THE PRESENT AND FUTURE ROLE OF CIA

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
224
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 9, 2005
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 25, 1965
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
Body: 
Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approve or Release 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B 9528000100020001-6 PG..D..17/2 25 August i965 A. At the outset in long range planning for the Central Intelligence Agency it is necessa,:y to examine its present and future responsibilities, bearing in mind that while the National Security Act of 1947 which created the Agency describes certain functions for the organization, the evolution of the intelligence community, the changing roles and responsibilities of other departments and agencies and the creation of new agencies have all served to affect the activities of the CIA. It is equally important to CIA's planning that there be clear under- standing within the U. S. Government of the Agency's responsibility and authority. It is therefore believed essential that the Agency continue and intensify efforts to brief selected Congressmen and Congressional staff members, taking into account their continuing and special interests and- including discussions of CIA's functions and responsibilities in general. Such briefings should also be initiated for the Executive Branch Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For lease 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B0091000100020001-6 PG-D=17/Z of the Government, including particularly such policy groups as the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board. While it is realized that the DCI must carry the principal burden in briefing U. S. Govern- anent officials, greater use of second echelon officers of CIA, as feasib':o, would increase the scope of the Agency's efforts in this area without increasing the Director's already heavy schedule. 11 War Planning A. The role of the CIA in wartime is not fully understood or accepted by the member agencies of the United States Intelligence Board (USIB). In 1957, the National Security Council instructed the Director of Central Pntelligence to proceed with the development of war plans for the intelligence conununity. The Director took the position that it would be necessary first to develop directives governing peacetime arrange- ments. During the ensuing two years, various National Security Council Intelligence Directives defining foreign intelligence responsibilities of the USIB member agencies were published. In 1959 the Emergency Planning Steering Committee (never formally constituted or recognized by the USIB) initiated a study which was concerned largely with emergency relocation-only one facet of war planning. The Committee ceased to Approved For Release - 2R000100020001-6 25X1 25X1 Approved Fo0lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0090000100020001-6 PG--D- 17/2 function when the Board reached an impasse on the intelligence advisory role of the DCI to the President during wartime. B The CIA Act of 1947 makes no distinction between the peacetime and the wartime roles of the DCX or the Agency. The At:t. provides all of the authority needed by the A -envy for the pursuit of wartime activities. Positive assertion of existing statutory authority rare of a CIA war plan is needed. Subsequent planning should integrate the wartime roles of the USIB member agencies. C Paragraph 8 of National Security Council Intelligence Directive 5 and the Command Relationships Agreement (between the T)CI and the Secretary of Defense) place the Agency's forces operating in or from an active theatre of war under the command of the Theatre Commander. The Theatre Commander would be under the operational control of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. D. Relationships between CIA Headquarters and the military command structure in time of war have not been defined. As matters now stand, CIA would tend to lose its forces located in an active theatre of war and would be without any plan of action for the wartime operation of the remainder of the Agency. It is imperative that CIA clarify its mission in war and its relations with the Department of Defense. Approved For Rel Use 2.005105:5120 . CIA-K 711" 25X1 25X1 Approved For lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095 000100020001-6 25X1 PG-1D 17/2 The Agency is small in size as compared to the military. 25X1 Its real worth is based upon qualitative characteristics and a quick reaction capability. Being irregular and unorthodox by nature, its activities and capabilities are understood little by the millary. Its field components cannot operate effectively without the resources and guidance of CIA Headquarters. The DCI and Warning A. As Chairman of USIB, the DCI is the senior intelligence officer concerned with warning. The USIB's formal intelligence warning 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved Forlease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095J000100020001-6 SECRET PG -D- 17/2 25X1 mechanism--the Watch Committee and its staff, the National Indications Center--reports to USIB by the terms of DCID 1/5 and the Chairman of the Watch Committee is designated by the PCI after consultation with USIB We have dealt with early warning in a separate monograph else- where in this plan. IV Intelligence Production A The Agency's role in the production of intelligence has been quite well established in most areas, both by law and by directive, as being charged with the production of national intelligence. In some areas of intelligence production this is more specifically established than in others, and therefore in planning It is important that it be. firmly established in all areas where the Agency must make major commitments. In this regard the National Security Act of 1947 states, "(b) for the purpose of coordinating the intelligence activities of the several Government departments and agencies in the interest of national security, it shall be the duty of the Agency, under the direction of 'the National Security Council--(3) to correlate and evaluate intelligence relating to the national security, and provide for the appropriate dissemination of such intelligence within the Government using where apprppriate existing agencies and facilities. ". What this says in simpli?st modern-day terms is that the Agency is charged with producing national intelligence. Approved For lease 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B009 2R000100020001-6 Approved For lease 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00951000100020001-6 25X1 PG-D-17/2 25X1 specifically Messrs Kirkpatrick and Cline for the Agency and B The responsibility for the production of National Intel- ligence Estimates has been clearly established by common practice over the years and is spelled out in DCID 1/ 1. This is one of the most important important responsibilities of the Agency and has created for the United States Government a document of incalculable value in which the greatest objectivity of the intelligence system provides the policymaker with the top intelligence viewpoint. Its integrity should be preserved at all costs in the interests of national security, most particularly the responsibility of an independent agency for its production. C. The responsibility for national current intelligence is less clearly established by directive although it appears that there is a clear understanding with DIA as to the division of responsibilities. In the negotiations conducted in 1962 and 1963 between the Agency and DIA, duced departmental current intelligence while CIA produced national current intelligence. However, this has not been inscribed in any direc- tive and this should be done at an early date in order to insure logical for DIA, a clear understanding was reached that DIA pro- 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 25X1 Approved For lease 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00951000100020001-6 PG-D-17/2 organizational development both within the Agency and the Department of Defense that will implement the agreement, D The Foreign Missiles and Space Analysis Center (FMSAC) was established by the DCI as a means of meeting his statutory responsibilities under the National Security,Act of 1947 to correlate.and intelligence relating to national security and to provide appropriate evaluate/dissemination of such intelligence within the Government. Mr McCone expressed the view that his authority to form such an organization was clear and he felt there was no need for supporting documents--i. e., NSCIDs and DCID.s No additional action is believed necessary at this time. The production of -national economic intelligence on specified areas of the world was established as a CIA responsibility by letter from General Walter Bedell Smith to Secretary of State Dean Acheson. This was formally, delineated. in DCID 3/1 which assigns to CIA primary responsibility. for the production of economic intelligence on the Communist countries. The DCI in March-of this year advisedthe Secretary of State that he found it.necessary to develop within CIA a limited capability for economic analysis on non-Communist countries as 25X1 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved Fo! lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009 000100020001-6 25X1 PG-D-17/2 well. In the fields of military-economic intelligence CIA has also under- taken to supplement intelligence produced elsewhere in order to provide essential contributions to National Intelligence Estimates on military questions and to provide the support required by the Director of Central Intelligence in carrying out his responsibilities to the President. Research relating to the cost and resource impact of foreign military and space programs has been recognized by the Department of Defense as a primary responsibility of CIA. Finally, the coordination of economic intelligence is carried out through the Economic Intelligence Committee, chaired by a representative of the Central Intelligence Agency in accord- ance with DCID 3/ 1. F The responsibility for the production of national basic intelligence as typified by the National Intelligence Surveys is clearly established and is specified in NSCID 3, paragraph la, b, dc, d, and e. However, there is considerable duplication of effort in the broad area of basic intelligence, since each community organization produces intel- ligence for different purposes and can clearly establish that their product is not identical with the National Intelligence Surveys and within the 25X1 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved Folease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009 000100020001-6 PG-D-1712 military area basic intelligence is often produced under contract from non-intelligence components. Basic intelligence research and produc- tion is therefore an area in which there is considerable uncor rolled and uncoordinated effort. It is recommended that in planning for the future the entire area of basic intelligence, not just the production of National Intelligence Surveys, be subjected to intensive scrutiny and clearly delineated responsibilities be established in order to insure orderly progress. While this is being done--it may take a matter of years--the CIA should continue to carry the responsibility for the production of the National Intelligence Surveys. G. Present and future demands on the Director emphasize the importance of completing the Agency's strategic base in research by extending it in political intelligence. This is an area as critical as it is difficult. It is a major challenge, but must be met if intelligence is to match its findings in hostile capabilities with correlative insight into intentions. In recent years the State Department has more and more withdrawn from this'field and devoted its limited resources to quick support of policy. The Agency does not have a "charter" for 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 200 I -RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For*lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009,000100020001-6 PG-D- 17/2 for political research and does not ask for one. There are gaps here which must be filled in the national interest and CIA m;?ans to fill them. H. Responsibility for the Agency's production of finished intelligence on all foreign scientific and technical activities rests with the Office of Scientific Intelligence under the authority of National Security Council Intelligence Directive 3 and Director of Central Intel- ligence Directives 3/3 for atomic energy, 3/4 for guided missiles and astronautics, and 315 for other scientific and technical intelligence. The pertinent citations in 1~?SCID 3 are contained in paragraph 7c ("the CIA shall produce., .. scientific and technical intelligence as a service of common concern") and 7d on atomic energy intelligence. DCID 3/3 and 3/4 both state in paragraph 2 that the production of intelligence on the responsibility of all departments and agencies atomic energy and guided missiles and astronautics is/represented on the USIB. Paragraph 2a of DCID 3/5 reiterates paragraph 7c of NSCID 3 that the CIA shall product scientific and technical intelligence as a service of common concern "and as required to fulfill the statutory responsibilities of the DCI. " Thus OSI produces intelligence in nearly every phase of foreign military research and development consistent with its manpower capabilities and external research facilities. 