THEODORE SORENSEN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
11
Document Creation Date: 
December 19, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 27, 2005
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 2, 1977
Content Type: 
OPEN
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5.pdf1.76 MB
Body: 
2050 1NGRESSION'AI, RECORD -- SENA TE ?Ni'muid be "anApprdie githlittil21105/1142,43.414APP9PALIOMPPPP . . and. ;Kcurate yecords be kept of purchases, 4retnsportation, storage, 'weighing, and octsl inspections- and official weighings. ern.- These are record e that elevators generally .ir'e keep in the normal course of business Also, h the Administrator of the FICUS could pre-.; scribe the keeping of other records concern-- lug :the. processing of grain,- as required to 'facilitate the administration of the Act. ' -'-'-?However, the Secretary of ',Agriculture would be required to complete a study with-- in six months after enactment of this Bill, that addresses - the various record-keeping ..-reqpiremente of the Commodity Credit Cote. poration, the; United- States Wareho Act,; and the- Grain Standards Act use : The Seeretary: tirOuld be.required to develop a single record- keeping-system for use by grain elevators, ?that would be applicable to all three pro- n grams. Also, the system would be adaptable t to individual elevators, based on their size, complexitynand business porposes. ' ni7.0,:.ne',:aeteeee ,? Seetioarl.providea for- the eatabli.hment 'of 's,temporary advisory. committee. to pro- .4 vide consultation and advice to the Adminis- tratier- of the Federal Grain Inspection Serv-. -:Oce With respect to the implementation a the -United tneetee ?rah! Standards of e-19711,-, in: order to 4ssirre thet oil:lei-1y and .timely movement of graIn from the fanner to the-, consumer i faellitatcd t, tl:Cuaw A reouirements a this Ant, , The Committee would be 'Composed of `1.: :4nembees rerereeentina vrain producers, con-, ee Burners,. and all seer:lents of. the vain incluse try. inclurllne vro.lio inspection and welshing. asfencies, The Secretary Inroad Ire, reouired to: appoint the exmanittos, within 30 daye after., .:?the effective date of this Ao,.. _ . . amended to rem3ire-- (1) '-the ms. teriaucc ccr: rozords on pur- chases, sales, trensportatit etorege, weign- lug, and official inspection P.'ts, official weign- ing of inalre and ? (2) such other grain pro..essing records as . the Administrator may prescribe as necessary- . to facilitate the administration of the Act. ' election 4(b) of the bill would require the. Secretary: of Agriculture to review the ree- ord-keeping requirements -for grain elevator operators, :,:ander the United States WarD house Act, the rulee of the Commodity Credit Corporation., and the United States Ware- e, house. Act. Based on his review, the Seeretary would be required to develop a singe record-- keeping-system that meets the requirements of the Commodity Credit Corporation and Lliv:e Acts, and which taker, iI-dto account -Ole squAng sizes, complexity, s-ad business poses of grain elevators, RIDDING FOR INSPECTION AND I,PADING Or .C4.112MODITIES - ? 11 a 'alio/al -4.11TRATiDN'il taP .1.1-114 ADVISOAT .COMMITTCR ' ? Section 2 Provides that the Committee shall IS: and Pfivete.' generally operate under the provisions of !'''''Im5? the Federal -Advisory Committee Act. Note: Abe cosi of Warehouse Adrninistiatran Act 53P,500,00U The Secretary of Aeritralturc would pro a"'"17' 4/"Priation? ? vide tilts Committee with necessary clerical Source; USDA AP/IS and NIS, ' assistance, stair personnel, and quarters -? "?? -Members of the Committee would not re.L. This ebruailf- ioqingoolA c generally t is a factual ? account of what actually hi ped, what various members of the committee did or said relating to this particular nomination, ? ? ?r- believe it goes a long way toward set- ? ting the record. straight as far as thin situation Is concerned. T believe it in im- portant that the misconceptions and the ; inaccuracies that had-been presented to the American people following the with- drawal of Mr. Sorensen's 13ame_s. f; nominee for Director of Central Tntelli- fience should be ? corrected.- , think it is important that the Senate itself understand what most members of the ,select committee- fell, was their .re sponsibility in this matter, - Mr. President, I. ask Unanimous con7. sent.that the story that appeared today,--- In the-New.York Times .be printed in the - troll TFOR5":' appropri- fees atiees totioo. "fobaccri., I Peroroct ..? Feb aod vegetables_ ...... Pau% . ' . Grao. ? 