purchased. They should be included both in the first estimate and in the last estimate, and that is what I have done. EMBARRASSING FACTS At first the Air Force refused to com- ment on the C-5A cost overruns. I can well understand this refusal. In light of earlier Air Force assertions and repre- sentations to Congress about the C-5A, it must have been extremely embar- rassing for the Air Force when these facts came to light. Only a few months prior to our hearings, the Air Force had testified before another committee of Congress that the current costs of the Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 ? MDPORklit4R000300100001-3 0 veiugust 13, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL REC ? S 9973 C-5A were within the original cost esti- to the performance of the C-5A as well tation programs which are desperately mates?in other words, no cost overrun, as to the costs. Both of the Air Force needed. For example, on March 6, 1968, Alex- spokesmen to whom I have referred also DOUBLE HOUSING FUNDS ander H. Flax, Assistant Secretary of the testified that the plane would be delivered It is almost double all the funds we Air Force for Research and Development, on time, and that the first delivery was intend to spend in 1970 for low- and testified before the House Subcommittee scheduled for June 1969. They also testi- moderate-income housing by HUD. on the Department of Defense, of the Bed of their high expectations of the The overrun on the C-5A is more than Committee on Appropriations. Secretary performance of the plane. Now we know twice as much as we intend to spend in Flax was asked whether C-5A program that these claims were also overopti- this entire fiscal year for low- and mod- was within the original cost estimates. mistic. The fact is that a substantial erate-income housing for the entire He replied: delivery slippage has occurred. The Air country. If there is one economic shame We believe it is within the range between Force was to have its first C-5A's last in this country, where we have really the target and ceiling costs at the moment. June. They were not delivered. In other fallen down, it is in low- and moderate- Secretary Flax went on to say: words, the contractors have already income housing. failed to meet their delivery schedule. It is only slightly less than all the $2.3 in the program office the contractor is in the The first deliveries are. now scheduled billion in the fiscal 1970 budget for Fed- According to the best estimates of people range where he should be between the tar- for next December a slippage and de- eral outlays to elementary and second- get and the ceiling costs, lay of 6 months. ary education. Whether the plane when it is finally The C-SA overrun would virtually pay Secretary Flax added that the aver- delivered will perform according to the for all non-service-connected pensions age weapons systems cost of the first 53 contract specifications is also a clues- for the U.S. veterans for fiscal year 1970. production aircraft would be $22 million tion, in my opinion. For we have learned It is more by $300 million than all the each and that the average weapons sys- t the C-5A has developed a wing money we spend on veterans' hospitals tems cost for the first 115 aircraft would be $18.6 million per copy. To be generous with Secretary Flax, his testimony was wildly overoptimistic. SECOND TESTIMONY On May 8, 1968, the Air Force again testified to Congress, this time before the Senate Subcommittee on Appropriations for the Department of Defense. General Robert G. Ruegg, Deputy Chief of Staff, Systems and Logistics, was asked to de- scribe the C-5A program. He responded: The design, development and manfacture of the C-5A aircraft is progressing very sat- isfactorily and is generally on schedule. General Ruegg then stated that the current average weapons systems unit cost for the approved program of 120 C-5A aircraft was $19.6 million per plane. It should be noted that there is a slight discrepancy between the testi- mony of Secretary Flax before the House Subcommittee on the Department of De- fense of the Committee on Appropria- tions and the testimony of General poor families for an entire year. eu weof the American people on t e ot er, Ruegg before the Senate Subcommittee are having trouble getting the full $100 the time has come to call a halt to such on Appropriations for the Department million for that program. The $100 mil- outrageous excesses. of Defense. The discrepancy amounts to lion needed for the program for the en- a mere $1 million per plane. Secretary tire country is only one-twentieth the $2 AIR FORCE PRESS RELEASE Flax testified that the cost would be billion overrun on this one plane. As I stated, at first the Air Force would $18.6 million for 115 aircraft, while Gen- COMBAT TROOPS not officially comment on the disclosure eral Ruegg testified that the aircraft Mr. President, the $2 billion, at $10,000 of the overrun. Finally on November 19, would cost $19.6 million for 120 aircraft. per man per year, would finance the pay 1968, a week after the disclosure wasmade before the Subcommittee on Econ- It seems strange that the unit cost of and allowances and associated personnel omy in Government, the Air Force did 120 aircraft would be more than the costs for 200,000 combat troops or more make a statement in the form of a press unit cost of 115 aircraft. But this dis- than 10 combat divisions for a full year. release. The press release stated as crepancy and this confusion in the wake That is why many of us say this coun- follows: of the real facts as we now know them try would be stronger if we spent defense C-5 is neither here nor there, unless one funds more efficiently. The prime contract for the C-5, with Lock- were to expect consistency and accuracy The $2 billion overrun on one plane heed Aircraft Corporation for the airframe on the part of the Air Force with re- and one contract would finance all the and General Electric Company for the en- gard to the costs of its weapons systems. economic assistance or AID funds in gines, were the first on a "Total Package" Again to be generous to General Ruegg, the fiscal 1970 budget of $1.973 billion, basis, which was an innovation in Govern- his testimony on the costs of the C-5A The $2 billion is five times the amount ment procurement. Under these contracts, was also wildly overoptimistic, in the budget for rural electrification, designed to check the large cost increases COST AND DELIVERY SLIPPAGE It is more than five times the amount of the past, the competing contractors made commitments with respect to production C-5 The point is that the Air Force has the Interior Department will spend on airplanes prior to their development. been asserting as recently as 6 months all forms of recreation. In view of the great risks inherent in such before the hearings before the Subcom- The $2 billion excess to be spent on commitments, which embraced a period of mittee on Economy in Government--my the C-5A is almost 20 times the $212 seven years, the contracts contained safe- subcommittee?that there was no C-5A million in the Department of Transpor- guards both for the Government and thecontractors. The Government is protected by overrun, and the Air Force assured Con- tation budget for urban mass transpor- contractual provisions which create increased gress that the program was proceeding tation to which the President addressed motivation for the contractors to produce satisfactorily. These assurances, by the himself with such vigor in the past few technically superior equipment on time at way, related to the delivery schedule and days?and high-speed ground transpor- the lowest cost possible. For example, the crack during static testing in the last and medical care. few weeks. Just how serious this wing The $2 billion overrun on the C-5A is crack is and how it relates to, the over- almost three times the $742 million in all strength or weakness of the C-5A air- the Federal budget in fiscal year 1970 for craft has not been publicly disclosed so law enforcement, justice, and civil rights. far. What kind of priority system is that In any event, one can well understand when our cities are burning, when our the embarrassment of the Air Force to Courts are jammed, when the crime rate see the public disclosure of the $2 billion has risen, and when millions of Amen- overruns in November 1968. cans still suffer the stigma and indig- HUGE FUNDS AT STAKE nities of second-class citizenship? Mr. President, $2 billion is a phe- These are among the reasons this con- nomenal amount of money. These are tract is outrageous. What kind of pri- not the funds for the yearly procure- orities do we have when we spend $2 ment of an entire military service. Two billion more on one single plane than for billion dollars is the amciunt of money any one of the programs I have men- by which costs will exceed the estimates tioned aboVe? on one weapon system alone. That is the The alarming thing about it is the Air hard, shocking, scandalous fact. Force performance. They have backed Look at the alternatives to spending and filled. They have tried to hide the the money on the overrun. facts. They have atempted to cover up Two billion dollars would pay for the the excesses. housing subsidy under the new home- CHANGE PRIORITIES owners section of the 1968 Housing Act, For the sake of the security of the for some 3% million housing units for country on the one hand, and the welfare Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9974 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 13, 1969. contractors pay 2O-SOc of every dollar above the target price of 2B$. The Government is get an investigation to determine wars and one minor "brushfire" war. whether that was desirable. That is we assume, not that we might not obligated to pay anything above the ceiling price of 2.4B$ for the first 58 airplanes Why would not the 58 C-5A's present- have to fight these two wars in succession including their engines atoll the research and 13r authorized, funded, and under con- or in a relatively short space of time; development. Similarly, should the Govern- struction not meet whatever military re- rather, we assume that we might have to ment proceed with a follow-on buy, the con- quirements exist? wage the wars all at once, simultaneously. c tract contains a formula whi+la would reduce My information indicates that the I might add, that how this farfetched and but not eliminate large lOsses that the on- tractors might incur on the nrst 58 airplanes, Air Force and the military already have questionable assumption crept into our by increasing the target cost of the follow-on more than adequate aircraft capability defense policy and our foreign policy is airplanes. All of these terms were contained with the cargo planes in its inventory, a mystery to me and until a relatively , In the original competivelv awarded con- In addition, the Air Force has access to short time ago, very few Members of the tracts, the cargo capability of private carriers. Congress, on the basis of my information, The Government is nate considering the The Air Force has traditionally utilized knew that there was such an assumption, question of ordering c-5 aiepl.ines beyond the private carriers for its airlift needs. This In any event the military requirement original 58, but no decision has been made, seems to me to be an eminently sound for the C-5A, and specifically for the full The incentive for the contractors to reduce costs remains in effect; and any such order policy. But with the addition of the C-5A 120 aircraft, is based on the 2-plus war and the excess cargo airlift capability contingency Plus the McNamara rapid will provide continued posit,ive motivation. ? . . ? - to maintain cost control. which it would bring to the Air Force, I deployment strategy. At the beginning of this pr,-Tam over three predict that there will be a change in this years ago, the Air Force estimated that the Policy. Already there are signs that the LS IT COST EFFECTIVE? cost of development and production of the military is cutting down on its use of In my judgment, the 23 aircraft from first 58 airplanes would be $1.3 billion. The private carriers. I think this is unf or- run B cannot be justified even if we ac- corresponding estimate for the 120 airplanes tunate, that it represents a mistake in cent the assumption that we must be ultimately contemplated was $3.1 billion. judgment, and that it will impair our prepared to engage in two major con- ng private carrier fleet. ventional wars and one minor war, siuml- ? lation and all other factors, ;,re $3.25 billion Current estimates, includi economic esca- THE 58 PLANES WOULD BE PRODUCED taneously, which, as I have indicated, and $4.3 billion, indicating increases of 41 . and 39% respectively. strikes me as an unrealistic if not irra- Now let me explain that my amend- tional assumption. These additional costs result from: (1) increased costs for labor and materials result- ment would not end the C-5A program I do not say that the United States ing from the combination of a significant war altogether. Fifty-eight planes has been should not have any rapid deployment effort and an unprecedented demand for authorized and are under Construction, Capability. No doubt some rapid deploy- civilian aircraft, both of which occurred after as I have stated. My amendment does not ment capability is desirable. That is not, the original estimates, (2) the introduction apply to the 58 aircraft under construe- the question here. The 58 C-5A's now of new technology, and (3) modifications to tion. These aircraft are known as first under production will give us substantial overcome technical difficultiv.; inherent in the development of all new aircraft. production run, or run A. A second pro- rapid deployment capability. What is at Based on flight experience to date, the duction run is also contemplated by the issue is the question of whether the 23 C-5 will exceed its technical rfor Air Force. In fact, the Air Force may be additional C-5A's will add significantly guarantees. contemplating several subsequent pro- to our deployment capability. In my duction runs, judgment, it will not. The 23 additional What all that verbiage means is that The second production run is known aircraft will add only the capability to the Air Force was admitting that the as run B. The total number of aircraft move the equipment for half an Army 120 C-5A's would cost approximately $1.2 in run B is 62 units. The authorization division to Europe in 3 weeks and for less billion more than the original 1965 esti- bill before us today contains funds for than one-quarter of a division to Asia in mates. This concession, although it did 23 aircraft from the second production the same period. not represent the whole kWh, indicated rim, or run B. This is a very small capability con- part of the magnitude of the problem. My amendment applies only to the 23 CONGRESSONAL RESPONSI aILITY sidering the very large price we are being aircraft in run B. The funds that my asked to pay. I would also add that the 'The problem revealed by the C-SA case amendment would strike from the bill McNamara rapid deployment concept is goes far beyond the cost of a single weap- are the funds earmarked for the 23 air- questionable because the C-5A is justi- ons system, even though the cost prob- craft. The amendment provides that no fled only during the very early move- lem alone is very great. The problem is more than 58 C-5A's, meaning run A, ment requirements following the out- whether the Congress is willing and shall be purchased until after the Comp- break of hostilities. Only for the 1- to 3- ready to exercise its full responsibility to troller General of the United States has week period following the beginning of a the American people with regard to the completed and submitted to the Congress war can the C-5A be justified. At any military budget. In my view, military a comprehensive study and investiga- later period, that later than 3 weeks, spending for many years has been out tion of the projected costs of the C-5A's. ships become a much more efficient and of control so far as the Con aress is con- Among the facts the Comptroller Gen- effective means of moving men and cerned. The Congress, in short, has failed eral should gather are those which would equipment. Ships, of course, can move to properly exercise its constitutional allow us to judge, whether the purchase many more men and much larger ton- responsibility to provide fOr the common of the 23 aircraft from run B would add ages than aircraft. defense. This responsibility should not significantly to the deployment capa- signify the complete abdication of au- bility of the military forces of the United As an example, if we plan to move our military forces to Europe from the thority by the Congress over the military States. This in effect is the military United States in a period of 2 weeks, budget in general and military weapons requirement, systems in particular. ships become more economically efficient The essence of the military require- than C-5A's. If we plan to deploy our The C-5A program symbolizes the fail- ment Justification for the C-5A concerns forces to Asia during a 314-week period, ure and the breakdown of the present the rapid deployment strategy envisioned ships are more economically efficient system, by the former Secretary of Defense, than C-5A's. way A 0-5A? Robert McNamara. This strategy con- In the first place, Congress unthink- templated the availability of military SHIPS LESS EXPENSIVE ingly permitted the military to sell the forces for very rapid deployment. It The question should be asked, what is C-5A concept to it. Is there a real mill-our realistic readiness capability? The would therefore depend upon a strategic tary requirement for the C.-5A? What is deployment force which could deliver the fact is that our military has never dem- the nature of this military requirement? necessary military forces with unpre- onstrated the capability to assemble and Why do we need 120 C-5A's? even assum- cedented speed, deploy more than one or two light air- ing that there is a real requirement? TWO AND ONE-HALF WAR STRATEGY borne or marine divisions in a matter of a few weeks. Any plan we may have to I may emphasize that my amendment All of us have now heard of the 21/2 assemble, transport, and reassemble for would permit 58 C-5A's, already author- war contingency. This means that our combat 12 or more heavy, mechanized ized. It would simply mean that the ad- entire defense strategy is based on the or armored divisions in a period of a ditional 23 C-5A's--or going to 81 C- assumption that we might have to fight few weeks is completely unrealistic based 5A's?would be held up until we could simultaneou sly two major conventional on our experience and our peacetime Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 1969 Approved Est1feitminett1ReabRIDIn$pic+164R000300100001-3 S 9975 Augusf 13, training. If we take our experience into account and allow for the relative readi- ness capabilities of peacetime troops, ships are far more inexpensive than the C-5A for equal deployment capability in a 2-month period after D-Day. Accord- ing to information that I have received, ships are one-half to one-sixth as ex- pensive as the C-5A for such a period. In other words, if 23 additional air- craft are not purchased there will be only a minor impact at best on our over- ? all rapid deployment capabilities. This is because of the relatively minor incre- mental advantage to be gained from the purchase of the 23 additional planes, considering their cost. The fact is that we already have more than an adequate aircraft capability from our available C-141's, C-130's, and our civilian reserve aircraft. Indeed this aircraft caPability is already adequate even assuming the 21/2 war contingency. According to my information currently procured air- craft forces are adequate even for emer- gency wartime supply. SYSTEMS ANALYSIS STUDY SAYS PLANE NOT JUSTIFIED I recently asked Philip N. Whittaker, the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force, Installations and Logistics, to brief me on the military requirement for the 23 additional aircraft or for the 120 aircraft. Mr. Whittaker replied that the military requirement is based on classified infor- mation. I can well understand the Air Force's reluctance to discuss the military requirement publicly. I have learned that the most recent study by the Office of Systems Analysis into the C-5A program concludes that the 23 follow-on aircraft cannot be justified on either military or economic grounds. Mr. President, I suspect that this is probably the most important statement I shall make this afternoon, and I wish to repeat it. I think if all Senators know of this statement, very considerable question will arise in their minds as to whether they should vote for this C-5A; and I think it would be very persuasive to many Senators to vote for my amend- ment. Let me, therefore, repeat it: The most recent study by the Office of Sys- tems Analysis into the C-5A program concludes that the 23 follow-on aircraft cannot be justified on either military or economic grounds. That is an analysis by the Office of Systems Analysis, in the Office of the Secretary of Defense. I do not know how we can get a better qualified authority, and it is especially persuasive in view of the fact that the Secretary of Defense and the Defense Department have asked for these aircraft and yet their own analysis shows they cannot be justified on either military or economic grounds. TWO BILLION DOLLAR OVERRUN The second major issue in the C-5A procurement is the matter of costs. I have indicated that the conclusion of the Subcommittee on Economy in Govern- ment was that the cost of 120 aircraft will be about $2 billion more than was estimated when this contract was en- tered into in 1965. This brings us to a discussion of the C-5A contract. Since the largest portion of the overrun and the problems revealed so far deal with the Lockheed contract, I will refer to it. The contract entered into by the Air Force with Lockheed was a negotiated, fixed price incentive con- tract. It was the first contract utilizing the so-called total package procurement concept?TPPC. When the Air Force announced the award of this contract, it did so very proudly. It was proud of the contract as a new concept in procure- ment, that is, the total package procure- ment concept which was supposed to achieve two major objectives. Because the C-5A contract gave birth to this new concept, it is important to understand what it was supposed to do. FAILURE OF TOTAL PACKAGE PROCUREMENT First, total packaging was supposed to act as a deterrent against cost overruns in less than promised performance. To accomplish this objective, all develop- ment, production, and as much support as is feasible of a system throughout its anticipated life, was to be procured in a single contract, as one total package. The contract for the C-5A includes price and performance commitments by the contractor, which is supposed to motivate him to control costs, perform to specifica- tions, and produce on time. In view of the enormous overrun and the 6-month delay in the delivery schedule, at least two of the three criteria for performance of the contract show negative results. It has been our experience that contractors have often bought into an R. & D. con- tract by offering to perform it at a low price and making other promises, often unkept, in order to place themselves in a position to be the prime contractor or the sole source contractor for the production. The production of a weapons system, of course, is usually the more lucrative end of the job. INEFFECTIVE METHOD Second, total packaging was supposed to motivate contractors to design for economical production and support of operational hardware. In May of 1966, several months after the award of the C-SA contract, the Air Force published a description of the total package procurement concept. This de- scription contains the following pas- sages: Most simply stated, the TPPC as conceived by the Air Force, envisions that all antici- pated development, production, and as much support as is feasible of a system through- out its anticipated life is to be procured as one total package and incorporated into one contract containing price and performance commitments at the outset of the acquisition fees of a system procurement. In other words, the C-5A contract with Lockheed included R. & D. production, and support; that is, spare parts. The contract also contained priceand per- formance commitments. PAST FAILURES In explaining why the Air Force felt the need for this new contractual device, It stated: Thus, the history of defense procurement is replete with cost overruns and less than promised performance which were, at least in part, the results of intentional "buy in" bid- ding where cost estimates are understated and performance and scheduled estimates overstated on the initial contract and this has been the case even where there has been no substantial increase in the then state of the art. The principal benefits enumerated by the Air Force in this publication are that the contract: First, requires a tightening of design and configuration and discipline. Second inhibits the unrealistic sales- manship or buy in bidding, includes overestimates of performance as well as underestimates of cost. Third, motivates the contractor to de- sign initially for economical production, and should produce not only lower costs on the first production units, but also a lower takeoff point on the production learning curve, thus, benefiting every unit in the production run. Fourth, permits the Department of Defense to negotiate with a contractor on the basis of binding commitments concerning the performance and the price of what is really required?opera- tional equipment. OBJECTIVES -:17NOBTAINED These were the expressed objectives of the total packaging concept as embodied in the C-5A contract. They are desirable objectives. Unfortunately, none of them were obtained in the C-.-5A contract. There is considerable evidence, in my judgment, that Lockheed engaged in un- realistic salesmanship and that its intent was to buy into the C-5A. It did this by underbidding the Boeing Corp. which was also a candidate for the C-5A by $300 million. Lockheed also underbid its nearest competitor in price, the Douglas Corp. by $100 million. The enormous cost overruns cast Lockheed's low bid in a new perspective. In light of what we now know, Lockheed's low bid is ludicrous, and it can be reasonably concluded that Lockheed knew or had reason to know that its bid was unrealistic. The proposal submitted by the Boeing Corp. by the way, was considered superior on tech- nical design grounds than the Lockheed proposal by the Air Force Source Selec- tion Board. The Air Force assertion that this con- tract was based on binding commitments concerning the performance and price is especially foolish or deceptive in view of what we now know. This brings us to a discussion of the now famous repricing formula and it also brings us to the sub- ject of spare parts which I said earlier I would more fully discuss. REPRICING FORMULA The repricing formula contained in the contract was first publicly disclosed in hearings last November. The repricing formula is the most blatant reverse in- centive in Government contracting that I have ever encountered. It provides, in effect, that the second production run, run B, is to be repriced, on the basis of the actual cost of the first production run, run A, and in accordance with a specific formula. The effect of using the repricing formula is to renegotiate with the contractor over the price of the follow-on production, run B. It means that in the event the actual costs of the first 58 planes exceed the original esti- mates, the contractor receives a higher price for the follow-on production. In Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9976 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 1$, 1969 other words, the higher the cost to pro- duce the first 58 planes, the higher the prices goes for the follow-on aircraft. As can be seen, there is a very limited incentive to control the costs. Instead of being penalized for exceeding these cost estimates, the contractor in this case is awarded a higher price for the follow-on production. NO BINDING COMMITMENT ON COST How firm, therefore, are the firm price commitments which the Air Force has claimed for the C-5A contract? I asked this question of the then Assistant Secre- tary of the Air Force, Robert H. Charles-- the father of the package procurement, and some Senators say he wrote the book on it?when he testified before the Sub- committee on Economy in Government on January 16, 1969. The colloquy with Mr. Charles on this point follows: Mr. PROXMIRE. Do we really have binding commitments on the C-5A price if the con- tract is repriced for future production runs in order to take care pf cost overruns in the initial production? Do we not lose one of the main advantages of the total packaging? MT. CHARLES. No, I think not. Chairman PROXM/RE. I do not see how we can have binding commitments, on the one hand, on price and a repricing projection at the same time. Mr. CHARLES. I do. It is a binding clause In the contract. Any contract adjustment is made pursuant to a formula to which the competitor bids. I see nothing non-binding about it. In other words, to the Air Force a con- tract clause provides for a firm price commitment even though another clause in the contract provides for a waY to increase the price. It seems to me that under that kind of arrangement, the only party committed is the American taxpay- er and he is committed to pay any price, no matter how high and excessive it might be, once the Air Force decides it wants a new weapons system. AIR FORCE NOW ADMITS MISTAKE But even the Air Force has recently admitted that the repricing formula was a mistake. The Air Force states in its recent review of the C-5A program: This provision was well intentioned but poorly comprehended at the time of award. In operation it is beset with ambiguities, complicating its implementation and rais- ing the prospect of a reverse incentive. Un- der a selected set of conditions, the point can be reached where, for each additional dollar of cost occurring in the production of Run A aircraft, an increase of total con- tract target and ceiling of more than a dollar could result. This potential could encourage the contractor to add costs to Run A so as to reduce overall loss on both the Run A and Run B production. GOLDEN HANDSHAKE Contrary to Air Force claims at the early stages of this program, when it was being sold to the Congress and to the public, the contract has not produced lower costs for the first production units. The costs for the first production units are greatly exceeding the original esti- mates. Thus, instead of a lower takeoff point on the production of learning curve, benefiting every unit in the production run, we have a higher takeoff point on the production learning curve, thus in- flating every unit in the production rim. On top of all this, we have the repricing formula, which has been called the "golden handshake," which further in- flates the cost of the run B aircraft. The Subcommittee on Economy in Govern- ment concluded in its unanimous report the following: Not only were the price increases made possible by the repricing formula, but the cost overruns which are resulting in the higher prices may very well have been en- couraged by the existence of the formula and by the nature of the formula. For the mere fact that a repricing provision existed in the contract constituted a built-in get- well remedy for almost any kind of cost growth. According to this provision, the price of the second increment (run B) could be increased ori the basis of excessive actual costs on the first increment (run A). The motivation, if any, of the incentive feature of the contract is thereby largely nullified, provided the contractor is confident that the Government will exercise the option. Why bother to keep coats down if their increase forms the basis for a higher price? Addi- tionally, because of the nature of the for- mula, the higher the percentage of overrun over the original contract ceiling price on the first increment, the higher the per- centage by which the second increment is repriced. As I have indicated, the Air Force itself now recognizes that the repricing for- mula was a serious mistake. The mistake was so serious that the Air Force says it would now like to renegotiate the con- tract to remove the reverse incentive fea- ture. The Air Force review of the C.-5A program calls for such a renegotiation. The problem, however, cannot be so easily resolved. Revising the contract to eliminate or modify the repricing form- ula will not make this a good contract nor will it necessarily reduce the cost of the C-5A to the Government. And the cost is what is at issue here. SHOULD STOP AFTER FIRST RUN There is no way, in my judgment, to get out from under the huge cost of this program without curtailing it at this point. If the program is. ended at the completion of the first 58 aircraft, Lock- heed would be forced to absorb the cost of overruns for which they are responsi- ble, over and above the ceiling price in the contract. There is no reason for Lock- heed not to absorb the costs over and above the ceiling price. And these costs, by the way, would in- clude the possibly extensive costs brought about by the recent failure of the C-5A wing to meet structural strength require- ments. I might add here that the failure of the C-5A to meet the structural strength requirements in the contract is a serious matter. It is no excuse to say that the plane is satisfactory to 100 per- cent of its designed load limit, and that it only fails to meet 150 percent of the designed load limit. The fact is that the 150 percent provides for a safety feature which is absolutely essential before any plane can be deemed airworthy. The FAA, according to my understanding, would require this plane to meet 200 percent of its designed load limit. But the Air Force has decided for some reason which it has not made known, not to seek FAA certi- fication, although the contract provides for FAA certification. In addition, the fact that the plane failed to meet the static tests indicates that it would more than likely fail under dynamic condi- tions. Static tests only simulate dynamic conditions. The static tests that occur on the ground do not create the same kind of stresses on an airframe that is created during the dynamic conditions that occur in the air. LETTER TO SECRETARY On this point I wrote a letter to Robert Seamans, Secretary of the Air Force, on July 18, 1969, inquiring about the report- ed crack in the C-5A wing. I also ad- dressed certain questions to the Secretary relating to recent changes in the C-5A specifications which seem to represent degradations in its performance stand- ards. So far I have had no response from the Secretary of the Air Force to my letter, although I wrote him on July 18! However, I believe that what I said to him was pertinent to this discussion: JULY 18, 1969. The Hon. ROBERT C. SEAMANS, Jr., Secretary of the Air Force, Department of Defense, The Pentagon, Washington, D.C. DEAR Ma. SECRETARY: I have noted the re- cent announcement by the Air Force that tests of a C-5A aircraft produced a crack in one of its wings. This development seems to me to raise ad- ditional questions about the C-5A program. You may be aware of recent testimony by Mr. A. E. Fitzgerald before the Subcommittee on Eat:moray in Government with regard to certain changes in the C-5A specifications. One of the changes, according to Mr. Fitz- gerald, is a decrease in the maximum speed for lowering flaps on landing from 205 knots to 180 knots. Another change is a decrease In the maximum allowable sink rate at land- ing. It occurs to me that both of these changes represent degradations in the C-SA specifications. What are the reasons for lowering the standards of the C-5A specifications? Have wing cracks, fuselage cracks, or any other substantial defects been produced in the C-SA prior to July 13, 1969, by ground static tests or other tests or usage of this aircraft? Were the performance standards for the C-&A lowered because defects were produced in previous tests? Would you be normally advised of any defects produced from the C-SA during tests? Will the delivery schedule for the C-5A be affected by the current difficulty? If the delivery schedule will be delayed, please esti- mate the amount of the delay. Please estimate the cost of fixing the cur- rent difficulty (the cracked wing). Who will pay the cost of necessary modifications, the Government or the contractor? In the event that Congress does not auth- orize the purchase of the Run B aircraft, who would pay the costs of the modifica- tions made necessary by the cracked wing? In the event that Congress does authorize the purchase of Run B, who would pay the costs of the modifications? Your early response to these questions will be appreciated. Sincerely, WILLIAM PROXM/RE, Chairman, Subcommittee on Economy in Government. IS GOVERNMENT LIABLE FOR REPAIRS4 The question that we also need an- swered is whether the purchase of the 23 additional aircraft would make the Gov- ernment liable for the cost of repairs and modifications necessary to correct the structural defect. This is one of the ques- tions which my amendment seeks to an- swer. In the amendment, the Comptrol- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2011/31tiEbeffP7gmaptR0003ooi 00001-3 August 13, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL ? A ler General is instructed specifically to seek an answer to this question. I should add here that according to the lawyers for the contractor, the Govern- ment would be liable not only for the costs of repairing the cracked wing and making whatever modifications are nec- essary, but would also be liable for all contractor losses and termination costs if the full 120 aircraft are not procured. This view is based on the fact that the Secretary of the Air Force early this year exercised the option to purchase the fol- low-on aircraft. The exercise of this option was an- nounced on the morning of the January 16, 1969, hearings before the Subcom- mittee on Economy in Government, of which I am chairman. This announce- ment came in spite of my request to the Secretary of Defense that the Govern- ment not commit itself to purchase the Run B aircraft until a complete investi- gation of the cost overruns could be com- pleted. The investigation I asked for was not even started on the morning of Jan- uary 16, when the announcement of the Government was made. COST OF SPARES The amendment I have introduced ad- dresses itself to several other cost issues, including the cost of spares. The Air Force has consistently tried to gloss over and obscure the huge cost increases that have occurred on the spare parts. It has even attempted to create the impression that the original contract did not include the cost of spares. This is not true. The contract entered into in 1965 with Lock- heed did not include the cost of spares. Now the Air Force claims that the ori- ginal contract included only the cost of Initial spares as distinguished from re- plenishment spares. The difference, as it has been explained to me by the Air Force, is that the initial spares would be comparable to the first set of tires on an automobile needed to replace the ori- ginal tires, while the replenishment spares would be the second and third set of new tires. The question, then, is whether the ori- ginal contract estimates included the cost of the replenishment spares. REPLENISHMENT SPARES IN CONTRACT In answering that question, I would first point out that the contract itself contains a provision covering the costs of replenishment spare parts and repair spare parts. Secondly, it has always been assumed by persons familiar with the contract from its origin that replenish- ment spares were included in the orig- inal contract estimates. This assump- tion is based on the description of the to- tal package contract described by the Air Force in 1966 and on an early brief- infl document written in 1965. The Air Force's description of total packaging, as I stated earlier, indicated that all anticipated development, production, and as much support as is feasible was to be included in the total package con- tract. This would include spare parts, whether initial or replenishment. Further, the briefing document which I referred to states explicitly that re- plenishment spare parts are to be in- cluded as part of the C-5A package. I will now read from this briefing docu- ment. On the title page is the following: Contract AF 33(657) 15053 FPLF-VP, C-5A, Lockheed Aircraft Corporation Lockheed? Georgia Div. On page 3 of this document, which was prepared by the Air Force, is the follow- ing: What we bought: Item A?RDT&E, Sys- tem Integration and Assembly ACFT/Mis- sion Kits, Training/Training Equipment, AGE, System Test, System Management, Data and Reports. On page 4, this list of what the Air Force bought continues: What we bought: Item B?Production, ACFT/Mission Kits, Training & Train- ing Equipment, AGE, Contract Technical Services. Provisions for: Initial Spare and Repair Parts, Replenishment Spare and Repair Parts, Up Dating/Modification Changes. It will be noted, of course, that the list of what the Air Force bought with the C-5A contract included initial spare and repair parts as well as replenishment spare and repair parts. In my judgment, the Air Force is in- tentionally attempting to confuse the Congress and the people on the subject of spare parts. Mr. President, I go into the detail on replenishment spare parts because again and again we have had different esti- mates as to the original cost of the C-5A and as to its present cost. Repeatedly, those who have argued that the overrun is not $2 billion but some lesser figure It is $1.4 or $1.3 billion?have said that in the initial estimates, replenishment spare parts were not included, and that by adding the cost of replenishment spare parts in the present estimates, we are not comparing the same things. I go into this detail today to estabilsh beyond any question the documentation to show that I am comparing the same things, that the replenishment spare parts are included in both, and that on that basis there is a $1.9 billion to $2 billion overrun. Rarely has there been a case with so much concealment and obstruction on the part of a Government agency with respect to its handling of public funds that has been so well demonstrated and documented in public hearings. The cal- lous and devious treatment by the Air Force of one of its employees, Mr. A. E. Fitzgerald, well illustrates this point. FITZGERALD CASE Mr. Fitzgerald has been the deputy for Management Systems, Office of the Secretary of the Air Force, for almost 4 years. His responsibilities until recent months included development of the management controls used on the C-5A program. He was also a member of the steering committee reviewing the financ- ing of the C-5A. He was first asked to testify before the Subcommittee on Economy in Government last November because of his recognized expertise in the area of management systems and cost controls. Mr. Fitzgerald's problems began when he was invited to testify. The Air Force first attempted to deny his appearance before the subcommittee altogether. Only S 9977 after repeated urgings by my office did the Air Force finally relent and grudg- ingly permit him to appear. However, the Air Force notified me that Mr. Fitz- gerald was to appear only in the capacity of a "backup" witness. The main witness was to be someone else. But this some- one else was an individual with whom the subcommittee was not familiar and whom it had not invited. In other words, the Department of De- fense was attempting to dictate to the Subcommittee of Congress who was to be its principle witness: and the Depart- ment of Defense had taken it upon itself to inform us of the appearance of some- one who was not invited, while relegating the individual who was invited to "backup" status. Of course, the subcom- mittee insisted on hearing from Mr. Fitzgerald, and we did. However, the Air Force denied Mr. Fitzgerald the opportunity to prepare a written statement, although the sub- committee had requested a written state- ment from him in our letter of invitation. A written statement permits the witness to organize his testimony in an orderly way, and to prepare statistical data, charts, and other materials. It also provides a committee with a chance to become familiar with the testimony in advance of the hearing, to prepare thoughtful questions, and to have a more fruitful dialog with the witness. But the subcommittee was denied this oppor- tunity because of tbe directive to Mr. Fitzgerald not to prepare a written statement. The only explanation, in my judgment, is that the Pentagon was attempting to interfere with this witness' testimony by gagging him as much as possible. This explanation is amply supported by the events that followed Mr. Fitz- gerald's oral testimony in November. In his oral testimony, responding to direct questions from me, he conceded the fact that there would be a cost overrun on the C-5A, possibly as high as $2 billion. COMPUTER ERROR Less than 2 weeks after his testimony, he was notified of his loss of Civil Service tenure. Imagine that. Less than 2 weeks after this man testified before a congres- sional committee and simply answered a question put to him--and as far as we know he answered it honestly?he was notified of the loss of his civil service tenure by the Air Force. The Air Force claims that this action was only coinci- dental to the fact that he had recently testified before the Subcommittee on Economy in Government about the C-5A. It was called a "computer error." We checked on the basis of the latest testi- mony and found that the,computer made very few errors. It had made two errors before that were similar to this one, al- though it made some 50,000 decisions. Whether the Air Force's action in strip- ping Fitzgerald of his job protection was a coincidence may be judged from the events that followed. For the subcommit- tee subsequently obtained a copy of a memorandum to the Secretary of the Air Force from the Secretary's administra- tive assistant. The memorandum was dated January 6, 1969. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9978 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 18, 1969 GET RID OF )11ZGRRALD The intriguing feature of this memo- randum is that it concerns ways in which the Air Force could get Ad of Mr. Fitz- gerald. I think the Members of this body ought to think about this a few minutes. Here was the Secretary of the Air Force, Harold Brown, receiving an interoffice memorandum from his administrative assistant. The subject of the memoran- dum was ways by which the Air Force could get rid of one of its civilian em- ployees. The civilian employee happened to be Mr. A. E. Fitzgerald. The civilian employee happened to have testified be- fore a committee of Congress on the costs of the C-5A cargo plant. The civilian employee testified that there would be a $2 billion cost overrun oh -this program. Previously the Air Force had gone to great lengths to hide the costs of the overruns. Less than 2 weeks after his testimony the civilian employee was stripped of his Civil Service public ten- ure. A few weeks later a memorandum is prepared by the administrative assist- ant on how to get rid of the civilian em- ployee. Is this still a coincidence? The memorandum itself explained for the benefit of Secretary Brown three separate actions "which could result in Mr. Fitzgerald's departure" They were, first, adverse actions for cause. Second. reduction in force. Third, conversion of Mr Fitzgerald's position from an ex- cepted category to career service, and then eliminating him in subsequent com- petitive procedures. To etplain the last possibility, the memorandum contains this example of Air Force ethical constraints: This action is not recommended since It is rather underhanded and Would probably not be approved by the Civil Service Com- mission, even though it is legally and pro- cedurally possible. A coincidence? I have done everything in my power to prevent the Air For oe from taking punitive action against Mr. Fitzgerald. In my view, he is a dedicated, loyal Fed- eral employee and citizen, whose conduct is beyond reproach. His only offense is that he is cost conscious. His job is to control costs, to save the taxpayers' money. He works at this job conscien- tiously and tries to save as much of the taxpayers' money as possible. He is extremely competent in this area. He is one of those rare persons who is highly gifted and who has had the char- acter and the strength to persist in what is an unpopular job of trying to hold down costs. This is the kind of conduct which engenders real hostility on the part of contractors and others who worked with him in the Air Force and the Pentagon. COLD CLIMATE FOR F/TZGERALD Unfortunately, there are those in high places in the Air Force and in the De- partment of Defense who do not agree with this approach to Government spending. And these persons have been responsible for the peculiar coincidences affecting Mr. Fitzgerald's job. Even now they are attempting to hound and dis- credit him. His major responsibilities have been taken away from him. Instead of the major weapons systems for which he was formerly responsible, his new job is to look into the cost overruns on a bowl- ing alley in Thailand. But perhaps the most reprehensible and dangerous acts committed by the Air Force in connection with Mr. Fitz- gerald's appearance before the subcom- mittee relates to the supplemental testi- mony the subcommittee requested last November. The subcommittee had asked Mr. Fitzgerald to prepare certain cost data and other information in writing, to be submitted to the subcommittee fol- lowing the close of oral testimony. Among other things, the? subcommittee had asked for a breakdown of the C-5A cost overruns. The request was made on No- vember 13, 1968. DELAYED TRANSMITTAL Not until December 24, 1968, did the subcommittee receive the materials from Mr. Fitzgerald, and only after the sub- committee has raised strenuous objec- tions to the delay in transmitting the supplemental testimony. In fact, as the subcommittee later learned, Mr. Fitz- gerald had prepared his supplemental testimony within a few days of the No- vember 13 apeparance and had turned it over to the Air Force for transmittal to the subcommittee. The Air Force had held on to the supplemental testimony and intentionally delayed its transmittal for more than 4 weeks. The materials received on -December 24, were labeled "Insert for the Record testimony of A. E. Fitzgerald." How- ever, upon checking with Mr. Fitzgerald, the subcommittee learned that the mate- rials received on December 24 were not the same materials prepared by Mr. Fitz- gerald. They had been altered by the Air Force. More importantly the Air Force had altered the C-5A cost esti- mates prepared by Mr. Fitzgerald. The alterations made it appear that Mr. Fitz- gerald's figures corresponded with the official Air Force figures contained in its November 19 press release. The subcommittee advised the Air Force that it would not accept the mate- rials received on December 24 as the testimony of A. E. Fitzgerald. We in- sisted on our right to receive the true and accurate testimony of the witness, unaltered and uncensored by the Air Force. The subcommittee finally, on January 15, received Mr. Fitzgerald's au- thentic and uncensored testimony. The Air Force's attempts to muzzle, interfere and alter the testimony of Mr. Fitzgerald cannot be justified. They ap- pear to have been almost desperate and panic stricken in their efforts to prevent public disclosure of the C-5A overrun. The Air Force testimony in two separate committees of Congress in March and May of 1968 that there was no C-5A overrun should be considered in this con- nection. LATE REPORTING OF OVERRUN What also needs to be considered is the fact that they began to learn of the C-15A overrun as early as November 1966. During that month an Air Force team, which included Mr. Fitzgerald, vis- ited the Air Force plant in Marietta, Ga., where the C-5A was being pro- duced. The review team found overruns of up to 100 percent in key segments of the program. That was in 1966, a year and a half before Mr. Flax testified before an ap- propriations subcommittee of the House that there were no overruns, and that the costs were between the cost and the ceiling. The second visit 3 weeks later con- firmed the initial observation. The over- run in the C-5A program grew steadily in late 1966. Yet, according to the evi- dence received by the subcommittee, evi- dence of its existence began disappear- ing from Department of Defense internal reports. In 1968 evidence of the over- runs also disappeared from internal Air Force reports. In fact, the Air Force re- ports had been changed by directive from higher headquarters to eliminate the evidence of the C-5A overruns. Mr. Fitz- gerald requested an audit to determine the true facts about the C-5A costs but it was never performed. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. PROXMIRE. I am happy to yield to the Senator from Virginia. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. The Senator from Wisconsin mentioned that the rec- ords were altered, and I believe he said by higher authority. Could the Senator identify the higher authority more pre- cisely? Mr. PROXMIRE. I cannot identify it other than by saying that the informa- tion, the testimony of Mr. Fitzgerald, was sent to us and we received it. We then checked with Mr. Fitzgerald and he said that that was not his testimony, that it had been changed by persons in the Air Force. Unfortunately, at the present time, I do not know and I cannot tell the distinguished Senator from Virginia who it was that changed that testimony. I will do my best to determine the identity of that person, or persons, and provide it for the RECORD. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. I was not so much concerned about that as whether it was done within the Air Force or by a higher echelon; namely, the Depart- ment of Defense as differentiated from the Air Force. Mr. PROXMIRE, Again, I would have to say to the distinguished Senator from Virginia that I am not sure. I think he makes a good point. It could come from either source. It would not be fair to the Air Force to assume that it was likely they, because it might very well have come from the Department of Defense. Mr. Fitzgerald worked insthe office of the Secretary of the Air Force. His superior was in the office of the Secretary of the Air Force. On the other hand, he did work with the Department of Defense in this, and it could have come from either area, both of which, of course, would be higher headquarters than Mr. Fitzgerald. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. I have had great concern about this contract, just as has the Senator from Wisconsin. I shall not further interrupt the Senator at this time, but when he finishes his address, I should like to go over a few points with him. Mr. PROXMIRE. Very good. Mr. President, I believe that the evi- dence in the case indicts the Air Force Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August- 13, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE S 9979 and Department of Defense for its han- dling of the C-5A program. The C-5A has been mismanaged and public funds have been mishandled. The Air Force has shown its great disregard for the heavy responsibility it has over the use of public funds, and it has shown serious disrespect for Congress by its high- handed conduct. MISMANAGED WEAPONS SYSTEM I might point out that the Air Force is not alone in this regard. The House investigation of the Army Sheridan tank program revealed similar disclosure problems, deceptions, and mismanage- ment on the part of the military. The Aerospace Daily and Executive Report, a trade newspaper, on July 30, 1969, com- mented on certain aspects of the tank and the C-5A cases. I believe what the Aerospace Daily has to say on this mat- ter is significant because that journal can by no means be labeled as critical of military spending or of the aerospace industry. I will therefore read excerpts from what the Aerospace Daily has to say: Pentagon internal reporting has come un- der fire and suspicion as an outgrowth of findings of the House Army tank investiga- tion and Congressional hearings on the C-5A jet transport cost overrun. In the $2.5 billion Army tank procurement, House Armed 8ervices Committee investiga- tors found internal reports misleading, in- accurate and deliberately optimistic. Officials connected with the program were criticized for failing to provide objective information to high command upon which logical and sup- portable decisions could be made. In the now $4.6 billion C-SA Galaxy trans- port procurement, Air Force admits that it deliberately did not report for two years initial and continuing cost growth which showed up only five months Into the eight- year program. In the fl7st case, Army claimed it wrote optimistic reports on development of the M-551 Sheridan light assault reconaissance vehicle and its Shillelagh weapons system because at every reporting period developers "believed" serious deficiencies were shortly to be corrected. The House investigation shows they were not in many cases, despite 10 years of work. In the second case, Air Force said it with- held cost growth because it did not want to jeopardize the financial condition, in the stock market and elsewhere of its only C-5A supplier. As a result of these faulty reports, Con- gressmen and Senators charged with respon- sibility for authorizing and appropriating De- fense funds have been abashed to discover they are the last persons to find out about unsolved developmental problems and cost overruns. In a time of inflation, high taxes and serious Federal budget constraints, they are placed in a tenuous position vis a vie their constituents. The article then points out that the Senate Armed Services Committee has requested quarterly reports on cost, schedule, and performance on 31 major weapons systems and that it is consider- ing having the General Accounting Office monitor contracts, The Aerospace Daily continues: How effective this step will be has to be seen. House tank investigators found that GAO was denied access to Army records, a procedure which the Pentagon can invoke under "executive privilege" precedents. Fur- ther complications are caused by differing record-keeping and auditing procedures used by the services and by their contractors. A price example is the fact that in the C-5A procurement Air Force estimates that contractor Lockheed Air Craft will lose $285 million. Lockheed estimates it will lose $13 million but make a profit after spares are ordered. The systems analysts in Laird's of- fice have still another set of figures. It remains that the Pentagon's veracity has been hurt by the findings of Congressional inquiries into the tank and transport pro- curements. Members of Congress can forgive and forget if they feel they made a bad de- cision based on objective information. But if the information they received was not honest, they will look at future Pentagon reports askance, and take them with a very large grain of salt. TIME TO CALL A HALT What all of this adds up to, in my judgment, is that the Congress must call a halt to Pentagon shenanigans. The C- 5A case symbolizes the worst aspects of military procurement. The Air Force has been managing this program since 1965 and it has utterly failed to do a good job. Public funds have been squandered on a program of dubious value which will cost at least $2 billion more than Congress originally agreed to pay. Where are the C-5A overruns leading? The recent Air Force report admits that "there is a dis- tinctive possibility that costs may con- tinue to increase." I believe that this statement means that the Air Force is putting the Congress on notice that it will come in at a later date to ask for even more money for the C-5A. Mr. President, let me add that when Assistant Secretary Whittaker briefed me in my office a few days ago he said that, too. He said that there is evidence of further cost growth, that we have not seen the end of the overruns on the C-5A, that we cannot say that $2 billion is the limit; it could be more. There is every Indication that it will be more. As a mat- ter of fact, the Air Force now is being franker in predicting overruns than it has been at any time. The American people deserve a better accounting of its tax money with respect to the C-5A program than we can now give. My amendment will at least place the Congress in a position of knowing what the real military requirements for the 23 additional aircraft are and what the economic justification for them is. The amendment asks the General Ac- counting Office for an investigation of the facts and to submit its findings with recommendations to the Congress within 90 days. NEED MORE KNOWLEDGE Clearly it is not unreasonable to re- fuse to authorize any additional C-5A's until we know more about this program. Furthermore, if it is determined that there is a military requirement for the 23 additional aircraft, then I believe we ought to know what they will cost and whether their costs will be ballooned by the re-pricing formula. I therefore urge the adoption of the amendment. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that sections from the.Subcommit- tee on Economy in Government Report on the Economics of Military Procure- ment, on the C-5A overruns, which in- eludes a table on the cost overruns, be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the excerpts were ordered to be printed in the REC- ORD, as follows: 2. COST OVERRUNS: THE C?CA CARGO PLANE The Air Force selected the Lockheed Air- craft Corp. as the airframe prime contractor for the C-5A, a large, long-range, heavy logistic aircraft, on September 30, 1965, after proposals had been received in response to Requests for Proposals (RFP) from 5 firms, and preliminary contracts had been entered into with 3 of them in 1961. It is not clear, from the evidence, how much price compe- tition had to do with the selection. Secretary Charles testified that there was competition among the firms. But when asked how low Lockheed's bid was compared to the others, he refused to disclose the figures on the grounds that "this is company proprietary information". A similar procedure resulted in the selection of General Electric as the engine manufacturer. The contract with Lockheed is a negotiated, fixed price incentive fee contract. It is also the first contract utilizing the total pack- age procurement concept (TPPC). Two major objectives of the concept, according to the Defense Department, are to discourage con- tractors from buying in on a design and de- velopment contract with the intention of re- covering on a subsequent production con- tract, and to motivate contractors to design for economical production and support of operational hardware. Thus, TPPC is sup- posed to act as a deterrent against cost over- runs and less-than-promised performance. To accomplish this, all development, pro- duction, and as much support as is feasible of a system throughout its anticipated life, Is to besprocured in a single contract, as one total package. The contract includes price and performance commitments to motivate the contractor to control costs, perform to specifications, and produce on time, As the C-5A is an incentive contract (TPPC 'does not necessarily result in incentive contract- ing) it contains the usual financial rewards and penalties associated with incentive con- tracting. The C-SA contract for the airframe pro- vides for five research, development, test and evaluation (R.D.T. & E.) aircraft plus an ini- tial production run of 53 airplanes (the total of 58 planes is called run A), and a Govern- ment option for additional airplane. The present approved program for the C-5A is 120 airplanes comprised of run A (58 air- planes) plus run B (57 airplanes) plus five airplanes from run Cl. The testimony received during the No- vember 1968 hearings indicated a cost over- run in the C-5A program totaling as much as $2 billion. A "cost overrun" is the amount in excess of the original target cost. Accord- ing to the testimony, the program originally called for 120 C-5A airplanes to cost the Government $3.4 billion, but because of cost overruns mainly being experienced in the performance of the Lockheed contract actual costs would total $5.3 billion, Following the November hearings, Senator Proxmire asked GAO to investigate into the causes and amount of the C-5A overruns and other matters relating to the contract. On November 19, 1968, the Air Force an- nounced, in a press release, that the original estimate for 120 C-5A aircraft was $3.1 bil- lion, compared to the current estimate of $4.3 billion. Subsequently, in response to a request by the subcommittee, Mr. Fitzger- ald, who was responsible for the develop- ment of a management controls used on the C-5A and who was on a steering committee directing a financial review of the C-5A, supplied a breakdown of the estimates of C-5A program cost to completion. This data showed Air Force estimates for 120 airplanes Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9980 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 13I 1969 was $3.4 billion in 1965, and $5,3 billion in cal advances beyond the state of the art, dismayed to learn that this decision was 1968, indicating an overran of about $2 bil- The inflation argument, which is supposed made before the completion of the GOO in- lion. The difference between the Air Force to account for $500 million of the cost vestigation and without a full disclosure of press release and the data supplied by Mr. growth, appears questionable. The contract the reasons for the cost overruns. The public Fitzgerald seecos to be accounted for in the contains an inflation provision to protect the interest in economy in Government was not figures for spare parts. The data supplied by contractor from unforeseeable price changes served by this precipitous decision, an- Mr. Fitzgerald shows $0.3 billion for spares in the economy, to go into effect 3 years after flounced a few hours before the start of a estimated in 1965, and $0.0 billion in 1968. the issuance of the initial contract, that is, congressional hearing and a few days before If the figures for spares are celded to the esti- October 1, 1968. The initial 3-year period the inauguration of the new President, mates in the Air Force press release, the tele was supposed to be considered &normal busi- sets of figures are close to r.ne another. new riek. The Air Force official explanation Mr. BYRD of Virginia. Mr. President, In the January 16 follow up hearing, GAO of this provision states: "The contract thus will the Senator from Wisconsin yield? reported on its investigation, the nature of included in the price an amount which re- Mr. PROXMIRE. I am happy to yield Which is discussed below on page 40. Briefly, fleeted a projection of the mounting cost to the Senator from Virginia. GAO transmitted to the subcommittee lig- trend in the economy of labor, materials, urea supplied by the Air Force 2 days prior equipment, and subcontract prices." If fu- Mr. BYRD of Virginia. I do not want to the hearing. These figura; indicated a sub- ture inflation for at least 3 years was in- at this time, to comment on the amend- to overrun but a smaller total cost for eluded in the price, it is hard to see why ment offered by the Senator from Wis- the overall C-5A program than the $5.3 bil- inflation should be a major factor in later consin because I want to give it more lion figure shown in the November hearth. s increasing the price. Without a more study than I have had the opportunity The reason for the lower total was the orals- thorough investigation of the Go5A program, to give it up to this point. However, I sion by the Air Force at the COatS Of the the technical problems encountered, the commend him for going so fully and into spares, failure to anticipate them at the time of the Nevertheless, testimony and other en- negotiation, and operations of the inflation such detail in regard to the C-5A con- dence received in the course of the hearings provision, the subcommittee cannot form any tract. confirmed the existence of the approximately firm conclusions about the reasons for the It seems to me the Senator from WiS- $2 billion overrun in the CaiA program, the enormous overrun. consin has rendered both the Senate and reverse incentives contained in the repric- A repricing formula built into the contract the American people a real service. lag formula, and large overruns in other Air was also revealed in the November testimony. I have been deeply concerned with re- Force programs. The latest estimate of the The repricing formula is one of the most gard to this contract, which appears to total cost of 120 C-5A's, including spares, blatant reverse incentives ever encountered me to be so flexible and so ambiguous provided by Secretary Charles., is $5.1 billion, by this subcommittee, it should be recalled This is close to the estimate previously sup- that the Coco contract is supposed to repre- that either party can do almost anything plied by Mr. Fitzgerald, and about $2 billion sent an important step toward cost control. it might wish to do. more than was estimated in 1965. The eel- An Aix Force manual on the total package In that connection, I ask unanimous lowing table shows the estimates supplied procurement concept dated May 10, 1966, consent to insert In the RECORD at this by Mr. Fitzgerald, the Air Force press re- states that "It should produce not only lower point some inquiries that I put to the lease of November 19, 1468, and Assistant Costs on the first production units, but, in Secretary Charles: president of Lockheed and other officials turn, a lower take-off point on the produc- of Lockheed when they appeared before COMPARISON OF ESTIMATES OF C 5A PROGRAM tion learning curve, thus benefiting every the Committee on Armed Services. That unit in the production run." The facts about Iln billions of dollar A the C-5A axe just the reverse. Costs for the testimony begins on page 2150, beginning Whether the actual performance of the t.-D& Fitzgerald Air,Forre relcasel Charles 1965 1968 1965 1968 1965 1968 120 aircraft: ROT. & E. plus production AFLC 2 invest- $3.1 $4.4 $3.1 $4.3 p.3 ment .3 .9 .8 Tote: 3.4 5.3 3. 1 4.3 5,1 with, "Senator BYRD of Virginia. Thank first production units are greatly exceeding original estimates, resulting in higher take- you, Mr. Chairman," and goes through off point on the production learning curve, page 2152, ending with, "Senator BYRD thus inflating every unit in the production of Virginia. Thank you very much." run. In addition, the contract is supposed to There being no objection, the extract provide the Government with binding COM- was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, mitrnents on price and performance. Obvi- as follows: ously, there is in fact no binding comm.. rnent on price if the price can be modified Senator Byrd? upwards, as is being done in the C-5A, be- Senator BYRD of Virginia. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, cause cause actual costs are exceeding estimates. lives up to its promise remains to be shall not attempt to second-guess either the Air Force or Lockheed on this contract. seen. On the matter of delivery, it is Necessarily it is a very interesting complicated one. It 1 The Air Force press release of Nov.19.1968, did not provide to note that the Air Force announced on does seem to one after 2 days at hearings it is cost breakdowns between RAT. & E. (iesearch development, February 25, 1969, a 6-month delay in the a very flexible one and a very ambiguolis one testing, and engineering), production ruus, and AFLC invest- first operational C-5A aircraft from June I woud like to get an understanding of a meat. The figures given seem to omit Atia investment. 1969 to'Deceinber 1969. couple of things. by Fitzgerald includes spare parts; that submitted by Charles 2 AFLC (Air Force Logistics Command) investment submitted Not only were the price increases made As I recollect Mr. May's chart, Lockheed includes initial spares, replenishment .pares, and support. possible by the repricing formula, but the says that the cost to the Government when Table submitted by Secretary Charles (heilings, pt. 1, p. 311) cost overruns which are resulting in the high- Mr. MAY. Yes, sir. the contract is completed will be $3.2 billion. does not include estimates for 1965. er prices may very well have been encouraged The cost growth in the 0-5/1 program can by the existence of the formula and by the Senator BYRD of Virginia. Now the Air be seen in the table. The figures supplied nature of the formula. For the mere fact Force testified yesterday, said I checked my by Fitzgerald show an ineeease from $3.4 that a repricing provision existed in the memory a little while ago, that the cost to billion in 1965 to $5.3 billion in 1968. The contract constituted a built-in get-well rem- the Government will be $4.3 billion, or a Air Force press release can be reconciled with edy for almost any kind of cost growth. difference of more than $1 billion, and could the Fitzgerald figures if the AFSLC inveet- According to this provision, the price of the it be explained where that $1 billion is? meat (spares) is added to each of the esti- second increment (run B) could be increased Mr. MAY. Senator Byrd, I think we have to mates. Thut, the $3.1 billion estimate for on the basis of excessive actual costs on the recognize that the Air Force estimates are 1965 would total $3.4 billion, and the $4.3 first increment (run A), The motivation, if for the total program, including the Govern- billion estimate for 1968 would total $5.2 any, of the incentive feature of the contract ment-furnished engines. Our projections that billion. Secretary Charles' own figures far is thereby largely nullified, provided the con- we showed you are only for that portion of 1968 total $5.1 billion. The subcommittee re- tractor is confident that the Government the cost that Lockheed is responsible for, jects the attempts of Air Force spokesmen will exercise the option. Why bother to keep and this involves primarily the airframe. to minimize the size of the program or the costs down if their increase forms the basis Now that differential that you speak of, as size of the overrun by removing spares 8.8 for a higher price? Additionally, because of best I can understand it consists therefore an item of oost. Spares are an integral part the nature of the formula, the higher the of items that are not within the framework of the Co5A program and shOuld be included percentage of overrun over the original con- of our contract, plus the difference in esti- in any consideration of costs, tract ceiling price on the first increment, the mates that exist between what the Air Force According, to the Air Force, tile coat growth higher the percentage by which the second feels our mete will be and what we feel they in the Ch-&A program has resulted from nor- increment is repriced. will be for 115 airframes. mal development problems associated with The subcommittee learned, on the morn- Senator BYRD of Virginia. You feel that complex weapons and inflation However, the ing of the January 16, 1969, hearing, that the your cost will be a great deal less than the subcommittee notes that the C--543 was Air Force had exercised the run. B option Air Force believes your cost will be? chosen for the first application of the total for 57 additional C-5A aircraft, apparently Mr. MAY. I think the Air Force estimate is package procurement concept partly for the committing the Government to spend at least approximately $200 million higher than ours complex weapon system requiring technologi. reason that it was not considered a highly $5.1 billion an aircraft originally estimated through 115 airplanes, and that the differ- to cost $3.3 billion. The subcommittee was ence in those numbers that you are citing Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved Foj&zasesatilaiapP7A9i3j6t, R000300100001-3 S 9981 'August 13, 1969 is accounted for by the prime contract with the General Electric Co. for the furnishing of their TF-39 engines. Senator BYRD of Virginia. Then the cost to the Government, if you take Lockheed's figure, is not $3 billion which your chart shows? That is only your part of the contract? Mr. MAY. Yes. We feel that is the only por- tion that we are competent to testify about. Senator BYRD of Virginia. Yes, I agree with that, but I wanted to get clear that the total contract, the total cost to the Government will not be $3.2 billion for the total con- tract. It will be $3.2 billion if you are correct insofar as Lockheed's share is concerned. Mr. MAY. That is correct, sir. Senator BYRD of Virginia. You have a dif- ference between the Air Force and the Lock- heed Company, there is a difference of about $272 million, as I understand the figures. The loss would be 285 if the Air Force is cor- rect, while it would be roughly $13 million if Lockheed's figures are correct. Mr. MAY. Yes, sir. Senator BYRD of Virginia. How much has Lockheed actually spent_on the C-5A pro- gram to date? Do you happen to have those figures? Mr. MAY. The number is approximately $1.5 billion, Senator, and we will supply the precise number for the record if we may. Senator BYRD of Virginia. You will supply the precise figure for the record? Mr. MAY. Yes, sir. (The information furnished is shown below.) "Through May 30, 1969, Lockheed has ex- pended $1,372,112,173. In addition unliqui- dated progress payments to subcontractors amounted to $197,580,196. In total, through May 30, 1969, the amount was $1,569,682,369." Senator BYRD of Virginia. Now, how much has Lockheed received from the Federal Gov- ernment up to this point? Mr. MAY. I will have to supply that for the record, sir. (The information furnished is shown below.) "Cash receipts from the Government through May 30, 1969, are as follows: "Final billing for contract line items delivered $494, 878, 575 "Progress payments to Lock- heed for work in progress 827, 609, 140 Total 1, 322, 577, 715 "Progress payments to sub- contractors for work in progress 197, 580, 196 "As additional information, through May 30, Lockheed had incurred $91,966,571 in un- reimbursed work in process costs." Senator BYRD of Virginia. I am not sug- gesting that this be done at all, but if the contract were canceled at the end of Run A, do you have an estimate as to what Lock- heed's profit or loss would be? Mr. HAUGHTON. We do not hal4 such an estimate, Senator, and we think that it is past the time when it would be canceled at Run A, because we already have funding on Run B, so Rttn B would have to be included now. Senator BYRD of Virginia. And as I under- stand from your reply to one of Senator Symington's questions, Lockheed feels that it has a contract for 155 C-5A aircraft. Mr. HAUGHTON. Subject to certain funding requirements, yes, sir. Senator BYRD of Virginia. Of course Con- gress has not approved the funding, but Lockheed feels that it does have a contract for 115 aircraft, provided the Congress funds the 115 aircraft? Mr. HArrorroN. Right, yes, sir. Senator BYRD of Virginia. Now it was testi- fied yesterday that Lockheed is 6 months be- hind schedule. Does Lockheed concur in that assertion? Mr. HAUGHTON. Yes, sir. Senator BYRD of Virginia. The contract pro- vides for a penalty up to a total of $11 mil- lion for schedule delays. As I understand it, no penalties have been determined or assessed at this point. Mr. HAUGHTON. That is right. There have been no penalties assessed, because the oper- ational aircraft are not required for delivery as of this time. Senator Bran of Virginia. Yesterday the Air Force testified that it is not, at this time, able to estimate as to what the Government would lose if the program were terminated at the present time. Does Lockheed have an estimate as to what the Government loss would be if the program were to be termi- nated? Mr. HAUGHTON. No, sir; we do not, because it goes out into termination clause for all the suppliers of the program, and I do not have that figure. I think that figure would be very difficult to develop with any accuracy. Senator BYRD of Virginia. The next ques- tion may be one that you would prefer not to answer and I will not press it if you feel that way for business reasons, but what percent of the business of the Lockheed Corp. does the C-SA program represent? Mr. HAUGHTON. Well, there Is going to be 2 or 3 years in here when it is going to ap- proximate 25, close to 25 percent of our total sales. Our sales last year ran $2.2 billion, and I think our sales average on the C-5 over a 3- or 4-year period would be about $500 million a year. Is that about right, Torn? Mr. MAY. A little higher than that, but substantially 25 percent. Mr. HAUGHTON. About 25 percent, maybe a little more, give or take a little. Senator BYRD of Virginia. Thank you very much. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. Mr. President, may I ask the Senator from Wisconsin his estirnate as to the total cost to the Government if and when the contract is completed. Mr. PROXMIRE. The total cost to the Government, on the basis of the evidence we have now?and, as I said, my esti- mate would have to be conservative be- cause the Air Force tells us it is going to be higher?is $5.3 billion for the 120 planes. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. As I understand It, that is the estimate which the Sena- tor and his staff made. It is not the Air Force estimate? Mr. PROXMIRE. I understand the Air Force estimate is $5.2 billion. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. The Air Force estimate for the completed contract is $5.2 billion? Mr. PROXMIRE. $5.2 billion. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. And the esti- mate of the Senator from Wisconsin is what? Mr. PROXMIRE. $5.3 billion. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. Through May 30 of this year, Lockheed has expended, in round figures, $1.570 billion, accord- ing to testimony submitted on page 2151 of the committee hearings. Lockheed has received, during the same period of time, up to the date of May 30, $1.520 billion, in round figures, on this contract from the Government. Mr. PROXMIRE. This is an important colloquy. The Senator is pointing out that Lockheed has received almost 100- percent reimbursement?not quite, but very close to it. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. Lockheed has received practically 100-percent reim- bursement, which means Lockheed has been operating on Government money. Would the Senator not agree? Mr. PROXMIRE. The Senator is abso- lutely correct, not only with respect to progress payments, but the Government owns the plant in which Lockheed is building the plane. $150 million worth of equipment is also owned by the Govern- ment. Therefore, Government capital, the capital supplying the equipment, is largely, but not entirely, Government capital; a great deal of it is; and almost all of the working capital cost is pro- vided by the Government. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. So Lockheed has had the benefit, I calculate, of some- where around $150 million in interest. If the Government had not put up the money and Lockheed had had to go on the market to borrow the money, Lock- heed would have been billed for that money and would have had to pay it. Mr. PROXMIRE. The Senator has made a point that escaped me. That point should be made. $150 million is just about right. It may be a little more than that in view of what has happened to interest rates, but it is close to that. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. I would like to make a further study? Mr. PROXMIRE. If the Senator will yield, I want to make the point that interest payments are not reimbursable. They are not allocable. So the point is well made that it would have had a great effect on Lockheed. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. So Lockheed has had the benefit of $150 million of otherwise nonreimbursable cost that has been paid by the taxpayers. Mr. PROXMIRE. That is correct. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. So when we speak of the total cost of the contract, I think it is well to consider the interest charges, as well as the other figures the Senator gave, to make up the total. Mr. PROXMIRE. I agree wholeheart- edly with the Senator. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. I would like to read into the RECORD at this point one paragraph of the statement I made be- fore the committee last June when the officials of Lockheed appeared before the committee. Now, just another brief comment or two. Mr. Haughton has mentioned the lack of flexibility in the contract. Lockheed had been complaining of lack of flexibility. Continuing the statement: I admit I find the contract very difficult to understand, but it seems to me that here is a great deal of flexibility in that contract, and a great deal of ambiguity in the contract, to the extent of at least $272 million worth, because that is the difference between what the Air Force figures the final figure will be and what the company figures it will be, so it seems to me there is a great deal of flexibility, and the taxpayers will be called upon to pay somewhere between those two figures, the one mentioned by the Air Force of 285 million and the other by the company of $13 million. In the way of flexibility, while I say I do not fully understand the contract, it seems to me there is a great deal of flexibility in this contract and a great deal of am- biguity, The question lam suggesting is wheth- er the public interest is being adequately protected by the Department of Defense, Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9982 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 18, 1969 particularly the Department of the Air Force. It is not Lockheed's responsibility to protect the taxpayer, but it is the Air Force's responsibility to protect the tax- payer. The Air Force is a Government organization. It is part of the Depart- ment of Defense. It receives all of its money from the taxjaayerS. It is the responsibility of the Government--the Air Force in this case?to say that any contract made on behalf of the Govern- ment adequately and /Fully protects the general public and the tax funds that come out of the pockets of the wage earners of our country. What passed through my mind, as I was listening to the distinguished Sena- tor from Wisconsin as be spoke on the Senate floor this afternoon and bro'ught out many facts and figUres, just as went through my mind during the committee hearings, was whether the Air Force in its procurement practices is adequately protecting the taxpayers. I think it is Important that all Government agencies handle their contracts in a way that will adequately protect the taxpayer. Mr. PROXMIRE. I thank the Senator from Virginia. His point is well taken. We should be concerned not only with the Lockheed contract. That is only one. The Air Force spends billions and billions of dollars of the taxpayers' money every year. It is important to focus attention on the practices which have been high- lighted by the way the-Lockheed situa- tion was handled. No matter what action Is taken on my amendment, the im- portant lesson we should learn from the Lockheed contract is that the Air Force simply must handle its procurement practices more honestly as far as Con- gress is concerned and_ ft must handle them with far greater regard for the American taxpayer than it has in the past. I think that is the point made by the Senator from Virginia, and it was made extremely well. I think it was the most important point Of all made with reference to the Lockheed contract, in terms of what we can save in the future. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. The Senator from Wisconsin has rendered a splendid public service in focusing attention upon this fact. As he pointed out a moment ago, it concerns not just the C-5A con- tract or just the Air Fbrce, but all de- partments of Government, and partic- ularly the Defense Department, because that is where the greatest spending oc- curs and that is where these large con- tracts are. It is important that the De- partment of Defense promulgate prac- tices and procedures which will protect the tax dollars taken from the pockets of the wage earners. What the Senator from Wisconsin has been doing in recent weeks in this regard, and what he is d0- ing today on the floor, I believe will contribute substantially toward the pro- tection of the dollars of the American taxpayers. Mr. PROXMIRE. I thank the Senator from Virginia. I assure him that our sub- committee has just started hearings, which will continue through the recess, into the spending of a number of GOT- emment agencies?not the Defense De- partment alone. Mr. President, the current issue of Life magazine, on August 15, 1969, contained an article entitled "The New Math of Inflation," which should be a lesson for everyone in politics, particularly those who serve our country in the Senate and the House of Representatives. It says: For a decade it's been called "the affluent society," but suddenly the U.S. public is be- ginning to think all those dazzling statistics and ever-rising curves are a giant con game. Between inflation, which today is at an an- nual rate of 7.2%, and the relentless in- crease in Federal, state and local taxes, we are all running to stand still. In fact, many have begun to fall behind, and the average citizen is furious about it. The Life Poll, conducted by the opinion research firm of Louis Harris and Associates, Inc., reveals that 86% of a nationwide cross section 4:4 young and old, rich and poor, rural and city dweller assess their anger at current tax policies as either "high" or "very high." Eighty-two percent of them want major cuts in federal spending now, and a surprising 56% are even ready to see wage and price controls imposed to stabilize prices. Twenty- one percent claim they are ready to take part in a tax revolt, and another 22% who could never openly oppose their government said they could sympathize with those who did. The Bureau of the Budget made an analysis last year of controllable and uncontrollable spending. They found that about $100 billion of our Federal spending is controllable. We obviously cannot control such items as interest on our national debt; we could pass all the resolutions in the world, and still could not do it. We cannot cut social security payments. But 80 percent of all our na- tional spending is in the budget. As the Life magazine article points out: The potential savings in the post-Vietnam defense budget are estimated by the August 1 Fortune at $17.6 billion out Of $78.7 bil- lion. . . . To get this monstrous 40% of all federal spending under control would be the biggest single step toward a more rational schedule of national priorities. In this connection, Mr. President, I call to the attention of the Senate a series of very thoughtful and revealing articles in the current issue of Look magazine, which I shall ask to have printed in the RECORD. The articles are entitled as follows: "The Defense Establishment," writ- ten by Charles W. Bailey and Frank Wright. "Defense Contract: The Money Web," written by Gerald Astor. "Generals for Hire, written by Berke- ley Rice. "The Waste," written by David R. Maxey. "How to Cut the Budget," written by David R. Maxey. "The University Arsenal," written by Ruth Gelmis, showing how the univer- sities have become involved and en- meshed, and what the effect has been. A fine epilog by Averell Harriman, entitled "Our Security Lies Beyond Weapons." I ask unanimous consent that the arti- cles which I have listed, published in Look magazine for August 26, 1969, be printed in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the articles were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Tale DEFENSE ESrABLISHMENT (By Charles W. Bailey and Frank Wright) For the first time in 30 years, the American defense establishment is on the defensive. Not since the 1980's?before World War the cold war, the Korean War, Vietnam-- have those who build and manage our mili- tary machine been seriously challenged. The argument this year in Washington has been centered mainly on the ABM?the anti- ballistic-missile system that President Nixon proposed to defend our own intercontinental missiles and bomber bases against surprise attack. But the issue has become much broader: What is the proper place of the nation's de- fense establishment in the Government and in American society? Has the military ma- chine grown so large that it threatens to throw that society critically out of balance? Once again, critics are raising the specter of the "military-industrial com.plex"-- -the shorthand label for that combination of political, military and economic pressures that influence U.S. security policy, military strategy, armed forces and defense spending. The Vietnam war has dragged on for years, and military victory, despite repeated predic- tions by the nation's civilian and military leaders, is now admittedly beyond our grasp. Military spending has grown steadily until it swallows almost $80 billion a year?more than 40 cents of every dollar in the Federal budget?and requests for new and more cost- ly strategic weapons may offset any savings that would result from a cease-fire in Viet- nam. Pressures are rising for greater Federal out- lays to meet the dcanestac needs of -a nation whose multiplying urban problems are com- pounded by racial, social and economic stresses. The voices of concern do not sing in unison, sad most of them recognize both the complexities of the keue and also the high motivse of those with whom they dis- agree. The chorus is rising nonetheless. "I don't question the patriotism of any- one," says Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana, majority leader of the VB. Senate. "But I do question the judgment of creating a mili- tary-industrial-labor complex which exer- cises such great power. You have to control the money?control the spigot?and then you can get into philosophy." Former Vice President Hubert Humphrey says, "It isn't as if bad men were conspiring against good people. It is that events com- bine to bring about a preponderant alloca- tion of resources to defenee. That preponder- ance inevitably affects national polities, in- evitably brings a looseness of control, and feeds on itself." Walter F. Mondale of Minnesota, a young Democratic liberal in his fifth year in the Senate, sees the issue as one of national pri- orities: "I've watched every fiscal dividend be dribbled away. There's not a dime left for people. We ought to write a book on our- selves. The first chapter ought to be what we think we are as white people. The rest should be on what we really are and what we do to people who can't defend them- selves?the Indians, the blacks, the Mexican- Americans. Then we call them animals be- cause they don't react right after we've beat them fiat. If you Want to destroy the defen- sive capacity' of our nation, just keep it up the way we've been going. If these young militants on campuses anti in the political parties are going to be the leaders?and someday ithey are?they aze not going to be interested in keeping this kind of society together." John Sherman Cooper of Kentucky, who speaks for anti-ABM Republicans in the Senate, recalls his early efforts to question big defense outlays: "You couldn't find out anything. The Armed Services Committee would say, 'It's classified,' or 'We've gone into this already and have more information than you'." Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 pe FoEiNtakts2sCIMAeClarcloiti9E_'7Afik0AttER000300100001-3 August 13, 196Vrovd S9983 Another anti-ABM spokesman, Democratic Sen. George McGovern, knows firsthand the kind of pressures that can be generated. Some of his South Dakota constituents urged him to try to get an ABM site in the state because of the economic benefits it would bring. "I don't think there's any con- spiracy between the military and industry," he says, "but it does develop a momentum. Even the clergymen know their congrega- tions are swollen by defense installations. There's a subtle influence on labor unions, business, community groups." The defense establishment is complex. It Is huge. It is also one of the most pervasive institutions in the nation: one out of every ten Americans who works for a living is part of the defense establishment. In the fiscal year just ended, an estimated $78.4 billion was spent on defense?nearly nine percent of the gross national product. There are 500 major military installations in the continental United States, and 6,000 smaller ones. The Defense Department con- trols 45,000 square miles of land?an area the size of Pennsylvania. Overseas, we have 3,400 big and little bases in 30 foreign countries, Hawaii and Alaska. Some 22,000 U.S. corporations are rated "major" defense contractors, and another 100,000 or so get a piece of the action through subcontracts. One example of the geographic spread of the defense dollar: When Lock- heed Aircraft Corp. got the contract to build the C-141 Starlifter jet transport for the Air Force, it bought parts and services from 1,200 other firms. Just one small part for the plane?a fuel-pump switch?required ma- terial from New York, Connecticut, Illinois, Ohio, California, Wisconsin and Massa- chusetts. The major share of defense spending?$44 billion last year?goes for weapons and other equipment. Two-thirds of that went to the 100 biggest defense contractors, and a whop- ping one-quarter of the total?$11.6 bil- lion?was paid out to these ten: General Dynamics, Lockheed, General Electric, United Aircraft, McDonnell-Douglas, American Tele- phone & Telegraph, Boeing, Ling-Temco- Vought, North American Rockwell and Gen- eral Motors. Even the university campus can be a big defense contractor. Last year, both MIT and Johns Hopkins University were among the top 100. Some states do better than others. Cali- fornia got one out of every seven defense- procurement dollars last year?or $6.5 bil- lion. Texas was second with $4.1 billion. The rest of the top ten are: New York, Connecti- cut, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Massachusetts, Mis- souri, New Jersey, Indiana. How did it all start? And how did the de- fense establishment get so big? There are many reasons for its growth?but only one for its birth: We live in a dangerous world. At the end of World War II, the nation rushed?as it had after every war?to dis- mantle it,s armed forces and turn its atten- tion to the search for the good life. Suddenly, however, the U.S. faced an unprecedented military and ideological challenge. The Soviet Union sought to expand its dominion west- ward across Europe and southward into Iran, Turkey and Greece. In Asia, another Com- munist government came to power in a bitter civil war In China. The United States hesi- tated?and then, in an extraordinary series of basic policy decisions, moved to check the Communists. The rationale was "contain- ment," which came to mean a U.S. commit- ment to meet, if necessary with armed force, any Communist encroachment on independ- ent nations that asked for our help. This required our nation for the first time to maintain a large peacetime military force. Beyond this, there was another reason for the pyramiding growth and cost of defense: atomic bombs, hydrogen bombs, jet airplanes and, finally, intercontinental missiles made the tools of war astronomically costly. The complexities of these weapons dictated years of research and dayelopment before they could be ready. Their capacity to strike a single, sudden, devastating blow meant that a nation committed by political decision to constant readiness for conflict could no longer wait until war began to beat its plowshares into swords. There are other reasons?some of them un- related to either high policy or the march of science?why defense spending has grown. Neither Congress nor the White House has been able to find ways of exercising any- thing like the critical scrutiny that is routinely applied to much smaller domestic programs. Many congressmen are reluctant to vote against anything for "our boys in service." Secrecy labels applied to many proj- ects hinder those who do raise questions. Finally, there is "pork"?the economic bene- fits that defense spending can bring to a community. There are positive factors too. By and large, the Pentagon and its industrial allies have done all they can to encourage congressional permissiveness. This year, there are 339 De- fense Department employees assigned to "legislative liaison"?the bureaucratic eu- phemism for lobbying. That works out to two Pentagon agents for every t.hree members of Congress; no other special-interest group comes close to having so many. Defense Department lobbyists don't limit themselves to pushing the Pentagon's legis- lative program. They also spend much of their time currying favor with congressmen in other areas?passing advance word of con- tract awards so members can get political credit for "announcing" them, or handling inquiries about the problems of constituents in service. They also give special attention to con- gressmen who hold major influence over defense affairs. The South Carolina district of Chairman L. Mendel Rivers of the House Armed Services Committee is chock-full of Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps bases. Georgia?home of Sen. Richard B. Russell, for years, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee and now head of the Appropriations Committee?is loaded with armed services installations and defense Industry. The congressional military barons get some personal benefits too. The Air Force routinely provides planes from its "VIP" fleet to ferry them around the country. And one night this spring, the Defense Department not only turned out its top brass for a Mis- sissippi testimonial dinner for Chairman John Stennis of the Senate Armed Services Committee but also flew in the entertain- ment?a Navy choir from Florida, an Army WAC band from Alabama and an Air Force string ensemble from Washington, D.C. - - If the Pentagon can bring heavy pressures and blandishments to bear on Congress, the defense industry?companies and unions alike?can exert massive leverage on both. Its lobbyists, ranging from high-priced vice presidents to clerks, do most of their work In private, staying out of public debate over weapons systems or budgets. Industry's influence in Congress is some- times magnified by outside help?from cham- bers of commerce, state and local officials or labor unions eager to impress on con- gressmen the benefits of defense bases or contracts. A study two years ago of 27 firms slated for prime contracts on the ABM sug- gests the potential for this kind of pres- sure; the firms operate more than 300 plants In 172 congressional districts spread across 42 states. Thus, at least 256 senators and representatives had some economic stake? direct or indirect?in the ABM. A recent estimate that 15,000 firms, including subcon- tractors and suppliers, would share in ABM spending suggests that the impact is even broader. At the Pentagon, several factors combine to bolster industry's standing. First, the grow- ing complexity of modern weapons has made it ever harder for Government to keep its provisioners at arm's length. No longer does a service simply decide what it wants, design It, and then advertise for somebody to build it; now, industry's "sss men"?strategic- systems salesmen?and engineers play a major role in military-weapons design. Industry and the military join hands in other ways too. There are the service as- sociations, to which active and retired officers as well as industry representatives belong. The groups are large (the Air Force Associa- tion counts 100,000 members) and often rich?upwards of $2 million yearly income In some cases, with industry providing much of it through dues and advertising in as- sociation magazines that advocate bigger and better weapons. Another factor is the ease with which some men move from defense industry to the Defense Department, and vice versa. Secre- taries of Defense, and lesser officials, have come from industry, and returned to it. Re- tired military officers flock to defense in- dustry, often going to work for a firm whose operations they had monitored while on active duty. When industry and the Pentagon go hand- in-hand to Congress, they find powerful friends awaiting them. A few senior mem- 'hers control congressional action on mili- tary matters; four committee chairmen?all Southerners, all conservatives, all well along in years, all with over 20 years of service? make up the elite: Rivers, 63, a congressman for 28 years, chairman of the House Armed Services Com- mittee. George Mahon of Texas, 68, .a congress- man for 34 years, chairman of the House Ap- propriations Committee. Stennis of Mississippi, 68, a senator for 21 years, chairman of the Senate Armed Serv- ices Committee. Russell, 71, whose 36 years of service make him the Senate's senior member, chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee. These men are strong and talented in their own right. But the primary source of their power lies in the seniority system, in the way members are chosen for advance- ment, and in the structural and jurisdic- tional tradition of Congress. The Southern flavor of the defense posi- tions?one official calls it "the South's re- venge in perpetuity for Gettysburg"?is a self-feeding process. Warm weather and ease of year-round operation lead the military to spend much of its money in the South. Mem- bers of Congress from Dixie therefore gravi- tate to the committees that deal with mili- tary affairs, and because it is relatively easy for them to get reelected, they build up se- niority and thus control the committees, This process is even more marked in the Senate, where the smaller membership al- lows senators to serve on more than one major committee. The result has been the creation of interlocking directorates; the three topranking members of Armed Serv- ices?Stennis, Russell and Republican Mar- garget Chase Smith of Maine?are also on Appropriations. Such dual membership and parallel inclinations almost always produce the same result: Armed Services approves Pentagon proposals and Appropriations pro- vides the money to finance them. There are more personal ties to the Pen- tagon too. Two members of the Senate Armed Services Committee hold commis- sions as major generals in the Reserve forces, a third is a retired two-star Reserve gen- eral. The man who writes the military-con- struction appropriation bill each year?Rep. Robert L. E. Sikes of Florida?is a major general in the Army Reserve. A 1967 Minne- apolis Tribune survey of the entire Congress Approved For.Release 2004/11/30 :"CIA-RDP71B00364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9984 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August IS,- 1969' turned up 82 senators and 107 representa- tives with Reserve COMMiSs11113s. One reason military ccentattees generally have their way is the systeM itself; If you attack the other fellow's committee on the floor, he may do the same Ws yours. Armed Services and Appropriations members defend their bailiwicks with relentless zeal against either indivdual attack or jurisdictional raids by other committees. The bulk and com- plexity of programs, the frequent censoring of reports and hearings records for "security" reasons, and the traditionally one-sided na- ture of the testimony that is_published?all these also inhibit Opposition to military out- lays. The debate on the defense establishment has been highlighted this year by a new round of "horror stories" atout Pentagon mismanagement and inefficiency: $2 billion increase in the cost of a new_tiant jet trans- port; the belated cancellatiga of a contract for a new helicopter that was badly flawed. Such disclosures of waste are only ancillary to the basic issues in the rising debate over the proper role and size of the nation's de- fense establishment. But saving a billion here and a billion there hes its merits? especially in the light of the military's post- Vietnam "shopping list" of hew and even more costly weapons. The new weapons list is long and varied. It includes a replacement for_the Minuteman missile, now the backbone of our strategic force; multiple warheads to boost the strik- ing power of missiles; a long-range bomber to replace the 5-52; fighter planes for the Navy and Air Force; three nuclear-powered aircraft carriers at a half-billion dollars each. There are dozens of others. All of these systems would cost money. But critics argue that some of them? especially the Multiple Inapendently-tar- geted Reentry Vehicle (MIRV), as the multi- ple-warhead project is called could also seriously escalate the U.S.-Soviet arms race. To some in Congress and elsewhere, MIRV is a greater menace than the ABM. The case of MIRV points up the critical Importance of how decisioni are made on whether or not to build a Weapons-system. The crucial decisions are male, in the end, by only one man: the Preaclent. But the coinage of presidential actions is often minted long before it is issued by the White House. Proposals for foreign and defense policy, for military strategy and for the spending to implement them come to the President's desk from many sources: the Secretaries of State and Defense, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the National Security Coun- cil, the Budget Bureau, the Congress. Policy- making decisions should, in theory, flow in an orderly sequence: first, basic foreign policy, defense policy to support it, military strategy to implement defense policy, mili- tary forces to carry out the strategy; finally, budget decisions to pay for the forces. But, in fact, it sometimes goes the other way: money decisions determine force levels, these in turn affect strategy, strategy influences defense policy?and defense policy then dic- tates foreign policy. One man who served two Administrations in a top national-security sae puts it this way: "What is needed is a counter to the parochially presented programs and deci- sions of the Defense Department. No other part of our society functions with so little check and balance. This is not a plot?it is the failure of the rest of our society to de- velop the expertise to permit reasoned deci- sions on basic policies." Can this be done? Many people who know the problem firsthand are gWomy. But the effort is going to be made. A half-dozen pro- posals for study of the defense structure, and its implications for future national pol- icy, are under way or about to start?includ- ing several in the Defense Department it- self. The suggestions cover the waterfront and include privately financed research cen- ters to review programs, a new joint Senate- House committee with a strong grant of au- thority to review national priorities, a new independent defense-review office to analyze military spending, expansion of the Budget Bureau's staff. Some think that a deter- mined, open fight will have to be made on the floor of the House and Senate over every major defense issue. Even with much stronger congressional control, the President will have the key role. "The question in defense spending is 'how much is necessary?'" President Nixon said In June. "The President of the United States is charged with making that judgment." Still, questions of costs and priorities per- sist. None of the answers will come easily, especially in a world where nations build great military forces not to make war but to deter it?a world where weapons are built, as one scholar suggests, "not to be used but to be manipulated." But however hard the questions, they are at least being asked, some for the first time in 20 years, some for the first time ever. Upon the course of the debate that has just barely begun, and upon the kind of answers that emerge, may depend the place of the United States in the next decades -or the next century. DEFENSE CONTRACT: THE MONEY WEB (By Gerald Astor) The Pentagon has long been able to jet combat troops to fight 5,000 miles from American shores if a President decided to apply kill power there. But heavy equip- ment?tanks, cannons, helicopters, portable bridges and trucks?all traveled slow water freight. So the word went out from the Pen- tagon to U.S. industry: build us a really big bird. Lockheed won, and the droopy-winged C-5A Galaxy, 247 feet in length, is the big- gest bird yet to get off the ground. In one load, the four engines will lift an M-48 bridge launcher (128,420 pounds), four quarter-ton trucks with trailers, two ambulances, two five-ton trucks with trailers, two three-quar- ter-ton trucks with trailers plus 52 soldiers to erect the bridge and drive the vehicles. The C-5A gives the U.S. armed forces mas- sive airlift power, but when it grabs its maxi- mum gross weight of 762,000 pounds and flings itself into the air, a lot more than mili- tary hardware goes into the wild blue yon- der. In the three and a half years since Lock- heed got the contract, it has added 10,000 workers to its Marietta, Ga., plant. Chubby C. U. Dixon, Jr., a mason who earned $5.55 an hour, signed on for $3.75 an hour to stuff C-SA wings with electrical gear. "Outside, there's no vacation, no retirement, no credit, and it don't rain in here," says Dixon point- ing to the 76 acres of U.S. Air Force Plant B-1. Perhaps another 9,000 Lockheed-Georgia people who worked on other projects have moved on to the C-SA along with the new recruits. In fact, of Lockheed's $6 million weekly payroll, approximately $4 million goes to C-5A workers. For 15 years Gene Amos has been drawing paychecks from Lockheed. "I'm one of the lucky ones, never been laid off," says Amos, a troubleshooter on the produc- tion line. "It's a funny thing," he goes on, "but when the union's negotiating a con- tract, businesses in the area all seem to raise their prices just before the contract's signed. So all you keep are the fringe benefits." Employees of Lockheed-Georgia spend their money In 85 counties, and most of them pass along their dollars in the Atlanta area and Cobb County, where Marietta is. Gray-haired Len Gilbert, director of the Cobb County Chamber of Commerce, crosses one leg over the other and says, "What does Lockheed mean to us? A heckuva lot, In 1961, a low point when they had about 13,100 employees, the total wages for a quarter in Cobb County amounted to $33 million." He paused to locate the figures. "In the last quarter of 1968, Cobb County showed a pay- roll of $85 million." Corresponding figures for 1961 and 1968 show an increase in retail sales from $133 inillion to $368 million. "A payroll dollar turns over seven times," points out Gilbert, making the C-SA responsible for a big chunk of those sales. While the popu- lation of Marietta shows only a slight in- crease since the 1960 census figure of 25,000, suburban Cobb County has added 66,000 folks to the 114,000 that lived there then. Marietta Mayor L. Howard Atherton remem- bers when the former tenant of the factory, Bell Aircraft, stopped making B-29's in 1945, and 32,000 people lost their jobs. "It felt like the end of the world, but it wasn't so bad. When Bell shut down, the people left town. It was a transient population. Now, it's dif- ferent. Lockheed is culturally and economi- cally a part of Marietta. Lockheed people are much more solid, they pay their bills, par- ticipate in the community life. They couldn't just move away." Atherton, who is a drugstore owner, believes that even in the unlikely event that Lock- heed should go the way of Bell, his com- munity would survive. "There's been so much building in the last few years, con- struction's had a bigger effect than Lock- heed." In the next breath, Mayor Atherton calls the company "vital not only to Marietta but the whole state." Some local citizens agree with him. The head of a jewelry outlet says business is up, and not just because of the aircraft workers. "But I often say if Lockheed goes, every- thing goes. Yet there is a helluva lot of new industry around." The manager of a small- loan company says, "We're not solely de- pendent upon Lockheed, and with Atlanta coming out this way, it wouldn't be that bad if there were a outback." The C-&A spins a web of money that touches far beyond Marietta-Atlanta or even the rest of Georgia. Through subcontracts. the money flows to people in 44 states plus Canada and the United Kingdom. One large satellite effort belongs to Avco in Nashville, Tenn., which builds the 223-foot wings. Avco also makes fuselages for Bell heli- copters, wings for other Lockheed planes and metal office furniture. But the largest num- ber of employees, 1,500, work on the droopy C-5A wing, making it, in effect, the largest project in Nashville industry. Few workers joined Avco for this particular job?most sifted over from other assignments. Avco's $125 million C-5A contract sounds like handsome business, but General Man- ager and Vice President Charles Ames says, "We couldn't live on programs like the C-5A." When and if Lockheed goes ahead with the L-10-11 air bus for civil transport. Avco expects to add workers. One smaller subcontractor operates out of an abandoned shopping center in Caldwell. N.J. Nash Controls, Inc., a subsidiary of Sim- monds Precision, turns out small actuating devices. Business dropped when the Pentagon canceled production an Lockheed's Cheyenne helicopter but picked up with the C-5A. Sen- sitive to recent congressional rumblings an the "overrun" in the C-5A price (perhaps $2 billion extra), Lockheed officials blame the higher costs on severe inflation in their in- dustry and production-capacity shortages. Whether one talks to executives, assembly- line workers or local officials, the fears of the military-industrial complex get midget shrift. "We gat enough problems building the C-5A," says Gene Amos, "without worrying about that." "It's all a lot of nonsense," says Avoo's Charles Ames. "The civilians I know in the Department of Defense are very dedi- cated, have the highest integrity. There's no desire to perpetuate any military-industrial complex." Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved FoEggInsfsilMT1AletittE&Ft9P7MQ9MR000300100001-3 August 13, 1969 S 9985 GENERALS FOR HIRE and colonels at Lockheed makes one wonder around. The salesmen take care of selling, about their objectivity. but if you don't have an intro like me, you (By Berkeley Rice) There are same limits on what kind of work waste your time with underlings who don't For those who have trouble understanding these men may do when they retire. Federal have any power. If I want a contract, I know the complexities of the military-industrial laws prohibit retired officers frsm selling to exactly who to go to. Some other guys may complex, one graphic illustration is the traffic the Department of Defense for three years know the technical stuff, but I know the in retired military officers who join the de- after retirement and to their own service for people. That's my expertise." Such expertise may raise questions about conflict of interest, but not to most retire officers who have joined the defense industry. Says Pete Higgins, "You take a man who retires around 45 to 50, with his kids ready for college, and he's got a problem. Ile can't do it on his retired pay. He's got to have a second career. Many of these men have no other marketable experience. Where the hell else do you want them to go!" No one seems to know, but as they con- tinue to go into the defense industry the contracting process may suffer. One Defense official claims, "the fact that these lucrative job opportunities exist cannot help but in- fluence those who deal with defense contrac- tors. I remember trying to hold down costs on a large contract once, and a general work- ing with me said, 'I must be out of my mind, trying to cut the overhead on this company. I'll be part of that overhead in a few years.'" When military men spend much of their careers dealing with companies they may eventually work for, they naturally develop some concern for the company's point of view. When 90 percent of the major defense contracts are negotiated in such a congenial atmosphere, price and the public interest can easily become secondary considerations. A normal buyer-seller relationship has a built-in check against this sort of thing, because the buyer must spend his own money. The services do not, a fact which Pentagon officials and procurement officers often seem to forget. Despite all the criticism of defense spend- ing, most military men look on the growing traffic betweeti the services and the defense industry as natural and proper. An admiral who has bade the transition himself claims, "It's good for the military, It's good for the company, and it's good for the country." tense industry. More than 2,000 retired gen- life. However, the laws are vague about what erals, colonels, Navy admirals and captains constitutes "selling." Since 1962, the Depart- now work for the 100 largest defense con- ment has taken action in only one case in- tractors. Their numbers have tripled in tale volving a major contractor. Asked why, a last ten years. The top ten firms employ more Defense Department legal officer comments, hen half of the 2,000. Many of these had ?I doubt if anybody here is vigorously beat- been involved in the contracting process on major weapons systems. Their decisions often meant millions of dollars to companies for whom they now work. Sen. William Proxmire (D., Wis.) calls this a dangerous and shocking situation." While not charging anyone with corruption, he claims the trend represents "a distinct threat to the public interest." The threat, he says, is twofold: high-ranking retired officers may be using their influence at the Pentagon to affect decisions on contracts with their com- panies; active officers involved in procure- ment may be influenced by the prospect of jobs with companies they are buying from. Defense contractors, of course, deny the charges of influence-peddling, and insist they hire ex-military men because of their expertise, and not in reward for past favors. Despite these denials, research on the em- ployment of retired officers reveals some in- triguing patterns. Take the Minuteman II missile program, which has climbed from an original price of $3.2 billion to $7 billion. One of the major subcontractors is North Ameri- can Aviation ($669 million in 1968 defense contracts). Its autonetics division produces the missile's guidance system for the Air Force. Two Air Force plant representatives and a project officer for the contract recently retired and joined North American auto- netics, one as division manager. Lt. Gen. W. Austin Davis, ex-chief of 'USAF's Ballistic Systems Division, which handled the con- tract, is now a vice president of North Amer- ican. His chief procurement officer also joined of 104 ing the bushes trying to discover violations of the selling laws." Since the purpose of defense companies is to sell to the Defense Department, some ob- servers feel the question as to which em- ployees are engaged in sales is ridiculous. Anyway, most large firms now call their sales- men "marketing men." As defense companies, many of the marketing men are retired offi- cers, but they do not sign the contracts. W. T. "Pete" Higgins, a former Navy officer, Is "marketing manager for naval programs" for an electronics company. "I come with the team that makes the presentation," he admits, "but only as an adviser. With my background in naval electronics, I know damn well I'm helping the company get con- tracts." Does this mean using his influence? "That's nonsense," says Higgins. "Anything of significance goes through ten to fifteen levels in the chain of command before a final decision. Only peanuts are settled on a single level that could be influenced by personal interest." Helping the company get defense contracts is a popular non-selling job for high-ranking retired officers. They usually have titles like "assistant to the president" or "director of advanced planning," but they are known in the trade as "rainmakers." Regardless of how much clout they have at the Pentagon, they bring to their companies valuable inside knowledge of service plans for future weap- ons systems. When a general or admiral who has been involved in planning or research on the company, which employs a total a big project retires, defense contractors bid high-ranking retired officers, including sev- for his services as eagerly as any professional eral other Air Force generals. football team after a top college quarterback. Asked if this employment pattern is un- When Maj. Gen. Harry Evans retired in 1967 usual, a senior Pentagon official remarked, "It as vice director of the Air Force's $3 billion happens all the time. Almost all the officers Manned Orbiting Laboratory program, he was who have anything to do with procurement immediately hired as vice president and gen- go into the business. Naturally, they go to eral manager of Raytheon's Space and Infor- the companies they've had the most contact mation Systems Division. In 1966, Bell Aero- with. If you check the history of any missile space Corporation, the Army's largest sup- or weapon program you'll find the same Pifer of helicopters, hired Gen. Hamilton story." Howse, former chief of Army Aviation, as The story usually ends with the Defense vice president for product planning. Department paying far more than the origi- Most of the large defense companies have nal estimate. When the Navy contracted with high-ranking ex-officers in their Washington Pratt & Whitney for 2,000 engines for the offices, Everyone denies that they have any controversial TFX, or F-111, the original bid influence on defense contracts, but they are was 6270,000 per engine. By 1967, when pro- obviously there because they know their way duction began, the price had risen to more around the Pentagon. One of them is Lt. Gen. than $700,000 apiece. The man who signed William Quinn, former Army Chief of Pub- the production contract was Capt. Patrick lie Information, arid now in charge of "Wash- Keegan, the Navy's plant representative at ington operations" for Martin Marietta, which Pratt & Whitney. Soon afterward, he retired Produces many of the Army's missiles. "We from the Navy and joined P. & W. as special maintain liaison with Defense," says General assistant to the executive vice president. Quinn, "but I don't go over to the Pentagon Sharing his office was another special assist- on any sales matters." Asked about using his ant, a former colonel who until his retire- influence, he admits he knows "half the peo- ment had been in charge of engine purchases pie in the hierarchy over there," but claims for the Air Force, he never uses his contacts for business. "Be- The problem of plant representatives is lieve me," says Quinn, "this operation is as crucial, for they are the watchdogs who sup- clean as a hound's tooth. Our real contribu- pos,edly guard against delays, failures and tion is in maintaining a dialogue between our cost overruns on a contract. At Marietta, Ga., companies and the military people." where Lockheed Aircraft Corporation ($1.8 Just how retired officers can help to "main- billion in 1968 defense contracts) is turning tam n a dialogue" can be seen in the work of out the giant C-5A jet transport, 230 Air an ex-Navy officer who prefers to remain Force officers watch over production. Despite anonymous. He retired in 1968 from the all this supervision, however, the C-SA is well Bureau of Naval Weapons, where he had been behind schedule, and the final price on 115 involved in the selection of contractors. He planes has climbed from the original bid of now works for one of them as a $200-a-day $1.9 billion to $3.2 billion. The fact that some consultant in Washington. "I know a lot of of these Air Force production supervisors will Navy, people here," he says, "and I sort of probably join the 210 other retired generals help the company's men find their way It's certainly good for the companies thriv- ing on defense contracts. It may be good, or at least comforting, for the military to deal with former comrades who understand their problems and look forward to jobs in in- dustry. But as defense costs continue to drain funds desperately needed for domestic pro- grams, some AMeriCallS are beginning to wonder if "it" is really good for the country. THE WASTE (By David R. Maxey) Remember Robert Goodloe Harper? No? He's the prophet who said, in 1798, "Millions for defense, but not one cent for tribute." We haven't let Bob down. Harper's hyper- bole, now puffed to $80 billion annually, is still part of the American way of life. Con- gress has traditionally watched domestic spending like a hawk, but focused loosely on defense. Here are some examples of looseness that have stirred interest. How do you like them? DIVE! DIVE! In 1964, the Navy planned to buy 12 Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicles. Purpose: to lend aid to disabled submarines. Cost: $3 mil- lion each. In June, hideous new cost esti- mates surfaced. Now, the Navy will buy six vehicles for $80 million each. Cost increase: 2,666 percent. Since the 1920's, we have had one submarine accident at which the DSRV might have had a chance of being useful. One. THE RUSSIANS WERE COMING, THE RUSSIANS WERE COMING! The threat of Soviet bombers in American skies caused us to build a gigantic air-de- fense system. One estimate of cost: $18 bil- lion. The Russians failed to uphold their part of the bargain by not building enough bomb- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9986 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August ers to be a real threat. We ahould be grateful for that, because our air-afense system does not work very well. Now h*r this testimony: Senator Cannon: "In osfter words, the Air Defense Command agrees that if the Soviets sent over (deleted) heavylrombers now, we would only knock down (deleted) out of the (deleted) ?" Dr. Foster [of the Defense Department]: "I cannot speak for the Air Defense Com- mand, sir; but I am not the least bit stir- prised. (Deleted)." Senator Cannon: "I am shocked at that." Senator Symington: "Inteedible." The system maligned abeee costs annually at least $124 billion to operate, with out- siders betting on $2 billion. DIS/NGENUITY WALTZ Gordon Rule, Director of Procurement Con- trol and Clearance, U.S. Navy, told Sen. William Proxmire at a meeting of his eels- committee recently why defense-procure- ment programs so often cost much more than estimated: "We play games. The contractors know if they tell the Department of Defense how much a system will really cost, they'll scrub it. The Department of Defense knows If they tell the Congress the real cost, they'll scrub it. You start in with both sides know- ing its's going to met more." Proxmire shouted that was dishonest. Rule replied that he preferred to call it disingenuous. BALLAD OF ERNIE FITZGERALD In November, 1968. A lernest Fitzgerald. Deputy for Management Systems for the Air Force, told the Proxmire itibeommittee he estimated the Lockheed a-BA cargo? plane would cost about $2 billion more than the Air Force had originally estinsated. Pentagon executives became cross with Fitzgerald for his candor. Twelve days later, he found that his Civil Service status had been revoked. "Computer error" was blamed for giving him that status in the first plaee. Senator Prox- mire then unearthed a memo to Assistant Secretary of the Air Force Robert Charles. The memo discussed ways 'eel fire Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald still has a shriveled version of his job, but cost control on large weapons pro- curements is not part of it, The Air Force has since verified that Fit raid's estimate of a $2 billion overrun on the C-5A is very close to right. Lockheed first estimated that it would lose $13 million on the C-5A, then allowed it might make a feW bucks. THE LITTLE HELICOPTER THAT COULDN'T Helicopters are crafts of real beauty only when they work. The Cheyenne helicopter was never beautiful. It was to be a gunship, built as such from the grolund up. Willis Hawkins, then Assistant Soseretary of the Army for Research and Development, sup- ported the idea. Hawkins had mine to the Army in 1983 from a vice president's job at Lockheed. It took time to decide what firm should build the Cheyenne Experts first rated Vertol, Bell, Lockheed and Sikorsky in that order. A Source Selection group a generals made changes, rating Lockheed first, then VerboI, Sikorsky and Bell. A final pier gave the con- tract to Lockheed. Why? "Stronger manage- ment." "What general," rips a critic, "could rate Lockheed's management anything but high when he knows that the Assistant Sec- retary came from Lockheed?" On March 23, 1966, Lockheed got the re- search-and-development cOntract. Three months later, Willis Hawkins resigned and save $450 million. Benson also proposed billion assumption, was never debated in returned to Lockheed. The first Cheyenne shortening basic training for soldiers not appeared in May, 1967, followed by nine more. the Congress, even though the Defense De- aimed at combat roles?that is, most of Test flights began. In March. 1969, a Chey- partment has made it vrey, very clear that them. Saving: $50 million a year. The Air enne off California threw three rotor blades it is covering the possibility of such a war. Force and the Navy have already short- and plunged, killing the pilot. In April, the Once our contingencies are agreed on, ened basic training for their men. And why, Army threatened to cancel the contract for Schultze said, we take the step of asking asks Benson, should every Army officer be lack of satisfactory performance. Estimated what force levels we need to handle them, shuttled around as if he were in training to costs had soared all the way from $138 mil- How many men? Then, what weapons sys- be Chief of Staff? Right now, men move lion to $186 million for 15 ships. In May, 1969, tems should we buy? on the average of once a year. Benson shows the Army canceled the Cheyenne, after So. An orderly process, from commitment savings of $500 million if assignment changes spending $159 million, to contingency to force level to weapons could be lowered by 25 percent 137 1969 BUT IT WORKS ON PAPER Systems. Schultze cautions that every de- A study by Richard Stubbing of the Bu. cision along the way needs fresh scrutiny, erau of the Budget said we're getting worse, because, for instance, the decision to be ready not better, in the design and application of for two and a half wars does not make the electronics system for aircraft and missiles, force level needed to fight them obvious and Strubbing listed 13 major Air Force and Navy unchangeable. Schultze delights in the ex- aircraft and missiles produced since 1955, ample of the Navy's aircraft carriers. Cur- pointing out that only four had electronics renter, the Navy has 15. Why 15? One tea- systems that were over 75 percent reliable, son is that the Washington Naval Disarrna- Eleven other systems, which coat $25 billion, ment Treaty of 1921 ladled out national sputtered below the '75 percent standard, quotas of capital ships. The U.S. got 15. After Four programs were either canceled or phased World War If, the Navy saw that the 15- out for low reliability. Stubbing said we'd battleship force was obsolete. The aircraft do better to ask systems contractors to build carrier became the new capital ship, but we working models rather than promising re- cling to the magic number still. liability based on paper estimates. He also' Carriers are what one critic calls hide- thought competition between contractors ously vulnerable" to air attack. They work would concentrate their minds wonderfully, best, when the U.S. has unquestioned air THE HIGH COST OF ABORTED MISSILES superiority, such as in Vietnam. But does their vulnerability, and the number of dry- Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri pointed land fields, justify having 15? It the force out last March that over $4 billion had been could be cut to 12, say, the U.S. would Save Spent since 1944 for missiles that never got about $360 million. And the direct cost of Into position to be fired. They all perished building one new carrier is about $540 million. Schultze comes down hard on the mili- tary tendency, logical only in a werld of limitless wars and money, to plan for every possibility, remote or not, and build forces and weapons systems to meet it. Currently, we are planning AWACS, the Airborne Warning and Control System, to add to our existing air-defense system. The logic of air defense tortures the mind. We built the system to shield us from Russian bombers, which the Russians never really got around to building. Now, we spend to improve it in order to discourage Russia from getting around to building bombers. Pro- ponents of AWACS say it will warn us of Kamikaze-style attacks from Soviet medi- um-range bombers. How likely is that? And would it feel better to know that if our cities crisp in a nuclear war, we'd be burned by missiles instead of bombers? There is. by the way, much reason to doubt that AWACS will work any better than the cur- rent system. In June, 1968, Congressional Quarterly, putting civilian and military officials off the record to elicit candor, did an exhaustive reporting job on the Defense budget. CQ found Pentagon Insiders estimating that, aside from savings on weapons systems we don't need, around $4.2 billion could be excised by cutting the size of the armed services. That estimate did not assume an end to the Vietnam war, but only a reduc- tion in the proportion of support troops to combatants (now about three to one), and a drop in the number of men in the "tran- sient" category?men budgeted in excess of force requirements because they'll be travel- ing, not working. Nine months later, Robert Benson, for- merly of the Comptroller's Office, Defense Department, wrote in Washington Monthly that he saw another $1.5 billion in savings from troop reductions in Europe. We have over 300,000 there now, plus 200,000 depend- ents. Benson argued that the U.S. will not send troops into Eastern Europe anyway during the research-and-development phase of their lives. Big as that figure is, it's smaller than if those missiles had been produced and depolyed, then found to be technically sick or obsolete. Fifteen other missiles did get into position, then were scrapped. Cost: $18.8 million. How To Cue THE BUDGET Vietnam is a giant teaching machine. Without the mind-riveting pain it causes, we might still be leery of questioning the operations of the Department of Defense. We might still be dreaming that since our military establishment is the finest in the world, the running of it is better left to military experts, well-supplied with money. Such dreams have faded. Congress, less afraid of being labeled unpatriotic, is asking penetrating questions. And the answers prove beyond imagining that if to err is human, the Pentagon is full of mortals. From that finding, it is only a step to asking Whether we can't have sufficient defense at lower cost, and perhaps use the savings for programs with lower priorities, like healing our cities and making poverty an anachron- ism. The answer to the first part of that question is yes. The Defense budget can be cut without radically thinning our blood. Some of the best thinking about the military budget has been done by Charles Schultze, former Director of the Bureau of the Budget and now a Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington, Schultze, a rational man, hopes that our defense planning proceeds logically. First, we examine what our commitments around the world are. For instance, we now have in force better than 40 mutual-security agreements involving the U.S. in the defense of large chunks of Earth. Should we be all that involved? Do some pacts need re- thinking? Given those commitments, what kind of fight might we get into? What threats should we plan for? This June, Schultze reminded Sen. Wil- liam Proxmire's Subcommittee on Economy (witness Hungary, Czechoslovakia), so the in Government that our contingency plan- forces can be reduced without critically ning now says that we should be able to diluting the American, presence. start fighting, simultaneously, a major Benson found further savings in people. "NATO" war in Europe, a major war with He figures that if annual leave time for a China in Southeast Asia, and a minor scuffle serviceman were cut from 30 days to 20 in Latin America, such as our last trip to (to more nearly match civilian vacations), it the Dominican Republic. Schultze pointedly would slice manpower requirements enough said that the China war contingency, a $51,0 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 u rt 13, 1969A pproved Fotin: 00001-3 Between them, Benson and the Congres- .sifytal'Quarterly staff agreed on a cut in the Defense budget of $9 to $10 billion a year, Vietnam or no Vietnam. Benson's estimate includes a 15 percent increase in the effic- iency of defense contractors. That might take some doing. In the broadest terms, and with examples almost too fierce to mention, the Proxmire subcommittee found that there never has been much interest in cost control, either on the part of contractors or their customers in the armed services. Ernest Fitzgerald, who first identified the $2 billion cost "overrun" on the Lockheed C-5A jet transport that cost control is seen as "antisocial aeivity." He cited the case of the Mark II avionics sys- tem, a "black box" for the navigation gear and radar on the F-111 fighter-bomber. Costs on the system, experts bet, have risen from a planned $610 million to $2.5 billion. In June, Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, doing some digging of his own, pro- duced a study of 12 weapons systems that showed cost overruns ranging from 0.2 per- cent to 194 percent on nine of them. The latter increase was on SRAM, the Air Force's Short Range Attack Missile, now expected by the Pentagon to cost $313.9 million more than was estimated. Outsiders bet the SRAM bloat is worse than that. Laird dryly noted that $1.4 billion of the nine overruns was due to "optimistic original cost estimates" on the part of weapons contractors. But contractors suffer from more than simple optimism. They sometimes underesti- mate their costs deliberately, in order to bid low and grab a contract. This practice is called "buying in." It is based on the as- sumption, valid historically, that the cus- tomer services will pay the costs no matter how they creep. Former Assistant Secretary of Defense Robert Charles could not recall for Proxmire when he'd last seen a major defense contractor lose money on a contract. That, in spite of the fact that over 90 percent of all weapons systems end up costing twice what the contractors' original estimate said they would. Fitzgerald has some ideas of how to bring an atmosphere of candor and concern for cost into the military-industrial dialogue. In the process of explaining them, he has made public a privileged language. For instance, when a manager of a weapons-system pro- curement finds that costs are outrunning the money Congress gave him, he has a "funding problem." In other words, costs are not too high, his funds are too low. Fitzgerald re- ports that since he's been in the Pentagon, he has never heard of cost reduction as an answer to a funding problem. A? "credible" cost estimate is one high enough so that actual costs do not produce an embarrass- ing overrun. What Fitzgerald and others are telling us is that bargaining and cost control, twixt military and contractor, is not gimlet-eyed jockeying in the best sense of free enterprise. It is more the murmuring of lovers. Fitzgerald would like to see the Pentagon use what are known as "should-cost" studies. These studies, sharp penciled by efficiency experts, try to answer what a weapons system should cost, assuming for one sweet, fleeting moment that the con- tractor operates in a reasonably efficient way. The Government would function as a management consultant to show the com- pany how to hold costs down. Previous should-cost studies found considerable waste motion and superfluous workers, sometimes overstaffed up to 60 percent for the work needed. Taken together with hard-nosed devotion to economy on the part of top Pentagon offieials, should-cost studies and other techniques, Fitzgerald thinks, could result in the saving of billions. Think that over. Billions. We should lay to rest now the notion that defense cuts would damage the economy. Arjay Miller, ex-Ford Motor Co. vice chair- man, told LOOK Senior Editor Al Rothen- berg: "I think a reduction in military ex- penditures . . . would have a plus effect on the economy. When rumors of peace break out, the stock market goes up...." If the Pentagon moves sharply to slash costs, the size of the Defense budget will depend all the more on the decisions made in the White House and Congress about how ambitious the country's defense policy should be. Charles Schultze is not impressed with the idea that a well-organized mili- tary-industrial complex has been siphoning cash out of the Treasury with evil design. Rather, he said, the American people "have pretty much been willing to buy anything carrying the label 'Needed For National Security.'" Schultze talked about involv- ing the Bureau of the Budget, traditionally the President's watchdog, more deeply in the writing of the Defense budget. Previously, the Department of Defense was less scru- tinized than any other Cabinet department. President Richard Nixon recently took Schultze up on that, giving Budget Director Robert Mayo what Mayo called his "march- ing orders" to examine Defense thoroughly. All the talk of cost-cutting now, of reduc- ing the Defense budget, echoes down the road to a time when the bad dream of Vietnam will be over. Then, we will find out what kind of "peace dividend" we'll get, i.e., how much money will be available for use in domestic programs or for paying out to taxpayers in the form of lower taxes. Projecting tax gains from a growing economy and the savings from not being in Vietnam against the auto- matic increases in domestic programs and the growth in non-Vietnam defense spend- ing, Schultze forecast a cumulative fiscal dividend of $35 billion by 1974. That sounds large, until we note that increases in military spending already planned will use up the $20 billion' a year we save from leaving Vietnam. The Defense budget can go marching on without the war. Whatever fiscal dividend we do get will come from the gain in tax reve- nues from a full-tilt economy. And Schultze's projection does not include the costs of large new weapons systems, or an escalation in the arms race. Those would poison the dividend. The Nixon Administration has already cut $1.1 billion in expenditures from the 1970 Johnson Defense budget. Recently, the Man- ned Orbiting Laboratory, a project on every- one's list of extraneous matter, was un- manned. Future savings from that surgery will be at least $1.5 billion, perhaps more. And Laird has given every indication that his study of nine weapons systems would not be the last hunt for waste. But we also have the word of Robert Moot, Defense Department Comptroller, that the Pentagon expects no significant cutbacks be- low the $80 billion budget, even after Ameri- can forces move out of Vietnam. He guessed $75 billion would be somewhere near right, unless "our commitments and our missions can be cut back." And the responsibility for thinking about that, aside from the Presi- dent's, lies with a Congress now somewhat awake to the chances of saving some dollars for domestic consumption. THE UNIVERSITY ARSENAL (By Ruth Gelmis) Angry students and newly formed groups of concerned faculty are raising some tough questions on college campuses. The Ameri- can multiversity, it seems, is fast on its way to becoming a docile Pentagon pet, depend- ent on military financing and deeply en- meshed in the defense establishment. On March 11, more than 1,400 students crammed into Stanford University's Memo- rial Auditorium to demand the facts about that school's involvement in war research. (Stanford ranked 46th last year among the nation's defense research-and-development contractors.) The answers were to come from S 9987 five university trustees. One was William Hewlett, president of Hewlett-Packard, whose defense sales last year totaled $34 million. Hewlett is also a director of Chrysler ($146 million in defense contracts) and FMC Cor- poration ($185 million) . Another trustee was Charles Ducommun, a director of Lockheed ($1.9 billion) . Among the trustees who were not there were the president of Northrop Aircraft and the 'chairman of General Dynamics. A trustee began, "I don't think it's fair to say that the university is participating in the war." The audience groaned. He con- tinued, "Many people within the university are actively opposing the war." "It's very nice," a student shouted, "to view the university as an open -place where I do my thing and you do your thing, only your thing happens to be doing research on weapons of destruction and death in the name of the university." The two-hour confrontation turned very nearly into a rout, as the trustees' answers became progressively inadequate, irrelevant and evasive. At one point, Hewlett flatly de- nied a charge that FMC manufactured nerve gas. The students presented evidence; Hew- lett countered that his source was the presi- dent of the corporation. Finally he admitted FMC had been making nerve gas up to six months earlier. The trustees' performance at that meeting radicalized a good many students, including Mike Sweeney, a former editor of the Stan- ford Daily who was sufficiently respected by the administration to have been appointed two important student-faculty committees. Sweeney walked in a liberal and walked out a radical. Now he pickets and demonstrates. "I've lost all my credit with the Establish- ment. It doesn't matter; you no longer care that much whether your future is going to be destroyed, whether you're imprisoned, whether you'll be physically endangered? because there's no alternatives." The Stanford University trustees appoint the Board of Directors of the Stanford Re- search Institute. SRI was created in 1946 as a nonprofit "wholly-owned subsidiary" of Stanford to "improve the standard of living and the peace and prosperity of mankind." It does nearly half its research ($29.7 million) for the Defense Department. Ten percent of its work ($6.2 million) is military research directly related to Southeast Asia. SRI oper- ates top-secret counter-insurgency projects in Thailand, including a new $1.8 million contract accepted last December. It has also done secret counterinsurgency research in Vietnam, Honduras and Peru. One classified project is summarized as "considering the advantages and disadvantages of providing U.S. operational assistance to the armed forces of the Government of Peru engaged in counterinsurgency operations." SRI'S board includes: Ernest Arbuckle, chairman. Arbuckle is a Stanford trustee, a director of Hewlett-Pack- ard and a director of Utah Construction & Mining .Utah built B-52 bases in Thailand, and its affiliate, Marcona Corp., mines iron ore in Peru. Edmund Littlefield, also a Stanford trus- tee, and president of Utah. Malcolm MacNaughton, president of Cas- tle & Cooke, which owns 55 percent of Thai- America Steel and 84 percent of Standard Fruit. Standard Fruit imports bananas, nearly half its supply from Honduras. Edgar Kaiser, chairman of Kaiser Alumi- num, part owner of Thai Metal Works. Kaiser also has an 80 percent interest in the phos- phate deposits of the Sechura Desert in Peru. Fred L. Hartley, president of Union Oil of California, which has drilling rights off the Thai coast. Gardiner Symonds, chairman of Tenneco, which now has extensive concessionary rights. in.Indonesia. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9988 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 1; 19? Counterinsurgency is not the brainchild of these directors, but it protects their in- terests very well. Jerry Dick, a young physicist and father of two, is opposed to the Vietnam war. In Feb- ruary, at a meeting sponsored by the Stan- ford chapter of the American Association of University Professors, Dick heard SR/ Presi- dent Charles Anderson argue that no re- searcher was forced to take on any project he found morally objectionable, Dick stood up: "Sir, I was pressured into doing chemical-warfare research." That can- dor, he learned later, nearly cost him this security clearance. I went looking for Dick, and an employee told me, "I think he's still here, but he may not want to see you." Couldn't I talk to him on the telephone? "Well, that might net work either. It's clear that they can bug the switchboard, and a lot of us here think they probably do." I asked Weldon "Hoot" Gibson, execu- tive vice president of SRI, If Dick was still working there. His face flushed with anger. "I don't know. I really don't. Have you seen him? Don't bother. . . . People like that have a decision to make?do they want to _ support the organization or not?" When I found Jerry Dick, he'd been fired. William Rambo is associate dean of the Stanford School of Engineering and director of the Stanford Electronics Laboratories target of a nine-day student sit-in in April. The labs held $2.2 million la classified con- tracts, primarily in electronic-warfare re- search, before the faculty senate di- rected on April 24 that the contracts be phased out. Shocked faculty mem- bers learned meanwhile, from the sit-in stu- dents, that contract titles and summaries had been carefully edited to delete military references, apparently to faellitate approval of the contracts by a watchdog committee on classified research. "Applied Research in Electronic Warfare Techniques," for ex- ample, became "Applied Research in Elec.. tromagnetics." Rambo is on the board of, and holds stock in, Itek, an electronics firth that held over $80 million in defense contracts at the end of last year. He is also a member of sEVLial military ad- visory committees, including the Defense De- partment Advisory Group on Electronic War- fare and ECOM?the Army Electronics Com- mand. In other words, he is called upon as an expert to advise the Defense Department on the usefulness of the kinds of equipment Itek supplies. Rambo, in all sincerity, stt yS he wonders "how much talent we are denying the Gov- ernment by this sensitivity regarding con- flicts of interest." In a 1966 memo, Hubert Heffner, then Stanford's dean of research a ad now Nixon's deputy science director, aeknowledged that it was "not uncommon" for faculty mem- bers to be directors of private firms, and, de- clining to set rules, urged teachers to be "sensitive" to potential conflicts of interest. Sensitive or not, professors acrass the nation sit on the boards of defense industries and advise military committees. MIT'S research budget for the academic year 1967-68 was $174 million, and 95 per- cent of this came from the Federal Govern- ment, with $120 million from the Defense Department alone. Such heavy dependence on one source wor- ries many university administrators, includ- ing Cornell's former preddent, Jamee Per- kins, who warned that the "acceptance- of Government work and corporate donation has been known to result in a slowing down of the university's critical faculties." One laboratory director may already be In trouble because of his Cautiously critical views. Dr. Wolfgang Panofsky, who directs the AEC-funded $30-mil1ionea-year Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC), believes university scientists ought to play a crucial role as an independent source of public re- view of defense policy: "It can't come from people who work directly for the Defense De- partment because they're obligated to live by official policy. It can't very well come from the contractors whose living depends on the Defense Department. So the universi- ties are the only places with the technologi- cal expertise left. The real problem is how do you keep the universities from becoming captive in the process of furnishing this ad- vice?" One answer, he says, is that "the live- lihood of the university must in no way de- pend on Defense Department support." A professor at the Center, arguing that "the director of a laboratory Is not a free man," attributes SLAC's current funding dif- ficulties to political reprisals. "This lab is not being pleasant politically anymore. Most of the people here have come out against the ABM, so the Center has begun to lose a few of its friends in Congress. And the way you get a budget increase is, you have friends on the AEC, friends on the Joint Atomic Energy Committee." A few months ago, as if deliberately to substantiate that charge, Francisco Costag- liola, who was at the time an AEC Commis- sioner, wrote to Stanford and MIT threaten- ing that should the schools decide against doing classified research, he would press for withdrawal of all AEC research money. Sidney Drell, another SLAC professor, found himself in an awkward position when he addressed the Stanford March 4 Convoca- tion. (Stanford and more than 30 other universities held convocations that day to raise the issue of war research.) Drell care- fully avoided taking a public stand on the ABM that day because he felt constrained by his position as a member of the President's Science Advisory Committee. He is an op- ponent of the ABM. Money, or the lack of it, has boxed a num- ber of university administrators into a corner. Some admit a desire to pull back from de- fense work and reorient research priorities, but complain there is simply rio alternate source of comparable financing. The one agency specifically charged with supporting basic research, the National Science Founda- tion, has only enough in its till to support 12 percent of that research. But the Defense Department, NASA and the AEC do support a good deal of basic research, partly because they can more easily get appropriations. When pressure on the Defense Department compelled it to cut back on some of its con- troversial foreign-country projects, it offered to transfer $400,000 of its own $7.8 billion research budget to the State Department. The Department of State's current budget for research contracts is $125,000. Stanford's President Kenneth Pitzer com- plains, "Our national priorities are wrong." But when he needs funds for university re- search programs or expansion, where is he to go? The new Stanford Space Engineering and Science Building, for example, was made pos- sible by grants of $2,080,000 from NASA and $992,000 from the Air Force. Universities have learned that it doesn't hurt to have a Pentagon man on your staff. When the president of the California Insti- tute of Technology, Lee DuBridge, left for Washington to become Nixon's Science Ad- viser, he was replaced by Harold Brown, then Secretary of the Air Force. Last year, Caltech received $3.5 million from the Defense De- partment, much more than its entire student tuition. NASA and the AEC supplied an addi- tional $5 million. Caltech also operates the nearby $214-million-a-year Jet Propulsion Laboratory for NASA. A year ago, the University of Rochester, whose defense contracts increased from $1 million in 1966 to $13 million in 1968, hired as its vice president and provost, Robert L. Sproull. Sproull is the current chairman of the Defense Science Board, the top Pentagon science-advisory committee. The University of California. holds $17 mil- lion in defense-research contracts and ad- ministers the $250-million-a-year missile- development and testing laboratories at Livermore and Los Alamos. Its new president is a former Assistant Secretary of Defense, Charles Hitch. The -university also maintains an $80,000-aeyear office irrWashington. MIT chose Jack Ruins to be vice president in charge of the Lincoln and Instrumenta- tion laboratories, -which do most of their business ($92 million) with the Defense De- partment. A former Pentagon official, Ruina Is a pragmatist: "You can say you'll with- draw the labs [from military work], but who's going to pay their sedary?" The heavy investment in military research has a snowballing effect. As one professor complains, "The trouble is, when you de- velop it, somebody will want to build it." The researcher who takes on a military con- tract because that'a where he can most easily get funding, and then develops a new tech- nique or weapon, frequently starts a new "spin-off" corporation to produce it. Route 128 around MIT and Harvard and the 900- acre industrial park owned by Stanford Uni- versity are crowded with hundreds of aero- space and electronics spin-offs, most of them doing most of their business with the De- fense Department. In recent years, 160 new firms have spun off from MIT alone. The new corporations in turn hire univer- sity consultants (MIT professors may con- sult one day out of five) and graduating students. For that one-third of MIT's grad- uate students who support themselves as re- search assistants, future careers are deter- mined by the kind of research they do while In graduate school. In 1968, 45 percent of MIT's industry-bound graduates took jobs with the top 100 prime defense contractors. Many still receive draft deferments for work- ing in a defense plant. Every new employee of a defense-oriented corporation has a vested interest in a swol- len defense budget. His livelihood depends on it. Half of all U.S. research and development is military in nature. Last year, the U.S. spent four times as much an chemical and biological warfare as it did on cancer re- search. The man who invented napalm was not a Dow employee but a Harvard profes- sor working in a Harvard lab. Universities and nonprofit research institutes received $665 million from the Defense Department in 1968, for work on the ABM and MIRV. for research on aerial-weapons systems, anti- personnel bombs, chemical and biological warfare, incendiary weapons, counterinsur- gency, and such mind-teasers as the cla,ssi- fied contract titled "Beliefs and habits of cer- tain foreign populations of significance for psychological operations." Talent and funds that could be applied to problems of urban blight, disarmament, pol- lution, poverty, and disease are drained into newer, bigger, better weapons systems. Dr. James Killian, chairman of the MIT Corporation (he was the nation's first pres- idential Science Adviser), has recommended to a Senate subcommittee that an ad hoc task force be created to review our weanons technology and strategic policies. Scientists thus "free 03 organizational loyalties" could make recommendations "without being con- strained by any departmental commitments or biases." Such a task force is not even in the plan- ning stage. l'Ugh t now, if the President wants a detailed study of, say, Russia's strategic capabilities vis-a-vis the U.S., he asks the Defense Department to ask the Air Force to ask the Rand Corporation to do the study. There is no large-scale, eivilian-sUpported "think tank" to which the public or Con- gress or even the President can go directly Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 PAugust 13, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE for advice on strategic policy. The scientist's voice is captive, reaching us only after It has been filtered through Pentagon agencies and distorted by military interpretation. OTJR SECTIRITY LIES BEYOND WEAPONS (By W. Averell Harriman) Like Many other Americans, I am fearful about the present role of the military in our national life. Military men have as their pri- mary responsibility the defense of the nation, and they are miscast when they are expected to be omniscient on other vital national con- oerris. It is in some ways unfair to ask them to accept responsibility for decisions on which they are clearly unqualified to give a balanced judgment. I have worked closely with our military officers during the past three decades and respect them for their competence and dedi- cation to our country, I have held many of them in the highest esteem, among them General Marshall. I vividly recall Marshall explaining to President Roosevelt that his advice was given purely from a military standpoint. When military men advised extreme action In Vietnam, I am not sure that they fully realized the limited character of our objec- tives there. We are not there to win a war, but simply to stop the North from taking over the South by force, and .to permit the people of the South to decide their own fu- ture. I am not sure that all those advising the President fully understand how limited our objectives are. Somehow or other, there is a feeling that we are fighting the inter- national Communist conspiracy?rather than Vietnamese national Communists who do not Want to be dominated by either Peking or Mosoow. The international Communist sit- uation is quite different today than it was in the early postwar period. During those days, I was always on the side of those want- ing more arms for our nation. When South Korea was attacked, we had a military budget of only about $14 billion, and we suf- fered greatly from it. But today, we have a military budget of almost $80 billion, and have so many other requirements in our country that it is time to call a halt to our arms buildup. The war in Vietnam is an un- fortunate drain on our resources, and will, I hope, be brought to an early settlement. The money we spend there is urgently needed now to reunite our own divided country. It is not the military's job to know how that is to be done, and they cannot be ex- pected to weigh the technological require- ments of the military against the require- ments in our cities. The military today are asking for new weapons that in my judgment are clearly less important than other na- ' tional needs. We obviously must maintain nuclear ca- pability giving us a second strike force that would deter the Soviet Union or anyone else from hitting us. But that does not mean we have to be ahead in every aspect of nu- clear capability, nor does it mean that we must have many times the power to over- kill any enemy. In 1941, I was in -London as President Roosevelt's representative to Prime Minister Churchill and the British Government. Even then, I was struck by the difference in the role of the military in Britain and in the U.S. The British War Cabinet consisted of the political leaders of the country, and the ministers of the armed services were not even members of it. I am not suggesting that the British military leaders were not highly respected or that their views were not given full weight. But they were given weight within the Cabinet in balance with the other problems of the British nation. The military chiefs of staff were advisers to the Cabinet. The military establishment was in- tegrated into the policy-making procedures of the British Government. They had no contact with the Parliament, nor did they glee any public expression of their views. This is altogether different from our pres- ent procedures. Not only the Secretary of Defense but also the Chiefs of Staff go to the committees of the Congress and testify on all sorts of matters. As a result, a num- ber of senators and congressmen get an un- balanced view of our nation's needs from military men who are responsible for only one aspect of our national concerns. What I am suggesting is that we have a group of senators and congressmen whose attention is concentrated on military needs. That is why we had one member of the Congress saying a short while back that if we turned over the Vietnam war to the soldiers, they would win it in a month. Nothing could be more absurd than that statement. But it indicates the mind-set that some members of Congress get after steady bombardment by the views of our military. Their responsibility is the security of the nation, and they must look at the worst of everything. Those who see only the possible military threats would drive us into another world war. That is why isolated military judgments of political situations are not sound. Robert Kennedy wrote that during the Cuban missile crisis, he was struck by how often his brother's military advisers took "positions, which, if wrong, had the advantage that no one would be around at the end to know" how wrong they were. All of us abhor Soviet repression of free- doms at home and in Czechoslovakia, and their support for Communist subversion in independent countries. But I decry the at- tempt that is being made today by some in the Defense Department and Congress to scare the American people into believing that the Soviets are scheming to attack us with nuclear weapons. No one knows the intention of the Kremlin, but I can speak from my Russian experience that dates back over forty years. I am convinced that the Soviets are as anxious to avoid destruction of their country by nuclear war as we are of OUTS. It is particularly alarming that there ap- pears to be a new policy in the Pentagon, to have the civilian-directed offices of Interna- tional Security Affairs and Systems Analysis support the recommendations of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and not question them. It is reassuring that the Congress is in- creasingly showing concern over military programs and exercising its independent judgments on decisions. I believe that negotiations we are now starting with the Soviets to control the nuclear arms race are the most important we have ever undertaken. They can be suc- cessful if we act wisely. From my talks with Mr. Kosygin and other Soviet officials, I am satisfied that they want to stop the nuclear arms race for two rea- sons. They don't want to divert further ex- penditures from their pressing internal needs. And they believe the U.S. and the Soviet Union should come to an understanding now to reduce the risk of nuclear war. This is a time of world opportunity?a split second in history. I have been told by my scientist friends that both sides can develop effective MIRV's (Multiple Independently-targeted Re-entry Vehicles) in a relatively short time. It is vital that agreement be reached before this occurs. We can each tell the number of missile sites the other has but we cannot know the character of warheads fitted to the missiles without detailed on-site inspection. I was very much shocked to hear that the military had gone ahead to order these mul- tiple warheads without telling the Congress or the public that they had done so. There are advisers in our defense establish- ment who are on record as opposing an agreement with the Soviet Union on nuclear restraint. They are entitled to their opinions, S9989 but it would be inexcusable If actions Were taken that committed us to the arms race without the widest possible discussion. I am sure President Nixon believes that an agree- ment on nuclear restraint is of vital import- ance to our nation, and most Americans share this judgment. It Is interesting that it took eight years for the Congress and the public to understand what President Dwight Eisenhower was talk- ing about when he warned about the mili- tary-industrial complex. It is only recently that we have begun to question the new weapons programs, the wisdom of immediate deployment of the ABM, and testing of the MIRV. Until now, the pressure from the Con- gress has been to appropriate more money than the Administration requested for new weapons programs. Pressure comes now in the opposite direction, The turnaround is due largely to the unpopularity of the war and the urgency of domestic needs. We are be- ginning to recognize the danger of a mili- taristic attitude on the part of our country. Our security will not come from the number of our weapons. It will come from the strength of our moral force at home and abroad, from our economic and social strength, and from the unity of our people. Mr. PROXMIRE. In addition, Mr. President, I call attention to two editori- als, published in the New York Times of August 11, 1969, one entitled "Homage to the Astronauts," and the other entitled "Portrait of Mars." I read briefly from the first editorial, as follows: This background makes it particularly un- fortunate that the formal celebration planned this week has such a narrow, nationalistic cast. In the words of the plaque they left on the moon, the astronauts "came in peace for all mankind." Yet their visit to the United Nations next Wednesday will be very brief, while the rest of the day will be devoted to an American celebration of an American achievement. Perhaps it is not too late for more imagina- tive planning to emphasize the role of the astronauts as envoys of all humanity, emis- saries whose trip was made possible by con- tributions of knowledge from many nations over many centuries. Better than any men before them, after all, Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins know that this one planet is one world and that what unites men is far stronger and more important than the forces dividing them. I also wish to quote briefly from the followup editorial, on where we go from here, entitled "Portrait of Mars." After discussing what the remarkable shot we have seen in the last few days has re- vealed about Mars, the article says: Whether the Pimentel-Herr hypothesis is right or wrong, the case is strong for further intensive study of Mars by unmanned satel- lites?as against a precipitate switch to the much more costly alternative of manned exploration. A race to put men on Mars would be a moondoggle for whit% there is neither need nor justification. I hope when we look at the space authorization bill, which I understand will be before us shortly after we return, we will keep that in mind. The National Advisory Council advised some time ago that we can save a billion if, for the next 3 or 4 years, we limit our space exploration to unmanned exploration. Our voyage to the moon is the most remarkable achievement in centuries. Having accomplished that, our next step should be unmanned space exploration, A Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9990 Approved For Re mas1a0A1ClietkE-IDOP;111300E64RAOTOE0300100001-3 August 1A 1,060 t get Up to a comfortable 70 degrees or so at penditure of at least $2 billion on re best, they descend at worst to hundreds of search, development, test and evaluation degrees below zero. For lovers of comfort, Mars is as uninviting as the THOM, and weii alone?before any of these aircraft enter over a hundred timet as far away. our strategic arsenal The irrepressible optimists who refuse to believe that earth alone has life in this solar system did get something to cheer about from Mariner 7. Professors Piznentel and Herr believe they detected methane and am- monia in Mar's south polar region, and they suggest this may have a biological origin, i.e., there may be some primitive form of life In that past of Mart. It is an exciting hypothesis worth further investigation, but for the moment the idea must be viewed as an extremely long shot. Methane and ammonia can arise from non- biological processes, Moreover, there are serious contradictions between some of the Pimentel-Herr conclusions and thote of other Investigators using different data sent hack by Mariner 7. Whether the Pimentel-Herr hypothesis is right or wrong, the case is stneng for fur- ther intensive study of Mars by unmanned satellites--as against a precipitate switch to the much more cottly alternative of manned exploration. A race to put men on Mars would be a moondoggie for which there is neither need nor justification. The fascinating close-approach photo- graphs sent back by the two Mariners covered only 20 per cent of the planet, and they offered no explanation for the changing pat- terns of dark and light that telescopes have shown on Mars for centuries. /additionally, Mariner 7 has uncovered an intriguing mys- tery by demonstrating that the bright area called Hellas is decidedly atypical in not having craters. That revelation immediately raiees the question of what processes have obliterated the craters that meteors must have created in Hellas too with less potential loss of life and a grew saving in funds. I ask unanimous consent that the New York Times editorials from which I have quoted be printed in the IlEcoae at this point. There being no objection, the edi- torials were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, RS follows: HOMAGE TO THE Asteineenes By this morning, if all goes as planned, the three Apollo astronauts Wall have been re- leased from quarantine Wad reunited with their families. Then they Will begin receiving the world's homage for their historic accom- plishment in a celebration that will start with Wednesday's grueling cross country parade. Armstrong, Aldrin and Coning richly de- serve the heroes' acclaim they will receive in the days immediately ahead As no earlier feat has ever done, their aueeessful trip to and return from the moon captured the imagination of men and women almost everywhere. In the universal glow produced at least briefly by their suer-eel, many of the normal divisive barriers arineng men broke down. They were hailed in afiecow as Well as in Washington, in Cairo as Well as in Jerusa- lem, in New Delhi and Karaehi, in East Ber- lin and West Berlin. This background makes it particularly un- fortunate that the formal eelebration plan- ned this week has such a narrow, nationalis- tic cast. In the words of the plaque they left on the moon, the astronauts "came in peace for all mankind." Yet their visit to the United Nations next Wednead will be very brief, while the rest of thai day will be devoted to an American celebration of an American achievement. Perhaps it is not too late for more imagina- tive planning to emphasize the role of the astronauts as envoys of all reoinanity, emis- saries whose trip was made pessible by con- tributions of knowledge frcall many nations over many centuries. Better than any men before them, after all, Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins know that-this one planet Is one world and that hat unite: men is far stronger and more important than the forces dividing them. PORTRAIT OF MAR': On that eventual day when the first men walk on the surface of Mars, ',hey will fired much "magnificent desolation' akin to that seen by Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin when they strolled on the mom last month. That virtual certainty emerges from the brilliantly successful exploration of the red planet just completed by Mariners 6 and 7. Their expedition lacked the human drama of Apollo 11, but the scienaile information they returned may well qinilify the two Mariners as the moat scientlfieally produc- tive enterprise men have yet e irried out in space. . Generations of science fictien writers? from H. G. Wells and Edgar Rice Burroughs to Ray Bradbury?were mistaken, it turns out, in their visions of human or nonhuman civilizations on Male. On thaeentrary, Mars it a bleak, arid wasteland, a gee----gist's night- mare of twisted plains and innumerable craters whose typical landscape is almost ene distinguishable from that of the moon. True, Mars has a thin atmosehere?whose ground-level pressure is about that found twenty or thirty miles above the earth?but it is composed mainly of caelion dioxide, and cauld never support any coMplex life fa- miliar here on earth. Woree yet, the Martian surface--or most of it anyway -is bathed daily in a deadly shower of ultraviolet radia- tion, and there is no equivalent of the life- saving protection provided by the atmos- 1 phere here. While Martian temperatures may I might say at this point, Mr. Presi- bomber, we are talkingenes1 ecord,c dent, that in talking about this new bomber, we are talking about a system the eventual cost of which could be as high as or higher than that of the Safe- guard anti-ballistic-missile system about which we have just debated for some 5 or 6 weeks. Moreover, it is contemplated, according to a recent issue of Aviation Week & Space Technokiey: Under the new schedule, USAF will select by November 1 a single contractor for the final development and production of the AMSA. We are clearly at the threshold of a major new expenditure, We should not be drawn into it little by little without having a clear idea of where we are going and why. I believe, therefore, that the time is at hand for a thorough exarnina- tion of our entire strategic bomber program. With the cosponsorship of the Senator from New York (Mr. GooDELL), the Sen- ator from Oregon (Mr. HATFIELD) , and the Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. PROX- MIRE), who have been leading the effort to review our military outlays, have proposed an amendment to the pending bill which aims to hold AMSA to the fiscal 1969 spending level; in other words, to avoid an acceleration of work on the system. It would leave $20 million in the For the scientifically minded or even the pending authorization hill, to be e0M- merely curious, the rich harvest of the bined with $5 million in carryover au- Mariners can only whet the appetite for more thority from fiscal 1969 knowledge. ADVANCE MANNED STRATEGIC AIRCRAFT Mr. MeCIOVERN. Mr. President, the military procurement authorization bill, S. 2546, represents a significant increase for an advanced manned strategic air- craft. In fiscal 1969 the approved program for this project was $25 million. It is pro- posed that we spend $100.2 million in fis- cal 1970, for purposes outlined by De- fense Secretaries Clifford and Laird in their respective posture statements. Secretary Clifford raised the figure to $77 million, to "continue the competi- tive design phase initiated with fiscal year 1969 funds and to advance the development of the long leadtime avionics and propulsion systems." Secretary Laird added another $23 mil- lion, to "shorten the competitive design phase and permit the start of full-scale engineering development in fiscal year 1970. While no decision on produc- tion and deployment must be made now, the accelerated research and de- velopment effort could advance the initial operational capability?I0C--of this air- craft by 1 year." While we might take some small com- fort from the fact that we can avoid a final decision this year on a system es- timated to cost a minimum of $12 bil- kin, it is nevertheless important to rec- ognize that present plans call for the ex.- Mr. President, this would be the ef- fect of reducing by $80 nhilli the amount requested in the pending au- thorization bill for work on a new bomber. In the meantime I hope we can initiate a more extensive review of the alleged need and justification for any strategic bomber force at all and for this elaborate new system in particular. I am especially interested in learning more about the administration's contentions in this regard. For my own part, I must say that at the end of a substantial amount of study, including briefings from the Air Force officers in charge of the AMSA program, .1 have been unable to escape the conclusion that the many legs upon which the AMSA case rests, even in com- bination, cannot begin to support it. The case for retaining any kind of a bomber deterrent is almost as doubtful. I will call up my amendment for active consideration shortly after the recess. In preparation for discussion at that time, and so that all of us can develop a clear understanding of the Admin- istration's position, we have submitted to Defense Secretary Laird the following list of questions bearing on the strategic bomber program. Most of them have been discussed with Air Force oincials in both classified and unclassified terms. I have asked that they be answered in wilting for the public record, and that the re- sponse be supplied to me by the end of the recess. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 :CIA-RDsF' A.1364R000300100001-3 August 12, 1969CONGRESSIONAL RECOR ? S 9725 ing and technical direction of system developments; operations analysis and long-range military planning; and gen- eral and continuing research and experi- mentation in support of military R. & D. Our study of the nonprofits, including a Defense Department briefing, indicates that there has been a general tightening of management and control of the de- fense FCRC's, including a noticeable re- duction in the fees which have been paid to the major FCRC's. However, the sub- committee took issue with the Defense Department criteria for determining the reasonableness of FCRC executive com- pensation rates. It does not seem appro- priate to the subcommittee that executive salaries for these nonprofit, no- risk Government-sponsored and Gov- ernment-funded activities should be equated to compensation for profitmak- ing organizations in private enterprise having the same operating budget or the same "sales." We found it difficult to jus- tify a salary of $97,500 for the chief executive of an FCRC when the salary of the Secretary of Defense is only $60,- 000. That was the basis for the recom- mendation by Senator HARRY BYRD Of the restrictive language in limiting such executive compensation. Senator BYRD'S amendment is contained in section 204(a) of the authorization bill. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McINTYRE. I am happy to yield to my colleague on the Armed Services Com- mittee and also my colleague on the Re- search and Development Subcommittee. Mr. BYRD of Virginia. Mr. President, first may I congratulate the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire for the tremendous amount of work that he has put into the handling of this legislation as chairman of the Subcommittee on Re- search and Development. He has handled it with great ability and great industry. In regard to the amendment the Sen- ator from New Hampshire just men- tioned, I think we should emphasize for a moment just what it will do and what it will not do. It does not prevent the. payment of salaries in excess of $45,000, but it does make mandatory that any such salaries above the figure of $45,000 must be ap- proved by the President of the United States. As it is now, the salaries for these Government-sponsored, nonprofit orga- nizations are in effect determined by self-perpetuating boards of trustees, and then those salaries, set by the boards of trustees, must be approved by the De- partment of the Air Force or the appro- priate department in the Department of Defense. So this provision would take away from the Department of Defense the right to establish salaries in excess of $45,000, and would require that they have the ap- proval of the President of the United States. The reason why both the subcommit- tee and the committee felt such a pro- vision was desirable was that, as a prac- tical matter, all of the funds for the Govermnent-sponsored, nonprofit or- With these proposals, which I strongly urge the Congress to enact, we can en- hance America's human resources. By opening up the opportunity for man- power training on a large scale, we build a person's will to work; in so doing, we build a bridge to human dignity. RICHARD NIXON. THE WHITE HOUSE, August 12, 1969. MESSAGE FROM THE HOUSE -.A message from the House of Repre- sentatives, by Mr. Hackney, one of its reading clerks, announced that the House had agreed to the amendments of the Senate to the bill (HR. 10107) to continue for a temporary period the ex- isting suspensionf ty o ertain-istle. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJA- LEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The PRESIDING 0101,10ER (Mr. EA- GLETON in the chair). The Chair lays be- fore the Senate the unfinished business, which will be stated. The ASSISTANT LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A bill (S. 2546) to authorize appropriations during the fiscal year 1970 for procure- ment of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and to au- thorize the construction of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to pre- scribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I yield myself 40 minutes. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from New Hampshire is recognized for 40 minutes. Mr. McINTYRE: Mr. President, I have a prepared statement here that defends and replies to the thrust of the amend- ment being offered by the distinguished Senator from Arkansas (Mr. FULBRIGHT) . I want to make it clear that I do not plan to yield for questions or any col- loquy during the presentation of this proposed statement, with one exception. I shall be glad to yield to the distin- guished Senator from Virginia (Mr. BYRD) who is a member of the Subcom- mittee on Research and Development of the Armed Services Committee, since I will be referring directly to actions which took place in that subcommittee and in the full committee. Mr. President, this amendment would make a further reduction of $45,614,000 of the R.D.T. & E. portion of the au- thorization bill. I would call the Senate's attention to the fact that the bill, as re- ported by the Armed Services Commit- tee, has already reduced the $8.2 billion request by $1 billion and $43 million. This represents a total reduction of some 121/2 percent of the funds requested for R.D.T. & E. The areas in the field of military re- search that the Senator's amendment seeks to reach and further reduce over and beyond the committee's recommen- dation are: First, Federal contract research cen- ters; Second, DOD contracts with foreign research institutions; Third, policy planning studies with foreign policy implications; Fourth, the Themis program; and Fifth, Project Agile?R. & D. on low level conflict. The Armed Services Committee has al- ready cut this overall field of military science research by $50.5 million. Most of this cut will be absorbed by the five pro- grams under attack in the Fulbright amendment?about $40 million. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me? ? Mr. McINTYRE. I have already indi- cated that I do not plan to yield. Mr. FULBRIGHT. This is not for a question. I wanted to modify my amend- ment, so the Senator will know what I have in mind. Mr. McINTYRE. I yield for that pur- pose. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I wish to modify my amendment on page 3, line 24, to add the following new sec- tion: SEC. 205. None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act may be used to carry out any research project or study unless such project or study has a direct and apparent relationship to a specific mili- tary function or operation. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment will be so modified. FEDERAL CONTRACT RESEARCH CENTERS Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, let me first discuss the Federal contract re- search centers. These are the so-called "think tanks." These are one of the re- sources which gives the Department of Defense a capability to meet the chal- lenging requirements for new system concepts and their orderly and timely development into operational military systems. Other parts of the mix of re- sources for doing this job include in- house laboratories and contracts with profit-oriented industry. During the past 5 years the R.D.T. & E. funding for the nonprofits or Federal contract re- search centers has been decreased sig- nificantly in an orderly, but programed fashion. I would caution against a pre- cipitate reduction without proper plan- ing and laying of the groundwork for transfer of tasks being performed by these FCRC's to other scientists and en- gineers?either in-house or contractor employed. Large reductions without pre- planning will probably result in the dis- banding of talented teams of scientists and engineers with a consequent serious impact on many high priority programs. The time lost and the added cost of re- creating these teams at a later date would nullify the cost savings achieved by this reduction. It was the feeling of the subcommit- tee that these nonprofit corporations serve a useful purpose in three areas: System planning and systems engineer- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30_,. CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 S 9726 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 12, 1969 ganizations come from the American taxpayers. That being the case, the committee felt that the salaries shad be more in line with those paid by the Government for positions of great restionsibility, such as the Secretary of Defense and other Cab- inet officials. But the committee recognized that there are many technical experts whose services are needed, and in those cases higher salaries may be set if they have the approval of the President of the United States. I will take just one corporation, the Aerospace Corp. In fiscal 1969 its operat- ing budget was $71272,000. Of that amount, it received Its entire funding, $74,272,000, from the Tiedartment of De- fense. In regard to Aerospace, the informa- tion submitted to the- committee shows that there are 68 persons in Aerospace earning in excess of. $30,000 per year. There are 19 who earned in excess of $42,500. To give the Senate the range of sal- aries, the President was paid last year $97,500. A senior vice president was paid $66,000. A vice president for operations was paid $65,000. Another vice president for operations was paid $58,000. Another vice president and general manager was paid $55,000. Another vice president was paid $50,000. Another vice president was paid $50,000. Another vice president was paid $50,000. Another vice president was paid $50,000. Another vice president was paid $45,000. Another vice president was paid $45,500. The committee went into this matter very carefully. It felt that there should be some restraint with regard to what is done with respect to these 16 Govern- ment-sponsored, nonprofit research or- ganizations. With that in mind, the amendment which is included in the bill was devel- oped and was approved by the committee. I thank the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire for yielding to me at this point. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I com- pliment the Senator from Virginia for his work, not only On the particular amendment he has been discussing, but generally for his help, counsel, and ad- vice on the subcommittee, and, of course, his activities on the full committee. It has been a pleasure to be associated with him, particularly as we have delved into this matter of research and development during the past year. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Presi- dent, will the Senator Veld? Mr. McINTYRE. For what purpose? Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. I wish to compliment the Senator. Mr. McINTYRE, Oh. I always yield for that. The PRESIDING OPeICER. The Senator yields for a compliment. Mr. BYRD of West Vir iinia. Mr. Presi- dent, the Senator yields for a compli- ment that is well deserved. I have been greatly impressed by the presentations that have been made during the debate on this bill by the able junior Senator from New Hampshire. I think that he has been exceedingly diligent in his work as chairman of the subcommittee; and the statements that he has made, his participation in colloquies on the floor, and his answers to questions have indi- cated that he has a very thorough grasp of the subject matter. I know that one can only acquire the knowledge with re- spect to a bill that he obviously has ac- quired with respect to this bill through a great deal of hard work, effort, and dili- gence. It is gratifying to see Senators come to the floor who are so well pre- pared to present their case on a bill, and the Senator from New Hampshire has certainly set an extremely fine example. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from West Virginia for his very kind remarks, but I would add that, as one of the so-called junior Senators, I have learned much and have profited greatly from watching my dis- tinguished colleague from West Virginia in his Presentations, because I think it is generally recognized that there is no harder-working Member of this body than my distinguished friend from West Virginia. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. I thank the Senator. I think the Senate is in- debted to him, and he has done a great service for the country, on the subject matter of the legislation which his sub- committee has delved into. It is a very difficult subject matter, and I have lis- tened to his presentation with interest. I wanted to pay him this tribute be- cause I felt it was well deserved, and again I say the Senate is indebted to him. I congratulate him, and I know he will continue to do great work on the Committee on Armed Services. Mr. McINTYRE. I thank the Senator very much. Furthermore, the subcommittee felt that there should be a general reduction in the level of effort of FCRC's, par- ticularly since we see an overall reduc- tion in the total DOD research and development budget. In addition, we noted that the Defense Department has instituted a policy authorizing Defense- sponsored FCRC's to invite them to take up to 20 percent of their business from non-DOD sources. The subcommittee recognized that the total operating budget of the Federal Contract Research Centers is not neces- sarily, indeed not usually, funded from a single account. For example, the line item for Aerospace Corp. under Military Astronautics and related equipment is $24.7 million, whereas its operating budg- et planned for fiscal year 1970 is $78 million. The rest of the funding is pro- vided from various programs for which Aerospace Corp. provides system en- gineering and technical services. We rec- ognize the difficulty of identifying ap- propriate accounts to which a reduction should be charged. It is expected that the impact on the FCRC's will be in excess of the recommended cut. The efforts of the Federal Contract Research Centers are generally charac- terized by two attributes. First, each center has a "mission oriented" rather than a "scientific discipline-oriented" charter; that is, each center is given tasks directly connected to the Services' operational needs. To carry out these tasks, an FCRC must involve many kinds of scientists and engineers. Thus, the contributions of any one center are carte varied?in terms of scientific disciplines and areas of technology, and in terms of the duration and scope of effort lead- ing to a contribution. Second, many investigations are con- ducted concurrently within each center, and the culmination dates of investiga- tions are widely staggered. Thus, a small sampling of the contributions made by all FCRC's during a given short period of time is not representative of their long-term cumulative value. Because of these two characteristics, what I wish to point out is: First, a rather detailed listing of some of the important developments from one FCRC, the Applied Physics Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University; and second, a sam- pling of illustrative contributions by other FCRC's. This should provide a "feel" for both the range of the center's activity as well as the larger range of work accomplished by this entire cat- egory of R. & D. orga,nizations. APPLIED PHYSICS LABORATORY The Applied Physics Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University, working primarily for the U.S. Navy, has long been a pro- ductive member of the DOD's research and development team. The fiscal year 1967 DOD funding of this organization -was $31.4 million. The level of technical effort haS been reasonably constant over the past several years. In return for this Investment the Applied Physics Labora- tory has: Developed the basic surface-to-air missiles, Terrier, Tartar, and Tabs, which are now deployed on upward of 60 ships and has undertaken the job of improving the capabilities of these sys- tems against new threats, countermeas- ures, and other environmental factors. Released to production, in December 1966, design modifications for the Terrier and Tartar missiles to extend the capa- bilities of the missile. Mr. President, I am now talking about the missiles on our warships today, on the high seas of the world. Formulated testing methods and devel- oped the necessary ancillary test equip- ment to permit the rapid determination of the state of operability of the ship- board weapon systems of the Tartar and Terrier ships. A system dynamic tester has been developed that provides real- istic target simulation for the fire con- trol system and generates a test problem similar to that of engaging a stringent target. The functioning of the Ere con- trol system is automatically evaluated and a scoring is displayed. The first model of this equipment was successfully tested aboard the U.S.S. Berkeley in the fall of 1966. A further advance in oper- ability testing involved the design of automatic equipment for the evaluation of the Navy tactical data system com- puter complex already aboard Terrier ships of the DLG-26 class. This com- Priterized test program was successfully demonstrated aboard the U.S.S. Wain- wright and work is proceeding for the installation of the teat program aboard all the Terrier ships having the NTDS Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12, 196 oved Fo 004/11/30 1tI3P LOIN iitc.E5Il.31N Idl7V.M.L7-- 017IN ACEIR000300100001-3 S9727 rr-Ralease,2, ,E4A,RDP7e1EMO system. The testing programs materially contribute to the online readiness of the DOD CONTRACTS WITH FOREIGN RESEARCH proposed project, and fourth, at least INSTITUTIONS one of the following special conditions is shipboard weapon systems. The amendment by the Senator from inherent in the proposed work. Conceived and developed the Navy Arkansas would reduce the authorization First. The research or development in- navigation satellite system. This sys- for Defense Department contracts at for- volves geographical, environmental, or ? tem provides extremely accurate navi- gation fixes for the Polaris submarine fleet, independent of weather conditions. The entire development, including the concepts, the computing programs, de- tailed satellite design, construction and checkout, the development of the ship- board navigation receivers and com- puters, and the development of the sup- porting ground system for tracking, com- manding, and controlling the satellite was accomplished by the Applied Physics Laboratory. AEROSPACE CORP. Aerospace Corp.: They devised a pro- gram for modifying formerly operational Atlas E and Atlas F missiles into configu- ration suitable for target vehicle boosters for the advanced ballistic reentry sys- tem program and the Nike ABM test pro- grams. The total projected cost saving of modifying 134 boosters over procure- ment cost of that many new target ve- hicle boosters is estimated at $1.47 billion. Within the past 2 years Aerospace Corp. has developed an analytic method for predicting radio frequency attenua- tion caused by the plasma-sheath sur- sounding reentry vehicles. This is a sig- nificant contribution, in the efforts to overcome the problems resulting from radar and telemetry signal attenuation during a critical portion of the missile or space capsule flight profile. HUMAN RESOURCES RESEARCH OFFICE Human Resources Research Office, George Washington University: During the last 12 months they have conceived and designed a radically new training device for aviators. This device will re- duce required instrument training flight time from the present 50 hours to 40 hours. The savings in projected flight costs are estimated as $1,700 million per year. or flora not eign institutions by $2 million, culturalcon ion , , The Department of Defense has con- found and not feasible to duplicate or tinning priority needs for certain se- simulate within the United States and its territories. Second. The work involves diseases, epidemiological situations, or availability or clinical material which are not present within the United States. Third. The work involves a unique re- search idea highly relevant to DOD needs. In this fiscal year 1970 budget the De- partment of Defense requested $5,700,000 for work in this impotant field of re- search, the field of research which is de- voted almost entirely to physical sciences, otherwise called the hard sciences. The Armed Services Committee has reduced this request by some $513,000 leaving a total authorization of approximately $5.2 billion. The amendment of the Sen- ator from Arkansas calls for a further reduction of $2,000,000 reducing this pro- gram to a figure of $3.7 million or in ef- fect practically gutting this type of work, for the reduction overall would be great- er than one-third. The reduction of one- third of these high priority research in- vestigations which can only be carried out abroad include, as I have said, in- vestigation of parasitic diseases of rele- vancy to naval and military personnel in foreign areas, to long-range global communications and of environment in foreign areas of importance to our mili- tary. A reduction of this scope would eliminate further progress on more than 100 projects planned for foreign investi- gators. Last year, fiscal year 1969, there were 451 research undertakings in 44 coun- tries at a cost of $9.2 million. The cost of this program of fiscal year 1970, after the committee reduction, has reduced it to $5.7 million, in which there will be 207 projects. This is the present plan but not all the projects have been approved and there rhay well be some changes in these numbers because of the cut already made. Of the $5.7 million only $300,000 at the very outside that could possibly be la- beled social and behavioral sciences and all these may not be programed during the year. I ask unanimous consent that a com- plete list of the projects planned for fis- cal year 1970?their contracts for re- search?for foreign institutions along with the nature of the research and the amounts of funds be printed in the REC- ORD. There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in the REC- ORD, as follows: lected foreign research and development projects. One very important area is that of long-range radio communications re- quired for our worldwide communica- tions network. Interaction of solar radia- tion with the earth's upper atmosphere produces global extent ionization of the region called the ionosphere. The rapidly changing conditions of the ionosphere affect in a primary way Defense com- munications. For this reason we support ionospheric and radio propagation re- search in Australia, Canada, and Nor- way to acquire essential data not obtain- able within the United States. A second area of prime importance is that of military medicine in foreign countries where our American troops are stationed or operating. Many diseases are endemic to a specific geographic locale and their presence greatly affects the force strength of our command and force units. It is not desirable nor feasible to pursue stateside research on many ?of these diseases since it is not desired to , bring them into the United States. Therefore Defense supports selected re- search projects in military medicine in such countries as Japan, Israel, Italy, and Brazil. A third area of key importance is that of environmental and meteorological phenomena related to the land, sea, and air that our Defense units operate on or over the globe. It is simply not possible to carry out the required research from stateside alone. Foreign investigators having a daily presence and long estab- lished experience in specific geograph- ical areas are important contributors to the basic knowledge that we require about terrestrial sciences in foreign lands, about the oceans and seas far dis- tant from the United States and about MITRE CORP. atmospheric weather phenomena in for- Mitre Corp.: They developed an inter- eign areas. To meet priority Defense re- q ferometer radar technique to provide auirements, selected research projects are supported in Berlin, Canada, Den- capability for rapid and precise deter- mark, Greece, and other countries. mination of satellite orbits and ballistic Defense has established stringent cri- missile trajectories and information re- teria for selection of research and devel- garding the physical configuration of opment projects by foreign performers. the target satellite or missile. All ongoing or further research and ex- This gives an idea of some of the tre- ploratory development by foreign per- mendous research advances that these formers shall be supported by DOD only so-called think tanks have come up when it has been determined that, first, with. it is clearly significant in meeting urgent I now turn my attention to the De- defense needs of the United States; sec- partment of Defense contracts with for- ond, it cannot be deferred for later ac- eign research institutions. This is an- tion; third, the proposed foreign investi- other area that the Fulbright amend- gator certifies that he is unable to obtain ment attacks. support from any,other source for the Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For R_Qlease 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9728 i,uNGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE August 12, 1969. Military department and contract agency Tine Argentina: N Universidad de Buenos Aires F Consejo National de Invest. Cient. F National University of L.a Plata. F Consejo Nacional He I nvesti- gaciones. Australia: A tVlonash University N University of Queensland__ _ _ F University of Sydney F University of Adelaide _ F University of Sydney Austria: A Institute of Hygiene, Univer- sity of Vienna. F University of Vienna Belgium: A Von Harman Institute F Von Karmen Institute for Fluid Dynamics, Rhode Saint/Genese. F Von Kerman Institute for Dynamics, Rhode Saint/ Genese, F Von Karmen Institute for Fluid Dynamics, Rhode SainVGenese. Do F Von Karmen Institute for Fluid Waterloorhode-St Genese, F University of Liege _ Born-Bunge Foundation Bolivia: D Colegio San Calixto . _ _ F San Andres University Brazil: A University of Sao Paulo A Minas Gerais University A Federal University of Bahia A Universidad Mackensie Do_ A Institute Adolfo Lutz N University of Sao Paulo F Comissao Nacional De Activi- dades Espac, J Dos Campos. F Fundacao Service Especial de Saude Publica. Canada: A York University A McGill University. A Royal Victoria Hospital A University of Manitoba N McGill University Do Do Do N Computing Devices of Canada_ A Manitoba University N Institute of Oceanography_... N British Columbia Research Council. N York University N McGill University N McGill University N University of Toronto N University of British Columbia. F Laval University D McGill University D Canadian Armament Re- search and Development Establishment. ? RCA Victor, Limited Ceylon: A Medical Research Institute. Funds planned for fiscal year 1970 Development of effective protective and thera- peutic drugs for radiation sickness. X-ray spectrometry of galactic sources from 7.76outhern Hemisphere. Wearch in stellar spectroscopy Wilecular mechanisms of steroids action on tespiratory systems, Microbiological and immunological studies of _pathogenesis and virulence in leptospirosis. Haute and pharmacological action in toxin from deadly jellyfish. *My of cosmic radiations at extremely high eil Reoevich directed toward propagation of solar pai iicles. Steliar intensity interferometer andentiology, virology, and immunology of tO-horne encephalitis and other tick- be. oe diseases. Cnmposition and content of meteorites Flow characteristics associated with V/STOL model testing in wind tunnel. The influence of cross flow on 2-dimensional sep iration. Applantion of the blunt-trailing edge blade to p 1. taesiiir separation in hypersonic flows Lem-density high-temperature gas dynamics__ E*i ,iental aerodynamics. High resolution atmospheric I R absorption and sky background emission interfermoetric Dead i ipment of sleep patterns, women doctor en,' use. Spech ,ii characteristics of infrasonic acoustic wa /vs and related seismic research: lay research at high altitude Control of ribonucleic acid synthesis in gian chromosomes. Schietosemiasis drug screening Pathogenesis of diarrhea in severe strongy- toidasis. Ai:atmospheric studies LA 60 Solar inicrowave radio emission LA61 Ariteuirus studies in Sao. Paulo, Brazil Mathematical investigations of problems of ocean surveillance of navigation. Measuiements of the earth's total magnetic Kehl and its variations. Epideiciological studies of Amapari virus Kictelo.i. of atmospheric constituents Extremely low frequency electromagnetic pheilemena. Investigation of pathogenesis and treatment of si jock. Shrift of factors influencing the passage of dreg.; into the malarial parasite plasmodium Be yir. Electric properties of ice Arctic plankton ecology_ HE audio absorption in ice Energy budget and other tropical microclima- tolovical research. Antehlatic detection and classification Investigations of pheromones as chemosteri- lent-. tor insects with special reference to synthetic queen substance and its analogs. Sydeimitics biology and hydrographic rela- tion or seine species of calanus. Mitine borer biology Brain nucleic acid changes during learning_ __ Mechanisms of polymer degradation High magnetic fields and insulators Very high altitude missile and decoy gas dynamics; missile aerodynamics for broad altiiiide ranges. , Fundamental air-sea exchange processes and then relation to wind wave generation: ()online turbulence. Nalizehemoral control of thyrotrophic activity. Psychological processes of the central nervous system. Hypervelocity Research program 10.0 24. 0 12.0 16. 0 18.0 12. 0 50. 0 25. 0 60. 0 20. 0 Military department and contract agency Title Chile: A Comisten Nacional de Investigacion. F Universidad de Chile__ F Catholic University of Chile__ F Catholic University of Chile F Comision Nactional de I nvestigacion Cientifica y Technologica. Colombia: F Universidad Nacional de Colombia. F Universidad del Valle Costa Rica: A University of Costa Rica Denmark: N Marine Biological Laborto_ F Danske Meteorologiske Institute. 17.0 Equador: On.. F Universidad Central del 10. 0 Equador. Finland: 15. 0 F Institute of Occupational Health. France: A Ecole Pratique des Hautes Estudes-Sorbonne, 15.0 A Institute for Cell Pathology. N Campagne de Recherches et d'Etudes Aeronautiques. F Observatorie de Paris F University of Lyon Germany: A Institute for Animal Phys- iology, J. W. Goethe Uni- versity. A Free University of Berlin . A Research Office for Physical Bioclimatology. A Rheinisch-Westfaifische Technische Hochschule. F Bochum Radio Observatory F Technische Hochschule Munchen, Munich. Ghana: F University of Ghana, Accra_ 20. 0 15. 0 20. 0 30. 0 50. 0 14, 0 15.8 12.0 5. 0 8. 0 5.0 15. 0 20. 9 7. 0 Greece: F University of Athens D Seismological Institute of 8. 0 Athens University. Iceland: N Surtsay Research Society..... India: A Bombay National History...... 12. 0 IS. 0 25. 0 20. 0 10.0 15.0 20. 0 20. 0 150.0 20. 0 13.0 10. 0 15. 0 26, 0 11.0 15.0 50, 0 15.0 140. 0 700 0 Radar 5ackscatter studies 100. 0 LeMnspirosis-A serological survey of occupa- 1.0 demi groups in Ceylon, F University of Calcutta Indonesia: A Lembaga Biologi Nasional Iran: D Pahlavi University Israel: A Structure function relationships inhuman and high elevation adapted mammal hemo- globin. _ Form and function invariants in the visual system. _ Nervous connections in the vestibular system_ Studies in synaptic mechanisms I3iochemical properties of nerve membrances_ Studies of ecology and disease transmission__ Disease ecology of tacaribe group viruses _ Physiological studies of leishmania _ Ecological investigations on bottom living marine animals. Ionospheric research using active satellite transmissions. Arctic geomagnetic observations Studies of psychotomimetics Funds planned ter fiscal year 1970 20. 0 21.0 8. 0 7. 0 8. 0 0.0 30. 0 7.0 10.0 14. 0 3.0 6, 0 Mathematical and electrical analogs of heat 10.0 transfer in man. Metabolic and sensory stimuli in the regula- tion of food intake-behavioral and electro- physiological study. Laser action on living cells Rheo-electricat apalogy: Supercavitating pro- peller design. Research directed toward the improvement of planetary phettogrammetrY. Neurophysielogical mechanisms of The states of sleep. Microcirculatory behavior In shock___ _ Daily analysis of circumpolar 30 and 10 mb maps E486. Atmospheric aerosols between 700 and 3,000 meters, [-1127. Measurement of thorny concentration of lower atmosphere. Ionospheric studies using active synchronous satellite t ra nsmissions. Investigation of spectral radiation properties of Atmosphere and earth. Ionospheric studies using active satellite transmiisions. 20. 0 20.0 10. 0 18, 0 10. 0 6,0 20 0 10,0 15.0 7.0 10.0 7.0 Ionospheric research using active satellite 15.0 transmissions. Aftershocks and crustal structure in Greece__ 20,-S Ecological succession of biota on a newly formed oceanic land mass. _ Studies of the bionomics and taxonomy of the birds of India, taxonomy of the birds of Bhutan. Radio, astronomical and satellite studies of the ionosphere. Migratory animal pathological sur- vern(gdnoesnieasia), avian studies in Nutritional studies -Iran_ Israel Institute of Applied Social Re- Investigation of leadership quail- search, ties of kibbutz-raised young men. A Rogoff-Wellcome Medicine Research In- Isolation of snake venom toxins stitute. and study of their mechanism of action. A Technion Institute of Technology Photochemistry of antimalarial drugs. N Institute of Technology Techn ion-Israel_ _ Cross-stresses In the flow of gases (Reiner-effect). Basic theories Inc nonnumerical data processing. Effects of heat sources on plane- tary circulation, Ionospheric research using Sat- ellites. Seismk source Identification tech- niques. Pharmacological and biochemical changes in animals made acres- sive by isolation. Immunological reactions in viral hepatitis. Hebrew University Hebrew University F National Commission for Space Research. D Weizmann Institute of Science Italy: A Pharmacological Research Institute A University of Genoa Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 25, 0 7.0 15.0 6.0 50, 0 20. 0 20. 0 15. 0 15. 0 20. 0 20. 10. 0 20, 0 15,0 20. 0 August 12, 1960proved FratefuVR9C1/3fig&BDID7sMetR000300100001-3 S 9729 Military.department and ? contract agency Title Funds planned for fiscal year 1970 Italy-Continued A Chemical Institute of University of Rome__ Individual activity coefficients of ionic species. F University Degli Studi di Pisa Comparative neurophysiology of F University of Ferrara Research on mechanics of breath- ing. F National Institute of Optics___ Problems in visual performance of pilots F University of Milan Neutron flux of earth's radiation environment__ F University of Sassari Identification of photodynamic systems in the retina. F Arcetri Astrophysical Ob- Solar radio spectroscopy and detection of sun servatory spectral lines. F University of Milan Physiology of cerebrospinal fluid Jamaica: Ionospheric studies using active satellite F University of West Indies. transmissions. Japan: A National Cancer Center Research Institute. Kyushu University A Institute of Microbial Chemistry. A Nara Medical College A _ Do A Kitasato University A Sasaki Institute A Nara Medical College A Japanese Foundation for Can- cer Research. A Kitasato Institute A National Institutes of Health A Do A Kitasato Institute A Yamashina Institute or Ornithology. A Kanazawa University Neuronal activities on the regu.ation of feeding. A Hokkaido:University Physiological activity of the brown adipose tissue. A Kumamoto University Biological reactions to cellular antibodies with special reference to their immune- pathological and immuno-chemical prop- erties. A Do Endogenous mechanism of vascu.ar response in inflammation, with special reference to biologic significance of specific permability factors and their inhibitors newly isolated from inflammed sites. A Kirume University Interaction between arbovirus and myxovirus_ A Shi-Ehime Preparatory of Life cycle and control of paragoniumus in Japan. Shikoku area. F Tokyo Medical and Dental Gamma-aminobutyric acid in sensory physi- University. elegy. F Kumamoto University Neural organization of sensory information for taste. Measurement of human complement com- ponents in dengue shock syndrome. Taxonomical and ecological studies on lung fluke, paragonimus in Pacific area; with special reference to Southeast Asia. Microbial drug resistance (genetics and evolu- tion of It factor and plasmids). Polymeric structure of hemoglobin and its relation to function. Localization by electron microscopy of several phosphatase activities. Nature and mode of action of local antibody in intestine. Investigation of cell component structural changes in homologous transplants com- pared with normal cells. Electron microscope studies on several phos- phatase activities in neurons and gliacytes infected with Japanese encephalitis virus. Differences in antigenic specificity and im- munogenicity of tissue transplants. Cytochemical studies on ultrastructures o1 toxoplasma gondii and allied organisms. Mode of infection of scrub typhus I mmunologica studies on scrub typhus and its center in Japan. Studies on encephaiitozoon (nosema cuniculi) infections in man. Migratory animal pathological survey Kenya: F College of Nairobi, Kenya__ _ Ionospheric studies of radio emissions Korea: A Seoul National University____ Multiplication and antibody formation of Jap- anese encephalitis virus in snakes. A Kyung-HEB University Migratory animal pathological survey(Korea)_ _ A Seoul National University_ _ Ecological survey and mass chemotherapy of filariasis on Cho Do, Korea. Malaysia: A University of Malya Mosquitoes of Malaysia 20.0 A Do Weathering of rocks under humid tropical 20.0 conditions. ? Netherlands: A International Training Center 4.0 for Aerial Survey. N Central Laboratory, T.N.O 20.0 10. 0 15. 0 10. 0 6. 0 10. 0 3. 0 10. 0 15. 0 4.0 10.0 7. 0 12.0 3. 0 3. 0 7.0 7. 0 3. 0 6. 0 10. 0 15. 0 15. 0 20. 0 5. 0 8. 0 6. 0 6. 0 12. 0 5. 0 5. 0 8. 0 5.0 10. 0 13. 0 5. 0 15.0 Role of image quality of photogrammetrjc pointing accuracy. Mechanical strength of filled elastomers of the types used as solid propellants in rocket motors. Antilymphocyte serum, homologous bone marrow transplantation and irradiation. F Radiobiological Institute of the Organization for Health Research. Norway: A Electroencephalographic Lab- Brain, behavior and intracerebral blood flow__ oratory. A University of Oslo Neuropsychological studies of mechanisms of visual discrimination. A Do Photochemical atmosphere model containing oxygen and hydrogen. . N Universityr of Bergen Degradation of marine surfaces by salt re- quiring bacteria. F Auroral Observatory Ionospheric studies using satellite transmis- sions. F University of Oslo The investigation of variable radio and optical solar phenomena. F University of Bergen X-ray and particle radiations at high altitudes in the auroral zone. D University of Bergen Detection seismology D Norwegian Defense Research Norwegian seismic system phase II Establishment. 15.0 20. 0 5. 0 5. 0 20. 0 10. 0 13. 0 15. 0 Military department and contract agency Title Funds planned for fiscal year 1970 Peru: A University Peruvian Caye- tam Heredia. A Do A Do A Do A Do A Do F Institut Geofisica Del Peru Lima. Do F Geophysical Institute of Peru_ F Institute Geofisico Del Pero_ _ D Institute Geofisica! Del Peru_ Philippines: A Mindanao State Univer- sity. A National Museum A University of Philippines A Do A National Museum A University of Philippines A Do F Manila Observatory Spain: F Observatory of Ebro_ F University of Salamanca_ Sweden: A Sahlgrens Hospital, Uni- versity of Goteborg. N University of Goteborg, Medical. F Stockholms Universitet Stockholm. F Kiruna Geophysical Ob- servatory, Kiruna. F Royal University of Uppsala. Do F Kiruna Geophysical Observatory. F University of Goteborgs D University of Uppsala Switzerland: A University of Lausanne A University of Basel A Physiklisch-Meteorologische Observatorium. F Universitat Bern F Universitat Zurich Taiwan: A Tunghai University A Kaohsiung Medical College___ A Tunghai University A National Taiwan University A Do Thailand: A Applied Scientific Research Corp. A Do A Medical Sciences University Facility for Tropical Medi- cine. A Bangkok School of Tropical Medicine. University of Medical Scien- ces. A Do D Applied Scientific Research Corp. United Kingdom: 35.0 A Liverpool School of Tropical 675.0 Medicine. Physiologic changes in the cardiopulmonary 15. 0 system by ascending to high altitudes. Endocrine alterations at high altitude 0.0 Coagulation studies in newcomers to high 5.0 ' elevations LA-134. Hormone metabolism in men exposed to high . 10.0 elevatien LA-128. Respiratory physiology on ascent to high 15.0 altitudes. . Role of adrenal cortex in process of acclima- 20. 0 tization to high elevation. Equatorial ionospheric effects study 10.0 Research directed toward the study of the 20. 0 . airglow at low latitudes. Radio solar measurements 9.0 Observations of earth magnetic field 5. 0 Observation and study of infrasonic waves in 30.0 the atmosphere. Migratory animal pathological survey (South .5.0 Philippines). Migratory animal pathological survey (North 5.0 Philippines). Filariasis studies in the Philippines 7.0 Fluorescent antibody test in ineasurement of 7.0 malarial immunity. Ecology. of Southern Samar 15.0 Determination of malaria vector on Pangut- 0.0 aran Island, Sulu Archipelago. Determination of choloroquine resistant P. 8.0 Falciparum Parasitas Impalawan and other Provinces of the Philippines. Conduct radio observations of the sun 30.0 Ionospheric studies using active satellite 3.0 transmissions. Morphobiochemical correlations involved in 6.0 the differentiation eye lens. Newer advances in treatment of shock in man 10.0 Effects of noise on inner ear cells 30. 0 Rocket sampling of solid particles in tlPe 2. 0 mesosphere. Study of characteristics of auroral ionosphere 10,0 and its irregularities. Research, design and development refraction 33.0 and gravity experiments. Evaluation of high latitude cosmic ray data_ _ _ . 7.0 High latitude geomagnetic data 4.0 Integrated nervous control of the cardiovascu- 10.0 lar and gastrointestinal systems. Seismic body waves and surface waves 15.0 Investigation on structure and biological activ- 12.0 ities of human immunoglobins M. & D. (IGM and IGD). Variation-resistant matrices and related 5.0 mathematical topics. Measure of direct solar radiation and sky- 5.0 brightness in UV and visible part of spec- trum. Pulmonary pathology of oxygen toxicity 12.0 Sugar and peptide intestinal digestion and ab- 10.0 sorption. Migratory animal pathological survey 5. 0 Biochemical studies on toxic nature of snake 10.0 venoms. Biology and pathophoricity of biting midges 7.0 (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) in Taiwan. Hast-parasite relationships of Schistosoma 8.0 Japonicum in Taiwan. Studies of cardiotoxin and vasoactive sub- 20.0 stance releasing components of cobra venom. Migratory animal pathological survey (Thai- 8.0 land FE 315). Migratory animal patholog cal survey (Thai- 5.1) land FE 316). Investigation of filariasis in Thailand 10. 0 Leptospirosis in Thailand, with special ref- erence to epidemiology, pathology and C. Investigations on the patterns of epidemiology and endemicity of diseases occurring due to largescare environmental changes in north- east Thailand. Schistosomiasis in Thailand, studies on inci- dence, epidemiology, life cycles and its causing .cercarial dermatitis (carry-on and redirection of above). Reaearch? on tropical environmental data (trend)and basic environmental data (bend) in Thailand Chemotherapy of rodent malaria drug action against exoerythrocytic stages and drug resistant strains. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 5. 0 10 0 20. 0 200. 0 20. 0 S 9730 Approved For Reamtn MIONTINi citffiti31-q?sYkiff?3ool0000tta ziugust, 12, 1.969 Military contract department and agency IC Funds planned for fiscal year 1970 United Kingdom?Continued A Maybridge Chemical Co A Royal College of Art F U. College F Imperial College N University of Cambridge, Department of Pathology. N Oxford University, Pharma- cology and Physical Chem- istry Departments. N Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford. N University of Sussex Potintial antimalariais based on quinoline-7- carboxylic acid. perimental cartography search for determination of air density temperature and winds at high altitudes. rigin of auroral primaries tyoprotective mechanism -Studies on decompression sickness and inert - gas narcosis. lielhods of protecting Navy personnel against - biological toxins. iiai pattern recognition in naval tasks 10.0 20.0 10.0 7.0 6.0 02.0 20.0 10.0 Military department and contract agency Title Funds planned far fiscal year 1970 United Kingdom?Continued N Royal College of Advanced The absorptiOn of sound by Polymer solutions_ 9.0 ech N University of Keefe Recombination reactions of importance it 7. 0 propulsion. N Cambridge Language Resi- Semantic research for automatized language 8.0 i dent Unit. translation and inforthation reBieval. F University of London F Kings College ion marls sPeCtrometry of the lower ionosphere_ 50.0 Gravitational physics 10. 0 N Trinity College, University of Body temperature regulation 10.0 Dublin. F University College, Dublin__ Radio and entice !emission from high energy 20.0 osmic rays. Uruguay: A Univeisidad de la Republica... Relationship between wild entourages and - 4.0 mycoses, especially S. American blastomy- cases. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, the subcommittee and committee have gone over this list and scrutinized it carefully and find strong justification for the con- tinuation of this program at the level of $5.7 million as approved. Mr. President, I turn now to policy planning studies. The amendment of the Senator from Arkansas is also aimed at policy planning studies with foreign affairs implications carried out by DOD. The total requested for such studies was $6.4 million. The Armed Services Committee has al- ready recommended a cut of $0.7 million from this amount. The ndditional cut proposed by the Senator from Arkansas would reduce the program to $2.7 mil- lion, or a total cut of 58 percent. Clearly the cut suggested by Senator FULBRIGHT would severely curtail the policy plan- ning effort. Policy planning studies seek to insure that military strategy does not lag be- hind social and political change and be- hind weapons technology and weapons development. Through it we try to better understand the circumstances, situations, and en- vironments that may be controlling in the future application of military re- sources. Because this is such a nebulous area, it requires particularly intense, profes- sional exploration of the problems to ar- rive at judgments which materially en- hance national capacity and effective- ness. Yesterday and, I arti sure, on many other days, we heard the distinguished Senator from Arkansas talk about pro- grams, projects, and studies of the Turkish Revolution from 1916 to 1921, the Ataturk revolution. The Senator mentioned a program effort involving Ceylon. In the colloquy had between the Sena- tor and me, I tried tn point out that he was really nitpicking, picking on what I call horrible example so as to intim- idate the opponents and picture the en- tire program in a manner that I con- sider to be completely unfair. I point out for the RECORD that this is a sample I have chosen of some of the programs that would be considered under this area. The following are typical broad subject areas: PROJECT TTTLiO Japanese Rearmament, Nuclear, and Space Programs. PROJECT DESCRIPTION A study of factors and developments af- fecting the Japanese military contribution to the U.S. effort in Asia, including the security pact. PROJECT TITLE Soviet Military and Foreign Policy. PROJECT DESCRIPTION A continuing study of Soviet military doc- trine, use of military strength for political purposes, foreign policy, and political in- stitutions in the Soviet Union and East European states. PROJECT TITLE Strategic Analysis of Southeast Asia--1969 (SALA). PROJECT DESCRIPTION Includes analyses of Malaysian foreign policy, regional military cooperation, and Australian foreign and military policy. PROJECT TITLE Strategic Postures Study (SPOST). PROJECT DESCRIPTION Work supporting a continuing Army staff study effort to analyze and evaluate alterna- tive postures for the US, the USSR, and CPR in the 1968-80 period. PROJECT TITLE Navy Policy Planning Study. PROJECT DESCRIPTION To identify tasks the Navy would be re- sponsible for in the post-1975 period for im- proved inputs into the Navy Strategic Planning process. PROJECT TITLE Navy Role in Exploitation of the Ocean Resources. PROJECT DESCRIPTION To define the Navy's interests, objectiVes and options in the exploitation of the oceans' resources. PROJECT TITLE The Future Security Posture of Japan 1970-1985. PROJECT DESCRIPTION Assesses the likely security postures of Japan during 1970-85 and the implications for USAF long-range planning. PROJECT TITLE Strategy, Concepts and Military Objectives Studies to Support Air Force Long-Range Planning. PROJECT DESCRIPTION Analyzes future changing political eco- nomic and military trends to insure that the Air Force is responsive to U.S. security needs. PROJECT TITLE Sino?Soviet Economic Potential. PROJECT DESCRIPTION A continuing study of the economic back- ground of Soviet and Communist Chinese military power. Presently it includes studies of outlays, employment, and organizational problems in Soviet R&D, Soviet foreign eco- nomic relations and Chinese civil aviation. PROJECT TITLE European Security Issues. PROJECT DESCRIPTION An examination of a range of alternative security arrangements and the role of the U.S. presence in Europe. PROJECT TITLE Command & Control Problems for the Na- tional Command Authority. PROJECT DESCRIPTION A study of information and control facili- ties, system.