25X1 25X1 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095000100020001-6 25X1 PO-D-17/2 V. National Reference Services A. Over the years CIA has developed certain national intel. I!Zence reference services required for independent intelligence produc- tion by the Agency in direct support of the DCI, to support assigned intelligence- responsibilities and to provide services of common support to the community. Likewise, the simultaneous development of reference services by each of the USIB intelligence organizations would be costly, duplicative, and unnecessary. This is an area where the attention of the DCI is needed in order to reach agreement with the military agencies and the Department of State as to the responsibility for the development and maintenance of national intelligence reference services of common concern. It is also clear that this Agency's ability to cope with its own immediate needs for information handling, much less to move toward a more centralized community effort, will depend heavily, if not entirely, upon the use of automatic data processing tech- niques, The Agency's future need for automatic d sta processing is,, therefore, given special emphasis later on in this plan. The Central Intelligence Agency now has firmly established its responsibility for the maintenance of a national reference service in 25X1 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved Fo1elease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0094V 000100020001-6 25X1 PG-D- 17/2 the field of biographic intelligence dealing with all foreign personalities outside of the military field. This is an important service and should be maintained. Its charter is DCID 1/9. C. The CIA also has an established national intelligence reference service responsibility in the field of the acquisition and indexing of foreign documents. This is prescribed in DCID 2/4 and is one D While CIA's library and substantive intelligence files are at the present time used more extensively by other agencies than by CIA--and this is as it should be-.this is nevertheless one area where centralization and coordination can achieve savings for the intelligence community. With substantive intelligence documents entering the system at a rate in excess of a million a month, it is obviously waste- ful for each agency to plan to file the identical documents. On the other hand, each agency obviously has the right to be able to retrieve imme- diately documents on any subject which it may need. It is therefore important that the DCI insist on the clear delineation of responsibility in the intelligence system for the storage and retrieval of substantive documents . 25X1 Approved For Release 2005 5% R&1 RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved Fo0lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009, 000100020001-6 25X1 PG-D- 17/2 Intelligence Collection 25 B. The Central Intelligence Agency by intent of Congress is responsible for the conduct of Federally directed espionage and counter- espionage on a world-wide basis. This has been directed in NSCID 5 which also provides that the armed services may pe.rticipate in clandes- tine operations for departmental purposes provided that their efforts are coordinated with the designated. representatives of the DCI. This requirea?especial attention to the necessity for the security implications of clandestinity. 25X1 I SECRET Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Next 2 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For Releas ? far-il U 11 0 PG-D-171 19 August 1965 The Present and Future Role of CIA 1. In preparing any long-range plan for the Central Intelligence Agency it is necessary to examine its present and future responsibilities, bearing in mind that the National Security Act of 1947 which created the Agency describes certain functions for the organization, the evolution of the intelligence community, the changing roles and responsibilities of other departments and agencies and the creation of new agencies have all served to affect the activities of the CIA. It is equally important to CIA's planning that there be clear understanding within the U.S. Government of the Agency's responsibility and authority. It is therefore believed essential that the Agency continue and intensify efforts to brief selected Congressmen and Congressional staff members, taking into account their continuing and special interests and including discussions of CIA's functions and responsibilities in general. Such briefings should also be initiated for the Executive Branch of the Government, including particularly such policy groups as the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board. While it is realized that the DCI must carry the principal burden in briefing U.S. Govern- ment officials, greater use of second echelon officers of CIA, as feasible, would increase the scope of the Agency's efforts in this area without increasing the Director's already heavy schedule. Approved For ReleSE05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 C%r Approved For .ease 2005/05/ _ I DP76130095,00100020001-6 War Planning 2. The role of the CIA in wartime is not fully understood or accepted by the member agencies of the United States Intelligence Board (USIB). In 1957, the National Security Council instructed the Director of Central Intelligence to proceed with the development of war plans for the Intelligence Community. The Director took the position that it would be necessary first to develop directives governing peacetime arrangements. During the ensuing two years, various National Security Council Intelligence Directives defining foreign intelligence responsibilities of the USIB member agencies were published. In 1959 the Emergency Planning Steering Committee (never formally constituted or recognized by the USIB) initiated a study which was concerned largely with emergency relocation -- only one facet of war planning. The Committee ceased to function when the Board reached an impasse on the intelligence advisory role of the DCI to the President during wartime. The CIA Act of 19+7 makes no distinction between the peacetime and the wartime roles of'the DCI or the Agency. The Act provides all of the authority needed by the Agency for the pursuit of wartime activities. Positive assertion of existing statutory authority in the form of a CIA war plan is needed. Subsequent planning should integrate the wartime roles of the USIB member agencies. Paragraph 8 of National Security Council Intelligence Directive 5 and the Command Relationships Agreement (between the DCI and the Secretary of Defense) place the Agency's forces operating in or from an active theatre of war under the command of the Theatre Commander. The Theatre Commander would be under the operational control of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Relationships between CIA Headquarters Approved For Release Miff RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 .OP 'iP Approved For ase 2005/99A-RDP76B0095 0100020001-6 and the military command structure in time of war have not been defined. As matters now stand, CIA would lose its forces located in an active theatre of war, and would be without any plan of action for the wartime operation of the remainder of the Agency. The Agency is small in size as compared to the military. Its real worth is based upon qualitative characteristics and a quick reaction capability. Being irregular and unorthodox by nature, its activities and capabilities are understood little by the military. Its field components cannot operate effectively without the resources and guidance 25X1 of CIA Headquarters. The DCI and Warning 25X1 3. As Chairman of USIB, the DCI is the senior intelligence officer concerned with warning. The USIB's formal intelligence warning mechanism -- the Watch Committee and its staff, the National Indications Center -- reports to USIB by the terms of DCID 1/5 and the Chairman of the Watch Committee is designated by the DCI after consultation with USIB. Intelligence Production 1+. The Agency's role in the production of intelligence has been quite well established in most areas, both by law and by directive, as being charged Approved For Release 2005/05 D} .,O DP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For .ease 2005/05/ DP76B0095;00100020001-6 with the production of national intelligence. In some areas of intelligence production this is more specifically established than in others, and therefore in planning it is important that it be firmly established in all areas where the Agency must make major commitments. In this regard the National Security Act of 19+7 states, "(b) for the purpose of coordinating the intelligence activities of the several Government departments and agencies in the interest of national security, it shall be the duty of the Agency, under the direction of the National Security Council -- (3) to correlate and evaluate intelligence relating to the national security, and provide for the appropriate dissemination of such intelligence within the Government using where appropriate existing agencies and facilities." 5. The responsibility for the production of National Intelligence Estimates has been clearly established by common practice over the years and is spelled out in DCID 1/1. This is one of the most important responsibili- ties of the Agency and has created for the United States Government a document of incalculable value in which the greatest objectivity of the intelligence system provides the policymaker with the top intelligence viewpoint. Its integrity should be preserved at all costs in the interests of national security, most particularly the responsibility of an independent agency for its production. 6. The responsibility for national current intelligence is less clearly established by directive, although it appears that there is a clear under- standing with DIA as to the division of responsibilities. In the negotiations conducted in 1962 and 1963 between the Agency and DIA, specifically Approved For Release 2005/OBRCRDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For .ease 2005/QWtR3A-RDP76B0095 00100020001-6 Messrs. Kirkpatrick and Cline for the Agency and 25X1 DIA, a clear understanding was reached that DIA produced departmental current intelligence while CIA produced national current intelligence. However, this has not been inscribed in any directive and this should be done at an early date in order to insure logical organizational development both within the Agency and the Department-of Defense. 