SPILLING THE NID

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CIA-RDP90-01137R000100150001-2
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December 19, 2016
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December 9, 2005
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1
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May 12, 1986
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ARTICLE NEW YORK TIMES APP&4 e{eass 2006/0rIORa)CI WP90-0113 ESSAY I William Sa lire Spilling the NID WASEDWTON W= Casey, Director of gam, al} pears to be getting nervous in the service on the subject of leeks. Having been made the laughingptock of world spookery by his mishandling of the defector Yurchenko, he is now threatening journalists with jail terms for publishing secrets other than those leaked from the top. He is joined in this always-popular pastime of Intimidation by David Durenberger, chairman of the Senate Select Committee on' Intelligence, whose heavily publicized midlife crisis makes him seem, In my opin- ion, eager to show he has not become a blabbermouth. Let me put forward my own Na- tional Estimate of the crackbrained crackdown. John McMahon, until two months ago the C.I.A.'s Deputy Director, was the product of its intelligence-gather. Ing side, and resisted Director Casey's policy (with which I agree) of putting missiles in the arms of freedom fight- ers willing to shoot them at oppressors in Afghanistan, Africa and Nicaragua. He was booted out and replaced by Robert Gates, who came up through the evaluation rather than gathering branch. Mr. Gates is thus more a driver of spies than a spy by trade; he is comfortable with the Casey covert action, and his pride and joy has been the National Intelligence Daily. This "NID," with Its blue card- board cover and 10 or 12 pages of in- formation, is the evaluated product of the intelligence community. The cir- culation is limited to about 200 offi- cials whose lowest clearance is "top secret," and who enjoy the thrill of in- sidership six mornings a week. (On Sundays they have to rely on the newspapers. and can catch up on what is happening.) Do not contuse the NID with the P.D.B. - the President's Daily Brief- ing, in the white cover - which goes to only a handful of people, and which I presume contains poop from the human group as well as from satel- lites and big ears. (I used to confuse A scapegoat was needed to said a warning to the list, and to justify the lie detector "experiment" within the Pen- After a story appeared in the ~ Evans and Novak column about using Zaire as the distributor of missiles to the Savimbi insurgents in Angola - in- formation that may have been in the NID - Michael Pillsbury, a Defense official, was fluttered and bounced. "Mike the PW" was expendable; as a Senate aide in the hard-line "Madi- son Group" during the Carter era, Mr. Pillsbury was a valued Casey-Weinber- ger ally; but now the Jesse Helms crowd is losing its clout and the firing of Mike the pill could serve as a warn- ing to others. Moreover, a head od a platter was needed for Zaire. Then far scam ~ a bridge too are press, he went to The tainn Washington Bob Woodward to ~ ~ p lashed, he would recommend proses [ tier under some untested statute. "I'm not threatening. but ..." ' _ The Justice Department, hoverer, while willing to go after Makers in Gov. The C.I.A. tries to spook the press ernment, is unwilling to join Mr. Casey in chilling the leakees in the press.., One reason is that law enforcement officials have long been aware of, and are discreetly curious about, meet- ings held in Mr. Casey's home, alone, between the Director and reporter Woodward, who is writing a book about the C.I.A. I would never ask Bob Woodward about that, because a man's sources or non-sources are nobody's business but his own. But a few months back I put the question buzzing around Jus- tice directly to my old friend Casey.'- "I haven't seen Woodward for -1$ months " was the ruff l N , g rep y, o basis. Dictionary, Merriam-Webster's Un- at a11 to the obvious F.B.I. wonderment abridged, and found it difficult to un- if Mr. Casey was the source of the ate? derstand why spooks were concerned rise he most complains about. He does that "the NID is leaking.') readily admit seeing Mr. Woodward That's it. That's the reason Mr. (as he did me) long ago. Casey is having fits, losing sight of I do not suggest that the Director of the freedoms we hired him to protect: Central Intelligence has ever been the the NID is leaking. source of a fact the Government does Rather than consider if secrets are not want known. But to the extent coming out of C.I.A. or N.S.A. (No politicians on background seek to use Such Agency), when fooling the poly- Journalists to advance policy. Mr. graph is child's play, the blame is Casey and even higher officials ar being placed on the consumers of Intel- "sources." They will find their out. ligence: the 200 NID subscribers, a lets turn user-wilrlendly when their? third of whom are in the Pentagon. . carrots become sticks. Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R000100150001-2 ARTICLE APPpprovel For Release 2QQ /01/03: CIA-RDP90-01137R000 ON PACE 3A HINGTON MONTHLY February 1986 The real story Soviet combat brig The 5TUPIDIT~of Intellz'gence by Stansfield Turner presidency," Jimmy Carter said of the failure to secure Senate ratification of the SALT iI agree- ment. He had staked his presidential prestige and to a significant extent, his political future on the signing and ratification of the treaty. While many factors combined to put Senate ratification in doubt, the White House thought the prospects hopeful even in an election year, hopeful that is, until an intelligence failure concerning the report of a brigade of Soviet troops in Cuba caused a political uproar that seriously damaged the chances for passage of SALT II. Here, Stanfield 774rner, director of the CIA at the time, gives his account of the mishandling of the report and the unnecessary damage it caused Technology has so increased the amount of in- formation we can acquire that a whole new set of problems has resulted. On the one hand, analysts are inundated with data and must find ways to filter, store, and retrieve what is signifi- cant. On the other hand, analysts must be con- cerned with whether they are receiving everything that is collected in their area of interest; with whether the members of the intelligence The most profound disappointment of m y Adapted from secrecy and Democracy: The CIA in Transi- tion by Stanfield 71.rner Houghton Mifflin Ca. Boston..c 1985 by Sransfield 74rner. Reprinted by permission of the publisher community-the CIA's espionage branch, the NSA [National Security Agency], the Defense organizations responsible for overhead recon- naissance, the CIA's electronic surveillance com- ponent, the State Department's diplomatic reporting system, the FBI's foreign intelligence branch, the Defense Intelligence Agency's [DIA] attaches, the intelligence organizations of the military services, and the intelligence offices of the departments of Treasury, Energy, and the Drug Enforcement Agency-all share what they collect. An unfortunate example of information not being shared adequately came in the summer of 1979. It led to the most serious intelligence failure of my tenure. The failure to forecast the fall of the Shah earlier that year was of far less significance than our mishandling of the report that a "combat brigade" of Soviet troops was in Cuba. Had we predicted the Shah's fall from power even six or seven months ahead of time, there was little the United States could have done to prevent it. The reporting on the combat brigade, however, did play a direct part in scuttling the SALT II arms control treaty with the Soviet Union. In June 1979 President Carter had met with President Brezhnev and signed the SALT II trea- ty. The Senate was preparing to hold its initial _ hearings on ratification when, on July 18, the Washington Star reported, "Sen. Richard Stone, Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R0001001500011Rli=uulaj Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R0001 ~ ^' r.m.PPEARED WASHINGTON POST Iq) 16 November 1985 Joint Ceremony to Cap Sumnu*t Soviets Resolve 10 of 25 Divided-Family Cases, State Dept. Says By Lou Cannon and David Hoffman W,ishinghm Post Stiff Writers President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev have agreed to add a joint appearance Thursday at the end of their meet- ings in Geneva, where they are like- ly to sign cultural and air-safety agreements and to review the sum- mit, White House officials said yes- terday. In another development, the State Department said last night that the Soviets had resolved 10 of the 25 U.S.-Soviet cases involving separated spouses, dual nationals and divided families. Prior to this month, only three separated spouses had re- ceived exit visas over the past 1'/z years and only one dual national case was resolved within the last year. The gesture was termed by a senior department official as "a sig- nal prior to the summit" of Soviet willingness to resolve the problems. These developments came as Reagan prepared to depart this morning for Geneva and the first superpower summit, since 1979. Sources said that Reagan and Gor- bachev are expected to agree to establish a regular process of con- sultation, including future summit conferences. A senior White House official said that the Thursday ceremony that has been added to the summit schedule also could include either joint or separate statements by the two leaders on summit accomplish- ments. Describing the Thursday cere- mony, a senior official said: "As we see it now, the two leaders in some public forum would sign the docu- ments [and]. would each make a statement. Ours would probably be on how.we saw the summit. Then there would be some more casual conversation between the two, and they'd leave." The senior official said that Gor- bachev is "the head of the Commu- nist Party and a very staunch ad- vocate of his cause" and that Rea- gan is under no illusions that the meetings will be easy. "You cannot expect him to be soft, you cannot expect him to be genial, you cannot expect him to be anything except what he is, leader, of the Soviet people and a very dy- namic person," the official said. Reagan spent his last day in Washington in an hour-long Nation- al Security Council meeting review- ing summit themes. An official said the president's advisers "don't want to overload him" with briefing ma- terial and added that ,Reagan was rereading earlier papers that had been given him. Reagan also met during the day with Sens. Pete Wilson (R-Calif.), and Ernest F. Hollings (D-S.C.). They presented a petition signed by 37 colleagues urging Reagan not to agree to restrictions on his Stra- tegic Defense Initiative (SDI). The senators said they shared Reagan's view "that SDI is too important to be traded for marginal improve- ments in the status quo." "The quest for a world free of `push button' Armageddon must not be abandoned for short-term gains in the superpower thermostat," the senators said. "Ironically, we have let the Soviets make real progress on their campaign against our SDI, while they proceed apace on their own." Earlier this week, Reagan was briefed on the Soviet Union by three CIA analyst . Staff writer Don Oberdorfer contributed to this report. Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R000 00150001`-2.__ :.1.ky .~ ed For Release 2QQ6~QI/P3,..~ RDP90-01137800010 _5 P', aroh, 19LS 5 Managing `the Fudge Facto' By BERNARD GWERTZMAN Special to The New York Times WASHINGTON, March 24 - As, Ronald I. Spiers tells it, he was hap- pilv at work as Ambassador to Paki- stan when he complained offhandedly to Secretary of State George P. Shultz, who was passing through Isla- mabad, about the way the State De- partment was managed worldwide. The next thing he knew, Mr. Shultz was asking him to return to Washing- ton to become Under Secretary of State for Management. Mr. Shultz's first choice as head of management, a corporate expert in the field, had dis t after less than a m gus iven u to do. Former Secretary of State Dean Rusk complained in the early 1960's that the department had "too many chiefs and not enough Indians." Mr. Spiers makes the same point when he says: "We have too many senior officers who cannot be placed in jobs appropriate to their rank" and "currently, 40 senior officers are overcomplement" (doing "make- work" jobs). In part, this is because of politics. Since 1981, he says, 23 am- bassadorial or other senior assign- ments have moved from career to - /~ g k, year of trving to put order into what At the. heart of has affectionately been called "the Fudge Factory." The problems of the State Depart- many problems is ment are so long-standing - inade- quate resources, cliquish personnel a loss of discipline. policies and a pervasive feeling that -Ronald I. Spiers what most officers do has little im- pact on foreign policy - that being ement is viewed by d of mana h g ea many in the department as an invita- tion to frustration. Mr. Spiers said he took the job because after complain- ing to Mr. Shultz "I could hardly tell him I preferred to stay where I was." Mr. Spiers, a veteran of the Foreign Service, has in recent months begun speaking out candidly about his un- happiness with the state of affairs at Foggy Bottom, and he is quick to say that not much has changed yet. He re- cent gave a speech to the American Foreign Service Association, the trade union for the State Department, and excerpts from that speech appear in the current issues of the Foreign Service Journal and the State Depart- ment's own house organ: In his view, not only does the State Department not receive enough money to do its job well, but it has failed to manage well the resources it has, namely a dedicated corps of dip- lomats. - In a way Mr. Spiers may have dis- covered the wheel. It has. long been known that a disproportionate num- ber of competent diplomats had little political appointees. Even the most respected category is not immune. Of 40 career ministers, the absolute cream of the foreign service, seven are without meaningful jobs, he says. Many officers, particularly those without challenging assignments, complain that despite all sorts of ob- jective criteria that are supposed to be used to rank officers and to select the best for promotion, in the end it all depends on whom one knows in a posi- tion of power. An officer may have performed superbly in some far-off embassy, but ususally has less chance of getting a top position`than does a talented aide to a senior offi- cial in Washington. For instance, it is regarded in the State Department as a passport to a prized overseas assignment to spend two or three years as a senior aide to a high official. In fairness to those officers, they do put in I6-hour days and long weekends, and the toll on their personal lives is often heavy. Too often, Mr. Spiers says, assign- ments depend "more on whom you know than whether you are the best for the job or the job is best for you." The system today penalizes officers "who are less visible to the decision- makers in Washington" and fails to insure "equitable sharing of hardship assignments," he -says. "At the heart of many of these problems is a loss of service disci- pline that, in my view, arises from a sense that the system is not operating equitably," he said. "I see little chance of restoring esprit de corps and a sense of service until we find ways to restore trust in the system and overcome a feeling that nice guys finish last." Another major complaint of Mr. Spiers is the lack of funds given to the State Department for its basic job. The budget is about $2 billion annual- ly, which, as Mr. Spiers points out, is less than one percent of the Penta- gon's budget. Moreover, he says despite mvti ue attached to tne Central in- telligence Agency and o er c andes- tine operations. Percent of the Ea- tin-al in the Presidents supersecret morning report covering crucia overnignt internationa aevelo ments comes from F oreiign ervice reporting. Ana yet, in the last d"ade, there has been an percent cut in the number o peop a evo ego 'cam nomic and political re rtin and analysis - t e heart o the dart- . men's responsibilities - as we had to meet increases in consular work, loaosand provi eadministrative-S u11- Dort for other a encies." - "What we nave done, year after year, is thin the soup," Mr. Spiers said. Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R000100150001-2 Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137ROOa re St WASHINGTON TItlES 18 September 1984 Ms, orts -The Soviet Union is developing and deploying three new types of nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missiles, informed admin- istration sources have told The Washington Times. This represents a major new - effort by the Soviets to upgrade their strategic missile network. It also would place them up to 10 to 15 years ahead of the United States in deployment of comparable strate- gic missile systems, the sources say. As part of this effort, the Soviet Union has embarked on a crash pro- gram to deploy upwards of 460 new SS-25 nuclear ICBMs at two launch sites before the end of 1985. According to information recently reported in the CIA's top- secret National ntel igence ails the Soviets have accelerated _SS 2 ifl 9 - -test programs and are e~ tae new mt`~"ssiles at Yosh- a and. YurS?a_ Yoshkar Ol presently houses SS-13 cdngla- warhead ICBMs, and Yu rya is an SS-20 missile com lex. The sources said that 60 triple- warheaded SS-25s are being installed in SS-13 silos at Yoshkar Ola to replace those older single missiles. An additional 200 road- mobile SS-25s each are to be deployed at Yoshkar Ola and Yurya as well for a total of 460. The sources report that the war- head on the SS-25 is about one-third of the missile's total throw-weight, or payload. This not only violates another provision of SALT II; it also indicates the SS-25 will be covertly . deployed with three MIRVed war- heads. The strategic significance of this crash program to deploy 460 new missiles is that it will add 1,380 new warheads by 1985. In addition, U.S. intelligence offi- cers have identified a totally new, mmissile, the SS-X-2 7, as being un er development. Its liquid-fueled engirIgs are being tested at the Soviet facility at Dnepropetrovsk etrovsk and-the missiletest silos have been detected at the Tyuratam mis- sile/space center, the ssources say. The SS-X-27 had been foreseen by the Pentagon as an outgrowth of the SS-18 ICBM. But based on the observed size of the SS-X-27's silo. L it is believed that the new missile will be significantly larger than the SS-18. First flight tests of the SS-X-27 are expected' in 1986 but could occur as early as next year. The Soviets, in the past, have maintained that their missile devel- opments are simply modifications of existing systems. The SALT II treaty, by which both the Soviet 'Union and the United States have agreed to abide even though it has not been ratified, prohibits deploy- ment of more than one "new type" ICBM. The Soviets have designated the medium-sized SS-24 as this new type and claim that the SS-25 and others are merely modifications of it, and proper. Two administration reports on Soviet arms control violations have concluded that the SS-25 repre- sents an illegal second "new type" ICBM. The president's report to Congress, released in January, and the still-classified General Advi- sory Committee's report on arms control violations both term the SS-25 as a "probable violation" of SALT II. The sources say that the evi- dence is now stronger and the "probable" qualification has been strengthened to "certain" in official reports. The third new missile, the SS has been seen at the Plesetsk test range, the sources U n t i l reported. recent )7. U.S. rote - l Bence believed that the Soviets would hold off testing the SS-X-26 in t t until a ter SALT II expire at the end of 1985. But now, the sources say, "it is known it will be _ ig t_tested bj early l9 5." The SS-X-26, which uses a solid propellant, is a ? successor to the SS-18, which uses a liquid propel- lant. The sources said that, based on the observed size of the SS-X-26 silos, it will be "significantly larger" than the SS-18, which can be fitted with up to 14 nuclear war- heads. The silos for the SS-X-26 are said to be larger, than those of the SS-18, which would constitute a violation of SALT II limits on silo size. The sources say that Soviet mis- sile complexes for old, deactivated SS-7 ICBMs are likely sites for future deployments of the road- mobile SS-25s. They identified four such sites at Verkhnyaya Salda, Novosibirsk, Omsk and Tyumen. The deployment of the SS-25, SS-26, and SS-27 missiles would vio- late several arms control agreements, the sources say. Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01I37R000100150001-2 TAT Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R0001 )0150001-2 WASHINGTON POST 24 May 1984 Asks istrnoreIand SU By Eleanor Randolph Washington Post start Wrttef I , Drawing from almost ,4.OO Libel lawyers for CBS argued yesterday that sworn statements from almost 40 military and intelligence analysts from the Vietnam war years prove the network's charge that the U.S. military- command in Vietnam lied about enemy troop strength to bolster political support for the war in the late 1960s. In a motion asking, U.S. District Court Judge Pierre Leval to dismiss a $120 million libel action against CBS by retired Army Gen. William C. Westmoreland, network lawyers said that "few broadcasts have been as thoroughly researched" as a Mike Wallace program called "The Uncounted Enemy A Vietnam Deception," which ran in Jan- uary, 1982. Included in the CBS brief are quotations from letters that a former Army analyst sent his wife. "You should have seen the antics my people and I had to go through with our computer cal- culations to make the February strength calcula- tions come out the way the general wanted them to," one read. "We started with the answer and plugged in all sorts of figures until we found the combination the machine would digest." The writer of the letter, James Meacham, now a journalist in London, has said recently that he was merely dissatisfied with his work and did not mean the letters to be construed years later as evidence of a conspiracy. The CBS brief also quoted Richard Kovar, a 30-year CIA veteran who now writes President Reagan's daily CIA briefing, as saying that the CBS documentary is "a great service to the intel- ligence process." The network brief also contended that Kovar said it should be broadcast annually on the anni- versary of the Tet offensive "so that no intelli- gence analyst, soldier or citizen who watches it will ever let anything like this happen again." Ronald Smith, a 25-year CIA intelligence offi- cer and analyst who is at the Department of En- ergy, said that for CBS to call efforts to hold down enemy troop estimates a "conspiracy ... ac- curately describes the concerted effort undertaken by military officials to distort and suppress critical intelligence information about the enemy we faced in Vietnam," , . documents that have made the detailed chronicle of one of the a nu an torpor media, CBS used a rare tactic I stage of a libel case, saying that ocumen >s true and thus is not libelous. Such an assertion, normally awaits the findings of the court as a re- sult of the trial. As a fallback to a more standard legal position in such cases, CBS lawyer David Boies also argued that First Amendment protections of a free press in this country should warrant dismissal of West- moreland's "attempt ... to impose a price on crit- icism of the way in which our government's high- est officials exercise their official powers" by his filing of the libel suit. Boies acknowledged that the broadcast has flaws, some of which were the subject of a highly critical article in TV Guide last year and a recent- ly released book charging that CBS set out to "smear" Westmoreland. But Boies argued that "none of those flaws im- plicates either the truth of what the broadcast says or CBS' belief in it." Don Kowet, author of a controversial new book about the documentary, "A Matter of Honor," and Sally Bedell, now with The New York Times, wrote the an' article in TV Guide, "Anatomy of a Smear-How CBS Broke the Rules and `Got' Westmoreland." After the story, CBS conducted an internal in- vestigation that criticized the network for re-in- terviewing some witnesses unfairly, for not iden- tifying former CIA analyst Sam Adams on the air as a paid-CBS consultant and for failing to prove that there-was a `conspiracy" by the military to "cook" the figures, ' as such manipulations are sometimes called. In June, 1983, CBS suspended the show's pro- ducer, George Crile, for, taping telephone inter- views with former secretary of defense Robert S. McNamara and others without their knowledge, The tapes and the internal CBS investigation have become a part of the voluminous record. Westmoreland's lawyer, Dan M. Burt, said he could not comment in detail on a motion he had not read. He labeled as "ridiculous" a CBS argu. inert th tt W Approved For Release 2006/t01/03 : ~IA-RDP9~ I(~~11bF-2 ARTICLE A 4 d For Rele 0 / CIA-RDP90-01137R0 ON PAGE 30 March 1984+ U. S. Aides Say Iraqis Made Use Of a Nerve Gas Assert Lab Gear Came From West Germans By SEYMOUR M. 1RSH 5pccal to The Am YorkTiraes WASHINGTON, , March 29 - United States intelligence officials say have obtained what they believe to be i_ controvertible evidence that Iraq has used nerve s in its war with Iran and is Hearin eom lesion of e ensive sues for the massproduction of the lethal chemical agent Pentagon, fare State . Department and in- telligence officials said in interviews this week that the evidence included documentation that Iraq has been buy- laboratory equipment from a West' German company, purchases that are. believed to be linked to Iraq's nerve gas production plans. The intelligence also shows, the offi- cials said. that Iran has as manv as five dispersed sites for the storage, produc- tion and assembly of nerve gas wed .-ts Without intervention. these offi- cials ?said, Ira is estimated to be weeks or months away from the ability to mount mjor chemicalattacks against Iran's far more numerous - troops. in small canisters, it would be virtually impossible to effectively monitor the spread of such weapons to other coun- tries. In 1969 the United States reaffirmed.. its renunciation of, the first use of chemical warfare, and it later reduced its preparations to defend against a chemical war. The United States has accused Iraq of using chemical weap- ons in the war with Iran, but Baghdad has denied the charge. A senior official said this week that the Joint Chiefs of Staff had been asked to provide what he termed a "prelimi- nary look" at the feasibility of an American air strike on the fortified sites, but. concluded there were not enough American aircraft in appropri- ate locations. This official went on to say that there were many in the Government who, re-, calling the successful Israeli air attack in 1981 on what was determined to be an Iraqi nuclear plant, would like to see the Israeli Air Force attack again. Some sensitive high-level conversa- tions on the issue between the United States and Israel have already taken . place, the official added. This information could not be con- firmed, although many American offi- cials, in interviews, volunteered their personal judgment that such an attack would be one welcome solution to the problem. A senior State Department official described his frustration over the issue. "It's not lack of knowledge at high levels," he said. "It's been in all the high-rollers' briefing books. The Iraqis appear to be ready to do any- thing. The question is what do we do? Should we cast a major air strike? That's a big move," The official ac- knowledged hearin "s ecul ti " g p a on Deep Underground Bunkers - i that the Israelis might be "ready to Each of the sites, the officials said, move," but added that such talk was in. has been built in deep underground his view only talk. ed bunkers, heavily ifortified by concrete, The intelligence, which was provided that are reported to be six stories below the surface. Officials said the Iraqi concern appeared to be protection from an air attack. Neither the White House nor the State Department would formal] corn- ment today on the intelligence informa- l ti on, If full-scale chemical war develops, one senior American official said, "the genie is out of the bottle." He added: Arms control is down the drain. And we've got our forces completely at risk." The official warned that because of the nature of chemical weapons, huge doses of which can be transported from sources epict~in tter ~~ee than on-si a as Lte(hy and forceful v resented to genLRga- gan _ gan in the last week, the officials said, with a te~iouse not yet providing politer guidance. Of ills saia that on three occasions within the week the Central Intelli. en c Agency, to mat_ize it concern over the intelligence, had empbasized or "red lined " the relevant informa- on on Ira 's chemical war abilities jbf, ident's daily intelli a ae rief, one of the most high] classified docu-, ;nenE- m _e vernmerit. .'s in i- ;na ion is Arepared_p & by,-the C.I.A. and resented early each morn- ingg to tthe'P resident. One official, reflecting the frustra- tion of many in the Intel igence field, praised William J. Case the Director I of entry me iaence for _avinF'~t i'e is to stand ar` t addin "He's given the correct information to the White Ouse an it s u to em The State Department said on March 5 that the United States had concluded' that the available evidence indicated that lethal chemical weapons were being used by Iraq against Iran, in violation of the Geneva Protocol of 1925, which Iraq agreed to adhere to in 1931- At the time of the statement an Administration official said the chemi- cal weapon being used by - the Iraqis seemed to be mustard gas; a blistering agent. At that time Iran accused the Iraqis of using nerve gas and nitrogen mustard, but the Administration said there_was no evidence Iraq had used nerve gas- One reason for` hesitation over the issue a indite House official aclaiowl- edged, is the traditional concern of in- telligence offici s for the rotection of "sources and methods." The specific in o a oout tth extent of Iraqi nerve Qas dev ypnef rat is said,a e been derived from unusually sensitive sources. - A maior diplomatic complication confronts the Administration, officials say. American intelligenregenc~e have identified Karl K4]k,.scientific and technical supply_ comp~nv j Dreieiest German, as being re- s nsible for the sale and shipg of sor ted laborators,-uip~nt at, intelligence. officials sa,,_s been used - aona_eDily ithout the v' - i4i e ei3L3n~t d ability uito develop a nerve as. Sales L.iTie o ment considered b American of- cia s to essentia to to Iraqi were said to have taken place e ov at least two yea period of -* iod of chemical company ~, a?1h_tbe obtaintng all of ht required export licenses from the We st German Government before shipment. - Evidence Presented to Bonn Sometime within the last month, offi- inte i e ce o icia s o tained evidence directly linkin the companr's s pments to Iraqi ey?Tp. The C.I.A. relayed some of its infor- mation'and its concern directly to the . United States Embassy in B a of- ficial said, which in turn made a diplo- a c representation to the4R L ez Irian Government. The official Amen- Continued Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01I37R000100150001-2 G,TICI.E APP RTved For Release 2/96W -RDP90-01137R00 c11 PAGE' A ;/ 11 December 1983 Intelligenee: Togo Much Teo Little Evaluation This report wes prepared and written by Philip Taubman and Joel Brinkley. The marines, defending the ad- equacy of security at their ? Beirut headquarters on Oct. 23, have said they never received intelligence in- lormation warning that they might be the target of a suicidal truck-bomb at- tack. General Kelley, the Marine Commanda , told Congress - last month that the marines "have-yet to find a shred of intelligence which would have alerted a reasonable and -prudent commander to this new and unique threat." - intelligence and military officials say General Kelley may be right in the sense that the marines never re- ceived a tip that a large truck packed ,with explosives would come crashing into the Marine compound. But they said intelligence warnings about ter- ?rorist threats, particularly car bombs, were never in short supply. "We m one or two a day," recalled -General Mead, who served two tours and five months as Marine com- mander in Beirut. He said, "I was told by ,my intel officer, `Hey boss, we've had another warning.' You got that every day. 'You're gonna get it, you're gonna get it, you're gonna get it' Initially, after the American Em- bassy went, we went into a condition- one-type situation. I had my men on alert all the time. But then I began- mittees that the marnes were given descriptions of at least 100 potential car bombs between June 1 and Oct. General Mead recalled receiving dozens of warnings about white Mer- cedes vehicles that might be carrying bombs- "We were told .-this every day, he said in an interview, "so everybody's looking. for this white Mercedes. I used to- laugh every day when I'd get on the street with my driver and I'd_ say; 'Cam the white Mercedesl' " No one in the Marine contingents in Beirut or the chain' of =command .