's'efeded fiscal yearrifilli.:::. 40 Nora ,,-.-ceive any Compensation for then work on ,TITEODORE SCriftENSEN ? - the Committee, than travel expenseen- oe..)' The ComMittee would cease- to exist at , Mr:1-TUDDLESTON. Mr, President, OKI ,.,?-trie expiration of two yearsproceeding anuary 17, the President":: designee for appointment. ,, , '- ' --' ', ? '-????:;'27:': the position of Director of Central, Intel-, ,.. ,.?. "srerlw'r 3-VISPECII?N tjeE11VISInil -t''Ine'S-'::-licence,Mr..Theodore .Sorensen rir New -..Section.3-would repeal paragraph (2) of yor%., willuleew his name Irons consider- - 'section...7M, and paragraph.- 12) of section atioti. Withdrawal came at the beginning ' 7A(.1)., of the United States Grain Standards of . the. hearings scheduled by the Select f---Act, ?which require tleat designatedfficial o inspection and weigbing agencies and State Co.nunittee of the Senate on Intelligent*: agencres;to-f;Iee authority has beer, dole- ''.w -t-- responsibility or considerirt I h a I , , gated- for theperforinance cf Inspection and noinitiation. , . 'cr,:--;e ???',: .? , .2:. :weighing at export port locations, pay fees ? Following that rather p-,- i;mati,,2 and l' to support the cost t r direct Federal super-. unexpected turn of ovei ,I.? , there wan -vision of tiler activities, - '.''^- ,?...7'''` - -????!- naturally ft id. 5? Of pr'e-sS IIITant,.. at _.,,,4; This section would also firrairtld section 21 tempting to doscribc no f :11 Clark:sr -3 floc; : 'of. the United State Swain Standards Act- , and ..the actions and nwtives of gorm. -wlaicia provides for appropriations The au:), .;thortzation' for appropriations ,to Cover- ad-.:, menibers a the .i;ornnrittee that led. to ininirtrative and supervisory costs would be ? - Mr. Sorensen withdrawal. . expanded, in conjunction; with the changes Virtually -all of those press reports "7 Made, in ,the Federal fee structures, to in., Vastly' overstated the conditions that ,-. crude all Federal administrative and surier!," actually-- existed, , Some bondereff - on vleerY-eeete., ' ,..s.'':- hysteria,;': . -' . " .::"-- -.;---'?, ,'-!?-?':- i---' ---- ., ..-,-.-.= fpidi,..:f,- ,--fil....r-fgfi,4473-, --, --,,,,. SECTION 4?ACCORDS t, , -.....;; - -;.".;? 4,7..,:..,,,,.Today in the New York Times there f,3ection 4(a) of this billewould'amenasee- .:appeared .a 'story of some length pre- -, ' tion:12 (d) 'of the United States Grain Stand, pared and written by a number of sere- - arcIrr Act, which requires commercial grain s,rate- journalists which attempted, to gel, co elevator .operators and grain merchandleame the facts and tell the story alit actually . 'who- use inspection or weighing services un-. happened.:- ,li .7 '...%..- !.. :,' -....,..,..,' r' '. '''' 2 .' r der the Act to -keep, certain types of records .,,, '; enumerated in the law, and gives the Secre- ,. . X laVO read the Story ad te, Mcrobor of ". , '. tary, of Agriculture and the Administrator the select committee.: 1. have talked to of the Federal Grain Inspection Service ac, other members of the Select Committee , cess to such records and the elevator facility.' en,Intelligence who Contributed .4") ithis , ,. ; Tile :requirement forl?the,?maintenance,9f , steg 01(? are recorded in It..,,,.,,, ., , ? There being no -objection, the artiGiC was ordered to be printed in the RECORn, - as follows:, ? " ' ? REJACT,ION 05 SORENZI:1 - D.11A1W-. ?- . HUMAN FAILING WmAuNwioN, February -1-netIrlent Car- ter's effort ter install Theodore C. Sorensen a the Director of Central Intellige?enwas not blocked. It collapsed. "-tee After hie dramatic ? wit)) dia -,;an. 7 at the siert of televised eonfirmetion pro-. eeedings-- -Me: Sorensen sugeested and the conspiracy- conscious capital embraced tbe ?otion that militarists, -spies,. right- Wier.; PC- tivists and partisan politicians bad combiner' to prevent: a liberal, pacifist exilic of Coyel.i. Ii ecu undertakthi; institin tio?al redeem. 1 ? ? -.. - nin a ICCOnStrOCUOTrOT CVCIAF; that led to the collapse of the ?omioatione -a rare de feet for an theoming Prer:id cot.