% and procedures required for management of crises and control of conflicts. PROJECT TITLE Communist China. PROJECT DESCRIPTION A broad effort to correlate and evaluate data on Communist China's political, eco- nomic, military objectives and to determine the foreign policy implications for the U.S. These are the types of studies that chew up the money. These are not the funny, horrible examples that the Sen- ator from Arkansas dragged out last year and this year. These are the types of stud- ies and programs that I would think the present occupant of the chair or the Sec- retary of State would like to know are ongoing in the event a decision has to be made involving this area. I think I would want it. I cite these in order to present a better idea of just what this program Is about. It was clear to the committee that most of these studies are more properly a responsibility of Federal agencies other than the Department dr Defense. Specifi- cally, most of these policy planning stud- ies would appear to be more logically a responsibility of the Department of State. We have recommended that these projects be taken over expeditiously? this year?by the appropriate agency and that the Defense Department phase it- self out of this area of research except in cases that are direcly defense related. I think that the Senator from Arkansas should recognize that if the Defense funding for these studies is withdrawn the plans of the Armed Services Commit- tee to transfer rather than eliminate these studies will be thwarted. There would be no funds with which to continue many programs previously initiated, since it is too late this year to include them in any other agency's budget. As the Senator from Arkansas is aware, the Defense Department has made a Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12,, 1969 ApprovestrieesassiVaniffijafkIREPAT364R000300100001-3 S9731 variety of efforts to decrease its role in programs which would have to be re- social science studies related to foreign ducecl OT cancelled in the event of an policy and to increase the role of other additional cut, which the Senator from agencies. These include cuts in the level Arkansas is suggesting, in the Agile funds of effort, curtailed field work overseas, include: offers to transfer funds to the Depart- A reduction in vital equipment devel- ment of State, and proposals for a high- opment and field experimentation in the level interagency committee under non- Small Independent Action Forces. This DOD leadership to develop priorities and is a system approach toward the need responsibilities for knowledge and analy- of patrol size operations being under- sis dealing with the external world. How- taken by Advanced Research Projects ever, the ability of the Department of Agency jointly with the Army and Ma- Defense to affect what other agencies do rine Corps. is appropriately limited.The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time I know that the Senator shares my be- of the Senator has expired. lief that our foreign and defense policiesMr. McINTYRE. I yield myself 5 adcli- need to be better informed about the ex- tional minutes. ternal world, not less. In recent hearings There is a great need for a systematic under his direction, the important point and integrated study of the small hide- was made that we need a strong effort pendent action force?the patrol?with a to understand how the world looks to view toward making this most hazard- ous, but vital, military operation a more effective and less risky venture. This program is examining the various com- ponents of the Small Independent Action Force?the man, equipment, environ- ment, techniques, and the interaction of these components to determine how they can be improved. The proposed reduction would have a serious impact upon a major element of the Agile budget, namely border control systems. Research in this critically im- portant area in order to advise friendly nations to effectively protect the inte- grity of their borders and desist from offensive actions is highly significant to the United States. For example, a major fraction of the current activity is related the Fulbright amendment is too drastic to Korea which is now facing increased and should be defeated. North Korean infiltration attempts THE AGILE PROGRAM which, if not halted, could embroil the The Senator from Arkansas would re- United States in an undesirable con- duce Agile by an additional $5 million. frontation. This effort which ARPA re- Agile is one of the elements of the budget cently initiated is a direct result of a activity which is "other equipment" in request for assistance from General the Defense agencies budget. The Armed Bonesteel, Commander of U.S. Forces in Services Committee reduced that budget Korea. The lessons learned could also be activity by $25 million. In making this applicable to other areas in support of reduction, the committee recognized that U.S. policy, if necessary. because, this budget activity funds a A third example of research which number of very high priority programs? would be adversely affected by a sub- I am now talking about the category stantial Agile reduction is the study, in , "other equipment"?the $25 million re- Thailand, of Communist terrorists' lines duction ordered by the Committee on of supply and their mode of operation. Armed Services would be reflected by In conversation with Dr. Foster yes-. substantial cuts in the Agile program. terday, which was substantiated today, "Other equipment" includes such pro- Dr. Foster, who is No. 3 in the Depart- grams as intelligence data-handling ment of Defense, the Chief of Research, systems, advanced sensors, cryptologic Testing, Evaluation, and Development, activities, and a number of classified pro- assured MO that if this further cut ad- grams which are vital to our national vanced by the Senator from Arkansas security. For example, one program (Mr. FULBRIGHT) is agreed to, it would which is included is the provision of $74 have a substantial impact on the Agile million for nuclear weapons effects tests. program. Senators will recall that this activity is These are directly relevant and im- part of the program to provide safe- portant applications of research to im- guards to the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. proving our ability to cope with existing h t dvised and threats to our Armed Forces. I believe this are progressing satisfactorily and con- tributing significant new knowledge and techniques to established defense re- quirements. This would diminish the contributive research efforts of approxi- mately 60 university faculty members and 120 graduate students on important defense related research problems in 10 different universities and colleges. The issue here is whether it is desir- able to encourage new centers for re- search. A good start has been made in this direction by Project Themis, and the evaluation of results so far is promising. The Armed Services Committee did not believe that the Themis project should be completely canceled nor suffer such reduction as this amendment calls for. The Themis program for fiscal year 1970 requested $33 million. A 12-percent reduction of the Armed others and to avoid imposing our parte- Services Committee reduced this by ap- ular cultural views on others. I suggest proximately $4 million. The Fulbright that we miss the point when we limit our amendment would now add $8 million to efforts to curtailing the activities of the the $4 million reduction recommended Department of Defense alone. Instead, I by the full committee. invite the Senator from Arkansas to join This will reduce the program a total of with me and my colleagues on the Armed ? about $12 million, to a total of $21 mil- Services Committee to see to it that na- lion, and would cut it- 36 percent. tional needs for rational understanding In view of the fact that this is the last of the world are met by the government year of new starts for the program, the as a whole with an appropriately dimin- total reduction of $12 million will mean ished role for the Department of that there will be no new starts this year. Defense. I wish to state, too?with emphasis? THE THEMIS PROGRAM that the Themis program is concerned Mr. President, on the subject of the only with unclassified subject matter? Project Themis, which is the fourth area and deals exclusively in basic research. under attack in the amendment of the It is the opinion of the committee that distinguished Senator from Arkansas, this is a recommended cut in this amend- ment of some $8 million. I would want to put this proposed cut in the full con- text of what the Research and Develop- ment Subcommittee and full Committee of the Armed Services have already done. This program is based upon a 1965 Presidential request to all executive de- partments requesting more emphasis on establishing new centers of research ex- cellence at universities in fields relevant to the Department's missions. DOD's plan provided for starting 200 new uni- versity programs over' the four-year pe- riod from fiscal year 1967 through fiscal year 1970, an average of 50 new pro- grams each year. The university response was very enthusiastic; more than 1,000 proposals were submitted by universities in the first 3 years, from which 118 projects were selected and funded. In the fourth and final year of new starts in fiscal year 1970, 25 new starts are planned which require $10 million of funds. Since the cut in this amendment super- imposes itself on a reduction of some 12 percent already made by the Armed Serv- ices Committee, this cut of $8 million would cause: In 9 when First. The elimination?if it has not consented to the treaty it insisted that kind of research deserves our support. been eliminated already?of the 25 new these safeguards be instituted. I, per- Mr. President, the point here is that fiscal year 1970 starts. This will defer sonally, would not like to see our efforts Agile has already sustained a reduction the growth of research skills in the im- in this field reduced by action of the in its funding in this bill by action of the portant defense-related areas of detec- Senate. The Test Ban Treaty requires Armed Services Committee which tion and surveillance, structural me- these tests to be conducted underground, reduced the "other equipment" category chanics of defense vehicles, oceanog- and underground nuclear testing is ex- by $25 million. This additional reduc- raphy, and resuscitation and treatment pensive. It is one of the prices we pay tion now recommended would cut deep of the wounded. for the reduced tensions which grow into valuable programs. Second. Will also be the termination of out of limitations on atmospheric nuclear Mr. President, in summary, let me say approximately 10 of the 118 ongoing testing. that the amendment we are considering Project Themis contracts all of which Some of the research and development here would reduce research efforts by Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 s 9732 Approved For ReleaniM4/11/30 ? CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 RESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 12, 1969 - an additional $45 pillion. These same Mr. McINTYRE. I am happy to yield to Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator is research efforts havd already been cut the distinguished chairman of the Corn- correct. by the Senate Armed. Services Commit- mittee on Armed Services. Mr. STENNIS. There really is not tee by more than $504nillion. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, in spite enough time. However, we cannot pass Many of the programs which are of of my contact with the subject already on these matters unless we hear the particular concern 10 the Senator from this year to sonic extent, I have been very arguments. Arkansas will be cdt in the reduction much interested in what the Senator has Mr. FULBRIGHT. I think the Senator made by the Armedaer vices Committee, had to say about these projects. is correct. It is my feeling, Mr. President, that I do not see how anyone could listen to Mr. McINTYRE. I yield the floor. further cuts in the littoral Contract Re- his statement of facts?and I know it is Mr. PULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I search Centers, beyarel those made by correct?without being most favorably yield 5 minutes to the distinguished Ben- the Senate Armed Se; vices Committee impressed with these programs. ator from Michigan, including the efforts made by the De- Like everything else these programs Mr. HART. Mr. President, first, I wish pertinent of Defense_ to further reduce need regulation, they need thorough sur- to repeat what I have said before the FCRC expenditures -by taking more of veillance, and they need annual review. Senator from New Hampshire. He has their income from non-DOD sources, is I appreciate the statement made by the done a magnificent job hi scaling down as far as we should go at this time. Senator that it is his purpose as the or, to use his own expression, scrubbing As with all of the questions raised in chairman of the subcommittee to eon- out or cleaning up, some of the aspects connection with the research programs tinue surveillance over the various pro- of the bill. We are all in his debt. The we have under considaration here, the grams and the multitude of other items taxpayers are in his debt. Having said Research and Development Subcommit- that are not included in the amendment. that, I wish to disagree with his chara,c- tee, which I chair, IX going to consider I thank the Senator, and I salute him terization of the action of our friend these programs in great depth during the and congratulate him for a very fine job from Arkansas (Mr. PULBR/GETT ) as "nit coming year. We will he in a better con- in a tedious and sticky area where it is Picking." dition at this time next year to provide very difficult to get the real merits of the I disagree completely that the Senator the Senate with a more comprehensive situation. from Arkansas yesterday, in comment- understanding of these programs and I also reiterate my interest with refer- lug on some of the research projects, their meaning to the total DOD mission. ence to all of these projects to see if the was trying to endanger the whole pro- But, continuing. This amendment executive branch cannot review them, gram unfairly. The programs that the would severely cut agray great parts of pick them out, and place some of them Senator from Arkansas discussed are a the research at foreign institutions, so that those they wish continued, can Part of the package. This is what we are Since 1968, the DOD-has cut the funds be placed somewhere else in the budget, being asked to authorize money for. If in for this research from $13.1 million to in some other department, so that better the eyes of any of us some of the items the $5.7 million requested this year. We surveillance over them can be had, make something less than good sense, need this research, Mr. President, be- I thank the Senator. ? then our responsibility is to talk about cause it involves conditions of geography, Mr. McINTYRE, Mr. President, eer- them. culture, disease and e-xpertise which are tainly under the leadership of the chair- Just as I have commended the Senator not possible of study in the United States man of the Committee on Armed Serv- from New Hampshire for scrubbing up or or not available in this country. ices, the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. scaling down, I commend the Senator This amendment proposes a $3 million STENNIS), the committee has given this from Arkansas for putting his finger on cut in policy planning research. The DOD military authorization bill the best study something that, to us, does not make Is quite willing to have much of this re- in depth I have seen in the short time sense. Nobody will be intimidated by search done elsewhere lad the imposition I have been in the Senate. that. of the cut made by the Senator from The Fulbright amendment attacks We are talking about an item of $7 Arkansas would elimTnate the research areas we have already acted on and billion-plus. We are suggesting that in and that would leave the DOD without where we continue to work, as the Sen- that reach of $7 billion is some money much valuable information which is ator has emphasized. It is apparent that that does not have to be authorized or available in no other place. these projects are being scrubbed down some proposal that need not be under- The amendment by the Senator from and scaled down. It is important that' the taken. Arkansas would kill al new starts in the Senator realizes that this matter has Each of us has a family budget. Unless Themis program arat severely hamper been looked into carefully, we are operating on the poorest poverty some of the ongoing programs. This pro- Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator base, we all know that the budget con- gram was established to provide new again. I express my regret that more tains some money that really does not centers of excellence with a broad Senators cannot be present to hear these have to be spent, and the survival of the geographical representation in fields matters discussed by each side in order family would not be destroyed or even relevant to the DOD mission. All of these to hear the arguments pro and con. I do seriously jeopardized if we did not spend advantages would be practically elimi- not see how it is possible to vote on a some of the money that we have set aside nated by the pending amendment. matter so involved as this matter with- to spend. The Agile program ha received a major out having a chance to hear more of the We might ask ourselves what it would s reduction from the action of the arguments, be like if we had a family budget of $7 Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will billion. Is it not likely that somewhere Armed Services Committee. The proposed amendment would reduce funds for Agile the Senator yield? there would be certain expenditures that by an additional $5 million. Since there Mr. McINTYRE. I yield, really need not be undertaken? One does Is only $27 million in Agile in the begin- Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I not have to be a Ph. D. in domestic sca fling, it is obvious that this additional cut - certainly agree with the Senator from ence, home economics, or general eco- Mississippi on what he has just said. nomics to know that if we are given $7 will severely cripple a program dealing billion a year, we probably do not have Some Senators have reverted to their old with counterinfiltraton systems, new ina to spend all of it, and that the economy customs too quickly. We were able to get trusion detection sensors, border control might even be stronger if we did not quite a bit of interest in connection with analysis, border area security systems, pacificationspend all of it. the ABM discussion, but now we have efforts, and village defense corps selection and training, the same attendance on these amend- The Senator from Arkansas yesterday meets that we used to have on the old gave a list of some projects that struck Mr. President, I urge that the end- bill. I wish Senators would remain in the him, and struck others of us, as examples meat by the Senator from Arkansas be Chamber. We would make much better of why it is not necessary to go all that defeated. We must- be austere. We have progress. I share the Senator's regret way. I think it is not an tmfairness to the been austere. We must not go beyond that more Senators are not present, program to hold that view. prudence. Mr. STENNIS, I thank the Senator. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the However, I wish to add that they do have the Senator from Arkansas yield to me Senator yield? many other duties, on my own time? Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved Eff\iteifesssefeg9R110t6AtrIRDREIMp#64R000300100001-3 S 9733 August 12, 1969 atar from Michigan is recognized for 5 additional minutes. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Does the Senator from Michigan yield to me for an obser- vation? Mr. HART. Indeed I do. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, the Senator from New Hampshire does not deserve any criticism at all, even though the Senator from New Hampshire did cut these programs by 8 percent from the budget request, I believe. But the budget went up on most of these items, contrary to most Government programs that I am familiar with on the civilian side. The amount for Federal contract re- search centers, for example, in 1969, I am informed was $263.3 million. The 1970 request is $277.4 million. That is a 5-percent increase. On social behavioral science research, the 1969 figure is $45.4 million and for 1970 it is $48.6 million, a 7-percent in- crease. If I understand correctly, the Sen- ator from New Hampshire did cut back the budget request, but actual cut over what it was in actual expenditures last year is not quite that much. But, in any case, I agree with the Senator that it looks like nit picking when we are talk- ing about $45 million in a budget of $80 billion. But in practically any other pro- gram before this Congress,. $45 million would look like quite a substantial amount. $45 million would be a great deal for a project on the White River or the St. Francis River in my State, for example. My senior colleague, Mr. MC- CLELLAN, and I?he in particular?have often put out a great deal of energy to get $45 million for a natural resource development. Just because this is only a small part in such a huge appropriation request, only $45 million, we can call it peanuts or we can call it nit picking, but only in the sense that it is small in comparison to the total. But it is not small relative to any other standard in this country but the stand- ard of the Pentagon and the Defense Department. In a letter which I put in the RECORD yesterday, dated July 24, and which is from John S. Foster, Jr. of the Defense Department, it was stated, after con- siderable discussion, that it is not pos- sible to arrive at the cost of the projects. We are met with that argument very often. In reply to the Senator from New Hampshire's question as to why we do not discuss current projects, I asked Mr. Foster in my letter of June 10, why we could not get the cost. He said: The funding of these projects is based on a total project cost, with such multiple out- puts anticipated. Any effort to isolate a cost figure for a given report would be arbitrary and probably not represent the actual costs involved. Nor would such a cost estimate rep- resent a measure of the payoffs from the re- search. Then in the next paragraph, which is a significant one and which is the type ' of thing which is ongoing?I believe it is ongoing, in the words of the Senator from New Hampshire, and which I think ought to be stopped?Mr. Foster says: Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. McINTYRE. Let me try to give an example to the distinguished Senator from Michigan. Mr. HART. Take the proposal that the distinguished Senator from Arkansas was discussing. Those are the ones I am say- ing were not used to intimidate any- one? Mr. McINTYRE. I do not know? Mr. HART. To respond to this. ? Mr. McINTYRE. Here are some of the 'programs discussed yesterday by the Senator from Arkansas: First. "The Attaturk Revolution in Turkey." Second. "Gandhi, Nonviolence, and the Struggle for Indian Independence." Third. "The Sinhalese Buddhist Revo- lution of Ceylon." Fourth. "The Egyptian Revolution, Nasserism, and Islam." Fifth. "Militant Hindu Nationalism: The Early Phase." Mi. HART. Now, with respect to that? Mr. MeINTYRE. All right. Just a min- ute now. I have the floor. There is ab- solutely not one nickel in the 1970 budget for these program& What is the Senator bringing them up for? What is he bring- ing them up for but to intimidate and scare the rest of Congress into thinking they are spending that money this fool- ishly? My statement has a number of ex- amples in it of the type of ongoing pro- grams and projects that we are making today; otherwise spotlighting these other programs the Senator from Arkansas has Mentioned, in my opinion, is nit picking. Mr. HART. I think we could more aptly say that he is talking about mis- takes we have already made. Does not the Senator agree with that? Mr. McINTYRE. I am not prepared to defend the 1968 budget here. I am here to talk about the 1970 budget. Mr. HART. Maybe we cannot agree on the characterization of the studies the Senator has just enumerated and which were discussed yesterday, but if we had to do it all over again, would we really buy a book on Ataturk? If we had it to do all over again, would we really do any of those things which, in my book, rep- resent the kind of thing that the national family budget really does not have to spend money on to get? Mr. McINTYRE. I cannot judge what determination was made prior to 1968. Those we talk about now have not been funded at all since 1968. Maybe if it seemed important to study the theories of revolution. It may well be interesting to have some scholarly expertise study into the Ataturk Revolution, or the rev- olutionary process in Ceylon. The point I want to make is that we are here talking about the fiscal year 1970 budget. Why do we not talk about the programs in 1970 instead of pulling these things out of the past trying to scare the rest of the Senate into voting against the bill? Mr. HART. What about providing em- pirical trade conclusions about ideolog- ical goals which support insurgency? We are funding that and that has been an ongoing one. That was mentioned. Mr. McINTYRE. Insurgency has been quite a problem for the Department of Defense during the past 3 or 4 years in a place called Vietnam. Mr. HART. Does the Senator think that the University of Massachusetts un- der this contract will either get us out of Vietnam or keep us out of another one like it by this kind of study? Mr. McINTYRE. I am not going to indulge in what the University of Mas- sachusetts can do. The able Senator from Massachusetts (Mr. BROOKE) is now in the Chamber. Perhaps he can reply to that. Mr. HART. No; if there is still time remaining? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I yield 5 additional minutes to the Senator from Michigan. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from Michigan is recognized for 5 additional minutes. Mr. HART. Let me explain why I rose to react as I did. It is not nit picking. Whatever it is, it is a discussion of chap- ter and verse on projects which were authorized by Congress for the Depart- ment of Defense to undertake. There are those of us who hold a deep 'conviction that whatever else it is relevant for, or to, whatever agency of the Government, if any, should be buying the Military Establishment should not. If there is any nit picking, it is nit picking of ourselves because routinely over the years we have said to them, "Go- ahead, if you think you need it. Here is the money." The Senator from Arkansas and others are saying, and I too think it is not Inappropriate, in the review of military requests, to review what some of us be- lieve to have been mistakes made by the military. Heaven knows, when we come in here looking for money for school feeding programs, or when we try to get aid started or even to maintain it, we are lectured at considerable length about what happened last year and the year before with some of the money we gave them then. In a sense, that is what we are doing with the Department of De- fense right now. I think the Senator from Arkansas performs a very useful service in attempting to do just that. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator from Michigan yield? Mr. HART. I yield. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I appreciate what the Senator has said. I repeat, I think the Senator from New Hampshire has done a good job in undertaking to criti- cize it at all. It has never been done be- fore, to my knowledge. He has been a tower of strength in getting anything underway. But the situation here, as I see it, has been built up over a number of years before the Senator was even on the committee or even a Member of the Senate. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator from Arkansas has ex- pired. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I yield myself, or the Senator from Mich- igan, 5 minutes and then I will let him yield to me because I want him to par- ticipate in this colloquy. I yield 5 min- utes to the Senator from Michigan so that he may yield to me. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 .? CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9734 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 12, 1969 In the case of projects not yet completed available for R. 8z D. this current year wish to ask the Senator from Michigan and for which only into reports are avail- that it had the previous year. Looking at the request the Depart- a question? able, significant results can be expected in the future. In the case et tonapleted projects, Mr. BROOKE. No. the final report represattts only a portion af ment of Defense made for research this Mr. FULBRIGHT. 1 wanted, as a mat- the total output. For exalinple, in one project year, $8.2 billion, apparently the Depart- ter of fact, to continue a bit on what funded over a period of nine years, a total ment does not understand the meaning the Senator says, particularly as to uni- of 29 technical reports, 7f.2 scientific journal of the close vote on that amendment. versity research, This is one of the large publications, and significant contributions But, to its great credit, the Armed Serv- items. The budget request for university to a book were produced in addition to the ices Committee has responded in, I think, research for 1969 was $254.4 million, and final report Which you received, as has been said several times before, for 1970 $305.9 million, which is a 20 per- That is the sort of thing which I think very effective fashion. cent increase, is beyond the normal or proper activities The Defense Department this year re- As a matter of fact, we do know of, of the Department ofi)clense. It is not quested an authorization of $8.2 billion, and there is a great deal of evidence of, a literary institution Created to produce The committee reduced the figure to $7.1 the disapproval by many of the students books. In my view, it is not supposed to billion, more than $1 billion less than of the intrusion of the military program So out and produce research works on the Department sought, which is more into our universities. Ataturk or warlordisrit, or Islam, or the than $600 million less than authorized I ask unanimous consent to have Sinhalese Revolution-in Ceylon. These the last fiscal year and about $400 mil- printed in the RECORD, because it Is ex- studies are irrevelant to and beyond the lion less than was appropriated last fig- actly on this point, an article entitled proper scope of the Defense Department.cal year. "Turned-Off Young Scientists Force That is the math point. Again I commend the committee for Major Cutbacks in Military Research," Actually, the cut ram proposing is its review and its recommendations, but written by Victor Cohn, and published relatively very small as compared with I think the further reduction, modest as in the Washington Post of May 12, 1969, the basic research total in the bill which it is, proposed by the Senator from which describes the attitude of young sel- ls $430 million. That is a large amount of Arkansas is possible. entists in the various schools. Under the money for basic research. By "basic" 1 None of us is sure what causes unrest headline it says, "Caution: The military- mean not related to any specific project on the campuses, but to the extent that industrial complex is armed and dan- in the Defense Department. Of course, the student knows that research and de- gerous. ABM is an Edsel," referring to the nonbasic research is far greater than velopment by the Federal Government is signs carried by physicists picketing the that. But basic researth is the type of overwhelmingly entrusted to the De- White House April 30. research we would expect to be done in partment of Defense-- There being no objection, the article a graduate school at Harvard or Yale The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, or Princeton, and so on, generally. It is ator's time has expired, as follows: sometimes called pure science. It has Mr. HART. Mr. President, will the Sen- - A. URNED-OFP YOUNG SCIENTISTS FORCE MAJOR nothing specific in mind. ator yield me 1 additional minute? CUTBACKS IN MILITARY RESEARCH SCIEN- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time Mr. FULBRIGHT. Yes. TISTS FORCE RESEARCH CUTBACKS of the Senator has expired. Mr. HART. That those engaged in re- (By Victor Cohn) Mr. FTJLBRIGHT. I yield myself 5 search, contrary to general assumptions, minutes more, are not the universities primarily, but "Caution. The military-industrial complex is armed and dangerous." 1 hope the Senator from New Harnp- the think tanks as the Senator from "ABM is. an Edsel."?Signs carried by shire and the Senator from Mississippi Arkansas has developed, if they see the physicists picketing the White House April 30 would inform me if there is anything ratio of the Federal Government's allo- In a less violent, but equally radical way that they especially do not like in the cations of research and development for science students, younger scientists and amendment. I would certainly entertain the military and then compares it to the many older professors of physics and physi- some revisions to it. Otherwise, I would amount of money the Federal Govern- ?logy have been raising their own hell on like to have a vote on it It is a worth- ment allocates for research in new tech- the campuses. while amendment. niques for housing, for antipollution ef- In the view of Prof. Don R. Price, Har- vard political scentist, this is "a new kind As I said before, it is the first time in forts, and so on, he gets a very obscure of rebellion," linked only in part with the 25 years that we have made a serious notion of our priorities. Perhaps, more activist kids and college students in general. effort to bring the whole authorization correctly, such students get an illustra- It is a rebellion of young and discontented for the Pentagon under review. tion of priorities which offend them and technologists?against the ABM and other outrage them. I was Just handed the annual report costly milltary-technological systems, against The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- "weaponeering" at secret laboratories on or of the Rand Corp., for 1968. Over ator's 1 minute has expired, near campuses and, in many cases, against 10,000 publications have been produced, Mr. HART. May I have 1 minute more? doing any research, secret or non-secret, to with some 500 new titles published each help the military. F Mr. ULBRIGHT. I yield 1 minute. year. It sounds like a big publishing it is a rebellion against computer (enters Mr. HART. When we say, "Let us put and social science projects serving the CIA. house such as they have in New York, first things first," what do we identify It is a rebellion against what one young publishing fiction and other paperback in our minds as having first claim? physicist called "the whole misuse of tech- books. Most of these titles that I have Look at this bill. Look at the bulk for nology to spoil rather than. save the country." read have nothing to do with the proper research. Look at the bill in its totality. Sometimes painstakingly logical, some- responsibilities of the Defense Depart- ment. So I hope the Smalor from New Then compare it with the programs, in times only emotional and shrill, this rebel- some cases of long standing, intended to test swbeeele in csn it hcaslion reasingly effective. In the Hampshire would consider going a little relieve hunger and to insure a broader further in his cut. Caused or helped cause giant Stanford ... availability of medical care. One does University--derided by the new dissidents as Mr. HART. Mr. President, of course I share that hope. not have to be a member of the SDS to the "Pentagon of the West"?to decide to The effort we are making to reduce the Jump up and scream, "Your allocations phase out half the secret military projects and your priorities are all out of whack." at its Stanford Applied Electronics Labora- authorization for research and develop- So can we not persuade ourselves, in tory. The Stanford rebellion was conducted ment and evaluation began actually addition to the reduction that the com- largely by undergraduates, but sympathetic more than a year ago. On April 18, 1968, mittee has made of more than $1 billion and vocal professors gave them vital meral the Senate defeated an areendment that for research, to add $45 million for the authority. I proposed reducing thedefense author- Made Stanford's trustees place a mora- reasons so eloquently assigned by the torium on new chemical and biological war- ization for those activities from the Senator from Arkansas? fare contracts at the nearby Stanford Re- committee-approved total of $7.8 billion The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time search Institute, nominally "independent" to $7.3 billion. That was a reduction of of the Senator has expired. but in effect owned by the university trustees. $508 million. That defeat was on a roll- Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, will the Caused huge Maasachusetts Institute of call vote, and we lost 28 to 30. Senator yield? Technology to call a moratorium on taking any new secret contracts at a pair of crack If the amendment had been approved, the Department of Defense would have Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, / radar and rocket guidance laboratories that yield myself 5 minutes, have supplied much of the brainpower be- had about the same amount of money Does the Senator from Massachusetts hind U.S. weaponry. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved FetRoitygdwAyi /ft tgimppgg gglopp 4 Ro oo3oo 0000 -3 s 9735 August 12, 1969 Forced American University in Washington to cancel a partly secret Army research contract with the University's Center for Research in Social Systems. Seen physicists picketing the White House; professors buttonholing Senators and Rep- resentatives and organizations with many names but like purposes?Project Daisy, Ad Hoc Committee of Concerned Scientists? spring up at campus after campus. ?This movement and student protests in general have in the past year forced the Defense Department to cut in half?from some 400 to 200?its "classified" or in com- mon parlance secret research and develop- ment contracts on U.S. campuses. REPORT ON CONTRACTS This week Dr. John Foster, director of de- fense research and engineering, is expected to discuss the problem at a news conference. According to figures he has gathered, there are now such contracts or grants in effect at some 60 universities. He will say they now represent about $20 million worth of all the department's some $250 million this year in 5500 campus projects. In addition, the department finances what another official estimates to be $200 million in work?most of it classified?at "research centers" like MIT's Lincoln Laboratory and Instrumentation Laboratory, Caltech's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Johns Hopkins' Applied Physics Laboratory. Most of these centers are operated by the universities on "not-for-profit" contracts, partly to keep secret work off the campuses themselves. Foster may also report that the principal concentrations of classified research (accord- ing to one of his staff) are at: MIT and Stanford. MIT's are entirely at the Lincoln and Instrumentation (or "I") Labs, neither of which MIT consider part of its teaching campus. There are no classified projects on the MIT campus proper, but the "I Lab" is on the campus fringe and both labs have close staff and graduate project connections. University of Michigan, many at a uni- versity facility at Willow Run. Despite wrenching 1967-68 protests by students and faculty, the university this academic year has rejected just one classified proposal and ap- proved 36 others. University of California at Berkeley, Uni- versity of Texas, Georgia Tech, Ohio State University and New Mexico State University. For well over a year the Defense Depart- ment has been straining to reduce classified work on the campuses. "We still have some that need not be classified," an official re- ports, "mainly where a contracting officer has just used that as an easy way to give investi- gators access to classified material. This is not the only way to do this, and we want to reduce unneeded classification to zero." There will then remain a hard core of still classified projects that both Defense officials and many professors and colleges consider proper and necessary. These deal with sub- jects like laser and maser detection (of dis- tant objects like missiles) , electronic coun- ter-measures, advanced radar, underwater sound?"things that in the national interest need to be kept secret" and need to be done for the country's defense, in the view of Dr. Charles Kidd, a deputy to Dr. Lee DuBridge, the President's science adviser. But DuBridge?though no activist?re- moved secret work from the Caltech campus as "inappropriate" 20 years ago. ONE-DAY STOPPAGE "Inappropriate" was a mild word on March 4, 1969, when MIT students?some of the country's brightest future scientists and ad- vanced engineers?joined turned-off faculty members to hold a "one-day research stop- page to protest "misuses of science." The University of Pennsylvania, the University of Rochester and some 30 other campuses saw similar demonstrations. And new organiza- tions began to proliferate. Some coalesced or merged loosely with a group started in New York City in February around a lanky elementary particle physicist from Stanford, Dr. Martin Pearl, as "acting secretary." This "Scientists for Social and Political Action" or SSPA quickly counted 500 or so members in "40 or 50" local chap- ters. Pearl?at age 42, standing between the young and the old in science?bows to the "atomic scientists" who first attempted polit- ical action after World War II, and in bitter battle helped win civilian control of atomic energy. "But now," he says, "these men are the scientific administrators. They have to be careful of what they say. Now a second, fresh voice is needed." NOT RESPONDING A younger associate, Brian Schwartz of MIT, is blunter: "These older men have lost contact with the real world. They're not re- sponding to the younger problems." The younger problems exploded at Stan- ford in early April. For nine days, student dissidents occupied the Applied Electronics Laboratory, site of some $2 million a year in defense research. The younger problems were hoisted onto picket signs in Washington April 30, when for the first time in history, it was stated?first time or not, it was rare-1'75 pale, variously bearded, bookish-looking physicists pick- eted the White House. Their target: the ABM. Their leaders: David Nygren of Columbia and Tom Kir ic of Harvard. The physicists were here for the American Physical Society's annual meeting. This usu- ally staid convention has boiled up into an indignation meeting over President Nixon's proposed Safeguard ABM system," said a news report. Wearing "Stop ABM" buttons, physi- cists prowled hotel and Congressional corri- dors. "Even the controversy over the security 'trail' of J. Robert Oppenheimer in the 1950s" wrote William Hines in the Chicago Sun- Times, "did not match this intensely politi- cal climate." MORATORIUM ARRANGED The younger problems boiled up again at both MIT and Stanford. At MIT, students marched into the office of President Howard Johnson for a sit-in and talk-out, especially about secret work on military helicopters and multiple-entry atomic missile guidance. All agreed to move to a lecture hall. Next the MIT faculty met. The upshot was a morator- ium on secret projects until a special 22-man group studies the whole role of the Lincoln and "I" Labs, sites of some $95 million a year in Pentagon contracts. At Stanford too there were more demon- strations and faculty meetings. The upshots there: (1) a start on an "orderly" phasing out (or conversion to non-secret) of some $2 million a year in secret contracts, represent- ing about a third of the Applied Electronic Labs' defense work; (2) a pledge to end chem- ical and biological warfare research and counter-insurgency studies at Stanford Re- search Institute (worth about $1.1 million a year). At both Stanford and MIT many professors have balked. Someone must defend the coun- try, they indignantly say. Someone must pro- vide the knowledge. And many of the best minds are on campuses. If universities sev- ered all Defense ,Department ties, says Jack Ruins, iv= vice president for the special laboratories, "the country would be left in the hands of the professional military and industrial group." At Stanford, Prof. 0. G. Villard Jr.?radar researcher and son of the late Oswald Garri- son Villard, crusading editor of the Nation? said: "As the son of a liberal who was a devoted pacifist, I have searched my con- science and always felt I have been com- pletely faithful to the pacifist traditions of my family. I have always considered that my research was 100 per cent directed toward saving human lives. This development essen- tially brings my research here to an end, and I believe the decision will have a most un- fortunate effect on the long-term viability of the School of Engineering and even of the university." These men were talking mainly about classified and directly linked military research. PENTAGON FINANCING But there is still another trend, against even open, non-secret basic study financed by any military or para-military agency. The Defense Department finances much basic re- search in physics, chemistary, electrical engineering and the like, partly because it knows that almost all such knowledge is ulti- mately needed; partly because it wants to maintain contacts With bright scientist- consultants. Of some $1.5 billion in Federal basic research money now going to colleges, some $247 million (16 per cent) comes from the Pentagon. Last month University of Maryland stu- dents picketed a computer center doing non- secret work on pattern recognition for the CIA. At MIT last week, disaffected students protested a Defense-financed, non-secret project to make new computer methods available to any social scientist?whether working on Vietnam peasantry or the succor of the American poor. At Stony Brook, the Students for a Democratic Society, stormed another computer center. The computer cen- ter may be fast becoming the American Bas- tille. To most young or old scientists, if not to their students, this is illogical. SYMPATHY FOUND Still, there is great sympathy among them for these many youths who are coming to consider almost all research "complicit" war research "for the system." An important answer to the very young, maintains Stanford's Martin Perl, is to turn much research to social purpose. "The un- controlled spawning of technology has pro- duced pollution and contributed to socially destructive conditions," says his new orga- nization. "Yet there is no real attempt to apply technical skills to improve life." "This is what we want to tell people," said one of the new scientists during the Physi- cal Society meeting here. "We're not very vio- lent types. We're not about to riot. We just want to exercise our democratic rights." Is all this the high-water mark of a tem- porary scientists' movement or is it a be- ginning of something larger? Only time will tell, but if the young scientists keep talking, there may be a new element in the American political dialogue. After years of relative si- lence, says Dr. Charles Schwartz of the Uni- versity of California, "a large number of sci- entists are coming out of their little dark laboratories," and things may never be the same. Mr. FULBRIGHT. On May 1, 1969, the Washington Post published another article entitled "MIT Curbs Secret Mili- tary Research," written by Victor Cohn. It was the MIT delegation of students and a professor who came to call on me, asking me what they could do to dis- associate to a much greater degree? they were not adamant that it be com- plete?the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from military research. They did not like their university being considered simply an adjunct of the Pentagon. I ask unanimous consent that Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9736 Approved For ReLedvapilgA18310ACItekENBM g3.64R0.0.0300100001-3 hiN A. Lb iiugu,4a 2, 1.Q69 research?as Dr. Edward Teller suggested last week?it plans to almost eliminate it on campuses and diminish aignificantly in the off-campus university laboratories. The Pentagon's ooncern about its mu ver- city research program, which accounts for one-third of its entire research effort, was heightened last month when two of the Nation's most prestigious institutions Stan- ford University and the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology---decided to begin cutting back their Defense involvement. In an effort to improve its image among the Nation's university students and young- er faculty to ward off new and more serious criticism and protect its valuable relation- ship with the institutions, the Pentagon has begun looking for ways to make accommoda- tions. Under the guidance of Dr. John S. Foster Jr., director of Defense Research and De- velopment, it has recently: Cut its classified research projects in uni- versities from 8 per cent of the total to 4 per cent and hopes to get down to 1 or 2 per cent. Urged Congressional committees at every opportunity not to take primitive measures? such as criminal legislation or fund outoffs? against student militants and radicals. In- stead the Pentagon recommends "leaving the initiative for solving the problem with the university administration." Emphasized that the scope of a university's defense research is a decision to be made independently by the university, and en- ootuaged and aided universities in diversi- fying their research in non-defense areas. Brought university scientists and admin- istrators to Washington to explain campus problems to the Defense officials who oversee the research activities. Accelerated the formerly combersome pro- cedures for Pentagon review and release for publication of papers prepared by university researchers In Defense-sponsored activities. The number of classified projects has been trimmed largely by declassifying, not by end- ing them. While the Pentagon insists publicly that this declassification is purely the result of an accurate application of existing security guidelines in areas where there was too much caution before, it is nevertheless clear that some relaxation of standards is involved. "We just make sure now that, indeed, the work is truly classified," one high Pentagon official said, "and that it's not a case where someone at a lower level decided to classify it just to be safe. Classified Projects are re- viewed now at the highest levels." Foster, speaking to the American Nuclear Society in Seattle lett Wednesday, said that "some applied research and development con- tracts funded by the Defense Department at universities?normally at separate off-campus labs?are and must remain classified." While the Pentagon's classified projects are a handy-target for campus militants, there is a question about how much of an issue they actually are. Since only 4 per cent of the total is classi- fied, Foster says, "I believe this issue Is over- rated, and many of the people at universities Who have investigated the facts agree." Rep. Lawrence Hogan (R-Md.), one of 22 GOP congressmen who toured campuses re- cently to determine the causes of student un- rest, said the problem was never mentioned to him, although there was a broad dissatis- faction with professors who spend more time on Defense projects than in dealing with stu- dents. A Pentagon official who deals with Univer- sity research says there has been no change in the number of proposals received from the institutions themselves for projects. POT every proposal it approves, the Pentagon re- ceives eight. One Pentagon official suggested that a small amount of classified work should be the article to which I have referred be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the REC- ORD, as follows: [From the Washington Post, May 1, 1969] MIT CURBS SECRET MILITARY RESEARCH (By Victor Cain) Massachusetts Institute of Technology? the Nation's leading science and engineer- ing university?has ordered -a temporary halt on accepting new secret military research at two famous laboratories-.- The action was in rsponse to mounting student and faculty protests against mili- tary research by U.S. universities?and against big new weapons systems like the anti-ballistic missile. As evidence of that growing movement, some 175 young anti-ABM physicists picketed the White House for 45 minutes yesterday, then presented Dr. Lee A. DuBridge, the President's science adviser, with a petition opposing the Safeguard ABM system pro- posed by President Nixon. The petition was signed by nearly 1200 members of the American Phycal Society now meeting here. Other physicists went to Capitol Hill to give Congressmen ang-Safeguard peti- tions signed by 729 colleagues at many uni- versities. versities. "A large number of scientists are earning out of their little dark laboratories" to give the public their opinions on weapons, Charles Schultz, a Univerffity of California physicist, told a group of House membess. Just such a coming out--starting with a one-clay research stoppage iSlarch 4--culmi- nated in MIT' decision to declare a morato- rium, perhaps until fall, on new classified projects at the two laboratories. A 22-member panel will review the labs' roles?and perhaps, said one MIT source, "recommend that they be sold or otherwise disposed of, to be operated with no MIT connection." REPORTS SOUGHT MIT President Howard rehnson asked the panel to make a temporary report by May 31 and a final one by Oct. 1. Panel Chairman Frank Pounds, MIT School of Management dean, said he will try to have the final report ready May 31. All work on present projects will continue in the meantime and the laboratories may accept "contract modifications." One of the affected labs is the Lincoln Laboratory, which has been doing missile detection studies important to ABM develop- ment, though not working on ABM system hardware. The other is the Instrumentation Laboratory, which is working on the guidance system for MIRV (multiple independently- targeted re-entry vehicles) Warheads for the sea-horse Poseidon missile. The Linooln Laboratory Cmn. buildings out- side Boston and in Cambridge) was estab- lished 18 years ago at Defense officials' "urgent" request?so MIT recalled?to de- velop radar and associated air defense sys- tems. Almost all its work is for the Defense Department. CONTROLS FOR ROCHETS The Instrumentation Laboratory (on the fringe of the MIT campus in Cambridge) works on guidance, navigation and controls for rockets and spacecraft. Three-fifths of its work is for the Defense Department, two- fifths for the civilian space effort. Together, the two labs have 3700 employes and a current annual budget of $116 million. Their scientists are not part of the MIT fac- ulty, and MIT has labored to keep their secret efforts at arm's length; there are no secret projects now on the MIT campus proper. Still the labs' staffs and MITs faculty have close links. And these links have been given much of the credit for the labs' high- quality work and high-quality staffs. MIT President Johnson initially named Pounds to head an 18-member panel includ- ing faculty, students, alumni, Lincoln and Instrumentation Lab staff members and MIT trustees. Among the panel members are Julius A. Stratton, former mrr president now board chairman of the Ford Foundation, and Dr. Victor Weisskopf, noted physicist and a member of the Union of Concerned Scientists that held the March 4 research stoppage. FOUR PANELISTS ADDED Pounds added four supplementary panel- ists, including Roam Chomsky, celebrated MIT linguistics professor and another March 4 protester. Protest against the ABM has been the loudest item of unofficial business during American Physical Society meetings here this week. Some 3000 physicists and their wives jammed a convention hall Tuesday night to hear an anti-ABM debate, and 1216 voted overwhelmingly against Safeguard in an informal ballot (76 per cent opposed it, 21 per cent favored it). Physicists have been visiting their Sen- ators all week carrying anti-ABM petitions. "Every swing Senator has been visited," said Martin Perl, Stanford physicist and an or- ganizer of Scientists for Social and Political Action. The Physical Society officially said its mem- bers have voted 8559 to 6405 to meet next January in Chicago, despite many members' protests over police handling of disorders during the Democratic Convention. The so- ciety also named a committee to seek ways for concerned physicists to examine scien- tists' role in society?a lesser response to demands for a new division on science and society. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD the following additional articles: An article entitled "Defense Research: Pentagon Declassifying Projects Studied in University Labs," written by Richard Homan, and published in the Washing- ton Post of June 23, 1969. An article entitled "MIT Curb on Se- cret Projects Reflects Growing Anti/mill- tary Feeling Among Universities' Re- searchers," written by William K. Stevens, and published in the New York Times of May 5, 1969. An article entitled "Dissident Scien- tists Brew Defense Program Tempest," written by John Lannan, and published in the Washington Star of February 5, 1969. There being no objection, the articles were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Washington Post, June 23, 1969] DEFENSE RESEARCH?PENTAGON DECLASSIFY- ING PROPECTS STUDIED IN UNIVERSITY LABS (By Richard Homan) Faced with the threat of serious disruption of its research activities in universities, the Defense Department is making a determined effort to adjust them to the changed atmos- phere on the Nation's campuses. Within the past year it has cut by half the amount of classified defense research?a par- ticularly provocative reminder of Pentagon presence?done in universities. As a matter of policy, basic research proj- ects in universities are no longer classified and a program of high-level, stringent peri- odic review of applied research projects has been established to determine whether their classification is still justified. Although the Pentagon does not expect to do away with all classification of defense Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12 r 1969 Approvedft1~33311(ggPAtilabAfria-D?RAGN64R000300100001-3 s 9737 kept on campuses?to provide a target for the most violent radicals so they wouldn't turn their attentions to unclassified projects. Until the reassessment of Pentagon-spon- sored activities by Stanford and MIT, only two serious challenges to classified research had arisen on campuses in more than a decade. In 1967, New York University and the University of Pennsylvania canceled projects dealing with chemical and biological war- fare. At a speech before the American Institute on Problems of European Unity last week, Dr. Teller, one of the world's foremost nu- clear physicists, complained that security classification was "scattering our scientists away from defense work." In a broad attack on all secrecy in research, Teller said, "we must adopt a policy of open- ness. We have classified everything; we have succeeded in a fabulous manner in confusing the American public, the Congress, by this secrecy. "Secrecy has not succeeded in slowing down Russian research, even in the most secret areas such as my own, nuclear ex- plosives. Secrecy does not hurt anybody ex- cept ourselves. I think a thoroUgh review of secrecy is needed." [From the New York Times, May 5, 1969] M.I.T. CURB ON SECRET PROJECTS REFLECTS GROWING ANTIMILITARY FEELING AMOITG UNIVERSITIES' RESEARCHERS (By William K. Stevens) The Massachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy, by declining temporarily to accept new programs of classified research from the Gov- ernment, has spotlighted a new stage in the evolution of what might properly be called the Federal-industrial-academic complex. This vast, interrelated social organism has been the main instrument of scientific in- quiry and technological advance in the United States since the instrument was born of wartime necessity, in total secrecy, three decades ago. Since then it has undergone successive mutations?first with post-World War II de- mobilization, then with the onset of the cold war and the start of the space age, and now with a rising tide of antimilitary feeling among university researchers. That feeling coupled with a growing inter- est in how science and technology might serve the nation's social needs, is said to have lent urgency to M.I.T.'s decision, announced last week, to place a moratorium on new secret research projects. PANEL TO REPORT The moratorium will last until Oct. 1, when a 22-man panel is to report on its re- examination of the institute's relationship to two of its semi-independent divisions, the Lincoln Laboratory and the M.I.T. Instru- mentation Laboratory, which are two of the country's major contractors for research sponsored by the military. The study of the two laboratories' roles was undertaken, M.I.T.'s president, Howard W. Johnson, said in an interview last week, as part of a continuing internal reassessment of the institute. But he said the laboratories were made the subject of a special separate study because of "widespread concern" about secret military research among M.I.T. pro- fessors and students. The ferment is rooted in fears of military- industrial dominance, in a deep sense of un- certainty about nuclear war as expressed in dissent over the antiballistic missile system and, especially, in the Vietnamese war, ac- cording to Dr. James R. Killian Jr., chair- man of the M.I.T. Corporation, who was a science adviser to President Eisenhower. "A SHIFT IN INTEREST" "There is now a shift in interest," Dr. Killian said in an interview in his office at M.I.T. "There was a period when the cut- ting edge of technology was in the areas of the military and space. But there is a feel- ing now that in terms of national need we ought to devote a larger proportion of work to other fields." He mentioned transportation, bioengineering, medical research and social problems generally. "I would lay great stress on this shift of mood," he said. Today's mood is far different from the one in which some of the nation's leading sci- entists found themselves in the fall of 1939 when Dr. James B. Conant, then president of Harvard University, invited them to his home to talk about the role of science and scientists in the war that had just begun. KISTIAKOWSKY IN GROUP "I was among them," Dr. George B. Kis- tiakowsky, the Harvard chemist who later succeeded Dr. Killian as President Eisen- hower's science adviser, said in an interview last week. "We talked of the possibility of offeringiour services to the British. We would also be learning the problems of warfare in case the United States should become in- volved." Separately, a group of American physicists had become concerned over the prospect of using nuclear fission to produce a bomb of vast destructive power. "In view of this situation," Dr. Albert Ein- stein wrote to President Roosevelt on Aug. 2, 1939, "you may think it desirable to have some permanent contact maintained between the Administration and the group of physi- cists working on chain reactions in Amer- ica." After the fall of France in 1940, Mr. Roose- velt gave the concerned scientists official power by chartering the National Defense Research Committee, headed by Dr. Vannever Bush. Its purpose: to organize American science and technology for war. COORDINATED EFFORT Expanded into the Office of Scientific Re- search and Development (0.S.R.D.) , the Bush group coordinated the country's over-all sci- entific effort throughout the war and over- saw the initial development of the atomic bomb until the Manhattan Project was set up separately. With the end of the war, 0.S.R.D. was de- activated, and most universities got out of the business of secret research. But the coun- try was left with an 0.S.R.D. legacy that is the basis of the country's scientific and tech- nological effort, and of the Federal-indus- trial-academic complex, to this day: the Gov- ernment contract as the main mechanism for financing private research. PATTERN ESTABLISHED Basic research had all but stopped during the war, and Government contracts let main- ly by the Office of Naval Research, under- wrote its rebirth afterward. Had it not been for this, Dr. Bush said the other day, the result for scientific research "would have been a catastrophe." Within a few years other Government agencies were financing research across the whole spectrum of scientific activities. For the most part, money to universities was for nonsecret basic research, and that re- mains the pattern. The Federal Government during the cur- rent fiscal year is spending more than 85-bil- lion for the support of research and nearly $11-billion for development, or the fashion- ing of new products based on the fruits of research. Of the 85-billion for research, about $1.5- billion is going to the colleges and univer- sities. Of this $1.5-billion, $247-million?or about 16 per cent?comes from the Depart- ment of Defense. Of the $247-million from the Defense De- partment, only about 4 per cent goes for secret research, Dr. Lee A. DuBridge, Presi- dent Nixon's science adviser, told the Senate Government Operations subcommittee last week. Ile said this was down from 8 per cent two years ago. Since shortly after World War II, few uni- versities have done secret research. And Dr. DuBridge said in an interview last Satur- day that almost all the money going from the Defense Department to universities for nonsecret projects was for basic research. He defined basic research as research in which the only goal is the pursuit of new knowledge, wherein "you can't tell in ad- vance whether it's going to be socially useful or not." Most of the disengagement from military- oriented research in the academic commu- nity, he said, is in the realm of applied sci- ence?that is, research directed toward a specific goal. M.I.T. SHARE LARGE However, most of the applied research in military matters is done in the Defense De- partment's own laboratories or by industrial contractors. The government this year is spending about $1.3-billion in these two categories. M.I.T. has a disproportionate share of military research contracts. Not only is it allocated more Federal research grants than any other university ($96-million worth in the fiscal year 1967, the latest year for which comparative figures are available), but near- ly half the amount?$47-million worth?is from the Department of Defense. By comparison, the recipients of the next four largest Federal allocations were: Uni- versity of Michigan, $56-million total, in- cluding $13-million from Defense; Univer- sity of Illinois, $52-million, $12-million De- fense; Columbia, $52-million and $11-mil- lion; University of California, Berkeley, $48.8-million and $7-million. M.I.T.'s high proportion of defense research funds can perhaps be traced to the Lincoln and Instrumentation laboratories. The Lin- coln Laboratory?created in 1951, early in the cold war, to develop early warning systems for the detection of incoming enemy bomb- ers an,d missiles?has spent $05-million, of which $64-million came from the Defense De- partment. The instrumentation Laboratory, which is the world's leading research center for self- oontained missile-guidance systems, received $30-million to develop the guidance systems for the Thor, Polaris and Poseidon missiles. In the fiscal year 1968 it spent $20-million for development of the guidance and naviga- tion system of the Apollo spacecraft under a contract from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Few of those interviewed believe the two M.I.T. laboratories will or should be closed clown. The main point at issue is their fu- ture form and relationship to the institute at large. "I hope this problem won't be solved by S.D.S. pressures," said Dr. DuBridge, refer- ring to Students for a Democratic Society. "It's important for universities to look at themselves when they're not in a period of crisis," Dr. Johnson of M.I.T. said, "and we're not." [From the Washington Star, Feb. 5, 19691 DISSIDENT SCIENTISTS BREW DEFENSE PROGRAM TEMPEST (By John Lannan) A new tempest is brewing in the national scientific community over whether the de- fense establishment absorbs too much of the oo-untry's scientific and technological energies. In New York this week several groups of younger physicists are pressing a host of proposals for political activism and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology an activist step has already been taken?a day- long "research stoppage" has been called for March 4. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9738 CARtglafAblf.R8A199s) -147iugusi 12, 1969 Approved For Rel yikeyNT1300100001 In Manhattan, the cans for action were fOr university research as between 1969 cost of -$71,600,000, which amounts to an heard during the aamrial meeting of the and 1970. average of $59,000 per man-year. American Physical Society. The research In Project Themis, which is generally That is quite a sizable sum to appro- stopPage at MIT has been scheduled by a newly formed Union of ncerned Scientists, called the Federal aid-to-education proj- priate, to turn over to an organization for at the Instigation of more vocal members in ect of the Pentagon, there is a 13-percent no specific purpose, in a sense to do with Oci the physics department. increase in the budget request. I am un- as they please, and at these rates. ?This is not a strike in terms of the able at this point to estimate precisely Rand, in turn, agreed "to perform a standard use of the word," said the union% what effect that has over the actual ex- program of study and research on the chairman, Prof. Francis T Low. "It's not penditure last year on these particular broad subject of aerospace power, with directed against MIT. It a psychological items. The Senator stated the overall the object of recommending to the U.S. amounts but it was not broken down into Air Force preferred methods, techniques, specific items. and instrumentalities for the develop- On this matter of social behavioral ment and employment of aerospace science research, the one which has at- power." tracted much of the criticism, there was I presume that out of that profound an increase of 7 percent between the 1969 research they came up with a project and 1970 budget requests. There was a like the C-5A. That is one example, I specific reduction of $1.5 million, as I un- presume; I hope it was not, but I do not derstand it, by the committee. know what they produced that has been As to the Federal contract research of great value. centers, there was a 5-percent increase. We were told yesterday, much to my This represents a very large amount; the surprise, by some Senators, that our air- actual amount, as to these research cell- planes are inferior. One of the Senators, ters, is $263.3 million in 1969, and $277.4 in the course of the debate, said they are million in 1970, a 5-percent increase. inferior. I do not believe that, myself; As I understand it, the committee ac- but it seems that whenever there hap- tion does not specifically cut these items; pens to be a problem and if they want it provides for an overall cut, which may more money, the argument is that the be applied, according to the report, in product is inferior. If we are talking on broad categories; and, of course, this is the Fourth of July, on the other hand, one reason why it is of no particular we have got the best planes and equip- significance to say, when the Senator is ment in the wOrld. It all depends on the defending this item, "you should specify circumstances how good the products the precise ones you have got." I do, not are. My guess is that our planes are as know that the committee specified ex- good as anybody's. We certainly have actly what they thought. If I correctly spent as much money as anyone on them. understand the report, on page 49, the Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, will the committee recommended reductions in Senator yield? the general areas as follows: The Army, Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. $10 million; the Navy, $15 million; and Mr. MURPHY. Possibly the Senator is the Air Force, $12 million, which is very making reference to remarks made by much in the same pattern as my amend- me yesterday, in which I pointed out that ment. We more or less used the same ap- we had not had a new model fighter proach, but we went one step farther. plane laid down, I believe, since 1954, The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- and that the B-52's being used so effec- ator's time has expired. tively?thank goodness we have them? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield myself 5 ad- are, many of them, 10 years old, and ditional minutes. some of them older than that. We went one step further in at least I do not think I used the word 'in- recommending, although the amend- ferior." I might have implied that we ment itself does not require it, cuts of could have had better planes had we specific amounts within the categories, had better planing in the Department of I am not at all sure that it is wise prac- Defense, in the background. I think tice for the Senate to go beyond that, somewhere along the line we have been other than as to some one very specific negligent; and I know my distinguished up political activism. At least item that might be called to our atten- colleague agrees with me that when we two and pos- sibly three groups are bent on making the tion, such as the ones we mentioned, the send our boys out to defend the security prestigious American Physical Society more Ataturk study and some of the others. of the country, we do not want to give responsive to what they say are the needs It is very hard to find out about those them second-class equipment. rather than the fears of people. until after the studies have been author- Mr. FULBRIGHT. I agree with the INVOLVEMES4 r SIGHT ized and are in process, or well along. In Senator, but I have never been under One group is trying to change the society's many cases, it is difficult to know what is the impression that they have had sec- constitution, (a move that failed almost two being done until the study is completed. ond-class equipment. to one last year,) to get it involved with On the "think tanks," the funding of The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- contemporary problems. AIP's constitution the "think tanks," it seems to me, is ex- ator's 5 minutes have expired. rather than public policy. tremely loose, Rand being one of the Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield myself 5 ad- now limits its activities to scientific issues Still another is trying to broaden the AIP's principal ones?a very large operation. I ditional minutes. role in the education, of the public to the wish to explain briefly why I think that The planes we have lost, for example, dangers as well as the benefits of scientific is a very loose way to control these in Vietnam, were not lost because they and technological advance. operations, were confronted by superior airplanes, Still a third is trying to establish some The financing of these research cen- but because they were shot down with sort of an action group ,uch as that spawned ters, commonly called "think tanks" is ground-to-air missiles and other ground by the MIT faculty. not on a project-by-project basis at all, fire, which I do not think a better plane, Mr. FULBRIGHT. Here is an area in but under agreements by the various if there was one, could have avoided. which the evidenceL is quite clear, I be- military agencies to provide long term They have not been outclassed in air lieve, that it is not in the interests of our support to the organizations they sport- battles. At least, such incidents have not universities nor, I think, in the long-term sor. The current Air Force contract with been brought to my attention. interests of the Pentagon itself, to Rand, for example, covers the 5-year pe- / read in today% newspaper that we alienate the young scientists or the young nod from 1966 to 1971, and is for a mini- have sent 72 more new Phantom jets to people of this country. Yet there is a 20- mum of 1,277.8 man-years of prates- Spain to impress the Spanish with what Percent Increase in the budget request sional scientific effort, at an estimated good planes we have. They are more protest." OTHER CAMPUSES PRESSED The MIT group is seeking to spread ite disaffection with the w4 things are to other campuses. "We've made contact with 10 to 20 others already," said Murray Ed n, a professor of electrical engineering. "We're sending letters to other institutions anil maybe a couple of hundred are going or have gone out." The letter-writing catriptign, LOW explain- ed, is a person-to-person one, faculty mem- bers at one institution writing to colleagues at another. Though each union member's goals may differ, the basic idea is the same: That the nation is dissipating on defense its scientific capabilities for bettering human life. The Vietnam conflict appears to be little more than a precipitating factor in bringing on the March 4 protest at the Defense De- partment's single largest research contractor amongst educational institutions. "I think we're all very unhappy about the Vietnam war," said Lou. "but that's not what we're protesting about." CONFIDENCE sHAEEN. But the 42 faculty members who signed the original statement of purpose nearly a week ago said Vietnam hes "shaken our con- fidence in (the government's) ability to make wise and humane decisions." They also pointed out that "there is also disquieting evidence of an intention to en- large further our immense destructive ca- pability." They said the response of the scientific community to these intentions "has been hopelessly fragmented." The union's proposals include a call to start "a critical and continuing examination of governmental policyln areas where science and technology are of actual or potential significance:" to turn research from defense- oriented to environmental-oriented projects, to start their students questioning their fu- ture professional commitments; to express opposition to the anti-ballistic missile sys- tem and, finally, to organize scientists into an effective and vocal political action group. In New York, several groups of younger, concerned physicists are busily drUrnming Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12,-1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 9739 modern than the F-100's which they re- placed. However, that is not .exactly the point. The Rand Corp., the "think tank," has a free hand to spend $71 million during this period of 5 years at an average of $59,000 per man-year. I think this is loose accounting. And I protest strenuously under the present budget conditions and the difficulties we had in getting money for the education bill just recently passed, and for other bills. Efforts are made to cut items out of the education bill and other bills. I protest the disproportionate amount we are spending in these research proj- ects which have very questionable rele- vance to the mission of the Defense Department. They have nothing whatever, in my opinion, to do with the protection of the men in Vietnam. These are not research projects for a better plane. That is not what the Rand Corn is really doing. These are different proj- ects. They fall under a different cate- gory. All these behaviorial science re- search studies have nothing to do with the qualities of a plane or any other hardware. They have no relevance to the hardware used to fight. Some of the studies are designed, in my opinion, to assist in brainwashing either the enemy or our own soldiers or someone else, I guess, because they fall in the field of psychological research, which is an inter- esting subject but is unrelated to the mission of the Defense Department. The university research is sort of in a class by itself. Regardless of what ef- fect it may have upon the Pentagon ac- tivities, I do not want them to further undermine the integrity of our universi- ties or schools. This is a much more serious matter than whatever they may wish to do to the program of research of the Penta- gon itself. I feel the same way about research in foreign institutions. We are having enough trouble with our foreign rela- tions. This is an area with which we are all familiar. We know about the protests all around the world at our foreign re- search activities and the difficulties we have had. The President came back from one trip abroad and reported that everyone is en- thusiastic about the United States. If everyone is as enthusiastic about the United States, I think the enthusiasm is limited to the moon shot. It would be very strange indeed that the attitude toward many of the policies we are fol- lowing would be changed 'that quickly. The important thing is that to intrude our defense-sponsored research into the foreign institutions harms our relations with the foreign nations. There was a specific example of this in Sweden last year. The Swedes protested the program we had paid their universi- ties to undertake. We know what has happened in Japan. We know about the violence originating In university circles in Chile when the Camelot was brought to light. In India last year, approximately a year ago, we remember what happened there. I have an article entitled "India Sus- pects U.S. Scholars," written by Bernard D. Nossiter, who is one of the most re- ceptive and able reporters the Washing- ton Post has. The article was published In the Washington Post of August 15, 1968. I read the first paragraph: American scholars in India are again sus- pect after parliamentary explosion here over a Himalayan research program supported by Defense Department funds. Here we have an actual injury to our relations because we intrude with De- fense Department funds into foreign academic research. What we are doing is driving friendly countries away from us. They certainly simply do not like it. I do not blame them for that. They do not wish to be an appendage of the Penta- gon. I think they are quite justified. I think that that item, which is $5.7 mil- lion, should be eliminated. I do not see any excuse for our going abroad and subsidizing these people. I assume that originally there was some idea that we might cultivate them and that they would be ingratiated and would respond. Domestically, when we give a contract to people, they usually respond and are appreciative of the money. Perhaps the specific professor who got the contract abroad might even have been apprecia- tive. However, on balance, the people in the institutions and in the country do not like it. It is bad policy. The PRESIDING OlenCER. The time of the Senator has expired. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I yield myself an additional 2 minutes. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from Arkansas is recognized for an additional 2 minutes. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed at this point in the RECORD the article to which I have just referred and also an article entitled "India Still Wary on U.S. Scholars," Written by Joseph Lelyveld, and published in the New York Times on August 14, 1968. There being no objection, the articles were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [From the Washington (D.C.) Post, Aug. 15, 1968] INDIA SUSPECTS U.S. SCHOLARS (By Bernard D. Nossiter) NEW DELHI, August 14?American scholars in India are again suspect after parliamen- tary explosion here over a Himalayan re- search program supported by Defense De- partment funds. The incident centers around the Himala- yan Border Countries (HBC), a project affili- ated with the University of California at Berkeley. The nature of the research ap- pears to be innocuous and of no military significance. But opposition politicians on the left and right have created a storm be- cause $282,000 is coming from the Pentagon. In reply to questions in Parliament last week, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi said she would "very carefully look into" the project. Her Minister of State for External Affairs, Bali Ram Baghat, said that the government views the program "with con- cern" and is "reviewing the advisability of permitting" it to continue. FOUNDATION ORDERED our India has already ordered the Asia Foun- dation here to pack up because it received ' money from the Central Intelligence Agency. In view of the rising wave of Indian national- ism, American researchers say they would not be surprised if the government now for- bade them to enter the sensitive Himalayan region near China and denied visas to scholars supported by military or intelligence money. The blowup was forecast last winter by a California professor of anthropology, Gerald 53. Berreman.. He resigned from the Hi- malayan project, writing its director, Leo Rose, a political scientist at Berkeley: "It seems unlikely that one would be per- mitted by the governments of host nations to pursue anthropological research (and pre- sumably most other social science research which takes place in the countryside) if it were known that the money came directly from the United States military establish- ment." OPPOSED TO VIET WAR Berreman also resigned on what he called moral grounds, citing his opposition to the war in Vietnam. He is now in India under a Fulbright-Hays fellowship, hoping to study urbanism in a northern city. Yesterday, offi- cials in the Ministry of External Affairs ques- tioned him about the Himalayan project. The program began in the late 1950s, sup- ported entirely by Ford Foundation money. When this source began drying up, Director Rose hunted up other outlets and found funds at the Defense Department's Advanced Research Project Agency, the Smithsonian Institution and elsewhere. The project has produced analyses of the relations between Tibet, India and China; the political system of Nepal; and other studies in linguistics, ethnology and anthro- pology. Berreman, who examined the Pentagon contract, says it places no curbs on the schol- ars. It enables them to choose their own projects and guarantees that none of their findings shall be classified. FOES IN PARLIAMENT The furor in Parliament was touched off by a member of the Revolutionary Socialist Party. Members of the Jana Sangh, a party of right-wing Hindu fanatics, and Communists suggested that the research is merely a cover for American espionage. The National Herald, a daily that usually reflects the government's line, said that per- mission for the scholars to work in the Hima- layas "should never have been approved by anyone alive to the nation's self-respect and security . . . Whichever organization in the United States finances it, research and in- telligence have been inextricably involved during the postwar period." Perhaps as a result of this affair, professors here say, there have been unusual delays in granting visas to other American researchers with grants from the Health, Education and Welfare Department's Fulbright-Hays pro- gram. Ironically, India appears to have dis- covered the military sponsorship of the Him- alayan project from hearings held last May by Sen. Fulbright's Committee on Foreign Relations. [From the New York Times, Aug. 14, 1968] INDIA STILL WARY ON U.S. SCHOLARS?. CONCERN OVER PENTAGON OR CIA IN- VOLVEMENT STRONG (By Joseph Lelyveld) ? NEW DELHI, August 13?Three months ago Prof. Gerald D. Berreman, a University of California anthropologist, applied for a visa to come to India for a year of research and teaching. Today he called at the External Af- fairs Ministry here to assure worried officials that he was not an operative of the Central Intelligence Agency. It is an assurance that Indian officials now feel they must have from all American schol- ars interested in their country. But there was a special irony in Professor Berreman's case Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 ReleaetialagiN?alt-EME036gEIVA920100001-3 S9740 Approved For August 12, 1969 Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. because he helped to start the controversy that made the Indians edgy. Last January he sent Senator J. W. Ful- bright, chairman of the Foreign Relations 'Committee, a copy of a letter he had written withdrawing from participation in a research project on the Himalayas. He felt that the project had been cendpromised by financial support from the Pentagon. The anthropologist Wryly describes himself as a wild-eyed opponent of the wax in Viet- nam. His letter explained that this was the basis of his "moral abler. lion" to taking the funds. It also cited what he termed a prac- tical objection?that the project and all other serious academic resejVcir by Americans in India could easily become controversial here as a result of the Defense Department's in- volvement Dr. Berreman, who later got a grant from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, discovered to his dismay how ac- curate his forecast was. In fact, the contro- versy that has blown up here has caused the Government to hold up on all visa applica- tions from Americans with any kind of aca- demic pursuit. Indians became conscious of the Penta- gon's support of scholarly research only a few weeks ago, when there were press reports of Congressional testimony by Adm. Hyman G. Rickover before Mr. Pulbright's committee. The outcry in Parliament was immediate. One member charged that the Pentagon and C.I.A. were busy infilhating spies into the Himalayas, not only as scholars but also as artists, bird-watchers and yogis. Privately, Inidan officials say they do not really suspect the scholar:, of being spies. But they make it clear that research underwrit- ten by the Pentagon has no future here. COOPERATION IN etlE PAST This is also ironic, for India's own Ministry of Defense has cooperated in the past with the Advanced Research Project Agency, which gave the Himalayan projek t a grant of $280,- 000. As Professor Berreman e ,plains it, the proj- ect was not an integrated program of re- search but a pot-pourri of diverse studies in several disciplines thrown together for the specific purpose of attracting funds. The anthropologist, who wrote an article last February for The Ne Lion decrying the "moral imperialism" of the Peace Corps,w as asked whether there was any clear moral dif- ference between taking money from the De- fense Department and taking it from the De- partment of Health, Educe tion and Welfare. "Oh, I know I can't be entirely consistent," he replied. "If I were to be entirely con- sistent, I wouldn't 134q my taxes and I wouldn't be teachin,; at the Uni- versity of California. Its not consistency that I want but impact?in the form of opposi- tion to the war." Professor Berreman, who is here on a two- month tourist visa now, hopes to return next month to do a study of urbanization in Deb- ra Dun, a town near the Himalayas but not in them. The author of a book called "Hindus of the Himalayas," he Atomised the officials he saw today that he would not try to do any further research in the mountains. Among others waiting for action on their visas are a dozen graduates of professional schools at the University of California who should already have arrived here for a year of further studies. A University of Wisconsin student of linguistics who Ed hoped to study Tibetan and Sanskrit in Darjeeling has been asked to move from the Himalayan resort to Benares. American officials say they are not unduly alarmed by the difficulties the scholars are meeting. "Remember," one said, "we've had i our moments of xenophobia and obscurant- ism too." Mr. HART. Mr. President, in the course of the discussion it has been sug- gested that there are certain research projects which more appropriately could be undertaken by other agencies and de- partments of the Government. How- ever, they are not doing it. The Defense Department is. Without the Senator's amendment, some of these worthwhile things would terminate. A willingness to assist in the transfer from the Defense Department to department X has been voiced. I ask the Senator if it is not true that If there are projects of a research na- ture which are trimmed back by agree- ment to the Senator's amendmdnt, proj- ects which are thought to be worthy as research projects, there is on the Senate calendar a bill to authorize appropria- tions for activities of the National Sci- ence Foundation. That bill in regular order will follow the disposition of this bill by the Senate. I know of no way in which we can operate here as jugglers. We will have to take a stand here at some time, and I hope that it is now. We will have to say no to some of these rather esoteric and certainly not directly defense-related re- search projects and cut them off and, happily, we are in a point of time in relation to the Senate bill in which the measures that will follow have value, and something may be picked up in the following bill. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I yield myself an additional 5 minutes. Mr. HART. We are ready to make the transfer. However, before we are in a po- sition to be able to transfer, we have to saw off the defense from that kind of research. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I agree with what the Senator says I am a cosponsor with the Senator from Okla- homa of a measure to create a founda- tion for research in the behaviorial sciences. That would be a perfectly prop- er place to transfer these behavioral projects, assuming that they are good projects. Mr. HART. Mr. President, that bill will follow the pending bill. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I agree with the Senator. I think that his Point is well taken. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have printed at this point in the RECORD for the information of the Sen- ate a list of a number of particular in- stitutions. This one is for the fiscal year 1968 from the Department of Defense. It gives the name of the contractor and loca- tion and the amount of money for the fiscal year 1968. I also ask unanimous consent to have printed at this point in the RECORD for Project Themis, a list of the universities that consist of both private and public universities. The list gives the funding for 1967, 1968, and 1969. That, of course, s the latest we have. I.do this to show how extensive is the intrusion of the Defense Department into Practically all of the important institutions of the United States. Mr. HART. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? This again goes too far and lends cre- dence to the allegations of those who say that we are becoming a militaristic nation and that our civilian government and civilian life is being subordinated to the overwhelming influence of the military. There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: SECTION Il?NONPROFIT INSTITUTIONS, FISCAL YEAR 1961 lExcerpt from Department of Defense listing of 500 contractor according to net value of mtary prime contract awards to research, development, test, mid evaluation work] Rank Name of contractor and location Thousand: of dollar 10 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. _ _ _ _ 119, 17! Cambridge, Mass - 31, 66, Lexington, Mass 87, 51. 20 Aerospace Corp 73, 33, El Segundo, Calif 73, 30 San Bernardino, Calf 3: 22 Johns Hopkins University 57, 61 Baltimore City, Md 2,71 Silver Spring, Md 54,90 -- 30 Mitre Corp., Bedford, Mass 35,71 36 Stanford Research Institute 28, 71 Ethiopia _ 19 Thailand 5 Homer Village, Alaska 1 Menlo Park, Calif__ 27,60 Stanford, Calif ....1. 32 Mercury, NeV 43 Cheyenne, Wyo- 7 40 Rand Corp., Santa Monica, Calif 19,13! 44 California, University of 17,39, Berkeley, Calif 5,76; D3Vis, Calif 12-i Irvine, Calif 61 La Jolla, Calif 5, 51( Los Angeles, Calif 1, 471 Point Mugu, Calif 12 Riverside, Galif 89 San Diego, Calif 3, 182 San Francisca, Calif_ 256 Santa Barbara, CaliL 870 Santa Cruz, Calif44 ? -., , 45 System Development Corp 17,372 Huntsville, Ala 414 Lompoc, Calif 700 Los Angeles, Calif_ 61 Santa Monica, Calif 13, 120 Washington, D.0 863 Belleville, Ill 350 Lexington, Mass 375 Rome, N.Y 191 Dayton, Ohio 303 Falls Church, Va 1, 226 Hampton, Va 234 Norfolk, Va 35 46 Stanford University 1 ,422 Palo Afto, Calif 218 Stanford, Calif 1 ,204 51 Rochester, University of Rochester, N.Y....._ 13,182 55 Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, Inc 12, 500 57 60 64 65 Edwards, Calif 86 Buffalo, N.Y 11, 889 Wright-Patterson, Ohio 37 Fails Church, Va 448 ITT Research Institute 12,172 Chicago, III 7,017 Annapolis, Md 5,130 Wright-Patterson, Ohio.. 25 Institute for Defense Analysis, Arlington, Va 11,691 Pennsylvania Sate University, University Park, Pa 10,513 Research Analysis Corp 10,967 Iran 155 Vietnam 880 McLean, Va 9,273 Various &mettle ?241 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12, 1969 APPr?vet6gditigiNteM414/119M3DICart-RINOTIM00001-3 S 9741 364R0003001 SECTION II-NONPROFIT INSTITUTIONS, FISCAL YEAR SECTION II-NONPROFIT INSTITUTIONS, FISCAL YEAR 1968-Continued 1968-Continued SECTION II-NONPROFIT INSTITUTIONS, FISCAL YEAR 1968-Continued Rank Name of contractor and location Thousands ot dollars Rank Name of contractor and location 66 Columbia University, New York, N.Y 70 Michigan, University of Honolulu City, Hawaii 1,600 Ann Arbor, Mich 6,947 Willow Run, Mich 734 Ypsilanti, Mich 197 71 Illinois, University of Chicago, Ill Urbana, Ill 72 Battelle Memorial Institute Germany_ _ _ Washington, 13.0 Columbus, Ohio Richland, Wash 78 U.S. National Aero Space Agency Edwards, Calif Moffett Field, Calif Pasadena, Calif Washington, D.0 Houston, Tex Ridgeley, W. Va Thousands of dollars Rank Name of contractor and location 9,929 147 Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pa 9,478 151 Harvard University Boston, Mass Cambridge, Mass Fort Davis, Tex 153 Minnesota, University of, Minneapolis, 8,583 Minn - 154 California Institute of Technology, Paso- 89 dena, Calif 8,494 155 Texas A. & M. Research Foundation, College Station, Tex 8,322 156 Purdue Research Foundation 85 Riverside Research Institute, New York, N.Y_ 92 Washington, University of, Seattle, Wash_ 94 Texas, University of 57 114 8,036 115 Lafayette, Ind West Lafayette, Ind 160 New York University Thousands of dollars 2,575 254 Smithsonian Institution 1,082 2, 524 Washington, D.0 1,067 182 Cambridge, Mass 15 2,182 160 260 Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind 1,044 261 Kansas, University of 1,044 2,507 2,487 2,475 2,455 2,442 13 Kansas City, Kans 18 Lawrence, Kans 1,026 262 American Institute of Research 1,038 Palo Alto, Calif 93 Silver Spring, Md 145 Camp Lejeune, N.0 54 Pittsburgh, Pa 746 2,304 265 Case Western Reserve University, Cleve- land, Ohio 8,011 266 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N.Y.. 1,001 267 U.S. Atomic Energy Commission ' 995 7,026 Bronx, N.Y 731 - New York, N.Y 1,513 25 Syracuse, N.Y 25 40 University Heights, N.Y 35 19 77 167 Maryland University of 2,100 155 6,710 Baltimore City, Md 703 College Park, Md 1,397 6,315 5,552 5,386 Alamogordo, N. Mex 10 Austin, Tex 4, 598 College Station, Tex 68 Dallas, Tex 43 El Paso, Tex 502 Galveston, Tex 135 Houston, Tex 30 96 Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Woods 5,143 Hole, Mass. ' 175 105 Utah, University of 4,356 181 182 ' Dugway, Utah 283 Salt Lake City, Utah 4,073 107 Syracuse University Research Corp 4,172 Burlington, Mass 94 Syracuse, N.Y 4,078 117 Dayton, University of 3,610 Dayton, Ohio 3,358 Wright-Patterson, Ohio 252 118 Cornell University 3,595 Arecibo, P.R 1,585 Ithaca, N.Y 1,949 New York, N.Y 61 123 George Washington University 3,306 Washington, D.0 3,295 Alexandria, Va 11 128 Southwest Research Institute 3,149 Wright-Patterson, Ohio 226 Dallas, Tex 35 San Antonio, Tex 2,888 131 Denver, University of, Denver, Colo 2,902 133 Ohio State University Research Foundation_ 2,958 Columbus, Ohio 2,686 Wright-Patterson, Ohio 272 134 American University, Washington, D C 2,944 229 138 National Academy of Sciences 2,838 234 Washington, D.0 2,756 Watertown, Mass 47 National Academy of Sciences, Dover, NJ_ 35 139 Duke University, Durham, N.0 2,012 235 140 New Mexico State University Alamogordo, N. Mex 24 Las Cruces, N. Mex 640 University Park, N. Mex 1,612 White Sands MS., N. Mex 511 143 Alaska, University of, College Village, Alaska 2,695 146 Miami, University of 2,602 Coral Gables, Fla 1,141 248 Miami, Fla 1,461 252 172 New Mexico, University of 1,906 Albuquerque, N. Mex Sandia; N. Mex 174 New York State University of Washington, D.0 175 Germantown, Md 39 Las Vegas, Nev 270 U.S. Atomic Energy Commission Albuquerque, N. Mex 451 Oak Ridge, Tenn 40 Richland, Wash 20 934 1,052 268 Illinois Institute Technology, Chicago, III__ 988 270 U.S. Commerce Department 985 1,982 Boulder, Colo 540 Albany, N.Y 1,538 Washington, D.0 324 Buffalo, N.Y 318 Gaithersburg, Md 46 New York, N.Y 115 Rockville, Md 10 Stony Brook, N.Y 11 Suitland, Md 65 1,969 271 Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N.J 983 Oregon State University, Corvallis, Dreg--- _ Florida, University of, Gainesville, Fla Princeton University, Princeton, N.J 184 Midwest Research Institute Kansas City, Mn Wright-Patterson, Ohio 186 Louisiana State University of, Baton Rouge, La 188 Georgia Tech Research Institute, Atlanta, Ga 195 Stevens Institute of Technology 1, 842 273 Southern Research Institute, Birmingham, 1,803 Ala 965 275 Colorado University 964 1,762 - - Boulder, Colo 706 1,615 Denver, Colo 258 147 277 Northeastern University, Boston, Mass 952 279 Washington University, St. Louis, City Me_ . 933 1,754 281 Brown University, Providence, R.I 932 282 Pittsburgh, University of 921 1, 596 Washington, D.0 195 Pittsburgh, Pa 726 Hoboken, N.J 1, 559 New York, N.Y 197 WisconsinAniversity of, Madison, Wis 204 Hawaii, University of Honolulu City, Hawaii 210 Analytic Services Inc., Falls Church, Va 212 Cincinnati, University of Cincinnati, Ohio_ _ _ 214 Oklahoma State University of Stillwater, Oklahoma. 218 Iowa, State Univ of Science and Technology, Ames, Iowa. 219 Chicago, University of Chicago, III Lemont, III 222 Florida State University, Tallahassee, Fla _ 225 Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colo_ 226 Kansas State University of Agriculture, Manhattan, Kans. 228 Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, N.Y 1,274 Farmingdale, N.Y 30 Catholic University of America, Washington, 1,304 D.C. Research Triangle Institute 1,254 2,707 236 37 293 Missouri, University of 876 1,591 Columbia, Mo 798 1, 568 Kansas City, Mo 50 1,495 Rolla, Mo 28 1,446 1,422 296 Notre Dame, University of, Notre Dame, Ind _ 855 297 Oregon, University of 846 1,372 Eugene, Oreg 531 1,360 Portland, Dreg 315 1,320 298 Oklahoma, University of 840 40 Fort Sill, Okla 100 1,338 Norman, Okla 335 1,329 Oklahoma City, Okla 405 1,321 309 Virginia, University of, Charlottesville, Va 787 1, 304 316 Tennessee, University of 751 Iran Durham, N.0 Triangle Park, N.0 Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta, Ga. New Mexico Institute Mining and Technol- ogy. China Lake, Calif Socorro, N. Mex 238 Syracuse University Syracuse, N.Y Utica, N.Y Pennsylvania, University of Philadelphia, Pa Rhode Island, University of, Kingston, R.I_ Knoxville, Tenn 520 Menphis, Tenn 64 Tullahoma, Tenn 167 317 Southern California, University of 749 Los Angeles, Calif 735 296 San Diego, Calif 14 606 352 319 Southern Methodist, University of, Dallas, Tex 735 1,220 321 Delaware, University of, Newark. Del 732 8,218 325 Georgetown University, Washington, D.C_. _ 714 328 Yale University 709 200 1,018 New Haven, Conn 684 Alamogordo, N. Mex - 25 1,197 334 Houston, University of, Houston, Tex 680 1,184 338 Auburn University, Auburn, Ala 657 13 339 University Corp. Atmospheric Research 655 Boulder, Colo -40 1,125 Sunspot, II. Mex 695 1,084 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9742 Approved For ReleaSeaglitilsgfaNW-Rp8511490_aes4L45193p0100001-3 Augusl 12, 1939 SECTION II?NONPROFIT INSTITUTIONS, FISCM. YEAR SECTION II?NONPROFIT INSTITUTIONS, FISCAL YEAR 1968?Continued 1968?Continued Thousands Rank Name of contractor and location of dollars 341 Dartmouth College, Hantiiir, N H ____ ____ 652 342 Arizona State University, emple, Ariz_ 649 348 American Society for Engineering, Wash- ington, D.0 621 351 Lowell Technical Institute 618 --- _ ? Billerica, Mass_ 40 Lowell, Mass 578 ? 0 352 Lovelace Foundation, Allhiuerque, N. Mex_ 613 354 Ohio University,Athens Jo 608 358 Northwestern liniversity,Iyaastos, Ill 590 357 American Institute for Reieatch 569 -- Washington, D.0 26 Pittsburgh, Pa 481 370 Mississippi State Universtr, 'alate College, Miss .. 564 371 Travelers Research Center Hartford, Conn__ 561 376 North Carolina State Untyamity, Raleigh, _ N. r C " 551 388 Massachusetts, University ot _ 511 --- - ? Amherst, Mass 493 Waltham, Mass 18 ---- - Rank Name of contractor and location Thousands of dollars 390 Arizona, University of, Tucson, Ariz__ 504 396 National Society Professional Engineers, Washington, D.0 493 418 Michigan State, University, East Lansing, 464 Mich. 427 Boston College 455 Chestnut Hill, Mass 318 Weston, Mass 137 . _ 428 South Dakota School of Mines and Tech- 454 I . . 444 Nevada, University of Reno, Neu 446 Flight Safety Foundation, Phoenix, Ariz ._ 462 North Carolina, University of, Chapel Hill, N.C. 464 U.S. Interior Department___ _ SECTION II?NONPROFIT INSTITUTIONS, FISCAL YEAR 1968?Continued Rank Name of contractor and location Thousands of dollars 468 Tufts University 380 ---- -- Boston, Mass 41 Medford, Mass 339 _ 478 Arctic Institute of North America._ 35:4 Canada_ _ 75 Washington, D.C___ 279 479 Alabama, University of... 351 426 Birmingham, Ala 176 423 Hontsville, Ala_ 102 390 University, Ala _ 73 aga 483 Utah State University of Agriculture Cccl applied science 344 Denver, Col 50 Washington, D.0 37 Bartlesville, Okla 85 Albany, Oreg Pittsburgh, Pa 165 467 Presbyterian Hospital, Chicago, III_ 384 Bedford, Mass------------- 62 Logan, Utah 82 485 Iowa, State University of, Iowa City, Iowa _ 342 487 Lehigh University, Bethleham, Pa 241 Total . 665.35 PROJECT THEMIS The list shows all the Themis piojects funded through fiscal year 1969. The original 4-year plan called for 50 new starts for each of fiscal years 1967,. 1968, 1989, and 1970 for a total of 200 programs. During the first 3 years only 118 of the planned 150 new starts were approved. The fiscal year 1970 budget request for $33 million provides tor (1) 25 additional new projects lobe started during fiscal year 1970 which would require $10 million, and (2) the renewal of the ongoing Themis programs which would require $23 million. PROJECT THEMIS PROGRAMS?FUNDING BY FISCAL YEARS ($1,000) Military Department State and institution Alabama: A Auburn University Al University of Alabama A Alaska: University of Alaska Arizona: N Arizona State_ AF Do AF University of Arizona AF University of Arizona at Tucson California: AF University of California, San Diego' N University of Cilifornia, Riverside Colorado: N Colorado State_ N Colorado State. AF Colorado State at Fort Collins_ Connecticut: University of Connecticut__ _ AF Delaware: A University of Delaware N University of Delaware at Newark _ _ District of Columbia: AF Georgetown University. N Catholic University _ N Catholic University N Catholic University Florida: Al University of Florida A University of Florida N Florida State_ A Florida State__ N Florida State Georgia: A Georg ?Tech. Al Georgia Tech N University of Geo iia at Athens.. Hawaii: N University of Hawaii Al University of Hawaii A University of Hawaii at Honolulu Illinois: Al Illinois Institute of technology. A Illinois Institute of Technology at Chicago Indiana: Al Indiana University N Notre Dame University Iowa: N Iowa State. Al do_ A University of Iowa N _do Kansas: A University of Kansas Al do Al Kansas State N do Al University of Kentucky A Kentucky University at Lexington Al do A University of Louisville Louisiana: A Louisiana State_. AF do Kentucky: Program topic Information processing Structural mechanics Human ecology Human performance in isolation Detection devices, techniques and theory Precision optical systems X-ray and XUV radiation physics Transport phenomena in flow systems Solar radiation effects Tropical weather disturbances, surface effects Predictability of low-altitude winds_ Effects of environment on sensors Structural fatigue Fluid mechanics and heat transfer _ Oceanography Laser technology Vitreous state structure and dynamics Dynamics of cable systems Underwater acoustics Solid state materials Logistics and information processing Geophysical fluid dynamics Prediction of tropical weather phenomena_ Computer aided instruction Low-speed aerodynamic Interface phenomena Statistical analysis and information retrieval Astronomy research On-line computer systems Vector-borne tropical diseases V-STOL aerodynamics Degradation of structural materials . Environmental hazards Deep sea engineering Automatic navigation and control Ceramic and composite materials Vibration and stability ot military vehicles . Application and theory of automata Remote sensing instrumentation Social and behavioral science Performance in altered environment_ Nuclear radiation effects on electronic components Fiscal year Fiscal year 1967 1968 343 404 380 171 202 ... 190 -- 409 409 398 200 500 430 410 563 281 404 400 340 600 202 386 402 200 170 300 500 460 339 170 350 195 350 175 409 409 400 198 400 200 400 449 400 400 400 Metal deformation processing Research in electrochemical processes Environmental stress physiology Performance assessment and enhancement Infectious and communicable diseases Digital automata 200 224 500 400 200 200 200 577 468 399 342 171 368 400 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Fiscal year 1969 120 400 200 203 460 522 400 250 215 400 205 280 480 202 193 201 500 200 170 350 250 230 170 200 215 220 205 400 205 400 200 200 200 225 750 200 200 200 200 288 204 460 400_ 200 170 200 Approved F ..etli**9431000A4111131COCRD-RDIRENME64R000300100001-3 August 1Z, 1969 PROJECT THEWS PROGRAMS?FUNDING BY FISCAL YEARS ($1,000)?Continued S9743 Military Department State and institution Program topic Fiscal year Fiscal irz 1967 Massachusetts: N University of Massachusetts Deep sea structures N Boston College Elementary chemical kinetics Michigan: AF Michigan State University at East Lansing Behavioral studies Minnesota: N University of Minnesota Infrared detector and laser technology N Gas turbine technology N __ do Organization performance and human effectiveness Mississippi: A Mississippi State Rotor and propeller aerodynamics AF University of Mississippi Biocontrol systems Missouri: A University of Missouri at Columbia_ Fluid transport properties N University of Missouri at Rolla Aqueous aerosols in atmospheric processes AF do Basic studies on electronic materials A do Terrestrial science research AF Washington University at St. Louis Control, guidance and information studies AF ___do_ Optimum detection systems AF Nevada: University of Nevada Cloud physics - AF New Hampshire: Dartmouth College Time-shared computing systems New Jersey: AF Rutgers University Fluid flow aerodynamics N Stevens Institute Nonlinear physics of polymers A do Cryogenic sciences and engineering A do .. Evaluation of terrain vehicle systems New Mexico: N New Mexico Institute M. & T Environmental sciences N University of New Mexico Radiation effects on electronics New York: AF SUNY-Albany Modification of environment N SUNY-Buffalo Environmental physiology A Rensselaer Polytechnic Electrochemical power sources N __do Radiation effects A __do Optimum digital signal processing N Yeshiva University, New York City Research on thin film materials North Carolina: North Carolina State Materials response phenomena Digital encoding systems North Dakota: A North Dakota State Control of vectors of diseases of military importance N University of North Dakota High pressure physiology Ohio: A Case-Western Reserve Research in R. & D. management A Ohio University Low-level navigation Kent State University Liquid crystal detectors University of Cincinnati Internal aerodynamics in air-breathing engines Oklahoma: A Oklahoma State Electronic description of the environment N University of Oklahoma Mechanism and theory of shock N Oregon: Oregon State On-line computer environmental research Pennsylvania: A Drexel Institute of Technology Powder metallurgy AF do Forecasting by satellite observations N Jefferson Medical College Pathogenesis of acute diarrhea! disease A Lehigh University Nonlinear wave propagation N _do Low-cycle fatigue in joined structures N do Fluid amplification N Hahnemann Medical College Bioamines in stress A Rhode Island: Rhode Island University at Kingston___ Photoelectronic imaging devices - A South Carolina: Medical College of South Carolina Resuscitation and treatment of wounded N South Dakota: South Dakota School of Mines Modification of convective clouds AF AF A Tennessee: 0 University of Tennessee at Knoxville AF _do AF A A A A A AF A AF AF A AF A Fiscal year 1969 360 180 380 190 400 200 278 139 409 446 400 399 460 400 324 342 406 370 399 600 199 290 200 162 171 460 180 440 400 190 200 415 140 204 220 200 400 400 400 400 250 290 162 170 200 203 268 185 185 199 300 460 .430 400 300 407 482 580 200 350 230 215 400 390 200 200 396 200 393 197 527 263 150 200 410 400 241 405 290 510- 408 390 400 400 Dynamic sealing Remote sensor research - University of Tennessee at Tullahoma MHD power generation Vanderbilt University Coating science and technology Texas: Texas A. & M Optimization research __do Meteorology research Aircraft dynamics of subsonic flight Texas Christian Human pattern perception University of Houston Information processing Rice University Coherent and incoherent EM radiation do ' Remote sensing of gamma ray signatures Southern Methodist Automatic navigation ..do Statistics in calibration methods Texas Tech Performance and man-machine effectiveness Ai Utah: University of Utah Chemistry of combustion Vermont: University of Vermont Isolation and sensory communication Virginia: University of Virginia Learning control systems do Atomic interaction in gases do Cryogenic instrumentation Virginia Polytechnic, Blackburg Vehicle engineering and control V/STOL aerodynamics West Virginia: West Virginia University Total 368 260 130 300 400 430 272 380 150 408 400 550 200 215 388 100 190 350 400 398 200 502 470 200 410 342 171 408 416 150 200 205 200 240 202 290 255 204 195 200 200 400 520 400 184 100 150 204 200 275 155 215 194 135 190 175 400 200 296 235 200 255 170 200 400 400 208 19,375 28,180 29,239 Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, if it is convenient to the Senator from Arkan- sas, would he be willing to allow the Senator from Massachusetts to speak at this time. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, that is agreeable. I yield to the Senator from Massachusetts. Mr. STENNIS. If the Senator from New Hampshire will yield time, Mr. Pres- ident? Mr. Mc1NTYRE. I yield 12 minutes to the distinguished Senator from Massa- chusetts. Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, if I may take a somewhat different approach to the proposal as set forth by the Sen- ator from Arkansas, let me first say that the policy and general philosophy as set forth by the Senator's proposal was shared and was considered by the Subcommittee on Research and Develop- ment of the Committee on Armed Serv- ices, under the able leadership of the distinguished Senator from New Hamp- shire. In fact, it is in keeping with the policy as mandated to that subcommit- tee by the distinguished Chairman of the Armed Services Committee, the Senator from Mississippi. So the matters which the Senator from Arkansas raises are matters which the committee had before it in its deliberations and in its final decision, in its report to the full Armed Services Committee. Mr. President, I should like to analyze very briefly the contentions of the Sen- ator from Arkansas and then conclude by proposing certain questions to the Senator from Arkansas which I trust he will answer and which may be helpful in this debate. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9744 Approved For Rele tifig4HIAftRATIM3 - gEN AB003RAPOM00100001-3 Attguat 12, 1969 Mr. STE/sINIS. Mr. President, may we have order, so that those of us who wish to hear may do so? The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. RELLMON in the chair). The Senate will be in order. Mr. BROOKE. The Senator from Arkansas proposes a $45.6 million cut, in- cluding a 10-percent, or $27 million, cut in Federal contract research centers; a $2 million, or one-third, cut in research by foreign institutions; a 20-percent, or $5 million, cut in project Agile, counter- insurgency work, which includes largely technological work, not just social and behavioral research; $3 million from other social science research; and $8 million, or 25 percent, from project The- mis, a program for university research. If the Department of Defense distrib- utes the committee's 12-percent cut in the research budget evenly across all categories, the Federal contract research centers will be reduced by more than Senator FULBRIGHT has proposed. All the categories that the Senator has men- tioned are subject to the large cut the committee has imposed already, unless the Defense Department considers them of such high priority that other pro- grams are reduced disproportionately. Moreover, social and behavioral re- search on foreign military environments and policy planning studies are specifi- cally cited by the committee as an area to be reduced by 12 Percent or by $1.5 million of the $13.3 million, and by the recommended transfer of approximately $4 million in projects to other agencies with responsibility in these areas. For ex- ample, some policy planning studies might go to State, ACDA, and AID; and some more basic research might go to the National Science roundation. Work in these areas already has been reduced by approximately 11 percent since fiscal 1968 and by the effects of inflation, which the Senator has not mentioned, and which I am sure he would want to take into consideration. Thus, a thorough pruning of work in this area is already assured by the com- mittee's action. Apparently, Senator FULBRIGHT has several concerns: allegedly worthless re- search; defense connections with the universities; the SUPPOSed hazards of do- ing research under defense auspices in foreign countries, on the assumption that it may lead to engaging in military ac- tion there at some time. Mr. President, many knowledgeable people agree that some of the research Involved might better be carried out un- der other auspices, and the committee has provided for this. But unless the State Department and other agencies obtain greater authorizations, this of course, will be impossible. Thus, the effect of adopting the Ful- bright amendment simply would be to reduce further what is widely recog- nized as an inadequate national effort in social and behavioral research. Surely, we should first seek to create better me- chanisms for funding work in this gen- eral field before we trim the limited ef- fort already underway. If it is insisted that all Defense re- search must be strictly tied to DOD mis- sions, we would have to cut out all basic research in physical sciences as well. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. BROOKE. I yield. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Did the Senator hear the Senator from Michigan state a moment ago that on the calendar is the National Science Foundation authoriza- tion, and it will be up very soon, and we could authorize an increase to be taken up?all the items about which the Sena- tor is talking? Assuming that they are justifiable research contracts, it would be a much more appropriate way to do it, it would seem to me. That bill is al- ready on the calendar. May I also say to the Senator that I told the Senate a moment ago?I do not know whether he heard it?that a dele- gation from one of the most prestigious Institutions in the country, and certainly in his State of Massachusetts, waited on me with respect to the problem of the instrusion of the military. They are not antimilitary. They simply were making the point that they hated to see MIT be- come dominated or too dependent, I will say, upon a military appropriation. I be- lieve that MIT last year had $119,175,000. This is an awful lot of money. In one sense, of course, it is a great compliment to MIT. These students, I was told by the professor who brought them, were among the best students they had. They were not dropouts; they were not in that sense. They were serious, very intelligent young men who did not wish to see MIT be con- sidered just a kind of dependency of the Pentagon. They had great pride in MIT's reputation as one of theworld's technological institutions. Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I am sorry about it. I would have thought that the Senator, too, would be interested in preserving the great reputation of Harvard and MIT as among the leading educational institu- tions in the world. It was a great shock to me?and I think to the entire coun- try?to suddenly see an eruption on the campus of Harvard University, the oldest and I would say probably the most re- spected institution in America. I cannot, of course, prove that it was just because of this. Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I think it contrib- uted to it. Mr. BROOKE. If the Senator would yield, I would say that that was caused primarily by ROTC, not defense research, of which the Senator is well aware. There may have been some contribution. But I was about to say, before the Senator asked his question, that universities themselves are in the process of gaining better control of defense research pro- grams. I had a conversation recently with James Killian and Howard Johnson of MIT. They are well aware of this prob- lem. What the Senator has said relative to the students at MIT is certainly shared by members of the faculty and of the administration. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Yes. Mr. BROOKE. They are aware of the problem, and they are trying to get on top of the problem, and I think we should give them an opportunity. I might also point out that the De- fense Department is cooperating in seek- ing better balance and in reducing classi- fied research to a minimum. These things are ongoing at the present time, as the Senator very well points out. Of course, I am interested in main- taining the integrity of MIT, Harvard, and the other institutions of higher learning in the Commonwealth and throughout the country; but I think these programs are now being given close scrutiny by the administration and the faculty as well as the student body. Mr. FULBRIGHT. If the Senator will permit me, I should like to read an AP dispatch from Washington dated May 15, 1969: Dr. John Foster, the Pentagon's research chief, told a Congressional committee Wednesday that he saw "no evidence of major adverse impact from student demonstrations against defense research at universities." Mr. President, I submit that Dr. Foster is just out of touch with the situation in this country. And it was not just Har- vard. I mentioned Harvard because it is such a great institution. Mr. BROOKE. The Senator mentioned Harvard specifically. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator will re- call that at Berkeley, which is certainly also one of the great institutions, where there was a very clear protest about the participation at the university in IDA. The some situation prevailed at Cornell and at one university after another. I am not saying it is the only thing. The war is probably the greatest single contribu- tor, but they were also protesting about the participation of the university in IDA. There are many aspects to it. It is not just the military. In many cases it takes the attention and time of their leading pro- fessors to go off on these highly paid re- search projects and leave the teaching of the students. In other wilds, the stu- dents are being shortchanged. I know they are correct because the attention and time of the finest university profes- sors in many cases are directed and siphoned off in very large contracts that are given them. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have the article to which I referred printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: FOSTER BACKS U.S. RESEARCH AT UNIVERSITIES WasunvoroN.?Dr. John Foster, the Penta- gon's research chief, told a congressional committee Wednesday that he saw "no evi- dence of major adverse impacts" from stu- dent demonstrations against defense re- search at universities. Defending the research program, Foster said, "I hope you will not be misled by those who suggest that * * ? academic research [supported by the Defense Department] rep- resents a sort of sandbox for scholars, ir- relevant to defense missions, unproductive technically and, worst of all, inimical to the best interests of universities. It is more fundamental. "It is the great national advantage we possess because we are able to bring together essentially independent and well-informed people?from government, industries and Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 1R, 1969APProved F erCgtettgs2RNAFibcWt-Bg_'4itppCt4R000300100001-3 S 9745 universities?over long periods for voluntary work on our tough prOblems. This is the core of our capacity for technological superiority," As for demonstrations directed at Penta- gon research, Foster renewed his argument of a year that responsibility for dealing with them should be left with university adminis- trations. While Foster regarded "some of the current turmoil as irresponsible action," he added, "I still have confidence in the ability of the academic community, in the aggregate, to cope ultimately with the situation." Foster warned against congressional effort to curb such research at universities where demonstrations have taken place, saying, "We must not run the risk of eroding nation- ally important research by precipitate puni- tive action against features of university life that are essential to our future." The PRESIDING Or.VICER. The time of the Senator has expired. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, how much time do I have remaining? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator has 27 minutes remaining. Mr. McINTYRE. I yield 5 minutes to the Senator from Massachusetts. Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, I would appreciate it if the Senator from Arkan- sas would allow me a little time. I think the colloquy was very helpful and I am grateful to him for joining in. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I would be glad to do so. Mr. BROOKE. I think this is a healthy trend and creates an awareness on the part of the administration, the faculty, and the members of the student body. The Senator referred to Dr. Foster. Mr. FULBRIGHT. But he is not aware of it. Mr. BROOKE. He is not aware of it. Mr. FULBRIGHT. But he is the head of research. Mr. BROOKE. I think the Depart- ment of Defense is aware of the neces- sity for gaining better control of de- fense research on campuses. Mr. FULBRIGHT. But this is the man who hands out the money. That is the trouble. Mr. BROOKE. But he said this is not caused by defense contracts with the uni- versities. I think he is attributing this to the war in Vietnam and the chemical problems and, as we are all aware,. the ROTC matter. Mr. FULBRIGHT. They all contribute. I agree that no one thing does it; they all contribute. Mr. BROOKE. It is a healthy trend, but to carry it so far that university ties are severed would be, in my opinion, a very unwise move. Mr. FULBRIGHT. By my amendment we would not sever them. Mr. BROOKE. I think it would de- prive the universities of work on national defense. I am sure the Senator would agree that it would weaken one of our best guarantees that open and objective research and counsel, not alleged pres- sures of a "military-industrial" complex are shaping the defense policy. I am sure the Senator would agree that thus, uni- versities themselves should determine whether and under what circumstances they should engage in defense research. This is a matter we should leave up to the universities and not something we should establish as a matter of policy or mandate. Such programs should not be terminated by congressional fiat. Defense-sponsored social science re- search abroad is already down by 70 per- cent since fiscal 1968 and all proposals are now subject to thorough interagency review under State Department auspices. It is a highly dubious and antiintellic- tual proposition to assume that research on foreign areas somehow increases like- lihood of U.S. military involvement. With all due respect, I do not believe that is SO. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. BROOKE. I yield. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The point I was making is that the intrusion of our mili- tary into university life is offensive and it creates ill will. I believe there is evi- dence of it in the articles which I have had printed in the RECORD. I was not making the point we were more likely to become militarily involved, Mr. BROOKE. It could just as well de- crease it as increase it. Whether we involve ourselves mili- tarily is a matter of policy, not research, and that policy can be most wisely shaped if careful preliminary research is done. The reports subnlitted by the Senator from Arkansas yesterday, in my opinion, are hardly the whole story. Out of such policy studies have come many of the fundamental concepts and programs on which national security rests. Concepts and rationale of stable deter- rents, the first strike, second strike dis- tinction, the rationale for security through arms control rather than arms competition, the most informed critics of MIRV and ABM, have all been in- fluenced importantly by work done on these research efforts. Economies are also realized. Overseas bomber bases were reduced at savings of billions of dollars a year after studies in the midfifties revealed their vulner- ability to missile attack. These and other savings grew out of such analysis as the Senator from Arkansas attacks so cate- gorically, analysis costing only a pittance of the savings from the basic studies alone. If there is waste, payoffs from such research are sometimes so great as to . compensate many times over, especially in view of the relatively small fraction of the budget in these categories. It is also utterly misleading for the Senator from Arkansas to assert that no one knows the cost of studies he cites. As the letter of July 24, 1969, from the Department of Defense, printed in the RECORD at the request of the Senator from Arkansas at pages S9621?S9622, in- dicates, the cost of individual reports are not easily determined, but the costs of projects, from which many reports may emerge, are know. The costs of the projects from which the Senator from Arkansas has selected certain reports to question are specified by the Department as $11,530,408 over a period of 15 years. Many of the concerns voiced by the Senator from Arkansas are shared by a number of us. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired. Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I may proceed for 2 additional minutes. Mr. McINTYRE. I yield 2 minutes to the Senator. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Massachusetts is recog- nized for 2 additional minutes. Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, that is why the Subcommittee on Research and Development and the Committee on Armed Services took strong action in these several areas. However, the com- mittee's action is more than sufficient. Indeed; many observers will fear that too much damage has been done to the defense research effort by the reduction of more than $1? billion, and we should not go further at this time. Mr. President, it is for that reason that I urge that the Senate agree to the committee recommendation and reject the amendment offered by the Senator from Arkansas (Mr. FULBRIGHT) . Mr. President, I have some questions I would like to ask the Senator from Arkansas and I shall submit them to him inasmuch as the time of the Senator from New Hampshire is running out. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I yield 10 minutes to the Senator from Califor- nia (Mr. MURPHY) . Mr. MURPHY. I thank the distin- guished Senator from New Hampshire. would like to speak momentarily, on one aspect of the proposed amendment which has to do with the Federal Con- tract Research Centers. We have heard great approaches to many of these mat- ters in terms of dollars. The understand- ing, the use of the dollars, and the com- plexity of the operations concerned, sometimes have not been fully discussed or fully understood. I wish to express my appreciation to the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire for permitting me this time, and acknowledge the concern of the Senator from Arkansas about spending by our Department of Defense, which is widely known, and, of course, I join him. I think that great economies may be forthcoming in the future. I do believe, however, that some attention should be given to the kinds of Federal Contract Research Centers that we have, and the kinds of tasks that they perform. This is important since the Senator from Ar- kansas wishes to cut $27 million from the funding for these organizations whether or not they are engaged in the area of social sciences. As an example of the areas of respon- sibility in the FCRC's; eight are operated under the auspices of universities, each concentrating in the fields in which each respective university has specific strengths. Three others do analysis work and, sometimes rather loosely, I think, are called think tanks, because they have a concentration of very expert brains. In my hometown of Los Angeles, I be- lieve there are more Ph. D.'s than any other place in the world accumulated un- der one roof. They perform valuable review of our posture on a continuing basis. Two other Federal Contract Re- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71B00364R000300100001-3 S9746 Approved For RtieNtimicifisi caffigvilopm.pp 030010000173 August .c12, 12969 search Centers are engaged most spe- cifically in the systems management field. The latter two, it should be pointed out, were built up under the auspices of the Congress for the direct purpose of han- dling profoundly complicated technical programs on a nonprofit basis so as to be most scrupulous in avoiding conflicts of interest in all places wherever possible, in order to save the taatpayer's dollars. However, these and other FCRC's have been of other great benefit to the tax- payer. Because of the kind of work the FCRC's do there have been tremendous savings of dollars which, this Senator is convinced, could never have been achieved in any other way. For instance, it was documented some years ago to the satisfaction of the Secretary of Defense and the Congress that the Aerospace Corp., acting with its Military partner, the Air Force, had in fact effected a sav- ings of a billion and a half dollars in its ballistic missile progranis in its first 5 years of operation, and it is acknowl- edged that this same team has brought about the savings of at least another bil- lion since that time. While there are 16 FMC's, I believe he success of Aerosme Corp., is typical of them all and., 'Mr. President, it is easily documented fin' the purposes of our discussion here today. One of the most successful programs conducted by the Air Force and Aerospace Corp. has been the Titan III project which has en- joyed a tremendous run tit great savings to the Government. I have previously commented on this some weeks ago. The secret of this success hasTheen outstand- ing, professional technical management which brought about a situation whereby our Nation was able to place operational payloads on Titan III boosters which were originally supposed to be R. & D. vehicles. In other words, they cortibined-research and development with actual payloads at one time. Yet, and this is important, because of this professional management, about which I speak, the Titan HI took on operational missions_ while still an R. & D. vehicle with enorinous success and tremondous savings. I might add, parenthetically, that all of our space flights to date have been launched by boosters developed by or evolving from those built by the military. Another of the most valuable Federal Contract Research Centers, the Rand Corp., which has been mentioned today, has been responsible for sUbstantial sav- ings in numerous areas;There are two, however, which are typical of the kinds of economy these groups do effect. Rand's study of strategic air bases in fact developed a new coffeept of opera- tions which, by the Air Force's own esti- mate, resulted in net savings of $1 billion in installations alone, and was judged to provide the same or better security as other proposed systems Mating from $10 to $22 billion more over a 4-year period. So this is really not wasted money. What we are doing is buying an accumulation of the very best brains pessible. In a second typical example, because of Its noncompetitive status, tbe Rand Corp. was able to bring the industrial computer groups together on common ground to exchange technical information and to initiate computer sharing among them. This cooperative pooling of programing techniques, known as Share, is estimated by the Department of Defense to have saved military installations and defense contractors, and therefore the taxpayer, approximately $50 million. There is yet another example of the kinds of vital work carried on by these Centers which must be given notice. The Institute for Defense Analysis completed a test and evaluation study in mid-1968 only 1 short year after it was under- taken. This project was a comprehensive analysis of the testing requirements for the Minuteman III and Poseidon weapon systems. The spectacular results showed how to determine the actual performance of these systems by testing without the enormously increased casts the Depart- ment of Defense feared might be needed through the use of what up to that time were the only known testing techniques. This successful effort by the Institute for Defense Analysis was accomplished by forming a team of knowledgeable staff people along with military officers and highly qualified engineers from industry. In other words, they put together the very best brains. The work of this team resulted in the resolution of a severe problem which the Government itself had been unable to resolve even after re- peated attempts. In other words, Mr. President, if the Institute for Defense Analysis had not licked the problem, it probably would not have been done even today and I, for one, cannot put a price on that. While I ant mentioning this specific Center, I believe it is very important to note that of the total contract budget of the Institute for Defense Analysis, only 5 percent is allocated for foreign policy and social studies. Yet the Senator from Ar- kansas asks us to reduce the FCRC fund- ing by 10 percent. Mr. President, the Department of De- fense, again with the consent of the Con- gress, years aeo decided that it would be necessary to use the Federal Contract Research Center approach in extremely complex programs in problem areas. The PRESIDING Otees.CER. The time of the Senator from California has ex- pired. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I yield 3 additional minutes to the Senator from California. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from California is recognized for 3 additional minutes. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, if I do not finish my remarks in that time, I ask unanimous consent that the remainder of them be printed in the RECORD because, obviously, because of this protracted dis- cussion which has taken place there will not be time for me to read it all. I ask this so that Senators who are not pres- ently in the Chamber may have the bene- fit, if they so desire, of reading what I think has been a rather carefully pre- pared explanation of the exact PucPe6e of these Centers, why they were put to- gether and what they do. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, as an ex- ample of the degree of expertise needed, the difference between the development of airplanes and large booster rockets applies. In the construction of an air- craft, you Can always taxi it down the runway, lift off to an altitude of 1 foot and settle back to the runway subse- quently analyzing problems within the machine and correcting them. However, in the case of the booster racket with its valuable payload, you have no such luxury. What is important here is the stark fact that the booster alone, without payload, frequently casts several million dollars. Therefore, it must work?and work right?the first time. The military simply does not have enough people trained in the manage- ment of such programs in-house to guar- antee, this kind of success. But, by using an FCRC's technical ability the job can be done, was done and must continue to be done. Mr. President, so far I have mentioned the successful story of only three of our Federal Contract Research Centers. But, the story with the rest is pretty much parallel. Yesterday, the distinguished Senator from Arkansas introduced an amendment which if I read it correctly, would have the effect of reducing FCR,C funding by $27 million across the board. Yet the thrust of his argument centers on the activities carried out by these groups under contract to the Depait- ment of Defense in the social sciences and foreign affairs. I submit that this is dangerous because it uses the area of foreign policy and social sciences as the target, but, aims at all disciplines within the FCRC's with a shotgun or broadside effect. That is the great danger of generalizations. There is an additional perspective to this question that has received too little attention here in this debate. It is the straightforward proposition that it is vital to our Nation's safety that the planners in the Department of Defense be aware of the far-reaching and serious military consequences of changes in for- eign governments. Certainly, no one in the Department of Defense nor in the FCRC's has any wish to interfere with the prerogatives of the State Depart- ment and from my conversations with them and my study of their work I can say with certainty they want no part of it. Yet, military implications of foreign governmental change do exist?they are real. Mr. President, it would be folly to ignore them with possible serious mis- calculations the result. It has been pre- viously demonstrated to the satisfaction of the Congress that the very best way to analyze such situations is via the exper- tise offered by the FCRC's and, while regrettable, we must see today's world as it is and not as we wish it to be. Thus, we have an obligation to our own safety and security to have the advantage of just this kind of analytical review. Perhaps, what the Senator is really saying is that these centers represent the military-industrial-scientific-educa- tional complex which he so greatly de- plores. We have heard much of this com- plex?I prefer the words "American team"?of late and we would do well to remember the gist of the thoughts of our Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved F&Mengs014/Ali/iikyythDPWItpkyk4R000300100001-3 August 1.2, 1969 beloved Gen. Douglas MacArthur who, as a part of his legacy, told us that the one great reliable strength of our Nation as it maintained its place in the world is our industry-military team which was and is called upon for our security every day of our lives. Certainly, by now it is not necessary to once again remind this body that retiring President Eisenhower actually pointed to this team with pride. Furthermore, those who are so con- cerned about this team would do well to remember that the Federal.Contract Re- search Centers do in fact serve as a buffer or governor on both the military and the prWate sector. They do not make a product. They pay no dividend" other than to the taxpayer.. The important safeguard which exists here is simple: Both military and industrial security in these installations are operated by the Department of Defense and because the Secretary has confidence in the FCRC's they are able to gather together all the very best proprietary data, gleaning and coordinating all the best information while protecting it from piracy, but of- fering it as an asset to our security. Nonetheless, we are told here that this amendment will reduce the authorization for the Federal Contract Research Cen- ters by $27 million because the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations S 9747 executives in enterprises such as the They will go up the street to large pri- major management consulting firms and vats industrial concerns like TRW, research organizations, both profitmak- Hughes, North American Rockwell, or ing and nonprofit. Many of these organi- Lockheed. zations do Government contract work, Surely, the distinguished Senator from and compensation in excess of $45,000 is Arkansas is well aware of the fees and common in most of these posts. Even in salaries that ability and a good rec- the case of university professors, there ord can draw. The Senator from Arkan- are a substantial number of senior peo- sas, being the great lawyer he is, has re- pie whose activities, including consulting, ceived in his lifetime career special fees bring them incomes in the $50,000 to because of his expertise and knowledge of $60,000 range. Again, much of this con- the law. suiting is paid for from Government con- Mr. President, I believe there is an- tract funds, including Department of De- other important factor worthy of our fense funds. profitmaking enterprises consideration today which applies to normally provide additional incentives, bath amendments. I refer to the social such as stock options, not available in and economic problems that loom so nonprofit organizations such as the large in America now. It is acknowledged FCRCs, and universities provide other that the most competent and successful fringe benefits in many cases. organizations created for the purpose In the case of most of the FCRC's, the of solving problems are those currently boards of trustees set the salaries of the engaged in defense and space work. They top personnel. These trustee constitute have developed a whole new concept an impressive roster of public-spirited called systems management. Lately a citizens, including leading public figures, new term has come into common use: I ex-public servants, university presidents refer to "civil systems" which simply and industrial executives. These men are means the application of the systems acutely conscious of their policy respon- management or systems engineering ap- sibilities and of the public interest nature preach to those enormous problems of the organizations. They are well able which face us from within. The great to judge the performance and quality of organizations we have created to solve the persons whose salaries they set. our defense problems since World War II These boards of trustees are keenly are in being?they are operating and in place. They could, in fact, be our most important national resource when we turn them to the problems of pollution, waste disposal, communications, crime, delinquency, transportation, urban re- newal, and the eradication of poverty, all of which are approaching crisis propor- tions as the distinguished Senator from Arkansas himself has often said. So far, Mr. President, the potentially most promising approach to the solution to these problems is through the appli- cation of systems management or the systems approach or civil systems, if you will, by our great concerns in the aero- space industry of which the Federal Contract Research Centers are such a vital part. It may well be that other de- partments of the Government will want to use the abilities of these centers to- ward the ends I have just outlined?and this Senator believes they should. It may also well be that the Department of State could profitably use their services, since is concerned about their work in e aware of the need to attract and to hold social sciences. Again we have the gen- individuals of the highest caliber in the eralization which is akin to the old top management position of the FCRC's apples and oranges?which is akin to if these organizations are to be able to lumping all the animal world together continue their effective performance in and saying all must wear horseshoes or? the national interest. The responsibilities In this case?all will have their rations are great; much of the work is pioneer- cut since there is a problem with horse- ing and its quality is extremely impor- shoes. Mr. President, what we are asked tent. Management judgment and talent to do here is to consider the social sci- is an absolute essential. For all of these ences, condemn the work the FCRC's are reasons a limitation such as the one doing in the social sciences, lump the proposed appears inappropriate and in social sciences together with architect fact harmful. engineering, weapons analysis, systems The present language, left as is, sug- management, and cut back on the whole gests that in the absence of Presiden- works. tial approval, some 20 officials of the Mr. President, I have the privilege of FCRC's would have to take a cut in total serving on the Subcommittee on Re- compensation back to $45,000, or leave search and Development chaired by the their jobs, or the FCRC's affected would very able Senator from New Hampshire. have to cease doing business with the I can tell the Senate that under Senator Department of Defense. MCINTYRE'S leadership, the subcommit- Mr. President, I am reminded that t into the question of the Federal many years ago I was called before a Contract Research Centers very thor- committee of this very body to explain oughly. When the Subcommittee on Re- just why the late Clark Gable could draw we all know how many problems that search and Development reported to the a salary of $7,500 a week. Many on the Department has had over the past 8 full Armed Services Committee on its committee asked "What does he do?" years, and the Committee on Foreign Re- work, my friend the distinguished Sena- "How can he be werth $7,500 a week for lations would wish to consider appropiate tor from Virginia offered an amendment what he does?" My answer was that he funding. which is included in the bill and would doesn't do anything, but he has an ex- However, it is extremely important limit the salaries of FCRC technical and pertise?he is an actor of supreme ac- that these organizations, these going management personnel. I did not co- complishment and in free and open corn- concerns, not be impeded or reduced or sponsor that amendment for numerous petition he can earn this much money. discouraged here as we consider defense reasons, but, I certainly understand Clark Gable's name in lights over a Procurement. As a matter of fact, that and congratulate Senator BYRD for his theater sells tickets and offers an in- so-called military-industrial complex we motives in offering it. come to all involved as the result of free are supposed to be so concerned about However, we should remember that the trade. could, through these self-same FCRC's, complexity and national importance of I do not mean that there is detailed turn out to be the best friend our advo- the work of the FCRC's require highly commonality between the motion pie- cates of domestic priorities ever had. talented and competent management. ture business and the FCRC's. I do mean, The importance of independence and The competition for top people in this however, that these people about whose objectivity in these organizations is field of endeavor is considerable. The salaries we are so concerned are among paramount, and has long been recog- major FCRC's are managed by people the finest technical people we have and nized as such. The FCRC's are for the who would otherwise be serving as senior they are dedicated to their country and most part engaged in highly important professional executives in industry or in- programs. Should they become discour- and complex research on matters of dustrial laboratories, as university ad- aged, I can say for certain they will not great significance to military planning ministraters or senior professors, or as go into $40,000-a-year Government jobs. and national security policy. More re- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9748 Approved For ReemedfiglIAOACV&I&)Fit7r1BOOS3E64 cently, because of the major contribu- tions of these organizations in the field of national security, it has been urged by many, including the Secretary of De- fense, that they apply their skills and experience to other impost tent national problems such as those of the environ- ment and the cities. A number of them are doing so, and this is becoming a sig- nificant portion of their. work. It would seem unwise and inappropriate to inhibit the application of this national resource to domestic problems by placing special restrictions on them in a military pro- curement bill. Mr. President, the distinguished and highly respected Director of Defense Re- search and Engineering, Dr. John S. Foster, stated in his recent testimony be- fore the Committee on Armed Services that? Second, we have reconsidered recently an issue which has been brought up from time to time for several years?whether or not these primarily Defense-sponsored organiza- tions should be permitted or even encouraged to apply selectively their specialized capa- bilities to major domestic problems such as transportation, urban redevelopment, hous- ing, and medical services. We have concluded that when an FCRC has capabilities suitable to a non-Defense client, ia should be Per- mitted, to undertake non-Defense work. In short, we believe that the DOD has developed in the FCRC's a "national resource" which should be used as national priorities dictate, consistent with our needs in the national security area. Thus I have begun discus- sions with other parts of the Federal Gov- ernment and with the FCRC's to introduce this concept of "selective diversification." I must add, however, that we do not intend to fund programs designed to solve domestic problems, nor do we intend to act as a per- manent "middle man" in administering any such programs. Similarly, we do not intend to reduce or dilute our DOD funding to FCRC's for national security work, nor do we expect the FMC's to reduce or delimit their contribution to defense needs. Mr. President, it is important to this bill that there be no further reduction in funds authorized for Federal Contract Research Centers. I hope I have made some small contribution to erasing some of the misunderstandings that exist where they are concerned. I have seen first hand the work they are doing and I know the capabilities of their people. I can report with confidence, as can many of my colleagues, that many of our most advanced, most significant, and o most successful new ideas for our security t begin at these centers. These Centers are vested ith the tre- mendous responsibility for sNatems man- t agement, long range planning and the solutions to tomorrow's problems. While I wish today's problems made it possible for me to join with the Senator from s Arkansas in his amendment, I believe the examples I have just cited are so corn- w pelling as to leave us with the clear re- r sponsibility to support the funding of w these Federal Contract Research Centers as one of our great hopes for the future. w I depart from my prepared remarks for ? f a moment to point out that during the committee hearings concern was ex- s pressed over salaries in the FCRC's. I eci attempted to explain the reason. When the Federal Contract Research Centers se were put together, it was of extreme ne- $ cessity that the very best and the very finest brains be obtained. The PRESIDING OrviCER. The time of the Senator has expired. Mr. MURPHY. May I have 1 additional minute? Mr. -McINTYRE. Mr. President, I yield 1 minute more to the Senator. Mr. MURPHY. I know from practical experience that many of these scientists and administrators are working in these projects at a cost to themselves. I know they could go down the street from Air Research, for instance, and be hired at Thompson-Ramo-Woolridge at higher salaries. I know they could walk down the street and be hired at Hughes Air- craft or Hughes Tool and be paid a higher salary. I also pointed out that to get the sec- ond-best brains would be a mistake, be- cause these are the men who conceive the ideas, who draw the expert analyses for the Air Force and other services, to proceed at the greatest savings, in the most practical way. Because of my knowledge of the per- formance of the Federal Contract Re- search Centers, notwithstanding that I dislike to be in opposition to the amend- ment of the Senator, I shall be forced to oppose it. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from California. He has been a very helpful member of the Research and Development Subcommit- tee and particularly with respect to this matter. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, if the Senator will yield me 10 seconds, I have been on that committee, and I know the chairman of the committee agrees with me that there is a real lack of knowledge of what happens in these centers. I know he agrees with me that, as soon as we have the time, he will accept the invita- tion to come to my State. There are two of these Federal Contract Research Cen- ters in my State that I think would be very good to visit. lam sure we would like to visit them and have a look at close range and ascertain what is being ac- complished and exactly how the pro- grams works. If we do that, I think we will have a greater understanding of what we are discussing I am extremely happy to be a member f the Senator's committee, where, for he first time I believe a great scrutiny t these matters is being had. Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. President, will he Senator yield me a few minutes on matter?flother Mr. FULl3RIGHT. First, may I respond to the remarks of the Senator from Mas- achusetts for a moment? The Senator from Massachusetts anted to conserve his own time, He was unning short of time. He submitted in riting a number of questions to me. Before I proceed to the questions, I ish to say that I have great sympathy or the attitude of the Senator from Mas- sachusetts, because there are many re- earch projects in the universities or ucational institutions of his State. It is my understanding that Massachu- tts Institute of Technology, with over 119 million last year, is the largest sin- R000300100001-3 ATE August 1,2, 1,969 gle educational institution on the payroll of the Defense Department. Harvard, of course, has a much smaller alloctaion, but it is substantial, over $2.5 million. The University off.Maseachusetts, under the Themis program, had a substantial amount, $720,000. Boston College had $440,000. However, on the other side, in my view, is the impact these research programs may have on the celleges and universities. What I am more interested in is the preservation of the integrity of our edu- cational institutions, whether they are in my State or in any other State. The first question the Senator from Massachusetts asked was: Would the Fulbright amendment affect the $4 mil- lion recommended to be transferred to the Department of State for foreign pol- icy research?which is in the report? It would not affect it. As far as I know, there is no evidence that the Department of State wants these programs, nor is there any evidence that the transfer of the projects are of projects which are worthwhile of themselves. My own guess is that it would be better that they be discontinued. In any case, there is no evidence it would affect it at all. The second question of the Senator is: The Fulbright amendment would impose a further $2 million, or one-third, cut in research by foreign universities and in- stitutions. Is the Senator aware that this area has already been reduced by 70 per- cent since fiscal year 1968? I am aware of that. I already congratulated the Senator from New Hampshire for reducing it, but we still have contracts in 44 different foreign countries. I have already given my reason why I think it is bad policy, and it ought to be reduced to a bare minimum, if not eliminated. It is possible that there may be some unique situations in which a program would be Justified, but I am quite con- fident there is no justification to have them in 44 countries. I air not sure our foreign policy can stand that much inter- vention by the Defense Department. It ought to be kept at a minimum. Besides, If there are some unique situations in which research and development would be justified, I would strongly recommend that it be sponsored by some other agency, the National Science Foundation, or the National Institutes of Health, or the Department of Commerce, some agency other than the military. Surely, it ought to be obvious now to all Americans that military intrusions is offensive to small countries, or to any country. Military intrusion is much dif- ferent from intrusion by cultural or other institutions, because people are suspi- cious of the military, as going to their own security. We always run Into that danger. Tourists can go abroad without harm. People can live in another coun- try. But when soldiers are stationed in another country, traditionally it has al- ways caused suspicion. So I think there is a great difference, because it arises from fears of our own country, and I do not think it is good for our relations. Mr. IVIcINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield at that point? Mr. FULI3RIGHT. I yield. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August R, /9610Proved FotaktmeRsNeNAL3qttre6RPSFRRWAR000300100001-3 S 9749 Mr. McINTYRE. One thing that plagues me is that if the State Depart- ment and the Foreign Relations Com- mittee of the Senate and its counterpart in the House, and the President of the United States have had something to do with setting the foreign policy of this country and setting out the goals and set- ting out the objectives, once those objec- tives are made clear, or at least scaled down to somewhere along the lines the distinguished Senator from Arkansas would like to see, I think it would be no trouble for the Department of Defense to scale back the activities the Senator complains about. But the State Depart- ment and the Senator's committee and the Administration set the pace, and the Department of Defense is only trying to carry it out. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The other day I discussed the purpose of our country in this field in connection with the posture statement. I only wish to say that I have strongly disapproved of our tendency to intervention, and I have done that pub- licly, beginning with our intervention in the Dominican Republic in 1965. I thoroughly disapprove of the ease with which we accept the responsibility to intervene in another country's affairs and tell them what to do and tell them what kind of government they ought to have, and so forth. The Senator is aware of my disagreement with our policy. It is true that I am only one Senator, but the Foreign Relations Committee has gone through quite a change in its atti- tude toward that policy. The foreign policy I am really complaining about is that of the previous administration, led by Secretary Rusk in the State Depart- ment. I thoroughly disagree with his definition of the mission of the United States. This we have discussed. Now with a new administration and with new of- ficials in the administration, I had hoped we would begin to follow a different ap- proach. This amendment is a small segment or part of that approach of downgrading our intervention and intrusion into for- eign countries; to treat other countries more as equals, with greater respect, and, hopefully, to cultivate better relations with them. The foreign programs I am talking about are one little aspect of it. I am doing my best to change our policy. I am doing the best I know how to get out of Vietnam and change our policy. ? The hearing we had this morning is in connection with a situation which we are very fearful may become another Vietnam. All I can say to the Senator is that I am doing the best I can to change it. I have not been very -successful, but that is all I can do. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield briefly? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. McINTYRE. I hope the Senator from Arkansas appreciates the position the Armed Services Committee, with this authorization bill, is in. Since the Sen- ator from Arkansas does not set the for- eign policy of the United States, and the State Department and the administra- tion do, he will find that we, as we try to answer the questions and try to help him in understanding this particular bill, more or less find ourselves in a bind be- tween the position of the State Depart- ment and the attitude of the distin- guished Senator from Arkansas toward the foreign policy of this country. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I do not know whether the State Department has really approved these projects or not. On my inquiry last year, the Bureau of the Budget was not aware of most of the projects and had not examined them. They do not examine Defense Depart- ment programs as they do other pro- grams. I think the participation of the State Department in the program of the De- partment of Defense, if at all, is perfunc- tory. Even this contingency planning agreement with Thailand is not in the custody?or-the State Department. I re- quested it from the State Department, and they came back with the letter which I put in the RECORD the other day, say- ing, "We regret we cannot give it to you, because the Secretary of Defense is re- luctant to allow it outside of his control," which meant, in effect, that here is an agreement between Thailand and the United States, and it is not even in the hands of the State Department. So we have a lot of difficulties in this area, and I am not at all sure the State Department is a very free agent when it comes to such matters. The one agency, and the only agency in the Government, in my opinion, that can ever exercise any degree of restraint upon the Defense De- partment is the Senate, because of its peculiar characteristics, in that we are more independent than anyone else in the Government. We have longer terms, and that is why we were given longer terms. We represent our States, and thus represent larger constituencies than Members of the House of Representa- tives. I shall not describe our system of government further, but I think the Sen- ate is the only agency that can possibly bring its influence to bear upon the mili- tary establishment. It will be seen that this is not wholly imaginary, when you look around the world and look at all the other major countries, wherever they may be. Most of them are dominated by their military establishments. We have got to assume that the United States and the American people are gifted with some very special qualities, if we are to be able to avoid the same fate. The Senator can look at Rus- sia, or at China, or where have you; Latin America, Brazil, Argentina, Peru, and so on. I shall not call the rolls, but most of them are largely under the in- fluence of the military. There is a reason for it. I do not know; perhaps in the long run it is better. I do not think so, with the present state of my information. I prefer to maintain the dominance of the civilian authorities; and our Constitution, I think, was in- tended to provide for that. The next question the Senator from Massachusetts asked me is as follows: Many of the examples of "questionable" studies cited by the Senator from Arkansas were contracted 3, 4 or 5 years ago. Since then, DOD research has been subjected to muoh closer scrutiny. Does the Senator have .any knowledge of current or projected studies which would substantiate his fears? I may say that the studies I cited were the most current that the Defense De- partment would provide; and I will say again, as I have said often, that it is not easy to get some information out of the Defense Department. We are engaged, at the moment, as I say, in a very serious contest with them over this agreement with Thailand. In this case, we have used, in our statement and in the in- sertion, the latest information that the Defense Department was willing to pro- vide. I do not have the power of subpena on the Secretary of Defense or the Com- mander in Chief, and I cannot make them give me what the committee wants. I simply provided the best information we could get from them. I think the Senator from New Hamp- shire will admit that it is not always easy to get, neatly and efficiently, anything you want out of the Defense Department. It is a huge bureaucracy of millions of people. The Joint Chiefs of Staff itself, I think, now constitutes some several thousand people. All I can say is that I got the latest information that was avail- able. I asked for the latest, and this is what we were given. The Senator next asks whether I have any views of universities regarding this amendment. No, I have not submitted it to univer- sities. I do have views of universities about the intrusion of the Defense De- partment into their activities. I have already talked about that at length. I have views as to the reactions of the students and professors as to the extent of the intrusion by both research proj- ects, ROTC, IDA, and what have you. The Senator's fifth question is as follows: The Senator from Arkansas has cited many "horrible examples." Does he have any in- formation as to what percentage of actual research programs this type of prOgram represents? No; I have no idea how to arrive at a percentage. The examples I put into the RECORD speak for themselves;Some peo- ple do not think they are horrible ex- amples. I do not think they are horrible; that is not the word I used. I think they are wholly inappropriate to the functions of the Department of Defense. Some of them would be defensible as activities of the National Institute of Health, the Na- tional Science Foundation, or the De- partments of Commerce or State, but they have no relation to Defense, and the only reason as far as I can see why they were sponsored by the Defense De- partment is that the Defense Department has no difficulty getting any amount of money it wants, for this or any other project. That is the situation we seek to correct. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have printed in RECORD a com- munication from the Department of De- fense entitled "Behavioral Sciences Proj- ects Proposed for Funding in Fiscal Year 1970," issued as of July 22, 1969. This re- quest is partially in response to the Sen- ator's questions; although the informa- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For ItSeAMC:WIRT: amp BREIR6M00300100001-3ff S 9750 ust 42, 1269 tion is not very specific, it gives some idea of the present attitude of the Defense Department in this area. There being no objection, the state- ment was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES PROJECTS PROPOSED FOR -FUNDING IN FISCAL MAR 1970 ARPA behavioral science research can be understood Most accurately as level of effort support for technical areas of special im- portance to the Department of Defense. In- dividual contracts vary widely in level of support and in duration. Frequently a con- tract is funded over a three-to-five year pe- riod, and rarely for a longer period of time. The best estimate of future support is a line extension of present level of effort for a tech- nical area, recognizing that individual con- tracts will change according to research progress. RATIONALE FOR MAJOR PROGRAMS We are terminating almOst all ARPA Be- havioral Sciences research work outside the U.S. ARPA has reoriented is behavioral science research work into a, direction where there is broad agreement in the research and defense community that more promise ex- ists?the interdisciplinary combination of the computer and behavioral seiences in spe- cific problem areas. The objective is ta pre- duce results to Defense user organizations within five years. Initially, we have extended support to three basic programs to be con- ducted at universities where unique talent now exists. Simultaneously, we began's, man- agement inquiry to determine how to use an applied research organization to apply the results of the basic research to specific and immediate DOD operational problems. As the work progresses, and to the extent that the results of our management analysis warrant, we plan to phase down ARPA sponsorship of university participation in the three pro- grams. The first university program is the Cam- bridge Project which seeks_ te provide tools needed to determine trend and interaction ef- fects in complex DOD systems. System ex- amples include designing hardware for effec- tive human operation, training and educat- ing personnel, organizing manpower, and al- locating resources. We have more than enough data, but we lack tools to enable Us to extract patterns and raw inferences from them. The work takes advantage of existing ARPA-funded interactive ocenputing capabil- ity at MIT and will have Wide participation by MIT and Harvard scientists. This effort will be supported at approximately $2,400,000 yearly. The second university program, the Center for Computer-Based Behavioral Studies at UCLA, seeks to construct a theory and prac- tice of gaming in order to improve substan- tially its realism for training and prediction. As a good example, many vital Don missions require that DoD people know how to bargain and negotiate effectively with counterpart members of other nations; help is needed in the appropriate training of. military advisors, defense attaches, and staffs of alliance com- mands. Faced with analogous problems in labor relations, major schools of business ad- ministration and major corporationii have turned increasingly to gaming (i.e., simula- tions) for training and predict ion. This effort will be supported at approximately $1,000,000 yearly. The third university program, Quantitative Political Science, seeks to develop quantita- tive tools and unclassified data bases to im- prove our ability to predict national security needs. The work is accomplished at the uni- versity of Michigan, the University of Hawaii. the University of Southern California and Yale University. The data archive at the Uni- versity of Michigan will be managed by the Inter-University Consortium for Political Research which currently distributes other types of social science data to faculty and students at 120 member universities. If suc- cessful, the tools would help us to distin- guish between likely and unlikely future con- flict situations. DoD must try to predict fu- ture security situations and needs in order to plan for logistics, force structure, strategy, and research and development. Faced with analogous needs, government departments responsible for the domestic economy turned more than thirty years ago to the develop- ment of quantitative predictive tools and supporting data bases. DoD has made only fragmentary use to date of quantitative po- litical science for conflict and sociology. How- ever, even these limited efforts have been use- ful to JCS, DIA, and Service officials. The basic university work in building the tools will all be unclassified and the regults freely available. The later applications of the tools to operational DoD problems will probably be carried out elsewhere. This effort will be sup- ported at approximately $850,000 yearly. In addition, ARPA intends during FY 70 to support research in the following areas: Teaching and Learning?The Department of Defense must maintain a vigorous and broad set of education and training activities for its personnel. As external threats become more complex. U.S. personnel increasingly re- quire improved training to perform their jobs. Much of the new techrtolgy developed for other military purposes can also be applied to more effective training and education sys- tems. ARPA sponsored research in computer assisted instruction has resulted in prototype systems which permit the instructor to man- age teaching aids and resources with greater flexibility. These systems also promise to cut costs substantially under the terms of the instructional funds required for each student contact hour. The flexibility and economy of these systems will permit progress in de- veloping techniques and methods of instruc- tion which-are most effective with students whose learning styles and abilities vary widely. Further research is concerned with the constraints imposed by different classes of subject matter and modes of presentation. Support during FY 70 will be approximately $185,000. During FY 70 specific contracts will be funded at Bolt, Beranek and Newman, and the University of Texas. Human Performance?The attributes and evaluation of individual and group perform- ance is fundamental to the operations of the Department of Defense. AR.PA's research in this area is primarily concerned with estab- lishing rules to assess the relationship be- tween human capabilities to perform mili- tary jobs and basic abilities suoh as signal detection, memory, information processing and perception. Support during FY 70 will be approximately $360,000. During FY 70 specific contracts will be funded at the Uni- versity of Michigan and the University of Oregon. Human Communication?This research area is concerned with principles of human communication as they affect coordination of effort in the execution of military tasks. This effort is and will continue to include work on competence to learn and use foreign lan- guages and second languages. The knowledge gained will then be used to develop and test educational materials to improve cross-cul- tural communication. Support during FY 70 Will be approximately $550,000. ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield 5 minutes to the Senator from South Dakota. Mr. McCrOVIeteN. Mr. President, in view of the limitation on time, I should like to speak very briefly on two unre- lated matters, the first having to do with the President's welfare message as it re- lates to our food assistance program, and, second, to make some remarks on the prisoner information policy of North Vietnam. DOES THE NIXON WELFARE PRO- POSAL WEAKEN lets; FOOD AS- SISTANCE PROGRAM? Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. President, with regard to the President's historic mes- sage on last Friday, which he trans- mitted in greater detail to Congress yes- terday, there is one matter of very grave concern to me, and that is the apparent intention of the administration, as out- lined in that message, to phase out time food assistance program for those Per- sons who choope to participate under the newly proposed family assistance program. Mr. President, I have no objection-- in fact I rather welcome it?to the re- placement of some of our plethora of welfare programs with an income main- tenance program as suggested by the President. But if in fact the adminis- tration proposes to offer a family of four a maximum of $1,600 in cash, and then tell the family that chooses that option that they are exCluded from the food stamp program, it will be, in effect, de- creasing very substantially the amount of aid now being received by millions of Americans. My preliminary estimates lead me to believe that if this exclusion policy goes into effect, and we deny food assistance to those families who choose the income maintenance program sug- gested by the President, in 44 out of the 50 States we would actually lose, for many millions of people, the amount of assistance they are now receiving under a combination of food stamps or com- modity assistance plus the welfare pay- ments they now receive. Mr. President, it is a fact that it re- quires almost all Of the $1,600 that the President has suggested for income maintenance to provide a family of four with an adequate diet. So it is my in- tention as the chairman of the Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs that has been looking into the problem of hunger and malnutrition in the United States to call administration witnesses before our committee at a very early date to clarify the matter. I hope very sincerely that the Presi- dent will press his proposal for an in- come maintenance program, but that he will not press it to the inclusion of the food stamp program. We must do either one or two things. We must permit both of the programs to operate simultaneously or else we will have a very substantial increase in the income maintenance figure suggested by the President. Mr. President, last May, President Nixon pledged that his administration would put an end to hunger in America for all time. He then moved swiftv to accomplish this goal by sending to Con- gress a plan to expand and improve the food stamp program. In his historic welfare message of last Friday, the President added to his ear- lier pledge by Proposing a family as- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE Three-stage deeentraNzation of administra- tive responsibilities First, State administration of 25 percent of apportioned funds when it designates a "lead agency" and develops comprehensive manpower planning capability and an ap- proved manpower plan; second, State admin- istration of 68% percent of the funds when it establishes (1) a Comprehensive Man- power Agency to operate the unified pro- grams in accordance with an approved plan, (2) a State manpower planning organization to coordinate all manpower related programs, and (3) arrangements to designate Mayors as area prime sponsors; and third, State con- trol of 100 percent of its apportioned funds when the State meets objective standards of exemplary performance in planning and carrying out its manpower service system. Allowances and wages The basic allowance to individuals enrolled in a manpower training program will be based on the average weekly wage In em- ployment covered by the State's unemploy- ment compensation law. In FY 1971 the basic allowance will be 40 percent of such average weekly wage, in FY 1972-45 percent and in FY 1973 and there- after-50 percent. Trainees with family re- sponsibilities will be allowed an additional $5 per week for each dependent, up to six de- pendents. In lieu of such allowances, public assistance recipients will receive an incentive and expense allowance of $30 per month in addition to their welfare payments during training. A completion bonus equal to twice the individual's weekly allowance, will be paid upon the successful completion of an au- thorized training course of 15 Weeks or more duration. Workers employed in "work experience" pro- grams will be paid wages at rates no lower than the lowest rate prescribed in the Fair Labor Standards Act. Workers undertaking employer compensated on-the-job training will be compensated at the higher of the applicable minimum wage rate or the pre- vailing wage rate for similar work in the locality. State apportionment of funds The Secretary of Labor would apportion at least 75 percent of the funds aPpropriated to carry out the Act (except its Job Corps, Job Bank and extended appropriation pro- visions) each year among the States in accordance with criteria which he would pub- lish. Metropolitan areas within States (Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas, or other designated areas) would be guaranteed apportionment of an amount in proportion to the numbers of persons in the labor force and number of disadvantaged indi- viduals residing in the area compared with the State total of such persons. Federal funds apportioned to the States under the regular program would be available to pay 90 percent of program costs. Incentive apportionment An amount equal to 5 percent of the funds appropriated will be available for supple- mental apportionments to States and areas which meet the exemplary performance standards. The Federal Government will con- tribute $2 for every dollar of available State funds. Federal program authority The remaining 20 percent of the funds will be available for expenditure directly by the Secretary to carry out the purposes of the Act. The Federal Government would be au- thorized to arrange directly for all or a por- tion of the operation of program activities when a State failed to assure its responsi- bilities under the Manpower Training Act or when it was only in partial compliance with provisions of the Manpower Training Act. In addition, such programs could be con- ducted directly with funds not apportioned to the States, in conducting research and demonstration programs under title III, the Secretary of Labor will consult fully with in- terested Federal agencies (including the Civil Service Commission with regard to the effect of the programs on the Federal service). Manpower training as an economic stabilizer In any fiscal year in which the national unemployment rate reaches 4.5 percent for three consecutive months, the Secretary of Labor could spend additional funds on au- thorized programs equal to 10 percent of the amount then appropriated under the Act for that year. When unemployment drops help* the trigger level, remaining unobligated funds will no longer be available. Computerized Job Bank A National Computerized Job Bank would be established in each State, or on a regional basis where sparsely populated States can be grouped together, to facilitate the placement of persons in employment for which they are qualified. The Bank would be operated with- in each State by the State Employment Beier.. ice. The Secretary would operate the interstate phase of the Bank's operation, col- lecting information from each State and making it available to all States. Information regarding both job applicants and joir orders would be processed through the system. To the extent that Federal agency vacancy in- formation may be required, the Secretary will consult fully with the Chairman of the Civil Service Commission in developing any reporting requirements. Federal vacancies will be filled in accordance with laws and regulations which apply to Federal employment. Advisory bodies The National Manpower Advisory Com- mittee will be continued. A new Intergovernmental Advisory Coun- cil on Manpower will be established_ It will be composed of representative Governors, Mayors, and other elected local officials, and will advise the Secretary on the Federal- State-local partnership established to admin- ister manpower programs. Other acts affected The Manpower Development and Training Act of 1962 and Title V of the Economic Opportunity Act are repealed and replaced by the manpower services provisions of this Act. The provisions of Title of the Econornie Opportunity Act are also replaced by the manpower services provisions of this Act. A new Title I-B of the Economic Opportunity Act authorizes the Office of Economic Oppor- tunity to undertake experimental programs in the employment and employment-related problems of the poor. Title I-A of the Eco- nomic Opportunity Act (Jab Corps) is trans- ferred to the Manpower Training Act, and administration is placed directly in the Sec- retary of Labor. ze6/14 AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MISSILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RESERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the considera- tion of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize ap- propriations during the fiscal year 1970 ler procurement of aircraft, missiles, na- val vessels, and tracked combat vehicles and to authorize the construction of test facilities at Kawajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized person- nel strength of the Selected Reserve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. S 9767 Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays on the amend- ment. The yeas and nays were ordered. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time? Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I yield myself two and a half minutes. 'Mr. President, I should like to sum UP the situation with which we are con- fronted in connection with the Fulbright amendment. The first thing I Wish to make clear to the Senate is that the Armed Services Committee already has cut research, de- velopment, test, and evaluation by over a billion dollars. The cut suggested by Senator Fulbright amounts to close to $46 million, in an area in which we al- ready have cut $50 million, of which $40 million will be falling on the same pro- grams about which the Senator from Arkansas is complaining so strongly. The committee has had the best of staff work, excellent staff work. This year, the chairman set up the R. & D. Subcommittee, and a hard and close scrutiny was conducted into these areas of the budget. Sometimes when we approach a prob- lem and try to cut in and reduce the expenditures, we suddenly become aware that if we cut too deeply, go a little too far, we may be doing more harm than good and may nullify any good that has been done. In 1970, we have been able to reduce this budget. We feel very strongly that when Senator FULBRIGHT suggests that some of these small programs be cut by 58 percent, by 36 percent, by 33 percent, he is in effect reducing these programs more than he should. So when we con- sider our own cuts, which have measured anywhere from 10 to 12 percent on these programs, it seems that it is piling on too much and that, in the interest of good budgeting and forward-looking work for the research and development and in the area of military research, the amend- ment of the Senator from Arkansas should be defeated, and defeated soundly. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield myself 3 minutes. Mr. President, there is over $400 mil- lion for basic research or nonmission research, in the $7 billion research au- thorization for the Department of De- fense. I am proposing the following: to cut $45 million overall. It will reduce the funds for the so-called think tanks by 10 percent, or $27 million, which is much the largest item. There are 16 of these re- search centers called think tanks. It will reduce the research in foreign institutions by $2 million, which is one- third, which is the point the Senator meant. I think it should be cut out. It will cut behavioral and social research performed in other places by $3 million. An example of that is the Hudson Institute. It will hold the line on new starts under Project Themis by cutting the budget re- quest by $8 million. It will reduce the counterinsurgency research, Project Agile, by $5 million. All this amounts to $45 million. All I can say is that I apologize to the Senate for being so timid that I did not propose three or four times this amount, because Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9768 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE several of these programs should never have been started and should be stopped. The only excuse I can give for not pro- posing $145 million or $200 million is that, out of deference to the Senator from New Hampshire?he has made a good beginning?I thought I had better be as modest as I could and hope to get something beyond what he has done. He has done a good job, but not good enough, because a number of these projects should be discontinued. They are inap- propriate for the Defense Department. It does not necessarily mean that all of them are inappropriate for other agen- cies, but they are not related to the mis- sion of the Department of Defense. It is not a question of redefining the Depart- ment of Defense mission in this case. It Is in other areas that we discussed the other day, particularly in the field of hardware, but not in these research proi- ects, especially in foreign universities, in the behavioral sciences. I hope the Senate will continue to take the attitude that from now on we are going to subject the Department of De- fense appropriations or authorizations to the same kind of scriatiny which is given to other departments of the Gov- ernment. I may say that $45 million in any other department of the Govern- ment would not seem like a pittance. I agree that in this agency it seems very small. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I am proud that the Senator from Oregon has cosponsored this amendment with me. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time? Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, a par- liamentary inquiry. The PRESIDING OnsiCER. The Sen- ator will state it. Mr. STENNIS. What is_ the situation as to time? The PRESIDING OrkiCER. Each side has 3 minutes remaining. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I will be pleased to yield to the distinguished chairman of the Committee on Armed Services the remainder of my time. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator for his generosity. Mr. President, nothing has been gone over more carefully by a well-informed subcommittee, unusually well staffed, than the items about which we have been talking. That subcommittee recom- mended a 12-percent reduction in these items. That reduction was -adopted and brought here before the Senate. It is about $40 million. The amendment of the Senator from Arkansas would reduce the amount around $45 million more in those same categories. A great deal a what the Senator is talking about here is in the 1968 budget, or at least a part of it. A great deal of his criticism is that these items should be in some other depart- ments of Government. We state in our report that some of theist should be transferred to the Department of State. I suggested yesterday that the Senator pick out some of them and give them to the committee. We thought it was too late in fiscal year 1970 to dump them out in the waste basket without anyone having jurisdiction over them. There- fore, we dealt with the situation as best we could. In this group I am fully satisfied that the subcommittee intelligently and diligently made an effort to get a firm recommendation for the Senate. I hope the Senate takes the recommendation seriously and approves the work of the subcommittee with this understanding. We are sending a letter to the Depart- ment of Defense and any other depart- ment involved that all of these items are to be looked over and divided up and sent to us the next time so that they will come to us in more detailed form. Mr. Y017NG of North Dakota. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. YOUNG of North Dakota. Mr. President, I wish to point out to the Senator that the Committee on Appro- priations will also be making cuts. Mr. STENNIS. Yes. Mr. YOUNG of North Dakota. In the past the argument was usually made for the foreign aid authorization pro- gram that it could be cut later and it usually was by the Appropriations Com- mittee. This is not the last committee that will review the matter. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator. Any information we have will be passed on. Mr. FLTLBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. FULBRIGHT. What the Senator from North Dakota has said about for- eign aid certainly does not apply to the Military Establishment and never has over the years. Mr. YOUNG of North Dakota. We rarely appropriate as much as the au- thorization provides. Our committee cut $1.5 billion last year over even the House action. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Is the Senator say- ing the percentage of the cut on the Military Establishment has been com- parable to that on foreign aid by the Committee on Appropriations? Mr. YOUNG of North Dakota. Yes, it is for other than military personnel costs. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I cannot remember that ever having been true. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, there is one additional point. I know the Senators are busy, and I am also busy and I am not able to be in the Chamber as much as I would like to. However, it is tragic to me to see all the work that has been done by this subcommittee slashed to pieces when during the fine debate on both sides attendance was limited to three or four Senators. Many Senators have not heard the real facts. I thank the Senator for yielding. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time? Mr. PASTORE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me for 1 minute? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield all my time to the Senator from Mississippi. Mr. STENNIS. I yield. August n; 1969 " Mr. PASTORE. Mr. President, the thing that is confusing and puling in this matter is that it has been admitted that there are some research programs included here that are not connected with defense. For the life of me, I cannot understand in view of this fact how a cut of $45 million is going to peopardize the country. I am going to vote for the cut. Ur. STENNIS. There is no mention of unworthy items in here. Mr. BYRD of Virginia subsequently said: Mr. President, as a member of the Subcommittee on Research and Develop- ment of the Committee on Armed Serv- ices, I supported a reduction of more than a billion dollars in the funds re- quested by the Department of Defense for research and development. As a mem- ber of that subcommittee and as a mem- ber of the Armed Services Committee, I supported a reduction of 12 percent in funds requested by the Department of Defense for research and development. Some feel that these cuts were too heavy; others feel that perhaps some additional reductions might be made. I am a little inclined to the latter view. I am a little inclined to think that perhaps we could further reduce, in a small way, the re- maining funds. But the majority of the committee felt that a 12 percent reduc- tion at this time is as far as we should go. Most of the members felt that a bil- lion-dollar reduction in these funds is as far as we should go at the present time. So, Mr. President, on the matter of funds for the Department of Defense, I feel that there can be and should be reductions in the amount requested; and I feel that the Armed Services Committee has taken an important step in this re- gard when it has recommended to the Senate that the requested funds for re- search and development be reduced by $1 billion, or 12 percent. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. PACK WOOD in the chair). All time has ex- pired. The question is on agreeing to the amendment of the Senator from Arkan- sas (Mr. Futsarear). In this question the yeas and nays have been ordered, and the clerk will call the roll. The bill clerk called the roll. Mr. KENNEDY. I announce that the Senator from Tennessee (Mr. Goat) is absent on official business. I also announce that the Senator from Nevada (Mr. BIBLE) , the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. EASTLAND) , the Senator from Utah (Mr. Moss), and the Senator from Texas (Mr. YARBOROUGH) are nec- essarily absent. I further announce that, if present and voting, the Senator from Utah (Mr. Moss), and the Senator from Texas (Mr. YARBOROUGH) would each vote "yea." Mr. SCOTT. I announce that the Sen- ator from Ohio (Mr. SAXBE) IS necessarily absent and, if present and voting, would vote "yea." The Senator from Illinois (Mr. Peacv) is detained on official business and, if present and voting, would vote "yea." The result was announced?yeas 49. nays 44, as follows: Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12, 1.969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE Aiken Bayh Boggs Burdick Byrd, W. Vs. Case Church Cook Cooper Cranston Dole Eagleton Ellender Fulbright Goodell _ Gravel Griffin Allen Allott Anderson Baker Bellmon Bennett Brooke Byrd, Va. Cannon Cotton Curtis Dirksen. Dodd Dominick Ervin Bible Eastland Gore [No. 79 Leg.] YEAS-49 Harris Hart Hartke Hatfield Hughes Inouye Javits Kennedy Mansfield Mathias McCarthy McGee McGovern Metcalf Mondale Nelson Packwood NAYS 14 Fannin Fong Goldwater Gurney Hansen Holland Hollings Hruska Jackson Jordan, N.C. Jordan, Idaho Long Magnuson McClellan McIntyre Pastore Pearson Pell Prouty Proxmire Randolph Ribicoff Schweiker Scott Spong Symington Tydings Williams, N.J. Williams, Del. Young, Ohio Mfllet Montoya Mundt Murphy Muskie Russell Smith Sparkman Stennis Stevens Talmadge Thurmond Tower Young, N. Dak. NOT VOTING-7 Moss Yarborough Percy Saxbe So Mr. FULBRIGHT'S amendment was agreed to. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote by which the amendment was agreed to. Mr. PASTORE. Mr. President, I move - to lay that motion on the table. The motion to lay on the table was agreed to. AMENDMENT NO. 129 Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I call up my amendment (No. 129). The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment of the Senator from Arkan- sas will be stated. The legislative clerk read the amend- ment, as follows: On page 5, line 11, strike out the quota- tion marks and the word "Funds" and insert in lieu thereof the following: "Not to ex- ceed $3,000,000,000 of the funds". On page 5, line 17, strike out the words "the Secretary of Defense" and insert in lieu thereof the words "the President". Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I yield to the Senator- from Washington (Mr. JAcxsoN) without losing my right to the floor. CONSTRUCTION, OPERATION, AND MAINTENANCE OF THE KENNE- WICK DIVISION EXTENSION, YAK- IMA PROJECT, WASHINGTON Mr. JACKSON. Mr. President, I ask the Chair to lay before the Senate a mes- sage from the House of Representatives on S. 742. The PRESIDING OFFICER laid be fore the Senate the amendment of te e House of Representatives to the bill, S. '742) to amend the act of June 12, 1948 (62 Stat. 382) , in order to provide fol- the construction, operation, and maintenance of the Kennewick division extension, Yakima project, Washington, and for other purposes, which was, on page 2, line 4, strike out "fifty-six-year", and insert "fifty-year". Mr. JACKSON. Mr. President, the con- struction of the Yakima project was ini- tiated in 191)5. There are presently six operating divisions in the project. The Kennewick Division is the most recently constructed, having been authorized in 1948. S. 742 would authorize an extension to the Kennewick Division and would bring 6,300 acres of land under irrigation and provide wildlife and conservation benefits. When the Senate approved this bill last March, it was the fourth time the legis- lation had been passed by this body. The House of Representatives passed the leg- islation with minor amendments in June. However, at that time I received a com- munication from officials of the Yakima Indian Tribe expressing concern over whether this project, if approved and constructed, would jeopardize the water rights of the Yakima Tribe, and in addi- tion, whether the construction of this project in any way would adversely affect proposed Indian irrigation projects on the Yakima Reservation. I have discussed this matter with the Indians, and members of the staff of' the Committee on Interior and Insular Af- fairs have reviewed the questions raised by the Indians. In addition, the Secretary of the Interior and his staff have gone Into the issues very carefully to deter- mine if the Kennewick Extension would adversely affect the Indian projects or impair the water rights of the Indians in any way. By letter dated today, the Secretary of the Interior has assured me that hy drologically the authorization and s sequent construction of the Kenne ick extension would not affect adverse the water available to the tribe fo their projects. I quote from the 5 etary's letter: Further, in our view, the ? ? for, and desirability of, the three Indi: projects will not be affected by the Kenn- ick extension. These three projects must tend or fall on their own merits and ju ification. Finally, there is nothing in our .pinion, in the lan- guage of S. 742 or legislative history which we would cons e as adversely affect- ing the Indian inte is. We will, in the de- velopment of the , eject, make certain that any prior and s ? ?rior water rights of the tribe are fully .rotected and will require that these rig; be recognized explicitly in contracts en ed into pursuant to S. 742. ? Mr. Pr that the appear Th was as dent, I ask unanimous consent ull text of the Secretary's letter t this point in my remarks. e being no objection, the letter dered to be printed in the RECORD, 110WS: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, Washington, D.C., August 12, 1969. on. HENRY M. JACKSON, Chairman Committee on Interior and Insu- lar Affairs, U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. DEAR MR. CHAIRMAN': Your letter of June 4, 1969, enclosed for comment a telegram from Chairman Robert E. Jim of the Yakima Tribal Connell which expressed concern re- garding the effects of S. 742, a bill to au- thorize the Kennewick extension of the Yakima reclamation project in Washington, on Yakima Indian rights to the use of water for their reservation. The Department has received similar telegrams from Mr. Jim. S 9769 Since these telegrams were sent, the bill passed the House of Representatives with a ? minor difference?not in issue here?from the previously-passed Senate- version. The Kennewick project was authorized by the Act of June 12, 1948 (62 Stat. 382), which reserved capacity in the main canal for the future extension of irrigation to 7,000 acres of additional land. S. 712 would authorize this extension. Mr. Jim and the Yakima Tribe are con- cerned that this project will impair the water available to the tribe and lessen sub- stantially their chances of obtaining the nec- essary funding and authorization for three irrigation projects which they consider ex- tremely important to the economic develop- ment of the reservation. We can appreciate their concern and, for this reason, we met with them within the last few days in order to obtain a more complete un of their position on the legis try to alleviate their concern extent possible. ts fully the water avail Wapato Sates unit, t project which appropriation project. We The on th erstanding Ion and to the greatest The irrigation projects eh the Yakima Indians wish to cons in order to utilize to them are: the Satus Creek project, and the Toppenish eek project. The Wapato un Is an authorized Indian Id irrigate an estimated 5,000 acres at oat of about $500,000. No as been requested for this aye, however, agreed to revievi the props? far the purpose of considering such a r eat in the near future. er two projects would be located atus and Toppeniah Greeks, respec- tivel Authorization for these projects has not ? ? een requested by the Department to . We will review these projects and pro- e you with more information on them soon as possible, We have advised Mr. Jim and the tribe that the Department does not want to prej- udice their ability to gain approval at all or some of these projects in the near future, nor do we want to do anything that would Impair or infringe on their rights to water for all of these projects. We are satisfied, based on information fur- nished by the Bureau of Reclamation, that hydrologically the authorization and subse- quent construction of the Kennewick exten- sion would not affect adversely the water available to the tribe for the above projects. The project is not dependent on water from the Yakima Reservation. Further, in our view, the need for, and desirability of, the three Indian projects will not be affected by the Kennewick extension. These three pro- jects must stand or fall on their own merits' and justification. Finally, there is nothing in our opinion, in the language of S. 742 or its legislative history which we would con- strue as adversely affecting the Indian in- terests. We will, in the development of the project, make certain that any prior and su- perior water rights of the tribe are fully protected and will require that these rights be recognized explicitly in contracts entered into pursuant to S. 742. We hope that the expression of the De- partment's views herein will help to remove the deep concern expressed by the tribe and result in final passage of S. 742 as quickly as possible. It should be noted that the tribe has indi- cated that their concern is caused partially by some statements made by the Depart- ment on the project a few years ago. If you find any such statements in the record of this legislation which may have contributed to the concern of the tribe, we will be glad to clarify them. Sincerely yours, WALTER J. HICKLE, Secretary of the Interior. ? ? Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71B00364R0003001Q0001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9770 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 12, 1969 Mr. JACKSON. Mr. President, in view agencies. It was the Office of Naval Re- peculiar jurisdiction of the Department of the assurances provided by the Secre- search that stepped into the vacuum left of Defense for basic research. The chair- tary of the Interior, I move that the by the wartime Office of Scientific Re- man, the Selaator from Arkansas (Mr. Senate concur in the amenoment of the search and Development to continue FULBRIGHT) said to him: House. Federal funding of research at our lead- It would seem that the National Science The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ing universities. The ONR, the Army, and Foundation, NM, or the AEC should have al- question is on agreeing to the motion of the Air Force all helped sustain the pace most exclusive jurisdiction to do basic re- the Senator from Wasingtoia, of postwar research and to build up the search as distinguished from applied re- search. Do you agree with that? The motion was 45,te41 immense national resource now repre- sented by our trained scientists and en- This is what the- admiral replied: gineers, by our laboratories, by the dis- I think the problem you have here is AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- tinguished science faculties of many that the Department of Defense is able to TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR public and private universities. This mil- get large funds for doing basic research while MILITARY PROCUREM ISNT, RE- oposesib had a le for discussion other itary support for research was in the this inotG?wveith rpineut SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND national interest during the decade that agencies I ee- FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- saw the creation of the research retary of Defense McElroy on that subject, pro- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJA- and this- is the point he made. He said it grams of the National Institutes . of LEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- is important that basic research be done in Health, the Atomic Energy Commission, the United States. As I remember his words, SERVE COMPONENTSTRENGTH and the National Science Foundation he said it was not too important that the The Senate resumed the consideration Now the situation has changed. Defense Department do it, but that the work, of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- There exists today a whole panoply of should be done, and since the Defense De- priations during the fiscal year 1970 for Federal departments and agencies each partment has the funds to pay for the work procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval with responsibilities for the funding of it is therefore being done by them. vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and research. The Bureau of the Budget in The ready accessibility of Defense research, development, test, and evalua- its special analysis Q for the fiscal year funds for research has kept the Defense tion for the Armed Forces, and to au- 1970 budget lists 14 separate departments Department in the role of a principal thorize the construction of test facilities and agencies with such responsibilities sponsor or patron. This then is the is- at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to pre- Their estimated obligations range from sue: Should our research scientists and scribe the authorized personnel strength $1.491 billion for NASA down to $7 mil- engineers continue to look to the defense of the Selected Reserve of each Reserve lion for the Department of Justice. The agencies for $1.3 billion out of a total component of the Armed Forces, and for range of their interests sweeps across the estimate of $5.2 billion of Federal obliga- other purposes of the life and physical sciences tion for research? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, may and is beginning to extend to the social This is the issue that has attracted the I say that the next 2 amendments should sciences. They represent an existing attention of many college students and not require over 5 minutes' discussion, mechanism for civil agencies to assume contributed to campus unreSt. I hope Members of the Senate will re- more responsibility for the overall fund- Consider the recent first report of the main on the floor. ing of research so that the military can MIT Review Panel on Special Laboras I yield, without losing my i laid to the concentrate upon its proper functions tories, issued last May 31. Here the re- floor, to the majority leader, and responsibilities, view panel clearly expresses its concern Mr. MANSFIELD, Mr. President, the What is our present situation? with heavy emphasis on defense-related Fanbright amendment which was just Yesterday, Senator PROXMIRE inserted research. It said; a - adopted by the Senate is in my opinion into the RECORD nine tables beginning at We find today a heavy emphasis on fie- of a most significant nature. It should Page 59629. Examination of these tables fense-related research and d,evelopment in have far reaching effects on realining shows how much our research has come the country at large, an emphasis which de- the Federal sponsorship of research at to depend upon the Defense agencies, tracts from similar efforts aimed at other all sources but especially at our academic Particularly basic research of the kind urgent needs of society. Although the em- institutions, I am particularly pleased that should be sponsored by civil agen- phasis on defense work cameabout a . response to perceived national needs, it has with the adoption of that part of the (tICS, especially by the National Science hampered the nation's ability to cope with amendment adding a new section 205. Foundation. If we look at table III, we the problems of the oontemporary world That new section should go a long way see that the Defense Department for As far as M.I.T. Is concerned, the nation's toward obtaining the needed readjust- the fiscal years 1966 to 1969 has funded emphasis on defense produces a bias toward ment of sponsorship, more research at colleges and imiversi- specific areas of research at the institute, I had prepared the following amend- ties than has the National Science Foun- and makes it more difficult to move in other ment in the event the Fulbright amend- dation. If we look at table IV, we see that directions. M.I.T. has a role to play in a t- ment were not successful: over these 3 fiscal years, the Defense tempting to redress this balance, not only Department in virtually every field of within itself but also at the national level. On page 3, line 25, insert the following new section: science is a major Federal sponsor and Many of you will recall the request "sm. 205. None of the funds authorized far outspends the NSF. Table V makes Made last year for current information to be appropriated by this Act may be used the case even stronger, for here the De- about ongoing research projects of Fed- to carry out any research project or study fense Department has been funding as oral departments and agencies. The re- unless such project or study has a direct and much or more basic research than the suiting 12 cartons have been men- apparent relationship to a specific military agency which Congress established for tioned many times in this Chamber. 1 function or operation." this very purpose; namely, the National must confess that trying to get an over- The amendment is identical with that Science Foundation. all grasp of this massive outpouring of part of the Fulbright amendment that What has happened is that research information has been no easy task, and I adds a new section 205. That section 205 has ridden on the coattail of military wonder, based on our experience, what is now apart of this bill, appropriations simply because that mon- mechanisms exist within the executive It should be emphasized again as the ey was easy to obtain, branch to grasp the whole of thess debate continues on this measure that Take basic research as a case in point, varied, diverse research programs. the vigorous give and take displayed which by definition cannot be closely, di- We have made two preliminary forays again today is not intended as an attack rectly and visibly linked to a given need into this massive collection of project upon the military. Rather it is serving or problem. If the linkage is direct and information. Taking one field of science, to raise and illuminate many important visible, then the work is probably applied chemistry, we counted 1,988 chemistry Issues, one of which is the extent the De- research, or engineering. A year ago last research projects reported by eight de- fense Department should fund research, April, the Senate Foreign Relations Com- partanents and agencies. Of these, the particularly research not directly and mittee held hearings on Department of top three agencies were DHEVV with 617 visibly linked to present and foreseeable Defense sponsored foreign affairs re- projects, NSF with 458, and DOD with military needs and responsibilities. messiah. At those hearings Admiral Rick- 392. The DOD projects represented costs The Nation's scientific community has over, who is given to calling a spade by of about $17.4 million for fiscal years a longstanding debt to the Defense Its Proper name, was asked about the 1987 and 1968. Of these, 124 Air Force Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 "Augstst 12, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE projects were with universities and 1'7 with industry; 157 Army projects were with universities and one with industry; 21 Navy projects were with universities and five with industry. Taken together, of the 392 chemistry projects reported by DOD, 302 were in universities and educa- tional institutions, 23 were in industry, 53 were performed abroad, and 14 were with other kinds of organizations. These figures reveal how much re- search in chemistry has come to depend upon DOD funding. Turning to other fields of science, we looked at project information reported under the combined heading of be- havioral and socisd sciences. Here we find 280 DOD research projects reported representing obligations of $14.8 million for fiscal years 1967 and 1968 combined. Of these, 186 were going on at universi- ties: seven were funded by the Advanced Research Projects Agency; nine by the Army; 63 by the Air Force; and 107 by the Navy. Our initial screening identi- fied 11 subjects in which more than one Defense agency was sponsoring research; table I shows this information. Going further, an admittedly subjec- tive reading of these project titles for the behavioral and social sciences suggested that many could have been equally well funded by the National Science Founda- tion. In fact, of the 280 projects reported by DOD for behavioral and social sci- ences, as many as 212 representing obli- gations of $9.7 million out of a total of $14.8 million for fiscal years 1967 and 1968 combined, seemed appropriate for NSF and other civil agency support; table II gives the details. With the per- mission of the Senate, I would insert in the RECORD a list of the titles for Defense research projects reported in behavioral and social sciences that initial reading suggests are appropriate for funding by the National Science Foundation. The members can judge for themselves how directly and visibly related to de- fense needs are such research projects as "rate-controlled speech and mediat- ing variables in second-language learn- ing," funded by ARPA; or "the socio- economic aspects of command control in developing nations" by Army; or "organ pathology and prenatal-post- natal biochemical responses associated with early social-developmental rela- tionships" by the Air Force; or 'organi- zational, cultural and personal factors influencing work productivity" by the Navy. I cite these titles not to point a finger of ridicule, for we have no information as to the scientific quality of the work or the standing of the investigators. What I do intend is to question the relevance of subjects of these kinds to the military needs of the Nation, and to question why scientific research of this kind, if needed in the national interests, is not funded by other departments and agencies. Mr. President, this body can long de- bate the issue of Defense support for re- search that is more appropriate to other agencies without ever affecting what is going on. Debate can frame the issues, but only action can produce change. The change that national interests dictates is to relieve the military of its present funding of research not clearly, directly, and visibly linked to its responsibilities and functions. Whatever action we take will be painful, particularly if other members of this body who are concerned with funding of research by civil agen- cies under their jurisdiction are not persuaded to provide the funding so that DOD can transfer such work without dis- rupting too much of the ongoing re- search. Despite the pains of reductions, or ter- minations, or transitions, I propose that our national interests require us to act now and at least to begin the disengage- ment of Defense from funding of re- search not closely related to its needs. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have printed in the RECORD three tables which bear on this subject. S 9771 There being no objection, the tables were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: TABLE I.-RESEARCH SPONSORED BY MORE THAN 1 DEFENSE AGENCY Project Air Navy Force Army ARPA Learning foreign languages x x x Pattern recognition x x x Learning x x x Visual perception x x x Decisionmaking x x x Teaching complex material x x Effects of drugs on performance._ x x Behavior under stress x x Leadership x x Group interaction x x Memory x x TABLE II,-COMPARISON OF TOTAL NUMBER OF DEFENSE PROJECTS IN BEHAVIORAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCES FOR 1968 WITH THOSE POSSIBLY APPROPRIATE FOR SUPPORT BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION Number of projects Number of NSF type Fiscal year 1967 Funding for all behavioral and Per- social science cent research NSF type Fiscal year 1968 Funding for all behavioral and Per- social science cent research NSF Fur- typo cent ARPA 12 12 100 Army 22 18 81 Air Force 76 71 93 Navy 170 111 65 Total $611,683 849,045 1, 595, 000 5, 372, 000 280 212 75 8,427,728 PROJECTS IN THE BEHAVIORAL AND SOCIAL Scr- ENCES REPORTED BY THE DEFENSE DEPART- TN' 1968 THAT APPEAR APPROPRIATE FOR SUPPORT BY THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECT AGENCY Research on the psychological origins of revolution, fy '67, $39,000. Factors associated with cultural change in Middle Eastern countries, fy '68, $238,000. Research on behavior in international sys- tems, $0.1 Experimental study of the psychological processes involved in the use of language, $0. Handbook and casebook for practical eval- uators, fy '68, $32,000. Risk-taking and negotiation In leakier and delegate groups, fy '67, $36,483. On-line computer studies of bargaining behavior, fy '67, $216,000. Computer recognition of patterns of be- havior, fy '68, $89,775. The characteristics of incentive systems and their effect on individual behavior, fy '68, $95,000. Psychological processes of the central ner- vous system, fy '68, $200,000. Modes of organizing and presenting com- plex educational material fy '67, $110,800. Rate-controlled speech and mediating var- iables in second-language learning fy '67, $179,400. DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY The relationship between subjective a,nd objective assessments of fatigue. fy '68, $7,850. The effects of psycho-active chemicals on cognitive social skills. fy '67, $10,688; fy '68, $1,840. Socio-economic aspects of command con- trol in developing nations. fy '67, $85,934; fy '68, $74,000. Temporal orientation and task perform- ance. fy '67, $19,528. Comparative studies of the central mech- anisms of sensory discrimation. fy '67, $24,912. Performance: vigilance-factors influencing I "$0" means a project is on-going in fy '67 and '68 but was previously funded. $611,603 100 1654, 775 $654, 775 100 744,673 87 343,825 340,242 99 1,554, 000 3,030, 000 97 56 1,020, 000 4, 440, 000 1,008,600 2, 824, 000 98 63 5,948,356 70 6, 456, 000 4, 827, 017 74 detection and monitoring. fy '67, $30,667; fy '68, $30,890. Effects of drugs on sensorimotor processes and mentation. fy '67, $32,586; fy '68, $30,321. Perceptual lag as a function of onset and offset visual stimulation. $0 either year. Stimulus factors in human timing be- havior. fy '67, $1,899; fy '68, $300. Remote detection of cortical unit spike dis- charge; is it possible? fy '67, $18,689. Sleep and dream research. fy '67, $28,063; fy '68, $22,500. Analysis of visual and pupillary function- ing. fy '67, $14,338. Basic studies of psycho-physic measure- ment theory applicable to human sensory processes. $0 either year. Adaptation to bodily rotation. fy '67, $16,436; fy '68, $1,791. Suppression and fusion in stereopsis. fy '67, $44,856. Development of a psychophysical photo quality measure. fy '67, $10,948. Interdisciplinary research iii learning con- trol systems and pattern recognition. fy '67, $341,500; fy '68, $170,750. Suppression and fusion in stereopsis. fy '67, $33,634. DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE An information system for an enclaved so- ciety. fy '68, $89,000. Military contribution to modernization- Middle East and North Africa. fy '67," $36,000. Decision making in situations of practical action. fy '67, $57,000. Persuasive communication in functional organizations. $0. Visual perception of movement. $0. - 'Research to improve language training/ Western Europe. fy '68, $49,000. Political development and moderization in Islamic countries-military planning, $0. Measurements of attitude and attitude change. $0. Ultrasonic determination of body compo- sition. fy '67, $28,000. An experimental study of the develop- ment of consensus. fy '67, $21,000. Studies of uncertainty, information search and decision-making. $0. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9772 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE Theory and methods in the study of or- ganizational stress. fy '67, $112,000. A model for stimulus releva rice. $0. Performance and Wooten iical responses related to social changes veleus chemothera- py. fy '67, $38,000. Organ pathology and prenatal-postnatal biochemical responses asseciated with early social-developmental relatieleilliPs. $0. Spatial-temporal effects of high intensity point sources of light on the induction of apparent motion. fy '67, 821..000. Examination of short term :Ind long term memory processes/role of temporal lobe. fy '67, $16,000. Study of the narrative- review in pro- grammed instruction. $0. Human selective learning, fy eV, 318,000; fy '68, $20,000. Effects of physical and symbolic stressors on perceptual mechanistm.fy '67, $25,000. Social-cultural aspects of development. fy '67, $33,000. Emergent leaders in deeeleping nations. $0. Research in background imigery interpre- tation. fy '68, 316,000. Military implications of chnige: Commu- nist China. fy '67, $104,000. _ Predictive model for intra-geoup negotia- tion, fy '67, $26,000. Methodology for analysis_ re" internal so- cial movements. fy '67, $9,000. Innovation, social exch,ange and institu- tionalization. fy '67, $49,000. Measurement Of reactions to earees. fy '67, $33,000. Aerospace power and behavioral knowledge. fy '67, $105,000. Psycho-physiological measur ment of re- sponse to information overload et. complexity. fy '67, $68,000. Transfer of technology under military and related conditions-Japan and other coun- tries. $0. Social psychological aspects of stress. fy '67, $94,000. Rational models for strategic behavior. fy '67, $24,000. Movement, learning and behevior. fy '67, $30,000; fy '68, $36,000. Transformational and orgatite Lionel proc- esses in memory. fy '67, $14,000. Comparative study of nomad ive behavior among Japanese and American youth. fy '67, $34,000. Social-psyclaological factors in the devel- opment of new nations. $0. _ Influence of memory factors on sensory discrimination. fy '68, $15,000. Leadership, organizational effectiveness, and human resources. $0. The desire for group achievement: origins and effects. fy '68, $61,000. Operational description of behavioral laws, fy '67, $19,000. Cultural differences in task approach and optimal performance in a. trans. for task. fy '68, $400,000. Simulation studies of organiparional com- munication behavior under Stress. fy '67, $47,000; fy '68, $43,000. An analysis of group feedback effects. fir '67, 330,000. Allocation of resources in a multirnan- machine system simulation. fy '68, $40,000. Elementary processes In petite: n percep- tion. $0. Social mobility and professionel motiva- tion-application to Air Force manpower pool. fy '68, $11,000. Speech characteristics as indices of atti- tude, mood and motivational State. fy $47,000. Study of cognitive and affective attitudes. $0. Altered levels of consciousness and human performance. fy '67, $64,000. Psychophysiological baseline pattern an- alysis. fy '67, $83,000 fy '68, $32,000. Elite structure ancl elite tranaformation in totalitarian political systems. $0. Perception of dynamic stimuli, Sy '67, $38,000. The prediction of subject motivatibility in laboratory experimentation. fy '67, $29,000; fy '68, $19,000, A study in social science decision making. $0. Experimental study of the effects of sur- round brightness and size on visual perform- ance. fy '67, 079,600. Organization of information about human learning transfer and retention. fy '67, $25,000. Criteria for the design of new forms of organization. fy '67, $45,000; fy '68, $65,000. Remembering, forgetting and recovery of memory. fy '67, $30,000. Psycho-physical relations in perception of space, time and velocity. fy '67, $8,000. Executive decision making in organiza- tions under stress and crisis. fy '67, $47,000. Operational analysis of behavioral situa- tions, fy '67, $20,000. Political-idological systems and hostility patterns. $0. Movement and perceptual-motor perform- ance during atypical input conditions, $0. Individual differences in motor and verbal skills. fy '68, $62,000. Expectations of motivations related to power differences within groups. $0. Decisions and decision-makers: the effects of confidence, social risk and commitment fy '67, 329,000. Effects of supportive, close and punitive styles of supervision. fy '67, $5,000. Improvement of learning capabilities. fy '67, $87,000. A systematic investigation of contrast ef- fects related to vigilance tasks. fy '87, $17,000. Effects of task characteristics on perform- ance. fy '68, 350,000. T.T.S. DEPARTMENT OP THE NAVY Human engineering guide to equipment design and evaluation, fir '87, $15,000; fy $80,000. Experimental techniques for predicting performance of electronics personnel. fy '67, $20,000; fy '68, $37,000. Properties of visual displays and methods for evaluating the effectiveness of displays. fy '68, 320,000. Functional evaluation of electrolurnines- cent pictorial status displays. fy '67, $20,000. Psycho physiological problems of pilot pro- tection. fy '67, 340,000; fy '68, 330,000. An integrated system for measuring diver performance. fy '67, $26,000; fy '68, $50,000. Development of computer assisted instruc- tion procedures to aid in teaching complex concepts. fy '67, $70,000; fy '68, $70,000. Determination of the relationships be- tween the electrical activity of the human retina and the perception of form. fy '67, $15,000. The role of motivation in Naval leader- ship. fy '67, $57,000. Investigation of habit reversal techniques of potential use with Navy personnel. fy '67, $15,000; rY '68, $34,000i Image enhancement of Navy display sys- tems, fy '68, $11,000. Inducing cooperation between adversaries. fy '67, $41,000. Psycho physics mechanisms of atten- tion, memory, information processing and decision making, fy '67, $31,000; fy '68, $25,- 000, Dynamics of conflict and cooperation In small groups, teams, and crews. fy '67, 445,000. Speech as an indication of stress, $0. Recognition and discrimination of com- plex visual stimuli in continuous motion. fy '67, 355,000. Pattern recognition of EEG to determine level of alertness. fy '68, 346,000. New teehniquee for presenting human-en- August 12: 1969- gln.eering data to design engineering. fy '68, $20,000. Effect of cold water on divers. fy '67, $30,- 000; fy '68, 337,000. Systems analysis research on pilot land- ing performance. fy '67, 340,000; fy '68, $26,- 000, Development of techniques for using com- puters to administer and score psychologi- cal tests to Navy applicants. fy '67, $76,000; fy '68, $26,000. Computer-assisted instruction informa- tion exchange. fy '67, $47,000; fy '68, $56,000. Diver performance measures. fy '67, $30,- 000; fy '68 823,000. Machine augmentation of human strength and endurauee. fy '68, $400,000; fy 88, $167,- 000. Improving intelligibility of divers using helium-oxygen breathing mixtures, fy "68, $44,000. Comparison of different organizational structures in terms of crew effectiveness. fy '67 810,000. Psychological and physiological factors af- fecting team performance. fy '67 327,000. Effects of perceptual isolation on the hu- man Subject. fy '67 426,000; fy '68 $23,000. Inetractional strategies In computer as- sisted instruction. fy '67 357,000; fy '68 $71,- 000. _ Improving search and acquisition for tar- gets In peripheral vision. fy '67 $31,000; fy '68 $20,000. Computer classification of physiological responses in hazardous environments. fy '67 $34,000. Application of attitude change principles to equipment acceptance. fy '68 $39,000. Relationship between Navy vigilance tasks and body chemistry changes. fy '68 $40,000. The effects of persuasive communications on attitudes. fy '67 $38,000, Effects of drugs on stress and vigilance he- havior of Navy operators. fy '67 335.000. Drug enhancement ancement of performance on Na- val personnel under stress. fy '67 $22,000; fy ,68 322,o Electrical activity of human eye muscles under statin and dynamic viewing conditions. fy '67 316,000: fy '68 $16,000. Special methoris for resisting psychological warfare techniques. fy '67 $26,000; re '68 $65 Comparative study of electroencephal pat- terns. fy '68 $14,000._ Determination of the relationships among sensory and display interpretation factors in man-machine information transfer sit- uations. fy '67 $35,000; fy '68 335,000. Organizational, cultural and personal fac- tors influencing work productivity. fy '67 3131.000. Determination of the effects of high in- tensity light flashes on the eye and on visual perception. fy '67 $4,000; fy '68 $15,000. Survey of human factors and biotechnol- ogy research. fy '68 $22,000. Interaction of drugs with other factors determining human performance. $0. The measurement of stress and its rela- tionship to and effects on human perform- ance in mental and motor work. $0. Processing of information sequentially die- played by computer-driven cathode-ray tubes, fy '67 328,000. Work producing capabilities of underwater operators. fy '67 031,000; fy '68 330,000. Symposium on applied models of man- machine systems. fy '68 $4,000. Defining the conditions which control how well test material is learned and how long it is remembered. fy '67 $32,000. Row human beings acquire and evaluate Information in the process of Inu-kirg judg- inents and decisions. fy '88 $30,000. Military implications of modernization in the Far East. $0,. The study of leadership effectiveness in complex situations. fy 117 $15,000. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71B00364R000300100001-3 ? August 12, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-- SENATE S 9773 It is my further understanding that before the Senate concludes its business tonight, the distinguished Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. PROXMIRE) will lay down his amendment on the C5-A; that we will come in at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning; that the Senator from Wis- consin and other Senators will lay the foundation for the amendment. The amendment, however, would not be voted on tomorrow, but would be the pending business when the Senate re- turned on September 3. It is a very im- portant amendment, and it is hoped that a full attendance will be in the Senate at that time. In other words, to those of you who are interested in attending the state dinner at Los Angeles-and that is only one factor among many others-if we go through with what I have just dis- cussed, there will be no rollcall votes tomorrow; and all I can say, on that basis, is Godspeed. Sound conduction in the ear affecting milt- The measurement of speech intelligibility. tary communications. fy '67 $26,000. fy '68 $16,000. Group information processing and cleci- Leadership requirements in differing or- sion-making in complex situations. fy '67 ganizational settings. fy '67 $23,000; fy '68 $50,000. $30,000. Military implications of social change. fy Experiments on leadership, authority and '67 $140,000. , influence. fy '67 $22,000. Determination of the relationships between Theories and models of military group be- the responses of humans and the physical havior. fy '67 $37,000. dimensions of stimulation for the sense of Research on panic behavior. fy '67 $5,000; taste. $0. fy '68 $4,000. Research to improve methods of training in The influence of power on group produc- f oreign languages. fy '67 $19,000. tivity and morale. $0. Helium speech distortion correction using Reduction of hostility within groups to an analog simulation of the human ear. fy enhance team performance. fy '67 $20,000; '68 $35,000. fy '68 $20,000. Development of classification procedures to Studies of computer-assisted instruction; Identify pilot vertigo research. fy '68 $50,000. instructional strategies and behaviorally Biophysical changes affecting behavioral oriented language. fy '68 $68,000. performance. fy '67 $20,000; fy '68 $20,000. Conference on group decision making. fy Consulting and advisory services for the '68 $6,000. social and behavioral science. fy '67 $14,000; Effects of group interaction on problem fy '68 $17,000. solving. $0. Identification of variables which predict Identification of factors influencing the international conflict. fy '67 $26,000; fy '68 effectiveness of management and leadership. $24,000. fy '67 $28,000; fy '68 $45,000. Analysis of reward as a means of promoting Theory and measurement of international adult learning. fy '67 $29,000. conflict. fy '68 $165,000. Enhancement by drugs of Naval person- Research on how visually patterned stim- nel performance under stress. fy '67 $65,000; uli are classified by the nervous system. $0. fy '68 $49,000. Undersea work performance and psycho- Control of purposive movement through logical adjustment. fy '67, $22,000; fy '68 sequenced electrical stimulation of brain sites. fy '67 $121,000; fy '68 $51,000. $30,000. Research on factors involved in the de- Investigation of methods to reduce train- tection and identification of visual and audi- ing failures among intellectually able stu- tory signals. fy '67 $35,000. dents. fy '68 $25,000. Techniques of differential assignment of Effects of extreme environments on per- personnel. $0. formance of Navy teams and groups. fy '67 Comparative research on interpersonal per- $5,000. , ception. fy '68 $15,000. Mechanisms of human auditory localiza- Characteristics of Navy trainees that en- tion as related to Naval communications sys- hance or inhibit learning. fy '67 $44,000. terns. fy '68 $33,000. Comparative analyses of leadership prac- Techniques for improving human memory. tices. fy '68 $31,000. fy '68 $43,000. . Implications of organizational stability and Neural mechanisms involved in the proc- instability for psychological operations. fy essing of visual and auditory information. $0. '68 $150,000. Comparative studies of conflict and conflict Experimental analysis of aggressive be- resolution. fy '68 $36,000. havior. fy '67 $43,000; fy '68 $26,000. Analysis of the human behavior processes Brain nucleic acid changes during learn- involved in solving complex problems. fy '67 ing. fy '68 $26,000. $22,000; fy '68 $20,000. Basic mechanisms in. attention and vigi- lance of human operators. $0. Atlas of principles of group behavior for studies of crew Isolation and confinement. fy '67 $15,000; fy '68 $33,000. Speech analysis of men under stress. fy '67 $25,000; fy '68 $25,000. Determination of the factors influencing the perception of form and distance of un- derwater divers. fy '68 $7,000. Underwater work measurement techniques. fy '67 $25,000; fy 68 $34,000. PROGRAM ADJOURNMENT FROM AUGUST 13 TO SEPTEMBER 3, 1969 Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I move that the Senate turn to the con- sideration of House Concurrent Resolu- tion 315, with, of course, the proviso that the Senator from Arkansas does not lose his right to the floor. The PRESIDING .r.riCER. The con- current resolution 11 be stated by the clerk. The legislative cle k read the concur- rent resolution (H. Con. Res. 315) as follows: H. Coil. ES. 315 Resolved by the H (the Senate concu Houses shall adjourn 13, 1969, and that said day they sta o'clock noon on W 1969. se of Representatives ing), That the two on Wednesday, August hen they adjourn on adjourned until 12 nesday, September 3, Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, for have order? Mr. PROUTY. r. President, may we the information of the Senate, it is my intention shortly to call up House Con- The PRESID G OFFICER. The mo- current Resolution 315, but if the dis- tion is not deba ble. tinguished minority leader, in the mean- the floor? Mr. STENNIS Mr. President, who has time, has any questions, I will endeavor The PRESID G OFFICER. The ques- to answer them. tion before -th Senate is an adjourn- Biophysics of vision for design of optimal Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I would like to ask the distinguished majority ment resolutio and is not debatable. target displays. fy '68 $4,000. leader about the program for the balance Mr. PROU . Mr. President, I ask for Attitude change for the enhancement of of the day, but more particularly about the yeas and nays, then, if I cannot morale. fy '67 $30,000. speak. Improvements in underwater voice cora- the program for tomorrow, and whether The yeas a d nays were ordered. munication. fy '68 $34,000. or not there may be recorded votes on The PRESI sING OFFICER. The ques- Research on psychiatric effectiveness of fu- any amendments that may be submitted, tion is on : : eeing to the concurrent Research on physical and psychological fac- contingent will be going to the dinner resolution. e clerk will call the roll. ture weapon systems crews. fy '67 $54,000. knowing, of course, that a substantial tors involved in underwater speech commu- Mr. STEN S. Mr. President, a parlia- nication. fy '67 $50,000; fy '68 $57,000. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, it is mentary in. iry. . in California. Effect of noise on inner-ear cells. fy '67 The PRE- DING atoriCER. The Sen- $43,000; fy '68 $28,000. a good thing that the distinguished mi- ator will st: e it. Behavioral science inputs to the prediction nority leader raised that particular Mr. S i IS. What are we voting on? of conflict. fy '68 $275,000. question at this time. It is my under- The PRE IDING OFFICER. The clerk Conference on psychological problems in standing that the distinguished chair- will restate the resolution. large-scale change. fy '67 $7,000; fy '68 man of the Foreign Relations Commit- $24,000. tee, the Senator from Arkansas (Mr. The legi ative clerk read as follows: Automatic teaching systems; man-machine FULBRIGHT) , has two amendments whichResolved cc the House of Representatives interactions involving high speed digital (the Senat: concurring), That the two computers. $0. may not take too much time. Houses shal adjourn on Wednesday, Au- Effect of environmental restriction on per- It is my further understanding that gust 13, 19&, and that When they adjourn formance, fy '68 $4,000. there is a very strong possibility that a on said day they stand adjourned until 12 o'clock noo on Wednesday, September 3, Factors involved in modifying hostile at- yea-and-nay vote on House Concurrent 1969. titudes. fy '67 $2,000; fy '68 $36,000. Resolution 315, the resolution to ad- Comparative study of interaction between journ for 3 weeks, will be asked for; ideology and behavior. fy '67 $50,000. and, of course, if it is, it will be granted. ment of the pledge made by the joint Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71B00364R0003001(1) Mr. MANSFIELD. This is a fulfill- S 9774 leadership to all Senators, and about which all Senators were informed as long ago as last January, with no ob- jection at that time. The PRESIDING OFFI(ielt. The clerk will call the roll. The legislative clerk called the roll. Mr. KENNEDY. I announce that the Senator from Tennessee eMr. GORE), is absent on official business I also announce that the Senator from Nevada (Mr. BrseE), the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. EesTeeeie), he Senator from Utah (Mr. Moss), the Senator from Georgia (Mr. RUSSELL) , and the Senator from Texas (Mr. Yeretoeoueer) are necessarily absent. Mr. SCOTT. I announce that the Sen- ator from Ohio (Mr. Seem) is necessarily absent. The Senator from Oklahoma (Mr. BELLMON), the Senator freer' Utah (Mr. BENNETT), and the Senator from Illinois (Mr. PERCY) , are detained on official business. If present and voting, the Senator from Utah (Mr. BENNETT), and the Senator from Illinois (Mr. PERCIa, would each vote "yea." The result was announced?yeas 76, nays 14, as follows: [No. 80 Leg.] YEAS-70 Gurney Montoya Hansen telnet Harris mphy Hart Muskie Hartke on flatileld PP ckwood Hollings EPerson Hruska PdU Hughes Proxmire Inouye aftlidolph Jackson Ribienff Javits achweiker Jordan, N.C. ainith Jordan, Idaho Saps rkraan Kennedy >g Long Sten nis Magnuson St, yens Mansfield Symington Mathias Th,irmond McCarthy tower McGee Tydings McGovern Williams, N.J. McIntyre Soong, N. Dak. Metcalf Too rig, Ohio Miller Mondale NAYS-14 Ervin Goldwater Holland McClellan Pastore NOT VOTING-10 Bellmon Gore Lambe Bennett Moss iborough Bible Percy Eastland Russell So the concurrent resolution (H. Con. Res. 315) was agreed to. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE August 12, 1969* Anderson Baker Bayh Boggs Brooke Burdick Byrd, Va. Byrd, W. Va. Cannon case Church Cook Cranston Curtis Dirksen Dodd Dole Dominick Eagleton Ellender Fannin Fong Pulbright Goodell Gravel Griffin Aiken Allen Allott Cooper Cotton Presty Scott Talmadge Williams, Del. ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield without losing his right to the floor? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. KENNEDY. Mr. President, may we have order? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ate will be in order. The Senator may proceed. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, for the information of the Senate, there may well be one or two rollcall votes this eve- ning before adjournment. I do not think that the debate on the next two amend- ments will take very long. I would suggest that in the interest of better procedure and a more expe- ditious departure, Senators stay as close to the floor as possible so that we can dispose of the amendments one way or the other. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I Point out that my statement will not take over 3 or 4 minutes. Mr. MAGNUSON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield me 1 minute? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I yield 1 minute to the Senator from Wash- ington. JURISDICTION OF SENATE COM- MITTEES ON MASS TRANSIT MEASURE Mr. MAGNUSON. Mr. President, yes- terday the administration sent up a proposed piece of legislation on mass transit that encompassed a great num- ber of transit problems and rapid tran- sit in urban areas. It goes back in some instances to the proposal contained in the original mass transit bill, the jurisdiction of which lies in the Banking and Currency Committee. Many of the suggestions contained in the bill are also within the province of the Commerce Committee. The distinguished Senator from Utah introduced a bill and had it referred to the Committee on Banking and Cur- rency. However, the distinguished chair- man of that committee and the Senator from New Hampshire (Mr. COTTON) and I have an agreement that when they get through with that measure, it will be forwarded to the Commerce Committee so that we may consider the sections that properly belong within the jurisdic- tion of that committee. This is an all-Inclusive, pretty wide- ranging bill. I wanted the record to reflect this sit- uation. PROPOSED 1VIEETING OF FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMA:I-IV& Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, be- fore I make my statement on the pend- ing matter, there is one other matter that I should like to point out. Because of an unexpetted emergency, we were not able in the Committee on Foreign Relations this morning to vote on a pending matter. There was a rollcall in the Senate much earlier than we had expected. As soon as we dispose of the two amendments, If we can get a quorum, I would appreciate it very much if the committee members could come to the committee rooms so that we might have a very brief meeting. It should not take more than 5 or 10 minutes to dispose of the one remaining piece of business?the Peace Corps measure?before we ad- journ. Mr. President, I hope that the com- mittee members can come to the com- mittee room. I guarantee them that it will not take more than a few minutes. We will either do it or not do it within 10 minutes. / would appreciate it if after the disposal of these two brief amend- ments the members of the committee would come tAtivoinntittee room. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS POR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the considera- tion of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize ap- propriations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles and to authorize the construc- tion of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized persoemel strength of the Selected Re- serve of each reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, amendment No. 129 does two things. First, it makes clear that no more than $3 billion of the funds appropriated for use of the Armed Perces of the United States may be used to support the forces of Vietnam and other free world forces In Vietnam, or local forces in Laos and Thailand. Second, this amendment require.s that the decisions as to the expenditures of these funds are to be the responsibility of the President rather than the respon- sibility of the Secretary of Defense. My purpose in proposing this amend- ment is to tighten up the provisions of this authorizaton bill. As it now stands, the Congress would be authorizing the Secretary of Defense "on such terms and conditions as he may determine" to spend, Without any limita- tion whatsoever, an amount that could be as high as $80 billion to pay the ex- penses of armed forces other than those of the United States. This, I know, is preposterous. The Vec- etary of Defense would do not such hing. But that is precisely what the lan- uage of title IV authorizes as I read it. There must be some limit on the mount we are expected to take from he use of our Armed Forces and give to ther free world forces. I guess I do not know what that limit My amendment specifies that not more an $3 billion may be spent on foreign rmed forces. That is more than we pend for economic foreign aid and for any domestic programs. It is but 10 ercent of the some $30 billion which the ietnam war costs the United States nnually. I know it will be said that there must a broad delegation of discretion in e expenditure of these funds because hope that South Vietnam forces will e over more and more of the burden. ut I suggest that the Senate is entitled least to have an estimate of how much xt year is to be used to pay for the rces of allies fighting with us in Viet- a Is th a 111. 13 V a be th we tak at ne fo Dam. If the chairman of the Armed Services Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12, 196APProved FaffR6TORMSORM/3REMitRDPflritioAR000300100001-3 - Committee is not agreeable to the limit- I want to offer this substitute amend- Mr. STENNIS. I yield. ing figure of $3 billion for this purpose, ment now. Instead of saying "not to ex- Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, I would be interested in receiving some ceed $3 billion," I think we should put there is'a $500 million difference here. As other estimate. it at $2.5 billion; and if more money is I understand the position of the distin- It does not make much sense to me to needed, they can get the authorization guished Senator from Mississippi, he hold elaborate hearings on the Defense for it. agrees with the principle of what is de- Department budget, to receive detailed So I do not think we should try to step sired by the distinguished Senator from estimates on the costs of various weapons on the President of the United States by Arkansas. We are in a fight in Vietnam, systems, and then to adopt language in requiring him to issue a certificate, and we are and have been taking mili- this bill which says in effect that not- My amendment, which reads as fol- tary action in Laos and Thailand. withstanding any other law authorizing lows, is offered as a substitute: I would hope that the able chairman of funds for the Armed Forces of the United On page 5, line 11, strike out the quotation the Committee on Foreign Relations States, the Secretary of Defense can marks and the word "Funds" and insert in would accept the proposal presented by spend whatever he desires to support lieu thereof the following: "Not to exceed the chairman of the Committee on other free world forces in Vietnam and $2,500,000,000 of the funds". Armed Services. On page 5 line 17, insert for the word "con- Mr. FULBRIGHT. I intended to do S 9775 local forces in Laos. ditions" the phrase "under Presidential The Congress must be cautious of such regulations". wide open delegations of authority. I hope the chairman of the Committee That will put it forth in the register. on Armed Forces will accept this amend- The President is responsible for what it ment. does, anyway. I think that will take care Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President and of the situation. members of the committee, I call special So I offer that as a substitute, and I attention to the situation with respect to thank the Senator from Arkansas very title 4. It may be that a rollcall vote will much for calling attention to that mat- not be required on the matter. ter. This language, if it is going to refer I will first make a brief_ explanation of to the other authorization bills, should title 4 of the bill. It covers what was once have a limit on it, and it is limited. Let called foreign military aid or foreign aid me repeat for clarity, that it is limited for the military. But this section is lim- to the forces in Vietnam, other free world ited to the South Vietnamese and other forces in Vietnam, and the local forces free world forces in Vietnam, local forces in Laos and Thailand. In Laos and Thailand, and for related Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will costs during the fiscal year 1970 on such the Senator yield? terms and conditions as the Secretary of Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Defense may determine. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Inasmuch as it does Mr. President, that is the identical deal particularly with the local forces in language that was used for last year in Laos and Thailand, two countries in the authorization bill as brought forward which, at least technically and legally, without any change and also for the we are not at war, does the Senator not year 1968. think it would be better that this respon- I am going to propose an amendment sibility be given to the President? We are as a substitute to the amendment of the now discussing before our committee a Senator from Arkansas. The funds now matter involving Thailand, and it seems in the bill for this purpose amount to to me that this is a matter of such con- only $147 million. That is in hardware sequence that it should be squarely the The authorization is merely for the Ap- President's responsibility to make a deci- propriations Committee, concerning such sion on a matter of this kind, as distin- other amounts as they may appropriate guished from the ongoing war in Viet- and for whatever purposes they may ap- nam. That is the part of it that struck propriate. The Appropriations Commit- me?that it should be a presidential re- tee now has authority to appropriate sponsibility in the law. items except military hardware for our Mr. STENNIS. I think it should be a A r Navy but they do not have au- presidential responsibility. He is respon- thority to appropriate even 0. & M. sible for it, anyway. Certainly, we can , funds?operation and maintenance trust him to make the regulations about have the presidential responsibility at funds?for the Army of South Vietnam. this matter, and then the Secretary of the very peak, but I think he should be So this would be a general authorization. Defense, acting under those regulations permitted to make the regulations, and When this matter came before us, my and our law and restrictions, I be- then the Secretary can act on them. best recollection is that in looking at it, lieve---- Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, a the Chief of Staff said that this is iden- Mr. FULBRIGHT. Customarily, I say parliamentary inquiry. tical to the matter of last year, and that to the Senator, under the foreign aid bill The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- was correct. We did not get to the figures which my committee has handled, the ator will state it. then, however, and they gave me the funds are made available to the Presi- Mr. FULBRIGHT. Is it proper for me figures later, and showed how it was dent. to accept the substitute or withdraw my spent last year for this purpose?$2.5 Mr. STENNIS. Yes. amendment? billion. For this year, it is estimated to Mr. FULBRIGHT. That has been tra- Mr. President, I modify my amend- be $2.26 billion for this purpose. ditional, since the beginning. Actually,..., ment as proposed by the Senator from On that point, I did not notice the open this is an item which has been in the Mississippi. end clause in here, which is the three or foreign aid bill, in foreign assistance, in Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, will the four words on pages 1-2 and 15: "under the past. In fact, some Members pres- Senator yield? this or any other- act." That gives it an ently are considering taking it back into open end, unlimited authorization. I have that bill. Mr. STENNIS. I do not understand. not favored that since we built the Air Therefore, I would suggest?I do not The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- Force Academy. I do not like us to make know that it is all that important?that ator from Arkansas has modified his open end authorizations unless it is it would still be more appropriate for the amendment. absolutely necessary. That is my record responsibility to be given to the Presi- Mr. FULBRIGHT. I modify my amend- on it. dent. ment in accordance with the suggested But I failed to point that out to the Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, will words of the Senator from Mississippi. committee; I am sure I did. That is why the Senator yield? It is his proposal, and that disposes of it. that when I rose. I certainly accept the amendment of the Senator from Missis- sippi as to the amounts. His explanation of it is understandable. I say to the Senator from Missouri that the prosecution of the war, of course, is a military matter. But this involves far more than a military matter, as we found this morning; and it is the very matter into which the Senator from Missouri is looking. I think it is primarily a political matter as to how far we go in a commitment to support the local forces in Laos and Thailand in particular, as distinguished from Vietnam. Mr. SYMINGTON. I know of the legis- lative background incident to the matter we were discussing this morning, and as- certained that the Secretary of Defense believes the matter we discussed this morning, if implemented, would necessi- tate the approval of Congress. Again, it is my hope that the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations would take the language suggested by the chairman of the Committee on Armed Services. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I am willing to ac- cept the Senator from Mississippi's pro- posed amendment in place of mine and would, of course, support it. I merely brought that to his attention, in that I thought there might be a distinction be- tween the significance of the local forces in Laos. But if the Senator from Missis- sippi feels that strongly about it, I am perfectly willing to accept his amend- ment as a substitute for mine. Mr. STENNIS. It is my intention to Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9776 Approved For Re The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment is so modified. Mr. STENNIS. I want to discuss it a little further, but I yield to the Senator from Kentucky. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. SPONG in the chair). Will the Senator send the amendment, as modified, to the desk. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I yield to the Senator from Kentucky. Mr. FULBRIGHT. MiPresident, will the Senator yield to me first briefly? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Did the Senator suggest to strike "any other act" and only confine it to this act? Mr. STENNIS. No, that was done in marking it up. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator does not wish to strike out "any other act." Mr. STENNIS. No, that is part of it. The ceiling is on it now. - Mr. FULBRIGHT Very-well. Mr. STENNIS. I yield to the Senator from Kentucky. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I did not wish to intervene until the Senator from Arkansas and the Senator from Missis- sippi had agreed upon the questions which the Senator from Arkansas had raised. Now, I wish to raise another ques- tion on this section. I hope I may have the attention of the Senate for just a few minutes. When I first read title IV on page 5 of the bill, the thought came to me that it could be considered a commitment as defined in the national commitments resolution which was adopted almost unanimously by the Senate. I may attach too much importance to language, but I want to give the reasons for my think- ing in this direction. In Vietnam we are furnishing supplies and equipment to the South Vietnamese and to other free forces who are assisting the South Vietnamese. We are also using our troops in support of the South Viet- namese. The same situation may prevail in Laos and Thailand, as far as I know. We have authorized the supply of equipment and materiel to Laos and Thailand. Until a few years ago such supplies were author- ized under the military assistance section of the foreign aid bill; in 1967 the au- thority was transferred to the military authorization bill. My question goes to the meaning of the word "support." Is it intended in this section that support of free forces in Laos and Thailand is limited to equip- ment, materiel, and supplies, or is it in- tended that word "support" shall include the use of our own Armed Forces in sup- port of the local forces of Thailand and Laos. Mr. STENNIS. No. Mr. COOPER. If use of our forces is intended, article IV of the bill could be construed as a commitment of our Armed Forces. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, the Sen- ator presents a very good question but I do not hesitate for one moment in answering. It does not include troop personnel of that kind. As a matter of fact, I shall have print- ed in the RECORD within just a few min- cataiGNIESBIODOAICIUMFM1B00afflcIA0t3300100001-2 flugust 12 1969 utes an itemization of these very items for fiscal year 1968, fiscal year 1969, and fiscal year 1970, prospectively. We are dealing here with $2,226,400 for fiscal year 1970 which includes no military construction at this time, but procure- ment for the Army, Navy, shipbuilding conversion, aircraft procurement, mis- sile procurement, and other procure- ment, and the operation and mainte- nance for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force. So it is strictly military matters, and military matters alone. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I accept, of course, as all of us do, the statement and. intention of the Senator from Mis- sissippi, about his understanding of the matter. But it is important that we know the intention of the language which speaks of itself. I would ask if the Sen- ator from Arkansas and the Senator from Mississippi would be willing to modify paragraph (2) which now reads "(2) local forces in Laos and Thailand:" so as to insert before "local" the words: "to provide equipment, material sup- plies, and maintenance thereof to"; The additional language would remove any question of the intention?I do not know this is so intended; I hope it is not intended to use any of these funds for our forces to support the local forces of Laos and Thailand. Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. COOPER. I base my suggested language in part on a statement made by former Secretary of Defense McNa- mara when he asked that funds to assist Laos and Thailand local forces be taken out of the foreign aid bill and placed in the defense bill. He supported his request in a letter to Senator RUSSELL, chairman of the Armed Forces Committee. We are prepared to provide Laos and Thai- land the equipment and supplies they re- quire to combat the armed Communist forces which threaten their freedom. Therefore, the transfer itself implies neither escalation of conflict nor change in type or level of assist?. ance; it merely reflects the most effeotive manner to handle the problem. My amendment would limit the use of any of the funds, as far as Laos and Thailand are concerned, to equipment, material, and supplies Mr. STENNIS.The Senator might sup- ply his language on that point. With re- spect to equipment and supplies there, we already have a list in the RECORD of what is represented, Perhaps the language would provide this would not include any troops or U.S. forces. Maybe that would cover it. Mr. COOPER. "Other than U.S. forces." - Mr. MTTLFR. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, I would like to make a comment. Perhaps the Senator from Mississippi and the Sena- tor from Kentucky might indicate whether or not this is within the scope of the Senator's proposed language. My. understanding is that maintenance can be involved as well as the actual sup- plies and material. Mr. STENNIS. Yes. Mr. MILLER. If we are going to have maintenance, this could indicate con- tract maintenance, or it could indicate modifications of _equipment. So I cer- tainly think maintenance should be in this language if we are going to use spe- cific language. Mr. STNIS.n The word "mainte- nance is in the bill of particulars that I am going to have printed in the RECORD. It does include many things in addition to military hardware. It really has no place in this bill, strictly speaking, except $147 million. As a'inatter of convenience we put it in 2 or 3 years ago. I yield to the Senator from Arizona. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, I am certain I know what the Senator from Kentucky is getting at. I find my- self in favor of that but I have a question as to whether or not his exclusion would be so complete that we could not, for example, install radars in Laos or Thai- land, or electronic detection equipment, or electronic relay equipment that would require, at least for a time, personnel from the United IStates. These people might not be in uniform. They might be South Vietnamese. Would the idea of the Senator from Kentucky go that far? Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I shall try to make myself clear. I do draw a dis- tinction between operations, on the one hand, in Vietnam and in Laos and Thai- land, on the other. Whatever may be one's views on Viet- nam, we are assisting Vietnam in at least two ways: one by the supply of equipment and materiel; and the other, and of greateat importance, by the use of our Armed Forces in support of Armed Forces of Vietnam and other free forces. I have never voted against funds for these purposes. It has been said by former President Johnson that we have made a commit- ment for the use of our Armed Forces by the Gulf of Tonkin resolution. It has been debated and debated. In any case, we are in Vietnam, and we are at war. I do not know what is occurring in Laos or Thailand but I know it has not been declared either by the Executive or the Congress that we have a commitment in Laos and Thailand agatnst the Pathet Lao, or any insurgents in Thailand, or Loas. The United States is at least not at war in Laos or Thailand. My purpose is to be sure that we do not provide funds for the use of our Armed Forces in support of the local forces of Laos and Thailand and thus run the risk of be- coming engaged in war without joint authority, of the Executive and Congress. On June 25, the Senate passed a reso- lution which had been introduced by the Senator from Arkansas, which was later modified and passed almost unani- mously by the Senate. It states: Resolved, That (1) a, national commitment for the purpose of this resolution means the use of the Armed Forces of the United States on foreign territory, or a promise to assist a foreign country, government, or people by the use of the Armed Forces or financial resources of the United States, either im- mediately or upon the happening of certain events, and (2) it is the sense of the Senate that a national commitment by the United States results only from Edfirmative action taken by the executiveand legislative branch- es of the United States Government by Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 August 12, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE S 9777 means of a treaty, statute, or concurrent resolution of both Houses of Congress specifi- cally providing for such commitment. Mr. President, this bill when enacted will become a statute. It will represent the action of both Houses of Congress. It leaves no doubt that we are ready to provide financial resources of the United States to local forces in Laos and Thai- land, but if we do not make certain by proper language that it does not provide funds for our Armed Forces to engage in fighting in support of the local forces of Laos and Thailand, it would be inter- preted that this statute does provide such funds for such use of our Armed Forces. This may be said to strain language, but if it is strained, we become involved in Vietnam by strained action, by the strained premises by the evolution of events which, I am sure, no one in the early years intended or thought would bring us into that war. I want to provide language in this sec- tion, that will insure that use of the funds involves only the financial re- sources of the United States. That means our money, our equipment, our materiel, our supplies and operations related thereto. It would prohibit the use of Armed Forces in support and combat support, of local forces fighting in Laos and Thailand. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, per- haps we are missing a danger involved in all of this; namely, if we lend or sell equipment to the present Vietnam Gov- ernment, it is very possible that in the not too distant future, the North Viet- namese and the Vietcong could well be using that equipment against some of the countries which today are on our side; specifically, Laos and Thailand. That, I think, is a great danger, as evidenced by the fact that in the hear- ings conducted in the Foreign Relations Committee last year, relative to the sale of arms to other countries, we found there were some 6,000 American tanks which, in effect, were for sale if it could be arranged on the right basis to coun- tries in other parts of the world where the tanks were not considered obsoles- cent. With complete respect for the remarks of the distinguished Senator from Ken- tucky, there is no real secret about the fact that we have and are conducting military operations in Laos; also that we are conducting military operations from Thailand, I believe that it is important to recognize tonight if Americans are in danger in Thailand, or if Americans are in danger in Laos, because of actions taken over recent years, it is as im- portant for us to work to defend them in those countries as to defend them in South Vietnam. This morning, in a hearing conducted in the Foreign Relations Committee with respect to certain activities, the witness, not of high rank, testified that before anything occurred under the contingent agreement in question, the matter should be taken up with the Congress. That, to me, made considerable im- pression, because at least up to this ad- ministration, many things took place in Laos and Thailand which were not taken up with the Congress. So I checked the legislative history of the present Secretary of Defense when he was a Member of the other body, and found that he was forceful in stating such matters should be taken up with the Congress. I also found to my satisfaction that the reason this witness stated it should be taken up with the Congress was prob- ably because the Secretary of Defense believed it should be taken up with the Congress. I believe, therefore, that we are in a new era when it comes to the method and the nature of risking troops and utilizing equipment, in foreign countries. I would give full and great credit to the efforts which have been made by the chairman of the Foreign Relations Com- mittee so as to clarify this matter in these hearings. But, for these reasons and because of the position taken by the current man- agement of the Defense Department, I would hope that we would see fit to pass title IV as it is now in the bill. Mr. President, I regret implications? not made here on the floor of the Sen- ate?which would imply that we have no military operations in Laos. We know we are having them there; and we know we have built six major bases in Thai- land. I believe that title 4 is all right. I think this discussion has been constructive from the standpoint of the future. Mr. STENNIS. As it is, by adoption of the amendment of the Senator from Arkansas? Mr. SYIVIINGTON. That is right; the amendment of the able Senator from Arkansas, as modified by the amendment of the distinguished chairman of the Armed Services Committee. We will have both committees working together, and this part of the bill will be settled. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, the Sen- ator from Texas had asked me for recog- nition. I yield to him. Mr. TOWER. Mr. President, I would like to associate myself with the remarks of the distinguished Senator from Mis- souri. I think the thrust of the amend- ment of the Senator from Kentucky would be to deny involvement of Ameri- can personnel. It should be roundly de- feated, To begin with, what we are talk- ing about when we talk about Thailand and Laos forces is paramilitary forces, re- garding counter-insurgency work. We are trying to give them the sophisticated equipment to do anything, for example, airlift and radar. If we cannot train them to use the equipment, it is pretty useless to give it to them. I might say that our bases in Thailand are defended by Thai troops. Is is pro- posed that they get no personnel support from the troops in Thailand? Are we going to get no support for the air bases that are supposed to be defended? The thrust of the amendment of the Senator from Kentucky would be to necessitate using American personnel for work that they would not have to do if we were to allow some support of Thai troops or paramilitary troops. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I would like to hear from the Senator' from Arkansas. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, if the Senator will excuse me just a minute, the Senator from Arkansas and the Senator from Indiana asked me to yield to them. I believe the Senator from Arkansas asked me first. I yield to him. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, as I said a moment ago on this particular amendment, it seems to me that, with the amendment of the Senator from Missis- sippi, it would be satisfactory. I think the matter raised by the Senator from Ken- tucky, however, is a very significant one, and I do not want, in any offhand way, to make what might be called a national commitment with regard to Thailand. In my next amendment as printed, No. 111, which deals with the question of the Secretary of Defense making available reports prepared by outside organiza- tions, I have in mind such things as "think tanks," and so on. That amend- ment is before the Senate. I have also prepared another section which I want to discuss as a modification to my amendment, which provides that? The Secretary of Defense shall also provide to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a copy of all bilateral contingency plans, signed by a representative of the Department of De- fense and an official of a government of a foreign country, involving use of United States forces for the joint defense of that country. It deals, in effect, with the point the Senator from Kentucky has raised. The point of the Senator from Ken- tucky is a very important one. I do not wish, through inadvertence, to see an- other Gulf of Tonkin resolution go through here without knowing it. I am inclined to believe that, with the explana- tion and interpretation given by the Sen- ator from Mississippi and the Senator from Missouri, it would be certainly an outrageous way to interpret it if it were done that way. I wonder if the Senator from Ken- tucky could not offer this amendment at a later date as his own amendment on this precise subject. I do not know wheth- er the next amendment would cover it. I think the Senator has a valid point, but I do not think it is necessary, with what has been said with regard to this amendment. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, if I may say this, I think the Senator from Ken- tucky has made a contribution here. I have enjoyed getting his thought. This is purely a money bill. This is purely a spe- cial section here for foreign military aid. It has 2 years of use as a precedent. Ex- cept to put a ceiling on it, I believe we ought to proceed in that way. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator be- lieves it would be an outrageous distor- tion to interpret it as authority for use of our military forces, apart from what they are presently doing? Mr. STENNIS. I do not see how it could be interpreted that way. It would be a real monstrosity. I yield to the Senator from Louisiana. Mr. 'FLI,ENDER. Mr. President, I do not think there Is any question that the amount is for military hardware and uses of that kind, and does not involve soldiers at all. But I rose to ask the Sen- ator this question; He earmarked $2.5 billion. During the hearings that were Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9778 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE August 12, 1969 held 2 weeks ago, the figure was $2.2 bil- lion instead of $2.5 billion. Mr. STENNIS. Thatis correct. Mr. ELLENDER. Would the Senator modify his amendmencto include that figure? Mr. STENNIS. No. I think there should be some latitude. The 0.2 billion, which I mentioned during the, debate, was ar- rived at when the budget was written up. We have already had a somewhat aug- mented program to aid tile Vietnamese to build up their military forces. I think that $2.5 billion figure is a real- istic one. Mr. ELLENDER. The reason why I raised the question is that we used the figure of $2.5 billion during all the hear- ings we had as being the amount of for- eign aid to be used for military hard- ware. Mr. STENNIS. It will not hurt at all to have this excess. I suggest that in the supplemental bills the extra amount of money will be used. It is better to have it done that way than to have the de- partment draw the money from some- where else and then mune before the Congress with a big defteit. I think we ought to accept the figure of $2.5 billion. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, it is late and I do not want to detain the Senate. As I have said, I may be straining the point, but I do not think so. This is an important matter. For years we have been talking about_Vietnam, and cries of anguish have gone up because we did not look ahead and consider the end that the steps that were being taken could lead to-our involvement in war. This bill before us will become a statute-could be another step involving the United States much as the course of events led to our involveMent in Viet- nam. I would agree that it wOUld be a mon- strosity if the President of the United States, upon the language of this section, should consider the language of this bill as authority to enter war in Laos or Thailand. It would be a monstrosity, and I have full confidence in President Nixon, and that he would not do so, but that does not relieve us of our responsibility. It is admitted here by the chairman of the committee that these funds shall be used only for what has been termed miltiary assistance. . Is that correct? Mr. FULBRIGHT. That is correct, Mr. COOPER. And, as I understand that they shall not be used for our armed forces in support of fighting, or assisting fighting of the local forces of Laos and Thailand, other than for sup- plies. Therefore, I will propose another amendment. "Military assistance," I be- lieve, is a phrase of art. Is it not? Mr. STENNIS. Well, the Senator would know more about that than I would. Mr. FULBRIGHT. For years it was In the foreign aid legislation. I assume it Is still considered as such. Mr. COOPER. In the testimony of the Secretary of Defense before both the Armed Services Committee and the Foreign Relations Committee in 196'1, he spoke of the transfer of military assist- ance from the foreign aid bill to the de- fense bill. He called it military assistance. Mr. FULBRIGHT. That is right. Mr. COOPER. That is what it had been termed when it was considered by the Foreign Relations Committee. I propose: On line 15 before "local" insert the words "military assistance" so as to read "Military assistance to local forces in Laos and Thailand." If these two items, Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand, were separated and distinguished there would be no problem of a misunder- standing. However, the same words are employed for the use of funds in Vietnam as for Laos and Thailand, and there could be a mistake about their meaning. I would urge that before "local" there be inserted the words "Military assistance." Mr. FULBRIGHT. I would think that would be all right. Mr. ,STENNIS. We are talking about money. We are talking about funds. The first sentence reads "Not to exceed $2.5 billion of the funds authorized for ap- propriation for the use of the Armed Forces," and so forth. We are talking about money, and that is all. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Yes. Mr. STENNIS. And it would not fit in there before the Senator's words "local forces," it seems to me. Mr. COOPER. I thoughtmy suggestion would help. I will offer the amendment I first proposed. Is it in order for me to offer an amendment? Mr. SYMINGTON. Will the Senator read it? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair rules that it is not in order for the Senator from Kentucky to offer an amendment at this point, except by unanimous consent. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, a par- liamentary inquiry. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator will state it. Mr. COOPER. After the pending amendment is voted upon, as it has been modified would an amendment to the modified amendment then be in order? The PRESIDING OieloiCER, Will the Senator from Kentucky send his pro- posed amendment to the desk? The Chair would say, in answer to the inquiry of the Senator from Kentucky, that after the pending amendment, as modified, is voted upon, it would be in order that his amendment be considered. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I think the amendment has been fully explained. I ask unanimous consent that the table of funds to which reference has been made, the last item being $2.2 billion, be printed in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the table was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: ESTIMATED AMOUNTS INCLUDED IN MILITARY FUNCTIONS BUDGET FOR SUPPORT OF FREE WORLD MILITARY ASSISTANCE FORCES IN VIETNAM, LAOS, AND THAILAND AND RELATED COSTS, FISCAL YEAR 1970 INCLUDING THE AID/DOD REALINEMENT (In millions of dollars] BUDGE] Fiscal Fiscal Fiscal year year year 1968 1969 1970 Military personnel: Army 118. 0 114.2 116. 3 Navy .8 .6 .1 Marine Corps 15. 0 14. 8 14.2 Air Force .2 .2 .2 ' 134.0 129.8 030.8 Total, military personnel_ Operation and maintenance: Army 605.8 708, 0 632. 8 Navy 43.3 47. 5 53.7 Marine Corps _____ _ 6. 1 10, 7 10.3 Air Force 55.0 131. 8 157. 1 Total, operation and maintenance__ ___ 710. 2 898,0 853.9 Procurement: Army 552. 5 1, 243, 5 927. 3 Navy: Other procurement 5.8 10.2 4. 2 Shipbuilding and conversion_ __. 4. 5 6, 5 3.4 PAMN-Navy aircraft and missiles .2 Marine Corps 68. 5 50 8 88. 3 Air Force: Aircraft procurement__ _ 36.1 88.1 103.9 Missile procurement_ _ .... .1 Other procurement 67.4 85,4 114.4 Total, Procurement... 734.9 1, 484. 5 1,241.7 Military construction: Army 1.7 10.7 Navy 1.9 Air Force 9.0 1,5 Total, military construction 02.6 15.5 Grand total 1, 591. 7 2, 527. 8 2, 226. 4 Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I believe that for the information of Senators, the clerk should read the amendment of the Senator from Arkansas, as modified. The PRESIDING Olor.LCKR. The clerk will state the amendment of the Senator from Arkansas, as modified. The legislative clerk read as follows: On page 5, line 11, strike out the quota- tion marks and the word "Funds" and insert in lieu thereof the following: "Not to exceed $2,500,000,000 of the funds". Oct page 5, line 17, strike out the words "the Secretary of Derense" and insert in lieu thereof the words "the President". On page 5, line 17, insert after the word "conditions" the phrase "under Presidential regulations". The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ques- tion is on agreeing to the amendment of the Senator from Arkansas, as modified. The amendrnent, as modified, was agreed to. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Does the Senator from Kentucky now call up his amendment? Mr. COOPER, Yes. The PRESIDING' OFFICER. The amendment will be stated. The assistant legislative clerk read as follows: Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved Fce&Mtift3R9M3ftEgteltEDPNENDA6NR000300100001-3 S 9779 August 12, 196u Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, in regard to the Gulf of Tonkin resolution. The Senator is very persuasive. It is a fact, even though I thought it was a monstrosity, that later the resolution was interpreted as it was by the President of the United States, that it was so inter- preted; and every time the matter came up it was thrown in our faces. I believe the Senator's amendment will make the Senate's intent clearer and more posi- itive. I do not really see how this can re- strict the President's obligations, and I hope the Senator from Mississippi will accept the suggestion of the Senator from Kentucky. What we are trying to do is protect ourselves from such a monstrous interpretation. That having happened within the memory of all of us here, I believe it would be a very healthy thing for it to be accepted. Mr. President, I am not sure; can I ac- cept it? I would be willing to do so, with the agreement of the Senator from Mis- sissippi. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, the Sen- ate has voted on the other amendment. Mr. FULBRIGHT. That is right. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, a parlia- mentary inquiry. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator will state it. Mr. COOPER. I have the floor, but I will yield to the Senator for that purpose. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, the amendment of the Senator from Arkan- sas has already been agreed to. Can any one Senator accept another amendment to that? The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is the Senator from Mississippi asking that question as a parliamentary inquiry? Mr. STENNIS. Yes, of course. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair rules that it cannot be accepted. The On page 6, line 15, after (2) insert the following: "to provide equipment, material, supplies, and maintenance thereof to". Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, there has been a very good discussion, but I do want to have for the RECORD an interpre- tation of the section. I would not 13e so interested if I had not been conscious of the steps by which our country became involved in the war in Vietnam. I shall spend a minute or two on the subject. It all started very simply. Under Presi- dent Eisenhower, military advisers were sent to Vietnam. I do not know whether I should speak of a statement former President Eisenhower made when he is now dead, but I think it proper. He came here one day 2 years ago and talked to a number of us. He said? Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, may we have order? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ate will be in order. Mr. COOPER. He said that the only commitment he had made, was to Pro- vide military assistance in the form of advisers, and to provide economic aid as long as South Vietnam made appropri- ate steps to help itself. I may say that, after searching the record, that is all I could ever find that he had promised. For years, he had our military advis- ers in Vietnam. We furnished equipment to Vietnam; we supported various regimes?it is hard to remember how many?and then, as the fighting in- creased in the outer areas, we began to send troops to those areas, to assist the South Vietnamese in actual fighting. They were finally fired upon, and it be- came a matter of national honor to de- fend them, as the President had the right to do, additional troops were sent to South Vietnam and step by step we had become involved in the war in Vietnam. amendment of the Senator from Arkan- I am sure that President Eisenhower, sas has been voted upon. This is new President Kennedy, or President John- matter. son never intended that we would be Mr. COOPER. I hope not, but it is pos- involved in war and certainly no major sible we may be in war in Laos or Thai- war. But we conveyed to South Vietnam land; and if we go into war with the con- the impression that we would stand with current authority of the President of the them and defend them. I believe we con- United States and Congress, we will un- veyed that impression throughout South- derstand where we are, and at least Con- east Asia. gress and the President will have made a Wars start from small beginnings. I determination that it is in our national have thought, and many Senators have interest. thought?it was definitely the expression We may become involved in war with- of the Senate in the adoption of the out such a determination at some point, National Commitments Resolution? with some 35,000 troops in Thailand, as that a likely way to become involved in a I recall. war is to put our armed forces in an- Mr. FULBRIGHT. There were 45,000 other country where there is a local at the last count, I think. war. And if we stay there long enough Mr. COOPER. If at some point we thus and send enough men there, they will became engaged in fighting, we may find be fired on some day, and then, as I have ourselves at war by the same process as said, it is a matter of national honor that by which we backed into war in and, because the President has the con- Vietnam. stitutional duty to protect our troops, we Again, I point out that the language will be involved in a war. of the amendment applies both to Viet- Mr. FULBRIGHT, Mr. President, will nam and to Laos and Thailand. It is the the Senator yield? identical language. Mr. COOPER. I yield. I read the language to which I refer: Mr. FITLBRIGHT. What the Senator uzit EetutnoreigegfzsagronatZf for rtatees has said does revive in my memory very under this or any other Act are authorized clearly what was said, and particularly to be made available for their stated pur- what I said, after having been briefed poses to support: (1) Vietnamese and other and informed by the Secretary of De- free world forces in Vietnam, (2) local forces fense, the Secretary of State, and the in Laos and Thailand; The same language is used for both countries. It is a possible interpretation that these funds could be used in the same way in Laos and Thailand as they are now being used in Vietnam. I have said that it would be prepos- terous if the Secretary of Defense or the President were to use the funds in Laos and Thailand as they are being used in Vietnam as a result of the language of title IV. However, it is our province and our responsibility to make certain that the funds are not treated in the same way. This is the purpose of my amend- ment. It is simply to provide that as far as Laos and Thailand are concerned, these funds will only involve material, equipment, supplies, and related costs. The term "related costs" is in the lan- guage of the bill. If this is what is intended by the spon- sors of the bill and the administration, I do not see why they should not accept my language. It would remove all doubt. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. COOPER. I yield the floor. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from Missouri is recognized. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, I make two points. In effect, we have been In war in Laos for years, and it is time the Ameircan people knew more of the facts. Second, the present Secretary of De- fense states that, if this matter comes up again from the standpoint of any con- tingent agreement, he believes it is a matter which should be taken up with the Congress. Mr. ALLOT". Mr. President, I believe that the previous remarks of the distin- guished Senator from Missouri, as well as his just completed remarks, are well taken. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, I thank the Senator. Mr. ALLOT". Mr. President, I have been very quiet during the course of this debate. And, as I have listened to the de- bate, I find my emotions swelling up within me to the place where I think I would be hard pressed to express them in the period of 3 or 4 hours. I am not a warlike man, nor am I an unpeaceful man. But I find it difficult for anyone who was concerned with the vital committees of the Senate to stand on this floor and say he did not know in the spring of 1964 that we were becoming involved in the war in Vietnam. It is impossible for anyone not to have known it. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, Senator yield? Mr. ALLOTT. I yield. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, Senator referring to me? Mr. sALLOTT. I was referring to any- one who was e member of the Foreign Relations Committee or the Appropria- tions Committee at the time. Mr. COOPER. Let me say in response that during that debate I said that I knew what we might get into. I voted for the resolution, but I had no misap- prehension about its possibilities. The debate will show that on that day I said that It could lead us into war, but we will the was the Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9780 Approved For RgteanigNSIANNL: WitialtilpgRAw030010000,11713 gust 12, 1969 at war or anticipated that we would be Mr. ALLOTT. I apologize. I had my had confidence in the President that he would use his authority with Judgment. However, I do not want the United States to get into the tame situation again by the failure of the Congress to exercise its responsibility. Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. President, I appre- ciate the situation of the Senator. And I ask him, and he can answer it in any way he wants to, if he does not be- lieve the Secretary of Defenae of his own party and if he does not believe his own President, because we have had assur- ances from both of them that we will not have any more commitrnerts of troops in the Far East. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, will the Senator let me respond? Mr. ALLOTT. The Senator may re- spond. Mr. COOPER. Mr. Presid, iit, I believe in the responsibility of the President, and I believe in President Nixon. He is my President whether he is Republi- can or Democrat. It happans that we are members of the same pat .y, of which I am proud. I understand and respect his respon- sibility. I believe that he will exercise it to the best of his ability, and he has great ability. I believe also in the responsibility of Congress, both the House Of Representa- tives and the Senate. I belieVe that we have a responsibility to determine also, whether the United States should go into war and whether we should become in- volved in situations which will send us into war--whether our national inter- ests, security and proper commitments are actually involved. We are talking about the future, and whether we will take step, or refuse to take steps that may prevent or inhibit the possibility of war. Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. President, I under- stand the concern of the Senator about not wanting to become involved in another Vietnam. However, my state- ment was that there is no reason for anyone who was a member of the For- eign Relations Committee oe the eApa propriations Committee, and particular- ly the Defense Subcom.mittte, or the Armed Services Committee, not to have known in the spring and summer of 1964 that we were going to become involved in a war. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. Preskitnt, I yield for a question. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, it seems to me that repeating the state- ment is inviting comment upon a mat- ter which was discussed at length. And the Senator looks in this direction. I was there. It is true that in the spring of 1964, we had appioximately 15,000 or 16,000 soldiers in Vietnam. There had been a gradual escalation from the time that President Kennedy came in, when there were lesa than 800 men who were considered to bc advisers. They were not considered to be combat soldiers. Mr. ALLOTr. There were G36, if the Senator wants the exact figure. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I do not think anyone thought that we were at war there in the future, dates crossed. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The alleged inci- dents took place on the second and fourth of August, 1964. The resolution had been prepared long before that, I think. It was intreduced in the House and it was acted upOn almost instantane- ously. Mr. ALLOTT. Let me say to the Sen- ator that my mind played me a trick I thought it was before this. But I will still go back to the state- ment I made that in 1964 no member of the Armed Services Committee or the Appropriations Committee?particuarly the Defense Committee or the Foreign Relations Committee--should not have known that we were being committed to a war at that time. Now, Mr. President, I want to con- tinue? Mr. FULBRIGIIT. Maybe we should be a lot brighter than we are, but I did not know it, I am frank to say. Mr. ALLOTT. Well, I am not surprised. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ALLOTT. I yield. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, having had some unpleasant personal experiences about that time in 1964, in- volving this subject, I can speak with some experience on it. I have made the charge repeatedly, and it has never been denied?and this information came to me before my cam- paign actually started?that we did not drift into this war. We had a small num- bers of advisers over there in 1960 and 1961, and suddenly 15,000 to 16,000 men were sent over, with explicit orders to shoot back. I tried to bring this to the attention of the American public; I could not get anybody to listen to me. r do not think it would have made a bit at difference. But we were at war when the Gulf of Tonkin incident took place. I remember begging for equal tine on television so I could present not the Republican side but this American side of the under- standing of what was going on in Viet- nam, and I never got any place. When you are shooting back in a situation such as that, you are in war; and although we had advisers over there who were ex- plicitly told never to fire on anyone, this advisory situation ended some time in 1962: when the troops were told to fire back. I suggest to the Senator from Ken- tucky that, unless I am badly mistaken, even his language could not prevent a President from giving the same orders or a Secretary of Defense frotn giving the same orders. So I have a feeling that what we are talking about now gets to the fact of whether or not we, as Senators, have faith, regardless of whether we are Re- publicans or Democrats, in the man who has been elected President and the men with whom he has surrounded himself as Secretary of State and Secretary of De- fense. I merely wanted to inject this because have not heard it brought up. I have never been challenged on it, and I have made it and made it and made It. President Eisenhower had been given the opportunity to go to war in Viet- nam and he rejected it?I think very wisely?on the advice of General Ridge- way and General Gavin. I certainly did not think we were get- ting into war when President Kennedy sent advisor personnel out there. It is my impression that at about the same time he sent troops to Germany because Khrushchev had threatened him, he believed, at the meeting at Vienna. I do not believe that he intended to get into war any more than he intended to get into war in Germany by sending those troops there. No action had been taken when it came to the Gulf of Tonkin incident it- self? Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. President, with all due deference to the Senator, I said that I would yield for a question. I have been listening to the distinguished Senator, without interrupting him for weeks now. I yielded for a question, not for a speech. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. Presfdent, I will put it this way. Has the Senator read the report of the Foreign Relations Com- mittee on the incidents of the Gulf of Tonkin? Mr. ALLOTT, Recently? Mr. FULBRIGHT. At any time. Mr. ALLOTT. Yes. Mr. leutiBRIGHT. Was the Senator not impressed with the fact that the representations given to that committee by the then Secretary of State, Secre- tary of Defense, and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff proved to be in error? Mr. ALLOTT. I am completely aware of that. And I was present during all of the Gulf of Tonkin debate. I am aware of the statements made by various Sen- ators at that time. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator is aware that the statements made by the Chairman of the Foreign Relations Com- mittee were based on information given to him which information proved to be in error. The question I ask the Senator is this: That being so, how can he make the statement that we all knew?and I as- sume he means by that intended to ac- cept?the Southeast Asia resolution was the equivalent of a declaration of war? ALLOTT. Mr. President, I have made no such statement. I have tried to make my remarks, and I am going to make them if we stay here until midnight, de- spite the Senator's loquacity. I never made the statement or implied the state- ment that when the Gulf of Tonkin reso- lution, for which I admit I voted, was passed, everybody knew we were going to get into war. That was not in 1964. The Gulf of Tonkin resolution was not passed in 1964. Mr. PASTORE. Yes; it was. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Unfortunately, it was in August of 1964. Mr. ALLOTT. I thought it was before that. I apologize. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I happen to know about that I was present Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12, Approved For ittemtggglayAq, : ateekvinkoAcietwo3oo 00001-3 S9781 Mr. ALLOTT. I would say to the Sen- ator that I see no reason to challenge it, looking backward for 5 years now. Mr. STENNIS addressed the Chair. Mr. ALLOTT. I wish to continue. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, if the Senator will yield for this statement?it is 6 o'clock, and if we are going to have a vote tonight, I think we should vote, with all deference to the Senator from Colorado. I just want to give my opinion. Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. President, I want to defer to the Senator, but I have kept very quiet during the past weeks. My remarks will be very short. The fact that I would like to speak for 3 or 4 hours does not mean I am going to do so or have any intention of doing so. Mr. STENNIS. I withdraw my request. Mr. ALLOTT. If the Senator will per- mit me to continue for a short time, I will be very grateful to him. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from Colorado has the floor. Mr. ALLOTI'. Mr. President, looking sit the present amendment, I wish to say this: The thing that has concerned me about many of the rash of amendments that we have had?some of them have been meritorious?is that in my belief the Senate may be moving toward the position of creating a vacuum in South- east Asia. I know that the domino theory was discredited by all the intellectuals in this country several years ago. But whether the domino theory was discredited by the intellectuals or not, the fact is that if we do not preserve free governments in Southeast Asia, we are leaving a vacuum which is going to be filled faster than we can turn around by the Red Chinese and by the North Vietnamese. As long ago as 1962, I brought to the attention of the State Department? without any action or any acknowledge- ment in any way?the fact that Red Chinese troops were roaming at will through a good portion of northern Thailand. They still are, except that now they are actually engaging in acts of war. This is a large area. It is composed of many people, and with it a lot of the natural resource wealth of the world. We have done very well, in my opinion, in Indonesia; perhaps not as startlingly well as in Malaysia. But if we permit Laos to go completely down the drain, Thailand to go down the drain, and Vietnam to go down the drain, as some people would like to do?and some people would like to have us en- courage the promotion of a dual govern- ment there?I do not think it will be long before Southeast Asia will have become a Communist strongold. When this occurs, I think our position in the world will be much more difficult; our position with the Philippines will be much more diffi- cult; our position with Indonesia will be much more difficult; and our position with Malaysia will be impossible. When we formed the tripartite situa- tion in Laos, I said at the time it would not work. It has not worked. Today we find that the Plain of Jars in Laos is pretty much overrun by the Viet Minh. If I may have the attention of the Senator from Kentucky particularly as I make this remark, I do not want to see commitments made for ground troops in this area any more than he does. He is no more sincere in his belief than I am. But I am sure he knows that we have air bases in Thailand. He knows that we have a naval base in Thailand. That is no secret. He knows of our activities now?which I shall not mention?in Laos, activities which do not involve ground troops. I have read his amendment. I say in all sincerity, looking down the road to what I think could happen if the Sen- ate keeps on with this sort of frenetic pattern it has established during the last few days and'weeks, that I am afraid we shall be sending a good portion of the world down the rain. I have had the clerk write out the Fulbright amendment as modified. The amendment, so modi- fied reads, in pertinent portion: Not to exceed $2.5 billion of the funds au- thorized for appropriation for the use of the Armed Forces of the United States under this or any other Act are authorized to be made available for their stated purposes to support: (1) Vietnamese and other free world forces in Vietnam, (2)? And this is where the Senator's amendment comes in? to provide materiel, supplies, equipment, and maintenance thereof to local forces in Laos and Thailand. Have I quoted the Senator's amend- ment correctly? Mr. COOPER. Correctly. Mr. ALLOTT. In my opinion, what the Senator from Kentucky's amendment could mean is that we could not put supplies in Laos or Thailand to maintain our forces, or supplies to protect our air- ports, our Air Force, our naval bases, or anything else that we have there. The legislative history is quite clear, I think, as it pertains to every Senator, that none of us wishes to engage in more ground warfare in Southeast Asia or, for that matter, anywhere else. But I cannot read his amendment in any way except as being a totally un- acceptable and crippling burden upon the Secretary of Defense and the Presi- dent. I know the Senator's concern. I know he is sincere. I have never seen him do anything in his life which was not sincere. He does not play games with people and he does not play games with legislation. He is completely a sincere, honest, and straightforward man. But just as strongly, I would hope he would not press his amendment because I think it places a burden on our Presi- dent with respect to the protection of our forces in those areas, which is something that no one, if he understood it as I inter- pret it, would wish to do. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ALLOTT. I yield.. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, I wish to ask the Senator if it is not true that the President inherited the problems in Vietnam. I know the wish is shared by all of us that there had been another way to solve that problem. I know all of us wish that there was some way to solve it now without withdrawing from our commitments and without doing some- thing that would not be in the best in- terests of our country. However, is it not true that the President said on several occasions there will be no more Vietnams in his administration? Mr. ALLOTT. That is my understand- ing of what he has said. Mr. MURPHY. Would it not be con- sidered responsible that this man who has been in public life for many years and who has been elected by the people of this country be given the confidence without trying to write into an authori- zation bill for military procurement pro- visions that might be a detriment to the protection of American people, Ameri- can troops, and American property? Mr. ALLOTT. I fully believe so; yes. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, I have listened patiently to the discussion. As I said at the outset, and as the distin- guished Senator from Florida stated, this entire discussion has been a filibuster. This entire discussion has taken place at the wrong time and under the wrong set of circumstances. It should not be a part of this particular bill. I made that state- ment on the first day we considered the bill. I assure the Senate that the work of this committee was carefully and thoughtfully done. It was properly done. But now it is being shredded, twisted, and torn up. The more I hear this dis- cussion, the more I am certain discus- sion on our foreign policy, present and future, should take place in this body, and I would enjoy taking part in it. However, it would seem to me, and I hope the Senator agrees, that this eve- ning, at this stage, in this protracted dis- cussion this is an unfortunate attempt to place restrictions on a new President who has been doing a magnificent job, as far as I know, in bringing about solutions to problems that he inherited. By taking a good hard look at them he will be able to find solutions. Mr. ALLOTT. I thank the Senator for his contribution. I am appreciative of the Senator's statements. Mr. TOWER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. ALLOTT. I yield. Mr. TOWER. Mr. President, I think this is a dangerous amendment. I think it is potentially mischievous and very unnecessary for us to vote on it tonight when it has not been printed and no one has had a chance to look at it. There is no copy available except what has been scratched in pencil on a piece of paper. I think the matter requires extensive debate. I spent a great deal of time in Laos and Thailand. I know what we are engaged in and I know the extent to which we are involved. If a rigid interpretation were applied to the amendment of the Senator from Kentucky it could seriously jeopardize the lives of American men. I am not pre- pared to vote willy-nilly on something that we know nothing about. We do not know the reaction of the Department of Defense to the amendment or how they would interpret it. If extended discussion is required on the matter tonight I am prepared to dis- cuss it at length as long as anyone is prepared to sit and listen. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9782 Approved Forftitme01966/1A10kE.LibRpilppffifil?0003001000LIAy..,3.1 12, 1969 Mr. STENNIS and Mr. FULBRIGHT addressed the Chair. Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. President, I assured the Senator from Mississippi I would not retain the floor for more than a few min- utes. I have no intention of holding the floor further. I wish to say to the Senator from Mis- sissippi that the statement made by the Senator from California is true. Senators can rest assured that any matter coining out of the committee of the distinguished Senator from Mississippi has had the most meticulous scrutiny, observation, discussion, and thought. While I do not desire to retain the floor against the wishes of the distinguished Senator from Mississippi, I felt some of these things had to be said before this matter was voted upon because I am convinced this amendment would wreak a lot of havoc. There can be no question in anyone's mind after this legislative history that the amendment agreed to a few moments ago was never intended to put ground troops in Laos and Thailand. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. Prez,ident, will the Senator yield? Mr. ALLOTT. I yield to the Senator from Missouri. Mr SYMINGTON. I thank the Senator. Mr. President, I would hope we could get on with the bill. I respectfully point out to the Senate the fact that the lan- guage was agreed to by the chairman of the Committee on Armed Services and the chairman of the Committee on For- eign Relations. I thought that the lan- guage agreed to was eminently satis- factory and that we could have gone ahead at least 1 hour ago and gotten through with this part of the bill. Mr. ALLOTT. I yield the floor. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I ap- preciate the contribution of the Senator from Kentucky I feel this section is old law. It already has a meaning. It has been followed these 2 years. It would be far better to keep this section now, as used heretofore, with the ceiling we have prepared. If the Senator from Kentucky wants to pursue his thoughts further, I know what a draftsman he is and that he does not need anyone particularly, but if he would put anything he has in mind in a separate amendment, it would be helpful to see what others thought. I am glad now to yield to the Senator from Kentucky. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I have taken up a good deal of time tonight. I must say that I have not filibustered. Mr. STENNIS. No, Mr. COOPER. I have taken some -time because I considered this to be an impor- tant matter, much more important than merely reducing the amounts involved, with due regard to in friend from Ar- kansas and my friend from Mississippi. We are dealing with an entirely different concept: The question of whether funds can be spent for the use of our Armed Forces in fighting in support of local Laos and Thailand forces without a com- mitment by the President or the Con- gress or both, which might_ lead to war. I would therefore urge that the ques- tion is much more important than the matter of dollars and cents. I want to thank my friend from Colo- rado (Mr. Arzorr) for his statement. I know him. I know that he has deep feel- ings about these matters. He does sit quietly at times, but I know how deep his feelings run and he speaks with con- viction courage and force. I appreciate very much what he has said, and for his kind remarks about me. Perhaps I may be sincere, but some- one else might say that I may be sincere, but I may not be always right or too bright about things. Sincerity does not always make up for those qualities. My amendment has not been printed. I had thought about it but as we were coming to the close of the debate in these 2 days before we recess, I did not expect to bring it up until after the recess. But when the Senator from Arkansas offered his amendment, I knew that mine should be offered. I will not press for a vote tonight. I know that I can withdraw, and offer this amendment later, but I ask a parliamen- tary question because I want to be cer- tain: Mr. President, in the event the Senator from Kentucky withdraws his amendment this evening, would it be Possible for him to submit the amend- ment at a later date? The PRESIDING OloioiCER. Yes. That would be completely in order. Mr. COOPER. I thank the Chair. I will withdraw the amendment but I will bring it up again. I hope that by the time I bring it up again, the Senator from Mississippi will have consulted with the Defense Department to see if they would be willing to offer language in title IV conforming to the Senator from Mississippi's understanding that it was their intention. The Senator has said it was intended that funds were to be used for supplies, equipment, and such. We have absolute confidence in the Senator from Mississippi, but the Department of Defense should spell out clearly the pur- pose of title IV relative to Laos and Thailand. Mr. President, we have been talking about the President, President Nixon is my President. He is a Republican Presi- dent. I do not want to go back into his- tory, but members of my family have been Republicans since the Civil War? longer than some others have been, and some fought in the Civil War as Repub- licans. I support the office of President, I support the great responsibility it car- ries, and I have great admiration for and confidence in President Nixon. But, I also respect this body. We have responsibilities, too. I do not want the President of the United States?and we are talking about President Nixon?to be hindered in his efforts by the same mis- takes which have been made before. It is rather curious that before 1966, when this item had been carried in the foreign aid bill for years, it was used for military assistance, meaning equip- ment, supplies, maintenance, food, and money. Then it was changed, and placed In the Defense bill. It is rather curious that after it had been put in the defense bill, we began to use helicopters in Laos and Thailand un- der orders of the Department of Defense, and I understand in railitary activities. I cannot understand why the language is not differentiated between funds to be used in Lade arid Thailand and funds to be used in Vietnam, It is exactly -the same language. Perhaps fungi' are to be used for some military activities such, as for helicopters. Helicopters mai take local forces to back areas. tiring on the helicopters begins, as it did in Vietnam, and war comes. In 1963 or 1964?before the Gulf of Tonkin resolution?I remember the for- mer Senator from Oklahoma. Mr. Mon- roney, came back from Vietnam and told us that our helicopters were carrying men up the mountains, that there were U.S. riflemen on the helicopters who were firing in defense of the helicopters and the pilots, and that their fire was being returned from the ground. That may be what we are doing in Laos and Thailand now. The fact that some Senators have stated we are engaged in fighting in Laos and Thailand makes it more important that we limit the funds in this bill, be- cause if we do not, if we approve that kind of activity, it may lead?I hope not?but it may lead us into war. The SEATO Treaty states that in the event of armed aggression against any of the parties thereto, Including the protocol states, Laos, Cambodia, or Thai- land, the parties thereto shall take ac- tion according to their constitutional processes. Mr. President, what are the constitu- tional processes? It is not defined. When Secretary of State Dulles testi- fied before the Foreign Relations Com- mittee on the SEATO Treaty?I have read the testimony?he was asked what constitutional processes, meant. He replied that it meant the joint authority of the executive branch arid the Con- gress. The national commitments resolution was recently passed, expressing the same sense. If we are fighting in Thailand and Laos now, we should know it. The President of the United States? whether he be President Nixon, Presi- dent Johnson, or any President, in my view, has no right to taka our country into war without first coming to the Congress and asking for ite authority. If a situation should arise where our forces were being attacked, of course, the President has the constitutional right to defend them and to protect the security of our country. But I do not want war to occur because of carelessness or fail- ure to look ahead. If we get into war, I believe that the Senate wants the deter- mination to be made by the jelat au- thority of the President and the Con- gress. Mr. President, that is the meaning of my amendment. I shall withdraw the amendment to- night because many Senators have not had the opportunity to read it and to consider it. Unless the Armed Services Committee and its chairman modify the section by amendment?it has to be by amendment?and by Interpretation so precise that no one can think anything to the contrary. I want to say that I will bring up this admendraent again and we can determine if this body wants to Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12, 196Approved FoCONCRMSAW1136tFigalik/P74'&11313UR000300100001-3 S 9783 abide by the constitutional processes, wants to abide by its national commit- ments resolution and wants to disap- prove funds for the use of our forces which could lead us into another war without the consent of Congress. Mr. President, I withdraw my amend- ment. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Kentucky withdraws his amendment. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator very much for his splendid remarks and for what I think is a constructive step, too, in withdrawing the amendment for the time being. That is all I have to say. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I thank the Senator, and I may add to my re- marks that I shall ask for a rollcall. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I do not know what the wishes of the leader- ship or of the Senator from Mississippi are. I have a very minor amendment, which can go over until September, but I wanted to inquire as to the wishes of the Senator from Mississippi. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, a parlia- mentary inquiry. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator will state it. Mr. STENNIS. Has the amendment been adopted? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment has been withdrawn. No amendment is pending. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, in other words, the one which I amended in accordance with the Senator's amend- ment has been adopted, according to my understanding. Mr. STENNIS. That is my understand- ing. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, does the Senator wish me to offer amendment No. 111 at this time or not? The Sena- tor is familiar with it. Mr. STENNIS. I cannot agree to it. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I thought the Sena- tor had proposed an amendment to it. Mr. STENNIS. No; that is the wrong one. The Senator is referring to another amendment. I have only seen the amend- ment the Senator has handed me within the last hour or two. Mr. FULBRIGHT. This is No. 111. Mr. STENNIS. I was handed the wrong one. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I am sorry the Sen- ator was given the wrong amendment by mistake. Amendment No. 111 was sub- mitted and printed about a week ago. Mr. STENNIS. I am ready for the ,Senator to present his amendment, if he is agreeable to a proviso. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will 'ie Senator yield briefly? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield to the Sen- tor from Montana. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I do feel I should let this occasion go by without expressing my respect, regard, and affection for the distinguished senior Senator from Kentucky (Mr. COOPER) . What he tried to say and what he did was and is in the minds and hearts of all of us, and has been for almost half a decade, If not longer. I want him to know that I honor him for his persistence as well as for his sagacity and I am delighted that he is going to introduce again the amendment which he has withdrawn, because none of us can alibi himself out of what he did on the Tonkin resolution. It was plain, clear, and legible, and every one of us understood it, but that does not mean many of us have not regretted it. The reason why I am impressed by what the distinguished Senator has said is that he has tried, as best he knows how, to exercise his responsibility as a Senator of the United States, in the hope that this body?the Senate of the United States?will live up to its respon- sibility, collectively as well as individ- ually, and that we will participate, inso- far as we can within the realm of the Constitution, in making certain that we act in line with what President Nixon said just this past month, when he laid down, in Guam, the Nixon Doctrine for the Pacific. He said, in effect, "No more Vietnams." He said, in effect, we are a pacific na- tion, with peripheral Asian interests in the mainland. He said, in effect, we are not going to get involved in internal dif- ficulties. He said, in effect, we are not going to go to war again unless it is nu- clear and our security is at stake. So I am delighted that, even though the hour is late, the Senator from Ken- tucky did bring up this question. It is paramount. Everything that is happen- ing and has been happening in Vietnam has an indirect and a direct relationship to many of the other troubles that con- front this Republic today. I agree with the Senator that we do not want to get involved again in an area which is not vital to the security of this country, and in an area which has cost this country over $100 billion?and the end is not yet in sight?and not just 36,- 000, but altogether 44,000 dead?with the end not yet in sight?and with wounded of over 200,000?and the end not yet in sight. So I think the warning raised by the distinguished Senator from Kentucky should be and will be heeded. I want him to know that I honor him for what he has said, and I honor him for what he has done in this body. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I would like to associate myself with every- thing the majority leader has said about the Senator from Kentucky. The Sena- tor from Kentucky played a leading role relating to the recent resolution with regard to the responsibilities of the Senate and the Congress. In offering this proposal and in making the statement he made, he was carrying into effect the letter, and I think the spirit, of that resolution. He has rendered a great service. I could go further and say that, as a result of the efforts of the Senator from Kentucky, I have noticed that the Senate as a whole in recent weeks has shown a greater sensitivity to its responsibilities in this whole area than it has ever done in the 25 years I have been in the Senate. I think the Senator from Kentucky de- serves the credit which the Senator from Montana so appropriately expressed. Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, if the Sen- ator will yield, I wish to associate myself with the remarks just made by my col- leagues. The Senator from Kentucky is a dear old friend of mine. I make the practical suggestion that to articulate this amendment properly it will take not only the Department of Defense, but it will take the State Department, which have a role in trying to coordinate the military and diplomatic activities of the United States. I think the majority leader's words give added authority to the need for articu- lating an amendment which will be upon the level of the one we discussed so long and which was decided so narrowly, but which will truly seek to carry out a policy of the United States. That is what this amendment is really all about. I know that I, as a member of the com- mittee, and I am sure the chairman, will cooperate with our colleague from Ken- tucky, so that when he presents the pro- posal it will truly represent the Senate declaration as articulated, and which raises the question which the Senator from Colorado (Mr. ALLOTT) raised, all of which is pertinent to our security re- quirements. Mr. COOPER. I thank the Senator. Mr. JAVITS. I think he has rendered a historic service. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President-- Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, who has the floor? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from Mississippi yielded to the Sen- ator from Arkansas. He had the floor initially held by the Senator from Mississippi. The Senator from Arkansas. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I was going to yield to the Senator from Kentucky. Mr. STENNIS. I yield briefly to the Senator from Kentucky. Mr. COOK. Mr. President, I wish to associate myself with the remarks made by the majority, leader and would like to say to my colleague that I would hope he would do us the honor, when he re- submits the amendment, to consider us- ing the argument that is now in the RECORD and disseminating it to the Members of this body, and that he would do many of us the honor of asking for cosponsors to his amendment when it may be submitted in the future. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I yield to the Senator from Arkansas. If he would rather have the floor, I yield the floor. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Very well. I will take the floor. I want to direct an inquiry to the Senator. Mr. President, I wish to take the floor. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from Arkansas. Mr. FULBRIGHT. It is my under-, standing the Senator from Mississippi has prepared an amendment to my amendment No. 111?a proviso, I should say, at the end?which made the amend- ment acceptable to him. Is that correct? Mr. STENNIS. I may say to the Sena- tor from Arkansas that an additional question has arisen here about which I think we ought to have a colloquy with respect to possibly redrafting the amendment of the Senator. lam in sym- pathy with the amendment. I believe we could work something out along that line. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71B00364R000300100001-3 S 9784 Approved For ReANGRISSIMIL atliqUilfe1-BCat6I4M0300100001Agust 12, 1969 Mr. FULBRIGHT. Does the Senator wish to do that tonight or at a later date? Mr. STENNIS. If the Senator wishes to briefly offer his amendment, I may ask him some questions about it. We can get to it rather quickly. The amendment is relatively simple. It would require the Secretary of De- fense to make available to a congres- sional committee, upon request, any study or report prepared outside the Department of Defense which was financed in whole or in part by the M- partment. The purpose is to insure that the Congress is given access to research studies performed by the so-called "think tanks," the universities, or indi- viduals whose work is paid for by the taxpayers. The amendment recognizes the issue of executive privilege and care- fully specifies that the mandate applies only to work performed outside?I em- phasizing "outside"?the Department of Defense. This amendment is the outgrowth of an effort by the Committee on Foreign Relations to obtain a study prepared by the Institute for Defense Analysis relat- ing to the Gulf of Tonkin incident. It is my understanding that the study con- tains a review of what happened in the Gulf of Tonkin, how communications were handled, and in general how deci- sions were made. The purpose of the study, I was informed, was to determine what lessons could be learned for future crisis situations. I think that my col- leagues will agree that there is much that all of us can learn from that inci- dent and its aftermath. The committee has attempted several times to obtain this study from the Department of De- fense, but has been refused each time. The Institute for Defense Analysis re- ceives virtually all its feeds from the De- partment of Defense. In fiscal year 1969 this organization receiVed $10,898,000 from the Department of Defense and the Department proposes to give them $11,150,000 in 1970. I believe that the Congress, which im- poses the taxes on the public to finance this organization, and which authorizes and appropriates the money for it, should have the right to see how that money is being spent. The issue here is far more important than this one study?it is a question of whether the Congress has the power to obtain information, prepared outside the Government with tax money, for which no claim of executive privilege has been made. The Senate is beginning, at long last, to reassert its constitutional prerogatives and to restore the proper balance to our system. Passage of this amendment will be one small, but positive, step in that direction. So I do think that there is an impor- tant principle involved here. The Senator from Mississippi has proposed a modi- fication, which I think is proper, but whch he can discuss, which simply, as I understand it, says that these reports must be final in form?not tentative, or unfinished reports?which is what I in- tended. I am perfectly willing to modify my amendment in accordance with that suggestion. With this stated, I may say that, as a consequence of this morning's meeting, I propose a further amendment which I hope will be acceptable to the Senator from Mississippi. I have not previously prepared it, because it grew out of this morning's meeting of the committee with the representative of the Joint Chiefs. If it is acceptable, I hope the Senator will add it. If it is not, I will do the same as the Senator from Kentucky, and reserve it for further consideration. But if I may, I should like to read it for the informa- tion of the Senate. It is only one paragraph. I would add, if it is acceptable to the Senator from Mississippi, the following language: The Secretary of Defense shall also provide to the Conunittees on Armed Services of the Senate and the House of Representatives a copy of all bilateral contingency plans, signed by a representative of the Department of Defense and an official of a government of a foreign country, involving use of United States forces for the Joint defense of that country. I mean, of course, that foreign coun- try. I thought this language might solve or help solve a problem such as that which presently confronts us. It speaks for itself. If the Senator is willing to accept, it I shall include it; if he is not. I shall reserve it and see if we can work out Something mutually acceptable at a later date. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, address- ing myself to the last point of the pro- posal, this is a highly important matter. It demands the most careful analysis and consideration of the language, the implications, and the complications in- volved; so I very respectfully, at this time, could not seriously consider ac- cepting it. Mr. FULBRIGHT. If the Senator will yield, I do solicit his assistance, because I know he has great influence in the Department of Defense, in working this matter out. I very deeply regret to have a difference of view of this character with the Department of Defense. It in- volves exactly the same principle of the right of Congress?and now, of course, we are speaking of the Senate?to such Information as "What is the status of the agreement?" So, in the interim between now and the time when I shall offer it later, I hope the Senator from Mississippi will use his influence with the Department of Defense to prevail upon their making avalable to the committee the docu- ments, with which he is familiar. Mr. STENNIS. We will give the prob- lem attention. It is a matter that the full committee certainly ought to have a chance to pass upon. It appears to me that it is broad enough to include any and all kinds of war plans that might be made, or near war plans, so those mat- ters would have to be taken care of. Mr. FULBRIGIIT. I emphasize to the Senator that I did not mean that. This refers only to matters signed by the rep- resentative of a foreign country, in this case the Prime Minister of Thailand. This is most unusual. I asked the De- partment, "Is there any precedent? Is there anything similar to it?" They were unable to cite any other example of a similar nature. Mr. STENNLS. Mr. President, I am not passing on the facts the Senator re- fers to. I have not seen it, and know nothing about the contents of it. Back to the printed amendment, though, with the proviso on it, my pro- viso merely stated, "This shall apply only to reports, studies, and investiga- tions which are already or substantially final and complete, and shall not be ap- plicable to preliminary or tentative drafts," and so forth, "and working pa- pers." But going back, now, to the substance of amendment No. 111 as printed-- ANTFND1VrENT NO. 111 Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, if the Senator will yield, I believe I over- looked calling up amendment No. 111. I call up my amendment No. 111, and ask for its immediate consideration. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment will be stated. The LEGISLATIVE CLERK. The Senator from Arkansas (Mr. FIMBRIGHT) pro- poses arid amendment (No. 111) as fol- lows: At the end of the Nil add a new section as follows: "SEG. 402. The Secretary of Defense shall, in response to any request made to him in writing by a committee of the Congress, promptly submit to such committee a copy of any report, study, or investigation re- quested by such committee if such report, study, or investigation was made in whole or in part with Department of Defense funds and was made by a person, organization, foundation, association, corporation, or other entity outside the Department of Defense." Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I do not think this in any way would involve war plans, because it pertains only to work done by someone outside the Defense Department. But I raise this question: Why should it not apply to other entities outside the Defense Department, or any other department of the Government? If we just say "Defense Department," other departments could have these studies made, and pay for them themselves, and we would have no access to them. Per- haps we would not want it. But the main point is this: Suppose the President of the United States has an outside organization prepare some- thing for him, and it should be thus paid for? Suppose it is military, and very properly paid for by the Department of Defense? We could not afford to think ofr having such an amendment here, requir ing him to give us the report. That is purely executive privilege. Mr. FULBRIGAT. Well, of course there is no problem. The President ha executive privilege. Mr. STENNIS. I think the Senate should redraft this proposal, with th. printed language modified to clearly ex- clude matters of executive privilege, be- cause there is an instance that just came to mind a minute ago, that a President could very well have a department, have a study made, for himself and the de- partment. This executive privilege matter, I think, is a very serious thing. I have been through that. I am in sympathy with the intent of the Senator's amendment and Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12, 1964PProved Fceells11681S820041M3RECCIRIEDP-7$616MR000300100001-3 S9785 its general, primary purpose, but I really think, with all due respect, it should be withdrawn. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I be- lieve I am correct in saying that the President of the United States can at any time?and of course he has pleaded on many occasions?plead executive privilege. We have never contested that with him. I do not see how that would be a real problem. He is not the one who is with- holding this. In fact, one request has been made of the President. I do not recall any incident with which I have been associated in which it has occurred. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, the amendment merely provides that any kind of study, report, or investigation paid for with the Department of Defense funds shall be subjected to the will of Congress.' I think that is too much. A redrafting of it would make certain exclusions. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I un- derstood that the Senator, with his pro- viso, would accept it. Mr. STENNIS. The Senator is correct. I had indicated that. However, in the last few minutes I have become concerned about the matter of executive privilege. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, does the Senator wish for us to proceed with the debate and vote tonight on this mat- ter, or does he wish it to go over until September? I do not think it is essential to the survival of the Republic that we vote on the matter tonight. It is perfectly all right with me for it to go over. I do not wish to give up on it. It in- volves a very critical problem that we are in the midst of, and particularly the one I refer to with regard to the amend- ment. Mr. STENNIS. I think it has much merit. Mr. FULBRIGHT. That is what I un- derstood the Senator to think. Mr. STENNIS. Mr, President, I think It should spell out clearly the matter about executive privilege. I do not see how we can do that tonight. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I want the suggestion of the Senator with regard to spelling it out. It is not clear as to how to accomplish what he has in mind. Under the circumstances, if I may do so with the agreement of the Senator, I will withdraw the amendment temporar- ily with the assurance that I shall re- submit it when we return in September. Is that agreeable with the Senator? Mr. STENNIS. That is what I had ex- pected the Senator to do. Mr. FTJLBRIGHT. Mr. President, is that satisfactory with the Senator? Mr. STENNIS. Entirely so. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I will also try to in- corporate it with the provision and get it to the Senator in advance. Mr. STENNIS. That is entirely satis- factory. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I withdraw the amendment. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment is withdrawn. Mr. MANS/. Mr. President, do understand correctly that the amend- ment offered by the distinguished Sen- ator from Arkansas has been withdrawn? The PRESIDING 0.10.FiCER. The amendment has been withdrawn. The Senator from Wisconsin is recog- nized. Mr. PROXMTRE. Mr. President, I call up amendment No. 108 and ask that it be made the pending business. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment will be stated. The legislative clerk proceeded to state the amendment. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the reading of the amendment be dispensed with and that the amendment be printed in the RECORD. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The amendment, ordered to be printed In the RECORD, reads as follows: On page 2, line 7, strike out "3,965,700,000" and insert in lieu thereof "$3,432,700,000". At the end of the bill add a new section as follows: "Ssc. 402. (a) None of the funds author- ized to be appropriated by this or any other Act may be expended for the procurement of any C-5A aircraft in addition to those air- craft for which a contract has been' entered into prior to the date of enactment of this Act, and in no event shall more than a total of fifty-eight of such aircraft be purchased until after the Comptroller General of the United States has completed and submitted to the Congress a comprehensive study and investigation of the past and projected costs of such aircraft. In carrying out such study and investigation the Comptroller General of the United States shall among other things, consider? "(1) whether the C-5A aircraft is an eco- nomic replacement for the C-141 and other aircraft in view of the great increase in both the procurement and operating costs of the C-5A aircraft; "(2) whether the purchase of a fourth squadron of C-5A aircraft would add sig- nificantly to the deployment capability of the military forces of the United States; "(3) whether the purchase of a fourth squadron of C-5A aircraft would 'make the United States liable for all contractor losses and termination costs if a total of six squad- rons of such aircraft were not procured; "(4) whether the purchase of a fourth squadron of the C-5A aircraft would make the United States liable for the cost of repairs and modifications necessary to correct the structural defect revealed in the recent fail- ure of the C-5A wing; "(5) the current cost estimates necessary to complete? "(a) Run A of the C-5A aircraft, "(b) the first twenty-three units of Run B of such aircraft, and "(c) the remainder of Run B of such aircraft, including spares and operating expenses for such aircraft over the next ten years; and "(6) the cost results to the United States of applying the repricing formula contained in the C-5A procurement contract on the first twenty-three units of Run B of such aircraft and on the complete Run B of such aircraft. "(b) In carrying out the study and inves- tigation authorized by subsection (a) of this section, the Comptroller General of the United States shall consult with the Office of Systems Analysis of the Department of Defense. "(c) The Comptroller General of the United States shall submit the results of his study and investigation, together with such recommendations as he deems appropriate, to the Congress not more than ninety days after the date of enactment of this Act." Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, this is the amendment that pertains to re- ducing funds for the C-5A. I stated on the basis of the colloquy previously between the chairman of the committee and the distinguished ma- jority leader that the amendment would not be voted on until we return in the fall, but that it would be the first order of business at that time. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. PROXMIRE. I yield. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, the Sen- ator from California wants to confirm his understanding that the pending busi- ness when we return after the recess has already been laid down. Mr. MANSFIELD. The Senator from California is correct. The C-5A amend- ment presented by the distinguished Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. PROXMIRE) will be the pending business. Mr. MURPHY. That amendment will be the pending business. Mr. MANSFIELD. The Senator is cor- rect. Mr. MURPHY. It is not the desire of the Senator to pursue this matter to- night, but to carry over on it; is that correct? Mr. PROXMIRE. I will make remarks on the amendment tomorrow, but I un- derstand that there will be no vote on it until the fall. Mr. MURPHY. I thank the Senator. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I un- derstand that there will be no further rollcall votes tonight. In all candor, there will be none on tomorrow, either. THE CALENDAR Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate pro- ceed to the consideration of Calendar Nos. 349 to 358. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. MISS JALILEH FARAH SALAMEH EL AHWAL The bill (H.R. 1707) for the relief of Miss Jalileh Farah Salameh El Ahwal was considered, ordered to a third read- ing, read the third time, and passed. MISS MARIA MOSIO The bill (H.R. 5107) for the relief of Miss Maria Mosio was considered, or- dered to a third reading, read the third time, and passed. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an excerpt from the report (No. 91-357) explaining the purpose of the bill. There being no objection, the excerpt was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: PFRPOSE OF THE BILL The purpose of the bill is to facilitate the entry into the United States, in an immedi- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9786 Approved ForREdmitailMONALWRRith1ROggitkpRO30010000'lzx3 iagust 12,?1969 ate relative status of the adopted daughter of a U.S. citizen. BILL PASSED OVER The bill (H.R. 3213) conferring juris- diction upon the U.S. Court of Claims to hear, determine, and render judgment upon the claim of Solomon S. Levadi was announced as next in order. Mr. MANSFIELD. Over. The PRESIDING 0./01010ER. The bill will be passed over. ANTHONY smmico The bill (H.R. 8136) for the relief of Anthony Smilko was considered, ordered to a third reading, read the third time. and passed. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD an excerpt from the report (No. 91-360), explaininz the purposts of the bill. There being no objection, the excerpt was ordered to be printed in the RECORD. as follows: PURPOSE ? The purpose of the propoiled legislation is to credit the annual leave account of An- thony Smilko, a General rvices Adminis- tration employee, with 321 hours of annual leave earned by him during the period begin- ning April 1959, and ending December 1985, inclusive which, through adiranistrative er- ror, was not credited to his annual leave account. STATEMENT The proposed legislation plas-ed the House of Representatives May 20, 1969. The facts of the case as stated in the accompanying House Report 91-204 are as follow': In its report to the committee on a similar bill in the 90th Congress, tile General Serv- ices Administration recomnianded the enact- ment of the bill with correetions which are now embodied in H.R. 8136. Mr. Anthony Smilko served as an employee of the general Services Adminiatration in the period rrom April 1959 through the end of 1985 and in that period he was credited with 20 days of annual leave per year. However, It was subsequently determined that in that period he was, in fact, entitled to 26 days per year. The error in crediting Iiis annual leave occurred because the leave was computed on the basis of a service computation date of August 0, 1919, rather than the correct date of April 5, 1944, which should have been used for purposes of determining annual leave computations. In the period In question Mr. Smilko was credited with 1,1i7 annual leave hours when he should haft been credited with 1,438 hours. As a reshit, he was not credited with 321 hours to which he was entitled. This is the figure carried in the bill H.R. 8136. In its report to the committee, the Gen- eral Services Administration observed that this error can only be adjusted by legisla- tion and, accordingly, it is reeen mended that the bill providing for a credit in a separate leave account be made to Anthony Smilko by enactment of the bill. The Oeueral Services Administration further stated that the Civil Service Commission has indicated to the General Services Administration that they do not object to the enactment of private legislation in this instance, for the leave merely provides for a restoration of the leave for use only and not for the purpose of a lump-sum payment. It is also appropriate to note that, whereas the Civil Service commis- sion states that future cages ought to be covered by general legislation, such leglisla- tion would not normally grant retroactive re- lief in Mr. Srnilko's case. In agreement with the views of the Civil Service Commission, the General Services Ad- ministration, and the House of Representa- tives, the committee recommends the bill favorably. BERNARD L. COULTER The Senate proceeded to consider the bill (H.R. 4658) for the relief of Bernard L. Coulter which had been reported from the Committee on the Judiciary with an amendment on page 2, line word "of" strike out "C "Cook". The amendmen The amendm engrossed and time. The bill passed. Mr. M unanimo the REC No. 91- the bill. Ther was or as folio' The as amen in settle States a of an ace curred on nerd L. Cou motor vehic as an employ Justice. The p bill would also judgment and cos ernment employee the Circuit Court of upon that accident. ? e" and inser as agreed to. t was ordered to be e bill to be read a third S read the third time, and WIELD. Mr. President, I ask consent to have printed in D an excerpt from the report- 55?explaining the purposes of ? being no objection, the excerpt ered to be printed in the RECORD, s: PURPOSE rpose of the proposed legislation, sal, is to pay Richard S. Bell $313.66 ent of his claims against the United Bernard L. Coulter arising out ent in Chicago, Ill., which oc- ecember 17, 1961, when Ber- er was operating a Government In the course of his duties of the U.S. Department of ment provided for in this In full satisfaction of a entered against the Gov- a municipal court of ok County, Ill., based I I ? ? STATEMEN In its favorable report o the bill, the Committee on the Judiciary the House of Representatives set forth ?e facts of the case and its recommendations ?s follows: The Department of Justice in a report to the committee on a similar b I dated July 22, 1968, stated that it had e mined the circumstances of the case and , con- cluded that passage of the bill wou d be equitable and that the Department ha. no objection to its enactment. The report of the Department of Jus ice notes that had the accident occurred er March 21, 1962, the effective date of he Drivers Act Amendment to the Federal T Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. 2679 (b-e), the Gove n- ment would have been substituted for r nard L. Coulter as the sole party defend nt. The result of this substitution would ave been that any judgment would have t? have been paid byathe Government. This end- ment, which originated as a bill ore this committee, was intended to otect em- ployees such as Mr. just such sit- uations. Prior to the enactment of these provisions, this committee had granted re- lief such as that provided in H.R. 4658 in a number of cases. It might also be noted that had the other party electecl,. to bring an action against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, a recovery against the United States would have barred any action against the Government employee. This is provided in section 2676 of title 28, which provides as follows: "? 2676. Judgment as bar "The judgment in an action under section 1846(b) of this title shall constitute a com- plete bar to any action by the claimant by reason of the same subject matter, against the employee of the Government whoee act or omission gave rise to the claim." In connection with the consideration of this rnatterathe committee was supplied with additional facts concerning the accident, It appears that Mr: Coulter had stopped at a stop sign at the intersection of 45th and South Drexel Boulevard in Chicago, Ill., while traveling in an eastbound direction. On De- cember 17, 1961, there was Ice on the streets and after starting the car, the Government employee realized that due to the icy con- dition, he was unable to accelerate the car enough to clear the intersection and avoid approaching traffic. He, therefore, stopped the ar after proceeding 4 to 7 feet into the in- section. The oncoming car continued to ap roach and struck the Government vehicle at that point. The committee has carefully considered the matter in the light of the recommenda- tion of the Department and the facts of the case and has determined that this is a proper subject for legislative relief. The policy con- siderations reflected in the provisions of the Tort Claims Act as noted by the Department of Justice further provide a basis for such relief. Accordingly, it is recommended that the bill, with the corrective amendment rec- ommended by the Department, be considered favorably. The coramittee believes that the bill is meritorious and recommends it favorably. THE NAVAJO INDIAN IRRIGATION PROJECT The Senate proceeded to consider the bill (S. 203) to amend the act of June 13, 1962 (76 Stat. 96), with respect to the Navajo Indian irrigation project which had been reported from the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, with an amendment, on page 2, after line 3, strike out: "(d) The Secretary of the Interior shall compensate the persons whose grazing per- mits, licenses, or leases covering lands de- clared to be held in trust for the Navajo Tribe pursuant to section 8(a) of this Act are canceled after the date this subsection becomes effective. Sulah compensation shall be determined in accordance with the stand- ards prescribed in the Act of July 9, 1942, as amended (43 U.S.C. 315q), and shall be paid from the moneys received by the United States from the Navajo Tribe for the full ap- praised value of such lands under the pro- visions of section 3(a)." And, in lieu thereof, insert: (d) Any permits, licenses, or leases that have been granted on lands acquired and de- clared to be held in trust for the Navajo Tribe pursuant to section 8(a) of this Act shall be canceled on the effective date of this Act, except that permits, licenses, or leases whose term has not expired at the time of cancellation thereof by this Act, shall con- tinue in effect for the term of the permit, license, or lease under regulations for Indian lands until the land is required for irrigation purposes. When such lands are required for irrigation purposes, the permittee, licensee, or lessee shall be compensated by the Navajo Tribe proportionately for the value of devel- opments or irnproveinents made by such permittee, licensee, or lessee and which sueh permittee, licensee, or lessee was unable to utilize fully because of the cancellation of the permit, license, or lease, as determined by the Secretary of the Interior. So as to make the bill read: S. 203 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 12, 19 6ApppysAjf oFfIgiEligSidatiniaige-WittP7 Mbi1SUR000300100001-3 S 9797 mal times involves two complete task forces in reserve, thereby making the in- vestment cost of placing one "on station" three times $1.4 billion or $4.2 billion. To build an airbase in the Pacific costs $53 million; a civilian runway can be op- erational for tactical air with a bare base set for approximately $36 million. Third. Because of their high degree of vulnerability to enemy attacks, carriers are far less effectiVe than land bases. In recognition of the carrier's vulner- ability to attacks by submarines, aircraft, ship-to-ship and air-launched missiles, one-half of the cost of a carrier task force is for carrier defense. About 25 percent of a carrier's aircraft are held back for defensive purposes-- during the Korean war, 23 percent of the total combat sorties flown from car- riers were defensive, in contrast to 2.7 percent flown from land bases. Because of its tremendous investment in a carrier task force, the Navy is slow to commit the carrier to combat; once committed the carrier cannot effectively launch air attacks when attempting to evade enemy attack. Rapid advances in missile technology have produced the STYX and other more advanced antiship missiles, mak- ing the carrier's position untenable in any conflict with a sophisticated enemy. Fourth. Instead of reducing its carrier fleet, thereby accepting the realities of present and future defense needs, the Navy has continued to augment this fleet. The carriers which have joined the fleet since the mid-1950's?eight Forres- tal class, one Enterprise, and the CVAN- 68?the nuclear carrier which will enter the fleet in 19'72?are almost double the size of the older carriers, are equipped with the most modern aircraft, and, therefore, have far greater capability for tactical air than the oldest carriers which they replace. The Navy has stated that the nuclear carrier air wing is tactically more than twice as effective as that of the World War II carriers. Since the Navy has followed a "one for one" replacement policy in the past, the actual capacity of the carrier fleet in terms of providing tactical air power is far greater than 15 carrier' force level would imply. There is no reason why the Navy can- not reduce the number of attack carriers by retiring two of the older carriers as each of the modern carriers joins the fleet. Since the large, modern carriers are only effective in very limited conflicts, the Navy should use some of its,antisub- marine carriers, CVS, for attack pur- poses; one of these carriers is now being used in Vietnam as an attack carrier. Fifth. The fact that our adversaries and potential adversaries do not have at- tack carriers further weakens the justifi- cation for the present size of the U.S. carrier fleet. Neither the Soviet Union or China has built a single attack carrier, and neither plans to do so. The British and the French are the only other nations with an attack carrier in their fleet, and the British have decided to phase out their carriers. Whether the U.S. goal is military Par- AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRI- ATIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MISSILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RESERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH?AMENDMENT AMENDMENT NO. 136 Mr. MONDALE. Mr. President, on be- half of myself and Senator CASE, I am submitting .an amendment to the mili- tary authorization bill, now before the Senate. This amendment withholds the $377.1 million authorized for laying the keel of the nuclear attack carrier CVAN-69, pending a full study and investigation by the Comptroller General of the justi- fication for building an additional attack carrier. The United States has 15 attack car- riers, each requiring a task force of escorts and logistical ships, and it has maintained the same number?with few exceptions?since the end of World War No adequate rationale for a force level of this size has ever been presented by the Navy. That? 15 is. an arbitrary number is indicated by the fact that the United States has always had at least 15 capital ships since it was allotted this quota under the Washington Naval Dis- armament Treaty of 1921. When the at- tack carrier replaced the battleship as the capital ship, the Navy switched from 15 battleships to 15 carriers. With the advent of Minuteman and Polaris missiles, the attack carrier is no longer part of our strategic nuclear forces; its primary mission is to provide tactical air power. The use of 15 attack carrier task forces to carry out this mis- sion is simply wasteful and inefficient. First. The assignment of nine carrier task forces in the Western Pacific and six in the Mediterranean overlaps and dupli- cates U.S. land-based tactical air capacity. The United States maintains some 138 squadrons of tactical fighters and bomb- ers in active forces on land bases at home and abroad, including 3,350 active air- craft and 23 wings. This capability for land-based tactical air power is impressive, especially in light of the fact that with modern mid-air refueling techniques, the U.S.-based tactical air forces can be operational in a very short period of time. The geographic spread of overseas air bases operated by or available to the United States is such as to sharply re- duce the need for continually maintain- ing attack carriers "on station" in the Mediterranean and the Western Pacific. The Air Force is developing a Bare Base Support Program, which will enable the United States to convert 1,000 avail- able overseas civilian runways into mili- tary airfields With the use of "pre-posi- tioned" kits within less than 3 days. Second. A carrier base is far more ex- pensive than a land base. The procurement cost of one nuclear carrier task force?one carrier and four destroyers?is a minimum of $1.4 billion, and it can run much higher. But to keep one such task force "on station" in nor- ity or superiority vis-a-vis the navies of other nations, it is obvious that we could substantially reduce our carrier force lev- el without any danger to national se- curity. In addition to these arguments, there are serious foreign policy implications to the "show of force" role of the carrier in support of U.S. foreign policy com- mitments. It is official naval doctrine that one of the main advantages of car- rier air power is that it can be employed unilaterally, without involving third parties and without invoking treaties, agreements, or overflight rights. How- ever, except where the United States it- self is threatened, it is highly question- able that we should be prepared to inter- vene in conflicts unilaterally and with- out making political arrangements. If air power is needed to protect our interests, naval doctrine ignores the availability of land bases in most areas of the world. If a "show of force" in the form of U.S. naval presence is needed, older attack carriers, antisubmarine carriers, or other types of ships' will be adequate. In the face of these arguments, it would be fiscally irresponsible to author- ize an additional carrier at this time un- til there is a full discussion of the role of the attack carrier and the necessary force level needed to carry out this role. That is why our amendment calls for a study by the Comptroller General, and anticipates a full congressional debate before continuing to spend billions of dollars on this highly expensive and often ineffective means of providing tactical air power. I ask unanimous consent that the text of this amendment be printed in the REC- ORD at this point. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment will be received and printed, and will lie on the table; and, without objection, the amendment will be printed in the RECORD. The amendment (No. 136) is as fol- lows: On page 2, line 16, strike out "2,568,200,- 000;" and insert in lieu thereof "2,191,100,- 000;" At the end of the bill add a new section as follows: "Ssc. 402. None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this or any other Act may be expended in connection with the pro- duction or procurement of the nuclear air- craft carrier designated as CVAN-69; and no funds may be appropriated for any such pur- pose until after the Comptroller General of the United States has completed and submit- ted to the Congress a comprehensive study and investigation of the past and projected costs and effectiveness of attack aircraft car- riers and their task forces and a thorough re- view of the considerations which went into the decision to maintain the present number of attack carriers. In carrying out such study and investigation the Comptroller General of the United States shall, among other things, consider? "1. What are the primary limited war mis- sions of the attack carrier; what role, if any, does it have in strategic nuclear planning; "2. To what extent and in what way is the force-level of on-station and back-up carriers related to potential targets and the number of sorties needed to destroy these targets; "3. What is the justification for maintain- ing on continual deployment 2 carriers in the Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9798 Approved For Repagene41410AlL qiimmallIBM?ilily.W030010000kkust 12, 1969 Charles S. Guy, of Pennsylvania, to be U.S. marshal for the eastern district of Pennsylvania for the term of 4 years, vice James P. Delaney. On behalf of the Committee on the Judiciary, notice is hereby given to all Persons interested in this nomination to file with the committee, in writing, on or before Tuesday, August 19, 1969, any representations or objections they may wish to present concerning the above nomination, with a further statement whether it is their intention to appear at any hearing which may be scheduled. Mediterranean and from 3 to 5 in the West- ern Pacific; "4. What is the over-all attack carrier force level needed to carry out these primary missions; "5. Does the present `one for one' replace- ment policy for these carriers have the effect of maintaining or increasing this force level, in light of the fact that the newer carriers and their aircraft are more expensive and have far more capability than the oldest car- riers which they are now replacing; "6. Would a policy of replacing two of the oldest carriers with one modern carrier main- tain a constant force level; "7. How many, if any, attack carriers and carrier task forces are needed to back-up a carrier task force 'on-the-line'; "8. What efficiencies, such as the Polaris 'blue and gold' crew concept, can be utilizsd to increase the time in which a carrier can stay 'on-the-line'; "9. What type of military threats are faced by the attack carrier; what proportion of the costs of a carrier task force are allocated to carrier defense; what is the estimated effec- tiveness of carrier defense against various types and levels of threats; "10. To what extent does the carrier's vul- nerability affect its capacity to carry out its missions; what are the plausible contingen- cies in which carriers may be committed; "11. What type of resources should be de- voted to carrier defense, considering the range of threats, the costs and effectivenees of the defense, and the plausible contingen- cies in which a carrier can be effectively used; "12. To what extent can lend-based tacti- cal air power substitute for attack carriers; to what extent should the role uf the attack carrier be restricted to the initial stages of a conflict; "13. What are the comparative mysteries costs for land-based and sea-based tactical air power, and what is their cOmparative coa effectiveness; "14. How is the attack carrier being used in support of American feteign policy; if there is a need for a 'show-of force' in sup- port of foreign policy commitments, can this need be met by smaller carriers or other types of ships? "The Comptroller General of the United States shall submit the results of his study and investigation, together with such recant- mendations as he deems appropriate, to the Congress not later than June 30, 1970." GENERAL REVISION OF THE COPY- RIGHT LAW, TITLE 17 OF THE UNITED STATES CODE?AMEND- MENT AMENDMENT NO. 137 Mr. HART. Mr. President, for the la$1 60 years there has been no change in the flat fee composers and authors of musical works have received, under the Copyright Act of 1909, for the use of their creations by recording companies. The fee, called a "mechanical royalty," is 2 cents for each selection recorded. Although vast changes have occurred since 1909 in the price of records, the cost of living and technology in the rec- ord industry, the composer and author still get the same 2 cents. The copyright revision bill S. 543, rec- ognized the inequity of this and would increase the mechanical royalty to 24 cents per selection. This is inequitable since it does not take into consideration changes in the prices of records by rec- ord manufacturers. It would impose on Congress a continuing responsibilitY of fixing royalty payments. This burden on Congress in order to do equity to authors and composers can be removed by substituting for a flat cent rate royalty in S. 543 a flexible roy- alty, namely a percent of the retail price of the record suggested by the manufac- turer. This would permit authors and composers to share in the increased prices at which records have said since 1909, for example the replacement of $3.98 records by $4.98 records and by stereo tape cartridges and cassettes sell- ing for $6.98 and $7.98. Mr. President. I am submitting now an amendment to section 115 of S. 543 which would serve the purpose I have stated. The PRESIDING OisisiCER. The amendment will be received and printed, and will be appropriately referred. The amendment was referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. NOTICE CONCERNING NOMINATION BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY Mr. EASTLAND. Mr. President, the following nominations have been re- ferred to and are now pending before the Committee on the Judiciary: Peter Mills, of Maine, to be 'U.S. attor- ney for the district of Maine for the term of 4 years, vice Lloyd P. LaFoun- taM, John H. deWinter, of Maine, to be U.S. marshal for the district of Maine for the term of 4 years, vice Adam J. Walsh. On behalf of the Committee on the Judiciary, notice is hereby given to all persons interested in these nominations to file with the committee, in writing on or before Tuesday, August 19, 1969, any representations or objections they may wish to present concerning the above nominations, with a further statement whether it is their intention to appear at any hearing which may be scheduled. NOTICE CONCERNING NOMINATION BEVORE THE COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY Mr. EASTLAND. Mr. President. the following nomination has been re- ferred to and is now pending before the Committee on the Judiciary: Wayman G. Sherrer, of Alabama, to be U.S. attorney for the northern dis- trict of Alabama for the term of 4 years, vice Macon L. Weaver. On behalf of the Committee on the Judiciary, notice is hereby given to all persons interested in this nomination to file with the committee, in writing, on or before Tuesday, August 19, 1969, any representations or objections they may wish to present concerning the above nomination, with a further statement whether it is their intention to appear at any hearing which may be scheduled. NOTICE CONCERNING NOMINATION BEFORE THE COMMI rrEE ON THE JUDICIARY Mr. EASTLAND. Mr. President, the following nomination has been re- ferred to and is now pending before the Committee on the Judiciary: "SLUG" SULLIVAN, FOSTER GRANDPARENT Mr. MANSFIELD Mr. President, the VISTA voluntary program has been ac- tive in many areas of the State of Mon- tana, and perhaps one of the most Pop- ular has been the Foster Grandparent program. This pis:gram is designed to keep our senior citizens active in working with the local schools and hospitals. One of my oldest and closest associ- ates in Montana, John L. "Slug" Sulli- van, has become very active and one of the leaders in the Foster Grandparent program in Helena. "Slug" Sullivan is 78 years of age and has found his latest endeavor most worthwhile and satisfy- ing. A recent feature story published in the Independent Record dismisses the pro- gram at some length and gives an ac- count of John Sullivan's activities as a Foster Grandparent. This group of elder citizens help young people to overcome feelings of inferiority and to develop self- assurance and understanding. "Slug" was one of my earliest political mentors in Butte, Mont. I found the article written by Robert Sibley, a VISTA volunteer, most inter- esting and ask unanimous consent that it be printed in the REcom. There being no objection, the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: ONCE A FIGHTER , Now A LOVING FosTin ORANDPAIVENT (By Robert Sibley) (NoTE.?Bob Sibley, 25, aVISTA volunteer from Washington, D.C., is using his master's degree in journalism to aid the VISTA pro- gram serving elderly persons in Montana. Here he describes the Foster Grandparents segment of the program.) When Mike Mansfield was first deciding to run for Congress, he asked his old friend "Slug" Sullivan what he thought. "Well, I think you don't know too many people right ram" Slug answered. "But af- ter they get to know you, they'll like you. You should run this first time just to get advertising for yourself, and next time you'll probably make it." Mike Mansfield was defeated in his first race for Congress, but just as Slug predicted, he won the second time he ran and has been winning ever since. John L. "Slug" Sullivan has a lot of moments like this that b can recall as though they happenes just a few hours ago, even though they may have taken place more than 40 years back. "CLEAN rare" Tan and healthy looking with an easy- coming smile, Slug's appearance belies his 78 years; nevertheless, that's how old he is. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 CIA-RDP71B_Q03_64R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? should SEN E S9519 also be designed to deal with the consequences of new defense spending as well as the curtailment of spending. In short, I am suggesting that such a high- level Commission should be designed to deal not not only with the economic problems associated with a reduction in defense spending but also with all phases of the relationship between the ongoing military-industrial complex and the economy. In regards to the general ques- tion of conversion to a peacetime econ- omy, I was pleased to hear President Nixon state in his inaugural address: We shall plan now for the day when our wealth can be transferred from the destruc- tion of war abroad to the urgent needs of our people at home. Following up on this pledge, the Pres- ident has asked a subcommittee of the Council for Economic Policy chaired by Dr. Herbert Stein, to initiate policy plan- ning for converting our economy to a peacetime basis. Mr. President, over the past few months the military-industrial complex, its meaning and its dangers, has been the subject of far ranging, searching dis- cussion and analysis. On the whole I think this has been healthy. I hope that the debate will continue. However, I also believe that we have reached the stage where we should do more than talk and debate. We should begin to act. And in this respect there are a number of meas- ures Which the Congress could adopt in the near future. I have pointed to several such possible measures today. I again urge their favorable consideration by the Senate. And in closing I would return to Presi- dent Eisenhower's message. In citing the dangers of the military-industrial com- plex, President Eisenhower also stressed the fact that the complex was the prod- uct of necessity. Thus we cannot control these dangers by destroying the complex as some would seem to suggest. The mili- tary-industrial complex is a fact of mod- ern American life. No amount of wish- ing will make it go away. At the same time all must recognize that although there are dangers inherent to the mili- tary-industrial complex these dangers are not inherently uncontrollable. In other words we must keep the military- industrial complex in a proper perspec- tive. We must see both its essentiality and also its potential for abuse. We must have it, but we must control it. We must be vigorous in our efforts to see to it that It is a servant of peace and prosperity rather than the servant of war and de- struction. Mr. DOLE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. PEARSON. I am very pleased to yield to my colleague from Kansas. Mr. DOLE. Mr. President, first of all, I commend My colleague from Kansas for a general review of the so-called military-industrial complex. I feel that most of us will agree with many things said. I wish to add that we are fortunate in this administration to have a man like Melvin Laird as Secre- tary of Defense. I know of no one who has gone to the Cabinet level so well equipped. As my colleague knows, Mr. Laird for 14 years was a member of the House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee. Mr. Laird was a prober. He was a critic. He was a questioner. But, above all, he understood the Defense Department. He understood its responsibility, he tried to make the Department responsive and responsible when he could do so. At the outset of this administration, both Secretary Laird and Under Secre- tary Packard had expressed the philos- ophy that we should take a close look at all of the programs and reexamine our military requirements and validate the need for any new major weapons system. I would hope my colleague would agree that in the span of 6, 7, or 8 months, progress has been made by Secretary Laird. I would cite only a few examples of responsible progress under Mr. Laird. First, Mr. Laird has established a De- fense Systems Acquisition Review Coun- cil within the office of the Secretary of Defense to advise the Secretary of the current status and the readiness of each major system to proceed to the next phase of efforts in its life cycle. Second, and I think this very im- portant, there has been the appointment of a blue ribbon defense panel by the Secretary. This is a matter that he pur- sued with vigor while a Member of the House of Representatives. A blue ribbon defense panel has been appointed to re- appraise the Defense Establishment, There has been the cancellation of the manned orbital laboratory. There has been the termination of the Cheyene helicopter program. There have been new, frank, and can- did reports to both the Senate and House Armed Services Committees on major weapons acquisitions. Mr. Laird has attempted to provide ?Congress with more information. He has done an excellent job getting facts so that the Senate and the House can make valid adjustments. He has also en- dorsed as recently as July 31 the estab- lishment of a Commission on Govern- ment Procurement. He views the Com- mission as another positive step in re- porting on the methods of military pro- curement. There have been numerous improve- ments in the management of weapons acquisition process. As recently as Saturday we find the Secretary concurring in the judgment of the Senate concerning chemical and biological weapons. As an addition to the remarks of my colleague from Kansas, I want the record to show that we have a Secretary of Defense who is just as dedi- cated as anyone in the Senate or any- one in Congress in saving the taxpayers' money, and just as concerned about any so-called military-industrial complex. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. GRAVEL in the chair) . Under the prior unanimous-consent agreement, the Sen- ate will now proceed to other business. Mr. PEARSON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I may continue for an additional 5 minutes. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres- ident, I am constrained to object. This unanimaous-consent request was made last week, as I understand, and Senators were put on notice that debate an the pending McIntyre amendment would be controlled and would last for 1 hour after the unfinished business was laid down. Mr. PEARSON. Mr. President, I will withdraw the request. I do appreciate the situation of the leadership in this respect, and they were very gracious to give me time this morning. I can respond at an- other time. (03424 AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Chair lays before the Senate the unfinished business, which will be stated. The ASSISTANT LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A bill (S. 2546) to authorize appropriations during the fiscal year 1970 for procure- ment of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and to au- thorize the construction of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to pre- scribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces and for other purposes. The PRESIDING 010.FiCER. The ques- tion is on agreeing to the amendment of the Senator from New Hampshire. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a question? Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. I yield 1 minute to the Senator. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, this Is getting to be a rather unusual pro- cedure, to request unanimous consent for a specific time for a speech and then nobody can make a rebuttal. The Senator made an excellent speech. I do not agree with it in its entirety. He used President Eisenhower's quota- tions but he did not use enough of them. If I have to wait until tomorrow or Sep- tember, the point I want to make will have lost its effectiveness. I think I am going to start opposing all unanimous-consent requests for this type of presentation. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. I thank the Senator. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that a brief quorum call may be had at this time. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator withhold his request for a quorum call? What was the unanimous-consent re- quest? Did the Senator make a unani- mous-consent request about limitation? Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. No. That was made last week. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres- ident, I ask unanimous consent that there be a brief quorum call, the time to be equally divided between both sides. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres- ident, I suggest the absence of a quorum.. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9520 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 11, 1966 The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The assistant legislative clerk pro- ceeded to call the roll. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres- ident, I ask unanimous Consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres- ident, I ask imanimoui consent that, at the conclusicm of the vote on the pend- ing amendment, the alSie chairman of the Committee on Armed Services be recognized. The PRESIDING OtoricER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Who yields time? Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, how much time does the Senator desire? Mr. McINTYRE. Ten minutes or so. Mr. NELSON. I yield 10 minutes to the Senator from New Hampshire. CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WARFARE Mr. McINTYRE, Mr. President, the Senate today will consider amendment No. 131, which I introduced last Friday together with Senators YARBOROUGH, PROXMIRE, HARTKE, PELL, NELSON, MON- DALE, STEVENS, GOODELL, and HUGHES. Had more time been available after the introduction, I am certain many other Senators would have joined in its sponsorship. On an associated point, Mr. President, may I say that I was particularly pleased with Defense Secretary Melvin Laird's statement Saturday. This statement, ex- pressing his concurrence with the goals of this amendment, reflects an admirable understanding on the part of the Secre- tary of the need for improved manage- ment and control of chemical and bio- logical warfare programs. Secretary Laird also deserves com- mendation for recommending a National Security Council study of these matters, and President Nixon deserves much praise for ordering the study. Most helpful, too, in the present ex- amination of CBW programs has been the consistent, progressive leadership of the distinguished chairman of the Com- mittee on Armed Services, the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. STENNIS) . We are considering today a coordi- nated effort to deal with a highly coin- plex and unpopular part of our defense structure in such a way as to achieve the kind of congressional control and national understanding we feel is needed, while, at the same time, avoiding in- volvement of the Senate in the lengthy procedure which would be required were we to take up a number of separate amendments. Moreover, by bringing together in a single package a number of proposals involving ? chemical and biological war- fare programs, our consideration can be all the more comprehensive. The amendment introduced Friday did not include a section covering one particular area. The proposal dealing with this particular area was originally put forth by the distinguished Senator from Indiana (Mr. HARTKE) I am happy to say that since Friday we have reached agreement on the language for this sec- tion, a section relating to the subject of so-called "back-door financing" of CBW programs. Mr. President, I send this section to the desk and ask unanimous consent to have it added to amendment No. 131, to- gether with technical changes that have been made to the original amendment, No. 131; and I ask unanimous consent to have it printed at this point in the RECORD. The PRESIDING OrtoICER Is there objection? The Chair hears none, and it is so ordered. The modification is as follows: At the end of amendment No. 131 add a new subsection as follows: "(g) (1) Except as provided in subsection (g) (2) of this section, no funds authorized to be appropriated by this, or any other later enacted Act may be expended for research, development, test, evaluation, or procure- ment of any chemical or biological weapon, including any such weapon used for in- capacitation, defoliation, or other military operations. "(g) (2) The prohibition contained in sub- section (g) (1) of this section shall not apply with respect to funds authorized to be ap- propriated by this Act." On page 4, line 3, insert "will" between "agente and "be". On page 4, line 6, change "subsections (e) (1) " to "subsections (d) (1)". On page 4, line 7, change "(e) (2) " to "(d) (2)". On page 4, line 21, change "or an other" to "or any other". On page 5, line 2, insert "of the Public Health Service" after "Surgeon General". On page 5, line 3, delete "President" and insert "Secretary of Defense". On page 4, line 22, insert "or any" after "lethal chemical agents,". Mr. McINTYRE, Mr. President, a word must be said at this point about the ex- cellent work done by each of the Sena- tors who have contributed sections of this amendment. Their individual re- search, the honing of their proposals to a remarkable precision of language, and the spirit of cooperation exhibited in their willingness to consolidate their pro- posals into a single amendment is in the finest tradition of this great body. As we take up consideration of the amendment, let us keep in mind that al- ready included in the overall legislation before us is a $16 million reduction in the Defense Department's budget for re- search and development in lethal offen- sive chemical and biological warfare. This reduction was recommended by my Subcommittee on Research and Devel- opment and accepted by the full Armed Services Committee. I raise this thought so that, as we take up consideration of the amendment, we have a comprehensive picture of the ac- tion we can take in regard to CBW pro- grams. Now let me identify each of the sec- tions of this amendment. I will not go into detail because I know other Mem- bers intend to do that. The first section (402) (a), also de- veloped by our able colleague the Sen- ator from Indiana (Mr. HARTKE) , Calls for a full and complete semiannual re- port by the Secretary of Defense to the Congress setting forth in detail the total CBW research, development, test eval- uation, and procurement program. This, of course, would provide Con- gress with the kind of detailed informa- tion Congress and the public need in order to understand the programs and to determine future direction. The second section (402) (b), developed by the able $enator from Wisconsin (Mr. Nztsost), and the able Senator from New York (Mr. Goorista.), provides that no funds can be used for the procurement of any delivery system which is specifically designed to disseminate lethal agents. This section, Mr. President, makes clear our opposition to the use of lethal CBW agents as offensive weapons and prohibits expenditure of funds for any device designed to deliver these agents. The third section, (402) (c) , expresses the concern of many about the deploy- ment or storage of lethal agents and microorganisms Outside the United States. Recent accounts of unfortunate incidents involving such deployment or storage have prompted new congres- sional interest in what we may be doing in this area of CBW activity. This section will provide for a full range of reports to the Interested Con- gressional committees, and will also in- sure consultation with foreign nations before we deploy CBW agents on their soil. Mr. President, I believe that in gen- eral we accomplish the substance of this proposal, but the section makes unmis- takably clear Congress' interest and de- sires. This section is another developed by the Senator from Wisconsin, (Mr. NEL- SON) and the Senator from New York (Mr. GOODELL) . The next section, (402) (d), also pro- posed by the Senator from Indiana (Mr. HARTKE) , relates to recent fears of many about the possible dangers inherent in the rail shipment of lethal cherncial and biological agents. Basically, this section covers three areas. It requires the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service to assure that shipment will not be detrimental to the public health. It would give advance notice of such shipments to the Congress and civilian agencies. And finally, it will bring about the de- toxification of lethal agents before they are shipped off for disposal. Again, some of this already is being done, but this section makes clear the Congress in- terest and intent. I would like to say at this point that while I am completely in agreement with this section I think we should always keep before us the fact that it is not the chemical and biological warfare service alone that transports biological agents around the country, nor Is this service the principal shipper of such agents. The National Institute of Health and other public and private health agencies trans- port an enormous amount of such agents. We are not dealing with such agencies In this particular legislation, to be true, but we may want to consider this in other legislation. I think a study would show that the amount of potentially dangerous biological agents shipped by CBW is relatively small when measured against the total shipment by all agencies. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved FtratinA29iii.AF3Rt&MID_PWOWEIR000300100001-3 S 9521 August 11, 1969 The able Senator from Rhode Island (Mr. PELL), proposed the next section 402(e). While the previous section dealt with transportation of lethal chem- ical and biological agents within the United States, the section of the Senator from Rhode Island, deals with transpor- tation of such agents outside the United States. It also includes the matter of testing, development, storage and disposal of such agents outside the United States, and it asks for the full consideration of U.S. international responsibilities when lethal CBW agents are moved, tested, disposed of, or developed in foreign areas. This section places certain responsi- bilities in the hands of the Secretary of State to assure that we are not likely to violate international law. The succeeding section 402(f) , an ad- ditional section developed by the Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. NELSON) and the Senator from New York (Mr. GOODELL) is, perhaps, one of the most significant in the proposal. I am sure we have all been concerned about incidents of the past several years where outdoor testing of lethal agents and micro-organisms have jeopardized both animal and human life. This particular section of the amend- ment would eliminate open air testing except in those instances when the Sec- retary of Defense, under the direction of the President of the United States, would declare that our national security re- quired such testing, and the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service de- termined that the public's health would not be endangered. Furthermore, this section would re- quire that appropriate committees of the Congress would be informed of all pro- posed open air tests at least 30 days prior to the date on which it is proposed to hold them. The final section of the amendment, added by unanimous consent today, would become section 402(g) (1) and (2) . This section, proposed by the Senator from Indiana (Mr. HARTKE) is another step in congressional control over funds that can be used in CBW efforts. It would restrict the reprograming of funds from other programs into CBW. I am not aware that so-called backdoor financing of CBW is presently taking place, Mr. President, but with the adop- tion of this section we would assure that it does not. In summary, this amendment will serve the obvious public need to better know and understand our chemical and biological programs. It will provide in-depth information to the Congress in its continuing considera- tion of this broad, complex, and frequent- ly distasteful matter. And it comes directly to grips with those incidents that have so disturbed the Nation recently?the severe illness of two dozen CBW workers in Okinawa, the death of the sheep at Dugway, Utah, and the dangers inherent in moving deadly CBW agents across the country. I conclude, Mr. President, by pledging my determination to make the chemical and biological warfare program a prin- cipal item on the agenda of the Researeh and Development Subcommittee of the Armed Services Committee during the coming year. We will want to examine in detail every facet of the program. We will be briefed by a full range of scientists and other experts and receive pertinent material from them. We will want to hear from other Members of the Senate who have a par- ticular interest in CBW. And we will want to survey the effects of the actions proposed in this amend- ment and in other sections of the cur- rent authorization bill. In short, when we return next year to consider the 1971 version of the author- ization bill I sincerely believe that the recommendations we will? make will en- able the Senate to meet problems that may still exist in this program. In the interim, Mr. President, I strongly urge the adoption of this amend- ment. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time? Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, under the agreement, who controls time? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The mi- nority leader and the majority leader or their designee. Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, how much time does the Senator from New York desire? Mr. GOODELL. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me for 10 minutes. Mr. NELSON. I yield 10 minutes to the Senator from New York. Mr. GOODFT.L. Mr. President, before I begin my formal remarks I wish to offer my commendations to the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire. I would like to ask the Senator from New Hampshire a question to make sure a technical correction has been made in the amendment. I refer to page 4, line 22, of amendment 131. Mr. McINTYRE. Is the Senator re- ferring to the technical amendments I offered this morning to the original amendment? Mr. GOODELL. Yes. I refer to that point where reference is made to "lethal chemical agents, disease-producing bio- logical micro-organisms, or biological toxins." It was my understanding there might be some misinterpretation here be- cause of the words which should read "or any other." Mr. McINTYRE. Does the Senator re- fer to page 4, line 22, where the amend- ment reads, "None of the funds author- ized to be appropriated by this or any other act shall be used for the open-air testing of lethal chemical agents, disease- producing biological micro-organisms, or biological toxins"? What is the question? Mr. GOODELL. That is the way the amendment reads? Mr. McINTYRE. That is the way the amendment reads at the present time. Mr. GOODELL. I simply wanted to clarify that point. I think it is a crucial point. We are requiring this procedure of lethal chemical agents that are tested and all disease-producing biological microorganisms, or biological toxins. Is that correct? Mr. McINTYRE. The Senator is cor- rect. Mr. GOODELL. Mr. President, the omnibus anti-CBW amendment we are presenting here today represents an im- portant break with secrecy over chemi- cal and biological weapons. It is a modest measure to check the vast destruction potential of our CRW arsenal. Still, it is a significant measure. It is significant for it opens up the secrecy which has cloaked the spiraling gas and germ weapons program. It checks the weapons spiral. It minimizes international repercussions over CBW. It provides for public health and safety by guarding against the perils in transport, storage, and disposal of CBW. It puts up a barrier to future outdoor testing of CBW. It encourages congressional re- view. The distinguished chairman of the Committee on Armed Services has called this omnibus anti-CBW amendment a solid start on the problem, and he is quite certainly right. I should like to commend Senator STENNIS and the members of the Armed Services Committee for taking the first major step in controlling the CBW pro- gram. The committee cut $16 million from the Pentagon's request for funds earmarked for research and develop- ment on offensive lethal chemical and biological weapons. This significant step has set in motion other steps to control the CBW program. I would like to start today by consider- ing open-air testing of deadly gas and disease-producing? germs. It was with great reluctance that I agreed to modify the "flat ban" amendment originally in- troduced by the Senator from Wiscon- sin (Mr. NELSON) and myself. A flat ban on outdoor CBW testing would eliminate the threat that a test cloud of deadly gas and germs might drift from the test site to our cities and towns. The moratorium postpones but does not elim- inate this threat. We felt we could make a significant step forward at this time. On the assurance of the Senator from New Hampshire that his subcommittee was going to look intensively at this en- tire program we have great confidence he will do so and that we can move for- ward in the future with greater restric- tions consistent with national security. There are pluses and minuses in the test ban revision. The minus side leaves the option open for future tests. The plus side puts congressional control over testing. The burden of proof is on the Pentagon if any further tests are to take place due to national security. I believe there is agreement here today that no longer will these tests take place on a routine basis. There must be a high-level determination that such tests are directly Involved with the national security. That determination must be made by the Sec- retary of Defense under guidelines pre- scribed by the President and must be agreed to by the Surgeon General with reference to the procedures to be fol- lowed. It is my view that it should be unnec- essary in the future for us to engage in any outdoor testing, but we do leave the door open for the very unusual? Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9522 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 11, 1969 and I emphasize very:, unusual?sittute duced land designated as "permanent tion that might arise In the national se- biocontaminated area." curity. What next is in store from such CBW While we are studying this problem in open air testing? the next year, such tests Might take place As we debate the wisdom of banning under very careful regulations and safe- open air testing of lethal gas and any guards. The burden of assurance that disease-producing bacteria or toxin, the no health hazard will result from any very testing of deadly nerve gasses con- test rests with the U.S. Surgeon General. tinues. It is of little comfort to me to In each case, Congress 'will have the eel- hear from the Defense Department that portunity for hard questioning. On bal- there are no irrunediate plans to conduct ance, then, the moraterium is accept- outdoor tests of lethal biological agents. able at this beginning stage of CBW re- It is of little comfort that the Q-fever view, field tests at Dugway have been corn- If the moratorium is to be meaningful, pletecl and now research will shift to the we simply must be guided by the princi- laboratory to evaluate results. pie that the security of this Nation be- While the specter of future open air gins with the health and safety of our tests for disease-producing bacteria people. Pentagon requests based on na- hangs over us; while outdoor testing of tional security simply blest be 'viewed such deadly nerve gasses as VX, Tabun? in this context. If not, tire moratorium GA?Sarin?GB?and Soman?GD--- on outdoor testing wottel be relatively continues; when any open air test of meaningless. If CBW tests are requested, deadly gas or any disease-producing bac- every effort must be made to confine teria takes place, the issue of public safe- them to the laboratory, 'This point cannot ty remains of grave concern. be emphasized enough. We all know the If just one accidental release of dead- example at Dugway Provine Grounds in ly nerve gas or disease-producing bac- Utah where thousands of sheep were teria spreads to our cities and towns, killed. Had the wind shifted farther a the toll in death and sickness would be large city in the United States would indefensible. Every precaution must be have been engulfed by deadly nerve gas, taken to assure the health and safety VX?odorless and colorless. What a dis- of our people. Animals must be Pro- aster that would have been. We must tected. Environment must be preserved. not engage in such tests without the All these things must be done regardless highest priority given the safety of our of how slight the danger. people. Consider the deadly effect of these One example suffices to explain why chemical agents. Consider the vast de- CBW testing should be confined to the struction potential of the disease-pro- laboratory. It is an example which clear- clueing biologicals. Let us take a look at ly demonstrates that hazards from open these agents in deciding whether in air tests of chemical and biological terms of public safety alone, we should weapons are not vague speculations, but ban lethal CWB from being tested out- grim realities. The example is the new well-known sheep-killing accident last doors. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- year, caused by an open air test of 'VX sent to have printed in the RECORD a te- at the Army's Dugway Proving Grounds ble of chemical and biological agents, In Utah. Some say that safety rules for together with a table on planned open CBW testing are sufficient. Safety rules, air testing at various sites including the they may say, are enough to protect against the fatal results possible when site at Dugway Proving Ground, Utah, the Deseret Test Center in Utah, and at deadly nerve gas is tested in the air. Be- fore the sheep-killing ineldent and since - that time, the Army has announced sate- There being no objection, the tables ty regulations for CBW open air testing, were ordered to be printed in the Are safety rules at the test site RECORD, as follows: suf- ficient for public safety? X simply cannot TABLE OF CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL AGENTS accept that they are. A freakish wind THE CHEMICAL AGENTS shift or a poorly supervised test may Nerve gases (VEE) kills less than 1 per cent of its victims never occur. Let us consider, then, what GB: An odorless, colorless, volatile gas that and lasts as few as three days; Eastern equine might otherwise happen, can kill in minutes in dosages of 1 milligram, encephalomyelitis (EEE) is fatal about 5 per In the 1968 sheep-killing incident, the approximately 1/60 of a drop. In the U.S. cent of the time, if untreated, and can seri- test at Dugway was to determine howsenal since the late 1940's, it is also known ously cripple the central nervous system of as Sadn. The gas kills by paralyzing the survivors. nerve gas VX distributes itself downwind nervous system. 5 to 25 miles per hour to the northeast. Plague: Acute, usually fatal, highly infec- VX: Another odorless gas that, unlike GB, tious bacterial disease of wild rodents found This was the information sought. Under does not evaporate rapidly or freeze at nor- in two forms?bubonic and pneumonic. today's safety rules at Dugway, the teat mal temperatures. Becausee of its low vole- Sypmptoixis of bubonic plague include small would be limited to winds 15 miles per tatty, it is effective for a longer period of hemorrhages, and the black spots that led the hour. Even so, would this Prevent another time. VX also is capable of killing in 1 mini- disease to be commonly known as the "black nerve gas accident? Consider what hap- gram doses and, like GB, paralyzes the ner- death" during the massive epidemics of the pened in the sheep-killing incident. The vous system in minutes. past. Pneumonic plague is highly infectious test started. The jet opened its tanks and Incapacitating agents because it is spread from man to man via began spraying nerve gas over the test BZ: A gas that is either a psychoc,hemical coughing. Symptoms include, fever, chills, area. After a few seconds the tanks were rapid pulse and breathing, mental dullness, or a strong anesthetic which can produce to close and the plane pull up. But the intemiltazorvairy paralysis, blindness, or deafness coated tongue, and red eyes. Psittacosis: Viral infection in birds that is BZ has also been k transmissible to man, with symptoms of high tanks did not close; the tanks stayed cause maniacal behavior. Its precise makeup fever, muscle ache, and disorientation. Dis- open. The plane pulled up with nerve le secret. gaS still spraying. Then over 6,000 sheep Blot control gases ease can be mild, and last less than a week, or can cause death in upwards of 40 per cent Regardless of safety regulations, field grant odor similar to apple blossoms. The may take months. tear gas that also acts as an irritant to the upper respiratory system. Ca: An improved, more toxic tear gas that quickly causes tearing, coughing, breathing difficulty, and cheat tightness. C antempo- rarily incapacitate men in twenty seconds. Heavy concentrations cause nausea. It Is now used in Vietnam. Harassing agents DM: A pepper-like arsenical gas that causes headaches, nausea, vomiting, chest pains for up to two or three hours. It can be lethal in heavy doses and has been blamed for some deaths since its first use to. Vietnam in 1964. DM is widely known as adamsite and was used in World War I. HD: A pale yellow gas with the odor of garlic, popularly known as mustard gas. Causes severe burns to eyes and lungs and blisters skin after exposure, but onset of symptoms is delayed from four to six hours. Can kill in heavy concentrations. Mustard, like VX, is not volatile and is usually effective for days after its use. It caused ons-fourth of the U.S. gas casualties in World War I. Defoliants and herbicides 2,4-D: A weed-killing compound known as dichloropheri-oxyacetic acid that has rela- tively short persistence in the soil and a rela- tively low level of toxicity to man, if prop- erly dispersed. Heavier concentrations can cause eye irritations and stomach upsets, however. Dangerous to inhale. Usually used in Vietnam along with 2,4,5-T (trichloro- phenoxyametic acid), which has similar?al- though somewhat more toxic?properties. Ef- fective against heavy Jungle. Cacodylic Acid: An arsenic-base compound used against rice plants and tall grass. Strong plant killer that gives quick results. One seri- ous restriction on its use is the possibility that heavy concentrations will cause arseni- cal poisoning in humans. Widely used in Vietnam. It is composed of 54.29 per cent arsenic. BIOLOGICAL AGENTS Anthrax.' An acute bacterial disease that is usually fatal if untreated when it attacks the lungs (pulmonary anthrax). Death can result in twenty-four hours. Found naturally in animals, which must be buried or burned to prevent contamination. Symptoms include high fever, hard breathing, and collapse. Also known as woolsorters' disease. Brucellosis: Bacterial disease usually found in cattle, goats, and pigs. Marked by high fever and chills in humans. Also known as undulant fever. Fatal in up to 5 per cent of untreated oases. Symptoms can linger for months. Encephalomyelitis: Highly infectious viral disease that appears in many forms and gradations: it can be simply debilitating or fatal. Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis were killed. ON: A non-lethal gas with a deceptive, fra- of those afflicted. Complete convalescence testing of biologicals at Dug-way, has pro- agent, now in use in Vietnam, Is a fast-acting Q-/ever: Acute, rarely fatal rickettsial dfls- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDF'711300364R000300100001-3 A'ugust 11, 1969 S 9523 Approved Feaftitifseq8R4AtlIntglierpaRA199,013i?4R000300100001-3 Tularemia: A bacterial disease marked by high fever, chills, pains, and weakness. Acute period can last two to three weeks. Sometimes causes ulcers in mouth or eyes, which mul- tiply. Untreated, its mortality rate is between 5 and 8 per cent. Highly infectious, and usually found in animals, fowls, and ticks. Also known as rabbit fever. Source: Chemical and Biological Warfare, America's Hidden Arsenal, by Seymour H. Hersh (Doubleday Co. 1969). ease usually found in ticks, but also found in cattle, sheep, gents, and some wild animals. The Q-fever organism can remain alive and Infectious in dry areas Tor years. Rarely fatal but the resulting fever may last up to three months. Rift Valley Fever: Viral infection of sheep, cattle, and other animals that can be trans- mitted to humans, usually to the male. Symptoms include nausea, chills, headaches, and pains, but the disease is mild: despite the severity of symptoms deaths are rare and acute discomfort lasts only a few days. Also believed to be more virulent among Asians. Rocky Moutnain Spotted Fever: An acute rickettsial disease transmitted to man by the tick. One of the most severe of all infectious diseases. Can kill within three days. Fevers range up to 105 degrees F. Often found in northwestern United States, but susceptibil- ity to the disease in general. Highly respon- sive to treatment. PLANNED OPEN AIR TESTING?MARCH 1968-MAY 1969, DUGWAY PROVING GROUND, UTAH Item Agent Agent amount Quantity M139 bomblet GB 1 round per trial (5 trials). E139 bomblet GB 1 item per trial (8 trials). 105 milimeter projectile_ GB 1.5 pounds per round_ 1 round per trial (3 trials). BLU 19/623 GB 1 round per trial (I trial). Item Agent Agent amount Quantity M55 rocket GB Spray boom (truck) GB 8-inch howitzer shell VX Spray boom (truck) VX 1 round per trial (4 trials). 2 gallons per trial 3 trials. 143.h pounds per round__ _ 1 round per trail (5 trials). 2 gallons per trail 2 trials. PLANNED TESTING, FOURTH QUARTER, FISCAL YEAR 1969: APRIL-JUNE 1969 Item Agent Agent quantity per item Deseret Test Center, Utah (Dugway Proving Ground, Utah): United States Army: 8 inch shell, 50 foot release VX 15.4 pounds E139 bomblet GB Do GB M55 rocket warhead GB M23 land mine VX Test fixture, ground release 1 VX 10 pounds Test fixture, ground release 1 HD do 155-millimeter shell, ground release 1 GD 12.5 pound Test fixture, ground release 1 GA 1.2 pounds United States Navy: Bomblet G-type Defense system challenge, ground releasel_ GB or VX United States Air Force: BLU-19 bomblet GB 3 pounds do Number of items to be teste Item Agent Agent quantity per item Number of items to be tested Edgewood Arsenal, Md.?all Army: 155 mm shell, ground release 1 Test fixture Do E139 bomblet (EOD test) M23 land mine E139 bomblet i. Test munition Fort McClellan, Ala:8 Bulk agent, poured on a suitable surface for detection and decontamination exercises. VX EA 1356 GB GB VX GA GB GD VX HD HD HD HD HD HD GB VX VX 6.5 pounds 100 grams 50 grams 10 pounds 2 gallons 1 gallon 160 centimeters_ 120 centimeters 80 centimeters 40 centimeters 42 centimeters_ 42 centimeters 42 centimeters . 08 ?24 ?20 1 3 114 8 039 2 1 5 1 1 6 5 5 5 8 4 4 4 4 6 3 3 10 16 6 3 4 LETHAL AGENT, OPEN-AIR TESTS SCHEDULED, FIRST QUARTER, FISCAL YEAR 1970?JULY-SEPTEMBER 1969 Height of Item release Agent Quantity of item Agent quantity to be per item tested Deseret Test Center, Utah (Dugway Proving Ground): United States Navy: V Bomblet____ Ground United States Army: 55-gallon drum?portable water._ do VX 1 pound 3 GB Less than 2 5 pounds. HD VX M2XR XR 75 155 MI21 projectile GB 28 155 M121 projectile VX 28 155 M121 projectile GB 6 155 M121 projectile VX 6 4.5-inch mortar Ground HD 6 pounds 148 HT 155 do G 12 to 14 pounds___ 30 M23 Land mine VX 12 M56 Warhead (M55 racket). GB 10 United States Air Force: Test fixture Ground HD 8 pounds 7 Item Quantity of item Height of Agent quantity to be release Agent per item tested Edgewood Arsenal, Md. (All Army tests): 155 Howitzer shell Ground VX 6.5 pounds 7 Test fixture do EA1356 100 grams 24- Do do EA1356 11 pounds 3 On do GB 50 grams 20 E139 bomblet (EN) test) GB 1 Test bomblet do VX 1 pound 8 M23 land mine VX 3 155 Howitzer canister do VX 3 pounds 9 Test spray 1 meter. GA 1.3 pounds 16 Fixture GB 1.3 pounds 8 GD 1.3 pounds 16 VX 10 pounds 2 GB 4 E139 bomblet GD 8 I Ground releases are statically detonated or functioned. 2 Te be conducted this quarter or next quarter, depending on availability of facilities. a Chemical agent decontamination and detection exercises are conducted to train chemical specialists in techniques for these operations. The specialists are subsequently assigned to Army divisions and decontamination teams. Source: Subcommittee on Conservation and Natural Resources, Committee on Government Operations, U.S. House of Representatives. Mr. GOODELL. Mr. President, let us suppose that VX again escaped from a testing site. Suppose instead of drift- ing to a field of sheep, the nerve gas drifted to a city or town of people. The deadly nerve gas VX is colorless and odorless. The protection required against Its very rapid fatal effect is a gas mask and protective clothing. First aid sug- gested is atropine. What chances under Note: Recent exchanges between Representative Henry Reuss, chairman of the House Conserva- tion and Natural Resources Subcommittee and Army Secretary Stanley Resor give some idea of the scheduling of open air tests of chemical agents, including nerve gas. The unclassified data above lists item-by-item outdoor testing for the periods March 1968 to May 1969 at Dugway Proving Ground, Utah; April to June 1969 at Deseret Test Center, Utah (Dugway Proving Ground, Utah); at Edgewood Arsenal, Md.; and at Fort McCelllan, Ala.; July to September 1969 at Deseret Test Center, Utah (Dugway Proving Ground, Utah) and at Edgewood Arsenal, Md. these circumstances would our people have of surviving? A ban on outdoor testing of lethal chemical agents, including VX, would prevent such circumstances from arising. I simply cannot accept accidental death, contaminated land, and the spread of disease as a price for adding still more to the already vast offensive capa- bility of our CBW arsenal. Mr. President, on Saturday, Secretary of Defense Laird said that a chemical warfare deterrent and a biological re- search program are essential to national security. He said that research and test- ing of CBW agents should continue. If I rightly understand, we can expect Pentagon requests to break the proposed "moratorium" on CBW open air tests. If such Pentagon requests be made and Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9524 Approved For ReltuRAM11/3.0 ? ClAttD5/8300364R000300100001-3 311./INAL K SENATE Augwzt .11, 1949 agreed to, I fear we will be back again where we started. That is, we will be back with peril to the public health and peril from a spiraling t7.13W program. Mr. President, why, in view of the nu- clear, and other deterrents, are chemical warfare deterrence andan offensive bio- logical research program essential to na- tional security? To date, research in biological war- fare has already produced biological war- heads for the Sergeafii; research has brought germ warfare U3 the missile age. Chemical deterrence1 has also found shelter in the Sergeant. Still, we are told by the Pentagon that research and test- ing should continue. What are we really_ contributing to when we stockpile munitions filled with lethal gas and disease-producing bac- teria? Do we not contribute to that eerie sense of doomsday? 'What do we mean to accomplish with gas and germ weap- ons? To prevent use? But what if the net result is to proliferate use? Mr. President, anything so infamous as germ warfare should be deterred ulti- mately by eliminating germ weapons. Some will say that this is a dream. Some will say that it cannot be achieved. I cannot accept this reasoning to justify germ weapons. Today, I call for the day when we will dismantle can germ arsenal. I look forward to the day, when the United States will eliminate the means by which civilizations of the world could plunge into the abyss of epidemic and mass death. I urge today, that we fight germs with medicine; not with germ weapons. Medical protection against germs is reasonable, it is sane. To pro- tect against germs with germ weapons is folly; it is madness. Deterrence with defensive equipment, such as gas masks and vaccines, is more reasonable than the deterrence offered by military science and by hardware which places gas and germs in grenades and in nuclear warheads. Deterrence with defensive equipment has the added advantage of beneficial "spin-offs" for peacetime medical applications gained by gas and germ research It is still un- clear to me why medical research of this kind is done by the Defense Department when such research can be done by the Public Health Service. Deterrence with weapons has the neg- ative side effect of arms race competition with other nations or indeed, with our own self. Unilateral armament may be the net effect, or perhaps is the goal of our CBW program. Still, we cannot ignore our contributions to proliferation of CBW throughout the world. Mr. President, how does our national security benefit from CBW proliferation? We have spent years to check nuclear proliferation to nonnuclear nations. If we succeed in nuclear nonproliferation, then few nations will pose a nuclear threat to the cities of this country. Chemical and biological weapons are a way that many nations can threaten our cities. Do we and should we encourage for- eign nations to build up gas and germ weapons as a deterrent to a potential enemy? Should we train foreign officers in gas and germ warfare? Should we have CBW courses at Fort McClellan and in- vite foreign officers to attend? Mr. President, many people are un- aware that in the past 20 years, con- cerning CBW, and prior to 1951, we even had a foreign officer training program which trained military officers from Egypt and Yugoslavia in the use of chem- ical and biological agents. It has been charged that, subsequent to that time, Egypt used deadly gases in Yemen. We have a share of the responsibility for this tragic development in the history of mankind, Some 35 nations have received foreign officer training in how to use CBW weap- ons. This is truly a significant rung up the balance-of-terror ladder for the world, because chemical and biological agents can be produced cheaply by countries with very small resources. Unlike nuclear weapons, chemical and biological weapons which can wipe out mankind can be produced by small countries. We must move forward?cer- tainly our country must?and should not be a party to escalating an arms race in this area of CBW. Certainly it is difficult to look back at different countries' activities in the past 20 years with any confidence that we have done anything but contribute to greater escalation. It is particularly distressing to me that our CBW program includes a foreign officer training program in CBW. The Army offers two courses in CBW open to foreign officers at Fort McClellan. One course is for a period of 9 weeks. The other is for a period of 9 months. Since 1951, the Pentagon has provided CBW training to officers from over 35 foreign countries. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to have printed in the RECORD two charts showing the countries which have participated in the Army's CBW train- ing program. There being no objection, the charts were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: ARMY'S CBW FOREIGN OFFICER TRAINING PROGRAM PARTICIPATING COUNTRY LIST, FROM 1951 TO PRESENT FOREIGN OFFICERS TRAINING PROGRAM-I.. 9 WEEK COURSE Fiscal year- 1969 1970 Japan Korea Philippines Taiwan Thailand South Vietnam Iran 1 Lebanon Pakistan Saudi Arabia 5 4 France Germany 2 2 Greece 5 4 Italy Netherlands Norway Spain Sweden United Kingdom 3 3 Yugoslavia Canada 1 2 Argentina Mexico Australia 2 Source: Department of Defense FOREIGN OFFICERS TRAINING PROGRAM-36 WEEK COURSE Fiscal year 1969 Australia Japan Korea Phillipines Taiwan Thailand South Vietnam Iran 2 Iraq Jordan Lebanon Pakistan Egypt! Austria Denmark Germany Greece Italy Norway Switzerland Turkey Yugoslavia I Canada Argentina Brazil Venezuela Israel I Terminated since early 1950's. - Source: Department of Defense. Mr. GOODELL, Mr. President, officers have come here to learn about CBW. They have come from Europe, from Latin America, from the middle East and from Southeast Asia. This year, emphasis has been given to training officers from Viet- nam, Thailand, Korea, Taiwan, and the Philippines. I am concerned that such training of foreign officers could inspire an wipe- tite for acquisition of these insidious weapons of war. I am disturbed that knowledge and acquisition of CBW could propel nations of the world to use CBW in war. Have we learned nothing from Yemen? Indeed, sharp review of this foreign officers training program in Cl3W is long overdue. I urge that the Senate Armed Services Committee make a complete review of this aspect of the OEM' program. The question to be faced is whether these study courses should be continued or abandoned in the name of reason. If we fail to halt chemical and bio- logical weapons spread and build-up now, what will be in store for future gen- erations? While we now pause on the present rung of the CBW balance-of-ter- ror ladder, we see that we are in a near perfect model of weapons escalation. If we have "overkill" in nuclear weapons; we have "superkill" in chemical and Mo- logical weapons. If the Pentagon has asked us to deploy an ABM for defense against nuclear attack, it is just a matter of time that the Pentagon will ask us for funds to deploy an ACBM, an anti-chem- ical and biological monitoring system? We simply must guard against the dangers inherent in the very existence of chemical and germ weapons. There is danger in any outdoor testing of lethal gas and any disease-producing bacteria and toxin. There is danger in CBW esca- lation and proliferation. There is danger in the use of gas and germs in warfare. Today, we can start to check the dangers posed by CBW by acting favor- ably on the omnibus anti-CBW amend- ment. We can begin today with what promises to be a very long and difficult Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 ? 0AzIRDPUB00364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECuKll ? &CNA S9525 road to additional review and further control of chemical and biological weap- ons both in this country and throughout the world. Yet to be done is a review by the whole Congress of many general areas of inquiry: Why do we have a gas and germ ar- senal? Is the Pentagon's retaliation in kind a valid justification given the nu- clear deterrent? How does our CBW program contrib- ute to the proliferation of CBW through- out the world? What is the U.S. policy on use of these weapons in combat? What steps are the United States will- ing to take in CBW arms control? Let us give deep consideration to the grave moral issues which arise when we stockpile munitions filled with lethal gas and disease-producing bacteria. Let us think deeply on this as we move further in our review ot CBW from the stand- points of deterrence, proliferation, use in combat, and targets for further dis- armament. More steps can be taken to control chemical and biological weapons. These include: Presentation of the Geneva Protocol by the President to the Senate for rati- fication. The United States signed, but never ratified, the 1925 Protocol outlaw- ing use of gas and germs in war. A report by a nongovernmental Scien- tific and Medical Advisory Committee on CBW. This report could focus on scien- tific, medical, and arms-control aspects of chemical and biological weapons. The report should be presented to both the President and to Congress. Paralleled with congressional examination and that of the National Security Council, such a report could be an important contribu- tion M options for charting a long-range Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I deterrent and our biological research pro- should like to respond to the Senator gram, both of which are essential to na- tional security," the statement said. from New York and commend him for Senate Armed Services Committee Chair- the fine work he has done in this area man John Stennis (D-Miss.) said Friday he of CBW, and to commend also the Sena- would probably support the amendment and tor from Wisconsin (Mr. NELSON) and predicted its approval. others, and their staffs, for their close The compromise language, which the or- cooperation and the fine work they have iginal supporters?said would not harm the done in trying to bring together and con- amendment, would allow open air testing of solidate the thinking on control matters CBW agents only when the Secretary of De- fense certified that it was necessary for na- concerning the CBW program. tional security, the U.S. Surgeon General To this point I would say that all of certified that it would not be hazardous to these Senators have cooperated. The health or the environment and congressional compromise may not please everyone; committees had been notified in advance. but, as the Senator from New York There are no restrictions on such testing stated, it represents a beginning of con- now. The original amendment would have flatly banned it. trol that Congress should have over this The compromise version was worked out program. Friday in a meeting between Dr. John S. Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, I thank Foster, Pentagon research director, and Sen. the Senator from New Hampshire. As Thomas J. McIntyre (D-N.H.) , chairman of chairman of the subcommittee, along an Armed Services subcommittee that had with other Senators and their staffs, they already recommended deletion of all funds did a superb job in working out the com- for development of offensive CBW weapons. bined amendment. CONCERN CITED I should like to mention that a num- Laird said that when he took office in Jan- ber of us have offered amendments of uary he "became concerned with the manage- various kinds to the budget. It is ap- ment and control of our chemical warfare propriate to mention that the original and that i biological resesarch programs" i n e " and "felt eorfe needede se programs." budget on January 14 was $23,151,660,000. man- agementin aonvd con ement control That was reduced by Secretary Laird's On result of this concern, he said, was recommendations to $21,963,060,000. And President Nixon's directive in April ordering then through the efforts of the chairman, the National Security Council to make a the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. STEN- thorough study of CBW activities. NIS), the budget was cut another almost "Pending the completion of the NSC $2 billion, down to $20,059,500,000. study," Laird said, "I believe it is prudent It should not go unnoted that the that we act jointly with Congress and take actions, wherever possible, to improve the chairman and his committee did an ex- management and control of chemical war- cellent job in reducing the budget. The fare and biological research programs." fact that a number of us have other Laird emphasized that research and test- amendments should not cause us to ig- ing of CBW agents should continue even nore the fact that the chairman did a though the United States has stated it would fine and conscientious job. use them only in self-defense, because "fail- ure to maintain an effective chemical war- Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- fare deterrent would endanger national se- sent to have printed in the RECORD a curity." news story from the Washington Post of The amendment would also require semi- yesterday, Sunday, August 10, 1969, on a annual reports to Congress on CBW spend- course of action on gas and germ weap- statement by the Secretary of Defense, ing and would bar procurement of further ons. Mr. Laird, as well as the statement by CBW delivery systems, CBW activities found These are some more steps we can take Mr. Laird made on August 9, 1969, re- hythteSeci law, of Statetviolatewithinw- to control CBW in addition to the omni- garding the CBW amendment pending. le r agents iowna within tiiernU?st nited shiptnieatens ts an ndf CBW to anti-CBW amendment we are con- There being no objection, the news - trans- port to foreign countries without approval sidering today. article and statement were ordered to be of the foreign nation and notification to Mr. President, I am not completely printed in the RECORD, as follows: Congress. ? $2.5 BILLION SPENT 1969] satisfied with the compromise, but I [From the Washington (D.C.) Post, Aug. 10, think it is a significant breakthrough. . Since 1960, the Pentagon has spent about I want to commend particularly the CBW CURB ENDORSED By LAIRD $2.5 billion on CBW activities with little Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. NELSON) The Defense Department announced un- congressional scrutiny or public knowledge. The amendment ththtatywo would procurement be at attached bill, to which for his cooperation in working with me expectedrir yesterday that it would support $20-b and others in developing these amend- has been on the Senatefloor for five weeks. germ warfare weapons. efforts for strict congressional controls on the testing and production of chemical and ments, particularly the three originally Nearly a dozen other amendments are await- cosponsored by us. I would also like to The announcement by Defense Secretary ing action and Senate leaders said Friday commend the Senator from New Hamp- Melvin R. Laird virtually insures Senate ap- the bill would probably not come to a final shire for his continuing concern and in- proval Monday of a revised but still broad vote until September. terest in this area, and for his coopera- amendment drawn up by critics of the Sen. Gaylord Nelson (D-Wis.), a sponsor of Pen- ton in working out the amendment tagon's past activities in the CBW field. It the CBW amendment, released this list of colleges and universities engaged in Pentagon would, among other restrictions, ban most which we expect will be carried through CBW contracts: open air testing of the lethal agents. in conference and not diluted further. ri approved, the CBW amendment would "Boston Univ., Brooklyn College, Buffalo Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will be the second major victory for critics of the Univ., Univ. of California at Berkeley, Univ. the Senator from Wisconsin yield me Pentagon since they failed by two votes last of California at Los Angeles, Univ. of Chicago, 1 minute? week to block initial deployment of the Univ. of Connecticut, Cornell Univ., Delaware, Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, how much Safeguard anti-ballistic missile system. George Peabody College, George Washington time remains to me? The Senate's liberal bloc won approval Univ., Georgia Institute of Technology, Hah- The PRESIDING OFFICER. Pour mm- Thursday of a potentially far-reaching nemann Medical College, Harvard, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana, Illinois Institute of Tech- amendment that would give the General Ac- utes remain to the Senator from Wis- counting Office greater powers to audit de- nology. consin. tense contracts. Also, Indiana Univ. Foundation, Iowa State Mr. NELSON. I yield 1 minute to the .1 am in agreement with the goals of the Also, Johns Hopkins, Kansas State Univ., Senator from New Hampshire. (CBW) amendment," Laird said yterday Univ. of Maryland and its medical and dental es schools, Univ. of Massachusetts, Massachu- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- in a statement released by the Pentagon. setts Institute of Technology, Univ. of Michi- ator from New Hampshire is recognized "I believe this revised amendment will gan, Univ of Minnesota, Univ. of North Caro- for 1 minute. allow us to maintain our chemical warfare Una, Ohio State Univ., Univ. of Oklahoma, Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9526 CO NGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 11, 1969 Univ. of Oregon, Univ. of Pennsylvania, Univ. of Pittsburgh, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn. "Also, Rutgers, St. Louis Univ., Stanford Research Institute, Univ. of Tennessee, Univ. of Texas at Austin, Texas AeirM, Univ of Utah, Utah State Univ., Medical College of Vir- ginia, Univ. of Washington, Washington State Univ., Western Reserve Univ., College of William and Mary, Univ. of Wisconsin and Yale." MEMORANDUM FOR CORRESPON?wNTS, AUGUST 9, 1969 Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird today issued the following statement in response to queries about the DoD position on the pend- ing McIntyre amendment. On assuming the office of Secretary of De- fense in January, I became concerned with the management and control of our chemical warfare and biological research programs. I felt that improvements were needed in the management and control of these programs. That is why in April I requested and the President ordered a National Security Council study of these matters. This study Is in progress. Pending the completion Of the NSC study, I believe it is prudent that we act jointly with Congress and take actions, wherever possible, to improve the 'management and control of chemical warfare and biological research programs. Members of my staff, principally Dr. John S. Foster, Jr., Director of Research and Engi- neering, have been working in recent days with Senator Thomas J. iliferntyre of New Hampshire, and with other members of the Senate Armed Services Committee, on a re- vised amendment to the pending Defense Authorization Bill. I am in agreement with the goals of the new amendment, which the Senate is sched- uled to consider on Monday. I believe this revised amendment will allow us to maintain our chemical warfare deter- rent and our biological research program both of which are essential to national security. The history of the use of lethal chemical warfare agents has demonstrated on three notable occasions in this country that the only time military forces have used these weapons is when the opposing forces had no immediate capability to deter or to retaliate. This was true early in World War I, later in Ethopia and more recently in Yemen. Clearly, failure to maintain an effective chemcial warfare deterrent would endanger national security. Because it would not always be possible to determine the origin of attack by biological agents, the deterrent aspects of biological research are not as sharply defined. A con- tinued biological research program, however, is vital on two other major ?mints. First, we must strengthen our protective capabilities in such areas as vaccines and therapy. Secondly, we must minimize the dangers of technological surprise. It is important that the American people be informed of why we must continue to maintain our chemical deterrent, conduct biological research, and how we propose to improve the management and control of these programs. Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, how much time do I have left? The PRESIDING OFiviCER. The Sen- ator from Wisconsin has 2 minutes re- maining. Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to hare printed in full in the RECORD the report of the Sec- retary General on chemical and bacterio- logical weapons and the eirects of their possible use. There being no objection, the repor was ordered to be printed in the RECORD as follows: LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL Jusre 30, 1969. DEAR M. SECRETARY-GENERAL: I have the honour to submit herewith a unanimous re- port on chemical and bacteriological (bio- logical) weapons which was prepared in pur- suance of General Assembly resolution 2454 A (XXIII). The Consultant Experts appointed in ac- cordance with the General Assembly resolu- tion were the following: Dr. Tibor Bakacs, Professor of Hygiene, Di- rector-General of the National Institute of Public Health, Budapest. Dr. Hotse C. Bartlema, Head of the Micro- biological Department of the Medical-Bio- logical Laboratory, National Defense Research Organization TNO, Rijswijk, Netherlands. Dr. Ivan L. Bennett, Director of the New York University Medical Center and Vice- President for Medical Affairs, New York Uni- versity, New York. Dr. S. Bhagavantam, Scientific Adviser to the Minister of Defense, New Delhi. Dr. Jiri Franek, Director of the Military In- stitute for Hygiene, Epidemiology and Micro- biology, Prague. Dr. Yosio Kawakita, President of the Uni- versity of Chiba, Professor of Bacteriology, Chiba City, Japan. M. Victor Moulin, Ingenieur en chef de armement, Chef du Bureau Defense chimi- que et biologique, Direction technique des armements terrestres, Saint Cloud, France. Dr. M. K. McPhail, Director of Chemical and Biological Defense, Defense Chemical, Biological and Radiation Laboratories, De- fense Research Board, Ottawa. Academician O. A. Reutov, Professor of Chemistry at the Moscow State University, Moscow. Dr. Guillermo Soberon, Director, Institute de Investigaciones Biomedicas, thaversidad Nacional Autonama de Mexico, Mexico City. 'Dr. Lars-Erik Tarrunelin, Chief of Depart- ment for Medicine and Chemistry, Research Institute for National Defense, Stockholm, Dr. Berhane Teourne-Lessane, Medical Co- Director and Head of Department of Viruses and Rickettsiae, Imperial Central Laboratory and Research Institute, Addis Ababa. Colonel Zbigniew Zoltowskl, Protestor of Medicine, Epidemiologist and Scientific Ad- viser to the Ministry of National Defense, Warsaw, Sir Sony Zuckerman, Chief Scientific Ad- viser to the Government of the United King- dom, Professor Emeritus, University of Bir- mingham. The report was drafted during sessions held in Geneva between 20 and 24 January and between 16 and 29 April, and finalized at meetings held in New York between 2 and 14 June 1969. The Group of Consultant Experts with to acknowledge the assistance they received from the World Health Organization, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the In- ternational Committee of the Red Cross, the Pugwash Conference on Science and World Affairs (Pugwash) and the International In- stitute for Peace and Conflict Research (SIPRI) , all of which submitted valuable in- formation and material for the purposes of the study. The Group of Consultant Experts also wish to express their gratitude for the valuable assistance they received tram members of the United Nations Secretariat. I have been requested by the Group of Consultant Experts, as their Chairman, to submit their unanimous report to you on their behalf. Yours sincerely, WILLIAM EPSTEIN, Chairman, Group of Consultant Experts on Chemical and Bacteriological (Bio- logical) Weapons. QUESTION OF' GENERAL AND COMPLETE DISARMAMENT [Illustrations not printed in the Recone] (Report of the Secretary-General on chem- ical and bacteriological (biological) weapons and the effects of their possible use) Pursuant to General Assembly resolution 2454 A (XXIII) of 20 December 1968, the Secretary-General has the honour to trans- mit herewith to the General Assembly the report on chemical and bacteriological (bio- logical) weapons and the effects of their possible use, prepared with the astistance of qualified consultant experts. In accordance with paragraph 4 of the resolution, the report is also being trans- mitted to the Security Council (8/9292) and the Conference of the Eighteen-Nation Com- mittee on Disarmamenti as well as to the Governments of Member States. FOREWORD DT THE SECRETARY-GENERAL During the past few years, I have become increasingly concerned by developments in the field of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons and have given expres- sion to this concern on several occasions. A year ago, I stated publicly that "the inter- national community was not sufficiently conscious of the dangers inherent in this new type of weapon of mass murder", and that "due attention had not been focused on this very serious problem". In the introduction to my annual report on the work of the Organization, in September 1968, I stated: "While progress is being made in the field of nuclear disarmament, there is another aspect of the disarmament problem to which I feel too little attention has been devoted in recent years. The question of chemical and biological weapons has been overshadowed by the question of nuclear weapons, which have a destructive power several orders of magni- tude greater than that of chemical and bio- logical weapons. Nevertheless, these too are weapons of mass destruction regarded with universal horror. In some respects, they may be even more dangerous than nuclear weap- ons because they do not require the enormous expenditure of financial and scientific re- sources that are required for nuclear weap- ons. Almost all countries, including small ones and developing ones, may have access to these weapons, which can be manufac- tured quite cheaply, quickly and secretly in small laboratories or factories. This fact in itself makes the problem of control and in- spection much more difficult. Moreover, since the adoption, on 17 Jane, 1925, of the Geneva Protocol for the Prohibition of the Use in War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous or Other Gases and of Bacteriological Methods of War- fare, there have been many scientific and technical developments and numerous im- provements, if that is the right word, in chemical and biological weapons, which have created new situations and new prob- lems. On the one hand, there has been a great increase in the capability of these weapons to inflict unimaginable suffering, disease and death to ever larger numbers of human beings; on the other hand, there has been a growing tendency to use some chemi- cal agents for civilian riot control and a dangerous trend to aceept their use in some form in conventional warfare, "Two years ago, by resolution 2162 B (XXI), the General Assembly called for the strict observance by all States of the principles and objectives of the Geneva Protocol of 1925, condemned all actions contrary to those ob- jectives and invited all States to accede to the Protocol. Once again, I would like to add my voice to those of others in urging the early and complete implementation of this resolution.- However, in my opinion, much more is needed. . . ." "By a letter dated 1 July 1969 from the Secretary-General to the Co-Chairmen of the Conference. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Relea5 2004/11L3.0 ..aCIA :RDP7Mi64R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGREssioiN AL 'chmp ? bh S 9527 At its twenty-third session, by resolutionmeans of warfare; the possible ?long-term logical (biological) agents intended for pur- 2454 A (XXIII), the General Assembly re- effects on human health and ecology; and poses of war were to end if they were elimin- quested me to prepare, with the assistance the economic and security implications of ated from all military arsenals. of qualified consultant experts, a report on the development, acquisition mid possible "If this were to happen, there would be a chemical and bacteriological (biological) use of chemical and bacteriological (biologi- general lessening of international fear and weapons in accordance with the proposal cal) weapons and of systems for their de- tension. It is the hope of the authors that contained in the introduction to my an- livery, this report will contribute to public aware- nual report on the work of the organization The consultant experts to whom I conveyed ness of the profoundly dangerous results if (A/7201/Add. 1), and in accordance with the these terms of reference accepted them as these weapons were ever used, and that an recommendation contained in the report of the basis for their study. aroused public will demand and receive as- the Conference of the Eighteen-Nation Corn- It was my intention that the Group of surances that Governments are working for mittee on Disarmament of 4 September 1968 Consultant Experts should survey the en- the earliest effective elimination of chemical (A/7189). tire subject from the technical and sof- and bacteriological (biological) weapons." In pursuance of this resolution, I ap- entiflc points of view, so that the report I have given the study prepared by the pointed the following group of fourteen con- could place these weapons in proper per- consultant experts my earnest consideration sultant experts to assist me in the prepara- spective. It was also my hope that an au- and I have decided to accept their unani- tion of the report: Dr. Tibor Bakacs, Profes- thoritative report could become the basis mous report in its entirety, and to transmit sor of Hygiene, Director-General of the Na- for political and legal action by the Mem- it to the General Assembly, the Security tional Institute of Public Health, Budapest; bars of the United Nations. Council, the Eighteen-Nation Committee on Dr. Hotse C. Bartlema, Head of the Micro- As the report was to be made available Disarmament and to the Governments of biological Department of the Medical-Bio- by 1 July 1969, very concentrated efforts by Member States, as the report called for by logical Laboratory, National Defence Re- the consultant experts were required in resolution 2451 A (XXIII). search Organization TNO, Rijswijk, Nether- order to cover this extensive field. The mem- I also feel it incumbent upon me, in the lands; Dr. Ivan L. Bennett, Director of the bars of the Group, acting in their personal hope that further action will be taken to New York University Medical Center and capacities, carried out this demanding task deal with the threat posed by the existence Vice-President of Medical Affairs, New York at three sessions between January and June of these weapons, to urge that the Members University, New York; Dr. S. Bhagavantam, 1969. of the United Nations undertake the fol- Scientific Adviser to the Minister of Defence, The Group had the benefit of valuable lowing measures in the interests of enhanc- New Delhi; Dr. Jirl Franek, Director of the submissions from the World Health Organi- ing the security of the peoples of the world: Military Institute for Hygiene, EpidemiologV zation, the Food and Agriculture Organize- 1. To renew the appeal to all States to and Microbiology, Prague; Dr. Yogic. Kama- tion, the International Committee of the accede to the Geneva Protocol of 1925; kite, President of University of Chiba, Pro- Red Cross, the Pugwash Conference on Sci- 2. To make a clear affirmation that the lessor of Bacteriology, Chiba City, Japan; M. ence and World Affairs (Pugwash) and the prohibition contained in the Geneva Protocol Victor Moulin, Ingenieur en chef de l'arm- International Institute for Peace and Con- applies to the use in war of all chemical, ement, Chef du Bureau Defense chimique at filet Research (SIPRI). I wish to express my bacteriological and biological agents (includ- biologique, Direction technique des arme- grateful appreciation to all the consultant ing tear gas and other harassing agents) , ments terrestres, Saint Cloud, France; Dr. experts for their dedicated work and to the which now exist or which may be developed M. K. McPhail, Director of Chemical and Bio- organizations and bodies who co-operated in the future: logical Defence, Defence Chemical, Biologi- in the preparation of the study. cal and Radiation Laboratories, Defence Re- The Group has submitted me to a unani- search Board, Ottawa; Academician 0. A. mous report embodying its findings and con- Reutov, Professor of Chemistry at the Mos- elusions. I wish to avail myself of this cow State University, Moscow; Dr. Guillermo opportunity to express my gratification for Soberon, Director, Instituto de Investiga- the very high level of competence with which ciones Biomedicas, Universidad Nactional the consultant experts have discharged their Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico City; Dr. Lars- mandate. In a very short period of time, they Erik Tainmelin, Chief of Department for have produced a study, which, in spite of Medicine and Chemistry, Research Institute the many complex aspects of the subject , for National Defence, Stockholm; Dr. Ber- matter, is both concise and authoritative. It bane Teoume-Lessane, Medical Co-Director is a document which, I believe, provides and Head of Department of Viruses and valuable insights into the grave dangers that Rickettsiae, Imperial Central Laboratory tuid are posed by the production and possible Research Institute, Addis Ababa; Colonel use of these dreaded weapons. Zbigniew Zoltowski, Professor of Medicine, I am particularly impressed by the con- Epidemiologist and Scientific Adviser to the . elusion of the consultant experts wherein Ministry of National Defence, Warsaw; Sir they state; , 801131 Zuckerman, Chief Scientific Adviser to "The general conclusion of the report can the Government of the United Kingdom, thus be summed up in a few lines. Were Professor Emeritus, University of Birming- these weapons ever to be used on a large scale ham. in war, no one could predict how enduring Mr. William Epstein, Director of the Die- the effects would be, and how they would armament Affairs Division, Department of Political and Security Council Affairs, served as Chairman of the Group of Consultant Experts. Mr. Alessandro Corradini, Chief of the Committee and Conference Services Sec- tion, acted as Secretary of the Group. He was assisted by members of the Disarmament Affairs Division. After giving due consideration to the terms of the resolution and to the views expressed and the suggestions made during the dis- cussion of the question at the twenty-third session of the General Assembly, I reached the conclusion that the aim of the report should be to provide a scientifically sound appraisal of the effects of chemical and bac- teriological (biological) weapons and should serve to inform Governments of the con- sequences of their possible use. Within this over-all framework, the report would fur- nish accurate information in a concise and readily understandable form on the follow- ing matters: the basic characteristics of chemical and basteriological (biological) 3. To call upon all countries to reach agree- ment to halt the development, production and stockpiling of all chemical ond bacterio- logical (biological) agents for purposes of war and to achieve their effective elimination from the arsenal of weapons. INTRODUCTION 1. In accordance with the resolution of the General Assembly 2454 A (X.XIII) the Secre- tary-General was asked to prepare, with the assistance of qualified consultant experts, a report on chemical and bacteriological (bio- logical) weapons and on the effects of their possible use. Specifically the experts were asked to provide a scientific appraisal of the characteristics of the chemical and bacterio- logical (biological) weapons which could be used in warfare; of the effects they could have on military personnel and civilians; as well as of their long-term effects on health and our physical environment. They were also asked to provide a statement about the eco- nomic and security implications of the de- affect the structure of society and the en- velopment, acquisition and possible use of vironment in which we live. This overriding such weapons and associated weapon sys- danger would apply as much to the country tems. The report which follows is confined to which initiated the use of these weapons as these objectives. to the one which had been attacked, regard- 2. No form of warfare has been more con- less of what protective measures it might demned than has the use of this category of have taken in parallel with its development weapons. The poisoning of wells has been re- of an offensive capability. A particular danger garded from time immemorial as a crime in- also derives from the fact that any country compatible with the rules of war. "War is could develop or acquire, in one way or waged with weapons, not with poison" another, a capability in this type of warfare, ("Armis belle non venenis geri"), declared despite the fact that this could prove costly. the Roman jurists. As the destructive power The danger of the proliferation of this class of arms increased over the years, and with it of weapons applies as much to the develop- the potential for the widespread use of ing as it does to developed countries. chemicals, efforts were made to prohibit "The momentum of the arms race would through international understandings and by clearly decrease if the production of these legal means the use of chemical weapons. The weapons were effectively and unconditionally Brussels Declaration of 1874 and the Hague banned. Their use, which could cause an Conventions of 1899 and 1907 prohibited the enormous loss of human life, has already use of poisons and poisoned bullets and a been condemned and prohibited by inter- national agreements, in. particular the separate declaration of the Hague Conven- tion of 1899 condemned "the use of projec- Geneva Protocol of 1925, and, more recently, tiles the sole object of which is the diffusion in resolutions or the General Assembly of of asphyxiating or deleterious gases". means of warfare; the probable effects of the United Nations. The prospects for gener chemical and bacteriological (biological) and complete disarmament under effective 3. The fear today is that the scientific and weapons on military and civil personnel, both international control, and hence for peace technological advances of the past few protected and unprotected; the environ- throughout the world, would brighten. sig- decades have increased the potential of mental factors affecting the employment of nificantly if the development, production chemical and bacteriological (biological) chemical and bacteriological (biological) and stockpiling of chemcial and bacterio- weapons to such an extent that one can con- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9528 Approved For Reletael?caMyc3RTAIN?n18? S003%1N00300100001-3 TE August ii, i99 ce ve of their use catviing casualties on a scale greater than one Would associate with conventional warfare. At the moment most of our knowledge confierning the use of chemical weapons Is band upon the wiper- ience of World Wax I. Gas was first used in 1914 and the first big attack in 1915 claimed 5,000 human lives. It is eatimated that from then until the end of the War in 1918, at least 125,000 tons of toxic chemicals were used, and according to official reports gas casual- ties numbered about 000,000, of which about 100,000 were fate/. The agents which were used in this war ante much less toxic than those, in particular nerve agents, which could be used today, and they were dispersed by means of relatively primitive equipment as compared with what is now available, and In accordance with battletield concepts of a relatively unsophisticated kind. 4. It is true that a conelderable effort has also been made to develop chemical agents which have as their pure not to kill but to reduce a mares capadity to fight. Such agents are used by civir authorities of a number of countries in eater to suppress dis- orders and to control riots, but when used in warfare they would inevitably be employed as an adjunct to other forms of attack, and their over-all effect might be lethal. 5. Since World War II. bacteriological (biological) weapons hales also become an increasing possibility. But because there is no clear evidence that these agents have ever been used as modern military weapons, discussions of their characteristics and po- tential threat have to draw heavily upon experimental field and laboratory data, and: on studies of naturally occurring outbreaks and epidemics of infectious disease, rather than on direct battlefield experience. Their potential importance in warfare can be sensed when one remembers that infectiouti disease even as late as World War II caused numerous casualties. 6. The greater threat posed by chemical weapons today derives from the discovery and manufacture of new, more toxic compounds. On the other hand, bacteriological (bio- logical) agents already exist in nature and can be selected for use in warfare. Some of these agents, notably bacteria, have been known for several decades, but there Is a vast number of other possible agents, es- pecially viruses, which have been discovered only recently, and some of these also possess characteristics which make their use pos- sible in war. Increases in potency of these various types of agent have been made pos- sible by scientific and technological advances in microbial genetics, experimental pathology and aerobiology. 7. As is well known, the use of toxic gases in World War I generated so powerful a sense of outrage that countries were en- couraged to adopt measures prohibiting both chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons. The result was the fieneva Protocol of 17 June 1925, which prohibits the use in war of asphyxiating, poisonoW or other gases and of all analogous liquids, materials or de- vices, as well as bacteriological methods of warfare. This established a custom and hence a standard of international law, and in practice most States have adhered to the principle that no one should resort to the use of such weapons. But despite the adhor- rence in which they have always been held by civilized peoples, chemical weapons have none the less on occasion been used. For ex- ample, mustard gas was used in Ethiopia in 1935-36, causing numerous casualties amongst troops and a civilian population which was not only completely unprotected, but which lacked even the itest elementary medical services. It should also be noted that the existence of the Geneva Protocol of 1925 may have helped as a deterrent to the use of chemical or bacteriological (biological) weapons in World War II, even though the belligerents in that conflict had developed, produced and stockpiled chemical agents for possible use. The International Tribunal at Nuremberg brought into the open the fact that amongst the new agents which had been produced and stockpiled during the course of the war were such highly lethal agents as Tabun and Sarin. Since then the validity and effectiveness of the Geneva Protocol have been reinforced by the approval, by the General Assembly of the United Nations, Without a single dissenting voice, of resolu- tions 2162 B (XXI) of 5 December 1966 and 2454 A (xxin) of 20 December 1968, calling for "strict observance by all States of the principles and objectives" of the Geneva Protocol, and inviting all States to accede to it. 8. It is simple to appreciate the resurgence of interest in the problems of chemical and bacteriological (biological) warfare. Ad- vances in chemical and biological science, while contributing to the good of mankind, have also opened up the possibility of ex- ploiting th cal and bacterio- logical (biological) warfare weapons, some of which could endanger man's future, and the situation will remain threatening so long as a number of States proceed with their development, perfection, production and stockpiling. 9. The report, as is noted in the General Assembly resolution, is designed to submit to peoples and governments, Ma form easily understood by them, information on the ef- pfeerotigileornsf connected possible bacteriologicse ec(bteiod eflogiuscale) of ai eeapthonsmai,ncasald re as to promote a further consideration of bac- teriological (biological) weapons. Informa- tion about the nature of chemical and bac- teriological (biological) weapons, about their increase and diversification as technology has advanced, about their long-term effects on human beings, animals and vegetation, and about environmental factors which con- dition these effects, is provided in Chapters I to IV of the Report, In Chapter V. which deals with the economic and security im- plications of chemical and bacteriological (biological) warfare, the experts have in- terpreted the worst "security" to mean both security in the narrow military sense, and security in terms of the adverse and long- term effects which these weapons, given they were ever used, could have on the framework of civilized existence. 10. As the present report shows, the out- standing characteristics of this class of weapons, and particularly of bacteriological (biological) weapons, is the variability, amounting under some circumstances to un- predictability, of their effects. Depending on environmental and meteorological condi- tions, and depending on the particular agent used, the effects might be devastating or negligible. They could be localized or svide- ipread. They might bear not only on those attacked but also on the side Which initi- ated their use, whether or not the attacked military forces retaliated in kind. Civilians would be even more vulnerable than the military. The development, acquisition and deployment of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons--quite apart from ques- tions of protection--constitutes a real eco- nomic burden which varies in extent for dif- ferent countries. Above all their acquisition could not possibly obviate the need for other weapons, 11. As chapters I and V of the report in- dicate, it would be enormously costly in re- sources, and administratively all but iinpos- Bible, to organize adequate protection for a civilian population against the range of pos- sible chemical agents. Even military person- nel, if locally engaged in a particular oper- ation in which chemical and/or bacteriologi- dal (biological) weapons were used and where they had the advantage of protective measures, would be unlikely to escape the wider-spread and longer-term effects on their country at large. These might arise, for ex ample, from the ampractleability of protect lug soil, plants, animals and essential focal crops against short and long-term effects 12, To appreciate the risks which bacterio- logical (biological) warfare could entail, one has only to remember how a natural epi- demic may persist unpredictably, and spread far beyond the initial area of incidence, even when the Most up-to-date medical resources are used to suppress the outbreak. The difficulties would be considerably increased were deliberate efforts made, foe military reasons, to propagate pathogenic organisms. Mass disease, following an attack, especially of civilian populations, could be expected not only because of the lack of timely warn- ing of the danger, but also because effective measures of protection or treatment simply do not exist or cannot be provided on an adequate scale. 13. Once the doer was opened to this kind of warfare, escalation would in all likelihood occur and no one could say where the process would end. Thus the report concludes that the existence of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons not only cantdbutes to international tension, but that their further development spurs the Rams race without contributing to the security of any nation. 14. The present report will, in accordance with resolution 2454 A (XXIII), be sub- mitted to the Eighteen-Nstion Committee on Disarmament to the Security Connell and to the General Assembly at its twenty- fourth session. We hope that it will con- tribute to the implementation of measures Which, in the final analysis, will eliminate chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons from all military arsenals. CHAPTER /. THE BASIC CHARAOIERLSTICS OP CHEMICAL AND BACTERIOLOGICAL (BIOLOGICAL) MEANS OF WARFARE 15. Since World War I, When chemical war- fare was first resorted to on a lerge scale, the variety and potency of chemical and bac- teriological (biological) weapons has grown steadily, and there has been a corresponding increase in the capacity to deliver them to a target area. The particular threat posed by chemical weapons today- derives from the existence of new, and far more toxic, chem- ical compounds than were known fifty years ago. Since bacteriological /biological) agents exist naturally, their increased potency as weapons has resulted from a process of se- lection rattier than from the production of entirely new agents. As Is explained in later sections of this report, selection has been made possible by advances in our knowledge of the genetics of microbes, and through ad- vances in experimental aerobiology. 16. The most significant result of these technical developments is the great variety of %injurious effect which these agents can induce, and the consequent increase in the number and types of situation in which ere might be a temptatoia to use them for military purposes. A. Characteristics of chemical and bacterio- logical (biological) weapons 17. For the purposes of this reports chem- ical agents of warfare are taken to be chem- ical substances, whether gaseous, liquid, or solid, which might be employed because of their direct toxic effects on man, animals and plants. Bacteriological (biological) agents of warfare are living organisms, whatever their nature, or infective material derived from them, which are intended to cause disease or death in man, animals or plants, and which depend for their effects on their ability to multiply in the person, animal or plant attacked. 18. Various living organisms (e.g. rick- ettsia,e, viruses and fungi), as well as bac- teria, can be used asi weapons. In the con- tent of warfare all these are generally recog- nized as "bacteriological weapone". But in order to eliminate any poasible ambiguity, Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 F oalemB:91,W3RiaiBDID7s1EIRRW R000300100001-3 August 11; 1969APproved S 9529 the phrase "bacteriological (biological) weapons" has been used throughout to com- prehend all forms of biological warfare. 19. All biological processes depend upon chemical or physico-chemical reactions, and what may be regarded today as a biological agent could, tomorrow, as knowledge ad- vances, be treated as chemical. Because they themselves do not multiply, toxins, which are produced by living organisms, are treated in this report as chemical substances. We also recognize there is a dividing line between chemical agents of warfare in the sense we use the terms, and incendiary substances such as napalm and smoke, which exercise their effects through fire, temporary depriva- tion of air or reduced visibility. We regard the latter as weapons which are better classi- fied with high explosives than with the sub- stances with which we are concerned. They are therefore not dealt with further in this report. 20. Finally, we recognize that both chemi- cal and bacteriological (biological) agents are designated either as lethal agents, that is to say, agents which are intended to kill, or as incapacitating agents, that is to say, agents which are intended to cause dis- ability. These terms are not absolute, but im- ply statistical probabilities of response which are more uncertain with bacteriological (biological) than with chemical agents. Not all individuals will die from an attack with a given lethal agent, whereas some, for example infants and people weakened by malnutrition, disease or old age, as well as a high proportion of individuals in special circumstances, for example following irradi- ation, might succumb to an attack with incapacitating chemical or bacteriological (biological) agents. With a few chemical agents, notably some tear gases (lachry- mators) , there is a negligible probability of any fatal outcome, and these have been used by many Governments to quell riots and civil disorders. When used in this way they are called riot control agents. Lachrymators have also been widely used in warfare as harassing agents, in order to enhance the effectiveness of conventioxial weapons, or to facilitate the capture of enemy personnel. 1. Differences Between Chemical and Bacteriological (Biological) Warfare 21. Although there are some similarities between chemical and bacteriological (bio- logical) agents regarded as weapons of war, they differ in certain important respects. These differences are related to (1) potential toxicity; (2) speed of action; (3) duration of effect; (4) specificity; (5) controllability; and (6) residual effects. Potential toxicity 22. Although more toxic than most well- known industrial chemicals, chemical war- fare agents are far less potent on a weight- for-weight basis than are bacteriological (biological) agents. The dose of a chemical agent required to produce untoward effects in man is measured in milligrams (1/1,000 of a gram), except ,for toxins which may be in the microgram (1/1,000 of a milligram) range. The corresponding dose for bacteri- ological (biological) agents is in the picogram (1/1,000,000 of a microgram) range. 23. This difference reflects the fact that bacteriological (biological) agents, being alive, can multiply, and its significance is that, weight-for-weight, bacteriological (bio- logical) weapons could be expected to inflict casualties over very much more extensive areas than could chemical weapons. 24. Being living organisms, bacteriological (biological) agents are also very much more susceptible to sunlight, temperature, and other environmental factors than are chem- ical agents. A bacteriological (biological) agent disseminated into a given environment may retain its viability (ability to live and multiply) while losing its virulence (ability to produce disease and injury). Speed of action 25. As a class, chemical agents produce their injurious effects in man, animals or plants more rapidly than do bacteriological (biological) agents. The time between ex- posure and significant effect may be minutes, or even seconds, for highly toxic gases or ir- ritating vapours. Blister agents take a few hours to produce injury. Most chemicals used against crops elicit no noticeable effect until a few days have elapsed. On the other hand, a, bacteriological (biological) agent must multiply in the body of the victim before disease (or injury) supervenes; this is the familiar "incubation period" of a disease, the time which elapses between exposure to in- fection and the appearance of symptoms of illness. This period is rarely as short as one or two days, and may be as long as a few weeks or even longer. For both chemical and bacteriological (biological) agents the speed of , action is affected by the dose (i.e., the quantity absorbed) but this secondary fac- tor does not obscure the basic difference be- tween the two classes of agents in the time they take to manifest their effects. Duration of effect 26. The effects of most chemical agents which do not kill quickly do not last long, except in the case of some agents such as phosgene and mustard, where they might continue for some weeks, months or longer. On the other hand, bacteriological (biologi- cal) agents which are not quickly lethal cause illness lasting days or even weeks and on occasion involve periods of prolonged con- valescence. The effects of agents which act against plants and trees would last for weeks or months and, depending on the agent and the species of vegetation attacked, could re- sult in death. Specificity 27. While both classes of agents can be used to attack men, animals or plants, indi- vidual biological agents have in general a much greater degree of host specificity. In- fluenza, for example, is essentially a disease of man; foot-and-mouth disease mainly af- fects cloven-hoofed animals; and rice blast is a disease confined to rice only. On the other hand, some diseases (for example, bru- cellosis and anthrax) occur both in man and animals. However, chemical agents are much less specific: nerve agents can affect mam- mals, birds and invertebrates (e.g., insects). Controllability 28. By controllability is meant the ability to predict the extent and nature of the dam- age which chemical and bacteriological (bi- ological) agents can cause. This is a most important consideration in their use as weapons. The most likely means of deliver- ing chemical and bacteriological (biologi- cal) agents is by discharge into the atmos- phere, relying on turbulent diffusion and wind currents to dilute and spread the agent over the area being attacked. Control is thus possible only to the extent that the meteor- ological situation can be predicted. 