- above them appears to have appreci- ated the influence this might have on security. No one. proposed establish- ing a special intelligence task force composed of terrorism experts to help the marina, according to the in- telligence officials. Intelligence experts said such a unit, which could have been based in Washington, Europe or Beirut, could have sifted through the various kinds of intelligence, including information obtained from informants and elec- tronic surveillance, and helped sepa- rate the reliable from the unreliable. Bits and Pieces of Data In addition, they said, the special. ists could have looked for pattern in thinking I had to have more specifici- the bits and pieces of data,that might' ty, I'm wearing my men .down with- ?.-.. reveal why terrorists were re. out more specificity of a threat." Too Much Raw Intelligence The problem in Beirut was not in- sufficent intelligence, but insufficient evaluation; according to a variety of current and former military and in- telligence officials familiar with the intelligence support provided to the marines. . If anything, commanders up the line agreed; the marines received too much raw'intelligence about terror- ism and were not trained to analyze it, eventually becoming somewhat complacent about almost- daily cacti bomb warnings. Admiral Holcomb, the deputy com- mander of American Naval Forces in Europe, said the flow of intelligence information was filled with warnings of impending terrorist attacks. Gen- eral Kelley told Congressional com- which, is turn, could help~pinp support from Iran Sia, targets for surveillance. - . Analysis of this kind in Washington since the Marine bombing indicates that an Iranian-backed Shiite Moslem faction in Lebanon called the Islamic Amal, located in Baalbek, northeast of Beirut, was involved in both the embassy and Marine bombings. A senior' intelligence official said there are also "some indications" that Syria aided in the attack by providing explosives. He denied re- ports that the United States has ir- refutable evidence linking the attacks to Syrian leaders. Formation of?a group of specialists before the attack could have given a more sophisticated reading of the ter- rorist threat, intelligence experts said. "It was a colossal oversight,,. one former senior intelligence official said. He added, "It's almost criminal to send Marine intelligence officers, -. men who've dealt only with battle- field intelligence, into Beirut without sending some experts in to help them specialized kind of infor- mation they were getting on terror- ism." Senator Warner, who has been in- vestigating intelligence aspects of the Marine mission, said the chain of command "should have required that someone with this training be reas- signed temporarily to the Marines." From the- beginning of their mis- sion,' the marines seemed to be' haunted by American -intelligence setbacks. The first, which the ma- rines indirectly abetted in their first tour in August 1982, was the ..- .O.-evacuation after The Israeli invasion. Over the years, while the United States officially refused to deal di- rectly with the P.L.O. because of its terrorist activities and hostility to- ward Israel, the C.I.A. developed a highly effective intelligence network/ in the Palestinian community. in Lebanon. "The disintegration of the _P.L.O.,was a serious intelligence loss_ for the United States," one forvier in- telligence official said. Then in April almost the entire i C.I.A. staff in Beirut was killed by the bomb blast that destroyed the embasr sy,'including several of the agency's leading experts on the Middle East. Intelligence officials said the C.I.A. station was quickly rebuilt and the network of informants in Lebanon was not affected, but acknowledged that the change was disruptive. Gathering intelligence about ter- rorism, particularly trying to pene- trate terrorist groups, is considered one of the toughest jobs in the intelli- gence business. One intelligence official said: "Ter- 1 rorist cells are small, fanatical and highly paranoid. It's almost impossi- ble to plant an agent in one. You may get -lucky and turn someone already inside, but you generally have to rely for information on wiretaps anctother communications intercepts." Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R0001001.50001-2 many American lives in jeopardy when offers of Israeli medical anad rescue assistance were rejected. THE U.S. air attack yesterday 0 The Syrian regime of Press- brass on Capitol Hill indicates that on the Syrian artillery bat. dent Assad directly controlled the a "coverup" of intelligence and se- teries, which fired on unarmed `terrorists who carried out the w~ hin the Shortcoming$ Defense Dept under way II American reconnaisanee planes, bombings. was the first strike the U.S. has ? There is strong circumstantial This is the story the Defense made directly against the ' evidence that the Syrians also Ord- Dept. does not want to seeins i t h n . e pr forces of President Hofez Assad. ered the April 16 bombing of t Yet the Syrians - with strong U.S. Embassy in Beirut - an The following Is the first part of Soviet backing - have waged a atrocity which killed 63 embassy an exclusive day-by-day account brutal undeclared war against the international peacekeeping force since It arrived In Leba- non. This emerges from a major Post -investigation into the Octo- ber 23 "kamikaze" bombings of THE U.S. air attack yesterday on the Syrian artillery batteries, which fired on unarmed American reconnaisanee planes, was the first strike the U.S. has made directly against the forces of President Hatez Assad. Yet the Syrians - with strong Soviet backing - have waged a brute; undeclared war against the international peacekeeping force since it arrived in Lebanon. This emerges from a major Post Investigation into. the October 23 "kamikaze" bombings of the U.S. and French military compounds in Beirut which cost the peacekeep- ing farces almost 300 lives. Among the disturbing conclusions of the investigation: T. I ks j, personnel. : of events leading up to I e c...r O The bombings were carried toting attacks. out with Soviet and East Bloc com- it has been pieced together from plicity If not explicit approval. exhaustive interviews by Post re- Otherfindings includes porters in Lebanon, Israel and ? The American, French and Is- Washington. roeli Intelligence services inexpii-I cably ignored vital evidence of the Involvement of fanatical Shiite' Moslem "Shahid" suicide squads in Middle East terrorism. ' ? Even so, many lives would have been saved had the Defense Dept. heeded urgent warnings from the CIA and other intelli- gence agencies of plans for a spectacular" strike against the! Marines compound. O Security at the Marine com- pound was inexplicably lax on the night of the bombing - even by the "relaxed" standards of the Beirut peacekeeping forces. O Defense Dept. anxiety about alienating Syrian "goodwill" put Monday, April 18,.1483: The U.S. Embassy, Bei.- ru.t. Time: Midday. A pickup truck loaded with high explosive detonates in the embassy -fore- court, 'demolishing the entire front of the build- ing and killing 63 em- bassy personnel. . Among the. dead are Bob Ames, the CIA's I chief Middle ' East ana- lyst, and it of his most important subordinates. U.S intelligence sources claim that It is still not known whether or not it was a suicide attack. i apZMvLXD Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R000100150001-2 Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R000100 ARTICLE ON PAGE. WASHINGTON POST 7 November 1983 ~' b . p irti By Chuck Conconi One of West Germany's most influential publications, Der Spiegel, has a harsh piece this week on "The World of Ronald Rea- gan." On the weekly news magazine cover Sunday was Reagan in cowboy hat, along with Mickey Mouse, a sultry blond, covered wagons, an Indian, combat troops leaving a- landing-craft and skyscrapers.-in describing the president's world, Der Spiegel wrote: "Ronald Reagan, who in the White House is briefed by the CIA about the foreign sit- uation in 20-minute films, probably consid- ers the world is a movie. Grenada is no ac- cident, but a new film scene in the life of this president-the first takes on location since he took office. It has the old, tested B-movie motives-to the right. the, cavalry. on the hilltop, left in the bush the enemies' of civilization, the Reds. So simple, so old.is Ronald Reagan's California cosmology." Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01I37R000100150001-2 ATM;-1!N 1 A.t"=`='EATtrg Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R00010 ` '`` " ?`` PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER 3 Noveriber 1983 U.S. camp in: Lebanon:: shifts entry PPWR Inquver hire Ulu ; BEIRUT. Lebanon US-Marines. .yesterday -shifted. the maiii. entrant to their- camp to the 'gate used by the - truck-bomb, terrorist and set up ' a heavily fortified -130-yard `maze . in . hope 'oT foiling any more bomb at tacks Meanwhile, . 'police'- sources. said that Lebanese investigators had been'. threatened with death if they contin- ued to probe the Oct. 23 bombings that killed at least 230 Marines and sailors at Beirut International Air- port and 58 French :paratroopers. about a mile away. The sources, :.who requested .ano- nymity; did not-say who had -made the .threats. But- they disclosed thaj, according toinformants,-the terror ists first surveyed the.bomb targets by posing -as peddlers.... ..... As FBI laboratory specialists. con- -tinned; analyzing - the 40-foot=wide bomb crater, the Marines shifted th main entrance to their camp,. from north to south. The new main gate .is the _ same' ;one through .which ..the bomb=laden truck ;passed before speeding into the fou_ r-story' Battal- ion , .Landing' :.Team , headquarters, where it'detonated and reduced the structure to rubble. - Now, vehicles entering the .gate face. Marilte sentries and must be driven .alonga zigzag route:: -,ibe New York Times reported yes- terday. that a warning _of a- terrorist attack on U.S. forces in Lebanon was circulated among top government of= Ticials'three days' before the Oct- 23 bombing.- - = . _. 7.: ... r.._ ,l. The Times said an intelligence tt- portspeeified that a pro-lranian3hi- ite.MusI1r gionp,Ifown as ls-a r -Amai':-and "the, Pa y~f_.Cpdr.wt 311natte~Gl4er.es,~~-er- The i:tA -said eras that- it .,- . The :radio, known as, the .Voice of could not confirm the-warning was Lebanon, also, said that snipers tired given and a rte House spokesman on motorists in- Kharoub, 15 miles c to o ere -south of Beirut, and that several pt* Within hours - e m ing, De- = ple were wounded. fense Secretary Ca par' W. Weinbet? -The artillery and- mortar blasts ger;said he suspected prb-'Iranian ter- L echoed over the US. Marine peace- - rorists were responsible, The bead-elf - keeping base sandwiched between , laatic'Amal-has'denied'the,. group the combat zones, but -a Marine carried out the bombing ? t spokesman- said no- Americans .were -' Tlie Times said te warning did {involved .