--- shows as it. was instead a drama of narrower Mimeo din-AIM:Acme. izryitan.sofe ON GAR'0:1; TiVOlvcd -were Mr. Sorense?e, ow), rceoe. nee to become the. chief of tne intelligence mmunity, perSonality conflicts, timidity ong Senate liberals and Dernoeretc, and, a ye an misjudgments and an apparent ? of nerve by the new Adirelnistratio?. - -those -involved in it, the episode said at eel. as much about. the style and motives of the -new President se It told ebout tent ? nomination ), o sou tti ed. , Mr, Carter promised, to erdeet a Can;ii ' carefully arid to consult extensively with the Democratic Co?grcss. But be evidently se- leeted Mr. SorCIISCJI without a thorough In- quify -Into his background. Mr. Carier oever epolte to the chairman of 'ate Senate te eei. ? committee on Intelligence, Senator Jeanne 3. 'inouye of hawaIi, until the nomination -was in trouble. Surprised by the extent of dissent the ;nomination generated among Senate Democrats, Mr: Carter never asked the-Sens; tors to put aside their cloyMte erid support. his nominee. Mr. Carter -backed away from - Liu! nomination without consulting_ the Sen. 8.-te Democratic leader, Robert G. Byrd of West Virginia, about either the chances or deehe ability of a fight to confirm Mr. Sorensen. Five days- before be took office, the Presi- dent told Mr. Sorensen It was "up to you" whether the embattled nominee should fight for confirmation. But, then the new President; anxious.- to ' avert a narrow, partisan_ victory or an out- right defeat' by Congress at the starteof bin - Administration, guided Me Sorensen to e decision to, abandon the contest. When the ' nominee's deliberations hinged on an Sc' curate count-of support among Senate Demo- SECTION. 2- ? 'nen ? :nee lee yet* ales 60C1160 7 , ? roved FabRoditisssR9945/itl inCORIERDPANNTE9 R000100070001-5 February 2, 197PP S2051 prats Mr. Carter gave Mr. Sorensen a tally that was incomplete and misleading. And he urged Mr. Sorensen to consult a confidant who, Mr. Carter knew, would likely counsel withdrawal. Still nursing his wounded pride in the Vir- gin Islands until today, Theodore Chaiken Sorensen, 48-year-old former aide to Presi- dents Kennedy and Johnson, was described ,as being puzzled even now over what had happened to his nomination. What follows, based on interviews with more than 40 per- sons who were involved, including several who reconstructed key conversations but insisted on anonymity, is the account. THE SELECTION On Dec. 22, Senator Robert B. Morgan of North Carolina, a Democrat on the senate Intelligence Committee, read a speculative account in The Washington Star that Mr. Sorensen would be named to direct the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency. When Frank Moore, Mr. Carter's assistant for congressional liai- son, telephoned on another matter, Senator Morgan told the aide: "Lord, I'm glad you called. Don't appoint him to the C.I.A. job." The Senator based his objection on a belief that Mr. Sorensen had not been candid with the intelligence committee when he testified that President Kennedy had been unaware of C.I.A. plots to assassinate Fidel Castro, the Cuban Prime Minister. The Senator said as much to Mr. Sorensen, who could not dis- suade Mr. Morgan. The Carter aide reassured Senator Morgan; "he's not going to be appointed," Mr. Moore told him. That same day, Kenneth P. O'Donnell, a Boston business consultant who had been President Kennedy's appointments secretary, spoke by telephone to Greg Schneiders, a Carter assistant working at the transition offices in Americus. Ga. Mr. Sorensen protested his old colleague from the Kennedy White House, was a con- scientious objector during the Korean ikvar and would be in an untenable position deal- ing with military officers in the intelligence agencies. "They're not going to stand for it," Mr. O'Donnel said. "I don't want to see Car- ter get hurt by this." ADVICE RELAYED TO CARTER The conversation was interrupted by a call to Mr. Schneiders from Mr. Carter in nearby Plains. Coming back on the line with Mr. O'Donnell, Mr. Schneiders said he had passed the advice on to the President-elect. The next day, Dec. 23, Mr. Carter announced the Sorensen nomination. Most of the eight Democrats and seven Republicans on the Intelligence Committee, whose consent to the nomination was es- sential, were mystified. Mr. Carter's aides called the selection "unexpected." As re- cently as last week, few participants in the episode of 'the ill-fated nomination under- stood how and why Mr. Sorensen was chosen. As an assistant to President Kennedy, he had been known