7. The production of national economic intelligence on specified areas of the world was established as a CIA responsibility by letter from General Walter Bedell Smith to Secretary of State Dean Acheson. This was formally delineated in DCID 3/1 which assigns to CIA primary responsibility for the production of economic intelligence on the Communist countries. The DCI in March of this year advised the Secretary of State that he found it necessary to develop within CIA a limited capability for economic analysis on non-Communist countries as well. In the fields of military-economic intelligence CIA has also undertaken to supplement intelligence produced elsewhere. in order to provide essential contributions to National Intelligence Estimates on military questions and to provide the support required by the Director of Central Intelligence in carrying out his responsibilities to the President. Research relating to the cost and resource impact of foreign military and space programs has been recognized by the Department of Defense as a primary responsibility of CIA. Finally, the coordination of economic intelligence is carried out through the Economic Intelligence Committee, chaired by a representative of the Central Intelligence Agency in accordance with DCID 3/1. Approved For Release 200STCIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ase 2005/05/20#;P76BO09521#0100020001-6 8. The responsibility for the production of basic intelligence as typified by the National Intelligence Surveys is clearly established and is specified in NSCID 3, paragraph la, b, c, d, and e. However, there is considerable duplication of effort in the broad area of basic intelligence, since each Community organization produces intelligence for different purposes and can clearly establish that their product is not identical.with the National Intelligence Surveys. Basic intelligence research and production is therefore an area in which there is considerable uncontrolled and uncoordinated effort. It is recommended that in planning for the future the entire area of basic intelligence, not just the production of National Intelligence Surveys, be subjected to intensive scrutiny and clearly delineated responsibilities be established in order to insure orderly progress. While this is being done -- it may take a matter of years -- the CIA should continue to carry the responsibility for the production of the National Intelligence Surveys. National Reference Services 9. Over the years CIA has developed certain national intelligence reference services required for independent intelligence production by the Agency in direct support of the DCI, to support assigned intelligence responsibilities and to provide services of common support to the Community. This has been an expensive area as far as money and manpower is concerned and with the information explosion already upon us will,, without proper attention in the near future, consume a very large portion of Agency resources. Likewise, the simultaneous development of reference services by each of the USIB intelligence organizations would be costly, duplicative and unnecessary. Approved For Release 2005/0 * t Approved For .ease 2005/0 K_ J RDP76B0095.00100020001-6 This is an area where the attention of the DCI is needed in order to reach agreement with the military agencies and the Department of State as to the responsibility for the development and maintenance of national intelligence reference services of common concern. It is also clear that this Agency's ability to cope with its own immediate needs for information handling, much less to move toward a more centralized Community effort, will depend heavily, if not entirely, upon the use of automatic data processing techniques. The Agency's future need for automatic data processing is therefore given special emphasis later on in this plan. 10. The Central Intelligence Agency now has firmly established its responsibility for the maintenance of a national reference service in the field of biographic intelligence dealing with all foreign personalities outside of the military field. This is an important service and should be maintained. Its charter is DCID 1/9. 11. The CIA also has an established national intelligence reference service responsibility in the field of the acquisition and indexing of foreign documents. This is prescribed in DCID 2/4.and is one of the better coordinated efforts in the Federal Government. 12. While CIA's library and substantive intelligence files are at the present time used more extensively by other agencies than by CIA -- and this is as it should be -- this is nevertheless one area where centralization and coordination can achieve savings. With substantive intelligence documents entering the system at a rate in excess of a million a month, it is obviously wasteful for each agency to plan to file the identical documents. On the other hand, each agency obviously has the right to be able to retrieve Approved For Release 2005/05/`%.0REDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ease 2005/05ISECRELDP76B0095 00100020001-6 immediately documents on any subject which it may need. It is therefore important that the DCI insist on the clear delineation of responsibility in the intelligence system for the storage and retrieval of substantive documents. Intelligence Collection 1i+. The Central Intelligence Agency by intent of Congress is responsible for the conduct of federally directed espionage and counterespionage on a world-wide basis. This has been directed in NSCID 5 which also provides that the services may participate in clandestine operations provided that their efforts are coordinated with the designated representatives of the DCI. This requires especial attention to the necessity for the security implica- tions of clandestinity. It is one of the few Agency activities which has its wartime charter in existence through the command relationship agreement with the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which provides that in times of war or national emergency or when directed by the President, CIA assets in a theatre of war or zone of military operations will be under the direction of the theatre commander. 25 25 8 Approved For Release 2005/05/98t!DP76B00952R000100020001-6 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Next 2 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved F Release 2005%LR;IA-RDP76BOO952RO0010juzuuul-ti PC- - ,~--17 ASSUMPTIONS--THE ROLE OF CIA 1. In preparing any long-range plan for the Central Intelligence Agency it is necessary to make certain assumptions as to its future responsibilities. While the National Security Act of 1947 which created the Agency describes certain functions for the organization, the evolution of the intelligence community, the changing roles and responsibilities of other departments and agencies and the creation of new agencies have all served to affect the activities of the CIA. We consider it important as a basis for sound planning that there be clear understanding both within the Agency and within the United States Government, including the Executive Branch and the Congress, to what responsibilities rest with the CIA. 2. In a later section we deal with the subject of emergency and war planning and note the necessity for action in these areas. However, we would stress at this point the necessity for simply establishing an under- standing in the Government as to the role of the CIA in the time of national emergency or general war. It is essential that this be clarified before any national emergency or general war creates a situation where national assets can be lost through hasty action in time of stress. The Congress has made no distinction between CIA's role in wartime and that in peacetime. It is therefore assumed that, except where qualified by National Security Council Directives or Presidential orders, the CIA will continue to perform. SECRET 0, A. M. , '? sday, 17 August 65 25X Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ,ease 2005/01-0 DP76B0095,00100020001-6 the same functions in wartime that it does at present. Except for the command relationship agreement with the Joint Chiefs of Staff, which establishes the role of the CIA clandestine services overseas in the military command structure, and for the few sentences in the National Military Command System paper on the role of CIA, there is no statement of understanding as to what the Agency will do in wartime. Views on this subject range all the way from it becoming a completely subordinate unit to the Pentagon or being phased completely out of existence--both of which are held in Pentagon circles--to the position that its functions and responsibilities would not be materially altered in wartime. These extremes are obviously both impractical and unwise, and therefore we recommend that at the earliest possible moment the Agency take the initiative in preparing and reaching an understanding with the Government on its war role. Intelligence Production 3. The Agency's role in the production of intelligence has been quite well established in most areas, both by law and by directive, as being charged with the production of national intelligence. In some areas of intelligence production this is more specifically established than in others, and therefore in planning it is important that it be firmly established in all areas where the In. this regard the National Security Act of 1947 states, "(b) for the purpose of coordinating the intelligence activities of the several Government departments and agencies in the interest of national security, it shall be the duty of the Agency, under the direction of the National Security Council--(3) to corollate and evaluate intelligence Approved For Release 2005/05/20 00952R000100020001-6 Agency is planning to make major commitments. Approved Fob- 'ease 2005/05/205 p76B00952 00100020001-6 relating to the national security, and' provide for the appropriate dissemination of such intelligence within the Government using where appropriate existing agencies and facilities:'' 4. The responsibility for the production of National Intelligence Estimates has been clearly established by common practice over the years and is spelled out in DCID 1 / 1 . This is one of the most important responsibilities of the Agency and has created for the United States Govern- ment a document of incalculable value in which the greatest objectivity of the intelligence system provides the policy maker with the top intelligence viewpoint. Its integrity should be preserved at all costs in the interests of national security, most particularly the responsibility of an independent agency for its production. There is at least some assurance of the prevention of another Pearl Harbor through this vehicle of a coordinated National Intelligence Estimate. 5. The responsibility for national current intelligence is less clearly established by directive, although it appears that there is a clear under- standing with DIA as to the division of responsibilities. In the negotiations conducted in 1962 and 1963 between the Agency and DIA, specifically Messrs. Kirkpatrick and Cline for the Agency and for DIA, a clear understanding was reached that DIA produced departmental current intelligence while CIA produced national current intelligence. However, this has not been inscribed in any directive and this should be done at an early SECRET Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ,ease 2005/05/20 :C76130095?00100020001-6 L ~ff date in order to insure logical organizational development both within the Agency and the Department of Defense. 6. The production of national economic intelligence on specified areas of the world was established as a CIA responsibility by letter. from General Walter Bedell Smith to Secretary of State Dean Acheson. This is further delineated in DCID 3/ 1. 