-- not predict:a:time; date-orl lace r& ` "You can hear the fighting, but the attack:1"? `right now. the Marines are not being The newspaper said3h report was fired .on," said Caps Wayne Jones 15 distributed Oct.-20101& government minutes after he toured Marine posi- -officiaisand military - eiders -iti-Eu- , Lions adjacent to south Beirut Shiite ropeaiidprnbsbaj!was`seea-by'top actors it+vclvpd in the. clashes. Marine off'ic'ers u ~e1rliL The- Times quoted-Martha '-Gel. .James, McManaway -as `'saying . thle warning was not precise enough fdr rMarines-in Beirut'so..take -extraordi- nary precautions '.around. 1he, head- nuarters -.building: - 'For all we:knew;'the:threat -men- ,.:ioned -might have -involved: an -,oid -lady carrying .6 shopping -bag fillcd with explosives," he said. ?t w In fighting - in - Lebanon;?-govern- .ment?troops'and Muslim gunmen ea: -gulled Beirut's southern suburb az l surrounding.., hills .with- artillery, mortar and machine-gun- fire: yester- ` Iayina serious breach,of.the Sept. 26 cease-fire agreement. Lebanese army-sources also repou- -ed Druse Muslim. shelling of the de- fense ministry' in Yam.. and. the Shout Mountain-.village of: Souk el Gharb, the key army base eight miles from. Beirut that guards the :sour-- east approaches to the ? capital. State-run Beirut Radio . said the nine leaders of Lebanon's. warring factions, who are attending a nation- al: -reconciliation, talks, in . Geneva, : Switzerland,.had learned of the figllt- ing'The-radio said they-called their .-Christian" and Muslim field - com- manders -to try to silence the guns. Unconfirmed reports on'the.right- wing Phalange militia radio reporter :battles And sniping en:-the Galerie Semaaa.:-Beirat'a-meip, east-west -roadway --and in-- e~: Tayoune;.aria r,t hat separates Cbr an east ;t orn Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R000100150001-2 Approved For Release 200'11OFZKCKS90-01137 3 -November 1983 =M1= 4z Major Questions Raised: On CJ.A.'s Performance By-PHILIP TAUBMAN SpedtltoT .NrwYC,kT,mII WASHINGTON, Nov. 2- The terror. ist bombing of the United States Ma- rine headquarters in Beirut and the that Cuban presence tot ythey found in Grenada have raised major questions in the Reagan Administration and Con- gress about the performance of Ameri- can inte_igenrp agencies. These questions, like those about the adequacy of security at the building in Beirut, represent some of the most con- tested issues growing out of the recent events mLebanon and Grenada. The intelligence questions, according to Administration officials and mem-' bers of Congress, revolve around two immediate concerns: whether better intelligence information might have helped prevent the attack on the Ma- tines in Beirut on Oct. 23 and whether the American troops that invaded Gre- nada two days later were suffi ciently informed about the strength of Cuban forces an the island. The officials said fundamental ques- tions had also been raised about the mission and methods of the nation's in- telligence agencies, including the issue of whether the United States had be-: come too dependent an sophisticated electronic -surveillance equipment in- stead of human agents for spying. Agencies an the Defensive The questions have put the Central. Intelligence Agency and other intelli- gence organizations somewhat on the defensive and produced strains be- tween the uniformed military services and civilian intelligence officials. Mili- tary officers who commanded the inva- sion of Grenada, for example, com- plain about an intelligence vacuum that they say left assault forces unpre. 'pared for the stiff resistance they en-: comtered from Cuban troops. While most said it would be some time before a full review was complet- ed, they said it already seemed clear that serious shortcomings were ex- posed in Lebanon and Grenada. ' .In Lebanon, the American intelli- gence - agencies had been . trying to monitor the activities of terrorist groups and to anticipate political devel- opments among the volatile Moslem and Christian. communities, Adminis- tration officials said. Because of the difficulty of infltrat-. ing militant groups, however, the pffi: cials said, the resulting intellige e tended to lack the specific information that would enable the authorities to block assassination plots or other ter- roristactivities.. Three days before a terrorist drove a truck filled with tans of explosives into. the Marine headquarters at Beirut air,, port, killing about 230 American server icemen, the C.I.A. reported that a pro- Iranian Moslem spinter group ap,, peered to be planning an attack against, the Marines. The report was widely; distributed among senior Government. officials, including Marine leaders. . Defenders of the C.I.A. cite the re port, which appeared in the highly clas- sified National Intelligence Digest orb Oct: 20, as - evidence that the agency provided at least some warning before the bombing, even if it did not give thq Gen. Paul X. Kelley, the Marine Commandant, disputed that suggestion today, telling members of the House Armed Services Committee that no one had given the Marines the kind of de. tailed intelligence they needed to pre! vent a suicide bombing attack. , "I'm not talking about those broad, vague, general statements that they hide behind," General Kelley said in an apparent reference to the Oct. 20 intel- ligence report. "I'm tallang about specificity, about a truck," he said. Surprises in Grenada In regard to Grenada, Defense Deb partment officials said they were sur, prised by both the number of Cuban combat forces and the extent of Soviet and Cuban Influence on the island. ' Intelligence officials acknowledged. that detailed information on both subl jects was unavailable, but said that planning for the invasion bad moved sq rapidly there was little time to prepare the tactical intelligence normally re-: quired for a military assault. They also said that the military services, not thy C.IA, were responsible for the collect lion of tactical intelligence. 1 7" The officials said the C.I.A. esti- mated before the invasion that there were about 700 Cubans in Grenada, a figure that the Defense Department ulr ,timately accepted last week after re- porting earlier in the week that 'the total was more than 1,100. Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R000100150001-2 The intelligence officials said the, C.I.A. had provided a periodic flow of ' information in recent months showing that Cuba and the Soviet Union were expanding their influence in Grenada. But they said they were unaware of the large stockpiles of Russian weapons re- portedly found in the invasion. Administration officials said the C.I.A. also had little information about political developments in Grenada. As a result, they caught by.surprise when Washington Prime Min ter. Maurice Bishop was ousted in a coup last month. In both Grenada and Lebanon, intel- ligence officials said, the information that was lacking was of the kind best obtained by human agents rather than satellites, reconnaissance aircraft or . ,other electronic equipment. While the officials~said C.I operated';a~ large number of American and foreign agents in Lebanon but had been u~nable to penetrate terrorist groups. In Grenada, the officials said, the C.IA had no permanent presence and the State Department maintained no permanent diplomatic presence on the island. As a result, the officials said, the United States had few reliable sources of information and found itself relying on other Latinnatioas. qT!et.E tr,np .VEDA!proved For Release 2006/01/03: CIA-RDP90-01137R000l .O ?r. . NEItr YORK TIDES 3 November 1983 Questions by House Panel Anger Mari, By JOEL BRINHLEY day of testimony before House and Sen- ate committees today. He said the . WASHINGTON, Nov. 2 - The Com- mandant of the Marine Corps. Gesn. PaulX Kelley, *told the House Armed Services Committee today that it should be asking more questions about the people who bombed the Marine t"?quarters at Beirut airport rather than abort sedmity precautions. - The death toll may rise to 239, he' said: Questioned for the second day abof_why sentries an duty were not carrying loaded rifles when the truck loaded with explosives raced past, Gen. eral Kelley shouted: _ _.._ "We're talking about clips in weap-' ors, but we're not talking about the people who did it. I want to- find the perpetrators. ?I want to bring them to justice! You have to allow me this one represents a new and truck bombing ` unique terrorist threat, one that could not have been anticipated by any com- could have loaded their rifles in a sea ood or two. The rifles are carried un- loaded to prevent accidents, a Marine spokesman said. Besides, the general told the commit- tee, "In my professional Judgment, it would have been impossible to stop that He defended the field commander's decision to house several hundred ma- rines in one place, saying that the air po;t headquarters had survived many months of fighting, including shelling during the Israelioccupation. . Representative Dave McCurdy, an Oklahoma Democrat, asked why there were so many people in the building, considering that, "in the Middle East, terrorism is just as much a function of their use of power as our use of the M-1' tank." Some military officials and experts on terrorism said the same thing in in- Representative Larry Hopkths, a Kentucky Republican, nErod, : "Maybe the M-16 would rot have stopped the truck. We'll know. But one thing we do know is that an empty'M-16 won't stopatruck." - Now, the, general said, the Marine sentries are carrying loaded w pop me. meetly to a report that the Central In- i -0u--' put that t th 'Yat many people in one telligence Agency said Oct. 20, three place together. and you are creating a days before the bombing, that there situation, especially in that part of the I might be a possible terrorist attack on world where terrorism is so common." American forces in Lebanon. H K reran of s a b "I read in The New York Times today," General Kelley said, "that some nameless, faceless intelligence official had an intelligence report that should have been sufficient that we should have recognized the threat. "But I would like that nameless and : faceless official to come by and tell me he recognized that it would be a five-ton truck carrying 5,000 pounds of ord- nance going at 60 miles per hour. And I'll tell you, I'll be damn mad! " He said the tragedy might have been averted if the Marines had received a specific warning. - "I'm not talking about those broad,. vague general statements they hide be. hind," he said. "I'm talking about specificity, about a truck." - General Kelley completed his $hird pp ert Prof. Ro Georgetown University, a specialist an terrorism who used to be with the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, said: "I just don't understand it. In addi- tion to providing barriers against vehi- cles, you just don't want to concentrate your people in a situation like that. They seemed more interested in crea- ture comforts than in safety." On the question of unloaded weapons, General Kelley told the committee that sentries were following orders and Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R000100150001-2 Y ARTICLE APPEARF ved For Release 2001/03' _CI~390-01 I37R0 ON PAGE ovember Reagan Aides Say U.S. encies Issued Warning of Beirut Attack By PHILIP TAUBMAN - Spsc & ao lbe l in-Yasl2lew WASHINGTON, Nov.1 -Three days before a bomb blast killed United States marines, soldiers and sailors in Beim, intelligence agencies warned that American forces in Lebanon would probably be the target of a'terrarist at- tar k, Reagan Adminisrxatian officials ; said today. The intelligence report, the officials said, specified that the ffiai peered to be planning such an attack was a militam pro-Iranian Shiite- Mos-lem group in Lebanon known as the Is lamic Amal and the Party of God.