as a brilliant speech writer and "chief of staff for ideas." As a New York City lawyer, he was a sometime adviser to political candidates, had raised campaign funds for Mr. Carter and had contributed ideas for speeches and the Presidential cam- paign debates. But he had a limited foreign policy background and no experience man- aging large institutions. The explanation for the choice lay in the contact Mr. Carter and his senior advisers had with Mr. Sorensen's keen intellect, in the new President's search for a gifted out- sider to control the intelligence agencies? and in an accidental conversation. SORENSEN'S COUNSEL SOUGHT Jack H. Watson Jr., who planned Mr. Car- ter's transition and is now th,e President's Cabinet secretary, elicited Mr. Sorensen's ad- vice in choosing Cabinet nominees. Among others Mr. Watson consulted was Richard H. Neustadt, the Harvard professor of govern- ment who had advised President Kennedy on Cabinet selection. Mr. Watson's method was to determine the likely challenges confronting Cabinet-rank officials, decide what characteristics were ap- propriate to the task and, to illustrate the concept in a memorandum to Mr. Carter, name an individual familiar to the President- elect who would meet the criteria. In his C.I.A. memo, he recommended that Mr. Carter choose an individual with intelli- gence of a "sharp, high level" who had "pro- found" personal and intellectual integrity, healthy skepticism and a perspective that would be fresh in the intelligence field. Mr. Watson discussed the characteristics one day with Mr. Neustadt. "You know who's perfect?" The professor said. "Ted Sorensen." To Mr. Watson the suggestion was so logi- cal that he was surprised not to have thought of it. He used Mr. Sorensen's name as the illustration in the memo and turned it in to Mr. Carter shortly after the election. DOUBTS ON SUITABILITY Mr. Neustadt and others began contacting Mr. SorenSen to say they, too, had recom- mended him for the post. Mr. Sorensen, who had recommended David E. Bell of the Ford Foundation, told Mr. Nebstadt the job was "full of snares and headaches," told Mr. Wat- son, "No, that's not the job for me," and told Senator Edward M. Kennedy he had grave doubts about his suitability, On Dec. 15, confronted with a speculative newspaper account that he had been chosen, Mr. Sorensen telephoned Mr. Carter to say he would be willing to discuss the matter. Three days later Mr. Sorenson stopped in Plains for the discussion. Mr. Carter asked if Mr. Sorenson would have any investments that would pose conflicts of interest and Mr. Sorenson said no. The conversation drifted to other areas, then suddenly. the President- elect returned to the C.I.A. job, , "Well, I want you to do it," Mr. Carter said. Mr. Sorenson was startled, having pre- sumed that the Carter stuff would take time to check his background And suitability for the sensitive position. But he made what he later described as a "lightning" calculation. Even though he had three times denied in- terest in the job to others, he told Mr. Car- ter: "Yes." Mr. Sorenson returned to New York where, the following day, he was said to be surprised by an indication that his background had not been plumbed. Hamilton Jordan, one of Mr. Carter's senior assistants, telephoned to ask whether it was true that Mr. Sorenson had been a conscientious objector. For the first of many times the nominee explained that he had sought and received classifica- tion as a noncombatant but had never tried to avoid military service. Mr. Sorenson offered to suggest other matters in his personal his- tory that could give rise to Senate concerns, but Mr. Jordan told him that was not neces- sary. THE REACTION To be sure, the Sorenson nomination was greteed icily on the political right. Senator Barry Goldwater, Republican of Arizona, re- fused to grant even the customary courtesy call by the nominee. Human Events, a con- servative publication produced a negative answer to its rhetorical question, "Should a Conscientious Objector Be the New C.I.A. Chief?" Senator Robert J. Dole, who was Presi- dent Ford's running mate last fall, sampled sentiment among Republicans and urged on Jan. 13 that the nomination be withdrawn. Representative Lawrence P. McDonald, a Georgia Democrat, organized a Jan. 10 meet- ing of conservative opponents. Some former and retired intelligence officers, spread word in friendly Senate quarters that, as one of them stated it, Mr. Sorenson would be "about as well-received at Langley," the C.I.A. head- quarters, "as Sherman was in Atlanta." Human Events would ultimately credit "diligent" conservative groups and Republi- can senators with having stirred the mo- mentum that thwarted the nomination. Yet Frank McNamara of the American Conserva- tive Union was pessimistic a we'ek before the scheduled confirmation hearings that the op- ponents could muster more than five of the 15 Senators. All that week the antagonists searched for a copy of an affidavit Mr. Sorenson had given ,the defense in the trial of Dr. Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony J. Rus,o Jr., who were accused of disclosing classified 'informa- tion?the so-called "Pentagon papers"?on United States involvement in Vietnam. The opponents thought it could be a rock setting off ripples in a pool. It was. But the docu- ment was found first by a Sorenson sup- porter, Senator Joseph it Eiden Jr., Demo- crat of Delaware. Looking back on it, what astounded Mr. Carter's staff was that the opposition to Mr. Sorensen was not confined to the right. The discovery reflected the new Administration's naivete in assuming that Mr. Sorensen, as an articulate, intellectual, charter member in the Kennedy coterrie, would be welcomed back into power. ' If Mr. Carter's victory suggested the coun- try had changed since the Democrats last reigned, Mr. Sorensen's reception among Sen- ate liberals and Democrats demonstrated that Congress had changed too. Senator Kennedy, eager to champion the cause of his late brother's ally was reduced to a circumspect role. Visible activity on behalf of Mr. Sorensen, the latter's strategists decided, would have drawn attention to the nominee's presence as an adviser to Mr. Ken- nedy at Chappaquiddick, after a young wom- an drowned when the Senator's car ran off a bridge on that island near Edgartown, Mass. There were other, seemingly less conse- quential objections raised in quarters where the Carter camp had expected praise. Jody Powell, the White House press secretary, said later that he had, been dumbfounded by "personal, catty, sniping stuff" from liberals who had been expected to rally to Mr. Sorensen's defense. Two early advocates, Senator Gary Hart of Colorado and Senator Walter Huddleston of Kentucky, detected the qualms among their colleagues. Mr. Huddleston thought the mood made Mr. Sorensen a "marginal" prospect for confirmation. Mr. Hart warned Vice President-elect Mondale early in Jan- uary of growing "resentment" over Mr. Sorensen. Senator Inouye, who lost his right arm in World War II and once said he would give the left if necessary to fight Communists, told Colleagues he was particularly troubled by Mr Sorensen's renunciation of personal violence, which the Senator found incom- patible with a job in which violence might one day have to be abetted. All the early jitters were magnified with sudden vengeance when Senator Biden found the Pentagon Papers affidavit. THE HEY ISSUE The opponents were already complaining of Mr. Sorensen's support of Dr. Ellsberg and the committee's minority staff had obtained a Justice Department transcript of the nominee's March 15, 1973 testimony in the Pentagon papers trial. The transcript showed Mr. Sorensen had made an affidavit MX months earlier that was not admitted as evidence. Uncertain of what the document contained but wary that the opposition would use it, Senator Biden's aids scoured Washington un- til they found a copy on Jan. 13. Approved For Release 2005/11/28: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5 S 2052 Approved For %MAMA: it,h5039-9=mompo 00070Quabswary 2, 1977 Describing the preparation of his book, "Kennedy," in 1965, Mr. Sorensen said in the 1972 affidavit that he took 67 boxes of documents, letters and other material from the White House when he left in 1964 and that they included seven boxes of "classi- fied" information. Mr. Biden found that statement "very disturbing." He took the affidavit to Senator Inouye, the committee chairman, that Thurs- day?four clays before the start of the con- firmation hearings?and urged that Mr. Carter be notified immediately. The implications were clear. Mr. Sorensen, whose prospects had already been described as "marginal" by a supporter, would now have to defend his use of classified information when being considered for a post in which