AN INSURANCE POLICY FOR PEACE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00001R000300490020-0
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 2, 2004
Sequence Number: 
20
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
September 3, 1954
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00001R000300490020-0.pdf76.91 KB
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STA Approved For Release 2004/11/29 : "? An In PqIicy for Peace . WHAT POSES the greatest 'risk of nuclear war in the years ahead? The answer offered in a study by the Central Intelligence Agency is, we think, correct = i'lMly,-a miscalcula- tion by Soviet leaders of the U.S. will to resist in a crisis. The point closely parallels one made by David Lawrence. today in his editorial page column analyzing the save -the Bay of Pigs expedition. The United States had accepted the erec- tion of the Berlin Wall with little more than verbal pyrotechnics. And the United States had accepted the neutra- list solution in Laos. "Formal U.S. statements regard-? ing Cuba conveyed an air of studied uncertainty. "In military planning, despite sub causes of World War II. Appeasement, stantially increased programs of mi and vacillation by the United States sile deployment,- the United States was and Hitler's European neighbors em- boldened the Nazi leader to take the reckless steps that produced a world bloodbath. The CIA study, prepared by Wil- lard Matthias of the CIA Board of Na- tional Estimates, notes that deterrence is the key. It is our best insurance against war. This means that, in addi- tion to prodigious nuclear might, a na- .Lion must manifest unmistakably a determination to use its power if push- ed too far. The Matthias study gives a good example in reverse -- how the United States, by seeming to be afraid of a confrontation, set the stage for the Cuban missile crisis of 1962. Says the CIA paper: "In the international atmosphere of early 1962, when the Cuban move was planned, the Soviet leaders were still riding high and the United States advocating a greater conventional ca- pability and a counter-insurgency pro- 'i gram. "Thus, it probably appeared to the. Soviets that the diplomatic and military stance of the United States was that of '? a power seeking to avoid confrontation and fearful of its consequences, and { therefore a power which could be sub-. jected to a series of setbacks without high risks of forceful resistance." * a ? THE SOVIETS, of course, badly misjudged our determination in 1962. We meant business and we proved it. However, this has not stopped further probing by the Soviets or other Communist adversaries, as the complex situation in Southeast Asia illustrates. Our show of toughness in Cuba in 1962 stands us in good stead -- but only temporarily. There are now other places and other circumstances certain and cautious. will power. "The United States had chosen not And that, as the saying, goes, to run fkpepo 1~ F risk ecess~ .~.L~ ~ 1 Q0 004 51r~ 1