7. The responsibility for the production of basic intelligence as typified by the National Intelligence Surveys is clearly established and is paragraph la, b, c, d, and e. specified in NSCID No. 3, / However, despite this clear understanding, one of the areas where there is considerable duplication of effort is in the broad area in the production of basic intelligence. This is a difficult region to legislate because each organization produces intelligence for different purposes and can clearly establish that their product is not identical with the National Intelligence Surveys. On the other hand, it is patently clear, and has been for years, that this area of basic intelligence research and production is one in which there is considerable uncontrolled and uncoordinated effort. It is recommended that in planning for the future the entire area of basic intelligence, not just the production of National Intelligence Surveys, be subjected to intensive scrutiny and clearly delineated responsibilities be established in order to insure orderly progress. While this is being done-- it may take a matter of years--the CIA should continue to carry the responsi- bility for the production of the National Intelligence Surveys. L. SECCE Approved For Release 200/05/20 : DP761300952R000100020001-6 Approved For .ease 2005/05/2Q EEIR. iP76B0095;00100020001-6 National Reference Services 8. While originally located in the Directorate for Intelligence, and closely related to intelligence production, over the years the Agency has been developing certain national intelligence reference services. This is an expensive area as far as money and manpower is concerned and is one in which there is considerable room for greater coordination and integration. With the information explosion already upon us, it is vital that the U. S. and National Intelligence System agree upon certain services of common concern which can be performed in the reference field. The simultaneous development of reference services by each of the intelligence organizations will be costly, duplicative and unnecessary. This is another area where the attention of the DCI is needed in order to reach agreement with the military intelligence agencies and the Department of State as to the responsi- bility for the development and maintenance of national intelligence reference services. 9. The Central Intelligence Agency now has firmly established its responsibility for the maintenance of a national reference service in the field of biographic intelligence dealing with all foreign personalities outside of the military field. This is an important service and should be maintained. Its charter is DCID 1/9. 10. The CIA also has an established national intelligence reference service responsibility in the field of the acquisition and indexing of foreign Approved For Release 2005/05/20: SIE R tB00952R000100020001-6 documents. This is prescribed in DCID 2/4 Approved For .ease 20009$1~pJ~ llk-RDP76B0095 0100020001-6 and is one of the better coordinated efforts in the Federal Government. While CIA' library and substantive intelligence files are at the present time used more extensively by other agencies than by CIA--and this is as it should b thisis nevertheless one area where centralization and coordination can achieve tense savings. documents entering the system With substantive intelligence at a rate in excess of a is obviously absurd for each agency to plan to file the identical other hand, each agency obviously has the right to a month, it documents. be able to retrieve immediately documents on any subject which it may need. It is therefore important that the DCI insist on the clear delineation of responsibility in the intelligence system for the storage and retrieval of substantive documents 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/T21 -RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 ? 25X1 PG-D-16/3 LONG RANGE PLAN PRODUCTION OF INTELLIGENCE SUMMARY 1, The major objectives in CIA's long range plan for the production of intelligence are; To strengthen the capability for assuring 25X1 25X1 24-hour current and net tactical intelligence; b. To strengthen the strategic base of research in support of estimates economic, economic-military, and scientific-technical and to complete the base by extending it in political research. These objectives must be realized concurrently, 2 Research and analysis against Communist China must be more than doubled during the next five years 9 without relaxing effort against the USSR. By request of the Secretary of Defense the Agency's work in military costing must be expanded to include all Communist military establishments, especially the Chinnesea It should be noted that the sharp increase against Communist China will mean a small e relative decrease against the USSR. The effort against Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ,ase 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B00952?00100020001-6 SECRET 25X1 PG-D-16/3 the Communist power as a whole, however, may increase from 64 to 68% of the total production effort during this period. 3. At the same time, care is necessary to prevent a weakening of capability directed to the instability and disorder which threaten from the underdeveloped countries and regions of the world, 25 5, The intelligence required during the period of this plan will be more and more natio: al in character, whether it pertains to localized political turbulence in a less developed or newly emerging nation- to the conflicting interests of great powers in local nationalisms, racism, or populism In the inciting crossfires of revolutionary social and political movements; to the potential for confrontation with Communist China and the USSR; or to 2 SECRET 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For rpase 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952,0100020001-6 SECRET PG-D-16/3 Olympian conpetitio s between the U.S., the USSR, and possibly others such as China. 3 SECRET 25X1 25X1 25 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095 00100020001-6 w SECRET 25X1 PGD 16/3 1, Twenty-flour Hour Current Intelligence, From the time of the Korean Wars when the Agency operated on a shoe string, sending one or two analysts to the Pentagon each morning to summarize the daily telecon for the President, to the present war in Vietnam, there have been many alarms and crises of widely differing kinds. The Agency knows from experience that it must stay ahead of the changing tempos in the development and progression of enduring crises, and that it must not let new crises and untoward events take our Government by surprise. In serving the President it serves the entire foreign operations of the Government, The degree of the President's involvement in the direction of foreign operations has varied with time, style, and situation. But over the years a rising premium has attached to fast and ,accurate current intelli- gence. The current intelligence front has increased in importance, with corresponding demands upon the CIA Watch system, 20 ?perati?nns Center and Current.InteIlligence Strength For the duration of this plan the goal is maximu prepar edne gs for simultaneous crises of all kinds, from obscure and 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ,ase 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095,00100020001-6 25X1 PAD- l6/3 multifarious developments in the revolutionary world of the backward, to the actions and reactions of the Communi powers q both I their internal and external policies and a, The Operations Center, it is an immediate objective to press their relations to new and old opportunities and contests. The perfecting of means foY alert involves not only the ability to concentrate resources for quid response, but also advanced readiness with the strength and quality of analysis required. on to a proper locus in which to co centrate analytical forces on critical situations, one equipped with the best in supporting services and communications, especially served by Clandestine Service reporting with proper protection by the DDP of its operations and sources. The Operations. Center must be a nerve center in fact as well as in name o bo Current Intelligence Strength At the same time there is the objective of strengthening the analytical roster for current reporting by about 50% during the next five years, 2 SECRET 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095400100020001-6 SECRET 25X1 i.e., from a strength of and should subjected to co GD-l6/3 This plan will ssessment. As now seen the increase should provide easure - needcad to sustain task forces and analytical support of the Operations Center, 3. The planned Increase, however, will watch bill such as would be required in, general war. To plan now for a full watch bill of analysts would multiply the projected increase by a factor of four. This would mean to plan now for a war-time scale of operations by 1970, without regard to the ambivalence of our position in external affairs. It does not seem advisable to take this full step in planning at this time, although with the possibility clearly in mind, the measurement of on-duty. and planned strength against the degrees of war should be a continuing task of a permanent planning group. 4. The expansion of current intelligence should t take place at the expense of or as a surrogate for the completion and the manning of the Agency's strategic base in research. 25X 25X Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ease 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B0095 00100020001-6 PG D=16/3 5, Strategic Base in Research. The next major concern, then, is the strategic base in research. It is not second in time or priority. Research here means research in support of estimates. It seeks painstakingly for the most reliable answers which all of the information will yield to- the critical questions of major import to our national security. While the emphasis falls on support of estimates of hostile capabilities and inten- tions, the research is directly pertinent to the evalua- tions needed in current intelligence. Without anchorage in the depth of conclusions from relevant research, current intelligence is always in danger of drifting with a tide, imperceptible from one day to the next in the preoccupation with the immediate and the immediately following. Further- more, the kind of research whic constitutes the strategic base must be done within the Government by specialists in their .several fields who bring to the peculiarities and sensitivities of classified information a knowledge not only equal to that of their colleagues outside of Govern- ment but already shaped by experience to the practical Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ,ease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095, 00100020001-6 SECRET PGD l6/3 questions which confront the Administration in Its decisions of foreign policy, 6 There is an old controversy in the intelligence community over CIA's role in research. Xt stemmed from the question of jurisdictional responsibility and authority for estimates. This in turn reflected the thesis that each department preempted the responsibility for research in the field of its own operational authority. In research lay the authority of superior knowledge. Depart- mental authority for estimates in the field of departmental s and depart ental jurisdiction in research hired, against CIA's earliest efforts to do national intelligence, 70 Following the reorganization of 195Cd51g CIA as chartered to do research in economic int loc only, and the charter came as lligence o uch bT- default of State as by CIA's insistence on research in an area which was then unknown territory. Research. in the Soviet economy had to turn Its back on requests for curront intelligence in order-first to' establish base d norms. In time, the CIA became authoritative in the field of Soviet economic capabilities and performance, 5 