29. Because they infect living organisms, some bacteriological (biological) agents can be carried by- travellers, migratory birds, or animals, to localities far from the area orig- inally attacked. 30. The possibility of this kind of spread does not apply to chemical agents. But con- trol of contamination by persistent chemical agents could be very difficult. Should large quantities of chemical agents penetrate the soil and reach underground waters, or should they contaminate reservoirs, they might spread hundreds of kilometres from the area of attack, affecting people remote from the zone of military operations. Although we know of no comparable substance likely to be used as a chemical warfare agent, the spread of DDT over the globe illustrates, in an extreme form, how man-made chemicals can spread. This chemical insecticide is now found in the tissues of creatures in all parts of the world, even in places in which it has never been used. For example, as a result of its transfer through food chains, it is even found in the tissues of the penguins which live in Antarctica. Residual effects 31. In circumstances which favour their persistence, herbicides, defoliants and per- haps some other chemical agents, might linger for months, stunting the growth of surviving or subsequent plant life, and even changing the floral pattern through selec- tion. Following repeated use, certain chemi- cal agents could even influence soil struc- ture. The risk of residual effects with some bacteriological (biological) agents is poten- tially greater, mainly because they could lead to disease, which might become epi- demic if man-to-man transmission occurred readily. Bacteriological (biological) agents might also find unintended hosts in the ani- mals and plants of an area, or be trans- ported by infected individuals over great distances to new environments. 2. Technology of Chemical and Bacteriologi- cal (Biological) Warfare 32. The technological problems associated with chemical and bacteriological (biological) warfare are of two kinds; (1) those associ- ated with the production of the agents and the weapons needed for their dissemination and (2) those which concern the provision of the protective equipment and defenses nec- essary to protect military forces and civilian populations. Any nation whose chemical, pharmaceutical and fermentation indvstries are well advanced could produce chemical and bacteriological (biological) agents on a scale commensurate with its other military capabilities. The assurance of safety in the production of bacteriological (biological) agents, problems associated with the syn- thesis of complex chemical agents, and decid- ing on the best weapons to disseminate them, are examples of some of the relevant tech- nological difficulties. A special problem asso- ciated with the development and main- tenance of an offensive capability in bac- teriological (biological) warfare relates to the fact that some agents are viable for only a short time (a few days) after manufacture. This period can be extended by refrigeration of the agent or by freeze-drying it before storage. The drying processes, however, are very complex and difficult where large quanti- ties of highly pathogenic agents are involved. The problems which relate to defence are far more difficult, for as with most weapons, ef- fective defence calls for much more stringent training, and demands far more manpower and monetary resources than does the of- fence. For example, alarm systems against chemical attack are very complex electro- mechanical devices whose production de- mands a highly technologically based indus- try. They cannot be maintained except by ex- pert and highly trained personnel. 3. Chemical and Bacteriological (Biological) Weapons Systems 33. The use in warfare, and the possible military effectiveness, of chemical and bac- teriological (biological) agents cannot be ap- preciated if they are thought of simply as poisons and plagues. They need to be con- sidered in the context of the weapon systems of which they would be part. 34. A weapon system comprises all the equipment and personnel, as well as the or- ganizational structure? required to maintain and operate a military device. By itself, for example, a cannon is not a weapon system. Only when it is integrated into an artillery battery, together with trained crew, ammuni- tion, vehicles, supplies, spare parts, firing table, forward observer, communications and command organization does it constitute a weapon system. Correspondingly, artillery shells filled with mustard gas or nerve agents and guns to fire them, or an aircraft with a spray tank filled with a bacteriological (bio- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9530 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE August 11, 1969 logical) agent, are not by themselves weapon systems. 35. Many complex technological problems have to be overcome in transforming a chem- ical or bacteriological (biological) "agent" into a "weapon system". A "weapon" is of little military value if it is not dependable and if it cannot be delivered to a target with certainty. This means that In the develop- ment of a chemical and bacteriological (bio- logical) weapon system it is not only neces- sary to consider matters such as mass pro- duction, storage, transportation, and means of delivery, but also the limitations on use set by terrain and weather prediction. 36. In addition, considerations affecting defense need to be taken into account. Masks, protective clothing, detection alarms, spe- cial medical supplies, augmented logistic facilities and, above all, thoroughly trained military and civilian personnel. are necessary parts of chemical and bacteriological (bio- logical) weapon systems. The concept of a fully developed chemical or bacteriological (biological) weapon system is thus exceed- ingly complex, and implies as much technical capability and as high a degree of training as does the operation of any other advanced weapon systems. While chemical and bac- teriological (biological) weapon systems are cheaper and more readily attained than nu- clear weapons, and while they may in some circumstances be more effective militarily than conventional weapons, they are highly complex systems which for their development and operation call for sizeable resources and considerable expertise. But the possibility al- ways exists that by choosing a single agent and a simple means of delivery, a nation could equip itself relatively cheaply to attack a limited area with a reasonable chance of success. B. Concepts of the use of chemical and bac- teriological (biological) weapons in war 1. Chemical Weapons 37. Chemical weapons could be used either within the zone of contact of opposing forces; or against military targets such as airfields, barracks, supply depots, and rail centres well behind the battle-area itself; or against targets which have no immediate connexion with military opera tions; for ex- ample, centres of population, farmland, and water supplies. The circumstances in which they could be used within a zone of contact are many anti varied?for example, to achieve a rapid and surprise advantage against a poorly trained, ill-equipped military force which lacked chemical protective equip- ment; to overcome troops tri dug-outs, fox- holes, or fortifications where they would be otherwise protected against fragmenting weapons and high-explosive; to remove foli- age, by means of chemical herbicides so as to improve visibility and to open up lines of fire, and to prevent ambush; to create bar- riers of contaminated land on or in the rear of the battlefield to impede or channel move- ment; or to slow an enemy advance by forc- ing them to use protective clothing and equipment. Such equipment undoubtedly re- stricts mobility and impedes normal activi- ties. It is thus highly probable that once one of two well-equipped sides had been at- tacked with chemical weapons. it would re- taliate in kind, in order to farce its opponent to suffer the same penalties of restriction. In all such operations civilians who had not fled from the battle-area might become casu- alties, as they also would if, while not in the battle-zone, vapours or aerosols drifted to- wards them with the wind, or if they strayed at a latter date into areas contaminated with a persistent agent. The risk of civilian casualties would obviously be greater if chemical attacks were made on military tar- gets well in the rear of the zone of contact, and would be very serious in- the case of at- tacks on centres of population. 2. Bacteriological (Biological) Weapons 38. There is no military experience of the use of bacteriological (biological) agents as weapons or War and the feasibility of using them as such has often been questioned. One issue which has frequently been raised con- cerns the validity of extrapolations made from laboratory experience to military situa- tions in the field. Some recent investigations under field Conditions throw light on this point. 39. In one field trial, zinc cadmium sul- fide (a harmless powder) was disseminated in particles two microns (one micron is 1/1,000,000 of a metre in. diameter, from a ship traveling 16 kilometres offshore. About 200 kilograms were disseminated while the ship travelled a distance of 260 kilometres parallel to the coastline, The resulting aero- sol traveled at least 750 kilometres, and cov- ered an area of over 75,000 square kilometres. 40. This observation provides an indica- tion of the size of area which might be cov- ered by a windborne aerosol, but It does not tell whether the bacteriological (biological) agents which might be spread in an aerosol would still retain the ability to produce dis- ease. All bacteriological (biological) agents lose their virulence or die progressively while travelling in an aerosol and the distance of effective travel of the cloud would depend on the rate of decay of the particular agent in the particular atmospheric conditions prevailing. 41. Some idea of the relative size of areas which can be covered by bacteriological (bio- logical) and chemical aerosols can be gained from this same experiment. Had the parti- cles that were carried been a bacterial or viral agent, they would not have caused cas- ualties over as large an area as the one covered, because of decay of the agent while in the aerosol state. However, depending on the organism and its degree of hardiness, areas of 5,000 to 20,000 km2 could have been effectively attacked, infecting a high propor- tion of unprotected people in the area. If the same means are applied to a hYpothetical chemical attack using the most toxic chem- ical nerve agent, then about 0.8 kg of agent would have been released per km. The down- wind hazard from this, in which some cas- ualties might be expected, would not have extended more than one kilometre, and prob- ably less, unless meteorological conditions were extremely favourable (see chapter III). The area covered by such a chemical attack might thus have been 50 to 150 km., as com- pared with the 5,000 to 20,000 km2 for the bacteriological (biological) attack. 42. For purposes of sabotage or covert (secret, as in sabotage actions behind enemy lines) operations, small aerosol generators for bacteriological (biological) agents could be built, for example, into fountain pens or cigarette lighters. It is also possible to con- ceive of the distribution of bacteriological (biological) agents by hand to poison either water supplies or ventilation systems, espe- cially in a situation of breakdown of sani- tary facilities due, say, to military mobiliza- tion, or to a nuclear attack. In addition to producing casualties, such an attack could produce severe panic. If half a kilo of a culture of Salmonella (a group of bacteria, many species of which produce severe intes- tinal infections, including gastro-enteritis, food ("ptomaine") poisoning, paratyphoid fever and typhoid fever) had been added to a reservoir containing 5 million litres of water, and complete mixing had occurred, severe illness or disability would be suffered by anyone drinking 1 decilitre (about 3 ounces) of untreated water. 43. The same degree of poisoning as would be produced by half a kilo of Salmonella culture could be achieved with 6 kilos of botulinum toxin (see chapter II), 7 kilos of staphylococcal enterotoxin (see chapter II), or 50 kilos of V-nerve agent, or in the case of common industrial chemicals, with five tons of sodium fluoroacetate (used as a roden- ticide) or ten tons of potassium cyanide. C. Chemical and bacteriological (biological) agents Chemical Agents 44. Chemical agents are usually described in terms of their physiological effects and are characterized as foliates: Agents affecting man and animals Nerve agents are colourless, odourless, tasteless chemicals, Of the -same family as organophosphorus insecticides. They poison the nervous system and disrupt vital body functions. They constitute the most modern war chemicals known; they kill quickly and are more potent than are any other chemical agents (except toxins). Blister agents (vesivants) are oily liquids which, in the main, burn and blister the skin within hours after exposure. But they also have general toxic effects. Mustard gas is a good example. Blister agents caused more casualties than any other chemical agent used in World War I. Choking agents are highly volatile liquids which, when breathed as gases, irritate and severely injure the lungs, causing death from choking. They were introduced in World War I and are of much lower potency than the nerve agents. Blood agents are also intended to enter the body through the respiratory tract. They produce death by interfering with the utili- zation of oxygen by the tissues. They, too, are much less toxic than nerve agents. Toxins are biologically produced chemical substances which are very highly toxic and may act by ingestion or inhalation. Tear and harassing gases are sensory irri- tants which cause a temporary flow of tears, irritation of the skin and respiratory tract, and occasionally nausea and vomiting. They have been widely used as riot control agents, and also in war. Psycho-chemicals are drug-like chemicals intended to cause temporary mental disturb- ances. Agents affecting plants Herbicides (defoliants) are agricultural chemicals which poison or dessicate the leaves of plants, causing them to lose their leaves or die. The effectiveness of different chemical warfare agents against man, ani- mals and plants is shown in table I. The vari- ous specific chemical agents are listed and described in chapter 2. Methods of delivery 45. Chemical munitions are designed to ful- fill three objectives: (1) to provide a con- tainer for the agent so that the agent/muni- tion combination can be delivered to its target; (2) to attain an effective distribution of agent over the target area; and (3) to re- lease the agent in active form. In the case of Incapacitating and riot control agents, it is necessary that the munition itself should not cause injury or death, and that it should not start fires. This is particularly important for devices used in the control of riots. 46. The munitions to be used would depend on the method of delivery, the shape and size of the target area, and other variables. Ground-to-ground munitions include gre- nades, shells, rockets; and missile warheads; air-to-ground munitions include large bombs, dispensers, spray tanks, and rockets: emplaced munitions Include generators and mines. 47. Ground-to-ground munitions. Small ground-to-ground munitions (grenades, shells and small rockets) function much like their conventional counterparts. Upon im- pact in the target area, they would either ex- plode or burn, and so expel the agent to form a cloud which Would diffuse and drift down- wind, resulting in an elongated elliptical area within which casualties would occur, This represents a paint source Of dissemination (chapter II). Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71800A4R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENA TABLE 1.?CATEGORIES OF CHEMICAL WARFARE AGENTS AND THEIR CHARACTERISTICS S 9531 Physical state at 2V C. Persistency Main state of aggregation in target Effective route of entry Effective against Nerve agents Blister agents Choking agents Blood agents Toxins Tear and harassing gases Inca pacitants Herbicides (defoliants) do Liquid Low to high Vapour, aerosol, liquid Lungs, eyes, skin Man, animals. Liquid, solid High do do Do. Liquid Low Vapour do Do. Liquid, vapors do do Lungs Do. Solid do Aerosol, liquid Lungs, intestinal tract Do. Liquid, solid do Vapor, aerosol Lungs, eyes On. do do Aerosol, liquid Lung , skin Do. Low to high do Foliage and roots Plants!. I Some herbicides, particularly those containing organic arsenic are also toxic for man and animals. - 48. Small rockets would frequently be fired (c) be effective regardless of medical coun- to have any potential in bacteriological (bio- in "ripples", and artillery shells in salvos, ter-measure; logical) warfare. resulting in a group of impacts over the (d) be able to cause a large number of 65. Protozoa are one-celled microscopic target area. This would constitute an area casualties (this would imply that any agent organisms which cause several important hu- source of dissemination (chapter II). chosen would be highly infectious, but man diseases, including malaria. Because of 49. Large ground-to-ground (as well as whether the agent chosen would also be their complex life cycles, they too appear aerial munitions and missile warheads) easily transmissible from man-to-man, would to have little significance in the present might carry a number of small submunitions depend upon an intent to initiate an epi- context. as well as agent in bulk. The parent muni,- demic spread). 66. Parastic worms such as hook-worm, and tion, upon functioning, would disperse the Agents affecting man . the filarial worms have very complicated submunitions over the target area. These life cycles. They cause illness and disability 59. All the diseases under consideration would then disseminate the agent over a only after long exposure and repeated in- occur naturally, and the causative organisms wide area rather than a single point of im- with few exceptions, are known to scientists , fection and would be extremely difficult to pact, as in the case of bulk munitions. throughout the world. Incapacitating agents ? produce in quantity, to store, to transport, 50. Another military concept is to use or disseminate in a weapon. Insects are also are those which, in natural outbreaks, cause large warheads filled with several hundred illness lout rarely death. If the natural dis- difficult to conceive of as weapons. Some, Such a warhead, burst at a suitable altitude ease has an applicable mortality, the agent kilos of an agent of low vapour pressure. would produce a shower of droplets, effec- is regarded as a lethal one. However, these tively contaminating everything on which it agents when used as aerosol weapons might fell. A number of such weapons could bb cause more severe disease than occurs nat- used to assure that the target was covered. urally. 51. Air-to-ground munitions. Bombs 60. Different populations have varying de- dropped from aircraft are larger than most grees of resistance to the diseases produced shells, and consequently would result in a by bacteriological (biological) agents. An in- higher concentration of the chemical near the fectious disease which might be only mildly point of ground impact. Bombs bursting incapacitating in one population might prove close to the ground could be used to achieve disastrous to another. For example, when a wider dissemination of the agent, especially measles was first introduced into the Hawai- with chemical agents. ian Islands, it caused far more deaths than 52. A dispenser is a container for submu- in the relatively resistant populations of nitions, which, after opening, could remain Europe. A bacteriological (biological) weapon attached to the aircraft. The submunitions which might be intended only to incapacitate could be released simultaneously or in suc- could be highly lethal against a population cession. where resistance had been lowered as a re- 53. Small rockets or missiles could also be sult of malnutrition. Conversely, a weapon used to deliver chemical agents from aircraft. which was intended to spread a lethal disease The pattern of dispersal would be much might only cause occasional mild illness in the same as that produced by ground-to- people who had been given a protective vac- ground rockets or missiles. eine or who had become immune as a result 54. Ground-smplaced munitions. Ground- of natural infection. The history of epi- emplaced munitions comprise generators and demiology is rich with surprises. mines. The generator is a tank containing 61. Viruses are the smallest forms of life. a chemical agent, a source of pressure, and Most of them can be seen only with the a nozzle through which the agent is forced. electron microscope, and must be grown Generators would be placed upwind of the on living tissue (tissue cultures, fertile eggs, target, and then activated by a suitable de- etc.) Genetic manipulation of the whole vice, virus or chemical manipulation of its nu- 55. Chemical mines would be placed in dela acid, might be used to acquire strains areas of anticipated enemy activity, and of higher virulence or greater stability to en- such as the mosquito and the tick are trans- mitters of disease, and as "vectors", have to be looked upon as having potential military significance. Higher forms of life, such as rodents and reptiles can be dismissed in the context of the present discussion. Agents affecting animals 67. Bacteriological (biological) anti-animal agents, such as foot-and-mouth disease and anthrax would be used primarily to destroy domestic animals, thereby indirectly affect- ing man by reducing his food supply. 68. Outbreaks of contagious disease in animal populations, knows as epizootics, may spread much more readily than do epidemics among human beings. Viral infections are probably more serious for animals than those caused by other classes of micro-organisms. 69. Most of the bacterial diseases of ani- mals which could probably be used in war- fare are also transmissible to man. Human beings would be expected to get the disease if they were affected by the attacking aerosol cloud, and occasional individuals might con- tract the disease from infected animals. Agents affecting plants 70. The natural occurrence of devastating plant diseases such as the blight of potatoes in Ireland in 1845, the coffee rust of the 18708 in Ceylon, the chestnut blight of 1901 in the United States of America, and the widespread outbreaks today of cereal (cape- would be activated by pressure or trip wires, vironmental cially wheat) rusts has suggested that plant 62. Rickettsiae are intermediate between pathogens might be used for military pur- 2. Bacteriological (Biological) Agents the viruses and bacteria. Like the viruses, POSes. There are four major requirements for 56. Like chemical agents, bacteriological they grow only in living tissue. Judging by the deliberate development of a plant disease (biological) agents may also be classified in the scientific literature, research into the into epidemic (epiphytotiC), proportions: terms of their intended use, whether de- genetics of rickettsiae has been less intense large amounts of the host plant must be signed to incapacitate or to kill human be- than into that of viruses and bacteria, present in the region; the agent should be ings, to incapacitate or kill food and draft 63. Bacteria are larger than viruses, ran.? ?,._ capable of attacking the particular varieties animals, or to destroy food plants and in- of host plant that are grown; adequate quan- ing in size from 0.3 micron to several ml- crops. crons. They can be easily grown on a large tities of the agent must be present; and the 57. Bacteria, viruses, fungi, and a group scale employing equipment and processes environmental conditions within the region of microbes known as rickettsiae are by far similar to those used in the fermentation should be favorable for the spread of the the most potent agents which could be in- industry, but special skills and experience disease. An epiphytotic cannot develop if corporated into weapon systems. There is would be needed to grow them in quantity in any one of the above requirements is not no assurance, however, that other living or-satisfied. the particular state in which they readily ganisms may not in the future become more cause disease. Although many pathogenic Methods of delivery important as potential agents for warfare. (disease-producing) bacteria are susceptible 71. Bacteriological (biological) agents can, The selection of agents for use in warfare to antibiotic drugs, antibiotic-resistant in principle, be loaded into the same type of 58. The number of bacteriological (biolog- strains occur naturally, and can be selected munitions as can chemical agents. Other ical) agents which could potentially be used or obtained through the use of suitable than for covert or "special-purpose missions", in warfare is far fewer than those Which methods of genetic manipulation. Similarly, bacteriological (biological) weapons, if de- cause naturally-occurring disease. To be ef- it is possible to select strains with increased veloped for military purposes, would in all fective for this purpose they should: resistance to inactivation by sunlight and probability be delivered by aircraft or by large (a) be able to be produced in quantity; drying. ballistic missiles. Aircraft (including cruise (b) be capable of ready dissemination in 64. Fungi also produce a number of die- missiles and drones) could drop a large the face of adverse environmental factors; eases in man, but very few species appear number of bomblets from high altitude, or Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9532 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August ii, 1969 spray from a low altitude. Because a small amount of agent will cover relatively large areas, bombs would probably be small (1 kilo or less) and dispersed over as wide an area as possible. They could be released from clusters or from dispensers in the manner of chemical weapons, but probably from a high- er altitude. 72. An aircraft could establish a line of agent which, as it traveled downwind, would reach the ground as a vast elongated infec- tive cloud (see chapter II). The effectiveness of such a procedure would be highly depend- ent on weather conditions, but the larger the area, the larger the weather front involved, the greater the chances that the predicted results would be achieved. A small relative error might, however, involve a country net in the conflict. 73. It is conceivable that bacteriological (biological) weapons, probably bomblets, could be packaged in a laalltstic missile. The bomblets could be released at a predeter- mined altitude to burst atetound level. The effect would be the same as rablet delivery by aircraft except that it would be more costly, 74. Unless transmitted by insects, bac- teriological (biological) agents have little power to penetrate the intact skin. Infections through the respiratory tract by means of aerosols is by far the most likely route which could be used in warfare. 75. Many naturally-occurring diseases (e.g. influenza, tuberculosis) are spread by the aerosol route, and some of them, notably influenza, can generate into large epidemics. When an infected person sneezes, congas, or even speaks, an aerosol is formed which contains particles ranging widely in size. The larger particles are usually of little impor- tance because they fall to the ground. But small particles (3 microns or less in diame- ter) dry out rapidly in the air, and are the most infectious. They may rarain suspended in the atmosphere for a lot* time. Animal experiments have shown that a great many infectious agents (including ins ny which are transmitted otherwise in nature) can be transmitted to animals by aerosols of small particle size. Laboratory accidents and ex- periments on volunteers have confirmed the effectiveness of the aerosol route of infec- tion for man, 76. If bacteriological (biological) warfare ever occurred, the aerosol technique would thus be the one most likely to be used, sim- ply because the respiratory tract is normal- ly susceptible to infection by many micro- organisms; because of the Wide target area which could be covered in a single attack; and because ordinary hygienic measures are ineffective in preventing the airborne route of attack. Since the particle size of an aerosol is crucial to its ability to penetrate into the lung (see chapter III for detailed dis- cussion) , the method for aerosolizing a bac- teriological (biological) agent would have to be controllable so as to assure the dissemi- nation of a large proportion of particles less than 5 microns in diameter. 77. Aerosols of bacteriological (biological) agents could be formed by three general methods. Agents could be disseminated by explosive means in much the same way as chemical agents. However, the size of the resulting particle is hard to control by this method, and much of the agent may be de- stroyed by the heat and shock of the ex- ploding munition. Particles could also be formed by using pressure to force a suspen- sion of the organisms threugh a nozzle, Particle size is determined by tae amount of pressure, the size of the diselairge orifices, the physical characteristics of the agent, and atmospheric conditions. Size eon trol of solid particles (dry form of agent) can be achieved by "pre-sizing" before dissemination. Aerosol particles could also be produced by a spray by releasing the agent in liqUid suspension into a high velocity air strewn. This principle can be applied to spray devices for use on high performance aircraft. D. Defence of man against chemical and bacteriological (biological) agents 78. A comprehensive defensive system against attacks by chemical or bacteriological (biological) agents would have to provide for deteotion and warning, rapid identification of agents, protectioti of the respiratory tract and skin, decontamination, and medical prophylaxis and treatment. Some aspects of such a system could be dealt with by fairly simple equipment. Others would necessitate highly sophisticated apparatus. But the Whole complex would necessitate a very effec- tive organization manned by well-trained personnel. While military units and small groups of people could be equipped and trained to protect themselves to a significant extent, it would be impracticable for most (if not all) countries to provide comprehensive protection for their entire civil population. 1. Medical Protection Chemical attacks 79. No general prophylactic treatment ex- ists which could protect against chemical attacks. Antidotes (atropine and oximes) to nerve agents of value if administered within half an hour before or within a very short time after exposure. Atropine is itself toxic, however, and might incapacitate unexposed individuals given large doses. Skin can be protected from the vapours of blister agents by various ointments, but they are not ef- fective against liquid contamination. Bacteriological (biological) attacks 80. Vaccination is one of the most useful means of protecting people from natural infective disease, and the only useful means available for prophylaxis against bacterio- logical (biological) attacks. The protective value of vaccines against small-pox, yellow fever, diphtheria, and other diseases is fully established, although the protection they afford can be overcome if an immunized in- dividual is exposed to a large dose of the infectious agent concerned. It is probable, however, that even those existing vaccines which are effective in preventing natural in- fectious diseases might afford only limited protection against respiratory infection by an agent disseminated into the air in large amounts by a bacteriological (biological) weapon. Moreover, whole populations could not be vaccinated against all poSsible dis- eases. The development, production, and administration of so many vaccines would be enormously expensive, and some vaccines might produce undesirable or dangerous re- actions in the recipients. 81. This picture is not significantly al- tered by certain new developments in the field of vaccination: e.g. the use of living bacterial vaccines against tularemia, brucel- losis and plague; or aerosol vaccination, which is particularly relevant to vaccination of large numbers of people. There have been recent advances in the control of virus diseases, but at present none of these is practicable for the protection of large popu- lations against bacteriological (biological) warfare. 82. Prophylaxis against some diseases can also be provided by the adrinnistration of specific anti-sera from the blood of people or animals previously innoculated with micro-organisms, or -products derived from them, to increase the anti-body levels (im- munity) in their blood. Tetanus anti-toxin is used in this manner, and until more ef- fective methods replaced them, such anti- sera were used for many diseases. It would, however, be impossible to prepare specific anti-sera against all possible bacteriological (biological) agents and to make them avail- able for large populations. 83. Other possibilities, for example the use of therapeutic materials before symptoms appear, are equally remote from practical realization. They include immune serum, gammaglobulin, or drugs such as antibiotics or sulfonamide drugs. The use of gamma- globulin to prevent, or mitigate the severity of, disease may be useful for individuals known to have been exposed. But since gam- maglobulin is made by separation frem human blood, stocks could never be avail- able except for isolated eases. In theory, chemoprophylaxis (the use of drugs and antibiotics to prevent infection) might also be useful in the short term for small groups operating at especially high risk. But it would only be prudent to assume that the bacteri- ological (biological) agents which an enemy might use would be those which were re- sistant to such drugs. 2. Detection and Warning 84. The requirement is to detect a cloud of a chemical or a bacteriological (biological) agent in the air sufficiently quickly for masks and protective clothing to be donned before the attack can be effective. Usually the objective would be to try and detect the cloud upward of the target so that all those downwind could be warned. There are also requirements for the detection of ground contairnanation with chemical agents and for detection equipment to enable those under attack to decide when it would be safe to remove their protective equipment. Chemical attacks 85. In World War I it was possible to rely upon odour and colour as the primary means of alerting personnel that a chemical a"6- tack had been launched. The newer more toxic chemical agents cannot be detected in this way. On the other hand, presumptive evidence that such weapons had been used would none the less still be Of value as warn- ing. Once an enemy had used chemical wea- pons, each subsequent attack would neces- sarily have to be presumed to be a possible chemical attack, and protective measures would have to be instituted immediately. In- dividuals would have to mask not only in the air attack in which spray was used, or when there was smoke or mist from an unknown source, or a suspicious smell, or when they suffered unexpected symptoms such as a runny nose, choking and tightness in the chest, or disturbed vision, but whenever any bombardment occurred. But because of the uncertainty, it would be clearly desirable to devise and provide a system of instruments which can detect the presence of toxic chem icals at concentrations below those having psysiological effects, and which would give timely and accurate warning of a chemical attack. It would also be advantageous to have test devices, collectors and analytical labora- tory facilities in order to determine whether the environment was safe, as well as to identify accurately the specific chemical agent used in an attack. 86. The first and essential component of a defensive system would be an instrument Which could detect low concentrations of a chemical agent. However low the concentra- tion, a person could inhale a toxic amount in a short time because he breathes 10-20 litres of air per minute. Since the human body can eliminate or detoxify Very small amounts of many toxic materials, there is no need to consider very long periods of exposure?the concern is with the exposures of only a fetv hours. This is often referred to technically as the Ot (concentration time) factor. Essen- tial requirements of a method of detection suitable for use by military or civil defence personnel are that it be simple, specifie, sensitive and reliable. Typical detector kits contain sampling tubes and/or reagent but, tons, papers, etc. After being exposed to par- ticular chemical agents, these detectors change colour or exhibit some other changes easily observable without special insturraents. Chemical detection kits could also be used to decide when it Is safe to remove proteca tire masks or other items of protective cloth- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : ClAirP0p4t4R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECOR ? A bag. Obviously, laboratories, whether mobile or fixed, can perform more elaborate chem- ical analyses than can detection kits. 87. Warning devices which have been de- vised incorporate sensitive detectors that ac- tuate an automatic alarm which alerts indi- viduals to take protective action before a harmful dose of agent is received. They are of two trends: point sampling devices, which sample the air at one location by means of an air pump, and area scanning devices, which probe a specific area for chemical agents. The disadvantage of point source alarms is that they must be placed upwind of the area that has to be protected, and a rather large number may be needed. If the wind shifts, they have to be repositioned. Successful area scanning alarms have not yet been developed. 88. It must be recognized that in spite of instrumental warning systems, personnel near the point of dissemination of a chemical agent might still not have sufficient time to take protective action. Bacteriological (biological) attacks 89. Unlike chemical weapons, bacteriologi- cal (biological) weapons cannot readily be distinguished from the biological "back- ground" of the environment by specific chem- ical or physical reactions, and much lower aerosol concentrations of bacteriological (bi- ological) agents are dangerous than of chem- ical agents. The problem cal early detection and warning is thus even more difficult than for chemical weapons. A partial solution to the problem has been achieved with certain non-specific but very sensitive physical de- vices such as particle-counters and protein detectors (protein is a typical constituent of micro-organisms). Presumptive evidence of a bacteriological (biological) attack might be obtained if there is an unusual deviation from the normal pattern of material in the air recorded by the instruments. The eleva- tion of such a deviation, however, would necessitate intensive and prolonged study of the normal pattern in a given location. This subject is discussed further in annex A. 3. Physical Protection 90. The primary objective is to establish a physical barrier between the body and the chemical and bacteriological (biological) agents, and especially to protect the skin and the respiratory tract. Without this no warning system, however effective, has the slightest value. Protection could be achieved by using various types of individual protec- tive equipment or by means of communal shelters. Individual protection S 9533 casualties because of lack of training, fail- ferred to nutrient media, where sufficient ure to keep the mask in good condition, growth may take place to permit identifica- growth of beard, or ' because facial in- tion of some kinds of bacteria within fifteen juries prevent a good fit, etc. The amount hours. Another method, the fluorescent anti- of leakage that can be tolerated with bac- body technique, can be highly specific, and terriological (biological) agents is much less is applicable to bacteria and some viruses. In because of their greater potency. some cases, it allows of specific identification 9$. Since mustard gases and the nerve within a few hours. But despite all, these agents of low or intermediate volatility can recent developments, laboratory identifica- penerate the unbroken skin, even through tion of biological agents is still a complicated normal clothing, the whole body surface must and unsatisfactory process. be protected by some form of special cloth- 4.. Decontamination ing, of which there are two kinds, one which Chemical agents is impermeable to liquid agents, and the 98. Prolonged exposure to weather and other which, though permeable to air and moisture, has been treated so as to prevent sunlight reduces or eliminates the danger of most chemical agents, which are slowly de- chemical agents from getting through. Rub- ber coated fabrics, made into protective suits, composed by humidity and rain. But one could net rely on natural degradation to constitute the first, while normal clothing, eliminate the risk and, in general, it would treated with chlorimides or absorbents, is an be essential to resort to decontamination. example of the second. In addition, some This would reduce the hazard but it is a form of impermeable cover, ground sheet or cape, can be used to protect against gross time-consuming process and would greatly liquid contamination. Feet and hands are haxnper military operations. 99. A wide range of chemicals could be usually protected by special gloves, and used as decontaminants, the choice depend- either by boot covers or treated boots. ing on the particular agent which has to be 94. Together with a mask, protective cloth- neutralized, the type of surface that needs ing, properly worn and in good condition, to be treated, the extent of contamination, will afford excellent protection against known and the amount of time available. Decon- chemical and bacteriological (biological) taminants range from soap and detergent in agents. The greatest degree of protection is water, to caustic soda, hypochlorite and var- provided by the impermeable type but ,when lows organic solvents, and their successful worn continuously it becomes very burden- use calls for large numbers of people, a cop- some because of heat stress, particularly in ions supply of water, and appropriate equip- warm environments. Permeable clothing al- ions lows somewhat greater activity, but even so, 100. Decontaminating solutions, powders, physical activity is impaired. applicators and techniques have been de- Collective or communal protection veloped for decontaminating skin, clothing, 95. Collective protection takes the form of personal equipment and water. These would fixed or mobile shelters capable of accom- need to be used immediately after an at- modating groups of people, and has been de- tack. vised not only for civilians but also for ape- 101. Unless food has been stored in metal cial groups of military personnel (e.g. corn- cans or other containers which were imper- mend posts, field hospitals). Collective pro- meable to chemical agents, it would have to tection is the most effective physical means be destroyed. Decontamination of complex of protection against all forms of attack. equipment and vehicles is a difficult and Sealing or insulating the shelter will provide ttme-oonsurning procedure. Special pres- protection only for a limited time, because of suxized sprayers to disseminate powdered lack of ventilation. Sealing plus a supply of and liquid decontaminants have been de- oxygen and a means of eliminating carbon veloped for this purpose, as have paints or dioxide is better, but once again the time of coatings to provide a smooth impermeable occupancy is limited. The shelter could be surface to preclude the penetration of chem- none the less safe even though surrounded ical agents. by fire or high concentrations of carbon 102. Decontamination might even need to monoxide. The best kind of shelter provides be extended to roads and selected areas. This ventilation with filtered air to maintain a would involve the removal of contaminated positive pressure relative to that outside. soil by bulldozing, or covering it with earth, This positive internal pressure prevents the using explosives to spread a powdered de- penetration of airborne agents, and permits contaminant over a wide area. entry or exit of personnel and equipment Bacteriological (biological) agents without contamination of the interior of the shelter. Extended periods of occupancy are 103. Decontamination procedures for bio- logical agents are similcr to those used for possible. toxic chemical agents. Aeration and exposure 96. These principles of collective protection -to strong sunlight will destroy most micro- as applicable to all enclosures arranged for organisms, as will also exposure to high tem- human or animal occupancy. They have been peratures. Thoroughly cooking exposed food, used to provide protection by: hastily con- and boiling water for at least fifteen minutes structed or improvised field shelters, mobile will kill almost all relevant micro-organisms. vans and armoured vehicles, and permanent Calcium hyprochlorite and chlorine can also or fixed shelters designated for housing be used to purify water. Certain chemical civilian or military personnel. compounds, such as formaldehyde, ethylene 97. Once a bacteriological (biological) at- oxide, calcium and sodium hypochlorites, tack had been suspected or detected, it would sodium hydroxide and betapropiolactone, can be necessary to identify the specific agents be used to decontaminate materials and involved so that proper protective measures work areas. A hot, soapy shower is the best could be taken and chemo-prophylaxis and way to decomtaminate human beings. 91. Protective masks are the first line of defense against all chemical and bacteriolog- ical (biological) agents. Although protective masks differ in appearance and design, they have certain features in common: a fitted facepiece, made of an impermeable material soft enough to achieve' an effective seal against the face, and some means of holding it in place, such as a head strap, and a filter and absorption system, in canister or other form, which will remove particulate (aero- sol) agents by mechanical filtration. The canister also contains activated charcoal, sometimes impregnated to react with agents in the vapour state, but which in any case will absorb toxic vapours. Some masksare made so as to permit the drinking of water treatment planned. Identification would also while the individual is masked, or attempts help to predict the incubation period and at resuscitation measures on casualties hence the time available for remedial meas- without unmasking them. Civil defense urea to be taken. At present the only means masks are often less elaborate versions of of identifying specific micro-organisms is by the military mask. Gas proof protectors can normal laboratory procedures. Many routine be provided for infants, laboratory methods of identification require 92. A protective mask, properly fitted and as long as two to five days, but some recent in good working condition, will provide corn- developments have reduced this time appre- plete respiratory protection against all known ciably. It is possible to collect the particles chemical and bacteriological (biological) from large volumes of air and concentrate agents. However, a Certalo percentage of them in a small amount of fluid. Bacteria can masked personnel can be expected to become then be trapped on special filters and trans- E. Protection of domestic animals and plants against chemical and bacteriologi- cal (biological) attacks 1. Chemical Attacks 104. The widespread protection of domes- tic animals and plants from chemical at- tack would be impracticable. Once a crop had been attacked with herbicides there Is no effective remedial action. The damage could be made good only by a second plant- ing of either the same or another crop, depending on the season. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9534 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 11 1969 2. Bacteriological Biological) Attacks Animals 105. Animals or flocks could be protec by collective shelters, although the cost would be great and, in the absence of an matic warning devices, it would be impose ble to assure that the creatures would b sheltered at the time of attack. 106. The ideal means of protection f animals would be vaccination. Vaccines hay been developed, and many are routinely pro duced, for foot-and-mouth disease rinde pest, anthrax, Rift Valley fever, hog cholera, Newcastle disease and others. Vaccination of animal herds by aerosols Is a promising area of investigation. Plants 107. The only hopeful approach would be to breed disease resistant plants. This Is a regular part of most national agricultural programmes, and has as its object the in- crease of crop yields. But unless the exact identity of the bacteriological (biological) agent which might be used were known well in advance (possibly years), it would not be feasible to apply this principle to provide protection to crops against this kind of attack. 108. Efforts devoted to spraying fungicides and similar preparations to reduce loss after attack do not appear to be economically effective. In most cases the best procedure Is to utilize available manpower and machines In planting second crops. ANNEX A : EARLY WARNING SY,A EMS FOR AIR- BORNE BACTERIOLOGICAL (BIOLOGICAL) -AGENTS An ideal automatic system for early warn- ing against an attack with bacteriological (biological) agents would comprise the fol- lowing components: (1) a device to collect large volumes of air and concentrate the particulate matter ob- tained, in a small volume of fluid or on a small surface; (2) a device to quantify and identify the collected material; (3) a mechanism to assess the results and to initiate an alarm if necessary. To collect and identify bacteriological (biological) agents and to initiate an alarm so that protective measures can be taken in sufficient time to be,useful is extremely diffi- cult This is so because, firstly, identification of agents is generally time-consuming and, secondly, large and fluctuating quantities of bacterial and other organic materials exist in the atmosphere at all times. Thus if pathogens from a cloud released by an ag- gressor were collected, the device would need, not only to determine whether the quantity collected was significantly above the normal amounts that might occur, but also what the agent was, or at least that- in the amount collected, it vras highly dangerous to man. At present, warning devices are available which are sensitive but non-specific and these, unfortunately, would give an unac- ceptably high proportion of false alanne. Others are being developed which attempt to incorporate both rapid respOnse with high specificity, but none to date thin the produc- tion stage. Research on this bisportant prob- lem is being continued and some of the ap- proaches and techniques that are being used in this study are listed below. Classification of automated biodetection approaches ? General category: Physical.particle detec- tion. Suggested approach: magnification, light scattering, volume displacement, General category; key biochemical compo- nents. ted Suggested approach: antigen detection by fluorescent labelling, dyes and staining, bio- to- lumineecence and iluorescences, optical activ- ity, pyrolysis products detection, ATP detec- tion, proteins, nucleic acids, or others. General category: Biological activity. Suggested approach: Growth (increase in or cell mass or numbers), CO. evolution, phos- e phatase activity, substrate change (pH, Eh, r 0. interchange), Pathogenic effects,, - ? Adapted from Greene, WI'S. "Biodetect- ing and Monitoring Instruments Open New Doors for Environmental Understanding", Environmental Science Technology, F'ebru- ary 1968, pp. 104-112. CHAPTER I/. THE PROBABLE EFFECTS OF CHEM- ICAL AND BACTERIOLOGICAL (BIOLOGICAL) WEAPONS ON MILITARY AND CIVILIAN PER- SONNEL, BOTH PROTECTED AND 'UNPROTECTED A. The effects of chemical agents on individ- uals and populations 109. The effects of chemical warfare agents on humans, animals and plants depend on the toxic properties of the agent, the dose absorbed, the rate of absorption and the route by which the agent enters the orga- nism. Toxic agents may enter the body through the skin, the eyes, the lungs, or through the gastro-Intestinal tract (as a re- sult of eating contaminated food or drinking contaminated liquids) . 110. For a given agent absorbed under the same conditions, the effect will be propor- tional to the dose absorbed. This is why It is possible to define for each agent certain characteristic doses, such as the dose which, under given conditions, will on average cause death In 50 per cent of the individuals exposed (the 50 per cent lethal dose, or "LD 50"), or the dose which will cause 50 per cent non-fatal casualties, or the dose which will have no appreciable military effect. These are expressed in milligrams of agent, with reference to a healthy adult of average weight. They may also be given In terms of milligrams per kilogram of body weight. 111. For purposes of evaluation it is con- venient to express the same idea somewhat differently in the case of gases, vapours and aerosols absorbed through the respiratory passages. Here the absorbed dose depends on the concentration of the agent in the r, on the respiration rate of the subject, and on the duration of the exposure, If, for the sake of Illustration, it is assumed that the average respiration rate for groups of in- dividuals engaged in various activities re- mains relatively constant, it follows that the dose, and therefore the effect produced, will be directly proportional to the product of the concentration of the agent in the air (C in milligrams/cubic metre) and the exposure time (t in minutes). This is called the dosage (or Ct factor), certain charac- teristic values of which (for example the LD TABLE I.?GENERAL CHARACTERISTI Type 50) are used in particular situations for quantitative estimates of the effects pro- duced. 112. For toxic agents acting on or through the skin, the dose absorbed by contact will often be related to the "contamination rate," expressed in grams/square metre, which indi- cates to what extent surfaces are contami- natde by the liquid. 113. The consequences of an attack on a population are a combination of the effects on the individuals in it, with both the con- centration of agent and the susceptibility of individuals varying over the whole area ex- posed to risk. Different individuals would respond differently to an attack, and might have different degrees of protection. Possible long-term contamination of personnel from chemical warfare agents persisting on the ground and vegetation may add to the im- mediate, direct effects. 314. Protective masks, protective clothing and shelters and, to a certain extent, de- contamination when applicable, give sub- stantial protection against all chemical War- fare agents. But, as already emphasized, the mere possession of a means of protection by no means constitutes an absolute safeguard against contamination by poisons. Alarm and detection equipment is important, soil-se- times vital, because without It timely warn- ing, which is essential to the proper use of protective equipment, would be lacking. Since protective measures are most effective when performed by trained personnel works ing effectively in units, military personnel are more likely to be provided with adequate protection than a civilian population. In any event, the civilian population in most coun- tries is simply- not provided with protection against chemical warfare. 115. Several chemical warfare agents which were known during World War I, and others developed since, have been reported on in the scientific literature. However, the effects of the more lethal modern chemical weapons have not been studied under conditions of actual warfare. Furthermore, no complete and systematic field Studies of the use of de- foliants, herbicides and riot control agents are available. The following descriptions of the probable effects of chemical weapons, based both upon evidence and on technical judgment, must therefore be regarded as somewhat conjectural. 1. Effects of Lethal Chemical Agents on Individuals 116. Table 1 provides a classification of the most important lethal chemical agents, and notes some of their characteristics in terms of the effects they produce. More de- tails are given in annex A. CS OF LETHAL CHEMICAL AGENTS Mechanism Time for onset of effects Examples Nerve agent G Interferes with transmission of nerve impulses. Nerve agent V Interferes with transmission of nerve impulses. Blister agent Cell poison Choking agent Damages lungs _ Blood agent Interferes with all respiration_ Toxin Neuromuscular paralysis Very rapid by inhalation (a few Tabun, Sarin, Soman. seco nds). Very rapid by inhalation (a few VX. seconds); Relatively rapid through skin (a few minutes to a few hours). Blistering delayed hours to days; Sulfur mustard. eye effects more rapid. Nitrogen mustard. Immediate to more than three hours___ Phosgene. Rapid (a few seconds or minutes)_.. _ __ Hydrogen cyanide. Variable (hours or days)__ Botulinum toxin. 117. Lethal chemical agents kill in rela- tively small doses, and ate a rule the amount that causes death Is only slightly greater than that which causes incapacitation. Death may occasionally be caused by high doses of presumed incapacitating agents and, conversely, minor effects could be caused by low doses of lethal agents. Blister agents are considered with the lethal agents, since a small but significant fraction of the person- nel attacked with such agents may die or suffer serious injury. Nerve agents 118. These lethal compounds are readily absorbed through the lungs, eyes, skin and inteatinal tract without producing local ir- ritation, and they interfere with the action of an enzyme (cholinesterase) essential te the functioning of the nervous system. The nerve-agerut casualty Who has been exposed to a lethal dose will die of asphyxiation Within a few minutes if he is not treated swiftly by means of artificial respiration and drugs each as atropine or =iamb. Otherwise Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 -August .11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE S 9535 recovery is generally rapid and complete. Oc- casionally, it raay take several weeks, but will be complete unless anoxia or convul- sions at the time of exposure were so pro- longed as to cause irreversible brain damage. 119. The route of entry of the agent into the body has some influence on the appear- ance of symptoms. Mute develop more slowly when the agent is absorbed through the skin than when it is inhaled. Low dosages cause a running nose, contraction of the pupil of the eye and difficulty in visual accommodation. Constriction of the bronchi causes a feeling of pressure in the chest. At higher dosages, the Skeletal muscles are af- fected-weakness, fibrillation, and eventually paralysis of the respiratory muscles oc- curring. Death is usually caused by respira- tory failure, but heart failure may occur. It is estimated that the most toxic nerve gases may cause death at a dosage of about ten mg min/m3.* Less toxic ones are lethal at dosages of up to 400 mg min/m3. Blister agents or vesicants A 120. Mustard is a typical blister agent which, like other members of this class, also has general toxic effects. Exposure to concen- trations of a few mg/m 8 in the air for sev- eral hours results at least in irritation and reddening of the skin, and especially irri- tation of the eyes, but may even lead to temporary blindness. Exposure to higher con- centrations in the air causes blisters and swollen eyes. Severe effects of this kind also occur when liquid falls on the skin or into the eyes. Blistering with mustard is compar- able to second degree burns. More severe lesions, comparable to third degree burns, may last for a couple of months. Blindness may be caused, especially if liquid agent has entered the eyes. Inhalation of vapour or aerosol causes irritation and pain in the up- per respiratory tract, and pneumonia may supervene. High doses of blister agents cause a general intoxication, similar to radiation sickness, which may prove lethal. 121. The first step in treating a person who has been exposed to a vesicant or blister agent, is to wash it out of the eyes and de- contaminate the skin. Mild lesions of the eyes require little treatment. The blisters are treated in the same way as any kind of second-degree burn. Other lethal agents 122. Phosgene and compounds with sim- ilar physiological effects were used in World War I. Death results from damage to the lungs. The only treatment is inhalation of oxygen and rest. Sedation is used sparingly. 123. Hydrogen cyanide in lethal doses causes almost immediate death by inhibiting cell respiration. Lower doses have little or no effect. 124. Most of the so-called blood agents contain cyanide, and all act rapidly. The casualty would either die before therapy could begin, or recover soon after breathing fresh air. 125. Botulinum toxin is one of the most powerful natural poisons known, and could be used as a chemical warfare agent. There are at least six distinct types, of which four are known to be toxic to man. Formed by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum, the toxin is on occasion accidentlly transmitted by contaminated food. The bacteria do not grow or reproduce in the body, and poisoning is due entirely to the toxin ingested, It is possible that it could be introduced into the body by inhalation. 126. Botulism is a highly fatal poisoning characterized by general weakness, head- ache, dizziness, double vision, dilation of the pupils, paralysis of the muscles concerned in swallowing, and difficulty of speech. Res- piratory paralysis is the usual cause of death. *A dosage of one mg min/m3 consists of an exposure of one minute to gas at a concen- tration of one milligram per cubic metre. After consumption of contaminated food, symptoms usually appear within twelve to seventy-two hours. All persons are suscep- tible to botulinum poisoning. The few who recover from the disease develop an active immunity of uncertain duration and degree. Active immunization with botulinum toxoid has been shown to have some protective value, but antitoxin therapy is of limited value, particularly where large doses of the toxin have been consumed. Treatment is mainly supportive. 2. Effects of Lethal Agents on Populations 127. As already indicated, the possible ef- fects of an attack on populations with lethal chemical warfare agents would depend upon the agent used, upon the intensity of the attack, whether the population was mainly under cover or in the open, on the avail- ability of protective facilities, on the physi- ological state of the individuals affected, and upon the meteorological conditions, which might differ from what had been predicted, and alter during the course of an attack. 128. The importance of meteorological con- ditions on the spread of agent from its point or area of release is illustrated by Figures 1(a), 1(b) and 1(c) which show in an ideal- ized diagramatic form the type of dosage contours to be expected from a point source, from multiple sources and from a linear aerial source respectively when exposed to the effects of wind. 129. Figure 1 (a) shows the shape of the zone travelled by the chemical cloud pro- duced by a point source (for example, one isolated munition), at the far left of the innermost cigar-shaped figure under condi- tions of a strong wind (say, 5-20 km/h) in the direction indicated. 130. The number on each line indicates the dosage (Ct = concentration times time) on the line. The dosage at any point inside the area delimited by the curve is greater than the number indicated. On the basis of these data, it is possible to estimate the casualties when the characteristic dosages of the agent used are known. For example, if the LD 50 value of the agent were 30 milli- gram-minutes/cubic metre, there would be more than 50 per cent fatalities in the area inside the contour marked 30. 131. This figure applies to a volatile agent such as Sarin, which is usually released in the form of a vapour or an aerosol cloud. In the case of a non-volatile liquid released in the form of droplets which fall onto the ground and contaminate it, a corresponding map could be drawn for the level of contam- ination of the soil (expressed in milligrams/ square metre). 132. Figure 1 (b) shows the same phenome- non in relation to an area source such as would result, for example, from attack by a missile warhead filled with small bombs or by an artillery salvo. 133. In the case of a volatile agent released in the form of a vapour or aerosol, the re- sulting cloud, carried downwind, covers a zone whose general shape is the same as in the case of a point source (Figure 1 (a) ), but its dimensions are obviously much larger and the dosage values are also larger. 134. If a non-volatile agent were released In the form of droplets, the hazard would be very great in the impact area because all sur- faces (skin, clothing, vehicles, equipment, vegetation, etc.) would be contaminated. The downwind hazard caused by the drift of the most minute particles would extend over a much smaller area than in the previous case because only a relatively small number of minute particles would be carried by the wind. 135. Figure 1(c) shows the zone covered by a linear aerial source, as in the case of dissemination of a non-volatile agent from an aircraft. 136. The emitted cloud is carried by the wind and does not touch the ground until it has travelled some distance away from the line of flight of the disseminating aircraft; this depends on the altitude of the aircraft and on the wind velocity. Since the cloud has already been subjected to the influence of turbulent diffusion before reaching the ground, the dosage values or contamination rates will be highest some distance away from the zone boundary nearer the source. 137. Because of meteorological and other variables, it is impossbile to make general statements about the quantitative effects of chemical weapons on populations. The fol- lowing hypothetical examples, therefore, are intended merely to Illustrate what might happen and the degree to which protective measures could reduce casualties. To provide representative illustrations, the examples chosen include the different hazards created by nerve agents used in a battle zone, on military targets in the rear and on civilians - in a town. Effects of nerve gas on protected troops in combat 138. A heavy attack with air-burst muni- tions dispersing non-volatile liquid nerve agent would create concentrations on the the ground that could rage from one-tenth of a gram to ten grams of liquid per square metre, giving a mean value of about five grams. This would be extremely hazardous. At the same time, aerosol concentrations would be created over almost the entire impact area (dosages about twenty mg. min/m3). This would produce casualties even if there were no liquid hazard. 139. To counter this type of attack, pro- tective measures of a very high order of efficiency, including protective masks, light protective clothing, means for decontamina- tion, detection systems, antidotes and medi- cal care, would have to be available. Pro- tective clothing and rapid utilization of gas masks would give a certain measure of protection. But in this case, subsequent de- contamination and medical care would be necessary to avoid heavy lethal losses. Effects of nerve gas on a military target in the rear 140. An attack from the air with a volatile nerve agent against a military installation in a rear area would cause an intense liquid and vapor hazard in the installation itself, and a vapour hazard downwind in the sur- rounding area. As suggested in figure 1(b), the impact area would be very heavily con- taminated; gas dosages inside and close to the impact area would be very high. Further downwind the gas concentration would de- crease gradually, and finally become in- nocuous. A general picture of the way cas- ualties would occur in a downwind area is indicated in figure I (a) . 141. After an attack in which tons of Sarin were used against an area of one square kilometre, the impact area and the area immediately downwind from it would be highly lethal to all unprotected personnel. Lethal casualties would occur at dosages above eighty mg. min/m3 and severe casual- ties down to thirty mg. min/m3. Some very light casualties would result at dosages around five mg. min/m3. The distance be- tween the impact area and the area of lowest effective dosage would depend on the local topography and on weather conditions, but would rarely exceed a few tens of kilometres. 112. Personnel provided only with gas masks, but not wearing them at the moment of the attack, would suffer substantial losses in and close to the impact area, both because of the effects of the liquid and because of the high gas concentration inhaled before they could don their masks. Further downwind, masks would give essentially complete pro- tection if warning were provided reasonably quickly. Effects of a nerve gas attack on a town 143. The population density in a modern City may be 5,000 people per square kilometre. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9536 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 11, 1969 A heavy surprise attack with non-volatile nerve gas by bombs exploding on impact in a wholely unprepared town wcadd, especially at rush hours, cause heavy losses. Half of the population might become cainzalties, hall of them fatal, if about one ton of agent were disseminated per square kileraetre. 144. If such a city were epared for at- tack, and if the preparations Included a civil defence organization with adequately equip- ped shelters and protective Isn.sks for the population, the losses might be reduced to one half of those which would be anticipated in conditions of total surprise. 145. Although it would be very difficult to achieve, if there were a high level of pre- paredness, comprising adequate warning and effective civil defence procedures, it is con- ceivable that most of the population would be sheltered at the time of the attack, and that very few would be in the streets. 146. Given a town with a total population of 80,000, a surprise attack with nerve gas could thus cause 40,000 casualties, half of them fatal, whereas under ideal circum- stances for the defence, fatalities might num- ber no more than 2,000. It is inconceivable, however, that the ideal woUld ever be at- tained. 3. Effects of Incapacitating Chemical Agents 147. Incapacitating chemicels, like tear gases and certain psychochemicals, produce in normal health people a temporary, rever- sible disability with few if any permanent ef- fects. In your children, old people and those with impaired health, the effects may some- times be aggravated. They 'are called in- capacitating because the ratio between the lethal and incapacitating doses is very high. The types which could have a possible mili- tary use are limited by requirements of safe- ty, controlled military effectiveness and eco- nomic availability. Tear and harassing gases 148. Many chemical compounds fall into this category, of which a-chloaaeetophenene (CN), ortho-chlorobenzylid :enemalononitrile (CS), and adamsite (DM) are probably the most important. They are sands when pure, and are disseminated as aerosols. _ 149. Either as vapour or in areosol, tear and harassing gases rapidly produce irrita- tion, smarting and tears. These symptoms disappear quickly after exposure ceases. The entire respiratory tract may also be irritated, resulting in a running nose aria pain in the nose and throat. More severe exposures can produce a burning sensation in the trachea. As a result, exposed persons experience dif- ficulty in breathing, attacks of coughing and occasionally, nausea and headaches. 150. Extremely high dosages of tear and harassing gases can give rise to pulmonary edema (fluid in the lungs). Deaths have been reported in three cases afters extraordinary exposure to sachloracetophenone (CN) in a confined space. 151. The effects of adamsite (nM) - are more persistent. Nausea is more severe and vomit- ing may occur. 152. Results of experiments on various species of animals (see annex B) and some observations of human responses lead to the following tentative conclusions First, CS IS the most irritating of these gases followed by adamsite (DM) and sachloracetophenone (CN). Second, the tolerance limits (highest concentration which a test subject can toler- ate for one minute) of DM and CS are about the same. Third, the least tax- lc of the tear gases is CS, followed by Datt- and then Cia. Fourth, human beings vary In their sensi- tivity to, and tolerance of, tear and harass- ing gases. And finally, the toxicity of these gases varies in different animal species and in different environmental conditions. 153. The symptoms caused by tear gases disappear, as tears wash the agent from the eyes, and if the victim gets Out of the tear gas atmosphere. Some, however, cause red- dening or rarely even blistering of the skin when the weather is hot and wet. Toxins 154. Staphylococcus toxin occurs naturally in outbreaks of food poisoning?which is the only medical experience with this toxin. The symptoms have a sudden, sometimes violent, onset, with severe nausea, vomiting and diar- rhea. The time from ingestion of the toxin to the onset of symptoms is usually two to four hours, although it may be as short as a half hour. Most people recover in 24-48 hours and death is rare. Treatment is sup- portive and immunity, following an attack, is short-lived. The toxin is resistant to freez- ing, to boiling for thirty minutes, and to concentrations of chlorine used in the treat- ment of water. Staphylococcus toxin could be. considered as an incapacitating chemical warfare agent. Symptoms can be produced in animals by intravenous injection, and the toxin may also be active by the re- spiratory route. Psychochemicals 155. These substances have been suggested for use in war as agents which could cause temporary disability by disrupting normal patterns of behavior. The idea cannot be accepted in its simple form, since these sub- stances may lead to more permanent changes, particularly in individuals who are mentally unbalanced or who are in the early stages of a nervous and mental disease. Moreover, very high doses, which would be difficult to exclude during use in war, can cause ir- reversible damage to the central nervous sys- tem or even death. Psychochemicals could also have particularly severe effects on children. 156. Compounds such as LSD, mescaline, psilocybin, and a series of benzilates which cause mental disturbance?either stimula- tion, depression or hallucination?could be used as incapacitating agents. Mental dis- turbance is, of course, a very complex phe- nomenon, and the phychological state of the person exposed to a psychochemical, as well as the properties of the agent, would pro- foundly influence its manifestations. But, despite the variation in responses between individuals, all those affected could neither be expected to act rationally, nor to take the initiative, nor make logical decisions. 157. Psychochemicals do more than cause mental disturbance. For example, the general symptoms from the benzilates are interfer- ence with ordinary activity; dry, flushed skin; irregular heartbeat; urinary retention; constipation; slowing of mental and psy- chical activity; headache, giddiness; disor- ientation; hallucinations; drowsiness; occa- sional maniacal behaviour; and increase in body temperature. While these effects have not been fully studied, there would be a significant risk of affected individuals, par- ticularly military personnel, becoming sec- ondary casualties due to unco-ordinated be- haviour. A single dose of 0.1 to 0.2 mg L6D25 will produce profound mental dis- turbance within half- an hour, the condi- tion persisting for about ten hours. This dose is about a thousandth of the lethal dose. 158. Treatment of the symptoms of pay- chochemicals is mainly supportive. Perma- nent psychotic effects may occur in a very small proportion of individuals exposed to LSD. 159. It is extremely difficult to predict the effects which an attack with psychochemical agents would produce in a large population. Apart from the complication of the varying reaction of exposed individuals, there could be strange interactions within groups. A few affected individuals might stimulate their fellows to behave irrationally, in the same way as unaffected persons might to some ex- tent offset the reactions of those affected. Since the probability of fatal casualties re- sulting directly from exposure is low, some normal group activity might be sustained. Protective masks would probably provide complete protection since practice/1y all po- tential psychochemical agents, if used as of- fensive weapons, would be dessiminated as aerosis. 4. Other Effects of Chemical Agents Effects on aniznals 160. The effects of lethal chemical agents on higher animals are, in general, similar to those on man. The nerve agents also kill insects. Effects on plants 161. A variety of chemicals kill plants, but as already indicated, little is known about their long-term effects. The effective dose ranges of defoliants vary according to the particular species of plant attacked, its age, the meteorological conditions and the de- sired effect: e.g., plant death or defoliation. The duration of effect usually lasts weeks or months. Some chemicals kill all plants indis- criminately, while others are selective. Most defoliants produce their effects within a feW weeks, although a few species of plant are so sensitive that defoliation would occur in a period of days. 162. An application of defoliating herbi- cide* of approximately 3 gallons (32 pounds) per acre (roughly 36 kg per hectare) can produce 65 per cent defoliation for six to nine months in very densely forested areas, but in some circumstances some species of trees will die. Significantly lower doses suffice for most agricultural and industrial uses throughout the world. Defoliation is, of course, a natural process?more common in trees in temperate zones than in the tropics. Essentially what defoliants do is trigger defoliation prematurely. 163. Desiccation (the drying out) of leaves results in some defoliation, although usually the leaf-drop is delayed, and the plant would not be killed without repeated application of the chemical. Chemical desiccants cause a rapid change in colour, usually within a few hours. B. The effects of bacteriological (biological) agents on individuals and populations 164. Mankind has been spared any experi- ence of modern bacteriological (biological) warfare, so that any discussion of its pOssible nature has to be based on extrapolation frosts epidemiological knowledge and laboratory experiment. The number of agents which potentially could be used in warfare is limited by the constraints detailed in chapter I. On the other hand, the variability which char- acterizes all living matter makes it conceiv- able that the application of modern knowl- edge of genetic processes and of selection could remove some of these limitations. Some species of micro-organisms consist of a num- ber of strains characterized by different degrees of virulence, antigenic constitution, susceptibility to chemotherapeutic agents, and so on. For example, strains of tularaemia bacilli isolated in the TJnited States are gen- erally much more virulent in human beings than those found in Europe or Japan. Foot- and-mouth disease virus is another well- known example of an organism with various degrees of virulence. The situation with bacteriological (biological) weapons is thus quite different from that of chemical weap- ons, where the characteristics of a given com- pound are more specific. 1. Effects on Individuals 165. Bacteriological (biological) agents could be used with the intention of !tilling people or of incapacitating them either for a short or a long period. The agents, how- ever, cannot be rigidly defined as either lethal or incapacitating, sins* their effects are de- *For example, the commonly used "2,4-Ds and "2,4,5-T" which are the butyl esters of (2,4-dichlorophenoxy) acetic acid and (2,4,5- triohlorophenoxy) acetic act& Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 ? CIA-RDP7I RO9R4R000300100001-3 s 9537 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RE.CORD ? A pendent upon many factors relating not only to themselves but also to the individuals they attack. Any disease-producing agent intended to incapacitate may, under certain condi- tions, bring about a fatal disease. Similarly, attacks which might be intended to pro- voke lethal effects might fail to do so. Exam- ples of naturally occurring lethal disease are shown in table 2 and representative incapac- itating diseases in table 3. A detailed list of possible agents, NVith a brief description of their salient characteristics is given in an- nex C. 166. A number of natural diseases of man and domestic animals are caused by mixed Infections (e.g., swine influenza, hog chol- era). The possible use of two or more differ- ent organisms in combination in bacterio- logical (biological) warfare needs to be treated seriously because the resulting dis- eases might be aggravated or prolonged. In some instances, however, two agents might interfere with one another and reduce the severity of the illness they might cause sepa- rately. 167. The effects of some forms of bacterio- logical (biological) warfare can be mitigated by chemotherapeutic, chemoprophylactic and immunization measures (for protec- tion see chapter I and annex C of this chap- ter). Specific chemotherapeutic measures are effective against certain diseases, but not against those caused by viruses. But it may not always be possible to apply such meas- ures, and they might not always be success- ful. For example, with some diseases early therapy with antibiotics is usually success- ful, but relapses may occur. Moreover, re- sistance against antibiotics may develop in almost all groups of micro-organisms, and re- sistant strains may retain full virulence for man as well as for animals. TABLE 2.?EXAMPLES OF AGENTS THAT MIGHT BE USED TO CAUSE DEATH Agents Diseases Incubation period (days) Effect of specific therapy Likelihood of spread from man to man Viruses Rickettsiae Bacteria Eastern equine encephalitis__ 5 to 15 Nil Tick-borne encephalitis 7 to 14 do Yellow fever 3 to 6 do Rocky Mountain spotted fever_ 3 to 10 Good Epidemic typhus 6 to 15 do Anthrax 1 to 5 Moderate Cholera do Good Plague, pneumonic 2 to 5 Moderate Tularaemia 1 to 10 Good Typhoid 7 to 21 do NiI.I Do. Do. Do. Do. Low. High. Do. Low. High. I Unless vector present. TABLE 3.?EXAMPLES OF AGENTS THAT MIGHT BE USED TO CAUSE INCAPACITATION Agents Diseases Incubation period (days) Effect of specific therapy Likelihood of spread from man to man Viruses Rickettsiae Bacteria Fungi Coccidioidomycosis Chikungunya fever 2 to 6 Nil Nil.' Dengue fever 5 to 8 do Do. Venezuelan equine 2 to 5 do Do. encephalitis. Q-fever 10 to 21 Good Low. Brucellosis 7 to 21 Moderate Nil. 7 to 21 Poor Do. I Unless mosquito vector present. Possible bacteriological (biological) agents 168. Victims of an attack by bacteriological (biological) weapons would, in effect, have contracted an infectious disease. The diseases would probably be known, but their symp- toms might be clinically modified. For ex- ample, apart from the deliberate genetic modification of the organism, the portals of Infection might be different from the natural routes, and the disease might be foreign to the geographical area in which it was de- liber6tely spread. Possible bacteriological (biological) agents representing diseases caused by the main groups of relevant micro- organisms are: 169. Anthrax: Under natural conditions, anthrax is a disease of animals, the main source of infection for man being cattle and sheep. Its vernacular synonym "wool sorter's disease" indicates one way men used to con- tract the disease. Depending on the mecha- nism of transmission, a cutaneous (skin) form (contact infection), an intestinal form (alimentary infection), or pulmonary form (airborne infection) may develop. The lung or respiratory form is most severe, and un- less early treatment with antibiotics is re- sorted to, death ensues within two-three days in nearly every case. 170. Antibiotic prophylaxis is possible, but would have to be prolonged for weeks, since it has been shown that monkeys exposed to anthrax aerosol die if antibiotic treatment is discontinued after ten days. In certain coun- tries, several types of vaccines are employed, but their value has not been fully evaluated. of the illness, and can be significant for proper diagnosis. Treatment presents great difficulties. 174. Plague: Under natural conditions, small rodents, from which the disease is transmitted by fleas, are the main source of human infection with plague. This is hoW "bubonic" plague develops. If the plague microbes are inhaled, pneumonic plague de- velops after a three-to-five-day incubation period. The patient suffers from severe gen- eral symptoms and if untreated, normally dies within two to three days. A patient with pneumonic plague is extremely contagious to contacts. 175. Preventive vaccination is moderately effective against bubonic, but not pneu- monic, plague. If administered early, strep- tomycin treatment may be successful. 176. In a study of experimental pulmonary plague in monkeys, it was found that an average dose of only 100 bacteria caused fatal disease in half the animals tested. Animal experiments have also show that particles of 1 micrometre diameter (1.25,000 of an inch) , containing single microbial cells, can cause primary pneumonia, with a rapid and fatal outcome. If the aerosol is formed by larger particles (5-10 micrometres diameter) micro- bial cells are deposited in the nose and other regions of the upper respiratory tract, and primary foci of the disease develop in the corresponding lymphatic nodes. A fatal gen- eralized infection may then follow. 177. A large mass of plague bacteria could be grown, and probably lyophilized (freeze- dried) and kept in storage. The agent is highly infectious by the aerosol route and most populations are completely susceptible. An effective vaccine against this type of dis- ease is not known. Infection might also be transmitted to urban and/or field rodents and natural foci of plague may be treated. 178. Q-/ever: Under natural conditions, Q- fever is a disease a animals, the main sources of infection to man being sheep, goats and cattle. The infection is transmitted most fre- quently by the air route. 179. An incubation period of two to three weeks follows the inhalation of the infectious material. A severe attack of influenza-like ill- ness follows, with high fever, malaise, joint and muscle pains, which may be followed in five to six days by pneumonia. In untreated cases, the illness lasts two to three weeks; the patient feels exhausted and is unable to do normal work for everal weeks. But the disease can be successfully treated with broad spectrum antibiotics (tetracyclines). Prophy- lactic vaccines have been prepared in some countries, but have not yet been proved suit- able for large-scale use. 180. The agent causing the disease is a rickettsia, and is extremely infectious for man. An epidemic of Q-fever once occurred due to contaminated dust which was carried by the wind from a rendering plant some ten kilometers away. Q-fever is also a coinmon and significant laboratory hazard, even though it is only rarely transmitted from man to man. The high susceptibility of hu- mans to this agent has been demonstrated in volunteers. 181. Q-fever rickettsiae are extraordinarily resistant to environmental factors such as temperature and humidity. Very large amounts can be produced in embryonated chicken eggs (20,000 million mirco-organisms par millilitre) and can be stored for a lung period of time. A Q-fever aerosol could pro- duce an incapacitating effect in a large pro- portion of the population of an attacked area. The infective agent could persist in the en- vironment for months and infect animals, possibly creating atural foci of infection. 182. Tularaemia: Under natural conditions, tularaemia is a disease of wild animals, the source of human infection being rodents, especially rabbits and hares. When it occurs naturally in human beings, who are very susceptible to the disease, skin lesions with swelling of the lymph nodes are its usual 171. The anthrax bacillus forms very re- sistant spores, which live for many years in contaminated areas, and which constitute the most dangerous risk the disease presents. From epidemiological observations, the in- halation, infectious dose for man is estimated at 20,000 spores. Experiments on animals show that anthrax can be combined with in- fluenza infection or with some noxious chemical agent, and that the susceptibility of the animal to airborne anthrax infection is then markedly enhanced. 172. With suitable expertise and equip- ment large masses of anthrax bacilli can be easily grown, and heavy concentrations of resistant anthrax spore aerosols can be made. Such aerosols could result in a high propor- tion of deaths in a heavily exposed popula- tion. Immunization could not be expected to protect against a heavy aerosol attack. The soil would remain contaminated for a very long time, and so threaten live-stock farm- ing. 173. Coccidioidomycosis: This disease, which is also called desert fever, is caused by a fungus found in the soil of deserts in the United States, South America and the USSR. The spores of the fungus are very stable, and can easily be disseminated as an aerosol. If they are inhaled, pneumonia with fever, cough, ague and night-sweatinig, and muscle pains follow after an incubation period of one-three weeks. In most cases, recovery from the disease occurs after some weeks of illness. An allergic rash sometimes breaks out during the first or second week Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 S 9538 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 11, 1969 manifestation (infection by contact with sick and dead animals, or by way of ticks and other vectors). Infection can also occur through the eye and the gastro-intestinal tract. The pulmonary form (airborne infec- tion) is the more serious. Pulmonary tula- raemia is associated with general pain, irri- tant cough, general malaise, etc., but in Europe and Japan mortality due to this form of the disease was never higher than 1 per- cent even before antibiotics became avail- able. American tularaemia strains in the other epidemics have been associated with a mortality rate as high as 20 )ercent despite antibiotic treatment. Usually treatment with streptomycin or tetracycline is highly effec- tive. A tularaemia vaccine developed in the Soviet Union is also highly effactive. 183. The agent causing the disease is a microbe which is very sensitive to common disinfectants, but which is able to survive for as long as a few weeks in contaminated dust, water, etc. 184. Aerosols of tularaemia have been tested on volunteers. The inhalation infec- tious dose for man is about ten to twenty- five microbes, and the incubation period five days. By increasing the inhaled dose a hun- dred times, the incubation period shortens to two to three days. Owing to its easy aerosol transmission, tularaemia has often infected laboratory workers. 185. The microbiological characteristics are similar to those of the plague bacillie (al- though antibiotic treatment and vaccination prophylaxis are effective). Both lethal and incapacitating effects are to be expected. The disease is not transferred front man to man, but long-lasting natural foci might be created. 186. Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus (VEE): In nature, VEE ia an infection of animals (equines, rodents, birds) transmitted to man through mosquitos Which have fed on infected animals. 187. The disease has sudden onset, with headache, chills and fever, nausea and vomit- ing, muscle and bone pains, with encephalitis occurring ha a very small proportion of cases. The mortality rate is very low and recovery Is usually rapid after a week, with reSidual weakness often persisting for three weeks. No specific therapy is available. The vaccine Is still in the experimental stage. 188. NUMerOUS laboratory Infections in hu- mans have been reported, most of them air- borne. In laboratory experiments, monkeys were infected with aerosolized virus at rela- tively low concentrations (about 1,000 guinea pig infectious doses). 189. Since the virus can be produced in large amounts in tissue culture or embryo- nated eggs, and since airborne infection read- ily occurs in laboratory workers, concentrated aerosols could be expected to incapacitate a very high percentage of the population ex- posed. In some areas, persistent endemic in- fection in wild animals would be established. 190. Yellow fever: In nature, yellow fever is primarily a virus diseaat of monkeys, transmitted to man by variety of mosquitos (Aedes rtegypti, Aedes simpsoni, Hamagogus species, etc.). After an incubation period of three-six days, influenza-like aymptoras ap- pear with high fever, restlessness and nausea. Later the liver and the kidneys may be seri- ously affected, with jaundice and diminished urinary excretion supervening. The very se- vere forms end in black vomitus and death. In a non-immune population. mortality rates for yelloW fever may be as high as 30-40 per cent. There is no specific treatment, but pro- phylactic vaccination, being highly effective is widely used in yellow fever endemic areas. 2. Effects on Populations 191. Other than for sabotage, the use of aerosol clouds of an agent is the most likely form of attack in bacteriological (biological) warfare. For example, material can be pro- duced containing infective Micro-organisms at a concentration of 10,000 million per gram. Let us suppose that an aircraft were to spray such material so as to produce an aeronsol line source 100 kilometres in length across a 10 kilometre per hour wind. Then, assum- ing that 10 per cent of organisms survived aerosolization, and that subsequent environ- mental stresses caused them to die at a rate of 5 per cent per minute, about 5,000 square kilometres would be covered at a concentra- tion such that 50 per cent of the unprotected people in the area would have inhaled a dose sufficient to infect them, assuming that the infective dose is about 100 micro-organisms per person, This particular calculation is valid for agents such as those which cause tularaemia, plague, as well as for some vir- uses. The decay rate of the causative agents of Q-fever, anthrax and some other infections is much lower and the expected effect would be still greater. 192. The effects of bacteriological (biologi- cal) attacks would obviously vary according to circumstances. Military personnel equip- ped with adequate protective measures, well trained In their use and provided with good medical services could, if warned of an at- tack, be able to protect themselves to a considerable degree. But effective early warn- ing and detection systems do not yet exist. On the other hand, attacks on civil popula- tions are likely to be covert and by surprise and, at present no civilian populations are protected. Unprotected military or civilian personnel would be at complete risk, and panic and irrational behaviour would com- plicate the effects of the attack. The heavy burden which would be imposed on the med- ical services of the attacked region would compound disorganization, and there would be a major risk of the total disruption of all administrative services. 193. In view of the extensive anti-person- nel effects associated with agents of the kind with which this report is concerned, it is useful to view them against the area of effect of a one-megaton nuclear explosion, which as is well redognized, would be suffi- cient to destroy utterly a town with a popu- lation of a million. It should of course be emphasized that direct comparisons of the effects of different classes of weapons are, at best, hypothetical exercises. From the military point of view, effectiveness of a weapon cannot be measured just in terms of areas of devastation or numbers of casualties. The final criterion will always be whether a specific military objective can be achieVed better with one than another set of weapons. The basic hypotheses chosen for the com- parison are rather artificial; and in particu- lar, environmental factors are ignored. But despite this limitation, table 4 gives data that help to place chemical, bacteriological (biological) and nuclear weapons in sorne perspective as to size of target area, numbers of casualties inflicted, and cost estimates for development and production of each type of weapon. The figures speak for themselves. TABLE 4.?COMPARATIVE ESTIMATES OF DISABLING EFFECTS OF HYPOTHETICAL ATTACKS ON TOTALLY UNPROTECTED POPULATIONS USING A NUCLEAR, CHEMICAL, OR BACTERIOLOGICAL (BIOLOGICAL) WEAPON THAT COULD BE CARRIED BY A SINGLE STRATEGIC BOMBER Criterion for estimate Type of weapon Nuclear (1 megaton) Chemical (15 tons of nerve agent) Bacteriological (biological) (10 tons a) Area affected Up to 300 km 2 Time delay before onset of Seconds - effect. Damage to structures Destruction over an area of 100 km.2 Other effects Radioactive contamination in an area of 2,500 km.2 for 3-6 months. Possibility of later normal 3-6 months after attack use of affected area after attack. Maximum effect on man____ 90 percent deaths Multiyear investment in $5,000-10,000 million substantial research and development production capability.2 UP to 60 km2 Minutes None Contamination by persistence of agent from a few days to weeks. Limited during period of con- tamination. 50 percent deaths $1,000-5,000 million UP to 100,000 km I. Days. None. Possible epidemic or estab- lishment of new endemic foci of disease. After end of incubation period or subsidence of epidemic. 50 percent morbidity; 25 percent deaths If no medical intervention. $1,000-5,000 million. It is assumed that mortality from the disease caused by the agent would be 50 percent if no medical treatment were available. 2 it is assumed that indicated cumulative investments in research and development and production plants have been made to achieve a substantial independent capability. Individual weapons could be fabricated without making this total investment. 3. Effects on Animals 194. The way bacteriological (biological) weapons might be used against stocks of domestic animals would probably be the same as that used in attacks against man. Rep- resentative diseases and their characteris- tics are shown in table 5. 195. Viral infections probably cause the most important diseases of domestic animals and could have more devastating effects than diseases produced by other types of patho- gens. Since many of the organisms which cause infectious diseases in domestic animals are also pathogenic for man, and since some of them may also be readily transmitted from animals to man, either directly or by vectors, such attacks might also affect the human population directly. Attacks upon livestock would not only result in the immediate death of animals, but also might call for compul- sory slaughter as a means of preventing the spread of infection. 196. Covert bacteriological (biological) at- tack during peacetime directed against do- mestic animals could give rise to serious political and economic repercussions if large numbers of stock were affected. For example, African swine fever occurs endemically on the African continent as a subclinical disease of warthogs. In 1957 it was accidentally brought from Angola to Portugal, and then in 1960 to Spain. Despite strict and extensive veteri- nary measures that were enforced, losses in pig breeds were estimated to amount within a single year to more than 89,000,000. 197. Isolated attacks against stocks of do- mestic animals during wartime would have only a nuisance value. However, if a highly infectious agent (e.g,, foot-and-mouth dis- ease) were used, even a local attack could have very widespread effects because of spread by the normal commercial movement of animals, particularly in highly developed countries. Extensive attacks with travelling clouds could, however, lead to a disastrous state of affairs. The history of myxamatosis (a rabbit disease) in Europe provides a par- allel. Not only did it drastically reduce the rabbit population in France, into which it was first introduced; it immediately spread to other countries of Europe, including the United Kingdom. The risk of the uncon- trolled spread of infection to a number of countries is an important consideration in Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE the use of some bacteriological (biological) weapons. 198. The possibilities of protecting domes- tic animal stocks against bacteriological (bio- logical) attacks are so remote that they are not worth discussing. of protection. Advanced countries might, as a precautionary measure exchange suscep- tible plants by more resistant strains. This would be difficult for countries whose agri- cultural standards were not high, and which would be the most vulnerable to bacterio- logical (biological) attacks on their crops. TABLE S.?EXAMPLES OF DISEASES THAT MIGHT BE USED TO ATTACK DOMESTIC ANIMALS 7ABLE6.?EXAMPLES OF DISEASES THAT MIGHT BE USED TO ATTACK PLANTS DISEASE ANIMALS ATTACKED Viruses: African swine fever Equine encephalitis Foot-and-mouth disease_ _ _ Fowl plague Hog cholera Newcastle disease Rift Valley fever Rinderpest Vesicular stomatitis Ricksettsiae: Veldt disease Q-fever Bacteria: Anthrax Brucellosis Glanders Fungi: Lumpy jaw Aspergillosis Hogs. Horses. Cattle sheep, hogs. Chickens, turkeys, Hogs. Chickens, turkeys. Cattle, goats, sheep. Cattle, sheep, oxen, goats, water buffaloes. Cattle, horses, mules, hogs. Cattle, sheep, goats. Do. Cattle, sheep, horses, mules. Cattle sheep, goats, hogs, horses. Horses, mules. Cattle, horses, hogs. Poultry, cattle. 4. Effects on Plants 199. Living micro-organisms could also be used to generate diseases in crops which are economically important either as food or as raw material (e.g., cotton and rubber). Sig- nificant food crops in this respect include potatoes, sugar-beet, garden vegetables, soya beans, sorghum, rice, corn, wheat and other cereals and fruits. Obviously the selection of the target for a biological attack would be determined by the relative importance of the crop in the national diet and economy. Deliberately induced epiphytoties (plants dis- ease epidemics) could in theory have serious national and International consequences. 200. The fungal, bacterial, or viral agents which could be used against plants are shown in table 6. 201. With a few minor exceptions, the plant viruses could be cultured only in living plant systems, the causal agent being found only in the plant tissues and juices. Virus diseases are transmitted principally by insect vectors and to some extent by mechanical means. 202. Bacterial agents which attack plants can persist for months on or in the plants. All of them can be cultured on artificial media. Normally, plant bacteria are not dis- seminated to any great extent by winds; the principal methods for spread in nature are insects, animals (including man) and water. Rain can spread bacteria locally, while in- sects and animals are responsible for their more extensive spread. It is conceivable that bacterial plant pathogens could be adapted for deliberate aerial dissemination. 203. Plant fungi, which cause some of the most devastating diseases of important agri- cultural crops, are disseminated mainly by winds, but also by insects, animals, waterand man. Many fungal pathogens produce and liberate into the air countless numbers of small, hardy spores which are able to with- stand adverse climatic conditions. The epi- demic potential of a number of fungal patho- gens is considerable. 204. In theory there are measures which could protect crops against bacteriological (biological) attacks; but at present their po- tential cost rules them out in practice. There is no essential difference between the coun- ter-measures which would have to be intro- duced to counter bacteriological (biological) weapons and those employed normally to con- trol plant diseases in peacetime. But the use of bacteriological (biological) weapons to de- stroy crops on a large scale would imply that the attacker would choose agents capable of overcoming any known, economical method Diseases Liklihood of spread Viruses Corn stunt High. Ho)a blanca (rice) Do. Fiji disease (sugar cane) Do. Sugar beet curly top Do. Potato yellow dwarf Do. Bacteria Leaf blight (rice) Do. Blight of corn Do. Gummosis of sugarcane Low. Fungi Late blight (potato) Very high. Cereal rusts Do. Rice blast Do. Corn rust High. Coffee rust Very high. 5. Factors Influencing the Effects of Bacteri- ological (Biological) Attacks Exotic diseases 205. Any country which resorted to bac- teriological (biological) warfare would pre- sumably try to infect, with a single blow, a large proportion of an enemy population with an exotic agent to which they had not be- come immune through previous exposure. Such exotic agents would lead to the appear- ance of diseases which normally had not oc- curred before in a given geographical area, either becauSe of the absence of the organism involved (e.g., foot-and mouth disease in North America or Japan), and/or of natural vectors (e.g., Japanese or Venezuelan ence- phalitis in Europe, Rocky Mountain spotted fever in many countries). In addition, a dis- ease which had been controlled or eradicated from an area (e.g., urban or classical yellow fever from many tropical and sub-tropical countries, epidemic typhus from developed countries) might be reintroduced as a result of bacteriological (biological) warfare. Altered or new diseases 206. Deliberate genetic steps might also be taken to change the properties of infectious agents, especially in antigenic composition and drug resistance. Apart from genetic changes that could be induced in known organisms, it is to be expected that new in- fectious diseases will appear naturally from time to time and that their causative agents might be used in war. However, it could not therefore be assumed that every outbreak of an exotic or new disease could necessarily be a consequence of a bacteriological (bio- logical) attack. The Marburg disease, which broke out suddenly In 1967 in Marburg, Frankfurt and Belgrade, was a good example. It was acquired by laboratory workers who had handled blood or other tissues of vervet monkeys which had been recently caught in the wild, and by others who came into con- tact with them. Because the outbreak oc- curred in medical laboratories it was very skillfully handled. In other circumstances, it might have spread widely before it was con- trolled. Epidemic spread 207. As already emphasized, a wide variety of agents can infect by the inhalation route, so that in a bacteriological (biological) at- tack a large number of persons could be in- fected within a short time. From the epi- demiological point of view, the consequences would differ depending on whether the re- sultant disease was or was not transmissible from man to man. In the latter case the result would be a once-for-all disaster, vary- ing in scale and lethality according to the nature of the organism used and the num- bers of people affected. The attack would S 9539 undoubtedly have a strong demoralizing ef- fect on the unaffected as well as the affected population, and it would be in the nature of things that were would be a breakdown of medical services. 208. If the induced disease were easily transmissible from man to man, and if it was one against which the population had not been effectively immunized, it is possible to imagine what could happen by recalling say, the Periodical appearance of new varieties of influenza virus, e.g. the 1957 influenza pandemic. In Czechoslovakia (population about 14 million), 1,500,000 influenza pa- tients were actually reported; the probable total number was 2,500,000. About 50 per cent of the sick were people in employment and their average period away from work was six days. Complications necessitating further treatment developed in 5-6 per thousand of the cases, and about 0.2 per thousand died. Those who axe old enough to remember the 1918 influenza pandemic, which swept over most of the world, will judge the 1957 out- break as a mild affair. Susceptibility of population 209. A very important factor in the effec- tiveness of an aerosol attack is the state of immunity of the target population. Where the population is completely lacking in spe- cific immunity to the agent which is dis- seminated, the incidence and severity of dis- ease are likely to be exceptionally high. Nat- urally occurring examples of very severe epi- demics in virgin populations are well known (e.g. measles in Fiji, poliomyelitis and in- fluenza in the Arctic). A similar result fol- lows the introduction of a suspectible popu- lation (often a military force) into an al- ready infected area. Thus there was a high prevalence of dengue fever in military forces operating in the Pacific in World War II? sometimes affecting as many as 25 per cent of the operational strength of a unit. The local population suffered relatively little from the disease because they had usually been infected early in life, and were subsequently immune. Populations of increased vulnerability 210. Malnutrition: Recent statistical studies reveal a clear association between malnutrition and the incidence of infectious diseases. FAO, WHO and UNICEF have pointed out that in developing countries, a shortage of nutritious food is a major factor in the high mortality rate due to infectious diseases, particularly in children. 211. Housing and clothing: Primitive hous- ing and inadequate clothing would lead to an increased vulnerability to bacteriological (biological) and more particularly chemical weapons. Millions of people live in houses which are permeable to any sort of airborne infection or poison, and millions are inade- quately clothed and walk farefooted. 212. Other conditions which characterize poor populations have a definite influence on the spread of infections. Large families increase the opportunities for contagious contact. Inadequate housing, lack of potable water and, in general, bad sanitation, a low educational level, numerous vectors of in- fectious disease (e.g. insects), and, of course, lack of medical services are factors which also favour the spread of disease. The agents used might also persist in the soil, on crops, grasses, etc., so that delayed action might need to be taken into account. Social effects and public health measures 213. A basic factor which influences the risk of epidemic situation during every war is a rapid impairment of standards of hy- giene. Widespread destruction of housing and of sanitary facilities (water works, water piping, waste disposal, etc.), the Inevitable decline in personal hygiene, and other diffi- culties, create exceptionally favourable con- ditions for the spread of intestinal infec- tions, or louse-transmitted disease, etc. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9540 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 11, 1969 214. The importance a adequate public health services is well illustrated by an ex- plosive water-borne epidemic of infectious hepatitis in Delhi in 1955-1956, which af- fected some 30,000 persons, and which oc- curred because routine water treatment was ineffective. This epidemic was caused by the penetration into the water supply of waste waters heavily contaminated with hepatitis virus. However, there was no concurrent in- crease in the incidence of bacillary dysentery and typhoid fever, showing that the routine treatment of the water had been adequate to prevent bacterial but not viral infections. 215. Air streams, migrating animals and running water may transport agents from one country to the other. Refugees with con- tagious diseases pose legal and epidemiologi- cal problems. In areas with multinational economies, losses in livestock and crops may occur in neighbouring countries by the spread of the disease through regional commerce. 216. The experiences from fairly recent smallpox epidemics can also be used to illu- strate the social effects of an accidentally in- troduced, highly dangerous airborne infec- tion. In New York (1947) one patient started ANNEX A.-CHEMICAL PROPERTIES, FORMULATIONS AND TOXICITIES OF LETHAL CHEMICAL AGENTS (EXCERPT FROM MATERIAL SUPPLIED BY WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION) -10? C., (b) at 20? C.; (6) approximate duration sunny, light breeze, (c) -10? C., sunny, no wind, : breathing rate ca. 15 liters /min.); (9) estimated an epidemic, in which twelve persons became ill and two died. Within a month more than 5 million persons were revaccinated. Similarly in Moscow, in January 1960, a smallpox epi- demic of forty-six cases (of whom three died) developed, caused by a single patient. At that time 5,500 vaccination teams were set up and vaccinated 6,372,376 persons within a week. Several hundreds of other health workers searched a large area of the country for con- tacts (9,000 persons were kept under medical supervision, of these 662 had to be hospital-. ized as smallpox suspects). Key to table:(1) Trivial name; (2) messy classification; (3) approximate solubility in water at 20? C.; (4) volatility at 20? C; (5) physical state (a) at of hazard (contact, or airborne foflowing evaporation) to be expected from ground contamination (a) 10? C., rainy, moderate wind, (b) 15? C., settled snow; (7) casualty producing dosages (lethal or significant incapacitating effects); (8) estimated human respiratory LC40 (n.C1c1 activity human percutaneous toxicity.' (1) Sarin (2) Lethal agent (nerve gas). Lethal agent (nerve gas). Lethal agent (blood gas). Lethal agent (blood gas). Lethal agent (lung (f53)) 100 percent 1 to 5 percent (a) Liquid 3 to 18 mg/m3 Liquid 873, 000 mg/ms 3, 300, 000 mg/m3 6, 370, 000 mg/m3 _ irritant). 4) 12,100 mg/m8 100 percent 6 to 7 percent Hydrolysed (b) do do Liquid Solid Liquid_ do (0 (aVapour (b) )1. to 1 boor._ _ 1 to 12 hours Few minutes Few minutes 34 to 4 hours ?_ 3 to 21 days do (c) Ito 2 days 1 to 16 weeks 1 to 4 hours >5 mg.-min./m.1 >0.5 ma-minim 0 >2,000 ma-minim 100 mg.-min./m.8 _ 10 mg.-min./m.1 5,000 mg.-min./m , 11,000 mg -min /rn 1 3 200 (9) 1,500 mg./man _ 6 mg./man vx Hydrogen cyanide Cyanogen chloride Phosgene Mustard gas Lethal agent (vesicant)._ Lethal agent. Botulinal toxin -A 0.05 percent Soluble. 630 mg/ma _ Negligible. Solid Solid. Vapour Liquid Do. Few minutes 12 to 48 hours__ do do 2 to 7 days 3,4' to 4 hours to 1 hour 2 to 8 weeks .3 >7,000 mg.-min./m.3 >1,600 mg.-min./m.3 >100 mg.-min./me 0.001 mg. (oral). . _ , mg.-min./m.3 1,500 mg.-min./m.3 0.02 mg.-min./ m.s (7) (8) 4,500 mg./man 'A drop of mustard weighing a few milligrams can produce a sedans blister which will be incapacitating if it interferes with the normal activities of an individual. _ ANNEX B?TEAR AND 110.ASSING GASES Three parameters will be used to qualify the effects of tear gases. These are defined as follows: Threshold of irritation is the atmospheric concentration of the substance (in mg per ma), which, in one minute of exposure, causes Tear ass Lethal index irritation. (mg.min/m9 Tolerance limit is the highest atmospheric - Adamside (DM) concentration (in mg per 01?) which a test Ethyl bromacetate_ 0. I 2-5 15, 000-30, 000 subject can tolerate during one minute of Bromacetone 5 5-50 25, 000 exposure. Omega-chloracetophenone (ON) 1.5 10 30, COO Lethal index Is a dosage, and thus the .05-. I 1-5 40, 000- 75, 000 0-chlorbenzylidene malononitrile (CS) O. 3 -1. 5 5-15 8, 500-25, 000 product of the concentration in the air (in ANNEX C.-SOME BIOLOGICAL AGENTS THAT MAY BE USED TO ATTACK MAN mg per ni,) and the time of exposure (in The data given under "Lethal index" are minutes), which causes mortality. Data for from animal experiments with various various tear gases are given in the following species. table. T reshold of Tolerance irritation limit (mg/m8) (maims) Disease Viral: Chikungrinyna fever Probably high_ None R to 6 days_ 2 weeks tea few Very low (less than 1 percent)._ None None. months. Dengue fever .iiiah do 5 to 8 days... A few days to weeks do Eastern equine encephalitis do do do Do. 5 to 15 days__ 1 to 3 weeks . High (greater than 60 do Under development. Tick-borne encephalitis do dopercent). Venezuelan equine encephalitis do do Ito 2 weeks_ 1 week to a few months.. Variable up to 30 percent do_. Do. Influenza do do 2 to 5 days... 3 to 10 days Low less than 1 percent) do Do. 1 to 3 days... 3 to 10 days Usually low, except for de Available. Yellow fever complicated cases. Smallpox ..... do do High do 3 to 6 days... Ito weeks High (up to 40 percent) do Do. 7 to 16 days 12 to 24 days Variable but usually high (up do Do. to 30 percent). Transmis- Incubation - Infectivity I sibilitys period, Duration of illness 5 Mortality3 Antibiotic therapy Vaccination Ricksettsial: Q-fever do None or 10 to 21 days Ito 3 weeks Low (usually less than 1 Effective Under development negligible. (sometimes percent.) shorter). Psittacosis to Moderately 4 to 15 days_ 1 to several weeks high Moderately high do None. Rocky Mountain spotted fever do None 3 to 10 days 2 weeks to several months. Usually high (up to 80 percent.) do Under development. Epidemic typhus do chi_ 6 to 15 days_ A few weeks to months Variable but usually high (up do Available. to 70 percent). Bacterial: Anthrax (pulmonary) Moderately Negligible_ _ __ 1 to 5 days... 3 to 5 days Almost invariably fatal Effective if given very Do. high. - Brucellosis We None early. Cholera High 1 to 3 weeks . Several weeks to months_ Low (less than 5 percent) Moderately effective Under development Glanders h None 1 to 5 days_ _ Ito several weeks Usually high (up to 80 percent) do Available. Melioidosis do dO 2 to 14 days_ 4 to 6 weeks Almost invariably fatal Little effective. None. Plague (pneumonic) do High 1 to 5 days._ 4 to 20 days Almost 100 percent fatal Moderately effective Do. 2 to 5 days__ 1 to 2 days do Moderately effective if Available. Tularemia .... do given early. Negligible_ 1 to NI days 2 to several weeks Uusually low sometimes high Effective Do. Typhoid fever f up to 60 percent). Moderately Moderately 1103 weeks A few to several weeks_ Moderately high up to (10 high. high. Moderately effective Do. percent). Dysentery Nigh High 1 to 3 days A few days to weeks Low to moderately high de- Effective None. Fungal: Coccidioido mycosis pending on strain. -. do None__ 1 to 3 weeks.. A few weeks to months_ Low. None Do. . Infectivity: indicates the potency of the parasite to penetrate and multiply in the host's orge- agent, resistance of the host and many other factors. It also should be noted that if the agents _ nism, regardless of the clinical manifestation of illness. In fact, there are several agents by which concerned would be deliberately spread in massiVe concentrations as agents of warfare, the in. great majorityof the exposed population will be infected without developing clinica symptoms. cubation,periods might be shorter and the resulting symptoms more serious. As to mortality, this of any arthropod vector. 8 Transmissibility: This refers to direct transmission from man to man without the intervention refers to the ratio between the number of fatalities to the number of diseased (not to that of in- 5 The figures listed under incubation period, duration of disease, and mortality are based on 4 The availability of vaccines is no indication of their degree of effectiveness. fected) individuals, if no treatment is given. epidemiological data. They vary, according to variations in virulence and dose of the infecting Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 9541 CHAPTER III. ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS AFFECT- ING THE USE OF CHEMICAL AND BACTERIOLOGI- CAL (BIOLOGICAL) CONSIDERATIONS A. General considerations 217. Extraneous factors influence the be- haviour of chemical and bacteriological (bio- logical) weapons to a far greater extent than they do any other kind of armament. Some, such as wind and rain, relate to the state of the physical environment, and to a certain eitent can be evaluated quantitatively. Others, which reflect the general ecological situation, and the living conditions and physiological state of the populations ex- posed to the effects of the weapons, are more difficult to define; their influence?though they could be considerable?cannot be quan- tified. 218. This limitation applies particularly to bacteriological (biological) weapons. The natural course of infectious diseases?for example in influenza epidemics?shows that they are governed by so many uncontrollable factors that the way they develop cannot as a rule be foreseen. This would also be prob- ably true of pathogenic agents which were deliberately dispersed. On the other hand, the knowledge gained through the study of epidemiology, and in the study of artificial dispersions of bacteriological (biological) agents, both in the laboratory and the field, has shed some light on some of the factors concerned. 219. The ecological problem is the main theme of chapter IV. The factors which con- cern the variability of the human target, e.g. physiological and living conditions, and levels of protection, have already been described in chapters I and II. This chapter is con- cerned with physical environment (climate, terrain). 1. Phenomena Associated With the Dispersal of Chemical and Bacteriological (Biologi- cal) Agents 220. It has already been pointed out that chemical substances and living organisms capable of being used as weapons are ex- tremely varied in their nature and in their effects. On the other hand, regarded solely from the standpoint of their physical state after dispersion in the atmosphere, they can clearly be placed in one or the other of the following categories: Liquid drops and droplets of varying size; (diameters greater than about 10 Microns). More or less finely divided liquid and solid aerosols; (diameters less than about 10 Mi- cron.$). Vapours. 221. Almost always, moreover, especially in the case of liquid chemical agents, the result of dispersion is a mixture of these different phases; thus, a liquid dispersed by an ex- plosive charge gives rise to a mixture of aerosol and vapour, while aerial spraying may produce a mixture of droplets and aero- sols. Solid chemical substances will be in aerosol form, and this will also be true, as has already been pointed out, of bacterio- logical (biological) agents. 222. Thus, chemical attacks would usually take effect simultaneously in two forms: Contamination of the ground at, and in the immediate vicinity of, the target by di- rect deposition of the agent at the time of dispersion, and by subsequent settling of large particles; Formation of a toxic cloud consisting of fine particles or droplets, of aerosol, and possibly of vapour. 223. Most bacteriological (biological) at- tacks would be designed primarily to create an infectious aerosol as an inhalation haz- ard. Some ground contamination might, however, also result when infectious par- ticles settled on the ground. 224. Both ground contamination and toxic or infectious clouds would be immediately subject to the physical action of the atmos- phere. 225. If the soil contaminants are liquid chemical agents, they would either evapo- rate, producing a sustained secondary cloud, or be absorbed by the ground, or diluted or destroyed by atmospherical precipitation. If they were solid agents, whether chemical or biological, they might be returned to a state of suspension by air currents, and perhaps carried out of the initially contaminated zone. 226. As it becomes formed, the toxic or infectious cloud is immediately exposed to atmospheric factors, and is straightaway carried along by air currents. At the same time, the particles within it are deposited at different rates according to their mass, and reach the ground at varying distances from the point of emission, depending on wind velocity (up to several kilometres in -the case of particles less than a few tens of microns in diameter) . The mechanically stable frac- tion of the aerosol (particles under 5 mi- crons in diameter) remains in suspension, and may be carried along for considerable distances. B. The influence of atmospheric factors on clouds of aerosols or vapours 227. The movement of a toxic or infectious cloud after its formation depends chiefly on the combined effects of wind and 8,t1n0S- pheric conditions. The cloud is carried a longer or shorter distance by the wind; at the same time it is dispersed and diluted at a faster or slower rate by turbulence of the atmosphere and by local disturbances of mechanical origin resulting from the rough- ness of the ground. 228. The cloud may rise rapidly in the at- mosphere or remain in the immediate vicin- ity of the ground, thus retaining its de- structive power for a greater or lesser time depending on whether the air layer in which it is released is in a stable or unstable state. 1. State of the Atmosphere 229. The state of the atmosphere plays such an important role in the behaviour of aerosol clouds that one might almost say that it is the predominant factor in de- termining the outcome of an attack, the ef- fect of which could be considerably reduced, or almost nullified, were the atmosphere very unstable, or very serious if it was in a state of pronounced and prolonged stability. For this reason the mechanisms governing the turbulent movements of air, caused by differences in temperatures between super- imposed air layers require some explanation (see fig. 2) . 230. Disregarding the frictional layer of air close to the ground, where mechanical turbulence resulting from friction between the air and the rough ground over which it moves creates special conditions, air tem- perature in the troposphere decreases on average at the rate of 0.64? C for every 100 metres of altitude. Very frequently, how- ever, as a result of thermal exchange between the air and the ground, a cooler air layer may be formed beneath a mass of hot light air; in such conditions, the lower air layer, with its greater density, does not tend to rise and the atmosphere is said to be in "stable equilibrium". 231. The situation, in which the vertical temperature gradient becomes inverted, is known as "temperature inversion", while the air layer affected by the phenomenon is termed as "inversion layer". When present it is eminently favourable to the persistence of toxic clouds. 232. After a day of sunshine, the surface of the ground cools rapidly, with the result that the layer of air close to the ground cools more rapidly than those above it. Both the intensity of the inversion and the thick- ness of the air layer involved increase to a maximum towards 4 a.m., and then decrease again, finally disappearing shortly after sunrise. This variation is very marked when the sky is clear, and in favourable conditions the inversion may last from fourteen to eighteen hours a day, depending on the season. 233. Very often, however, especially in winter or in overcast weather, when the rays of the sun are not sufficiently intense to heat the surface of the ground, the temper- ature inversion may last' for several days. This condition has characterized all the dis- asters caused by industrial pollution; for example, the smog which claimed 4,000 vic- tims in London in 1952 took its toll during a period of atmospheric stability which lasted for seven days. 234. Figure 2 shows the evolution of a toxic cloud depending on the state of the atmos- phere. (Fig. 2 not printed.) 235. Apart from this kind of low-altitude inversion, which is most important in the context of this report since it governs the behaviour of toxic clouds released close to the ground, similar process may take place on a large scale at higher altitudes (hundreds of thousands of metres) whenever a cool air layer is formed beneath a hot air mass. This may take place over large, cold expanses (i.e. large expanses of land or sea, cloud or fog masses, etc.). Because of the high alti- tude at which they form, these inversion layers have little effect on toxic clouds released at ground level; but in the case of the long-distance transfer of spores they may act as a screen or reflector. 236. The configuration of the surface of the earth in a particular area, which alters the thermal exchange pattern, may also be conducive to the formation of an inversion. For example, inversions are a customary phenomenon in winter in deep valleys sur- rounded by high peaks, and occur more fre- quently in the neighbourhood of slopes fac- ing the north than on southern slopes. This ? also occurs whenever hills of any size en- close a plain or basin, interrupting the gen- eral flow of air and preventing mixing from taking place. It is interesting to note that apart from the periodic appearance of smog in London, all the other major accidents re- sulting from air pollution have occurred in regions where the land configuration fits this description. For example, the small town of Donora, in the United States, lies in a rela- tively narrow plain bordered by high hills. In 1948 air pollution in the course of an inversion lasting five days led to twenty deaths and 6,000 cases of illness among the town's 14,000 inhabitants. 2. Urban Areas 237. The case of urban built-up areas is more complex, and it may even be said that each one possesses its own micro-climate, depending on its geographical situation, its topography and the layout and nature of its buildings. 238. Because the materials from which they are constructed are better conductors, and because their surfaces face in very varied directions, buildings Usually capture and reflect solar radiation better than does the natural ground. Urban complexes therefore heat up more quickly than does the sur- rounding countryside, and the higher tem- perature is still further augmented by do- mestic and industrial heating plants. The re- sults in a. flow of cool air from the neigh- bouring countryside towards the hot centre of the town, beginning shortly after sunrise, decreasing at the beginning of the afternoon and then rising again to a maximum shortly before sunset. This general flow, which is of low velocity, is disturbed and fragmented at ground level by the buildings, forming local currents flowing in all directions. 239. This constant mechanical turbulence, to which is added the thermal turbulence caused by numerous heat-generating sources, should prevent the establishment in towns of a temperature inversion at low al- titude. In fact, however, inversions do occur, when conditions are otherwise favourable, but the inversion layer is situated at a higher Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9542 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE August 11, 1969 altitude than over the surrounding country- side (30 to 150 metres). 240. At night, local inversions may be gen- erated at low altitude as a result of rapid radiation from the roofs of houses; thus in a narrow street lined with buildings of equal height, an inversion layer may be created at roof-top level which will persist until dawn. 241. Fog is more frequent over towns than over open country (+30 per cent in summer and +100 per cent in winter). The process of fog formation is accelerated by the parti- cles, dust and smoke which form a dome over the town. At night these particles act as nuclei around which the fog oondenses, the fog contributing in its turn to the re- tention of the particles in the dome. Fog will obviously have the same concentrating effect on particles originating in toxic clouds. 242. One final point which should be noted is that toxic aerosols and Vapours may take some time to penetrate enolbised spaces. Once they have done so, they niWy continue as a hazard for very long unless adequate ventila- tion is provided. 3. Effect of Wind and Topography 243. The wind carries and apreads the toxic or infectious cloud, which is simultaneously diluted by turbulence. The distance which the cloud travels before its concentration has fallen to a level below which it is no longer harmful depends on the velocity of the wind and the state of the atmciaphere. Since to- pography also produces changes in the nor- mal wind pattern, it too plays an important part in determining the direction of travel of toxic clouds, sometimes focusing their ef- fects in individual areas. Local winds may also be established as a result of differences In the heat absorbed by, and radiated from, different ground surfaces. 244. These local, surface winds, which af- fect the air layer nearest the ground up to 300 metres, are frequent and widespreati in mountain ranges and near sea coasts. There are slope breezes, valley breezes, sea breezes and land breezes; and they could shift a toxic cloud in directions which cann.ot be pre- dicted from a study of the general meteo- rology of the area. The breezes develop ac- cording to a regular cycles Luring the day, under the influence of solar-radiation, the air moves up the valleys and slopes, and moves from the see, towards the land; at night these currents are reversed. In temperate climates land and sea breezes are predominant during the summer; but they are masked by the general wind pattern during the other sea- sons of the year. They are predominant in subtropical and tropical regions through- out the year. 4. Example of Combined Effects of Wind and the State of the Atmosphere on a Cloud 245. There is some similarity between the evolution of toxic blonds Which could be produced by chemical and bacteriological (biological) attacks and that of clouds con- taining industrial pollutants, so much so that the mathematical models developed for forecasting atmospheric pollution can be ap- plied, with a few modifications, to toxic clouds. But the initial characteristics of the two are as a rule different. Characteristic features of chemical or bacteriological (bio- logical) attacks are the multiplicity and high yield of the sources of emission and their very short emission time, all of which are factors making for a greater initial concentration in the cloud than the concEntration of pol- lutants in industrial clouds. 246. Figure 4 indicates the order of magni- tude of these phenomena, and demonstrates the schematic form, and for different at- mospheric conditions, the size of area which would be covered by toxic clouds originat- ing from a chemical attack using Sarin, with an intensity arbitrarily chosen at 500 kg/km. It shows that the theoretical distance of travel by the cloud, determined for bare and unobstructed ground, may exceed 100 km. In practice the atmosphere must remain stable for more than ten hours in order to enable the cloud to travel such distances, a condition which, although certainly not ex- ceptional, is fairly uncommon. (Figure 4 not printed.) 247. This figure illustrates the effect of atmospheric conditions on the distance a toxic cloud can be carried by the wind. 248. The example chosen is that of a medium-intensity (500 kg) attack with Sarin on a circular objective 1 km in diam- eter. The wind velocity is 7 km/h. 249. Each of the lines represents a con- tour of the hazard zone, i.e. the zone in which any unprotected person would be ex- posed to the effects of the agent. 250. Under highly unstable conditions (for example, on a very sunny day), this hazard zone is no greater than the area of objective aimed at (the circle at the left end of the figure). On the other hand, in any other situation?(1) slightly unstable, (2) neutral, (3) slightly stable, (4) moderately stable or (5) highly stable?the distance traveled will be greater, and it may extend almost 100 km if conditions remain highly stable for a suf- ficiently long time. It must be noted, how- ever, that the distance of 100 km could be reached only if a very marked inversion persisted for about fourteen hours (100+7) ; such a situation is quite rare. 251. Corresponding evaluations cannot be made for an urban area, since the parameters Involved are too numerous and too little understood. But it may be presumed that most of the characteristics of the urban micro-climate would tend to increase the persistence of chemical clouds. This is seri- ous cause for concern, when it is remembered that in highly industrialized countries 50 to 90 per cent of the population live in urban areas 252. To sum up, a stable or neutral atmos- phere in equilibrium might cause a toxic cloud produced by a chemical or bacterio- logical (biological) attack to persist for hours after it had exercised its military effect, which could generally be expected to mate- rialize in the first few minutes following the attack. These conditions could obtain not only at night, but also during long winter periods over vast continental expanses. If a neutral atmosphere in equilibrium were as- sociated with a light wind irregular in direc- tion, then the area affected could be rela- tively large, and, assuming an adequately heavy initial attack, the concentrations Would be high. 5. Special Features of Bacteriological (Biological) Aerosols 253. So far as physical phenomena are concerned (horizontal and vertical move- ments, sedimentation, dilution, etc.), bacter- iological (biological) aerosols would be generally affected in the same way as chem- ical clouds of aerosol and vapour, but not necessarily to the same extent. But since the effective minimum does for bacteriologi- cal (biological) agents are considerably smaller than for chemical agents, bacterio- logical (biological) aerosols would be ex- pected to remain effective even in a very dilute state and, consequently, that they could contaminate much larger areas than could chemical clouds. An example is given In chapter II. 254. There would be no limit to the hori- zontal transport of micro-organisms, if there were none to the capacity of the organisms to survive in the atmosphere. Thus if the microbial aerosol particles were so small that their speed of fall remained close to the speed of the vertical air movements in the frictional layer (under average conditions this is on the order of 10 cm/s), the agents, whether alive or dead, would remain sus- pended and travel very considerable dis- tances. Even if bacteriological (biological) clouds were to move only in the air layer nearest the ground, they could cover very large areas. For example, in one experiment 600 litres of Bacillus globigii (a harmless spore-forming bacterium which is highly re- sistant to aerosolization and environmental stresses) were released off shore; bacteria were found more than 30 km inland. Organ- isms were found over 250 kin, which was the entire area within which there were monitoring stations during the trial. The ac- tual area covered was much more extensive. 255. On the other hand, most pathogenic agents are highly vulnerable when outside the organism in which they normally repro- duce, and are liable to biological inactiva- tion, which is sometimes rapid, in the aerosol state. This inactivation process is governed by several factors (such as temperature, humidity, solar radiation, etc.) which are now the subject of aerobiological research. 256. The size of the infective particles in a bacteriological (biological) aerosol is highly significant to their ability to initiate disease as a result of inhalation. It has been established that the terminal parts of the respiratory tract are the most susceptible sites for infection by inhalation. As with chemical agents, the penetration and reten- tion of inhaled bacteriological (biological) particles in the lungs is very dependent on particle size, which is primarily determined by the composition of the basic material and the procedure of aerosolization, as pointed out in chapter I. 257. The influence of particle size of aero- sol infectivity is illustrated in table 1, which shows that there is a direct relationship be- tween the LD5, and particle diameter of an aerosol of Franciscella tularensis. TABLE 1.?NUMBERS OF BACTERIA OF FRAN- CISCELLA TilLARENSIS REQUIRED TO KILL 50 PERCENT OF EXPOSED ANIMALS ? ? Numbers of bacterial cells LDg, Diameter of particles Guinea Rhesus (microns) pigs monkeys 3 17 7 6,500 240 12 20,000 540 22 170, 000 3,000 C. Influence of atmospheric factors on chemical agents 1. Influence of Temperature 258. An attack with a liquid chemical agent, as already pointed out, would be as a rule result. in the formation of a cloud of small droplets, aerosol and vapour in vary- ing proportions, as well as in ground con- tamination, all of which would be affected by air temperature. 259. Influence on. droplet and aerosol clouds: Only particles having dimensions within certain limits penetrate and are re- tained by the lungs. The larger ones are trapped in the upper part of the respiratory tract (e.g. nose and trachea), whereas the smaller ones are exhaled. Penetration and retention have maximum values in the sive range of 0.5 to 3 microns. 260. Liquid chemical agents exercise their effects both by penetrating the skin and by inhalation. The material absorbed by the lungs acts immediately, whereas there is a delay before the effects become manifest from an agent absorbed through the skin or the mucous membrane of the upper air pas- sages. 261. A high temperature favours the evap- oration of particles which will decrease in size and thus reach the lungs, contributing to the immediate effect; an additional quan- tity of vapour is produced which contributes to the same effect. 262. Effect on ground contamination: The temperature of the air, and even more that Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE of the ground, have a marked effect on the way ground contamination develops and persists. The temperature of the ground, which depends on the thermal characteris- tics of its constituent materials and on the degree of its exposure to the sun, either in- creases or reduces evaporation, and conse- quently decreases or increases the duration of contamination. The surface temperature Is extremely variable from point to point, depending on the type and colour of the soil; a temperature difference of 20? has been noted between the asphalt surface of a road and the surrounding fields. The tem- perature gradient also varies during the course of the day; in clear weather the dif- ferences may range from 15 to 30? C. in a temperate climate, and up to 50? C. in a desert climate. High temperatures of both air and ground favour the rate of evapora- tion, thus reducing the persistence of sur- face contamination; wind, because of the mechanical and thermal turbulence it creates, has a similar effect. 263. To illustrate the effect of these vari- able factors, it is worth noting that the con- tamination of bare ground by unpurifled mustard, at a mean rate of 30 g/m2, will persist for several days or even weeks at temperatures below 10? C at medium wind velocities, whereas it lasts for only a day and a half at 25? C. Furthermore, because of ac- celerated evaporation at high temperatures, the cloud produced is more concentrated, and the danger of vapour inhalation in, and downwind of, the contaminated area becomes greater. 2. Influence of Humidity 264. In contrast to high temperature, high relative humidity may lead to the enlarge- ment of aerosol particles owing to the con- densation of water vapour around the nuclei which they constitute. The quantity of in- halable aerosol would thus diminish, with a consequent reduction in the immediate ef- fects of the attack. 265. On the other hand, a combination of high temperature and high relative humidity causes the human body to perspire pro- fusely. This intensifies the action of mustard- type vesicants, and also accelerates the trans- fer through the skin of percutaneous nerve agents. 3. Influence of Atmospheric Precipitation 266, Light rain disperses and spreads the chemical agent which thus presents a larger surface for evaporation, and its rate of evap- oration rises. Conversely a heavy rain dilutes and displaces the contaminating product, facilitates its penetration into the ground, and may also accelerate the destruction of certain water-sensitive compounds (e.g. lewisite, a powerful blistering agent). 267. Snow increases the persistence of con- tamination by slowing down the evaporation of liquid contaminants. In the particular case of mustard gas, the compound is con- verted into a pasty mass which may persist until the snow melts. 268. Soil humidity, atmospheric precipita- tion and temperature also exercise a powerful influence on the activity of herbicides, which are much more effective at higher humidities and temperatures, than in dry weather and at low temperatures. This applies equally to preparations applied to plants and to those introduced into the soil. 4. Influence of Wind 269. As vapors emanating from ground contaminated by liquid chemical agents be- gin to rise, the wind comes into play. The distance the vaport will be carried depends on the wind velocity and the evaporation rate of the chemical, which will itself change with variations in ground and air tempera- tures. The distance is maximal (several kilometres) when there is a combination of the conditions promoting evaporation (high soil temperature) persistence of the cloud (stable atmosphere) and dispersal of the cloud (gentle winds). These conditions exist in combination at the end of a sunny day, at the time when a temperature inversion exists. 5. Influence of Soil?Dependent Factors 270. Nature of the soil. The soil itself, through its texture and the porosity of its constituent materials, plays an important role in. the persistence of liquid chemical contaminants, which may penetrate to a greater or lesser extent, or remain on the surface. In the former case the risk of con- tamination by contact is reduced in the short term, but persistence will be increased to the extent that factors favourable to evaporation (temperature, wind) are pre- vented from acting. In the latter case, when the contaminant remains on the surface, the danger of contact contamination remains considerable, but persistence is reduced. Thus persistence in sandy soils may be three times as long as in clay. 271. Vegetation. Vegetation prevents a liquid contaminant from reaching the soil and also breaks it up, thus encouraging evaporation. But at the same time the short- term danger is enhanced because of the widespread dispersibn of the contaminant on foliage, and the consequently increased risk of contact contamination. 272. The canopy of foliage in dense forests (e.g., conifers, tropical jungle), traps and holds a considerable portion of a dispersed chemical agent, but the fraction which none the less reaches the soil remains there for a long time, since the atmospheric factors in- volved in the process of evaporation (tem- perature, wind, over the soil, turbulence) are hardly significant in such an environ- ment as compared with open spaces. 273. Too little is known about the absorp- tion and retention of toxic substances by plants to make it possible to assess the re- sulting danger to the living creatures whose food supply they may constitute. Like cer- tain organic pesticides, it is probable that other toxic chemicals may penetrate into plant systems via the leaves and roots. Cases could then arise where all trace of contami- nant had disappeared from the soil but with the toxic substance presisting in vegetation, 274. Urban areas. It can also be assumed that, in spite of a surface temperature which is on the average higher, contaminants might persist longer in built-up areas than over open ground. There are two reasons for this. Structural, finishing and other building ma- terials are frequently porous, and by absorb- ing and retaining liquid chemical agents more readily, they increase the duration of contamination. Equally the factors which, in open country, tend to reduce persistence (sunshine, wind over ground) play a less important part in a built-up city. 275. Climate, in general, may exercise an Indirect influence on the effect of percutane- ous chemical agents, simply because of the fact that in hot climates the lightly clad inhabitants are very vulnerable to attacks through the skin. 276. The predominating influence of cli- matic factors and terrain on the persistence of contamination Indicates that the a priori classification of chemical agents as persistent or non-persistent, solely on the basis of dif- ferent degrees of volatility, is somewhat ar- bitrary since, depending on circumstances, the same material might persist for periods ranging from a few hours to several weeks, or even months. D. Influence of atmospheric factors on bac- teriological (biological) agents 277. Infectious agents, when used to infect by way of food and water, or by means of animal vectors are, of course, hardly subject to the influence of climatic factors. But any large-scale attack by bacteriological (bio- logical) agents would probably be carried S 9543 out by aerosols, in which the agents would be more susceptible to environmental influ- ences than chemical agents. 278. Physioo-chemical atanospheric factors have a destructive effect on aerosol-borne micro-organisms. Their viability decreases gradually over a period of hours or days at a progressively diminishing rate. Some decay very rapidly: for example, certain bio-aerosols used for pest control in temperate climates, and dispersed under average conditions in the cold and transitional seasons, show a rate of decay of 5 per cent per minute. 279. This apparent vulnerability of micro- organism in aerosols might cast some doubt on the possible effectiveness of bacteriological (biological) attacks. However there are var- ious means by which the rate of decay in the aerosol can be considerably reduced. For ex- ample: the use of very high concentrations of agent; the use of suitably "modeled" path- ogenic strains; or the protection of aerosol particles by encapsulating them in certain organic compounds. 280. These procedures, which prolong the survival of micro-organisms in air, could pre- sumably also be applied to potential agents of bacteriological (biological) warfare. Means are also available for prolonging the survival of micro-organisms in water, soil, etc. 1. Influence of Temperature 281. The effect of temperature on the sur- vival of micro-organisms in bacteriological (biological) aerosols is not highly significant in the temperature ranges generally encoun- tered. As a general rule, aerosol-borne bio- logical agents will be destroyed more rapidly the more the temperature rises. On the other hand, in some circumstances high tempera- tures may act on bacteriological (biological) aerosols in the same way as on chemical aero- sols, that is to say, particle size will be di- minished by evaporation, and thus their rate of entry into the lungs will be enhanced. 2. Influence of Humidity 282. Relative humidity is the most impor- tant of the atmospheric conditions which af- fect the rate of decrease of viability of micro- organisms in the air. The extent of its effect varies with different micro-organisms, with the nature of the suspending fluid from which the aerosol is disseminated, with the manner of its dissemination (as a spray or as a dry powder). As a general rule, the rate of inactivation is greater at lower relative hu- midity although with some organisms maxi- mum inactivation occurs in the middle range of relative humidity (30-70 per cent). The rate of inactivation will, however, tend to decrease with time, and may become ex- tremely low when a state of equilibrium (sta- bilization) between the particles and their environment has been established. This im- plies that irrespective of relative humidity values, the final infective concentration of a stabilized aerosol may still be above the threshold minimum dose for infection by in- halation. Even SO, microbial survival in a stabilized aerosol may be further reduced by sudden variations in atmospheric humidity. 283. The effectiveness of aerosol-borne bacteriological (biological) agents depends not only on their capacity to survive in the air. Also important is their low rate of sedi- mentation, combined with the capacity of the micro-organisms to spread and penetrate into buildings, so contaminating surfaces and materials indoors as well as outdoors. The possibility that some infective agents can survive for a long time in such condi- tions, and the fact that environmental duet particles may exercise a protective influence on organisms have been demonstrated on many occasions. Studies made in hospitals have shown that surviving micro-organisms can be dispersed from sites which have come to be called "secondary reservoirs", and that they may become sources of new infections, carried either through the air or by contact. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9544 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 11, 1969 3. Influence of Solar Radiation 284. The ultra-violet part of the solar spectrum has a powerful germicidal effect. Bacterial spores are much less sensitive to this radiation than are -either viruses or vegetative bacteria, and fungal spores are even less sensitive than baoterial spores. The destructive effect of solar radiation on micro- organisms is reduced whensrelative humidity is high (over 70 per cent). Air pollution including a high proportign of atmospheric dust, also provides some erotection. 285. Ultra-violet light exercises its destruc- tive effects on micro-orgastisms through the structural degradation of Vie nucleic acids which carry the genetic Informations Most research on this subject hale been carried out on microbes in liquid suspeissions, but the results of studies of aerosOl-borne microbes seem to lead to similar conclusions. 286. The germicidal effeeit of ultra-violet radiation has been known foe a long time and used in combating airborAe infections in schools, military builclinge and hospitals. The problem of proper radiation dosage, and proper techniques, owever, still remain to be salved. 287. The lethal effect of sainlight on micro- organisms is less marked, although still ap- parent, in diffuse light. This is why a bac- teriological (biological) attack, if one ever materialized, would be more probably under- taken in darkness: 4. Influence of Atmospheric Precipitatidn 288. Rain and snow have relatively little effect on bacteriological (biological) aerosols. 5. Influence of the Chemical Composition of the Atmosphere 289. Little is known about the influence on the viability of mirco-organienis of the chem- ical compounds present in the atmosphere. Oxygen promotes the inactivation of aerosol- borne agents, particularly in conditions of low humidity, and recent studies have also demonstrated that an unstable bactericidal factor (formed by combination between ozone and gaseous combustion products of petroleum) is present in the air, particularly downwind of heavily populated areas. 6. General Effects of climate 290. Climate may also have a general and considerable influence on the development of epidemics and epizootics, in so far as the pro- liferation of vectors which spread disease may be encouraged, given the right condi- tions. This is indicated by the way myxoma- tosis developed in Australia. Although several attempts in 1927, and then from 1936 to 1943, to impart the disease to Australian rabbits failed, the epizootic spread rapidly from 1950 onwards, apparently for the sole reason that the summer, which was particularly rainy that year, was associated with an exceptional proliferation in the flooded Murray River valley of the mosquitoes which carry the disease. 291. Atmospheric humidity and tempera- ture also have a strong influence on micro- organisms acting upon vegetation. CHAPTER IV. POSSIBLE Loisc-resier EFFECTS OF CHEMICAL AND BACTERIOLOGIdAI, (BIOLOGICAL) WARFARE ON HUMAN HEALTH AND ECOLOGY A. Introduction. 292. So far this report has dealt essentially with the potential short-torm effects of chemical and bacteriological (biological) war- fare. The possible long-term effects of the agents concerned need to be considered against the background of thetrends whereby man's environment is being constantly modi- fied, as it becomes transformed to meet his ever-increasing needs. Some Of the changes that have occurred have been unwittingly adverse. The destruction of forests has created deserts, while grasslands have been destroyed by over-grazing. The air we breathe and our rivers become polluted, and chemical pesticides, despite the good they do, also threaten with undesirable secondary effects The long-term impact of possible chemical and bacteriological (biological) warier clearly needs to be considered within an adequate ecological framework. 293. Ecology may be defined as the study of the interrelationships of organisms on the one hand and of their interactions with the physical environment in which they are *found an the other. The whole complex of plants and animals within a specific type of environment?a forest, a marsh, a savan- nah?forms a community comprising all the plant life and all the living creatures?from the microorganisms and worms in the soil, to the insects, birds and mammals above the ground?within that environment, and the understanding of their interrelationships also necessitates a knowledge of the physical characteristics of the environment which bear on the living complex. Ecological com- munities are normally in dynamic equilib- rium, which is regulated by the interaction of population density, available food, natural epidemics, seasonal changes and the compe- tition of species for food and space. 294. Man has his special ecological prob- lems. His numbers are multiplying fast, and increasing population requires commensurate increases in food production. The production and distribution of adequate food for the population which is predicted for the latter part of this century, and which will go on increasing through the next, will allow no relaxation in the effort which has already proved so successful. Food production has increased phenomenally in the past fifty years, primarily because of (1) improved agri- cultural practices, and particularly because of a marked increase in the use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides; (2) the develop- ment of genetically improved plants, herbs and flocks; and (3) increased industrializa- tion of food-producing processes. There is hope that steps such as these will continue to bear fruit. 295. But while the use of fertilizers, herbi- cides and pesticides has brought about a massive increase in food production, it has a.sio added to the pollution of soil and water, and as a result has altered our ecological environment in an enduring way. So too have other features of our industrial civili- zation. The motor car has been a very potent factor in increasing air pollution in towns and cities. The increasing population of the world creates unprecedented wastes, and the methods used to dispose of it?burying it, burning it, or discharging it into streams or lakes?have further polluted the environ- ment. The remarkable development of syn- thetic and plastic materials in recent years has also added a new factor to the short- and long-term biological effects on man. Every new advance on our technological civ- ization helps to transform the ecological framework within Which we evolved. From this point of view the existence and possible use of chemicals and bactriological (biologi- cal) agent in warfare have to be regarded as an additional threat, and as a threat which might have enduring consequences, to our already changing environment. B. Consequences to man of upsetting the ecological equilibrium . tilizers and more productive hybrid seeds came widespread, the increase was eleven e quintals. This is characteristic of What has happened everywhere where fertilizers have been used on a large scale. 297. The beneficial effect of the use of modern chemical pesticides also does not need spelling out. It is estimated that the present annual world loss in production due to weeds and parasites is still approximately 460 million quintals of wheat and 360 mil- lion quintals of maize, and that to eliminate this waste will mean the use of even more pesticides than are now being consumed, 298. What has to be realized about modern agricultural practices is that without them the increases in the output of food which the world needs could never be achieved. Unless production mounts everywhere, those who have not yet cast off the burdens of living in a primitive agricultural world will never reach the level of civilization to which all aspire. 299. But, as already indicated, the grew' increase in the use of fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides does have deleterious side effects. For example, in Switzerland, sur- face waters and springs have been contam- inated in times of high rainfall by excessive amounts of fertilizers corresponding to 0,3- 0.5 kg of phosphorous and 45 kg of nitro- gen per hectare per year. This kind of thing occurs elsewhere as well, and it cannot but help transform -for all we know adversely.. theenvironment in which living matter in- cluding fish otherwise thrive. 300. The dangers of the side effects of modern pesticides are also beginning to be appreciated, and are already beginning to be guarded against in advanced countries. Except in high dosage, these substances act only on lower organisms, although some organophosphorous compounds are toxic to man and other vertebrates. Less selective agents may be toxic to soil bacteria, plank- ton, snails and fish. Chlorinated hydrocar- bons, such as DDT, are toxic only in un- usually high dosages, but accumulate in fat, and deposit in the liver and the central nervous system. Following surface applica- tion, pesticides enter the soil and seep into underground waters; or become washed by rain into rivers, lakes and reservoirs. It is theoretically possible that in some situa- tions, in which non-selective chemical pesti- cides are used, disruption of the ecological equilibrium could lead to the long-term sup- pression of useful animals and plants. These are dangers which only constant vigilance will avert. 301. Detergents are another modern chem- ical development whose use has had to be regulated, since they have a direct short- term effect on certain types of natural food such as daphniae and the algae which are eaten by fish. The first detergents which came on the market led to enormous quanti- ties of foam on river, and this in turn re- duced the supply of oxygen for organisms living in the water. They also damage the earth by affecting soil bacteria. Such de- tergents, which resist destruction even by the most modern water treatment Methods, have all but disappeared from use and have been replaced by others, which can be al- most completely destroyed by waste water treatment. 302. In the context of the possible long- term effects of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons, we have finally to note that towns and cities are growing all over the world, and that in the developed coun- tries, conurbations (fusion a cities with loss of suburbs) have reached population levels approaching 50 million. Such great concentrations of people require very com- plicated arrangements for supply of food, water and other materials, transport and general administration. The use of chemical or bacteriological (biological) weapons against cities would undoubtedly have an ex- 296. The chemical industry doubled its output between 1953 and 1960 and it is still growing fast but the useful results of its continued development are none the less of the utmost importance to man's future. The good effects on food production of the use of artificial fertilizers alone far outweigh any secondary deleterious consequences of their use. The facts are too well known to need spelling out. It is enough to point out, as one example, that maize production in the United States increased between 1923 and 1953, a thirty-year period, by barely four quintals per hectare, but that in the ten years be- tween 1953 and 1964, when the use of fer- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE ceptionally severe disorganizing effect, and the full re-establishment of the services necessary for health, efficient government, and the smooth operation of industry might take a very long time, C. Possible long-term effects of chemical and bacteriological (biological) means of war- fare on man and his environment 303. Chemical weapons, in addition to their highly toxic short-term effects, may also have a long-term effect on the environment in which they are disseminated. If used in very high- concentration they might cause damage by polluting the air, by pointing the water supplies and by poisoning the soil. 304. Bacteriological (biological) weapons could be directed against man's sources of food through the spread of peraistent plant diseases or of infectious animal diseases. There is also the possibility that new epi- demic diseases could be introduced, or old ones reintroduced, which could result in deaths on the scale which characterized the medieval plagues. 1. Chemical Weapons 305. There is no evidence that the chemical agents used in World War I?chlorine, mus- tard, phosgene, and tear-gas?had any un- toward ecological consequences. As already observed, over 120,000 tons of these agents were used during that war, and in some areas which were attacked, concentrations must have added up to hundreds of kilograms per hectare. Theae regions have long since re- turned to normal and fully productive use. 306. The organophosphorous, or nerve, agents have never been used in war, and no corresponding experience is available to help form a judgment about their possible long- term effects. But since these agents are toxic to all forms of animal life, it is to be expected that if high concentrations were dissemi- nated over large areas, and if certain species were virtually exterminated, the dynamic ecological equilibrium of the region might be changed. 307. On the other hand there is no evi- dence to suggest that nerve agents affect food chains in the way DDT and other pesti- cides of the chlorinated hydrocarbon type do. They hydrolyze in water, some of them slowly, so there could be no long-term con- tamination of natural or artificial bodies of water. 308. The use of herbicides during the course of the Viet-Nam conflict has been re- ported extensively in news media, and to a lesaer extent in technical publications. The materials which have been used are 2,4- dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, 2,4,5-trichloro- phenoxyacetic acid, eacodylic acid and picloram. 309. Between 1963 and 1968 these herbicides were used to clear forested areas for mili- tary purposes over some 9,100 km2. This may be divided by forest type as shown in the following table. TABLE 1.?TYPE OF FOREST AND EXTENT AND AREA TREATED WITH HERBICIDES IN SOUTH VIETNAM, 1963-68 Type of forest Extent Area treated kilometers 2 kilometers 2 Open forest (sem ideciduous)___ Mangrove and other aquatic__ Coniferous 50, 150 4, 800 1,250 8, 140 960 0 Total 56, 200 9,100 310. South Viet-Nani is about 172,000 km2 in area, of which about one-third is forested. The area treated with herbicides up to the end of 1968 thus amounts to abput 16 per cent of the forested area, or a little over 6 per cent of the total. 311. There is as yet no scientific evalua- tion of the extent of the long-term ecological changes resulting .fram these attacks. One estimate is that some mangrove forests may need twenty years to regenerate, and fears have been expressed about the future of the animal population they contain. Certain species of bird are known to have migrated from areas that have been attacked. On the other hand, there has been no decline in fish catches, and as fish are well up in the food chain, no serious damage would seem to have been done to the aquatic environ- ment. 312. When a forest in a state of ecological equilibrium is destroyed by cutting, secon- dary forest regenerates, which contains fewer species of plants and animals than were there originally, but larger numbers of those species which survive. If secondary forest is replaced by grassland, these changes are even more mraked. If one or more of the animal species which increases in number is the host of an infection dangerous to man (a zoon- oats) , then the risk of human infection is greatly increased. This is exemplified by the history of scrub typhus in South-East Asia, where the species of rat which maintains the Infection and the vector mite are much more numerous in secondary forest, and even more no in grassland, 50 increasing the risk of the disease being transmitted to people as forest is cleared. 313. In high rainfall areas, deforestation may also lead to serious erosion, and so to considerable agricultural losses. Deserts have been created in this way. 2. Bacteriological (Biological) Weapons Against man 314. New natural foci, in which infection may persist for many years, may be estab- lished after an arosol or other type of bac- teriological (biological) attack. This possible danger can be appreciated when one recalls the epidemiological consequences of the acci- dent introduction of rabies and other veter- inary infections (blue-tongue, African swine fever) into a number of countries. The spred of rabies in Europe following World IT, as a consequence of the disorganization caused by the war, shows how an epidemiologically complicated and medically dangerous situa- tion can emerge even with an infection which had long been successfully controlled, In 1945 there were only three major foci of infection in Czchoslovakia. In the following years, foxes multiplied excessively because farms were left unworked, because of the increased number of many kinds of wild creatures, and also because of the dis- continuation of systematic control. Foxes also came in from across frontiers, and the epizootic gradually worsened. In the period 1952/1966 a total of 888 foci were re- ported, 197 new ones in 1965 alone. Bringing the situation under control demand extra- ordinary and prolonged efforts by the health service: in 1966 alone, 775,000 domestic ani- mals were vaccinated in affected areas of the country. Non the less, the disease has not yet been stamped out. Natural foci cannot be eliminated without organized and long-term International co-operation. 315. Arthropods (insects, ticks) also play an important part, along with other crea- tures, in the maintenance of pathogenic agents in natural foci. A man exposed to a natural focus risks infection, particularly from arthropods, which feed on more than one species of host. A bacteriological (bio- logical) attack might lead to the creation of multiple and densely distributed foci of in- fection from which, if ecological conditions were favourable, natural foci might develop in regions where they had previously never existed, or in areas from which they had been eliminated by effective public health meas- ures. ? 316. On the other hand, the large-scale use of bacterological (biological) weapons might reduce populations of suscepitibIe wild spec- ies below the level at which they could continue to exist. The elimination of a species or group of species from an area would create in the ecological community an empty niche S 9545 which might seriously disturb its equili- brium, or which might be filled by another species more dangerous to man because it carried a zoonosls infection acquired either 'naturally or as a result of the attack. This would result in the establishment of a new natural focus of disease. 317. The gravity of these risks would de- pend on the extent to which the community of species in the country attacked contained animals which were not only susceptible to the infection, but were living in so close a relationship to each other that the infection could become established. For example, not all mosquito species can be infected with yellow fever virus, and if the disease is to become established, those which can become vectors must feed frequently on mammals, such as monkeys, which are also sufficiently susceptible to the infection. A natural focus of yellow fever is therefore very unlikely to become established in any area lacking an adequate population of suitable mosquitos and monkeys. 318. Endemics or enzootics of diseases (i.e. infections spreading at a low rate, but in- definitely, in a human or animal population) could conceivably follow a large-scale at- tack, or might be started by a small-scale sabotage attack, for which purpose the range of possible agents would be much wider, and might even Include such chronic infections as malaria. 319. Malaria is a serious epidemic disease In a susceptible population, but it is difficult to envisage its possible employment as a bacteriological (biological) weapon, because of the complex life cycle of the parasite. Drug-resistant strains of malaria exist in, for example, areas of Asia and South Amer- ica, and their possible extension to areas where mosquitos capable of transmitting the disease already exist, would greatly com- plicate public health measures, and cause a more serious disease problem because of the difficulties of treatment. 320, Yellow fever is still enzootic in the tropical regions of Africa and America. Monkeys and other forest-dwelling primates, together with mosquitos which transmit the virus, constitute natural foci and ensure survival of the virus between epidemics. 321, Importation of this disease is possible wherever a suitable environment and sus- ceptible animal and mosquito hosts exist. This occurred naturally in 1960 when a pre- viously uninfested area of Ethiopia was in- vaded by yellow fever and an epidemic re- sulted in about 15,000 deaths. Because of the inaccessibility of the area, some 8,000-9,000 people had died before the epidemic was recognized. The epidemic was extinguished but it is likely that a permanent focus of yellow fever infection has been established in this area, previosuly free of the disease. It might be extremely serious if the virus were introduced into Asia or the Pacific Is- lands where the disease appears never to have occurred, but where local species of mosquito are crown to be able to transmit it. Serious problems could, also arise if the virus were Introduced into the area of the United States where vector mosquitos still exist, and where millions of people live in an area of a few square kilometers. 322. Another consideration is the possible Introduction of a new species of animal to an area to cause either *long-term disease or economic problems. For example, mon- gooses were introduced many years -ago to some Caribbean islands, and in one at least they have become a serious economic pest of the sugar crop, and an important cause of rabies. The very large economic effect on the introduction of rabbits to Australia is well known. Certain mosquito species (a yellow fever mosquto, Aedes aegypti, and a malaria mosquito, Anopheles gambiae) have natu- rally spread to many areas of the world from their original home in Africa, and have been responsible for serious disease problems in the areas that have been invaded. It is con- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9546 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE August 11, 1969 ceivable that in the war the introduction of such insects on a small (ital.? might be tried for offensive purposes. 323. In addition to the development of new natural foci, another long-term hazard, but one which is very much more speculative than some of the possibilities mentioned above, is that of the establishment of new strains of organisms of altered immunolo- gical characteristics or increased virulence. This might occur if large numbers of people or other susceptible animal species became infected in an area through a bacteriological (biological) attack, thus providing oppor- tunities for new organisms to arise naturally. The appearance from time 1.0 time of immu- nologically different forms of influenza shows the type of thing which might happen. Such altered forms of agents might cause More severe and perhaps more widespread epi- demics than the original attack. Against domestic animals 324. Foot-and-mouth disease is a highly Infectious but largely nen-fatal disease of cattle, swine and other cloven-footed animals It is rarely transmitted front a diseased ani- mal to man, and when it is, the order is a trivial one. 325. The milk yield of diseased cows de- creases sharply and does not reach its normal yield even after complete recovery. Losses range from 9 to 30 per cent of milk yield. In swine, loss from foot-and-mouth are esti- mated at 60-80 per cent among suckling pigs. Foot-and-mouth is endemic in many coun- tries and breaks out frouCtime to time even In countries which are normally free of the disease. Some countries let it run its course without taking any steps to control it; others try to control it by the use of vaccines; and some pursue a slaughter policy in which all affected animals and contacts are killed. 326. It is obvious that a large epizootic could constitute a very serious economic bur- den, for example, by bringing about a serious reduction in the supply of milk. It is in this context that foot-and-mouth disease could conceivably serve as a bacteriological (bio- logical) weapon, especially since war condi- tions would greatly promote its spread. Effi- cient prevention is possible through active immunization, but the immunity is rather short-lived and annual vaccination is re- quired. 327. Bruce/Zosis is an example of chronic disease which could possibly result from bacteriological (biological) weapon attacks. There are three forms known, which attaffic cattle, swine and goats respectively. Any of these may be transmitted to man, in whom it causes a debilitating but rarely fatal disease lasting for four to six mon he or even longer. It is enzootic in most countries of the world, and an increased incidence of the disease re- sulting from its use as a Weapon could be dealt with, after the initial blow, In the same way as is the natural disease. But the cost of eliminating disease suela as brucellosis from domestic animals is very high. 328. Anthrax was described in chapter II and what concerns us here as that if large quantities of anthrax spores were dis- seminated in bacteriological (biological) weapons, thus contaminating the soil of large regions, danger to domestic animals and man might persist for a very long time. There is no known way by which areas could be rendered safe. The use of large quantities of anthrax as a weapon might therefore cause long-term environmental hazards, Against crops 329. The rust fungus, as already noted, is one of the most damaging of natural path- ogens which affects wheat crops. Each rust pustule produces 20,000 uredospores a day for two weeks, and there may be more than 100 pustules on a single infected leaf. The ripe uredospores are easily detached from the plant even by very weak air currents. The spores are then carried by the wind over die- tances of many hundreds of kilometres. It is estimated that the annual total world loss of wheat from rust is equivalent to about 43500 million. 330. Weather plays a decisive role in the epiphytotic spreading of rust. Temperature influences the incubation period and the rate of uredospore germination. Germination and infection occur only when there is a water-saturated atmosphere for three to four hours. Thus, epiphytotic spread occurs when there are heavy dews and when the tem- perature is between 10? and 30* C. The prin- cipal means of prevention is to destroy the pathogen and to breed resistant species. Recently, ionizing radiation has been em- ployed to develop resistant strains. 331. The cereal rusts die out during winter unless some other susceptible plant host, such as barberry, is present, and therefore their effect on crops would be limited to a single season. As they are capable of reducing man's food reserves considerably, rust spores could be extremely dangerous and efficient bacteriological (biological) weapons, especi- ally if deployed selectively with due regard to climatic conditions. Artificial spreading of an epiphytotic would be difficult to recog- nize and delivery of the pathogen to the target would be relatively simple. 332. Rust epiphytotics might have a very serious effect in densely populated develop- ing countries, where the food supply might be reduced to such an extent that a human population already suffering from malnu- trition might be driven to starvation, which, depending on the particular circumstances, might last a long time. 333. Another conceivable biological wea- pon, although neither a practical nor a bacteriological one, is the potato beetle. To use it for this purpose, the beetle would have to be produced in large numbers, and Introduced, presumably clandestinely, into potato growing regions at the correct time during maturation of the crop. In the course of spread the beetle first lives in small foci, which grow and increase until it becomes established over large territories. The beetle is capable of astonishing propagation: the progeny of a single beetle may amount to about 8,000 million in one-and-a-half years. 334. Since beetles prefer to feed and lay their eggs in plants suffering from some viral disease, they and their larvae may help transmit the virus thereby increasing the damage they cause. The economic damage caused by the beetle varies with the season and the country affected, but it can destroy up to 80 per cent of the crop. Protection is difficult because it has not been possible to breed resistant potato species and the only means available at present is chemical pro- tection. 335. Were the beetle ever to be used suc- cessfully for offensive purposes, it could clearly help bring about long-term damage because of the difficulty of control. 3. Genetic and Carcinogenic Changes 336. The possibility also exists that chem- ical and bacteriological (biological) weapons might cause genetic changes. Some chemicals are known to do this. LSD, for example, is known to cause genetic changes an human cells. Such genetic changes, whether induced by chemicals or viruses, might conceivably have a bearing on the development of cancer. A significantly increased incidence of cancer In the respiratory tract (mainly lung) has been reported recently among workers em- ployed in the manufacture of mustard gas during World War IL No increased preva- lence of cancer has been reported among mustard gas casualties of World War I al- though it is doubtful if available records would reveal it. However, most of these cas- ualties were exposed for only short periods to the gas whereas the workers were con- tinuously exposed to small doges for months or years. CHAPTER V. ECONOMIC AND SECURITY IMPLICA- TIONS OF THE DEVELOPMENT, ACQUISITION AND POSSIBLE USE OF CHEMICAL AND BACTERIOLOGr- CAL (BIOLOGICAL) WEAPONS AND SYSTEMS OF THEIR DELIVERY A. Introduction 337. Previous chapters have revealed the extent to which developments in chemical and biological science have magnified the potential risks associated with the concept of chemical or bacteriological (biological) war- fare. These risks derive not only from the variety of possible agents which might be used, but also from the variety of their effects. The doubt that a chemical or bacteriological (biological) attack could be restricted to a given area means that casualties could occur well outside the target zone. Were these weapons used to blanket large areas and cities, they would cause massive loss of hu- man life, affecting non-combatants in the same way as combatants, and in this respect, they must clearly be classified as weapons of mass destruction. The report has also empha- sized the great problems and cost which would be entailed in the provision of pro- tection against chenaical and bacteriological (biological) warfare. It is the purpose of this final chapter to explore in greater depth the economic and security implications of mat- ters such as these. B. Production 1. Chemical Weapons 338. It has been estimated that during the course of the First World War, at a time when the chemical Industry Was in a relatively early stage of development, about 180,000 tons of chemical agents were produced, of which more than 120,000 tons were used in battle. With the rapid development of the industry since then, there has been an enormous growth in the potential capacity to produce chemical agents. 339. The scale, nature, and cost of any progamme for producing chemical weapons, and the time needed to implement it, would clearly be largely dependent on the scientific, technical and industrial potential of the country concerned. It would depend not only on the nature of the chemical industry itself, and on the availability of suitably trained egnineers and: chemists, but also on the level of development of the chemical engineering Industry and of the means of automating chemical processes, especially where the pro- duction of highly toxic chemical compounds is involved. Whatever the cost of developing a chemical or bacteriological (biological) capability, it needs to be realized that it would be a cost additional to, and not a sub- stitute for, that of acquiring an armoury of conventional weapons. An army could be equipped with the latter without having any chemical or bacteriological (biological) weap- ons. But it could never rely on chemical or bacteriological (biological) weapons alone. 340. Today a large number of industrialized countries have the potential to produce a variety of chemical agents. Many of the in- termediates required in their manufacture, and in some cases even the agents themselves, are widely used in peace time. Such sub- stances include, for example, phosgene, which some highly developed countries pro- duce at the rate of more than 100,000 tons a year and which is commonly used as an in- termediate in the manufacture of synthetic plastics, herbicides, insecticides, paints and pharmaceuticals. Another chemical agent, hydrocyanic acid, is a valuable intermediate in the manufacture of a variety of synthetic organic products and is produced in even greater quantities. Ethylene-oxide, which is used in the manufacture of mustard gases, Is also produced on a large scale in various countries. It is a valuable starting material In the production of a large number of im- portant substances, such as detergents, dis- infectants and wetting agents. The world Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 9h3proved ForatenMignOliklot9P7.WINTIR000300100001-3 August 11, 1 S 9547 production of ethylene-oxide and propy- lene-oxide is now well in excess of 2 million tons per year. Mustard gas and nitrogen mustard gases can be produced from ethy- lene-oxide by a relatively simple process. Two hundred and fifty thousand tons of ethylene-oxide would yield about 500,000 tons of mustard gas. 341. The production of highly toxic nerve agents, including organophosphorus com- pounds, presents problems which, because they are relatively difficult, could be very costly to overcome. To a certain extent this is because of the specialized safety precau- tions which would be needed to protect work- ers against these very poisonous substances, a need which, of course, applies to all chem- ical agents, especially to mustard gas. How- ever, many intermediates used in the man- ufacture of nerve agents have a peacetime application: for example, dimethylphosphite, necessary for the production of Sarin, is used in the production of certain pesticides. But even leaving operating expenses aside, the approximate cost of acquiring one plant complex to produce munitions containing up to 10,000 tons of Sarin a year would be about $150 million. The cost would, of course, be considerably less if existing munitions could be charged with chemical agents. 342. A country which possesses a well- developed chemical industry could clearly adapt it to produce chemical agents. But were it to embark on such a step, it would be only the beginning. The establishment of a comprehensive chemical warfare capability would also involve special research centres, experimental test grounds, bases, storage depots and arsenals. The development of so- phisticated and comprehensive weapons sys- tems for chemical or bacteriological (biolog- ical) warfare would be a very costly part of the whole process. None the less, the possi- bility that a peacetime chemical industry could be converted to work for military pur- poses, and of chemical products being used as weapons, increases the responsibility bf Governments which are concerned to pre- vent chemical warfare from ever breaking out. 2. Bacteriological (Biological) Weapons 343. The microbiological expertise neces- sary to grow agents of bacteriological (bio- logical) warfare exists to a large extent in many countries, since the requirements are similar to those of a vaccine industry and, to a lesser extent, a fermentation industry. Apart from the combination of the highly developed technologies of these two indus- tries, there remains only a need for some specialized knowledge, expertise and equip- ment to permit the safe handling of large quantities of bacteriological (biological) agents. Consequently, existing facilities in the fermentation, pharmaceutical and vac- cine industries could be adapted for the production of bacteriological (biological) agents. But the technological complexities of producing bacteriological (biological) agents in dry powder form are very much greater than for wet spray systems. More- over, it would be desirable to provide an ef- fective vaccine with which to protect pro- duction staff. The technical difficulties would increase with the scale and complexity of the weapons systems that were being devel- oped. But the fact remains that any indus- trially advanced country could acquire what- ever capability it set out to achieve in this field. 344. The difficulty and cost of providing for the transport and storage of bacteriological (biological) weapons are considerable, since special storage conditions, e.g., refrigeration, and stringent safety and security precau- tions are essential. In addition, testing to determine the potential effectiveness of the material produced would require consider- able and costly testing facilities both in the laboratory and in the field. 345. Despite the fact that the development and acquisition of a sophisticated armoury of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons systems would prove very costly in resources, and would be dependent on a sound industrial base and a body of well- trained scientists, any developing country could in fact acquire, in one way or an- other, a limited capability in this type of warfare?either a rudimentary capability which it developed itself, or a more sophisti- cated one which it acquired from another country. Hence, the danger of the prolifera- tion of this class of weapons applies as much to developing as it does to developed coun- tries. C. Delivery systems 346. Practically all types of explosive mu- nitions (artillery shells, mines, guided and unguided rockets, serial bombs, landmines, grenades, etc.) can be adapted for the de- livery of chemical agents. A modern bomber, for example, can carry about fifteen tons of toxic chemical agents, and it is estimated that only 250 tons of V-gas, an amount which could be delivered by no more than fifteen or sixteen aircraft, is enough to con- taminate a great city with an area of 1,000 square kilometres and a population of 7 to 10 million. Were such a population mainly in the open and unprotected, fatal casual- ties might reach the level of 50 per cent. 347. Existing armaments which (with some modification) could be used to deliver agents in order to generate local outbreaks of disease, could also contaminate large areas with pathogens. For example, a single aircraft could cover with a bacteriological (biological) agent an area of up to 100,000 square kilometres, although the area of ef- fective dosage might be much smaller due to loss of the infectivity of the airborne agent. 348. While the development and produc- tion costs of chemical and bacteriological (biological) agents might well be high, the cost of the complete weapons system (see chapter I) would be even greater. The cost of developing, procuring and operating a squadron of modern bombers far outweighs the cost of the bombs it could carry. How- ever, for some purposes, an existing weapon system or a far less sophisticated means of disseminating might be used. ? D. Protection 349. The measures which would be re- quired to protect a population, its livestock and plants against chemical or bacteriological, (biological) attack are immensely costly and complex (chapter I). At present, warning systems for the detection of aerosol clouds are fairly rudimentary. Systems for the de- tection of specific chemical and bacterio- logical (biological) agents might be devised, but again they are likely to prove very ex- pensive, if indeed they are feasible. 350. With certain agents, contamination of the environment, for example of buildings and soil, could persist for several days or weeks. Throughout this period people would be exposed to the risk of contamination by contact and by inhalation. Protective cloth- ing, even if adequately prefabricated and distributed or improvised, would make it difficult to carry on with normal work. The prolonged wearing of respirators causes physiological difficulties, and it would prove necessary to provide communal shelters with air filtration and ventilations systems for civil populations. Shelters would be extremely costly to build and operate, and a programme for their construction would constitute a heavy burden on the economy. 351. Even if protective measures were pro- vided against known agents, it is conceivable that new ones might be developed whose physical or chemical properties would dictate a need for new individual and communal protective equipment. This could constitute an even greater economic burden. 352. Defensive measures, especially against chemical agents, would also have to include the extremely laborious and expensive task of decontaminating large numbers of people, as well as equipment, weapons and other materials. This would mean setting up de- contamination centres and training of people in their use. Stocks of decontaminating agents and replacement clothing would also 1?e required. 353. A very important part of a defence system against chemical or bacteriological (biological) weapons would be the means of very rapidly detecting an attack and iden- tifying the specific agent used in an attack. Methods for doing this rapidly and accu- rately are still inadequate. Specific protec- tion against bacteriological (biological) agents would necessitate the use of vac- cines and perhaps antibiotics (see annex C of chapter II). Vaccines vary in their effec- tiveness, even against naturally-occurring in- fections, and even those which are highly effective in natural circumstances may not protect against bacteriological (biological) agents deliberately disseminated into the air and inhaled into the lunge. Antibiotics used prophylactically are a possible means of pro- tection against bacteria and rickettsiae but not against viruses. But the large and com- plex problems of their use in large popula- tions would be all but insuperable. 354. It would be extremely difficult to ar- range for the medical treatment of a civil- ian population which had been attacked with chemical or bacteriological (biological) weapons. Mobile groups of specialists in in- fectious disease, of microbiologists, and of well-trained epidemologists, would have to be organized to provide for early diagnosis and treatment, while a network of reserve hospitals and a massive supply of drugs would have to be prepared in advance. The maintenance of a stockpile of medical sup- plies is extremely costly. Many drugs, espec- ially antibiotics, deteriorate in storage. Huge amounts would have to be discarded as use- less from time to time, and the stock would have to be replenished periodically. E. Cost to society 355. The extent to which the acquisition, storage, transport and testing of chemical and bacteriological (biological) munitions would constitute an economic burden, would depend on the level of a country's industrial and military capability, although compared to nuclear weapons and advanced weapons systems in general, it might not seem ex- cessive. But the task of organizing delivery systems and deployment on a large or sophis- ticated scale could well be economically dis- astrous for many countries. Moreover the preparation of an armoury of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons would constitute a possible danger to people in the vicinity of production, storage and testing facilities. 356. Chemical and bacteriological (biologi- cal) attacks could be particularly dangerous In towns and densely populated areas, be- cause of the close contacts between individ- uals, and because of the centralized provision of services for every day necessities and supply (services, urban transport networks, trade, etc.). The consequences might also be particularly serious in regions with a warm, moist climate, in low lying areas, and in areas with poorly developed medical facilities. 357. The technical and organizational com- plexity, as well as the great financial cost, of providing adequate protection for a popu- lation against attack by chemical and bac- teriological (biological) agents have already been emphasized. The costs would be for- midable by any standards. The construction of a system of fall-out shelters to protect only part of the population of one large and highly developed country against nuclear weapons has been estimated at no less than $5,000?$10,000 million. Such shelters could be Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9548 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 11, 1969 modified, at a relatively modest additional cost, to provide protection against chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons. TO construct communal shelters for a corre- sponding part of the population against chemical and bacteriologieal (biological) weapons alone would cost much the same as protection against nuclear fall-out. If all other necessary related expenditures are con- sidered?such as detection and warning sys- tems, communications, and medical aid?the total coats of civil defence against chemical and bacteriological (biological) agents would be greater than $15,000-$25,000 million for a developed country of 100-200 million people. But even if such a programme were ever planned and implemented, there could be no assurance that full protection could be achieved. 358. For whatever its cost, no shelter pro- gramme could provide absolute protection against attack by chemical or bacteriologi- cal (biological) agents. Protective measures would be effective only if there were adequate warning of an attack, and if civil defence plans were brought into operation immedi- ately and efficiently. However, many shelters were available, the likelihood would be that large numbers of people would be affected to varying degrees, and would be in urgent need of medical attention, and once hostilities had ceased, that there would be large numbers of chronic sick and invalids, requiring care, support and treatment, and imposing a heavy burden on a society already disorganized by war. 359. It is almost impossible to conceive of the complexity of the arrangements which would be necessary to control the conse- quences of a large-scale bacteriological (bio- logical) attack. Even in peacetime, the de- velopment of an epidemic of a highly con- tagious disease started by a few individual cases, introduced from abroad, necessitates enormous material expenditure and the di- version of large numbers of medical person- nel. Examples of widespread disruption due to a few smallpox contacts are given in chap- ter II. No estimates are given of the actual costs involved in dealing with these events, but in some cases they must have run into millions of dollars. Large-scale bacteriologi- cal (biological) attacks could thus have serious impact on the entire economy of the target country and, as is observed in chapter II, depending on the type of agent used, the disease might well spread to neighbouring countries. 360. Whatever might be done to try to save human beings, nothing significant could be done to protect crops, livestock, fodder and food-stuffs from a chemical and bacterio- logical (biological) weapons attack. Persist- ent chemical agents could constitute a par- ticular danger to livestock. 361. Water in open reservoirs could be polluted as a result of deliberate attack, or perhaps accidentally, with chemical or bac- teriological (biological) weapons. The water supply of large towns could become unusable, and rivers, lakes and streams might be tem- porarily contaminated. 362. Enormous damage could be done to the economy of a country whose agricultural crops were attacked with herbicides. For ex- ample, only ten to 10 grammes per hectare of 2, 413 could render a cotton crop com- pletely unporductive (see annex A). Fruit trees, grape vines and many other plants could also be destroyed. Mixtures of 2, 413, of 2, 4, 5T and piclomm are particularly po- tent. The chemical known as paraquate can destroy virtually all annual plants, includ- ing leguminous plants, rice, wheat and other cereals. Arsenic compounds clessicate the leaves of many crops and make them unusa- ble as food. There are no means known at present of regenerating some of the plants which are affected by herbicides. Experience has shown, however, that in the case of some species, either natural or artificial seeding can easily produce normal growth in the next growing season. But the destruction of fruit trees, vines and other plants, if achieved could not be overcome for many years. For most practical purposes, it would be impos- sible to prevent the destruction of cultivated plants on which herbicides have been used, and depending on a country's circumstances, widespread famine might follow. 363. If the induced disease were to spread, bacteriological (biological) weapons could af- fect even more extensive agricultural areas. The effect would however be more delayed and more specific to the corps affected. An- nex A gives examples of the extent of the decrease in a wheat harvest and in a rice harvest affected by blast. The uredospores of the rust are easily transported by air cur- rents so that down-wind sections would be affected by rust to a considerable distance, with a corresponding sharp reduction in the crop, while the upwind sections gave a good yield. 364. Over and above all these possible ef- fects of chemical and bacteriological (bio- logical) warfare on farm animals and crops is the possibility discussed in the previous chapter, of widespread ecological changes due to deleterious changes brought about in wild fauna and flora, F. The relevance of chemical and bacterio- logical (biological) weapons to military and civil security 365. The comparison of the relative effec- tiveness of different classes of weapons is a hazardous and often futile exercise. The ma- jor difficulty is that from the military point of view, effectiveness cannot be measured just in terms of areas of devastation or of numbers of casualties. The final criterion would always be whether a specific military purpose had been more easily achieved with one rather than another set of weapons. 366. Clearly, from what has been said in the earlier chapters of this report, chemical weapons could be more effective than equiva- lent weights of high explosive when directed against densely populated targets. Similarly, so far as mass casualties are concerned, bac- teriological (biological) weapons could, in some circumstances, have far more devastat- ing effects than chemical weapons, and ef- fects which might extend well beyond the zone of military operations. 367. From the military point of view, one essential difference between anti-personnel chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons on the one hand,, and a conven- tional high explosive weapon on the other (including small arms and the whole range of projectiles), is that the area of the effects of the latter is more predictable. There are, of course, circumstances where, from the point of view of the individuals attacked, an incapacitating gas would be less damaging than high explosives. On the other hand, whereas military forces can, and do, rely en- tirely upon conventional weapons, no coun- try, as already observed, could entrust its military security to an armoury of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons alone. The latter constitute only one band in the spectrum of weapons. 368. As previous chapters have also shown, neither the effectiveness nor the effects of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons can be predicted with assurance. Whatever military reasons might be advanced for the use of these weapons, and whatever their nature, whether incapacitating or lethal, there would be significant risk of escalation, not only in the use of the same type of weapon but also of other categories of weapons systems, once their use had been initiated. Thus, chemical and bacteriological (biological) warfare could open the door to hostilities which could become less con- trolled, and less controllable, than any war In the past. Uncontrollable hostilities can- not be reconciled with the concept of mili- tary security. 369. Since some chemical and bacteriologi- cal (biological) weapons constitute a major threat to civilian populations and their food and water supplies, their use cannot be rec- onciled with general national and interna- tional security. Further, because of the scale and intensity of the potential effects of their use, they are considered as weapons of mass destruction. Their very existence thus con- tributes to international tension without compensating military advantages. They gen- erate a sense of insecurity not only in coun- tries which might be potentially belligerent, but also in those which are not. Neutral countries could be involved through the use of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons, especially those whose territories bordered on countries involved in conflict in the course of which chemical and bac- teriological (biological) casualties had been suffered by garrisons and civilians close to frontiers. The effects of certain bacteriolo- gical (biological) weapons used on a large scale might be particularly difficult to con- fine to the territory of a small country. Large- scale chemical and bacteriological (biologi- cal) agents and chemical agents might be used for acts of sabotage. Such events might occur as isolated acts, even carried out in defiance of the wishes of national leaders and military commanders. The continued existence and manufadture of chemical weap- ons anywhere may make such occurrences more likely. 370. Obviously any extensive use of chem- ical weapons would be known to the country attacked. The source of the attack would probably also be known. On the other hand, it would be extremely difficult to detect iso- lated acts of sabotage in which bacteriolo- gical (biological) weapons were used, espe- cially if the causative organism were already present in the attacked country. Because of the suspicions they would generate, acts of sabotage could thus provoke a conflict in- volving the widespread use of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons. ANNEX A ECONOMIC LOSS FROM POSSIBLE USE OF CHEMICAL AND BACTERIOLOGICAL(BIOLOGICAL) WEAPONS AGAINST CROPS TABLE 1.?ECONOMIC LOSS WHICH COULD RESULT FROM THE USE OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS DUE TO THE DESTRUC- TION OF CROPS PER HECTARE OF LAND Type of plant Average harvest On tons per hectare) Price of 1 ton in U.S. dollars Sum total of losses in U.S. dollars per hectare Cotton 3 600 1,800 Rice 5 84 420 Wheat 3 69 207 Apple tree 30 '140 I 8, 400 'Will not produce apples for 2 years. TABLE 2.?ECONOMIC LOSS DUE TO THE USE OF BACTERIOLOGICAL (BIOLOGICAL) WEAPONS AGAINST CROPS Plant Type of agent Loss in Losses U.S. dollars Per- Tons per cent hectare hectare re Wheat Cereal rust (Puccinla 80 24 165 graminis) Rice Rice blast (Piricu- 70 35 294 !aria drizae). CONCLUSION 371. All weapons of war are destructive of human life, but chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons stand in a class of their own as armaments which exercise their ef- fects solely on living matter. The idea that bacteriological (biological) weapons could deliberately be used to spread disease gen- erates a sense of horror. The fact that cer- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE tabs chemical and bacteriological (biological) agents are potentially unconfined in their effects, both in space and time, and that their large-scale use could conceivably have deleterious and irreversible effects on the balance of nature adds to the sense of insecu- rity and tension which the existence of this class of weapons engenders. Considerations such as these set them into a category of their own in relation to the continuing arms race. 372. The present inquiry has shown that the potential for developing an armoury of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons has grown considerably in recent years, not only in terms of the number of agents, but also in their toxicity and in the diversity of their effects. At one extreme, chemical agents exist and are being developed for use in the control of civil disorders; and others have been developed in order to in- crease the productivity of agriculture. But even though these substances may be less toxic than most other chemical agents, their ill-considered civil use, or use for military purposes could turn out to be highly dan- gerous. At the other extreme, some potential chemical agents whieh could be used in weapons are among the moat lethal poisons known. In certain circumstances the area over which some of them might exercise their effects could be strictly confined geographi- cally. In other conditions some chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons might spread their effects well beyond the target zone. No one could predict how long the effects of certain agents, particularly bac- teriological (biological) weapons might en- dure and spread and what changes they could generate. 373. Moreover, chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons are not a cheap sub- stitute for other kinds of weapon. They rep- resent an additional drain on the national resources of those countries by which they are developed, produced and stockpiled. The cost cannot of course be estimated with pre- cision; this would depend on the potential of a country's industry. To some the cost might be tolerable; to others it would be crippling, particularly, as has already been shown, when account is taken of the resources which would have to be diverted to the develop- ment of testing and delivery systems. And no system of defence, even for the richest countries in the world, and whatever its cost, could be completely secure. 374. Because chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons are unpredictable, in varying degree, either in the scale or dura- tion of their effects, and because no certain defence can be planned against them, their universal elimination would not detract from any nation's security. Once any chemical or bacteriological (biological) weapon had been used in warfare, there would be a serious risk of escalation, both in the use of more dangerous weapons belonging to the same class, and of other weapons of mass destruc- tion. In short, the development of a chemical or bacteriological (biological) armoury, and a defence. Implies an economic burden with- out necessarily imparting any proportionate compensatory advantage to security. And at the same time it imposes a new and con- tinuing threat to future international security. 375. The general conclusion of the report can thus be summed up in a few lines. Were these weapons ever to be used on a large scale in war, no one could predict how en- during the effects would be, and how they would affect the structure of society and the environment in which we live. This over- riding danger would apply as much to the country which initiated the use of these weapons as to the one which had been at- tacked, regardless of what protective meas- ures it might have taken in parallel with its development of an offensive capability. A par- ticular danger also derives from the fact that any country could develop or acquire, in one way or another, a capability in this type of warfare, despite the Riot that this could prove costly. The danger of the proliferation of this class of weapons applies as much to the developing as it does to developed countries. 376, The momentum of the arms race would clearly decrease if the production at these weapons were effectively and uncon- ditionally banned. Their use, which could ?ante an enormous loss of human life, has already been condemned and prohibited by international agreements, in particular the Geneva Protocol of 1925, and, more recently, in resolutions of the General Assembly of the United Nations. The prospects for gen- eral and complete disarmament under effec- tive international control, and hence for peace throughout the world, would brighten significantly if the development, production and stockpiling of chemical and bacteriologi- cal (biological) agents intended for purposes of war were to end and if they were elimi- nated from all military arsenals. 377. If this were to happen, there would be a general lessening of international fear and tension. It la the hope of the authors that this report will contribute to public awareness of the profoundly dangerous re- sults if these weapons were ever used, and that an aroused public will demand and re- ceive assurances that Governments are work- ing for the earliest effective elimination of chemical and bacteriological (biological) weapons. APPENDIXES Protocol for the prohibition of the use in war of asphyxiating, poisonous or other gases, and of bacteriological methods of warfare, signed at Geneva, 17 June 1925 The undersigned plenipotentiaries, in the name of their respective Governments: Whereas the use in war of asphyxiating, poisonous or other gases, and of all analogous liquids, materials or devices, has been justly condemned by the general opinion of the civilized world; Whereas the prohibition of such use has been declared in Treaties to which the ma- jority of Powers of the world are Parties; and To the end that this prohibition shall be universally accepted as a part of Interna- tional Law, binding alike the conscience and the practice of nations; ? Declare: That the High Contracting Parties, so far as they are not already Parties to Treaties prohibiting such use, accept this prohibition, agree to extend this prohibition to the use of bacteriological methods of warfare and agree to be bound as between themselves according to the terms of this declaration, The High Contracting Parties will exert every effort to induce other States to accede to the present Protocol. Such accession will be notified to the Government of the French Republic, and by the latter to all signatory and acceding Powers, and will take effect on the date of the notification by the Govern- ment of the French Republic. The present Protocol, of which the French and English texts are both authentic, shall be ratified as soon as possible. It shall bear today's date. The ratifications of the present Protocol shall be addressed to the Government of the French Republic; which will at once notify the deposit of such ratification to each of the signatory and acceding Powers. The instruments of ratification of and ac- cession to the present Protocol will remain deposited in the archives of the Government of the French Republic. The present Protocol will come into force for each signatory Power as from the date of deposit of its ratification, and, from that moment, each Power will be bound as re- gards other Powers which have already de- posited their ratifications. In witness whereof the Plenipotentiaries have signed the present Protocol, S 9549 Done at Geneva in a single copy, the seventeenth day of June, One Thousand Mile Hundred and Twenty-Five. RESOLUTION 2162 13 (am) (1484th plenary meeting, December 5,1966) The General Assembly, Guided by the principles of the Charter of the United Nations and of international law. Considering that weapons of mass destruc- tion constitute a danger to all mankind and are incompatible with the accepted norms of civilization, Affirming that the strict observance of the rules of international law on the conduct of warfare is in the interest of maintaining these standards of civilization, Recalling that the Geneva Protocol for the Prohibition of the Use in War of Asphyxi- ating, Poisonous or Other Gases, and of Bac- teriological Methods of Warfare, of 17 June 1925, has been signed and and adopted and is recognized by many States, Noting that the Conference of the Eight- een-Nation Committee on Disarment has the task of seeking an agreement on the cessa- tion of the development and production of chemical and bacteriological weapons and other weapons of mass destruction, and on the elimination of all such weapons from national arsenals, as called for in the draft proposals on general and complete disarma- ment now before the Conference. 1. Calls for strict observance by all States of the principles and objectives of the Proto- col for the Prohibition of the Use in War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous or Other Gases, and of Bacteriological Methods of Warfare, signed at Geneva on 17 June 1925, and condemns all actions contrary to those objectives; 2. Invites all States to accede to the Ge- neva Protocol of 17 June 1925, RESOLUTION 2454 A (XXIII) (1750th plenary meeting, December 20,1968) The General Assembly, Reaffirming the recommendations of its resolution 2162 B (MCI) calling for strict observance by all States of the principles and objectives of the Protocol for the Prohibition of the Use in War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous or other Oases, and of Bacteriological Meth- ods of Warfare signed at Geneva on 17 June 1925, condemning all actions contrary to those objectives and inviting all States to accede to that Protocol, Considering that the possibility of the use of chemical and bacteriological weapons con- stitutes a serious threat to mankind, Believing that the People of the world should be made aware of the consequences of the use of chemical and bacteriological weapons, Having considered the report of the Eight- een-Nation Disarmament Committee which recommended that the Secretary-General ap- point a group of experts to study the effects of the possible use of such weapons, Noting the interest in a report on various aspects of the problem of chemical, bacterio- logical and other biological weapons which has been expressed by many Governments and the welcome given to the recommenda- tion of the Eighteen-Nation Disarmament Committee by the Secretary-General in his Annual Reports for 1967-68, Believing that such a study would provide a valuable contribution to the consideration in the Eighteen-Nation Disarmament Com- mittee of the problems connected with chem- ical and bacteriological weapons, Recalling the value of the report of the Secretary-General on the effects of the pos- sible use of nuclear weapons, 1. Requests the Secretary-General to pre- pare a concise report In accordance with the proposal in Part II of his Introduction to the Annual Report for 1967-68 and in ac- cordance with the recommendation of the Eighteen-Nation Disarmament Committee Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9550 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 11 1969 contained in paragraph 26 of its report (doc- Hilleman, M. R. "Toward Control of Viral fashion I have seen, the implications uraent A/7189) ; Infections in. Man", Science, Volume 167, of engaging in this kind of warfare. 2. Recommends that the report be based on 1969, p. 3879. accessible material and prepared with the Horsfall, F. L., Jr. and Tamm. I. Viral and The Secretary General, in his conclu- assistance of qualified consultant experts by Rickettsial Infections of Man. Lippincott, mon, states that: the Secretary-General, taking tnto account Philadelphia 1965 4th Edition, The generalconclusion of the report can the views expressed and the suggestions Horafall, J. G. and Dimond, A. E. [Edi- thus be summed up in a few lines. Were made during the discussion of this item at tors] Plant Pathology: An Advanced Treatise, these weapons ever to be used on a large the twenty-third session of the General As- New York: Academic Press, 1959 and 1960, scale in war, no one could predict how en- sembly; 3 volumes, during the effects would be, and how they 3. Calls upon Governments, national and Hull. T. G. Diseases Transmitted from Ani- would affect the structure of society and international scientific institutions and or- mats to Man. Springfield, Illinois: C. C. the environment in which we live. This over- ganizations to co-operate with the Secretary- Thomas, 1963, 5th Edition, riding danger would apply as much to the General in the preparation of the report; Jacobs, Morris B. War Gases, New York: country which initiated the use of these 4. Rquests that the report be transmitted Interscience Publishers, Inc., 1942. weapons as to the one which had been at- to the Eighteen-Nation Dial rtnantent Corn- Jackson, S. et al. BC Warfare Agents. Stock- tacked, regardless of what protective meas- mittee, the Security Council and the Gen- holm: Research Institute of National De- ures it might have taken in parallel with eral Assembly at an early dale, if possible by fence, 1969. its development of an offensive capability. A / July 1969, and to the Governments of pepper, M. If. and Wolfe, E. IC. [Editors] particular danger 9180 derives from the fact Member States in time to permit its ?On- "Second International Conference on Aero- that any country could develop or acquire, sideration at the twenty-fourth session of biology (Airborne Infection)", Bacteriological in one way or another, a capability in this the General Assembly; Reviews, Volume 30, No. 3, 1986. pp. 487- type of warfare, despite the fact that this 5. Recommends that Governments give the 698. could prove costly. The danger of the prolif- report wide distribution in their respective Liddell Hart, B. H. The Real War, 1914- eration of this class of weapons applies as languages, through varioue media of corn- 1918. Boston, Mass.: Little, Brown and Co., much to the developing as it does to de- munication, so as to acquaint public opinion 1931. veloped countries. with its contents; Lohs, K. Synthetische Gifts. Berlin: Verlag The momentum of the arms race would 6. Reiterates its call for strict observance det Ministeriums fur Nationale verteidigung, clearly decrease if the production of these by all States of the principles and objec- 1958. 2/1 Edition, 1963. weapons Were effectively and unconditionally lives of the Geneva Protocol of 17 June 1925 Lurey, W. P. "The Climate at Cities", Sci- banned. Their use, which could cause an and invites all States to accede to that entitle American, No. 217, Aug. 1987. enormous loss of human life, has already Protocol. Matunovic,Co. N. Biological Agents in War, been condemned and prohibited by inter- national agreements, in particular the Ca- Belgrade: Military Publishing Bureau of the Yugoslav People's Army, 1958. (Translated neva Protocol of 1925, and, more recently, BIBLIOGRAPkri Baroian, 0. V. [Russian Title.] by the U.S. Joint Publications Research Serv- in resolutions of the General Assembly of Brown, F. J. Chemical Warfare: A. Study in ice 1118-N.) the United Nations. Restraints, Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton McDermott, W. [Editor] "Conference on The PRESIDING OkkICER. The time University Press, 1968. Airborne Infection", Bacteriological Reviews, of the Senator has expired. Bruner, D. W. and Gillespie, Volume 25, No. 3, 1961, pp. 173-382. II, Hagan's Th - Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, does the ng- fectious Diseases of Domestic Animals. Meteorology and Atomic Energy. Washing- Senator from New Hampshire desire ton, D.C.: US Atomic Energy Commission, Ithaca, New York: Comstock Publishing As- July 1965. more time? sociataion. bah Edition. Clarke, R. The Silent Weapons, New York: Mel'fljkov, N. N. [Russian title.] Mr. McINTYRE. Not at the present McKay, 1968 Moulton, F. R. [Editor] 1942. Aerobiology. moment. Davis, B. D., Dulbecco, R., Eisen, . N, Washington: American Association for the Mr. NELSON. MT. President, I would H Ginsberg, II. s., and Wood, VV, B., Jr. Micro- Advancement of Science, 1942, Publication No. 17. like to ask for 2 minutes to complete the biology, New York: Reaper and Row, 1967. reading of that statement. Dubos, R. J. and Hirsh, 3, o. Bacterial and Nonmilitary Defense. Chemical and Bio- Mycotic Infections of Man. Philadelphia: logical Defenses in Perspective. Washington Mr. SS. Oh, I thought the Sen- Lippincott, 1965. 4th Edition, D.C.: American Chemical Society. 1960, Ad- ator had concluded. Farrow, Edward S. Gas Warfare. New York: vances in Chemistry Series No. 26. Mr. NELSON. No. E. P. Dutton and Co., Inc., 1920, Prentiss, A. M. Chemicals in War. New Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I yield 2 Fries, Amos A. and West, Clarence J. Chem- York: McGraw-Mill Book Co., Inc., 1937. minutes to the Senator from Wisconsin. ical Warfare. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Rose, S. [Editor] (YEW: Chemical and Bio- Co., 1921. , logical Warfare. Boston: Beacon Press, 1969. Mr. NELSON. I thank the Senator. Fothergill, L. D. "The Biological Warfare Rosebury, T. Experimental Airborne Infec- I lust want to read the completion of Threat", In Nonmilitary Defense: Chemical tion. Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins, 1947, this summary: and Biological Defenses in Perspective. Ad- Rosebury, T. Peace or Pestilence. New York: vances in Chemistry Series 26, Washington: McGraw-Hill, 1949. The prospects for general and complete disarmament under effective international American Chemical Society, 1960, pp. 23-33. Rosebury, T. and Kabat, E. A. "Bacterial Fothergill, L. D. "Biological Warfare: Na- Warfare", Journal of Immunology, Volume control, and hence for peace throughout the world, would brighten significantly if the de- ture and Consequences", Texas State Jour- 56, 1947, pp. 7-96. rut/ of Medicine, Volume 60, 1964, pp. 8-14. Rosicky, B., "Natural Foci of Diseases" veloprnent, production and stockpiling of, In: chemical and bacteriological (biological) Fox, Major L. A. "Bacterial Warfare: The A. Cockburn [Editor] Infectious Diseases, agents intended for purposes of war were to Use of Biological Agents in Th Warfare", The Springfield, Ill.: C. Thomas, 1967. Military Surgeon, Volume 72, No. 3, 1933, Rothschild, J. H. Tcnnorrow's Weapons, end and if they were eliminated from all military arsenals. pp. 189-207. New York: McGraw-1111i, 1954. _ Franke, S. "Lehrbuch der Militarchemie". Barton,"If this were to happen, there would be aiMario. The War Gases. New York: Deutsche Militar V general lessening of International fear and erlag. Volume 1, 1,967. D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc., 1939. tension. It is the hope of the authors that Geiger, R. Das Klima do Bodernnahen SOrbo, B. "Tear gases and tear gas weap- this report will contribute to public aware- Sohn, Brunswich: Fredrick-I Viewey and ons". Lakartidningen. Volume 66, 1969, p. ness of the profoundly dangerous results if Green, H. L. and Lane, W. R. Particulate Sohn, 1961. 448. these weapons were ever used, and that an Clouds: Dusts, Smokes and Mists. London: E. Vedder, E. B. The Medical Aspects of Chem- aroused public will demand and receive as- and F. N. Sporn, 1964. ical Warfare,. Baltimore, Md.: Williams and aurances that Governments are working for Gregory, P. H. and Monteith., J. L. Air- Wilkens Co., 1925. the earliest effective elimination of chemical borne Microbes. London: Cambridge Univer- Waitt, A. E. Gas Warfare, New York: Duell, and bacteriological (biological) weapons." sity Press, 1967. Sloan and Pearce, 1944. I have given the study prepared by the Hatch, T. F. and Gross, P. pulmonary Dep- World Health Organization, Air Pollution, consultant experts my earnest consideration osition and Retention of Inhaled Aerosols. Monograph Series. Geneva: 1961. and I have decided to accept their unanimous . . . New York and London: Academic Press, report in its entirety, 1964. Mr. NELSON, Mr. President, it is the Eeden, C. G. "Defences Against Biological most comprehensiveI simply say I wish to endorse that document of this Warfare", Annual Review of microbiologg, kind that has been called to my atten- statement of the Secretary General. I Volume 21, 1967, pp. 639-676. tion. I think it is in the interest of the think the elimination of the production, Herten, C. G. "The Infectious Dust Cloud" Congress and the public that it be distribution, and stockpiling of this kind In Nigel Calder [Editor] Unless Peace Comes; printed in. full in the RECORD. The United of weapon is our ultimate goal. a Scientific Forecast of New Weapons, New York: The Viking Press, 1968. Nations report was compiled by an in- I thank the Senator from Mississippi Hersh, S. At Chemical and Biological War- ternationally distinguished group of sci- for yielding. fare: America's Hidden Arsenal. New York: entists, representing many nations, and Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I yield Bobbs-1krerrill, 1968. I think presents, in the most effective myself such time as I may take. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 APProvedtORVAIIMAT Itita6-RDmopp64R000300100001_3 s 9551 The Senator from Indiana has indi- cated that he may want some time. Mr. HARTKE. Five minutes. Mr. STENNIS. I yield the Senator from Indiana 5 minutes. Mr. HARTKE. Mr. President, first, I should like to thank the committee for the action it has taken in concerning itself with the very important question of chemical and biological warfare, and also to express my special thanks to the dis- tinguished Senator from New Hamp- shire (Mr. MCINTYRE) for the fine work he has done with regard to this rather complicated but at the same time very important legislation dealing with a mat- ter of general concern not alone to the people of this country, but the whole world. In the statement of the Senator from New Hampshire (Mr. MCINTYRE) , he also made mention of the fact that we are dealing with the shipment of such ma- terials which are shipped by those other than the Defense Department itself. I think it is very important for us to recog- nize that the shipment of any type of material of this kind which is dangerous to the public generally should be dealt with; that it is not just the Pentagon itself which is the one unit which is shipping material which can be hazard- ous to the public health. It is my intention to support legisla- tion by the Senator from New Hampshire to prohibit the shipment of such mate- rials by other agencies, including private corporations, because we know that a large number of potentially dangerous biological agents which are shipped through the country generally are not under any real control. It has been a matter of great concern to me, and the committee has held hearings on surface transportation. Also, the whole question of chemical and biological warfare is not a new issue in the Senate. Many of us can recall the intense publicity campaign waged by the Army Chemical Corps nearly 10 years ago?a campaign designed to inform the Congress as to the supposed economy and humanity of gas and germ warfare. At that time we were told that chemicals and biologicals were "Tomorrow's weap- ons," and that they would some day make it possible for Nations to wage a "war without death." This publicity campaign succeeded in boosting the status of the chemical corps and our CBW budget increased three- fold between 1961 and 1963. Also, as our involvement in Vietnam deepened, R. & D. gradually gave way to manufacturing, stockpiling, and combat use. Procurement budgets, now shrouded in wartime secrecy, have grown to dis- turbing proportions. "Tomorrow's Weap- ons" are now costing us more than $1 million a day. Our CBW program?once an underfunded vision?has grown into an uncontrolled nightmare. "Tomorrow's Weapons" are with us today?but they have brought with them fear, suffering, and disaster. The use of tear gas in Viet- nam to flush the enemy from cover, and the use of herbicides to destroy Viet- namese food supplies, is not the humane "war without death" that we were prom- ised. The Utah sheep-kill episode and the nerve gas disposal issue have brought the dangers of CBW closer to home. Ac- cidents in Okinawa and open air testing in Maryland have only served to in- tensify public fears about lethal gases and germs. I recall one instance in which I was rather severely criticized for complaining about the utilization of this type of ma- terial; and the man in charge of the operation said, "Well, this is just killing without a 'bang.'" I think killing is ef- fective whether with a "bang" or not. Predictably, as CBW budgets have grown, the Army's craving for publicity has disappeared. Today, the issue of chemical and biological warfare is being raised primarily by civilian opponents rather than by Pentagon advocates. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I yield the Senator 2 minutes. Mr. HARTKE. I thank the Senator. The Senate action today has been prompted by a profound public concern? a concern that becomes harder to con- trol the longer we delay. The American people are demanding the Congress take a hard look at our chemical and biologi- cal warfare program?a hard, critical look. The amendment we are considering to- day is a modest step in the right direc- tion. It puts mild restrictions on cer- tain kinds of testing, limits the develop- ment of certain kinds of delivery sys- tems, prohibits stockpiling of CB weap- ons overseas, and provides greater safety in transportation of lethal chemicals and biologicals. But most important, in my mind, it strips away some of the unnec- essary secrecy which surrounds our CBW program. My own contributions to the amendment are embodied in the report requirement, the prohibition on "back- door" financing, and the rail shipment notification restrictions. These provi- sions, providing the Congress with basic information on the scope and the pur- pose of our CBW program, will make the other restrictions easier to enforce, and will prevent ungrounded public fears from turning CBW into a dangerous and emotional issue. Mr. President, the CBW issue need not grow into a symbolic attack on mili- tary spending, or a ritualistic defense of military preparedness. It can be judged on its own terms, thanks to the collective efforts of those who have brought this widely accepted amendment to the floor. This amendment provides the Senate with an opportunity to answer its own questions, to express its concern, and to respond to public demands, without im- pairing our military capabilities or com- promising our Nation's security. I thank the Senator from Mississippi for yielding me this time. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator from Mississippi yield me 2 minutes to respond? Mr. STENNIS.. Yes. Mr. President, I yield the Senator from New Hampshire 2 minutes. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I commend the Senator from Indiana wholeheartedly for his interest in this field, particularly in this year of 1969, and I commend, too, the fact that his staff, working together with my staff and Pentagon personnel, have done a lot of hard work. There was much give and take in working out these compromises. The Senator and his staff have displayed great merit, and deserve our commenda- tion. The Senator made mention, in his re- marks, about shipments of biological agents throughout the United States, not by the Department of Defense but by others. The Senator may be aware of what I am about to say. I think he has made reference to the fact that his com- mittee has oversight of the matter. Mr. HARTKE. That is correct. Mr. McINTYRE. The American Type Culture Collection, which is a private group in Washington, D.C., made ship- ments of nearly 20,000 different cultures of bacteria and viruses, many of them deadly, in 196'7 and again in 1968. During these same years Fort Detrick made shipments totally about 400?about 200 a year. Figures are not readily available for the shipments of these bacteria and viruses by the communicable disease lab with headquarters in Atlanta, Ga., but I understand that there is a heavy move- ment of these agents by the laboratories. Mr. HARTKE. I thank the Senator from New Hampshire for this informa- tion. We will certainly bring it up in com- mittee, and I think we can come forward with some legislation this year which will be effective in making it possible for us to provide greater protection for the people generally in transporting these agents, which are potentially so danger- ous and so deadly. Mr. McINTYRE. I think that will be fine, because I think the whole group of amendments sponsored by the Senator from Indiana, the Senator from Wiscon- sin, the Senator from New York, the Senator from Texas, the Senator from Rhode Island, and others, have demon- strated that Congress feels the need for more control over shipments of these deadly germs and deadly gases, and not only for more control, but for more knowledge about them. I thank the Senator. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I yield myself 2 minutes. As chairman of the committee, I high- ly congratulate the Senator from New Hampshire (Mr. McINTYRE) for the splendid work he has done on this sub- ject during our hearings. I also com- mend him and the authors of the various amendments for the work that they have done in this highly important field, which has developed to the point where it needs such regulation as is reflected by these amendments. I believe the Senators and the staffs have done a splendid job; and in fact I support the amendments. We have not had a chance to have a com- mittee meeting, and I cannot speak for the committee, but I have discussed the matter with the Senator from Maine (Mrs. SMITH), and I am sure she will have a word to say in their support. I point out that the committee took out the $16 million for research and development of lethal offensive chemical and biological items. This is follow-on to Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9552 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 11, 1969 the work of the McIntyre subcommittee, with the other Senators who authored these amendments. I believe they have done a splendid job. I discussed this matter on the tele- phone Saturday morning with Secretary Laird, and he thinks some regulation is desirable. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Ben- ator's time has expired. Mr. STENNIS. I yield myself 1 addi- tional minute. He expressed concern about the situ- ation, and an inclination to support the amendment; and later, at a press con- ference, he did express support for it. So I commend it to the Senate. As I say, I think the Senator Crom Maine will have a few words in its favor also. I thank the Senator from Wisconsin, for the committee, for his very generous words with respect to our efforts on this bill. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield to the Senator from New Hampshire. Mr. McENTYRE. I ask for the yeas and nays. The yeas and nays were ordered. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, if I have any time left, I yield to the Senator from Arizona. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, I merely wish to say that I believe the chairman has made a ve2y wise move in accepting this amendment. While, as he said, I cannot speak for the whole com- mittee, I want him to know that at least he has the backing of the junior Sena- tor from Arizona. We did a good bit of work on this sub- ject in committee. It Is a very touchy, very sensitive field, that all of us be- lieve should have regulation, or more regulation, and I am very happy that the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire was able to work out the com- promise that he did, with the large num- ber of amendments with which he had to work. He has done an oustanding job all through the writing of this bill and its defense on the floor. So, Mr. Presi- dent, I am glad that the chairmanl has indicated the position which he has with respect to the action which is about to be taken. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I thank the Senator very much. The PRESIDING OtetoICER. Who yields time? Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I yield 1 minute to the Senator from Maine. Mrs. SMITH. Mr. President, I join the very able chairman of the Committee on Armed Services, and concur with what he has said with respect to this amendment. I also commend the several sponsors of the various amendments for getting together and bringing in what seems to me to be an excellent compro- mise, and I am glad to support it. Mr. DIRKSEN. I yield 1 minute to the Senator from California. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, I as- sociate myself with the remarks made by the ranking minority member of the Committee on Armed Services, and by the chairman of the committee, and say that I should like to join in congratulat- ing the Senators who have agreed upon this amendment. I think it is most help- ful, most progressive, and certainly would help bring back the control to Congress, where it should be. Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I yield myself such time as I may require. Hideous as the words "chemical and biological warfare" seem to be to the sensitivities of people, yet there are other countries which have had and do have capabilities in the field. I recall very viv- idly, for example, lying in a ditch with a gas mask over my nose when the first burst of chlorine came over from the en- emy in World War I; and I remember when I was a horse officer, how badly those artillery horses were galled and beaten by mustard gas. That was one time when it was used. The Italians used it in Ethiopia, and the Egyptians used in it Yemen; and we _know, from the Penkovsky papers, that there is a capability on the part of the Soviet Union, because he wrote, among other things: Many places in the country have experi- mental centers for testing various chemical and bacteriological devices. He amplifies that, of course. So there is a capability in this field; and it occurs to me that we have to have some kind of a retaliatory facility for the very pur- pose of deterring others from ever using it. So I fully concur in what has been fashioned here by way of a modified amendment. Mr. President, we have heard many voices recently questioning the need for chemical warfare and biological research programs as a part of this country's de- fense. I would like to go on record in support of these two programs and at the same time I encourage the increas- ing interest of the Members of this body in the why and wherefore of these pro- grams. First, we should recognize that the President recently directed the executive branch to undertake a detailed review of our policies and posture in chemical and biological warfare, including the U.S. position on arms control and the ratification of the 1925 Geneva Protocol. Second, I remind my colleagues that the Defense Department has consistently followed congressional advice in their chemical and biological defense activi- ties, and I do net believe they have at- tempted to hide these activities, some of which are necessarily classified, from congressional inquiries made by the com- mittees directly concerned. A congressional committee in 1959 made several recommendations pertinent to our considerations today. One of the recommendations stated it is recognized that in the present world situation, with other countries pursuing vigorous pro- grams of chemical and biological devel- opment, the best immediate guarantee the United States can possess to insure that chemical and biological warfare is not used anywhere against the free world Is to have a strong capability in this field, and this will only come with a stronger program of research. Another recommendation was that if chemical and biological weapons are to be consid- ered a deterrent force in the U.S. arSenal of weapons, the program of research ad- vocated here will have to be accompanied by an adequate program of manufacture and deployment of chemical and bio- logical munitions. The first recommendation alluded to the threat as it existed in 1959. Has there been any reduction in the threat since then? We do not believe so. In 1967, the then Deputy Secretary of Defense testi- fied on chemical and biological warfare before the Senate Subcommittee on Dis- armament, saying: At long as other nations, such as the Soviet Union, maintain large programs, we believe we must maintain our defensive and retaliatory capability. I am informed that the Soviets con- duct chemical research that is related to offensive and defensive chemical warfare and that they have means which are suitable to deliver them. Col. Oleg Pen- kovsky, the former Soviet intelligence agent, wrote in his "Penkovsky Papers" about the chemical and biological pro- grams of the U.S.S.R.: Many places in the country have experi- mental centers for testing various chemical and bacteriological devices. He further wrote: Soviet artillery units all are regularly equipped with chemical-warfare shells. They are at the gun sites, and our artillery is routinely trained in their use. And let there be no doubt: if hostilities should erupt, the Soviet Army would use chemical weapons against its opponents. The political decision has been made, and our strategic military planners have developed a doctrine which permits the commander in the field, to decide whether to use chemical weapons, and when and where. The U.S.S.R.. has a capability in bio- logical warfare; they have the tech- nological capability to produce, store, and deliver biological warfare agents. On the defensive side, the Soviets are believed to possess a chemical defensive capability in terms of equipment and training, superior to those of the Western powers. Training in the use of defensive equipment, reconnaissance measures, and means for survival are taught and practiced until individual and unit pro- ficiency are attained. You may raise the question why we need such a program. I believe I have just covered the major reason?the po- tential threat posed to the United States and her Allies. We must have a program to deter enemy use of chemical weapons by being able to retaliate in kind. To place this statement in proper perspec- tive, let us review some history. There are three major occasions when chemi- cals were used?World War I, first used by the Germans; in the 1930's when the Italians used chemicals in Ethiopia; and more recently in 1967 when the Egyptians used chemicals in Yemen. We should note that the Italians and Egyp- tians had been signators to the Geneva Protocol of 1925 and yet subsequently initiated the use of these weapons. On these occasions, the other side did not have a deterrent capability and did not have a chemical weapon to use. Nei- ther did they have a defensive or pro- tective capability. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 196APProved Fre ditinsittgsgffifyi1/311kEatE,DI.D7s1NRifeR000300100001-3 s 9553 However, during World War II with many nations having a capability, chem- icals were not used. Many experts be- lieve that the U.S. policy that it would not use chemical weapons unless an- other nation used them first, and having backed this up with a retaliatory capa- bility, was the major deterrent to the use of chemicals during World War II. Some might say we do not need these weapons today as deterrents when we have nuclear weapons in our stockpile. Personally, I do not want to have to rely on nuclear weapons as a deterrent in this area because it may engage the United States in a much larger exchange. Further, if a nation were to use chemical weapons or biological weapons against the United States or its Allies, and the United States had no chemical or biolog- ical capability, it would force us to re- spond with nuclear weapons or accept the alternative of possible defeat. Thus, the United States has main- tained a limited chemical and biological offensive and defensive capability pri- marily as a deterrent and because we cannot permit ourselves to be techno- logically and militarily surprised by the advances other nations are bound to make. We cannot by legislation or wish- ful thinking stop the progress of science. Any action which we take to deprive our Nation of this capability without insur- ing effective and well policed interna- tional arms control constitutes unilateral disarmament, and I for one do not be- lieve thig to be prudent. As we all know, the United States is committed to exploring any proposals or ideas that could contribute to effective arms control. For example we recently participated in a United Nations study of chemical and biological warfare to be used by the 18 Nation Disarmament Committee to explore means of getting an effective dis- armament agreement on chemical and biological weapons. However, until we achieve effective agreements with the re- quired controls to eliminate all stockpiles of these weapons, we should maintain a chemical and biological program strong enough to be credible and strong enough to deter any aggressor from using these weapons. Mr. President, how much time do I have remaining? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator has 91/2 minutes remaining. Mr. DIRKSEN. I yield 3 minutes to the Senator from Utah. Mr. MOSS. Mr. President, because of the widely publicized sheep incident last year in Utah and more recently, because of my successful fight to keep the Army from shipping obsolete nerve gas weap- ons from the Denver Rocky Mountain Arsenal to Utah, I am very familiar with the CBW controversy. The amendment being proposed today is basically in accord with my own posi- tion on CBW. I do, however, have sev- eral questions about the specific language of the amendment and then some obser- vations on the CBW problem generally. I ask the Senator from Wisconsin, first, whether the language in section (b) which forbids the procurement of de- livery systems specifically designed to disseminate lethal chemical and biologi- cal agents include devices that are being used in the present testing of CBW, such as the artillery shells that are now being used? Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, I suggest that the Senator direct that question to the subcommittee chairman. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, it does go to prohibit any dissemination or dis- tribution weapons that are specifically designed for this purpose. Of course, it would not include the 155 mm. howitzer. That is a weapon we could use to dis- pense the material, if the time ever comes, God forbid, but it is not specifi- cally designed for that purpose. This sec- tion refers exclusively to disseminating systems specifically designed to dispense CBW agents. We had to yield to the Defense De- partment on this point because the orig- inal language was so broad it could have been armor, weaponry, and things we purchase as part of our equipment to de- liver normal military high explosives. Mr. MOSS. Mr. President, I think that the suggestion is still much too restric- tive. However, that is something that we would have to deal with later. Second, I might suggest that the lan- guage in section d(1) and (2) which re- stricts the transportation of lethal chemical and biological agents be tight- ened to avoid a possible loophole. Instead of applying these restrictions just to ship- ments to or from military installations, I would broaden the language to include any shipments anywhere within the United States, its territories, or posses- sions. This could be done by simply drop- ping the words "to or from any military installations" in sections d(1) and (2). Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, the group working on the proposal felt that if it was too restrictive, we might be- come involved in the interplay between the military. What we did do was to try to restrict it to moving and disposal. Mr. MOSS. Mr. President, this would merely say to or from military installa- tions. If it was not going to or from mili- tary installations, it would be included. I think this ought to be tightened up at this time. Mr. McINTYRE. The Senator might have a point. Mr. MOSS. A final point, Mr. Presi- dent. Too much of the public discussion about CBW has become emotional and speculative primarily because of the Army's obsession with secrecy. Rightly or wrongly, and I think rightly, the Gov- ernment's credibility concerning CBW is highly suspect. Even after the Dugway incident it was some time before the Army would admit that they were test- ing nerve gas agents let alone responsible for the death of the sheep. To give the American people good rea- son to believe what the Government tells them and to provide the public with much-needed information, I suggest that the Surgeon General appoint a commit- tee of three State public health officials and three nonmilitary experts to assist him in making the determination as to whether CBW testing is a hazard to pub- lic health. This determination should be made in a public report and should in- clude as much information as possible. In my opinion much of the information now classified need not be and would help in creating a better public understanding of CBW. Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I yield 3 minutes to the Senater from South Carolina. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from South Carolina is recognized for 3 minutes. - Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, the management and control of our chemical and biological warfare research programs has become an emotional issue in recent months, due to an unfortunate incident in Utah. Certainly, this is an area in which the greater care must be taken as these chemical agents and disease producing biological micro-organisms and biolog- ical toxins are deadly. Tighter controls may well be in order, judging from the accident in Utah. While some restrictions would be use- ful, the McIntyre amendment is broad in its coverage, especially in that it pro- hibits funds to procure delivery systems or any components of delivery systems for chemical and biological agents. Such a restriction may be harmless at this point, as the military does not de- sire any funds in the current bill for of- fensive delivery systems. However, if this restriction is passed, it becomes law. It would, therefore, tie the hands of those charged with our defense if, in the fu- ture, more sophisticated means of de- livery for these agents are needed to maintain our defense posture. Presently, we use standard shells and bombs to deliver these agents but this requirement could change and valuable time could be lost in removing this re- striction to allow the Defense Depart- ment to meet the needs of an emergency. Mr. President, the history of the use of these agents shows they have only been used a few times in modern history and in each instance their use was made when the user knew his opponent did not have the means to retaliate. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that Secretary Laird's statement be printed in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the state- ment was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: MEMORANDUM FOR CORRESPONDENTS, AUGUST 9, 1969 (Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird today issued the following statement in response to queries about the DOD position on the pend- ing McIntyre amendment.) On assuming the office of Secretary of De- fense in January, I became concerned with the management and control of our chemical warfare and biological research programs. I felt that improvements were needed in the management and control of these programs. That is why in April I requested and the President ordered a National Security Coun- cil study of these matters. This study is in progress. Pending the completion of the NSC study, I believe it is prudent that we act Jointly with Congress and take actions, wherever possible, to improve the management and control of chemical warfare and biological research programs. Members of my staff, principally Dr. John S. Foster, Jr., Director of Research and Engi- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9554 neering, have been working in recent days with Senator Thomas J. McIntyre of New Hampshire, and with other members of the Senate Armed Services Cornmittee, on a re- vised amendment to the pending Defense Authorization Bill. I am in agreement with the goals of the new amendment, which the Senate is sched- uled to consider on Monday. I believe this revised amendment will allow us to maintain our chemical warfare deter- rent and our biological research program both of Which are essential to national security. The history of the use of lethal chemical warfare agents has demonstrated on three notable occasions in this century that the only time military forces have used these weapons is when the opposing forces had no immediate capability to deter or to retaliate. This was true early in World War I, later in Ethiopia anti more recently in Yemen. Clearly, failure to maintain an effective chemical war- fare deterrent would endanger national security. Because it would not alvtays be possible to determine the origin of attack by biological agents, the deterrent aspects of biological re- search are not as sharply defined. A continued biological research program, however, is vital on two other major counts. First, we must strengthen our protective capabilities in such areas as vaccines and therapy. Second, we must minimize the dangers of technological surprise. It is important that the American people be informed of why we must continue to maintain our chemical deterrent, conduct biological research, and how we propose to improve the management and control of these programs. Mr. THURMOND. Mr, President, in view of this, I support this amendment but with some reservation, and mainly In the trust that the military will act promptly and the Congress will respond realistically if they see any indiCation a change in this policy is required. Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I yield 1 minute to the Senator from New York. The PRESIDING OPFICER (Mr. GOODELL in the chair). The Senator from New York is recognized for 1 minute. Mr. GOODELL. Mr. President, the high degree of amiability and unanimity on this omnibus amendment at this point belies the difficulty that many have had in pushing this matter forward so that we could have reasonable regulation of chemical and biological weapons. The amendment does not meet head on the critical issue invorved that I hope the McIntyre subcommittee will face in the year ahead. That is whether our country should continue to produce and stockpile chemical and biological weap- ons and the means of delivering them as a deterrent, and whether we must have a better deterrent in every area of every kind of weapon if we are to pre- serve our national security. I trust that the Senator from New Hampshire will explore this question in depth so that we may have a decision on the matter in the year ahead. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Mr. President, approximately $350 million of taxpayers' money has been spent annually for chemical and biological warfare agents. For many years the Department of De- fense has purchased and stockpiled enor- mous amounts of toxic and infectious chemical and biological agents. Approved For RE.15mingfarek fikIRD/31pfslipKRICI003001000014-3 .1-ragas/ 11, 1969 potential. The fact that we have nerve gases in bases around the world raises grave moral and public policy questions. At least some of the secrecy ought to be ripped away. No one reasonably would ask that Pentagon officials make full dis- closure of every last detail of research, development, production? and storage of its chemical and biological warfare agents. At the same time, a thorough ventilation of the nature of these fright- ful weapons might well lead to stronger treaties against their production and use. Congress must act now to fulfill its re- sponsibility in a program that has es- caped careful congressional scrutiny for too many years. Unfortunately, some of these weapons are presently being used in Vietnam. The use of chemical defoliants in Vietnam has been increasingly questioned by those concerned over the longrun en- vironmental dangers. Also, there is evi- dence that the so-called riot control gases used in Vietnam cin be fatal to the weak, sick, and undernourished civilians exposed to them. On July 2, 1969, U.N. Secretary-Gen- eral U Thant released an excellent re- port on chemical and biological warfare in which he strongly urged that all na- tions ratify the Geneva Protocol of 1925 banning first use of chemical and bio- logical warfare. He also called for all nations to reach agreement to halt the development, production, and stockpiling of all chemical and biological warfare agents and to eliminate them from the arsenal of weapons. U Thant's report makes it clear that the testing and use of biological warfare agents pose health hazards to everyone? that the deadly diseases that have been stockpiled for use as weapons are just as dangerous to the producer and po- tential user as they are to the recipient. The report emphasizes the need to promptly reach agreement on a ban on the production, stockpiling, and use of biological weapons. A proposal that would accomplish this is now before the 25- Nation Disarmament Conference which is meeting in Geneva. I am hopeful that the administration will do all it can to see that this resolution is adopted. Mr. President, today a comparatively few nations possess these lethal weap- ons. However, any nation, large or small, can develop contagious bacteria and viruses. If and when they do, the danger of an accident or purposeful use becomes greater. The very survival of man is at stake. The development and stockpiling of these horrible chemicals and germs is a pursuit after armaments far in excess of those needed for our national security and national defense. I am utterly opposed to any further de- velopment and stockpiling of such de- vices. I urge the adoption of the pending amendment to establish effective guide- lines and controls over the storage, trans- portation, disposal, and maintenance of chemical and biological agents. Also, to ban future open-air testing of lethal chemical agents, disease producing bio- logical micro-organisms or poisons ex- cept on determination of the Secretary of Defense that such tests are necessary for the national security and only then after the Surgeon General has determined In fact, we are in the process of trying to get rid of 27,000 tons of such chemical weapons now obsolete, yet too dangerous to remain stockpiled. During the past 16 years nearly 1,500,000 nerve gas bombs containing a total of 4 million pounds of such gas have been produced. Another 1,350,000 pounds of the same deadly gas is contained in our M55 rockets. Our chemical and biological warfare arsenal now includes numerous and varied agents for the spread of wholesale dis- ease, starvation, choking or suffocating of entire populations, and other such deadly effects. For the first time in many years, pos- sibly since the days of World War I, Americans are becoming uneasy and con- cerned about the most grisly weapons in contemporary arsenals?the weapons of chemical and biological warfare. It is a subject that cries out for sober discus- sion. The production of these weapons has been shrouded in secrecy. Even we in the Congress know very little about what is occurring in experimentation, develop- ment, stockpiling, and disposal of these weapons. Most Senators and Representa- tives were shocked at the recent disclos- ure that 28 persons were injured in a nerve gas accident in Okinawa, and of the fact that the Pentagon has stored nerve gases and other chemical-biologi- cal warfare weapons in bases throughout the world. That time we were lucky that a more serious catastrophe did not occur that could have taken the lives of mil- lions of men, women and children. The extent to which the Congress has been uninformed on this vital issue was best emphasized by a recent statement of the distinguished senior Senator from Louisi- ana (Mr. ELLENDER) , the ranking major- ity member of the Committee on Appro- priations, who said: As far as the Continental U.S. is concerned, evidence has recently been brought out that tremendous stockpiles of various deadly com- pounds are on hand at centers throughout the country. Most of this work has been done without the knowledge of the Congress. Dur- ing my twenty years service on the sub- committee of the Appropriations Committee for Defense, I never have come across any line item for the production of nerve gas. This, despite the fact that almost $1 million a day is being spent by the Pen- tagon on chemical-biological warfare weapons. Since 1964 it has not even been pos- sible to determine how much money the Government is spending on these weap- ons. Estimates vary from $350 million to $500 million per year. In the arsenal of the Pentagon and of those in at least 13 other nations are chemical poisons so toxic that one-fiftieth of a drop can be lethal in minutes. Senators will recall the death in 1968 of 6,400 sheep from nerve gas in the Dugway Proving Ground in Utah. It is horrible to contemplate, but it is a fact that today the Soviet Union and ,United States possess enough of these chemicals and biological agents to de- stroy every man, woman, and child on earth. It is clear that the time has come for a full-scale congressional investigation of our chemical and biological warfare Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 Approved Fcce,M that the proposed tests will not present hazards to public health. The provisions of the pending amendment form an im- portant first step toward stemming and controlling the proliferation of these deadly weapons. Mr. PELL. Mr. President, I was de- lighted to read in the newspapers this weekend that the Secretary of Defense, Hon. Melvin Laird, approves of the amendments that we have before us to control the chemical and biological weapons program. I interpret Secretary Laird's approval of my amendment regarding interna- tional law to mean that the Secretary of Defense recognizes a responsibility of the Department of State for interpreting our international obligations, and I assume that the Secretary of Defense will pro- vide for proper consultation with the Department of State regarding the in- ternational legal implications of the movement of chemical and biological materials outside of the United States in the future. Although I am happy that the chair- man of the Armed Services Committee and the Department of Defense has ap- proved the amendments which we have before us, I hope this does not mean there will not be further debate on the foreign policy questions involved in the RSSR9gtKtlatCCtWERIDFSElrfM03Z4R000300100 Congress better informed on the pro- opment and use does not guarantee gram and indicates the Senate's right- safety. ful concern that testing, transportation, Americans have a right to expect their disposal and storage of chemical and bio- Government to use great caution in ap- logical warfare elements be done as safe- preaching such an awesome set of ly as possible. With this understanding, I weapons. They have a right to expect support the amendment. their Government to use more than or- Mr. MUSKIE. Mr. President, for more dinary care in handling such weapons. than 50 years poison gas has been an in- They have a right to expect their Gov- strument of warfare, and for all that ernment to develop considerable energy time Americans have been repulsed by to eliminating the danger of such weap- the thought of poison gas being used to ons being used in time of war. kill and maim people. The packet of amendments we are As a nation, America traditionally has considering now will enable us to meet viewed the case of poisonous gases as in- their responsibility. humane. We have sought to make gas The PRESIDING OFFICER. All time an illegal weapon of war, and in two having expired, the question is on agree- world wars we declined to use it to kill ing to the modified amendment (No. 131) our enemies. of 'the Senator from New Hampshire. On Despite our public stance, American this question, the yeas and nays have military contracts have continued to be been ordered, and the clerk will call the let and military personnel have been as- roll. signed to the task of researching, devel- The assistant legislative clerk called oping, manufacturing, and storing poison the roll. gas and biological agents. Mr. KENNEDY. I announce that the Until a year ago, gas and germ war- Senator from Tennessee (Mr. GORE) is fare seemed a subject for science fiction, absent on official business. Members of Congress were vaguely aware I also announce that the Senator from of the research and development pro- Indiana (Mr. BAYH) , the Senator from grams, but regarded them as contingency Nevada (Mr. BIBLE) , the Senator from operations, first, to deter other nations Connecticut (Mr. Dona), the Senator from using such weapons first; and sec- from New Mexico (Mr. MONTOYA) , the ond, to aid in' research on counter- Senator from Georgia (Mr. RUSSELL), blin of and the Senator from Texas (Mr. YAR- 001-3 S955 measures. The first tion. I believe that the Senate should complaint came with the use of tear gas, BOROUGH) are necessarily absent. chemical and biological warfare ques- tion. further announce that, if present discuss the role that the Department of defoliants, and napalm in Vietnam. More I Defense expects CBW to Play in the vigorous complaints erupted with news and voting, the Senator from Indiana (Mr. BAYH) the Senator from Tennes- world arms race, and I would hope tha we would discuss the implications of Sec- retary Laird's recent statement imply- ing the chemical and biological weapons are strategic weapons which might be used in a second strike capacity. Mr. TOWER. Mr. President, I would like to express my understanding of the intent and effect of this amendment. This amendment is not intended to prevent the Department of Defense from under- taking biological and chemical research programs. Those programs have been presented and justified to the Congress as required in the interest of national incident and other threats from o defense. The amendment recognizes, chemical and biological warfare program however, that the public and members are being given to the Congress and to of the Congress are concerned that the the public. program be undertaken under conditions The second major incident?or near Aiken of maximum safety and that the Con- incident?was the Army's plan to trans- anoetit gress be fully aware of the actions that port 27,000 tons of poison gas containers Anderson are taken. For this reason, the amend- by rail from Colorado to the east coast Baker ment, while not restricting the types of where it would be loaded on barges and 1:iee ini nmert activities that the Department of De- dumped in the ocean. That plan has Boggs fense may undertake in pursuing the been shelved, temporarily, but additional Brooke program it has presented and justified opposition to the chemical and biologi- 73uyrrcciii,ctit. to us, imposes certain reporting and co- cal warfare program has been stirred up Byrd, W. Va. ordinating requirements. Some of these by the fact that the Army was prepared Cannon requirements may prove burdensome and to ship such dangerous materials across Carure ca time-consuming. Perhaps with experi- the country through large cities without Cook ence we will later decide to remove some major precautions against accidental dis- Cooper of them. However, despite the burdens charge of the gases and without serious Coattonton the amendment imposes, the Department attention to the environmental hazards Curtis of Defense has recognized the concern posed by ocean disposal. Dirksen of the public and members of the Con- In retrospect, the Dugway Proving nomleinica gress in matters concerning chemical Ground accident and the ocean dumping Eagleton warfare and biolokical research pro- proposal may have been blessings in dis- Eastland grams, and has therefore indicated it guise. They have alerted the country to zrnveinnaer will not oppose enactment of the amend- a clear and present danger from chem- Fannin ment. ical and biological warfare operations, in Fong As I understand this amendment, it in peace and in war. Goldwater Fulbright no way represents a criticism of the Materials containing anthrax, tulare- CBW program or of the military officials mia and Q fever germs, nerve gas, and who have administered it. It simply ex- other toxic materials are not minor Bible presses the desire of the Senate to have weapons, and secrecy about their devel- DOcld Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 of dangers from testing and disposa chemical and biological materials and see (Mr. GORE), the Senator from New weapons in the United States. Mexico (Mr. MONTOYA) , the Senator The first major incident came last from Texas (Mr. YARBOROUGH) , and the year when more than 6,000 sheep died Senator from Connecticut (Mr. Doaa) in Utah, near the Dugway Proving would each vote "yea." Ground, where chemical and biological Mr. sear". I announce that the Sen- warfare materials were tested. The sheep ator from Michigan (Mr. GRIFFIN) is de- f all victims to a nerve gas released by a tamed on official business, and, if pres- plane. For a long time military secrecy ent and voting, would vote "yea." cloaked the cause of the deaths. Now, The Senator from Ohio (Mr. &am) thanks in large part to the work of Rep- is necessarily absent; and if present and resentative RICHARD D. MCCARTHY, Dem- voting, would vote "yea." ocrat, of New York, the facts about that The result was announced?yeas 91, nays 0, as follows: [No. 74 Leg.] YEAS-91 Goodell Gravel Gurney Hansen Harris Hart Hartke Hatfield Holland Hollings Hruska Hughes Inouye Jackson Javits Jordan, N.C. Jordan, Idaho Kennedy Long Magnuson Mansfield Mathias McCarthy McClellan McGee McGovern McIntyre Metcalf Miller Mondale Moss NOT VOTING-9 Gore Russell Griffin Saxbe Montoya Yarborough Mundt Murphy Muskie Nelson Packwood Pastore Pearson Pell Percy Prouty Proxmire Randolph Ribicoff Schweiker Scott Smith Sparkman Spong Stennis Stevens Symington Talmadge Thurmond Tower Tydings Williams, N.J. Williams, Del. Young, N. Dak. Young, Ohio S9556 Approved For Reims' So Mr. MCINTYRE'S amendment (No. 131), as modified, was-agreed to. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr_President, I move to reconsider the vote by which the amendment was agreed to. Mr. NELSON. I move to lay that mo- tion on the table. The motion to lay on the table was agreed to. Mr. STENNIS addressed the Chair. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississielpi is recognized. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I wish to make a very brief about the bill and con eration of addi- tional amendments thereto. Mr. SYMINGTON. I. President, may we have order? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senate will be in order. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, what I will say is nothing new, but I am Say- ing it in an effort to promote our de- bate in such a way that the issues will be understood by Members of the Sen- ate. As an illustration, last Friday we had about 31/2 hours of debate on an amend- ment by the device of continuous yield- ing by the author. This is a practice we have fallen into. I do net blame anyone; no one was out of order; and I do not make these remarks critically. However, the committee had no chance in all that time to present our views and the situa- tions as we saw it with reference to that amendment. That is only an illustra- tion. I hope we can work out something to avoid such a situation in the future. The committee chairman has no control, ex- cept as he may confer and reach under- standings with Senators with respect to which amendment is called up and when it shall come up. The main point I wish to talk about now is that this bill represents a balanced program. Mr. President, will the Chair enforce the rule so that we may have order? The PRESIDING OrtelCeat. The Sen- ate will be in order. Mr. STENNIS. We have offensive nu- clear weapons, and we have provided for a defensive system against the offensive nuclear weapons arrayed against us. We know that we are not going to make a first strike. There is nothing like that in the minds of the people, Congress, or the President. We know that we are not going to start a nuclear war. I do not know, but with the high development of these weapons I doubt that Russia would in- tentionally start a nuclear war. Perhaps the time when that was probable is be- hind us. However, no one really knows. So we must be prepared in that field. I do not believe we should say that we will riot start one under any circumstances. I said that years ago. I mention these matters to get down to the real issue; namely, the need for conventional forces. At one time, we were getting away from that. We went into the nuclear field and neglected modernization of the Army. We neglected a great many other things because we put most of our money Into nuclear weapons. Certainly we are not about to reach a millennium, when everyone will be at WE4A163P1AFIW8ili3?(9W 00300100001-3. August 11, 1969 peace, and the lion and the lamb will lie down together, when there will be no more boundary disputes and no more aggression against one nation by an- other. We do not believe that that mil- lennium has arrived. We know that we must have sufficient military strength to protect our people, and I am talking about 200 million citizens here at home. We know that we must protect them with sufficient conventional weapons. We know that it must be our policy to pro- tect those 200 million Americans. We have assumed many commitments around the world and may be forced to go beyond our boundaries and protect the perimeter. We may want to reduce these com- mitments, but no one is offering a resolu- tion to do so. No Senator has proposed a plan to change the situation. No com- mittee of Congress is hearing any testi- mony on the subject. There is no report or statement of opinion of a committee that is weighted in favor of any change. We have not had any requests from a President to that effect?from President Nixon or any prior President. Thus, our policy still is that we can best protect ourselves by providing some defense of the outer perimeter. That is what a great deal of the hardware in the bill is for. Some Senators may think the bills should be changed right here on the floor of the Senate, piece by piece, so as to take out the tanks, take out the car- riers, take out this, or take out that. I do not believe that is the way to proceed. When the will of the majority is felt, we will find out for sure. I favored paring some items in the bill, as I said in my opening talk, but we had better know what we are doing and have a committee consider the mat- ter from all angles and submit a report on a bill. This is what the Armed Serv- ices Committee did. At the same time, I should also like to know what the President thinks about it. This policy should be enunciated clearly; then we can implement it. Let us not place the cart before the horse. We all remember that following World War II we decided that Japan should have no weapons, except to a very limited degree. We said to Japan, "We will take care of you." I think we overdid it. We should modify that. But can we do that? Can we take pieces out of the military bill on the flour of the Senate, until the President, the committees and others have spoken or enunciated some kind of policy? Look at our obligations around the world. Take Korea. We must not tear down everything we have built up there. We guaranteed Korea's integrity when no other nation joined with us. It was just the United States of America and Korea. We guaranteed Korea's protec- tion. That requires credible military forces and military deterrence. It does not take a wise man to see that. We all remember Formosa. We all re- member Vietnam, where we are now. The Lord only knows how or when we can get out of there. We are members of SEATO and NATO. All these obligations prove conclusively that we need balanced con- ventional forces, and that we must have them. I want to have them with the smallest number of dollars. Let me mention something else. One can go to a military service and some- times get a large listing of the defects in the weapons of a rival military service. That is a part of the picture in the Pen- tagon. The Navy which believes in its weapons, and the Air Force also believes in its weapons?and I am glad they do. But sometimes, on the gide, they are quick to point out defects, real or imaginary, in the weapons of the other service. Let me give an illustration. I was once inside the matter of the Nike-Hercules ground-to-air defense missile. I thought we were going too fast and too far, and before it had been perfected enough. The bill provided hundreds of millions of dollars. I was handling the military construc- tion bill. A general spoke on "Pace the Nation" that Sunday afternoon. He was a very fine general. The question was put to him: If a city were properly de- fended with enough Nike-Hercules, and a hundred enemy bomber planes came in, how many could they knock out? He said, "A hundred out of a hundred." The next morning I talked with an outstanding admiral of that day, one of the foremost we had. / said, "If a city had the required number of Nike-Her- cules and a hundred enemy bombers were coming in to bomb the city, how many Nike-Hercules could they knock down out of that hundred?" He said, "Not a darned one." I think both of those gentlemen were wrong. But that general remark of the admiral, coming down the corridor of the building, having no appointment, led us to go further into the matter. Mr. McNamara told me later that it would save some money. But my point is that we do not know enough about mis- siles. My point is that there is interservice rivalry, and that is seldom brought up in debate. I am not saying this critically of anyone. I know there is rivalry. Some- times it is within a service. All of us remember the old cavalry. The cavalry has gone. But weapons rivalry still exists within the services. So we had better examine carefully some of the information we are getting? and getting in good faith?about these matters. My point is that the bill pro- vides a balanced program, something that the Joint Chiefs have agreed to. The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs is no ordinary man. Do not discount Gen- eral Wheeler, unless you want to con- demn all military men. If you do, let General Wheeler go on down the drain with the rest of them. But if you want impartiality, do not discount General Wheeler. That is not all. We are looking for a balanced program in Weaponry. This program is largely one like that approved by former Secretary McNamara. What- ever one may think about him, he had plenty of sense. I think he was one of the most effective Secretaries of Defense we have ever had. I do not think he was right on all things, but he worked, and he knew a lot about defense. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Fe LblyamsaiN4/AnkccipfifiDPgtgRiA4R000300100001-3 S 9557 August 11, 1969Approved F Former Secretary Clifford approved President of the United States. I will be this program, although there were some differences in details. We squeezed a great deal of water out. But Mr. Clifford is a man of high intelli- gence and considers things seriously. Secretary Laird approved this budget just as recently as early March. Senators who do not know Secretary Laird have missed a gem. We who serve on the Com- mittee on Appropriations have been con- fronting his fine mind and ability for years. I do not know of any Member of Congress who rendered finer service in this field than Representative Melvin Laird. He was usually a jump ahead of most of the rest of us. So the program provided by the bill is his best judgment. He believes the Nation needs this bill as a balanced program. I do not mean that every "i" must be dotted and every "t" crossed, of course, but as an overall proposition. That is not all. President Nixon ap- proved virtually all of this budget. Mr. Nixon is not a newcomer. He is not one who had been president of General Motors or president of a university or some other institution. That man learned the hard way. I am not complimenting him. We all know his background and experience. I tell the Senate that when he came back here in 8 years I was amazed, from the word "go," at the fine knowledge he had of the present situation and the present need, here and there and everywhere, of the military program. I know, because I have talked with him over and over. He did not have anything to offer me. I did not have anything that I could give him, except just loyalty to the country. I am not espousing the Nixon program, or any- thing like that. I am talking about na- tional defense now. But he grasped this problem. He had it in his mind. He was as well versed as anyone outside the mili- tary itself. Melvin Laird was there, and so were others. They made hard decisions. They may be planning more. That is the case here. We are not living in a millennium?oh, riot by a long shot. We are not out of Vietnam?not by a long shot. We will have to have the hard- ware, the weapons, the manpower, the know-how, the skills, and the judgment, if we are to continue as a leader of the free world. I am no internationalist. I am no big spender, either. I am no big spender? my records shows it?for the military department. When we talk about such terms as "military-industrial complex," and all that, that does not mean anything to me, and I do not think it means anything to anyone in the show down. I think it is a slander and a libel on a great mili- tary profession and the membership of the Senate for those things to be fed out and fed out on the Senate floor, through committee hearings, through television, through radio, everywhere, all the time, to create?and it does create?a pre- judice. 'Whether that is the purpose or not?I will let every man's motives be decided by him or someone else, 'and not by me?but it is leading this coun- try into what I consider a dangerous ' state of mind?mistrust, distrust, down- grading the military, and downgrading the Senators who have responsibility for d ho are falsely charged our defense an w with being "dominated by the miliary." Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. Please let me finish with just a few more words. I give everyone credit for good faith, and I think everyone wants to do what he thinks then is best for the country. But I warn you, we can slip back mighty fast just because we are displeased with a few things. I am displeased with many things. We all wish we could stop the war in Vietnam, for one thing. I am dis- pleased with some contracts for military supplies and material that have been en- tered into. Incidentally, those contracts came directly out of the brains of the civilian authorities in the Pentagon. We will get into that later. But I told the military, "You do have some responsibility in the field of spend- ing." When General Ryan, now the Chief of the Air Force, was before us for confirmation, I said, 'General it is not your primary responsibility, but in the nature of things, you do have responsibilities for the expenditures of this money. In part you are re- sponsible in the military area, and I think you ought to train more and more men in the field of management and related fields, so that as you bring them through the categories of promotion, you will have more responsible men. I know you have some who are outstanding, but not enough." He agreed with me heartily. I am going to write the other Chiefs and make the same point. I think it is part of our duty. But if we scuttle this whole thing, if we cut the bone and the muscle here by making too many unwise reduc- tions, acting in the dark, we will rue the day. I favor reducing military manpower as soon as the shooting stops at least to the level it was before the war started. I am not settling on that as the final figure. But, by a quick calculation, in that category alone there is a minimum of $10 billion a year in savings. There are other sayings we can make. I want the military and the civilian part of the department to do a better job in getting a dollar's worth for every single dollar they spend. But I tell you, we will never do that by settling for sec- ond rate weapons. We will never do that ? by giving the doughboy we send to the front an old tank. We will never do that by sending our aviators, whether they be in the Navy, Air Force, or other service, in a plane not as good as the one he is up against. And so on down the line. I speak with all deference to every- one, but I tell you, right now we are getting off into the wrong attitude. We are getting off into an attitude of knock down, drag out, regardless of conse- quences, that can leave this Nation?not immediately, but within a few years? unprepared to defend its own people. Let us get a balanced program of weapons together. Let us reexamine our foreign policy, and if we want to change it, let competent Senators come in here with a definite resommendation on their resolution, on their report, on their testi- mony, and on the recommendation of the found somewhere, perhaps not up frbnt but somewhere up near the front, plug- ging in a proper way for some reasonable modification. But there are points beside honor in- volved, in turning our backs upon our commitments. There is involved, for ex- ample, the safety and perhaps the sur- vival of the American people. So, Mr. President, while I welcome debate on any phase of this bill to any reasonable extent, I will approach it in the way that I have outlined; and frankly, I was talking more to the people of the United States than to anyone else in these last few minutes. Several Senators addressed the Chair. Mr. STENNIS. I believe the Senator from North Carolina had risen first, if he wishes me to yield. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, I ask the Senator from Mississippi if he does not think that it is a fitting time for us to meditate seriously upon this little verse: God and the soldier we adore ' On the brink of ruin, not before; When danger's past, and all things righted, God is forgotten and the soldier slighted. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I am happy to yield to the Senator from Arkansas. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I certainly have great sympathy with the position of the Senator from Mississippi. He is, I think, one of the most conscientious and dedi- cated Members of this body, and not just in his position as chairman of the Com- mittee on Armed Services. He has served with equal distinction as chairman of other committees, and has performed some very difficult functions. I do not quarrel at all, certainly, with his motives or what he is saying. But I should like to comment in this sense: He says he is interested primarily in a bal- anced program. I take it he meant bal- anced within the Military Establishment. I think I, and those of my colleagues ? who share some of my views, are inter- ested in a balanced program also, but we feel that the balance should be between the military program and the other pro- grams of this Government. Mr. STENNIS. If the Senator will ex- cuse me a moment, I have an urgent matter. Very well. Mr. FULBRIGHT. As a result of a series of crises and wars, for which the Senator from Mississippi, of course, is not to blame, there has developed an im- balance, not within the military so much, but between the military and other pro- grams of our Government. This entire debate is about how to correct that im- balance. To ask the Senate to accept the pro- posals of the Pentagon without thorough debate and examination, it seems to me, to have the Senate simply to abdicate its real function. On many of these mat- ters there have been hearings, as the Senator mentioned. There have been some extremely interesting hearings in the Committee on Foreign Relations, also, and in the Joint Economic Commit- tee headed by the Senator from Wiscon- sin (Mr. Paoxmifts). Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9558 Approved For Relea,se 2004/11/30,? CIA-RDP71B00364R000300100001-3 wiNGKESSIONAL RECORD ? SEN Some of the witnesses before that committee, such as Mr. Fitzgerald and others, are certainly qualified, and as good as we have in this Government. They are right out of the Pentagon it- self. Some have suffered personally be- cause of their daring to do their duty, in my opinion, as citizens. The difference in view on this problem arises because I think that, as Senators, we should balance the military with oth- er governmental programs. I submit that when you calculate the amount of money devoted to the military establishment since World War II?well over a $1,000 billion?against other activities impor- tant to the country, such as education and the development of our natural re- sources, I think our system of priorities is out of balance. That, as I said, is real- ly what this debate is about. The Senator has mentioned rivalry among the services. That is not news. We know about that, and I do not complain about it. But it is our duty to correct some of the results of such rivalry. We have been told, and I think there is a degree of truth in it, that when we give, we will say, a big program, to the Army and the Air Force. About all that can be done to balance things out is give the Navy more aircraft carriers. That way they will receive about as much as the Air Force and the Army; and there- fore, to retain a kind of balance. So we continue to build aircraft carriers when they are obsolete. No other country in the world builds them. . That in itself raises a serious question: Why, if aircraft carriers are really useful and not obsolete, is not Russia, or China, or Germany, or somebody, out trying to build aircraft carriers? It is rather odd that we should be the only ones to put so much faith in this kind of machine. Carriers are extraordinarily costly. The Senator from Missouri (Mr. SYMINGTOIV) is a better spokesman than on this sub- ject, but I recognize that, as a member of the Committee on Armed Services, he is a little bit embarrassed to take issue with his colleagues. I would be, too. I am always a little bit embarrassed to take issue with my colleagues on a committee, with whom I have shared many hear- ings; but the Senator from Missouri has said much about this subject on many occasions. It is, I submit, the balance of all over national programs that should concern us. I do not for a moment suggest that the Senator from Mississippi is a spend- thrift. We are not saying that he is ex- travagant at all. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, if the Senator will yield to me, I do not have to wait until he or anyone else accuses me of something. I simply call attention to my record. I do not have to wait for the Senator or anyone else. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Of course, I think there are some members of congressional committees who, in the past, have shown a disposition?and it is not the Senate& from Mississippi to whom I refer?to urge upon the Pentagon increatted appropria- tions, even over what was requested. Coining to the question af the military- industrial complex, the Senator says it is a slander that anyone should mention it. ATE August 11, 1969 have been held. We have heard from knowledgeable people. In addition, on occasions when we have requested information from the Defense Establishment, we have been met with the statement that it was classified or too sensitive. They would not furnish it. So, to the degree that we are operating in the dark, I submit that it is not the fault of the Senate committees. It is the fault of the establishment itself in re- fusing to make available what I believe to be appropriate and relevant documents and information. I do not really believe the Senator has a legitimate quarrel about the debate and about the proposals to try to bring about what I would call a better balance be- tween the Military Establishment and the rest of the Government of the United States. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield briefly? Mr. STENNIS. I will yield later. I be- lieve the Senator from California had re- quested that I yield to him. I yield to the Senator from California. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from California is recognized. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, relative to the Armed Services Committee, I must say that my experience this year has been a great revelation. I suggest that the matter of balance of expenditures cer- tainly must have been because of the necessity created by world conditions. If we did not have some of the world problems that exist today, we would not have the problem of making high expen- ditures in order to achieve the balance that the distinguished chairman of the Armed Services Committee has spoken of. I think probably that, looking at the past and finding where the fault lies, certainly when we have called on the military, wherever they have been per- mitted to do so, they have done their job very well insofar as I recall history back beginning with World War I. However, very often where we have looked at the action of the Political Establishment in international affairs and their record, in my humble opinion, has not been quite as good. Therefore, I point out that the prob- lems which have been created have caused this difficulty in achieving the balance about which the distinguished chairman talks. Referring to the remarks of the distin- guished Senator from Arkansas concern- ing the statement that we do not have good planes, my experience is that we do not now have them. We have been very neglectful in certain tategories. Our planes are good but old. We have not kept up with our potential aggressors and enemies. We do have a good rifle. However, strangely enough, for some reason, we have only one manufacturer. We have heard about the deficiencies of the South Vietnamese. However, we find that when they had a good rifle, they are pretty good soldiers. They are brave. They are eager to defend their country. So, I think that the distinguished chairman of the Armed Services Com- mittee makes an excellent point. While there are many other areas that need our I have mentioned it, but I certainly, in most of my formal speeches on the sub- ject, have made it very clear that the people in the Pentagon, by and large, do not deserve that kind of criticism, nor that it should be regarded as a slander. I regard the criticism, if warranted any- where, as warranted against Congress; and I should share in it, in that, for 25 years, I have never before seriously en- gaged in an effort to cut or change, in any substantial way, the budget requests of the military establishment; nor has anyone else to speak of. This is simply the first effort to restore balance to the system. It is not a slander upon the military. Nobody is slandering the military. If there is any criticism at all, I think it is primarily due to Con- gress failure for too long to expose to debate and serious examination these programs. I do not believe the Senator from Mis- sissippi could say that we have really seriously examined these programs in the past. Not even the Bureau of the Budget has done so. I ask Mr. Schultze, who was then Director of the Budget, in open hearing, about the research programs in the Pentagon. He said frankly that they did not go into them; they just accepted the Pentagon's views. We have on record a statement of Mr. McNamara that he made, I think before the Committee on Armed Services, that in not one instance while he was Sec- retary of Defense, where there was a dif- ference of view between the Bureau of the Budget and the Pentagon, was the Pentagon ever overruled. He always pre- vailed. This, again, is most unusual, and at least partly the fault of Congress, be- cause nobody bothered to challenge it. Therefore, I do not believe the Senator has a legitimate complaint about the way in which he or the Military Estab- lishment has been treated. After all, they have $80 billion available in round fig- ures. An to say that our Military Estab- lishment is obsolete and that our service- men do not have good rifles and good airplanes, is, it seems to me, a gross re- flection upon the efficiency of American industry. The money has certainly been spent in large amounts for that purpose. The Senator is saying that we have given the money but that we do not know how to produce a good airplane. It has not been for the lack of money that we do not have a good plane. If we do not have one. I have been under the impres- sion that we do have good planes and good rifles. I have been under the im- pression that we do have good ships and other equipment. Never once have I shared the idea or said that our people are not properly equipped. We have spent and are spending, as the Senator knows, from the best estimates of our intelligence community, substan- tially more than the Russians have spent. And they are the ones we seem to be so concerned about. When the Senator says that we are cutting in the dark and slashing and cut- ting without knowing what we are doing, he is making a statement that I do not subscribe to. I think we know a good deal about the normal programs. Many good hearings Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969Approved F65?titysitffigmil Iikeht&Dygog98[3p4 R000300100001-3 s 9559 attention in this country, they have not been neglected. I have had the great privilege of serv- ing on the Labor and Public Welfare Committee and on the Education Sub- committee. There has not been any great neglect. However, we could do more. I join with the distinguished Senator from Arkansas in hoping for the day when this sort of balance has been achieved and we can proceed on all mat- ters in progress, peace, and prosperity not only in our country but also around the world. At the present time, I am afraid that we must be realistic. I am afraid that we cannot achieve all of the theory on these programs. We have to accept the situation as it exists today. We have many plans for research and development. We have very little hard- ware. We have to rebuild and reestablish our military in order to carry out our com- mitments and, hopefully, as the result of the strategic arms limitation meetings that are about to take place, we can look for a day when we can deescalate the ex- penditures on the military side and in- crease them on the other side. My colleagues know that I come from a State where a great deal of these pro- curement funds will be spent. I have had no pressure, no calls, and no suggestions from the so-called highly publicized mili- tary-industrial complex which used to be called the military-industrial-scientific complex. There has been no pressure on me. My decisions in the committee have been based on the information brought out in the hearings and as a result of the questioning of experts, both military and nonmilitary and the studying and read- ing I have done over years past in order hopefully to equip myself properly for my present position. I associate myself with the remarks of the distinguished chairman of the com- mittee, the Senator from Mississippi, and say that he hopes, as we all do, that this balance will be much easier to establish once we get world conditions in balance the way they should be. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I thank the Senator for his remarks. I point out to the Senator from Ar- kansas that my remarks and my plea Is for this balance in conventional forces within the military. However, if he will bring in some more balance on our com- mitments in a bill or a resolution, with a report and other usual documents be- hind the measure, things that ordinarily go with it, he and I will be found to be closer together. My point is that, until we do that, we cannot simply turn our backs on the commitments we have made. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, we are in the process of trying to do that right now in reexamining our commit- ments. We have a staff working on it and we think we are making some prog- ress. I hope the Senator does not think we are not doing our best to do exactly that. In the meantime, other matters come up and require our attention. I am not being critical of the Senator from Mississippi. He is doing his job as is the military, I think. I think in all honesty that I and the other Members of the Senate have failed to do what we should have been doing for 10 or 15 years in being a little more attentive to this kind of program. We have allowed our priorities to get out of balance. Does the Senator from Mississippi agree that we have inferior planes and that our planes are not as good as the aircraft of other countries? Mr. STENNIS. I do not agree. I hope the very opposite is true. However, if we do not build new planes, new types of planes?and we have to make the deci- sion 4 or 5 years in advance?we could find ourselves second rate. We may have already slept too long with refer- ence to other weapons. Mr. FULBRIGHT. We heard the state- ment of a Senator from a State in which more planes are built than in any other State, to the effect that we have inferior planes. I never believed that to be true. I had not heard that at all. We have some that are inferior in some fields. However, our best planes are as good as the best planes of any other country today. Mr. STENNIS. I do not know that that Is true right now. However, we have pro- vision for some contained in the bill. They are moving along and will be the best. I have referred to our many commit- ments to other countries?commitments which require us to defend them. I mentioned Japan. There is a hard one. Take that one on and get it modi- fied, if the Senator believes it should be modified, and bring us something defi- nite on that problem if the Senator wants to. I believe that we can consider some other matters here in that immediate field. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I think there is a great deal of merit in what the Senator Is saying, and that is what we are try- ing to do. We recently had the case of the Spanish bases, and we tried to mod- ify it. We did get it modified?not as much as I would like, but we modified it substantially. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield to the Senator from Wisconsin. I do not mean to try to retain the floor. Mr. PROXMIRE. I will be brief. I say to the distinguished Senator from Mississippi that so far as cutting in the dark is concerned, I think that this year, for the first time in many years?cer- tainly, in the years I have been in the Senate?we are acting with far more in- formation and understanding than ever before, for a number of reasons. First, the Senator from Mississippi has done an excellent job in his committee and in his hearings. I have had a chance to go over the hearings, and I think he and his committee not only have asked the right questions but also have orga- nized unsually well. As I understand it, the Senator has delegated to some of the members of the committee a great deal of authority, and they have investigated thoroughly and have come up with some extremely useful information. In addition?and I think this is most unusual?this year a number of Sena- tors?I am not one of them?organized a group called Peace Through Law, and they secured outside professional advice on a number of weapons systems. If the Senator from Mississippi has had a chance to review the report?I think the Senator from Oregon (Mr. HATFIELD) is one of the principal movers in this area?I believe he will be im- pressed not only by the professionalism involved but also by the moderation of their recommendations. They did not propose to cut deeply, but they did pro- pose to make some moderate, thoughtful cuts that were well documented. I understand that the Senator from Oregon will speak on this matter a little later. I hope he speaks soon, because the Senate should be aware of the very comprehensive, painstaking, and thor- ough examination which has been made of this budget. Also, the Joint Economic Committee held hearings last November, January, and June, in which we examined in con- siderable detail, on the public record, the military budget. We had some experts on these weapons appear before us. We have developed Boone substantial infor- mation. So I think this debate will not be cut- ting in the dark and it will not be ir- responsible from the standpoint of those who are offering amendments to reduce the military budget. I agree with the Senator from Mississippi that we must have a strong military force?strong Army, Navy, and Air Force?and we must be secure. I think our amendments are going to be in the area of trying to achieve this. If there is a difference of opinion, it is simply a difference of judg- ment as to precisely what is needed from a technical standpoint, not a difference in terms of value in judgment. We must have a secure armed force, for our mili- tary people certainly are serving this country very well. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator very much for his remarks. I think he has done some excellent work. Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, I am pleased that the Senator from Wisconsin is present, because he has a great amount- of knowledge about the economic aspects of this matter. The statement has been made by the Senator from Arkansas that we should have a balance in the broader sense of the term rather than a balance with re- spect to conventional and strategic forces. I think both points of view are proper. We should have a perspective in both senses. But I think the danger is that by talk- ing about a balance in the broad sense, much has been said about the military being out of balance. I believe the Sena- tor from Arkansas implied, when he pointed out all the other commitments, that we have in our own domestic respon- sibilities. I have been trying to make the point to my colleagues?and this is the third time?that one way of looking at balance is to look at our gross national product. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9560 Approved For Retagts41404atigh:SteegilliBRI4INto3ool0000l,?g?st II, 1969 I believe that economists generally take a look at a nation's gross national product as an indication of its capabilities to meet various commitments. While I recognize that a $78 billion national defense budget sounds like a great amount of money, I think it should be put in the perspective of what our gross national product is. I have pointed out that for fiscal year 1970, the $78 billion defense budget will comprise approximately 8.1 percent of our gross national product, and that is no larger than it was for fiscal 1969. I thought we should go back in 5-year periods for 15 years to see how it looks. If one goes back to fiscal 1964, fiscal 1959, and fiscal 1954, he will find that the pro- posed defense budget for fiscal 1970 is less in percentage of our gross national product than 3 of those periods and equal in one. So I find myself a little unenthusiastic about all this talk about balance when I take a look at our ability, which is re- flected in the gross national product. One other thought on this matter is that if you take from the $78 billion national defense budget $28 billion for the cost of the war in Vietnam, you get down to $50 billion, which we might say represents what could be a normal na- tional defense commitment. The war is an abnormal situation. That would put us down to 5 percent of our gross na- tional product. I invite the attention of Senators to this fact: Even though the 8.1 percent of our gross national product is what our national defense will come to for fiscal 1970, that includes $28 billion for the war. When you go back to 1964, there is practically nothing for the war; there was nothing for a war in 1959; and there was nothing for a war in 1954. Yet, the percentage of the gross national prod- uct devoted to military was greater than the percentage we are going to have for fiscal 1970. My point is simply this: Before we start talking too much and too enthusiasticsilY about a balance, let us put things in perspective. If we put things in perspec- tive, then I think we might be able to do a better job. I thank the Senator for yielding, Mr. STENNIS. 1 thank the Senator. Mr. ELLENDER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. ELLENDER. Mr. President, there is no one in the Senate for whom I have higher respect than the distinguished Senator from Mississippi. I know that he is doing a good job as chairman of the Committee on Armed Services. He is very conscientious. Mr. STENNIS. I wish I could be as good a Senator and as effective a Sen- ator as the Senator from Louisiana. Mr. ELLENDER. I have been trying for the past 12 years to get most of our troops removed from Western Europe. We have had between four and one-half and six divisions there for 20 years. The main reason why they were sent there, Fla I understand it, was to help contain the Soviet Union, and to reassure our NATO allies that they would be protected by U.S. forces. We built huge airfields in Japan, Oki- nawa, the Philippines, and all over Africa to isolate Russia, and in the proc- ess we actually have been sustaining all of Western Europe militarily. We have also constructed many harbors and other military installations. But, somehow, we seem to be unable to get the countries of Western Europe to assist us in our efforts. They do not seem to sense the danger as our military advisers see it, and that should give us something to think about. The Senator stated that we are in South Korea. We have been there vir- tually alone for many, many years. And this is supposedly a United Nations un- dertaking. It is not totally a U.S. action, as the Senator knows but we have been carry- ing most of the burden. It seems that the executive department is unable to obtain help or any kind of assistance from the other members of the United Nations. We have been carrying that load alone, as I have stated, at a very substan- tial cost to our taxpayers. Now as to Western Europe, it seems to me that it is up to the Chief Executive and perhaps Congress to try to get as- sistance from our erstwhile allies or with- draw most of our manpower from that area. We have been in Western Europe now for 20 years, as I said. It has been costing the taxpayers of this Nation over $2 billion a year to sustain the five and one-half divisions stationed there. To- gether with their families that are and have been in that area for the past 15 years, the total of roughly 600,000 Amer- icans. I cannot understand why we should not obtain assistance. The Senator is on the Subcommittee on Appropriations for the Armed Services. He knows that I have tried every time a new Secretary of De- fense was named?beginning with Mr. McElroy and then Mr. Wilson, and their successors?to get help from Western Europe. All I could obtain was, "We will try." Try?that is all they have done and with no results. From the start the countries of West- ern Europe were not carrying their just load as they promised to do. On a visit there in 1960, between the Republican and Democratic National Conventions, I found that our so-called allies had no di- visions that were ready for action. In Germany, Belgium, and other countries, there were more or less paper divisions. If the Russians had struck in 1960, there would have been only five and a half di- visions from our country ready to go, and one brigade from Canada. As I have stated, the rest of them were paper di- visions and it would have required months to bring them to our stanards. Why that situation was permitted to continue I cannot say, but somebody was not on the job. When I visited SHAEF in 1960, even our military people there stated to me that our allies were well prepared and ready to go, but after an investigation I found that they were mere paper divisions, particularly in Germany. Now, to come to our local situation, I have voted every dollar requested by the Defense Department to maintain our de- fenses. Five or six years ago it was my feeling that since we were living in a mis- sile age, we should spent much of our time and money in developing more and better missiles. It was obvious to me that if a war were to occur between us and Russia, it would be a war in which nu- clear missiles would be used, and not conventional weapons. I stated at the time that it was my feeling and my belief that our country could not afford to carry on both a mis- sile-age program and a conventional war program. It would be simply impossible; it would be too costly. But my advice was not heeded, and we are making efforts now to carry on preparation for both a missile-age war and a conventional war- fare program. I see no reason why we should do that if the people from West- ern Europe, who are now able to assist us, do not joint in helping us. It is my belief that as long as the U.S. Govern- ment permits the French Germans, Bel- gians, Danes ,and the British to lay their heads on Uncle Sam's shoulder and to carry them along, they will not do any- thing to help us out. Mr. President, It strikes me that every effort should be made by the present administration to obtain assistance, real assistance, from the governments of Western Europe; and, if they do not agree, we should get out of Western Eu- rope. That is what I advocate and that is what I have been proposing for at least 10 years, with little or no success. They seem not to see any danger and our mili- tary people take the position that Europe should be protected. I cannot agree. I am not going to try to debate now the many mistakes made by our policy planners or by the managers of the Pen- tagon's research and development pro- gram. However, as the Senator from Mississippi knows, it has been my belief for a long time that we have been pro- viding too large a reservoir of research money for the Pentagon, and the plan- ners have fallen over themselves to find ways to spend the available funds. I think this year the Defense was allowed over $8 billion by the Bureau of the Budget. Is that correct? Mr. STENNIS. The exact figure was $8.2 billion. Mr. ELLENDER. And it was cut back by how much? Mr. STENNIS. About $1 billion in all. Mr. ELLENDER. As I figure it there is over $7 billion in the bill before us. Mr. STENNIS. It is $7.179 billion. Mr. ELLENDER. As long as we have that much money for the Pentagon to do research, ways will be found to spend it. I am very hopeful that during this session we will be able to cut back on some of these research funds. Today we are budgeting almost $17 billion for re- search funds in all departments of Gov- ernment. I cannot help but feel there is much waste. Such a huge sum cannot be frugally administered. My good friend from Arkansas (Mr. MCCLELLAN) is familiar with all the bil- lions of dollars that we have spent for the P-111, but we still have funds in the pending bill for further research and Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 A 11 1969 Approved Foeftnesffailay3ittEiti!p117glifflik3ft$R000300100001-3 ugust , S 9561 building more prototypes and some I am not absolving the military from listened with a good deal of interest to planes for our Air Force. all the blame but this is one instance the statement of the Senator from Mis- Mr. McCLELLAN. Will the Senator where there was a great overrun of the sissippi and the remarks which have yield at that point? costs, where the Secretary of Defense been made in response. We appreciate Mr. ELLENDER. I shall yield in a said he was taking the figures out of his his sincerity and the great amount of moment. Also, we were presented with a head and overruled everyone else. Thus, work he has performed on the bill before large sum to continue the MOL?the we cannot blame the military and the us. For myself, I do not find any fault Manned Orbital Laboratory. It was only experts in the military field when they in his concept of balance. after a good deal of coaxing that re- try to counsel, and their counsel is over- While the amendment which was of- search for the MOL was discontinued, ruled in that fashion. I want to keep the fered by the Senator from Michigan The Air Force is not spending any more record straight. I am sure the military (Mr. HART) and myself took a good deal money in that direction. Over $1 billion have made many blunders, but the Sen- of time, I do not think it has been was spent through the Air Force before ator mentioned that one plane, and I wasted. It has directed the attention of the project was halted. have some knowledge about that. the Senate, the Congress, and the peo- In a related area, I am chairman of the Mr. ELLENDER. I have named no one. pie to the defense budget, and naturally subcommittee which goes over the funds Mr. McCLELLAN. I did. I named the debate led into the larger questions requested by the Atomic Energy Com- someone. of security and the means of -attaining mission. For years, we have been work- Mr. ELLENDER. I did not. I was talk- security. Ing on a small atomic engine for the ing about the Defense Department gen- I have not been one who has criticized space program. We have already spent erally. I know that there was quite a dif- the military. I have always recognized $1,200,000,000 on this engine and up to ference of opinion between the Navy and that our military leaders have a particu- now we have not satisfactorily con- the Air Force regarding the F-111 and lar responsibility, a responsibility to plan structed a prototype. I asked how long it that the Navy took the position that and recommend those programs which would take to complete the engine, and I they should have their own plane. they believe are necessary for the secur- was told 7 more years would be needed Mr. McCLELLAN. The result was they ity of the country. The security of this and that the cost would be about $1,100- did not get any plane. If they had got- country is not limited only by its physi- ten what was given to them, they would cal protection but, in my view, it compre- heds protecting its institutions and our 000,000 more. So we will be spending well over $2 billion in order to perfect this machine. Yet at the same time, I am proposing a small amount in that very same bill to continue our public works programs, to fight air pollution and water pollution and, somehow, I have been un- able to get amounts budgeted for those worthy projects. I am for a balanced military program, for our own immediate protection, but not for one to protect the whole world. Most of the millions of dollars we have spent on the military assistance advisory groups and other missions throughout the world have not been well spent. They have brought us more grief and trouble than anything else, in my opinion. They have served to keep the pot boiling, and have helped create fear and suspicion among nations which should be good friends and neighbors. They have helped get us into arguments where we had no good reason to be, and no real American interest to protect. So far as I am concerned, I should like to see every American soldier now in Europe come back, and let the Europeans do more to protect themselves. They are well able to take care of themselves by this time. Mr. McCLELLAN. The Senator from Louisiana mentioned a while ago as one illustration the F-111 airplane. In all fairness, I am not absolving the military from all the blame in connection with that airplane, but I think the record should be kept straight that the mili- tary, from the very beginning, disap- proved of that airplane, and from the be- ginning, the military people warned that the commonality of the concept would not work, that the two planes would not be able to perform the missions for which they were designed. Thus, I simply want to keep the record straight that the pri- mary mistake and responsibility, and then the compounding of that mistake, up some of the burden of defending the lies primarily with the civilian head of free world. and backup costs, was $12 billion an- the Department of Defense and not with Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, will the nually. This fact demands help from the the military who repeatedly tried to get Senator from Mississippi yield? other countries. that concept modified and the plane re- Mr. STENNLS. I yield. As Senators have said, we must relate designed so as to make it work. Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I have our defense needs to our foreign policy not nave. Mr. ELLENDER. The point is that the free system of Government. Department of Defense, in that area, Anyone who has been in the military spent about $2.5 billion. Is that not cor- service, whether in a squad_platoon, com- rect? pany, or regiment, knows that every Mr. McCLELLAN. They spent nearly commander of a unit seeks all the ma- $5 billion. teriel and arms he can to meet any con- Mr. ELLENDER. Very well. That tingency. I have no doubt that this re- makes it wose; $5 billion and they have sponsibility enters into the thinking and no planes at present. concern of military leaders. But to secure Mr. McCLELLAN. They will be get- balance, there are several things to be ting 400 planes, instead of the 1700 orig- considered, inally ordered. One consideration is the resources of Mr. ELLENDER. As I said, I named our country and this demands the no one. I was speaking of the Depart- amount be allocated for effective and ment of Defense generally. I am certain reasonable purposes. As the Senator from Mr. McNamara did not move alone. Louisiana pointed out a second con- Mr. McCLELLAN. He overruled all the sideration involves the use of our re- military, sources in assistance and defense of other Mr. ELLENDER. Perhaps. countries, any inquiry as to the efforts Mr. McCLELLAN. That is an undis- they are willing to make. I remember puted fact. when the Senator from Mississippi and I Mr. ELLENDER. The point I was try- attended the NATO assembly meeting, ing to emphasize most is that we have after the invasion of Czechoslovakia. made many promises to assist everyone Then, the representatives of other in the world. That has been the effect countries, were concerned, and the meet- of the MAAG's I referred to earlier. That ing reflected great interest in the defense is some of the programs I have been try- of Europe. It was my duty to file a report, Ing to emphasize. That is why we have and on examination, and as a result of spent so many billions of dollars to help comments from military leaders, I at people who did not do enough to try and least, came to the conclusion that if help themselves, there had been any balance between the Mr. McCLELLAN. Let me say to the NATO forces and the Soviet forces, the distinguished Senator from Louisiana balance had been upset by the invasion that I wanted to keep the record of Czechoslovakia. Yet since that time, straight with respect to the TFX air- plane. our NATO allies, no matter how much Now I want to say to the Senator that they are appealed to, have not increased their contributions necessary for the ade- I am in complete agreement with him about Western Europe. We have quate defense of their own countries. sup- ported them all these years, providing I had attempted to secure from the defense for them, and I think it is high Department of Defense the cost of our time they began to provide their own. total contribution to the security of I agree completely with the Senator from Western Europe. I secured information Louisiana about that. When we talk from the Department of Defense, which about bringing our troops home, the I placed in my report. The total cost, not Western European countries should take merely the cost of the troops in Europe, f the 6th fleet weapons Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9562 Approved For Rtiomigggitirin ? cIAMDB00364R000300100001-3 IoN-Ar, RE August 11 1969 ? SENATE commitments. What a good many of us have tried to do is to insist that the Executive branch be very careful about conunitments. We do not want it to be taken for granted that a commitment exists to send troops to another country, to engage in war, or to put our troops on foreign soil in a position where we could back into a war?which we have done in Vietnam?unless a joint author- ity is given by the Executive and by the Congress of the United States. We ought to establish what our com- mitments are, and their relationship to the security of this country. Otherwise, we may be engaged in military spending, and wars in areas throughout the world. We should try to find agreement with the Soviet Union upon the control of nuclear arms. We hope that progress can be made. Agreements could leduce mate- rially the demand for spending, and even more important, reduce the chance of nuclear wax. Now I would like to make a suggestion. Mr. STENNIS. I will consider a sug- gestion from the Senator from Kentucky at any time. Mr. COOPER. We have a bill before us involving about $20 billion. It involves expenditures for all of the branches of the armed services, and it includes many items with which those of us who do not serve on the Armed Services Committee are not familiar. For a year I have found how difficult it is to learn about one issue?anti-bal- listic-missile systems. I believe it would be very helpful if the Senathe from Mis- sissippi would go through the bill, ex- plain the provisions of the bill, the need and relationship of the weapi ms systems, which are very difficult for all of us, and explain the reasons supporting the vari- ous provisions and their funding. Give us your views of the balance of the bill of which the Senator spoke so well. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator very much. I know there is a need in that field or the Senator would not have brought it up. I will do my best to fulfill that need, to some degree. I will have to arrange a time. Mr. President, I do not want to hold the floor any longer. I yield the floor. Mr. McCLELLAN obtained the floor. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCLELT,AN. I yield to the Sena- tor from Arizona, without losing my right to the floor. Mr. GOLDWATER. I thank the Sen- ator from Arkansas for yielding. Mr. President, this morning, under controlled conditions, the senior Sena- tor from Kansas (Mr. PlAssoN) ad- dressed himself to the military -industrial complex. Having forgotten that it was under controlled conditions. I tried to question the Senator at the finish of his speech, but the Chair, properly, si- lenced me. However, before I was seated, I stated I thought the Senator had made a good speech, but I did not agree with it. I should like to correct what I think may be a wrong impression. I think the Senator made a fine speech, in which he recommended to the Amer- ican people that they realize that we have a military-industrial complex, and we should be proud and glad we have it, and he made some very interesting sug- gestions. When I said I disagreed with it, it was only as to a point or two in his thinking. His use of the famous quotation by General Eisenhower in his farewell speech on the military-industrial com- plex was put in the RECORD without what I think is an equally important part, in which President Eisenhower said: We now stand 10 years past the midpoint of a century that has witnessed four major wars among great nations. Three of these involved our own country. Despite these. holocausts America is today the strongest, the most influential and most productive nation in the world. Understandably proud of this preeminence, we yet realize that America's leadership and prestige depend, not merely upon our unmatched material prog- ress, riches, and military strength, but on how we use our power in the interests of world peace and human betterment. I merely wanted to get that point in the RECORD, together with one other that the Senator made. I have discussed this matter with him, and I recognize why he made it. If I did not serve on the Armed Services Committee, I would feel myself somewhat in agreement with him. He comments in one sentence: But nowhere is this weakness more glaring than in defense matters. I take personal offense at that, because I have served on committees of the Sen- ate for many, many years, and I have never served on a committee that is so thorough and so constant in its investi- gations as is the Armed Services Com- mittee, under the chairmanship of the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. STENNIS). The Senator went further, and this is one other point I disagreed with, but it does not mean I disagree with the entire speech at all. He said: I submit that under the present conditions it is a simple physical impossibility for the two _armed services committees and the two military subcommittees of the appropriations committees to effectively review and evaluate e policy and budgetary requested of the Department of Defense. I wanted to make a statement on my own behalf that this is not so; that I think the two committees and the two subcommittees involved do an excellent job. I also wanted my verification on the record that the suggestion which he made to return to a Truman type of com- mittee that we knew back in World War II is a good one, whether it means expan- sion of the present committees or setting up a new one. I wanted merely to correct the record. I thank the Senator from Arkansas for yielding to me. Mr. McCLELLAN. Mr . President, I yield to the Senator from Connecticut (Mr. Rnacorr) without losing my right to the floor. Mr. RIBICOFF. Mr. President, dur- ing the past several days, the Senate has been deeply concerned about waste in the defense budget. This concern has been demonstrated by the number of amend- ments introduced relating to the role of the General Accounting Office in audit- ing defense contracts. Every Member of this body is dedicated to efficient and effective government. And so is the Committee on Government Operations. The Committee on Government Op- erations is concerned about any waste, excess spending, or inefficient practices in the Federal Government, wherever they exist. In particular, it is especially con- cerned that the agency established and charged with monitoring Federal spend- Ing?GAO--he properly constituted and staffed for this critical task. As was repeatedly noted during last week's debate, the Committee on Gov- ernment Operations has legislative over- sight over the operations and activities of the General Accounting Office, The following excerpts from Senate rule XXV makes this very clear: (j) (1) Committee on Government Opera- tions . . . to which shall be referred all pro- posed legislation, messages, petitions, me- morials and other matters relating to the following subjects: (A) Budget and accounting measures, other than appropriations. (B) Reorganizations in the executive branch of the Government. (2) Such committee shall have the duty of? (A) receiving and examining reports of the Comptroller General of the United States and of submitting such reconunendations to the Senate as it deems necessary or desirable in connection with the subject matter of such reports: (B studying the operation of Government activities at all levels with a view to deter- mining its economy and efficiency. Commenting on proposals to expand the concept and funetions of the General Accounting Office, the able and distin- guished chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Senator JOBN STEN- NIS, placed in the RECORD of August 7, 1969, a letter he had received from Elmer B. Staats, the Comptroller General, which stated in part: Before legislation of this type is enacted, it would be our recorninendation that the most careful consideration be given to it by the Congress. The type of reviews made by this office and the needs of the interested committees of the Congress need further develorunent and exploration. This assessment should begin with the committee that has statutory responsi- bility for the activities of the General Accounting Office. I have been authorized by the chair- man of the Committee on Government Operations, Senator Joniv MCCLELLAN, to say that the commiVee plans to hold hearings on the General Accounting Of- fice to determine its capacity to meet its current?and proposed?obligations and responsibilities. The hearings would be a general assessment of the GAO, its statutory au- thority, budget and staff. We would also seek to determine in what additional ways the GAO could better fulfill its obligations to the legislative branch. I would also like-to note that these pro- posed hearings have the full endorse- ment and support of Senator KARL MUNDT, ranking minority member of the committee. The committee hopes to hear testimony from the Comptroller Gen- eral, from interested Senators, from the Department of Defense, and others. We Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 19Approved Fo Ewans 123,44.2e0i.Erati9Ermplere000300100001_3 August 11, S 9563 would welcome any bills that would assist the GAO in carrying out its responsibil- ities in auditing the activities of the Federal Government. It would be my hope that the commit- tee could then report out legislation that would be responsive to the pressing prob- lem of monitoring, assessing and con- trolling?to the fullest possible extent? the massive expenditures of the Depart- ment of Defense, as well as all Federal agencies. I thank the distinguished Senator for yielding me the opportunity to make this statement. YOUNG PEOPLE, ORGANIZED CRIME, AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE Mr. McCLELLAN. Mr. President, too often those of us who are concerned about the administration of criminal justice tend to analyze the problems that face us in terms of categories without seeing inner relationships. We express our concern about street crime and at- tempt to respond to the rape, robbery, and murder that occur in our streets. We express our concern about organized crime and attempt to respond to the de- predations of criminal syndicates. It was in this context, therefore, that I found the testimony of Prof. Donald R. Cressey, of the University of California at Santa Barbara, before the House Se- lect Committee on Crime, on August 5, all that much more enlightening. A stu- dent of Sutherland, whose "White Col- lar Crime" did so much to destroy the myth that poverty is a cause of crime, Professor Cressey is a nationally recog- nized authority in criminology, whose most recent studies have been conducted In the area of organized crime. Profes- sor Cressey's testimony shows clearly the relationship between our Nation's fail- ure to respond to the challenge of or- ganized crime and the increasing vio- lence of our inner city youth. In showing this connection, he demonstrates how essential an attack on organized crime is In any concerted effort to respond to crime in the streets. Mr. President, I submit that a society that cannot bring to book the overlords of La Cosa Nostra is a society which can- not hold the allegiance of the young to the traditional standards of moral re- sponsibility. I commend Professor Cres- sey's statement to each of my colleagues, and I ask unanimous consent that it be printed in the RECORD following my re- marks. There being no objection, the state- ment was ordered to be printed in, the RECORD, as follows: ORGANIZED CRIME AND INNER-CITY YOUTH (Testimony by Prof. Donald R. Cressey before the Select Committee on Crime, House of Representatives, Congress of the United States, August 5, 1969) American criminals have managed to put together an organization which is at once a nationwide illicit cartel and a nationwide confederation. This organization is dedicated to amassing millions of dollars by means of extortion, and from usury, the illicit sale of lottery tickets, chances on the outcome of horse races and athletic events, narcotics, and untaxed liquor. Its presence in our society is morally reprehensible because any citizen purchasing illicit goods and services from organized criminals contributes to a culture of fraud, corruption, violence, and murder. But the real danger of organized crime arises because the tremendous profits obtained from the sale of illicit goods and services are being invested in legitimate businesses and in the political process. The game is mo- nopoly, both the economic sphere and the po- litical sphere. Although organized crime touches every American, the direct victims are the citizens living in the deteriorated areas of our large cities. The economic base of organized crime's multi-billion investments in legiti- mate business and in politics is the precious money of the urban poor. The war on poverty has not been a smashing success at least in part because Government money poured into ghettos goes immediately from the pockets of the poor to the pockets of organized crimi- nals. From there, the money goes to nullifi- cation of the very economic and political processes which make the war on poverty possible in the first place. Numbers lotteries and bookmaking busi- nesses thrive on the dollars of unskilled Ne- groes and other inner-city residents, not on bets placed by the rich, the educated, the well-housed, the well-employed. Similarly, -the American drug addict is likely to be poorly educated and unskilled, a resident of a central-city area, and a member of a dis- advantaged ethnic minority group. And it is the factory worker, the marginal business- man, and the urban welfare recipient, not the suburbanite, who frequently is so desper- ate for a loan that he seeks out a loanshark. A membership group variously known as "Cosa Nostra," "The Mafia," and "The Syndicate" is the core of the organized crime group that is feeding on the urban poor. The structure and operations of this or- ganization need not be described here, They were sketched out by the McClellan Com- mittee in 1963 1 and by the President's Com- mission on Law Enforcement and Adminis- tration of Justice in 1967.2 Three recent books, including my own, fill in some of the details.' Cosa Nostra is a membership organization. About 5,000 men who have been admitted to membership now view themselves as mem- bers and take special cognizance of other members. But not all the persons making a living from organized crime are members of Cosa Nostra. For example, very few of the public officials corrupted by Cosa Nostra are members. Each of the twenty-four Cosa Nostra "families" in the United States has at least one position for a "corrupter," a man whose job it is to secure immunity of "family" members from the law-enforcement process. For each "corrupter" position of this kind, there is at least one "corruptee"?the person receiving the bribe, the payoff, the contribu- tion, or the "favor" the corrupter has to offer. While the corruptee usually is not a Cosa Nostra member, the services he performs are essential to the continuing operations of Cosa Nostra. Accordingly, he is part of organized crime even if he is excluded from member- ship in the core organization. Similarly, the persons occupying the low- est levels of the division of labor constitut- ing organized crime ordinarily are not Cosa Nostra members. These are the "street men" involved in the retailing of Cosa Nostra's illicit goods and services, such as narcotics and bet-taking. They also fill the organiza- tion's needs for personnel to provide low- level services such as driving trucks and cars, delivering messages, running errands, pick- ing up illegal betting slips, and answering the thousands of telephones utilized by bOok- makers. In the ghetto areas of large cities, much of the street work is done by Negroes. These street-level workers are employed by Cosa Nostra in much the way corruptees are employed by Cosa Nostra. That is, they may be part-time employees paid on a piece-work Footnotes at end of article. basis, or full-time salaried employees, or com- mission agents. Commission agents are the most affluent street-level organized criminals. Some of them solicit bets for centrally located book- makers who have title to a neighborhood. Others sell illegal lottery tickets. Still others are considered the "owners" or "bankers" of illegal numbers lotteries. These last men are likely to be called "independents" because they are not members of Cosa Nostra. But they are not independent. Each of them must give a percentage of his gross to a Cosa Nostra member for the privilege of doing business in his territory. The street-level commission agents work- ing in black ghettos ordinarily are black men. All of them?and especially the "independ- ent" numbers bankers have high status in their neighborhoods. They are the "hustlers" with the ready bank roll, the Cadillac, the Omega watch, the $65 alligator shoes, and other symbols of affluence. Despite the fact that discriminatory practices prevent black commission agents from moving up into the- echelons of Cosa Nostra, when the real money is, these organized criminals are the idols of young ghetto residents. They are men who have made it. The National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders noted that poverty, violence, and organized crime activities combine to produce great synieism about the idea that success is to be achieved by legitimate means. The Commission succinctly stated what many other persons and agencies have ob- served: "With the father absent and the mother working, many ghetto children spend the bulk of their time on the streets?tlae streets of a crime-ridden, Violence-prone and pov- erty-stricken world. The image of success in this world is not that of the "solid citizen," the responsible husband and father, but ra- ther that of the "hustler" who takes care of himself by exploiting others. The dope sell- ers and the numbers runners are the "suc- cessful" men because their earnings far out- strip those men who try to climb the eco- nomic ladder in honest ways. "Young people in the ghetto are acutely conscious of a system which appears to offer rewards to those who illegally exploit others, and failure to those who struggle under tra- ditional responsibilities. Under these circum- stances, many adopt exploitation and the 'hustle' as a way of life, disclaiming both work and marriage in favor of basual and temporary liaisons. This pattern reinforces itself from one generation to the next, cre- ating a 'culture of poverty' and an ingrained cynicism about society and its institu- tions." So far as urban ghettos are concerned, Cosa Nostra is comparable to an invading army. Its troops have conquered territory and now these troops, with the assistance of the local Quislings who serve them, have made a certain peace with the residents, in- cluding law-enforcement agents. The alli- ances of organized criminals operating in Inner-city areas contribute to more general crime and delinquency rates in three inter- related ways. First, by their opulence the persons engaged in organized crime demon- strates to the people, and especially to the young, that crime does pay. Second, by their very presence, organized criminals demon- strate the existence of a rich vein of cor- ruption in political and law-enforcement organizations, making it difficult for parents and others to convince children that people get ahead in the world by good, hard, honest labor in service of family, country, man, and God. Third, the presence of organized crime in a neighborhood lowers the status of the people in the district, just as do conditions of squalor, with the result that anti-criminal admonitions lose their effectiveness?the people have less to lose if convicted of crime. Attraction. If an organization is to survive, Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9564 Approved For INRitekiWAIII?,:fekeeMB7113N6M00300100001-3 August 1_1, 1969 it must have an institutional process for re- cruiting new members and inculcating them with organizational values and ways of be- having. But the most successful recruitment processes are those which do not appear to be recruiting techniques at all. These are the process by which membership becomes highly desirable because of the rewards and benefits prospective members believe it con- fers on them. These, also, are the processes which enable inner-city youth to find niches in the world of crime. Some boys grow up knowing that it is a "good thing" to be a banker, to belong to a certain club, to attend a certain university. They know these are "good things" because men they emulate have done them. Other boys?those in the central areas of our large cities?grow up knowing that it is a "good thing" to be a street-level organized crimi- nal, to have the respect of established orga- nized criminals, and to be given the oppor- tunity to learn the skills and attitudes necessary to bookmaking or numbers selling. Still other slum boys grow up knowing that If they have the right qualifications and con- nections they might be admitted to member- ship in Cosa Nostra itself, thus becoming eli- gible for a share of the billions of dollars Cosa Nostra makes annually from the illegal bets placed with the street-level workers who are employed by Cosa Nostra. Most slum boys grew up in social situations In which the desire for participation in orga- nized crime comes naturally and painlessly. Raymond V. Martin, formerly Assistant Chief of Brooklyn South Detectives, has reported that in some Brooklyn neighborhoods, boys grew up under two "flags." 5 One is the flag of the United States, symbolizing middle- class institutions, tradition, and culture. The other is the flag of organized crime, symboliz- ing criminal society. Stated in more general terms, the principle is this: Persons growing up in some geographic and seciil areas have a better chance than do others to come into contact with norms and values which support legitimate activities, in contrast to criminal activities, while in other areas the reverse is true. In many areas, alternative educational processes are in operation, so that a child may be educated in either conventional or crim- inal means of achieving success. In inner eity areas, organized criminals efficiently and ef- fectively provide youngsters With criminal- istic norms, values, and ways of behaving. Boys growing up in areas where the "syndi- cate flag" is flying learn that success comes to "real men," to "stand-up guys" who violate the law with impunity. Accordingly, they train themselves in skills and attitudes which they believe will be as valuable to their suc- cess as they have been in the careers of the men they admire. A recent study by Irving Spergel suggests that these include, espe- cially, personal values about silence, honor, and loyalty?values which make the boys controllable by the adult criminals about whom they are silent, to whom they behave honorably, and to whom they are loyalS Spergel studied juvenile delinquents in three different neighborhoods of Chicago. One of them was given the fleticious name "Racketville" because organized-crime activi- ties flourish there. In this neighborhood, like many other American slum neighborhoods, organized criminal activities such as lot- teries, bookmaking, and usury employ a siz- able proportion of the population. Some de- linquents were observed participating in lottery operations, primarily through family connections. For example, one boy drove his uncle's Cadillac to pick up the receipts from a numbers writer. Another boy was elated when a man he said was "big" in the num- bers asked him to perform a minor errand. He said this might be a "break" for him, that this "big shot" might give him a job paying "a couple hundred dollars a week for hardly doing nothing," that he would be able to Footnotes at end of article. get up late in the morning, have girls, and go to night clubs. The boys viewed minor organized-crime work assignment as opportunities to do small favors for the racketeers, thus demonstrating willingness and trustworthiness. Usurers were viewed as respectable businessmen by the boys, who emulated them. The boys themselves participated in money-lending, and during the course of the study two boys were arrested for systematic loansharking while still attending school. Spergel concluded, however, is more important for an organi crime aspirant to display evidence t he is a "stand-up guy" than to learn ecific criminal skills. A "stand-up guy" owe courage and "heart." He does not whi e or complain in the face of adversity, in uding arrest interrogation and purrishme . He has learned to rate crim- inals higher t an noncriminals. Racketeers placed a premium on smooth and unobtr ive operation of their employees. The undis iplined, trouble-making young "punk" w not acceptable. The primary con- dition for mission to the racket organiza- tion was ot necessarily involvement in de- linquent ts but training in attitudes and beliefs w ich would facilitate the smooth operation f the criminal organization. Prior developme t of specific skills and experiences seemed les necessary than the learning of an underlying llegitimate orientation or point of view con ive to the development of or- ganized crim 7 The followl transcript of a bugged con- versation betwe a New York Cosa Nostra soldier and his Min indicates that this "underlying illegit I' 'te orgentation" is sought in neighborh... '- 'ther than Racket- ville. The speaker is praisin the qualities of his captain's regime by telling m his mem- bers have the desired criminalis attitudes. They are "stand-up kids." The co rsation refers to an FBI investigation: "They are telling them everything. ho's Cosa Nostra. What's the picture here. ho the bosses are. Who's the bosses? These e kids that don't know nothing. They schooling them. They are telling.them up a down the line what everything is here. The are actually exposing the whole . . . thing to innocent kids. (Inaudible.) Innocent kids. Exposing the whole thing. "He's a captain." (Inaudible.) And so forth, I said. Good. Your kids, now, you know, are stand-up kids. . . . They are going to tell them not a word." 8 Spergel asked the delinquents in his study, "What is the occupation of the adult in your neighborhood whom you most want to be like ten years from now?" Racketville boys did not name bankers, or policemen, or Con- gressmen, or teachers, or businessmen, or skilled workers. Eight out of ten responded to the question by naming some aspect of orga- nized crime. Similarly, Racketville delin- quents believed that the most important quality in "getting ahead" is "connections," not ability, or good luck, or education. There is an important lesson here for ministrators of programs designed to courage inner-City youth to remain in ool and "get a good education" so they con- tribute to their own welfare and t welfare of the nation. This message is getting across. It does not fit the r ty of daily street ex riences in ghett y waching the part o organized eri available for them to se the street salons?inner-city boys le that who take the illegitimate ccess fare better than those taking the legitimate route. The same experiences also convince them that it is who you know, not what you know, that counts, Seven out of ten of Spergel's delinquents chose edu- cation as the least important factor in achieving success, perhaps indicating a be- lief that "education" and "connections" are antithetical. Slum boys who think this way we are fac- tually incorrect, even with reference to or- ganized crime. The orientation sought by inner-city boys?the attitudes of the "stand- up guy" helps prepare them for street crime like burglary and robbery, and for Street level involvement in organiged crime. But positions of leadership in organized crime, like positions of leadership everyWhere in this day and age, increasingly require skills learned in colleges and universities, not on the streets. Moreover, being a "stand-up guy" might get a boy a position as a book- maker or a numbers seller if he has good con- to become a Cosa Nostra mem- ber he must have better connections than this. And if he is to advance in Cosa Nostra he now must have the skills of a purchasing agent, an accountant, a lawyer, an execu- tive. Spergel found, in fact, /that significant upper-echelon opportunities in organized crime were not open even to the youth of Racketville. Some delinquents, he says, even- tuallk became racketeers "without neces- sarily starting at the bottom." Occasionally, even honest government offi- cials inadvertently contribute to the glory of organized criminals and, thus, to a more general illegitimate orientation among slum youth. For example, in the summer of 1966 the director of New York City's Youth Board asked two Cosa Nostra soldiers, Albert and Lawrence Gallo, to help halt racial violence in the East NeW York section of Brooklyn. The implication, probably correct, was that Cosa Nostra men could keep order where the police and social workers could not. But an- other implication, also correct, was that boys who want to be neighborhood leaders should go into organized crime. John J. Cassesse, President of the New York Patrolmen's Be- nevolent Association, commented that the use of the two organized criminals by city officials both sapped the morale of the police force and made "tin Sleds" of the organized criminals involved: "I can just see what will happen. It's this way. When a police officer goes up to some juveniles who have been misbehaving and tells them to quiet down and move along, what will they say to him? "You're not the boss around here, Mr. Gallo is." When you single people like that out, you make them tin gods in the neighborhood?people-known for their habitual lawiessness."10 - Corruption. The problem of organized rime is clearly a problem of political cor- ption. The American Bar Association's re- st on organized crime concluded, "The I gest single factor in the'breakdown of law e forcement dealing with organized crime is t corruption and connivance of many p blic officials," 1-1 Similarly, at a 1967 con- ence of law-enforcement officials, the then C ief Justice of the United States, Earl War- proved For eolftsfu2k0i8M3p iablif67 _iggpktip00300100001-3 August 11, 1A9 S9607 funds in a manner not contemplated by the Congress. If, as stated in the Plan, discrimina- tion in referral is prohibited by the National Labor Relations Act and Title' VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, it is our opinion that the remedies provided by the Congress in those acts should be followed. See also in this connection section 207 of Executive Order 11246. While, as indicated in the foregoing opin- ions and in your Solicitor's memorandum, the President is sworn to "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States," we question whether the executive departments are required, in the absence of a definitive and controlling opinion by the Supreme Court of the United States, to as- sess the relative merits of conflicting opin- ions of the lower courts, and embark upon a course of affirmative action, based upon the results of such assessment, which appears to be in conflict with the expressed intent of the Congress in duly enacted legislation on the same subject. In this connection, it should be noted that, while the phrase "affirmative action" was in- cluded in the Executive order (10925) which was in effect at the time Congress was de- bating the bills which were subsequently en- acted as the Civil Rights Act of 1964, no specific affirmative action requirements of the kind here involved had been imposed upon contractors under authority of that Executive order at that time, and we therefore do not think it can be successfully contended that Congress, in recognizing the existence of the Executive order and in failing to specifically legislate against it, was aproving or ratify- ing e type or methods of affirmative action which your Department now proposes to im- pose upon contractors. We recognize that both your Department and the Department of Justice have found the Plan to be legal and we have given most serious consideration to their positions. How- ever, until the authority for any agency to impose or require conditions in invitations for bids on Federal or federally assisted con- struction which obligate bidders, contractors, or subcontractors, to consider the race or national origin of their employees or pro- spective employees for such construction, is clearly and firmly established by the weight of judicial precedent, or by additional statutes, we must conclude that conditions of the type proposed by the revised Philadelphia Plan are in conflict with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and we will necessarily have to so construe and apply the act in passing upon the legality of matters involving expenidtures of appropriated funds for Federal or federally assisted construction projects. In this connection it is observed that by section 705(d) of the act, Congress charges the Equal Employment Opportunity Com- mission with the specific responsibility of making reports to the Congress and to the President on the cause of and means of eliminating discrimination and making such recommendations for further legislation as may appear desirable. That provision, we be- lieve, not only proscribes the procedure for correcting any deficiencies in the Civil Rights Act, but also shows the intent of Congress to reserve for its own judgment the establish- ment of any additional unlawful employment practice categories or nondiscrimination re- quirements, or the imposition upon employ- brs of any additional requirements for as- suring equal employment opportunities. We realize that our conclusions as set out above may disrupt the programs and objec- tives of your Department, and may cause concern among members of minority groups who may believe that racial balance or equal representation on Federal and federally as- sisted construction projects is required under the 1964 act, the Executive order, or the Con- stitution. Desirable as these objectives may be, we cannot agree to their attainment by the imposition of requirements on contras- tors, in their performance of Federal or fed- erally-assisted contracts, which the Congress has specifically indicated would be improper or prohibited in carrying out the objectives and purposes of the 1964 act. Sincerely yours, A74:5017 ELMER B. sTAATs. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ ALEIN MISSILE RANGE AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- priations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and to authorize the the construction of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized person- nel strength of the Selected Reserve of each reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. Mr. TYDINGS. Mr President, what is the pending business? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The pend- ing business is the amendment of the Senator from Maryland. Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays on my amend- ment. The yeas and nays were ordered. Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, I have long made clear that I am committed to firm oversight of our defense expendi- tures. At the same time, however, I feel an obligation to speak out when it ap- pears that proposed economies may be false ones. With this in mind, I feel I should offer some comment on the pro- posal by the Senator from Maryland to reduce the Department of Defense's emergency funds by one-half. I am well aware that in recommending an emer- gency fund of $100-million, the commit- tee exceeded the previous amount au- thorized for this purposes. But I also be- lieve that a 50 percent reduction in this amount is too great a cut. My reasons for holding this position may be stated quite simply. The Sub- committee on Research and Develop- ment, on which I was honored to serve, recommended, and the full committee has endorsed, major reductions in the proposed Department of Defense budget for Research and Development. Those reductions amount to over $1 billion, the most substantial cut in any sector of the budget and one which will affect many programs which the Department of Defense considered vital. Having exer- cised such a stringent review of this ele- ment of the budget already, it is my be- lief that the Department should have somewhat greater latitude in regard to the emergency fund. These funds will permit the Department to manage more sensibly the effective reduction of effort which this legislation will provide. I consider a reasonable degree of flex- ibility very desirable, and in view of the magnitude of the cuts already contem- plated, I believe the emergency fund is a prudent device for improved manage- ment of the Department of Research and Development programs in a period of substantial reorientation. For example the committee report in- dicates the considerable uncertainties which afflict the whole question of air defense. Both with respect to the defense of the continental United States and with respect to forward defense of our men in the field, should they be engaged against an enemy with significant tactical air capability, there are quite fundamental questions about the size and nature of air defenses which should be provided. The committee directed a deferral of work on the airborne warning and con- trol system?AWACS?largely because of the doubts about the likely bomber threat to the United States. Similarly, in the relatively brief time we had to consider the matter in the subcommittee and in the full body, the necessity for the promising SAM-D sys- tem remained unclear. So far as defense of the field army and the continental United States is concerned, it seems clear that this system would provide both more potent and less costly defense than the present capabilities, namely, the Nike- Hercules and Hawk missile forces. The present weapons are extremely expensive to maintain. If we are going to provide extensive air defense in the future, we may later wish to proceed with the SAM- D technology. Thus, the deletion of funds for SAM- D was accomplished with some trepida- tion on the part of many of us in the committee and was written in primarily beeause of the compulsion we felt to re- duce the overall budget. At the same time, however, the committee has directed the Secretary of Defense to review the bomber defense requirement in detail and to submit find- ings and recommendations in connec- tion with the fiscal 1971 budget. Since the Department has argued that SAM-D is one of the most critical programs bear- ing on future air defense efforts, it may well choose to use a portion of the flex- ible funding authority under section 202 to sustain a minimum level of effort on SAM-D pending this full re-examina- tion of the need for a more advanced air defense capability. This is but one example of how such authority might be put to constructive use. There are many occasions in a large and fast moving technological effort, of which the Department's total R. & D. pro- gram is the principal example, when the capacity to feed money into a critical area can prove invaluable. Particularly since the Department's R.D.T. & E. budg- et has a large and pressing backlog of projects competing for funds, I do not consider this emergency authority exces- sive. Indeed my view is similar to that voiced in the Senate the other day by the distinguished junior Senator from Mary- land (Mr. MATHIAS) . I tend to believe that our defense effort should emphasize the technological advantages we have ac- crued, and that we should seek to control our total defense expenditure princi- pally by strict limits on premature com- mitments to procurement of expensive systems and by reducing our conven- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71B00364R000300100001-3 S 9608 mkiggibm 1ampisq:A9 n9003001000Q 4ug1-3u8t 11, 1969 On page 3, line 2, strike out "$1,921,500,- 000" and insert in lieu thereof "$1,911,343,- 000". On page 8, line 3, strike out "$3,051, 200,- 000" and Insert in lieu thereof "$3,041,211,- 000". On page 3, line 4, strike out "$468,200,000" and insert in lieu thereof "$454,625,000". Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield to the ma- jority leader. Approved For tional forces with their costly manpower levels to the extent feasible. The other side of the coin is that, if we are to stress technological advantages in maintaining a strong national security posture, we cannot skimp cm our R. & D. effort. Considering the 12,7-percent cut already imposed on the total R.D.T. & E. authorization, I believe that ample emer- gency funding is both important and de- sirable. Accordingly, while I could not support the $50-million recommended in the original amendment, :I believe the compromise which has been worked out does allow for a sufficient de'n.ee of flex- ibility in the program. The revised amendment will therefore have my sup- port. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing Li the amend- ment of the Senator from Maryland. On this question, the yeas and nays have been ordered, and the clerk will call the roll. The assistant legislative clerk pro- ceeded to call the roll. Mr. KENNEDY. I announce that the Senator from Tennessee (Mr. GORE) is absent on official business. I also announce that the Senator from Indiana (Mr. BAYH) , the Senator from Nevada (Mr. BIBLE), the Senator from Connecticut (Mr. Donn), and the Sen- ator from Texas (Mr. YARBOROUGH) are necessarily absent. I further announce that, if nresent and voting, the Senator from Tennessee (Mr. GORE) , the Senator from Indiana, (Mr. BATH), the Senator from Connecticut (Mr. Donn), and the Senator f row Texas (Mr. YARBOROUGH) would each vote "yea." Mr. SCOTT. I announce that the Sen- ator from Ohio (Mr. SAXBE) is neces- sarily absent and, if present and voting, would vote "yea." The result was announced?yeas 94, nays 0, as follows: [No. 75 Leg.] YEAS-94 Aiken Allen Allott Anderson Baker Bellmon Bennett Boggs Brooke Burdick Byrd, Va. Byrd, W. Va. Cannon Case Church Cook Cooper Cotton Cranston Curtis Dirk.sen Dole Dominick Eagleton Eastland Ellender Ervin Fannin Fong Fulbright Goldwater Goodell Bayh Bible Gravel Griffin Gurney Hansen Harris Hart Hartke Hatfield Holland Hollings Hru.ska Hughes Inouye Jackson Javits Jordan, N.C. Jordan, Idaho Kennedy Long Magnuson Mansfield Mathias McCarthy McClellan McGee McGovern McIntyre Metcalf Miller Mondale Montoya Moss NAYS-0 NOT VOTING-6 Dodd Ss -the Gore Yarborough Miindt Murphy Muskie sel son Packwood Pe :tore Pearson Pell Percy Prouty Proxmire Randolph Ribicoff Schweiker Scott Smith Sparkman Sung St,,nnis &ovens Symington Talmadge Thiirmond Tower Tydings N .J . Williams, -Young, N. Dak, Young, Ohio So Mr. Tynnros' amendment, as modi- fied, was agreed to. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote by which the amendment was agreed to. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. I move to lay that motion on the table. The motion to lay on the table was agreed to. Mr. FULBRIGAT obtained the floor. Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield to the Sen- ator from Illinois, with the understand- ing that I will not lose my right to the floor. NOMINATION OF ASSOCIATE JUS- TICE OF THE SUPREME COURT Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the name of the new Associate Justice of the Su- preme Court may be Bled during the adjournment or recess of the Senate. I ask this because it cannot be filed until Thursday, and until it is filed, the chair- man of the Committee on the Judiciary cannot set the time for a hearing. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, re- serving the right to object, I did not hear his name. Mr. DIRKSEN. I did not give his name. [Laughter.] Mr. President, I also request that the name be referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? The Chair hears none, and it is so Ordered. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MISSILE TEST FACILIT.LeS AT KWAJALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RESERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- priations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and research, development, test, and evalua- tion for the Armed Forces, and to au- thorize the construction of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to pre- scribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. AMENDMENT NO. 110 Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I call up my amendment No. 110. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment will be stated. The legislative clerk proceeded to read the amendment. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that further reading of the amendment be dispensed with. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered; and, without objection, the amendment will be printed in the RECORD. The amendment is as follows: On page 2, line 26, strike out "$1,638,600,- 000" and insert in lieu thereof "61,626,707,- 000". AUTHORIZATION FOR THE COM- MITTEE ON FINANCE TO NUTT ON SEPTEMBER 4 OR 5 Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that, on September 4 or 5, the Committee on Finance may be allowed to meet during the session of the Senate for the purpose of beginning hearings and listening to witnesses on tax reform legislation. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? The Chair hears none, and it is so ordered. Mr. MANSFIELD. It is hoped that, after that, we will be able to get authori- zation for the Committee on Finance to meet during the session of the Senate on a week-by-week basis. But we will cross that bridge when we come to it. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREIVIENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RESERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the considera- tion of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize ap- propriations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat ve- hicles, and research, development, test, and evaluation for the Armed Forces, and to authorize the construction of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Re- serve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. - Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a question? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield for a ques- tion. Mr. STENNIS. I know that the Senator has an amendment of some importance and that he wishes to discuss it. I am wondering if there could be a agreement for controlled time at this point. Mr. FITLBRIGHT. I say to the Senator that I have agreed to yield to the Sen- ator from Illinois (Mr. Palmy) . He has a statement on a nongermane matter. My speech will take a little time, and I had agreed to accommodate him, to yield to him. I am unable to determine how long my speech will take, due to the inter- ruptions. The Senator knows how it goes. Sometimes it goes quickly and sometimes not quickly. I would hesitate to make an agreement at this time. Later on I might do so, after I am through with my speech. Perhaps the Senator will renew his request after I have completed my remarks. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 ? Approved FoEarsitainsi00,4/11/30,. ..,161119P7AEIRpAlritR000300100001-3 August 11, 196p proved .KE We have it in our power to raise the standard of living and the realizable hopes of millions of our fellow citizens. By providing an equal chance at the starting line, we can reinforce the tra- ditional American spirit of self-reliance and self-respect. RICHARD NIXON. THE WHITE HOUSE, August 11, 1969. EXECUTIVE MESSAGES REFERRED As in executive session, the Presiding Officer laid before the Senate messages from the President of the United States submitting sundry nominations, and withdrawing the nomination of John G. Hurd, of Texas, to be Ambassador Ex- traordinary and Plenipotentiary to Ven- ezuela, which nominating messages were referred to the appropriate committees. (For nominations this day received, see the end of Senate proceedings.) AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND, FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MISSILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RESERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the considera- tion of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize ap- propriations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat ve- hicles, and to authorize the construction of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Re- serve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. AMENDMENT NO. 113 The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. BYRD of Virginia in the chair). The Chair recognizes the Senator from Mary- land. Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, I call up my amendment No. 113 and ask that it be read. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The amendment will be stated. The legislative clerk read as follows: On page 3, line 9, strike out "$100,000,000" and insert in lieu thereof "950,000,000". ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. TYDDIGS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I may yield 7 minutes to the Senator from Massachu- setts (Mr. BROOKE) , without losing my right to the floor. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? The Chair hears no objec- tion, and it is so ordered. The Senator from Massachusetts Is recognized. Mr. BROOKE. I thank the Senator from Maryland. The PRESIDING OrrICER. The Sen- ator is recognized for '7 minutes. es` P(Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, now that IVHRV the ABM decision has been taken, it be- hooves the Senate and the President to concentrate on the most urgent strategic question now facing the Nation; namely the looming prospect of new offensive deployments. There has now been con- siderable discussion of the so-called mul- tiple independently targetable reentry vehicles and more than a quarter of the members of Congress, including almost one-half the Senate, have cosponsored resolutions calling for immediate efforts to obtain a joint Soviet-American mora- torium on testing of MIRV systems. Such a moratorium, which enjoys much wider support in the informed technical and strategic community than the contro- versial ABM plan, would be a highly de- sirable means of buying time to explore the MIRV problem in the forthcoming strategic arms negotiations. I wish to call the attention of the Sen- ate to an important editorial in this morning's Wall Street Journal. This edi- torial makes clear the contradictory ar- guments which have been advanced by certain persons who are reluctant to en- dorse a MIRV test moratorium, and also sets forth the cogent reasons for pursu- ing this critical matter on an urgent basis. The editorial alludes to one point in particular which should not become con- fused. It is quite misleading to suggest that U.S. MIRV systems would be stall- lizing and healthy, because of their smal- ler size and relative accuracies, while the kind of Soviet tests which have been ob- served point toward systems which are dangerous. While initial versions of U.S. MIRV's would not be accurate enough to threaten the Soviet missile force, continued test- ing and guidance modifications of those weapons .could eventually improve their capability against hard targets. Accura- cies have improved by a factor of 10 in recent years; a further improvement by a factor of only 2 would be sufficient to produce this result. And the Soviets would have to base their long-range planning on this expectation, not on du- bious American assurances that our MIRV is safe and good. Furthermore, while the Soviet Union's tests of the SS-9 multiple warheads ap- pear to involve an intermediate tech- nology somewhere between a simple cluster weapon and the sophisticated and flexible MIRV on which we are working, it is not clear that the system could serve exclusively a first-strike purpose. The tests do seem incompatible with a re- taliatory role only; that is, they do not appear well suited to attacking cities. As the President has publicly implied, the footprints of the Soviet tests seem to match the distribution and layout of por- tions of the U.S. Minuteman force and they may be designed for that purpose. But in addition to a capacity for assured retaliation, we ourselves have long stressed the importance of a second- strike damage-limiting capability?it is one of the rationales the DOD applies in seeking unnecessarily accurate guidance for Poseidon and Minuteman III. Thus, especially if the Soviet SS-9 force remains too small for an effective first-strike against the Minuteman fields, what we have seen may well turn out to be an effort to acquire a damage- limiting capability, that is, a weapon sys- S 9585 tem which, in the event of war, would give the Soviet Union a capability to re- duce damage to itself by striking U.S. missiles. This is intricate and ambiguous anal- ysis, and no one can be sure of the Soviet Union's exact attitude on MIRV. But it should be abundantly clear to both sides, first, that neither side needs a MIRV system unless the other deploys a thick city defense that is years away and, second, that perfection and deployment of MIRV by either side will stimulate the other to take countermeasures. If this process is not arrested soon, and I doubt that it can be arrested unless MIRV is forestalled, the arms race is virtually certain to soar upward to a higher and more dangerous plateau. The Journal's editorial stresses that the United States could safely undertake a MIRV test moratorium because: American MIRV development is intended to assure penetration of a large-scale Soviet ABM, of which there is no firm evidence so far. Dr. Poster has testified that if the Soviets do build such a system, its initial operational capability is five years off. MIRV evidently could be deployed in a far shorter time. Don- ald Brennan, a Hudson Institute strategic specialist who agrees with the Administration on most issues, put it well in seeing no need for immediate MIRV deployment "on the basis of any philosophy whatever." And the Journal concludes: Even if there were no other considerations, we can see little justification for deploying a weapon the nation does not yet need. In this case, with arms limitations talks im- pending, such deployment seems doubly ques- tionable. A delay would give both the Soviets and arms-control advocates at home assur- ance that the Administration is deeply serious about the talks. We would be opposed to such gestures if they endanger U.S. security, but all public indications suggest a MIRV delay would not. The Administration is far free t to respond to all of these considerations now that it has won the ABM fight. . . . In MIRV it now has the opportunity to demonstrate even more conclusively it has a firm hand on the stra- tegic tiller, by proving it can also hold back on arms development that seems the advis- able course. The central challenge to strategic sta- bility comes from the current efforts to perfect MIRV systems. Now that action on the ABM question has been taken, the focus of the debate on national security should shift to the MIRV problem. I ask unanimous consent that the com- plete text of the Journal's editorial be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: BEYOND THE ABM VICTORY Score one for the Administration in the anti-ballistic missile fight, and perhaps more importantly, also in the underlying fight over who should control the nation's stra- tegic posture. Now that it has won the big light, perhaps the Administration can even find new confidence to seriously consider a delay in plans to deploy multiple warheads, a strategic development far more question- able than the ABM ever was. The ABM decision was on its merits a prob- lematical one, and there is something to be said for resolving the close ones in favor of the President. He is the one in charge of negotiating any arms control agreement with the Soviets, and his negotiating position would not be exactly solidified if the other side began to think a more acquiescent Sen- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : 91A-RDP71B00364R000300100001-3 S9586 Approved For Rtiet.ftift/113filiCA-MS1BOA4M0300100001-3 August 11, 1969 ate would actually have more to say than the President about future strategic decisiona. As long as the ABM test loomed, further, we could sympathize with the Administra- tion's hesitancy about a Mt-RV slowdown. Before the vote, this would have looked like an important concession to the dovish Sena- tors, and thus would have left the President's influence and decision-making powers loOk- ing more nebulous than they have turned out to be. Also, if the ABM were defeated, the Administration would have wanted to pro- ceed with MIRV to insure that something was done to counteract the very rapid recent ad- vances in Soviet strategic strength. None of these factors any longer applies, and the Administration can now consider MIRV far more on its own Merits. Where the ABM is a defensive weapon, MIRV is an of- fensive one. MIRV is also far more destab- ilizing in the strategic balance, being In- timately related with the possibility of one side launching a first strike to wipe out the other's deterrent. It is not clear that a U.S.- Soviet agreement to limit WIRV would be feasible, but it does seem pretty clear that MIRV depolyment can be delayed safely a year or two to explore that possibility. Pentagon research chief John Foster prob- ably was correct in testifying recently that the U.S. version of MIRV Is not a first-strike weapon, unlike the Soviet version with far larger warheads ideal for Uae against hard- ened missile sites. But even this is not en- tirely clear. Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird has referred to the use of American submarine-based MIRVs against "hard tar- gets." For that matter, Dr. Foster himself * ? * rent land-based missiles and the projected multiple-warhead version are "adequate with respect to warhead yield and guidance ac- curacy" when used for "a damage-limiting mission." Unless we have fallen behind in our Pentagonese, a damage-limiting mission would be a strike against missile sites. Per- haps the Pentagon's apparently contradic- tory statements can soniellow be resolved, but if not, even the 'U.S.-type MIRV seems highly destabilizing. Perhaps, of course, a U.S. MIRV may prove necessary even so. The Soviets are develop- ing their own, and inspection difficulties both in the test stage and after deployment may make any kind of agreement impracti- cal. But at least some competent Witnesses believe a limitation could be enforced so long as the weapons are not deployed. Most importantly, holding back U.S. deployment long enough to explore both the inspection difficulties and the Soviet attitude would apparently not involve much risk. American MIRV development is intended to assure penetration of a large-scale Soviet ABM, of which there is no firm evidence so far. Dr. oFater has testified that if the Soviets do build such a system, its initial operational capability is five years off. MIRV evidently could be deployed in a far shorter time. Donald Brennan, a Hudson Institute stra- tegic specialist who agrees with the Ad- ministration on most issues, put it well in seeing no need for immediate MIRV deploy- ment "on the basis of any philosophy what- ever." Even if there were no other considerations, we can see little justification for deploying a weapon the nation does not yet need. In this case, with arms limitations talks im- pending, such deployment seems doubly questionable. A delay would give both the Soviets and arms-control advocates at home assurance that the Administration is deeply serious about the talks. We would be opposed to such gestures if they endanger U.S. se- curity, but all public indications suggest a MIRV delay would not. The Administration Is far freer to respond to all of these considerations now that it has won the ABM fight. It proved it can over- come opposition and proceed with arms ad- vances when it considers them necessary. In MIRV it now has the opportunity to demon- strate even more conclusively it has a firm hand on the strategic tiller, by proving it can also hold back on arms development that seems the advisable course. MESSAGE FROM THE HOUSE A message from the House of Repre- sentatives, by Mr. Hackney, one of its reading clerks, announced that the House had agreed to a concurrent resolution (H. Con. Res. 315) providing for an ad- journment of Congress from Wednesday, August 13, 1969, until 12 o'clock noon on Wednesday, September 3, 1969, in which it requested the concurrence of the Senate. ENROLLED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTION SIGNED The message also announced that the Speaker had affixed his signature to the following enrolled bills, and they were signed by the Acting President pro- tempore: S. 912. An act to provide for the establish- ment of the Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument in the State of Colorado; S. 1611. An act to amend Public Law 85-905 to provide for a National Center on Educa- tional Media and Materials for the Handi- capped, and for other purposes; and H.J. Res. 864. Joint resolution to provide for a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the E oiMiptrol Act of 1949. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MISSILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RESERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- priations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and to authorize the construction of test fa- cilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. AMENDMENT No. 113 Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, I call up my amendment No. 113 which is pro- posed by myself and Mr. EAGLETON, Mr. FITLBRIGHT, Mr. HARRIS, Mr. HART, Mr. HATFIELD, Mr. JAVITS, Mr. MONDALE, Mr. MOSS, Mr. PACKWOOD, and Mr. PRORMIRE. I ask unanimous consent that the name of the Senator from Texas (Mr. YARBOROUGH) also be added as a cospon- sor of this amendment. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The amendment will be stated. The BILL CLERK. On page 3, line 9, strike out "$100,000,000" and insert in lieu thereof "$50,000,000". Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, the De- partment of Defense has requested that its emergency fund for research and de- velopment be doubled from last year's $50 million appropriation to $100 million for fiscal year 1970. As I shall seek to document in my remarks that follow, there is no compelling case for doubling this fund. To the contrary, the facts dic- tate maintaining the emergency fund at last year's $50 million level or reducing it. No national security issues are in- volved. This is strictly an economy mat- ter in an inflationary setting that has made superfluous government spending Intolerable. Therefore, along with Sen- ators EAGLETON, POLBRIGHT, HARRIS, HART, HATFIELD, JAVITS, MONDALE, MOSS, PACK- WOOD, PROXMIRE, and YARBOROUGH, I have introduced an amendment to S. 2546 to reduce the emergency fund authorization from $100 million to the $50 million ap- propriation figure of last year. The emergency fund is one of the de- vices available to the Department of De- fense to provide the flexibility needed to respond to unanticipated military prob- lems and to pursue uneXpected techno- logical breakthroughs. The fund may be used at the discretion of the Secretary of Defense, with the concurrence of the Bureau of the Budget and upon notifica- tion to the Congress, "for research, de- velopment, test and evaluation, or pro- curement or production related thereto." As I stated earlier, the amount appro- priated for the emergency fund last year, in fiscal year 1969, was $50 million. This is the same amount that was originally requested in January by the Department of Defense for fiscal year 1970. However, 2 months later, DOD revised its request by asking for $100 million, the amount contained in the authorization bill cur- rently before us. The argument offered by DOD in sup- port of this request for an additional $50 million is that the extra money is needed for sufficient flexibility in the manage- ment of the Department's research and development program. This argument implies either that insufficient flexibility existed last year with respect to the De- partment's research and development ef- forts or that R. & D. demands relative to R. & D. resources are expected to in- crease in fiscal year 1970. As the facts will show, neither of these is the case. Let us begin with an examination of the adequacy of last year's $50 million emergency fund. In fiscal year 1969, al- most 82 percent of the emergency fund was allocated for research and develop- ment related to our operations in South- east Asia?SEA. Therefore, the fund is most meaningfullly viewed as a part of PROVOST?the Department of Defense code name under which are lumped all of our Southeast Asia-related research and development programs. So the ques- tion we are really asking is: Was there sufficient flexibility in the Defense De- partment budget last year to meet all of our PROVOST needs?bath the expected and the unforeseen? Mr. President, according to Dr. Fost- er's testimony before the Armed Services Committee in May of this year, and I re- fer at this time to page 1802 of the hear- ings, part II, and also to page 1854, where according to Dr. Foster's testimony?and this was the testimony in May of a fiscal year that was going to end on June 30, a month and a half later, fiscal year 1969? $522 million was initially programed for Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 20_04/1_1/30_. CIATRDP71RORR4R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? PROVOST research and development, last year, dated July 5, 1968, on page 10, million. This is in addition to the $150 exclusive of the emergency fund. This entitled "Emergency Fund." million authority which he has to trans- $522 million was the amount initially Before I read what the report states, fer funds from one appropriation in the Programed, before any utilization of let me say the House struck out the Defense Department, say, for aircraft emergency fund in its entirety last year. carriers, submarines, or something like S 9587 funds. On that same day, in May of 1969, Dr. The Senate had arrived at a figure of Foster predicted that by the end of fiscal $121 million. The House and Senate went 1969, PROVOST activities would require to conference, and out of the conference $353 million in addition to the $522 mil- came the figure of $50 million. I merely lion programed. In reality, his estimate ask to return to the $50 million figure Was $53 million too high, but I will not which was agreed to in the conference make a point of that. Nevertheless, that between the House and the Senate. But was approximately $100 million less than last year the Armed Services Committee the additional $406 million which was of the House knocked out all the author- added to the PROVOST funds in fiscal ization. year 1968. I read from page 10 of the report of the Mr. President, let me try to explain Armed Services Committee of the House: what this means. In 1968, the Depart- Under the Department of Defense Appro- ment initially programed, for PROVOST, priation Act of 1968, the Secretary of Defense $450 million. However, the final amount was given authority to transfer funds, not to spent was $856 million. So how did they exceed $350 million, from other appropria- tions to the emergency fund, make up the difference? They made up the difference by reprograming $222 mil- Last year?fiscal year 1969?they had lion from a total research and develop- $150 million of that transfer authority, ment program of some $7.093 billion? but only used $78 million of it. and they are permitted to reprogram In view of the transfer authority previously however much they want, which I will granted to the Secretary of Defense and re- show they have done each year and will quested for inclusion in -the fiscal year 1969 do next year. They had a supplemental Appropriation Act, the committee believes that the amount requested for the emergency appropriation of $96 million for which fund can be deleted in its entirety. they came to the Congress, and they used $88 million from the emergency fund. That was the position of the Armed That was in fiscal year 1968. Services Committee last year when there Last fiscal year?the fiscal year just was a conference with the Senate. ended in June 1969?they had an original Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will budgeted program for PROVOST of $522 the Senator yield on that point? million. They reprogramed $263 million Mr. TYDINGS. I am delighted to yield. from a total research and development Mr. PROXMIRE. Did the Senator say budget of $7.155 billion? the House Armed Services Committee Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the knocked out the entire amount on the Senator yield right there on these fig- ground that it was possible to transfer urea? funds from one part of the total appro- Mr. TYDINGS. I yield. priation to another? Mr. STENNIS. For what year is the Mr. TYDINGS. Exactly. That is the Senator talking about the PROVOST exact language found on page 10 of the funds? report of the House Committee on Armed Mr. TYDINGS. Fiscal 1969, the year we Services, July 5, 1968. have just completed. Mr. PROXMIRE. If that is the case, it Mr. STENNIS. The regular amount? seems to me there is no real argument for Mr. TYDINGS. The initial amount flexibility at all. Is there? There is simply budgeted was $522 million, an argument that we increase the overall Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator. funds by $100 million. That is really what Mr. TYDINGS. However, they needed is being proposed this year; is it not? an additional $304 million added to their Mr. TYDINGS. Exactly. The flexibility program for fiscal 1969, which ended which is presently available for the Sec- June 30 past. So they took only $41 mil-retary of Defense is, I think without lion from the $50 million emergency fund which had been authorized and appro- priated last year. They also took $263 million through reprograming within the total research and development budget, and they came up with the $826 million that they needed. Now, Mr. President, they did not touch the $150 million discretionary power which the Secretary of Defense has to transfer funds from one appropriation of the De- partment of Defense to another. They did not touch that. Nor did they touch for this purpose, the special $10 million contingency fund which the Secretary of Defense has at his discretion. In other words, PROVOST was able to raise the full $826 million required to meet the de- mands placed upon it without exhaust- ing all of the funding flexibility within the Defense Department. Let me read from the report of the Armed Services Committee of the House, that, to another appropriation in the De- fense Department such as research and development. Mr. PROXMIRE. He has that flexibil- ity within the research and development area; does he not? Mr. TYDINGS. Yes. Mr. PROXMIRE. And he can transfer from one to the other? Mr. TYDINGS. That is correct. In ad- dition, as I just explained, he has an- other $150 million worth of flexibility through the transfer authority. This is similar to the reprograming authority, in that it permits money to be trans- ferred from one budgetary slot to an- other. The difference is that when the slots between which money is transferred are appropriations?that is, specific dol- lar amounts that appear in the appro- priations bill?the term used is not "re- programing" but "transfer authority." There is a $150 million limitation on transfer authority. Also, DOD has another $10 million contingency fund. Mr. PROXMIRE. How large is the re- search and development budget? Mr. TYDINGS. The research and de- velopment budget reported by the Senate Committee on Armed Services is $7.18 billion. For the fiscal year 1969, it was $7.551 billion. For fiscal year 1968, it was $7.093 billion. Mr. PROXMIRE. In view of the size of that budget, and the flexibility within it, would it not be more logical to call this a surplus fund instead of an emer- gency contingency fund? That is all it is. Any contingency can be met by tapping the $7 billion available in the research and development budget plus the addi- tional resources available from the entire $75 billion or $80 billion defense budget. Mr. TYDINGS. Exactly. One other thing that concerns me is that the Com- mittee on Armed Services did an ex- tremely thorough job on research and development programs requested by the Department of Defense this year. The committee reduced the request by some question, without precedent in the ex- 12 percent. They scrutinized the research ecutive branch. He has the authority to items of the various projects point by transfer funds from program to program point. within each appropriation without limit. What this $100 million really allows Thus, this reprograming authority allows the Secretary of Defense to do is to make them to defer, for instance, non-SEA an end run around the Committee on R. & D. programs undertaken by the Armed Services to avoid the congres- Army and transfer the funds to a new sional right of scrutiny and to pick pro- Army SEA R. & D. project. There is no grams, because congressional control of limit to the amount of money that can emergency fund utilization is quite be programed within any one appropri- limited. ation. Of course, since we are talking Mr. MURPHY. Will the Senator yield? about the research and development pro- Mr. TYDINGS. am delighted to yield. gram, assuming the committee's author- Mr. MURPHY. Is it not the under- ization is accepted, there would be for standing that the request for research ' this year some $7.1 billion from which to and development was based on specific reprogram if PROVOST falls short. items, of which there are a great num- Last year, in fiscal 1969, with a $7.055 ber in the bill: rifles; radar; research billion research and development pro- and development in the use of laser gram, the Secretary of Defense repro- beams; and the rest? So when we speak gramed into PROVOST from other parts in round numbers, we are thinking of the of research and development budget $263 spread over a great many items, and we million. In 1968 he reprogramed $222 would assume that those who made the Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9588 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 CO NGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 11, 1969 Mr. MURPHY. Is it not true that when limit within a given appropriation. Since he reprograms, he has to take from one appropriations are generally for large in order to accommodate the other? and unspecified purposes, such as "Army Mr. TYDINGS. Certainly, aircraft" er "Navy R.D.T. & E.," the re- Mr. MURPHY. Is it not true that in programing authority enables the Dc.. the light of the cut which the committee fense Department to move around a has already made, one might simply call great deal of money. The purpose of re- this added fund simply "comfortable programing, to quote this year's Senate money"? Armed Services Committee report on the Mr. Ty.taINGS. I would call it luxury bill before us, is to provide DOD "con- money. siderable flexibility should events require Mr. MURPHY. I would hope there changes in program emphasis or re- would not be any luxuries. As the Sena- source allocation." tor knows, I have had some experience in The $263 million reprogramed into private industry with research and de- PROVOST for fiscal year 1969 repre- velopment. I am very conscious of the sented only 3 Y2 percent of the total fact that they can go on indefinitely, Department of Defense R. & D. budget and they sometimes spend much more for fiscal year 1969 of $7.55 billion. than was anticipated. But I happen to Now, according to Leonard Sullivan, have great confidence in the Secretary of the director of PROVOST and the etner- Defense, and particularly in his assist- gency fund in the Pentagon, the total ant, Mr. Packard, who made not just a PROVOST budget for fiscal year 1969 national but an international reputation enabled him to handle every important not only a man of great talent, a great R. & D. request from Vietnam. scientist, physicist, and electronic engi- I hope the Senator from California is neer, but also a man with complete listening. This was a reduction from the knowledge and wisdom with regard to the $121 million which the Senate Armed use of funds. That is how he started in Services Committee requested; the House a garage with $300, I think it was, or $600, of Representatives refused to agree with in the public competition and wound up the request, and the $60 million was the with an astronomical fortune. I am told eventual compromise. But, according to he would be hired quickly and eagerly by Mr. Sullivan, he has never been forced any industry in the country, or in the by lack of funds to turn down any request world, because of his expertise in these from General Abrams, our field corn- matters. mender in Vietnam. Furthermore, Mr. These are the kinds of fellows that we Sullivan contends that no R. & D. pro- are asked to have confidence in, and I, gram suggested in fiscal year 1969 to aid for one, feel that after the cut the corn- our efforts in Vietnam which his office mittee made, this would not be an extra- deemed meritorious was not undertaken vagance. I would hope that unless it In short, according to its Director, were necessary, these funds would not be PROVOST did everything it wanted in used, but it would be nice to have them fiscal year 1969 and did it with great in the event that, due to some unfore- success and did it with the $50 million seen happening, the availability of the which was appropriated last year. funds might make a tremendous differ- At this time I ask unanimous consent ence to the safety of the Nation, or to have printed in the Rseose at the con- enable us to cut costs elsewhere by mak- elusion of my remarks the statement to Ing unnecessary other weapons that are me from Mr. Leonard Sullivan, Jr., in now burgeoning, its entirety, together with certain ex- Mr. TYDINGS. I thank the distin- hibits and attachments which he sub- guished Senator from California. A little mitted to me. farther on, I shall quote directly from There being no objection, the material a statement given to me by Leonard was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, Sullivan, Jr., the Deputy Director for as follows: Southeast Asia Matters of the Office of EMERGENCY FUND, DEFENSE Defense Research and Engineering, Congress first important giant of financ- where he points out that if the Senate ing flexibility to the Defense Department was should adopt the same figure we did last made early in the Korean War in the First year, $50 million, there would be no Supplemental Appropriations Act, 1951, ap- PROVOST research and development proved on September 27, 1950, This Act es- programs neglected; it would merely tablished for the first time an Emergency mean that the Department of Defense Fund of $190,000,000 which would be avail- would have to do a little dickering with able for transfer by the Secretary of Defense, with the approval of the Bureau of the Budg- the various services to get the additional et, to "any appropriation for military Sum- moneys to meet certain priorities within tions of the Department of Defense available the existing budget. I intend to put that for research and development or industrial statement in the RECORD in its entirety, mobilization to provide additional flexibility and read specific lines, a little farther on to the Secretary of Defense." In recommend- in my remarks. ing this Emergency Fund, the House Appro- Suffice it to say that in the last fiscal groinations2ndComsrlitstteeateRde:port (No. 2987, 81st year, 1969, there was $304 million ad- g The committee is well aware that emer- ditionally needed, which was not initi- gencies may arise where it would be most de- ally programed for Southeast Asia. This sirable to have readily available funds with $304 million was obtained, as indicated, which to expedite basic research on a certain in two ways: $41 million was taken from problem or to accelerate development on some the $50 million emergency fund; and item that research had disclosed as practi- $263 million was reprogramed into cable and desirable, or to accelerate and in- PROVOSTfrom lower prioritYD. tensify preparedness in the industrial field." The Second Supplemental Act of 1951, ap- programs. "Reprograming" is an au- proved January 6, 1951, added $50,000,000 thority given the Defense Department by to this Emergency Fund, and the Congress Congress to reallocate funds without continued in subsequent years to make ap- requests had some knowledge of what their needs would be. As a member of the committee, this is my understanding; and that after care- ful scrutiny, we decided that we could cut back the overall round figure by some 12 percent. Coming down to the question of the emergency or justification for the new fund, this is to cover a case where it might well happen that unexpectedly, some scientist comes up with an entirely new concept that might be of great value, and might in fact replace three or four other weapons, and the Secretary might want to permit him to proceed immedi- ately. This fund has been created to be used only at the discretion of the Secre- tary of Defense, in order to provide for such a new situation or advance that had not been conceived or thought of previ- ously. At least that was mi understanding of its purpose. It was not really just to give the Secretary of Defense or the re- search and development group another bundle of money to go ahead and use in- advertently, but for careful use within the judgment of the Secretary of De- fense. After the argument made by those wit- nesses from the Department, it was the feeling of the committee that this was a particularly important and needed sum of money, if for no other reason strictly in the light of the fact-that we had cut back the overall figure that was men- tioned by some 12 percent. Although these figures, added up, are tremendously large, when you divide them up into the many areas in which they have to be used?and I have to as- sume that the experts know what they are asking for; I have to assume that they are not asking for more than they actually hope to receive or expect to need?is it not fair to assume that there might just be the possibility that great progress might be restrained, just for the lack of having this extra or emer- gency fund to be used at the disposal of e Secretary of Defense? Mr. TYDINGS. Let Mc say, with the exception of the last sentence of the statement Of the Senator from Califor- nia, the Senator's understanding is the same as mine. My point is, however, that with a total research and developraent budget of $7.18 billion for the coniing year, there would be sufficient flexibility, because of the complete latitude in reprograming permitted the Secretary of Defense, to do the same type of reprograming in fiscal year 1970 that he did in fiscal year 1968, when he had a smaller total for research and development of $7.093 bil- lion, and he reprogramed $222 million for PROVOST. He was able to do the same thing in 1969, when he repro- gramed $263 million out of a total re- search and development budget of only $7.551 billion. On neither occasion did he even have to touch, for PROVOST purposes, the additional right to transfer $150 million from one appropriation of the defense budget to anOther. So the question is, really, do we wish to give him an extra $100 million on top of what the research and development budget already is? Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2Q04/w3k. August 11, 1969 CJA7RDP704,0114R000300100001-3 s 9589 . CONGRESSIoNAL KtCutu) 3 4.1" propriations in varying amounts for this pur- pose. From FY 1952 onwards, the purposes of the Fund were limited to research and devel- opment and production related thereto. The rationale for the Emergency Fund has not changed over the years since the need for such flexibility was ilaat recognized during the Korean War. Indeed, the need is far more urgent now, by virtue of the conflict in Southeast Asia, than it was in the late 1950's and early 1960's when the Congress regularly appropriated $150 million per year. An ex- amination of the use of the Fund during the past two or three years and its direct relationship to the conduct of the Vietnam conflict attests convincingly to the impor- tance of having this financing flexibility during FY 1970. A summary of the amounts appropriated from FY 1951 on and the amounts trans- ferred and used from FY 1960 on is shown on the attached table. STATEMENT OF LEONARD SULLIVAN, JR., DEPUTY DIRECTOR, SOUTHEAST ASIAN MATTERS, AU- GUST 8, 1969 The Emergency Fund provides a special source of dollars at OSD level which can be current PROVOST efforts account for almost applied at the discretion of the Secretary 10% of the RDT&E budget. The size and of Defense (with concurrence of the Bureau distribution of funding by year is shown at of the Budget and upon notification to the Tab B (not printed in RECORD). It should be Congress). It is used to: noted that the cumulative RDT&E expendi- Exploit sudden unexpected breakthroughs tures for the past six years are approximately in technology which could have a significant equal to the total costs of fighting the war for impact on our defense posture: six weeks. An unclassified article on PRO- Provide rapid and timely response to ur- VOST is at Tab C. gent requirements from operational forces Tab B also shows the funding by source, engaged in important cold or hot war situa- and I would like to explain this. Most of our tions. developments are small in dollars ($.5 to The history of the Emergency Fund is pro- 5.0M), and short in development time (12- vided at Tab A. 24 months). To be responsive, they cannot As a source of special dollars?not promised wait 12-18 months for initial funding. Hence to the Services for established programs at they do not match well with the orderly, the beginning of the fiscal year?it is an well-planned, long-debated, peacetime budg- extremely valuable management asset to pro- et cycle. Yet the budget is too tight to allow vide responsive development for critical items much "contingency funding", although this not foreseen during the normal one year is the obvious management tool to use to budget development cycle preceding the fiscal accommodate the urgent but unexpected. So year. Besides its use for the current Vietnam we have adopted the following procedure: war, it is primarily used for highly classified 1. We estimate our requirements in the developments for our strategic forces?in Fali for the budget submission--which is why intelligence gathering, command and control our PROVOST testimony tends to be general problems, and weapon system component im- rather than specific. provernents. I cannot provide a list of these 2. Before the new fiscal year begins the items because of their high classification. next Summer, we update our needs at Ap- At the $100M level, the Emergency Fund portionment time?increasing the PROVOST represents only 1.25% of the total RDT&E portion at the expense of non-war programs, budget. In recent years, the DOD budget sub- even though they often are not as glamorous missions to the Congress have been about as ICBMs, ABMs, ASW, MBTs, AAFSS, etc., 20% below that requested by the Services, and even though the approved RDT&E Hence the budget is extremely tight; there budget is always smaller than we requested is no "loose money" around; and reprogram- and had fully programmed. This becomes the ming is a long ardous problem of debate, 44p, portion of the Tab B bar charts (not oajolery, etc. reproduced). With the onset of the large scale U.S. par- 3. As new requirements unfold during the ticipation in the war in Vietnam, the Emer- year and can be quantified in terms of dol- gency Fund has been largely devoted to ex- lars needed, we ask the Services to reprogram pediting new capabilities for our forces in from lower priority programs, or from pro- Southeast Asia, in response to requirements grams which have not progressed as planned. stated by the operational forces. ? This is relatively easy at the beginning of It is generally accepted that the U.S. force the Fiscal Year but increasingly difficult as committed in SEA were not ideally equipped the year progresses and funds become corn- for this new kind of war?hence our costs muted?and we must compete with other have probably been somewhat higher in dol- high priority non-SEA programs whose addi- lars and lives, the duration longer, and the tional needs are also unanticipated in the "deterrent" offered against "future Viet- current budget process. This is the "B" por- nams" somewhat less than if we had been tion of the Chart at Tab B (not reproduced). fully equipped and "optimized" for this type 4. Next, when an item is urgent, represents of low intensity, jungle, counterinsurgency, a "new start", or responds to an important counterinfiltration warfare. Moreover, we known problem area, we tap the Emergency have been ill-prepared to train and equip Fund for the required dollars, generally our Asian Allies to take on more of the fight- providing less than half the amounts re- ing burden themselves, quested by the Service. This is the "E" per- We in R&D have been trying to re-equip tion of the Tab E charts. We readily admit and tailor our committed forces to increase that some of these dollars have been put our effectiveness in this kind of war by learn- on "high risk" items?where the "pay-off", ing the combat lessons fast enough to pro- though not certain, would be quite signifl- vide specially tailored equipment to our cant if our goals could be achieved. forces within the time span of the war?us- At Tab D is a Summary Table of dollars ually within 18-36 months. There are some provided from the Emergency Fund, SEA atm! instances where we have been quite sue- non-SEA oriented, showing the increasing, cessful?from individual soldier equipment peaking, and falling percentage tor the war- and malaria preventatives to new anti-radar oriented projects. We would anticipate that missiles and equipment for seeing at night. 80% of this year's Emergency Fund would We have not, however, found any one magic go to the PROVOST items. Charts showing solution: we are therefore attempting as the breakout by Service and Defense agen- broad-scale an attack on the problems as cies, both requested and provided, are at possible. Tab E.,That the Emergency Fund is mainly I should like to note that many new de- spent about halfway through the fiscal year? velopments have been fielded in useful quan- when reprograming has became far more titles and more are on the way?some are difficult?is shown at Tab F (not included). already being transferred to the Vietnamese. 5. Finally, in former years, when the war However, almost all of these new equipments was still escalating and our RDT&E efforts have operational utility beyond Southeast still expanding, it became obvious that the Asia and will become part of our post-war reprograming and Emergency Funds to- standard equipment. Hence our efforts con- gether would be inadequate. In these years tribute not only to our combat capabilities ('66, '61, & '68) we asked the Congress for, in SEA, but to the combat potential of our and received, Supplemental RDT&E appro- future tactical forces, which have for many priations?indicated by the "S" portion of years received lesser priority than our stra- the Tab B charts. tegic forces. 6. Several other sources of possible fund- All our Southeast Asia-related RDT&E ing have been considered at times but have programs are lumped under an all-inclusive not been available for SEA needs. For in- program code name of PROVOST?which is stance, SecDef transfer authority would an OSD 'Management device to ensure ade- make it possible to "convert" production quate attention during budget time (since monies to RDT&E up to a $150M annual there are hundreds of individual small proj- limit. But as you know in recent years, ects), special procurement priorities, etc. Our production budgets have also been inade- quate to support the war (hence the Supplemental requests in '66, '67, '68 and ' '69). Therefore the transfer authority could not be fully used to support RDT&E prob- lems. Actually, about 40% of the available transfer authority has been used over the past four years?but on direct transfers from production to RDT&E within the same non- SEA programs such as F-111, Minuteman II, etc. This device has thus been used to compensate for the Emergency Fund redirec- tion to our wartime problems. A table of transfer authority utilization is at Tab G. At Tab H, we have also attempted to rate the success of our Emergency Fund proj- ects, by dividing all fund increments into one of three categories: "success", "failure", or "still in development". A success is one that has been accepted for operational use and is already in?or planned for?produc- tion. Failures are ideas which simply did not pan out either in development, test, or operational evaluation. Many items?par- ticularly in the last two years, are of course still in development with their ultimate con- tribution still indeterminate. However, we are quite satisfied that for '65, '66, and '67, our success rate is over 75%, based on dollars spent, not on individual projects. We expect the same for '68 and '69. A detailed classified listing of projects funded from Emergency Funds is included in a separate Tab I (not included). A long classified discussion of the RDT&E "Lessons Learned" in Southeast Asia?and what we have done about them?is in a separate Tab J (not included) : an article wrote recently for the Journal of Defense Research. Last year, the Congress authorized an Emergency Fund of only $50M. Although a few million remained until near the end of the year, the preponderance of it was spent, as usual, near the middle of the fiscal year. The $50M was clearly inadequate and was recognized to be so from the be- ginning of the year. To compensate for the Congressional action, we therefore deferred an additional $90M (approx) of funds already assigned to the Services and "earmarked" it for augmentation of the Emergency Fund by reprogramming if and when necessary. Hence we knew from the beginning of the year that we had an "equivalent Emergency Fund" of about $140M (approx) ?and used almost all of it. If the Congress insists on restricting the Emergency Fund for FY 70, we will again be forced to use some equivalent device to assume adequate funds to cover our unfore- seen requirements. However, it would appear to be a needless, time-consuming, and direct Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9590 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE August 11, 1969 approach to an otherwise straighforWard TAB A Final summery of peal year 1948 emergency management tool. Additionally, if as now fund- item approved-Continued Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 we still have many problems without ade- Initial fund_ quate solutions-solutions that will be $50, 000, 000 Nuclear weapons effecta re- needed as long as we are in. Vietnam-even In Total of items approved 50, 000, 000 search 2, 000, 000 redueed numbers. Solutions that could be Army: Defense Conununications provided to the Vietnamese to make their Southeast Asia requirements Agency (DCA) : tasks easier after we go. Solutions that should be incorporated into our post-war (one Uncle group) 36, eeD, 000 Southeast Asia related item__ 3,000, 000 Acoustic recording system de- General Purpose Forces as soon as we can per- Final summary of fiscal year 1967 emergency velope feet them-to reduce the chances of our inot 750, 000 fund items approved ' Evaluation of aircraft weapons military might being belittled again, fire control 669,000 Initial fund e125, 000, 000 During the current "lull" for instance- Clearing of helicopter landing Total of items approved_ _ ___ 124, 997, 270 Which is an annual affair- our casualties zones with fuel air explo- ( deaths) are very high from enemy mines Army: sives (FAS) 179, 000 and boobytraps, and from rockets and mor- Self-destructive device for as- Southeast Asia related items_ 16, 908, 000 tars (exact figures are classified) . We still Improved real time sensors tillery ammunition 200, 000 have no adequate, practical, means for de- Classified project 995, 000 for OV-1 aircraft--- --------3,000, 000 terring either. We still frequently cannot Southeast Asia related item_ 500, 000 "find the enemy" in the j,Uneles before he Total Army Southeast Asia related item_ 5, 800, 000 39, 583, 000 finds us. We still cannot adequately monitor Southeast Asia related item_ 1, 860,000 and "track" infiltration across the borders Navy: Classified Project 300, 000 from Cambodia and Laos. We frequently ex- Classified Project $00,000 Sensor systems development pend massive amounts of ordnance to kill (non-SEA) 5, 217, 000 a small target because we cannot find it ac- Total Army 28, 748, 000 Tactical electronic warfare de- curately, or hit it the first time from an air- cepttan system 700, 000 craft even when we can see It. Navy : Thousands of scientists and engineers in Radar site pinpointing im- the Defense laboratories and industries are Total Navy 5,917, 000 provements (EELS) 3, 000, 000 working on these and other pressing prob- Southeast Asia related item_ 305, 000 lems which directly reflect _on our losses, on Mr Force: Southeast Asia re- Radar site pinpointing MI- our overall costs, and on our apparent "ira- latestitem 500, 000 provements 2, 000, 000 potence" in. discouraging etre tinned North Southeast Asia related in, 776, 270 Vietnamese intervention. I think it is a Classified project_ ,.... 6, te)0, 000 Advanced Research Projects Classified project_ 3, 800, 000 matter of national urgency to continue to Agency (ARPA): work on these problems with the same vigor Southeast Asia related item_ 905, 000 Classified project as we have in the past four years. 3,000, 000 River warfare boats_ - -_--__ 7, 050, 000 Southeast Asia related item 1, 000, 00() Advanced ceemmand data erys- The Emergency Fund provides flexibility, tern responsiveness, and emphasis. It is the im- 2, 400, 000 portant one percent of the PDT&E budget Total ARPA 4, 000, 000 Southeast Asia related item_ 14, 000, 000 which provides an essential management TALOS ARM missile develop- Final summary of fiscal year 1968 emergency ment tool for expediting our contribution to end- 4, 500, 000 fund items approved Fleet ballistic missile (FBM) ing (or at least reducing our lie rticipatian in) Initial fund $100, 000, 000 command and control that unfortunate war. It is essential to our Total of items approved 100, 000, 000 efforts, and provides the dee nest possible communications _ ... _ ____ _ 1, 450, 000 approach to the requisite "contingency Army: Southeast Asia related item_ 1, 972, 000 funding". Standard ARM missile devel- TAB A Reduction of fire hazard to oprnent 14, 500, 000 aircraft 1, 500, 000 Classified project 3, 120,01)0 EMERGENCY FUND, DEFENSE SMMARY TOTAL EXPEND,- Southeast Asia related items_ 36, 963, 000 Classified project 500,000 TURES APPROVED Mortar locating system de- [in million dollars]. velopment 1, 200, 000 Total Navy 66, 878, 270 Southeast Asia related item__ 3, 330, 000 Border sectuity/anti-infiltra- Air Force: - -- - Amounts tion 8, 961, 000 Southeast Asia related Items,, 19, 151, 000 trans- Combat aircraft records and Re- Appro- furred and Fiscal year quested priated used Total Army data system (CARDS) _____ 400, 000 51, 954, 000 --- 1951 I 240 Navy: Total Air Force_ 19, 551, 000 1952 90 Advanced marine biological 1953 35 systems Advanced Research Projects 1954 60 __ - Agency (ARPA) : Southeast 1, 050, 000 Footnotes at end of table. Southeast Asia related items_ 10, 677, 000 Asia related items 2, 630, 000 Classified project 6, 000, 000 -- - s - Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 n. I think it is a Classified project_ ,.... _____ 6, te)0, 000 Advanced Research Projects Classified project_ 3, 800, 000 matter of national urgency to continue to Agency (ARPA): work on these problems with the same vigor Southeast Asia related item_ 905, 000 Classified project as we have in the past four years. 3,000, 000 River warfare boats_ - -_--__ 7, 050, 000 Southeast Asia related item__ 1, 000, 00() Advanced ceemmand data erys- The Emergency Fund provides flexibility, tern responsiveness, and emphasis. It is the im- 2, 400, 000 portant one percent of the PDT&E budget Total ARPA 4, 000, 000 Southeast Asia related item_ 14, 000, 000 which provides an essential management TALOS ARM missile develop- Final summary of fiscal year 1968 emergency ment tool for expediting our contribution to end- 4, 500, 000 fund items approved Fleet ballistic missile (FBM) ing (or at least reducing our lie rticipatian in) Initial fund $100, 000, 000 command and control that unfortunate war. It is essential to our Total of items approved 100, 000, 000 efforts, and provides the dee nest possible communications _ ... _ ____ _ 1, 450, 000 approach to the requisite "contingency Army: Southeast Asia related item_ 1, 972, 000 funding". Standard ARM missile devel- TAB A Reduction of fire hazard to oprnent 14, 500, 000 aircraft 1, 500, 000 Classified project 3, 120,01)0 EMERGENCY FUND, DEFENSE SMMARY TOTAL EXPEND,- Southeast Asia related items_ 36, 963, 000 Classified project 500,000 TURES APPROVED Mortar locating system de- [in million dollars]. velopment 1, 200, 000 Total Navy 66, 878, 270 Southeast Asia related item__ 3, 330, 000 Border sectuity/anti-infiltra- Air Force: - -- - Amounts tion 8, 961, 000 Southeast Asia related Items,, 19, 151, 000 trans- Combat aircraft records and Re- Appro- furred and Fiscal year quested priated used Total Army data system (CARDS) _____ 400, 000 51, 954, 000 --- 1951 I 240 Navy: Total Air Force_ 19, 551, 000 1952 90 Advanced marine biological 1953 35 systems Advanced Research Projects 1954 60 __ - Agency (ARPA) : Southeast 1, 050, 000 Footnotes at end of table. Southeast Asia related items_ 10, 677, 000 Asia related items 2, 630, 000 Classified project 6, 000, 000 -- - s - August 11, 19 proved For&MV0040.1/30 ? RDP71600364R000300100001-3 SION AL RECORD ? SENATE S 9591 Final summary of fiscal year 1967 emergency fund items approved?Continued Defense Communications Agen- cy (DCA) : Southeast Asia related items $2, 190, 000 Defense Atomic Support Agen- cy (DASA) : Nuclear weapons tests 5, 000, 000 TAB C RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT 'FOR VIETNAM IN BRIEF.?The author heads the office in the Pentagon whose specific purpose is to expedite those R&D activities which hold some promise of increasing the effectiveness of our forces in Southeast Asia. From that special position, he tells of the important role of R&D in the war. Currently, the Depart- ment of Defense is investing some $800 mil- lion per year in this effort. Given the long time required to bring ideas through the R&D process and convert them to hardware, is it reasonable to expect that today's ideas can be developed in time to have an effect on the battlefield? The Pentagon clearly be- lieves so, citing the more than one hundred new types of equipment that are added to our operational inventory each year. Currently, more than one thousand specific R&D pro- jects are going on in support of the war.? D.A.) Some people wonder whether research and development have a place in a war while that war is going on. I believe strongly that there is a place for such endeavors?just as there was in previous wars. Indeed, my office exists under the Director of Defense Re- search and Engineering for the specific pur- pose of expediting those research and de- velopment activities which hold some promise of increasing the effectiveness of our mili- tary forces in Southeast Asia. Most wars we fight will be different from the ones we are anticipating. Every war will have its own peculiarities and innovations. Every war will introduce new tactics, new equipment, and new objectives. So there will always be a problein of remaking our mili- tary forces, or reoptimizing them for the particular type of war that comes along. We know now that the war in Vietnam is considerably different from any war we have ever fought before. We entered this war fully and beautifully equipped to fight either an all-out nuclear conflict or World War II over again. But then we found that Vietnam is a new war?for many reasons. As I describe these reasons, I believe you will see the im- portance of a strong R&D activity linked to our engagement in Southeast Asia. MORE THAN ONE WAR At the time we undertook to help the South Vietnamese, I do not think we fully realized how difficult it would be to fight an enemy so closely interwoven with our allies It is a war without front lines, a war where you can seldom distinguish friend from foe? except by the actions of the foe. Thus, we have had to learn a great deal about how to find small bands of enemy guerrillas dis- persed over the countryside. In addition to the insurgency, however, several other wars have been superimposed, each with its own characteristics. I will discuss each briefly. The most advanced war, technologically, Is the bombing of the North; it uses many of our latest tactical aircraft in a strategic role; we are up against enemy surface-to-air missiles for the first time; we are in combat against supersonic Soviet-designed aircraft, firing air-to-air missiles?and we are doing the same. The electronic warfare is quite sophisticated on both sides. Less sophisti- cated, but more important, we have had to learn how to survive intense antiaircraft fire. One frustrating aspect of this war is the difficulty we find in really discouraging the enemy, or killing his interest in fighting, by bombing alone. We are also learning?or re- learning?that when you run an air cam- paign without ground follow-up, you fre- quently cannot keep the targets destroyed. It is one thing to bomb a bridge to slow some- one's retreat on the ground, or to bomb a convoy that is resupplying front line troops. But it is quite another thing to try to stop a country from going about its essential busi- ness?like driving trucks, burying supplies in the ground, or unloading ships?when one has an intention of following up on the ground. These are things which make it a very expensive kind of war?and in many respects, the results are difficult to quantify. The second war is in trying to stop infiltra- tion into South Vietnam. This is a relatively new problem; we had soine experience along the Korean demilitarized zone, but not dur- ing a hot war. Vietnam has about one thousand miles of land boundary, and another thousand miles of water boundary. We are trying to stop the North Vietnamese from crossing these 2,000 miles of boundary and resupplying the guer- rillas in the South. Actually, relative to the length of the border, the supplies and rein- forcements coming into the South are very small. So the "flow rate" across any Unit length of the total boundary is low. But the boundaries are difficult to patrol; most of the natural assets are on the side of the guerril- la. For example, two-third of the land boundary is covered by heavy jungle. Across these boundaries, the North Vietnamese either walk, carrying supplies on their backs, or push bicycles. They do not ride the bi- cycles; they use them as oriental wheelbar- rows, carrying up to 500 pounds of supplies in "saddlebags." Lately, they have begun using trucks to cross. They have found that we cannot destroy their roads as fast as they can build them. They have had a very active road-building campaign and are now building roads into South Vietnam. ? Within South Vietnam, a third war involves the dissipation of the main enemy units? now mostly North Vietnamese manned. These are the "search and destroy" actions in which the U.S. forces have been mainly employed in South Vietnam, In these actions, we go out into the countryside to try to find the enemy mainforce battalions and regi- ments that move as units. We attempt to locate and destroy them before they can reach friendly targets. This is where our fire- power has come into play, along with the extreme mobility to fly our forces anywhere in the country. Without that firepower and mobility, we would need many more troops to do the job from relatively static defensive positions. The fourth war is one we have paid fess attention to than we might have. This is the war to control the guerrilla. As a civilian, I am in no position to determine where mili- tary priority should be?and hence I shall not try to put myself in a role of military strategist. But the facts in the guerrilla war are these: If all the smoke were cleared away, if we stopped the bombing of the North, if the North Vietnamese stopped infiltrating into the South, if we stopped fighting main unit actions in the jungles, we would still have the problem of controlling the guerrilla. ADJUSTING A THRESHOLD Who is the guerrilla? He is simply the local dissident or the local zealot. He is willing to commit acts of violence in order to make himself heard and in order to change his lot and that of future generations. The threshold of his violence is a fine balance between the strength of his discontent and his view of the consequences of his violence. We should be able to change an insurgent's threshold of violence by adjusting both sides of the balance. We can lower his level of discontent by peaceful action, and we can raise the apparent deterrent by suitable military or police presence?and technology can prob- ably help on both sides. By "we" I mean the U.S. as well as the South Vietnamese government. It is mainly in this "fourth war" that social science research has been used to advantage. Before we can undertake to ad- vise another country--much less help and train it?we must have a full understanding of the differences in its culture, background, aims, and motivations from those of our own society. We cannot realistically hope to as- sist in solving the problems of South Viet- nam which have caused the dissatisfaction and lawlessness until we understand in con- siderable detail how and why those problems arose. The fifth and newest war with which we have been confronted is the war of the cities?a form of "escalation" or moderniza- tion of the Maoist insurgency doctrine. The enemy knows that by rocketing and shelling from without and by sniping and arson from within, it is possible to cause considerable local and international consternation. Dam- age to property is extensive, the innocent populatino is caught in a cross fire they can- not easily avoid, and the credibility of the government is put to a severe test. Although not solely a Vietnamese problem, there is much still to be learned in minimiz- ing the trauma of "urban insurgency." The preparation of a city, its people, its govern- ment, its civic agencies, and its public utili- ties is not a simple matter. The conduct of the urban counterinsurgency, once engaged, demands special troops, special training, special weapons, special vehicles, and special tactics. And the reconstitution of the city in the aftermath also requires special planning and special techniques to minimize the dura- tion and extent of the dislocation. All of these problems are on the front burner in South Vietnam today?and should be at least on the back burner in many other parts of the world. WHAT VALUE R. & D.? With this background we begin to see a dy- namic range of things in this war for which our R. & D. activities are applicable. Indeed, the range is enormous compared to that of any war we have ever fought. It ranges all the way from police techniques to electronic warfare?and we are trying to modernize our forces throughout the whole spectrum. There are many people both in Defense (including military and civilian) and in the U.S. at large (including Congress and private citizens) who believe that our efforts to make this a war of technology are wasted. There are others who would claim that we have already forced the escalation of this wax to one that we could conveniently fight with our already highly sophisticated war ma- chinery. I would dispute these points. Al- though I would agree that we will find no single device that will have the climactic importance that the tank had in World War I or the atom bomb had in World War II, there are many, many opportunities to de- velop better weapons and devices, skills and understanding by which to lower our losses, shorten the duration of the conflict, and enhance both our own and our allied military posture. In several discrete battles of this war, brand-new technology has had a very significant, if not decisive, effect on the out- come. In other instances, technology could have had a decisive effect if our experimental equipment had been available in produc- tion quantities, and if our military forces could have been trained over-night to em- brace new equipment (and adjust their tactics accordingly). Moreover, some of our more important con- tributions are only new reaching the theater in operational quantities. As individual - "gadgets," they cannot win the war by them- selves, but taken in the aggregate, the effort may become significant. We will "break even" financially if our total effort shortens the war by only one month?without assigning any value to the lives saved thereby. And if the sum total of these new capabilities can Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 S 9592 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 11, 1969 assist in deterring future conflicts of this as a rough average, we send about 100 new for this war. There are new artillery rounds, type (by raising the threshold for violence types of equipment to the theater every year for instance, and new kinds of bombs, in- elsewhere in the world) then I can only con- for operational tests and evaluation, to find eluding new kinds of delay bombs of various chide that our efforts have been worthwhile, out whether they will in fact contribute to sorts?some td go after the flak sites in the In the main, the inventory Of our general- our fighting capabilities. Another 100-150 are North, some to go after the truck traffic, some purpose forces was outstanding when we also added to our operational inventory, to go after enemy eoldiers hidden under went into Vietnam. The U.S. general-purpose These run the gamut, from a basically new jungle canopy. Most of our proudest accorn- forces are designed to fight ane sort of Urn- type of helicopter, a new variety of jet air- plishments, however, will remain classified ited nonnuclear war that might arise, any- craft, or a contraband detector, all the way until the war Is over, although some of our where in the world---whether ,,1 an ice cap, down to a new type of tropical combat boot night-vision equipment and motion detec- in a desert, in a jungle, in a marsh, any- which will make it easier for a soldier to tion radars have now been declassified, since where. Because of the broad lenge of con- walk around, a modern transportable hos- they have either been lost to the enemy or filets in which we might possibly become pital, or better medicines against the types have no reasonable countermeasure. involved, a single general-purpese force can- of disease that are prevalent in Southeast In addition to our test agencies in Viet- not be really optimum for any specific war Asia. nam and our organization here in the Pen- except possibly in Europe. Therefore, there The actual research and development pro- tagon, we have scientific advisors with the is a very necessary tailoring jeb that mukrt grams hate been carried out in all the usual major field commanders. be done, having nothing to do with whether R&D centers of competence?the military Only the military men themselves can es- or not we spent enough money for defense laboratories, private industry, and university tablish what We call a "faun requirement" during peacetime. We will always have to research centers. I am frequently asked for a piece of equipment. Belt our people in tailor our forces to a specific nennuelear war whether the widely divergent views within the field are free to tell us of needs. When we once it comes along. the U.S. about the merits of war have had a are informed of these, we ask the scientific ORGANIZATION FOR onrinneerime deleterious effect on our efforts. Naturally, community to work on possible solutions. One of the lessons I hope we will learn any member of the U.S. Government is dis- When solutions appear practical we present from the war in Vietnam is that we must appointed when he asks for help from a, them to the people in the field. Often they always be prepared to opttmiee our forces laboratory, a company, or a university and is then turn around and give us a "firm re- after we get involved. This is why we have told that they do not feel it appropriate for quirement." This may seem a somewhat un- generated a special, highly responsive R&D them to participate, that they have other wieldly operational chain, but we are pri- team within the Department of Defense, more pressing work to do, or that there is manly research and development people try- How did we organize in the Department o insufficient profit in it for them. I also find ing to provide equipment for a military for- Defense to do this? I shoOld remind you it personally embarrassing to find this non- ganization; ultimately, the operators must that this war grew in an insidious fashion, constructive attitude within the engineer- make the decision as to whether or not the from a very small war which had few people's Mg and scientific community of which I solution is resaistic. attention, to a rather lam war with ord- consider myself a part. Nonetheless, for every In additon, each of the Services has set up nance delivery that matches Korea. The a temporary setback I receive, I can provide a quick reaction capabilityWhereby the Ser- Pentagon chose to manage tins various as- at least ten examples of service and dedica- vice can reepond rapidly ta special demands pects of the war, as much as pi esible, tion "beyond the call of duty": Laboratory for improved equipments. Each Service main- existing organizational management and vritlein scientists who work on their own, virtually tains its own laboratory people in the field. In without funding support, huge U.S. corpora- many instances these experienced engineers budgeting procedures. R&D en the war is performed in accordance with this same tions who essentially "donate" the services have found relatively simple, inexpensive of some of their best talent without hope of things that have made tremendous differ- principle: It is managed, essentially, by the ences. A typical example: Down in the Me- sanie people who are also eintrolling the large profit return; tiny companies that kong Delta region, where the fighting takes R&D that is done for other military devices work around the clock to prove that they can meet an almost impossible schedule; place on the rivers, and canals, we haake been which are not involved in this war. However, to add emphasis to the work that was ape- graduate students and professors who offer using small landing craft of World War II elfically needed for Southeast Asia, Dr. John themselves without demanding recognition; vintage as patrol boats. Because they have Foster, Jr., established my office about two people from all these groups who risk their flat bottoms, they are well suited for the shaw and a half years ago as an expediting office lives in Vietnam to help. I do not believe llo waters of the river and canals. The within Defense Research and Engineering. It that any important development has been Navy wanted to be able to land helicopters was charged only with creating and expedit- delayed by the vocal nonparticipation of a aboard these boats, which are only 40 or 50 feet long, either for medical evacuation, re- disappear R&D pertinent to the war: and it will few?though / personally believe that their method of self-expression is insulting and supply of equipment, or various cernmand disappear when the war is over. who was in the theater at the personnel control functions. One of Navy's labors- through the normal organizations, the prob- Because we chose to manage the w , ar demoralizing to our men in Vietnam. WEAPONS MODIFIED AND NEW tory el time designed a suitable landing deck. lems associated with streamlining our pro- Let me mention a few examples of the Within a few weeks, a prototype was built cedures have been really those of personal kinds of developments I have been talking in Vietnam according to his design?with contact?of individuals within the organise- about. We recently developed a new gunship- some help from his people back in the U.S. tion getting together and eereeing to do things; we work either face to face or we aircraft configuration that happens to be Today, many of these "ratnicarriers" oper- very good at killing trucks along the re- ate successfully in the Delta. This develop- go through the standard procedures. We have hand-carry papers, rather t7a.ati letting them supply routes and in ptoviding close support ment has measurably increased the flexibility formed a series of ad hoc steering groups and to our ground troops. This plane was de- and effectiveness of those forces, and for a committees; in essence, these groups tie veloped for the Air Force in a military labo- very small sum of money. The Army main- to- gether all the various agencies Invoivedlin ratory at Wright Field within a period of tains their Limited War -Laboratory which about nine months. It involved new equip- does many of the same kinds of things, Mall the pursuit of the war. We use one code name for this whole op- ment in an existing airframe. Wherever pos- jobs that are badly needed in a hurry. These eration; PROVOST, for Priority Research sible, we borrowed and adapted existing labs are allowed to bypass some of the nor- jectives Vietnam Operational Support. Ob- components. The plane was tested in the mal chains of approvals, when the money is It is at this level where you find the people U.S. and it worked adequately; then it was small and quick reaction is urgently needed. who are full time on R&D for Vietnam. Hare sent to Vietnam with its operational crew p we have a regular Senior PROVOST steering plus a number of test people who observed million It over a period of time. The plane operated II ik st Group; this is the mechanism I use within In combat and was judged to be sufficiently Total Southeast defense, the Pentagon to get practically everything successful that the 7th Air Force submitted Asia, done. It is comprised of a seiner military man R.D.T. & E. R.D.T. & E. $67: 969357 (a general or flag officer) who reports to his a formal request for a production quantity. Production is under way now. military chief for R&D in each of the Serv- The HUEY Cobra program is another ex- 7, 553 $100 ices. 1964 200 We also have part-time representation in ample. Here the Army took the original Bell gv, 370 the group from other government agencies HU-1 helicopter and redid virtually -the en- 1967 1: 9524 680 that have technical skills applicable to our tire aircraft to make it a better weapon plat 800 - 1968 780 specific problems. For inns floe, NASA has form. It was introduced in the early part of 1969 6:000? 800 people who are available to us for solving this year and we believe it may make a sig- problems for which they have unique talents. nificant difference in the war. It has proven I cite these examples to show that the Serv- The Atomic Energy Commission Is also repro- particularly useful in the urban insurgency ices have the technological capabiltiles and sented?they have some of the finest engi- context, procedures available to respond to the de- neers and "gadgeteers" in the business. We have introduced several weapons which mends for R&D in this war. My office in Finally, of course, we work closely with the are brand new. Some were already in develop- ODDR&E has not taken over this role; the Advanced Research Projects Agency, a sepa- ment before we became engaged in this con- military Services do it themselves; our job rate part of Dr. Foster's office. filet, and hence it was simply a question each is to help them, to encourage them, and to We have over one thousand specific R&D time of expediting or changing the weapon in assist in finding the funds needed for these projects going on now in support of the war; some modest way to improve its effectiveness requirements. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 9593 GOOD GUYS AND BAD GUYS The most difficult job in this war has been to find the enemy. This may sound platitu- dinous. After all, we have had to find the enemy in every war we've ever been in. But there are no front lines in this war. The enemy operates primarily in small units, You cannnot tell the "good guys" from the "bad guys"?many aren't even wearing uniforms. The big problem is to find out where the enemy is at a particular time?and, in fact, to determine whether or not he is the enemy?and then to determine his inten- tions. He is very good at camouflaging him- self, his installations, and his equipment; and he moves primarily at night. Over North Vietnam, the problem is of a similar kind: We try to knock out the bridges, vehicles, and supply dumps, but these too are hard to find, as are his radar installations and antiaircraft defenses. The North Vietnamese do not have a very advanced civilization, they don't have large target complexes, and they have learned that we have difficulty knocking out their targets if they keep them small enough, or if they hide them away during the day. For every visible bridge, there may be three or four alternate ways of crossing the same stream. In guerrilla and urban warfare, we must find the man who is planting the mine along the road, find the Vietcong who may come into a village to cut the chief's throat during the night, and find the teenage sapper team bent on destroying a Saigon police station. In all these cases, our biggest inadequacy is being able to single out the target, or the Individual that represents the enemy. Per- haps a fourth of our total RDT&E expendi- tures has been solely for the purpose of trying to detect indications of enemy presence. We are using virtually every type of indi- cation that a human or vehicular target provides in our attempts to develop better means to find the real targets. These detec- tion systems must work in real time?it does no goad to find that 100 men walked or drove down Trail X from Point A to Point B a week ago. So realtime, nighttime intelligence gathering has been one of our major prob- lems. We are beginning to make significant inroads in this area. Starlight scopes, for instance, permit a soldier to see targets with nothing more than starlight as illumination. They are now widely used in the Southeast Asian conflict with very impressive results. I might interject here that the enemy has shown extraordinary cleverness in counter- ing some new things we have introduced. It is seldom more than a few months after we introduce something new before we cap- ture some document that tells the enemy, in essence, how to counter the new device. This is one reason we have tried to be so very security conscious during this war. Where is the enemy's brainpower? Clearly, some of it is in the field, and it is evident that the enemy's allies have a certain amount of scientifid advisory talent working for them too. I suspect there is an office like my own somewhere in the enemy structure, and that my counterpart works with a smaller budget and different emphasis. It is not the American way to use a lot of man- power and just a few devices that add to their capability; to save lives, we tend to want to minimize the number of men we use and to replace their skills with more sophisticated technology. EYE FOR EYE, TANK FOR MORTAR There are those who have a deep concern that we may be compromising much of our latest technology for tactical warfare with- out benefiting from a similar disclosure of Soviet and Chicom capability. To a certain extent, this is true; the Communists have committed North Vietnamese lives rather than Soviet technology wherever possible. The real questions, of course, are whether it Is serious to have exposed our own capabili- ties as a means of reducing our own dead and crippled, and whether it will be difficult to establish a new level of capability In those areas where surprise is advantageous. I have no doubts in either area; we have done the right thing. After all, new technology be- comes available faster than we convert it into military hardware. And in many areas, we have had the priceless advantage of finding out just how well our newer equipment works. We are thus in a position to make the type of real-world improvements in our forces that can only be derived from prac- tical experience. There is very little good that comes from any war?and we would be negligent, indeed, if we did not profit from the only real R&D "benefit" possible; a better understanding of our own capabilities and needs. There is another thing that is coming out of this war loud and clear: There are dramatic asymmetries between what we do and what the enemy can do to counter us. In some wars, the participants reason: If the other fellow has a tank, we must have a tank with an extra inch of steel; if he has a Mach 2 airplane, we must have a Mach 2.1 airplane; If he has a 150-mm artillery piece, we must have a 175. But because occupation and seizure of territory are not elements of this war, such reasoning does not hold in Viet- nam. The enemy can destroy a $6 million airplane with a $100 mortar shell. Be can shoot down a half-million-dollar helicopter with a 250 bullet from a hand-held gun. He can stop a tank with a hand-held antitank weapon, because he just plain sneaks up to it, stays under a bush for two or three days, or submerges himself in a rice paddy and waits for the tank to come along. Such asymmetries are hard to live with. Time and again, we are asked: Why do we need a $2 million, two-seat twin-engine, after-burning jet to destroy little bamboo bridges? You could argue that we might be able to get along with a somewhat cheaper airplane, but the enemy has an air defense system above that bamboo bridge, which em- ploys MIG 21's. Thus, we must have a weap- on that can take on both the bridge and the MIG 21. The whole war has an enormous "dynamic" range, from one extreme to the other. But if we give up?if we say we cannot stop such resupply movements, by which the local insurgents are supported and bol- stered?then we are saying that we cannot stop this conflict. If we cannot do this, we cannot stop wars of national liberation. If this is true, the whole world may become "liberated" piece by piece. The mortar problem in Vietnam is another example of asymmetry. We have never be- fore been in a war where our cities, bases, and depots have been exposed to mortar and rocket fire?often from 360* around the perimeter. A mortar shell can be carried in a man's pocket; it can be hidden in a crate of lettuce. The enemy is willing to take two weeks, or two months, to set up a 50-round attack. On the average, 50 rounds can destroy $20 million worth of airplanes. A simple weapon such as a mortar or rocket can raise hell, and the counter system is quite complex. The enemy's allies are doing a good job of providing the North Vietnamese and the South Vietnamese guerillas with these wea- pons?and they are not simply old pieces of pipe with home-made explosives in them; they are all made somewhere in the Commu- nist nations; they come in little canvas carry- ing bags; they break down into pieces that can easily be handled by a small man. This is not accidental. This weaponry is carefully tailored for their side of the job, just as we try to tailor ours to counter it. It is a fas- cinating game of technology against tech- nology, but in one case with a minimum use of manpower, and, in the other, a rather ex- travagant use of manpower. Between 1964 and today, much of the equipment used by our forces has changed at least once. This covers the gamut from uniforms to aircraft and the weapons they drop; for instance, the helicopters we use for pilot rescue: We used one helicopter when the war began, then another helicopter for the next two years, and now we have begun to replace the second helicopter with an even more capable machine. STRATEGY FOR A "PORCFT,TS" WAR In the field of detection, I think the changes are occurring even more rapidly. You have probably read about the chemical sniffers, that smell the presence of human beings. This sounds rather sophisticated, but is little more than normal laboratory instru- mentation packaged in an olive drab box. We put these boxes into helicopters and fly them over the jungle. Four or five years ago, I doubt that anybody would have given us a plug nickel for this idea, and yet, they are now being used in substantial quantity by regular operational force's. Similarly, we are learning to detect footsteps many yards away?with another spin-off from labora- tory instrumentation equipment. These developments open up some very ex- citing horizons as to what we can do five or ten years from now: When one realizes that we can detect anything that perspires, moves, carries metal, makes a noise, or is hotter or colder than its surroundings, one begins to see the potential. This is the beginning of in- strumentation of the entire battlefield. Even- tually, we will be able to tell when anybody shoots, what he is shooting at, and where he was shooting from. You begin to get a "Year 2000" vision of an electronic map with little lights that flash for different kinds of activity. This is what we require for this "porous" war, where the friendly and the enemy are all mixed together. Much of the new sensor technology has application at the other end of the battle spectrum, in the security business. For ex- ample, we must learn how to protect the road from Saigon to the Mekong Delta, for this is the economic lifeline for the country. Some 40% of the people live in the Delta; these people are 95% agrarian, and their products must get to Saigon. Keeping this road free from ambush is a very serious problem. One other problem in the Delta is that most of the people are not for either side; they want both sides to go away so they can grow some rice and sell it to somebody for a reasonable price. They give their allegiance to no one. And this is the frustration: They will tell you a week later that the Viet Oong came in and took 20% of their rice. But they will not tell you at the time it happens. They know we cannot protect them adequately against others who may sneak into the vil- lage again next week. So our progress is inhibited by not being able to provide an adequate level of security. Consequently, a small group of Viet Gong can keep the popu- lation silent and uncooperative. Indeed, throughout the country one of the biggest problems stems from the fact that no- body has a telephone. There is often no way for a victimized community, or family, to call for help. We sorely need a simple, primitive substitute for our own phone system, I think it would help to raise the people's confidence if they could report to their officials in time for law enforcement to respond. NEW CONCEPTS or WAR What are the lessons to be learned from this wax? I believe the first is the fact that we cannot separate the insurgent from his back- ground. Next, when we do find a target?be it a Viet Cong, a truck, or a bridge?often we cannot kill it, and always the enemy can re- place it. All the important enemy targets are small, fleeting, hidden, moving, cheap, smart, and reproducible. He knows how to use his environment to advantage. The jungle, the Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9594 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE August 11, 1969 rice paddies, the shallow streams and canals, the firm clay earth itself, the long-suffering people and their generations of discontent- these are the environmental factors we Must contend with. And let me add one more: We must learn to fight extensively at night. We must work within this environment to find the enemy and to either catch him in the act of being an enemy or somehow to deter him from being an enemy again. Over the past four years, the United States has spent over $2 billion in R&D on these other problems of the war. We are on the verge of some very important new Military capabilities. We may not perfect them all in time for this war. Indeed, some may never even reach the field in test quantities. But these are the things that will keep this kind of war from breaking out again, and we must continue to develop them into weapons and equipment that can be readily adopted by the military, even after we reach a ceasefire In Vietnam.- From the work we have sponsored during this war, I can see three revolutionary con- cents coming into focus-end our research and development programa have already be- gun to demonstrate that these concepts can be made practical: One: We are getting cloger to being able to provide complete realtime battlefield sur- veillance around the clock, through suitable instrumentation. Two: Technology will soon permit the de- 1965 velopment of practical weapons that will dis- cretely destroy the types of small, fleeting targets characteristic of this type of war. Three: It now appears that we may reach the stage where there will be little difference between fighting at night or during the day. Clearly, this will be the toughest challenge; fighting at night will require a new systems approach, new training, new doctrine, and new ways of committing one's manpower. In all three of these revolutionary con- cepts, we are hindered by two real-world problems. First, the technology is so new that it has not yet become an inherent part of our weapons system designs. Second, and equally important, the introduction of new concepts is extremely difficult during the conduct of the war. These are the problems that must be solved if we are to compress the learning and experience process so that the greatest benefits of new technology can be felt in South Vietnam. Finally, we must learn to share this new technology with our allies. It is not enough to equip only the U.S. forces with new capa- bilities that make our men more effective. We must become more aggressive in training and organizing the South Vietnamese to take on the "residual war" themselves. It is my own opinion, after nine visits throughout South Vietnam, that the South Vietnamese can handle more sophisticated equipment-even if we have to maintain it for some time into the future. It is only by transferring our new capabilities to our allies that we can hope to turn the counterinsurgency problem back where it belongs, with a concurrent reduc- tion in U.S. costs and loss. When that hap- pens, then my office can probably go out of operation. EMERGENCY FUND ALLOCATION TO SOUTHEAST ASIA, FISCAL YEAR 1964 THROUGH FISCAL YEAR 1970 }Dollar amounts in millions} R.D.T. & E. 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 Emergency fund amount 125 125 125 100 50 1100 Emergency fund to Southeast Asia 21 73 101 88 41 Percent to Southeast Asia 16.5 58.1 80. I . 88,0 81.7 Total Southeast Asia, ROT. & E 200 370 680 856 826 1' 593 1 Requested--not included in fiscal year 1970 Southeast Asia total. 2 Southeast Asia content at apportionment. TABLE R.D.T. & E. EMERGENCY FUND SUMMARY FISCAL YEAR 1965-69 SOUTHEAST ASIA PROJECTS ONLY }Dollar amounts in millions] 1966 1967 1968 1969 Requested Approved Requested Approved Requested Approved Requested Approved Requested Approved Army $16.4 $8.3 $97.7 $16, 7 $66.1 $28.1 $119.9 $52.2 $56.9 $38. 6 Navy 13.6 9.9 99.9 22. 7 93. 1 49.0 46.3 13.3 6.6 Air Force 1.3 1.3 95.8 31,4 92.2 19.2 44.1 17.6 43.2 .7 DCA (DCPG) 1.1 1.1 10.4 2.2 3.0 3.0 .5 A RPA 1.8 1.8 4.3 2.6 1.6 1.6 2.0 LI DASA DIA Total 32.4 20. 6 295, 2 72. 6 265. I 101. 1 214.9 88. 0 108.7 40, 8 Total emergency funds 125.8 125. 0 125. 0 1011. 0 50. 0 SEA (percent) 16. 5 58. 1 80. I 86,0 81 7 ALL PROJECTS Army $42. 0 $33. 3 $120.0 $29.7DIA $66. 7 $28. 7 $119.9 $52.0 $61.7 $39.6 Navy 84.8 38.8 121.0 30. 0 117.3 66.9 67.8 19.1 22.8 5.9 Air Force 26. 4 26. 4 153,7 61.5 118. 5 19.6 66.4 20.3 17.5 5 DCA (DCPG) 4. 1 4. 1 10.4 2.2 3.0 3.0 . ARPA 6.3 1.8 7.5 3.8 4.3 2.6 3.6 3.6 5.0 4.0 DASA 9.0 9,0 10. 0 5. 0 4.0 2.0 . 2 Total Total emergency funds 172,6 113.9 125.0 402.1 125.0 125,0 327.2 125.0 125.8 264.9 109.0 100.0 _ 107.0 50.0 50.0 NON-SOUTHEAST ASIA PROJECTS ONLY Army 25.5 25.5 22.3 12.9 .6 .6 . 4.8 1.0 Navy. 71.2 28.9 21.1 7.3 24.6 17.9 21. 5 6. 0 16.2 5.2 Air Force 25.1 25. 1 57, 8 33. 1 27.3 .4 22.3 2.0 17.0 DCA (DCPG) 3.0 3.0 ARPA 6.3 1.8 5.7 2.0 2.1 2.1 3.0 3.0 DASA. 9.0 9.0 10.0 5.0 4.0 2.0 DIA .2 0 Total Total emergency funds 133. 8 93.3 125. 0 106. 9 55.3 125,0 _ 62.5 23.9 125. 0 _ 50.1 12.1 000.0 41.0 9.2 50.0 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE TAB G SUMMARY OF TRANSFER AUTHORITY, FISCAL YEAR 1965-69 [Dollar amounts in millions! S 9595 Year Service Appropriated From To Item Amount Date Fiscal year 1965 Nary RDT. & E. (A) ROT. & E. (N).._..._. Aircraft R.D.T. & E. (AF) KELT. & E. r)_ do R.D.T. & E. (Det Aq) R.D.T. & E. N) do Air Force Other procurement (AF)_ R.D.T. & E. AF) do Missile procurement(AF)_ RAT. & E. (AF) do Total Fiscal year 1966 Navy PAM (N) R.D.T. & E. (N) Aircraft Air Force Missile procurement (AF)_ R.D.T. & E. (AF) Missile 12.0 October 1964. 2.0 2. 0 20.0 December 1964. 14.8 Do. 40. 8 Total Fiscal year 1967 52. 0 December 1965. 24.2 January 1966. 76 2 Air Force Aircraft Procurement R.D.T. & E. (AF) .. Aircraft (AF). Navy PAM (N) R.D.T. & E. r) do PAM (N) R.D.T. & E. N do Air Force Military personnel (AF)_ R.D.T. & E. A ) Missile Total Fiscal year 1968 Fiscal year 1969 Air Force Other Procurement (AF). R.D.T. & E. (AF) A/C System Other Procurement (AF)_ R.D.T. & E. (AF) Missile Other Procurement (AF)_ RAT. & E. (AF) do Not used 4.0 December 1966. 12. 0 46. 0 18.6 80. 6 Total January 1967. January 1967. June 1967. 28. 5- October 1968. 41. 6 8. 4 78.0 EVALUATION OF SUCCESS OF EMERGENCY FUND EXPENDI- TURES Still in de- Total Successfull velopment 2 Failures3 funds (percent) (percent) (percent) 1965____ 20.6 91. 5 1966____ 72.6 59. 0 37 1967 101. 1 73. 0 26 1968____ 88. 0 38. 0 61 40. 8 14, 0 86 0. 5 4 .1 .1 .0 Accepted for production use or incorporated in already opera- tional equipment or manuals. s Still in development, or still undergoing tests with no decision yet on operational potential, or stopped by change in scope of war. Not acceptable ass result of unsuccessful development, test, or operational evaluation. Mr. TYDINGS. But did the need to use $41 million of the emergency fund and $263 million in reprograming au- thority for PROVOST exhaust the flex- ibility of the Department of Defense's research and development program? Hardly. In addition to reprograming author- ity, the Secretary of Defense has $150 million in transfer authority which al- lows funds to be transferred between Defense appropriations, provided that not more than 7 percent of any one ap- propriation is transferred. Last year, fiscal yea?. 1969, only $78 million of that $150 million transfer authority was uti- lized, and none of it directly for PROVOST. Finally, for use in "unforeseeable emergencies and extraordinary expenses of a confidential military nature," the Secretary of Defense has a $10 million contingency fund. That is over and above all of the other items I have just cited. Though there has never been occasion In the past to use it for an emergency in the area of research and develop- ment, it could be. used for such a pur- pose. Last year, the Secretary expended less than $1.5 million of that $10 million fund. In other words, PROVOST-the cate- gory of research and development in which 82 percent of the emergency fund was expended-was able to provide for all of its needs, expected and unantici- pated, in fiscal year 1969 without ex- hausting all of the flexibility of the De- partment of Defense research and development program. Mr. President, this leads us to a sec- ond question. Since the $50 million emer- gency fund was adequate according to Mr. Sullivan, the representative of the Department of Defense in 1969- Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. TYDINGS. I yield. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, I under- stand that Mr. Sullivan was in charge of research and development for Southeast Asia. Am I correct? Mr. TYDINGS. Mr, Sullivan is a Dep- uty Director of Southeast Asia Matters, Office of Department of Defense Re- search and Engineering. Mr. MURPHY. In other words, his area of activity was, I would assume from his title, PROVOST. Mr. TYDINGS. The Senator is cor- rect. That is the department name and label for all research and development for Southeast Asia. Mr. MURPHY. Southeast Asia. Mr. TYDINGS. The Senator is correct. In addition, he heads up the emergency fund. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, the use of the funds we are talking about, as I understand, is not to be limited to South- east Asia or to the problems relating to Southeast Asia but are to be used for any new emergency or any use that in the consideration of the Secretary would warrant the use of the funds. Am I cor- rect in my understanding? Mr. TYDINGS. No. The Senator is in- correct in his understanding. The $100 million emergency fund is for research and development, testing, and evaluation for procurement or production related thereto. It is not carte blanche over the so-called waterfront. It is specially "for research and development, testing, evalu- ation, for procurement or production re- lating thereto." And as a practical matter, in the fiscal year 1969, 82 percent of the emergency funds went to PROVOST. This is approx- imately the rate of emergency funds in recent years that come into PROVOST, research and development directly re- lated to Southeast Asian matters. Mr. MURPHY. But it is not restricted to that. Mr. TYDINGS. No, it is not restricted to that, but it is restricted to research, development, testing, evaluation, and re- lated production and procurement. Mr. MURPHY. But it is not restricted to procurement relating to Southeast Asia. Mr. TYDINGS. No. Mr. MURPHY. Not restricted in pro- curement relating to Southeast Asia. Mr. TYDINGS. No. Mr. MURPHY. But refers to matters in Europe, NATO, SEATO, Okinawa, Kwaj- alein, or other of the other thousands of places that are unfortunately inter- ested in this matter around the globe. That was my point, I just wanted to establish Mr. Sullivan's area of operation, as I was a little confused for a moment. Mr. TYDINGS. I thank the Senator. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Has the Senator finished his remarks? Mr. TYDINGS. Not yet. If the Senator will bear with me for another 10 minutes, I will yield to him at that time. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I with- hold that request. Mr. CRANSTON. Mr. President, what were the main reasons advanced by the Department of Defense for doubling the emergency funds? Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, I take this opportunity to respond to that question by reading a quotation from a statement of Mr. Leonard Sullivan, Jr., the Deputy Director of Research and Development, Southeast Asia Matters. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9596 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August .11, 1969 I will read it first and then I will sum- marize it. The Senator may then sum- marize it for himself In case I unfairly categorize his answer. Let me give the answer of the Depart- ment of Defense from page 7 of the statement submitted to me and my staff on the Emergency Fund, It reads: Last year, the Congress authorized an Emergency Fund of only $50M. Although a few million remained until near the end of the year, the preponderance of it was spent, as usual, near the middle of the fiscal year. The $50M was clearly inadequate and was recognized to be so from the beginning of the year. To compensate for the Congres- sional action? That is, the reduction to $50 million. I continue to read: We therefore deferred an additional $90M (approx) of funds already .issigned to the Services and "earmarked" it for augmenta- tion of the Emergency Fund by reprogram- ming if and when necessary. Hence we knew from the beginning of the year that we had an "equivalent Emergency Fund" of about $140M (approx)---and used almost all of it. Mr. President, I shall comment here and then will continue With the quota- tion. This is exactly what they did in 1966, 1967, and 1968. It is what they can do In 1970. Because of the greatnexibility with- in the Department of Defense, in other words, they can reprogram almost every- thing when necessary. I continue to read from Mr. Sullivan's statement: If the Congress insists on restricting the Emergency Fund for FY wo will again be forced to use some equivalent device to as- sume adequate funds to diner our unfore- seen requirements. However, it would appear to be a needless, time-consmn, and indirect approach to an otherwise si,raightforward management tool. AdditionaAly, if as now ap- pears possible, the overall EpT&E budget is cut by 12%?making it 5%4 lower than lest year's?the problem in establihning the de- ferrals for reprogramming Will be substan- tially more difficult, may ma counter to the preferences, of the Congress, and will cause additional sources of irritation and delay between the Services and OSD I shall comment here again. In other words, Mr. Sullivan would much rather have an additional $50 millian or an ad- ditional $100 million or an additional $150 million than require_ the Secretary of Defense?the man wha should know the most about it?ta determine where the higher priorities are among the various services and have to reprogram because that might cause an additional source of irritation between the services and the Office of the Secretary of De- fense. I continue to read: In either case? reprogramming or Emer- gency Funds dispersal?the Congess is noti- fied of all appropriation transfers and re- programming actions above the established $2M threshold, and is asked to give prior ap- proval in instances of known Congressional interest. In fact, two of our-important '69 Emergency Fund items have been delayed for four months this year by such Congressional concern. Hence Congressional control of our activities is essentially the sone for repro- gramming and Emergency Fund usage, but the reprogramming represents the less at- tractive alternative for internal Defense Management. Let me emphasize the last sentence I read: But the reprogramming represents the less attractive alternative for internal defense management. Of course, I would much rather be able to give my wife an additional $100 a week than say, "You will have to make some choices from what you have." Certainly it is less desirable, but the fact of the matter is, according to Mr. Sullivan, that not one single item needed for Vietnam or for provost research and development was delayed or cut because of lack of funds. They just repro- grammed it within the $7.6 billion plus for research and development program and got what they needed. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. TYDINGS. I will yield in a mo- ment. Have I sufficiently responded to the question of the junior Senator from Cali- fornia? Mr. CRANSTON. Yes. The response has covered my question thoroughly, and I am grateful to the Senator. Mr. TYDINGS. I yield to the senior Senator from California. Mr. MURPHY. I say to the Senator from Maryland that if I were to com- pare my wife to the Defense Depart- ment, I would be in trouble when I went home. Mr. TYDINGS. Perhaps the Senator does not know where his Department of Defense is. Mr. MURPHY. The distinguished Sen- ator from Maryland used the words "least attractive," which I think is a nice? Mr. TYDINGS. "Less attractive." If I said "least," I meant to say "less." I took that word for word from the language of Mr. Leonard Sullivan, Jr., on page 9 of his statement. Mr. MURPHY. Then Mr. Sullivan used another term before that, when he said they would be forced. I do not know Mr. Sullivan. When he says they would be forced, I do not know whether this is what I would call a very bad disposition of circumstances or whether this- would be forcing a manner of procedure that was unworkable or impractical. Certainly, over the last years, there has been much in the Defense Depart- ment that I have considered impractical and much that I have considered un- workable. I should like to make the Point again that in the judgment of the committee, we thought that perhaps by cutting the request and trimming it back to what we thought was a proper figure, and realiz- ing that there are 'times when specific extra funds are needed?and I have to assume that they use the research and development money properly and they cannot just automatcially say, "Cut out that program"?if they can do that and the program is going to be cut in order to accommodate the funds for another program, it should not have been started in the first place. With the way I hope this committee will function in the fu- ture, we will not have as much of that as we have had in years past. So I merely rise to make the point, first, that Mr. Sullivan is talking only about his responsibility, which is Viet- nam, which is limited. Second, he is not happy with the condition. We can assume that he is an extravagant fellow who just says, "I would like to have some extra money." Or we can assume he is a knowledgeable, reputable fellow, and I assume that; otherwise, I know that the distinguished Senator would not be quot- ing him. That would involve using only funds that are needed; therefore, when he transfers funds from one program to another, he may be doing some damage to the program-from which the funds are being taken. Mr. TYDINGS, I thank the Senator. Let me discuss the second question raised by the position of the Departnient of Defense. Since the $50 million emergency fund was adequate in fiscal year 1969, is there any indication that research and devel- opment demands relative to research and development resources ha fiscal year 1970 will increase sufficiently to warrant doubling the emergency fund to $100 million? Since more than 80 percent of the emergency fund is to be devoted to PROVOST again In fiscal year 1970, and since PROVOST represents the highest priority research and development to support our combat activities in Vietnam, let us begin by looking at PROVOST for the coming year. In fiscal year 1970, initial programing for PROVOST is $590 million, $68 million more than was initially programed in fiscal year 1969. At the same time, in testimony before the Senate Armed Serv- ices Committee in May, Doctor Foster projected total PROVOST costs by the end of fiscal year 19'70 at only $15 million above his projected total PROVOST cost for fiscal year 1969. In other words, to cover an additional $15 million in pro- jected total costs, the Defense Depart- ment is increasing initial programed funds for PROVOST in fiscal year 1970 by $68 million. Furthermore, according to Mr. Sulli- van: We know we are "over the hump" In our EDT & E expenditures for this war. We have learned to predict our funding requirements somewhat better. In addition, Mr. Sullivan stated that while we were not ideally equipped in the past few years to fight in a Vietnam- type war and thus encountered many unexpected problems, as a result of past PROVOST work "we are now much more current." In short, due to past experience, there should be less unexpected-research and development expenses in fiscal year 1970?less of the kind of expenses the emergency fund was designed to meet. For the coming year, the Secretary of Defense will still possess his $150 million transfer authority as well as his repro-, gramming authority. It is true the total DOD research and development budget was cut in committee this year. However, the cut amounts to only a 5 percent re- duction in research and development as compared with last year's appropriation. Furthermore, 80 percent of the reduction recommended by the Armed Services Committee applies to specific programs Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Ad ForcLIAeavEgg96/41a0iF63REpligtoggw0003ool0000l-3 August 11, 19proved S 9597 unrelated to the Vietnam war. Thus, the of Maryland. In my view, and the view overall reprograming ability within the of so many of my colleagues who are co- research and development sector of the sponsoring the amendment with me, we Department of Defense budget will not do not believe this additional money is be significantly affected. warranted. In the name of economy, I It is also important to note in con- ask that the Senate support the measure sidering Vietnam-related research .and reducing the amount to the $50 million development in this year's budget that of last year's appropriation. the end products of this research and de- Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the velopment will not be available for use Senator yield? in Vietnam until 1971 or 1972. According The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. DOLE to Mr. Sullivan, it takes between 18 to 36 in the chair. Does the Senator yield? months from the inception of a project Mr. TYDINGS. I yield. until it is ready for use by our troops Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I appre- in the field. elate the Senator's yielding to me. I think none of us, including the Presi- He has gone into this matter very dent, expects the current level of thoroughly. U.S. involvement in Vietnam to con- For the record, I have a statement tinue for another 11/2 to 3 years. which Will show the amounts appropri- As a matter of fact, the President ated for this emergency fund in the past. on at least two occasions has indicated In the past, Congress has always recog- that he is going to reduce troops in Viet- nixed the need for a limited emergency nam. On one occasion, he ordered a fund which would allow the Secretary 25,000 troop reduction. So I do not see of Defense to apply the necessary re- how we can expect the level of involve- sources to exploit sudden technological ment to increase in Vietnam, in view of breakthroughs or satisfy unanticipated the statements of the President of the research and development needs, and to United States. do so without disrupting planned and on- But, the question is asked, what if going programs. there is a large, unexpected increase in In fiscal years 1962, 1963, and 1964, our research and development demands? we appropriated $150 million for this In addition to the $50 million Emergency purpose each year. In the fiscal years Fund, the Secretary's $150 million trans- 1965, 1966, 1967 the approved fund was fer authority, and his reprograming au- $125 million. In fiscal year 1968 it was thority, there is still the Secretary's $10 reduced to $100 million. In 1969, al- million contingency fund and the possi- though the Defense Department re- bility of a supplemental appropriation quested $125 million, the emergency from the Congress. fund was reduced by Congress to $50 In short, weighing the probable de- million. In each of these years the-fund mantis on our research and development was augmented by authority to transfer program for the coming year against the other appropriated funds in the amount resources available to meet these de- of $150 million each year. mantis, I can find no sound justification Mr. President, this matter is compli- for doubling the emergency fund to $100 cated, as are so many other matters, by million, the situation with reference to Vietnam. In concluding, I want to make clear I know it has upset the budget, it has that this debate does not involve our upset these accounts, it has upset the national security. According to-Mr. Sul- transfer, and it has upset everything. For livan, whether he receives the additional 2 years we had to insist on money being $50 million for the emergency fund or put in for the expense of the war. There not, his office will be able to meet all of was nothing in the appropriation bill. the needs of our troops in Vietnam. I wish to point out that this matter What is at issue is whether he will be deals with the matter of transfer. Just forced to haggle with the various Services what does that mean? That is a matter for low priority or superfluous funds if handled by the Committee on Appro- PROVOST costs exceed his initial esti- Priations. They have the language provi- mates. This is an exercise he has per- sions in their bill governing transfers formed successfully for the past 4 years of funds. It really does not come within with no apparent injury to our national this bill, but it is related. security. Mr. TYDINGS. It is very related. What we are talking about is an econ- Mr. STENNIS. Transfer means the omy measure. We are in the midst of a transfer from one account to another, serious inflation. We have just saddled such as a transfer from the research and the American people with an extension development account to the 0. & M. ac- of the 10-percent surtax. In return, we count?the operations and maintenance have promised to cut all Government account. I am just making this state- spending that is not absolutely essential ment for the record. To reprogram to the Nation's well being, means to bring one item in the same ac- Mr. President, I have devoted consid- count over to another item in the same erable study to the Defense Department's account; transferring some item of re- request for a doubling of the emergency search and development over to another fund, research and development within that I do not question the manner in which general account. the past emergency fund have been I would rather have a definite and used, nor do I doubt the sincere motiva- positive figure in here for the emergency tion behind the desire of the Department use only in the breakthroughs that we of Defense for an additional $50 million, are trying to reach, and require them to If I were the Secretary of Defense I exhaust that money first before they would probably be asking for that also, could have any transfers from another But I am not the Secretary of Defense. account. As I have said, we do not con- I am a Senator representing the people trol all of that. It is within the authority of the provisions in the appropriation bill. The reasoning with respect to the $100 million was simply this. We have a re- duction here, as Senators know, from the $8.222 billion requested in the budget of April 15. The committee made a re- duction to $7.170 million, using round numbers. That is well over $1 billion. In making such a vast reduction, which is more than at any time recently, we were trying to cover the proposition of a real breakthrough and a possible emer- gency of some kind. Our thinking was merely commonsense; that it might prove that the knife was in too deep in some items; and there ought to be more than a nominal sum that could be used. The Senator traced the history of all this matter. I have mentioned the trans- fer authority. I think, frankly, it is noth- ing to argue over a great deal. I do not think it is necessary to have a rollcall vote or anything of that nature. If the Senator feels as if he can ac- cept it for $75 million and let it go at that figure, we will put something in our re- port or in a letter to the Department of Defense, and particularly Dr. Foster, that we think this was allowed for that pur- pose; not to go into the transfer of funds until he has at least exhausted this money. If they are going to use a lot of transfer money first, we will take this out altogether next year. I respond to the Senator in that way. If he would be willing to make it $75 million, I think we could accept such an amount. Mr. COOK. Mr. President, will the Sen- ator yield? Mr. TYDINGS. I yield. Mr. COOK. Mr. President, I would like to substantiate the $75 million figure of the Senator from Mississippi on this basis. Referring to the report of the Com- mittee on Armed Services, I might sug- gest that the committee was told that of the $50 million it had expended $47.002 million, which left $2.998 million. Mr. TYDINGS. That was May 22, a month and a half before the end of the fiscal year. Mr. COOK. The Senator is correct. But at the same time, Dr. Foster indicated there were $25 million in programs that were then pending; that they had to de- cide what should be done, but they only had $2.998 million and felt it should run until the end of the year. The point I am trying to make to the Senator from Maryland is that if he would consider $75 million, I think we can get it by reason of the fact that they had expended almost the $50 million and had $25 million-plus of programs that were in existence for R. & D. for which funds were not available. I agree with most of what the Senator from Maryland has said with respect to the transfer of funds, but I would sug- gest, as one who is econmoy minded, that for me to suggest raising the amount from $50 million to $75 million is only on the basis that the committee itself has already deleted from the budget more than $900 million of research and devel- opment funds, and there is not the abil- ity to transfer back and forth. Even the ability to transfer in the $150 million float account is of such a nature that it Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9598 Approved Forvatiggfmt :fitRIOR71B0.03W000300100001-3 olio? SENATE August 11, 1969 may not be as easy in the future for Mr. Sullivan or anyone else to be able to shift those funds one way or the other as he saw fit. I think there is ample authority. As a matter of fact, if I may speak for a minute longer, the distinguished Senator from Maine (Mrs. Swum) brought up this very subject with Dr. Foster in the testimony and asked him about the addi- tional $25 million of programs waiting that could not be funded. She asked whether he did not feel, perh,:ps, that he should raise the $50 million figure. So I can only say that I think there is ample precedent for the Senator to consider an increase from $50 million to $75 million. I hope that he will give the proposal serious consideration. Mr. TYDINGS. I thank the distin- guished Senator from Kentucky for his contribution. Pie is also persuasive. I might point out that of the almost $1 bil- lion reduction in research and develop- ment made by the Committee on Armed Services, only 20 percent of the $1 billion was not for specific items deleted by the committee itself. But I certainly think that the Senator is very persuasive. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. TYDINGS. I yield. Mr. PROXMIRE. I am wondering whether there should be an increase from $50 million to $75 million. Was that the suggestion? Mr. TYDINGS. That is correct. Mr. PROXMIRE. When the situation, as I understand, deals primarily with Vietnam and related projects. Mr. TYDINGS. Last year; as I recall, 82 percent of the fund was applied to Viet- nam and related items. Mr. PROXMIRE. I think one of the most persuasive aspects of the Senator's excellent speech was his emphasis on the fact that everything we are told is that the war in Vietnam is being deescalated. The President has already announced his plan to withdraw 25,000 troops, and we accept that. Certainly it is irreversible, in the view of most of us. As the Senator said, within a year and a half to 3 years, it should be possible to withdraw very largely from Vietnam? not entirely but largely?under these cir- cumstances, the increase in the conting- ency fund for Vietnam for certain things in Vietnam does not seem to be logical. What is the answer? Mr. TYDINGS. Let me say to the Sen- ator from Wisconsin, that is a difficult question in light of the Preddent's state- ments about reduction of American in- volvement, de-Americanization of the Vietnam war, and bringing home our troops. The increase in the Emergency Fund, say 80 percent of it, can be reason- ably expected to be used in defense-re- lated research and development for Southeast Asia which by the testimony of Mr. Sullivan will not be cornoleted for 18 to 36 months. Mr. PROXMIRE. What was the cost of that last year when the situation was far more complicated than every indication is it will be this year? Last year, when we had 550,000 American troops in Vietnam, we did not exhaust the fund last year; is that not right? Mr. TYDINGS. That is correct. I think for the RECORD, just to make it abso- lutely clear, we should put the colloquy between the Senator from Maine (Mrs. SMITH), the ranking Republican minor- ity member of the Armed Services Com- mittee, and Dr. Foster, together with his response to her when she questioned him about the emergency fund, which ap- pears on page 1854 of the authorization for military procurement research and development hearings before the Armed Services Committee, part 2 of two parts. We should include this colloquy just to complete the record in this matter. Mr. DO/VI/NICK. Mr. President, will the Senator from Maryland yield? Mr. TYDINGS. I yield. Mr. DOMINICK. I should like to make the record clear that this research con- tingency fUnd is not just for Vietnam but covers all research. Maybe it was 80 percent that was spent on it the last time. We may well spend another 80 per- cent of it for research and development on a Middle East situation the next time. We cannot tell where the need for these funds will arise. We cannot equate the withdrawal of troops from Vietnam with our need for this research contingency fund. With all respect to the Senator from Wisconsin, I think he is clouding the record. It should be made crystal clear. Mr. TYDINGS. I think it is clear. In fiscal 1965, 88 percent of the total went to Vietnam. In 1969, 81.7 percent went to Vietnam. I might say that if, we were not in Vietnam I do not think this would even be an issue before the Senate today, for were there no war, I think it would be up to the Armed Services Committee to specify what research and develop- ment was going to take place. Unantici- pated R. & D. costs would not constitute a serious consideration. Mr. PROXMIRE. Furthermore, $40 million to $45 million has been for Viet- nam. There will be less activity for Viet- nam now. It is prudent, wise, econom- ical, and logical for us not to increase the fund, which is all the modest amend- ment of the Senator from Maryland would do. So that I wonder, would not the distinguished Senator from Missis- sippi accept a compromise and go to $75 million from the $50 million. I wonder about the wisdom of that review of the whole history of this, in view of the ex- pectations about Vietnam. Furthermore, I should like to ask the Senator from Maryland, Is it not true that the original Defense Department's request was for only $52 million? That is what they wanted. Mr. TYDINGS. In January of this Year, Secretary of Defense Clifford re- quested $50 million in the original budget. Two months later, the request was in- creased to $100 million by Secretary of Defense Laird. Mr. PROXMIRE. Is it not also true that not one single request of need by Southeast Asia forces for research and development was denied? Mr. TYDINGS. The Senator is correct. The fact was that the considerable flexi- bility which exists within the Depart- ment of Defense made it possible to pro- vide for every research development project which they felt was of high priority. Mr. PROXMIRE. In the event that this is not enough, there Is ample flexi- bility, $7 billion in research and develop- ment, that can be used at the discretion of the Secretary of Defense in this area if he wants to; is that not correct? Mr. TYDINGS. That is correct; and there is an additional $150 million in transfer authority to transfer funds be- tween one section of the appropriation bill and another. Mr. PROXMIRE. I thank the Senator very much. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator from Maryland yield to me briefly again? Mr. TYDINGS. I yield. Mr. STENNIS. The Senator has given a fine list of figures here as to what has happened; but so far as the budget is concerned, as of now, we do not know what transfer authority, if any, the Appropriations Committee and Congress are going to put in the appropriation bill. A transfer has to be authorized in the bill. Then it is passed on by the com- mittee. We do not know what language they will have, on what the Congress will approve with reference to reprograming. Certainly, until those things are known, If those gates should be closed or partly closed, we certainly should not reduce the emergency fund too low. This is a discretionary 'matter for Dr. Foster anyway, and for Congress. So I had understood that the Senator from Maryland had weighed this thing con- siderably in that light. Mr. TYDINGS. I have. If the Senator from Mississippi offers an amendment to my amendment which, in effect, would reduce the recommendations of the Armed Services Committee from $100 million to $75 million?my proposal re- duces it to $50 million?I would accept that. Mr. STENNIS. Would that be agree- able generally here to thaw of us who have worked on this matter? I refer to the Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. PRox- snar) and the Senator from Kentucky (Mr. Cooxs) who have already expressed themselves. The Senator from Kentucky has expressed himself as being in favor of such a figure, if I understood him correctly. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator from Maryland yield? Mr. TYDINGS. I yield. Mr. FULBRIGHT. As I understand it, this bill has not been passed by the House? Mr. STENNIS. No. Mr. FULBR/GHT. Therefore this goes In the House bill, and if it follows past custom, will it not, the House will make it considerably larger, I expect. Mr. TYDINGS. No. Mr. STENNIS. No. Mr. TYDINGS. Last year the House Armed Services Committee struck out the emergency fund In its entirely. The Senate authorized $121 million. In conference, the Senate receded, the House acceded, and the sum of $50 mil- lion was arrived at. But the House had struck it out in its entirety. So I would Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 ailtigu;t 11, 1A0proved For Rtd3S9TORIMMINL: IZMEBRE74-B9P1441No0300100001-3 hope that for this year that the result would be that? Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I think there is no reason in the world why we should not be able to settle this matter to and the final amount to the satisfac- tion of all parties concerned in the bill arrived at in the conference. Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent, then, that my amendment be modified on line 2 by striking out the figure "50,000,000", and inserting in lieu thereof the figure "$75,- 000,000." The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the modification is made. Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, we had better have a quorum call. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, were the yeas and nays ordered? Mr. FULBRIGHT. No. There was not a sufficient second. Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, I sug- gest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The assistant legislative clerk pro- ceeded to call the roll. Mr. McCLELLAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. EXECUTIVE ORDER 11246 "EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY" Mr. McCLELLAN. Mr. President, one of the most alarming and dangerous trends in Government in recent years is the increasing tendency of the executive and judiciary branches of the Federal Government to usurp the lawmaking functions of the Congress. And it is in the area of civil rights that this tendency has been most evident. A recent and flagrant example of this tendency is the attempt of the executive branch to force racial quotas on Gov- ernment contractors by executive order. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 dealt in detail with the subject of equal employment opportunity, but much of private industry, especially ir. the construction field, has been confronted with a far more exten- sive and burdensome system of regula- tion in this area under the color of Ex- ecutive Order 11246 on Nondiscrimina- tion. That order, together with its im- plementing rules, regulations, and re- quirements goes far beyond the legisla- tion enacted by the Congress on this subject; indeed, the order is in direct conflict with the policy, purpose, and in- tent expressed in the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The clear purpose and intent of that act was to make discrimination in em- ployment on the basis of race, color, re- ligion, sex, or national origin, an unlaw- ful employment practice, whether en- gaged in by employers, labor organiza- tions, or employment agencies. Congress made it equally clear, however, that merit and capability, as determined by the employer, should continue to be the de- termining factors in respect to job qual- ification and employment. It was the further intent of Congress that the law was not to be interpreted as requiring the intrciduction of quotas or other representatives or preferential systems into the employment process. Section 703(j) of title VII, expressly dis- allowed the granting of preferential treatment to any individual or group in order to correct any imbalance that might exist with respect to the total number or percentage of persons of any race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, employed as compared with the total number of such persons in any community, State, or other area, or in the available work force in any com- munity, State, or other area. Nothing in title VII imposed?or au- thorized the imposition upon?private industry of any duty or obligation to in- stitute or finance any training, appren- ticeship, recruitment, advertising, or other affirmative programs designed to enhance the employment opportunities or job qualifications of any employee, applicant for employment, or other per- son. Nor did Congress intend to outlaw or interfere with bona fide seniority or merit systems. See section 703(h) . And it is highly significant that Congress, when it enacted title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, entitled "Nondis- crimination in Federally Assisted Pro- grams," expressly provided that it shall not "be construed to authorize action under this title by any department or agency with respect to any employment practice by any employer, employment agency, or labor organization, except where a primary objective of the Federal financial assistance is to provide em- ployment."?Section 604. Despite this express declaration of congressional intent, however, preaward procedures, including elaborate require- ments for "affirmative action" programs designed to impose quota and minority representation systems, have been in- corporated in regulations by the execu- tive branch. Recently the Department of Labor issued an order known as the Revised Philadelphia Plan for Compliance with Equal Opportunity Requirements of Ex- ecutive Order 11246, regarding Federal construction contracts. This plan was directed to all Govern- ment agencies, and while limited initially to the Philadelphia area, it was to be ap- plied nationally at some later date, to be determined by the Department of Labor. The plan purported to set up a pro- gram of equal employment opportunity for Federal contractors. Pursuant to its terms bidders on Federal construction contracts would be required to submit goals of manpower utilization. Racial employment quotas are plainly required by the language of the plan. Mr. President, I have received many complaints about the obligations imposed upon Government contractors by Execu- tive Order 11246 and the requirements imposed thereunder by the Office of Con- tract Compliance of the Department of Labor and various other executive de- S 9599 partments of our Government. Those complaints stem from the wide variance and apparent conflict between the policy and burdens imposed by this Executive order and the congressional policy and intent as manifested in titles VI and VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Because the obvious conflicts between those two programs give rise to serious questions of statutory and constitutional law, I wrote to the Comptroller General of the United' States on May 19, 1969, requesting his opinion regarding the va- lidity of Executive Order 11246 and the regulations, rules, procedures, and re- quirements issued pursuant thereto and being applied by the Office of Contract Compliance and other Federal agencies in the awarding of Federal and Federal- aid contracts. On August 5, I received a reply from the Comptroller General with which he enclosed a copy of his deci- sion?B-16306?addressed to the Secre- tary of Labor relative to the revised Phil- adelphia plan. The Comptroller General's decision confirms my concern in this matter. The so-called Philadelphia plan violates the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and it cannot be supported on the tenuous grounds of any implied, inherent, or derivative authority. And it most assuredly cannot be main- tained simply because some'Federal social innovator desires it to be so. The Comp- troller's analysis of the Philadelphia plan, and its requirements, clearly shows its conflict with and contravention of titles VI and VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Mr. President, this is the second time that the Federal bureaucracy has tried to initiate a "Philadelphia plan," to impose racial quota systems on Government con- tractors. The Federal procurement pro- cedures are complex and costly enough without adding this complicating and harassing burden. The Congress has act- ed in this area; its action is clear, and it is high time that the executive branch takes heed of the laws of this Nation. It is a well-established principle of con- stitutional law that the President's power to issue an Executive order must stem either from an act of Congress or from the Constitution itself?Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., et al. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579, 585. It is an equally well-established prin- ciple of constitutional law that although the President's general direction power is constitutional in its source, it is by no means absolute. On the contrary, its exer- cise is subject to important limitations. Foremost among these is the well-settled rule that an Executive order or any other Executive action, whether by formal order or by regulation, cannot contravene an act of Congress which is constitu- tional. Thus, when an Executive order collides with a statute enacted pursuant to the constitutional authority of the Congress, the statute will prevail?Ken- dall v. U.S., 12 Peters 524. Neither the President nor a department head at the President's direction or with his approval, has authority to act at variance with valid statutory provisions,-United States v. Symonds, 120 U.S. 46. As Justice Frankfurter said in the Youngstown Sheet and Tube case, "Where Congress has acted the President is bound by the enactment." And as Jus- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved ForeeNtsitigyAlkip 66A16:21 wpai?0003001000.0zialya-2. ii, ic S 9600 st tice Holmes declared in Myers v. United States, 272 U.S. 52, 177? The duty of the President to see that the laws be faithfully executed is a duty that does not go beyond the laws or require him to do more than Congress sees fit to leave within his power. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that a copy of Executive Order 11246, together, with my letter to the Comp- troller General, dated May 19, 1969, and his reply together with his decision rela- tive to the Philadelphia plan, be printed in the RECORD immediately following the conclusion of my remarks. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit 1.) Mr. McCLELLAN. In this connection it is pertinent to quote the f (allowing ex- cerpts from the Comptroller's decision: Whether the provisions of the Plan requir- ing a bidder to commit himself to hire?or make every good faith effort to hire?at least the minimum number of minority group employees specified in the ranges established for the designated trades is in fact, a "quota" system (and therefore admittedly contrary to the Civil Rights Act) or is a "goal" system, is in our view largely a matter of semantics, and tends to divert attention from the end result of the Plan -that con- tractors commit themselves to making race or national origin a factor for consideration in obtaining their employees. We view the imposition of sueh a require- ment on employers engaged in Federal or federally assisted construction to be in con- flict with the intent as well as the letter of the above provisions of the act which make it an unlawful employment practice to use race or national origin as a basis for employment. Further, we believe that re- quiring an employer to abandon his cus- tomary practice of hiring through local un- ion because of a racial or national origin imbalance in the local unions and, under the threat of sanctions, to make "every good faith effort" to employ the iromber of mi- nority group tradesmen specified in his bid from sources outside the union if the work- ers referred by the union do not include a sufficient number of minority group person- nel, are in conflict with section 703(j) of the act. And finally: We recognize that both your Department (Labor) and the Department of Justice have found the Plan to be legal and we have given most serious consideration to their positions. However, until the authority for any agency to impose or require conditions in invitations for bids on Federal or federally assisted con- struction which obligate bidders, contrac- tors, or subcontractors, to consider the race or national origin of their employees or pros- pective employees for such construction, is clearly and firmly established by the weight of judicial precedent, or by additional sta- tutes, we must conclude that conditions of the type proposed by the revised Philadelphia Plan are in conflict with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and we will necessarily have to so construe and apply the act in passing upon the legality of matters involving ex- penditures of appropriated funds for Federal or federally assisted construction projects. Mr. President, I am not quarreling with the objective of equal employment op- portunities for all persons based on merit and capability to do the ,Work, without regard to race, color, religion, or national origin. But I do not believe that dis- crimination, where it exists, can be remedied by imposing solutions which are inherently and equally discrimina- tory. The quota and other requirements imposed by the Philadelphia revised plan seek to remove inequities of one kind by imposing others in their stead, a situa- tion underscored in the following ex- cerpt from the Comptroller's decision: The recital in section 61:0.2 of the order (arid in the prescribed form of notice to be included in the invitation) that the contrac- tor's commitment "is not intended and shall not be used to discriminate against any qual- ified applicant or employee" is in our opinion the statement of a practical impossibility. If, for example, a contractor requires 20 plumbers and is committed to a goal of em- ployment of at least five from minority groups, every nonminority applicant for em- ployment in excess of 15 would, solely by reason of his race or national origin, be prejudiced in his opportunity for emp ment, because the contractor is committed to make every e it to employ five appli- rity groups. cants from m Mr. Pr Depar the F natio of t Au th dfv dent, I trust that the Labor nt, and all other agencies of eral Government will take due and appropriate action as a result e Comptroller General's opinion of St 5, 1969, and begin implementing laws as enacted and not as some in- iduals or officials may desire. EXHIBIT 1 XECUTIVE ORDER 11246?EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY Under and by virtue of the authority vested me as President of the United States by t e Constitution and statutes of the United S tes, it is ordered as follows: PART I?NONDISCRIMINATION IN GOVERNMENT EMPLOYMENT SECTS. 101. It is the policy of the Govern- ment of t United States to provide equal opportunity Federal employment for all qualified persons, ? prohibit discrimination in employment beca of race, creed, color, or national origin, an. promote the full realization of equal emplo' 'ent opportunity through a positive, continui program in each executive department and ency, The policy of equal opportunity appli to every aspect of Federal employment po and practice. Sus. 102. The head of each executive e- partment and agency shall establish maintain a positive program of equal ern\ ployment opportunity for all civilian em- ployees and applicants for employment with- in his jurisdiction in accordance with the policy set forth in Section 101. SEC. 103. The Civil Service Commission shall supervise and provide leadership and guidance in the conduct of equal employ- ment opportunity programs for the civilian employees of and applications for employ- ment within the executive departments and agencies and shall review agency program accomplishments periodically. In order to facilitate the achievement of a model pr gram for equal .employment in the Fe ? al service, the Co ission may cons from time to time with uch individ groups, or organizations as assistance in improving the Federal program and realizing the objectives of this Part. SEC. 104. The Civil Service Commission shall provide for the prompt, fair, and im- partial consideration of all complaints of discrimination in Federal employment on the basis of race, creed, color, or national origin. Procedures for the consideration of complaints shall include at least one im- partial review within the executive depart- ment or agency and shall provide for appeal to the Civil Service Commission. SEC. 105. The Civil Service Commission shall issue such regulations, orders, and in- structions as it deems necessary and appro- priate to carry out its responalbilities under this Part, and the head of each executive department and agency shall comply with the regulations, orders, and instructions is- sued by the Commission under this Part. PART II?NONDISCRIMINATION ER EMPLOYMENT BY GOVERNMENT CONTRACTORS AND SUBCON- TRACTORS Subpart A?Duties of the Secretary of Labor SEC. 201. The Secretary of Labor shall be re- sponsible for the administration of Parts II and III of this Order and shall adopt such rules and regulations and Jamie such orders as he deems necessary and appropriate to achieve the purposes thereof. Subpart B?Contractors' Agreements sEc. 202. Except in contracts exempted in accordance with Section 204 of this Order, all Government contracting agencies shall in- clude in every Government contract here- fter entered into the following provisions: uring the performance of this contract, the co rector agrees as follosts: "(1) The contractor will not discriminate against any employee or applicant for em- ployment because of race, creed, color, or na- tional origin. The contractor will tate affirm- ative action to ensure that applicants are employed, and that employees are treated during employment, without regard to their race, creed, color, or national origin. Such action shall include, but not be limited to the following: Employment, upgrading, de- motion, or transfer; recruitment or recruit- ment advertising; layoff or termination; rates of pay or other forms of compensation; and selection for training, including apprentice- ship. The contractor agrees to post in con- spicuous places, available to employees and applicants for employment, notices to be provided by the contracting officer setting forth the provisions of this nondiscrimina- tion clause. "(2) The contractor will, in all solicita- tions or advertisements for employees placed by or on behalf of the contractor, state that all qualified applicants will receive con- sideration for employment Without regard to race, cre?d, color, or national origin. "(3) The contractor will send to each labor union or representative of workers with which he has a collective bargaining agree- ment or other contract or understanding, a notice to be provided by the agency con- tracting officer, advising the labor union or workers' representative of the contractor's commitments under Section 202 of Execu- tive Order No. 11246 of September 24, 1965, and shall post copies of the notice in con- spicuous places available to employees and pplicants for employment. "(4) The contractor will comply with all rovisions of Elecutive Order No. 11246 of pt. 24, 1965, and of the rules, regulations, d relevant orders of the Secretary of Labor. "(5) The contractor will furnish all In- rmation and reports required by Execu- lye Order No. 11248 of September 24, 1965, and by the rules, regulations, and orders of the Secretary of Labor, or pursuant thereto, and will permit access to hiabooks, records, and accounts by the contracting agency and the Secretary Of Labor for purposes of in- vestigation to ascertain compliance with such rules, regulations, and order& "(6) In the event of the contractor's non- compliance with the nondiscrimination clauses of this contraet or with any of such rules, regulations, or orders, this contract may be cancelled, terminated or suspended in whole or in part and the contractor may be declared ineligible for further Government contracts in accordance with procedures authorized in executive Order No. 11246 of Sep. 24, 1965, and such other sanctions may be imposed and remedies Involved as pro- vided in Executive Order No. 11246 of Sep- tember 24, 1968, or by rule. regulation, or order of the Secretary of Labor, or as other- wise provided by law. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71B00364R00Q300100001-3 ? proved For8MmEN98M001:1E6ApPligiN3t3-#E000300100001-3 S 9611 August 19%9 does ,not actually make a change in the of private transactions. I have since expressed law which would provide the President opposition to extension of the tax, and voted with the authority to have a lower tax in favor of amendments which would have rate on outstanding issues from those restricted its effect. I continue to have con- siderable doubts whether extension of the which pertain to new borrowing? LET would be in the best interests of our Mr. LONG. No, that authority is in the country, in the absence of a concrete pledge House passed bill, which is still in the to begin dismantling this web of capital re- committee. What we have here is a sim- strictions at the earliest possible time. pie 30-day extension. I would therefore like to be appraised of: MT, JAVITS. That will be dealt with (1) your intentions to use the powers when the committee has its hearing? which will be given the President to vary the Mr. LONG, The Senator is correct. tax rates, so that these rat --for both new and outstanding iss ?will be",as low as Mr. JAVITS. The committee will have possible consistenyWith monetary stability; s and intentions which, in hearings? (2) your act Mr. LONG. The Senator is correct. your conti ng review of the nation's bal- Mr. JAVITS. May I be heard? an.ce of p ments program, may result in the Mr, LONG. Yes. gradu relaxation of the restrictions im- Mr. JAVITS. This is important to me. pos ? by the Office of Foreign Direct Invest- I have always fought against the interest t. equalization tax on the ground it repre- Please be assured that I have pledged my sents a protectionist device. However, w efforts to maintaining the strength of the dollar both at home and abroad, and am have a balance-of-payments probl willing to support any measure which will which is now congealed around th in- effect this end and for which no reasonable terest equalization tax. I understand the difficulties of t ministration in going along with such as me. Now, a certain background h been built up in utilization of the ta based THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY, on the fact I think it was unwis taxa- ? Washington, August 9, 1969. tion and Unwise for our country Hon. JACOB K. JAVIT take U.S. Senate, s' in view of the fact that this is the 1 d- Washington, D.C. lag money capital of the world. DEAR SENATOR JAVITS: In your letter to me I wrote a letter to the Secretary of ay on the Interest Equalization Tax, you the Treasury on Saturday. He responded, hay- emphasized the desirability of dis- not in terms of the 30-day extension, mantli our direct balance of payments which is understandable, but the bill as controls as as possible. it came from the House. He made the On April 4, President Nixon pur- situation clear. posefully began j exactly this type of process consistent wit ?ur balance of pay- ments position. At that ? e he announced that the exchange of correspondence I a relaxation of the capita estrictions on had with the Secretary of the Treasury foreign direct investment and ? ding abroad may be printed in the RECORD. by bank and non-bank financial titutions. There being no objection, the letters In addition, he pledged and "we all find were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, our solutions (to our economic prob s) in as follows: the framework of freer trade and pay ents". AUGUST 9, 1969. The President also pointed out that "The Re Interest Equalization Tax distortions created by more than three ears Hon. DAVID M. KENNEDY, of inflation cannot be corrected over ight. e ad- eople alternative exists. With best wishes, believe me, Sincerely, JACOB K. JAVITS. Secretary, U.S. Treasury Department Washington, D.C. DEAR MR. SECRETARY: The Interest Equaliza- tion Tax extension has been slated for floor consideration this coming week, and as you know, I have been following with some con- cern the reaction which this issue has had in the country. In April of this year, the Joint Economic Committee, on which I serve as senior Minority member, recommended that the IET be phased out as soon as prac- ticable. The Majority noted that suspension. of the IN T would do little or no injury to the U.S. balance of payments, and that sus- pension is an appropriate way to begin the elimination of capital export restrictions which "are a direct contradiction of the most fundamental international economic policy objectives pursued by the United States since the end of World War II." The Minority noted the strong and valid arguments which exist for reconsidering the continuation of the IET, and pointed out that significant changes in the structure of capital markets in the United States and abroad have reduced the danger of the greatly increased outflows which the IET was designed to prevent. These views accord with my prior opposi- tion to the IET. In 1964 when the tax was be- ing introduced, I proposed a "capital issues committee" for regulating foreign borrowings in the United States on a voluntary basis, which would have kept our capital outflows within manageable levels and preserved the traditional U.S. commitment to the freedom 9 Nor can the dislocations resulting f om a decade of balance-of-payments de its be corrected in a short time." It w against the background of these actions, t is pledge and an appreciation of the ti e it takes to restore balance to the ec.on y that the President announced his inte ion to seek an extension of the Interest ?ualization Tax. The extension legislati now before the Senate has a new vision which would provide to the Pr dent the authority to have a lower ate on outstanding issues from that which would pertain to new bor- rowings. The purpose of this provision is to provide that degree of flexibility which could be useful in reducing the reliance upon this tax as a selective restraint in our overall bal- ance-of-payments program. For example, if this authority is employed, a low or no tax on new issues could permit greater access to our markets for new projects without ac- cording this benefit to outstanding issues. The willingness of this Administration to vary the IET tax rate so that it will be when our reliance upon this tax can disap- pear. It Is also my intention t2 recommend as soon as possible in the light of balance-of- payments developments, additional steps in the gradual relaxation of the capital restric- tions imposed Under the foreign direct in- vestment program. I would emphasize the fundamental fact that our efforts te further reduce reliance upon selective restrains will be greatly fa- cilitated by the evident effectiveness of our program of general restraints in reducing in- flation, restoring better balance to our econ- omy, and creating the conditions that make it possible to rebuild our trade position. As inflation is so much the cause of our inter- national payments problem, it is vital that we pursue the fiscal-monetary restraint which will foster our balance growth. Sincerely, DAVID M. KENNEDY. Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, he made it clear there were certain undertakings which the Treasury was making with re- spect to the extension of this case. In his letter he stated that it would provide the President the authority to have a lower tax rate on outstanding issues from that which would pertain to new boriowings. He stated: If this authority is employed, a low or no tax on new issues could permit greater ac- cess to our markets for new projects without according this benefit to outstanding issues. I would like to point out that the out- standing issue question is complicated because of the reaching out by American banks and others to borrow, and that Americans would flock to get those issues if we took the interest equalization tax off. I sympathize with the Secretary and what he is doing. I hope the committee considers the matter to make a different rate for new issues as contrasted with other issues. The letter also stated: It is my intention to recommend to the President further use of this authority as circumstances permit, and in this regard I will be specially mindful of the opportunity to employ the additional flexibility we are now seeking from Congress which hopefully will advance the time when our reliance upon this tax can disappear. It is also my intention to recommend as soon as possible in the light of balance-of- payments developments, additional steps in the gradual relaxation of the capital re- strictions imposed under the foreign direct investment program. Mr. President, I have inserted this mat- ter in the RECORD to call it to the atten- tion of Senators so that it may be helpful as they get to the stage of dis- cussion and to prepare for my testifying, which the Senator has consented to. Otherwise, I have no objection. Mr. LONG. I thank the Senator for his cooperation. This is a matter which will require the attention of the committee. as low as possible consistent with monetary It will require some study. stability Was demonstrated first on April 4 when President Nixon reduced the IET rate We feel there may be considerable out- from approximately one-and-one-quarter flow of capital and there may be serious percent p.a. to three-quarters percent p.a. problems if the interest equalization tax on debt securities. It is my intention to rec- expires prior to the time we give the mat- ommend to the President further use of this ter the consideration it deserves. authority as circumstances permit, and in I thank the Senator. this regard I will be specially mindful of the opportunity to employ the additional The PRESIDING OFFICER. The ques- flexibility we are now seeking from Con- tion is on agreeing to the committee gress which hopefully will advance the time amendment. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9612 Approved ForRetfAmialgAtia43A: Ftifrimppgmitioo3ool0000ila gust 11, 1969 The committee amendment was agreed to. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill is open to further amenctment. If there be no further amendment to be proposed, the question is on the en- grossment of the amendment and the third reading of the bill. The amendment was ordered to be en- grossed and the bill to be read a third time. The bill was read the third time and passed. The title was amended, so as to read: "An act to continue for a temporary pe- riod the existing suspension of duty on certain istle and the existing interest equalization tax." Mr. LONG. Mr. President, I move that the vote by which the bill, as amended, was passed be reconsidered. Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, I move that the Motion to reconsider be laid on the table. The motion to lay on the table was agreed to. "?7?givi AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize ap- propriations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat ve- hicles, and research, development, test, and evaluation for the Armed Forces, and to authorize the construction of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized person- nel strength of the Selected Reserve of each reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, a parliamentary inquiry. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator will state it. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, was the amendment which I offered printed in the RECORD? The PRESIDING OFFICER. It was. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The purpose of the amendment I introduced is very simple. It would reduce the authorization for re- search development, test, and evaluation, by a total of $45,614,000. This represents a 7 percent reduction in Thuds for the "military sciences" research category for each of the three Services and the De- partment of Defense, plus a 20-percent reduction in the authorization for the Defense Department's overseas research program, Project Agile, which is funded under a category labeled, "Other Equip- ment." The proposed reductions, by Serv- ice, are: Army $11,893,000; Navy $10,- 157,000; Air Force $9,989,000; and the Department of Defense $13,575,000. The purpose is to make a modest cutback in the Department's funding of Federal contract research centers?the so-called think tanks?other social and be- havioral science research, foreign re- search, the Department's aid-to-educa- tion program, project Themis, and research on counterinsurgency matters. The intent is to have the $45 million reduction applied roughly as follows: First, reduce the funding of the Fed- eral Contract Research Centers by 10 percent, or $27 million; Second, reduce research in foreign in- stitutions?colleges and universities, pri- marily?by $2 million, or approximately one-third the program proposed; Third, reduce counterinsurgency re- search, Project Agile, by 20 percent, or $5 million; Fourth, cut other social science re- search, performed by organizations such as the Hudson Institute by the remaining $3 million; and Fifth, hold the line on new starts un- der Project Themis by reducing the re- quest by $8 million?a 25-percent reduc- tion. Let me discuss each of these items briefly. Last year the Committee on Foreign Relations began an inquiry into research activities of the Department of Defense that relate to foreign policy matters. That study, and followup inquiries, have convinced me that there is a great waste of the taxpayers' money in this field, that the Federal contract research centers are not under effective control by the Con- gress, that the Department of Defense is financing activities which are not properly its responsibility, and that the thinking permeating much of this re- search is likely to lead to a larger and larger military establishment and more Vietnams. The basic problem was put very well by Adm. Hyman G. Rickover in testi- mony before my committee last year. He said: There seems to me to be no effective check within the DOD on selection of research projects. I would suggest that only Con- gress can exert such a check on the DOD. The DOD has been able to involve itself in research having only the remotest rele- vance to the problems encountered by the armed services?matters at no previous time, nor anywhere else in the world deemed to lie within the province of the defense func- tion?just because it has the money; it has more money than any other public agency. It gets more money because the word "de- fense" has in itself an element of urgency. Whatever is asked in its name somehow acquires the connotation of a life and death matter for the Nation. I believe that Congress should exert the "check on the DOD" Admiral Rick- over suggested, by putting the brakes on this research. There are 16 Federal contract research centers, or "think tanks," which, in fiscal year 1969, received $263 million from the Department of Defense?a 4 percent in- crease over the previous year. Accord- ing to information furnished our com- mittee by the Department of Defense, these organizations, as a group, received 94 percent of their revenues from the Department of Defense last year; nine received 100 percent of their support from the Department of Defense. Only 1 percent of their revenues came from private sources. They are truly creatures of the Government, existing at the tax- payers' sufferance. The committee's hearing record re- veals little about the activities of these establishments and the Senate is, in ef- fect, being asked to provide $277 milliOn on faith for their operations?a 5-per- cent increase over last year. There is, in fact, no listing in the hearings of the amounts to be allocated to each. Upon completion earlier this year of an investigation of certain aspects of re- search work by nonprofit institutions, the General Accounting Office was suf- ficiently disturbed by what it found to recommend a Presidential study of the entire subject. The lack of real control over the "think tanks" is evident from this exchange between the Senator from Missouri and Mr. Charles Poor, Acting Assistant Secretary of the Army, during the hearings on this bill: Senator SYMINGTON. That simply means you give a company so much money. Mr. POOR. That is correct. Senator SYMINGTON. But, of research, they don't know what they are going to find out. You give them so much money, and they do as much for that money as they say they can; is that right? Mr. POOR.. That is essentially correct. (p. 525, Armed Services Committee hearings) Under such an arrangement, we now have a situation typified by a cartoon in a recent issue of New Yorker Magazine: Two strange looking natives are sitting on the ledge of a mountain peak and a bright-eyed American type, with brief- case and coat in hand, is eagerly climb- ing up to their perch. One native is say- ing to the other, "Don't look now, but here comes that pest from the Rand Corp. again." Let us look at some of the projects being carried out by these Defense re- search organizations: Here are a few planned by the Rand Corp., which last year received 93-per- cent of its total revenues from the Gov- ernment, and in fiscal 19'70 is slated to receive $24 million from the Defense De- partment: 1. "Military Representation in U.S. Mis- sions": $40,000. Official Description: Examine better meth- ods of military representation in handling military aid in foreign countries, specifically India, Indonesia, Brazil, and Iran. 2. "Capabilities and Interests Study:" $150,000. Official Description: An examination pi U.S. interests, commitments, and capabilities required to meet future contingencies that threaten those interests. Of course, one can easily see from these official statements that they are utterly meaningless, as that one is. One must get into these descriptions a little further. Here is another: 3. "Project Management, Project Formula- tion, and Special Requests": $165,000. Official Description: RAND management of ISA-sponsored research formulation, and ex- ploration of research relevant to ISA inter- ests, and special studies that may be required on short notice. Let us look at the Center for Research In Social Systems?the originator of the infamous Project Camelot. Last year 100 percent of its revenue came from the De- fense Department and it is to receive $2,100,000 next year for a payroll of 150 employees to carry out projects like these: Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August il, /proved For 43011401129314114M9 Riwatop2-1oNt4g000300100001-3 1. "Cultural Information and Analysis Center (CINFAC) ": $750,000. Official Description: An information stor- age retrieval, analysis facility providing in- formation services concerning foreign areas and cultures to qualified requestors. 2. "Internal Security": $80,000. Official Description: "Research on civil, paramilitary and military police operations related to overseas internal defense and de- velopment." 3. "U.S. Army Psychological Operations Re- quirements Worldwide": $25,000. Official Description: "Estimation of world- wide requirements for U.S. Army PSYOPS in time frame 1970-1977." I might point out that CRESS, of American University, and the Human Resources Research Office, of George Washington University, either have severed, or are in the process of severing, their university affiliations, as a result of student protests over their activities. Here are examples of the research pro- posed for the human resources research Office, which is slated to receive $4,300,- 000 from the Army in fiscal 1970: 1. "Development and Evaluation of a Southeast Asian Cultural Assimulator": $23,000. Official Description: "Compile assimuIator and evaluate advantages and disadvantages of using this as a principal teaching vehicle." 2, "Program for the Development of Cul- tural Self-Awareness (COPE) ": $115,000. Official Description: Design, production, and evaluation of program of audio-visual instruction for development of cultural self- awareness. That sounds very good and it may be a fine project for the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, or some- one else, but I submit this type of activity is scarcely relevant to the mission, or function, as it is called, of the Military EstablishMent or the military forces of this country. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield on that point? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Yes; I yield. Mr. PROXMIRE. The Senator is re- ferring to the design, production, and evaluation of a program of audiovisual instruction for the development of cul- tural self-awareness, for which $113,000 has already been initiated and $115,000 Is planned for the coming fiscal year. Is that correct? Mr. FULBRIGHT. That is right. Mr. PROXMIRE. I did not hear the remarks of the Senator from Arkansas, but I wonder if this is a program which should be carried on by the Defense De- partment; and if so, why? How can the Defense Department use this for defend- ing this country? Mr. F'ULBRIGHT. The remarks I made are exactly to that effect. Perhaps the Senator did not hear them. I said that while the project may be justified for some other agency of the Government, I cannot, for the life of me, see its rele- vance to what I believe the mission of the Defense Department to be. I have a further comment on that proj- ect, if the Senator would like to hear it. This is the Defense Department explana- tion. It is dated July 31, 1969: The objective of this Human Resources Research Office research effort is to design, produce, and evaluate a program of audio- visual instruction for the development of cultural pelf-awareness, (i.e., awareness of how a person's own thought processes and actions are influenced by his cultural back- ground) . COPE? COPE is the code name for this proj- ect? attempts to make Army personnel under- stand the influence of the American way of life on their own attitudes and actions In order to gain deeper insight into those of their foreign counterparts, thereby increas- ing the effectiveness of officers serving in U.S. military missions. That may be a good project for some purpose, but it does seem to me to go very far afl4ld from the objectives of a military establishment, which I thought was created to provide for the defenses of this country. This seems to me to be a form of rather sophisticated psycho- logical instruction that would be worthy of Harvard or some other university. Personally, I have great interest in the psychology of all of us. I am only ques- tioning, with respect to most of these projects, whether it is a proper activity for the Department of Defense. I think It is an improper activity. - Mr. PROXMIRE. As I understand it, this program would not provide funds for assisting military officers in securing a greater cultural understanding, but would be a study as to how this would best be done. Is that correct? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I think that is cor- rect. Mr. PROXMIRE. Would it be an at- tempt to study American culture, as to how one can best inculcate values into the hearts and minds of American of- ficers? Mr. FULBRIGHT. It would seem so; how they can be influenced. Then there would be other activities to attempt to apply what had been learned in research projects. The military, as the Senator knows, conducts very large operations in the exchange of officers with foreign countries, for example. That program is far larger than the civilian exchange program. It involves, I think, some $70- odd million. The last time I looked at it, It was more than twice the size of the civilian exchange program under the Department of State. In that military program, I would as- sume they would attempt to apply what- ever they had learned of the psychologi- cal aspects of the effect of one's environ- ment upon one's attitude. That may help . influence their attitude. I simply question very seriously that this is the kind of activity our Military Establishment ought to be engaged in. Mr. PROXMIRE. I am wondering just how and when this information could be used. Could it be used in officers' candi- date school? Is it to be used in officers' refresher courses? In what way would that information be used in inculcate a better cultural understanding on the part of our military officers? Mr. FULBRIGHT. We have educa- tional programs of that kind, of course. The Army War College is a quite sophis- ticated and highly developed educational institution. It brings every type of officer there. If anything were learned, I can imagine the War College might utilize this information, but it does not strike me as quite within the realm of the De- S 9613 partment of Defense to engage in this type of research. If this is proper research, on that theory, I can think of hardly anything that is not within the scope of their ac- tivity. There are a number of educational projects which I do not say are not in themselves justifiable, under proper sponsorship; but I think the amount of money that is spent on this kind of re- search by the Defense Department is way out of proportion, and is not rele- vant to their mission. Mr. PROXMIRE. I agree with the dis- tinguished senator. As he says, there are endless things they can do; and any amount of money could be justified if there were no limit to our resources and our funds. But it would seem to me that to pro- ceed on this kind of program, and some of the others that the Senator has listed and that are listed in the hearings, would be extremely hard to justify, in view of the limitation on funds with which we are all familiar. If we had to justify this in any other budget, the Senator can see how difficult or impossible to justify they would be. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator took the words out of my mouth. If these projects had been presented in some other agency's budget, they would have been gone over with a fine toothed comb; but because they are in the Defense De- partment and the word "defense" has a certain aura of urgency as well as an. implication that our survival depends on it, anything goes. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Or practically any- thing goes, in this research area. Yes; I yield to the distinguished chairman. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, there is no record of any request that the Sena- tor's commitee ever made to take over these matters. If the Senator will look at the bottom of page 47? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Of the hearings? Mr. STENNIS. Of the report. The Sen- ate was forewarned. The report reads as follows: The Committee believes measures should be taken to transfer a number of these efforts to other agencies for future fiscal years and that during the coming fiscal year the man- agement of certain projects of interest to the Department of State, Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, the National Science Foundation, and other agencies should be taken over by those agencies particularly the Department of State. If the Senator has an application list he wants to prepare, we would be glad to have him take any and all of them that he might wish. Then they would be scrutinized, and we would have the bene- fit of his opinion about them. Mr. FULBRIGHT. As the Senator from Wisconsin pointed out, the trouble about that is getting the money. The only place you can get the money for these projects is in the Defense budget. Mr. STENNIS. That would be up to the Senator. Mr. FULBRIGHT. What I am trying to accomplish by this amendment?the Senator says it is up to me, and I hope he will support it?is that, if we can cut this money out of this bill, the money Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 961.4 Approved For Fejmitis0s0ANA it93Mayil94i9oo3ool000n3 gust 11, 1969 will not be spent under Defense Depart- ment auspices, but would then be avail- able for other justifiable activities. My guess is that much of this work is prob- ably duplicated by other research in pri- vate institutions, but I have not looked into that question. Mr. STENNIS. We cannot settle it on guesses. We have something definite here to recommend; if the Senate does not want it, that is all right. Mr. FULBRIGHT. All right. Mr. STENNIS. But after the hearing and the proof, we decided it would not be well just to throw it all out; so that is why it is here, and we hope next year it will be elsewhere. Mr. FULBRIGHT. As I said to the Senator, we are not proposing to throw it all out, either, but I believe the Sen- ator's committee is proposing increases, on same of these matters, increases over the amount budgeted. Mr. STENNIS. Well, the Senator from New Hampshire will speak on that. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Basically, I object to the Defense Department going be- yond its proper activities siir ly because it has such appeal and such effective representation in both Houses of Con- gress that its officials can eet all the money they want for whatever they propose. That has been true up to now. I admire the Senator from Mississippi for his effectiveness, as well as his pred- ecessor, the Senator from Georgia, and the Representative from South Caro- lina (Mr. RIVERS). They have been able to get the money for these projects. That is as great a compliment as I can pay the Senator in this particelar area. / know of no other committee that has been so successful. All we are trying to do is to review these projects and prograini in a way similar to the way we look at others, and bring them into balance, usine the words the Senator from Mississippi used ear- lier. But the effort should be to balance our national program, rather than just to reach a balance within the Pentagon., as if that were the only program we had in our Government. The Military Establishmene as I said this morning?is able to jsrt a lot of money because we have beau in one war after another, and we have had crisis after crisis. It is easy to creete the im- pression that we are about to be over- whelmed by either the Chin( so, the Rus- sians, or perhaps the Biafrans, or Nigeri- ans, or perhaps the le afrans or Nigerians. I do not think that is a ericel enough reason, but that is the only reason. think the fact that the ccaniaittee itself recommends some activities be trans- ferred is good; but they do not recom- mend that we take the money along with it. However, even if they do transfer them I still think there is a grave question whether, in times like the present, we ought to be engaging in a proliferation of research activities that have no immedi- ate usefulness. Research ieefine, and pure research is fine in certain circumstances, but we are in such difficult and straitened financial circumstances at the moment that I think we ought to cut back on same of these things. I yield to the Senator from New Jersey. Mr. CASE. Mr. President, the point of limited resources is a very Important point I think of equal importance, if the facts justify it, is the criticism of this practice based upon its tendency to give the Defense Department and the Defense Department planners a monopoly on in- tellectual opinion in the country, or at least an important segment of it?for example, the behavioral sciences, just as one, a field in which there are not enor- mous numbers of people, and in which it might be very possible to set a trend in research, in opinion, and then in opinion forming. I am not suggesting a conscious effort to mold American opinion in this fashion, but the effect, it seems to me, is very likely to be the lessening of independent scrutiny by independent academicians, because there are not any more, or at least not sufficient numbers, because so many of them are tied in with the re- search sponsored by the Defense De- partment into many things which are probably in themselves very useful, but have very little bearing on the direct needs of the Department, properly con- ceived, and which have this insidious long-term effect. Is that a possibility? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I agree with the Senator. He has expressed very well, I think, one of the major considerations. We do not wish to turn this country into a militaristic state. We still believe it should be primarily a civilian state, with the Military Establishment supporting it. Continuing year after year with this sort of project will, I believe, have the ten- dency the Senator has mentioned. I may say, in addition, that there has been considerable protest about this tendency during the past year. A delega- tion of students and professors from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology called upon me for advice about what their proper attitude should be with re- lation to the military activities in their university. This is a complicated matter. They were very proud of their university. They did not wish to have it known sim- ply as a military agency, as a military department. That does not mean that they do not appreciate the work of the military or that they do not respect the uniform or are in some way critical of the military as such is quite wrung. That is not so. As has often been pointed out, the Director of Research of the Defense De- partment and the men who are in that group and who really developed these projects, are not military men. Mr. John Foster is not a military man. He is a sci- entist. He is an energetic man, a physi- cist, whose training was in the labora- tory. He has unlimited imagination, and he thinks of these things. But the secret of proliferation is the availability of money. What we can do is to help to restrain that aspect. Mr. CASE. Mr. President, will the Sen- ator further yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. CASE. The Senator has put his finger on the key point. I agree that this is our responSibility. If we do not as- sume it, as Mall the other major policy matters breuglat up by the bill, nobody else will. Mr. FULBRIGHT_Nobode. Mr. CASE. This IS not a criticism of the standing committees of the Senate, specifically not of the Committee on Armed Services. The Committee on. Armed Services cannot do this kind of job. No single committee of Congress can. This is the kind of thing that happens once every 6, 8, or 10 years. It happens More or less spontaneously because we sense the need to do it. The whole Senate is invovled and the Senator from Arkan- sas is performing a most useful function in his talk on this particular subject. Coming back to ins specific amend- ment, it is a most undesirable situation In which a man of the caliber of Dr. Fos- ter?and I am sure he is an excellent man--shouldbe the person to whom one goes if he needs money for research. This in itself?the hope of this kind of thing, as well as its actual culmination or real- ization?has an inhibiting effect upon the academic community of the country it seems to me. Mr. FULBRIGHT. That is correct. Mr. lefeINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FlTLBRIGHT. Yes, I yield to the distinguished Senator from New Hamp- shire. Mr. McINTYRE. When the Senator first digressed to talk about the project he had in mind, I did not quite under- stand him. Is it the audiovisual project that he is belaboring? Mr. FlJLBRIGHT. Mr. President, I am not belaboring it. I am discussing it. It is called the Program for the Develop- ment of Cultural Self-Awareness. Mr. Mc/NTYRE. Mr. President, I will be very brief. When the Armed Services Committee got into the projects con- cerning three very important areas? human performance, manpower selection and training, and the human factors in- volved?we found a great deal of sense In the projects and the plans. And, strange as it may seem, in many in- stances the decisions that were reached on these projects and the applications of the lessons learned were great money savers. When we consider that we have 3.5 million Americans in uniform, when we conceive of dee fact that there is a turn- over of some 29 percent, when we con- sider the complexity of modern weapons, and when we think of what we can achieve when we are trying to come up with 100 or 1,000 radar operators, by giv- ing the people who are applying for the Positions a raederate -test we can make certain that the ones undergoing the training would be more likely to be suc- cessful than if there were a hit-and-miss program. I point out that we do have some areas that have been cut. However, when we came to the area of human performance and the areas of training and manpower selection, we found these progranis to make a lot of sense. We will be able to go abeng with some Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, lApproved ForegNeleEnieltria.P RertteRniP-7-4 siameno 00300100001-3 S9615 of the others that the committee has al- ready agreed to tone down. However, in this area it was agreed that it was good work and should be continued. That is funded at the level, I believe, of $35 million. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I can understand that if it is the only oppor- tunity that a country has. Maybe even- tually, if we consider the present policy, the only opportunity for a decent edu- cation will be in the armed services. But I had always assumed, and still hope, that in our country, which professes to be a democratic, constitutional, republican system, the best training of people is to be obtained in public or private schools. Most of the 3.5 million men that the Senator mentioned are not professional soldiers. Most of them are nonprofes- sional soldiers, and I did not assume it was the function of the Army and the military to take these raw recruits and give them all kinds of education. They are assumed to have obtained a basic education in civilian life. If we are going to go all the way to a military state, the Senator is correct. They ought to have the best possible educational opportunities, audio, visual, and every kind of education, and the military should take over the schools. My point, and I think the point of the Senator from New Jersey, is that we think the Army and military affairs have a rather limited function?to defend the country with the manpower available, plus the professionals who are trained in West Point. We are not saying that it may not be proper to have a program of psychologi- cal indoctrination at West Point or Annapolis for the officers. However, this is a research project. It is one that I would call pure resea.rch. It does not seem to be an example of what the Mili- tary Establishment should be doing un- less we have a Military Establishment as the dominant influence within the coun- try. Mr. MeINTYRE. Mr. President, I think the Senator from Arkansas has made it very plain already in his remarks that there should be a reduction of spending by the military in general. I think that across the board the Sena- tors share this feeling. The committee is going to come in with a reduction of very nearly $2 billion. Mr. President, I agree with the Sena- tor. We do not want America to become a military state. I do not think it ever will become a military state. However, I would not want overlooked the fact that one of the greatest services the armed services perform is giving occu- pational training to high school drop- outs who have come into the service and sending them back after 3 years into his community. This does not apply just to the. present time, in the Vietnamese situation. The armed services send the men back into their communities able to win gainful occupation. I agree that we do not want the mili- tary to take over the education field. However, the military has done a fine job in training and educating many of our youngsters today. Mr. FULBRMHT. Mr. President, I have heard that said. If they cannot get the education in any other way, I suppose that is a good way to get it. I am not sure?and only time will tell?whether that training is associated with other training which will, in effect, mean that our country will continue to follow policies of which I disapprove? policies of intervention around the world and the policy with which I often asso- ciate the former Secretary of State: that it is our duty to intervene and keep the peace around the world all by ourselves. In my view, that is contrary to what I thought our policy was. We get into very deep foreign policy matters there. I know that one of the fallouts of much of the military training will be a sense of discipline and, as the Senator said, the education of some of the dropouts. How- ever, the great mass of the soldiers are not dropouts. I would assume that the great mass of them, by far the majority of them, are the normal, best young men of our coun- try who have gone to the best schools we have. And they have had what we will call a normal and successful education in their schools. They go to serve in the armed services for a limited period of time. Nobody is complaining about that now. My complaint has never been leveled at the Army or the military as such. My complaint has always gone to the policies of the civilian policymakers of our Gov- ernment in creating a situation like Vietnam. However, that is all we hear. I think we are trying, as the Senator said, to bring some restraint into the military budget- ary matters. This is a relative matter. No one wants to cut out our armed services. We spend a lot more money now an the military than does any other country in the world, including Russia. And we spend a very high percentage of our national budget, perhaps 40 or 50 percent. It goes up so fast that I cannot follow it .However, $80 billion is what is pro- posed to be spent. This amounts to about 60 percent of the total budget when so- cial security and all the other trust funds are not included. Mr. MeINTYRE. I thank the Senator from Arkansas for yielding to me. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Another research center is the Research and Analysis Cor- poration, budgeted to receive $10,800,000 to support 587 employees. Here is a sam- ple of its projects to be paid for under this authorization bill: 1. "Strategic Analysis of Europe-1969": $128,000. Official Description: Includes studies of French foreign policy, European trade pros- pects, development of Siberia, and Soviet- Japanese trade. 2, "Strategic Analyses of Subsaharan Africa-1969": $74,000. Official Description: Includes studies of U.S. strategic interests, environmental trends, and U.S. policies and programs. A study of French foreign policy, Eu- ropean trade prospects, development of Siberia, and Soviet-Japanese trade?it would strike me that if this is justified at all, or if we need it, this certainly would be for the Department of State and/or the Department of Commerce. Why is this in the Department of Defense? Studies of French foreign policy?well, perhaps it can be argued that the officers in the Department of Defense should have knowledge of French foreign poli- cy. But studies or analyses of French for- eign policy would necessarily, I would think, take place in the Department of State?unless the Department of State has gone so far that it is nothing but a small bureau within the Department of Defense. I confess that the revelation to me just recently that the agreement signed by the prime minister of Thailand was not in the custody of the Department of State but in the Department of De- fense did shock me a bit, as to the rela- tive significance of the Department of State and the Department of Defense. But I submit that this kind of study is not appropriate for the Department of Defense. The list could go on indefinitely. Con- gress should make a start toward bring- ing the operations of these organiza- tions under more effective control. The Committee on Armed Services is to be commended for putting a limit of $45,000 on salaries for research center officers. It is a step in the right direction, but much more needs to be done. And a re- duction in funds, I propose, is the best way to go about it. The salary of the head of one of these research centers was $90,000 last year, when we discussed this matter on the floor of the Senate. All Defense-financed foreign affairs research is not done by the "think tanks," by any means. The "think tanks" I mentioned are the research centers, of which I believe there are 16. Much of it is carried out by universities, other pri- vate research organizations, and even by military hardware manufacturers. The Hudson Institute, for example, received some 80 percent of its funds from the Defense Department in the last 2 years, according to testimony before the For- eign Relations Committee by a former institute president, Dr. Donald G. Bren- nan. Yet, it is not classified as a Federal contract research center. This is the organization which the General Ac- counting Office last year found had charged the Defense Department $45,000 to $52,000 per man-year for three research projects which turned out to be virtually worthless. Recent news reports indicate that the institute's latest con- tribution to the debate over Vietnam strategy is a plan which involves build- ing a moat around Saigon. I ask unani- mous consent that an article on this plan, published in the June 27 issue of the New York Times be printed in the RECORD at the end of my remarks. That reminds me, I think they also had a plan not long ago to create a great lake in the middle of South America in order to provide communication between all the countries of South America. They were going to dam up the Amazon and have a lake that, I presume, would cover a large part of Latin America. I under- stand that it did not appeal to the Latin Americans. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 8 9616 Approved ForftwEN0411,1/30z_CIA;RDP7161,011314R000300100001-3 - scintgltSt ././ .469 Not long ago, Douglas Aircraft Corp. was paid $89,500 to do a staidy for the Army, called "Pax Americana," which concluded, among other things, that While the 'UnitedStates is not an imperial- istic nation she exhibits many of the dhar- acteristies of past imperiums and in fact ba3 acquired imperial responsibilities. After trying, without success, to get the Defense Department to deelaseify the study, it developed that Douglas has printed the same study in unclassified form, for its own promotional purposes. It has gone on to do other research of this nature and recently completed a study for the Air Force, laying out sce- narios for several possible conflict situa- tions in which the United States might become involved, and spelling out the Air Force role in the peacekeeping eras that would follow these wars. The principal Defense Department program of overseas research is project Agile, a series of highly classified proj- ects relating to Vietnam and potential Vietnams. Over $25 millon is being re- quested for this program in 1970. I do not question the projects relating to Vietnam, no matter how farfetched they may appear. If they help save one Amer- ican life, well and good. But I do ques- tion the millions to be spent on projects involving other countries where the re- search is more likely to lead to Aineri- can involvement in disputes which are none of our business. Unfortunately, the Senate cannot debate these projects on their merits since all informs tion con- cerning this program is classified. All too many of the studies listed in the justification data for project Agile and similar research indicate that the Pentagon planners have not learned any lessons from Vietnam, but that they are busily engaged in blueprinting strate- gies where our military will play the key role in trying to maintain order in a disorderly world. Lt. Gen. Betts, Chief of Army Research and Development, when asked about the Army's research involv- ing foreign areas said: We have a continuing need to build up a library of information that can be available to our military planners for any country in the world into which we might have to go. That, I submit, is very reminiscent of statements which we used to hear from the Department of State. So far, the Army has paid $541,000 Ior 27 of these guides to countries where it "might have to go." Some of those coun- tries are Afghanistan, Brazil, Colombia, Congo, Ghana, Iraq, Lebanon, Pakistan, Syria, and Venezuela; a varied list of possible involvements. I may say that in the hearing the other day on foreign aid, I requested a repre- sentative of the Defense Department to supply the committee with any of these secret agreements which might involve our having to go into any of these coun- tries or any other country. So far, I have not received any; but they have been put on notice that we are Interested in them. In May, I asked the Department of De- fense for a number of a research reports, selected from the list of projects submit- ted to the Committee on Armed Services as justification for the 1970 budget re- quest. I want to assure my colleagues that the titles listed on pages 2209 to 2219 of the committee hearings, although often intriguing, do not give the full flavor of this research program. Only a reading of the actual reports filed reveals the type of information the Defense Department is getting for its money. For example, a project entitled simply "Ideology and Be- havior," had this official description: To provide empirically derived conclusions about ideological movements which support insurgency. But the report filed on this project? furnished to me by the Defense Depart- ment?bear the following titles: First. "The Attaturk Revolution in Turkey." Second. "Gandhi, Non-Violence, and the Struggle for Indian Independence." Third. "The Sinhalese Buddhist Revo- lution of Ceylon." Fourth. "The Egyptian Revolution, Nasserism, and Islam." Fifth. "Militant Hindu Nationalism: The Early Phase." I must submit, Mr. President, it is in- credible that we would spend money at this late date in the military depart- ment in studying the revolution in Tur- key, which took place a long time ago. Mr. Attaturk was a very great patriot for his country. However, members of the Armed Services do not have to have benefits? Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. McIRTYRE. I heard the Senator enumerate a number of studies. Is the Senator contending those are studies that are going to be performed with money authorized for fiscal year 1970, or is the Senator going back 4 or 5 years to dig up horrible examples? Is this for the fiscal year 1970 authorization? Mr. FULBRIGHT. No. One cannot find out about 1970. We can only deal with reports that have been completed. This is a recent one. The study is not that old. Mr. McINTYRE. It is not in fiscal year 1970. Mr. =BRIGHT. That is correct. They have us over a barrel, to begin with. So much is classified, such as the FAX Americana report. It was declassi- fied by the Douglas Co. I am talking now about activities in recent years, but not necessarily projects for 1970. Mr. McINTYRE. The Senator spoke on the subject of military research in foreign institutions, colleges, and uni- versities. Is that correct? Is that the area the Senator was talking about? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Yes. In part. Mr. McINTYRE. That is a part of the Senator's amendment? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Yes. This is only a part of the purpose of my amendment. Mr. McINTYRE. This is what? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I have been talking primarily about the 16 research centers until now. The work I just listed is done in universities. The one I mentioned a moment ago, "Militant Hindu Nation- alism," is an example of this research. The project started in 1966. It is supposed to run until the year ending 1971. I started this particular passage by re- ferring to Universities and private insti- tutions. We have already covered the think tanks. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will the Senator frosn Arkansasnield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. PROXMIRE. I should like to sun- port the distinguished Senator from Arkansas and nail the attention of the Senate to the difference between the amounts provided for many years to the National Science Foundation on the one hand for this kind of research, and the amounts provided for the Department of Defense. I hold in my hand a table which shows Federal obligations for research, total Defense Department end National Sci- ence Foundation, fiscal years 1956 through 1959, 'which shows, for example. in the latest year, 1909, that the Depart- ment of Defense had $1,658,000,000 for research in these areas and the National Science Foundation had only $280 mil- lion. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Will the Senator say that again, please/ Mr. PROXMIRE. The Department of Defense had, in 1969, $1,058,000,000 as compared to only $280 million for the National Science Fotindation. Mr. FULBRICrHT. For that purpose? Mr. PROXMIRE. For obligations for basic applied research. I think that this makes the case clear. The peoblem is that whereas we have established a Science Foundation for the purpeee of making the inquiries and making this research on a scientific basis, in the interest of science, on behalf of all agencies of Government, we provide the Defense Department with sit to seven times as much as we provide for the National Science Foundation. Mr. McINTYRE. M. President, will the Senator from Arkansas yiebil without los- ing his right to the floor, so that I may ask a question of the Senator from Wisconsin? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield, with that understanding. Mr. McINTYRE. The figures the Sena- tor from Wisconsin has .bist stated, I assume correctly, were about $1.4 billion, in fiscal year 1969, Was it? Mr. PROXMIRE. 11.658 billion. Mr. McINTYVE. The Senator says this was for research and applied, what? Mr. PROXMIRE. .Basic and applied research. Mr. McINTYRE. I want to point out that iii the Department of Defense when research is done, it covers testing and evaluation deaelopment as well as ex- ploratory development, engineering de- velopment, and advance development: It all comes under the broad category of testing and evaluation. Mr. PROXMIRE. Testing and evalu- ation development is not included in this figure. This is inforrnatism which was procured from the Department of De- fense itself, with the clear understanding, expressly on their part, that testing and evaluate:a would not be included. Mr. McIN'eatiE. I hasten to say that something must be wrong with the Sena- tor's figures because fiscal year 19'70 shows a figure for research, so far as the Department of Defense is concerned, of $600 million. It seems hardly likely that Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 19 proved FoKFORGI/E1E2erfiltfinORELORDP-7-10301i614R000300100001-3 S9617 in the last year, fiscal 1969; Department of Defense research, applied or otherwise, as the Senator says, went to a figure of $1,658 million. I think the comparison should be re- search. Mr. PROXMIRE. I have three other tables?the second category of Federal obligations and for basic research alone?total Defense and National Sci- ence Foundation. For Defense, $320 mil- lion; for National Science Foundation, $274 million. Again Defense had more, not so disproportionate but substantially more for basic requirements than the Na- tional Science Foundation had. The third table shows Federal obliga- tions for research by agency and per- former. Total Defense and National Sci- ence Foundation. This includes univer- sities and colleges. It includes FFRDS, administration by universities and col- leges that are administered by nonprofit foundations. It shows in every category that the Department of Defense had sub- stantially more than the National Sci- ence Foundation. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, will the Senator from Arkansas yield to me, so that I may be permitted to ask a ques- tion of the Senator from Wisconsin? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. MURPHY. It is my understanding that the National Science Foundation reaches out into all areas of science where research and development is being car- ried on, keeps current on all of these matters and brings them together. It makes studies but is not involved to the same degree as is the Department of De- fense in research and development on particular, or exact systems, let us say, that they believe they need. Mr. PROXMIRE. May I say to the dis- tinguished Senator from California that what I am talking about here is the fact that the National Science Foundation would not itself engage in this research, but would commission universities and nonprofit institutions to do it. The Sen- ator knows that in California, Wisconsin, and most States the National Science Foundation has such programs. Mr. MURPHY. I was merely attempt- ing to point out that the need and condi- tions under which the Department of Defense operates I do not think would be similar to those under which the Na- tional Science Foundation operates, which might very well be a proper re- flection of the difference in the amounts of money needed or provided. It is a case of comparing apples and oranges again. Mr. PROXMIRE. With regard to non- profit institutions, the National Science Foundation was funded only $244,000 last year, as compared with $26,886,000 for the Department of Defense. So here is a discrepancy of more than 100 to 1? $26,886,000 for the Department of De- fense as compared with $244,000 for the National Science Foundation. Mr. MURPHY. Here again an entirely different game is going on. I expect to- morrow to make extended remarks on some of the nonprofit foundations, the reasons for their existence, their objec- tives, the way they operate. We have a couple of them in my State, and over the years I have had the good fortune to go to them and watch their operations and learn what they are doing. I think there is a reason for that great difference. I thank the Senator for yielding. Mr. PROXMIRE. I thank the distin- guished Senator from California. Mr. President, I conclude by saying that tables 4, 5, and 6 bear out in detail and document the point the Senator made. I ask unanimous consent that, at the end of the remarks of the distinguished Senator from Arkansas, the tables may be inserted in the RECORD. The PRESIDING OrrICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. (See exhibit 1.) Mr. PASTORE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. PASTORE. We have just conclud- ed hearings on the National Science Foundation for this year. The Founda- tion is asking for $500 million. The House cut that amount considerably. The Foundation is asking for a restora- tion of the amount cut. I would hope in the development tomorrow the fact as to whether there is any duplication here could be brought out. Is the Senator from Wisconsin intimating that possibly the Department of Defense is duplicating what the National Science Foundation is doing? Mr. PROXMIRE. No. I appreciate the statement of the Senator from Rhode Island. I am trying to point out the dis- proportion between the amount that the Federal Government provides the Na- tional Science Foundation and the much greater amount it provides the Depart- ment of Defense for research. I do not contend there is any duplication. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I want to take up the point raised by the Senator from New Hampshire about this particular project, how it was obsolete or out of date. Let me read the descrip- tion. The description is: Provide empirically derived conclusions about ideological movements which support insurgency. It started in fiscal 1966 and is to end in 1971. So it is not an obsolete project. That project is called "Ideology and Behavior." There are the subtitles which I read. I think there were five of them. One of them I particularly mentioned dealt with Ataturk. The University of Massachu- setts is in charge of it. It is called "Religion and Revolution: A Study in Comparative Politics and Religion, Tech- nical Report No. 6, August 3, 1968." That is just 1 year ago. That is the subhead, with the overall project? Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Let me finish it first. It says: Research supported by the advanced Re- search Projects Agency under order No. 883 and monitored by the Office of Naval Re- search, Group Psychology Branch, under contract NONR 3357(08), NR 177-907. That is an example of what I mean when I say how far afield they go. Mr. President, I yield to the distin- guished majority leader with the under- standing that the request he will make will come after this exchange and that I do not lose the floor. AMENDMENT OF HIGHER EDUCA- TION ACT OF 1956?UNANIMOUS- CONSENT AGR EMENT Mr. MANSFIEL I. Mr. President, there seems to be some nterest in the bill (S. 2721) to amend he Higher Education Act of 1965 to a horize Federal incen- tive payments to lenders with respect to insured student loans when necessary In the light of onomic conditions, in order to assure hat students will have reasonable acct- . to such loans for fi- nancing their ed cation. After discussi g this matter with the most interested people, I think, I ask unanimous con nt that, at the conclu- sion of the pra er tomorrow?and the Senate will cony ne at 10 o'clock tomor- row morning?ti ere be a time limitation of 1 hour on th banking amendment to be offered by t distinguished Senator from Colorado Mr. Dommicx). Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, may I identify it? Mr. MANSFI a; D. Yes. Mr. JAVITS. The amendment deals with section 2(a (6) of the bill, appear- ing on page 7, toes 11 through 17 in- clusive. Mr. MANSF LD. I ask unanimous consent that th e be a limitation of 1 hour on that am ndment, the time to be equally divided tween the majority and minority leaders, or whomever they may designate; one alf hour on other amendments, an 1 hour on the bill. Mr. FULBRIG T. Mr. President, re- serving the righ to object, earlier in the day I was 1 armed that the Sena- tor from Oregon I r. HATFIELD) wanted to speak. Has thi request been cleared with the Senator rom Oregon? Mr. PROXMIR a If the Senator will yield, it was cleare en with him. Mr. FULBRIGH The Senator from Wisconsin or ,somec e else told me he wanted to speak in t morning. We were negotiating whethe I was going to speak or whether he was today. Mr. DIRKSEN. M President, there was no order. Mr. FULBRIGHT. raised this ques- tion because he discus d it with me. He did not delegate me ti speak for him, although I thought to was owed that courtesy. Mr. PROXMIRE. M. President, the Senator from Oregon e pected to speak. He had a speech on pe e through law, which relates directly a the bill, but I am quite sure he will b: willing to speak directly after the vote. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I does not make any difference to me. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. resident, reserv- ing the right to objec and I do not object?let me ask the enator from Ar- kansas if we can ha e an agreement now on a limitation o time with refer- ence to his amendment. Would the Sen- ator now entertain a u animous-consent request along that line? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Not until I finish my speech. I should have been through long before this. We passed three bills. Perhaps I should not yield so readily. I azte_IL, Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9618 Approved For Rtemmigigh qmsniacksweppo3oo 0000tA3ugust 11, 1969 am too easy. I have not got through my speech and it is not a long one, only 20 pages. I could have finished it in 80 minutes if I had not been interrupted. The chairman of the Finance Committee interrupted me, and now there is this re- quest, and there were two others. When I finish I shall be glad to talk. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to the unanimous-consent re- quest of the majority leader? Without ob- jection, the order is entered. The unanimous-consent agreement, re- duced to writing, is as follows: Ordered, That, immediately after approval of the Journal on Tuesday, August 12, 1969. the Senate shall proceed to the consideration of the bill (S. 2721) to amend the Higher Educaiton Act of 1965 to authorize Federal incentive payments to lenders with respect to insured student loans When necessary, in the light of economic conditions, in order to assure that students will have reasonable ac- cess to such lonas for financing their educa- tion, and that debate on the amendment to be proposed by the Senator from Colorado (Mr. Domtrucx) to Section 2 (a) (6) , on page 7, beginning with line 11, shall be limited to one hour, to be equally divided and con- trolled by the majority and the minority leaders. Provided further, That debate on all other amendments shall be limited to 1/2 hour, to be equally divided and controlled by the pro- ponent of the amendment and the manager of the bill, or someone designated by him. Ordered further, That debate on the bill shall be limited to one hour, to be equally divided and eontrod by the majority and minority leaders. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- priations during the fiseal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and to authorize the construction of test fa- cilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, with- out interruption, I woad like to finish my speech. The Attaturk study is a fas- cinating one. I want to read some of the Attaturk study. This is the efficial sum- mary: SUMMARY The Turkish Revolution led by Ataturk can be divided into two phases. During the first stage that began with Kemal's arrival in Anatolia in May 1919, religion and nation- alism combined to provide the fervor and elan for a successful war of independence. The sovereignty of the Turkish nation was secured against foreign enemies and their domestic collaborators, and in October 1923 the Turkish republic was formally pro- claimed. The second phase of this revolu- tionary upheaval lasted until Kernal's death In 1938 and involved a series of far-reaching political, legal and social reforms aimed at achieving the Westernization of Turkey. This program of radical reform deprived Islam of its political role and resulted in the construc- tion and consolidation of a secular Turkish state. Both phases of this revolution had roots in the Ottoman period; in some ways the revolution of Ataturk was the cuhnina- tion of a process of gradual reform that had begun well over one hundred years before the collapse of the Ottoman empire. ABSTRACT Beginning with a brief discussion of the decline and fall of the Ottoman Empire, the report analyzes the interplay between Ata- turk and the forces of religious traditional- ism in the Turkish revolution. Special at- tention is given to the role of religion in the struggle for national sovereignty that ended in 1923. The report concludes with a brief discussion of the position of Islam in con- temporary Turkish society. That is a current study, as current as any of them can be. It is a part of an ongoing project called "Ideology and Behavior." This may be perfectly proper for the Union Theological Seminary, but I say it has no place in a defense-supported research project, which taxpayers pay for, usually at three times the amount it could be done for at Harvard, Yale, or the University of Arkansas. I think it is nonsense, frankly. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? - Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. McINTYRE. All these programs seem to begin in fiscal year 1966 and terminate either in 1970 or 1971. Mr. FLTLBRIGHT. This particular group does. Mr. McINTYRE. The group the Sen- ator has mentioned. Mr. FULBRIGHT. That is right. Mr. McINTYRE. He says they are current. I say we are here considering the fiscal year 1970 budget. It is also very difficult for me to know in what area of the social behavioral science research field he is involved, but I assume it must be policy planning. I have to take a wild guess at that. All he would say is, this includes your FCRC's and your univer- sities. The first thing I wish to point out is that what I was concerned with on the committee was the amount of programs and projects we have in effect during fiscal 1970 programs and projects that we are initiating and have underway. For the Senator's information, we took $700,000 out of their $6.4 Million request. We cut this budget 11 percent. The Sen- ator's amendment, as I understand, pro- poses a cut of some $3 million. This, as far as I can see, after a pro- gram has been as well scrubbed down as this one, would be so devastating as to bring it practically to a point of ces- sation. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Programs of this kind ought to be ceased. That is the point I am making. I am not saying, "let us dispense with half of these." I have not read all of them, but I shall put the list in the RECORD at the conclusion of my remarks. They are descriptions of projects, and they ought to be ceased as a function of the Defense Department. Mr. McINTYRE. What the Senator has done, of course, is pick out four or five, talking about Ataturk and Turkey, or some other things that had fancy names. Mr. FULBRIGHT. No, those five are in one project. Mr. McINTYRE. If the Senator will allow me to respond- Mr. FULBRIGHT. Certainly. Mr. McINTYRE. What he is doing is picking out four or five programs, sin- gling them out for attention, and trying to cast innuendos about this very im- portant part of the Defense Establish- ment. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I certainly did not intend any innuendo. I intended to make a direct, at statement that this is unjustified, unrelated, end ought to be stopped, as far as the Defense Depart- ment is concerned. What is the innuendo about that? Mr. McINTYRE. The innuendo is that the Senator is going to put in the RECORD the list of the rest of the programs, but he is not going to read them out here. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I will read them all, if the Senator prefers. Mr. McINTYRE. I am ready to listen to them. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator is? Mr. McINTYRE. Yes. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Nobody else is. It will take a while to read them. Mr. McINTYRE. We have heard about Ataturk. What else does the Senator have? Mr. HART. Mr. President, will the Sen- ator yield at that point? Mr. FULBRIGHT. Yes, I am happy to Yield. Mr. HART. I ask the Senator from New Hampshire, why should we get the last chapter on Ataturk? Why do we not stop where we are? Mr. McINTYRE. I think the simple reason is that the vastness of this pro- gram of research gets to the point where, If we are not on the subcommittee which is looking into the matter, we do not have time to sit down and have the definitive story told us on every one of these pro- grams. Is it all right for the Senator to come in and say, "Let us cut them all out?" Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator is quite correct, and that is why I say he certainly should not take this as a criticism, at all. Mr. McINTYRE. I do not. Mr. FULBRIGHT. He certainly does not have time to look into these. These are activities that have no business being before the Committee on Armed Services. Nobody in the Committee on Armed Serv- ices has ever taken the time to look into them. Neither has the Bureau of the Budget. I asked Mr. Schultze, the Direc- tor of the Budget, whether he had looked over these projects. He said, "No." This was when he was the Director, last year. I asked him in open session, before the Committee on Finance, and that is what he told us. If the Senator would like, I will read a few more. Mr. McINTYRE. I think the Senator should read a few more. I do not know what he is talking about. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me at that point? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. SYMINGTON. First, Mr. Presi- dent, I commend the able Senator from New Hampshire for the superb work he did as chairman of the subcommittee, Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 ppe Fc9511Zrefargy6R4A114%CogkerREWEIMIW4R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969Arovd S9619 this year. I mean that with great sin- cerity. His subcommittee's effort and the report by the distinguished junior Sena- tor from Nevada on technical airpower probably represent the finest work that has been done by this committee in a long time. As I remember it, as a result of the work that was done by the able Senator from New Hampshire, in the taxpayers' Interest, he has cut this budget by about $1 billion; is that not correct? Mr. McINTYRE. That is correct; and on this particular program we have Cut it back 11 percent. Mr. SYMINGTON. As I understand it, What the Senator from Arkansas is saying, after his investigation, is that he would like to take an additional $45 million of this total budget, roughly; is that correct? Mr. FULBRIGHT. That is correct. Spread over the various items. I stated it precisely in my opening comments. Mr. SYMINGTON. So, therefore, what he is asking to take out of the research and development budget, after his study, is much less than one-half of 1 percent of what the able Senator from New Hampshire thought could be taken out, without affecting our national security. I only mention that because I, too, was interested, a couple of years ago, in some of these problems. I believe they came up in a hearing of the Appropria- tions Committee, where there was a question about a considerable amount of money that was spent on a study of women divers in Korea. I questioned it, if the Senator remembers, and we were Investigating why they did it. It turned out there was a pretty good reason: they dive in colder waters than divers in any other part of the world when they dive, I believe, for pearls. I have not been present for most of this debate, but I think the Senator from New Hampshire has done a superb job in saving a billion dollars. We have been looking at these social sciences for a long time. If the Senator from Arkansas thinks he can add $45 million to that $1 billion, I would hope, the facts could be dealt with on their merits, and not through any impingement on an already superb accomplishment. Mr. McINTYRE. The difficulty is that the Senator from Arkansas comes in with some of these choice ones. All of a sud- den, somebody asks, "Why are we study- ing why South Korean women can dive In cold water?" The reason we studied this was because it apparently had little effect on their hearing. The actual facts support the study, but the question itself casts asper- sions on all the rest of the program. The committee on which the Senator from Missouri serves, as he knows, cut $700,000 out of this $6.4 million, and brought it down to $5.7 million. On top of that, the amendment of the Senator from Arkansas requests that we go fur- ther, and cut out another $3 million, bringing it down to $2.7 million. That is much too drastic, particularly in the face of the hard look we took at it. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, it de- pends on whether it is justified. If it is a big program that was proliferated without attention from anyone, then it ought to take a hard look. Let me point out that this is not new with me. A year ago when the bill was being considered, I raised the question on the floor with the Senator from Missis- sippi. The Senator from Mississippi will re- call that we discussed the matter. And he said that he was going to look into it and have a study made. I congratulate him because he did so. All I say now is that I do not think it went far enough, in view of all of the overall circumstances of the government and the nature of the studies and the fact that the studies have no relevance whatever to military respon- sibility. That to me is the determining thing. I do not actually believe that any- one at this late date should be spending much money on looking into Attaturk's experience. This has been studied from A to Z. Everyone knows about it. The Senator said this is a peculiar one. I do not see the relevance of the "Sin- halese Buddhism Revolution of Ceylon", which is part of the same project. It seems to me unrelated to military function. Mr. McINTYRE. Is that part of it? Mr. FULBRIGHT. This is one of the flye parts of the "Ideology and Behavior" study. If the Senator wants a different one, here is "Changing Roles of the Military in Developing Nations." This is a completely different project. The contractor here is CRESS, which is the research center associated with American UniversitSi. This one is dated February. 1969. That is about as late as we can have. It is entitled "The Chinese Warload System: 1916 to 1928. The author is Hsi-hseng Chi, assistant professor of political science at the Uni- versity of North Carolina. I will not read all of this just the foreword: FOREWORD This study was conducted under a pro- gram designed to encourage university in- terest in basic research in social science fields related to the responsibilities of the U.S. Army. The program is conducted under contract by The American University's Cen- ter for Research in Social Systems (CRESS), and CRESS in turn has entered into subcon- tracts supporting basic research in a num- ber of major universities having a marked interest in one or more of these research fields. The research program was formulated by CRESS in terms of broad subject areas within which research would be supported, with the scholars themselves selecting specific topics and research design and utilizing informa- tion normally available to academic and pri- vate individuals. Under the terms of the sub- contract the authors are free to publish in- dependently the results of such research. In this study Hsi-sheng Chi describes the military aspects of the political contest for control of the central government in the con- text of the disorganized sociopolitical struc- ture of China from 1916 to 1928. It was pre- pared at the University of Chicago's Center for Social Organization Studies under the supervision of Professor Morris Janowitz, principal social scientist for research con- ducted under subcontract between CRESS and the university. The report is a useful corrective to the popular image of the Chinese warlords dur- ing this period of their greatest activity. The study points out that the warlords were not merely military men exploiting China's con-- dition for private gain in their various do- mains, nor were they seeking to destroy or replace the central government in the classic pattern under which many Chinese dynas- ties have historically emerged. To keep his study focused on the theme of the warlord system, the author chose not to deal with the activities of the incipient Chi- nese Communist Party during the 1916- 1938 period. I submit that kind of activity is unre- lated to the Department of Defense. It is a kind of good will offering to various universities. I suppose, of course, that they would be appreciative of the De- partment of Defense and its good judg- ment. That, as I say, is a different one. I have a lot of them. I do not think the Senator is interested in my reading them all. The Senator will remember that my point is that these are not military- related investigations. They have noth- ing to do with the responsibility of the Department of Defense, so far as I am able to see. I have not read all of the summaries. Here is a long one in that same project on "Gandhi, Nonviolence and the Strug- gle for Indian Independence." It is a very interesting subject, but it has noth- ing to do, in my opinion, with the mili- tary department. And that is true of most of these. I have a great variety of them here. I will have them printed in the RECORD at the conclusion of My remarks for peo- ple to read and determine their rele- vance to military responsibility. I point out that I hope the Senator from New Hampshire does not take any of this as a reflection upon him or his case. This has grown up over the past 25 years, just as a lot of this has, without any supervision. This is not the respon- sibility of the Senator from New Hamp- shire or of anyone else in particular. It grew like Topsy. They had the money. There was a period during which we were so rich that we thought we could afford anything, I confess to being a party to the dis- tortion of our priorities. However, I now think that influence of the military in our Government has gone beyond all reason. The Senator says that they cut this 11 percent. Is it not a fact that the budget had been increased over the past year's program by 5 percent? Mr. McINTYRE. It was reduced by $500,000. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Under what figure? Mr. McINTYRE. In the policy plans, $6.9 million. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I think for the last 2 preceding years the budget request at least had been increased. I am interested in an exchange pro- gram. It has been cut 67 percent in West- ern Europe. It has been practically eliminated. It was only $56 million. And then it was $46 million. It is now $31 million. It is practically nothing. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 ziugust 11, 1969 S 9620 Approved For ReigONCARVIAPALC*EWRIELOWROM300100001-3 But Department of Defense programs appropriations he may have approved that budgeted expenditures for that fiscal have gotten so big that they juggle in an authorization bill. That will get to year be reduced by, I think, $6 billion. around sums of $700 million or $500 mil- the heart of the matter. It is the best way At that thne, the report of the Committee lion just as if it were a pittance to have it properly considered. on Armed. Services accompanying the Our Government loses its sense of per- I urge the Senator to consider the pro- authorization bill reminded us that the spective on military programs. posal seriously. I am satisfied that our Department of Defense had to share the All I am trying to do is to bring this committee will not be able fully to satisfy burden of disciplining itself with respect back into perspective. One way is to dis- the viewpoint of the Senator from to expenditures. associate the Defense Department from Arkansas. I say that with all deference I recall sitting in the Chamber. The sociological and ideological studies. They to him, but here is a chance, really, to Senate had just acted as I recall on an have nothing to do with it. satisfy him with respect to items that re- agriculture bill to which a number of us We could not do anything about the late to the State Department, had sought to attach some money to feed ABM, which we all grant to be defective, Mr. FULBRIGHT. I appreciate the children during the summer, when but it is at least a military program. Senator's comments, schools were closed but stomachs still These programs are not even military. First, I may say that a number of these functioned. Mr. McINTYRE, Mr. President, will I do not think should be transferred any- Leafing through the report of this the Senator from Arkansas yield, so that where, if they are to be done at all. If committee, a year ago in April, to the I may answer his question? they have any validity, they would be caption "Research, Development, Test, Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield to the Sena- done by places such as Columbia, Har- and Evaluation," we discovered that there tor from New Hampshire. yard, and so forth. They have nothing to was not any disciplining of the Pentagon Mr. McINTYRE. In fiscal 1969, the do with the State Department or the De- on research and development proposed amount was $6.9 million. This was re- fense Department. But since we are talk- last year; rather, they proposed to in- duced to $6.41 million for fiscal year 1970. ing about a particular bill?well, I have crease it some $750 million, to close to As I have said, that amount has already described them as best I can. I do not a total of $8 billion, been reduced by the committee some see why there is any need for the State I recall asking the able Senator from $500,000, to make the amount about $5.9 Department to pay money for research MississippL who was handling the bill, million. involving Attaturk government; I really why the increase. He said, "Well, some of Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator is talk- do not, it was bookkeeping adjustment." The ing about two categories. Mr. STENNIS. I see that. actual increase proposed to be authorized Mr. McINTYRE. I am talking about Mr. FULBRIGHT. I do not think that was only $508 million, policy planning studies. I am trying to is valid. Mr. FULBRIGHT. A pittance. keep the Senator in one Avenue without I certainly will take under considera- Mr. HART. I offered an amendment at going to others, tion the suggestion of the Senator from that time to hold the research and devel- Mr. FULBRIGHT. My bill relates to the Mississippi. I think he genuinely would opment figure at the then current level, total for 1970. In the total of the items like to see this reform. Last year he told which was somewhere between $7 and for social and behavioral sciences and re- me that he would. I sense that he is $8 billion. I am not sure precisely where search studies there was an increase, sympathetic to the objective. Of course, I it was. But the point I make is that we do not realize that once these things become im- The Senate?this indicates how far we want to go off on the assumption that bedded in a great program, it is not easy have come?discussed that amendment we are dealing only with a slight cut in to get them out. It is very difficult, hi- for perhaps a couple of hours. I doubt that it was any longer. The Senator from a perfectly valid program. I am actually deed. raising a question as to the justification Mr. HART. Mr. President, will the Sen- Arkansas expressed a concern; others for practically all of this program. I ator yield? did. On a rollcall, the Senate rejected should like to have gone further than I Mr. FULBRIGHT. We are dealing with that amendment by three votes. So last did, but I comprised MY Principles in such vast sums when we get into the year we were not able to hold the De- the hope that I could get something done Pentagon and this appropriation, com- fense Department to the then level of toward redirecting the research activi- pared with all the others, that it is hard research and development spending au- ties of the Defense Department to de- to get back a sense of perspective. thorized. fense matters and taking it out of un- We voted, a moment ago, $75 million How far have we come? This year? related matters, just for what in political terms they call and this goes to the contribution that the Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the a slush fund, for no certain purpose; just Senator from New Hampshire has Senator yield? a contingency fund. But the $31 million made?the Committee on Armed Services Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield to the chair.. I mentioned a moment ago is for a pro- itself has recommended a reduction of man of the committee, gram that has been going on 20 years, for more than a billion dollars in research Mr. STENNIS. I appreciate the Sena- 41 countries; and the cutback imposed and development. That is progress in tor's concern about this subject. I have means the death of about half of those anybody's book. already stated that our report suggests programs. Mr. FULBRIGIIT. It certainly is. that we are going to undertake to trans- I yield to the Senator from Michigan. Mr. HART. And it is largely a reflec- fer many of these items next year. In all Mr. HART, Mr. President, I am sorry tion of the leadership of the Sen- sincerity, I propose to the Senator that that the able chairman of the Committee ator from New Hampshire took to try he go through the hearings and pick out on Armed Services temporarily has had to get hold of this massive, surging?I the items that he thinks should not be to leave the Chamber, guess that is a good way to describe in the military section, and then of that Mr. FULBRIGHT. He said he had a seven and a half billion dollars that is group pick out the ones he thinks should telephone call, running around the country for research come under the DepartMent of State. If Mr. HART. But while the Senator from purposes?area. He has done, indeed, a he will then join in an amendment taking New Hampshire is in the Chamber, per- magnificent job. them out of this bill, and if an authori- mit me to make a comment that rein- Mr. FULBRIGHT. I agree with the zation bill is required, he will have time forces the Senator from Arkansas' ex- Senator. in the Committee on Foreign Relations to pression of appreciation to the Senator Mr. HART. He is able to cut a billion hold hearings and purify the whole at- from New Hampshire which he voiced a dollars where the Senate itself last year mosphere. He can throw out the ones few minutes ago, would nOt support our effort to maintain he does not want in this bill and then To get this matter into perspective to the then level. submit a definite report recommending figure out where we are and how far we So, first, we should understand the an authorization. have _come, and then to take up the progress that has been made. I am think- Supplemental appropriation bills are problem of how much further we have ing about the ABM vote, comparing it coming along all the time. It is my privi- yet to go, I turn our minds back more with the vote a year ago on research and lege to be a member of the Committee on than a year ago to the day when this development, which we lost by three Appropriations. I will guarantee the Sen- bill was before the Senate in 1968. It votes. Even-Steven a few days ago on ator that I will fight to place in one of was in April of 1968. The Senate had just ABM. These defeats nonetheless have the supplemental appropriation bills any enacted the surtax, with its direction their long-term purpose. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969N3Proved FCCREORE659181141/A1/3110EUALSIBP nettliTir4 R000300100001-3 1. "Institutional Obstacles to Industrial Development in Peru" 2. "Peruvian Managers Opinions on Prob- lems of Industrialization" 3. "Some Advantages and Disadvantages of Small Scale Industry in a Highly Indus- trialized Economy" 4. "The Decline in Paternalism Among Pe- ruvian and Japanese Laborers" 5. "Mutual Obligations Between Manage- meneand Workers in Peru" 6. "Some Organizational Adaptations to Labor Problems in Peru" With respect to Peru it was no more than a couple of months ago, I believe, that the Peruvian Government invited our representatives to leave the coun- try. Senators will recall the furor in Chile in connection with Camelot. I believe believe these activities contributed to the deterioration of our relations with these countries. These studies may have some intellectual value. I doubt that they are relevant to anything. We know that in Peru our relations recently hit an all- time low. Certainly research activities like this do not help the situation. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. McINTYRE. That is an excellent study that the State Department might be interested in. It was in the area the chairman said he would like to transfer many of these programs. It might do the State Department good. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I do not know what they have relevance to. I do not know what use the State Department would have of it, outside of a scholar writing a thesis for a Ph. D. Anything can have relevance to that. After receiving a vast number of these completed research reports, I asked the Department of Defense to tell me how much each cost. After a month and a half of deliberation, the Department, in a letter of July 24 from Dr. Foster, fi- nally told me that it did not know. Any effort to isolate a cost figure for a given report would be arbitrary and probably would not represent the actual costs in- volved? Dr. Foster's letter said, adding? nor would a Cost estimate represent a measure of the payoffs from the research. I can well understand the Depart- ment's reluctance to put a price tag on, or try to assess the military benefits of, a report like "The Attaturk Revolution in Turkey." How can the Senate, or the public, be expected to assess the value of this research when neither we nor the Department of Defense knows how much it costs? I ask unanimous consent to have the letter printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: Back to research and development: What is wrong with the effort now being made by the Senator from Arkansas, if in fact we can spot additional research and development which appropriately should not be charged to the Defense Department? An argument can be made as to whether somebody else should get the final chapter on Ataturk's govern- ment, not the Department of Defense. Why, if we can highlight the remaining research efforts which seem imprudent to authorize, should we not go ahead and do it? It, indeed, will be a very minor addition to the magnificent work of the Senator from New Hampshire, but it nonetheless will be some additional prog- ress. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I think the Senator has put it very well. I have said time and again that I do not mean any criticism of the Senator from New Hampshire? and the Senator from Mississippi, also. Last year when I raised this matter? I confess that it was the first time I raised it?the Senator from Mississippi said, "I am going to look into it and make an effort." He did look into it. And he, with the Senator from New Hamp- shire, made a good effort. I am trying to go further than that. Of course, we want to save the money, but I feel that to go into this area, for the military to do so, gives a wrong di- rection to our life. It gives a wrong im- pression to our university people, to our young people, and to other people of the militarization of the life of this coun- try. The Senator from Mississippi made a very moving statement this morning about our security. I do not disagree with him about se- curity. I only state that there is a lot more to security than simply military hardware. The health of our internal educational system, the health of our in- ternal social system in all its aspects, our economy, all of it, are a part of it. A strong security stance cannot be main- tained if justice is not done to the rest of our society. It is one entire ball of wax. It is not only defense. I think we have gone so far because of these recurrent crises in the foreign field involving mili- tary action that we have gotten our sense ? of perspective a little out of focus. Here is one aspect of it that I do not think for a moment would harm our de- fense posture. I do not think the projects we have studied add one iota to the de- fense of this country. I think that is wrong. I have said I have been guilty in the past of taking the attitude that our col- leges and universities have been starved and needed to get money for the vast number of new students; that if the only way they could get it would be to take a handout from the Pentagon I would not complain too much. I have always sup- ported Federal aid to education. However, I have come to reconsider that approach for a variety of reasons. One of the main reasons is to get away from this attitude that the military has an undue influence in our universities. I have told about the visit of the students from MIT. Senators know about the riots. One aspect has been the fear on the part of students that the military dominated our society. I realize that the war has contributed to the situation. This is only one little segment of Defense activities I am talking about. It is not much we are asking. As the Senator from Michigan said, "You have done a good job, but I think you can go further in these restricted areas." The amount is small. I hesitate when we deal with big sums. I feel I am nit-picking when I ask for a cut of $45 million. On the other hand, the Senator from South Dakota and I would love to pick up $5 or $10 million to keep the exchange program alive. In that context it is a lot of money. To con- template you could get that amount here for that program is beyond anyone's dream. Forty-five million dollars is a large sum of money, except with respect to the Pentagon, there it seems small. I suppose people think I am nit-picking to save $45 million. But in addition to that I would like to get the Pentagon out of the business of subsidizing our liberal arts institutions. I used to think it would be a good idea because they were so poor they could use some help from the Defense Department. However, I feel the military has become too powerful in our entire society. I am not trying to engage in commer- cialism, but I picked up Look magazine this week and most of it is devoted to the subject. I would like to make a small contribu- tion toward the rehabilitation of this country, and of returning to a humane society where the military has a place? but not the dominant place?in the Government. I think this research program is an important area because much of it is in the academic field. What we do on pro- grams like this will have much to do with the attitudes of this and future generations. That is the best explanation I can give. Under the leadership of the Senator from New Hampshire we have made progress and I think we can make more progress. I shall complete this part of my speech and insert in the RECORD the remainder of these projects. I might mention a few others in case anyone thinks that is the only one I have. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. McINTYRE. Regarding the $700,- 000 cut that the committee recommended in this area against the $6.4 billion re- quest, is it not possible that all those horrible examples may be the ones to go under the knife that the Department of Defense will cut out? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I hope so. I will describe a few of the others. Another project, entitled "Social Change as a Result of Modernization," was designed, the description stated: To determine most effective uses of DOD aid to developing nations so that conflict between traditional cultural values and pres- sures toward modernization are minimized. The completed reports on this project are entitled: S9621 ? DIRECTOR OF DEFENSE RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING, Washington, D.C., July 24, 1969. Hon. J. W. FULBRIGHT, Chairman, Committee on Forcign Relations, U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. DEAR MR. CHAIRMAN: This letter is in re- sponse to your request of June 10, 1969, for the costs of the individual research re- ports sent to you on 4 June 1969. The reports which you received were pro- duced. from projects designed to provide a number of outputs of significance to DoD Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9622 Approved For RidoNtRigifraRE qactm3113virom?300100001-3 August 11, 1969 including: (1) a variety of technical reports and papers, in addition to-ft major final re- port covering the research and .5tudies under- taken; (2) interchange between DoD officials and technical personnel in a pssition to lend an outside perspective to DoD problems; and (3) continued development of research re- sults and capabilities relevant to DOD responsibilities. Funding of these proj- ects is based on a total project cost, Nvith such multiple outputs andel; .ted. Any ef- fort to isolate a cost figure for a given re- port would be arbitrary and Iobably would not represent the actual oasts involved. Nor would such a cost estimate represent a meas- ure of the payoffs from the re--arch. In the case of projects net yet completed and for which only interim rep)rts are avail- able, significant results can he expected in the future. /n the case of completed projects, the final report represents only a portion of the total output. For example, in one project funded over a period of 9 ye ,rs, a total of 29 technical reports, 12 Sffientific journal publications, and significant o .1tributions to a book were produced in additi ai to the final report which you received. The total funding to date I the projects represented by the reports you requested was $11,530,408, covering a period i,f more than 15 years. If you desire any further clarification on this matter, please let me know. Sincerely, 0. L. TUCKER. (For John S Faster, Jr.) Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, the proliferation of Defense-aruported re- search in foreign areas is f lustrated by what has taken place in Tleiland. The research bibliography for 7, giland is 63 pages long and lists 500 -parate re- ports. Much of this research was really foreign aid and should have been charged as such. The Genei Al Account- ing Office recently found th,t in a coun- try in South Asia, whose no ete I cannot use because of the security classification put on by the Defense Department, the Department had undertakee to spend $4.2 million an nine social cience re- search projects which the Cle0 believes should have been charged deainst for- eign aid. I do not believe that the De- partment of Defense should dispense foreign aid through a researeh program. Mr. McINTYRE. Is not flue Senator talking about some past histely? Are not these programs which were e ears ago? Mr. FULBRIGHT. There i no way for me to foresee the future. All I can talk about is past history and what has been done. If I were a prophet and could tell the Senator what is going to happett next year, I would talk about it but the Senator knows I can talk about only that which has happened. Mr. McINTYRE. The Sen: l tor is talk- ing in a foreign area, regarding security. This area is less than a $1 million figure. There is also less than a $1 million figure for Korea and Thailand. That is for fiscal 1970. What the Senator is talking about happened a year or two ago. Mr. PIILBRIGHT. I have a list in my hand right now. I am glad to show it to the Senator. It is secret. it concerns Project Agile. If the Senator will come over here, I can show it to him because it is against the law for me to read it into the record. It is a research project. ISM not at liberty to talk about it, Mr. McINTYRE. Not the Agile Pro- gram. Mr. FULBRIGHT. It is a current Pro- gram. It is not past history. Here it is. Mr. McINTYRE. The Agile program is a counterinsurgency study. Mr. FULBRIGHT. It is Galled that. The GAO, as I told the Senator, says it looks like foreign aid. We can make a play on the words about it. If it were actually foreign aid?and that is what it is, at least the GAO thinks it is, and it strikes me that way too. Mr. McINTYRE. If the funds are cut, this program will have to bear the brunt of that cut. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I am glad to hear that, but if the Senator wishes to look at this specific thing I am questioning, it is right here. It is secret. It tells the situation and some of the things that we cannot mention the precise name of. I can assure the Senator that this is not dreamed up. As to the statement about Thailand, the Senator does not question that, I believe. In the next fiscal year the Department of Defense proposes to spend $7,547,000 on research about foreign areas. Yet only $125,000 is budgeted for external research by the agency responsible for our Nation's foreign affairs, the Depart- ment of State. The entire budget for the State Department's Bureau of In- telligence and Research is only two- thirds the $6.2 million budgeted by the Defense Department for foreign policy research. It is obvious that the Depart- ment of Defense is involved in many re- search activities simply because it, and not the Federal agency with proper ju- risdiction, has the money available. Al- though the Armed Services Committee has recommended that -efforts be made to transfer some of this research to other agencies, particularly the Department of State, I believe it will find that much of this work is of no interest to other agencies when they must foot the bill. Another aspect of the military research program which merits a drastic reduc- tion is research carried out by foreign institutions, primarily colleges and uni- versities. According to the Defense De- partment, 440 research projects are now underway in 44 foreign countries throughout the non-Communist world The sum of $5.7 million is budgeted for foreign research in 1970 and a staff of 100 Defense Department employees is stationed abroad just to look after the program. There is trouble aplenty over military research being carried out in no need to ask for the same kind of trouble in e4 other countries. A com- pelling need in our foreign affairs today is to make the American presence our oedadulceasstionvisaiblline;swtiteudtioonnostandnothepriish e is that by linking foreign universities to our Military Establishment, Finally, I wish to mention a specific aspect of Defense Department research arrangements with American univer- sities. Of the top 500 defense research contractors, 99 are educational institu- tions and the Defense Department's 1970 budget for university research would be increased by 20 percent over last year, to a total of $306 million. But I wish to discuss only one small part of that ef- fort Project th program to build up the -Science depart- ments, physical and social, of universities around the country which do not now do much research for the military. The budget request for Thernis is $33 million, up 12 percent over 1969, and will support continuation of 92 projects at 52 uni- versities and colleges, Plus allowing initiation of an additional 25 projects. Admiral Rickover, dismissing this pro- ject last year said: Now it seems to be the most farfetched reasoning to conclude that it is the Depart- ment of Defense that must help develop these sciences and train these scientists. The result of a project like Thamis is that there will be university professors who get additional money besides their university salaries? money given them by the Department of De- fense and therefore to some extent beholden to the military. This strikes me as most undesirable. Project Themis could be cut back dras- tically with no ill effects to the Nation's defense posture. The Department of De- fense is not the proper agency to pre- vide Federal aid to education. Mr. President, our constituents are growing increasingly bitter over con- tinued increases in taxes, waste in de- fense spending, and the lack of funds for urgent social needs. We have just passed a bill to extend the 10-percent war tax. I believe that we owe it te the taxpayers to eliminate all unnecessary spending and that these Department of Defense research activities shouki receive the same critical auestioning they would re- ceive if they were being financed by other Government agencies. The committee has recommended 9 n 8- percent cut in the military sciences item, the funding source for meet of the pro- grams I have discussed. This is but a slap on the wrist ancl I think that the circumstances call for a more meaningful reduction in nonessential research activ- ities. I propose that the &nate cut this category by an additional 7 percent to, in effect, impose a 15-percent surtax on these programs, with the cuts to be al- located between the Federal contract research centers, particularly the non- physical science activities of these orga- nizations; other social and behavioral science work; foreign research; and Project Themis. My amendment would also reduce by $5 million the funds for Project Agile, the overseas research which is funded under the "Other equip- ment" category. It cannot be said that the amendment ties the hands of the Defense Depart- ment since each Service Will be left with considerable flexibility to distribute the cutback within these general areas. I might add that, under provisions of this bill, the Department of Defense will still have a $75 million emergency fund to play with, if the Senate's action todayis held up in conference. This is still half again as much as was voted last year. It is time that the Senate took a hard look at what the taxpayers' money is being spent for in the Defense research prograin. This amendment is but a small step?but it is a step In the right direction. Themis, e Department s I urge the Senate to adopt it. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 Approved tivaft-Isassamiti ranconoRBFKIVATs4R000300100001-3 S 9623 Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that an article in the June 27 issue Of the New York Times,-entitled "Think Tank Offers Modified Policy For Viet- nam," to which I referred in my com- ments, be printed in the RECORD: and in addition the summaries of a number of other recent research projects of the type I have been discussing. There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: "THINK TANK" OFFERS MODIFIED POLICY FOR VIETNAM WASHINGTON, June 26?A proposal for a modified strategy in Vietnam, conceived by a "think tank," is circulating at high levels in the Nixon Administration. The authors of the plan, at the Hudson In- stitute in Westchester County, N.Y., are said to maintain that it Could cut American cas- ualties to a handful, make the war "accept- able" in the United States and either in- crease chances for a peace settlement or offer a long-term chance of "winning" the war. The proposal includes a reduction of Amer- ican forces to 100,000 or 200,000 men by the middle of 1971, reliance only on volunteers, extension of the tour of duty to two years for each- soldier and construction of new types of "death-belt barriers" around Saigon and along the Cambodian border to block infiltra- tion. It also calls for new combat tactics. of Saigon. Officials said that the institute's proposal The earth dredged from the canals would had grown out of a series of studies in Viet- form a bank 50 yards high. Two chainlink nam financed by the Defense Department. fences would be built, one on the canal side The principal architect of the new approach of the slope, the other along the top of the is Herman Kahn, a witty, rotund physicist bank. The fax bank of the canal would be who made his reputation as a nuclear-war fortified with barbed wire, minefields and strategist. electronic sensors. Heavy air strikes and ar- BROAD RANGE OF STAFF tillery barrages would be brought down at The Hudson Institute, situated at Croton- any point where an attempt was made to on-Hudson, is a small, independent organi- breach the barrier. zation that makes analytical studies for Gov- ernment departments and private industry. SoCIAL CHANGE AS A RESULT OF MODERNIZATION Its staff includes physicists, economists, so- Description: To determine most effective dal scientists, mathematicians and former uses of DOD aid to developing nations so that members of the diplomatic, intelligence and conflict between traditional cultural values military services, and pressures toward modernization are mm- Administration officials who have attended imized Transfer to non-DOD agency under briefings on the plan in recent weeks at the discussion. Pentagon. The State Department and the Contractor: Kalamazoo College. American Special Forces units in Vietnam conflict between traditional cultural values to build larger units of irregular Montag- and pressures toward modernization are nard tribesmen to roam the desolate bor- minimized. Transfer to non-DOD agency un- der regions of the country, harassing enemy der discussion. troops. At present, the Administration is cut- Contractor: Kalamazoo College. ting down on Special Forces as more and Fiscal Year: Start, 1966; End, 1970. more of the irregular units are turned over Cost: Unknown. to South Vietnamese leadership. SOME ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF The Hudson plan would deemphasize SMALL-SCALE INDUSTRY IN A HIGHLY INDUS- large-unit sweeps through enemy base TRIALIZED ECONOMY camps, substituting many very small patrol (By Stillman Bradfield, Kalamazoo College, actions lasting several days'each. When a pa- and Anibal Del Aguila, Peru-Kalamazoo trol found an enemy force or camp, it would Project, 1967) call in air strikes and artillery fire. Most large South Vietnamese military This work was carried out under financial units would be drawn back toward the pop- support from the Advanced Research Projects ulous coastal plain. There they would pro- Agency, Department of Defense. The contract vide a screen behind which local troops and with Kalamazoo College is administered by much enlarged police force would provide the Group Psychology Branch of the Office of greater security by setting up thousands of night ambush positions to catch enemy guer- rillas and agents trying to slip in or out of the populated regions and to root out the Vietcong's undercover agents in the villages. Mobile reaction forces would be put on call around the clock to reinforce any posi- tion that was attacked by a sizable enemy force. A novel part of the plan. calls for con- struction of two deep fortified canals. One would run along the Cambodian border from the Gulf of Siam to a point west of Saigon where it would veer eastward and connect with a similar canal around the periphery White House say it combine old and ne Ideas in a wide-ranging package that has "considerable appeal." One official said that while is was unlikely the whole package would be carried out, some of the ideas were "being woven into the fabric of our strategy." He declined to say which ones. Reached by telephone today, Mr. Kahn said it would be "inappropriate" for him to discuss the plan. But others who have heard his briefings filled in some details. The Hudson plan would cut the present force of 540,000 American seXvicemen in Vietnam over the next two years to a strength of 100,000 to 200,000. Half of these would form a strategic reserve force of two to three combat divisions that would be pulled back to the coast. It would be available primarily to reinforce South Vietnamese troops if North Vietnam suddenly moved a large new Invasion force into the country. MORE SPECIAL FORCES URGED The rest would be in tactical fighter squad- rons, helicopter companies, long-range artil- lery batteries and logistics units. Their job would be to support the South Vietnamese military units that would take over the principal burden of fighting the war. This breakdown is similar to the concept already tentatively accepted by the Admin- istration in its long-range planning, officials say. But the Hudson plan differs in some de- tails. For example, it would double or triple Naval Research. Abstract The survival of many of the small scale manufacturers in Kalamazoe is explained in terms of the special fiexibilities and oppor- tunities they possess which enable them to isolate themselves from the competition of larger producers, and occupy a special niche in the market. Close, personal contact be- tween the owner-manager of a small manu- facturing plant and his employees, suppliers and customers enable him to give special at- tention when required, and also to be able to obtain good technical advice when needed. Inefficiencies resulting from a lack of spe- cialization of personnel are in part com- pensated for by the costs avoided when the manager fulfills all of these functions him- self. SOCIAL CHANGE AS A RESISLT OF MODERNIZATION Description: To determine most effective uses of DOD aid to developing nations so that conflict between traditional cultural values and pressures toward modernization are minimized. Transfer to non-DOD agency under discussion. Contractor: Kalamazoo College. Fiscal Year: Start, 1966; End, 1970. Cost: Unknown. THE DECLINE IN PATERNALISM AMONG PERUVIAN AND JAPANESE LABORERS (By Stillman Bradfield, Kalamazoo College, 1968) Fiscal Year: Start 1966; end 1970. Cost: Unknown. This work was carried out with financial PERUVIAN MANAGERS' OPINIONS ON PROBLEMS OF support from the Advanced Research Proj- INDUSTRIALIZATION ects Agency and The Wenner-Oren Founda- tion. The Contract with Kalamazoo College (By Stillman Bradfield, Kalamazoo College is administered by the Group Psychology and Anibal Del Aguila Peru-Kalamazoo Branch of the Office of Naval Research. Project, 1967) Abstract Abstract This paper contains a brief analysis of part This study compares questionnaire re- of a questionnaire administered to 100 grad- spouses of Peruvian and Japanese laborers uates of an executive development program with respect to their opinions of their duties in Lima, Peru. They were employed in many to their companies and their companies' ob- different sectors of the economy, and half ligations to them. were at least .part owners of the company Workers in both countries see manage- where they worked. It focusses on managers' meat as obliged to continue employment of opinions as to the major problems they face workers regardless of the economic situation. on their jobs, and their opinions as to the Similarly, workers in both countries expect major obstacles to industrial development in paternalistic treatment by the company Peru. The most important single on-the-job where this is to their economic benefit, in problem they identified was in the area of such areas as recreation, vacation, savings, finance, followed by production and sales, housing, etc. However, Peruvians were gen- In general, they did not perceive accounting, erally more willing to return traditional industrial relations, administration and orga- loyalties to the company than were the nization, or government regulations and con- Japanese. trols, as important problem areas in their In both countries the trend seems to be companies as compared with the first three away from paternalism, especially on work mentioned. A closer examination of the prob- issues. Workers of both countries are willing lems within these areas indicated that they to continue recognizing traditional status felt that most of them were outside their obligations in off-job areas where there are area of control, and most commonly outside no economic costs. Where the costs fall to the influence of the company. the company, paternalistic treatment is still ? favored. Workers in both countries, but more Soma CHANGE AS A RESULT OF MODERNIZATION SO in Peru, are pressing for more participation Description: To determine most effective in the decisions that affect how they carry uses of DOD aid to developing nations so that out their jobs. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9624 Approved For Re43@miligMtgatiCieEatij pp g yit SOCIAL CHANGE AS A RESULT 07 Momatenntemei Description: To determine most effective uses of DOD aid to developing nations so that conflict between traditional cultural values and pressures toward modernization are minimized. Transfer to non-DOD agency under discussion. Contractor: Kalamazoo College. Fiscal Year: Start, 1866; end, 1970. Cost: Unknown SOME ORGANIZATIONAL ADAPTATIONS TO LABOR PROBLEMS IN PERU (By Stillman Bradfield, Kalamazoo College, 1969) This woek was carried out with financial support from the Advanced Research Proj- ects Agency and the Wenner-Gren Founda- tion. The contract with Kalamazoo College is administered by the Group Psychology Branch of the Office of Navel Research. Abstract Owing primarily to rieadities in labor- management relations, a number of Peruvian Industries are moving toward a system of subcontracting for major services. This passes on many of the labor relations headaches to smaller companies, and -leaves the prin- cipal company in a more flexible position, viz a viz changes in market demand for its product. The system also provides advantages for the subcontracting companies and quite possibly for the country as a whole. It pro- vides a mechanism-by whical capital can be attracted into industry, the maximization of managerial resources in tbe country, and the development of new entrepreneurial talent. SOCIAL CHANGE AS A RI'4ULT OF MODERNIZATION- Description: To determine most effective uses of DOD aid to developeag nations so that conflict between traditional cultural values and pressures toward modernization are minimized. Transfer to nee-DOD agency under discussion. Contractor: Kalamazoo Colleen, Fiscal Year: Start, 1966; end, 1970. Coat: Unknown, INSTITUTIONAL OBSTACLES TO INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT IN .PE,tU (By Stillman Bradfield, Anibal Del, Aguila, September 1966 Introduction The Peru-Kalamazoo Projeet is a two-year project doing a comparative study between similar industries producing the same prod- uct, on the same scale, with the same tech- nology in both Peru and in Kalamazoo, Michigan to specify as nearly as poesible the institutional obstacles to inches trial develop- ment in Peru. We will be concerned with the following queetions: (1) To what extent do the ,ea me technol- ogy and scale of operation require the same work organization and behavies in two dif- ferent countries at different stages of development? (2) To what extent are work organization and behavior in industry affected by differ- ent sets of institutionai conditions operating in the society at large? (3) In what ways do these sen of institu- tional influences either promote or Impede the industrial development of Peru? This report is concerned with giving some of the results of our first two and a half months of field work. This has been an ex- ploratory stage in which we have been con- cerned with visiting 25 industnal plants in 20 different industries, and talking with businessmen, engineers, and labor leaders as to the problems they face in carrying out their jobs. We also attended a number of conferences NMI meetings with engineers, businesienen? government officials, and labor leaders. SOCIAL CHANGE AS A RESULTS OF MODERNIZATION Description: To determine most effective twee of DOD aid to developing nations so that conflict between traditional cultural values and pressures toward modernization are mininaized. Transfer to non-DOD agency under discussion. Contractor: Kalamazoo College. Fiscal Year: Start, 1966; end. 1970. Cost: Unknown, MUTUAL OBLIGATIONS BETWEEN MANAGEMENT AND WORKERS /N PERU (By Stillman Bradfield, Kalamazoo College, 1968) This work was carried out with financial support incen the Advanced Research Proj- ects Agency and the Wenner-Gren Founda- tion. The contract with Kalamazoo College is administered by the Group Psychology Branch of the Office of Naval Research. Abstract This paper compares questionnaire re- sponse of management and labor sectors in Peru on their opinions as to the duties of the worker and the company's obligation to the workers. There is surprising agreement between the management and labor groups Interviewed on important issues, such as: that the incompetent worker should be fired; that impersonal, objective criteria should be used in *electing new workers; that reason- able working rules should be strictly en- forced; that .high quality norms should be insisted upon; and, that supervisors should try to settle the problems of workers if at all possible rather than pass them all on to higher management. Generally there was also agreement between both sectors that ability, rather than seniority, should be the determining criteria for wage increases. IDEOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR Description: .ovide empirically derived conclusions about ideological movements whech support insurgency. (Terminating; In cc, final report Stage.) wh Contractor,: University of _Massachusetts. an Fiscal Year: Start, 1966; end, 1971. Cost: Unknown_ THE ATATURII REVOLUTION IN TURKEY (By Guenter Lewy, Department of Govern- ment, University of Massachusetts, Ann gwooloo001-3 Augusi 11, 19 69 had begun well over one hundred years be- ore he collapse of the Ottoman empire," Abstract Beginning with a brief discussion of the decline and fa.11 of the to litimire, the report amidazes the interplay between Ataturk and the forees of neigiou,s tradition- alism In the Turkiah revoitition. Special at- tention is given to -die role of religion in the struggle for nationall sovereignty that ended in 1923. The report concludes with a brief discussion of the pi:wait:at of Islam in con- temporary Turkish society. IDEOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR Description: Provide empirically derived conclusions about ideological movements Which support insumency. (Terminating; in final report stage.) Contractor: University of Massachusetts Fiscal Year: Start, 1966; end, 1971. Cost: Unknown, THE SINHALESE BUDDHIST REVOLUTION OF CEYLON 1956-4959 (By Guenter Lewy, Department of Govern- ment, University of Massachusetts, Am- herst, technical report No. 1, January 1967) Abstract Research sponsored by the Advanced Re- search Projects Agency under Order number 883 and monitored by the Office of Naval Re- search, ChoupPsychetogy Branch under con- tract Nonr-3367(08), NR 117-907. The origins of the resurgence of Buddhism in Ceylon following -the election victory of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, beaded by BandaranaAke, in 1956 are ana- lyzed. Bandaranaike failed to control the Buddhist elements. who had helped him to obtain political power and he was assas- sinated by a Buddhist monk in September 1959. The report concludes with a discussion of the future of organized Buddhism as a po- litical force in Ceylon. IDEOLOGY MID BEDLAWOR Description: Provide empirically derived riclusions about ideological movernenta ich support insurgency, (Terminating; in al report stage.) Contractor: University of Massachusetts. Fiscal year, start 1966; end 1971. Cost: 'Unknown. MIL/TANT HITZDIT NATIONALISM: THE EARLY herst; Religion and Revolution, a study in (B oomparative politics and religion, techni- cal report No. 6, August 1968) (Research supported by the Advanced Re- search Projects Agency under Order number c 883 and monitored by the Office of Naval B Research, Group Psychology Branch, under contract Nonr-3357(08), NR 177-907.) sea ber 'The Turkish Revolution led by Ataturk can con PHASE y Guenter Lewy, Department of Cioverri- merit, University ce Massachusetts, Am- herst Religion and Revolution; A Study in Comparative Politica and Religion, technl- al report No. 2, April 1967) esearch sponsored by the Advanced Re- rob Projects Agency under Order nem- 883 and nemaitored by the Office of Naval arch, Groim Psychology Branch under tract Nein-8357(0a), NR 177-907. Abstract ollowing a brief discussion of the Indian Meal tradition, the report analyses the gins and significance of militant Hindu ionalism. in the period 1880-1916. The as of several representateve nationalist era?B. G. Aurobindo Ghose, pat Rai, B. P. Pal?are examined and their uenee on the terrorist movement 1G CiiS. d. The report cOnclucles with some ughts on eontenmorary Hindu corn- nalism. Summary Rese be divided into two phases. During the first stage that began with Kernars arrival in An- atolia in May 1919, religion and nationalism combined to provide the fervor and elan for a successful war of independence. The on sovereignty of the Turkish nation was nat secured against foreign enemies and theiride domestic collaborators, and in October 1923 lead the Turkish republic was formally pro- claimed, claimed. The second phase of this revolution- ? ary upheaval lasted until Kemal's death in eusse 1938 and involved a series of far-reaching political, legal and social reforms aimed at achieving the Westernization of Turkey. This program of radical reform deprived D Islam of its political role and resulted in the con construction and consolidation of a secular whi Turkish state. Both phases of this revolution fins had roots in the Ottoman period; In some C ways the revolution of Ataturk was the P mination of a process of gradual reform that C IDEOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR escription: Provides empirically derived elusions about ideological movements ch support insurgency. (Terminating; In 1 report stage.) ontractor: University of Massachusetts, iscal year start, 1966; end 1971. ost: UnknoWn. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : ClArRDP711B0W000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? StiN S 9625 GANDHI, NON-VIOLENCE, AND THE STRUGGLE FOR INDIAN INDEPENDENCE (By Guenter Lewy, Department of Govern- ment, University of Massachusetts, Am- herst, Religion and Revolution; A Study In Comparative Politics and Religion tech- nical report No. 4, November 1967) Research sponsored by the Advanced Re- search Projects Agency under Order number 883 and monitored by the Office of Naval Re- search, Group Psychology Branch under con- tract No. NR-3357(08). NR 177-907. Abstract The report begins with an analysis of the character and the intellectual origins of the Gandhian doctrine of Satyagraha. The dominant force in Gandhi's life, it is con- cluded, was Hinduism. His appeal to the In- dian masses rested upon his standing as a Hindu holy man. Gandhi's role in the Con- gress' struggle for independence is discussed. The tension between Gandhi's functioning as a prophetic figure, following what he con- sidered to be the voice of God within him, and his role as a national leader paying heed to political realities, accounts for many of the mistakes committed by the Congress; it probably delayed the achievement of Indian independence. IDEOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR Description: Provide empirically derived conclusions about ideological movements which support insurgency. (Terminating; in final report stage.) Contractor: University of Massachusetts. Fiscal year start, 1966; end, 1971. Cost: Unknown. THE EGYPTIAN REVOLUTION: NASSERISM AND ISLAM (By Guenter Lewy, Department of Govern- ment, University of Massachusetts, Am- herst; Religion and Revolution, A Study in Comparative Politics and Religion; techni- cal report No. 5, March 1968) Research supported by the Advanced Re- search Project Agency under Order number 883 and monitored by the Office of Naval Research, Group Psychology Branch, under contract Nonr-3357 (08) , NR 177-907. Abstract Following an introductory discussion of the Islamic political tradition, the report examines the events leading up to the seizure of power by the Free Officers, led by Nasser, in July 1952.- Relations with the Muslim Brotherhood are traced and the role of Islam in the ideology of Nasserism as well as in Egyptian foreign policy, domestic reform, education, law and the court system are dis- cussed. The report concludes with an analy- sis of the interaction between the Islamic religion, modernization and legitimacy. IDEOLOGY AND BEHAVIOR Description: Provide empirically derived conclusions about ideological movements which support insurgency. (Terminating; in final rePort stage.) Contractor: University of Massachusetts. Fiscal year start, 1966; end, 1971. Cost: Unknown. MILITANT BUDDHIST NATIONALISM: THE CASE OF BURMA (By Guenter Lewy, Department of Govern- ment, University of Massachusetts, Am- herst; Religion and Revolution, A Study in Comparative Politics and Religion, tech- nical report No. 3, August 1967) Research sponsored by the Advanced Re- search Projects Agency under Order number 883 and monitored by the Office of Naval Research, Group Psychology Branch, under contract Nonr-3357 (08) , NR 177-907. Abstract Following a brief discussion of the inter- action of Buddhism and government in tra- ditional Burma until 1885, the report ana- lyzes the emergency of the political monks as the main force in the militant nationalist movement for Burmese independence. Bud- dhist monks played an important role in the violent agitation of the 1920's and in the Says San Rebellion of 1930-31. In the 1930's the monks are gradually overtaken by secu- lar-minded nationalists. The report con- cludes with a brief examination of the place of Buddhism in post-independence Burma. CHANGING ROLES OF THE MILITARY IN DEVELOPING NATIONS Description: Subcontracted studies of changing roles of military establishments. Contractor: CRESS. Fiscal year: Start, 1964; end, 1969. Cost: Unknown. THE CHINESE WARLORDS SYSTEM: 1916 TO 1928 (By Hsi-hseng Chi, February 1969; the Amer- ican University Center for Research in Social Systems, 5010 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20016) The author Hsi-sheng Chi is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of North Carolina. He received a BA. in literature from Tunghai University, Taiwan, and is at present a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Chicago. A substantially revised and enlarged ver- sion of this report has been submitted by the author to the University of Chicago a,s a doctoral dissertation. Foreword This study was conducted under a pro- gram designed to encourage university in- terest in basic research in social science fields related to the responsibilities of the U.S. Army. The program is conducted under contract by The American University's Cen- ter for Research in Social Systems (CRESS), and CRESS in turn has entered into subcon- tracts supporting basic research in a number of major universities having a marked in- terest in one or more of these research fields. The research program was formulated by CRESS in terms of broad subject areas with- in which research would be supported, with the scholars themselves selecting specific topics and research design and utilizing in- formation normally available to academic and private individuals. Under the terms of the subcontract the authors are free to pub- lish independently the results of such re- search. In this study Hsi-sheng Chi describes the military aspects of the political contest for control of the central government in the context of the disorganized sociopolitical structure of China from 1916 to 1928. It was prepared at the University of Chicago's Cen- ter for Social Organization Studies under the supervision of Professor Morris Janowitz, principal social scientist for research con- ducted under subcontract between CRESS and the university. The report is a useful corrective to the popular image of the Chinese warlords dur- ing this period of their greatest activity. The study points out that the warlords were not merely military men exploiting China's con- dition for private gain in their various do- mains, nor were they seeking to destroy or re- place the central government in the classic - pattern under which many Chinese dynas- ties have historically emerged. To keep his study focused on the theme of the warlord system, the author chose not to deal with the activities of the incipient Chinese Communist Party during the 1916- 1938 period. ABSTRACT The steady weakening of the Manchus in the China of the early twentieth century and the expanding military strength of the warlords created a climate for civil war. The warlords were unable to unite the country In spite of their dominance in both military and political spheres. The eventual rise to power of Chiaing Kai-shek and the Kuomin- tang brought about the decline in the war- lords' widespread domination. (Extinction of the warlords was not accomplished until the Communist takeover in 1949.) CHANGING ROLES OF THE MILITARY IN DEVELOPING NATIONS Description: Subcontracted studies of changing roles of military establishments. Contractor: CRESS. Fiscal year: Start, 1964; end 1969. Cost: Unknown. A SURVEY OF ELITE STUDIES (By Carl Beck, James M. Malloy, and William R. Campbell, assisted by Jerry L. Weaver, March 1965; the American University Cen- ter for Research in Social Systems, 5010 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20016) Foreword This survey was conducted, as a part of SORO's Basic Studies research program, under sub-contract to the University of Pitts- burgh with Dr. Carl Beck of the Department of Political Science as principal investigator. The Basic Studies Division was formed to en- courage, promote, and conduct research on fundamental social and behavioral processes that influence the U.S. Army's special warfare mission in developing nations and remote areas. One such fundamental area of interest Is leadership structure, interaction, and processes. Leadership in the emerging nations is widely recognized as a crucial factor in the insurgency situations that many of these countries face. It follows that success of the U.S. counterinsurgent mission is dependent upon knowledge that will be helpful in deal- ing with indigenous civilian and military leadership groups. An understanding of leadership structure and interaction is re- quired. The knowledge needed is to be found in answers to the following types of ques- tions: What leadership techniques are common to most of the Political systems found in emerg- ing nations? What techniques are unique to particular kinds of political systems? Are there identifiable patterns of change for leadership groups in these contexts? Do patterns vary according to different types of political systems? Only with this kind of background knowledge is it possible to assess adequately the significance, to a counterinsurgent situation, of specific types of changes in leadership groups, or the use of particular kinds of leadership techniques. The problems presently being faced in Viet Nam are a dramatic demonstration of this need. In planning and developing research pro- grams in new areas of interest to the U.S. Army, the essential first step is a survey of past literature and research to indicate gaps in existing knowledge as well as the need for future work. Dr Beck's paper was designed to serve this purpose for both the military and academic communities. It as decided to assess current understanding of the role and functions of leadership groups in different types of political systems. In so doing, Dr. Beck supplies us with a conceptual essay on "the study of political elites" that considers the problems of identifying elites, describing elite structure, etiquette, and techniques of control, conceptualizes idealized elite sys- tems, and analyses ploitical elite change. This essay should be of special interest to military users, since it provides a systematic approach to leadership groups and leadership interac- tion, It should also be of value to researhers who require a brief state-of-knowledge as- sessment as a basis for planning. Dr. Beck also Includes a bibliography of over 290 references -for those who wish to delve further into par- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9626 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 11, 1969 ticular problems or examine special areas of the world in more detail. In addition to the materials contained in this report, Dr. Beck prepared abstracts of the studies listed in the bibliography and an inventory of major propositions and state- ments about elite structure and interaction. These are available on loan from the SORO Library as source materials for researchers and military personnel who may wish to con- duct further work in this important problem area, Rrrcnis P. LOWRY, Acting Chairman, Basic Studies Division. CHANGING ROLES OF THE MILITARY IN DEVELOPING NATIONS Description: Subcontracted studies of changing roles of military establishments. Contractor: CRESS. Fiscal year: Start 1964; end, 1969. Cost: Unknown. SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND REVOLUTION (By Jack Bloom, August 1968; prepared un- der subcontract by the University of Chi- cago, Center for Research in Social Sys- tems, The American University, 5010 Wis- consin Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20016) Abstract Few researchers have studied revolutions from the standpoint of purely social struc- tural analysis. This paper adopts that per- spective and looks at revolution as a special case of social change, as a part of a develop- mental process. In particular, three countries in the middle 19th century (Germany, France, and Great Britain) are compared and contrasted to determine whether or not changing relationships between social status groupings can become the basis for predict- ing revolutionary outcomes. Six "classes" are identified; aristocracy, bourgeoisie, petite bourgeoisie, artisans, in- dustrial workers, and peasantry. France and Germany offer examples of revolutionary de- velopment which resulted in failures in their own separate ways. Britain offers an example of a country with similar cultural precon- ditions but which had no complete revolu- tionary development. Comparisons of class structure and interaction in these cases dis- close important relationships. For example, in the development of revolutionary processes key roles are played by (1) the petite bour- geoisie and artisans who can act as deter- mining swing groups, (2) a viable and power- ful aristocracy who can determine the ulti- mate outcome of revolutions particularly as other groups relate to or alien with them, (3) the relationship between the aristocracy and the peasantry especially as this deter- mines the attitude of the peasantry toward revolution, and (4) all classes as internecine conflict and antagonism may redirect and diffuse hostilities. Schematic depictions are provided for these types of relationships. Fur- ther research can be conducted by broad- ening the case base to test the applicability of these ideas for predicting the development of revolutionary processes in a society, CHANGING ROLES OF THE MILITARY DI DEVELOPING NATIONS Description: Subcontracted studies of changing roles of military establishments. Contractor: CRESS. Fiscal year: Start, 1964; End 1969. Cost: Unknown. PROBLEMS OF STUDYING MILITARY ROLES IN OTHER CULTURES: A WORKING CONFERENCE (By Ritchie P. Lowry, editor, September 1967) Abstract On 26, 27, and 28, May 1965 a conference was convened by what was then the Special Operations Research Office (now the Center for Research in Social Systems) of The American University in Washington, D.C. The purpose of the conference was to discuss research experience and strategies in the study of changing military roles in develop- ing areas. Some 15 scholars from major uni- versities and selected representatives of SORO (CRESS) who were identified as hav- ing conducted significant research in the subject of discussion were invited to par- ticipate. Some types of problems covered in the 10 major papers and comments in- clude problems of analyzing field research experience, problems of questionnaire ex- perience, problems of achieving clarity in studying military roles, and the problems of the influence of political and sensitivity bias. Individual presentations were grouped within three sessions of the conference: An Introduction to the Topic, Problems of Studying Military Roles in Latin America, and Problems of Studying Military Roles in the Near and Far East. CHANGING ROLES OF THE MILITARY IN DEVELOPING NATIONS Description: Subcontracted studies of changing roles of military establishments. Contractor: CRESS: Fiscal year: Start, 1964; end, 1969. Cost: Unknown. CROSS-NATIONAL STUDIES OF CIVIL VIOLENCE (By Ted Gurr with Charles Ruttenberg, May 1969) Foreword This report was produced under a program designed to increase university research in- terest in fields related to the U.S. Army mis- sion and to support basic research. The pro- gram is conducted by the Center for Research in Social Systems (CRESS), and for it CRESS has negotiated subcontracts with a number of major universities that have a marked interest in one or more of the appropriate subject fields. This report was prepared at Princeton University under such a subcon- tract. The paper summarizes the first phases of research designed to evaluate a multivariate theory of "the genesis of civil violence," us- ing cross-national aggregate data for a large number of policies. Some of the methods and data developed, the results of initial multiple correlation analyses, and a new coding in- strument for collecting systematic informa- tion on characteristics of civil strife are re- ported on here. The initial phase of research is completed; the larger comparative study of Which it is part is still in process. Much additional research, using a variety of tech- niques, will be required before any substan- tial proportion of the questions raised by the theoretical model and by the results reported here can be answered. SOCIAL PROCESSES RELEVANT TO MILITARY PLANNING FOR STABILITY STUDIES OF AFRICAN GROUPS Description: Study of African sociopolitical structures, dynamics, and leadership re- sources and attitudes. Contractor: CRESS. Fiscal year: Start, 1967; end, 1989. Cost: Unknown, URBAN DYNAMICS AND BLACK AFRICA (By William J., Hanna, Judith L. Hanna, June 1968; the American University Center for Research in Social Systems, 5010 Wis- consin Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20016) Authors' preface From Dakar to Mombasa, and from Fort Lamy to Lusaka, Black Africa's land and peo- ple display great diversity. Yet using Black Africa as the geographic unit of analysis is a viable research strategy because of the area's marked similarities in colonial past, revolutionary change, and contemporary dynamics. In addition, there is virtual unity in race?although not all indigenous Africans nor Negroid?and, at least according to some Africans, there is considerable cultural uni- formity. We have chosen to study the towns of independent Black Africa for reasons of policy, science, and personal experience. Towns are keys to understanding the coun- tries in which they are locabed, because they are centers of Africah cultural, social, eoo- nomic, and political innovation and diffusion. The rapidity of change in some spheres, illus- trated by the independence surge in the late 1950's and early 1960's as well as by the recent spate of military coups d'etat, makes analyses of the contemporary dynamics of towns a prerequisite for policy decisions which are relevant to current realities. Implicit throughout the study is our assumption that the policymaker's choices among alternatives of action and inaction are improved by in- creased understanding and that science and government should be mutually supportive. Social science may also be served. After reading more than one thousand papers, articles, and books concerned with towns in Black Africa, we concluded that the available information had not yet been well inte- grated and that its theoretical relevance had not yet been fully extracted. Thus, the scientific justification for this study is what- ever progress it makes toward such integra- tion and theoretical development, as well as toward the identification of critical knowl- edge gaps. At the personal level, it is our hope that reports such ea this may lissome small way repay the people of Africa for the hospitality and friendship they have shown us here and abroad. Repayment might come from more informed policymaking by those outside Africa who are concerned with the continent. Or, it might come by helping to bring African data into the mainstream of world social science, through our efforts directly or by whatever catalyzing effect we have upon others. FOREIGN COMMUNICATIONS AND DEFENSE Description: Describe communication mechanisms of China and Soviet Union and develop computer simulation of message flow so as to predict spread of information and news in future. (Expires 9/69) Contractor: MIT/Dr. Ithiel Pool. Fiscal year: 'Start, 1,963; end, 1970. Cost: Unknown. THE USE OF FREE TIME BY YOUNG PEOPLE IN SOVIET SOCIETY (By P. Gayle Durham, Research Program on Problems of International Communication and Security, Center for International Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology, Cambridge, Mass., January 1966) Preface The use of an individual's free time, and its quantity, are very relevant to this com- munications behavior. The activities avail- able to him for use during his free hours to a great extent involve mass media and con- versation with friends. Much of the infor- mation he gleans from his environment is accumulated during his free time use of these sources, although his working hours and so-called "self-maintenance" time are also by no means devoid of information-gather- ing activity. The study of the use of free time in Soviet society is particularly interesting, since it both provides the reader unfamiliar with the daily life of the Soviet citizen some insight into the influences on those leisure and in- formative activities, and allows an assess- ment of the effectuality of the efforts of the regime to mutate the character of its citizens through means of mass influence during those activities. * In order to survey the use of free time, we have chosen one sub-group of the population for preliminary investigation. This group Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71B00364R000300100001-3 August .11,1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE may be termed young people, and inclUdes specifically those between the ages of sixteen and thirty. Our reasons for this choice stem from various considerations. Inasmuch as our Underlying concern is to learn more about how Soviet citizens use cornmunica- tions media, we chose a group which we be- lieve to be more or less homogeneous in its patterns a daily life. The research was sponsored by the Ad- vanced Projects Agency of the Department of Defense (ARPA) under contract #920E- 9717 and monitored by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) under con- tract AF 49(638)-1237. METHODOLOGY FOR ANALYSIS OF IN TERNAL SOCIAL MOVEMENTS Description: Providing predictive base for forecasting social movements in selected countries. Contractor: University of Pittsburgh/Holz- ner and Yang. Fiscal year: Start, 1966; end, 1970. Cost: Unknown. Conducted under AFOSR grant No. AF- AFOSR-1304-67. Report period: July 1, 1967-June 30, 1968. Final report: Not for publication. METHODOLOGY FOR THE ANALYSIS OF INTERNAL SOCIAL MOVEMENTS (SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND SOCIAL SYSTEM CHANGE) (By Burkart Holzner and Ching-Kun Yang, August 1968, Department of Sociology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa.) Abstract This project develops methods and theory for the study of incidents of violent social protest and broad social movements in the context of social system change. The method of building computer based inventories of in- cidents of protest and conflict permits the quantitative description of large numbers of such events, based on easily accessible public records and historical documents. Critical in- stance case studies supplement the quantita- tive data through detailed qualitative in- vestigation. The project's frame of reference emphasizes event sequence analysis in con- flict and mobilization. In order to assess flexibility and power of the procedure, long time series, -the entire 19th century, were chosen for incident inventories on two so- cieties of widely different characteristics. An Oriental society (China) and a Western so- ciety (Germany) were selected. The data gathering phase for China (31,000 incidents) has been completed, for Germany it is pres- ently underway. FOREIGN COMMUNICATIONS AND DEFENSE Description: Describe communications mechanisms of China and Soviet Union and develop computer simulation of message flow so as to predict spread of information and news in future. (Expires 9/69) Contractor: MIT/Dr. Ithiel Pool. Fiscal Year: Start, 1963; end, 1970. Cost: Unknown. THE FILM INDUSTRY IN COMMUNIST CHINA (By Alan P. L. lAu, research program on prob- lems of international communications and security, Center for International Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Introduction This is a study of the film industry in Com- munist China. It is part of a research pro- gram on international communication con- ducted by the Center for International Studies, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. The research for this paper was spon- sored by the Advanced Research Projects Agency of the Department of Defense (ARPA) under contract #920E-9717 and monitored by the Air Force Office of Scien- tific Research (AFOSR) under contract AF 49 ( 638) -1237. This report seeks to update the data on the subject and to understand the dynamics of the Chinese Communist film industry. In order to put the present film industry into Its proper socio-historical context, we also deal briefly with the Chinese films in pre- Communist era. The report is based almost exclusively on Chinese publications. They include mainly Chinese Communist press reports and trans- lated Chinese materials. Only three non- Communist books (Chinese) could be found on Chinese films and our brief discussion on the pre-Communist period was based on them. We were particularly interested in sta- tistical information on the present Chinese film industry. Yet propaganda-free statisti- cal reports from Communist China were hard to come by. After 1959 even publica- tions of propagandistic statistical informa- tion from Communist China stopped. Since 1964 there have been some signs of the avail- ability of such statistics but systematic sta- tistical reports such as those published be- fore 1957 have not yet appeared. We have practically exhausted all the major sources on this subject in Chinese which are pub- licly available abroad. We have combed the holdings in such major libraries as the Chi- nese-Japanese Library and the East Asian Research Center at Harvard University, The Library of Congress and the Hoover Insti- tute at Stanford University. As our research continues, new information will be acquired. This report, representing research done so far, will be enlarged and updated in the future. BEHAVIOR NORMS: JAPANESE AND AMERICAN YOUTH Description: Comparison of attitudes and behavior of the youth of two countries for military assistance and manpower resources purposes. Contractor: University of Maryland/Dr. E. McGinnies. Fiscal Year: Start, 1967; end, 1969. Cost: Unknown. A cross-cultural study of normative behavidr among Japanese and American girls in the 11 to 18-year age range, by Satoru Inomata? Litt D., Department of Psychology, Shiga University; Elliott McGinnies, Ph.D., De- partment of Psychology, University of Maryland) Since 1945, the Japanese people have adopted many of the precepts and practices of American democracy. Adolescent boys and girls in Japan are now growing up in this new social climate. How are Japanese young people reacting to the dramatic changes that have taken place in their country? Are they coming increasingly to resemble their Amer- ican counterparts, or have they taken on the form rather than the substance of Western political and social values? In order to ap- proach some answers to these questions, we undertook a cross-cultural study of social attitudes among the youth of Japan, pat- terning our survey after one conducted with American teenagers a few years previously. In this way we hoped to be able to make com- parisons between the social attitudes of teen- agers in Japan and in the USA. We adopted the same questionnaire materials and methods of sampling used in a nation-wide survey of American youth by the Institute for Social Research at the University of Mich- igan. ANTHROPOLOGICAL RESEARCH TO ASSIST NAVY STRATEGICAL PLANNING Description: Investigator will combine anthropological variables with econometric techniques in order to conceptualize and pre- dict mobility in foreign military hierarchies. Contractor: University of Texas. Fiscal year: Start, 1908; end, 1970. Cost: Unknown. S 9627 MATHEMATICAL PROGRAMING AND ECONOMIC ANTHROPOLOGY (By Ira R. Buehler, J. R. McGoodwin, Depart- ment of Anthropology, University of Texas) Presented at a conference on Mathematical Approaches to Cultural Evolution. Technical Report 1: Comparative Econ- ometrics Project. Reproduction in whole or part is permitted for any purpose of the United States Govern- ment April 24, 1968. This research was sponsored by the Group Psychology Branch, Office of Naval Research (Contract No. N00014-67-A-0126-0005; NR 170-717/1-5-68 Code 452) as the initial tech- nical report of the Comparative Econometrics Project?Ira R. Buehler, Director. Introductory comments The general purpose of this paper is (1) to provide a partial and preliminary survey of several related mathematical decision- making models?in particular, mathematical (or linear) programming?(2) to consider their relevance for a wide class of optimiza- tion problems in economic anthropology, and (3) to assess some of their implications for various theoretical issues in evolutionary studies?the related notions of "cultural in- tensity" and "evolutionary potential." This essay is the initial (and therefore tentative) report in a series of studies that will dem- onstrate the underlying mathematical re- latedness of Military and economic program- ming and logistic problems on the one hand and aspects of economic anthropology, eco- nomic development, social organization and the prediction of mobility processes in polit- ical systems on the other. This discussion is consequently directly relevant to the formal- ist/substantivist opposition, in economic an- thropology, a theoretical bifurcation that is due to a considerable extent to the sub- stantivist magnum opus Trade and Market in the Early Empires (Polanyi et. al., 1957). THE DEVELOPMENT OF A METHOD FOR FORE- CASTING DECISIONS AND ACTIONS FOR MILI- TARY GROUPS Description: Make cross-national data base analysis of the effects of different military postures and strategies on the decision-mak- ing of foreign military groups; research will also be conducted on the predicted responses of these groups to perceive politico-military threats. Contractor: Western Behavioral Seience Institute. Fiscal year: Start, 1966; end, 1970. Cost: Unknown. VALUES, ATTITUDES, AND MULTINATIONAL DECISIONMAK/NG (Introduction by John R. Reser, Western Behavioral Soiences Institute, principal investigator, September 30, 1968) The research reported in these papers was supported in part by the Office of Naval Research, Contract No. N00014-66--0O279, NR 170-704 (Group Psychology). Introduction There is a close analogy between the world- wide problems of poverty and war at the International level and the problems of poverty and civil disorder on the national level. In both cases an understanding of the aspirations, values, and opinions of all parties involved is of fundamental im- portance, both for the successful imple- mentation of programs to even out the dif- ferences creating tension and conflict and for the avoidance of escalation of smaller conflicts into disastrous ones. This project is oriented towards the study of the values and opinions about interpersonal, social and international relations of future elites in a representative number of nations of the world. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 ? - S 9628 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE August 11, 1969 One premise underlying the study is that "A more complete understanding of others' values, attitudes, and ways of thinking in- creases one's ability to communicate effec- tively with them." Such communication may be across the conference table, through the medium of a strategy which One pursues, or simply that one behaves in a certain way due to his expectations ablnit how others will respond in the long or abort run. From this point of view information on the basic values and attitudes of future decision- makers in all nations will be of immeasurable value in helping them to Mal more effec- tively with military, diplomatTc, and political decision-makers of other countries as they pursue their careers, adding to the possibility that mankind's common interest in survival may override misunderstanding and mis- perception of the goals and values of others, by providing a common framework within which national differences in real interests may be seen. The Conflicts of the world today are, how- ever, only partly based on misperceptions and lack of mutual understanding of the values of others; the conflicts are themselves indicators of the large differences found in the international system. The aim is there- fore also to understand some of the factors which create the antagonism and lack of common interest at the international level. The focus of the project is on the impact of the nation-state on the values and opinions of its citizens in nations differing markedly ? in political system, level of industrialization, investment in military and police forces, and size. Finally, it is a major aim of the project to provide some insight into the background of the student unrest which today, and prob- ably more so in the future, is an important source of political change. ROLE DIFFERENTIATION IN THAI SOCIAL STRCUTURE IN TERMS OF A SEMANTIC ANAL- YSIS OF THAI PRONOUNS AND ROLES (By W. Wichiarajote and Marilyn Wilkins, Institute of Communications Research, University of Illinois, Technical Report No. 57 (68-2), June, 1968; COmmunication, Cooperation, and Negotiation, in Culturally Heterogenous Groups) (Project Supported by the Advanced Re- search Projects Agency, ARPA Order No. 454 Under Office of Naval Research Contract NR 177-472, Nonr 1834 (1936) , Fred E. Fiedler and Harry C. Triandis, Principal Investigators.) Abstract Fourteen Thai first-person pronouns and sixty Thai social roles were scored on a com- mon set of eleven features. Following a model of semantic feature analysis developed by Osgood, usage of the various pronouns within the various roles was predicted: appropriate (+), permissible (0), or ineongrous ( - ). These predictions were obtained by multiply- ing feature codings on the pronouns with corresponding codings on the roles; the alge- braic sum of these products yielded a ?, 0, or - outcome for each pronoun-role com- bination. Validity of the model was evaluated in terms of: the percentage of predictions which were accurate; correspondence of the semen- tice features with factors obtained through factor analysis; and the information revealed concerning the structure of Thai role differ- entation. Fifty-three Thai high school students were asked to judge the appropriateness of the 14 x 60 pronoun-role combinations. This data constituted the criteria for evaluating suc- cess of the semantic features and also pro- vided material for the factor analysis. Six factors were found to describe 94'a of the variance. They appeared to incorporate nine of the eleven semantic features. These, in turn, accurately predicted 85% of the Ss' specific judgments. The semantic features further revealed a hierarchic, tree-like struc- ture within the semantic patterns of Thai pronouns and social roles. TRANSFER OF TECHNOLOGY UNDER MILITARY AUSPICES Description: Cooperation with foreign mil- itary assistance and training programs. Contractor: Howard University, Dr. D. Spencer. Fiscal Year: Start, 1964; end, 1970. Cost: Unknown. MILITARY TRANSFER OF TECHNOLOGY?INTER- NATIONAL TECHNO..ECONOMIC TRANSFERS VIA MILITARY BY-PRODUCTS AND INITIATIVE BASED ON CASES FROM JAPAN AND OTHER PACIFIC COUNTRIES (By Daniel L. Spencer, Chairman, Depart- ment of Economics, Howard University, Washington, D.C.) ABSTRACT Transfer of technology through military and related channels. Case studies drawn from Japan, Taiwan, and Korea. The mate- rials constitute a first attempt to bulldoze through a new dimension in cost/benefit as- sessments of military activity overseas. Con- cludes that a dollar spent on military assist- ance may produce as much benefit as, or more than, a dollar spent on economic assist- ance. TRANSFER OF TECHNOLOGY UNDER MILITARY AUSPICES Description: Cooperation with foreign mil- itary assistance and training programs. Contractor: Howard University, Dr. D. Spencer, Fiscal Year: Start, 1964; end, 1970. Cost: Unknown. THE TRANSFER OF TECHNOLOGY TO DEVELOPING COUNTRIES?PAPERS AND PROCEEDINGS OF A CONFERENCE HELD AT AIRLIE HOUSE, WAR- RENTON, VA., APRIL 28-30, 1966 (Edited with an introduction and summary by Daniel L. Spencer and Alexander Woro- niak, Department of Economics, Howard University, Washington, D.C.; prepared un- der Grant No. AF-AFOSR 533-66 from the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Of- fice of Aerospace Research, U.S. Air Force) FOREWORD "The United States and the West must either lead in the process of modernizing the underdeveloped area, or by default, contrib- ute to a kind of world in which our institu- tions and values cannot survive." This state- ment by Gabriel Almond echos the thinking of a generation of American leaders who have invested substantial resources and other ef- forts to improve the conditions of life in def- icit areas in the hope that economic advance would contribuLe to political stabilization and create the soil in which democratic in- stitutions might take root. The easy optimism that flourished after World War II has been jarred by the experi- ence gained in two decades of foreign aid and technical assistance to backward and stagnant areas. We have learned that neither economic advance nor political stabilization can be automatically initiated by the invest- ment of U.S. resources. Dr. Carlos Chagas, President of the National Academy of Sci- ences of Brazil, insists that the technological gap separating the advanced nations from the so-called developing nations has grown wider rather than narrower during the last decade, despite extensive international co- operation. On a more hopeful note, Walt W. Rostow has postulated a theory of eco- nomic evolution which includes a "take-off" stage where rapid industrialization can be expected. The papers that follow were prepared by a group of scholars who are too sophisticated to believe that rapid economic development is a necessary consequence of programs of material aid and technical assistance. While they are fully capable as interpreters of economic history and could develop attrac- tive hypotheses relating to the development of economic institutions, for the purposes of the present conference they have directed their attention to a narrower field of eco- nomic theory in an attempt to elucidate the processes of technological transfer and struc- tural change which are basic to economic ad- vancement in backward areas. Dr. Daniel L. Spencer was encouraged by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research to conduct a conference on technological transfer, because it was felt that further use- ful work in this field might be stimulated by summing up the current state of knowledge, and focusing attention on problems of a methodological and theoretical nature that are obstacles to further understanding of these important processes. Our interest in problems of the kind ad- dressed at the conference stems from the fact that the mission of AFOSR is to sponsor basic research in areas of potential applicability to the military. The present effort is part of a research program devoted to those scientific and technical fields which might serve to im- prove the manner in which U.S. military per- sonnel, skills, equipment, and procurement policies can be exploited to the greatest bene- fit for the host country and to realize the U.S. national objectives to aid our friends and strengthen our allies. There are many channels within the military services for the use of information derived from research on foreign economic development. Military as- sistance programs, mobile training teams, technical training, and advanced education provided by the U.S. services for foreign mil- itary personnel are some of the bridges to the field of application. It is a source of gratification to the Air Force Office of Scientific Research that our expectations with regard to the conference on technological transfer and structural change have been fully realized. This Last exemplifies the objective of the organization to sponsor basic research in fields relevant to future plans and activities. CHARLES- E. HUTCHINSON, Air Force Office of Scientific Research. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71B00364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE S 9629 EXHIBIT 1 TABLE I.-FEDERAL OBLIGATI ONS FOR RESEARCH; TOTAL, DEFENSE, AND NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION FISCAL YEARS 1956-1969 [In millions of dollars/ Year Total DOD NSF TABLE II. FEDERAL OBLIGATIONS FOR BASIC RESEARCH TOTAL, DEFENSE, AND NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDA- TION FISCAL YEARS 1952-69 _. /Millions of dollars] 1952 1953 1956 852 482 16 1954 1957 925 445 30 1955 1958 1 1,079 489 33 1956 1959 1,403 523 54 1957 1960 1,941 861 68 1958 1961 2,620 1,113 77 1959 1962 3,273 1,311 104 1960 1963 4,041 1,605 141 1961 1964 4,464 1,672 156 1962 1965 4,854 1,751 172 1963 1966 5,271 1,849 224 1964 1967 5,273 1,591 241 1965 19602 5,406 1,425 255 1966 1969? 5,990 1,658 280 1967 1968 1969 1 The U.S.S.R. ?ofted Sputnik on Oct. 4, 1957. 2 Estimates by the NSF. Source: "Federal Funds for Research, Development, and Other Scientific Activities, Fiscal Years 1967, 1968 and 1969." vol. XVIII. National Science Foundation Report NSF 68 -27, table C 91. Department/agency Total DOD NSF 162 154 148 162 206 262 335 517 610 825 1,106 1,389 1,567 1,690 1,844 2,015 2, 093 2, 354 72 65 52 53 78 84 111 137 168 173 204 231 241 263 262 284 246 320 1 2 5 10 15 30 '33 54 68 77 104 141 155 171 223 239 o 251 2 27 4 'The U.S.S.R, lofted Sputnik on Oct. 4,1957, 2 Estimated by the NSF. Source: "Federal Funds for Research, Development and other Scientific Activities, Fiscal Years 1967, 1968, and 1969", vol. XVII, op. cit., table C-92. TABLE I I I .-FEDERAL OBLIGATIONS FOR RESEARCH BY AGENCY AND PERFORMER TOTAL, DEFENSE AND NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION [In thousands of dollars] Department/ Agency Ii niversi- ties and Total colleges FFRDCS I adminis- tered by Univs. and colleges FROGS 1 adminis- tered by nonprofit in Fiscal year 1967: Total' 5, 273, 021 1, 348, 469 DOD 1, 591, 331 246,507 NSF 241, 164 198, 458 427,497 47,577 81,681 36,545 16,907 Fiscal year 1968: Total 5, 405, 590 DOD 1, 424, 590 NSF 255, 464 1,396,754 226, 537 210, 483 447,180 39,706 90,630 25,743 17, 798 532 Fiscal year 1969: Total , 5,989, 550 1, 555, 509 DOD 1,658, 142 277, 365 NSF 279, 882 230, 377 466,903 98,303 19,652 41,224 26,886 244 TABLE IV. FEDERAL OBLIGATIONS FOR RESEARCH BY AGENCY AND FIELD OF SCIENCE, [In thousands of dollars] Life Psychological Total sciences sciences Fiscal year 1967:' Total 5, 273, 021 1, 451, 386 DOD 1, 591, 331 106, 245 NSF 241,164 57,570 Fiscal year 1968:2 Total 5, 405, 590 1,580 090 DOD 1, 424, 590 93, 638 NSF 255,464 60,148 Fiscal year 1969: 3 Total 5, 989, 550 1, 765, 306 DOD 1,656, 142 III, 060 NSF 279, 882 63, 720 108, 042 23, 438 8,040 112,753 24, 196 8,014 130,642 28, 690 8, 176 I Federally funded research and development centers. 2 "Federal Funds tor Research, Development, and Other Scientific Activities, Fiscal Years 1967, 1968, and 1969." vol. XVII, op. cit,. table 3 Ibid., table C-11. 4 Ibid., table C-12. FISCAL YEARS 1967 69 Physical Environmental sciences science 1, 074, 416 327, 479 69, 550 1,136,553 312,634 71,587 1,289,778 352, 895 80,099 1 "Federal Funds for Research, Development, and Other Scientilic Activities, Fiscal Years 1967, 1968, and 1969," vol. XVII, op. cit., table C-14. Engineering Mathematics sciences 670, 101 148,783 42, 938 649,549 127,631 48,284 611,671 130, 463 51,948 130, 021 89,903 18, 887 107, 086 68, 227 19, 582 144,661 102,205 22,212 2 ibid., table C-15. .1 Ibid., table C-16. 1, 555, 014 804,060 24, 273 1, 524, 161 722, 460 26,965 1,695, 361 841, 468 28, 342 TABLE V. -FEDERAL OBLIGATIONS FOR BASIC RESEARCH BY AGENCY ,AND FIELD OF SCIENCE, FISCAL YEARS 1967 69 [In thousands of dollars/ Department/agency Fiscal year 1967:' Total DOD NSF Fiscal year 1968: Total DOD NSF Fiscal year 1969:3 Total DOD NSF Total Life Psychological sciences sciences 2, 015, 182 284, 316 238, 562 2, 092, 766 246, 428 251, 375 2, 353, 665 320, 250 274, 253 612,041 32,656 57,570 652,869 28,336 59,137 716,981 37,644 62,606 60, 044 9, 234 8, 040 64, 876 7,721 8, 014 74,665 12, 035 8, 176 Physical Environmental sciences sciences Engineering Mathematics sciences 712,929 99,925 69,550 726,171 76,781 71,587 828, 147 92,035 89,899 321, 034 49,364 42,938 340,436 47, 863 48,113 382, 233 56, 027 51,569 64,639 31,191 18,887 . 57,238 25, 004 19, 582 76, 255 41,010 22,212 183,998 57,394 24,273 179,573 50,938 26, 698 191,443 66,769 27,517 1 "Federal Funds for Research, Development, and Other Scientific Activities, Fiscal Years 1967, 1968, and 1969," vol. XVII, op. cit., table C-33. 2 Ibid., table C-34. 3 Ibid., table C-35. TABLE IV.-FEDERAL OBLIGATIONS FOR BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE RESEARCH, 1960 AND 1968 . [In thousands of dollars] Social sciences 188, 687 8, 912 16, 060 207,504 8,178 17,100 250, 524 8,242 19,451 Social sciences 56,869 3,450 14,869 61,796 2,485 15,744 69,300 3,730 17,605 Other science] Agency 1960 (obligations) 1968 (estimate) Psycho- logical Social sciences sciences Psycho- logical Social Total sciences sciences Total Department of Agriculture. -16, 760 16, 760 32, 873 32, 873 Departmental Commerce__ _ 113 2,929 3,042 402 7,434 7,836 Department of Defense (total) 17,959 504 18,463 25,747 8,684 34,431 Army 5,215 400 5,615 Navy 8,209 8,209 Air Force 4,535 104 4,639 Defense agencies Defensewide funds 8, 856 7, 151 5, 830 2,850 0,060 2,278 1,938 3, 055 1,413 11, 134 7, 151 7,768 5,995 2,473 Footnotes at end of table. Agency 1960 (obligations) 1968 (estimate) 95,354 82,511 3,845 81, 898 67, 626 3, 784 101, 607 93, 119 5, 134 Other sciences 3,628 1,102 2,435 9,867 7,300 2,500 14,651 11,000 3,579 Psycho- logical Social sciences sciences Psycho- logical Social Total sciences sciences Total Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (total) 16,308 7,103 23,411 79,462 87,716 167,178 Administration on Aging Food and Drug Administration - Office of Education Office of Vocational Rehabilitation 447 592 1,039 1,800 200 1,200 4,779 1,540 6,319 24,444 26,991 51,435 3,500 14,921 18,421 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 9630 Approved Fore2tgut 11, 1969 Agency TARIF IV. 1960 (obligations) FEDERAL OBLIGATIONS 1968 Psycho- logical Total sciences- 15, 623 49, 655 (14, 788) (14, 352) 1,469 200 216_ 1,107 587 1,S62 122 FOR BEHAVIORAL tin thousands (estimate) Social sciences Total 28, 895 78, 550 (3,850) (18, 382) 5, 267 5, 467 10,050 10,050 216 10, 665 10665 6, 244 6, 831 8,988 9, 988 1,025 1,025 125 125 900 900 SCIENCE RESEARCH, 1960 AND of dollars' Agency 1968 '--Continued 1960 (obligations) 1968 (estimate) Total 4,279 27, 765 8,528 11,000 2, 273 3,658 7,304 Psycho- logical sciences Social sciences 4,090 (3, 132) 3.109 _ _L, 061 '1, 562 ' - 122 Psycho- logical sciences Socia' sciences Total Psycho- logical sciences Social sciences HEW-Continued Public Health Service__ National Institutes of Health Social security Administration Welfare Administration St. Elizabeths Hospital Department of Housing and Urban Development Department of Interior _ _ __ Department of Labor. Department of State (total) 11,529 (II, 506) 46 Department of Transporta- tion National Science Foundation_ National Aeronautics and Space Administration Office of Economic Opportunity U.S Arms Control and Disarmament Agency Veterans' Administration _ _ _ Other agencies Total 2, 597 1,005 213 1, 823 430 2,560 4, 420 430 1,005 2,/73 8, 953 5,073 190 3,654 319 4,279 18, 812 1,455 11, 000 2, 083 7,069 38,241 34,854 73,095 124,387 209,323 333,710 Departmental funds International Coopera- tion Administration Agency for Inter- national Development r 112 122 Source: "The Behavioral Sciences and the Federal Government," a report of the Advisory National Academy of Sciences, 1968, p. 39. Committee on Government Programs in the Behavioral Sciences, National Research Council, Fiscal year 1966 t Fiscal year 1967 Fiscal year 1968 Fiscal year 1969 TABLE V11.---FEOLRAL OBLIGATIONS FOR BASIC Social psychology $5, 259 4, 763 4, 076 7, 376 RESEARCH IN PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCES, FISCAL YEARS 1966--69 'Dollar amounts in thousands] , Department or Defense Anthropology $271 40 85 125 Economics Sociology Federal funds for research, development _ant other scientific activities, Fiscal years 1966, 1967, 1968 (vol. XVI) p._155. 2 Federal funds for research, development and other scientific: activities, fiscal years 1967, 1968, 1369 (vol. XVII) p. 159. Fiscal year 1966 1 Fiscal year 1967 2 Fiscal year 1968' Fiscal year 19694 $150 25 19 32 3 !bid, p. 160. !bid, P. 161. $810 268 300 412 Other $1, 404 3, 117 2, 081 3, 161 Total Total DOD Federal $7, 954 $65, 819 8,213 79,969 6, 561 86, 651 11,106 180,772 TABLE VIII FEIN RAL OBLIGATIONS FOR APPLIED RESEARCH IN PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCf AL SCIENCES, FISCAL YEARS 1966-69 Social psychology $7, 835 8,201 6,905 7,297 [Dollar amounts in thousands] Department of Defense Anthropology Economics Sociology Other 4;324 578 789 660 Federal funds for research, development and other scientific activities, fiscal years 1966, 1967, 1968, (vol. XVI) p. 178. [r Federal funds for research, development and other scientific activities, fiscal years 1967, 1968, 1969, (vol. XVII) p. 190. $6'12 I, 009 796 835 3 I b id. p.191. 'bid, p. 192. $2, 155 1,715 974 1,067 $2,631 2, 160 3, 134 1.900 Total DOD $13, 577 13, 663 12, 678 11, 809 Total Federal $156, 706 168, 973 179, 611 222, 502 TABLE IX.-FEDERAL OBLIGATIONS FOR RESEARCH (BASIC AND APPLI ED) IN THE PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL SCI ENCES, FISCAL YEARS 1968 E9 [Dollar amounts in thousands] Department at Defense Socml psychology Anthropology 1 scal year 1966 $13. 094 Fiscal year 1967 12, 974 Fiscal year 1968 11,061 Fiscal year 1969 14,6/3 Source: Tables VII and VIII. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, if here is nothing further on that subject, I have an item on an unrelated subject to discuss. Does the Senator wish me to yield? Mr. STENNIS. Just 1 minute: not over 2 minutes. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr STENNIS. The Senator has com- pleted his remarks. The committee has $595 618 874 725 Economics Sociology $732 1,034 815 917 $2, 965 1,983 1-, 274 1, 479 not used any time. Nevertheless, we might agree now on a limit applicable tomorrow, if the Senator is inclined at all to do so. Would an hour to a side be satisfactory? Mr. FULBRIGHT. There are a num- ber of Senators-the Senator from Michigan is one-who wish to speak on the subject. I think I ought to consult them before I agree. I personally have Other $4, 095 5, 277 5,215 5.061 Total DOD $21, 531 21, 876 19, 239 22, 915 Percent DOD/Federal 12.1 10. 2 7. 6 11.1 Percent DOD/Federal 8. 7 8. I 7. 1 5. 3 Total Percent Federal DOD/Federal $222, 525 248, 892 266, 2412 323, 274 9. 7 8.8 7. 2 7. 1 completed my remarks. We should give notice to Senators interested in the sub- ject. Mr. STENNIS. If we could have a quorum call- Mr. FULBRIGHT. There is one Sen- ator in particular who should be con- sulted. Outside of the ABM subject, the Senator from Wisconsin has been the "clearance" in this. The Senator knows Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11,196bekpproved FTRiq:94N/A1L/ 3R E w10i.-tPu-zP-7? 1g3160R000300100001-3 S 9631 that. I have coordinated this effort with him. I would not wish to enter into any kind of an agreement without a quorum call and without his having notice, be- cause he feels a special responsibility in this matter. The Senator is aware of that. Mr. STENNIS. Very good. I thought, though, if we could give that notice and have a quorum call? Mr. FULBRIGHT. We had better do it tomorrow. Mr. STENNIS. Tomorrow there will be so many other Senators competing for time. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I may make this suggestion. I am committed to make the statement I am about to make. I must get it in the RECORD. While I am doing that, perhaps the Senator or someone for him could get in touch with the Sena- tor from Wisconsin, and also, I would hope, the Senator from Michigan, whom I mentioned a moment ago, and see what their views are. While lam making this address, perhaps the Senator could get in touch with the Senator from Wis- consin. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will Senator yield me 2 minutes? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, in view of the fact that the Senator has had his say here about what these policy plan- ning projects are, I thought I might read into the RECORD some that my sub- committee was concerned with: Japanese rearmament, nuclear, and space programs: A study of factors and developments affecting the Japanese mil- itary contribution to the U.S. effort in Asia, including the security pact. Chinese military and foreign policy: A continuing analysis of the background and fundamental characteristics of Chi- nese foreign and military policies to elu- cidate their implications for U.S. re- search provides background for consul- tations with air staff officials and for in- puts to interdepartmental studies, such as work on strategic posture toward China. European security issues a continuing examination of trends in the political and military relations of European states: including possible changes in European security arrangements and na- tional developments affecting the overall European military posture. Soviet military and foreign policy: A continuing study of Soviet military doc- trine, use of military strength for politi- cal purposes, foreign policy, and politi- cal institutions in the Soviet Union and East European states. Military representation in U.S. mis- sions: Examines better method of mili- tary representation in handling military aid in foreign countries, specifically India, Indonesia, Brazil, and Iran. That is just naming five. This year these will cost about $580,000. In com- parison with those that our distinguished friend from Arkansas has been referring to, Ataturk and others, it makes a lot of sense to me that we should keep on studying these issues on a continuing basis. Mr. STENNIS. Until a few years ago, the authorization bill for the military program did not require that the re- search and development items be in- cluded in it, but we learned that we were not getting a major part of a certain weapons system before us?in other words, we just picked it up when it was ready to come off the assembly line, and we had to go back to get all the research and development, the tests, and the en- gineering. That was when we invented the law to require the research and de- velopment. What we were after was to get all the information on the weapons? the hardware, was the way we referred to it?before the Armed Services Com- mittee. But when we got the research and development required by law, we got a great many other things that we were not particular interested in. They were related, to a degree, and their number seems to have increased greatly year by year. There are so many of them, and many of them are so disassociated, that it is very difficult properly to evaluate all of them. As I recommended to the Senator from Arkansas?and his response was very logical?we would be glad for anyone to go through and pick out a list that per- tained more to the functions of other committees. I suppose almost any kind of list of subjects for research and devel- opment might pertain remotely to the work of any committee. But if Senators will bring out lists of those that belong more properly in the State Department, perhaps some in the Department of Commerce and other departments, they can go to their respec- tive logical places. But this year, after we got into this matter?and the subcom- mittee did a remarkable job?we could not just turn the file upside down, pour them out on the table, sweep them out with the afternoon trash, and leave them there with nothing done about them and no one to pass on them. We could not summarily reject the whole thing. So we performed a selective process, here, the best we could, and I hope that when this bill is finally completed we can obtain a further review of it, with the help of the Department of Defense and others, and make specific recommenda- tions as to where these projects should go. But in the meantime, this is just an alternative to cutting them all off. I hope the Senate will see fit, with the leadership of the Senator from Arkansas and other interested Senators, to find a way to adjust it for this year, and then we will take an approach next year that will be perhaps more satisfactory. I make these remarks to show clearly what the purpose is, and what the com- mittee is trying to do. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I wish to say that the Senator from Mississippi has been most reasonable in his reaction, both last year when this matter first came up, and now. I appreciate what he has said to- day. I believe the Senator; and I cer- tainly want to reemphasize that I mean no criticism of him. As I told the Senator, I asked the Di- rector of the Budget, Mr. Schultze, in open session, whether he had looked at it at all. He said he had not. This is an enormous and complicated program, and there dre many more im- portant things, that cost money and are more important to our security. There- fore, I think the Senator from Missis- sippi would probably be derelict in his duty if he did spend a lot of time on these projects, because I do not think they are really that important. But I would like to get our informa- tion in order, so to speak, to try to get back on the track. I think there was a period a few years ago when many of us were interested in universities. I live in a university town, and it is always publicized that "we got a research project of $15,000," and so on. At the time, it seemed all right. But I think it has got out of hand, and I would like to get it back on the track. I think the Senator from Mississippi has shown every indication that he shares that view, and all we have to do now is find out a way to do it. I thank the Senator very much for his remarks. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator from Arkansas for his kind remarks. LET'S PUT SPACE TO EARTHLY USES Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, I do not think any other Senator wishes to pursue this subject. I want to make some remarks about another subject which has been much in the public eye and which is not, unfortunately, relevant to the pend- ing business but is relevant to something the public is interested in. I feel com- pelled to Make these comments before we recess. I had hoped to have a more ap- propriate time to make them, but I must do it now. Like it or not?and I am not at all sure I do?there is no greater spur to human exertion than competition. From the chariot races of ancient Rome to the major league baseball of modern Amer- ica, contests of courage and skill have provided people with thrills and enter- tainment. Competition is also one of the powerful engines of economic growth and technological innovation. The rivalry of merchants and manufacturers was a powerful force in setting off the indus- trial revolution and is still a, major?if somewhat dogmatized?factor in our modern economy. The competitive in- stinct broke the 4-minute mile and sent astronauts to the moon; it also sent tens of millions of people to premature deaths in the two world wars. Competition between nations differs from the rivalry of individuals in that it is conducted on a far greater scale, brings to bear vastly greater resources, affects the lives of many more people, and is more likely than other rivalries to be conducted without rules or restraints to assure the survival of the participants. In other respects I perceive no important differences between the rivalries of in- dividuals, teams, corporations, armies, and nations. All are engaged in a contest for self-maximization, not just to excel but to exceed, not just to do something well but to do it better than somebody else. Competition is not the only spur to human exertion. At least in Western cultures the challenge of overcoming natural obstacles has fired the adventur- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9632 Approved For RVeminti11/30 L ? GJA-RD_P/11300364R000300100001.