confidentiality was regarded as the first prin- ciple of conduct. It would make little differ- ence that Mr. Sorensen's actions had not, technically, broken any law. The affidavit would become a reason for opposition on plausible ground. I WANT TO FIGHT Mr. Sorensen happened, at that moment, to be with the President-elect at a meeting with the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Blair House. As the meeting adjourned, Mr. Mondale drew Mr. Sorensen into an unoccupied room and said that Senator Inouye had just telephoned him to report the development and recom- mend that the nomination be withdrawn.' Mr. Carter and Zbigniew Brzezinski, the national security adviser, entered the room, and Mr. Mondale outlined the problem to Mr. Carter. Mr. Sorensen noted that the affi- davit was a public record, was defensible and created a clear choice. He could withdraw or fight. "I want to fight," he said. "I agree," Mr. Carter replied. They telephoned Senator Inouye and asked to have a copy of the affidavit delivered to Mr. Carter, and the Senator requested that Mr. Sorensen come to his office five hours later, at 10:30 P.M. When Mr. Sorensen got to the Senator's office Mr. Inouye was talking on the tele- phone with Mr. Carter, who told the Sena- tor he had found nothing objectionable in the affidavit and wanted to proceed with the confirmation process. A few minutes later Mr. Carter repeated the encouragement in a tele- phone call to Mr. Sorensen. Mr. Inouye, who earlier had counseled withdrawal, said he thought a concerted ef- fort could produce a 10-to-5 vote for con- firmation and "even 9-to-6 wouldn't be so bad." He urged that Mr. Sorensen meet the next day with as many committee members as might be in the city. Encouraged, Mr. Sorensen went to the C.I.A. headquarters and, until 5:30 A.M. that Friday, drafted an opening statement for the confirmation hearing. He would never read it. With one hour's sleep, Mr, Sorensen went from the home of his in-laws in suburban Maryland to Senator Kennedy's home in sub- urban Virginia. They had coffee with Stephen E. Smith, Mr. Kennedy's brother-in-law. Mr. Sorensen was tired but in good spirits. The Senator promised to spend part of the day contacting members of the committee. Mr. Sorensen roved blithely across Capitol Hill much of the day, looking for committee members to shore up his support. It would take an emotional encounter late in the day to demonstrate to him that the support in- stead was crumbling. Mr. Mondale, still working in the Senate office he would vacate in a week?it was across the hall from Senators Inouye and Biden?telephoned Senator Hart, who had gone home to Colorado. Mr. Hart had been an enthusiastic supporter of the nomination. Now he was troubled, not by the contents of the affidavit but by Mr. Sorensen's failure to have apprised the President-elect that it existed. Mr. Hart's sentiments were under- standable. In 1972, he had been manager of Senator George McGovern's Presidential candidacy when Senator Thomas E. Eagleton of Missouri neglected to mention he had undergone hospital treatment for depression, a matter that surfaced after Mr. Eagle ion was the Vice-Presidential nominee. Senator Hart nonetheless recommended a strong, positive defense be made for Mr. Sorensen's conduct. MEETING OF SENATORS Across the hall, however, Senator Inouye was again coming to the conclusion the nomination was doomed. Closeted at noon with Senator Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois, and Senators Morgan and Huddleston, they talked of the withdrawal option again. Of the four, only Mr. Huddleston had been en- thusiastic about Mr. Sorensen and now his judgment was crucial. Mr. Huddleston had respected and shared Mr. Sorensen's plans to reform the intelli- gence community, but the affidavit made him conclude that Mr. Sorensen would not be able to develop the confidence of its officers or of intelligence officials in allied nations. Senator Stevenson expressed similar but stronger misgivings. If confirmed, Mr. Ste- venson said, Mr. Sorensen might be "isolated" by his subordinates, denied knowledge out of mistrust, and rendered incapable of prevent- ing abuses in the name of intelligence. A central consideration among the four was the committee's own credibility with the intelligence agencies. Mr. Stevenson said the panel had managed to establish confidence that it could be trusted with intimate