SEC Y Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For1ease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095600100020001-6 25X1 G-B-16/3 25X6 S. From this base a by force Of circumstance - the Irectog o s need in support of the Department of Defense n d the President - the Agency moved into military economics9 Military costing of the Soviet Military establishment, research and development, production Gg advanced weapons, and the allocation of resources o 9 it is planned to strengthen this bass to most the requirement of the Secretary of Defense for military costing of the Chinese a An incre satellite milit se is necessary in any case d the a ry establishments., ticipated increase in volume of information on Chinese ilitarry capabilities9 in research and development as well as in production and allocation, loo In political research the problem is to strengthe the small existing base nd build from it to the end of a diagnostic grasp and improved capability for prognosis in the many problems of Communist political capabilities and intentions as they relate to the practical dilemmas of their domestic and foreign policies, The Agency has secured a small base of research in special problems of 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 25X6 Approved For ease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095,00100020001-6 SECRET 25X1 PG-D-16/3 political intellige doctrine The i cea Sino-Soviet relations, Communist ad practice, Chinese policy and leadership tional base of political research should extend beyond Sino=Soviet relations into the evolving relations of the powers, both Communist and non-Communist, llo In terns of dollars and positions relative to other efforts this expansion is not costly. But it will be well to m ke haste slowly and therefore surelyo Th analysts who can do the kind of work required must be masters, not journeymen apprentices, and they are hard to find - or hard to spare from other pressing duties. 12 As a unique subcategory, research in support of clandestine operational needs requires emphasis and recognition, $t is necessary to bri specialists together for this effort, Long experience and experimentation point to the conclusion that this kind of support to the clandestine service must be carried out in and by, or under the auspices of plans because of the co g a variety of siderations of security and the requirement for detailed knowledge of operations, 7 SECRET 25 25X 25X Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009, 000100020001-6 FPG-D-16/3 This As toeatec especially In the clandestine services section, 13 !abaffiCS of projections for the Agency's long ~ ency ? s ~o ag n about Zos~~?~ distribution of 008og a a The ~t~?ns and ~unn review o2 initial -range plan raises a angs trends In tl e dlso In pa ticu1a ' g thG coTRs of analysts Be relative to that In technical research and davzll collllectiong Pgocessingg and support. Whe identification and it wcstigati Imbalances Its our cyst an ns ipoTtaut Jpait 09 the work of the p anant planning 14. Organization for odunction, The presont aimation 123 not nec?ssari1y the best because it has .own tha way It has. It is obviously essential to have functional as vall as ragios al specialists and a styoa Z?O% ofd generalists. But there Is always the question of the most effective way In which to relate these group in order to keep $loxibility z,ithouat l disc1plinsa The'a Is as of organ1m o unchanging answer to tlas ppacttcal question of the right opganization g as between geoevaphic ad a unnct ional g gor ~ S nJp1! n 0 to neod by task ko'ces 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For0ease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095600100020001-6 SECRET 25X1 IRG-D- 16/3 will always be one of our organizational answersQ because no rigid alignment will anticipate the overlapping com- plemi pies of substantive probleRs as they change In their particular fo auulat~ .oms with events. 15. The question of organization i Coacerne It should planni, 9 groulp C In Pr a vital Agency on the agenda of the per araticn, It i 'ecowenc d that the directorates review their organizatior In Bing or projects 2or ppoducction9 and in collaboration with the permanent Planning group submit th iz revi6~ and r(Bo tione to the Director. The review should not be dono An haste. lIt should presuppose tba 12dings of study g o P assigned by directorates to reviee oue major substamtive ,pro le o Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For elease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0096000100020001-6 25X1 PG D=16/3 RECOMMDATIONS 1 . Lp long range bj ctiv s fog the pwodhotion o2 ntelligencce ao To strengthan the Agency capability for 24 -hour current Intelligence and t development o the Operations Center la connection therewitha bo To strengthen t C NA stoat gicc base In research and to extend It In political intell1gence; cco To Increase CIA's analytical Stre against Co AnI st Chin at-rmngth. 2. taquest the peTmanant planing ggonp ao To assess joaTiodicallly th@ on-duty d planned strength against the ogwom of war existing and sati atc d (with the apsistanoe acrd 09 1ational Estimates); and To identity and Investigate actual and fennel iab 1anc In the distribution of positi and Bends in the Agency. gtb uring the meat five yeaze 25X 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 25X1 Approved FSelease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B00 W 000100020001-6 SECRET PG-D-16/2 2D August 1965 PRODUCTION OF INTEI-OLIGENCE :?EC?OM.MENDATIONS Approve the long range objectives for the production of intelligence: a. To strength ten the Agency capability for 24-hour current intelligence and the develop- ment of the Operations Center in connection therewith; b, To strength the CIA. strategic base In research. and to extend it in political intelligence; c. To increase CIA's analytical strength; against Communist China during the next five years P5X1 in. the measure of strength, 2.o Request the permanent planning group: a. To assess periodically the on-duty and planned strength against the degree of war existing and estimated (with the assistance of the Board of National Estimates), and 25X1 Approved For 52R000100020001-6 Approved Follease 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B0095@00100020001-6 25X1 PG-D-16/2 b. To identify and investigate actual and potential imbalances in the distribution of positions and funds in the Agency. 25X1 Toted was good enough to provide both, recommendations which you have just read and the following t??-page summary. It is suggested that the members in examining this paper consider whether both are necessary for discussion when we reach this paper. ) 2 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 25X1 Approved Fo slease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009 000100020001-6 PG=D-l6/2 LONG RANGE PLAN PRODUCTION OF INTELLIGENCE SUMMARY 1. The major objectives in CIA's long range plan for the producti ?. of intelligence are: ao To strengthen thepability for assuring ;,.'4--hour current and net tactical intelligence-, bo To strengthen the strategic base of research in support of estimates economic, econoanic- military, and scientific -technical and to complete the base by extending it in political research, These objectives must be realized concurrently, 2. Research and analysis against Communist China must be more than doubled during the next five years, without relaxing effort against against the USSR. It should be noted that the sharp increase/Communist 25X1 China will mean a sma.l, relative decrease against the USSR, even though thedfort against the Communist power as a whole may increase 'During this period. 3. At the same time, care is necessary to prevent a weaken- ing of capability directed to the instability and disorder which threaten from the underdeveloped countries and regions of the world, Approved For Release 0100020001-6 - SECRET-__- Approved Forlease 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B0095,W00100020001-6 25X1 PG-D-16/2 5. The intelligence required during the period of this plan will be more and more national in character, whether it pertains to localized political turbulence in a less developed or newly emergir ,g nation; to the conflicting interests of great powers in loca.t national- isms, racism, or populism in the inciting crossfrres of 3e-rolutionary social and political movements; to the potential for confrontation with Communist China and the USSR; or to Olympian competitions between the Uo S0D the USSR, and possibly others such as Chinas Approved For Release - 0100020001-6 SECRET 25X1 SECRET Approved Fo lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B 095WO0100020001-6 G-D?-16/2 DISCUSSION l o Twenty-four Hour Current Intelligence. From the time of the' Korean War, when the Agency operated on a shoe string, sending one or two analysts to the Pentagon each morning to summarize the daily telecon for the President, to the present war in Vietnam, there have been many alarms and crises of widely differing kindso The Agency knows from experience that it must stay ahead of the changing tempos in the development and progression of enduring crises, and that it must not let new crises and untoward events take our Government by surprise. In serving the President it ses:ves the entire foreign operations of the Government, and in a way which makes the question of what is national and what is departmental of academic interest, for all practical purposes, The degree of the President's involvement in the direction of foreign operations has varied with time, style, and situation. But over the years a rising premium has attached to fast and accurate current intelligence. The current intelligence front has increased in importance, with corresponding demands upon the CIA Watch system. 2. Operations Center and Current In~ ielli ence Sts tho For the duration of this plan the goal is maximum preparedness for simultaneous crises of all kinds, from obscure and multifarious develop- ments in the revolutionary world of the backward, to the actions and 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved Fo$lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009* 00100020001-6 25X1 PG-D-1.6/2 reactions of the Communist powers,, both in their internal and external policies and their relations to new and old opportunities and contests. The perfecting of means for alert involves not only the ability to concentrate resources for quick response,, but also advanced readiness Tfsh the strength and quality of analysis required, ae The Operations Center. it is an immediate objective to press on to a proper locus in which to concentrate analytical forces on critical situations, one equipped with the best in supporting services and communications. A nerve center in fact as well as in name. b; Current Intelligence Strength. At the same time there is the objective of strengthening the analytical roster for current reporting by 25X1 strength of (during the next five years,, io eo ,, from a This plan will and should be subjected to continuous review and reassessment. As now seen the increase should provide the measure needed to sustain task forces and analytical support of the Operations Center. Approved For Rele se 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952 000100020001-6 25X1 SECRET Approved Foril ease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095 000100020001-6 PG-TD-j6/2 The planned increase, however, will not man a watch hill. such as would be required in general war. To plan now for a full watch bill of analysts would multiply the projected increase by a factor of four. This woi mean to plan now for a war-time scale of operations by 1970, without regard to the ambivalence of our position in external affairs. It does not seem advisable to take this full step in planning at this time, although with the possibility clearly in mine>., the n.easure'. went of on-duty and planned strength against the degrees o1 war should be a continuing task cf a: permanent planning group. 