- The bond of the Islamic Amal has denied that his group was responsible for the attack Oct. 23 that destroyed the Marine headquarters at the Beirut air- -port. After the attack. American and French intelligence officials said the Moslem splinter group appeared to have bees involved. In a related.developme:nt, a spokes. man for the Federal Bureau of Investi- gation, Lane Bonner, said a team of ex plosives experts from the bureau's laboratory had been sent to Beirut to help determine who- was responsible for the attach. - Mr. Bonner said debris recovered at the blast site would be brought back to Washington for analysis to determine whether the bomb could be linked to improvised explosive devices used in other attacks in r ?nOn - No Exact Predictions The intelligexr a warning did not pre- dict the exact time, type or target of an attack, according to the officials. but DUVertheless stood not from the flow of vagae rumors and imprecise intelli gen about terrorist activities in Lebanon. It was published in a classi- fied intelligence bulletin an Oct; 20, the officials said. _ - .. "It was a beadsitp, a .dear,. promi= neat warning;" one official who read the report said. He said similar, though less precise, warnings bad appeared in intelligence reports earlier-in the year.. The officials said the report ap- peared in the National Intelligence Di- gest, a summary of Intelligence infor- mation that is prepared by the Central I_wAlgig Agency and distributed every day to about x00 senior Govern- ment officials, including Marine Corpe off cers and United States military commanders in Europe who have spe- . dflcodmmand over the Marine tm1ts in ? IabanasL The -adequacy of Marine security procedures and the quality of intelli- ;gence before the bombing have emerged as major issues in the wake of the bombing. 17- C mandant Didaft See Report General, Kelley. the Marine Com- mandant; did not 'see or know of the Oct. 20. intelligence report, a Marine spokesman: said today. The -spokes maim, Cal: James L. McManaway, said General Kelley, who returned to Wash- ington an Oct.19 afteran eight-day trip to Europe and the Middle East, worked at his living quarters inWashington on Oct. 20 and did not see the National In- telligence Digest because rules govern- ing the handling of the highly classified document stipulate that it not be taken out of Marine headquarters in Virginia. Colonel McManaway said he did not know what 'the Marines did with the specific intelligence report on Oct. 20, but he said that in genera] "bur com- manders in Beirut get exactly the same information we see bere." He said the Oct. 20 report did not contain the kind of precise information that could have helped the Marines defend against the bombing. "For all we knew," be said, the threat mentioned might have in- volved an old lady carrying a shopping bag filled with explosives." Colonel McManaway said the Oct. 20 report did not contain the kind of pre- cise information that could have helped the Marines defend against the bomb-. ing. "For all we knew," be said, "the threat mentioned-might have involved an old lady carrying a shopping bag . filled with explosives.:' ... . The number of American : deaths from the bombing is uncertain. Gen. Pahl X Kelley said the death toll was x39, and spokesmen for the Defense De- ?partmeat and the Marine Corps said 20. A Marine spokesman in Beirut said it was at least 230, and a report from a military hospital in West Germany ip- dicated the numberwas 231.. ?' - - A second terrorist bomb attack the same day blew'up the headquarters of French forces in Beiri t, killing 56 pare- troops. The American and the French troops were based in Beirut as part of a international peacekeeping force. General Kelley and other top milk- tart' officers in Washington and in Bei- rut have said the Marines in Lebanon bad no intelligence information warn- rug that they faced the threat of a sta- cide bomb attack such as the one that destroyed the Marine headquarters. Senior AdmmistrAtion officials and members of Congress looking into the circumstances Surrounding the attack mud, tofty that warn- ing published on Oct. not providing details about a possible at- tac k against the Marines, did include e?xlghinivrmation so that the Marines should have increased security. Specifically, they said, in the wake of the suicide terrorist bombing attack against the United State mbassy in Beirut that was carried outin a similar fashion earlier this year, the warning should have alerted the Marines to take -apeaalprecautions. The intelligence report, the officials said, pinpointed the Islamic Amal as the group that, intelligence sources in Lebanon said was most likely to attack the Marines. It'also -described the group as a leading suspect in the bomb- ing of the American Embassy. The leader of the splinter group,- Hussein Musavi, denied any involvement in ei- ther attack last week. Approved For Release.2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01I37R000100150001-2 Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R0001 WASHINGTON POST 9 October 1983 George- F. Will Bush Is Wearing Well Kaiser Wilhelm's aides prepared for. him each morning a newspaper of care: fully excerpted items, printed in gold.. - Vice President George Bush gets less' gilded,but better, information. - Tucking into scrambled eggs at his of-- frce at 7:30 a.m. last week, Bush looked_, forward to a day that began with the: feeding of a columnist but soon became- interesting. It included several meetings with the president and ended with a political fund-raiser, the sting of whim.. was assuaged by the-fact that it involved playing tennis. By &30 a. r he was re-,. ceiving his daily briefing from the CIA the brutality of facts, not printed in gold He went from there to another national security briefing with the president- -- Most thoughtful people entering gov- ernment are dismayed by. and their dis- may? steadily deepens about, the weak information base on which decisions are'- made. So Bush works to be a super: -tanker loaded to the Plimsoll mark with . information. His experience during the last three years is a case study in the natural mor= tality of the silliness that flourishes dui=- ing campaigns. References to Ronald' Reagan as "a B-movie actor" are dead-: So is the science of preppyology. That involved the scrutiny of Bush's wrists . watch bands for signs of terminal Yale influences. Another melody no longer heard is the refrain that his conservative credentials are not in good order- He has_ now extinguished the suspicions of all conservatives except, those who need suspicions the way plants need sunshine Bush only became suspect because he was Reagan's -opponent Leave aside, those conservatives who themselves wear white collars and whose manual labor extends only to moving the carriage of a typewriter, but who thinly Bush cannot relate to-as they -can-blue-collh America. If Bush would just do som thing ungenteel-drink the water from the finger bowl, perhaps-he might complete his conquest of conservative- It is to the credit of the current presi dent and especially his predecessor_two former governors with no Washington`- experience--that the vice presidency has, become a serious job. Walter Mondaie was the first vice president to have %arn : office in the White House West Wing, as does Bush. Hitherto, vice presidents had offices next door, in the Executive Office Building. That building is just a 30-sec= - ond walk from the Oval -Office, but. (-in the .words of -a Bush aide) "politically; _ it's Baltimore." - Bush -can- attend any meeting the- president has, except those which head5,i of state traditionally have alone. ..He, spew his mind onh' in private with tlie` president, for several reasons. The author of the most memorable phrase of the 1980 campaign---"voodoo- ecommics"-must feel somewhat inhib. ited about entering the intramural de- bate between those who still say the tax cuts-will be self-financing (because eco- nomic growth will close the budget gap) and those who say tax increases are new;. wary- Furthermore; Bush speaks cir cumspectly when not alone. with the . president because he knows it would be'- a matter of minutes before any real or.` imagined differences with the president became common gossip- Bush has had the sort of career coin mon in Britain but rare here. That is, he has passed through a series of significant.' offices (congressman; chairman of his`: part)-, ambassador to the U.N. and -so Peking, director of the CIA). He is the most comprehensively experienced per son to serve as. vice president This is a political asset because of Reagan's age. That was expected to be an issue in 19.80.1 and was not. It is not expected to be in:{ 1984, but may be. Perhaps it will be less -~ an "issue" than a vague anxiety. If so, . Bush and his many credentials will be.,'I important again. Last time, he was important as evi-1 dence of Reagan's pragmatism and taste..; for quality. "Exit polls" taken among' voters leaving polling places showed that. 9 percent of those who voted for Reagan - listed his choice of Bush as the reason.'+It. ' is hard to know exactly what those. polled were saying, but 9 percent is,a large number of persons saying it Of all-mortals in their 60th year, Bush; is the least weatherworn, perhaps be, cause he has come to terms with the fact that there is only so much, and not ver` much, any man can do to control events. His cheerful absence of anxiety about The Question (will Reagan run?) reflects his certitude that Reagan will run, and his general knack for cheerfulness. Hap-. piness often is a byproduct of a mature person's fatalism, and a certain fatalism is essential to the emotional well-beir of a long-distance political runner. - holdouts. Approved'For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R000100150001-2 ARTICLE APPEAproved For Release 'h~jf~,3pri?!A ON PAGE 1A . 