-3 [ANA RECORD ? SENATE August 11, 1969 ous spirit in man: The mountain chal- lenges the climber, the ave the surf rider, the sea the mariner, the jungle the explorer, the universe the astronaut. By paradoxical contrast, unnatural? by which I mean manmade?obstacles have no such motivating magic. For most of us such unnatural obstacles as decaying cities and polluted water and air are a tolerated nuisance rather than a motivating challenge.?We accepted price of something called "progress." Western man, it seems, has come close to reversing the ancient stoicism of the East: Restless and insatia ble in chal- lenging nature's creations, he is becom- ing passive and fatalistic about his own. He will leap to the stars and yet squat miserably in his own fouled nest. Were it not so paradoxical and n debilitating, one might even take this for a new form of spirituality. Be all that as it may, the competitive instinct is probably the inost reliable tool of human creativity. But it has cer- tain risks about it, one being the con- stant danger that a zealous competitor will compete too well and so put an end to the competition. In sports, in business, and in politics it is essential to confine the contest within rules which will pre- vent anyone from succeeding too com- pletely, thereupon putting an end to the game and robbing mankind of the creative benefits of the competitive process. The genius of the Ameri, an Constitu- tion is that, at least up to now, it has kept the game going and the competi- tors in competition. The division of gov- ernmental powers among three branches and 50 States puts the various con- tenders for power in the position of hav- ing little chance of victory but an ex- cellent chance of survival in the continu- ing struggle for power. The system works tolerably well largely because it does not depend too heavily on human conscience and voluntary restraints, which, admir- able through these are, must be counted among the less reliable of human attri- butes. Instead, with unsentimental real- ism, the framers of our Constitution faced up to the universality of the hu- man drive to self-aggrandizement, recognized it for the creative but dan- gerous force that it is, and harnessed it into a system of regulated ivalries, free enough to generate political energy, re- strained enough to protect the people from despotism. Difficult as it is to control, the com- petitive instinct is even more difficult to acknowledge. Only in sports are com- petitions conducted in their own name; the game is for its own sake, for the fun of playing and the hope of winning. But in politics we feel a_ compulsion to dress up our contentious impulses in the vocabulary of ideals and ideology. No matter what the fight and who is in- volved in it, we suppose, almost in- variably, that some great principle is at stake, some noble and unselfish purpose, such as realizing our own great ideals or, more commonly, saving people from the wicked designs of our rivals. To hear the Soviet and American lead- ers talk about the cold war, nothing could be further from their pristine thoughts than any notion of self-aggrandizement or getting one up on the other. Heaven forbid. By their own accounting of it the Russian leaders sit up nights in the Kremlin thinking up ways to lift the yoke of oppression from the downtrodden of the earth. President Nixon, for his part, recalled in a recent speech that the United States had suffered over a mil- lion casualties in four wars in this cen- tury, and then claimed that it had all be done out of saintly altruism. He de- .-- closed: Whatever faults we may have_as nation we have asked nothing for ptreselves in re- turn for those sacrifices. ,W have been gen- erous toward those wirdm we have fought. We've helped our fopther foes as well as our friends in the taskabf reconstruction. We are proud of this record and we bring the same attitude in oar search for a settlement in Vietnam., I do n insincer fere d an ac mea Mos fait tici thei MO spe wha No ideal g I sug trollin often th is not pri tion; that t tionalizing is tion; and that, i suggest that Mr. Nixon was in asserting that we had suf- million casualties in four wars as of pure altruism. Undoubtedly he it, but that doss not make it true. of us have a deep and touching in our own virtue, and most poll- ns have an equally tender regard for own rhetoric. Few people are more d by a moving speech than the er himself?but that does not make he says true. do I suggest that there are no or generous impulses in politics. St only that they are far less con- han we like to believe; that more not what we take for principle iple at all but rationalize- thing we are usually ra- instinct for competi- nything approaches a controlling influen on our behavior, it is this appetite for c. 'test. I further suggest that there would be s uch to gain from a candid acknowledgem t of our own political, nature. Indeed, i 's only by recognizing the fragility of our eals, the limited role they play in guidin ur behavior, and their susceptibility to c ruption by rationalization that we c have any hope of translating them in reality. The Founding Fathers had n illusions about the behavior of their fel low men and, because of their realism they were able to discipline the struggl for power so as to protect the people fr despotism. That brings me to the space race to its possible uses for earthly purpos s. The landing of Mr. Armstrong and .1- onel Aldrin on the moon called for a great deal of poeticizing about th hu- man spirit bursting its earthly 'finds, about the nobility_ of in: endless search for knowledge, an. about the boundless but unspecified benefits for mankind certain to derive from the set- ting of human feet upon the surface of the moon. In all this I perceive not humbug pure and simple but rather more sententious- ness than plain hard truth. Americans went to the moon for a number of rea- sons, of which, I am convinced, the most important by far was our desire to beat the Russians. The kick was not just in Speech of May 14, 1969. getting there but in getthig their first, A football team doos not celebrate the number of points it got if the other team got more points. Similarly, when Khrushchev cavorted over his sputnik back in 1957, it was not so much in de- light over what the Russians had done as in delight over what they had done that we had not done. Then in early 1961 Yuri Gagarip made his flight around the earth, the United States was em- barre:Srert at the Bay of Pigs, and the American people in general and the Ken- nedy' adm,i1ilstratin in paitieular were plunged i to depths of gloom and self- flagellation. These events stoked the fires Of American competitiveness. It was then that the Apollo program was approved and we set off on the $30 billion crash program that put Mr. Armstrong and Colonel Aldrin on the moon last week. I do not wish to belittle the achieve- ment in identifying the driving force be- hind it. But-neither do I see any point in glorifying the motive out of apprecia- tion for the achievement. In the space race thus far both Russians and Ameri- cans have accomplished technological prodigies and have done so for the most part because of the desire of each to sur- pass the other. Although some of us have thought the space contest hasty and ex- travagant in cost, it has certainly been a more constructive contest than the deadly race in armaments. It has, how- ever, been wasteful: Efforts have been duplicated, priorities distorted, and re- sources diverted from more urgent needs. The competition bids fair to get out of hand, to pass beyond creativity to prod- igality of worse. I would not eliminate the competition. People like it much too much, and if through some miracle the Russians and Americans could bring themselves to get together, drop the space race and proceed to explore the universe all cooperative and lovey-dovey, it would spoil every- body's fun and likely rob the project of its creative drive. What we might try to do is to devise a way of putting limits on the competition, keeping It within finan- cial bounds, and generally regulating the rivalry in such a way as to have the con- test without being consumed by it. Until now the Soviet-American space rivalry has been a contest without rules, and contests without rules are full of hazard for the participants. There is a latent militarism about the space race. As Prof. George Wald commented on the moon landing: What should have been a great flight of the human spirit conies to us heavy with threat. Those almost miraculous guidance systems that SO uncannily and their targets, will they one day be guiding missiles to find us?. Spurred by an overly intense desire to "win," the contest has broken the bounds of "true science," Which the great 19th century French physiologist Claude Ber- nard said, "teaches us to doubt and in ignorance to refrain." Oblivious in our haste to such caution- ary warnings, we have scarcely thought 2 "Intellectuals Deeply Divided Over Tin- plications of Peat," The Washington Post, July 22, 1969. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30i CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 11, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 9671 tions by dealers each and every time they purchase sporting ammunition. And most important of all, this bill will in no way impair the objectives of the Gun Control Act?namely to keep the firearms out of the hands of the wrong people; and to reduce misuse and criminal use of firearms. Mr. President, S. 2718 is a good bill. I urge prompt consideration and early favorable action. THE VOTE AND ARMS LIMITATION Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, I be- lieve that the long debate on the Safe- guard ABM system was an extremely healthy experience for us all. I feel strongly that, in the end, the vote dramatically reflected our deep con- cern for the continuing security of our great Nation. This was not a partisan vic- tory, nor was it a partisan loss. Senators of both parties rallied to the President's banner in this cause and, I am sure, greatly strengthened his hand in our quest for peace. An editorial entitled "ABM Vote and Arms Limits," published in the Los An- geles Times of August 8, is a concise and thought-provoking summary of this is- sue. I ask unanimous consent that it be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: ABM VOTE AND ARMS LIMITS Issue: Now that the Safeguard ABM has won Senate approval, how have prospects for arms control been helped or hindered? By voting to authorize first-phase deploy- ment of the Safeguard ABM system, the U.S. Senate has enhanced the prospects for an eventual arms control agreement with the Soviet Union. The development is one, there- fore, of historic importance. The margin of victory for the ABM was slim-51 to 50 on one key amendment and 51 to 49 on another?but this is a case where the proverbial inch is probably as good as a mile. Opponents vow to continue the fight, but most observers share the judgment of Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield that the anti-ABM forces reached their "high water mark" in the voting this week. The House is expected to approve deploy- ment of Safeguard by a much larger margin than did the Senate. Opponents will make another fight when appropriations for the project come up in separate legislation, but their cause is generally regarded as lost. It is important, at this point, to cut through the confusion which has been left by many weeks of wordy and acrimonious de- bate and get straight just what is involved. The Safeguard ABM, which is a system for defense against missile attack on this country, marks a realistic and laudable at- tempt by the Nixon Administration to set the stage for an end to the nuclear arms race. It would offer a "thin" system of protec- tion for the American people against a small- scale Chinese missile attack or an acciden- tal launching from any quarter. The overriding Purpose of Safeguard, how- ever, is to preserve the credibility of our nuclear deterrent in the minds of the Krem- lin leaders at a time when the latter are working hard to overcome the U.S. lead in missile striking power. The premise is that the Russians will never be tempted to launch a surprise missile at- tack on this country if we keep them con- vinced that enough of our missiles will sur- vive to destroy the Soviet Union in return. This could be accomplished, as some ABM critics suggest, by increasing our own force of offensive missiles. But such a move would be far more provocative?and more injurious to the chances of arms control?than deploy- ment of an ABM system which is strictly de- fensive in nature. The Safeguard system, if built in total, will cost over $10 billion, including warheads. But if arms limitation talks with the Soviets produce an agreement to limit ABM deploy- ment, the whole system will not be built. The Nixon Administration this year is ask- ing only for a $759 million authorization to go ahead with deployment of two prototype installations. Congressional approval improves President Nixon's bargaining position for the upcoming arms limitation talks with the Russians? who already have a limited ABM system of their own, and show no inclination to aban- don it. Meanwhile, the closeness of the Senate vote on Safeguard dramatizes the fact that the Pentagon can no longer count on unques- tioned congressional approval of expensive new military programs and weapons sys- tems. Military spending will be closely and critically scrutinized. Even many ABM proponents will agree that the new skepticism is not a bad thing. NETWORK CIGARETTE ADVERTIS- ING LETTERS Mr. MOSS. Mr. President, in separate letters to me as chairman of the Con- sumer Subcommittee, the heads of the three major television networks have responded to my plea that the broadcast- ers relieve cigarette manufacturers of their contractual commitments so as to enable the cigarette industry to with- draw from all broadcast advertising by January 1, 1970. CBS said yes. NBC and ABC said no. On July 31, 1969 I sent the following letter to the heads of each of the three major television networks: As you know, the cigarette manufacturers have now indicated to the Commerce Com- mittee their willingness to withdraw from the broadcast advertising of cigarettes after December 31, 1969, "if the broadcast indus- try will simultaneously terminate all con- tractual arrangements for the broadcast of cigarette advertising." I am not unmindful of the economic dis- ruption which would be caused by such abrupt termination of cigarette advertising. But weighing the public health imperatives in the light of your strong traditions of social responsibility, I would hope that you would find it possible to accommodate the time table adopted by the cigarette manufacturers. I would very much appreciate hearing from you about your intentions with respect to enforcement of advertising contracts with the cigarette companies after January 1, 1970. Ithave now heard from each network. Mr. Stanton's letter on behalf of CBS is temperate, rational, and in the highest traditions of broadcaster responsibility. Mr. Goodman's letter for NBC is disap- pointing. Mr. Goldenson's letter on be- half of ABC is unresponsive, shallow, and insensitive. Mr. Stanton says that if Congress will grant the tobacco industry antitrust im- munity for its agreement to withdraw from the broadcast advertising of ciga- rettes, "CBS will release the cigarette advertisers from their commitments." He points out that responsibility for grant- ing such exemption properly rests with Congress. We agree and we intend to carry out that responsibility as soon as possible. Mr. Stanton also raises valid questions which merit response. He questions the legislative soundness of the tobacco industry's proposal of a "congressional prohibition of any Fed- eral Trade Commission action which would require health warnings in print media." I agree. I, too, oppose any such prohibition, and I see no inclination on the part of the Senate to grant such pro- hibition. I might add, however, that the National Association of Broadcasters warmly supported such prohibition in the House. He fears the "transfer of existing ex- penditures for broadcast cigarette ad- vertising to print media." So do I, as I indicated at the time the tobacco in- dustry made its proposal. This must not be allowed to happen. And if it can be prevented only by FTC action to require a warning in every cigarette ad, the FC must be left free to require such warn- ings. Mr. Goldenson takes the position that even if the termination of cigarette ad- vertising "would greatly reduce cigarette consumption," he would consider that ABC had no responsibility to terminate cigarette advertising unless it were term- inated in all news media. In fact, he is shocked by such "discrimination" as con- trary to "fair competition." "Discrimination," and "Fair Compe- tition" are serviceable slogans. But we are not talking about slogans. We are talking about the direct and unparalleled impact of the broadcast media upon the American home. Ever since television be- came an advertising medium, its sales- men have been contemptuously derid- ing newspapers and magazines as sec- ond-class media. Television with its animated, visual-audial impact upon nonselective viewers, has been heralded as the most powerful sales medium in history. Now Mr. Goldenson claims to be the victim of discrimination. The unpleasant fact is that television and radio cigarette advertising have been singled out as abominations by every major public health organization con- cerned with the hazards of cigarette smoking, because they have a direct and inescapable impact upon young people. As the broadcasting critic of the Wash- ington Post put it this morning, research has demonstrated that "no way exists for avoiding the young viewer of TV." There are few 4-, 5-, or 6-year-old children in this country who cannot recite by rote a half dozen cigarette jingles and catch phrases. They did not learn them by reading magazines and newspapers. The broadcasters them- selves have recognized their unique im- pact by agreeing to a 4-year phaseout of broadcast cigarette advertising. Moreover?and the broadcasters con- veniently suppress this fact?broad- casters alone enjoy a public monopoly conferred by Congress of broadcast frequencies. Congress has asked in re- turn, only that broadcasters serve the Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30_,.. CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9672 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 11, 1969 "public interest." Magazines and news- papers carry no such burden. Now, let us look at the shamelessly self-serving argument that until Con- gress bans the sale of cigarettes, the freedom of unrestrained advertising in all media remains a sacred right. Of course, if cigarettes were a new product about to be marketed with full knowledge that their consumption would kill hundreds of thousands, their sale would be banned without hesitation or quibble. But no responsible public -health official, to my knowledge, is recommend- ing a ban despite the proven hazards of smoking. Why? Because millions of Americans are addicted or, at least, heavily habituated to smoking. The in- evitable consequence of a cigarette ban in terms of a black market and the attendant law-enforcement chaos and social misery would make the bitter experience of prohibition pale by com- parison. That is why cigarsttes are not banned and the broadcasters know it,. It does not follow as the night the day that the failure of Congress to ban smoking, by law, forces us to permit the unrestricted promotion of cigarettes. Neither logic nor humanity dictates that we leave our young people thus exposed and unprotected. As I indicated in my letter to the net- works, I am not unmindful of the eco- nomic dislocation which would be caused by the loss of cigarette revenues. That loss, however, should be viewed only in the perspective of the human and eco- nomic loss which accompanies the pre- mature death and disease which strike thousands of Americans each year. Cigarette advertising on television and radio was certainly not the only factor influencing the decision of 70 million Americans to smoke. But I find it hard to believe that the more than $2 bil- lion of cigarette advertising revenues en- joyed by broadcasters since 1952 were not instrumental in persuading hundreds of thousands to smoke and hundreds of thousands not to quit. We are told that experience in other countries proves that the end of televi- sion advertising will have DO impact on cigarette consumption. But no country in the world has approached the inaS- sive exposure of citizens through televi- sion to cigarette commeteiels. There is no comparable experience. Mr. Goldenson's threat to curtail pub- lic-interest broadcasting if cigarette vertising revenues drop is simple bloc mail and not worthy of further comment: While refusing to release cigarette manufacturers from their commitments, NBC expresses its willingness to allow cigarette companies to substitute its non- cigarette brand advertising. Fairness re- quires that the cigarette manufacturers be able to utilize the maximum feasible time for the advertising of noncigarette products. The committee will explore this possibility with the cisarette com- panies. NBC's recommendation for institu- tional, public service sponsorship by the cigarette companies is also worth ex- ploring further. But cigarette manufacturers should not be forced, by commerical considera- tions, to continue to advertise cigarettes on radio and television. I am today asking the FCC to take note of the discrepancies among the net- work responses and to inform me if the FCC's mandate from Congress to see that broadcasters operate in the public in- terest affords them any opportunity to influence NBC's or ABC's decision. On our part we in Co least make certain vertising on rad' September 19 I have a to prepa would f of ciga TV by guage will indus well ' -scan at cigarette ad- and TV will cease by ed the Justice Department legislative language which cilitate the agreed withdrawal ette advertising from radio and the cigarette industry. The lan- will not be "discriminatory," but broad enough to permit tobacco ry withdrawal from print media as that later becomes feasible. GAS PL IMP INE RETAILERS WANT DE- ION ALLOWANCE AND OIL RT QUOTAS ABOLISHED Mr. P often we composed These smal giant major have the bene lowance or oil a these small inde not have the gigan meat subsidies of t panies, they must comp Mr. President on. June Retail Gasoline Dealers Wisconsin, Inc., held their co ? OXMIRE. Mr. President, all too ergot that the oil industry is f many small businessmen. usinessmen are not like the '1 companies; they do not t of the oil depletion al- port quotas. Although dent businessmen do profits or Govern- major oil com- e against them. 3 and 24 the ociation of vention in 'on they Eau Claire. At that conven aodpted the following resolutio OIL DEPLETION ALLOWANCE Whereas, it is apparent that pair leum producers have been favored by way of ed- eral Government oil depletion allow nce against income tax to the extent of 27 annually; and Whereas, the importing petroleum 11 11 ducers has further been granted fav. ed treatment on foreign crude oil imports; d Whereas, such special allowances ave been conducive to the promotion the in- ous price wars; and Whereas, such results have caus grave economic hardship and in some c com- plete economic disaster to the re e ;- Now, therefore, Resolved, that the Retail G. - ne Dealers Association of Wisconsin, In , in convention assembled, urges the Co ess of the United States and our Wise n Senators and Con- gressmen to t :ppropriate action to ter- oil depletion allowance to oil producers and to terminate favored treat- ment on foreign crude oil imports. I think this resolution is eloquent tes- timony to the need to change our tax laws and the oil import program which give the major oil companies all these subsidies to the detriment of the con- sumers and small businessmen. I, for one, shall do all that I can to implement this resolution. 2 % WALKER W. BROWN, PRINCIPAL, JOHN A. SUTTER, JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL, CANOGA PARK, CALIF. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, I should like to give what I feel is much deserved recognition to a distinguished educator from the State of California, Mr. Walker W. Brown, principal of John A. Sutter Junior High School in Canoga Park, Calif. Mr. Brown has earned the highest esteem of all who have worked with him during the 20 years he has worked with our young people. In his years as a teacher and adminis- trator, Mr. Brown has always strived to teach his students the American Through his work with student govern- ment, the meaning of democracy and a deep appreciation of it have been brought firsthand to his students, and at the same time, he has been educating and training the responsible leaders of tomorrow. Under his direction, programs dealing with Americanism and our American heritage have been held and have con- tinued for the entire school year. Due largely to the leadership of Mr. Brown. Sutter Junior High School was named a recipient of the n68 Principal Award and George Washington Honor Medal from Freedom's Foundation of Valley Forge. M. Brown has shown not only to his students, but also to all the teachers who work with him as well as all of his as- sociates, that no matter what their own personal political leanings, they can still take pride in the great history of our free people and in just being Americans, Mr. President, I am proud that Cali- fornia has an educator of Mr. Brown's caliber. I am sure that he and his col- leagues fully realize that he can best mold responsible citizens of the future at this early age. This is the time when young people are in their formative years, a time when their feelings toward things of great value like democracy and our American way of life are being molded-- feelings they will hold for the rest of their lives. And under Mr. Brown's guidance, a giant step is being taken to- ward ending future campus disruptions and toward providing the responsible leadership that will be so badly needed in the tumultuous years ahead. Mr. President, I salute Mr. Walker Brown, principal of Sutter Junior High School, for the outstanding work he has done with our young people, and I pray that his sincere efforts may continue for many years to come with even greater success than he has had thus far. EMERGENCY INSURED STUDENT LOAN ACT OP 1969 Mr. SPONG. Mr. President, on July 24, 1969, at 12:50 p.m., three Americans returned from a trip into space which took two of them to the surface of the moon. Behind the trip lay hours of re- search and development, billions of dol- lars, and the dreams of millions of per- sons through the United States and the world. Preparation for the trip not only produced a rnaminouth scientific and technological success but also resulted in various spin-off deVelopments which will advance many fields. All of this would however, been im- possible without educated men and wo- men. Education is the /tingle most im- portant element responsible for the re- cent space feat. It is single most im- portant factor in enabling us to continue Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 On The Floor - 11 of other weapons systems. "This does not mean that if Safeguard has a transistor that we cannot deal with that transistor in another system, or a weapon, or a Sprint, or a PAR (perimeter acquisition radar), or anything else that happens to be in the Safeguard system." What it did do, he added, was "to reject Safeguard as the system upon which the research and development will be focused." Richard B. Russell (D Ga.), President Pro Tempore of the Senate, said that backers of the Cooper-Hart amend- ment had been arguing for additional research and devel- opment instead of deployment. The Smith language, he said, "will kill all the research and all the development of the so-called Safeguard sys- tem after Senators have stood here on the floor day after day and stated they were in favor of research and devel- opment, but not deployment. This strangles it in the crib." Another ABM supporter, Howard H. Baker Jr. (R Tenn.), said that the Smith amendment would prevent "evolutionary development" to improve the Safeguard sys- tem. "I do not believe we intend to scrap what we have done so far and require out scientists to start over from scratch with some other system," he added, but that was "the inevitable effect" of Mrs. Smith's proposal. Stennis called the new amendment "a legislative monstrosity, when there is not time to analyze, to find the meaning of words, to check and doublecheck....It is leg- islating in the dark where we do not know what these words mean." When the voting ended, Mrs. Smith had joined the backers of the Cooper-Hart amendment but the two Sen- ators whose positions were not known, Anderson and Wil- liams of Delaware, lined up with the Administration. Under Senate rules an amendment needs a clear ma- jority to carry, and although Vice President Agnew cast a "nay" vote to break the tie, this was not necessary to de- feat it. The final vote on the second Smith amendment was 50-51, with 36 Democrats and 14 Republicans in sup- port of it, and 21 Democrats and 29 Republicans plus Agnew against it. Of the 21 Democrats who opposed the amendment, all but five were Southerners. All but seven Northern Democrats supported it. Cooper-Hart Amendment. Voting on the Cooper-Hart amendment followed immediately after the defeat of the Smith provision. There was a rush of murmurs when Mrs. Smith changed her previous position to vote against the anti-ABM measure. Hers was the only switch, setting the tally at 49-51. McIntyre Amendment. The next day, McIntyre tried to rally the anti-ABM forces to support his limited deploy- ment compromise. The amendment would allow installa- tion of radars, computers and electronic equipment at two Air Force bases in North Dakota and Montana, but would prevent deployment of operational missiles or acquisition of other sites. He called the Aug. 6 votes "a hollow victory indeed" for the Nixon Administration. Since "the Senate is in great disagreement among itself" over the Safeguard, he said, the bill should spell out what Defense officials could do rather than give them latitude to act. Stennis objected to the McIntyre amendment. "Just a few hours ago 51 Senators put their stamp of approval on phase one (of the Safeguard system)." The McIntyre atnendment "cuts some pieces out of phase one," he said, Fulbright said he did not understand how McIntyre's Another Memorable Vote Sen. Clinton P. Anderson (D N.M.) cast another crucial vote in the field of national defense Aug. 6. It was reminiscent of his vote as a House Member on the 203-202 roll-call that extended the draft Aug. 12, 1941. Anderson had not announced his ABM position before the Senate showdown on the Safeguard sys- tem. Only his stand and that of Sen. John J. Wil- liams (R Del.) were unknown to the public. Williams, typically closemouthed about his vote both before and immediately after the roll-call, would not discuss his views. Anderson's decision and thoughts were made know in an interview with Congressional Quarterly. Anderson was subjected to a steady barrage of phone calls on the morning of the Aug. 6 vote. Shortly before 11:30 a.m., President Nixon called and spoke briefly with Anderson. An aide said former Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, an opponent of the Safeguard system, had called Anderson earlier in the morning. "I have not had five minutes free this morning because of the telephone," Anderson told Congres- sional Quarterly shortly after 11:30 a.m. that morn- ing. An aide said Anderson had received about six ex- tended calls from other Senators and estimated that the New Mexico Senator had made several other calls himself. Anderson said he had made up his mind "prob- ably during the end of last week or the beginning of this week." Referring to his support for ABM in 1968, he said that he didn't really "have to make up his mind much." Anderson said that he was influenced in reach. ing his decision by a speech of Hans A. Bethe of Cornell University. Bethe supported a thin ABM system around U.S. missile sites. Anderson also said, "Scoop Jackson's presentation was excellent." Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D Wash.) was one of the major supporters of the Safeguard system. While saying "I tried my very best to find out what the facts were," Anderson admitted, "I haven't followed the debate in the Senate as closely as I might. There are no new ideas being expressed; the positions have been established for months." Anderson recalled, "The first vote I cast in Con- gress in 1941 was to extend the draft. The memory of that has stayed with me for a long time." He likened that bill, which he said was widely attacked by isolationists, with the Senate vote on the ABM. "The same circumstances exist today," he said. "There were very heavy pressures on me then from the so-called liberal bloc. But I had to vote for the bill." "Averell Harriman came by yesterday," Ander- son added. He described Harriman, an opponent of the ABM, as a "real old friend from the days when we were in the Truman Cabinet together." But, the Senator added, "I couldn't promise everyone every- thing," (Anderson is n former Secretory of Agri? cu ture. ) amendment wo7413 limit the_ Pen h tagon. T e o_nleorit proved For Release2004/1 du1/3e0 : CIA-R0P71600364R000300100001-3 PAGE 1434?August 8, 1969 COPYRIGHT 1969 CONGRESSIONAL QUARTERLY INC. Reproduction prohibited in whole or In port except by editorial client. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Longest Military Debate The Senate debate on the Antiballistic Missile System, which lasted 29 days, was the sixth longest debate in the Senate since 1945. It was the longest debate since that year on any military authorization bill. The debate on the Open Housing Act of 1968 lasted 53 days. The 1964 debate on the Civil Rights Act, lasted 82 days. It was the longest debate in the history of the Senate. The debate on the Foreign Assistance Act of the same year lasted 31 days. In 1960, debate on the Civil Rights bill lasted 39 days, and there were 35 days of debate in 1953 on the bill giving the coastal states title to the tidelands. "affirmatively authorizes two bases.. .which are intended to be operative bases," he said. He said he would support it "if I could be convinced it is truly restrictive in a mean- ingful way." The vote, the last on the Safeguard ABM during con- sideration of S 2546, was 27-70. Five Republicans and two Southern Democrats voted for it. Following the votes, President Nixon was reported by White House spokesman Ronald L. Ziegler as "pleased... and gratified by the results and the bipartisan voting that was apparent in the outcome." In another reaction the vote was interpreted by the Soviet newspaper Izvestia as a victory for the antimilitary forces in the United States. Future Controversy. However, continued attempts to block the ABM system were certain later in the session in the Senate where the opposition is centered. Some oppo- nents vowed an attack when the annual defense appropria- tions bill with funds for the plan is considered later in the session. In addition, many who opposed the ABM also plan to attack other programs authorized in the bill. The ABM funds authorized in the bill amounted to $759.1 million Out of a total of $20 billion contained in S 2546. The re- maining funds were designated for numerous research and procurement programs by all military services and the De- fense Department. Many of these programs had become centers of controversy and criticism during the growing debate over defense spending and contracting and nation- al priorities. About 20 amendments were either already offered or were being considered on the bill assuring that debate would continue for several weeks. Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield (D Mont.) Aug. 6 indicated that debate On the measure would probably continue past the three- week Congressional recess beginning Aug. 13. The controversial development of chemical-biological warfare weapons was the subject of seven amendments to curtail, oversee or cut back such operations. (For story on chemical-biological warfare, see Weekly Report p. 1313.) William Proxmire (D Wis.), an ardent critic of defense spending, introduced several amendments to oversee job changes of executives bet ween defense contractors and the Pentagon and of contracts and profits. (For story on de- fense contractirApisremic IF8F/RttleasIVI004/11/30 : CIA- On The Floor - 12 ABM Vote-Switchers Ten Senators who were in the Senate in both 1968 and 1969 changed their votes on similar amend- ments offered by Sens. Cooper and Hart to delay an ABM defense in both sessions. A June 24, 1968, amendment to the military con- struction authorization bill by Cooper and Hart was proposed to delay a $227.3 million authorization for the Johnson Administration ABM system. Their 1969 amendment barred deployment of the Safeguard system but permitted research. Six Senators who voted against the 1968 amend- ment voted for the amendment in 1969. They were: Birch Bayh (D Ind.), Howard W. Cannon (D Nev.), Fred R. Harris (D Okla.), Daniel K. Inouye (D Ha- waii), Warren G. Magnuson (D Wash.) and James R. Pearson (R Kan.). Four Senators, Winston L. Prouty (R Vt.), Hugh Scott (R Pa.), Margaret Chase Smith (R Maine), and John J. Williams (R Del.) voted for the 1968 amendment and against the 1969 proposal. (For 1968 vote, see vote 154, 1968 Almanac p. 34-S.) In addition Sens. J. Caleb Boggs (R Del.) and Len B. Jordan (R Idaho) voted against the ABM on at least one of the other occasions in 1968 and for it in 1969. Thomas J. McIntyre (D N.H.) and Joseph M. Montoya (D N.M.) voted for the ABM on all 1968 occasions but against it in 1969. Proxmire also offered an amendment to tighten spend- ing on the Air Force's controversial C-5A transport plane, for which costs had increased significantly during its con- struction. Other amendments were offered to curtail or end spending on the Army main battle tank program, defense research programs, the defense contingency fund and to limit troops strengths. Still others would require reports from the Pentagon on contract progress and release of studies by Defense "think tanks." Tie Votes Not Uncommon Although the 50-50 vote on the Smith amend- ment was the first tie vote in this session of Congress, ties are not unusual. Since 1952 there have been only three years-1954, 1957 and 1962?in which no votes were tied in the Senate. Article 1, section 3 of the Constitution provides that the Vice President may cast a vote to break a tie in the Senate. Since a tie vote defeats the measure being voted upon, the Vice President usual- ly votes to break the tie only if he favors passage of the measure. The last such occurrence was on March 11, 1968, when Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey voted "yea" to break a 42-42 deadlock on an amendment to provide funds for the Office of Economic Opportunity's Head Start Program. (See vote 32, p. 10-S, 1968 Almanac.) RDP71B00164 R000300100001-3 COPYRIGHT 1969 CONGRESSIONAL QUARTERLY INC. Reproduction prohibited in whole or in port except by editorial clienh August 8, 1969?PAGE 1435 ?August 8, 19 ? proved For ICOMD-I?Miggf8NA9,:latalWalWAVR00300100001-3 S 9457 One such moment arose recently when the Attorney General and I took different posi- tions on the issue of voting rights legislation. The 1965 Voting Rights Act expires next year. I have urged its simple extension. When the Attorney General offered a different pro- posal, which I opposed, some people asked me why I disagreed with the country's chief legal officer, a member of my own party. I have the highest personal regard for the Attorney General and I consider him one of the ablest men in public life. He and I are lawyers who disagree on the timeliness and certain provisions of proposed legisla- tion. It is not unusual for lawyers to disagree. I co-sponsored and fought for passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965. I believed this landmark legislation was the least we could do to prevent the exclusion of Negroes from the voting rolls in the South. The Act was specifically designed to pinpoint conspiracies that serve to maintain "whites-only" regis- tration. Literacy tests, for example, are pro- hibited when they are used for the purpose of discriminating. If the effect of the law has been regional, that is only because the pat- tern of discrimination has been regional. The Attorney General, however, hes pro- posed new legislation which, among other provisions, would abolish literacy tests in all states and do away with state residency bans. I approve of those features and will vote for them if they are considered as separate leg- islation after the Voting Rights Act is ex- tended. My present opposition to these pro- visions is a matter of timing. There is a danger that the present Voting Rights Act could expire by default. Twenty states now have literacy tests?many of them for nondiscriminatory reasons. Only in the deep Smith have they been used to ex- clude Negroes. But any attempt to change the laws of all twenty states would provoke extended debate in Congress and it might prove impossible to get the new law passed before the Voting Rights Act expires. All the progress we have made would go down the drain, as non-complying areas would hasten to exploit the expiration of the Act. However, there are also other parts of the proposed new law which I would have to op- pose, no matter what the timing. Under the 1965 Voting Rights Act county officials in the South can no longer resort to the kind of tricks which used to keep Negroes from voting. Some areas, for example, had laws which required would-be voters to "interpret the Constitution." Of course, such tests seldom kept whites out of the voting booth. The present Act suspends such de- vices until the offending counties can prove that they have not been used to discriminate for five full years. We put "teeth" into the law so that no state could get around the Fifteenth Amendment's mandate that the right to vote shall not be denied because of "race, color, or previous condition of servi- tude." Unfortunately, the proposed new law would scrap the system under which states now affected must clear with Washington changes in state and local election laws. This would take the heat off states which discrim- inate by giving the Federal Government a much heavier burden of proof. The Justice Department might have to rush lawyers into every suspect county just before election day trying to protect black voters' rights. Besides the obvious waste of tax dollars, this procedure would allow county officials to stall the Government with legal maneuvers until the elections were over. That is a step backward. I do not Want to endanger what Lord Coke called the "knowne certaintie of the law" when that law has worked extremely well. Therefore, I expect to do whatever is necessary to lead the fight, if I am asked to do it, for the extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. My position is influenced heavily by a deep personal commitment which has been con- k sistent throughout my years in Congress. The extension of the 1965 Voting Rights Act is quite simply a matter of human rights. That guarantees my strongest efforts on the floor of the United States Senate. CONCLUSION OF MORNING BUSINESS Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, is there further morning business? The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Is there further morning business? If not, morning business>100 AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FICSAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJA- LEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Senate pro- ceed to the consideration of the un- finished business. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The bill will be stated by title for the information of the Senate. The ASSISTANT LEGISLATIVE CLERK, A bill (S. 2546) to authorize appropriations during the fiscal year 1970 for procure- ment of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and to au- thorize the construction of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to pre- scribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. Is there objection to the present consideration of the bill? There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider the bill. The PRESIDENT pro tempore. The junior Senator from Missouri (Mr. EAGLETON) is recognized. THE MDT-70-1VI5I5 BATTLE TANK Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, Sen- ator HATFIELD and I, joined by Senators MCGOVERN, MONDALE, MOSS, PROXMIRE, and YARBOROUGH, have introduced an amendment to S. 2546 which would tem- porarily delay the further development of the Main Battle Tank until the Comp- troller General has an opportunity to report to the Congress on the practicabil- ity and cost-effectiveness of this highly complex defense system. This is a modest amendment in terms of the dollars it would strike out of the bill?$30 million for research and de- velopment and $24.5 million for produc- tion base support. I do not pretend to have the technical competence to judge the ultimate ef- fectiveness of the MBT-70. Nor do I question in any way the sincerity and competence of those military officers and contractors who have brought the system to its present state. But when the research and develop- ment costs of a military system con- ceived in 1963 have risen 528 percent in just 6 years, when the tank's projected operation date has slipped back from 1969, which was its originally estimated operational date, to 1974 or 1975; and when the strategic assumptions of a land war in Europe have necessarily changed during the extended period this tank has been on the drawing board; when we consider all these things, and others, I feel that Congress is obliged to know precisely what it is buying before it votes further funds for this project. Mr. President, the MBT-70 project is a joint undertaking by the United States and the Federal Republic of Germany. It began as a quest for a dream tank, rather than as a weapon designed to ful- fill a specific mission or a specific threat. Indeed, the Army had no clear idea of what the configuration of the MBT-70 would be until research, development, testing and evaluation was well under- way. Mr. President, General Burba, who formerly was in charge of this project, was interviewed in September of 1967, and in that interview appearing in the Armed Forces magazine he said this: For the first time in the history of modern tank design, the designers of the MIST were given carte blanche to optimize basic design configurations into which they put the best scientific engineering know-how. I might add that the designers, as re- ferred to by General Burba, according to the Defense Department, are the con- tractors on both sides plus the joint engi- neering agency. As the quotation reflects, they were given carte blanche to come up with almost anything they could conjure. General Betts, Army Director of Re- search and Development, explained the spectacular rise in R. & D. costs in these terms : For the first estimate we did not have a design. We did not have any really detailed idea of what would go into the tanks so the early estimates were very summary in nature. The most summary kind of cost esti- mates have become the hallmark of the MBT-70. The initial 1963 estimate for joint re- search and development, training, and evaluation was somewhere between $80 million and $86 million. In 1965, the ante was raised to $138 milion. Now it is $303 million. Those are the estimates for research, development, training, and evaluation originally brought in at $80 million to $86 million. That has now now sky- rocketed, with its first stop at $138 mil- lion, and now the current estimate is $303 million. Mr. President, I have had prepared a chart which is on the easel in the rear of the Chamber. I must confess that my original inclination to make up a chart stemmed from the fact that in discuss- ing military matters, it seems indispen- sable to have some kind of chart, whether secret or nonsecret, whether classified or nonclassified. I assure you, Mr. President, that this is the most nonclassified chart in exist- ence. Having had it prepared, I believe its illustrative purpose will bear out in graphic terms that which I have just verbalized; namely, as to the continued escalation of the estimated costs of re- search, development, training, and evalu- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S948 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?SENATE August 8, 1.969 ation with the program as it began in 1963. The difference between the red and green lines on the chart is that when the program was originally conceived in 1963, there was a partnership agreement be- tween the United States and the Federal Republic of Germany, a 50-50 partner- ship at that time, with $80 million being the total estimated cost, one-half to be borne by the United States ttrld the other half to be borne?$40 million?by the Federal Republic of Germany. That continued in 1965. As to 1966, 196'7, and 1968, the costs had risen so much by that time, to $138 million, but it was still a 50-50 arrangement, one-half German, one-half American, in terms of cost. It was in 1968 when the greatest escala- tion in costs took place and the 50-50 Partnership arrangement just completely evaporated and it became pretty close to a 75 percent American endeavor--close to $230 million, and about $70 million on the German side. Mr. LONG. Mr. President, will the Senator from Missouri yield? The PRESIDING OFFICEn (Mr. AL- LEN in the chair). Does the Senator from Missouri yield to the Senator from Louisiana? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. Mr. LONG. Would the Senator tell me whether those who negotiated that agreement ever heard of the balance-of- payments problems? The fact that the Germans had a good surplus and we had a big deficit, did we know about that in negotiating the agreement Mr. EAGLETON. Frankly, in answer to the Senator from Louisiana, I Just do not know as to whether the balance- of-payments question was considered or taken into the equation at the time the determination was made. The main thrust of my argument, Senator, is, and I do not wish to becloud the issue or to avoid answering the Senator's question, but the escalation of the cost, the ancil- lary or subsidiary questions as to the di- vergence away from the previous 50-50 agreement to what it is now, is loosely a 75-to-25 arrangement. Mr. LONG. The point is that the chart shows it is "heavying" up on the costs and departing from the 50-50 arange- ment where we now do about 75 percent of it, I would assume. Mr. EAGLETON. That is right. Mr. LONG. During this same period we were negotiating a treaty that the Germans pay for more of their own ex- penses of doing business because we could not carry them any longer, with this Na- tion carrying the cost of this develop- ment: Here is an agreement that was apparently negotiated, diami trically op- posite, by apparently some enthusiast over in the Pentagon who thought his program was so great that we ought to depart from the 50-to-50 ratio and go to an 80-to-20 ratio, perhaps, at the very time this Government was Pressing the German Government to carry more of the burden. Mr. EAGLETON. I think the Senator is eminently correct. I take it that today, near the latter part of 1969, it is still the pious hope?and I eauphasize the word "pious"?that the German Federal Republic and other governments that constitute our NATO partners will carry a greater burden of defense costs. I em- phasize the words "pious hope" because there has been no manifestation, whether it be in the way of troops or anything else, that gives substance to that pious hope. Here in 1968 was an agreement which went into the very teeth of our desire to get out of the dilemma with re- spect to the twofold problem?for them to carry a greater burden of the defense costs and to some extent relieve our bal- ance-of-payments problem. Mr. LONG. Here is someone who did not want to be forced by pressure or cir- cumstances; who was being required to dress in a Santa Claus costume and put on a pair of overhauls and go to work.; and here is an agreement which was ne- gotiated apparently completely against the current, swimming upstream, while the Whole trend was to go in favor of helping us balance our payments. Here was a situation where there was an 80-20 arrangement, when we could not pay and the other fellow could pay, which would require us to move away from the 80-20 arrangement to a 50-50 arrangement, and yet we were moving away from the 50-50 arrangement toward an 80-20 ar- rangement. Mr. EAGLETON. I agree with the Sen- ator. If there was any merit, from the international monetary point of view or the balance of payments point of view, in deviating from the original concept of that agreement?to wit, 50-50?the mer- itorious argument would be for the Fed- eral Republic of Germany to take up 80 percent of the burden and leave us, for a change, on the short end of the stick, and assume 20 percent of the burden. The logical result would have been that result rather than the end result re- flected in that chart. Mr. LONG. If we look at the condi- tions between 1965 and 1968 and the pressures on our monetary situation, of course, it will be seen that we should have been moving toward a 50-50 ar- rangement rather than in the other di- rection. Mr. EAGLETON. That is right. I thank the Senator from Louisiana. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr EAGLETON. I am glad to yield to the senior Senator from Missouri. Mr. SYMINGTON. I congratulate my colleague on a typically thorough de- velopment of a group of pertinent facts, and was most interested in the com- ments made by the distinguished chair- man of the Finance Committee, who knows, as do we all, of the increasing problems incident to our continuing un- favorable balance of payments. I be- lieve the last quarter was the worst we have had in our history. I would ask the able Senator where this research and development work was done? Mr. EAGLETON. The physical site or the physical location? Mr. SYMINGTON. Both. Mr. EAGLETON. In both countries it was in terms of the engine, which is Research was being done in the Federal Republic of Germany, and in the United States, by the General Motors Corp., and the Lycoming Corp. in the State of Con- necticut is doing some work in terms of researching a turbine engine that may conceivably some day go into the MBT-70. Mr. SYMINGTON. When the increased cost developed, as this illuminating chart shows, was the increased cost on work done primarily in this country? How was that divided? In other words, was there any additional direct negative effect on our balance of payments? Mr. EAGLETON. The backup figures on some of this material are not publicly available, as I am sure the Senator must know, based on his long experience on the Armed Services Committee. The amount of work being done, though, will be reflected at the present time in terms of the amounts here and in the Republic of Germany. It is close to 80-20; 80 American, 20 German. Mr. SYMINGTON. Has any adequate explanation been given the Senator as to why there was such a sudden sharp increase in the money expended by the United States as against the money ex- pended by Germany? Mr. EAGLETON. I am sure that per- haps later on the Senator from Missis- sippi can clarify any erroneous miscon- ception I may have, but the original con- tract in 1963 was based an $80 million and a 50-50 coequal partnership, which was estimated on production levels look- ing down the road. The cost of research went up. The target for production was enhanced and went up. It was assumed that the greatest production would be done in the United States and, hence, the United States should share a greater burden than originally was estimated. That is my impression. Mr. SYMINGTON. I thank the Sena- tor. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I am glad to yield to the Senator from Mississippi. Mr. STKNNLS. I thank the Senator for yielding to me. On these cost figures, Members of the Senate, the figures I have here come directly from the Army. They are the ones charged with the re- sponsibility. They say that the total pro- gram cost before production?that is, real production of the tank, ready to roll out and go out in the field?will be, in round numbers, the United States, $173 million; Germany, $130 million. I will repeat that figure because I think it is important to be heard. Total cost prior to actual production for use, United States $173 million; Germany, $130 million. That is not exactly 50-50, but it is in the neighborhood of it. My source for that is the Army, and their source is their books. If that is in error, we certainly need to know now. Mr. EAGLETON. May I respond? Mr. STENNIS. Yes. The Senator yielded to me. Mr. EAGLETON. It ill behooves the junior Senator from Missouri to dispute the Senator from Mississippi on any still being worked on and not agreed to. military figures. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Aitgust -8, 1969Approved Fool3tOmfgnA/41AL3wErdwippiwillwri-Ro00300100001-3 S 9459 Mr. STENNIS. These are not my fig- ures; they are the Army's figures. Mr. EAGLETON. Here are the figures that were given to us by the Department of Defense on the development concept, as projected: The R. & D. cost to the United States alone was projected at $227 million, which is an increase of $184 million, which, as I said in my talk, was 528 percent over the original estimate for our part of the cost, our part origi- nally being $40 million. The gentleman who supplied us with this information, if the Senator would like to have his name, was Colonel Petrenko. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator. I am inclined to believe that the figures I have here are approximately correct, but I will call on them for further verification. I notice the Senator said projected cost. That was conceived when? Projec- tion means over into the years. When was that cost conceived? Mr. EAGLETON. There have been different conceptions, as it were, the original one being in 1963, $80 million; and that was apparently an adequate es- timate of projection for the first 2 years of the program. Then it went up to $138 million. Now, according to my chart, it is $303 million, to be precise. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me for a comment? Mr. EAGLETON. I wield. Mr. SYMINGTON': - Respecting the colloquy between the distinguished chairman and the Senator from Mis- souri, it is a bit comparable to what was going on on the floor yesterday with respect to the number of troops in Viet- nam. I know the chairman's figures are., given with complete sincerity, and I know my colleague's figures are given with complete sincerity. Therefore, I would hope that this matter can be checked for the record, and that what- ever the facts are, the record will then so show. We are having problems of this char- acter in other fields. It is possible that one person in the Pentagon gave a cer- tain set of figures, and another person, in all good faith, gave a different set of figures. Mr. EAGLETON. If I may comment on the remarks of my senior colleague, I think that is a very apt and adequate summary of the situation. I would be the first to desire to have the accurate figures, and I know the Senator from Mississippi desires the same thing. Mr. STENNIS. Oh, yes. If the Senator will yield further on that point, the whole answer is just to run back, for verification, our figures. I was stating figures here from a factsheet supplied to me by the Army. I thank the Senator for yielding. Let me make one further point about the year 1963, that seems so pertinent here. Mr. EAGLETON. Yes. Mr. STENNIS. In the year 1963, this tank we are talking about today was merely an idea that Mr. McNamara finally approved?a joint undertaking for a supertank for the 1970's, looking forward into the 1970's, and, frankly, primarily looking to Western Europe as a possible use for a part of that arsenal. That required the cooperation of the two governments; it involved the State Department at diplomatic levels, and everything else; and it was 2 years be- fore they really got moving. In 1963, they did not even have a full concept of what the tank would be. They had to get a green light to really go to thinking and putting things down on paper, and draw- ing lines and rubbing them out. This time looked long to me, too; but when I got into it, and saw where those 2 years went, it was a little different. I thank the Senator for yielding. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me? Mr. EAGLETON. I am glad to yield to the Senator from Arkansas. Mr. FULBRIGHT. With regard to the point made by the Senator from Mis- souri, it reminds me of the difficulty I have had on an amendment I have pro- posed with regard to research projects. I have had one of the best men we have on the staff working as closely as he could with Mr. Foster and his staff in the Pentagon, trying to ascertain the cost of each project?not the overall cost?and they finally just came back and said they could not identify those costs. I shall not present my amendment on those projects until Monday; but I can state now that they just are unable to give me the cost of individual projects carried in their programs. The Depart- ment will give us the name of a project, describe what it is about, and where it Is done, and so on, but they are unwill- ing or unable?they said they could not? give me what they called a realistic es- timate or price on many individual proj- ects. So I can well imagine?these are proj- ects many of which run from $50,000 to $500,000?that on a project like a tank, they have a very difficult time. They have become accustomed to loose practices. This only emphasizes how very important it was to adopt the Schweiker amendment yesterday. If the Defense people cannot do this kind of job. GAO has got to go in and help them de- velop a way to keep better track of their accounting methods and estimates on costs. Mr. President, I wanted to ask a ques- tion. I had a committee meeting this morning, and did not hear the first part of the presentation of the Senator from Missouri. Did he discuss the origin of this project? It was 6 years ago, was it not? Mr. EAGLETON. That is correct. Mr. FULBRIGHT. There have been changes and developments in the field of missilery and antitank weapons, since the project began which suggests to me that ideas which had great validity then may not be valid today. It may be ques- tionable whether the concept of the su- pertank is really valid now, in view of the great developments, for example in antitank weapons. In this bill itself, I think, there are some 14 or 18 different kinds of missiles, many of which are missiles of a nature that could be used against tanks; is that not correct? Mr. EAGLETON. That is. absolutely correct. In answering the Senator's ques- tion, I should like to put it this way: I shall dismiss this matter later in my re- marks, but I am pleased that the Senator brought it up now, because I think it is currently germane. Drawing on the very words of the Sen- ator from Mississippi, when this program was conceived in 1963, as the Senator from Mississippi said, it was just an idea, apparently, kicking around the Penta- gon, that it would be good to have a dream tank; just as there are a lot of other dream ideas that kick around. There are a lot of dreams that Americans have in the domestic sector of life, and as far as our cities are concerned, as well; we are a dreamy country. But be that as it may, this was a loose, amor- phous dream idea that somebody had, that we ought to build a better tank, a better mousetrap, a super deluxe model, and they started off on this 50-50 basis. I think the Senator is eminently cor- rect in his assessment of the change from what may have been the conditions in the world at that time. As the Senator from Mississippi points out, this was con- ceived as a tank primarily needed in Western Europe. Certainly the condi- tions that existed in 1945, at the end of the war, or in 1950, or in the latter part of the 1950's, and conceivably even up until 1963, are not necessarily the same as the conditions of the world, or the nature of possible warfare, or the nature of the threat we face, or the severity of it, in 1969. This is the dream, or the idea, or the concept of 1963. Perhaps, without admit- ting that it was relevant at that time, it may be?and, indeed, in my judgment is?irrelevant in the latter part of 1969, so quick and swift are the changes in the nature of the threat we face and the changes in the nature of warfare. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. FULBRIGHT. I yield. Mr. SYMINGTON. I notice the Senator says the cost is 21/2 to 3 1/2 times as much as that of our most advanced present tank, the M60A1. We had some hearings in the Committee on Armed Services, I think last year, which revealed that at that time there were-6,000 is the figure that rests in my mind?American tanks for sale in Europe?tanks that were obsolescent to the point of being obsolete. Mr. FULBRIGHT. For sale by whom? Mr. SYMINGTON. That is a good question, and I would ask the Senator not to press it. There were 6,000 Ameri- can tanks available, let us put it that way, available in Europe because they did not meet the standards of European potential warfare, although apparently they did meet the standards of potential warfare in other places. With that premise, if the modern new tank is a good tank, and we have another better one close to production, what is the reason we need this third even more expensive and even newer tank? Mr. EAGLETON. If I may answer the Senator, I think his question goes to the very heart of this issue. His premise, which I know is not his own personal Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9460 Approved For !teet./M.8ga :filt-M07:1_11196A4N0030010000123 _ ugust 19d.9 belief, but is offered to get at this issue. Our present tank force, with our prin- cipal and most modern tank being the 1V160A1, is far from obsolescent; indeed, according to the Stratton subcommittee of the House Armed Services Commit- tee?which just completed a few weeks ago the most exhaustive analysis of tanks, including the Sheridan, and what has happened to them, why they work and why they do not work?the M60A1, currently deployed in Western Europe, is equal to, or, in their judgment, supe- rior to any tank that the Soviet Union has deployed under the Warsaw Pact or otherwise. Let me quote, if I may, just briefly, that part of the report. Mr. SYMINGTON. Does that have to do with the M60A1? Mr. EAGLETON. Yes. it reads as follows: Since 1959 the M60A1 main battle tank has been the mainstay of the Army armored units in Europe and the Army currently considers this tank equal to ,r superior to Soviet-designed tanks . . . The Stratton committee goes on to point out the dilemma we eurrently face: Not only did the Army fail to maintain an adequate production rate of N160A1's during the 1960's, but they slowed down the produc- tion line and even closed it in 1,167 to produce the M60A1E2, which still cannot be deployed because of deficiencies. U.S. armored capability vra; further de- graded by the sale of /1/160A1's to countries other than NATO allies between fiscal year 1964 and fiscal year 1969. Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President, at one point fairly recently a decision was agreed to between our Government and the Government of West Germany, not to pay for the location of our several hundred thousand troops in Europe through the purchase of military equip- ment, rather to do so as the result of an agreement between the two Governments for the German Government to purchase bonds of the United States. Could it be that the difference in the amount of research and engineering work done on this particular military development, the cost increase was be- cause of that particular change of policy? Mr. EAGLETON. I am ready to confess the Senator is getting into a rather sophisticated industrial-military-Mone- tary field that is a bit over my head. However, I surmise that it could be quite possible. Mr. SYMINGTON. The Senator sees my point? Mr. EAGLETON. Yes, I do. Mr. SYMINGTON. It might be that that would have something to do with it. Otherwise, it would seem hard to under- stand. But in any case, again my con- gratulations to the Senator for this de- tailed clear and thoughtful presentation. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, con- cerning the great changes being realized in other areas, we were reminded the other day during the ABM debate of the great accomplishment of our astronauts and scientists in getting to the moon. I think there might be comparable changes in areas of weapons develop- ment. I am under the impression, for ex- ample, that the whole concept of the tank may be incorrect. Tanks may be usable to El Salvador or Peru. However, for the kind of conflict in which this country is likely to become involved, I raise the question of whether the idea of the tank is really appropriate considering the sophistication of the military in other types of weapons. I am reminded of what the distin- guished senior Senator from Missouri has stated on other occasions about the air- craft carrier. He has said that it is very hard to understand why we are the only country that seems still to be bemused with building aircraft carriers. No other cotintry seems to think they are impor- tant enough to have even a small one under construction. We have 15 major aircraft carriers. Another one is pro- posed. The aircraft carriers are very vulner- able, as I have heard the distinguished senior Senator from Missouri say, to modern weapons and various kinds of missiles including air-to-ground A ship armed with the missiles can stand quite a ways off from an aircraft carrier and hit it. An aircraft carrier is rather big and a relatively easy target. It is pos- sible to sink one $500 million ship with a missile that costs $500,000. The trouble seems to me to be the great lagtime between the technological dream the Senator spoke about and the actual technological advances that come about daily in fields such as missiles. I looked at the very great number of missiles described briefly in the report on the pending bill. They involve an enormous amount of money. I ask just how seriously and how much in depth we have considered the appropriateness of the tank under modern conditions. In what depth has that question been ex- amined and by whom? This is one of the weaknesses of these programs as I see it. Once they get started, they develop a momentum and a kind of constituency of their own. Everyone forgets about what the real original purpose was. No one asks whether the program is still appropriate and whether it will serve a very useful purpose when completed. I wonder what the Senator thinks about that aspect of the matter. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I have given the very question that has been so articulately stated by the Senator from Arkansas a great deal of thought. And it seems to me that while dreams continue to be dreamt by those who would design new weapons systems, sometimes the dreaming continues but is unrelated to changes in facts and con- ditions and situations that go on on earth and not in the ethereal clouds. As the Senator points out, not that it is in the pending amendment, but presum- ably it will be in some other measure later, with respect to the concept of the aircraft carrier, the Senator pointed out that we had 15 aircraft carriers. Back in the days of President Harding, when they had the 5-5-3 conference between the United States and Japan, they agreed on some kind of a ratio, feeling that with the 5-5-3 concept they would have 15. They had them then, they have them now. Presumably they will have them 30 years from now. I am informed that the Soviet Union has not built one aircraft carrier. We have 15, and some people think we ought to have more. Mr. FULBRIGHT. There is provision for another carrier in the pending bill, and at a great cost. Mr. EAGLETON. The Senator is cor- rect. Getting back to the specific issue with respect to tanks, I perhaps would not have questioned even this dream in 1945 at the conclusion of the war. Perhaps I would not have questioned the dream or idea in 1950. I think I would have been a little concerned with the matter in 1963. Obviously, I am questioning it here today because the very nature, as the Senator points out, of tank warfare might have changed. I call to the attention of the Senator the 6-day Arab-Israeli war in 1367, in which there were some tank engage- ments. However, there was also air su- periority on the side of the Israelis. I am sure that the memory of the Sen- ator is filled with pictures published in the periodicals at the time of burnt-out Egyptian or Arab tanks, dozens and maybe hundreds of them. It points out how vulnerable the tanks are when air superiority exists. I am told we have air superiority in western Europe, and I hope that we do. What are we dreaming about at this time in 1969? Mr. FULBRIGHT. That is my point. Unless this has to do with possible fu- ture engagements of this country?un- less it gets into what Secretary McNa- mara, Secretary Clifford and, I think to a smaller or lesser extent, Secretary Laird, have called posture statements? unless we intend to intervene and try to control by force smaller countries around the world, it is hard for me to believe that there is any use at all for this type of weapon. If we were to have a war with Russia, which is the danger that concerns us, what would we do with the tanks? Would we ship tanks overseas for a war with Ru.s.sia? The Senator knows such a war would be a nuclear war and that tanks would be utterly useless. Mr. EAGLETON. That happens to be my assumption. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Unless we continue to follow the policy of the last adminis- tration by intervening in places like the Dominican Republic and Vietnam. How- ever, our President has said that there will be no more Vietnams, as I interpret his statement made on his recent trip. He said he had no intention of having any more Vietnams, if he had a choice and could avoid it, in small places like Vietnam. He said that we would be of help to them but would not intervene. Perhaps a case could be made that if it was going to help them, we ought to make tanks for use in Cambodia and other countries. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved FizaNtAW.119fkalpfttafftBDJ_D7s1g0Iliet4R000300100001-3 S 9461 August -8, 1969 If that is true, it may be that a very much less sophisticated tank would be more appropriate. I do not know whether they could operate a dream tank. It would take a super-duper graduate of MIT to operate a tank as complicated as this. Mr. EAGLETON. This is the epitome of tanks. It would be meritorious in the Indianapolis speed race and would re- quire a sophisticated wheelman. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I raise the ques- tion, and it has been raised before?I think the distinguished Senator from Arizona raised it?that one missing link in this whole program?and Congress is partly at fault?is a real reevaluation of what we call the mission of the Defense Department. They have had missions, as described, I believe, by Secretary Mc- Namara, of a war in Asia, a war in Eu- rope?full fledged, I presume?and a semi-war in Latin America, all at the same time. If we are going to agree that their mission is that broad then we are called upon to make available almost every conceivable kind of weapon. What the Senator is doing, and what I am trying to do, is to raise the ques- tion whether we should not reevaluate what the mission is, especially in view of these requests, which are now so enormous. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. Mr. GOLDWATER. We were discuss- ing on the floor one day what I believe must be done before we can intelligently talk about force structure or whether we are going to have to be prepared for the two-and-a-half-war theory?that is, what we are going to do relative to our responsibility, say, with the NATO Treaty. Every one of these treaties?I think there are 15 or 17?specifically calls for us to go to war. If we decide that we are not going to pay any atten- tion to those treaties, we can forget all about most of our major weaponry. But if we are going to do as we have always done and respect our treaties, then we are going to need, for an interim period at least, weapons like tanks. The Russians are not downgrading tanks. They have two with which they are proceeding. I do not know how they compare with this one. I have to say that this tank has not had a happy history. The development of it has not been as rapid or successful as we would like to have it. But I add another thought that I think will help the Senator in his thinking in foreign relations. The Army had to drop the new helicopter, the Cheyenne. The tank people in the Army tell me that when they get the Cheyenne, they can forget all about tanks. It is going to be the antitank weapon. Knowing what I do about it, I can assure the Senators that it will be the most effective anti- tank weapon we have ever developed and will serve the purpose of the tank. As bad a record as this one has had, and as expensive as it has been, it is all we have. I return to my opening remarks: If we are going to respect our treaties? and the major ones are on the continent of Europe?I do not think the tech- nology of war has developed yet to the point that we can fight a land war there without tanks. I do not think they are worth a darn in Vietnam, for example. On hard ground over there they can operate. I am glad of the opportunity once again to urge upon the Senator from Arkansas that his committee really take a look into this matter. Before I leave, I have the figures that I told the Senator I would supply him with; and as soon as I return, I will give them to him. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. Mr. STENNIS. I think the Senator should have a reasonable chance to finish his statement, if he wishes. On the question of mission, our pres- ent obligation is along the lines of NATO, of course. But a tank is a basic, funda- mental weapon?NATO or no NATO. So this would not just be thrown to the wind if we should terminate NATO. This is a doughboy's weapon. It is out there where the man is fighting, in the grime and in the mud. Our other tanks are not faring too well. Soma are old, and there are other complicated matters. I do not think we can just charge this off by saying we ought to change the mission. Our present mission, anyway, until changed, is along these lines; and we are not going to run out of the use of a tank now, although tanks of any kind are not used much in Vietnam. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I do not think this is inconsistent. I raised this question, and the Senator from Arizona has somewhat confirmed it by saying that if the Chey- enne can be made effective, it will make the tanks obsolete. What made the battleship obsolete? We have many battleships, with a lot of money in them, and they are con- sidered obsolete. They used to be the very backbone of the Navy, not too long ago. That is all I am trying to say. I raise this question: When it takes 6 years to develop a weapon, and in the meantime technological changes are so rapid, the original concept may well be obsolete. I was impressed by the arguments made about Minuteman. It had not oc- curred to me that the advance being made in the accuracy of strategic missiles is so great that it may be that a static, in-the-ground, missile is becoming obso- lete and it will have to be made mobile. It may be that a mobile one is much better than continuing to protect one that is in the ground, if they do make accurate weapons. It is just a matter of technological advance. That is all I am saying. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. First, I should like to comment briefly on some of the obser- vations made by the Senator from Ari- zona and the Senator from Mississippi and to join, basically, in the sentiments of the Senator from Arkansas. I am not recommending?and I do not think any other Member of the Senate recommends?that we abdicate or abro- gate our NATO commitments. Also, I do not believe that the continuation of the MBT-70 is the sole basis of survival of NATO, any more than I think NATO would crumble when the Pentagon uni- laterally?and I praise them for it? dropped the Cheyenne, unilaterally dropped other weapons systems?the MOL and others?and has disallowed certain other dream concepts that have not even been submitted to Congress but have been vetoed in the Pentagon. NATO did not crumble. It is not a question of NATO going down the drain if we do not have an MBT-70. I recall and repeat what the Stratton subcommittee of the House Armed Serv- ices Committee said, and these are not people who are either unknowledgeable of or immune to the sensitivity of mod- ern warfare. Their report on the tank situation was that the M60A1, employed in the NATO area, was superior to or equal to any Russian tank under the Warsaw Pact. So this is not saying that we are going to keep doughboys from having a helmet or a gun or a hand grenade or even a tank. We have plenty M60-A1's. The problem is that if there was a mistake in the efficacy of tank warfare, which, I agree with the Senator from Arkansas, is highly dubious, to say the least, in the year of 1969?if there is a problem about the efficacy and viability of tank war- fare, it relates back to the decision made earlier in the sixties when we had an M60A1, when it was known to be a good tank and an efficient tank and, with re- spect to cost and production, to be a proper utilization of public moneys. We purposely slowed down on it and even discontinued the production of it in 1967 for awhile, in a fantastic effort, a frenetic effort, to try to develop a new tank. Then the M60-A1-E2?I am not trying to daz- zle anybody by a recitation of numbers and statistics?was to be the dream tank of that era. Where is that? Perhaps the Senator from Arkansas would be interested to know. There are 300 chassis of M-60A2 tanks, like the chassis of cars, stripped down somewhere on a parking lot in De- troit, Mich. It is a boo-boo, it does not work, and there it is. I have a lingering doubt and certain expectation that may- be 5 years from now, or 8 years from now, if this bill is passed as it is, there will be 800 chassis of the MBT-70. Per- haps it will not be Detroit but maybe Pittsburgh or Cleveland. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield on that point? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield to the Sen- ator from Mississippi. Mr. STENNIS. Does the Senator know the reason for the defect in those tanks? Mr. EAGLETON. The Shillelagh sys- tem is part of it, according to the Strat- ton report. Mr. STENNIS. But overall they tried to move that vehicle too fast. Mr. EAGLETON. The Senator is cor- rect. Mr. STENNIS. But now the Senator complains about this one because it is moving too slowly. I think it is one of the points in favor of the tank that they Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9462 Approved For ReamtiffsURVA-89KT)1BORgn:10,0300100001-3 August' 8, 1969 did not rim the red lights; they are per- fecting this thing as they g 0. If it is ever completed, it will be the hcst tank that we or anyone else ever had. I thank the Senator for yielding. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, with all due respect, my quarrel is not that the MBT is moving slow. I want it to move even slower; in fact, I want to put the brakes on it; not wipe it out and not completely do away with what has been done so ineptly and put, it away and for- get about it. All I am asking is that a sober, reflective, dispassionate second look be taken now in 1989 relating to a decision made in 1963, bearing in mind the enormous headaches developed in this system and the enormous escala- tion of costs that ensuetrin that period. All this amendment ,pks is that the GAO, the agency which the Senate voted yesterday to assist it, mak c determina- tion of workability of the defense sys- tems and its analysis thereof, and that the GAO be' given a chance for 6 months to look into this matter. If A is given the green light and they share the optimism of others?and they are legitimate in their optimism; I do not fault them for it?they could go ahead. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. HoL- LiNos in the chair) . Doer the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield to the Sena- tor from Oregon. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, I would like to inquire as to the preference of the Senator from Missouri as to whether he would like to discuss-these points as we come to them in his fine presentation or whether he would with to complete his presentation at this lime before be- coming involved in further colloquy. Mr. EAGLETON. I ha' enjoyed so much this exchange I had forgotten my prepared speech. Mr. HATFIELD. The Senator is only on page 1. Mr. EAGLETON. I would be glad to yield to the Senator if the Senator wishes. Mr. HATFIELD. I would rather hear the Senator finish his fine speech, which I have had a chance to 'read, and then ask the Senator a number of questions, all of which bear on the information the Senator has in his prettentation. After the Senator has completed his presenta- tion we could then engage in colloquy. Mr. EAGLETON. I thank the Senator. Mr. President, I belieVe that in My prepared text I was at the point where I began an analysis of the chart which is still in the rear of the Chamber, and I pointed out the escalated costs in terms of research, development, and engineer- ing. That is when the Senator from Mis- sissippi and I had our brief exchange as to the figures. I presume ue will have a way to verify them later. I shall now continue with my prepared text. Nor do these figures include enormous expenditures for many of the MBT-70's subsystems. The figures on the board thus far re- late solely to the MBT--10 itself, but it has elaborate, complicated, and sophisti- cated subsystems, including the Shil- lelagh 152-millimeter gun system begun under a 1959 authorization; over $30 million to Lycoming Corp. for research and development on a turbine engine not yet close to production; and addi- tional expenditures for the acquisition of a scavenger system needed to blow burning residue left by combustible am- munition from the weapons system. In addition to R.D.T. & E., approxi- mately $200 million is programed for production engineering. Mr. President, what this all boils down to is that the unit cost of the tank is now expected to be between $520,000 and $750,000-21;2 to 31/2 times as much as our most advanced present tank, the M-60A-1. I believe these escalating cost figures alone justify the study we pro- pose. Next, Mr. President, there is the question of the tank's strategic rationale. This is generally a part of the area dis- cussed in the exchange with the Senator from Arkansas, the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations. The MBT-70 was approved on the basis of expenditure projections far be- low those which have occurred, and time schedules far better than those met. Once approved, the project gained momentum. It achieved a sort of self- perpetuating justification as the Army deemphasized alternative systems, thus creating a greater need and urgency for a new system than would otherwise have existed. The Army now justifies the MBT-70 because of the quantitative superiority of tank forces in the Warsaw Pact as com- pared with NATO. And yet this year's House Armed Services subcommittee's report briefly referred to in the Stratton report, indicates that the M-60A-1 tank, which is recognized to be equal or superior to the Soviet tank, is not being produced in quantity. That is, our best current tank deployed, the M-60A-1 which is equal or superior to anything Warsaw Pact countries have. We are not producing it anywhere near close to its potential. In fact, at the opposite end of the spectrum, it is currently being-pro- duced at a very minimal level. The result is fewer tanks at a higher cost?about $222,000 per unit. The report states in part: Since 1959 the M-60A-1 main battle tank has been the mainstay of the Army armored units in Europe and the Army currently considers this tank equal to Ce superior to Soviet-designed tanks. Not only did the Army fail to maintain an adequate production rate of M-60A-1's during the 1960's, but they slowed down the pro- duction line and even closed it in 1967 to produce the M-60A1-E2, which still cannot be deployed because of deficiencies. U.S. armored capability was further degraded by the sale of M-60A-1's to coun- tries other than NATO allies? Made reference to somewhat briefly In the exchange between the Senator from Arkansas (Mr. PULBRIGHT) and the Senator from Missouri (Mr. SYM/NG- TON) ? between fiscal year 1964 and fiscal year 1969. I should like at this point to quote an- other portion of the Stratton report which will put in precise words that which I summarized in my answer, I think it was, to the Senator from Arizona (Mr. GOLDWATER) : In its rush to develop the Sheridan and the M60A1E2? That is the one with all the unused chassis in Detroit? equipped with a Shillelagh guided missile, the Army ordered mass production of these weapons and their related equipment before there was adequate assurance that the de- signs were suitable and, in some cases, even before production of fund requests had been officially approved. The fear of loss of pro- gram funds appears to be the principal ma- son why the Army top management level urged this mass production against the ad- vice of qualified users and testing agencies and personnel who had persistently at- tempted to portray the true facts of their sadly lagging development effort. The Senator from Mississippi pointed this out, and I am not suggesting or criti- cizing past development of the Shillelagh or the M-60A1-E2 tank because it was too fast. But, yes, I do join the findings of the Stratton committee. But I am not saying now that we must go headlong, full speed ahead, and emulate by repeti- tion that which has already been proved to be so tremendously expensive, if not a financially catastrophic blunder, which constituted the genesis of the Stratton report. Thus, the caution I am advocating in this amendment is not to throw the whole thing out, to abandon it, to ignore it or to forget it. The caution I am recommend- ing is for a 6-month analysis by the GAO, which the Senator from Missouri (Mr. SYMINGTON) pointed out on yesterday is the watchdog for Congress, that the GAO be given 6 months to take a look at this item which has proved to be so burdensome and difficult to cope with since 1963. Similarly, antitank weapons, which are presumably an important part of our response to the Soviet tank threat, have apparently been given low priority. This from the Department of Defense itself. The MBT-70 is pushed, advocated, urged, and given high priority, but the antitank weapons, for reasons, frankly, I am unable to understand, are given low priority. Yet in the fiscal year 1969 De- fense appropriations hearing, General Miley, Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff for Logistics, Programs and Budget, stated: The Secretary of the Army postponed the fiscal year 1968 procurement of TOW anti- tank weapon for higher priority items The $11 million for fiscal year 1968 provided a minimum engineering service effort to insure the availability of a production capability for TOW in fiscal year 1969. The sum of $11 zillion for fiscal 1968, providing for a minimum engineering service effort to insure the availability of TOW, thus testified General Miley. There is another antitank concept, worked upon and researched, called the Dragon. According to testimony before the Defense Appropriations Committee in the 90th Congress, it was stated that there are no funds in that bill for the development of Dragon. The main part of the funds for the research and develop- ment, training and evaluation?that was Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 8, 1969 Approved Foe Polo oiNcMg18?1E3RiEet.13?P7RAVRO00300100001-3 ? S S 9463 $141/2 million, in that instance?came over from the fiscal 1968 appropriations the year prior. Originally the appropria- tion was $20 million but $5.5 million was reprogramed to "higher priority items." Mr. President, as a layman, and a nonsophisticate in the art of warfare but, hopefully, endowed with a modicum of commonsense, I find it difficult to un- derstand how it is that a vague idea of a dream tank with highly complicated and terribly sophisticated weaponry, with ventilation systems, special superstruc- tures, and the like, became such a high priority item; and yet the anti-tank weapons, those which can be mass-pro- duced in larger quantities, with greater deployability in terms of the man in the field, or as he was referred to by the Senator from Mississippi as the "dough- boy," why those weapons that could be given to the doughboy were given low priority. It just seems to me it defies commonsense. Perhaps there is a military explanation for it. So while the Army failed to produce enough M-60-A--l's, it also failed to push for antitank weapons?a curious pattern of priorities which could lead one to ques- tion the seriousness of the Soviet tank threat. After all, what this debate thus far has been about, as the Senator from Arizona (Mr. GOLDWATER) points out, has been that we have our NATO commitments, and we have to keep those commitments. The Russians have tanks; we have to have tanks. The Russians possess a seri- ous-threat tank; we will respond by building a bigger and better tank. If we are concerned about Russian tanks in the Russian pact, why is it that we put a low priority on these weapons sys- tems, the TOW and the Dragon, the anti- tank weapons system that could be de- ployed in the greatest abundance for the men in the field. They would be a combatant and retaliatory response to the Soviet tank threat, if the Soviet tank threat indeed be that enormous. In any case, it is entirely pertinent to ask whether the MBT-70, as it is now conceived, is truly a necessary and effec- tive means of countering the tank threat in Europe?the point I think well made by the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations (Mr. FULBRIEBT). This brings me, perhaps, to the core of my argument?cost and effectiveness. That is what the study we propose would help both Congress and the Pentagon to determine. If we had unlimited resources, I guess we could take a gamble on the MBT-70, even if the stakes kept going up. But, as every Senator knows?and it is driven home more and more every day as the session grinds on?we do not have un- limited resources. We have lots of things we would like to do but cannot do be- cause our funds are limited. We have a Projected yearly price rise rate of 6.4 percent, the highest in 18 years. We know that inflation has driven prime interest rates to a high of 81/2 percent. Therefore, we must exercise prudence in Government spending of public moneys, especially the least eco- nomically productive type?military spending. Is the MBT-70 cost-effective? Mr. Charles L. Poor, Acting Assistant Secre- tary of the Army for Research and De- velopment, testified before the Senate Committee on Armed Services that it is cost-effective. I will read what Mr. Poor said: There have been a large number of studies conducted by the Army to determine the cost effectiveness of the MBT-70, and I think I can say without hesitation that all of these studies indicate that the MBT-70 is a more cost effective solution to the large number of Warsaw Pact tanks facing us than any other tank design that we have been able to consider. That is what Mr. Poor says on behalf of his case. Let me say this about it in response. The most recent computer study of antitank warfare came to the same conclusion. But the cost-effective- ness calculation for the MBT-70, com- pared with the proven M-60A-1 and other weapons, was based on an ex- tremely low and now out-of-date esti- mate of the MBT-70's cost. The M-60A-1, by contrast, was priced at a high figure, apparently based on the limited production policy now being pur- sued. The fewer M-60A-1's produced, the higher the cost per unit, the lower the cost-effectiveness, and therefore the less effective they are. So if we translate the cost of the M-60A-1 per unit, we will have a higher cost; but it is a poor com- parison in contrasting it with the MET- 70. It is my understanding that a very small increment in the price of the MBT- 70 would make it no longer cost-effec- tive. It would become less economical to produce and use than other systems. I am awaiting a report of the exact cost figure at which the MBT-70 goes over that line. In this cost-effectiveness business, there is a sort of magical line beyond which an item becomes, costwise, inef- fective and inefficient. It is my under- standing that the MBT-70 is close to that line. A small increment in its cost and it would be over. I have asked for a report on that and have not received it yet. With the increased costs, delays, and problems, perhaps it already has gone over the line. ? We can surely build a better tank. I do not dispute that, with our scientific, technological, and generally creative genius, given the money in unlimited abundance, we could build a better tank. I guess, when you get right down to it, Apollo 11 proves that, under the most optimum of circumstances, without the intervention of other countries, or with- out trying to thwart or stop it or resist it or fool with it or foul it, the United States has adequate?indeed, abun- dant?creative potential to come up with almost anything scientific, except a cure for the common cold. But the point is we do not have un- limited funds, and for what purpose are we going to build the MBT-70? For what purpose will it be utilitarian in 1974 or 1975 or 1976, whenever it is produced? We keep moving the date back. Originally it was supposed to be in production in 1969. Now it is the mid-1970's. And at what price? The truth in answer to these questions Is that the Senate does not know the purpose or the need or the price. Mr. President, our proposal is not en- tirely original. The many problems and doubts regarding the MBT-70 led the Special Investigating Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee? that is the Stratton committee?to rec- ommend recently: The MBT-70 program should be reap- praised and a report of finding made to Congress prior to any further steps in com- mitting funds to the production of these tanks. Representative MENDEL RIVERS' office? and Representative RIVERS is chairman of the House Armed Services Commit- tee?issued this release on July 10, 1969, in connection with the Stratton Army tank report. Here is what Representative RIVERS' office said in releasing this report: It is also recommended that no additional Sheridans be sent to Vietnam until after all major defects have been eliminated and that the Main Battle Tank (the MBT-70) pro- gram be reappraised before further funds are committed. That is the summary statement issued by the office of the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, a man intimately knowledgeable of military matters, who says the main battle tank, the MBT-70, program should be reap- praised before further funds are com- mitted. Secretary Laird himself listed the MBT among the problems inherited in the Pentagon on January 20, 1969. Sec- retary Laird said: Many problems, large and small, have al- ready been identified. They range from ob- vious ones such as those connected with the Pueblo, the TFX, and the Main Battle Tank, to less visible ones such as? Then he went on to recite some less visible ones. Here is the Secretary of De- fense, again one who came into this Posi- tion not unsophisticated in terms of tile operations of the Department, considered to be one of the most knowledgeable Members of Congress in Defense and De- fense appropriation matters, and he said three of the biggest problems he inherited when he became Secretary of Defense were the Pueblo, the TFX, and the MBT. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a question? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. My. STENNIS. The Senator remem- bers, does he not, that the same Secre- tary he is talking about asked for $44.9 million in the last budget to continue this research and development? That is the same man the Senator is talking about. Mr. EAGLETON. The Senator is emi- nently correct. The Secretary asked for more than the Senate Armed Services Committee recommended and the item was reduced by $15 million. Mr. STENNIS. We reduced it $15 mil- lion. Mr. EAGLETON. How do I explain it? Mr. STENNIS. Yes. Mr. EAGLETON. I have difficulty ex- plaining?without using it in the sense of derogation?what I classify as the po- litical schizophrenia that is inherent in Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9464 Approved For Rtitymosing4itj1(31j q1tyNa31_13ONSAIW)0300100001 -August -8 , 1969 the Secretary's making a recommenda- tion that we expend another $45 million for R. 8z D., $24.5 million for production, and so forth. In his explanation that we ought to do that?or his request that Congress do that?he says that three of the great- est headaches?problems?I do not want to misquote him?he inherited were the Pueblo, the TFX, and the MBT. Mr. CASE. Mr. President, will the Sen- ator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. In a moment, after concluding my response to the present question. I cannot understand it. I would like to have the opportunity but it is not mine? and I am not quarreling about that? to specifically question the Secretary as how he can justify these three incidents. The Pueblo certainly was notour shining hour. The TFX was considered to be the calamity of this era, the millstone around McNamara's neck; and then he includes, gratuitously or not, the main battle tank. How he then can recommend we go ahead with it, without any second look, I cannot understand: Perhaps some- one can explain it to me. I yield to the Senator from New Jersey. Mr. CASE. Mr. President, I do not know that I have an answer, but it does seem to me there is something of a paral- lel between the circumstances that the Senator from Mississippi has raised with the Senator from Missouri with regard to Secretary Laird's position and the time in, I think September or October of 1967, when, after a magnificent speech point- ing out how ineffective an anti-ballistic- missile system would be, and giving all the arguments against it, former Secre- tary McNamara came up with a recom- mendation for a so-called thin ABM sys- tem?a nonsequitur, it seems to me, comparable in many ways with the non- sequitur which has been posed to the Senator from Missouri here. Perhaps the same explanations are applicable broadly to each. They may include political pressure, and perhaps pressure from perfectly well-intentioned industrial interests or professional in- terests within the Pentagon; but in any event, I do not think the Senator needs to be, and I am not myself, embarrassed by this inconsistency, because we have seen it before. Mr. EAGLETON. I thank the Senator from New Jersey for that very appro- priate and apt observation. I would not speculate; it serves no purpose to speculate whether conceiv- ably, in my judgment, there could be pressure from a contractor or political pressure. Perhaps it could be this?and this may well happen: We have many systems and weapons; the Army Wants Nos. 1 through 200, the Navy wants Nos. 201 through 400, and the Air Force wants Nos. 401 through 000. They each want 200 items. So they have this give- and-take process: "Well, I will give in to you on this one, and let you go ahead with this one, but I am going to put the brakes on the Cheyenne. I will let you go ahead with the C-5A, but I have to call a halt on the MOL. Thus, by this process of you give me a little and I will give you a little, we will work out a pack- age, and perhaps we can put on a har- monious, smiling face and a unanimous front in terms of making a considered presentation to Congress." There is give and take, I readily admit to the Senator from New Jersey, in all of life, and it is not being critical of the military when I say that this kind of horse trading or log rolling is perhaps part of their existence. It is part of ours, as it is apart of every human being. Mr. CASE. There is no question about it, and there is no bitterness or any at- tack on motives or anything else involved in the Senator's position or mine, or any Senator's position, in regard to the mili- tary. They are great people, doing an un- imaginably difficult job, and we want to be helpful in terms of protecting them from their own inner stresses and ex- cesses. Mr. MURPHY. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I am happy to yield to the Senator from California. Mr. MURPHY. Unfortunately, because of an executive meeting, I have not had the chance to hear the entire presenta- tion of the distinguished Senator, but as to the part I have heard, I might point out, as a member of the Armed Services Committee, that we did not approach our duties on that committee, or at least I did not see any evidence of it, on the basis of any political considerations whatsoever. We were sent a list of weapons and equipment that, in the judgment of the military experts, was needed for the best balanced defense of the United States, and for the protection of its security. There were many items that we ques- tioned as to whether they were neces- sary. We went into it very carefully, and there were long discussions, for instance, as to some of the different missiles. The experts were there to point out the rea- sons for the difference. We would ask, "Why would not this missile do the same job that the other one would do?" We spent long hours going over such mat- ters very carefully. There are certain items that certainly I, for one, was not completely happy with. I was one of the earliest critics of the TFX, which the Senator mentioned. But unfortunately, through a series of circumstances over the years, we have not had too many new weapons models. We have had lots of research and devel- opment, but not very much building, and we had to take what was in existence. It was not always,' in my judgment, the finest choice; it was, you might say, the only game in town. That was what there was; this was the choice, and you had to develop it further, improve it, and hope- fully finally get it around to doing the operational jobs that the military felt was important. So this is the circumstance. I have the greatest sympathy for the Secretary of Defense, in dealing with some of the conditions and some of the complexi- ties that he found. Certainly he was knowledgeable; he had served on the committee of the House of Representa- tives, but he was not in charge, and when he assumed the job, along with the new administration, he had to accept what was there, just as our committee, when we sat down to go over the requests and to look at this bill, Which is the authori- zation for military procurement, had to accept the conditions that existed, and there are many areas where there could have been criticism. But there are always two ways to make an approach, negative or positive. We could find fault forever; but I hope MY distinguished colleague?who does not seem to be extremely interested in what I am saying; I hope I am not conduct- ing an exercise in futility here, trying to make an explanation. Mr. EAGLETON. Oh, no. Mr. MURPHY. As a member of the committee, having spent many hours, I feel that there was not any political con- sideration. I have been in and around the military, directly or indirectly, for many years; and I think sometimes un- fortunately they are given the blame for things that are not their fault. I should like to make the point that I am in com- plete sympathy with the Secretary of De- fense in the tremendous job that he in- herited, with the conditions that he in- herited, and I say, in the best judgment of this committee, nonpolitically, with full consideration of the absolute neces- sity for the protection of this country, this is the way, as far as I was able to ascertain, the committee as well as the military experts that appeared before us honestly felt. I did not see any evi- dence of a fellow saying, "Well, I have a factory in my State which is going to make some roller skates; therefore we ought to buy them for the Navy." I did not find any of that. I have found a lot of it suggested. I have found a lot of it suggested by innuendo, from time to time. As with so many things in these complex times in which we live, the im- pulse is to dissent rather than try to put together, and to put the emphasis in the wrong place. That was my purpose in rising. I thank my distinguished colleague for his courtesy in yield. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I cer- tainly thank the senior Senator from California. I hope that by nothing I said, either by spoken word or by inference or innuendo connected therewith, did I im- ply that there was any politics played in Senate Armed Services Committee. The Senator from New Jersey com- mented on how the Secretary of Defense could on one occasion identify the main battle tank in the ignominious trium- virate of the Pueblo, the TFX, and the MBT70. Mr. MURPHY. I think the Pueblo is no longer relevant. I think that through the judgment of the Secretary of the Navy that was finalized. I think there was a problem under the new Secretary of the Air Force. I hope that some of the things referred to when talking about the main battle tank have been very drastically changed and that many of these elements that constituted a problem 2 or 3 or 4 years ago are no longer a problem. There has been a pass- age of time and what he said on a cer- tain day may no longer apply. Mr. EAGLETON. I thank the Senator from California. What the Secretary of Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 8, /96Approved FoncRITOC4REg9114/01/130117aMEDI:27-1931MR41R000300100001-3 S 9465 Defense may have said a few months earlier in 1969 may admittedly no longer apply, so fluctuating are the justifica- tions for programs, whether it be the quick justification that we debated for 3 months as between the Sentinel thin shield defense of the big cities as against the mad Chinese to a couple of weeks later?that was January 20?to March 14 when the President made his speech on the thin protection of the land-based ICBM's as against an attack by the not so mad Russians. Justifications change very quickly. I think the point the Senator makes is an important one. Justifications can change. Conditions can change. Events can change. However, the dream never does. The dream is still the 1963 dream. It was a dream they had lurking around the Pentagon where someone had said, "We want to have a better tank. Maybe somehow, somewhere, we might want one of those good old tanks. So, in 1963 they were dreaming. And they are still dreaming and dreaming an evermore expensive dream?$303 mil- lion now. God knows what it will be a year from now. They are still dreaming. As the Sena- tor from California said, times change, and what Secretary Laird meant when he said that the three greatest headaches were the Pueblo, the TFX, and the main battle tanks may have changed. How would the Senator like tc be in that company? As little as I think of the MBT-70, nothing I have said before or will say in these remarks would dispar- age it as much as the Secretary of De- fense himself did by associating it with the Pueblo and the TFX. The Senator from California now says that things have changed and that what the Secretary said about the Pueblo is no longer in effect. The bumper stickers are off the cars. The TFX is all straight- ened out, and the MBT-70 is all straight- ened out. That is a pious hope which, in my judgment, will never be realized. I revert to my text. In an exclusive interview with George Wilson, of the Washington Post, the Secretary expressed dismay at the amount of gadgetry which has resulted in expensive breakdowns and repairs on the MBT-70. This was an interview with Mr. Wilson. It was later than the one previously quoted. I am sorry that the Senator from California had to leave the Chamber. He may think that the MBT-70 is hunky-dory today. However, he did not think it was good when he put it with the Pueblo and the TFX, and when he was talking with Mr. Wilson of the Wash- ington Post. He wondered if we need all these extravagant MBT-70 devices when the Russians get along well with simpler equipment. That is not the Senator from Missouri talking or the Senator from Oregon or anyone else who is advocating the pend- ing amendment. This is an interview with the Secretary of Defense who, as has been pointed out by the Senator from Mississippi, recommends going ahead with the MBT-70 despite the fact that he associates it with the Pueblo and the TFX. In July, 1969, issue of Government Executive, General Betts, the man in charge of this from a programing point of view, stated: The most important problem is that we have given it a great deal of . capability and that means a very expensive vehicle. The problem is whether we have put more in this vehicle than we require. The toughtest ques- tion is whether we really need everything that's in this tank. This is not the proponent of the amendment talking, but the general in charge of the program. He wondered, as I wonder, whether we need everything that is in it. Is it programed properly? Do we need it at all? I ask. General Betts went on to say: While we continue to test'it, we will also continue to analyze whether to give up some of the things that are in it. It doesn't have to have a combination of several weap- ons systems as it does now. It doesn't have to have all of the integrated computer-con- trolled fire control that it does now. Of course, we cannot have our cake and eat it, too, as someone once said. We cannot justify the MBT-70 by dream- ing about it and saying we will have all of this sophisticated gadgetry, this dual fire system, the Shillelagh, the 152 mm., and the fire control where, if there is a nuclear explosion, the hatch can be closed and we will live in isolation, some- what analogous to the astronauts, but not quite so roomy. We cannot have all that gadgetry and find out it is too expensive, and then ask a rhetorical question, as the general does, and say we have to strip some of this out. We will be back to where we started with the M60A1. We cannot propse this tank as the ulti- mate, as the desired objective with its great sophistication and its great com- plexity and then strip it of that which makes it different and makes it pre- sumably utilitarian and then go forward with it. When you leave it, it will be little better than the existing tank ex- cept that the costs productionwise are infinitely more expensive. The Battelle Memorial Institute is making astudy for the Defense Depart- ment of MBT-70 components in an at- tempt to make the system more cost effective. There may well be some changes in components and design, de- pending on the findings and DOD's will- ingness to adopt them. I want to make this clear. I am getting close to the end of my remarks and to the end of my voice. The amendment we offer today would not in any way prejudge the fate of the MBT-70. It would strike out $30 million under research and development and $24.5 million under production-based support which would be used for manu- facture of prototypes. That is my under- standing of what the item basically con- sists. It would prohibit further author- ization until after a full investigation by the auditing arm of Congress, the Gov- ernment Accounting Office. These are our auditors. As the senior Senator from Missouri pointed out, this is the one agency of Government that is sort of ours. We cannot be suspicious of them or fear them or be resistent to them. They are our creatures. They are not under the control of the President. The Comptroller General is appointed for a term of 15 years. He is immune ex- cept for malfeasance or nonfeasance. He is immune from the pressure of the Ex- ecutive. All we ask in the amendment is that our auditors, our watchdogs, be given a chance to examine this item afresh, to examine it from a point of view to which perhaps it has never been subjected since its inception in 1963. Let me add at this point that to do this would not be turning this system over to a bunch of nonknowing, philosophical eggheads. The GAO already has worked in analyzing this system. Their efforts and their endeavors were instrumental to the Stratton subcommittee, which, as has been quoted so often, went into the basic question of tanks, more specifically, the Sheridan, the Shillelagh, and what- have-you, with passing reference to the MBT-70. But the GAO is a well-trained and experienced professional and com- petent group which has systems analysts who not only would do this study ob- jectively, but also, based on the past per- formance they rendered to the Stratton subcommittee, are, by actual fact and by case example, equipped to do the job. So we ask in this amendment to have four questions answered by the Comp- troller General. We ask for 6 months in which to have the questions answered. First, why research and development costs estimates have had to be revised steadily upward since 1965?again re- ferring to the chart in the rear of the Chamber. Second, whether the MBT-70, consid- ering its revised estimated production costs, will be the most effective weapon to meet the contingency for which it was originally planned. Third, whether the strategic projec- tions made in 1963 with regard to the use of the MBT will still be valid when it. finally becomes available for use. That is, will it be obsolete as the result of ad- vanced technology and new strategy? Again, this has reference to the questions and the comments of the Senator from Arkansas (Mr. FULBRIGHT) . Fourth, whether there are more feas- ible and less expensive alternatives to the development of the MBT-70. The amendment requires the Comp- troller General of the United States to submit the results of his study and in- vestigation, together with such recom- mendations as he deems appropriate, to Congress not more than 6 months after the date of the enactment of this act. Mr. President, we do not ask that the MBT-70 be completely and summarily canceled. This we do not ask. In 1963, when it was conceived, the production date was geared to be 1969. We are in 1969. The production date is now esti- mated to be some time in the mid-seven- ties, 5 years or more away. We ask only that, in view of this 5-year delay in pro- duction, in. view of the increase in the research and developnient costs, in view of the extremely high projected per unit cost, in view of the improvement in mo- bile, cheap, and effective antitank weap- ons, and in view of the changing role of the tank in modern warfare?in view of Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9466 Approved For ittnitiggimitz : /amp witpoo3ooi 00001.3 August '8, 1969 all these things, which, to mc at least, are legitimate questions, but in the aggre- gate make an abundant case?that the Comptroller General make a complete and thorough 6-month study to see whether a course that was charted in 1963, under dreams and ideas perhaps appropriate at that time, is justifiable, either scientifically, technologically, mil- itarily, or economically, in 1969. Mr. CRANSTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I am pleased to yield to the junior Senator from California. Mr. CRANSTON. I thank my fellow junior Senator, the Senator from Mis- souri, for initiating a prohine examina- tion of one aspect of the military au- thorization measure before the Senate. This sort of careful study Is essential to the well-being of this country, to insure that we have the defense- apparatus we need and that we do not spend money on a defense apparatus we may not need. Frankly, I have not made up my mind as to this amendment and the value of this tank. Some cynical citizens think that nothing is ever deterinined by fact and logic in the course of a debate in the Senate. I bear witness to the fact that it Is, because my vote will be determined by what I learn, in the course of the debate In the Senate, from those who support this amendment and from those who do not. I am concerned about the inflationary aspects of the defense lancleet. We are being asked to support an extension of the surtax not only for the remainder of this year but also for a further period of time to deal with inflation. One way to deal with inflation is to have the tightest possible defense budget; and I am not convinced at the present time that all items, including this one, in the defense budget are necessary. I should like to ask the Senator a few questions that relate in part to this aspect. First, are we contaibutine at present one-half of the cost of maintaining the NATO defenses in Europe? Mr. EAGLETON. I wish I had at my fingertips, or based on immediate re- search, all the answer to the legitimate and probing questions of the Senator from California. I do not know, in terms of dollars ex- pended, whether we are maintaining half the cost of NATO. It would be my guess that we are, but I do not avant to attest to it. Mr. CRANSTON. At any rate, it is a very high percentage. Mr. EAGLETON. It is a very high per- centage, I think we are safe in saying. Mr. CRANSTON. One fact I do know is that the cost of U.S. troops in Ger- many is running, for us, to the tune of $850 million a year. There is that much drain on the balance of payments in this period of inflation. This leads me to question whether we should build tanks for a type of war that is unlikely ever to occur. I want to hear the case for this tank and. the threat of that kind of war from the chairman of the committee when he 'impends to the Senator's amendment. I wonder whether the Senator has any comment on the validity of the threat that we might find ourselves involved in a conventional or a tactical nuclear war in Europe, whether that threat is so grave that we need this sort of tank? Mr. EAGLETON. I consider that to be, again, a very wholesome question. I am aware that the Senator from California was away from the Chamber, attending a hearing of the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare on an educational bill that is of vital importance to the Nation. While he was at the committee meeting, an exchange took place between the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations (Mr. FULBRIGHT), the Senator from Arizona (Mr. GOLDWATER), and my- self, and, in part, also the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. STENNIS) ?and perhaps other Senators?on this point, on this fundamental question. I asked, at the end of my sp.ssch, Whither goest the tank? The Senator from Aranksas (Mr. FULBRIGHT) pointed out that tanks may well be the bell- weather of success ih El Salvador and Honduras; they may be indispensably necessary in Haiti, where Dr, Duvalier may well need them, to stay in power. They may well be needed in other areas, too. But, at best, I can only pose the ques- tion. It is one of the questions that I, as a freshman Senator?just as fresh as the junior Senator from California?want the General Accounting Office to answer. I do not pretend to be endowed with all the innate wisdom and experience that are necessary to make a highly so- phisticated answer to the question; but I think the question is legitimate. When one who is as experienced as the Chair- man of the Committee on Foreign Rela- tions, who has been a Member of the Senate for many years and has seen dif- ferent wars come and go and different threats come and evaporate?when he, based on that experience, wonders whether the tank is a viable force of modern weaponry in Western Europe under conditions that obtain in the year 1969, at least I have to wonder, at least I have to ask the question and search for the answer. I need the assistance of the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. STENNIS), I need the assistance of the senior Sen- ator from Missouri (Mr. SYMINGTON), men who have devoted their lives to the effort of providing an adequate, proper defense. I need the assistance of the General Accounting Office and of the Battelle Institute, which have made studies. These are questions that ought to be a..sked. That is all I am asking in my amendment. I can only ask the question. It is easy to ask questions. It is the easi- est thing in the world to cross-question oneself. But when an item has been im- bued with delay; is perhaps not of timely essence; is not a make-or-break propo- sition, that we have to have tomorrow, I should like to have an answer to the question. I was against the ABM and opposed to those who said we could not wait be- cause it was important that we have it in connection with forthcoming talks on limitations of armaments. That may be so. But no one can say that this item is of immediate essence. It has been de- layed 5 years now. It was supposed to be produced in 1969, but it will not be pro- duced until 1974 or 1975. I hope that will not be the case. These are the questions we ask. We ask that we be given 6 months to permit our investigators, our accountants, in the General Accounting Office, an arm of Congress, to take a look at this proposal. Give us 6 months. I ask that of the Senator from California who is not com- mitted on this vote, and who approaches the matter, as much as any other Sena- tor, on a factual basis without a knee- jerk reaction. Because of his experience as a comptroller, he has an analytical and precise approach. That is the na- ture of his thinking. He served in Cali- fornia, and it was part of his job to analyze the pros and cons of proposals, although, of course, not weapons systems in a State organization. He did deal with other systems and methodology, and he was able to make a dispassionate, in- formed, unemotional judgment based on known facts, worthy assumptions, and the like. All I am asking of the Senator from California and other Senators is that the entirety of Congress, all 100 Senators and 435 Representatives, be given the benefit of the kind of dispas- sionate analysis that the Senator from California would give a system. I ask the Senator from California to make the kind of judgment that he would make back in California or the kind of judg- ment of this system he would now like to have given by the Comptroller Gen- eral, Mr. Staats, and his staff. If we were saying in this amendment, "Knack out all the money?period," I would not support it. I could not have enough knowledge, as a lawyer from the State of Missouri, to know if this is the right thing to do. I am frank to admit I am not that knowledgeable on this sub- ject. But I do ask that we net spend any more for a moment on this painstaking and tortoise-like tank. All I ask is 6 months. I ask that the Senator from California join with me; nothing more. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield to the Senator from Mississippi. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, the Sen- ator has been very generous in yielding. I understood the Senator to say that he would not favor knocking out all the money for this item from the bill. Mr. EAGLETON. No. I said if the bill contained lines 1, 2, 3, and 4, the money items, and did not contain the rest of the items that call for study by the GAO, I would not support the bill. Mr. STENNIS. The amendment of the Senator does take the money, all of it out of the bill, for this tank. Mr. EAGLETON. The Senator is cor- rect, and for this limited purpose, for this limited period of time. Mr. STENNIS. For 6 months. Is that correct? Mr. EAGLETON. That would be the length of the study. Mr. STENNIS. The Senator knows he would be taking the money out until there is another authorization bill and Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August "8, 196APproved ForMORE29111414A/BOREMEDP.7133110021?1211R000300100001-3 S 9467 appropriation bill, which is ordinarily 1 year. Mr. EAGLETON, The Senator is cor- rect. Mr. STENNIS. That is correct. Mr. EAGLETON. But there are excep- tions, I understand, to the appropriation process, whereby a supplemental appro- priation could come in. Mr. STENNIS. That is not ordinarily done, and there could not be money transferred for this purpose, because when the appropriation is cut out, the artery is cut that gives it life. Does the Senator know that this oper- ation would close down and stop by Sep- tember 30, and that the people who are there would no longer be employed, cer- tainly not in that project? To start it up is not like lighting a fire. You would have to get men who are qualified and get them back on the job and get it fired up in that way. I am told by people who have experi- ence that taking this money out, as pro- vided in the Senator's amendment, would cost about 2 years' time. So, when the Senator said he would not be for it if we just took the money out, I wanted to question him on that point because it does take the money out and there is no life left in it until there is a recommenda- tion or congressional action, signed by the President. Mr. CRANSTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I shall yield, but first I wish to respond to the Senator from Missisippi because, I think his point is an interesting one and goes to the heart of this matter. The amendment would strike from the bill $30 million and another $24.5 million. The Senator is correct that during that period there would be a discontinuation of expendi- tures on these projects. The Senator is correct when he states?I take his word for it, and it makes commonsense to me?that by September 30 the money would run out from previous appropriations and many persons would be reassigned and some would lose their jobs. It is quite possible. The GAO study would take 6 months, if it were the kind of green light the Senator from Mississippi would want to see. I know he has some lingering mis- givings about this program, and he so stated. I think on the day he made his initial presentation on this measure, the manager of the bill said, "I have about lost patience with this situation." That is what he said in referring to the MBT- 70. So I know he has some misgivings and would like to see a greater certainty In this situation, Perhaps it would be less than 6 months because perhaps someone either at GAO or elsewhere with previous experience with tanks such as the Sheridan or the MBT-70 or with the Shillelagh weapon system could do it sooner. I would be glad to make it 3 months or 2 months. If they come back and give the green light, I would then join with the Senator form Mississippi and say I would support a new authorization and new appropria- tion. I am not a perfectionist, nor do I be- long to that group which is experienced in the craftsmanship of legislation. Per- haps it might be wise to leave some money in, putting the brakes on it, until the GAO study comes in and perhaps gives it a green light and opens it up to let the money flow. I am not that good at drafting legislation. Maybe there is a way to draft it based on the experience of others. I guess it was curious happenstance that this amendment came on the heels of the amendment agreed to Yesterday, which had been introduced by the Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr. SCHWEIKER) . Mr. CRANSTON. Mr. President, will the Senator from Missouri yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I have a great train of thought going and I do not want to get off it for the moment. It was perhaps a curious happenstance that the sequence of events occurred that way, but to me this could be a magni- ficent sort of test case as to whether the amendment adopted yesterday was pru- dent. I know that the Senator from Mis- sissippi had serious misgivings about it. My senior colleague, for whom I have the highest personal respect and who perhaps knows more about military mat- ters than any man I? have been privi- leged to know, also had serious misgiv- ings about the Schweiker amendment. To me, this could be an important and impressive test case as to whether what was done yesterday by the Senate in agreeing to the Schweiker amendment calling upon the GAO to give Congress assistance, analysis, and recommenda- tions, will work. Perhaps the Senate made a mistake yesterday. I was paired in support of the Schweiker amendment because it made sense to me, although to Senators like Mr. STENNIS and Mr. SYMINGTON, and others?the amendment was adopted by a margin of only one vote?it did not make sense. Let us test it out. Here is the best way I know to test it out. This is a case in point. This is a nonvital case in point. Time is not of the essence. Time is with us. This is one weapons system where 3 months, if the GAO can do it that quickly, or up to 6 months, it will not make us, break us, or defeat us. I am now happy to yield to the Sena- tor from California. Mr. CRANSTON. I thank the Senator from Missouri for yielding to me. He referred to the amendment adopted yes- terday relating to the GAO and I wanted to ask one or two questions in relation to it. Part of my concern about that amend- ment was its relationship to the need for the GAO to be independent and ob- jective in evaluating the programs. I was convinced that the GAO might be- come too deeply involved in these pro- grams and I wondered how objective its reports would be, and whether we would be able to rely upon them for the advice and counsel and the expertise that we want in relation to costs. This leads me to wonder about another aspect of the Senator's amendment. He spoke in a very kindly way about my own background as a State comptroller. My background as a State comptroller, and that of most State comptrollers, 1 am sure, deals with costs, with analyses of those costs, but not necessarily with the value of specific programs. Such judgments are left at least in California and elsewhere, I am sure, usually, to ex- ecutive experts in those fields, where there is a legislative body, to the experts among the general membership in that legislative body. In relationship to the four things the Senator asks the GAO to do in his amendment, and specifically to item 1, "Why research and develop- ment cost estimates have had to be re- vised steadily upward since 1965," Am I correct in assuming that this relates specifically to the cost estimates relating to tanks? Mr. EAGLETON. Relating not just to tanks, let me say to the Senator from California, but specifically, I mean, to the MBT-70?that particular and spe- cific program. Mr. CRANSTON. This tank? Mr. EAGLETON. Yes. Mr. CRANSTON. It seems to me that is obviously an appropriate task for the GAO to perform. I want to ask why, in the second, third, and fourth items, which the Senator wants the GAO to perform in his proposed amendment, why the GAO would be particularly qualified to report to us on the effective- ness of any particular weapon and on relating this to strategic projections and new strategies and to alternatives not in terms of cost but in terms of perform- ance of the MBT-70? Mr. EAGLETON. Again, to me, that is a very profound question. Perhaps it could only emanate from one who has had the experience of the Senator from California serving as a State comp- troller. I think in his definition of duties and responsibilities in California he of course relates the facts as they apply to his office, and I dare say the vast ma- jority of State comptrollers would as well. But I think he too narrowly assume or Identifies his prior experience and the nature of the duties of his office pre- cisely with that of the Comptroller Gen- eral of the United States. He circum- scribes the capability and performance potential of the Comptroller General. The office of the Comptroller General, as I would understand it, is not one made up of personnel who are adroit only at figures and can balance a ledger, can tally a sheet with assets and liabilities and see whether something is in the black or in the red. That takes talent. That Is not the limit of their talents, however. The best proof I can give to the Sen- ator from California as to the capability of the GAO to work in this area, and spe- cifically to work on tanks, and even more specifically to work on the MBT-70, is that they have already been doing that work. They did it for the Stratton Com- mittee. They were a major portion of the investigative arm that supplied the Stratton Committee with its most per- suasive and compelling findings of the $1 billion in waste in connection with the operation and deployment of the Sheri- dan and Shillelagh systems. Proof of the pudding is that they have done it. If it is unwise for them to do it?yet this they did, and it was not done yesterday, It was passed on with authorization of Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Reftt ? Vffil011?4111Yin LCI*89B113-9igftEr 300100001-3. ziugust 8, 1969 S 9468 the Senate, they have clone this before? it would be the subject of new remedial legislation to circumscribe and prohibit the Comptroller General of the United States. I for one, would not support that. I think the Comptroller General can ren- der to us and should render unto us that which the Bureau of the Budget renders unto the President of the United States and the executive branch. Mr. Mayo is not just a bookkeeper. He is not there just with pencil and paper with lines on it and columns, adding up figures. He and his analysts go to the Pentagon?not enough, in my opinion, and in the opinion of the Senator from Ohio?to try to examine the efficacy and the legitimacy needed for weapons sys- tems. They do that. The Budget Bureau does that for the executive. The Comp- troller General has been doing that for the legislative branch?to wit, the Strat- ton report; and, in my jud.,ment, should continue to do it. I know they are equipped to do it on the 1VIBT-70 because they have already done part of the work on it. Mr. CRANSTON. Did the Senator con- sult with or get the views of the GAO in regard to its ability to perform these particular functions? Mr. EAGLETON. I will turn that ques- tion over to the Senator from Wisconsin to answer. That is in his specific area of expertise. Mr. PROXMIRE. The Senator from California has asked the Senator from Missouri whether the GAO indicated its position on whether it could make this investigation? Mr. CRANSTON. Yea, whether these particular duties, particularly 2, 3, and 4, In the amendment, are duties which the GAO is equipped to perform and is pre- pared to perform. Mr. PROXMIRE. I will certainly find out the answer to that. I have staff or the Joint Economic Committee looking into that. They have not told me specif- ically whether the GAO feels it is quali- fied to do this, but I would be surprised, if they were not able to provide data on which Congress could decide. I think the record of the GAO indicates that they can do this kind of thing and that they have done this before. Mr. CRANSTON. I thank the Senator from Wisconsin. I have two more ques- tions I should like to ask the Senator from Missouri. Was one of the reasons for trying to alleviate the friction between the United States and Germany the bal- ance of payments problem we face, due to our troops being in Germany and the desire to develop a cooperative project relating to NATO that could possibly contribute toward alleviation of those frictions? Mr. EAGLETON. That would be rather speculative on my part. I do not know that the origin of the agreement back in 1963?the $80 million., 50-50 agree- ment?has ever been pinned down pre- cisely. I did ask, in an unclassified hear- ing, about this matter. I do not want to put words in the mouth of any particular officer. There were three or four officers present, a general, a colonel, a major, and a civilian. One of theinen in uniform put it this way: Back in 1963, the Federal Republic of Germany had shown tech- nological expertise. They are talented people. It was a two-heads-are-better- than-one approach. This was a novel idea. As one man put it?and I have nothing better to say on in?let Ger- many, with its scientists and contrac- tors and its people, go full steam ahead on the engine work, especially, and other- wise, and let our people go full steam ahead. Two heads are better than one and perhaps we will come up with some- thing better than if we did it all by our- selves or Germany did it all by herself. That is what I recall being said to me in that unclassified portion of the briefing. Mr. CRANSTON. If this tank is some- thing that some experts believe is needed to defend Western Europe, would it not be the better course for the Europeans to build it and pay for it? Mr. EAGLETON. Earlier this day the Senator from Louisiana, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee (Mr. Loam), and I had a brief exchange on the agree- ment with respect to the Federal Repub- lic of Germany, and he was at least on the border of answering the question asked by the Senator from California. If it can be shown that it is an effec- tive tank, the details of who will build it and the question of the importance of our balance of payments, have to be de- cided by other people. But we have to get over the hurdle of whether it is needed. I know I for one, and I know the Sen- ator from Louisiana, would be tremen- dously happy if West Germany or Bel- gium, of any of our other NATO al- lies would show greater Interest in developing and beefing up and expanding their weaponry, whether it be land, sea, or air, and could take a greater burden of their own defense and thereby relieve us of the expenditures and the balance of payment problems that are caused by the maintaining of over 200,000 of our troops in Western Europe. I for one would applaud that. I would love to see it. I would like to see our troops brought home, and to let our allies take care of themselves. We would continue to pledge our aid to the NATO countries. When, as, and if needed, we would send help, under our NATO obligations. Mr. CRANSTON. I thank the Senator from Missouri for his detailed and help- ful and careful work on this matter. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield on the point the Sen- ator from California has raised with the Senator from Missouri? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. Mr. PROXMIRE. I first want to say that we recognize that the General Ac- counting Office has over 2,900 profes- sional auditors and accountants and staff people who have devoted their lives to inquiring into Government agency practices. Second, 42 percent of them, according to Mr. Staats, have been work- ing on defense analysis. So these are the experts, these are the qualified professionals, in the best posi- tion to give us the kinds of answers the Senator from Missouri's amendment Calls for. As far as conclusions are concerned, however, we have to make them, and we should. I do not think it would be proper, I do not think the GAO would presume, to tell us whether the MBT-70 is the most effective weapon to meet the con- tingency for which it was planned. That is not their job. Again and again they have been reluctant to do that. But they will give us facts and information and cost effectiveness, and we make up our own minds, as the Senator knows. In all these questions there may be value judgments or strategic judgments of this kind. They cannot make up our minds for us, any more than the mili- tary men can make up our minds for us. The military men can give their rec- ommendations in this area, but nobody pretends that they should make the final decision. The distinguished Senator from Cali- fornia is a former comptroller of the State of California. He knows all an auditor or accountant can do is give us the facts and the data and the informa- tion; but that is not available now, and the Senator's amendment would make it so. Mr. CRARSTON. I thank the Senator. Mr. EAGLETON. Before yielding to other Senators, I wish to make this point to the Senator from California. I shall be brief. I know he must leave. I have some data, dated July 9, from the Comp- troller General of the United States, ad- dressed to "Dear Senator EAGLETON." It is a report prepared by the U.S. General Accounting Office, the statement of Harold H. Rubin, Associate Director, De- fense Division, and so forth. And there is a brief report that that agency has al- ready made what is admittedly a sketchy report on the MBT-70, the main bat- tle tank. I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the RECORD the last 2 pages, labeled B-1, and B-2 from the report of the Comptroller General of the United States. There being no objection, the ex- cerpts were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, RS follows: MAIN BATTLE TANK (MBT-70) The Main Battle Tank (14:13T-70) , currently being developed under a Cooperative Tank Development Program between the United States and the Federal Republic of Ger- many, is designed to utilize the Shillelagh missile and the 152mm combustible cartridge case ammunition. Development of the MBT- 70 was initiated under this program by an Executive Agreement signed between the governments on August 1, 1983. This agree- ment provides that the total costs of the program will be shared equally. In view of the development status of the MBT-70, and the considerable degree of slippage it has ex- perienced, we considered It prudent to con- centrate our efforts on the Sheridan and the M60A1E2 tank, deployment of which was more imminent. RESPONSIBILITIES The Office of the U.S. Program Manager and Project Manager, US/FRG Main Battle Tank, was established by Army Material Command General Order No. 52, effective Au- gust 15, 1983. As Project Manager, he re- ports to the Commanding General, AMC. As U.S. Program Manager, he is the U.S. mem- ber of the international US/FRG Main Bat- tle Tank Program Management Board, and as such, reports to the Chief of Staff, United States Army, and is governed by policy and Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August '8, 1969APP1o1ed FotI3Nims/MilgitinartiMpUtIptitpAttR000300100001-3 S 9469 progPam guidance issued by Headquarters, Department of the Army. 1VIBT-7 0 OBJECTIVES The MBT-70, which is intended to replace the M60 and the M48 as the standard main battle tank, will be employed against armored f :rmations and all other types of land war- fare targets including infantry elements of a modern army. It is intended to provide a night firing capability with improved relia- bility and durability, reduced maintenance requirements, improved weapons, and a sig- nificant increase in ballistic protection. MBT-7 0 COMMONALITY The MBT-70 is designed to be armed with the Shillelagh missile and the 152mm com- bustible cartridge case ammunition common to the Sheridan and M60A1E2 tank, and is intended to use an automatic loading device which is the key to a three-man crew con- cept. However, the automatic loader is de- pendent upon the acceptability of the am- munition combustible cartridge case which will be discussed in detail subsequently. CONCLUSION Unless deficiencies in the combustible car- tridge case ammunition are corrected, it is reasonable to assume that the MBT-70 will experience difficulties similar to those of the Sheridan and M60A1E2 tank. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON, I yield. Mr. STENNIS. I appreciate the Sen- ator's yielding to me. I want to make a very brief statement on this subject. I think the Senator is making a fine pres- entation. My remarks are not directed at him at all. Mr. President, the question arises here about keeping the bill moving. I am a great believer in the proponent of a bill or of an amendment having a full chance to present his case. I want to go on rec- ord every day as being among those who want this bill to move along. I know tre- mendous amounts are contained in it. The bill involves our men in Vietnam and our future military program. It is highly important that this bill move be- yond the Senate as soon as possible. The House will have to pass a bill. It will have to go to conference. All those matters take time. It has to come back here be- fore the Appropriations Committee can move on it. Sc, I am ready to agree to a time lim- itation on this matter. Let us let other Senators who want to speak come in and say what they want to say and, if pos- sible, get a vote on the amendment this afternoon. I hear a rumor going around that there is not going to be a vote this afternoon. This is an important matter, but, still, it is just one matter in the bill, and if we cannot get to a vote on it in a day, I think it is just tragic. I im- agine the Senator would be willing to agree to something along that line. Just one other thing. I appreciate the Senator's yielding to me. He yielded largely for questions. We just cannot go on and on letting any Senator who wants to walk in and make a speech on the matter by getting the Senator who has the floor to yield to him. The rules of the Senate provide that the Senator can yield only for a question. This is not directed to the Senator from Missouri. So, to make the bill move, the day may come when I shall have to object to yielding except for real emergencies or for questions. I thank the Senator for yielding to me. When he has finished, I will propose an agreement. Mr. EAGLETON. In response to the distinguished Senator from Mississippi, may I say I am not prepared at this time-.and I am not trying to foot-drag-- to agree to any time limit. In addition to myself, there are cosponsors, the Sena- tor from Oregon (Mr. HATFIELD) , and five other cosponsors, who are mentioned on the amendment, including Senator MCGOVERN, Senator Moss, and Senator YARBOROUGH. I OD not want to unilater- ally, on my own, foreclose them from the fullness of any participation they would like. Mr. STENNIS. The Senator should not, and I would not quickly agree, either. I shall have to consult with other Senators. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield to the Senator from Ohio. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Mr. President, first, I desire to congratulate the distin- guished junior Senator from Missouri on his excellent speech in support of the amendment he has offered, cosponsored by other Senators. In answer to the question from the dis- tinguished junior Senator from Califor- nia, the Senator from Missouri adverted to the NATO Alliance and to our troops in Western Europe. Is it not a fact that of all the NATO powers, the United States is the only one which has entirely ful- filled its NATO commitments? Mr. EAGELTON. I thank the Senator from Ohio. He has never been accused of being prone to understatements, but I must say with all deference that that is an understatement. We have not only fulfilled all our commitments, we have overfulfilled them. NATO is U.S.A.- NATO. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. That is correct. Now, regarding the MET-70, that is sup- posedly a joint United States-West Ger- man project for a heavy tank, designed to operate sometime in the 1970's, in the event of a tactical nuclear war in Europe. Supposedly, there is built-in protec- tion for the crew against the contami- nants of nuclear war. However, testimony has revealed that beyond limited protec- tion against the hazards of nuclear radi- ation, the design is certainly not accept- able for operations in any nuclear war. We are in agreement on that, I am sure. Mr. EAGLETON. I concur fully with the Senator from Ohio. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. The Armed Services Committee, as I recall, wisely recommended a reduction of $14.9 mil- lion on that item, and I voted for that reduction in the committee, as I am cer- tain did the distinguished senior Senator from Missouri, the colleague of the Sen- ator who now has the floor. Mr. EAGLETON. May I respond to the Senator's statement at that point? Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Yes. Mr. EAGLETON. The Committee on Armed Services cut out that $14.9 mil- lion with this comment, as the Senator will recall, referring to the MBT-70. It said: This program has been experiencing dif- ficulty for some years, and the committee now believes that a reorientation of the pro- gram is in order. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Yes. Mr. EAGLETON. What I am trying to do is to help with that reorientation, to get our expert advisers in the GAO to help us with that reorientation. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. I an certain that the senior Senator from Missouri, the Senator's colleague, who is one of the senior members of the Committee on Armed Services and one of the most highly respected and most knowledge- able members of that committee, concur- red in that reduction, and I know the junior Senator from Missouri is voicing the views of his distinguished senior colleague on that subject. We did not feel, in the committee, that the results of early research and de- velopment justified the Pentagon's bud- get request. Nevertheless, more than $54 million remains in the bill we are now considering for research and develop- ment, and for production base support, for this Main battle tank. The fact is that the engine, the trans- mission, the suspension, and auxiliary equipment are being manufactured by West German companies. That is a fact, Is it not? Mr. EAGLETON. Significant numbers of the components, especially with re- spect to the engine, and I presume other components as well. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. This is almost a quarter of a century following the end of World War II, and still at this time, 300,000 men of our Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marines are stationed in Europe, and along with them are 255,000 dependents. Of course, as the Senator knows, those officers there, at least field grade officers and general officers, never had it as good as they have it now, with their dependents, their servants, their automobiles, and their travel throughout Europe. That is all a great expense to our taxpayers, and we are trying to curtail it. Since April 1963, I have spoken out here in this Chamber urging withdrawal of most of our troops from Western Europe. If there is any real danger of aggression from the Soviet Union in Western Europe, it would be far better for our taxpayers if we would have our young draftees, say on a 13-month tour of duty, in Western Europe, instead of all those divisions made up mostly of profes- sional soldiers stationed in Europe, living like squaw men with their families. Would it not be far better if those di- visions were brought home, or sent on to the Pacific? If we have to be involved in a civil war in Vietnam, why should they not be sent there instead of draftees with only four months of training? I am sure the Senator agrees with me that the threat of military aggression by the Communists against Western Europe is not as it was in the time of Stalin, and has in fact all but vanished. The present rulers of the Soviet Union are no longer rattling their missiles toward West Ger- many. The Soviet Union is no longer a Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9470 Approved For REiltwitRAWALCIR-eaRL113_ORNARN0300100001-A. ugits I 8, 1969 have-not nation; its leaders now appear principally dedicated to the objective of raising the standard of living of their own people. It is the nuclear umbrella of the United .States that provides the real protection for Western Europe and West Germany, and not our ground troops there, cer- tainly. Does not the Senator agree with me that it is not the large number of our ground troops in Western Europe, or the MBT-70s, that are protecting Western Europe? Mr. EAGLETON. I think that is cor- rect. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Of course, we have the capability of airlifting, as the Senator knows, a combat-ready divi- sion from the United Sates and having them in the field in Western Europe within 24 to 48 hours ready for action. We know that. Mr. EAGLETON. Absolutely; and that would save vast amounts of money; and, as the Senator well knows many learned observers on the military scene, both professional and civilian, seriously ques- tion our massive military presence In Western Europe?by massive I mean in terms of the enormity of the number of troops with, as the Senator says, their dependents, et cetera, and the great fi- nancial drain. They question, first, whether militarily it is needed; and economically, we know the drain it im- poses upon us, not only taxwise but bal- ance-of-payments wise. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. And does not the Senator from Missouri agree with me that having them there is nothing more than foreign aid to West Germany in disguise? Mr. EAGLETON. It is foreign aid through the back door. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Yes. And the West German Government and the West German people do not need that foreign aid from us, because they are prosperous now as never before; is Tflot that a fact also? Mr. EAGLETON. One of the most prosperous nations on Garth, with the most solvent economy and the strongest monetary system. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Is not the con- tinued production in West Germany of the MBP-70, simply another form of foreign aid in disguise from the tax- payers of America? Mr. EAGLETON. I perhaps would not adopt the full phraseolotv of the Sena- tor; but it is certainly an economic shot in the arm to West Germs ny that they can do some work on this tank. The Daimler-Benz people and the others are certainly not going to be losing any money on it, and it is certainly highly questionable whether this country will get anything out of it that will be useful or needed. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. And it is only maintaining and building up their mili- tary-industrial complex? Mr. EAGLETON. It is tertainly help- ing their industrial complex. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. -Should we not not delay the further development of the main battle tank until the Comptroller General of the United States has an op- portunity to report to Congress on the parcticability and cost effectiveness of this mighty complex system? Mr. EAGLETON. I could not have Put it better myself. Those are words from Heaven. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Well, I sort of stuttered on that "cost effectiveness" and "practicability"; but we are in agree- ment, are we not? Mr. EAGLETON. Completely, on that point. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Mr. President, I have a final question to ask of the dis- tinguished Senator from Missouri. I ask whether the Senator agrees with me that there is only the most remote possibility that there would ever be a limited nu- clear war long enough in duration, or any nuclear war long enough in dura- tion, for these main battle tanks to be of any use whatever? Mr. EAGLETON. It is highly ques- tionable. If there were a limited nuclear war, I think the tanks would be among the first to go, and then next would be the aircraft carriers. I do not know how limited "limited" is in a nuclear war. I think it would be a matter of a few sec- onds, minutes, or hours. It would be a terribly short period of time with a lim- ited nuclear exchange, if the Senator is talking about an exchange between the United States and the Soviet Union. The very essence of the situation escalates and is something horrendously gigantic. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. It would be a matter of moments. Mr. EAGLETON. The Senator is cor- rect. Mr. YOUNG of Ohio. Mr. President, I again compliment the distinguished Sen- ator from Missouri. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that I may yield to the distinguished Senator froth Arizona for a few moments without losing my right to the floor. Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, reserv- ing the right to object, and I certainly shall not object, the custom of having someone hold the floor and farm it out for speeches when other Senators are waiting to get the floor has gone about far enough,. I am certainly not going to object at this time. I want to serve notice that I shall be objecting and very sharply to any of these arrangements, and I shall call for the regular order. However, I would like to say while I am on my feet that some of us expected we were going to work last night and today. It was even intimated that we would work Saturday. The people back home are not going to view with very much enthusiasm the Senate's recessing for 3 weeks in the middle of this crucial defense bill. We were going to work. Nothing hap- pened. Nothing will happen today. Quite obviously, we are not going to work Sat- urday. Everyone knows that on Wednes- day half of the Senators will be going to Los Angeles to welcome the astronauts. When is the Senate going to work? Mr. President, I do not object. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I yield 5 minutes to the distinguished Senator from Arizona without losing my right to the floor. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. CRANSTON in the chair). The Senator from Arizona is recognized. Mr. (X)LDWA Mr. President, yes- terday evening figures were inserted in the RECORD by the distinguished Sena- tor from Tennessee (Mr. GORE) and the distinguished Senator from Arkansas (Mr. FULBRIGHT) Which I questioned and for which I promised I would have an answer today. I am sorry that neither gentleman Is here. It is difficult to know when one can get the floor. So, one can- not make dates. Mr. President, efforts are being made in some quarters to convince the Ameri- can people that President Nixon is pot living up to his commitment to bring 25,009 American fighting men home from Vietnam by August 31. In doing so, those involved in this at- tack are deliberately mixing apples and oranges. They are comparing current figures of manpower totals in Vietnam to those of last January, even though the President did not commit himself to troop reduc- tion until June 8 at Midway. Let me read just what the President said on Midway regarding the withdrawal of American troops: As a consequence of the recommendation by the President? President Thieu, that is? and the assessment of our own Commander in the field, I have decided to order the im- mediate redeployment from Vietnam of a division, equivalent of approximately 25,000 men. This troop replacement will begin within the next 30 days and will be completed by the end of August. Mr. President, my colleagues should note that the President was talking about about 25,000 men, not exactly 25,000. I made some inquiries into that figure because I recognized it as being substan- tally more in number than the average American division. So that my colleagues might have a better understanding, I point out that a figure of approximately 16,000 is gener- ally used for an infantry division in Vietnam. However, a division force, which is a division plus supporting forces, is approximately 40,000. So, the 25,000 figure is more than a division, but less than a division force. Mr. President, President Nixon was talking not about early August but about end of August. These are the facts. But supposing the President were talk- ing about troop figures of last January, there is still a valid explanation that applies. The Pentagon uses two figures on troop strength in Vietnam. Actual strength and programed strength. Both are valid. Programed strength is an absolute. It is the number of men the services can put into Vietnam. Actual strength is the number of men actually there. This varies as troops are rotated. By the end of August the Defense De- partment expects to have a programed strength in Vietnam of 524,500 compared with the previous programed strength of Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 laka49RDIMME64R000300100001-3 S 9471 August 8, 1969 Approved EerlsftV??169A/P 549,500. This is a reduction of 25,000 in I doubt the wisdom, I might say to the Senator from Pennsylvania did a mar- programed troop strength. Senator, of picking out system by system velous job on his amendment, under Of course, actual troop numbers will by system and seeking to correct it. I difficult circumstances, with strong op- fluctuate under this reduction in pro- think perhaps the approach of the dis- position, as we all know. Today, we have gramed strength just as it has before. tinguished Senator from Pennsylvania a followup by another new, young Sen- But the approximate number will be yesterday was a better way to get at this ator. In the first case it was a Republi- around 515,000 by the end of August, problem. can Senator and in this case a new, compared to an average strength during Mr. EAGLETON. I agree somewhat young, Democratic Senator who is also fiscal 1969 of 540,500, again this is a de- with what the Senator says. By my indicating his remarkable ability. The cline of about 25,000 just as President amendment and that of the Senator common thread here, of course, is that Nixon promised. from Oregon (Mr. HATFIELD) we are not they are both aiming at the same thing, Mr. President, in their eagerness to trying to superimpose our judgment, our and that is to make the military ac- expertise, because I think both of us countable, to make it possible for us, as would be candidly to say that we are Senators, to know when we vote on the not as scientifically or militarily trained on that as are the Pentagon or Members military budget what we are voting on. I ask the distinguished Senator from of the Senate who have made their life the study of these matters, such as the Missouri if it is true that costs since 1963 on this tank have risen over 500 distinguished Senator from Mississippi. percent. The very thing we are asking for in Mr. EAGLETON. According to the this amendment is what the Senator figures pointed out. We are asking for the first we have, that is the case-500- test case of the Schweiker amendment. plus percent. I must say that prior to the Senator What better way can we prove whether Cham- what was done here yesterday, by a from Wisconsin coming into the Cham- narrow vote, over the strong objection ber, the chairman of the Committee on of some very able people?including my own senior colleague, Senator SYMING of Services, the Senator from Mis- sissippi, had figures supplied to him by ToN?was a wise move, than by saying the Defense Department that might be different. We are trying to verify it. My to the GAO, "We give you 6 months." find came from the Defense Depart- I am willing to cut that, if I can ment through a colonel whose name I out from the GAO that they can do it quicker-2 or 3 months. "Take a look at supplied. We are trying to reconcile it. According to the figures in the chart, the this thing, as you already have done in part for the Stratton committee, when Senator is correct. looked at the Sheridan and the Mr. PROXMIRE. The chart shows the you l Shillelagh, and you gave a look on the increase in Cost, which began at $40 mil- s lion, a total of $80 million?$40 million side at the MBT-70. Take a look at this for the United States and $40 million for thing and report back to us." I think it was happy coincidence that Germany. Now they have gone to about $230 million for the United States. the Eagleton-Hatfield amendment came i Mr. EAGLETON. It is $227 million for n the wake of the Schweiker amend- the United States and $80 million for ment, because this gives us a wonderful Germany, or thereabouts. opportunity to test out the wisdom. of Mr. PROXMIRE. Is it true that the that which was done yesterday. We may find in a 2- or 3-month , purposes for which this tank was origi- period, based on what the GAO does?if nally designed, originally conceived, have changed I would say to the Senator from Kan- they do it sloppily or ineptly?that what Mr. EAGLETON. They have changed sas that if tanks are needed, if there is was done here yesterday was a mistake? a massive threat of being outtanked by a mistake that is rectifiable either on immeasurably. the Warsaw Pact, we have and are pro- the House side or in conference. Forty- The chairman of the Committee on ducing at a painfully slow pace, at a very six Senators yesterday thought it was a Armed Services, the Senator from Mis- minimal rate, the M60A1. mistake; 47 did not. Perhaps the 46 were sissippi, pointed out that the purpose of As I stated earlier in the debate, ac- right. We have a perfect way to find the tank was unidentifiable almost at cording to the Stratton subcommittee of out?a laboratory case. I keep heark- the beginning. It was an idea in 1963. I the House Armed Services Committee, it ening back, because I think it is vital, to call it a dream. He calls it sort of an is equal to or superior to any Russian this one weapons system whose history idea, a vague idea that was kicking around the Pentagon. So I do not know tank that is part of the Warsaw group. proves that time is not of the essence. that in 1963 it had any purpose except to So I have a general doubt, and I know It is 5 year overdue now, and another the Senator from Arkansas does, asbuild a dream tank. 2 or 3 months, unlike the arguments others do, about tanks in general. How- advanced in the ABM debate, are not Mr. PROXMIRE. When the Senator ever, quite frankly I have not had the ex- vital or potentially catastrophic. says "a dream," does he mean the idea perience the Senator from Kansas has Mr. PEARSON. I thank the Senator. was to build a faster, stronger tank, with had in military matters. But I have very Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will a lower silhouette, a tank that would be technologically superior to the tanks now little doubt about the MBT-70. It is an Edsel. Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. the Senator yield? but with no new strategic mission? Mr. PEARSON. I should like to re- spond to the Senator in this manner. Mr. PROXMIRE. I have some ques- Mr. EAGLETON. If the Senator will tions for the Senator, but first I should bear with me, I should like to get a pre- I am not sure that I have any competency like to commend him on a remarkably cise quotation from my speech. Either to make a judgment or a statement as to the necessity of this particular tank, fine speech. I especially commend him General Betts or General' Burba, or but I have a conviction as to the neces- on his responses to the questions that somebody who had something to do with sity of tanks themselves, have been asked him. He has been ask ed this tank in its growing stage and in- This is a fairly sad and sorry story questions that have tested him from ception stage, said?I have it here. It in relation to this particular tank system. every angle, and I think his responses was General Betts, the Army Director of Research and Development. He said: The Senator seeks to correct it and seeks have been most convincing. For the first estimate we did not have a to attack it. We have a multiplicity of I think the Senate and the country design. We did not have any really detailed illustrations we can bring out from the are - fortunate that in the last 2 days idea of what would go into the tanks so Senator's mention of today in his very we have had a vision of the future. Yes- the early estimates were very summary in excellent presentation. terday, the distinguished, young, new make hay out of any possible mistakes, or variances or changes, too many per- sons who should know better, are shoot- ing from the hip. I suggest that they at least wait until the end of August before they begin blasting away at those who are trying so desperately to rectify the costly errors of the last 8 years. Mr. PEARSON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. Mr. PEARSON. Mr. President, I voted against the anti-ballistic-missile system. I did so because of the questions of the reliability costs, and the arms race, to- gether with the question of necessity. The question I put to my distinguished colleague and neighbor from Missouri today is whether he is convinced?I might say that I am?of the necessity for the construction and deployment of the main battle tanks, the necessity of the system, the necessity of a tank as part of the overall symmetry of power we need, measured together with the nu- clear umbrella and the conventional forces and our guerrilla trainees. Mr. EAGLETON. I have lingering, gnawing agonies and general doubt as to the need or necessity of tanks in gen- eral. I do not have much doubt personally as to the need for the MBT-70. Ido not think we need it. ? nature. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9472 Approved For ReleRmsgpidysliefkrATPR?e1R1/992y14?kly00100001-3 Augu'st 8, 1969 That is what he said, and I take him at his word. Let me add to that, on the same line and consistent therewith, Maj. Gen. Ed- ward J. Burba, who was formerly the head of the MBT-70, said in 1967 in the Armed Forces Management magazine: For the first time in the history of modern tank design, the designers of the MBT were given carte blanche to optimize basic design configurations into which :hey put the best scientific engineering know-how. They were given carte blanche to "go out boys and build us something, some- thing dreamy." That is about the way I understand it. Mr. PROXMIRE. What has been the expressed need for this tank? What has been the expressed put pose for it? What is it supposed to do? Mr. EAGLETON. It-is supposed to off- set the growing tank threat of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw powers in West- ern Europe. That is the alleged purpose of it. ' Mr. PROXMIRE. It is to be used in what kind of warfare? Mr. EAGLETON. Ina limited warfare. Mr. PROXMIRE. Nonnuclear? Mr. EAGLETON. Nonnuclear warfare. It presumably can be used in nuclear warfare. It might lend itself to that type of warfare. It is much faster, much more maneuverable. That is, if it would work, it would be all these things. But, basical- ly, it would be used in a limited warfare; and if we got into a limited nuclear war?which is a concept with which I have always had difficulty. I do not feel that it would remain lhnited very long? I am talking about a matter of hours. Mr. PROXMIRE. What evidence does the Senator have that tanks may be- coming less useful and perhaps obsolete because they can be hit? What is the cost difference between an offense and de- fense on tanks? In other words, what would be the cost to develop weapons that could knock out tanks? Mr. EAGLETON. The cost effectiveness of this particular MET-70 is priced-be- tween $520,000 and $750,000. per tank. That is not the cost for the entire group of them, but for one bulk. The range de- pends on how many are produced. If mcire are produced, of course, the cost goes down. The cost effectivenessl of this particular item, I understand, is very close to the breaking point, and perhaps going over that point, where it will-not be cost effec- tive because of the development of other weaponry, including antitank weapons. Here is a quotation from General Miley, talking about the Tow, which is an antitank weapon: This is our new Tow antitank weapon. You can see the wires that guide it coming out the tubes and they will kM any known tank in the enemy inventory. Mr. PROXMIRE. Does the Senator have the cost of that wetpon? Mr. EAGLETON. I donut have it, and I believe it has not been publicly dis- closed. I shall try to get the information. Mr. GOLDWATER, Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. Mr. GOLDWATER. It runs in the na- ture of $7,000 to $9,000. Mr. EAGLETON. The Tow. The Sen- ator from Arizona has said that the cost is $7,000 to $9,000 per weapon. I thank the Senator. Mr. PROXMIRE. The Senator from Arizona is very helpful. This means that a $7,000 to $9,000 weapon could knock out this one-half million dollar tank. Is that correct? Mr. EAGLETON. That is my under- standing. Mr. PROXMIRE. I would like to ask the Senator another question. Mr. EAGLETON. I wish to add there is another weapon called the Dragon. It is designed to fill the Army need for a certain type weapon. It is launched from a tube without recoil. This is a system which can be operated by one foot sol- dier. That system is not operable. Mr. PROXMIRE. Is it not true there has been an investigation of this tank by a special investigating subcommittee of the House of Representatives; that the study recommended the MBT-70 program should be reappraised and a re- port finding made to Congress prior to any future steps being taken? Was not this recommendation made by the sub- committee of the Committee on Armed Services in the other body? Is this not what the amendment of the Senator would accomplish? Mr. EAGLETON. Absolutely. And that is precisely a quotation from the report. I quoted earlier from the statement of Representative MENDEL Rrverts, of the House Armed Services Committee, in which he pointed out it was his recom- mendation that we stop on this thing now and take a long hard look at it. This comes from a man who obviously has enormous experience in weaponry. Mr. PROXMIRE. A man who certainly has not been soft on providing adequate armed forces. Mr. EAGLETON. Precisely. Mr. PROXMIRE. Is it not true that Secretary of Defense Laird has raised some very serious questions about this particular tank and has classified it along with the Pueblo and the TFX as an area in which we may have dismally failed? ing for us. They are people we can trust. They are ours. If we cannot trust the GAO to do the kind of job we want we are in terrible shape. They are be- holden to no one but us. I would not be afraid to let them help make this de- cision. We hurt ourselves when we deny ourselves that opinion. Mr. PROXMIRE. This impressed me more than any other quotation. General Betts is the head of Army Research and Development. Is that correct? Mr. EAGLETON. The Senator is cor- rect. Mr. PROXMIRE. Is it true that Gen- eral Betts said the problem is whether we put more into this vehicle than we require? The toughest question is wheth- er we need everything that went into this tank. Is it not true that this argument made by the most expert man we have in the Department of Defense in this area would suggest an investigation, a 6-month in- vestigation by the General Accounting Office would be extremely helpful to us in resolving whether we should go ahead? We have the Secretary of Defense, the people from the House Armed Services Committee, we have General Betts, all of whom raise very serious questions about this tank. Under these circumstances it seems to me logical that the amend- ment of the Senator from Missouri is sound, sensible, and necessary if we are going to really insist We know what we are doing when we authorize these large SUMS. Mr. EAGLETON. We have not only General Betts, who is not certain what gadgetry should go into this, but we also have these other opinions. The GAO re- port would not only help us to decide but it might help General Betts. It would give him an analysis and help him de- cide as to the coat-effectiveness for some of these things, such as whether there is ventilation and whether then can close the lid on the Shillelagh, and all of these gadgetry items. Not only do we have Representative RIVERS expressing misgivings, and the report linking it with the Pueblo and the Mr. EAGLETON. The Secretary, to my TFX?and I am not trying to embarrass knowledge, on two occasions publicly, the distinguished Senator from Missis- and maybe on other occasions, has so sippi?but I go back to his statement, classified the MBT-'70. In one case he for when he presented this bill he said, "I compared it with the Pueblo and the have about lost patience with this situ- TFX as being an inherent millstone. ation," referring to the MBT-70. Later on, in an interview with the We all know the Senator from Missis- Washington Post, he expressed the opin- sippi to be a patient man. Maybe he ion that delay in gadgetry would result would like to have the report of the in delay of the MBT-70. He wondered if General Accounting Office to determine we need all the MET-70 devices when the whether his patience has been warranted Russians get along with simpler weapons, and justified or whether the continuing I shall quote at this time from Repre- faith he has had in this program has sentative RIVERS' office when he released been overextended. the Stratton report. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will It also recommended that no additional the Senator yield for one further point? Sheridans be sent to Vietnam until all major Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. defects had been eliminated and that the Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I Main Battle Tank 70 program be reappraised would like to say to the Senator from before further funds are committed. New Hampshire (Mr. COTTON.) and the That statement comes from the chair- Senator from Mississippi (Mr. Sezrons) man of the House Armed Services Corn- that I agree wholeheartedly with them mittee. That is a pretty impressive sign that we should move this bill along as to stop, look, and listen; not to discon- fast as we can. At the same time I feel tinue or throw away or scrap but to take very strongly it is imperative that we a look for a limited period of time with discuss this question in detail. I think the GAO doing the looking and listen- Senators must agree that this debate has Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 8,` 1969 ApprovedFGANUWAiSigglilhil/WcaliktkrP-MeCT3364R000300100001-3 S 9473 been completely germane discussion. I have been around here a long time and I have heard a great deal of irrelevant, nongermane debate on many issues. In colloquy with the Senator from Missouri and other Senators, they have not been talking about irrelevant matters, even though it would be easy to tie other things in with this problem on tanks but, by and large, during the entire discus- sion, when other Senators were interro- gating the Senator from Missouri, the subject has been germane and pertinent. Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, in view of the fact that the Senator referred to the Senator from New Hampshire, will he yield to me? The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. SPONG in the chair) . Does the Senator from Missouri yield to the Senator from New Hampshire? Mr. EAGLETON. I am pleased to yield to the Senator from New Hampshire. Mr. COTTON. I wish to agree em- phatically with the distinguished Senator from Wisconsin that the discussion to which we have been listening has been not only germane but also most enlisten- ing and most helpful. I wish to compliment the distinguished Senator from Missouri (Mr. EAGLETON) for the very able presentation he has made on an important subject, a sub- ject on which he is well informed and about which he feels most deeply. I agree wholeheartedly that any point in this bill upon which the defense of this country depends should be explored and should be handled with care. But, Mr. President, at some time, on my own time, I shall have a few observa- tions to make and I would like to make them on my own time. They could not possibly take more than 8 minutes. I should like to inquire?and this is not in the way of being sarcastic?whether the distinguished Senator from Missouri could give us a general idea as to when the floor will again be open for Senators to address the Chair to seek recognition. Will it be 4 o'clock, 5 o'clock, 6 o'clock, or will it be on Monday? Or when? Mr. EAGLETON. Relating to the pending amendment? Mr. COTTON. I mean relating to the bill?again, this is not any reflection upon anyone. Mr. EAGLETON. I understand. Mr. COTTON. I am talking about the control of the floor by the Senator from Missouri. Does the Senator from Mis- souri have a general idea when he will be prepared to surrender the floor so that another Senator can seek recognition? Mr. EAGLETON. I do not have a precise idea as to my time limitation. The Senator did indeed ask for a general idea of my limitation, but based on the fact that I have not yet given an op- portunity today to yield to the distin- guished cosponsor of the amendment, the Senator _from Oregon (Mr. HATFIELD) who, I am sure, has some observations to make on this matter i cannot give him a precise idea. There are five other cospon- sors, and I do not know whether any or all of them wish to speak. Besides, other Senators may wish to address themselves to the question and address me on the matter. Mr. COTTON. May I say that under the rule?we all want to hear from every one of these Senators?but under the rule, they have no special privilege to address the Chair. Any Senator, when the floor is open, can address the Chair and if he is the first to address the Chair, he will be recognized and has a right to be heard. The mere fact is, under the rule as I understand it, we cannot toss the ball from one cosponsor to another cosponsor, to another cosponsor and onto another cosponsor, and close the floor to Senators who have something to say. The Senator from New Hampshire does have something to say and he would like to say it on his own time. I do not care whether it is 6 o'clock or 8 o'clock to- night, or whether it is Monday at 11 o'clock. For the past 8 weeks, we have been talking about the ABM. Everything that could possibly be said about the ABM, pro and con, has been said not once, not twice, but 10 or even 15 times by every Senator on this floor. If the Senator from Missouri will be patient for one moment longer, we have a tax bill coming up from the House. We are now in the month of August and talking about a recess next week. I do not expect that those who control the votes in the Senate are particularly solicitous about the present administra- tion; but if Congress does not begin to get down to brass tacks?and I think the pending bill should be thoroughly explored?but if we do not get down to brass tacks, we will find ourselves here at Christmastime; and I feel great appre- hension about that, because I do not believe that we can continue the first session of Congress simultaneously with the second session of Congress and draw double pay. Personally, the Senator from New Hampshire wants to say right now that he does not believe the Senate has a right to recess at this time. I think that these matters that the Senator from Missouri and others are discussing, and other questions coming up on the pending bill, are of paramount importance. I do not want to see that discussion throttled. I also do not want to see it go into another marathon. I want to say right here and now that If the Senate pursues its announced course of going home, or going some- where else, next Wednesday night, or next Thursday, with this bill still in the midst of being considered and dis- cussed, with the tax bill still to come, with appropriations bills way behind, and with the President going on the air tonight to talk about his major domestic program, I think that the people of this country are not going to feel that the Senate is doing its duty. Mr. President, this is the speech I was going to make. The Senator from Mis- souri has been very kind. I have made my speech. Now the Senator can have the floor, so far as I am concerned, and I thank him very much for his courtesy. Mr. EAGLETON. I thank the Senator from New Hampshire, with whom I am pleased to share a hall on the fourth floor. I am glad that the Senator from New Hampshire did have the opportu- nity to make his 8-minute talk, so he has not been delayed. Let me say this: As he well pointed out, the subject of the ABM was before the Senate for 8 weeks. I quit counting a long time ago. However, I have been in this Chamber today for 3 hours and 15 minutes, which is infinitely less than the 8 weeks we discussed the ABM. I admit that this matter is of less moment than the ABM. I am not here to say that it is of the same significance as the ABM. However, it is a $55 million item, which I suppose is petty cash to the Pentagon. But, conceptually, in terms of future warfare?and we are planning for future warfare?I think it is very important, as it relates to the Schweiker amend- ment which the Senate adopted yester- day, for the GAO to help us. I strongly believe that it should. This will be a per- fect test case for them. So I, for one, if the Senate took 8 weeks to get to this hour, am not pre- pared in 3 hours and 15 minutes to stop consideration of the pending amend- ment. I do not know what the time price tag will be. I think it will be more than 3 hours. Mr. COTTON. ;The Senator from New Hampshire was not reproaching the dis- tinguished Senator from Missouri. The Senator from New Hampshire was not even insinuating that the Senator from Missouri was taking more time than he should. I was simply seeking to try to find out when I might be in the Chamber and have an opportunity to address the Chair to seek recognition. I think the 2 or 3 minutes that I used just now per- haps takes care of the situation, because I wanted to get my statement in, that I think we should stay here until this bill is disposed of, and not go home until It is disposed of. Outside of that, I compliment the dis- tinguished Senator from Missouri on his presentation, and that 8 weeks he referred to. Mr. EAGLETON. I may well be subject to correction. It was an estimate. I think it was longer than that. I know it was a terribly long period of time, so long that I lost track. I thank the Senator from New Hamp- shire. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator from Missouri yield? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield to the Senator from Mississippi. Mr. STENNIS. Let me make it clear that that my remarks are not addressed to the Senator from Missouri except to compliment him again on his very fine presentation here on the floor of the Sen- ate. He is fulfilling an obligation to his sense of duty when he makes these ex- planations. But I say to all Members of the Senate now, we all know this is an important bill. We want everything to be discussed freely and fully, but we all know it is a bill that must pass. It is not a question of having a bill or not having a bill. This bill must pass with something in it. I think we all want it to move along rea- sonably fast and with proper dispatch. If there is going to be a disposition here for one Senator to just get the floor?the Senator from Missouri is en- titled to all the time he has taken, and Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9474 Approved For Relegyfeikl14411199AcIttiktiNi1p0OHATH300100001-3 August 8, LO GO some more?or if there is going to he a disposition just to delay matters and not get to a vote, the Senator from Missis- sippi feels he has a duty to other Mem- bers of the Senate. I believe all Sena- tors stand here on an even level. The floor is even here, as far as I am con- cerned, but, in legislative parlance and practice, the Senator who is handling the bill, as we use that term, has some obligation to other Members here to do what he can to push it along. I do not ordinarily make a request when the leaders are abisent?I am sure neither one would disagree, as far as I know; perhaps we could have a quorum call?but I would want them to propose or I will propose that on this amendment we have controlled time. We could have, say, 1 hour and a half to the side, or 2 hours to the side; and if that is not enough, 21/2 hours to the side; and if that is not enough, 3 hours to the side. Then we will have some certainty, and then things will move along. I think if we are just going to kill time, we ought to just come out and say- so and let the public understand and let the membership understand so they can make other plans. But Ito not want any Senator to agree to what he honestly thinks is too short a time. I wish those in this Chamber will ask the majority and minority leaders to come to the Chamber, so we can get their advice and counsel after the Sen- ator from Missouri has finished. Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. May I just finish? I am not trying to grab the floor. I told the Senator from Oregon this morning that if he wanted to follow the Senator from Missouri, I would not ask for the floor. But certainly the membership is entitled to some kind of statement from the committee that has passed on this measure. The membership is entitled to some kind of statement from us as to how it looks to those who had the re- sponsibility of going into this subject and filing a report. So I hope somewhere along the line I will have the chance in my own right, when I may have the floor, sometime this afternoon. Mr. COTTON. Mr. President will the Senator from Missouri yield so that I can ask the Senator from Mississippi a ques- tion? Mr. EAGLETON. I am pleased to yield. Mr. COTTON. I would like to ask the Senator from Mississippi?I know that he does not wish to assume the preroga- tives of the leadership-- Mr. STENNIS. That is correct. Mr. COTTON. But I would like to ask the Senator from Missialdpoi if he does not feel very strongly that the Senate ought to stay here until this bill is dts- posed of before we recess. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, if the Senator will yield to me to respond? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield to the Senaka. from Mississippi. Mr. STENNIS. I think we ought to drive hard to finish this bill, working day and night and Saturday, before there is any recess. I know many Senators have made plans for the recess, involving their families and their children, and I would bow to those plans; but if we are not go- ing to try to finsh, I think we forfeit those considerations. Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from Missouri has the floor. Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me for one more ques- tion? Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I yield for the limited purpose of this interroga- tion, without giving up my right to the floor. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair wishes to inform the Senator from Mis- souri that he has a right to do that. The Chair made the observation he did for the benefit of other Senators who seem to be seeking the floor from the Senator from Mississippi. The Senator from Missouri. Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, I dis- tinctly asked the Senator from Missouri to yield to me. Mr. EAGLETON. I nodded and yielded. I was chatting with another Senator. It is my fault. Mr. COTTON. The Senator from New Hampshire understands that many of us have plans. The Senator from New Hampshire has plans. It would be most unfortunate if those plans, which have been mentioned for many months now, should be frustrated. On the other hand, the Senator from Mississippi has been here a considerable length of time, and so has the Senator from New Hampshire, and human nature being what it is, if the Senator resolved to say to the peo- ple of the United States, "Here is a bill that must be taken care of for the de- fense of this country and we are going to stay here until we do it," I think it would be amazing how succinct and to the point the debate would suddenly be- come, and I think we would have ade- quate debate and we could dispose of this bill. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator for his suggestion. I am certainly willing to stay. I thank the Senator for yielding. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I may say to the Senator from Mississippi that perhaps within this hour I shall be in a position, after conferring with Senators who are interested parties in this amend- ment, to discuss some potential agree- ment. It is not my desire, nor certainly that of the Senator from Oregon (Mr. HATFIELD) or other Senators, to engage in foot-dragging, slow-down tactics. Mr. STENNIS. If the procedure is go- ing to continue on the pattern of yielding 5 or 10 or 15 minutes to various Senators, I am going to request to come 14 on that pattern for 12 or 15 minutes, for the committee. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I have had a request from the Senator from Vermont. I am going to make a unani- mous-consent request that I may yield 2 minutes to the Senator from Vermont (Mr. PROUTY) without giving up my right to the floor, on a matter apparently ex- traneous to that under debate. Mr. GRIFFIN. Mr. President, reserving the right to object?and I shall not ob- ject in this one instance?I believe that hereafter, unless the Senator from Mis- souri yields only for the limited purpose of a question, I shall be inclined to object I have plans, as do other Senators, and I would like to get to a vote as soon as possible. I shall not object. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to the unanimous consent re- quest of the Senator from Missouri? The Chair hears none, and the Senator from Vermont is recognized. S. 2806?INTRODUCTION OF A BILL TO PROMOTE EQUAL EMPLOY- MENT OPPORTUNITIES FOR AMERICAN WORKERS Mr. PROUTY. Mr. President, on be- half of myself, the distinguished senior Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr. SCOTT) , the distinguished junior Senator from Michigan (Mr. GRIFFIN), the distin- guished junior Senator from Oklahoma (Mr. BELLiaox), and the distinguished senior Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr. SCHWEIEER) , I send to the desk a bill en- titled the Equal Employment Oppor- tunity Act of 1969 and ask that it be ap- propriately referred. Mr. PROUTY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the bill be print- ed in the RECORD at the conclusion of my remarks. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The bill will be received and appropriately re- ferred; and, without objection, the bill will be printed in the RECORD. Mr. PROUTY. Mr. President, this is the administration's bill proposed by the President to amend title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 pertaining to discrim- ination in employment by employers, labor organizations, and employment agencies. Five years ago title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 ordained a national commitment to eliminate discrimination in all aspects of employment. Unfortu- nately, as a result of compromises neces- sitated by political considerations, Con- gress did not see fit to provide realistic enforcement procedures to support title WI's guarantees. This bill corrects that deficiency, and does so in a way that breaks new ground in the continuing development of Ameri- can law. Under the President's proposal, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission will continue to seek volun- tary compliance with title VII but if con- ciliatory efforts prove unsuccessful, it may bring lawsuits against recalcitrant violators. The main thrust of this bill, Mr. Presi- dent, is to provide for the trial of cases in the U.S. district courts where the Equal Opportunity Commission has found reasonable cause to believe that a- violation has occurred. Traditionally, advocates of fair em- ployment legislation have sought en- forcement by regulatory agencies through administrative processes. This proposal preserves the most attractive features of that approach?expertise and independence from shifting political Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 8, 1969 Approved Rfx(RtiGlifisateNtilattEeMallaPfligthANR000300100001-3 S9475 winds?while contemplating a vigorous policy of enforcement in the courts, where speedy redress can be obtained through due process. In addition, it has the advantage of being capable of easy accommodation within EEOC's existing structure. Proceedings under this measure will be able to be commenced shortly after enactment. On the other hand, if we should instead enact legislation provid- ing the EEOC with decisionmaking and enforcement authority through admin- istrative processes, it will require 2 to 3 years of gearing up before results can begin to be realized, a further delay difficult to accept. Under the administration's bill, Mr. President, charges of unlawful or dis- criminatory employment practices will continue to be filed with the EEOC. This agency will conduct investigations of these charges and, where the evidence establishes reasonable cause to believe a violation has occurred, the EEOC will attempt to conciliate the dispute as it does at present. Should conciliation attempts fail, how- ever, the EEOC will have complete free- dom to file a complaint in an appropri- ate Federal district court, which will be the trial tribunal to hear the case on the merits. Similarly, where the Commission dis- misses a charge after investigation, the aggrieved person shall have the right to commence an action in Federal dis- trict court as he does under present law. Decisions of the Federal district courts are appealable to the appropriate U.S. court of appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court in the usual manner, with one modification. This involves the situation where the EEOC loses a case in whole or in part in Federal district court litiga- tion. In such circumstances, the Civil Rights Divison of the Justce Depart- ment, after receiving recommendations from the Commission, will decide which cases to appeal to the court of appeals. The alt/ernative proposal to the pro- cedures in the administration's bill, Mr. President, is to provide for administra- tive litigation in the first instance before a Federal trial examiner subject to the provisions of the Administrative Pro- cedures Act. The trial examiner's find- ings and recommended order would then be subject to review by the Commission with ultimate judicial review in the U.S. court of appeals either as the result of an enforcement proceeding brought by the EEOC or by a petition for review filed by any party to the proceeding. I have previously taken the position that the Commission should have the same decision making authority and au- thority to enforce its orders in the courts of appeals as do other independent Fed- eral agencies such as the Federal Trade Commission and the National Labor Relations Board. I have taken this position in the past, however, in the context of either grant- ing the EEOC decision making and en- forcement powers or leaving the law in its present posture. This latter alterna- tive is completely unacceptable, as both the law and the Commission need to be strengthened and given additional tools with which to accomplish the objectives set by Congress. The bill which I introduce today, Mr. President, does contain the teeth of en- forcement which are so badly needed. Enforcement comes much more quickly here, from the Federal district court initially, than it would under an ad- ministrative hearing type of bill. In this regard, the entire proceeding will probably be substantially shortened by direct appeal to the court of appeals from the trial in Federal district court, rather than following the more circuitous route of administrative hearing before a trial examiner whose findings and order are appealable to the Commission before access to the courts of appeals may be obtained . Furthermore, as I review this bill, I find no way in which it will hinder or tie the hands of the EEOC in performing its duties. Thus, the Commission is free upon its own determination to litigate any or all cases it desires to in Federal district court with no person or agency being given the right to veto or reverse such EEOC action. Moreover, in the exercise of its own expertise in this particular area, the Commission may urge upon the courts any proposed remedies which it might have ordered in its own right if it re- tained decisionmaking authority. The propriety in granting, modifying, or denying such remedies will finally be determined by the court of appeals, and possibly the Supreme Court, under this bill in the same manner as would be the case if the Commission were granted the authority to issue its own orders subject to court review. There is also the question of whether this bill will result in a backlog of cases awaiting trial in Federal district courts. This is a matter we must study closely, but my present feeling is that it will not approach the backlog which would be faced by the Commission if it were required to review every litigated case in the country before enforcement in the courts of appeals could be sought. Moreover, as Federal court precedents are established under this bill, I envision a substantial number of respondents complying with court decisions or enter- ing into meaningful conciliation agree- ments with the Commission, rather than appealing, after they lose cases in Fed- eral district court. Not to mention the Increase in pretrial conciliations by re- spondents who would take their chances In drawn out administrative proceedings before a Federal trial examiner and the Conimission, but who would hesitate to go to trial directly in Federal district court when the precedents are clear. I want to note, however, that I reserve the right to offer amendments in our committee which in my judgment can make this piece of legislation stronger and even more effective in removing the blot of discrimination in hiring and em- ployment practices and to insure true equality of opportunity for all qualified persons in seeking, obtaining and retain- ing employment in both the public and private sectors of our economy. Mr. President, laws protecting human rights are as deserving of adequate im- plementation as any other declaration of national policy, and indeed, deserve priority. Congress has declared that cer- tain discriminatory acts are unlawful and it is overdue in adding substance to its words. We must act now, to finally demonstrate that the law?all laws? apply to everyone equally, and that the comfortable as well as the disadvantaged are subject to its rule. The bill (S. 2806) to further promote equal employment opportunities for American workers, introduced by Mr. PROUTY, for himself and other Senators, was received, read twice by its title, re- ferred to the Committee on the Judici- ary, and ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: S. 2806 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That this Act may be cited EL the "Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1969." SEC. 2. Subsections (g) and (h) of Section 705 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (78 Stat. 253; 42 U.S.C. 2000e-4) are amended to read as follows: "(g) The Commission shall have power . . . (6) to refer matters to the Attorney General with recommendations for intervention in a civil action brought by an aggrieved party under Section 706, or for the institution of a civil action by the Attorney General under Section '707, and to recommend institution of appellate proceedings in accordance with subsection (h) of this section, when in the opinion of the CommisMon such proceedings would be in the public interest, and to ad- vise, consult, and assist the Attorney Gen- eral in such matters." "(h) Attorneys appointed under this sec- tion may, at the direction of the Commission, appear for and represent the Commission in any case In court, provided that the Attorney General shall conduct all litigation to which the Commission is a party in the Supreme Court or in the Courts of Appeals of the United States pursuant to this Title. All other litigation affecting the Commission, or to which it is a party, shall be conducted by the Commission." SEC. 3. (a) Subsection (e) of Section '706 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (78 Stat. 259; 42 U.S.C. 2000e-5) is amended to read as follows: "(e) If within thirty days after a charge is filed with the Commission or within thirty - days after expiration of any period of refer- ence under subsection (a), the Commission ? has been unable to obtain voluntary com- pliance with this Act, the Commission may bring a civil action against the respondent named in the charge: Provided, that if the Commission fails to obtain voluntary com- pliance and fails or refuses to institute a civil action against the. respondent named in the charge within one hundred and eighty days from the date of the filing of the charge, a civil action may be brought after such failure or refusal within ninety days against the respondent named in the charge (1) by the person claiming to be aggrieved, or (2) if such charge was filed by a member of the Commission, by any person whom the charge alleges was aggrieved by the alleged unlawful employment practice. Upon application by the complainant and in such circumstances ,as the court may deem just, the court may appoint an. attorney for such complainant and may authorize the commencement of the action without the payment of fees, costs, or security. Upon timely applicatinn, the court may, in its discretion, permits the Attorney General to intervene in such civil action if he Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9476 Approved For ReleacantAIMAIgliWINVADOSInfla certifies that the case is of general, public Importance. Upon request, the court may, in its discretion, stay further proceedings for not more than sixty days pending the ter- mination of State or local proceedings de- scribed in subsection (b) or further efforts of the Commission to obtain voluntary oorn- pliance." (b) Subsections (f) through (k) of Sec- tion 706 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (78 Stat. 259; 42 U.S.C. 2000e4) are redesignated as subsections (g) through (1) respectively, and the following new subsection is added: "(f) Whenever a charge is filed with the Commission and the Commission concludes on the basis of a preliminary investigation that prompt judicial action is necessary to carry out the purposes of this Act, the Com- mission may bring an action for appropriate temporary or preliminary relief pending final disposition of such charge.. It shall be the duty of a court having jurisdiction over pro- ceedings under this section to assign cases for hearing at the earliest practicable date and to cause such cases to be in every way expedited." (c) Subsection (h) of Section 706 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (73 Stat. 259; 42 U.S.C. 2000e-5), as redesignated by this sec- tion is amended to read as follows: "(h) If the court finds that the respondent has engaged in or is engaging in an unlaw- ful employment practice, the court may en- join the respondent from engaging in such unlawful employment practice, and order affirmative action as may be appropriate, which may include, but is not limited to, reinstatement or hiring of employees, with or without back pay (payable by the em- ployer, employment agency, or labor organiza- tion, as the case may be, responsible for the unlawful employment practice), or any other equitable relief as the court deems appropriate. Interim earnings or amounts earnable with reasonable diligence by the person or persons discriminated against shall operate to reduce the back pay otherwise allowable. No order of the Court shall require the admission or reinstatement of an individ- ual as a member of a union or the hiring, reinstatement, or promotion of an individual as an employee, or the payment to him of any back pay, if such individual was refused admission, suspended, or expelled or was refused employment or advancement or was suspended or discharged for any reason other than discrimination on account of race, Color, religion, sex or national origin or in violation of Section 704(a)." Mr. SCOTT. Mr. President I am pleased to join with the Senator from Vermont (Mr. Paourv) as a sponsor of this bill entitled the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1969. I believe that the introduction of this legislation and the ensuing consideration given to it will greatly strengthen title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 per- taining to discrimination in employment by employers. While I personally favor the cease- and-desist approach, this well-reasoned alternative is woilAyififonsideration. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the considera- tion of the bill (S. 2548) to authorize appropriations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, mis- siles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles and to authorize the construc- tion of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized Personnel strength of the Selected Re- serve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I yield to the distinguished Senator from Mon- tana. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, if I may have the attention of the Senate, and with the permission of the distin- guished Senator from Missouri, who has the floor, and without him losing his right to the floor, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. SPONG in the chair). The clerk will call the roll. The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I yield for interrogation to the Senator from Oregon. The PRESIDING 010FICER. The Sen- ator from Oregon is recognized. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, I have some questions to ask of the Senator from Missouri. First, however, I would like to make one or two brief comments. Mr. GRIFFIN. Regular order. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The reg- ular order is that the Senator from Mis- souri has the floor and has yielded to the Senator from Oregon for the pur- pose of asking questions. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, we were talking awhile ago about the ques- tions that have been raised by various People as to the dependability of the re- search and the experiments we have had thus far on the tank. I ask the Senator from Missouri if he has information which would support the reports we have read in the press about the growing concern of the Ger- mans. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, may ? we have order? I am having difficulty hearing the Senator. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- -ate will be in order. Mr. HATFIELD. The questions relate to the attitudes of our partners, the Ger- mans. According to the chart, we started out with the idea that we would share the cost 50-50 of research and develop- ment. That now has shifted to about an 80 to 20 percent differential. We support 80 percent and the Germans support 20 percent. I have some information here that was reported in the New York Times of October 9 and 10,1967, to the effect that there has been growing concern on the part of our partner about the tank, and dates back to October 1967. It says: Some military experts here? Meaning in the German capital of Bonn? have raised some very serious questions about the continuation of the joint program. opp00100001-3Augicht 83 1969 So, as I restate the question, does the Senator have information concerning the attitude and the thinking on the part of our so-called partner? Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I have no really precise or quotable informa- tion. I have rumors and speculation. I have been casting about for some accu- rate information as to the posture of the Federal Republic of Germany as to their desire to continue even at the ad- vantageous 80-20 formula that is now the rule rather than the original 50-50 for- mula that obtained at the inception. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, why was the formula shifted from 50-50 down to 20 percent for the German contribu- tion and up to 80 percent for the Ameri- can contribution? Mr. EAGLETON. This gets into the realm of the imprecise, but the original production estimates for the MBT-70 were such that in 1963 and in 1968 the Germans were willing to go along on the 50-50 basis. However, when the produc- tion estimates accelerated and more tanks were to be produced, apparently they did not want to sink so much of their public treasury into the production of more tanks than they had anticipated. So they wanted to hold it to a certain limit. I call to the attention of the Senator from Oregon a report with which I know he is very familiar since he was the chairman of the committee that pre- pared the report on military spending, dated July 2, 1969, The report had a chapter, so to speak, on the main battle tank. It had chapters, I might add, on many other items which will be the subject of other amendments that will be before the Senate. It refers to bacteriological warfare, CBW, and also to a study made on the manned orbi- tal laboratory. However, the Pentagon beat them to the punch and withdrew it before Congress could get to it. Be that as it may, it had a chapter on the main battle tank, and I will read this small portion thereof, which relates directly to the question of the Senator from Oregon: Under the latest agreement? Meaning the agreement between the United States and the Federal Republic of Germany? the United States and Germany split evenly the first $138 million-- That takes us to about 1968 on that chart? with the cost above that to be prorated on the quantity of tanks purchased by each country. Returning to what I said earlier, the Federal Republic of Germany apparently does not want to buy too many tanks, looking down the road. It is dubious as to why they want to buy any, based on what is now known about this item. Mr. HATFIELD I should like to ask a further question, also concerning the fundamental point of cost effectiveness and the involvements of our country along with Germany in the development of this tank. When we talk about the cost effec- tiveness of a weapon which is developed by the Pentagon, supposedly the cost ef- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 73, 1969 ApprovedFtlICANTOMBSICOIN/A1/31DEOU-RBPS-1-wywrif4R000300100001-3 S 9477 fectiveness is a criterion upon which we are to make judgment on whether we should move ahead or accept the pro- posals for such development. Can the Senator tell us what some of the com- ponents of that criterion might be? In other words, what is the definition of cost effectiveness as it relates to the MBT or any other weaponry, but partic- ularly as it relates to the MET. This knowledge would help us decide where we escalate, or where we move ahead, or where we cut off work on such a pro- posal? Mr. EAGLETON. rt is a very fine ques- tion, completely appropriate, and does not lend itself to a precise, computerized answer. There is no magical computer, totally self-sufficient, into which various indicia can be pumped and a "yea" or "nay" answer come out. There is an element of subjectiveness In this cost-effectiveness business. As I gather it?and others who are more learned in this can certainly clarify any misconception I have?it goes something like this. No weapon system exists in a vacuum. No man is an island. Each weapon system or weapon interrelates with other systems and human beings who operate. But as costs escalate?in this instance, the enormous 500-plus per- cent on R. & D. alone, and now the per unit cost of the MBT-70 is between $520,000 and $750,000?you get to a breaking point, a point of no return, meaning' that it is an imprudent and wasteful expenditure of public money to go ahead with it, because some other item, albeit another tank, an antitank weapon, aircraft, or what have you, can do the same job more cheaply. It is our information that, so far as the M13T-70 Is concerned, it has just about reached the point of inefficiency, the point of no return, at which if it escalates much further, it is no longer cost effective; and other items, including the M60A1? anyway, the tank that we have now func- tioning and operational in Western Eu- rope?and other configurations and other antitanke weapons, including the Tow, the Dragon, and so forth, would better be able to do the job per dollar ex- pended than would going ahead with the then expensive MBT-70, once it crosses that line. Mr. HATFIELD. Would the cost effec- tiveness, then, he analogous to what we have as a cost-benefit ratio formula for the development of water and other such reclamation programs? For example, we have in such pro- grams the requirement to develop a cost- benefit ratio which often includes rec- reation benefits, flood control benefits, power benefits, wildlife, fisheries, con- servation, and so forth. In the com- putation of these various components, a certain cost-benefit ratio develops to justify the building of the project. Would the cost-effectiveness ratio be analo- gous to this cost-benefit ratio, not only in terms of having the components that are cranked into this cost-effective- ness program in order to justify the building a such a tank in the original instance, but also that at times along the way, it could be reviewed and re- computed? Mr. EAGLETON. Emphasizing the word "analogy," I think the analogy is indeed an apt one. As the Senator knows, we have that in terms of some of our public works projects, perhaps all of them. The dis- tinguished chairman of the Committee on Public Works is in the Chamber, and it is my pleasure to serve with him on that committee. The Corps of Engineers, for example, studies a particular flood control proj- ect, from the standpoint of its conserva- tion, water, power, and other criteria, and determines what the benefit-cost ratio is. If it meets the accepted criteria in terms of benefit-cost ratio, it can well meet with the approval of the Corps of Engineers and subsequently the Commit- tee on Public Works and the entire Con- gress. If it falls short of that?despite the fact that it would be a desirable thing to have, despite the fact that peo- ple of a given area might like to have the dam and might like to have more water, despite the fact that the people might like to have more recreational facilities?if it does not reach this bene- fit-cost ratio, it is considered to be an imprudent and unwise expenditure of public money. Thus, I think the analogy in the in- stant situation is apt. I do not fault, nor do I believe the Senator from Oregon faults, the right of people, whether they be in the Pentagon, on the floor of Con- gress, or in the ghetto, to dream. It is perfectly ethical, and it is a process of our orientation that we dream. We dream great dreams. Part of our trouble as human beings is that so often we leave those dreams unfulfilled and un- met. So I quarrel not with the privilege of the Defense Department to dream up this tank when they dreamt it back in 1963. In the words of the Senator from Mis- sissippi, they dream an Idea. They say, "We are going to build a tank," and they call in the contractors and say, "Go to it, boys. Build the greatest tank you fellows can guess might be made available." So then they dream and dream and dream and dream. Unfortunately, the dream gets more expensive. First it was an $80 million dream; then $183 million, then $303 million. Up and away. Then the point of the benefit-cost ratio is reached, such as in public works projects. In military projects, it is the cost-effec- tiveness. The luxury of dreaming is one that this country can ill afford at the very time there are those with unmet dreams, those whom the Senator from South Dakota (Mr. McGovsatr) has re- ferred to as individuals who dream of a decent meal, those who are left behind in the war on poverty. We talk about jobs, we talk about schools, we talk about neighborhood corps, we talk about neigh- borhood centers, but we leave out a pretty important dream, the dream of being able to eat. So if we let the Pentagon keep dream- ing the eternal dream, in this manner, of preserving the MBT-70, there will be some people in Portland, in St. Louis, in New York, and in Chicago who are still going to have their dream unfulfilled. We cannot do it all. Yes, there was a time?I said this earlier?when, with our enormous wealth, the urgencies and ex- igencies of the age were not nearly ?so heavily upon us, and we could afford the luxury of this kind of project. We could let the Pentagon fool around with it, change it. They could put the Shillelagh in or take the Shillelagh out. They could put the environmental control unit in the tank, or take it out. They could install dual firepower or not. We could afford that kind of dream in a bygone day. For better or for worse, but realistically, that day has gone, and the dreams of the military and the dreams of Congress have to be realistic, attainable, predict- able, and fulfillable dreams, or we will not be doing what we must do in terms of the desires of other Senators with re- spect to our economy. They will be short- changed. It is not the $54 million for the proto- type that will feed all the hungry peo- ple. The $54 million will not balance the budget, a budget which has long been out of balance. But it is symbolic. We cannot continue to condone a continu- ously haphazard, ill-performing weap- ons system that year after year is brought back to Congress. The Pentagon says, "Last year was a good year for us. We admit that, Members of Congress. The Shillelagh was not going too good. The Scavenger system is a little too goofy. We have not quite mastered the environmental control unit. We have 300 unused chassis sitting on a lot in Michi- gan and do not know what to do with them. Give us another year." It has been that way since the begin- ning-1963?and has continued through 1964, 1965, and on until 1969. Not only patience, but human endurance is being exhausted. Still the gentlemen say, "One more year." It is like a broken record. We have had enough. Although $54 million will not make us or break us, it is important in terms of what it symbolizes. We say at this time? when the needs are so heavy upon us? we are not going to fritter ft:way another $54 million or 54 cents if vie can help it. Mr. HATFIELD. Are we to assume that each time we have seen an incre- ment in the cost of this tank there has been a new cost-effectiveness study, or for that matter, as to the overall tank itself? Mr. EAGLETON. Frankly, I must say to the Senator that I do not have the precise date when the last cost-effective- ness study was made by the Pentagon. I am not trying to play the old game of, "I know something you do not know." I have had a couple of classified briefings on this matter and I do not want to transgress because I am not as familiar in this area as many other Senators who have dealt with armed services-type matters for a long time. In order that I may stay on the side of conservatism, I will not directly answer the Senator's question. However, I will say what I have said again and again. It is my under- standing that cost effectively, the MBT- 70 is pretty close?and I shall leave it at that?to the point of no return in the sense of being imprudently cost effective. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9478 Approved For RetivintatkINRiglek99E1BORE3g4NE10300100001-3 lingltSe 8, 1969 I wish to add to and amplify the con- tinued optimism of the Army in its presentation of this program year by year. Here is what General Burba stated in March of 1968, and that is about a Year and a half ago. He was then in charge of the program. IlbelieVe General Betts is now in charge of the program. In March 1968 he said about this tank: Skeptics and advocates alike have been Impressed with the smoothness which has characterizd the program's progress since its inception. I do not know him. I know he is a fine career man. I think he has a bad ghost writer because as of March 1968 this project was floundering and it had been floundering from its first halting start. It is a dream, and it has floundered and stumbled since its inception. I do not know how he could say in March 1968 that "smooth-m.3s which has characterized the program's progress since its inception". And then, when he takes over the Department of Defense, tells-us the three millstones he inherited were the Pueblo, the TFX, and the BMT- 70, the main battle tank. Is that not a delightful association? Here is a Secre- tary of Defense in 1969, after General Burba had said all is well, who said that his three millstones were the Pueblo, the TFX, and the MBT-70. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a furthei question? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. Mr. HATFIELD. What kind of judg- ment would we be making, if we could not base it on some sort of cost effec- tiveness? In other words, do we have enough data on cost effectiveness, or are we merely being asked to continue this project on the basis of these generalized remarks on the part of the gentlemen the Senator has quoted. Mr. EAGLETON. To rue it is entirely, and I will say exclusively, the latter. We are asked to buy another year in a long stream of years, with all these bug- aboos and unworkable components. "Maybe we will make them better next time. Let it go a little longer, and so forth. It is a broken record upon which time has expired. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. Pt esident, will the Senator yield further? Mr. EAGLETON. I yield. Mr. HATFIELD. We have the report before us. I am talking about the report No. 91-290 of the Armed Services Com- mittee, in which the only reference I can find to this tank is a statenlent which is rather general. It appears on page 53: The committee also recommends a reduc- tion of $1.1.9 million in the joint US/FRG main battle tank program. This program has been experiencing difficulty for some years and the committee now believes that a re- orientation of the program is in order. I would like to ask the distinguished Senator from Missouri if he knows what the Armed Services Committee means or what they have in mind when 'they talk about a "reorientation" of the program. Does not the committee action in itself confirm what the Senator has been say- ing today on the floor of the Senate about the questionability and the unreli- ability of the program thus far? Is not the Senator merely asking for a post- ponement on this tank project until the GAO can make some sort of evaluation? It is not to vote the tank up or down. It asks Members of Congress to take a hard look at a project that has cost millions of dollars and which the Sen- ator eloquently has stated has created doubt in the minds of generals in the Pentagon, the Secretary of Defense, our German partners who have been in- volved in this project, members of the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate, and the House Armed Services Committee, The Senator has quoted many sources that indicate grave doubt. Is it not true that all this amendment asks is that we continue to look into this matter through another set of eyes, through a study by the GAO, and then make a determination on the future of this tank following that kind of report? We ask this rather than going pellmell down this pathway which has brought little in the way of results with the ex- penditure of millions of dollars. Is that not what the Senator is asking us today? Mr. EAGLETON. In summary, that is what I am asking through the medium of this amendment. I am not sure what the word "reorientation" means. I know not if it is a word Of art in the military field, or whether it means other than it means in the nonmilitary area. But when the Armed Services Committee says, as I have quoted, that the commit- tee now believes the reorientation pro- gram is in order, to me, as a nonmember of that committee, it means: Let us take a look at it. Knowing that those who have a greater knowledge of the history of this subject, as I say, still stumble and bumble along, and knowing that they want to take a look at it, bear in mind that the original request to the Pentagon for research and development on this item was $45 million. To be pre- cise, it was $44.9 million. The Armed Services Committee cut it $14.9 million. So that means that the Armed Services Committee was about two-thirds as sold on it as was the Pentagon. The Penta- gon wanted $45 million and the Armed Services Committee said, "We will give you $30 million." Thus, in that frame of reference, in percentages, they are about two-thirds as happy with it as the Pentagon. As to the Pentagon, I do not know who is happiest with it over there. I know that General Burba surely is. He says it is the smoothest thing since raw silk. He is happy with it. Secretary of De- fense Laird is not happy with it. He said it was comparable to the Pueblo and the TFX. Thus, I am asking for a reorientation. The Senator is correct on that, if I inter- pret that word correctly. I want someone to look at the program. The someone I want to look at it is the someone that the Senate yesterday declared by its vote on the Schweiker amendment should help us look into various armed services pro- grams; namely, the General Accounting Office. By a curious coincidence, today, I want to implement that amendment with my amendment. I want to implement it under a microscope, so to speak, and make it a laboratory case, as to whether what the Senate did yesterday on the Schweiker amendment was right and proper. In my amendment, we ask the GAO to get us the report in 6 months. Knowing what I know, and what the GAO knows about tanks, since it has been working on them for the Stratton committee, if they can get that report to us much quicker, it will serve two purposes and will be well worth the time. Purpose No. 1 will tell us something about the tank. It will tell us a lot more than we know now. Purpose No. 2 will serve the commend- able objective of proving whether the Schweiker amendment was prudent. Forty-seven Senators thought it was prudent, and 46, including some of the most knowledgeable members of the Armed Services Committee, disagreed. We will know in 2 months whether, by this laboratory case, if we can get the GAO to give us a report in substance, in efficient form, with expertise, with thoroughness, whether what the Senate did yesterday was correct. Maybe it was wrong, because the Schweiker amendment was adopted by a razor-thin majority. If it was wrong, then perhaps someone will want to undo it. It can be undone in the House, in conference, or what have you. Thus, what we are asking for in the amendment are two commendable pur- poses, at a time when time itself is not of the essence. The MBT-70 cannot be shrouded in the argument that engulfed the ABM system, and apparently suc- cessfully so, that we cannot wait, that the survival of America is on the line if we do not deploy the ABM and perhaps it will be too late if we do not do so, and we will lose 2 years. I am not going to repeat the 8 weeks' argument. The die has been cast. The votes have been counted. The ABM will be deployed in Montana and South Dakota. But, time is not of the essence in this case. No one has ever said it was. It began in 1963 as a vague idea. The Senator from Missis- sippi said himself that they took their time trying to put some facts into the idea and narrow it down?I am para- phrasing here, and if I go beyond what the Senator from Mississippi intended, he can correct me?but it was a vague, amorphous idea, indeed, but that it would get less and less vague, and more iden- tifiable and become a more precise idea. So that time was never of the essence in this program. It could net be. At the outset, they said they would have the tank with us, manned and run- ning around, by 1969, I think it was. Here it is 1969, and there is no tank. It is any- one's guess whether it will be in the mid- 1970's, or 1974, 1975, 1976 perhaps, when it will be produced. Thus, I say to the Senator from Oregon that this has the dual, double-faceted, commendable purpose of being illustra- tive of the Schweiker amendment, and at the same time giving us illuminating information that we all so desperately need_ on this particular project. Mr. HAT.toraLD. I have only one more question in sequence. Is the Senator from Missouri aware of what criteria the Armed Services Committee used in re- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 8, 1969 Approved Fzronengs2M/At/VEMor_Pagpicft4R000300100001-3 S 9479 ducing the Pentagon's request by He told me this much ?if I am at lib- erty to quote him on a hearsay basis?he said, "They will fight like hell not to try to give you a precise answer under No. 2; that they do not like doing this kind of evaluation." I will concede, per- haps, to the Senator, that I may have overdrawn a bit on subparagraph (2). Mr. GOLDWATER. I am net trying to be picayunish about this. Mr. EAGLETON. No. It is an impor- tant point. Mr. GOLDWATER. Because I think we need more information about contracts, and so on; but I do not think the GAO is competent to tell whether it is the most effective weapon; or, going to paragraph (3) , to answer whether the strategic pro- jections made in 1963 with regard to the use of the MBT-70 will still be valid when it finally becomes available for use; that is, will it be obsolete as a result of advanced technology and new strategy. Does the Senator feel that that comes within the proper purview of the GAO? Mr. EAGLETON. That is getting a lit- tle closer to what the Senator from Wis- Mr. GOLDWATER. The point I am consin (Mr. PEOxmiRE) says may be a trying to make in these questions is that shade overdrawn. the General Accounting Officer is not If I may interrupt?it is right on the charged in any way with making stra- point?I have in my hand a letter from tegic projections. They do not sit in the the Comptroller General of the United meetings when they are made. They have States to me, dated July 9, 1969. The no way of knowing whether a weapon letter itself is not greatly revealing, but will become obsolete, because of projec- it is a cover letter transmitting to me a tions, within 6 months or any time. In report from the GAO, two pages of which fact, the conclusion the Senator just I already put in the RECORD earlier on read is the conclusion written by the this day. It is on the main battle tank. I Army on the weapon. do not pretend, nor does the GAO, that We do not say this is a perfect weapon. the two pages are an exhaustive analysis. We recognize that there are problems. It is a very brief summary of a very corn- But what I am trying to get at is the plex subject. General Accounting Office would want Let me read a part of page 2. The re- to duck from something like that; that port starts by discussing the Sheridan they would want to stay with their pur- and the M60A1E2. Then it goes to, pose of accounting, looking into con- "MBT-70 objectives." I found, and the tracts, and so forth. Senator from Arizona especially will For example, going to paragraph (4) find, that it is not terribly sophisticated; of the amendment, the GAO would have it is cursory. It continues: to answer the question of whether there The MBT-70, which is intended to replace are more feasible and less expensive al- the M60 and the M48 as the standard main ternatives to the development of the battle tank, will be employed against armored MBT-70. If the Senate adopts the formations and all other types of land war- amendment, we will be getting into the fare targets including infantry elements of area of having another agency do the job that the Defense Department, the a modern army. Skipping to? - strategic planners, are charged with do- MBT-70 commonality. The MBT-70 is de- ing. Even though I know the GAO is a signed to be armed with the Shillelagh mis- very competent group, and I have great sile and the 152mm combustible cartridge respect for their judgments, I do not be- ease ammunition common to the Sheridan lieve anyone in that group is equipped and M60A1E2 tank? to make the kind of judgment the Sen- Skipping the recitation of certain ator asks that- office to make, outside of of the GAO? facts? what is contained in paragraph (1) on Mr. EAGLETON. I think that the Sen- However, the automatic loader is depend- Cost. ent upon the acceptability of the ammuni- I am afraid there might be a constitu- ator from Arizona makes a valid point. tion combustible cartridge case which will be I have today discussed it with the Sen- discussed in detail subsequently. tional question here, although I am not an expert enough to put my finger on it, up the assets, add up the liabilities, and million? strike a balance. It is composed of tal- Mr. EAGLETON. I freely confess ented people who are analysts, who have ignorance as to the precise rationale that the expertise and talents to go beyond the committee employed in making that the printed word, beyond the diagrams, reduction. beyond the schedules, beyond the fig Mr. HATFIELD. So far as the phrase- ures, and to get into what we may call ology is concerned of asking for a "re- the area of substance and the area of orientation" of the program, the Senator theory. has no further data as to what they What I am trying to do by my amend- meant, or has the Senator discussed that ment is ask for the services which Mr. with the Armed Services Committee Mayo renders now for some of the same members? agencies, military as well as nonmili- Mr. EAGLETON. No, sir; I have not. tary. I am willing to cut the period to Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, will 6 months. I am asking that office to give the Senator from Missouri yield for a us -the benefit of their talent, which I question? know they have, because of the magnifi- Mr. EAGLETON. I am pleased to yield cent work they did in assisting Represen- . to the Senator from Arizona. tative STRATION in his report. The GAO is Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, I mentioned particularly in that Stratton want to ask the distinguished Senator report, specifically page 11, which I may from Missouri some questions relative to put in the RECORD later. But we have the language in his amendment that these talented people there, we have this refers to the Comptroller General of the questionable program, and I do not see United States. where it hurts a soul or a cause or in First, the Senator has referred very any way jeopardizes us to use our people often to the amendment adopted yes- in that way. terday by the Senate, as introduced by the distinguished junior Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr. SCHWEIKER) . As I read that amendment, I see in it a charge that is in keeping with the general pur- pose of the GAO and the Comptroller General of the United States; namely, they are to report on contract items, the ? time they were entered into, subsequent estimates of cost completion, and the reason for any significant rise or decline in prior cost estimates. I do not see how that amendment compares with the lan- guage in the Senator's amendment which is now pending?if the Senator will give me his attention Mr. EAGLETON. I beg the Senator's pardon. Mr. GOLDWATER. For example, on page 2 of the amendment, the Senator charges the Comptroller General of the United States, among other things to consider, first, why research and devel- opment cost estimates have had to be revised steadily upward since 1965. I will agree that that is a proper charge to give to the Comptroller General, but does not the Senator believe Itis within the pre- rogative of the GAO to answer a question, for example, as in paragraph (2) whether the MBT-70, considering its re- vised estimated production costs will be the most effective weapon to meet the contingency for which was originally planned. Does the Senator feel that that would come under the proper function ator from Wisconsin (Mr. PROXMIRE) , who is not now in the Chamber, but who, I now come to the conclusion: of mixing up the duties charged to the in my judgment, is one of the Members of Conclusion. Unless deficiencies in the corn- executive branch and the legislative this body most knowledgeable on the bustible cartridge case ammunition are cor- branch. I think there is a grave question GAO?not the only one, but he has had rected, it is reasonable to assume that the there. Others better equipped than I can a great deal of contact with that agency, MBT-70 will experience difficulties similar to those of the Sheridan and M60A1E2 tank. discuss it. as a result of his chairmanship of the I do not think it is wise to let the GAO Joint Economic Committee. Although he That is not a terribly profound con- consider the question of effectiveness of is cosponsor of my amendment, I think elusion. The point I am trying to make is weapons or whether they are obsolete in he is a bit inclined to think that I have that the GAO is more than just a book- the strategic projections. I do not think stretched paragraph (2) as to the general keeper's office. It is more than an office the GAO is equipped to do it any more capability of the GAO. where people take a bunch of figures, add than the Joint Chiefs of Staff would be Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For ReJgas..e 2004/11/30 ? CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9480 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 8, 1969 equipped to go in and run an audit on the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. The amendment is in no way compa- rable to the Schweiper amendment, which confined itself to money matters, contracts and so forth. Mr. EAGLETON. I thank the Senator from Arizona. As I said in answer to the previous question, I think at least in terms of subparagraph (2), based on the wise advice of the Senator from Wiscon- sin (ME. PROXMIRE), some of that lan- guage may be a bit overdieiwn. It is quite possible that there could be some bit of redrafting of the latter part of it. We had an exchange earlier today with the Senator from California, who is a former Comptroller of his State. I do not want to so narrowly circumscribe that which I am requiring the GAO to do that we would merely mike them book- keepers, insofar as what I would ask them to look into with reference to the MBT-70. I am not here to expound upon the Schweiker amendment one way or the other. It has had its day in the court of the Senate. I am here to es pound on the mBT-70 and how we can get the ulti- mate information, advice, counsel, con- sultation, and expertise that we have not had as of now in trying to make the "nitty-gritty" decision on a program that has stumbled along, as I have said, for 6 years. So far as the MBT-70 is concerned, knowing the GAO has systems analysts. knowing they have some personnel who did the enormously successful work for the Stratton committee, which went way beyond bookkeeping and went into the question of effectiveness, comparing it with the Shillelagh-- Mr. GOLDWATER. If the Senator will yield, he will find that this information is available from the Army. Our commit- tee knows of all these aspects. The GAO or the Secretary of Transportation, ff they want to, can call the Army and get a detailed description of everything that is wrong with the tank and the develop- ment of it. The Army has never said, to my knowledge, that it was a perfect and a perfected weapon. The problem is that by this amend- ment we are setting up another agency to do precisely what is being done by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, strategic planning, and by the Senate Armed Services Com- mittee and by the House Armed Services Committee. I wish to recognize that the House of Representatives has made an exhaustive study of this question. The Senate com- mittee has made a cursory study of the matter. But all of the material is avail- able now from the Army. So I think we are getting into another situation where we are going to have too many cooks in the kitchen, and we are net going to get out of that kitchen what we would like to get, which is cost effectiveness, if that word still has any meaning, contract effectiveness, and so forth. I think if the Senator would confine his charges to the GAO to those fields, he would be on very legitimate, safe grounds. But if I were the GAO myself, I would have to try to duck anything like this, because I would not be equipped to do it. Mr. EAGLETON. Well, as I have stated previously, the Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. PROXMIRE), who is an expert on the GAO function, doubts whether the GAO would be overly anxious to assume at least subparagraph (2), and perhaps it will have to be redrafted. I am ready to admit that. The Senator from Arizona points out that maybe this would be a situation of too many cooks in the kitchen, therefore just making a muddle of the thing, and making a still greater muddle out of that which has been muddled pretty far already. My answer to that, however inade- quate, is that I do not know how anybody could make a greater muddle out of this MBT-70 program than has already been made. It has been badly confused thus far, and I think one further look at it will not muddle it up or confuse it any further. I yield to the Senator from West Mr. RANDOLPH. During the colloquy this afternoon, the Senator from Mis- souri has referred to a dream?the dream of this tank. Would it be improper to imply that perhaps that dream might have become a nightmare? Mr. EAGLETON. That is a very apt observation. I may say to the Senator from West Virginia that in some in- stances, dreams turn out adventageouslY, and bear fruit; but others turn 180 de- grees into a nightmare, and this is of the latter type. Mr. RANDOLPH. And a dream can destroy as well as build? Mr. EAGLETON. Yes. And a dream can not only destroy, a dream can divert our attention and our interest from other more profitable pursuits, even in tanks. That is, the development of the M60A1 accelerated the development of the anti- tank weapons, the Hawk, the Dragon, and the Tow, which have been down- graded in priority, and the like. Mr. RANDOLPH. I thank the Senator from Missouri. While listening this after- noon, I have made an assessment of the efficacy of the amendment proposed by my colleague. I have followed the ques- tions and answers and I am inclined to support the amendment of the Senator who has now very kindly yielded to me. Mr. EAGLETON. I am very grateful for the flattering comments of the Sena- tor from West Virginia. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield the floor to me for about 10 minutes, with the advice that within that time, or at the end of it, he will get it back? Mr. EAGLETON. With that proviso, I am happy to yield to the majority leader. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I yield 5 minutes to the Senator from West Virginia. THE FUNDING OF MASS TRANSPORTATION Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, the President of the United States has for- warded to Congress an important mes- sage on public transportation. The mes- sage quite appropriately focuses attention on the real problems facing the people and affecting the economy of our Nation. We must carefully consider the needs of our people for metility and provide the transportation facilities which they re- quire. I have long realized, and have so stated, that highvAlys, alone cannot pro- vide the transportation needs of the American people. This is true for the metropolitan centers, with their great populations, and to a lesser degree for the smaller cities and communities of the United States as well. It was, I think, necessary that the President forward such a message be- cause it does lay dCwn, as it were, a plat- form on which this Congress can con- structively legislate. I do not think, how- ever, that the recommendation of the President will provide the tools to meet the transportation needs of the next generation. Mr. President, in my 25 years in the House of Representatives and in the Senate, I have come to believe that we cannot expect that the Congress will ap- propriate out of general funds sufficient amounts of money with which to con- tinue to strengthen the highway system of the United States, or the airport and airway systems. Funds for airways fa- cilities have not been forthcoming and we are in an air safety crisis. I am delighted that Senator WARREN MAGNUSON, the very knowledgeable chairman of the Senate Committee on Commerce is present on the floor at this time. I commend him and the members of his committee who have joined to- gether in exploring in detail the possi- bility of a trust fund for airports and airways, such as we have had for high- way transportation in this country. The highway trust fund has enabled us to de- velop our system of highways to serve the needs of interstate commerce and de- fense. As our road system has pro- gressed we realize that, in part, we are meeting the transportation needs of the Nation. The message of the President of the United States directs our attention to a third major form of transport in this country, mass transit. This third ele- ment must definitely be given attention. While I am delighted the President has spoken out on the need for action, I do not believe that general funds fi- nancing will provide sufficient moneys to do the job. The Uncertainties attached to such funding prevents them from be- ing a proper source of money for either highway development, airport-airways development, or now, as proposed, for mass transit development. Experience has shown that there will never be funds appropriated in sufficient sums from gen- eral revenues to do the job which must be done, not so much for this generation as for the next generation. Mr. President, of course, the mem- bers of the Banking and Currency Com- mittee and the members of other com- mittees are more familiar, than I, as to the level of the authorization which should be provided, it is my impression, however, that the amount suggested by the President of the United States and Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 8, 1969 McNamara explained the waste and in- efficiency which took place under his re- gime as the fault of the U.S. Congress. Mr. McNamara could not find the time to testify before the Proxmire Subcom- mitte because of his busy schedule in his present post as President of the World Bank. However, he was not too busy to 'grant an interview to a news- paper reporter from Boston. As a result of the interview, former Secretary Mc- Namara is quoted as having said that he spent much of his time as Secretary of -Defense in?and I use his exact words?"fighting a Congress that wanted to spend too much on useless military projects." Mr. McNamara, at another point in the interview, was quoted as saying "any number of times I was ordered to begin work on a project which was totally wasteful." Mr. President, when these remarks appeared in the newspapers, I wrote to Subcommittee Chairman PROXMIRE call- ing the quotes to his attention and sug- gesting that it had become even more imperative that Mr. McNamara be asked to testify in the defense spending in- vestigation and to explain precisely what he was forced to do by the members of this body and our colleagues in the House. Of course, things may have been dif- ferent during the four years I was away; however, I do not recall any instances of the Congress twisting Secretary Mc- Namara's arm and forcing him to spend money on useless projects. As it turned out, ram sure we all can agree that the TFX probably heads any and all lists that might be compiled on useless pro- jects in the Department of Defense. But the arm twisting in this instance was all done by Mr. McNamara. It will be re- called that the TFX had its very be- ginning in the highly vaunted concept of "commonality" which was one of Mr. McNamara's prize innovations. From that point on, all the major decisions having to do with the TFX were ap- parently the work of Secretary Mc- Namara and his immediate assistants in the Defense Department. These points have not been contra- dicted or denied by the present critics of defense spending, such as Senator PROXMIRE. For example, in his July 29 remarks Senator PaoxursE made refer- ence to trouble encountered by the Joint Economic Committee in attempting to obtain an analysis of the defense bud- get and added "and frankly, this does apply to the previous administration." This, Mr. President, is one of the few places where I have been able to find acknowledgment of the fact that the things which are being complained about in connection with the military procure- ment authorization did not occur in the present administration under the lead- ership of Secretary Laird. As I say, the critics of military spend- ing have not denied the responsibility which is owned by former Secretary McNamara. But by the same token, it is not a matter that they very often make clear. Consequently, it has been my intention here today to clear up some of the confusion and set the record straight. Thousands of words have been printed In the RECORD and many thousands more have been printed in newspapers and magazines throughout the country since the beginning of the year?and all of them related directly to the high cost of waste and inefficiency and favoritism and cost-overruns in the Department of De- fense. I merely want the record to show that these words are a sad and dangerous monument to previous national admin- istrations and especially to the liberal hero, Robert S. McNamara. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. GOLDWATER. I yield. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, unfor- tunately; I was not in the Chamber when the Senator was making his address. I have just returned. I understood the Sen- ator from Arizona to say we had not in- vited former Secretary McNamara to ap- pear before our committee. Is that correct? Mr. GOLDWATER. No; I did not say the Senator did not invite him. I called attention to the fact that he could not appear. I gave the Senator full credit for the good job he is doing. I said I hope he would equally and as thoroughly go into HEW and some domestic problems, which I know he intends to do. I know that on reading the RECORD the Senator will find that this Republican Senator has beei.e.doeiAkM AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- priations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles and to authorize the construction of test fa- cilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, if I may have the attention of the distin- guished Senator from Missouri (Mr. EA- GLETON), the distinguished Senator from Oregon (Mr. HATFIELD) , and the distin- guished chairman of the committee, the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. STENNIS), who is the manager of the bill, I would like most respectfully to suggest to my colleagues, the Senators from Missouri and Oregon, to consider the possibility of withdrawing the amendment now pend- ing, with the proviso that if the action contemplated does not take place before the third reading of the bill they would be in a position to again reoffer the pend- ing amendment. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me? Mr. MANSFIELD. I yield. The Senator may have the floor. Mr. STENNIS, Mr. President, and Members of the Senate, the sponsors of the amendment have urged greatly their need for an additional study covering certain points I will hereafter outline. We have had an around-the-table gen- tleman's understanding that the com- mittee will ask the General Accounting Office for a study on these two points that I shall enumerate. If that study is made available before this bill leaves the floor of the Senate on final passage, then the committee will pass on the contents of the study. It is to be a study and not just a recommendation. It is to be a study on the points that I shall enumerate. If the Committee on Armed Services still recommends that the funds be in- cluded in the bill as they are now, then this amendment will be withdrawn al- together and the funds will remain in the bill. I am speaking to the sponsors of the amendment, the junior Senator from Missouri (Mr. EAGLETON) and the senior Senator from Oregon (Mr. HATFIELD). Do the Senators have others with them on this matter? I wish to ask the Senator from Missouri whether these two Sen- ators, the Senator from Missouri and the Senator from Oregon, feel they represent others that have a special interest in this matter. Mr. EAGLETON. The Senator is cor- rect. There are five other cosponsors of the amendment, but I am permitted to represent them along with the Senator from Oregon (Mr. HATFIELD). Mr. STENNIS. I wish to ask the Sen- ator from Oregon (Mr. HATFIELD) , if he feels that way, that he can speak for them under this arrangement, which is temporary. Mr, HATFIELD. I think I can speak for the others. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator. Mr. President, continuing with the next point, if. this study for any reason is not available when the bill reaches final passage or near thereto, then the spon- sors will be free, under this agreement, to recall their amendment or reassert the amendment and push for its adop- tion. That is all, except those two main points in the letter tp the General Ac- counting Office. Mr. President, and Members of the Senate, this report would be available for Members of the Senate and not just the Committee on Armed Services, but our committee would pass on it. The first point this study would cover is why research and development cost estimates have had to be revised steadily upward since 1965; and, second, what other feasible alternatives to the develop- ment of the MBT-70 there are, if any, and the cost feasibility of each. I judge that the last item is a kind of guideline the Senators mentioned want the opinion on. This is a legislative matter now and continues to be a legislative matter and the Committee on Armed Services could, of course, confer with the Secretary of Defense or anyone else that it saw fit in considering this matter. I hope I have stated the matter cor- rectly. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August 8, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE fined beneficial ownership of 10 percent of the voting securities to mean ownership of such amount at the carrier's outstanding voting securities as entitles the holder to cast 10 percent of the total number of votes which the holders of all outstanding voting securi- ties are entitled to cast. The House amendment created a presump- tion of control an the part of any person owning beneficially 10 percent or more of any class of the capital stock or cdpital of an air carrier. The substitute agreed to in conference follows the Senate version. The managers on the part of the House agreed to the Senate language which had been worked out in conjimction with the Securitica and Ex- change Commission and the Cit il Aeronau- tics Board. EFFECTIVE DATE The Senate bill had a retroactdve effective date of March 7, 1969, but provided that no criminal penalties shall be applicnble to any- one who acquired control of an air carrier between that date and the date of enactment of the Senate bill. The House amendment provided that it take effect on the date of its enactment. The substitute agreed to in conference provides that the amendments ,o existing law will take effect as of August 5, 1969, the date of the conference agreement. The lan- guage relating to retroactive Melina' pen- alties was omitted as unnecessary. lisairv 0. Srseckas, SAMUEL N. FaND EL, Jame' D. DINGELL , J. J. PICKLE, WILLIAM L. Serawt.sa, SAMUEL L. DEVIN GLENN CUNNING SM, Managers on the Part of the [louse. The PRESIDING OaviCER.The ques- tion is on the adoption of the conference report. The conference report was agreed to. THE McNAMARA LEGACY Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, it is my purpose today to discuss in a gen- eral way many of the subjects the t have been raised about this Nation's Defense Establishment and military preparedness during the prolonged debate on this Military Procurement Authorizaten. Now that the issue of the ABM is tem- porarily out of the way, I believe it is time to place into a little better perspective many of the complaints about improvi- dent military expenditures as well as the overall charges of gross waste and in- efficiency in the Defense Departne nt. I believe it is well known in the; body that I am a retired major general in the U.S. Air Force Reserve, that I am now and have been in previous sessions a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, and that I have a great pride in and an admiration for the !nee and the record of our military services. It is not my intention to here claim that because of this pride and admiration I am ready to blanket the entire Defense Establishment of this Government with a covering of total competence and effi- ciency. Because of my interest over a long period of years, I believe I am per- haps better able than many Members of Congress to understand the tremendous complexities as well as the frailties and deficiencies of our military system and especially that part of it which is charged with the procurement of new weapons systems and items of military hardware. Waste and inefficiency? Yes. Without a doubt there is an enormous amount of waste and inefficiency, not only in the Department of Defense with its multi- billion-dollar budget, but throughout the entire Federal Government with its hun- dreds of departments, bureaus, commis- sions, boards, and agencies. Because of the enormous size and the incredibly complex nature of today's sophisticated weaponry, it is only natured- that the largest percentage o and over- lapping should In this expres ough tig rid in the Pentagon. action I have repeatedly my appreciation for the thor- ng and exhaustive job of inves- on performed by my colleague, the ator from Wisconsin (Mr. PRoX- r), and his Joint Subcommittee on vernment Economy. I can find it in my heart, however, to fault the Senator from Wisconsin on a couple of grounds, the most important of which has to do ith the fact that this very needful task s not undertaken years earlier. could possibly object also to the se- lec 'Or of the subcommittee's opera- tions that they seem to be concen- trated s y on one department of our sprawling tional Government. How- ever, I shall ?rgo this objection in the earnest hope th Senator PROXliffRE and his subcommittee ill next turn their attention to the w te and inefficiency which runs rampant t ough some of the nondefense department of our Govern- ment. I would hope that e would look with particular emphasis ? a the multi- billion-dollar expenditures if the De- partment of Health, Educ tion, and Welfare, As I stated earlier, my main c plaint, as an interested Member of th Senate who has been away for 4 years, is that this inquiry into abuses in the ) ense Department was so late in cumin . I Say that because long before I left t s body to become the Republican no ee for President, the fact was well es blished that some things were Tadica and ex- Pensively wrong in the se .artment of Defense and especia the Depart- ment's procurenten procedures?proce- dures, for example, which enabled a for- mer Secretary of Defense to overrule his Department's evaluation boards and military experts to award a multibillion- dollar contract for the TteX fighter- bomber plane to the highest bidder. As I have pointed out previously, that fiasco alone should have brought about a thor- ough-going examination of the Defense Department's handling of billions of dol- lars of the taxpayers' hard-earned money.- Had a proper investigation, such as Senator PROXMIRE has recently been en- gaged in, been undertaken at the time of the TFX controversy, I believe we could have saved the taxpayers many billions of dollars before such items as the ABM were even proposed. I nota that in Senator PROXMIRE'S re- Melte on the Senate floor on July 29 that he does acknowledge the point I have just raised. He said: The Unhappy fact is, however, that while inefficiency and military policies are being questioned today, they have been allowed to develop in the past without serious challenge from those outside the military establish- ment. A mimber of factors have enabled the mil- itary planners and the military spenders to claim their inordinate share of the public purse. Thus, while the good Senator from Wisconsin acknowledges in one para- graph that the policies of waste and in- efficiency which he is today exposing were allowed to develop in. the past, in the next paragraph he leaves the im- pression?and I believe unintentionally-- that these policies were the work of military men rather than civilians. But they were not. The fact is that the mili- tary planners and the military spenders, for 8 long, expensive years were former Secretary McNamara and his cadre of computer "whiz kids," Mr. President, I do not wish to un- necessarily dwell on the tremendous multibillion-dolear debt of waste and in- efficiency in defense procurement which we owe to former Secretary McNamara. But so long as some critics are indulging in an orgy af protest against any and all things related to the defense of this Na- tion and the defense of the free world, I, for one, would like to have it known and made crystal clear in the RECORD that the major architect at the things about which the liberals in this country are now ranting was one of their very own. What I sin stating here is that the man who cause all this money to be spent was a political liberal by his own defini- tion and by his own announcements. What is more, I think it is important to recall that the badge of membership in the elite corps of the New Frontier's lib- eral disarmament advocates was pinned on former Secretary McNamara by none other than Harvard's own Arthur M. Schlesinger, .Ir. Let me explain what I mean. As will be recalled, Mr. Schlesinger was a brain- truster and speech writer for the late President John F. Kennedy who wrote in great detail about his experiences at the White House and in the Kennedy administration in a book entitled "A Thousand Days," which was published in 1965. In his book, Mr. Schlesinger gives this first-hand observation of the former Secretary of Defense: Next to the President, McNamara . . probably did more than anyone else to sustain the disarmament drive. With his sense of the horror of nuclear conflict,. his understand- ing of the adequacy of existing stoekpiles, his fear of nuclear proliferation, his analytic command of the weapons problem and his managerial instinct to do something about an irrational situation, he forever sought new ways of controlling the arms race. Mr. President, I find it nothing short of fascinating that we have here a situation' whereby an assault on the Defense Es- tablishment is being fueled by the ex- cesses of a former Secretary of Defense who is described by his own friend as a man dedicated to disarmament as a pol- icy. I find it interesting, too, that Mr. McNamara now?after all the damage has been done, after the hundreds of millions of dollars for the TFX?F-111? have gone down the drain, after one weapon system after another has been abolished, after we have been left with an inadequate nuclear powered Navy and an Air Force which has no carry-on manned bomber?that after all this. Mr_ Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30: CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Augu r , 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE S 9485 Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I wish to say that I thoroughly approve what the distinguished Senator has advocated and stated. I think it fits in with the spirit of the amendment which is now pending, and I would hope that this mat- ter could be adjudicated and settled on this basis. Mr. STENNIS. I have just one word more. I have conferred with as many members of the Committee on Armed Services as I could, under the circum- stances. I think we are all in substantial agreement on this proposal. Other pro- posals were respectfully declined. Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. DIRKSEN, As I understand, this arrangement is pursuant to the colloquy we had in the Marble Room earlier this afternoon, and the Senator has outlined it pretty much in the same fashion. Mr. STENNIS. Yes. It does not go as far as our discussion went, but the basis is the same, and no harmful precedent has been set, as I see it. Mr. DIRKSEN. I am content to concur if the amendment is withdrawn. Mr. STENNIS. I think Senators should have a chance to express themselves. I yield now to the Senator from Oregon. Mr. HATFIELD. Mr. President, I should like to reiterate, as one of the sponsors of the amendment, what the distinguished Senator from Montana and the distinguished Senator from Missis- sippi have outlined as the agreement. It ought to be pointed out that in the amendment as we presented it, we were asking for the elimination of of approxi- mately $54 million from both the item of research and development and the item of prototype production. In with- drawing the amendment at this time, we then agreed to the specific proposal for a letter requesting a study which is em- bodied, basically, in subsection (1) on page 2, an additional subsection, which has been agreed to, and alternatives to the tank and other weapons, and that upon the receipt of that particular re- port, provided it is received before the final passage, the committee will make an evaluation of the report, and that Senators who are not members of the committee will also have access to the same report. If the report is not received before the final passage of the bill, we will then have the privilege of reassert- ing our amendment without prejudice. I believe, further, so far as our dis- cussion is concerned, that if the report is not decisive?let us say it is a report that can be interpreted pro- or anti- tank?Senators of like mind with the Senator from Missouri (Mr. EAGLETON) and myself will not be foreclosed from proposing an amendment to the appro- priation bill which will come later; but that that bridge will not be crossed until we come to it. Of course, I am only indicating this as a part of the background of our dis- cussion. It is our hope that the report will be decisive, so that we can all agree to it; and if it is negative, we hope that we will then be able to reach some agree- ment as to what our next action should be; but it would not prejudice any of the sponsors of the amendment from taking future action on the appropria- tion bill. But it will not prejudice any of the sponsors of the amendment from taking future action as it relates to the appropriation bill; is that not correct? Mr. STENNIS. Yes. The Senator is correct in all his statements, as I under- stand him. We will not undertake to bind?and should not?the Appropria- tions Committee. It is clear, though, that whatever the study reveals, or whatever the report is, so far as the bill now pend- ing is concerned, the decision of the Armed Services Committee on it will be final, so far as the sponsors of the amendment are concerned. Is that cor- rect? Mr. HATFIELD. That is correct. Ac- tually, that is all the amendment pro- poses to do, to ask for and receive a re- port. It did not attempt to precommit any Senators as to what that action would be following the report. I would accept the agreement as outlined, and I thank the Senator from Mississippi and the Senator from Montana for their as- sistance in this agreement. Mrs. SMITH. Mr. President? Mr. STENNIS. Let me say this. I have mentioned the two sponsors. I conferred with the Senator from Maine and I yield to her. Mrs. SMITH. Mr. President, I did not hear all that the chairman of the Armed Services Committee said with respect to the agreement that was made. While I sat in on the discussions, does the plan agreed upon set the pattern for all other amendments or any other amendments to the bill? Mr. STENNIS. Not at all, I say to the Senator from Maine. This I read from was the conference that we had in the Marble Room, with the Senator from Maine, the Senator from California, and the Senator from Wisconsin. This is the exact language that I used, otherwise I would have come to the Senator from Maine again. This does not set a prece- dent of any kind in that field. It is not agreeing to anything in the bill itself. This is a mere procedural matter. Mrs. SMITH. Would other sponsors of amendments expect to call for the same review by the GAO on other amend- ments? Mr. STENNIS. They might make that request, but I do not think we could agree. This is a peculiar case, in that this has gone on for several years and we are right down to the last mile, one might say, on research and development. I do not consider this to be a precedent. I believe it fully carries out the sugges- tion as made by the Senator from Maine. That is certainly my intention. Mrs. SMITH. I thank the Senator from Mississippi very much. Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, will the Senator from Mississippi yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, as I understand the arrangement, it does not provide for any suspension of the program. Mr. STENNIS. That is correct. Mr. THURMOND. There are 2,000 personnel working on this project. There are more than 1,000 civilian Government employees working on the project. Mr. STENNIS. Yes. Mr. THURMOND. The Army is deeply concerned about it. The Army says that a year's deferral in funding could delay first production for as much as 3 to 4 years. Mr. STENNIS. Yes. Mr. THURMOND. I just want the RECORD to be clear and show that there is no delay, no deferral, and no suspen- sion of this project. Mr. STENNIS. That is right. Mr. THURMOND. This is merely con- sideration being shown the sponsors of the amendment, to give the GAO an op- portunity to make its study and then the Armed Services Committee, from that study, will determine whether funds should be appropriated. Mr. STENNIS. That is right. Mr. THURMOND. And that action by the Armed Services Committee will be final. Mr. STENNIS. Yes. The Senator is en- tirely correct. I am certainly glad that the Senator brought up that point to be covered now. We have gone into that and it will not disturb the assembly line or the production line or the work going on now. This agreement will not inter- rupt it in any way. Things will proceed as usual. There is an agreement, too, in connection with the tank, with the Re- public of Germany. What is happening here now will not disturb that in any way. Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, the recent Warsaw Pact occupation of Czech- oslovakia displayed to the world that Communist military ground forces can serve as effective instruments in the at- tainment of Soviet political goals. Few of us here in the Congress, and certainly no one in Europe, will forget for many years to come the photographs of Rus- sian tanks rolling into that country and hereby suppressing a Communist re- gime which was becoming too liberal for its masters in Moscow. With this suppression of the Czech people still fresh in mind it is surprising to me that the distinguished junior Sen- ator from Missouri (Mr. EAGLETON) has introduced an amendment which would halt the joint development program of Germany and the United States to build a main battle tank. The Czech crisis showed indisputedly that the Russians have not abandoned their traditional reliance on large quan- tities of main battle tanks. In fact, our Intelligence indicates the Soviets have already begun issuing to their a'rMored units the T-62, a newer and much better tank than in use by their armies in the early 1960's. This move is contrasted by the fact that the United States has not developed a really new tank since the Korean war when we first issued the Mark 48 tank. Since that time we have relied upon production improvements of the M-48, the latest improvement known as the M-60A1. The tank under discus- sion today is not merely an increment improvement of the old M-48, but rather a totally new tank which is revolutionary Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 41"/6414'' S 9486 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD SENATE August 8, 1969 in nature and should serve our fighting men well in the next few decades. The MBT-70 amendment offered by the Senator from MI-se:Mit according to his press statement of July 18, 1969, is a follow through to a study on the Main Battle Tank done by himself and in- cluded in the recently released report by the Committee on Military Spending of the Members of Congress for Peace through Law. This, of course, is not a committee of the Congress, but a group formed by members of both House and Senate to promote their ideas on defense matters. The chairman of this committee is the distinguished Senator from Ore- gon (Mr. HATFIELD) WhO serves as a Co- sponsor of the amendment by Senator EAGLETON. Now, there are other parts of these reports which I wish to challenge. First of all, it should be clear the initial de- velopment cost -agreed upon by the United States and German Governments was $80 million. Further, it should be stated right here that a reading of the agreement indicates clearly neither Gov- erment expected this $$0 million to be sufficient to develop this tank but con- sidered it merely the amount necessary to begin a reasonable development. Both Governments recognized the amount would be more and the ase cement pro- vided for these additional rests. It would be next to impossible to accurately esti- mate the development cost of a revolu- tionary vehicle such as these two coun- tries hoped to build. Hardly any part of this tank compares with vehicles built in the past. InnovatiOns have been undertaken which invelve entire new concepts in tank warfare. Thankfully, the work is about done and we appar- ently have a weapon system which will serve our soldiers well for many, many years. Therefore, it seems rather unfair to figure cost overruns based on this $80 million figure when both entintries estab- lished it is not as a target development cost but rather as a beginning point in the development costs of this important weapons system program. Now, there is also this contention in these two reports issued by my distin- guished colleagues that the MBT-70 has a nuclear capability as a part of its fire- power. This is simply not so. The 1VIBT- 70 was not intended to have, does not have, and will not have nuclear firepower capability. Perhaps my colleagues meant to say the MBT-70 is designed to operate on a nuclear battlefield. Now that is accur- ate, but later in the sense paragraph of the Peace Committee report it is stated the MBT-70 does not provide any More protection on a nuclear battlefield than the M-60A1. This is an error. The M-60A1 tank design did not include particular features to overcome the haz- ards of a nuclear battlefield. On the other hand, the 1VIBT-70 does possess specific features to reduce the hazards expected to occur in a nuclear war. The MBT-70 thus has a vahes hie increment of advantage on such a battlefield as compar91 to the M-60A1. Let me proceed further to clarify an- other claim made by these reports, that this tank was to roll off production lines In December 1969, but has been extended 4 years beyond that target date. This Misstates the actual facts of the agreement between the United States and Germany. The agreement called for a tank, and I quote: "ready for produc- tion in 1970." This does not mean tanks rolling out complete from a factory. What this does mean, is that all required development and a technical data pack- age has been completed and ready for publication to industry. The industry must bid on it, a contract be negotiated, and finally a plant tooled up for produc- tion of the initial tank by about mid-1972 or later. Thus the target production date has not been extended for over 4 years. The present extension actually, covers about 2 years. Mr. President, sometimes it is puzsling to me just what technique the military should follow in trying to meet the ob- jections of some Members of the Con- gress in providing weapons development at the lowest cost. Just recently the De- fense Establishment was being sharply criticized because they had built weapons we needed and then had to abandon them in brief periods since they had served their usefulness and had been replaced by more advanced technology. Here we have a situation where a revolutionary new tank is being developed, one with a new turret, new suspension system, new gun, and it appears the criticism is based on a stretched out development program. As badly as we need a new tank today, is it not wise to spend a little extra money and take a little extra time in order to develop the best possible ma- chine,. one which will do the job in the next two decades as the M-48 has done in the past two decades? Frankly, this development program has been going slow. We need this tank in 1970 not 1974 or 1975, but we will never get it if this amendment is approved and another delay takes place. We should not lose sight of the fact this tank, while designed to fight in various environments Is mainly NATO oriented. Thus, it is to support our men in Europe who are eye- ball to eyeball with the enemy. We must give our men there the best tank we are capable of building, and whenever we leave Europe it will be comforting to me to know the Germans have that same tank facing that same enemy. Returning to the reports' of my col- leagues, through the Peace Committee and individually, it is stated the Army test and evaluations systems authorities admit a problem with the 152-millimeter ammunition. Such a problem did exist, but the same report in which this com- ment is made claims the ammunition and its gun operate suitably. Further, we have now passed through a period of testing of this ammunition and gun in Vietnam and hundreds of rounds have been fired with excellent results. In fact, the soldiers there have requested greater numbers of these weapons be sent there for their use. Mr. President, the MT-70 will not be merely an incremental improvement over a design first produced almost 20 years ago. In almost every feature, this tank will have revolutionary major in- crease in its capability. This will be true in its engine, its suspension system, its protection system, its battlefield silhou- ette, its secondary; armor, and its main armament. The main armament alone is unique in the world. It will be a combi- nation guided missile launcher, and a conventional gun capable of firing a new and improved variety of projectiles. The Present stage of development has already shown these revolutionary features to have an excellent prospect of meeting their intended design characteristics. The total design of the tank has a most favor- able prognosis of being a successful reeo- lutionary design when it appears and much more than, as the Hatfield report would say, temporarily superior to Soviet tanks. It should be superior for a goad long time. The Hatiield-Eagleton description would have us believe that the technolog- ical rationale for which this tank is de- signed may be obsolete by the nuclear battlefields if they occur in the mid- 1970's, saying it will be a victim of tech- nology or a new strategy. They say this is the central issue. This reasoning is in- complete. If this is a central issue, then the ques- tion is raised whether we should have any tank at all. If the most modern tank we can make, including revolutionary fea- tures, is thought to be obsolete and not useful, then certainly the present tank, product improvements of a 1950 design, will be even more obsolete and less useful. Those who kill off the MBT-70 because of this issue should also be proposing that we kill off all tanks for use on any pos- sible nuclear battlefield. If the Hatfield-Eagleton statements are intended to question whether there can ever be a nuclear tactical war, then they clearly cannot be at the same time arguing that a great improvement over our present tanks would not be useful to our forces, in Europe or anywhere else. As I previously pointed out, if a non-nu- clear war should suddenly become nu- clear than the MBT-70 with specific features designed for nuclear war will ob- viously be of greater usefulness to our troops in such combat. The Hatfield-Eagleton statements ratee the question of whether the stra- tegic projections made in 1963 will be valid in 1974. If they intend to convey the Idea that they have conjured up a better projection of the 1963 strategic consider- ations than those which prevail now, they should make them known. It is already apparent that the tactical projections on which the design of the tank is actually based were quite valid. The Army stated then that they would need a much better tank if they were to contend with the probable tank which they might find on the battlefield of the future. The Soviets have proved them correct. They have begun issuing to their units the T-62, a much newer and better tank than their units had in 1963. In other words, the best answer to the question which is asked by Senators Hat- field and Eagletonis provided by the Rus- sians. They are now reequileleing their armored and mechanized units?of which they have far more than we do?with a tank of much later design than our pres- ent M-60A1. The Soviets clearly expect to Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 jrari 1969 Approved FogailysimphatypEgmfr0003ool0000l-3 S 9487 have a use for tanks on any future bat- tlefield, nuclear or not. The Hatfield-Eagleton discussion makes much of the length of time in- volved in developing the tank and get- ting it ready for production, and of what they described as the spiraling cost of development. These statements ignore the available information pertaining to the sequence in development of this tank. In 1963, when the German-American agreement was signed, there was not then in exist- ence any agreed concept as to what the tank would be, or what its specific fea- tures would be like. The hard, difficult discussions between the two countries' tank commanders over these details was not resolved until September 1965. These details of actual construction became the basis for the increase from the original $80 million estimate of initial joint de- velopment cost, to the later estimate of $138 million development cost. These estimates were in-house projections. Later actual bids by potential contractors for the various components intended to be in the tank indicated that this in- house estimate was too low and the de- velopment time previously forecast was too short. The first prototypes, including in some cases alternative design features, com- menced delivery with .the first one in July 1967. Since then the development has proceeded in an orderly fashion, re- solving the operational features of each of several revolutionary designs of mech- anisms never before put together. This orderly, sequential, and severe testing of each of the components follows the gen- eral scheme of development which the General Accounting Office has recom- mended in such cases. The statements of my colleagues are said to be based upon a study of the MBT-70 tank. The Armed Services Com- mittee has recommended that the de- velopment of the MBT-70 be continued. This recommendation is based upon con- siderable study on the part of its staff which began shortly after the first pro- totype was issued for testing in July 1967. Its study has included numerous conferences with development officials of the Army, visits by members of the staff to observe the tank components in operation, including visits to Aberdeen Proving Ground, to test and production facilities of the contractors, to the Army Armored Center at Fort Knox, discus- sions with the Armored Board and Ar- mored Agency of the Combat Develop- ment Command and the responsible ex- perienced armor officers in the Armored School at Fort Knox. The considerations give here have been neither hasty nor perfunctory. The committee did believe that the orderly development procedure being followed would not be harmed if the requested funds for fiscal year 1970 were reduced from $44.9 million to $30 million in its overall consideration of reducing current expenditures. It like- wise believes that there is every possi- bility that if there are no impediments thrown in the works, that the United States will succeed with putting in the field, for use by its fighting men, a tank that is far superior to any tank ever seen before. It further believes that nothing can be gained by throwing away the money already spent in this orderly de- velopment procedure, and condemning our troops to the continued use of a tank much older in design than that possessed by the Soviets. Further, the arbitrary in- terruption of a joint development in which our partners, the Germans, are faithfully fulfilling their part of the bar- gain, is to place the United States in the position of a defaulter on a contract. To stop this development and begin another is hardly likely to be any less costly than the one on which we have already spend considerable money in getting close to the intended outcome. The most sensible thing, the most hon- orable thing to do in our agreement with the Germans, and the most economical thing to do, is to continue the main tank program as the Armed Services Com- mittee has recommended. Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. President, will the Senator from Mississippi yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. ALLOTT. I wish to ask about the second point the Senator read from on his list, which is closely allied with some of the points in the amendment, par- ticularly the second, third, and fourth. As I understand the agreement, the deci- sion of the Armed Services Committee will be binding as to what is done in this matter. But I should like to say, as a member of the Defense Subcommittee on Appropriations, that I believe, in these areas, in asking the GAO to make deter- minations, that we are going outside their function. Frankly, I think those are decisions which should be made by com- mittees of the Senate and by the Senate itself rather than by the GAO. They may or may not have the expertise to make such judgments. I doubt that they do, not have ready availability and con- stant availability to intelligence reports, strategic services, and things of that nature. But I did not want this to go by, being in the Chamber, as in any way placing my stamp of approval with re- spect.to that second point because I think it is a matter of determination in which the GAO should not be involved. Mr. STENNIS. If I may respond to that quite briefly, I think the Senator is en- tirely correct. I do not think they have the capability, but we will soon find out. Mr. YOUNG of North Dakota. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield to the Senator from North Dakota, a member of our committee. Mr. YOUNG of North Dakota. Mr. President, I want to associate myself with the views expressed by the Senator from Colorado. The General Accounting Of- fice is a very efficient Office when it comes to accounting, but in the past I have found that whenever it delves into policy, it can be terribly wrong. Certainly I would not want to accept their views on military matters and policy decisions. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, if the Senator will yield, that is not antici- pated. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, Mem- bers of the Senate, there has been a very good debate on this matter. It all came from the opposition to the tank. I hope we can conclude this colloquy soon and that someone on the committee who is versed in this matter?I am not referring to myself?will have an opportunity to say a few words. Meanwhile, it would be better to have quiet. Mr. CRANSTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield to the Senator from California. Mr. CRANSTON. I just wanted very briefly to comment on the point the Sen- ator from Arizona (Mr. GOLDWATER) raised earlier and that the Senator from Colorado (Mr. ALLOTT) and other Sena- tors have raised. I referred to it earlier today. It referred to some questions I had about the pending amendment. I think the proposal now made clears the point, but I would like briefly to ex- press my concern about expecting the General Accounting Office to render value judgments about whether a pro- gram is good or bad. I think to get them to express such judgments is offensive to experts in that field, the specific field involved?military for example. In the same way, I would question their right to judge the wisdom or lack of wisdom of the war on poverty and other such programs. It should confine itself to the question of cost effectiveness and leave decisions on the wisdom and value of any program to the House, the Senate, and the ad- ministration. I was comptroller of the State of Cali- fornia for 8 years. Hence, I have some feelings on what is the proper field to assign to the Comptroller. During this debate, I asked my staff to call the General Accounting Office and get their feelings on the four points, in the pending amendment, providing ac- tions by GAO. Very briefly, the feeling on the four points referring to the GAO is as follows: As to point 1, which is now covered by the agreement, subsection 1 is within the scope of the GAO investigatory respon- sibility. As to point 2 under that subsection, conversations with GAO indicate that the Comptroller General could not make any determination as to the most effec- tive weapons. The most they could do is present the pros and cons as developed by the Department of Defense, and GAO has no capability to conduct technical studies of technical capability. As to subsection 3, the GAO would be limited to presenting the information developed by the Department of Defense or other agency engaged in technological or strategic study. It could perform no function before setting forth the con- siderations which originally influence the decision with respect to the MBT-70, Finally, under section 4, the GAO in- quiry would be limited to an analysis of the decisions by which the Department of Defense decided to develop the MDT- 70. I think the compromise proposal now offered is a wise one. I think it has nar- rowed the scope of whatever the GAO would report. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I would like to emphasize that sections 2 and 3 have been obliterated and section 4 has been changed, so I think what will be done by the GAO is what it is capable Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9488 Approved For Rtmagg04.9,ich_RDp71600364R000300100001,3 sENATE August ,f-b=9 of doing, and it is not capable of going into the military field or policy. Mr. CRANSTON. Exactly. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I think it would be a fair test of the GAO's posi- tion. I think it will give them a chance to express themselves, too, about their capability. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. Yes; I am glad to yield to the Senator from Missouri. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, first, I thank the Senator from Mississippi. He has been remarkably patient and indul- gent throughout what to rue has been a very long and tiring debate, and he has many days such as this to endure. I want to compliment him and thank him for his patience with me and with the Senator from Oregon on the subject. Second, let me affirm in brevity the thought which the Senator from Oregon has suggested. The understanding spelled out by the Senator from Mississippi through the exchange with the Senator from Oregon is precisely my understand- ing. Finally, let me say that, however in- articulately our amendment was drawn, as the Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. PROXMIRE) pointed out, especially in sub- clause 2, the main thrust of what we were trying to achieve was a study and a re- port from GAO; and I hope we will have such a report. I think the whole Senate and the Armed Services Committee will benefit thereby. Mrs. SMITH. Mr. President, during our hearings on the proposed defense budget authorization, I seriously con- sidered recommending to the committee that which the proposed amendment seeks to accomplish. I repeatedly ex- pressed my concern on the Army's efforts in tank development arid anyone who doubts my concern can turn to page 364 and page 405 elsewhere in part one of the printed hearings. But, Mr. President, after consider- able reflection I, along with my col- leagues on the committee, faced up to the stark realities of our NATO commit- ment. I have always believed and I shall continue to believe that if we are to dis- patch our men in uniform anywhere outside the continental limits to carry out our national policies, the very least we can do is provide theta the best and most modern weapons possible. Yes, I, too, have expreated my disap- pointment in the numerous delays and high costs associated with modernizing our ground combat vehicles but let me point out the effects of amendment No. 76. First of all, the whole concept of logis- tical support cooperation between the United States and the Federal Republic of Germany will be placed in serious jeopardy. The main battle tank devel- opment represents a binding contract between the two governments in which Germany has invested considerable funds. It is a joint project that they alone cannot complete and one which the U.S. Government initiated. The pro- posed amendment, if adopted, represents a unilateral withdrawal from an inter- national agreement without prior con- sultation with one of our most depend- able allies. I remind my colleagues that this is one of our few allies that not only believes in but does actually participate on a cost-sharing basis. Second, the monthly cost for the next 6 months is approximately $3 million to maintain the main battle tank program as a going program without procurement of significant hardware. Current funds in this program will permit it to continue at most until September 30, 1969. Thus, the effect of the amendment is to close down the program for an undetermined time. Development work will be suspended and termination costs will approximate $9 million. Third, should the amendment be adopted the Federal Republic of Ger- many may see fit to take a unilateral ac- tion and cancel another contract with the United States to purchase 88 F-4 air- craft. Our forces in Korea today and those in Europe are now equipped with tanks which embody the technology of the 1950's and I can assure you that these will be obsolete by the mid-1970's. Mr. President, if the U.S. Senate de- cides to adopt the proposed amendment which would have the effect of unilateral withdrawal from a contract, I wonder if we should entertain another amendment to withdraw from the -North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). That treaty will have been in effect for 20 years in August 1969?this month. The treaty provides that after 20 years any member nation which desires to with- draw may do so by giving the other member nations 1 year's notice. Mr. President, the principal weapon systems contained in this bill are directly associated with our foreign military commitments. I strongly urge that before we deprive our own forces of their weap- ons, we should first withdraw from our treaty military commitments. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I highly commend the speech of the Senator from Maine. It is realistic, I think it contains some highly practical suggestions, and this is a matter that has to be met by something other than just talk, Mr. Pres- ident. We have had a lot of arguments here on the floor of the Senate as to what our foreign policy should be and what it should not be as expreSsed in the mil- itary bill. This bill represents the Armed Serv- ices Committee's judgment of what is necessary to back up our foreign policy as announced, and also directly protects us. I do not know of any other foreign policy there is. I do not think we have formulated anything else. We talk about these matters, but this is the real thing: to protect ourselves directly first, and then to be in some kind of position to carry out at least our share of these commitments. I hope that we can get on into the meat of this bill now, and consider this matter in that light. I, too, would like to dwell in make-be- lieve land, or wish-it-was land, but we are up against the realities with this amendment today. This is the first time we have got into the real hardware of the bill, outside the matter of the defen- sive ABM and I think most of the other amendments, at least the sizable ones, will continue to deal with the necessary hardware to implement our present pol- icy. Let us not fool ourselves, now, in talk- ing about whether or not we need a tank that will survive a nuclear war. I do not think we can make such a tank. We are talking about a ground war now, by con- ventional methods, and with reference to the tank, we are talking about the weapon in which Soviet Russia has been superior for a long time. The great Pre- ponderance of the evidence is that they still are superior. So, if we do have this ground war? which God forbid we do not have?we could not plan a better way to be de- ficient than not to have plenty of good, effective tanks that would at least have a chance to cope with those on the other side. I do not travel much, but last fall I did spend a little time in Western Europe, went right on over to the border of Czechoslovakia, went out in that mud and muck, and went up and over inside one of these tanks. I talked with those boys. I do not know anything about tanks, but that one did not look very much up to date to me. I will tell you where that word "dream tank" came from. This Is some of the roughest, toughest soldering that one can find anywhere, and the crew is a victim. I shall not emphasize this too much, but the crew, in a large way, is a victim of the position it is in, and the inaction or failure of that tank carries dire conse- quences for them. This is planned to be a tank that will do so many things so effectively and effi- ciently that it gives the crew a much better chance. That is one reason they call it a dream tank. If we mean business, now, about be- ing over there, and if there is any kind of a threat, let this be the last weapon we neglect, for fighting a ground war, rather than the first. This is a doughboy weapon. Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, I wish to commend the distinguished Sen- ator from Maine (Mrs. SMITH) for the excellent remarks she has made con- cerning the importance of the main bat- tle tank. The Senator from Maine has quite properly stressed that a break in this joint development program with West Germany would be a unilateral ac- tion which could only have the most seri- ous repercussions. My able colleague has also pointed out the critical need of our Army for a new tank since we have only had production improvements for the Past 20 years. The remarks of the Senator from Maine should be heeded by all of us in this Chamber and I wish to associate myself with them. Mr. PrfcINTYRE. Mr. President, the amendment offered by the distinguished Senator from Missouri would have the effect of withholding all R. Sz D. funds for fiscal year 1970 on the Main Battle Tank and, in addition, would withhold the funds for the procurement of 6 Pre- production prototypes which were plan- ned as the test vehicles to bring the tank to the point where full production could Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 august 8, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 9483 be initiated. Although the amendment calls for an investigation and study by the Comptroller General to be completed in 6 months, the result of the amendment would be a complete cessation of U.S. participation in the joint project. ...In my judgment, this would so com- pletely disrupt the contractual develop- ment efforts being carried on, both in the United States and Germany, as to force either termination of the Main Bat- tle Tank development completely or a further delay which would probably amount to several years. Mr. President, this is a result which, in my judgment, should not be taken lightly. The Main Battle Tank is not in- tended just as a nice thing to have, but as an essential weapon system which must be put in the hands of our troops if they are to successfully cope with the threat which they will face in the 1970's. Our intelligence tells us that at the pres- ent time the Russians have tanks in the hands of their troops which are superior in some aspects to the tanks the U.S. Army has. It is estimated that the tanks which the Soviet forces are operating today reflect a technology which is ap- proximately 10 years ahead of U.S. tech- nology. In addition, the best Russian tanks outnumber the best U.S. tanks by more than 3 to 1. With a tank force that is currently inferior, both in quality and numbers, we should not take lightly any action to disrupt the efforts to upgrade our tank force. And, Mr. President, there can be no question that this amendment, if it becomes law, will seriously?perhaps irreparably?disrupt the Main Battle Tank program. The main battle tank program has been, criticized because the initial re- search and development cost estimates have been revised upward a number of times. Mr. President, I am as concerned as any Member of this body about the rising cost of research and development and about the consistent record of the Defense Department in underestimating the ultimate cost of weapon system de- velopment. I recognize the difficulty of making precise estimates when a weap- on system is in the conceptual stage. It is clearly too early to make any kind of reliable estimate for an international program before the two countries even agree on the specific tank configuration, and this was the case in 1963 when a pre- liminary estimate of $80 million was made by United States and German tech- nical people. The 1965 estimates were somewhat more realistic but even these have grown?indeed, have doubled. I do not condone this growth any more than I condone the cost growth in the 0-5 or other Defense programs, but in fairness I think we should recognize that the causes of this growth in development costs have, in large part, reasonable ex- planations. They do not necessarily re- flect weaknesses in the program itself. For example, the estimates now include development of a joint heavy equipment transporter, a joint advanced component development program, and a gas turbine engine program which were not contem- plated in the 1965 development estimate. In addition, technical difficulties have contributed to the increased costs. Many developments are simply product im- provements in which existing designs are Improved component by component, re- sulting in evolutionary changes that do not represent major breakthroughs. However, the main battle tank is a revo- lutionary development in which higher development risks are accepted to pro- duce an all new tank which capitalizes on advanced engineering techniques and results in a major increase in capability. Again, I feel that the Defense De- partment has been guilty of over-opti- mistic planning is not allowing for addi- tional costs and time to solve these difficult technical problems which are associated with the revolutionary design. But it is this revolutionary design which will insure that the MBT-70 not only will not be obsolete when it is introduced but will be superior to any tank then existing on either side of the iron curtain. Congress has repeatedly criticized the Defense Department for rushing weap- ons systems into production before the development difficulties are completely resolved thereby incurring expensive retrofit after the production run has started. The Army has sought to mini- mize this kind of expense by applying conservative controls to place the devel- opment of the main battle tank, and this has contributed to both the delays in the development and to the increase in cost. Mr. President, I think that although the program has had problems, technical difficulties, growth in development cost beyond the original estimates, those problems are not the vital question now. What is vital is that our troops are equipped with inferior armor, in inferior numbers. This is a dangerous condition which decreases the deterrent value of our NATO forces in Europe and increases the possibility of a military adventure by the Communists which could have disastrous effects. The important thing at this point, Mr. President, is that we need a new tank. We need a new tank in numbers, and we need it as soon as it can become available. I think that the effect of this amendment would be to deny us the capability to produce an ad- vanced tank before the late 1970's. In my judgment, this is an unacceptable risk which we must not take. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, on June 13, 1969, Elmer Staats testified to the Subcommittee on Economy in Gov- ernment about the scope of GAO's in- volvement in the defense area. Mr. Staats stated that of the GAO's total op- erating budget for fiscal year 1969, of $59.6 million, over $30.1 million, or 50.5 percent is related to defense programs and activities. He said that the alloca- tion of GAO's resources in the account- ing, auditing, legal and other related functions in connection with defense spending amounts to 43 percent. The proposed GAO budget for fiscal year 1970 provides for a total professional audit staff of 2,585. Mr. Staats said: We continue to place heavy emphasis upon the major functional areas of defense activi- ties, including procurement, supply manage- ment, manpower, research and development, facilities and construction, support services, and management control systems. It is also well to remember that the Congress created the GAO to be its in- vestigative arm. The annual report of the Comptroller General states: The Congress established the General Ac- counting Office in the Legislative Branch to serve as an independent, nonpolitical and reliable source of assistance in carrying out its constitutional power over the public purse. The GAO periodically makes reports to Congress on its audits, investigations and evaluation requested by individual Members or committees. It annually issues literally hundreds of reports deal; ing with expenditures by the executive branch. These reports are designed to aid the Congress with information helpful in reviewing the annual budget requests. It should, therefore, be clear that the General Accounting Office was created to perform the kind of functions out- lined in this amendment, that it is em- minently equipped to do so with a large professional staff, and that it has the experience in the area of defense analy- sis that is called for. The GAO is the appropriate agency to undertake the study required by the amendment rather than the Bureau of the Budget or the Defense Department. would note the following: First. GAO is independent and re- sponsible to Congress. Second. GAO is building a systems analytic capability and currently has at least as much of this capability as BOB. Third. Neither BOB nor DOD could be expected to develop a report which would offend the President or the Secretary of Defense. The main battle tank, MBT-70, was conceived in 1963. It is being developed jointly by the United States and West Germany. Its purpose is to operate in the environment of a tactical nuclear war in Western Europe. The develop- ment of the tank had been scheduled for production by 1969, but it has now been deferred until 1974. The R. & D. costs of this weapon have risen from $86 million to over $300 million since 1963. In the current military authoriza- tion bill, there is a total of $55 million recommended by the Senate Armed Services Committee. This included $30 million for R. & D. and $24.5 million for production engineering. The Senate Armed Services Committee cut the R. & D. budget request of the Pentagon from $43.3 million. The Army intends to replace all of the M-60-A1 tanks which we now have deployed in Europe with the MBT-70. Currently, there are well over 1,000 Of these tanks in Western Europe. At the current estimated cost of producing the MBT-70 of between $600,000 and $700,- 000, per unit, it is estimated that the total cost of this program over the dec- ade of the 1970's would be in the neigh- borhood of $1.5 billion. The following points enumerate some of the circumstances surrounding the MBT-'70 which are pertinent to a Con- gressional decision to continue the R. & D. on this weapon. Developments in antitank warfare have far outdistanced tank warfare de- velopments. It is now possible for an , Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 4116"441. S9490 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 8, 1969 infantryman to knock out a tank with a guided missile which he carries with him in bazooka style. The MBT-70 is designed to be equipped with a Shillelagh missile. In this system, both the missile and 152-mm. cartridges are fired through the same tube mounted on the tank. This Shillelagh firing sys- tem is enormously complicated and has not yet been made to work. The Shil- lelagh was supposed to be installed on the Sheridan tank, but, because of in- herent design defects, it cOuld not be properly mounted. Even thetmh it was Produced and sent to Vietnam, where it became embroiled in a scandal because of serious firing failures in-battle. The same Shillelagh missile was Supposed to be attached to the M-60 tank, but again mounting problems as well as severe mis- firing troubles occurred. Currently there are hundreds of M-60 tanks waiting in Detroit for the Shillelagh missile which, according to the Stratton report, "still cannot be deployed because of deficien- cies." Costs of the MBT-70 are nnw projected to be about $600,000 to $700.000 for each vehicle. This is two and a half to three times as much as the M-60_tank, which we now possess, and whose performance is only marginally below that of the MBT-70. The Army intends to replace all of the M-60's which are now deployed in West- ern Europe with MBT-70's in the decade of the 1970's. It is known that there are currently well over 1,000 of the M-60 tanks now in Western Europe. If these are replaced by MBT-70's during the next decade, we are confronting a total budget cost of $65 billion or, more. If the Army receives the appropriation on the tank this year, the Congress will be very close to approving the production and deployment of this weapon. The M-60-A1 tank now, in Western Europe is at least equal to any tank now possessed by the Russians or in develop- ment by the Soviet Government. A num- ber of people with whom I-have spoken state that the M-60-A1 is superior to anything which the Soviets now have in development. While the Army has argued that there is a potential tank threat from the So- viets in the Western European theater, it should be noted that in 1958, a decade ago, their principal rationale for devel- oping a guided-missile capability on tanks was the alleged "possible superi- ority" of the Communist-bloc countries. In the recent report by the-Stratton sub- committee of the House, it was noted that that Soviet capability never devel- oped and now, some 10 years later, the M-60-A without the guided missile is "equal to or superior to Soviet-designed tanks." The Army insists that we are out- numbered in tank forces_ in Western Europe. The Stratton Subcommittee noted that the reason we are outnum- bered is because the Army failed to main- tain an adequate production rate of M-60's during the 1960's and indeed, "they slowed down the production line and even closed it in 1967 to produce the M-60 with Shillelagh missile, which still cannot be deployed because of de- ficiencies." The MBT-70 is designed to fight a war in Western Europe similar to World War II, only with tactical nuclear weapons instead of conventional weapons. Many strategists believe that such a con- tingency is no more than a remote pos- sibility. Moreover, the Congress to date has not fully considered the implications of tactical nuclear war on the European Continent. The characteristic of the tank which stands out in the minds of most of the people, both in the Pentagon and out, who are knowledgeable about this pro- gram, is the highly sophisticated tech- nology which is being built into it. I understand that there is built into every tank a computer for leveling and auto- matic loading and firing. Among these people, there is substantial skeptism con- cerning the ability of existing tech- nology to produce a workable vehicle. In fact, there is some well-based expecta- tion now that the Secretary of Defense judges the weapon to be an ultimately infeasible end and may well cancel it himself, if the Congress does not cancel it. Many people knowledgeable in the de- tails of this weapon have informed me that a major share of the high cost of this weapon is accounted for by the use of a special steel which is neutron ab- sorbing. In point of fact, if this is true, the Nation is spending a substantial amount of money?into the billions?to provide covering for a limited number of personnel who will be engaged in some prospective tactical nuclear war in Ger- many, France, the Netherlands, and so on. That there have been difficulties in de- signing the sophisticated equipment in this tank is evidenced by the cost growth in R. & D. In 1963, it was estimated that R. & D. would cost $86 million and that the tank would roll off the production line in 1969. Now the R. & D. cost has escalated to well over $300 million, and production target is now 1974. So far, the U.S. Government has spent over $30 million on the development of the 1500 horsepower turbine engine which, in the judgment of a number of people, may well not be technically feasible. While the MBT-70 might have been analyzed to be cost effective prior to 1965, it is now doubtful, given the esca- lated R. & D. costs, and given the doubts about technical feasibility, that it would still be cost effective. It is essential that this question be studied. Finally, I would make a number of other points which are pertinent to a decision on the MBT-70. If this weapon is produced and de- ployed in Western Europe under a joint agreement with West Germany, we will be in the process of supplying tactical nuclear weapons to Germany. I do not believe that this fact is widely recognized for, if it were, the same kind of opposi- tion to it would develop as did develop a few years ago on a similar issue. By providing a tactical nuclear weapon to NATO countries, it seems to me that the United States is directly undermin- ing its claims Concerning the effective- ness of its nuclear deterrence. If we are spending $10 billion to fight a tactical nuclear war, it is difficult to convince our NATO allies that our nuclear deterrence is sufficiently potent to forestall any potential Soviet attack. I would emphasize a point that I made earlier: namely, that Congress should not vote approval of a program such as MBT-70 without knowing the full budgetary implications of the system. This year, the Army requested $70 mil- lion of funds. This was cut to about $55 million by the Armed Services Com- mittee. If this $55 million comes close to committing the Nation to a $15 billion expenditure, it should be known by all participants to the decision prior to final decision. Mr. MAGNUSON. Mr. President, I have been listening to 2 days of debate here. I do not think it has been mentioned that at the other end of the spectrum is the Renegotiation Board, which has been operating for a long time. Of course, that Board passes on smaller amounts, but it passes on whether some- one has made an excess profit on a military contract. The Senator from Colorado (Mr. ALLOTT) and I have han- dled the small appropriations for that office for years. That Board is collecting many millions of dollars, and it has re- sponsibility over all military procure- ment contracts over, I think, $25,000, or whatever the figure is. So despite the procedure we have been talking about, at the other end of the spectrum There is the Renegotiation Board, which acts in a very nonpartisan manner. The Board has done a very good job. Does the Senator from Colorado agree? Mr. ALLOTT. I certainly do. Mr. STENNIS. I thank the Senator for his comments. Mr. EAGLETON. Mr. President, I with- draw my amendment, without prejudice. STUDENT LOANS Mr. JAVITS, Mr. President, certainly, sooner or later, the majority leader will make a statement on the program for to- day and next week. I would like to call attention to the fact that the Committee on Labor and .Public Welfare has just reported a bill which deals with the abil- ity of 200,000 college students to get student loans, and if we do not deal with that measure before we have a re- cess, very likely a large number of them may be denied the opportunity to spend the next year in college. I know the exi- gencies we are all under, and I only state It to submit it to the majority and mi- nority leaders. I would hope they might find some way of accommodating the serious situation. Thirty members of the Senate are cosponsors of that bill. I MEV add that the measure takes no money, because the money has been appropri- ated. It is just a matter d using it for this particular purpose. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, may I say that the joint leadership will do Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 August 8, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE "(b) None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this or any other Act may be used for the procurement of delivery systems specifically designed to disseminate lethal chemical agents, disease-producing biological micro-organisms, or biological toxins, or for the procurement of any part or component of such delivery system. '(c) None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this or any other Act may be uSed for future deployment and storage of any lethal chemical agent or any disease- producing biological microorganism or any biological toxin at any place outside the United States, or for the deployment at any place outside the United States of delivery systems designed to disseminate any such agent or microorganism or toxin unless the country exercising jurisdiction over such place haS prior notice of such action. In the case of any place outside the United States which is under the jurisdiction or control of the Government of the United States, no such action may be taken unless prior notice ? of such action has been given to the Com- mittee on Armed Services, the Committee on Foreign Relations, the Committee on Appro- priations and, when appropriate, the Com- mittee on Interior and Insular Affairs of the Senate, and the Committee on Armed Serv- ices, the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Committees on Appropriations and, when appropriate, the Committee on Interior and Insular AffairS of the House of Representa- tives. As used in this section the term 'United States' means the several States and the Dis- trict of Columbia. "(d) (1) None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this Act or any other Act shall be used for the transportation of any lethal chemical or biological agents to or from any military installation in the United States, its territorieS or possessions unless the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service has determined that such transporta- tion will not present a hazard to the public health. "(d) (2) The Secretary of Defense, except during a war declared by Congress or during a national emergency declared by Congress or the President after the enactment of this legislation, shall provide written notification to the Congress, to the Secretary of Trans- portation, to the Secretary of Health, Educa- tion, and Welfare and to the Interstate Com- merce Commission at least thirty days in advance of any operation involving the trans- portation of lethal chemical or biological agents to or from any military installation in the United States, its territories, or posses- sions. The Secretary of Defense shall provide appropriate notification to the Governor of any State through which such agents be transported. "(d) (3) The Department of Defense shall detoxify all lethal chemical or biological agents before their transportation for dis- posal as provided for in subsection (e) (1) and (e) (2) of this section whenever it is practical to do so. "(e) None of the funds authorized by this or any other Act shall be used for the testing, development, transportation, storage, or dis- posal of any chemical or biological weapon outside of the continental limits of the United States unless the Secretary of State determines that such testing, development, transportation, storage, or disposal will not violate international law and reports such determination to the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Represent- atives, and to the appropriate international organizations, or organs thereof, whenever required by treaty or other international agreement. "(f) None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this or any other Act shall be used for the open air testing of lethal chemi- cal agents, disease-producing biological mi- croorganisms, or biological toxins except upon S 9491 what it can. It certainly will not consider laying aside the present business un- less we have the concurrence of the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. STENNIS) and the ranking Republican member, the senior Senator from Maine (Mrs. SMITH) ; but if something could be worked out on the basis of a time limi- tation, we would be glad to give it our consideration. But if it is going to be a "dog fight," as it could well develop into, I think we would have to consider that. But we will do what we can, with- out being too definite. Mr. FELL. Mr. President, I would like to associate myself with the views ex- pressed by the Senator from New York. Mr. MANSFIELD. Probably it would help get the Senator from New York and the Senator from Rhode Island off my back if we could agree to it. AU RIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MISSILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RESERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- priations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat ve- hicles and to authorize the construction of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Re- serve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. Mr. NELSON. iVfr. President, I call at- tention to the absence of a quorum. Mr. MANSFIELD A quorum call is agreeable, provided that the Senator does not lose his right to the floor. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. The clerk will call the roll. The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator from Wisconsin yield? Mr. NELSON. I yield. AMENDMENT NO. 131 Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, at this time I offer an amendment to S. 2546. The amendment concerns chemical and biological warfare. Senators NELSON, GOODELL, HUGHES, PROXMIRE, YARBOROTIGH, PELL, HARTKE, MONDALE, STEVENS, and I are listed as co- sponsors of the amendment. Mr. President, the amendment repre- sents an effort to deal with amendments previously offered by these Senators. Those amendments are numbered 114, 116, 117, 118, 120, and 121. Mr. President, these amendments of- fered by the Senators for the most part are concerned with various rules and regulations that they would like to see incorporated into the law to serve as ef- fective guidelines and controls over the storage, transportation, disposal, and maintenance of chemical and biological agents?and includes also the Senator from Wisconsin's and the Senator from New York's amendment concerning open-air testing of lethal agents. The staff of my Subcommittee on Re- search and Development of the Com- mittee on Armed Services, together with the staffs of the various Senators in- volved, have worked to try to incorporate into the amendment I have just pre- sented the essentials of the various amendments offered. I believe that has been done with satisfaction. In sub- stance, a great deal of the ideas and the thrust of the amendments offered have been taken. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Will the Senator send his amendment to the desk, so that it may be read? Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that reading of the amendment be dispensed with at this time. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. ALLOTT addressed the chair. Mr. NELSON. I yield to the Senator from Colorado. Mr. ALLOTT. I wish to reserve the right to object to unanimous consent concerning dispensing with the reading. Does the Senator plan to read it at a later time? I think the Senate should be informed of the contents of the amendment. Mr. McINTYRE. I think the point the Senator from Colorado raises is a good one. The usual procedure, as the Sena- tor knows, is to dispense with the read- ing, in the interest of time. Mr. ALLOTT. All I am doing is in- quiring whether the Senator intends to read it or to make it available to us later. If he does, I shall not object. Mr. McINTYRE. I had not intended to read it because of the lateness of the hour, but I think the point is well taken. I do not want to give the appearance of rushing too fast on this important amendment. We have been in consulta- tion with the chairman of the Commit- tee on Armed Services and the ranking Republican member. Mr. ALLOTT. If a copy is available to us, I will not object. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. CRANSTON in the chair). Without objec- tion, reading of the amendment is dis- pensed with; and, without objection, the amendment will be printed in the RECORD. The amendment is as follows: At the end of the bill add a new section as follows: "CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WARFARE "SEC. 402. (a) The Secretary of Defense shall submit semiannual reports to the Con- gress on or before January 31 and on or before July 31 of each year setting forth the purposes of and the amounts spent during the preceding six-month period for research, development, test, evaluation, and procure- ment of lethal and nonlethal chemical and biological agents. The Secretary shall in- clude in such reports an explanation of such expenditures including the necessity there- for. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Aft,tak.,_ S 9492 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 8, 1969 a determination by the Secretary of Defense, The third amendment sponsored by Mr. MANSFIELD The joint leadership under guidelines provided by the President Senator GOODELL and myself, as part of will have no objection. of the United States, that an open air test is necessary for the nation.al security, and then the consolidated amendment, provides The PRESIDING OFFICE& How is only after a separate determination y b the that none of the funds appropriated by the time to be divided? Surgeon General, within thirty days of the this act shall be used for the open-air UNANIMODS-CONSENT AGREEMENT determination of the President, that the test testing of lethal chemical agents, disease Mr. MANSFIELD. First, I ask unani- proposed will not present a hazard to the producing biological micro-organisms, or mous consent that the vote on the pend- public health. The Secretary of Defense shall biological toxins except on determination ing amendment take place at 12 o'clock report his determination and that of the by the Secretary of Defense, under noon on Monday next. Surgeon General, to the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on Labor and Public guidelines provided by the President of The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without Welfare, and the Committee GU Appropria- the United States, that an open-air test objection, it is so ordered. and Foreign Commerce and the Committee on is necessary for the national security; Mr. MANSFIELD. I ask unanimous Armed Services, the Committee on Interstate and then only after a separate determi- consent that the time be equally divided between the minority and Ma- jority leaders or whomever they may designate. The PRESIDENT OFFICER. Without, objection, it is so ordered. Mr. MANSFULLD, Mr. President, there will be a rollcall vote at 12 o'clock noon on Monday, if I did not state it. The unanimous-consent agreement, subsequently reduced to writing, is as follows: and Foreign Commerce and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representa- tives at least 30 days prior to any actual teat. The Secretary of Defense shall set forth in his report the name of the agents, micro- organisms, or toxins to be tested, the time and place of any test, and the reasons there- for." Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, as the Senator from New Hampshire has stated, this amendment consolidates several amendments introduced by several Sen- ators and was worked out with the staff of Senator MCINTYRE'S subcommittee and the staffs of Senators who are au- thors of the various amendments. The consolidated amendment, as I have stated, contains aeveral amend- ments by other Senators. I would be happy to explain the three amendments that were introduced by the Senator from New York (Mr. GOODELL) and my- self. Mr. ALLOTT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. NELSON. I yield. Mr. ALLOTT. I assume the Senator is speaking to me?at least he is looking at me. Mr. NELSON. No, Senator GOODELL co- sponsored three amendments that are now incorporated. Mr. ALLOTT. I just want to say that I now have a copy of the amendment. Mr. NELSON. Then, instead of read- ing the amendment, I might just sum- marize the three for which the Senator from New York and I were responsible. I assume that the other authors of the various parts of this consolidated amendment will in their remarks ex- plain that aspect of the consolidated amendment which was introduced by them. The first of the amendments jointly sponsored by the Senator from New York (Mr. Gomm.) and myself simply provides that none of the funds in this bill shall be used for the procurement of delivery systems to dissemieale lethal chemical agents or disease-producing bi- ological microorganisms. The other amendment we jointly spon- sored which is part of the consolidated amendment provides that none of the funds appropriated by this Act may be used for deployment or storage of any lethal chemical agent outside the United States?I am trying to consolidate this; I will not read all of it?without prior notice to the country involved where it is stored, and unless prior notice is given to the Committee on Foreign Relations, the Committee on Appropriations, the Committee on Interior and Insular Af- fairs, and the Committee on Armed Serv- ices. nation by the Surgeon General, within 30 days of the determination of the Presi- dent, that the test proposed will not pre- sent hazards to the public health. The Secretary of Defense shall report this de- termination and that of the Surgeon General to the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate, and to the Committee on Armed Services, the Com- mittee on Interstate and Foreign Com- merce, and the Committee on Appropria- tions of the House of Representatives at least 30 days prior to any actual test. The Secretary of Defense, pursuant to this amendment, shall set forth in his report the name of the agents, micro- organisms, or toxins to be tested, the time and place of any test, and the rea- sons therefor. Mr. MANSriELD. Mr. President, is the Senator through with his explanation? Mr. NELSON. Of the three amend- ments I have. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield to me briefly, before the other cosponsors of these amendments speak? Mr. NELSON. I yield. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, the joint leadership has discussed the ques- tion of a vote tonight on the amendment which was offered by the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire, the chair- man of the subcommittee dealing with this matter in the Committee on Armed Services, and one of the authors of the proposal now before the Senate. We think we have reached agreement. We will find out shortly. I ask unanimous consent that the vote on the pending amendment take place at 12 o'clock noon on Monday next. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Reserving the right to object, what time is the Senate to meet on Monday? Mr. MANSFIELD. Ten a.m. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Has permission been granted for a meeting of the com? - mittee? I ask that for this reason: We would like very much the opportunity to act upon particularly the Peace Corps matter which is pending. There was an amendment to it, and we could not act. We did not have a quorum. All I want is to have an opportunity to act if I can get a quorum. Is that permissible? Mr. MANSFIELD. Yes. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator speak a little louder? Mr. MANSFIELD. The Senator from Arkansas wanted to know about com- mittees meeting on Monday morning. That will be all right. Mr. F'ULBRIGHT. If we can get a quorum, we would like to act on a matter. Ordered, That the Senate proceed to vote at 12 noon Monday, August 11, 1969, on the amendment offered by Senator MCINTYRE and others, relative to chemical and biolog- ical warfare (No. 131). Provided further, That debate on the amendment, beginning at 11 o'clock be equally divided and controlled by the ma- jority and minority leaders, or someone des- ignated by them. Mr. MeINTYRE. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. NELSON. I yield. Mr. MeINTYRE, Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that various amend- ments, as originally introduced by the Senators I have referred to in my re- marks, be placed in the RECORD at this time so there will be a comparison be- tween these amendments and the amend- ment I introduced on behalf of all of them. There being no objection, the amend- ments were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: AMENDMENT 114 At the end of the bill add a new section as follows: "SEC. 402. None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this or any other Act may be used for open air tests of lethal chem- ical agents or pathogenic biological micro- organisms or biological toxins." AMENDMENT 115 At the end of the bill add a new section as follows: "SEC. 402. None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this or any other Act may be used for the procurement of de- livery systems designed to disseminate lethal chemical agents, pathogenic biological micro- organisms, or biological toxins, or for the procurement of any part or component of such delivery systems." AMENDMENT 116 At the end of the bill add a new section as follows: "SEC. 402. None of the funds authorized to be appropriated by this or any other Act may be used for the storage or deployment of any lethal chemical agent or any patho- genic biological micro-organism or any bio- logical toxin at any place outside the United States, or for the deployment at any place outside the United States of delivery sys- tems designed to disseminate any such agent or micro-organism or toxin unless the coun- try exercising jurisdiction over such place has prior notice of such action. In the case of Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved Forc-1651'"NunONNOOrifFIZIAINA614LR000300100001-3 S 9493 August 8, 1969 any place outside the United States which is under the jurisdiction or control of the Government of the United States, no such action may be taken unless prior notice of such action has been given to the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on For- eign Relations, the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate and the Com- mittee on Armed Services, the Committee on Foreign Affairs, the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, and the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representa- tives. As used in this section the term `Unit- ed States' means the several States, and the District of Columbia." AMENDMENT 117 At the end of the bill add a new section as follows: "SEc. 402. None of the funds authorized by this or any other Act shall be used for the testing, development, transportation, or dis- posal of any chemical or biological weapon unless the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service determines that such testing, development, transportation, or disposal w' not present a hazard to the public health AMENDMENT 118 At the end of the bill add a new se ion as follows: "SEC. 402. The Secretary of Defen, shall submit semiannual reports to the C ngress on or before January 31 and on or ?efore July 31 of each year setting fort the amounts expended during the precedin six- month period for research, development, est, evaluation, and procurement of lethal che t- eal agents and for lethal biological agen s, and amounts expended for such purpos during such six-month period on other majo categories of chemical and biological agents of a nonlethal nature. The Secretary shall in- clude in such reports an explanation of such expenditures including the necessity there- for." Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays on the pending amend- ment. The yeas and nays were ordered. AMENDMENT 120 At the end of the bill add a new section as follows: "SEC. 402. (a) The Secretary of Defense shall provide written notification to the Con- gress, to the Secretary of Transportation, to the Secretary of Health, Education, and Wel- fare, and to the Chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commission at least thirty days in advance of any operation involving the transportation of any lethal chemical or bio- logical agent to or from any military installation. ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I wish to query the distinguished majority leader for a moment about the business of the Senate before the midsummer re- cess, and that means Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, because I believe we agreed that the recess starts at the end of business on Wednesday, August 13. Therefore, we have until t The question is wj,ot4rr Seantors will be on hand. Thereare invitations out- standing, such'as invitations for the din- ner for ..the astronauts in Los Angeles, and?..ether affairs which could possibly t 'e Senators away. I believe the lead- rship has to know. I would want to pre- vail on Senators to remain here under those circumstances if we are going to work right up to the end of that day. I would like to know if it is likely there will be rollcall votes. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, in re- sponse to the question raised by the dis- tinguished minority, leader, it is true that a number of Senators have received in- vitations to attend the state dinner for the astronauts in Los Angeles on the evening of Wednesday, August 13. There will be votes on Monday, Tues- day, and very likely Wednesday. I would hope, though, that those who intend to go to Los Angeles or those who have ac- epted the invitation would not enter eir declinations yet, but that they w uld, if at all possible, be prepared to go o honor these men and their achieve- me ts. T joint leadership will do its best to t to enable an early departure. I suppo the last plane would leave about 2 o'cloc , 3 o'clock, or 4 o'clock. We will come in early on Wednesday to get as much bu ness as possible out of the way. It does not appear at this moment, however, t at we would be able to finish the bill b Wednesday. We will make every effort to do so, but in view of state- ments whic have been made and com- ments whip I have heard as to the length of t e to be spent on some of these amen ents?and I know of 10 amendment at the moment and there may be mor it seems to be only a very long shot t t we could finish by Wed- nesday. Therefore, the best advice I can give is that those who are going to Los Angeles go at the last minute, and if events in- dicate we could finish at the last min- ute they might have to change their minds. It is not very good advice but it is the best we have. My present guess is that this measure will be the pending business when we return on September 3, after going into recess at the conclusion of business on August 13. Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, will the Senator from Wisconsin yield further? Mr. NELSON. I yield. ? Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I would like to ask the distinguished majority leader one more question, and I assure "(b) The Secretary of Defense shall givc all due consideration to the public health and safety in operations involving the trans- portation of any lethal chemical or biological agent to or from any military installation, shall maintain strict adherence to all Federal safety regulations in every case, and shall detoxify lethal chemical and biological agents before transportation for disposal when prac- ticable to do so." AMENDMENT 121 At the end of the bill add the following new section: "SEC. 402. None of the funds authorized by this or any other Act shall be used for the testing, development, transportation, storage, or disposal of any chemical or biological weapon outside of the continental limits of the United States unless the Secretary of State determines that such testing, develop- ment, transportation, storage, or disposal will not violate international law and reports such . determination to the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate and the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the House of Represent- atives, and to the appropriate international organizations, or organs thereof, whenever required by treaty or other international agreement." Approved For Rele him it is asked in the utmost of good faith and it is done only as a precaution that I think I always have to exercise in matters of this kind. Is there, in the judgment of the ma- jority leader, a likelihood that an amendment in the nature of the Cooper- Hart proposal, or a similar proposal, is likely to be offered, and would such a proposal be offered on Wednesday if we just let Members go to this astronaut dinner and they would not be here to vote? Mr. MANSFIELD. There is no such proposal that I know of and I note that the distinguished Senator from Ken- cky (Mr. COOPER) ?and the distin- gu1ied Senator from Michigan (Mr. HAR are nodding in agreement with me. If anyone tried to do something like that on Wednesday, with Members not present, I would object most strenuously. Mr. DIRKSEN. I am quite satisfied with the assurances of the majority leader on that point because if it were done it would complicate the vote, and there would have to be a rollcall vote, and we would have to let it go until we returned. Mr. MANSFIELD. If it did happen, the Senator from Montana would be pre- pared to start reading the Bible from the beginning. - Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. NELSON. I yield. Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, in view of the fact that the Senator from New Hampshire made some remarks on the floor of the Senate this afternoon in the absence of both the majority leader and the minority leader, I feel that in fair- ness I should repeat those remarks. I think my record after 15 years in the Senate bears out the statement that I have never presumed to tell the leader- ship of the Senate what to do or to offer them unsolicited advice. But I did say in the absence of both the majority leader and the minority leader, and, therefore, I feel in honor I should repeat it while they are present, that I am com- pelled to say that I feel it is a distinct mistake on the part of the Senate to start the recess until this bill is dis- posed of. We all know that when a matter is put over until we come back, the ar- guments and the contests start all over again ad infinitum. We all know, I think, that full expression and discussion of these very vital questions, are not neces- sarily promoted by extending them over days and days, because we have all seen lengthy arguments with only five Sen- ators in this Chamber, go on hour after hour for 2 or 3 days. I do not know how many Senators faithfully read all those arguments, but I have grave doubts that they do. Actually, full consideration of a vital matter is more likely to take place if it is condensed to 2 or 3 hours than if it continues over 2 or 3 days, because that means there is going to be a vote, and Senators are present to hear the ar- guments on both sides. I am one who has made plans and I do want to get away, but I think the Senate or the leadership should deter- mine that this very important bill, which ase 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S9494 Approved For itEeRiKkimios,:itt-8.RE71BRBA6400300100001-3 is so vital to the defense of the United States, should be disposed of and should be disposed of even if we have to return on Thursday or Friday. I think everyone would be pleasantly surprised and amazed at how succinct and to the point arguments would become, And that this bill could be and would be disposed of before midnight on Wednesday. I know it is presumptious to make this suggestion, but I feel that must register this sentiment, because I Am convinced that the people of this country are not happy to see us go into recess with so much coming along, such Ss the tax bill and all the rest, without disposing of this matter. Because I said all this earlier, I felt that I should say it now. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ap- preciate the candor of the diAinguished Senator from New Hampshire. As always, he is frank and straightforward. But a promise has been made to the member- ship and that promise will be kept. Fortunately, there is not a great deal on the calendar at the present time. The Senate is reasonably current with its work. When we convene in September, I anticipate that the NASA authoriza- tion bill will be considered at the con- clusion of the pending busine- s. At that time also, the stypropriation bill on the Interior Department will be reported; and other meastues will be passing out of committees. All commit- tees, I might add, are working assiduously. It is therefore my belief that this break will be a good thing for the Senate. It is my impression that the business of the Senate has become a 12-mouth opera- tion. Unlike the judges of the Federal courts, including the Supreeie Court, Senators do not have 3 or 4 months off. We have to go home to visit our con- stituents and take time off only when chance occurs. Especially is the younger Members of the Senate who would like to spend a little tirne with their growing families during the year. Accordingly, I have no compunction at all?none at all?in stating that the promise made will be kept. At the same time, I rive nize the frankness and the feeling on the part of the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire. It would be my le ye, and I think it would be a sound one, that prac- tically all the amendments which will be offered to this bill are now at the desk, or will be submitted in the net day or so. So by the time we come ba'- in Sep- tember, this matter will have b pretty thoroughly discussed. The country will have a good idea of what the senate has done And I am not at all sure that the people will be unappreciative of what has been done in this body, even if it has taken weeks where formerly It took only days. Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, to amp- lify and fortify what the distmguished majority leader has just said, he and I ? at together the last week in January and we agreed on the recess milted. They were announced. Cards were printed and delivered to every Member. Accordingly, Members made their plans Months and months ago as to what they would do during this 3-week period. It would therefore be something of a breach of faith if we undertook now to undo those plans in the interest of the pending legislation. Lacking the gift of prophecy, and not having the divine power of piercing the veil of the future, we could not tell last January what was going to happen in the course of the legislative session, or know that at this time we would be working on a matter for a period of 5 weeks. I believe that the majority leader is so eminently correct, that we should go through with our plans in the interest of our families. I speak particularly of the younger Members of the' Senate, who have sub- stantial families of School age, who are taken out in June and taken home, and will be brought back here in September. What an awkward situation for a Sen- at,or that he cannot have some time to go home and be with his children before they have to go back to school. Thus, that is the whole story. That is the reason behind it. It is the fruit of nearly 4 or 5 years of constant effort in this field before it was consummated. Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, I hope I do not need to say that the remark,s of the Senator from New Hampshire are in no way in disrespect to the majority and minority leaders. No Senator in this body has a higher regard for, or has enjoyed more kindness from them than the Senator from New Hampshire. I ac- cept their verdict. I certainly want to be obedient and a good soldier. I will say, however, that my opinion is unchanged. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- priations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and to authorize the construction of test fa- cilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WARFARE Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, in 1926, just 8 years after World War I, General of the Armies John J. Pershing sent a letter to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to warn of the dangers of chemical warfare. Just 8 years before, he had led American troops in the first world war?the first war where deadly gases were extensively used. The effects of those gases so horrified him that the famous general was moved to warn the Senate: Chemical warfare should be abolished among nations as abhorrent to civilization. It is a cruel, unfair, and improver use of AYE August 8, iva science. It is fraught with the gravest danger to noncombatants and demoralizes the bet- ter instincts of mankind. Scientific research may discover a gas so deadly that it will produce instant death-- I might say, as an aside, that that has been accomplished-- To sanction the use of gas in any form would be to open the way foe the Use of the most deadly gases and the possibIe poisoning of whole populations of noncombatant men, women, and children. The contemplation of such a result is shocking to the senses. And then to add emphasis, the general, who was the first and only general of the armies, who had seen years of com- bat and who was known for his tough- ness and valor, argued: It is unthinkable that civilization would deliberately embark upon such a course. Pershing's letter came nearly a year after the nations of the world gathered to draw up the "1925 Geneva Protocol for the Prohibition of the Use in War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous, or Other Gases and of Bacteriological Methods of War." The Geneva Conference had been called because there was worldwide re- vulsion over the use of poisonous gases during the First World War, during which gases, that caused 1.3 million cas- ualties including 91,000 deaths on both sides, were used. At that Conference, the United States stood in the forefront in moving to outlaw such gases. Although the United States signed the treaty, the Senate refused to ratify it. Eventually 42 nations ratified the agreement. The United States was not among them and Is still not among them. By the 1930's it became known that Russia, Japan, and Germany were ac- tively researching and testing chemical and biological warfare devices. Even though there were accusations among the major powers that chemical warfare was being conducted, it was apparent that none of these agents was ever au- thorized for combat use during World War II. In the closing days of the war, Hitler made a frightening decision to begin sending the newly developed nerve gases to his losing armies in the field as an- other in the line of last-ditch attempts to stop the Allied momentum. In relating what happened after Hit- ler made that decision, Albert Speer, Hit- ler's Minister of Production, told a Nur- emberg court in 1947 that rumors of the possible use of the gases reached the factories where the chemicals were being produced. Speer testified: When rumors reached us that gas might be used, I stopped its production in Novem- ber 1944. All sensible army people turned gas warfare down as being utterly insar c, since, in view of (America's) superiority in the air, it would not be long before it would bring the most terrible catastrophe upon German cities. In the previous year, 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt had come forward with a major decision as the Commander In Chief concerning chemical-biological warfare. In unequivocal words he had made a pledge that has carried to this clay and has been described as making Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 The Senate met at 10:30 o'clock a.m., on the expiration of the recess, and was called to order by the Vice President. Rabbi Chaim U. Lipschitz, D.D., man- aging editor, the Jewish Press, Brooklyn, N.Y., offered the following prayer: Our G-d and the G-d of our fathers, be Thou with the mouths of the deputies of this worthy Senate of the United States of America who stand in Thy presence. Teach them what they shall say. In- struct them what they shall speak. Grant their petitions and cause them to know how to glorify Thee. May they walk in the light of Thy countenance. May they bend their knees unto Thee, and with their mouths bless Thy people. Bless them altogether with the blessings of Thy mouth. Amen. THE JOURNAL Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Journal of the proceedings of Wednesday, August 6, 1969, be approved. The VICE PRESIDENT. Without ob- jection, it is soot:50,04 AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The VICE PRESIDENT. The Chair lays before the Senate the unfinished business, which will be stated. The LEGISLATIVE CLERK. A bill (S. 2546) to authorize appropriations dur- ing the fiscal year 1970 for procure- ment of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and to au- thorize the construction of test facilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to pre- scribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each Reserve Component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill. Mr. MoINTYRE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that, during the con- sideration of the pending question, which I believe to be my amendment, the privilege of the floor may be granted to my administrative assistant, Larry K. Smith, and to my legislative assistant, Alan Novins. The VICE PRESIDENT. Without ob- jection, it is so ordered. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The VICE PRESIDENT. The clerk will call the roll. Senate THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1969 (Legislative day of Tuesday, August 5, 1969) The legislative clerk proceeded te call the roll. Mr. HARTKE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The VICE PRESIDENT. Without ob- jection, it is so ordered. ORDER OF BUSINESS The VICE PRESIDENT. Under the previous order, the Chair recognizes the Senator from Indiana for a period of 30 minutes. SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION 145? APOLLO SUCCESS ILLUMINATES EARTHY FAILURES?INTRODUC- TION. OF A JOINT RESOLUTION Mr. HARTKE. Mr. President, the suc- cessful flight of Apollo 11 ranks among the greatest technological achievements of all time. We are grateful to Almighty God that the astronauts have returned safely to us. The spirit of their dazzling adventure has touched all of us, reviving our own spirit, and restoring our own capacity for adventure. Adding to our sense of amazement and wonder is the almost equally spectacular achievement of our Mars probe?Mariner 6?with its closer-than-ever television pictures of that legendary planet. In the exhilaration of this moment, Mr. President, it is instructive to re- member that the Apollo project has not always been a cause for cheer and ac- claim. Eight years have passed since a trip to the Moon in this decade became our national goal. We must never forget that those 8 years are marked with fail- ure and tragedy as well as with success and reward. When President John F. Kennedy made the Apollo program a na- tional priority in April 1961, few were prepared to look beyond the remote promise of his words?few were pre- pared to test themselves against the task at hand. But vigorous leadership in Govern- ment helped to convince the American people that the goal could and should be met. The organization of NASA, the development of new, more powerful rocket boosters, the training of men: and building of machines, the development of sophisticated computers, the millions of man-hours, the three lives lost, and the billions of dollars spent?none of this would have been possible without a profound sense of national dedication. Only the tireless efforts of business, labor, education, science, and technology could have made a trip to the moon pos- sible. And only leadership in Govern- ment?provided by three successive ad- ministrations with the support and en- couragement of the Congress?could have guided and coordinated these efforts with the efficiency needed to reach our goal on schedule. But the Moon shot is behind us, and our euphoria has already been inter- rupted by the urgent need to establish a new set of national goals. In our thoughts about the future, however, we will do well to learn from the success of our space program?that program was a success because the goal had been set with care. Some goals are better than others, and we must make our choice with strict standards in mind. The best kind of national goal is some- thing like a valuable prize dangling in front of us from the end of a stick. If the stick is too short, we will not have to move forward to reach the prize, and we will make no progress. If the stick is too long, we will not be able to see the prize, and we will make no effort to reach it. Only when the stick is just the right length will we move forward. Psychol- ogists have an expression for the proper length of the stick?they call it "op- timal stress." If the goals we set for our- selves place an optimal stress on our capabilities, we will make progress as a nation at the fastest rate possible. In 1961, the Moon was far enough away to inspire our imagination, but close enough to keep our spirit alive. In addition to being just the right length, of course, the stick has to point us in the proper direction. Some national goals inspire dedication for the wrong purposes. The pyramids of Egypt, the Colosseum in Rome, the palace at Ver- sailles?all mark the ruin of great na- tions which wasted vast resources on vanity and self-indulgence. I do not believe that the space pro- gram represents such a waste. Contrary to what some appear' to believe, the re- sources expended in the Apollo program could not have been simply transferred to other worthy endeavors. Like any goal that points us in the right direction, the Apollo program generated its own re- sources?the inspiration and the dedi- cation that grew out of the Apollo pro- gram were not "taken" from any other project; they were unique to the goal they served so well. But this is not to say that other goals cannot inspire similar dedication. Just as space exploration held a deserved pri- ority in the 1960's, so should human needs on Earth be given special atten- tion in the 1970's. This need on Earth has been drama- tized by our exploits in space. While the astronauts walked on the Moon, men on Earth felt unsafe walking on city streets. While the astronauts took special precautions to protect themselves in the vacuum of space, men on Earth sought better protection from a dangerously 89329 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9330 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 7, 1969 polluted atmosphere. While the astro- nauts looked for signs of water on the Moon, men on Earth were discovering that their own clean water supply was jeopardized by contamination and care- less disposal of industrial waste. As mil- lions of dollars were being spent to develop and supply the astronauts with a perfect "space diet," men on Earth con- tinued to suffer needlessly from mal- nutrition. Clearly, the time has come to turn our attention to these human needs in some systematic fashion. In his column of July 18, 1969, the dis- tinguished journalist, James 1 leston, ob- served: The American mind and the American political system seem to need great chal- lenges and clear goals to work at their best. Mr. Reston went on to suggest that an attempt to achieve "certain definite social and economic objectives" by the year 1976?the bicentennial of the Declara- tion of Independence?could provide just the kind of challenge that moves us as a people to our noblest and most creative efforts. Reston did not try to elaborate the details of those objectives, but I think that any of us here could compose a list that would win general approval through- out the Nation. Taken together, it would depict an America in which at least these things would be possible: Every man, woman, and child would have an adequate diet, decent housing, and essential health care; Every young person would receive all the education and job training he can usefully absorb; All of us could walk the streets of our cities, day or night, without fear; The appalling pollution of our air and waters would be eliminated; Economically gainful, socially useful employment would be available to all who want to work; Dependable, high-speed public trans- portation would move people to their jobs and then home again in comfort and safety; The ugly stain of racism would be well on its way to the status of an uncom- fortable memory; Our older citizens would be able to re- tire with the dignity and security to which they are entitled. Our youth would once again see in America "the last, best hope of man- kind," and see themselves as participants in their Nation's dreams, not commenta- tors on a nation's failures. Mr. President, this is one list of ob- jectives we might set for ourselves to achieve within the next 7 years. It is neither definitive nor exhaustive. Others may wish to add to it or to ar- range its items in some order or pri- ority. But its most important features are obvious to all: it deals with human needs, it is specific, and it is attainable. In other words, the stick is just the right length, and it points us in the right direction. Five years ago?perhaps even 5 months ago?such an ambitious Pro- grain may have seemed visionary. But the flight of Apollo 11 has transformed us into a nation of visionaries?hard- headed, practical visionaries of the kind (cur Founding Fathers must surely have been, when, to quote James Reston again, The whole idea of America was to create a society nobody had ever created before. The flight of Apollo 11 has that the gift of vision is simply ap- propriate in setting 9.5E meeting na- tional goals?it is Jaolutely necessary. We have been own how men can transform visioy into reality through a combination of resources uniquely abundant in is uniquely blessed land? technology, 4vealth, and skilled labor. Add to hese the less tangible, but equally n cessary, resources of imagina- tion an will and you have the sum to- tal of t e ingredients needed to accom- plish t e objectives I have outlined here today. Sur y no one doubts that we have the i agination. But imagination by itself i not enough. Shall our children be fore d to stand before the bar of his- tory a confess that we, their fore- bears, 1 ked the will?only the will? to trans rm the dreams of 1776 into the realit of 1976? Rhetoric an set goals, but only con- centrated, ? urposeful action can achieve them, he rhetoric of President John F. Kenne set the goal of landing men on the moo and bringing them home safely by 1971. The concentrated, purposeful action of s of thousands of Americans?scienti , engineers, businessmen and working en, the in- comparably gallant astron ts them- selves, and, yes, even Member of Con- gress and of the Executive?the ctions of these tens of thousands of m and women made that extraordinary on- quest of space a reality. Mr. President, I should like now urge the Congress to undertake one es sential first step toward fulfilling the% dreams of 1776 within the next '7 years. Ix I introduce today a Senate joint resolu- tion establishing a joint committee of the Congress to define specific national goals and to recommend means to im- plement them by not later than 1976. The Joint Committee on National Goals, as I suggest it be Called, would be com- posed of 10 Members from the Senate and 10 from the House, appointed by the Presiding Officers of the two Cham- bers. It would be directed to prepare a interim report for submission to - gress not later than March 1, 19 , and to have its final report ready prepa- ration to the 92d Con s not later . That final re- than January 15 port would include a statement of real- istic, attainable national goals and rec- ommendations as to the legislative and administrative means for achieving them by 1976. The problems that American society faces are immense, but they can be solved. That is the greatest lesson we can learn from the saga of Apollo 11. Not only can we solve difficult problems; we can do so in a limited period of time. It is appropriate that future national goals be set by the guiding, beckoning star of our Nation's 200th birthday. I say again, Mr. President, we possess every material and intellectual resource we need to set and to achieve our na- tional goals. Absent only is a clear and realistic definition of those goals, and the will to dedicate ourselves to their realization. Let us here, today, in the Congress of he United States, show that we do in- have the determination and the will to re-dagicate ourselves, through action, to the an-tient, eternally youthful promise of America. I ask unanimous consent, Mr. Presi- dent, that the text of the joint resolution be printed in the RECORD immediately following my remarks. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. PACKWOOD in the chair) . The joint reso- lution will be received and appropriately referred, and, without objection, the joint resolution will be printed in the RECORD in accordance with the Senator's request. The joint resolution (S.J, Res. 145) to establish a joint congressional committee to define national goals and to recom- mend means to implement such goals not later than the bicentennial of the United States in 1976, introduced by Mr. HARTKE, was received, read twice by its title, re- ferred to the Committee on Government Operations, and ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: S.J. Has. 145 Resolved by the Senate and House of Rep- resentatives of the United States of Anterica in Congress assembled, That (a) in recog- nition of the approaching bicentennial of the founding Of this Sation and the chal- lenge to translate the vision of our founding fathers into specific national goals to be achieved by 1976, there is established a joint congressional committee to be known as the Joint Committee on National Goals (here- after referred to as the "Committee"). The Commmittee shall be composed of ten Mem- bers of the Senate appointed by the Presi- dent of the Senate, six of whom shall be members of the majority party and four of whom shall be members of the minority party, and ten Members of the House of \ Representatives appointed by the Speaker of \the House of Representatives, six of whom *hall be members of the majority party and four of whom shall be members of the min- drity party. No chairman of a joint, stand- ihg, special, or select committee of either 4ouse, or ranking minority member of any s ch committee, may serve on the Committee tablished by this joint resolution. (b) The Committee shall select a chair- man and vice chairman from among its members. SEC. 2 (a) It shall be the duty of the Committee to make a complete study and determination of specific national goals for the United States and the means to achieve such goals by 1976. (b) The Committee shall make an interim report to the Senate and House of Repre- sentatives not later than March 1, 1970. (c) Not later than January 15, 1971, the Committee shall make its final report to the Senate and House of Representatives. The report shall include a statement of national goals and such recommendations, including proposed legislation and adminis- trative measures, as the Committee con- siders appropriate in order to achieve such goals by 1976. (d) The Committee shall cease to exist February 19, 1971. SEC. a. (a) In carrying out its duties Under this joint resolution, the Committee, or any duly authorized subcommittee thereof, Is au- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Augul 7, 1964yproved For nmrtggi4614/2p yems7113A0A4r11000300100001-3 S9333 ESTIMATED REDUCTION IN TAX LIABILITY FROM APPLICATION OF PRESENT LAW JOINT RETURN TAX SCHEDULE TO SINGLE PERSON AND HEAD OF HOUSEHOLD RETURNS?WITHOUT TAX SURCHARGE, AT 1969 LEVELS OF INCOME Adjusted gross income Claus-of (thousands)(thousands) Single persons Head of household Total Number returns Reduction lotus liability (millions) Number of returns (thousands) Reduction in tax liability (millions) Number of returns (thousands) Reduction In tax liability (millions) 0 to $3 $3 to $5 85 to $7 , $7 to $10 $10 to $15 $15 to $20 $2000 $50 $50 to $100 $100 and over 4, 827 5,086 3,211 2,258 696 183 148 18 8 $38.7 203.7 260. 4 344. 5 246. 5 146.5 334. 8 94.6 71.9 69 462 555 402 166 37 25 7 1 $0.3 7. 0 20.9 22. 8 22.3 11.5 32. 2 17.0 6.6 4, 896 5, 548 3,766 2,660 862 220 173 25 9 $39. 0 210.7 281. 3 367. 3 268. 8 158.0 367. 0 III. 6 78.5 Total 16, 435 1,741. 6 1, 724 140. 6 18, 159 1,882. 2 Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that there also be printed in the RECORD a brief review and evaluation of the income-splitting provi- sion in U.S. income tax law, by Joseph Pechman of the Brookings Institution. The excerpts are taken from his book, "Federal Tax Policy," published in 1966' by the Brookings Institution. There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: FEDERAL TAX POLICY During most of the history of the income tax, differentiation for family responsibilities was made among taxpayers through the per- sonal 'exemptions. More recently, there has been a trend toward different tax rates to provide additional differentiation, particu- larly in the middle and higher tax brackets. In the United States and West Germany this has been accomplished by adoption of the principle of "income splitting" between hus- band and wife. In France, income splitting is permitted among all family members. Other countries achieve a similar objective by providing separate rate schedules for fam- ilies of different size. The adoption of income splitting in the United States arose out of the historical ac- cident that eight states had community property laws which treated income as if di- vided equally between husband and wife. By virtue of several Supreme Court decisions, married couples residing in these eight states had been splitting their incomes and filing separate federal returns. Shortly after World War II, a number of other states enacted community property laws for the express purpose of obtaining the same advantage for their residents, and other states were threat- ening to follow suit. In an effort to restore geographic tax equality and to prevent wholesale disruption of local property laws and procedures, the Congress universalized income splitting in 1948. The effect of income splitting is to reduce progression for married couples. The tax rates nominally begin at 14, 15, 16, and 17 percent on the first four $500 segments of taxable incomes and rise to 70 percent on the portion of taxable incomes above $100,000. A married couple with taxable income of $2,000 splits this income and applies the first two rates to each half; without income splitting, the first _four rates would apply to this in- come. Thus, whereas the nominal rate brackets cover taxable in-comes up to $100,- 000, the actual rates for married couples extend to $200,000. The tax advantage rises from $5 for married couples with taxable income of $1,000 to $14,510 for couples with taxable incomes of $200,000 or more. In per- centage terms, the tax advantage reaches a maximum of almost 30 percent at the $24,000 level. The classic argument in favor of income splitting is that husbands and wives usually share their combined income equally. The largest portion of the family budget goes for consumption, and savings are ordinarily set aside for the children or for the enjoyment of all members of the family. Two conclu- sions follow from this view. First, married couples with the same combined income should pay the same tax irrespective of the legal division of income between them; sec- ond, the tax liabilities of married couples should be computed as if they were two single persons with their total income divided equally between them. The first conclusion is now firmly rooted in our tax law and seems to be almost universally accepted. It is the second conclusion on which opinions still differ. The case for the sharing argument is most applicable to the economic circumstances of taxpayers in the lower income classes, where incomes are used almost entirely for the consumption of the family unit. At the top of the income scale, the major rationale of income taxation is to cut down on the eco- nomic power of the family unit, and the use made of income in these levels for family purposes is irrelevant for this purpose. Ob- viously, these objectives cannot be reconciled if income splitting is extended to all income brackets. The practical effect of income splitting is to produce large differences in the tax bur- dens of single persons and married couples, differences which depend on the rate of grad- uation and not on the level of rates. Such differences are difficult to rationalize on any theoretical grounds. Moreover, it is difficult to justify treating single persons with fam- ilies more harshly than married persons in similar circumstances. As a remedy, widows and widowers are permitted to continue to split their incomes for two years after the death of the spouse, and half the advantage of income splitting is given (through a sep- arate rate schedule) to single persons who maintain a household for children or other dependents or who maintain a separate household for their parents. This is, of course, a makeshift arrangement which hardly deals with the problem satisfactorily. For example, a single taxpayer who supports an aunt in a different household receives no income splitting benefit; if he supports an aged mother he receives these benefits. There are growing pressures on the Congress to treat single persons more liberally?by lib- eralizing the head of household provision, increasing their exemptions, and other de- vices. One of the major reasons for acceptance of the consequences of income splitting may well be the fact that personal exemptions do not provide enough differentiation among taxpayers in the middle and top brackets. Single persons, it is felt, should be taxed more heavily than married couples because they do not bear the costs and responsibili- ties of raising children. But income splitting for husband and wife clearly does not differ- entiate among taxpayers in this respect since the benefit is the same whether or not there are children. The source of the difficulty in the income splitting approach is that differentiation of family size is made through the rate struc- ture rather than through the personal ex- emptions. It would be possible to differenti- ate among taxpayer units by varying the per- sonal exemptions with the size of income as well as the number of persons in the unit, with both a minimum and maximum. This procedure could be used to achieve almost any desired degree of differentiation among families, while avoiding most of the problems and anomalies produced by income splitting. Excerpts taken from Chapter 4, The Indi- vidual Income Tax Structural Problems, The Family?pages 81-84. Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, I am certain the Committee on Finance will give careful consideration to this meas- ure and I hope, in view of commitments made in the past in connection with the "Head of household" provision, will be prepared to support this most important modification of the present income tax code. Mr. RIBICOFF. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McCARTHY. I yield to the Sena- tor from Connecticut. Mr. RIBICOFF. Mr. President, I wish to commend the distinguished Senator from Minnesota for taking up the fight in behalf of one of my constituents, Miss Vivien Kellems. The Senator from Min- nesota has been in the forefront of this fight for many, many years. He has been a lone voice, receiving very little support from anyone else in the executive branch or in the legislative branch. I will certainly be pleased, as a member of the Committee on Finance, to support the Senator's efforts to bring justice in this important field. Mr. McCARTHY. I thank the Senator. I might note that Mr. Cohen, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for fiscal policy showed interest in--not the bill I am introducing today?but in the other pro- visions we talked about relative to the tax burden on single persons. I hope he Will support this measure. The Ways and Means Committee responded and I hope the Commi tee Finance will respond. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- priations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and to authorize the construction of test fa- - cilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes, Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, the rejection of the Cooper-Hart amendment to the military authorization bill is a hollow victory, indeed, for the adminis- tration. The closeness of the vote reflects a widespread disenchantment, not only Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9334 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP711300364R000300100001-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD --- SENATE August 7, 1969 with the Safeguard ABM system itself, but also with the unwillingness of the administration to move to a common ground that could accommodate a great many more Members of this body. 1, too, pride myself on hiding a team player, and there is much to be said for supporting your own President when he needs that support. But, my colleagues from across the aisle, your President, our President, should have received much more sup- port than he got here yesterday. And he would have had the support, if this body had not been forced to choose between two extremes in this highly con- troversial issue. For more than 2 months now, I have urged the administration and the sepa- rate factions in this body to move to a middle ground, a middle ground that would not ask the comprising of prin- ciple, a middle ground that would meet the basic concerns of both sides. I have not had much success. In- deed, I have not had much encourage- ment at all. But I am still determined to try to bring about some degree of unanimity, as opposed to the 51-to-46 division vote yesterday. I should like to see more unanimity in this body on this subject. Accordingly, I am proposing my own amendment for consideration at this time. My amendment, like the Cooper-Hart amendment, withholds authority to de- ploy interceptor missiles and limits work to research, development, testing, and evaluation. My amendment also precludes expendi- ture of the $600,000 earmarked for long- lead-time items for operational missiles, that is actually for the guidance system, holds back expenditure of some $15 mil- lion already appropriated for ABM mis- sile silo and launch construction, and freezes money already authorized for land acquisition and construction under the Sentinel ABM proposal and previous authorization acts. Mr. President, I want to emphasize the point that my amendment a ould specif- ically say to the Pentagon, "You shall not dig any hole. You shall not pour any con- crete in those silos." Congress says, "You shall not." That $15 million is hiding in the pipeline from a previous authoriza- tion act. On these points, then, there should be little disagreement on the part 'tif pro- ponents of the Cooper-Hart amendment, who obviously feel that any move toward actual deployment of interceptor missiles could escalate the arms race, jeopardize strategic arms limitation talks, and com- mit us to massive expenditures for an un- tried system of questionable feasibility. My amendment sharply differs from the Cooper-Hart amendment in one crucial aspect, and that crucial aspect is where the research and development is to take place. The Cooper-Hart amendment specifi- cally prohibits research and develop- ment "at any proposed anti-ballistic- missile site." My amendment, on the other hand, calls for research and development of radar and computer protOtyPes at the first two designated anti-ballistic-mis- sile system sites?Grand Forks, N. Dak., and Malmstrom, Mont. FurthermOre, my amendment's call for R. & D. on. site takes into considera- tion two Other important factors in this issue?timelag in possible deployment, and ultimate cost. By doing the research and develop- ment in place, we minimize loss of time in deployment of the system?if and when that deployment ever becomes necessary. I have been assured by Defense De- partment spokesmen that my proposal for R. & D. in place would cost us no more than 5 months, and perhaps as little as 3 months, in deployment lag- time, whereas the Cooper-Hart amend- ment would cost froth 12 to 18 months. This feature of my amendment, it seems to me, should offer real assurance to those Senators who fear that the longer the deployment timelag the greater the danger to our national security. This feature, I might point out, should not be considered as either hawkish or dovish. I would hope that it is consid- ered simply prudent. It has other practical aspects. My proposal promises additional sav- ings by precluding future duplication. If research and development are to be conducted elsewhere than at designated ABM missile sites, it follows that should deployment at some time become neces- sary, much of the work already done would have to be duplicated on site. By doing R. & D. in place, we auto- matically avoid duplication in time, in effort, and in money. Moreover, R. & D. on site offers the military an opportunity to gain experi- ence in handling the radar and compu- ter equipment under field conditions, again saving time, effort and money. Everything considered, Mr. President, I still feel as I did July 28 when I stood here and expressed my belief that the McIntyre amendment provided the common ground we needed to close the national chasm over the Safeguard anti- ballistic-missile system. Let me repeat what I said then: I am not asking either faction to com- promise principles on this issue. I am merely asking them to seek areas of agreement, and I sincerely believe there is a common ground which satisfies the basic concerns of both sides.., On the one hand, my amendment makes it absolutely clear that Congress is with- holding authority to deploy the system, and it therefore prohibts construction of any op- erational ABM missiles or parts thereof. And it freezes money and authority which the Pentagon now has to build missile sites and to acquire land other than the two locations needed to conduct research and development in place. And on the other hand, it authorizes research and development in place at Grand Forks, N. Dak., and Malmstrom, Mont. By so doing, it retains the option of deploying the system with minimal delay and at min- imal cost should Congress later decide to deploy on the strength of new evidence of a clear threat to our deterrent. Mr. President, one of the principal reasons why I have been sold on this point is that I do not believe, from the evidence submitted to me as a member of the Armed Serviced Committee, that the deterrent which Secretary Laird and those who are for the system say is threatened, is really anywhere near in as Much danger MS they make it out to be. And so, Mr. President, again I say, there is common ground waiting for those who seek practical resolution?for those who want to avciid a direct rebuff to the President?for these who want unity instead of division?the division we saw here yesterday on the floor Of the Senate. That common ground is to be found in my amendment. I ask my colleagues to support it. Now, Mr. President, there may be those who say, in view of the defeat of all amendments offered yesterday, why bother? Why try yet another amend- ment? I have already pointed out why I be- lieve that the President, who is about to embark on talks with the Soviet Union on arms limitations needs more than a two-vote margin of support in the Senate. This morning's Washington Post carries a lead editorial entitled "The ABM: Winners and Losers." I ask unani- mous consent that the editorial be printed in the RECORD at this point. There being no objection, the editorial was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: THE ABM: WINNERS AND LOSERS Yesterday's series of votes in the Senate on the authorization for the Safeguard ABM had something for everyone, but not nearly enough. For each side made its point in a way so limited as to render it useless. The President "won" with a show of weakness (a two-vote margin); his opponents "lost" with a show of strength?but nonetheless they lost. Despite all the last minute drama and legislative high-jinks, it had been evident for a couple of weeks now that the crucial vote on the Hart-Cooper amendment (per- mitting Safeguard research and development, but forbidding deployment in the current fiscal year) would be inconclusive. That is not only because yesterday's action was just the first in a series of votes yet to come. Should the President get to the end of the line in the Senate with such "victories" as this all the way, the result would still be in- conclusive. For he will not have won what he wants or even what he needs. That this would be so was foreseen by Senator Aiken a few weeks back, when he announced that he was opposed to the Safe- guard authorization in its present dorm (though not yet committeed to the Hart- Cooper approach) and when. he offered to bp the agent of some reasonable compromise. His vote projection may have missed the mark slightly, but his argument was sound: "May I point out that if the United States enters into a conference with Russia looking to the control of armament and aimed at developing a less tense relationship between the two countries, that even though the leg- islation as written could be approved by as many as 51 or 52 votes in this Senate, which I doubt, we would be in an extremely WE'lle bargaining position.'I believe it is absolutely necessary for President Nixon to have a much larger vote of this Senate supporting him when we enter into such a conference." Although we considered the provisions of the Hart-Cooper amendment?to which Sen- ator Aiken finally repaired?too sweeping In their restriction, we believed he was right in urging an accommodation. We still do. There was plenty of room in the alternative language put forth by Sen. Thomas McIntyre for an accommodation to have been worked Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 .Augiwt 7, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE S 9335 out?one that would not deprive the Presi- dent of his option to proceed with the ABM (which was what he originally asked for) and yet which also would not have incor- porated so firm and hard-to-reverse a com- mitment to the deployment of the system for the future. At that time, it was esti- mated on the Hill that Mr. Nixon might pick up between a dozen and twenty votes in this fashion, while relinquishing little that was of genuine importance. But the efforts of Senator Aiken, Senator Brooke and other ABM opponents to help bring about this re- sult were rebuffed. The Administration de- termined to go for a close, rough victory in the Senate. It could do worse than to ponder the small benefits it has gained. Even with a consider- ably larger favorable vote in the House, the Administration will not have achieved its principal aims. A sharply and closely split Senate vote on a question that has been made?as this one has been?a test of sup- port of the President on a national security matter, can hardly be of much value in the international bargaining arena; it is not a lot to take to the arms talks. And its prac- tical benefits are as limited as its diplomatic value. Mr. Nixon will continue to have the opposition of a huge portion of the Senate to this weapons system, and those legisla- tors can be counted on to fight the Safe- guard every step of the way via appropria- tions and other measures. So it is still by no means clear that his prevailing in the Senate on these early votes guarantees him the deployment option he so emphatically wants. Now Senator McIntyre's measure is be- fore the Senate. It is likely to enjoy the sup- port of some Senators who voted for the Hart-Cooper amendment and who now are prepared to take this next step up toward the President's position. If Mr. Nixon could at this late date bring himself to endorse some version of this modified language and en- courage his supporters to follow suit he could conceivably transform his narrow squeak Into something more like a victory. Such a step could provide him the degree of Senate support he so evidently needs to move with confidence in the field of arms control? not to mention the field of national security and defense. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, there is yet another reason why I believe this effort to amend the bill before us should be made, and to those who yesterday supported the Cooper-Hart amendment, it is an important reason. It deals with the responsibilities of the Senate, and the Congress, under the Constitution. Mr. President, section 8 of article 1 of the Constitution of the United States clean]. yand explicitly states where in the Government of the United States the re- sponsibility is laid for raising and sup- porting armies, providing and maintain- ing navies, and making rules for the Gov- ernment and regulation of the land and naval forces. Section 8 places these responsibilities exclusively in the Congress. One of the issues which has been raised in the consideration of the authorization for an anti-ballistic-missile system is how the constitutional responsibilities of section 8 should best be carried out. Some Members of the Senate, with whom I respectfully disagree, believe that the Congress can meet its responsibilities under the Constitution by holding com- mittee hearings, arriving at understand- ings covering broad, general areas with the Department of Defense, and enacting authorization bills under broad headings which are specific only in the dollar amounts involved. It is my opinion that this procedure, while possibly appropriate in wholly non- controversial areas, falls far short of the minimum constitutional requirements in those areas where controversy in the Senate would seem to require that con- gressional action be precise and specific. Clearly, the voting which has taken place so far indicates that there is wide- spread disagreement in the Senate over the policy to be pursued by the military regarding any anti-ballistic-missile sys- tem. The Congress must exercise its con- trol over this proposal. I do not wish to get into a semantics argument about control. Certainly there Is a measure of congressional control over the activities of the executive branch of the Federal Government in the setting of limits on the amount of money they spend, through guidelines contained in committee reports, and from legislative history as the legisla- tion progresses through the Congress. However, is this really control in the strictest meaning of the word? The Con- gress gives a great deal of latitude in what the various departments and agen- cies can do. The Congress allows, in most cases, the transfer of funds within the various departments and agencies at the discretion of the secretaries, administra- tors, and other agency heads. Of course, in most such cases, the transfers require either notification to or approval from the appropriate congressional commit- tees. But even in such cases, the Congress as an institution is not required to make a decision. Mr. President, the pending legislation in the Senate, the authorization bill for procurement and research and develop- ment for the Defense Department, con- tains authorizations amounting to more than $20 billion. The bill is four pages in length. At the same time, a typical housing authorization contains authorization for about $4 billion, yet runs 65 pages in length. It spells out in great detail what can and cannot be done on housing. So we in the Congress are quite famil- iar with the idea of exercising our con- stitutional controls through detailed legislation. Mr. President, what I propose is that, particularly in this area where so much controversy exists, the Senate be more precise about its authorization than we are in the bill before us. I propose that we spell out, so that all of the American people can know, just what we are and are not permitting the Department of Defense to do. The close vote by which the Cooper- Hart amendment was disposed of has implications in this regard which should be carefully noted. The fact is that the Senate is in great disagreement among itself about precisely what our policy should be. In such a case we have a greater responsibility than usual to spell out in detail just precisely what it is that we are approving. Certainly the legislative history of this proposal is now unclear. Officials of the Department of Defense have stated that they are asking for little more than an intensified research and development program. The Secretary, I believe, has said that approval of this bill means the decision has been made to proceed with the full Safeguard program. And various views in between have been stated. What my amendment intends to do and what I propose is that the Congress tell the Department of Defense, in the explicit language of legislation, just what our decision is. My proposal for congressional decision Is to permit the research and develop- ment of the Safeguard system's radars and computers in place in the first two designated ABM sites, and at the same time, clearly and explicitly prohibit the Department of Defense from taking any steps to deploy an ABM system. In short, I propose that we exercise our constitutional responsibility of con- trol fully, and not exercise it in the typical manner?year after year I have seen it?of handling military authoriza- tions, where all of the basic decisions are left to the military departments. I reserve so much time as I may have left. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I ask the attention of all Senators here. I am go- ing to make a brief outline of what I think is the issue. First, however, I want to say that the Senator from New Hamp- shire has rendered a truly wonderful service on this bill as a whole. He has been to the very heart of the research and development program, which is the largest item in one category in the entire bill, and has done an outstanding job, as reflected by the report and by the bill, and as will be shown in further argu- ments and debates on items in the bill. I not only cimpliment him, but I thank him for that. Mr. President, this matter is relatively simple. One word, though, about what the Senator said about the form of the bill, the few pages in it. There is a long legislative pattern behind that. With ref- erence to the military construction bill? and that is the bill in the House the Senator referred to--they spell out and we spell out what we call line items; even a runway being extended a few hundred feet would appear as a line item, with a definite authorization for that purpose. That is all right. That is the way they keep up with it. Over here our system is nonetheless complete and nonetheless specific. The same rule applies in the House; and in the Senate, with reference to these pro- curement items, which are so numerous, and the research items, which are so numerous; we have the bill with a lump sum for each category before us now, and the appropriation bill carries on in the same way. Many of the items in this bill will still be in the abbreviated bill. This is important, Mr. President. Back in the hearings, the testimony, the exhibits, the files, there is a minute history and a specification of all these dollars, item by item. That is brought forward in summary in the report, and it is just as definite, as specific as it can be made. That is true of the House bills on authorizations and appropriations, and I have never known of an instance where the Defense Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9336 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 7f119 69 Department, under any Secretary, has violated that reported record, the legis- lative history, the reports, in any way. So Congress is being just as specific under one System as it is under the other. There is no doubt about it now; we know exactly what is authorized here in phase I. The Department of Defense cannot be misled. They cannot be in error. They cannot avoid knowing, and we know it; Your committees know it, and we keep a surveillance over these things. That is more or less the law of necessity that we follow here, in having the bill abbre- viated; but the record Is totally complete. The Senator from New Hampshire, as I have stated, has done fine work on this measure. He mentioned the fact that in his mind, the threat has not been proven to be so great, and that he did not have as strong a conviction on that as some of us do, and therefore did not feel this urgency for the deterrent which is believed necessary by some Senators. That is a clear-cut statement, and I com- mend him for bringing out exactly how he feels. But I think that explains why he wants to put these limitations on this program. If I may have the attention of Sena- tors, I have a key point here: Just a few hours ago, 51 Senators put their stamp of approval on phase I. That was the effect of the vote. Phase I is what is in the bill with reference to the ABM. All the way through, ray position and my belief has been?and it is shared by a majority of the committee?that we will stand on phase I, that that is what is needed. That is why there was no com- mittee amendment to the House bill, and why no amendment by the committee was offered from the floor,.We have stood on phase I; and that is the very thing that was approved yesterday in writing by the recorded vote of the Senate. Phase I is limited, just as low as it can be limited if we are_going to move at all beyond pure research and devel- opment. The McIntyre amendment comes along, though, and goes back be- hind what was done yesterday, and cuts some pieces out of phase I. That is a quick summary of what it does. It goes back into the matter and takes out a part. The main thing is no silos, under the McIntyre amendment, even for the two missile sites in phase L No silos for missiles in phase I; that is the major point involved in this amend- ment, as I see it. We had a very fine debate on this issue, with everyone stat- ing his sincere convictions, and amend- ments in varying degrees proposed; and then the vote was taken, and the decision was made. My point is, let us not go back into the phase I. I stand on phase I and on phase I alone. That has been my position. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS, Yes; I yield to the Sen- ator. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Just to clarify for my information a little bit more the dis- tinction, what is the difference between what the Senator calls phase I and what is allowed by the McIntyre amendment., or, to put it another wale how does the McIntyre amendment restrict or alter phase I? Is it only as to the silos, did I understand the Senator to say? Mr. STENNIS. Well, there may be other restrictions. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I am very much In- terested as to what the distinction is. Mr. STENNIS. I said that was the major one. According to my notes, the McIntyre amendment leaves in all the money except $2 million. That $345.5 million, it cuts down $2 million, in round figures, but it leaves in $343.5 million, which, by the way, the Cooper-Hart amendment would have taken out. As to how that $2 million would be spent, that is the $600,000 that we have referred to here in the base about the long leadtime items with reference to the missile itself, which is a very small item, and the $1.4 million to make up the remainder of that $2 million was for the launch facilities. So that is the differ- ence with reference to the money: the launch facilities and the $600,000 item. Leaving out the silos for the missiles for phase I, it seems to me that that is the most important item that could be affected. Mr. FULBRIGHT. This is what con- fused me; perhaps I do not understand it: the missiles the Senator means are additional silos for Minuteman? Mr. STENNIS. No, no. Mr. FULBRIGHT. What are the silos for, that the Senator says will be pro- hibited? Mr. STENNIS. These silos are for the Spartan missiles. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Oh. Mr. STENNIS. The Spantan missiles themselves. If I used the word "Minute- man," that was in error. I do not think I did. Mr. FULBRIGHT. It is Spantan mis- siles? Mr. STENNIS. It is Spantan missiles, yes. I said silos, but it is for the Spartan missiles. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Then the restric- tion that the Senator objects to in the McIntyre amendment is no provision for silos for Sprint missiles or Spartan mis- siles, or both? Mr. STENNIS. Yes, both of them. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Both? Mr. STENNIS. Some of both of them, yes. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Otherwise, you get everythinge else phase 1 provides for? Mr. STENNIS. It is the money I have talked about Mr. FULBRIGHT. Is that money to buy land, sites, and so on, build roads, and all that? Mr. STENNIS. No, this money that I refer to is not to buy land or anything like that, Mr. FULBRIGHT. Is there any money to buy land in the bill? Mr. STENNIS. No, there is not any money in this bill to buy land. Not any. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Well, then, I do not see any great difference between the Mc- Intyre proposal and phase I of the ad- ministration's bill. Mr. STENNIS. Well, there is a great big difference here with reference to these silos for the Spartan and Sprint missiles. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator thinks it is a very substantial difference? Mr. STENNIS. Yes, I do. I think it is a tremendous difference. Mr. FULBRIGHT. If it is that big a difference, I might be inclined to vote for the McIntyre amendment. I was not sure there was any difference. I was under the impression that it was about the sante as what is in the bill. That is what I wanted to tie down. Mr. STENNIS. I think there is an ap- preciable difference. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I see. A big differ- ence? ' Mr. STENNIS. And I think the matter has really been passed On by the vote yesterday. Mr. FULBRIGHT. It was hard for me to see what the difference is, but if it is a real restriction, I think I shall be inclined to vote for it. Mr. ERVIN. Mr, President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield to the Senator from North Carolina. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, the McIn- tyre amendment, as I understand it, would allow us to proceed with thetlevel- opment and testing of the ABM and would allow us to acquire sites for the ABM. However, it says, "You cannot in- stall them so they can be used." It is like the old story of the colloquy between the mother and the daughter. The daughter said, "Mother, may I go swimming?" The mother said, "Yes, my darling daughter. Hang your clothes on the hick- ory limb, but do not go near the water" That is what the McIntyre amendment proposes. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I think that the matter has been fully covered and that the items are very clear in the report and the analysis of the Senator's amendment. I think the whole matter is before the Senate. If anyone wants some time, I will be glad to yield to him at this time. Mr. THURMOND. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I yield 5 minutes to the Senator from South Caro- lina. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from South Carolina is recognized for 5 minutes. Mr. THLTRMOND. Mr. President, I have great respect for the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire. However, I think it would be a great mistake if the Senate were to adapt his amendment. The approach adopted in the pro- posed amendment is such that it will cast a cloud of ambiguity over the entire Safe- guard developmental effort. The body of the authorization bill authorizes certain expenditures for the Safeguard system in general terms; the proposed amendment purports to redefine and limit this au- thority by an enumeration of activities for which funds may be used. By tin- Plication, therefore, expenditure for any- thing that does not appear on the list of enumerated activities is unauthorized. The list contained, and the language used, in the amendment appears, on ex- amination, to be so incomplete and ambiguous as to raise serious difficulties with implementation and to cast doubt on the authority to conduct certain nee- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 :. CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 .August 7, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 9337 essary developmental and preproduction Senate, we have delayed now for longer amendment is trying to control. But the activities, than we should have, experience we have had in the last 3 or The following are examples of the The Soviets are at least 5 years ahead 4 years indicates that once the Pentagon practical problems of interpretation and of us. They have an ABM system already has hold of such a mammoth project as ambiguity that would arise under the built, developed, tested, evaluated, and this anything can happen?as our dis- amendment : deployed. Their system is in operation tinguished chairman knows, we face First. S. 2546 in its title states that the now. overruns in the C-5A of over $2 billion. authorization of test facilities at Kwaj- Mr. President, again I repeat that this If Secretary Laird meant what he said alein is a specific purpose of the bill and is a purely defensive weapon. If we build when he said that a vote for the bill this is implemented by section 203. Yet the ABM weapon and the enemy never is a commitment to build this system, the absence of language in subsection (a) sends a missile over here, we shall not goodness, gracious, what may be the of the amendment specifically authoriz- have to use it. This would be well and overrun on the ABM system. ing funds to be spent for such facilities good. We shall have protected our peo- So I am surely like the mother who and R.D.T. & E. effort on radar and pie. However, if we build the ABM mis- says to her daughter: . missiles at Kwajalein, coupled with the sue and the enemy does send missiles Hang your clothes on a hickory limb. further limitation in subsection (b) for- here to destroy our people and our coun- bidding the installation of "equipment try, we shall then be most thankful and My amendment is intended to be re- described" in subsection (a) (1) ?that is, the people of America will be most grate- strictive , by specifically mentioning in the amendment what can and cannot be radars, computers and related electronic ful, that the United States had the fore- done. equipment?at "any proposed anti-bal- sight to build an ABM system. Mr. FLTLBRIGHT. Mr. President, will listic-missile site" other than Grand Mr. President, I hope that the Senate the Senator yield? Forks and Malmstrom, could lead to the will not delay longer moving forward to Mr. McINTYRE. I yield. conclusion that construction and instal- deploy this important weapon which will Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator has lation of facilities at Kwajalein is un- mean so much to the national security of raised a very critical point. From one authorized. These additional facilities at our Nation, point of view, as the Senator. from MIs- Kwajalein are required for essential sys- Mr. McINTYRE. Mn President, I yield sissippi and the Senator from New tern tests with radars and missiles. myself 5 minutes. Hampshire have said, it is restrictive. Second. Likewise, the provision in sub- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- From the other point of view, it au- section (b) limiting the installation of ator from New Hampshire is recognized thorizes two bases. I came to the Cham- "equipment described" to two specified for 5 minutes. her expecting to vote against it, on the sites may preclude the establishment of Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, first I ground that I do not wish to be respon- essential modifications to training facil- thank the distinguished chairman of the sible for authorizing, specifically and af- ities; it may also prohibit the modifica- committee, the Senator from Mississippi firmatively, two bases which are in- tion of existing command and control fa- (Mr. STENNIS) for the kind remarks he terlided to be operative bases, evidently; cilities and the production and installa- has made concerning my efforts on this otherwise, they would not be at these tion of the tactical software control site particular authorization bill. particular points. So I did not want to at Whippany, N.J., which is essential to It is no news to Members of the Senate be responsible for someone saying to the developmental testing program, that working with the Senator from Mis- me next year, "Look, you voted for this Third. Subsection (a) (2) raises even sissippi is an experience that helps any silly system that is obsolete, and you more serious ambiguities. This is the only man become a better Senator. And it is wasted $10 billion." Insofar as I can, I portion of the amendment dealing with an experience in which one always finds do not want to have to say, "Yes, I did." what is permitted in the way of prepro- himself being handled fairly and I have made enough mistakes without duction and production type activity. It squarely. knowing it. Here is one that I know is a permits "preproduction expenses"?an I find it a great honor to serve on his mistake?to throw $6, $10, or $20 billion ambiguous term?but only for missiles, committee. on two, five, or 10 bases. This is the point Considering that subsection (a) (1) per- With reference to the remarks of the at issue. mits funds to be used only for research, distinguished Senator from South Caro- If I could be convinced that the development, testing, and evaluation of lina, I feel that he has made a rather amendment truly is restrictive in a system components such as radars, corn- tortured criticism of the amendment as meaningful way, and I could justify that puters, and related electronic equipment, offered. in the future, as I have said to the Sen- but not for production of these items, it On page 2 of the amendment where we ator from Mississippi, I would be in- is unclear how funds, particularly talk about restricting the use of anti-bal- dined to support the Senator, because PEMA?procurement equipment missiles, listic-missile sites, we are talking about that is what I want to do. I tried that Army?funds, can be used to procure the fact that the overall ABM proposal yesterday. We tried to restrict this whole these items for the Grand Forks and has many proposed antiballistic missile system. Now the Senator has fallen back ? Malmstrom tactical sites. The amend- sites. into a fallback position, and the Sena- ment is silent with respect to production The amendment restricts the use of tor says he really restricts. engineering and preparation for manu- these sites specifically. And it says so I wish the Senator would elaborate on facture of nonmissile items such as ra- clearly and unequivocally on page 2 that that. What could I say 5 years from now, dars and computer. Absence of such au- the equipment described in the first sub- when this thing perhaps will have been thority would have a serious impact on section?the radars and the computers? proved to be a wholly ineffectual system timely future deployability of the system. that eventually will be moved in there and a waste of money? How could I then Fourth. There is no specific authoriza- are restricted to only two proposed anti- defend myself against the charge that tion for funds to be used for develop- ballistic missile sites at which they may I voted for the deployment in two bases ment or procurement of necessary and be installed?one at Grand Forks Air and wasted $5 billion? ancillary supporting facilities that are Force Base, N. flak., and the other at Mr. McINTYRE. Let me respond to not "related electronic equipment." the Malmstrom Air Force Base, Mont. the Senator from Arkansas by saying Fifth. This amendment could be in- There are no restrictions on the use of that the amendment is in the nature of terpreted as preventing the accomplish- sites such as Kwajalein for research and a compromise. It tries to give to those ment in fiscal year 1970 of survey, ad- development, sites which are not in- who feel as deeply as the Senator from vanced engineering and site selection for tended to be part of a deployed system. Arkansas some of the restrictions they phase II sites. If this site selection ac- In his remarks, the distinguished Sen- would like to see applied on this system, tivity is not carried out in fiscal year ator from North Carolina referred to a what we might consider the future mam- 1970 on several of the phase II sites, young lady who wanted to go swimming, moth sophisticated defensive weapon. At there will be several months of delay in and her mother advised her that she the same time, it turns to the proponents proceeding with these sites if their later could hang her clothes on a hickory limb, and says: "We recognize that you may deployment is approved, but that she should not go near the be right about a threat we may have to Mr. President, I am convinced that water. meet in 1975. So"?if I may speak met- there should be no further delay. As I I suppose his criticism is that my aphorically?"while we, Congress, take have stated heretofore in debate in the amendment is restraining, that my the reins on this ABM?we give you a Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9338 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 7 190 little leadtime now. Go ahead and in- stall"?I prefer the word "install" rather than "deploy"?"at two sites"?and I prefer "sites" rather than "bases." The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cor- TON in the chair). The time of the Sen- ator has expired. Mr. McINTYRE. I yield myself 5 ad- ditional minutes. We say: "All right, go ahead. You say you have the technological base; you know what you are going to do to the MSR and R. & D. Start to put your foot- ings in and start to plan, but keep it completely at computers and radars. Do not talk about any missilery or any weapons." This resolves two things that bothered me with respect to this issue. The first is that I could not quite accept the sever- ity of the threat. It gives me another year to examine the hard facts of what those SS-9's are all about. The second is that it gives us a chance to see if, somehow, the Soviet Union can sit down at Geneva with us and we can begin to talk sense about missile limitation. So in the bill, in this amendment, we have tried to say?and I think we say it succinctly and explicitly?what the Pentagon can do. As the Senator from Mississippi point- ed out, there is a substantial difference so fax as the proponents are concerned, be- cause they do not like this control, and there is this $15.6 million- -it is a small saving in this day. Mr. FULBRIGHT. It is very small In this bill. Mr. McINTYRE, But if we examine the practical effects of this amendment In view of our experience this year, what do we see? If we examine where the op- ponents of the ABM were 2 or 3 months ago, with 20 or 30 votes, and where they crested yesterday at 49 or 50, my amend- ment gives those who oppose this main- moth system the opportunity to reaffirm, 1 year from today, when the same au- thorization bill is before the Senate again, that, No. 1, they nave broken the precedent. We no longer have four pages with big numbers. We have in here specific language prohibiting deployment. It gives the opponents an opportunity to say: "Let us look again at the picture. Our intelligence says that the threat is no longer so obvious. The SALT talks are going well." Why should not this area of the com- promise be attractive to those who want to restrict, who want to hold back on this ABM system? I think it is illogical for those who do not want to see the ABM deployed, to turn around and vote "nay" on this amendment, when such a vote would in effect, approve of deploy- ment, and give the Pentagon its usual ability to run the show. Mr. FULBRIGHT. On the question of reevaluation next year, is there any way we can get an evaluation by anyone other than people who are directly interested in this deployment? The Senator from New Hampshire will recall the suggestion made by Dr. Killian in one of our hearings, that there should be an independent, non-Pentagon board of scientists and qualified people to evaluate- the effectiveness of this kind of system. Does the Senator recall that? Mr. McINTYRE, Yes; I recall. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Is there anything in the bill, or would it be inconsistent with the Senator's amendment, that, after this year, somebody other than Dr. Foster, for example--who is intimately concerned and committed to this?could evaluate whether or not this business is practicable? Mr. McINTYRE. The Senator has in mind a forward-looking commission. I could not agree that we stop everything now and have a commission decide what we should do on this bill. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator is say- ing then that We should hold up nothing except what he specifies for a year, and take another look a year from now? Mr. McINTYRE. That is what I pro- pose. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Will the same peo- ple be looking at it this time as have been looking for the past 25 years and have spent over a thousand billion dol- lars, or will it be some independent board of qualified people, such as Dr. Killian and his associates, people who are not in the employ of the Joint Chiefs of Staff? That kind of review would reas- sure me that we would at least have some kind of objective judgment upon this kind of system. Mr. McINTYRE. I have no opposition to the use of a board of experts?per haps a blue ribbon board?that could be an adjunct to our Defense Department. I do not have the misgivings about our Joint Chiefs of Staff that the Senator does. I have found them, over the years, to be extremely able and capable. But that is really irrelevant to the amend- ment. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I do not want to be misunderstood. In their performance of their functions, the Joint Chiefs of Staff are very able. I make no criticism what- ever of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I was directing my remarks to the judgment on this missile system, which I do not think is the pri- mary baby of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. It is primarily the baby of certain scien- tists, led by Dr. Foster, and they are people who are inordinately interested in research of all kinds. There are 12 dif- ferent kinds of missiles in this bill aside from the ABM?perhaps more, but at least 12. Perhaps there are 24. There are four pages dealing with it. These are gimmicks in which they are interested. It is similar to when I first flew a kite. An extremely interesting concept of aerodynamics is involved in what makes a kite fly. I never did understand it. Maybe I do not understand it yet, but it was interesting. Dr. Teller expressed it best of all in connection with the nuclear test ban treaty when he said that nothing should stand in the way of research and the pursuit of knowledge, not even 100 or 200 million Americans or anybody else. He was against any kind of restraint upon research and the pursuit of knowledge, and this is understandable. I am not criticizing them for that. We should recognize that is their attitude; that they are not responsible for the solvency of the United States or they are not responsible for judging this activity or the other. They have their respon- sibility and do it. I am not criticizing them. Our responsibility is different. The Senate should exercise its responsibility and make this kind of policy judgment. If the Senator's amendment is a sub- stantial restriction upon the deployment of a system which is very dubious, I am inclined to support it. Mr. McINTYRE. The Senator should support it because, as the Senator from Mississippi said, there is a difference. Mr. FULBRIGHT. This is where I came in. I thought the Senator was affirming this program and I was going to vote against the amendment. Now I am puzzled. Mr. McINTYRE. This amendment moves in the direction/ the Senator is talking about, in the direction of restric- tions; giving time for a blue ribbon com- mitte or board to overlook the matter and give us advice. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I wish that were possible. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, how much time do I have remaining? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Hampshire has 29 minutes remaining. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, will the Senator yield for a question? Mr. McINTYRE. lam happy to yield to the distinguished Senator from North Carolina. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, I would like to ask the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire if the American people, acting under their Constitution, do not elect Members of the Senate and the House of Representatives to make decisions of the kind the Senator from Arkansas mentioned?not Dr. Killian or blue-ribbon commissions? Mr. McINTYRE. I think that is an interesting question although, of course, the Constitution does so provide. How- ever, I have to admit regarding questions which involve technology and scientific work, such as the ABM, that I need all the technical help and advice I can get. I have heard that same thought echoed in the discussions in this Chamber by others. Mr. ERVIN. Cannot congressional committees obtain the testimony of Dr. Killian and others? Mr. McINTYRE. That has been sug- gested. Mr. ERVIN. I understood the Senator from Arkansas to suggest that the Sen- ator from New Hampshire should amend his amendment to create a commission to safeguard the people of the United States against the Pentagon. Mr. McINTYRE. If that is what the Senator from Arkansas meant I would have to disagree. I thought he was talk- ing a about ai blue-ribbon committee that would be scientifically trained, which could objectively appraise this matter and report. I did not mean and I do not think the Senator from Arkansas meant to toss the decisionrnaking process over to this blue-ribbon committee. Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 August.7, .1969APPnwed Fo 913R 00001-3 S 9339 Mr. FULBRIGHT. The Senator is cor- rect. During the hearings, Dr. Killian, who was an adviser in the Eisenhower administration, suggested this matter IS dubious and questionable?and he took not nearly as strong a position as others. He said that certain aspects of this pro- posal, particularly the computers and radars, are not completed or designed and that before a decision is made it should be subjected to at least a year's study by qualified scientists as to feasi- bility, practicability, and operability. This appealed to me as a very sound thing to do, but it has not been followed. The Senator will remember that last year I asked the chairman of the com- mittee if his committee had hearings with any outside scientists before the committee. The only people brought be- fore the committee last year were scien- tists on the payroll of the Pentagon, either direct or indirect. I say they can- not have an objective judgment. We were all looking for objectivity as to work- ability. Mr. McINTYRE. I do want to say that this year in committee hearings, both public sessions and executive sessions, I really appreciated the appearance of the various experts in this field who testified pro and con. It was helpful to me in try- ing to decide this difficult question. Mr. FULBRIGHT. I understand. The chairman of the committee said last year he was going to do it. I think this is a great step forward and it is much better to have a variety of opinion and not just opinions of employees of any organization, whether it be the Pentagon or any other organization. Mr. CASE. Mr. President, will the Sen- ator yield? Mr. McINTYRE. I yield 2 minutes to the Senator from New Jersey. Mr. CASE. I thank the Senator. I wish to approach the matter from a slightly different angle. I am impressed with the distinguished Senator from New Hampshire, and, to some extent, I think he has been joined by the Sena- tor from Massachusetts in trying to work out something that more closely meets the feelings on all sides on this impor- tant matter. But when the Senator put the em- phasis on the radars and computers, and excluded the deployment of the missiles In this coming fiscal year, many of us got a uniformly adverse reaction on the ground that putting these computers and radars in place at a very great cost would be a deterrent to the kind of re- search for the design of a system which would be likely to work better than the Safeguard for the purpose of defending missile sites. The Senator from New Jersey has found that argument a very persuasive one, and up to now at least is disposed to vote against the amend- ment of the Senator. I would be glad to have the Senator respond. Mr. McINTYRE, Mr. President, I yield myself 2 minutes to respond. I think the Senator has put his finger on a key point as far as my amendment is concerned. I recognize the difficulty many Senators had with what I would call the credibility of the radars, MSR and PAR. But I had to weigh in my mind the threat, the possibility of facing some- thing in the mid-1970's which America would have to react to, something the Soviets could do. I said to myself?and the Senator knows how much time Is consumed on these projects?let them in- stall the radars. It can't be completed this year. There will only be footings in there nine months from now. But give them authority to install radars and in the meantime carry on the research. I am trying to accommodate the possi- bility of a threat along with trying to restrict the unleashing of another gigan- tic weapon. Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. McINTYRE. I yield 1 minute to the Senator from Arkansas. Mr. FULBRIGHT. The best authority, even the one recommended by the Under Secretary of Defense, Dr. Panovsky, said that the present radar, the radar as now designed, was designed for the old Sentinel and is utterly useless for the Safeguard. I think I am not overstating what he said. He said that it would be foolish to install the present MSR. He thought this was to be purely an experi- mental installation to see if a workable MSR could be designed, and that it was not intended to install one until it was developed. Mr. McINTYRE. Actually, the one being developed is subject to change day by day as improvements are made. MSR's or radars are going to do this job. One is under test in Kwajalein. Mr. FULBRIGHT. They were for the Sentinel. They were not designed for Safeguard. Is not that correct? Mr. McINTYRE. The Senator is saying that there should not be any installation. Mr. FULBRIGHT. It is purely a re- designing proposition. They should not be installed until they are redesigned. Mr. McINTYRE. I understand. But this amendment is in the nature of a com- promise. It tries to reach a common ground and tries to impose some of the restrictions the Senator would like to have. Mr. President, does the Senator from Massachusetts desire to have me yield time to him? Mr. BROOKE. Yes. Mr. McINTYRE. I am happy to yield to the distinguished Senator from Massa- chusetts. Mr. President, how much time remains tome? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from New Hampshire has 19 min- utes remaining. Mr. McINTYRE. I yield 10 minutes to the distinguished Senator from Massa- chusetts. Mr. BROOKE. Mr. President, we have now reached the near-deadlock on the ABM issue which many have foreseen for weeks. So far as this issue itself is con- cerned, yesterday's decisions may well prove to be a pyrrhic victory for the pro- ponents and a futile effort for the oppo- ants of ABM. But however one describes the outcome, no one can feel satisfied that so grave a question, of such immense implications to this Nation and the world, has become the focus of such serious di- vision in our ranks. From the days of the Founding Fathers on, a cardinal rule of American politics has stressed the importance of a strong domestic consensus on issues affecting the national security and foreign policy of the United States. The need to develop such a consensus has been well under- stood by virtually every generation of Americans. We all have known that the capacity of representative government to deal with other governments, particu- larly totalitarian regimes, may be badly impaired by internal dissension. We now have laid bare the full extent of disagree- ment within the Senate over the proposed deployment of the Safeguard system. But, as I argued in yesterday's debate, there is neither necessity nor wisdom in leaving the issue where it now stands. The narrow verdict rendered yesterday should not be allowed to stand. It serves neither the administration's nor the Na- tion's interest to leave the issue at the point of maximum tension. Such an out- come can only damage the administra- tion's authority and capacity to pursue a vigorous diplomacy in this realm. It is likely to portend repeated conflict and disagreement on successive issues related to the ABM. It has already been made clear that the struggle will continue through the appropriations process. The lean majority that held sway in this body yesterday faces a dismal and draining prospect indeed: it will always have to have its troops at the ready for any later vote bearing on the ABM, for three is always the prospect that, if ill- ness or absenteeism strikes their ranks, the balance will shift abruptly and de- cisively against the ABM. I ask the Mem- bers of the Senate who prevailed yester- day if that is really their preferred course. If the present decision on the ABM is left inta;ct and becomes the sole meas- ure of Senate sentiment on this ques- tion, the entire tenor of legislative-execu- tive relations may be adversely affected. A bloody, protracted, and maiming bat- tle on the ABM cannot serve the goal of healing the domestic divisions which have so impaired our ability to meet our responsibilities at home and abroad. In short, as Senator AIKEN and others have tried to make clear, there is a com- pelling need to seek a new basis on which the Senate can work its will by a sub- stantial majority. To do this will re- quire that the question before the Senate be altered. It will have to take account of the deep concern of those of us who urge restraint in order to explore further the possibility of meaningful strategic arms limitations, and the equally deep-seated concern of those of us who feel that a beginning on ABM deployment should be made now, either as a presumed spur to the negotiations or as a hedge against their failure. Viewed in these terms, the question would become: How can we keep open the option of timely deployment of an ABM system without a premature commitment to deployment and without stimulating the arms race? That is the question that would chart the path to consensus; it is that question which outlines the poten- tial accommodation which so many dili- gent Members of this body have sought for months. There can be no accom- modation unless both sides display the Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9340 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE August 70 1969 flexibility essential to democratic de- cisionmaking. That is the question which the dis- tinguished Senator from New Hamp- shire is putting to the Senate. For many weeks, beginning in the Armed Services Subcommittee on Research and Develop- ment, Senator MCINTYRE and I have ex- plored the possibilities of devising a rea- sonable middle ground. likty staff and I, as well as Senator Mei/geese and his staff, have conducted innumerable con- versations with responsible authorities in the administration as well as Mem- bers of the Senate. The McIntyre for- mula is the only proposal yet advanced that meets the fundamental require- ments of both sides to this intense dispute. For the opponents of Al3M it would explicitly reserve a decision on authoriz- ing actual deployment of ABM weapons and would delay a decision on acquir- ing all the sites for the proposed Safe- guard system. Thus, this fermula would provide by statute that Congress is com- mitting the Nation only to a test and evaluation of the radars, computers, and associated electronics. It would lay the groundwork for resolving or confirming many of the technological questions which have been raised against the sys- tem. At the same time it Would go far t1- ward meeting the political objectives of those who are worried that a start on Safeguard at this time could jeopardize or complicate the SALT talks on which many of us have placed so much hope. With this language in the bill the Soviet Union would have a clear sienal that the United States is exercising restraint, that it prefers to await developments in the arms negotiations before proceeding beyond a test program for the ABM, and that Congress is definitely retaining its authority for subsequent decisions in this matter. For the proponents of the Safeguard system, this proposal provides =pie authority to take every necessary step the President has proposed for fiscal 1970. It would not disrupt the schedule he has proposed. Secretary Packard acknowledged after one Armed Services Committee meeting that the program could tolerate a delay in acquiring addi- tional sites. Further conversations with Dr. John Foster have made clear that, so far as those other sites are concerned, the only authority required for fisael 1970 is to do advance surveys. The only argument for actually acquir- ing those additional sites is one of economy; it may be cheaper and more convenient to do so now rather than later, if need be. But if those sites are purchased in fiscal 1970, it significantly undermines the President's strong as- surances that he contemplates a phased program, with a review every year in light of technological, political, and stra- tegic developments. We should not erode the President's important political standards for this program by allowing relatively trivial economic considerations to cast doubt on the phased plan for the program. It is also clear, as Dr. Foster has con- firmed, that there is no necessity to decide now whether an actual deploy- ment of missiles should be undertaken. Thus this proposal would meet every central concern on both sides of this great dividing line. It would make clear that Congress would decide later whether actually to deploy the weapons for the first phase of Safeguard. But by leaving intact the President's authority to begin a full-scale test and evaluation of the radars, oomputers, and associated electronics at the first two proposed sites, it would keep open the option of having the Safeguard system deployed, if it proves necessary, on pre- cisely the schedule proposed by the ad- ministration. Mr. Packard, Dr. Foster, and every knowledgeable proponent of the system will acknowledge that what they are in fact seeking is the right to test and evaluate the main elements of this system. If they do not prove out, the President would presumably not proceed further with it. Surely it should be clear to both sides that this redefinition of the decision we are taking is a commonsense resolution of the great dispute we have seen de- velop on this issue. It would help remove for the coming months a point of the most severe contention in the Senate and the Nation. It would lubricate the rela- tions between Congress and the admin- istration. It would come closest to the maximum feasible consensus presently achievable in this body and would pro- vide the basis for an active diplomacy in the impending arms negotiations. Let us not blindly reject the resolution of our differences which Senator Mc- INTYRE'S recommendation offers us. Let us recognize the wisdom of his healing suggestion. Let us all?yesterday's losers and winners?move on to a greater vic- tory for the Senate and the country by forging a consensus on this promising middle ground. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I thank and commend the distinguished Senator from Massachusetts for his remarks. I may say that the Senator from Massa- chusetts and I have served on an ad hoc subcommittee named by our distin- guished chairman to look into the re- search and development portions of the authorization bill. I believe that as a good share of our efforts and time were spent on this question, we came to think in terms of finding a compromise that might somehow heal what we felt to be a sharp division in the Senate. I have found the Sentaor from Massachusetts to be a great help and adviser and a mountain of strength as we tried, quietly, in our own way, to bring the two sides together. I now yield 3 or 4 minutes to the dis- tinguished Senator from South Dakota (Mr. MCGOVERN) . The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from South Dakota is recognized for 4 minutes. Mr. McGOVERN. Mr. President, I intend to vote in favor of the amend- ment offered by the Senator from New Hampshire (Mr. McIerree). The vote yesterday cannot be con- strued as a convincing decision on this important issue. The Congress and the country remain deeply divided over the wisdom of moving ahead now with de- ployment of an antiballistic-missile sys- tem. There has been no resolution of the very serious questions raised during this debate over Safeguard's technical effec- tiveness, its vulnerability to any serious effort the Soviets might mount to neu- tralize our Minuteman force, and its po- tential for mischief in connection with the arms race and the forthcoming stra- tegic arms limitation talks. For these reasons those who have supported de- ployment will, if they are prudent, sup- port this modest congressional limita- tion suggested by Senator Mclierree. Those of us who supported the Hart- Cooper amendment should certainly sup- port the Senator from New Hampshire who voted with us yesterday. None of us has altered his views. I still regard the Safeguard system as a major national blunder, and I intend to continue fighting it at every opportunity. But if we cannot eliminate the authority to begin deployment of phase I, the next best step is to narrow that authority. The McIntyre amendment is in line with this purpose. It is carefully drawn to allow only preparation of sites and deployment of long lead-time items, in- 'eluding missile site radars and perimeter acquisition radars. It specifically pro- hibits construction of any operational ABM missiles and it freezes existing au- thority to build missile sites and to ac- quire land other than at the two loca- tions in North Dakota and Montana. I regard that as significant. In the con- text of the arms talks, it assures the So- viet Union that this country will not have an operational anti-ballistic-missile sys- tem of any kind until the Congress au- thorizes it. We retain, during the critical period when discussions will be getting underway, the right to exercise our judg- ment again. It should convince both the Soviet Union and the Nixon administra- tion that we are serious about turning another corner on the dangerous, arid enormously expensive arms race of the past 25 years. In addition it provides additional time for the technical problems to become ap- parent and for the case against deploy- ment to be made again. I am fully con- fident that the growth in opposition to the ABM which has occurred during the past year will continue. The vote yester- day does not mean that Safeguard will be deployed; it means that more months must pass while we continue our critical examination. I urge my colleagues an both sides of this issue to join in supporting Senator MCINTYRE'S amendment. Mr. McINTYRE. I thank the the dis- tinguished Senator from South Dakota. I know how deeply he has felt about the ABM and its possible deployment, and I am especially pleased that he can see his way clear to vote for what I consider to be a sound compromise on this impor- tant issue. Mr. President, I am informed that the distinguished Senator from Mississippi is about ready to yield back his time. I be- lieve I have about 3 or 4 minutes left. Is that correct? Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Auguat 7, 1969 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD? SENATE S 9341 The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator has 31/2 minutes left. Mr. McINTYRE. I would like to reserve those 31/2 minutes at this time, and sug- gest the absence of a quorum, reserving those 31/2 minutes for a final summation. The PRESIDING OFFICER. From whose time would the time for the quo- rum call come? Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the time for the quorum call not be charged to either side. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there abjection? Mr. TOWER. I object. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection Is heard. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I do not understand the purpose of a call for a quorum. Mr. McINTYRE. A call for a quorum just before the vote. I have about 3 minutes left. I am about ready to yield my time back after a brief summary, just as the Senator from Mississippi is. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair is informed that, under the prece- dents of the Senate, the Senator has not time enough left to have a quorum call on his time. Mr. McINTYRE. What about time on the bill? Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, frankly, I think it is in order to have a quorum call before the vote. The PRESIDING OFFICER. After all time is yielded back, there will be a quorum call. Mr. STENNIS. I am ready, then? Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. STENNIS. I yield. Mr. MANSFIELD. I think the Senator from New Hampshire was under a mis- understanding, perhaps due to what I told him, but if the Senator will be kind enough to allow a 2-minute quorum call, it would clear the situation and give a few Senators an opportunity to get here and the Senator can complete his re- marks. Mr. McINTYRE. Is that agreeable? Mr. STENNIS. Yes. Does the Senator want to use a little more time? Mr. McINTYRE. Yes. I would like to address a few more Senators than we have present. Mr. STENNIS. Yes; I agree to take a few minutes for a quorum call. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Just so the Chair may understand, the Senator from Mississippi is yielding 2 minutes out of his time in order that there may be a quorum call? Mr. STENNIS. The Chair is correct. I yield 2 minutes for the purpose of a quorum call the beginning of a quorum call?so the Senator from New Hamp- shire may have the advantage of it in using the rest of his time. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, how much time do I have remaining? The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator from New Hampshire has 3 minutes. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, is my understanding correct that the Senator from Mississippi is about ready to yield back the remainder of his time, after a short closing summation? Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I would not yield back my time as long as the Senator from New Hampshire is using his remaining time. If he wants to yield back his remaining time now, I will yield mine back now. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I have presented this amendment for the con- sideration of the Senate primarily, and from the very beginning, in order that both sides on this sharply divided issue might have a chance to come together and give the President of the United States the sort of backing and authority that he needs in these critical times. My amendment does restrict the De- partment of Defense in what they can do as they undertake to put together this highly sophisticated ABM system. It re- stricts them in such a fashion that those who tried so mightily yesterday to keep the matter entirely in research and de- velopment should find it possible to vote for my amendment. However, my amendment also and very importantly recognizes the possible threat of the mid-1970's, and permits, under a restrained hand, the beginning of installation ef the radars and com- puters at the two sites, Grand Forks and Malmstrom. This amendment should meet the re- quirements of common ground on both sides, and do it without violating any of the principles that are in the minds of those who fought so valiantly yesterday. Mr. President, a "no" vote on this amendment is a vote for deployment. It is a negative vote for deployment. It Is giving up the fight. In its essence, a "no" vote is for taking away strict con- gressional supervision and control of this gigantic new weapon, and leaving it in the hands of the Pentagon. I reserve the remainder of my time. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Sen- ator has used all of his time. Mr. McINTYRE. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays on my amendment. The yeas and nays were ordered. Mr. MONTOYA. Mr. President, most observers have been stating that today marks the ends of a historic unprece- dented debate on American defense pol- icy. It is my opinion that this marks only the beginning of the debate. Whatever the outcome of the vote on ABM yester- day and today, and all subsequent votes on defense programs, what we are deli- berating is whether or not we take the historic step as the first nuclear power to have the wisdom and courage?to de- escalate the nuclear arms race. What intelligent person would advo- cate an escalation of the arms race, fur- ther provoking the proliferation of nu- clear weapons throughout the world? I know in my heart there is no one Sen- ator who advocates this. Secretary McNamara said the corner- stone of our strategic policy is assured destruction. Is there any doubt in any- one's mind we have that assured destruc- tion capability? Could the Soviet Union attack us and be assured we would not inflict a devastating retaliatory blow to their country? The answer is an un- equivical "No." Our immense offensive power, which is capable of retaliation despite a nuclear surprise attack, is the factor that has prevented a nuclear war from occurring. This power has not di- minished and it promises to increase within the next few years. In the next few years the intensity of debate will increase, not diminish. Gone are the days when defense programs re- ceived a carte blanche OK from Con- gress, Now we must work toward a posi- tive world peace policy of conciliation and negotiation. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I think the issues are drawn on this amendment and that its substance and what it would do are well understood. I believe that to adopt this amendment would be contrary to the clear-cut vote that was taken yes- terday, and would be in derogation of the position that the Senate took a few hours ago. I believe those matters are clear. I yield back the remainder of my time. The PRESIDING OFFICER. All time having been yielded back, the question is on agreeing to the amendment offered by the Senator from New Hampshire. On this question, the yeas and nays have been ordered, and the clerk will call the roll. The legislative clerk called the roll. Mr. FULBRIGHT (when his name was called). On this vote I have a pair with the senior Senator from Tennessee (Mr. GORE) . If he were present, he would vote "yea." If I were at liberty to vote, I would vote "nay." I withhold my vote. Mr. KENNEDY. I announce that the Senator from Tennessee (Mr. GORE), and the Senator from Louisiana (Mr. LONG) are necessarily absent. The result was announced?yeas 27, nays 70, as follows: [No. 68 Leg.] Aiken Bayh Brooke Church Cranston Goodell Gravel Harris Hartke Allen Allott Anderson Baker Bellmon Bennett Bible Boggs ? Burdick Byrd, Va. Byrd, W. Va. Cannon Case Cook Cooper Cotton Curtis Dirksen Dodd Dole Dominick Eagleton Eastland Ellender YEAS-27 Hughes Inouye Javits McCarthy McGovern. McIntyre Metcalf Mondale Montoya NAYS-70 Ervin Fannin Fong Goldwater Griffin Gurney Hansen Hart Hatfield Holland Hollings Hruska Jackson Jordan, N.C. Jordan, Idaho Kennedy Magnuson Mansfield Mathias McClellan McGee Miller Mundt Murphy Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 Moss Pell Proxmire Ribicoff Schweiker Tidings Williams, N.J. Yarborough Young, Ohio Muskie Nelson Packwood Pastore Pearson Percy Prouty Randolph Russell Saxbe Scott Smith Sparkman Spong Stennis Stevens Symington Talmadge Thurmond Tower William, Del, Young, N. Da, Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9342 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 7, 196k PRESENT AND GIVING A LIVE PAIR Fulbright, against. NOT VOTING-2 Gore Long So Mr. MCINTYRE'S arnendment Was rejected. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote by which the amendment was rejected. Mr. DIRKSEN. I move to lay that motion on the table. The motion to lay on the table was agreed to. PROGRAM Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I should like to ask the distinguished majority leader about the prograii. for the re- mainder of the day and perhaps tomor- row, and also on Saturday, inasmuch as it was said that there could be a session on Saturday. AUTHORIZATION FOR COMMTTTEE TO MEET Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, in reply to my distinguished colleague, the minority leader, may I first ask unani- mous consent that the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs be al- lowed to meet during the session of the Senate today. I do that because I under- stand that the Governor of Alaska and many Alaskans are in Washington, and it is a pretty expensive proposition for them. In view of that circumstance, I hope it will be allowed. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Coos In the chair). Without objection, it is so ordered. ORDER FOR ADJOURNMENT UNTIL 11 A.M. TOMORROW Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that when the Sen- ate completes its business today, it stand in adjournment until 11 San. tomorrow. The PRESIDING OlvrICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. ORDER FOR ADJOURNMENT FROM TOMORROW, FRIDAY, UNTIL MON- DAY, AUGUST 11, 1969 Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, it is my understanding that there is a certain amount of opposition?legitimate oppo- sition, may I say?to a Saturday session; and on that basis, I think it should be announced, with the concurrence of the minority leader, that, unfortunately? from our point of view, in an effort to speed up consideration of the pending bill?there will not be a Saturday session. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that when the Senate completes its business on Friday, it adjourn until 10:30 on Monday morning next. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered. Mr. MANSFIELD. There are difficul- ties which preclude our meeting on Bat- urday, and those difficulties are not the fault of the majority leader or the mi- nority leader. ORDER FOR RECOGNITION OF SENATOR PEARSON ON MONDAY Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that, at the conclu- sion of the prayer on Monday morning next, the distinguished Senator from Kansas (Mr. PEARSON) be recognized for not to exceed 30 minutes. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is soAr d. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIA- TIONS FOR FISCAL YEAR 1970 FOR MILITARY PROCUREMENT, RE- SEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, AND FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF MIS- SILE TEST FACILITIES AT KWAJ- ALEIN MISSILE RANGE, AND RE- SERVE COMPONENT STRENGTH The Senate resumed the consideration of the bill (S. 2546) to authorize appro- priations during the fiscal year 1970 for procurement of aircraft, missiles, naval vessels, and tracked combat vehicles, and to authorize the construction of test fa- cilities at Kwajalein Missile Range, and to prescribe the authorized personnel strength of the Selected Reserve of each Reserve component of the Armed Forces, and for other purposes. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. Presidents it is my understanding that 15, 18, or 20 amendments are yet to be considered. I would hope for the continued coopera- tion of the Senators on both sides, to the end that, if at all possible, we might be able to complete action on this bill no later than Wednesday next, or sooner. Mr. MAGNUSON. If we meet on Sat- urday, we can do it sooner. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the Senator yield? Mr. MANSFIELD. I yield. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, the ABM Is just one item of many major items that are in the pending bill, as is well known. Some major items in the bill have not been spoken about on the floor since Jan- uary. Some of these amendments?I re- spect -them all?go to the very vitals of our national defense program and can- not be discussed briefly. They go into fundamental policies over a period of years. All members of the committee are willing to agree as early as we can to some reasonable limitation of time with reference to the disposition of these amendments. But at this time we could not make agreements on all of them. As soon as we can, we will make an agree- ment on all those that have been filed, when we know what they contain. There will be considerable debate on these matters, and it is highly important that all Senators be present. We are pre- pared, and .I am sure the proponents are, as are many members of the committee, to discuss the subject matter. Mr. President, I certainly hope that we will work out a plan to pass this bill be- fore the August recess. Many things de- pend upon the final version of this au- thorization bill. It is a detriment to the Defense Department and to Secretary Laird to string the matter out so long into the calendar year. Of course, the appropriations cannot move on these matters. I hope, and I believe, we will have the cooperation of all to drive through and finish this bill before the August recess. Mr. GOLDWATER. Mr. President, I should like to back up what the distin- guished chairman has said and to appeal, once again, for a Saturday session. Seven amendments aimed at major portions of this bill already have been announced. All of them involve two or three times the amount of money about which we have debated 5 weeks. It will take time on the floor to answer the questions that will arise about the detail in highly technical military equipment. Frankly, I do not see a chance of com- pleting action on this bill by next Wednesday, when we are supposed to start a vacation, unless we do work on next Saturday. I like Saturdays off as well as any- one else. It gives me a chance to get home. But I think that disposing of this bill by the time we take a recess is more important than a day off on Saturday. Some of these items, such as AMSA, are expensive and will require a great deal of explanation. When we get into the matter of the tank, that will take a great deal of explanation. Also to be contested is the F-14 of the Navy, a very expensive two-place interceptor, which will take a great deal of explanation be- fore we hope we can convince Members of the Senate that it is worthwhile. We have the whole field of academic spend- ing on research and development, in which the Senator from Arkansas (Mr. FULBRIGHT) and I are in complete agree- ment. It involves a vast amount of money, a field in which we can save hundreds of millions of dollars, but it cannot be done overnight nor in a half-hour's time. With all due respect to what some of the Members may have to do on Satur- day, I think we could better spend the time here, so that we make sure we will get the recess about which we have spoken. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, I agree with the Senator from Mississippi and the Senator from Arizona that this bill will take a long, long time. The Sen- ator from Arizona has just given us some of the reasons, and there are many other reasons that will delay us. I think we all agree that this bill de- serves debate and should get debate in detail. I cannot see any possibility of our finishing by Wednesday. Perhaps there is, but I cannot see it, even if we come In Saturday and Sunday, because we have so much to discuss. The C-5A has not been mentioned, nor has the aircraft carrier. All these things are extraordi- narily complicated and require real dis- cussion and debate. Many questions will require detailed answers. Some of them have not been answered satisfactorily in the hearings. Under these circumstances, Mr. Presi- dent, although I would agree with the Senator from Mississippi that it is im- portant that we get the bill through as quickly as possible, we have a responsi- bility to discuss the bill in detail. This is only a 5-page bill covering $20 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 ?Au g u4t 7, 1969CONG1,ESSIONAL RECORD? AR S9343 Many of these matters cover complex out on numerous occasions the fact that to say that that is a matter covered by matters which are not clear in the bill, we have 15 and no other country has the amendment not in the bill. There We would not really know what is in the them. And he raised a fundamental have been no hearings on it. There has bill if we were to discuss it for 3 or 4 question of policy as to whether there been some discussion by the committee. days. Although none of us would like it, should be one. This is so important that For that reason, I could not agree now. I feel strongly we will have to be working it should not be voted upon under a Mr. MANSFIELD. That is all right. on this bill in September. time limitation of 1 hour or whatever Mr. President, I would appreciate it Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, let me it is. We should have an opportunity to if the Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. NEL- say first of all, out of experience?and understand this matter, because ? it soli) , the Senator from Texas (Mr. YAR- Approved For Release 2004/11/30 ? the majority leader has had the same ex- amounts to so much n moey. CIA-RDP7 WR000300100001-3 BOROUGH), the Senator from Indiana perience?keeping Members in the I think the Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. HARTKE), and the Senator from Chamber on Saturdays invites many is probably correct, although I rather Rhode Island (Mr. PELL) would meet quorum calls, including live quorum welcome the idea of running late tonight with the distinguished chairman of the calls, and there is a lot of time lost. I and tomorrow night, as long as we give Subcommittee on Scientific Research would much rather respectfully suggest Senators notice. We object to coming up (Mr. MCINTYRE), and if possible, the to the distinguished majority leader that to 6 o'clock in the evening and then be- manager of the bill, to discuss a number we run late tonight and tomorrow night, ing told. I welcome the idea of running of amendments covering the same sub- because we will do better that way than late. ject to see if some sort of agreement if we were to come in on Saturday. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, will the could not be reached as to what could Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I ap- Senator yield? or could not be done with respect to con- preciate what the distinguished minority ---- The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is' there solidation or coordination. If we could leader said. I believe the distinguished objection to the unanimous-consent re- meet in the rear of the Chamber so that Senator from Illinois has the answer to quest? we might discuss the matter, I would the question as to a Saturday session. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I appreciate it. Solt is with reluctance that I emphasize withdraw the request. AMENDMENT NO 85 there will be no Saturday seSsion. This The PRESIDING OFFICER. The The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair is t my personal wish but we will be in unanimous-consent request is with- recognizes the Senator from .Pennsyl- late tonight and we will be in late tomor- row. I hope it will be possible to get a continued degree of cooperation among Senators as amendments are called up. I understand the Senator from Penn- sylvania (Mr. SCHWEIKER) is quite recep- tive to the possibility of a time limita- tion which would be in the best interests of all concerned. The Senator from Pennsylvania will shortly offer an amendment, and I would like to ask, with his approval?that there be a time limi- tation of 1 hour on the amendment of the distinguished Senator from Penn- sylvania, the time to be equally dividerl between the author/ of the amendment (Mr. SCHWEIKER) and the manager of the bill, the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. STENNIS). Mr. CASE. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, I wish to ask the majority leader if we could have a gentlemen's agreement that as far as a time limita- tion on other amendments is concerned, there would not be a request made, at least without some notice, except on the basis of successive amendments, and an agreement relating an individual amend- ment. Mr. MANSFIELD. Yes, of course; Itijeinse thought it was perfectly proper to ask at standing with the Senator from New , contract as to-- this time, because of the attendance. Hampshire who dealt with this in great "(1) the estimates at the time the con- Mr. CASE. Yes. detail in the hearings. It might be we tract was entered into of the contractor and Mr. MANSFIELD. The amendment re- could get together. It might be it would the procuring agency as to the cost of the quires a new Department of Defense re- not take a long debate; otherwise, it contract, with separate estimates for (a) re- search, development, testing, and engineer- porting system for major contractors would take a long debate. to ing, and for (b) production; and increases GAO responsibility as the Mr. President, that is all I have to say "(2) the contractor's and agency's sub- watchdog. at this time. sequent estimates of cost for completion of Mr. FULBRIGHT. Mr. President, re- Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I the contract up to the time of the review; serving the right to object?and I shall have withdrawn the unanimous-consent "(3) the reasons for any significant rise or ' not object?first, I agree with what the request. decline from prior cost estimates; majority leader said about running late The PRESIDING OFFICER. The "(4) the options available for additional at night. This has proved to be very unanimous-consent request has been exercise such options, and the expected cost procurement, whether the agency intends to effective in the past. I also wish to agree withdrawn, of exercising such options; with the Senator from Wisconsin. If I Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I "(5) the estimates of the contractor and understand some of the major items the do not know when it will be offered again the procuring agency, at the time the con- Senator froth. Mississippi is talking about, or whether it will be offered again. It tract was entered into, of the time for com- I do not think we would be warranted was made in an attempt to expedite con- pletfm of the contract, any subsequent es- to pass on items without understanding sideration of the proposed legislation. timates of both as to the time for comple- tion, and the reasons for any significant them. I thought that was the desire of the increases therein; The Senator from Missouri is not here chairman of the Committee on Armed "(6) the estimates of the contractor and at this moment, but he had much to Services, procuring agency as to performance cepa- say about an aircraft carrier. He pointed Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, I wish billties of the subject matter of the contract, drawn. vania. Mr. MANSFIELD. There will be no The amendment offered by the Senator time limitation. from Pennsylvania will be stated. Mr. STENNIS. Mr. President, with re- The assistant legislative clerk pro- spect to the amendment which is coming ceeded to read the amendment. up, I do not think it will take long for Mr. SCHWEIKER. Mr. President, I ask debate. That amendment came up in unanimous consent that further reading committee and was explained by the au- of the amendment be dispensed with. thor. Then, he did not ask for a vote on The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without the amendment. I have not really gotten objection, it is so ordered, and the into it much since then. So I would have amendment will be printed in the to get some material here and look into RECORD. it. Then, I would be amenable to a limita- The amendment, ordered to be printed tion. in the RECORD, is as follows: Mr. President, I wish to make a fur- At the end of the bill, insert the follow- ther observation. I want the bill to move ing new title: along and I will make any reasonable "TITLE V?QUARTERLY CONTRACT agreement as far as the time is con- REPORTING AND GAO AUDITS cerned. However, on these far-reaching "SEC. 501. (a) The Secretary ,of Defense, policy matters that are complicated, it in cooperation with the Comptroller General, would be unreasonable to go into a time shall develop a reporting system for major limitation. For instance, I refer to the contracts entered into by the Department of matter mentioned by the Senator from Defense, any department or agency thereof, Arknasas. Then, there is the matter or any armed service of the United States, for dealing with biological warfare. We must the development or procurement of any get into that. weapons system or other need of the United States. I would like to suggest informally "(b) The Secretary of Defense shall cause that those who have amendments on a review to be made of each major contract biological and chemical warfare get to as specified in subsection (a) during each gether and agree on something among period of three calendar months and shall 1 and then have an under- make a finding with respect to each such Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 S 9344 Approved For Release 2004/11/30 : CIA-RDP71600364R000300100001-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE August 7,1969, and the reasons for any significant actual or Mr. SCHWEIKER. Mr. President, I ask vision lights in publicized hearings, when no estimated shortcomings therein compared to for the yeas and nays on the amend- amount of talk could return the waste of the performance capabilities called for under ment. money. the original contract or ?subsequent esti- mates; and The yeas and nays were ordered. The purpoee of this amendment is to (7) such other information as the secre- Mr. SCHWEIKER, Mr. President, I ask attempt to avoid such situations. It will " tary of Defense shall determine to be pert- unanimous consent that the names of put into statutory reform a requirement nent in the evaluation of