4. The expansion of current intelligence should not take place at the expense of or as a surrogate for the completion and the manning of the s geracy,s strategic base in research. 5. Strategic Base in Research. The next major concern;, then, Is the es rategi.c base in. research. It is not second in time or priority. Research here means research in support of estimates. It seeks painstakingly for the most reliable answers which all of the information will yield to the critical questions of major import to our national security. While the emphasis falls on support of estimates of hostile capabilities and intentionsa the research is directly pertinent to the evaluations needed in current intelligence. Without anchorage in the depth of conclusions from relevant research, current intelligence 25X1 Approved For ReI ase 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B0095 R000100020001-6 25X Approved Fole ease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095r00100020001-6 25X1 PG-D-16/2 is always in danger of drifting with a tide, imperceptible from one day to the next in the preoccupation with the immediate and the immediately following. I= ur?thermore, the kind of research which constitutes the strategic base must be done within the Government by specialists in their several fields who bring to the peculiarities and sensitivities of classified information a knowledge not only equal to that of their colleagues outside of Government but already shaped by experience to the practical questions which confront the Administration in its decisions of foreign policy. 66. There is an old controversy in the.intelligence community. over CIA's role in research. It stemmed from the question of juris- dictional responsibility and authority for estimates. This in turn reflected the thesis that each department preempted the responsibility for research in the field of its own operational authority. In research lay the authority of superior knowledge. Departmental authority for estimates in the field of departmental operations and departmental jurisdiction in research combined against CIA's earliest efforts to do national intelligence. 25X1 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For$ease 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B0095 00100020001-6 45 PGGD46/2 25X6 70 Following the reorganization of 1950-51, CIA Was chartered to do research in economic intelligence on the Bloc only, and the charter came as much by default of State as by CI is insistence on research in an area which was then unknown territory. Research in the Soviet economy had to turn its back on requests for current intelligence in order first to establish base lines and norms. In time, the CIA became authoritative in the field of Soviet econoini.; capabilities and performance. 80 From this base, by fo.s ce of circumstance u the Director's need in support of the President - the Agency moved into military economics, military costing of the Soviet military establishment, research and develop- meat, production of advanced weapons, and the allocation of resources, 9. It is planned to strengthen this base to meet the require- rent of the Secretary of Defense for military costing of the Chinese and satellite military establishments, An increase is necessary in any case and the anticipated increase in volume of information on Chinese military capabilities, in research and development as well as in production and allocation. 10. Present and future demands on the Director emphasize the importance of completing the Agency's strategic base in research by 5 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 nr-V4 25X1 Approved Fo~ease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095 00100020001-6 25X1 PG-D-16/2 extending it in political inteliagegace, This is an area as critical as it is difficult. It is a major challenge, but must be met if intelligence is to match its findings in hostile capabilities with correlati,Fe insight into intentions. In recent years the State Department has more and more withdrawn from this field and devoted its limited resources to quick support of policy. The Agency does not have a "charter" for pol .tiical research and does not ask for one. There are gaps here which must be filled in the national interest and CIA means to fill them, 110 In political research the problem is to strengthen the small existing base and build from it to the end of a diagnostic grasp and improved capability for prognosis in the many problems ol Communist political capabilities and intentions as they relate to the practical dileFnmas of their domestic and foreign policies. The Agency has secured a small base of research in special problems of political intelligence- Sino- Soviet relations, Communist doctrine and practice, Chinese policy and leadership. The international base of political research should extend beyond Simms oviet relations into the evolving relations of the powers, both Communist and non-Communis~ 25X6 In terms of dollars and positions relative to other efforts this expansion is not costly. But it will be well to make haste slowly and 6 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 I R3?-urIr 25X6 25X1 Approved Fo$lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009, 000100020001-6 PG-D. 16 /2 and therefore surely. The analysts who can do the kind of work required must be masters, not journeymen apprentices, and they are hard to find -> or hard to spare from other pressing duties. 13. As a unique subcategory, research in support of clandestine operational needs requires emphasis and recognition. It is necessary to bring a variety of specialists together for this effort. Long experience and experimentation point to the conclusion that this kind of support to the clandestine service must be carried out In the Directorate of Plans because of the considerations of security and the requirement for detailed knowledge of operations. This is treated especially in the monograph on DDP, 14. Balance of Programs. The review of initial projections for the. '.Agency's long mange plan raises a fundamental question about long- range trends in the distribution of positions and funds, In particular, the investment in the corps of analysts seems to diminish relative to that in technical research and development, collection, processing and support. The identification and investigation of imbalances in our system should be an important part of the work of the permanent planning group, 150 Orgarnzation for Production. The present organization is not necessarily the best because it has grown the way it has. It is obviously essential to have functional as well as regional specialists and a strong Approved For Release 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B00952R0 0100020001-6 SEC RE i 25X 25X Approved Fo$lease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009IV 00100020001-6 PG-D-16/2 group of generalists? But there is always the question of the most effective way in which to relate these groups in order to keep flexibility without loss of organization discipline, There is no unchanging answer to the practical question of the right organization, as between geographic and functional, for example. Response to need by task forces will always be one of our organizational answers, because no rigid alignment will anticipate the overlapping complexities of substantive problems ,;s they change in their particular formulations with events. 160 The question of organization is a vital Agency concern. It should be on the agenda of the permanent planning group, In preparation, it is recommended that the directorates review their organization in being or projected for production, and in collaboration with .the pe::; nanent planning group submit their review and reco emendations to thR Director. The review should not be done in haste. It should presuppose L1e findings of study groups assigned by directorates to review our major suLstantive problems. 8 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved F elease 2005/05/20: RDP76B00 R0001000 1-6 6! Long Range Plan Production of Intelligence 1. The major objectives in CIA's long range plan for the production of intelligence are: -a) to strengthen the capability for assuring 24-hour current and net tactical intelligence; b) to strengthen the strategic base of research in support of estimates - economic, economic- military, and scientific-technical - and to complete ,the base by extending it in political research. These objectives must be realized concurrently. 2. Research and analysis against Communist China must be more than doubled during the next five years, without relaxing effort against the USSR. It should be noted that the sharp increase against Communist China will mean a small, relative decrease against the USSR, even though the effort against the Communist power as a whole-may increase during this period. 3. At the same time, care is necessary to prevent a weakening of capability directed to the instability and disorder which threaten from the underdeveloped cr~i~P t 2 r? cxeiedaU Pr~~n anin;natie i? a Cc'rnsr ,51n; and n di c dcc ; si{lc: Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ase 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009521&0100020001-6 6 countries and regions of the world. 25 5. The intelligence required during the period of this plan will be more and more national in character,, whether it pertains to localized political turbulence in a less developed or newly emerging nation; to the conflicting interests of great powers in local national- isms, racism, or populism in the inciting crossfires of revolutionary social and political movements; to the potential for confrontation with Communist China and the USSR; or to Olympian competitions between the US, the USSR, and possibly others such as China. ? Approved For Release 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For 'ease 2005/0J aDP76B0095 0100020001-6 7. Twenty-four Hour Current Intelligence From the time of the Korean War, when the Agency operated on a shoe string, sending one or two analysts to the Pentagon each morning to summarize the daily telecon for the President, to the present war in Viet Nam, there have been many alarms and crises of widely differing kinds. The Agency knows from experience that it must stay ahead of the changing tempos in the development and progression of enduring crises, and that it must not let new crises and untoward events take our Government by surprise. In serving the President it serves the entire foreign operations of the-Govern- ment, and in a way which makes the question of what is national and what is departmental of academic interest, for all practical purposes. The degree of the President's involvement in the direction of foreign operations has varied with time, style, and situation. But over the years a rising premium has-attached to fast and accurate current intelligence. The current intelligence front has increased in importance, with corresponding demands upon the CIA Watch system. C.+~ ~ u u esr~ Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ase 2005/05/20 CIA-RDP76B00952QF0100020001-6 %J 7~ 8. For the duration of.=this plan the goal is maximum preparedness for simultaneous crises of all kinds, from obscure and multifarious developments in the revolu- tionary world of the backward, to the actions and reactions of the Communist powers, both in their internal and external policies and their relations to new and old opportunities and contests. The perfecting of means for alert involves not only the ability to concentrate resources for quick response, but also advanced readiness with the strength and quality of analysis required. 