31 July 1983 ~ Reagan'S move called ed the maneuvers to accomplish. They did not explain his decision to order the exercises. . In fact- they said, Reagan's key rea- son for deploying the U.S. forces was the U.S. perception that Cuba and the Soviet Union were planning a signifi- cant escalation of their milit `preemptive' By Alfonso Chardy lnauirer l5ashingIor. aurewi WASHINGTON - Hints that Cuba and the Soviet Union were preparing to expand their military role in Nica- ragua led President Reagan to in- crease the U.S. military presence .n. Central America. according to Penta- gon and National Security Council officials. "All our indications were that Cuba and the Soviet Union were pre- paring major military moves in Nica- ragua, and so we bad to move, too,' one security council official said Thursday. "Our move was a preemptive strike, so to speak." said a Pentagon official: who, along with other sources knowledgeable about the sit- uation. agreed to talk on condition that he remain anonymous. Administration_ officials said. how- ever. there was no hard evidence that Cuba was mobilizing troops or warplanes to intervene in Central America. And congressional critics suggest ed Thursday that U.S. intelligence analysts might have misread the evi- dence under pressure to supply proof for Reasan's hard-line stance on the reeion. The Reacsn administration sur- prised the U.S. public and angered critics Monday when it announced that it would dispatch -19 U.S. war- ships, including two aircraft carri- ers, and 3.000 to 4.000 ground troops to Central America for maneuvers that would last six months. On Tuesday, Reagan described the deployments as "routine exercises-- But privately, senior administration officials said they were meant to show support for U.S. allies in the region, step up U.S. pressures on Nic- aragua's Sandinista rulers to moder- ate their Marxist stance. and prove to U.S- foes that Reagan could act deci- sively in Central America. despite congressional opposition to his poli- cies. Pentagon. State Department and se- curity council officials interviewed this week said that although these factors explained what Reagan want- ary roles in Nicaragua. - The report said Ochoa had -been i State Department sources said U.S. instrumental in negotiating, organiz-` ambassadors in Latin America had ing and leading the deployment of been instructed to tell "trusted" lead- j Cuban troops to Angola in 1976 -and ers in the region that Reagan had to Ethiopia in 19777. fresh intelligence data suggesting Officials who read the IA journal such an escalation. said that in July it not at 1,00 .The Cuban moves are .to be de-~ Cuban military advisers had arrived. scribed as amounting to .a direct in Nicaragua-in recent months. rais-- challenge to vital US- interests and' ing the total of Cuban. civilian and national se i . cur ty, .said the sources, who saw the cables sent to the-Amer- ican diplomats. . IOn Thursday,-Cuban President Fi- del--Castro - suggested to reporters that .he-would 'be willing -to pull Cu- ban military -advisers out of Nicara- gua and -stop sending arms to that country if .Washington did the-same throughout Central America.On Fri? day, Reagan indicated he could ac- cept such an agreement. 1"If he is really serious about this,I think it's fine," Reagan said in an interview. "1 think that I am willing to give him the benefit of the doubt in any negotiations."i . Security-council and Pentagon-offi- cials said hints of Cuban and Soviet buildups in Central America began flowing: into US, intelligence agen-, ties 10 10 15 weeks ago. - Officials- said alarm bells began y a v sers in Cuba had ringing at CIA headquarters in Lang- increased by 20 percent in 1982- up to- ley, Va-, in May. when photographs 2500. In addition, he said the Soviets snapped by an SR-71, a high-flying had 6.000 to 8,000 civilian advisers spy aircraft. showed about 400 Cuban and a 1,700-member combat brigade marines practicing "sophisticated . in Cuba. amphibious landings" on beaches By last week. the Pentagon had near the Cuban port of Mariel, 25 revised upward the number of Soviet miles west of Havana. : civilian advisers in Cuba to 8.500 to The CIA's-chief aerial-photography 10.500. The Pentagon also said that in analyst, John Hughes. concluded r the first six months Q.f 1983, approxi- that the Cubans were-practicing an - i mately?0.000 metric tons of military invasion of a foreign country, not a ' :equipment as shipped from Mos- defense' of their own beaches. The. ow to Cuba. officials said. - Administration officials said they believed the 'Cubans . might have been practicing for landings in Nica- ragua.and perhaps even Hgnduras. a staunch U.S. ally' - At about this same time, the offi- cials said. Hughes reported that four Soviet merchant ships had been pho- tographed unloading military equip ment at Nicaragua's Pacific port of Corinto. 1 T "jol Nat journal distributed to senior policy makers - reported on June 1 that Cuban army Gen. Arnaldo Ochoa Sanchez had been in Nicaragua since - security, advisers there to about: 5.500. Finally.'said one securitycouncil official:: U.S. diplomats around the world noticed in recent weeks-that their Cuban counterparts were "probing" -to assess how Reagan would react should Havana send troops or Soviet-made MiG warplanes to Managua. - While all this was going on. U.S- intelligence agencies were reporting- an ongoing expansion of the Soviet military role in Cuba and Nicaragua-. Undersecretary of Defense -'Fred We advised the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee-in March that Mos-- cow'bad shipped, 63.000 tons of arms to Cuba in 1981 and 68,000 tons in 1982-the highest yearly totals since the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. Jkle also said that the number of Soviet militar d i Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R000100150001-2 i ARTICLAPPEARED. 1-? Approved For Release 200%IRLl Ig4lE19A P90-01137R0001 ON PAGE IA 29 July 1983 Cohan, Soviet move said to spur R~agan.-. --Washington - A hurry -of hints that Cubd-and the Soviei Union-were preparing to -expand their military role in Nicaragua led President Rea- gan..to . increase the U-S. military presence in Ventral America, accord- ing to Pentagon and lliational'Securi- -tw Council officials.' r "All -our indications were that -Cuba .and --.the,,Soviet Union=,:were: preparing majdr military moves in i Nicaragua. and so we had to -move, too," one NSC official said yesterday.- "Our move was a .preemptive ~ strike, -so to speak". said .a Pentagon official who, like other sources knowl- edgeable about the situation, -agreed to talk on condition that be remain anonymous. - Administration officials conceded, however, that there has been no hard evidence that -Cuba is mobilizing troops or warplanes to intervene in - Central America. Congressional . critics suggested yesterday that U.S. intelligence ana- lysts may have misread the evidence- under pressure to supply proof for Mr. Reagan's hard-line stance on the region. The Reagan administration sur- prised the American public and ang- ered critics Monday when it an- - In fact, they-said, Mr. Reagan's kec reason -for deploying the -US. forces was the U.S. perception that 'Cuba and the Soviet Union were plan- nind -to significantly iticrease4their, ry roles in Nicaragua. 'State Department sources said -. U.S. ambassadors in Latin America have been instructed to tell "trusted" leaders in the region that Mr. Reagan 'has fresh' intelligence data suggesting s u c h : . 'in-' tensification. r The Cuban moves are.:-16 -be :described as amounting to-a direct challenge to vital U.S.;:inter- ests and national security, said .the. sources, who- saw the cables sent.to the American diplomats.. -, : - NSC and Pentagon officials said hints of the Cuban and Soviet buildups in Central America-be- gan flowing into U.S. intelligence. agencies 10 to 15 weeks ago. . Officials said alarm bells began ringing at CIA headquarters in Langley, Va., in -May when photo- graphs taken by an SR-71, a high.-flying spy air- craft, showed about 400 Cuban .marines practicing "sophisticated amphibious landings" on beaches near the Cuban port of Mariel,.25 miles west of Havana. The CIA's chief aerial photography analyst, -John Hughes, concluded the Cubans were practic- ing an invasion of a foreign country, not a defense, of their own beaches, the officials said. Administration officials said they -first inter- preted the Cuban maneuvers as preparation for an invasion of some small Caribbean nation. Now, however, they believe the Cubans may have been practicing for landings in Nicaragua, and perhaps even Honduras. a staunch U.S. ally. About the same time, the officials said, Mr. Hughes reported that four Soviet merchant ships had been photographed-unloading military equip- ment at Nicaragua's Pacific port of Corinto. The administration was further "jolted," the of- ficials said, when the National Intelligence Daily (NID), a CIA journal distributed to senior policy- makers, reported June 1 that Cuban army Gen. Ar- naldo Ochoa Sanchez had been in Nicaragua since nounced that it would dispatch 19 UM: warships, including two aircraft-car riers, and 3,000 -to 4-000 ground troops. to Central America for maneuvers that will last six months.' Mr. Reagan described the-deplgy- -menns Tuesday . as "routine ? zer-: - -cises," but senior administration offs -dials privately said they were meant to -show support Jor -U.S. Allies in the region; step up .'U.S. pressures.-on -:Nicaragua's' Sandinista..rulers?to.mod- -erate their Marxist stance; and ,prow to U-S. -foes -that MP Reagan .can pct - .decisively in -Central America; -de- spite congressional -opposition to...his policies.: Pentagon, State Department -and NSC officials -interviewed this week said that while.these factors explain what Mr. Reagan wants the maneu- vers to accomplish, they do not -ex- plain his decision to order the exer- cises.. - - early May. . The NID report said General Ochoa:had been in-.- strumental in negotiating, organizing and leading the deployment of Cuban troops to Angola in 1976 and to Ethiopia in 1977, totaling about 42,000 sol- diers. NID's June 1 report said the Soviet-trained Gen- eral Ochoa apparently was in Nicaragua to com- pile a report for Fidel Castro on whether it would; be feasible to send Cuban troops to Nicaragua. Approved For Release 2006/01/03: CIA-RDP90-01137R00?S{7~00'I-Y Approved For Release 200G A/ G%-RrJ l O-01137RO09 .2~T!PLF APPEARED 1 27 June 1983 Casey, Who Can't Rexnemer, Berates Officials WhaCan't- R Lou HEAGAN&Cd. . Central Intelligence Agerjcy- Director; William J. Casey, whose memory ranges from weak to -nonexistent on unauthorized disclosure- of -President- - Carter's brie>n&o -books to the 1980 Reagan campaign;-i worried that fellow Reaganites,-are a .bunch.; of blabbermouths. Appearing before- the senior.-.. White;' House staff last Tuesday=:. and reading a prepared lecture in a tone-described-as="an admonishing mumble," Casey fretted about. the difficulties of keeping classed. infor- mation classified In the process.. he gave several still-clas- sified examples of - "unauthorized disclo- sures" to staff members not normally au= thorized to receive classified information of arv kind- Fortunately for- the- security of the re- public, Casey's examples included such pre- viously rehashed events as the thwarted Libyan invasion of the- Sudan. the .world--? publicized sending of arms to Afghan goer- . rillas and the open secret that the United _ States is assisting anti-government rebels in Nicaragua. All of this was old hat. But some of the White House staff members were startled to hear Casey's report on care and feeding of the National Intelligence Daily, the com-_ _ paratively low-level CIA analysis provided daily to i50 U.S. government officials. A legend on the cover of this document, known- as NID, says it is to be returned the same day and not to be duplicated. According to Casey, a CIA check showed that more than 100 of the documents were not being turned in and that some of those returned came complete with handy nota- tions instructing secretaries to- copy them. One responsive official, asked to return his copy, supposedly gave. back 7.5 photocopies. As it - turns out, there area remedies to deal with such carelessness. Casey mentioned a few of them,.such as dismissal and administering lie-detector tests to employes-who engage- in "unautho- rized disclosures.."__. As. far.- as:is=.known; he would make-an: exceptiorr.-for-briefing ma- terial -that .mysteriously appears on the desk of campaign chairmen. just before a crucial debate= - - Two days, later,%when . asked to provide details- of how the Carter- briefing book wound up in'the? Reagan camp-, Casey gave an.impressive demonstration of what a CIA director might do--if- he became- a prisoner of-way . Altliopgh he: provided .his name and ranki,. Casey said he- remembered nothing wha?+gveabout a briefing book that White Haase chef of staff James A- Baker III re- called Casey giving him. Casey's recollec-: tion has. not improved subsequently. Most- Americans- would, of course, be genuinely concerned by= disclosure of real' national-security secrets by those charged with keeping them- But some-in. the White- House, believe that national. security in the Reagan administration would be served es- pecially-well by appointment of a CIA di- rector who starts with a greater presump- tion_ofsredibility..__, That-is not Casey's long-suit, as a couple of jokes making, the White House rounds last week attest:. One, attributable to Alan Abelson, in Barron's* said "CIA" really stood for "Casey Investing Again," a reference to the remarkable timeliness of the director's. successful stock-market investments. The other, repeated on background and presumably not classified, was a tongue-in- cheek assurance that Casey, could not have been the. recipient of the Carter briefing hook. - "If Bill had received, it," one White House official said, "he would have placed it in a blind trust." Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01I37R000100150001-2 pp-roved For Release 20VdQ1i l;G' ?P 014PAGE A 19 June 1983 Cuba's Top Combat General move decisively to prop up the 5andin- Combat ista regime." Ocboa's Previous Roles Is Said to Serve in Nicaragua The C.I.A. writers of the report con- tended that General Ochoa's assign- By LESLIE H. GELS Reagan Orders a Review meat, based on his previous activities, was " spocui mre.re.Yoi h D BO @Il*(31i 1 611001-2 NTL'\ 1981. "It won't bother to denounce it, it will tion of the White House position on the Sovi- e 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01 137R000100150001-2 NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE anuary 1983 By Philip Taubman illiam J. Casey, the Director of Central Intelligence, sat at the end of the mahogany con- ference table in his office. Outside, the late afternoon sun played across the trees that ring the Central Intelli- gence Agency's headquarters in northern Virginia, filling the windows with a fresco of autumn colors. A short stack of docu- ments, some stamped SECRET, rested at Mr. Casey's left elbow, and a yellow legal pad on which he had penciled several notes was positioned to his right. "The reason I am here is because I have a lot of relevant experience and a good track record," Mr. Casey said, alluding to comments that he was un- I qualified for the job and had been appointed only because he was Ronald Reagan's campaign man- ager. Mr. Casey, an imperious and proud man, had been fuming over the criticism for months, accord- ing to his friends, and now, in his first cotnprehen- sive interview since taking office, he wanted to set the record straight. He flipped through the papers and extracted a yellowing clipping from The New York Times that extolled his record as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission from 1971 to 1973. Next, he provided several pages copied from a book about Allied intelligence operations during World War II; he had underlined a glowing assessment of his con- tribution to the Office of Strategic Services. The final clipping was a story that appeared in The Washington Star in the summer of 1980, describing Mr. Casey's role as Reagan campaign director. The headline: "Casey, the Take-Charge Boss." It was an oddly defensive performance for a man who, according to classified budget figures pro- vided by Government officials, is overseeing the biggest peacetime buildup in the American intelli. gence community since the early 1950's. Because intelligence expenditures are secret, it is not widely known that at a moment when the Reagan Admin. istration is forcing most Government agencies to retrench, the C.I.A. and its fellow intelligence or. ganizations are enjoying boom times. Even the military services, which have been favored with substantial budget increases, lag well behind in terms of percentage growth, although military-run intelligence agencies are growing almost as quickly as the C.I.A. Spending figures for intelli- gence agencies, including the C.I.A., are hidden within the Defense Department's budget. With a budget increase for the 1983 fiscal year of 25 per. intentions. lnfe ItY cent, not allowing for inflation, compared with 18 percent for the Defense Department, the C.I.A. is and ca abif gved For Release 2006/01/03 : C -R Og6digiiiiR (>' *5 OOl1f2e Federal P Government, according to Administration budget officials. I ='r1V7 ."\*r Approved For Release 2006/01/03 : CIA-RDP90-01137R00010 F, E J) THE POST 3 1,overber 1982 Sai y id toF1ind S. Afri~an Rebels; * ? I STAT Stronger, eii ~Neig i N targe-L-s- By Virginia Harrill F cre;Fn Senvice A ~i-a_shington _hhv group that has pre- vicus' obtained sensitive classified docu- ments says it has been given a U.S. intelli- gence report warning that the main guerrilla group operating in South Africa is gaining streng h and is weighing a more militant strawg involving attacks on white civilian targets. A second document made available to The _a-shin ton Post by Trans-Africa, a black American, lobby group on African affairs, suggests that the white-minority government in South Africa is considering suppression of liable repots of successful guerrilla attacks to protect white morale. That report is contained in what Trans- 'es as a copy of a page from the A- r': 15. 19S2, National Intelligence Daily, a bigniy classified compilation of current, in- teliiernce information from the CIA, the De- fense Intelligence Agency, the National Se- curity Agency and other intelligence sources. - It is circulated by the CIA director, as ,head of C;.S. intelligence, to a limited num- . ber of senior nolicv makers in the White House, the Cabinet and elsewhere in Wash- ington and to certain military commanders overseas. The daily summary said Pretoria was con- sidering new and stricter limitations on pub- licizing terrorist attacks because "the ANC [African National Conference, the main guer- rilla group in South Africal benefits from press coverage of its attacks." That, in turn, the summary said, "will strengthen the mil- itants in the ANC who want the group to engage in spectacular attacks against whites." Supporting that assessment is what Trans-Africa Director Randall Robinson said was an extensive CIA report on the outlawed nationalist group. Robinson, who said the : report came into his hands in April, refused to make portions of it available for publica- tion, He said they dealt with specific person- alities and bases of the ANC. Separate CIA spokesmen, making what each called the 'agency s `'usual" response to r pre 5 security inner circle=;'.Ile-latest -prob an with - cxiticigai frara two a m be -1 g e Haig's. deputies. of I rf icir;ance: of US.. Annbaseador'tn ttae l `nited `.Na newel the corers: of the president' and-his;senior=-yv-hits= : ?reuse officials.: about:Haig's:willing perform~as roi g 1 The problem'. con u - t} published -reports; tbat" l 1n dies was-s cussions.'with reports - -Iny considerable nhappine-withY Allen: THE 1'1ASHIilGT0 POST 12 July 1981 Senior presidential - aides said the decision on the ? new policy, put into _. effect last 'week, was made by the president after consultation - with his top staff : advisers, notably Meese, Baker and Deaver. _ :,: "A decision has been. made' ' to streamline--the' president's, schedule;. one of Reagan's senior advisers- said- "It is not intended to reflect-on Dick Allen. or Al. Haig or anyone else." .: In.-- practice, ,;.however, the. change does ? reflect,on...Allen: because,-"every.; national - security affairs - adviser has' given daily-briefings to the president since the - job -was formalized in the Kennedy =White- House with the ap- pointment:.of McGeorge: Bundy.: And it reflects; upon :Haig in that the for- matlized'.inclusioi., on_ the.. president's eight-person- committee known as the National- Security. Planning Group amounts' to the regular participation of two officials-the defense sec re- tarv and the CIA director who had not previously..- been part at me press 'T'his insane- that the -presxaem-wui . with h virtually his- be meeting regularly . entire . national: security council. While the entire. 'group' will be included on the. president's schedule every . Mon- not- actuallyTme_ quite that often,- according to: one senior White-House aide.-'The meetings will be convened tuna.', y -of the members.- feels `: here lie _ .matter::that'"ought? to ,be- q- . expect'--,tbatthe -group - will.. f meet at? least a couple of times each weer;:'::The`reason- for- the change issues have : often- surfaced:.. in is::: that: , the-:~moming ;briefings that `affected. not ;only.. State. but; Defense;" the CIA- ' ..tthere.- and others='and theyweren Now.they1will be.--It's iii extension-of. Before last week, the president had basin read' oral national securi Relea ~- ded .~ morning: briefings were atten by T-__L _~J LLB- xreirs nr Tlunnthl -1 cording to a presidential aide. "I think every president feels that it. clarifies a briefer's-mind to first Put, [his thoughts] down: on paper, this presidential adviser - said. "-`.. Each morning,- if:: Dick. Allen want3 ` to : see..- the president, he will be able to,do 50-- Also, every time Al Haig wants to as the president;; he will be able to -see Allen', who-assumed office in Jan- uary with the understanding that his. job would not, be. as commanding in. scope as it was.in`the era of two of his more, ~: famous _.predecessors, HenryKissinger "and Zbigniew.-Brzezinski,- was asked .in a telephone interview if .he considered.` the -'new format' d re duction of his duties. "Not at all, he- said. "I suppose - it, could seem that way. But not at ala We axe trying-to `. make - better' use of' the , presidents- time. I'maltogether enthusiastic- about the new schedule. Now,. he said;. the president willread- his national security briefing, and then Allen.will' appear in the Oval Of- fice for" the first five' minutes of the .regularly scheduled morning meeting that, the,,. president has with,:Meese; Baker .end Deaver'-"just to see if. there: is ;anything; that needs to