9. a) The Operations Center. ? It is an immediate objective to press on to a proper locus in which to concentrate analytical forces on critical situations, one equipped with the best in supporting services and communications. A nerve center in fact as well as in name. b) Current intelligence strength. At the same time there is the objective of strengthening the analytical roster for current 25X1 reporting by during the next five years, i.e. from a strength of This plan will 25X1 ? _ osa .'w 4,,L{~:cas Approved for Release 2005/05/20: CIA.-R DP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ase 2005/05/20:: CIA=RDP76B00952?P0100020001-6 and should be subjected-to continuous review and reassessment. As now seen the increase should provide the measure needed to sustain task forces and analytical support of the Operations Center. 10. The planned increase, however, will not man a watch bill such as would be required in general war. To plan now for a full watch bill of analysts would multiply the projected increase by a factor of four. This would mean to plan now for a war-time scale of operations by 1970, without regard to the ambivalence of our position in external affairs. It does not seem advisable to take this full step in planning at this time, although with the possibility clearly in mind, the measurement of on-duty and planned strength against the degrees of war should be continuing task of a permanent planning group. 11. The expansion of current intelligence should not take place at the expense of or as a surrogate for the completion and the manning of the Agency's strategic base in research. 12. The next major concern, then, is the strategic base in research. It is not-second in time or priority. Research here means research in support of estimates. Approved For Release 2005/05/20 CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ase 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952 00100020001-6 It seeks painstakingly for the most reliable answers which all of the information will yield to the critical questions of major import to our national security. While the emphasis falls on support of estimates of hostile capabilities and intentions, the research is directly pertinent to the evaluations needed in current intelligence. Without anchorage in the depth of con- clusions from relevant research, current intelligence is always in danger of drifting with a tide, imperceptible from one day to the next in the preoccupation with the immediate and the immediately following. Furthermore, the kind of research which constitutes the strategic base must be done within the Government by specialists in their several fields who bring tb.:the peculiarities and sensitivities of classified information a knowledge not only equal to that of their colleagues outside of Government but already shaped by experience to the practical community over CIA's role in research. It stemmed from of foreign policy. 13. There is an old controversy in the intelligence questions which confront the Administration in its decisions for estimates. This in-turn-reflected the thesis that the question of jurisdictional responsibility and authority Approved For Release 2005/05/2Q Iq=RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ase 2005/ q 11 ;cI#-RDP76B00952~0100020001-6 V '. *4 GA 9'. each department preempted the responsibility for . research in the field of its own operational authority. In research lay the authority of superior knowledge. Departmental authority for estimates in the field of departmental operations and departmental jurisdiction in research combined against CIA's earliest efforts to do national intelligence. 14. Following the reorganization of 1950-51, CIA was chartered to do research in economic intelligence on the Bloc only, and the charter came as much by default of State as by the fact that CIA insisted on research in an area which was then unknown territory. Research in the Soviet economy had to turn its back to requests for current intelligence in order first to establish base lines and norms. In time, the CIA established itself as authoritative in the field of Soviet economic capabilities and performance. 15. From this base, by force of circumstance - the Director's need in support of the President - the Agency moved into military economics, military costing of the Soviet military establishment, research and development, production of advanced weapons, and the allocation of resources. Approved For Release 2005/05/20 CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ase 2005/05/20 : CIA-I?7~B009520100020001-6 i ? 25X6 16. It is planned to strengthen this base to meet the Secretary of Defense's requirement for military costing of the Chinese and Satellite military establish- ments. An increase is necessary in any case - and the anticipated increase in volume ofinformation on Chinese military capabilities, in research and development as well as in production and allocation. 17. Present and future demands on the Director emphasize the importance of completing the Agency's strategic base in research by extending it in political intelligence. This is an area as critical as it is ? difficult. It is a major challenge, but must be met if intelligence is to match its findings in hostile capa- bilities with correlative insight into intentions. In recent years the State Department has more and more withdrawn from this field and devoted its limited resources to quick support of policy. The Agency does not have a "charter" for political research and does not ask for one. There are gaps here which must be filled in the national interest and CIA means to fill them. 18. Political research in support of estimates cannot count on increasing volumes of information to provide improved quality. And it cannot count on Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved For ease 2005/05/20 Gl, , 6B0095200100020001-6 25X6 breakthroughs into intentions, or on kind of assistance which computers can give to subjects which lend them- selves to quantitative measurement and visual data. 19. The Agency has secured a small base in special problems of political intelligence: Sino-Soviet relations, Communist doctrine and practice, Chinese policy and leadership. The problem now is to strengthen this base and build from it to the end of a diagnostic grasp and improved capability for prognosis in the many problems of -Communist political capabilities and intentions as they relate to the practical dilemmas of their domestic and foreign policies. The field of specialized research should extend beyond Sino-Soviet relations into the evolving relations of the powers, both Communist and non-Communist 20. In terms of dollars and positions relative to other efforts this expansion is not costly. But it will be well?to make haste slowly and therefore surely. The analysts who can do the kind of work required must be masters, not journeymen apprentices, and they are hard to find - or hard to spare from other pressing duties. -9- Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 25X1 Approved For ease 2005/05/2 I4P76B009521D0100020001-6 . q#A..~6fl'y3 21. As a unique subcategory, research in support of clandestine operational needs requires emphasis and recognition. It is necessary to bring a variety of specialists together for this effort. Long'~experience and experimentation point to the conclusion that this kind of support to the clandestine service must be carried out in the Directorate of Plans because of the considerations of security and the requirement for detailed knowledge of operations. .42. The review of initial projections for the Agency's long range plan raises a fundamental question about long range trends in the distribution of positions ? and funds. In particular, the investment in the corps of analysts seems to diminish relative to that in technical research and development, collection, processing and support. The identification and investigation of imbalances in our system should be an important part of the work of the permanent planning group. 23. Organization for Production The present organization is not necessarily the best because it has grown the way it has. It is obviously essential to have functional as well as regional specialists Approved For Release 2005/05/20 CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 ? ? Approved For ,ase 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B00952~0100020001-6 nlt ~"~.GM I:a and a strong group of generalists. But there is always the question of the most effective way in which to relate these groups in order to keep flexibility without loss of organizational discipline. There is no unchanging answer to the practical question of the right organization, as between geographic and functional, for example. Response to need by task forces will always be one of our organizational answers, because no rigid alignment will anticipate the overlapping complexities of substantive problems as they change in their particular formulations with events. 24. The question of organization is a vital Agency concern. It should be on the agenda of the permanent planning group. In preparation, it is recommended that the Directorates review their organizations in being or projected for production, and in collaboration with the. permanent planning group submit their review and recommendations to the Director. The review should not be done in haste. It should presuppose the findings of study groups assigned by directorates to review our major substantive problems. ? Approved For Release 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved F Release 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B002R0001000 SE~~ET 12 August 1965 MEMORANDUM FOR: Planning Group SUBJECT: Twenty-four Hour Current Intelligence 1. The difference between a 24-hour watch and 24 hour current intelligence is one of degree. At one extreme you have a message center and an operator who has instructions to call people according to a list of requirements; at the other extreme, analysts on duty who evaluate information as it comes in, report their findings promptly on matters of critical import and maintain a continuous summary of critical situations. The degree of 24 hour. current intelligence, in terms of depth and breadth of regional/functional coverage, depends on a) the nature and condition of our affairs abroad; b) the flow of information pertinent to them; c) the kind of command structure served, (i.e. how directly the command involves itself in the tactical direction of operations); and d) the number of analysts qualified and trained for quick evaluation. Excluded fram autamtia downgrading a,14 Approved For Release 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009 Approved For1lease 2005/05/20 : CIA,-2 76B009500100020001-6 2. An illustration of the two extremes may be useful. It is taken from experience during the last great war, when one became an intelligence officer before he could dissociate the term intelligence from academic usage. An intelligence unit at headquarters worked frantically, coming in early and leaving late, but its night watch consisted of one man. Every member of the unit took his turn as watch officer. His function was to keep the office open - for telephone calls, the possible receipt of information, etc. The condition of our affairs abroad was very grim indeed, but the unit had no current information bearing on the particular form and front of warfare to which it was assigned and therefore could not assist the combat intelligence command to which it was subordinated. As soon however as the unit began to receive current information - fortunately it was soon - it converted at once into a 24 hour intelligence "production" watch with the necessary number of officers assigned to it to make up a full complement for each watch. As a point of interest, the command combat intelligence unit (very few officers) did not itself go to a watch bill. These officers rested on the assurance that they would be wakened at any hour of the night when there Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : C_; O,Tq Approved For elease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B009 000100020001-6 SENU (V was intelligence which could not await the opening of business. And the intelligence officers on watch, in return for agonies of judgment, had the assurance that they would get their own share of sleep - unlike the situation which existed when they were working to obtain current information. 3. One could elaborate at great length on conditions a), b) and c) above as they apply to our present and to the future we anticipate, but it would be unnecessary, at least as far as our Director is concerned. For purposes of contrast, however, one might recall our situation in the Agency during the Korean War. We had no current intelligence watch, But then the President was not in tactical command, and it never occurred to anyone that he should be. As for CIA, at least some were confused about what CIA'.s role was - until the White House informed the Director that the President wished to have summaries of the situation from CIA. We sent one or two officers to the Pentagon early each morning to read the daily telecon report, which we then summarized and sent to the President. 4. Since the mid-50's our current intelligence has developed toward a 24 hour operation, subject to Approved For Release 2005/05/20 CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved FoSlease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP 009*00100020001-6 the changes in conditions a), b), and c) above and limited by d), the number of analysts. When a), b), and c) came together in a certain combination the limitation of d) had to be overcome, by extending the analysts. 5. If the tempo of events. has not accelerated, our Government's reactions have. By now the Agency has probably tried every expedient which could provide 24 hour current intelligence without going to a regular watch bill - SIDO's, every current analyst at one time or another on prolonged duty (overtime), staggered duty hours, task forces to divide the hours, stay behinds, and special forces for early morning duty. And now, to the information about the rising events themselves, has been added information about U.S. tactical operations. We have an Operations Center. 6. As the strategic seriousness of our situations and engagements abroad deepens and as no diminution can be foreseen of extraordinary calls for faster, more continuous and better current and tactical intelligence, there is no sensible way to face the future except to plan now for a regular, instead of an irregular, 24-hour current intelligence service. ~r r- ~ ~ C%' L LL v Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 095W00100020001-6 Approved For lease 2005/05/20 : Cl TAL fo-W 7. It is true that what we have experienced and what we foresee are several crises at the same time - of unequal degrees and kinds of seriousness. One can argue that our irregular system is regular enough, and flexible enough, to continue giving us adequate coverage of the things that need to be covered at any hour of need. To begin planning now for a complete 24-hour current intelligence service, net, tactical and all, may seem to accept a premise that we prepare for war. We are at war in Viet Nam, but it is a limited war and it is our policy to keep it limited. To declare a state of national emergency would in itself tend to raise the limit and contribute to a process of escalation. The same might be said in relation to an escalation of current intelligence. 8. The Operations Center plans a capability to handle from 2 to 3 crises simultaneously. But why 2 to 3? Two is Viet Nam plus the Dominican Republic. Three allows for one more. More than that would saturate the system and relegate the surplus to lower orders of priority - if one can always make so clear a distinction between one crisis and another. A crisis may be one n r. Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 009 000100020001-6 Approved Fo lease 2005/05/20 : CI8 large and long affair evoking, provoking others which it then absorbs and subordinates. Inherent in our present situation in Viet Nam are the continuing preoccupations with reactions and actions in Communist China and the Soviet Union, and with repercussions throughout South East Asia and the rest of the Far East. From an epicenter waves go out, extending far beyond., disturbing areas which previously appeared calm, and agitating others already disturbed. This. is not to estimate the progression and outcome of the war in Viet Nam, but it is to say that when tensions rise and concern increases, we must be prepared to keep an accurate and quick account of change - and must not let untoward events take us by surprise, whether they are directly related to the locus of power engagement or not. 9. The degree of 24 hour current intelligence at any given time will be determined by the conditions stated in para. one. The degree may continue to rise, may fall, or may have its ups and downs in between. But the degree should not be determined after the event or events. The purpose of planning is to lead the events. It is a matter for judgment when to shift to a stronger watch - to prevent a crisis from heading . Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-l DP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approved Fo1lease 2005/05/20 : C 1,7 009000100020001-6 up, if that be possible by action, or, if not, to be geared and ready when it comes. 10. We cannot foresee how many crises, of what kinds and interrelations, we shall face in any coming year. Fe can say however that a long range plan, as of August 1965, should provide for a current intelligence strength that can cover the world with order and dispatch at all hours - and do so without weakening our strategic base in research. 11. It remains to be said that 24 hour collection and transmission of information, as foretold by research and development, will generate its own pressure toward 24 hour analysis, if the future is at all so tense and turbulent as to warrant the increase in collection. And if warranted, the same improvement in communications will have its own effect on the command center in Washington, which must and will be served. 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B00952R000100020001-6 Approver Release 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76BB952R000100020001-6 p G?D'l 5/3 PERSONNEL AND TRAINING I Introduction A. In the years ahead the Agency must undertake news diverse, and dietinct y more demanding reeponeibilitiaa if it is to serve ad-? quately the increasingly critical eecurity interesto of the U. S, How~well it Will be able to reepond to these challenges depends in large part on homer wall we, manage our human rosourcaso In planning for the future, thereforen the CIA should recognize that its most, valaable asset is its trained pro- fessional cadre of career personnels These people provide the cutting edge for everything we do, Evolved o rer times and conditioned by exposure to the disciplines and presr u>s es of a. demanding environment, they represent a unique body of talent. It behooves us to make certain that we sustain it and conserve its 11 Discussion A0 We can be proud of the cadre of career personnel that conducts the business of this Agency todz,y0 Aa no senior Bu Beau of the Budget officer zeceantl ut it ' tl~e CIA h th l p 0 aG e argest reservoir of highly trained and competent personnel in the Government,, " Key elements of this cadre began their professional careers during and after World War X1 netitute the "first generation" of CIA personnel, Others of this Appro Approved For0ease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095400100020001-6 25X1 cadre were developed over later years with considerable efforts by top management, the career service boards, and the Office of Personnel and Training. We have been particularly successful in the recruftme It of young people for CIA. The establishment in 1951 of a Junior Officer Trainee (JOT) program has assured a regular input of highly qualified junior officers, Many of these young officers have fulfilled their high promise and form an increasingly large percentage of those officers selected for the mid-career training; program. this program has been recognized as one of the finest of its type in the Uo S Government, It 25X1 currently producesraduates each year as of September 1965. This output should be expanded if we are to meet our needs in the yeG.i s just ahead. Its program content likewise must be continually reviewed to assess possible changes for improvement, B. The middcareor program has been used as a vehicle for identifying those with a potential to become senior executives and for providing further training for them. This program has worked well but now needs increased emphasis and closer attention, C. While at the senior levels the Agency has made creditable PG-D-45/3 attempts to improve its managerial capacities, including executive training programs, this will not suffice for the future. The Agency should therefore plan also for the early creation of an executive career service and a senior training program to sustain it, 25X1 Approved Approved For4ease 2005/05/20: CIA-RDP76B0095600100020001-6 PG-D--1513 D. in osdsr do pbeser'sre the top-7iight quality of its personnel cache well into the "'Second genaxation" am e 'err au::t_1' a vital continuity of leadership, we must, in addition to ui_? t#: t i .g a :#;egular input of young officers through the C ?'ee ? ranee Program JOT), on we have largely' depended for ox rcer 're;~.ruitmant s4n~c ' 957 ale encourage lateral entry aric w l vr,'d~.l`i of ~~ iahste ae e ?" sts 1hi ifl practice would. provide the new idoi , and new blood that the Agency needs, A program of lateral entry c .>nnot be haphazard but rn'i st schoduled on a regular b2. is wit-.C' stated goals ai:.d objective,. We must aloe recognize that certain needed discipli.nao and skills` -w.111 remain in short supply. We should., fo our ow a ~'ac ;c~ titerpreter if none can be recruited from market, It must also be recognized t;hzL t).-ke acouisi'tien of n-iany of the skills that the Agency require:; nee-', not involve longg-term car "~ea; employment, This is part,icu rlytrue oe the '('.echnical and scientific field where the is moving so quickly and `inhere, after several years, the scientist or technic mnn hired on short term arrange.. menu by the Agency does wall to return to his particuli,e discipline in order to main .in h-s p:,Pe crr.Aonal credentials and. star Y?.cig ..:~ is ~ 1 ,, o G::~G''s than resist the efforts of :pog-vt s with rare ob-31l E) t;o 'e' Ldemic or scientific discipline, the Ageacy should, where ap ~r op~ iate, accomrrbo.- date it. In those cYrcTm-stances where the Agency reels its int r4'st are 3 25X1 Approved Fo Release - 0952R000100020001-6 Approved For lease 2005/05/20 : CIA-RDP76B0095 000100020001-6 1-G--D-1 5/ best served by re raining people vvitla skills on a long .tern-i career basis who are desirous of remainingloya:l to a- -ad retaining status in their particular disciplines, thhen it must take steps in the future to help them to do so, Specifically, tha Agency must adopt a mox?.,, fle:~dble policy than it now has, in which acaden le "ab 3c":.ei.U~il , e:;.ts:rnal training, acceptance of grants, and publication of works iv not just allowed, but actually encouraged, Fo The Agency, in order to sustain the continued input of high caliber personnel, must plan for a more aggressi - recruitment program and make use of the considerable latitude of its Gaut hirities to insure that CIA remains competitive in the increasingly tight pro! ssional labor market, The Agency should more clearly enunciate di fact that it is policy to encourage the use of qualified senior personnel the various directorates to assist directly and on a- continuous basis ii, identifying and recruiting individuals of the same skills and discipl.:ine a , Managers of operating components should therefore take greater i.nitiu?:ive to provide opportunities for them to do so, underwriting r_c cesnary travel and arranging work schedules to accommodate it. We &.