knowl- edge of clandestine activities, and that "the credibility we had established would be chs- established" if Mr_ Sorensen were confirmed. After a while, they invited Mr. Mondale, to join the discussion. Mr. Morgan left in the meantime, but the three other Senators re- cited their 'misgivings and counseled with- drawal. Mr. Mondale promised to advise Mr. Carter. Not long after the meeting, Mr. Sorensen stopped to see Mr. Stevenson. The Senator was brutally candid, telling him that Mr. Carter should have known of the affidavit and adding: "If you didn't tell him, it reflects badly on your judgment and if he didn't ask you it makes me wonder about his judgment." ' The Senator told associates Mr. Sorensen was surprised and disbelieving, at times defiant, as if Mr. Stevenson had been the first to give him a true assessment of his prospects. "You don't know me very well if you think I would withdraw from a fight," Mr. Soren- sen told the Senator. THE VOTE COUNT Mr. Sorensen continued his rounds, wind- ing up at 5 P.M. that Friday at Mr. Mondale's office. The Vice President-elect was alarmed at the state of affairs. He called Senator Inouye over and the Senator, who had ,been consulting with colleagues all afternoon, told Mr. Sorensen, "At most we can get you one or two members of the committee." When Senator Inouye left, Mr. Sorensen said he could not believe the appraisal was accurate. If so, he had lost seven or eight votes overnight. He and Mr. Mondale agreed they needed an accurate head count of com- mittee members. In one of several conversations with Mr. Carter that evening, Mr. Sorensen asked him to begin calling committee members on Sat- urday. Mr. Carter agreed, but said he doubted that the Senators would tell him anything more "determinative" than that they would delay a judgment until after the hearings. On Saturday morning, Mr. Sorensen had breakfast at the C.I.A. headquarters with Clark Clifford, the former Secretary, of De- fense. The meeting, planned as one of a ,? series with elder statesmen whose advice Mr. Sorensen felt would be useful to him, turned instead into a strategy session. Mr. Clifford agreed that an accurate read- ing of the Democratic committee members' attitudes was essential anti-that Mr. Carter also should sound out leading Senate Demo- crats who were not on the Intelligence Corn- - mittee. As they conceived it, the President- elect should also bring his weight to bear. They decided to ask Mr. Carter to make the conversations three-pronged; He should first say he considered the growing objections to Mr. Sorensen to be unfair and wanted the nomination confirmed, then ask for assist- ance and, finally, ask-for an appraisal of the situation. It was early afternoon before Mr. Sorenson could get through to Mr. Carter, who was in Plains. The President-elect was not enthusi- astic about the strategy because he was busy, but he offered to call as many Democrats on, the committee as possible. CALLS TO FOUR SENATORS During the day, Mr. Carter reached four of the eight Democrats: Senators Inouye, Eiden, Stevenson and Birch Bayh of Indiana. Of the suggested three elements of the con- versation Mr. Carter employed only the third, a request for an assessment. Senator Biden, reached in Wilmington, Del., told Mr. Carter, "I think we're ill trouble. I think it is going to be tough," and asked what Mr. Carter intended to do. "I'm leaving it up to Ted to do whatever he wants," said the President-elect. "I forced the job on him in the first place. He did not really want that job." Mr. Carter found Senator Stevenson in Washington. The Senator said he had no tally but was not at all sure Mr. Sorenson could make it, called it a "no-win" situation Slid recommended withdrawal of the nomi- nation. Mr. Carter thanked Mr. Stevenson for his candor. Senator Bayh, the strongest Sorenson ally on the committee, had been traveling across Indiana since Thursday, virtually out of touch with the rapidly deteriorating situa- tion in Washington. When Mr. Carter. located Mr. Bayh Saturday evening, at St. John Bap- tist Church in- Gary, the Senator told him: "There are questions that have to be answered. I assume they will be." Mr. Carter and his aides never reached Senator Hart, Senator Morgan or Senator Huddleston. Senator Hathaway, who was at funeral services for a relative in Canada, could not be reached on Saturday, but tele- phoned Mr. Carter when he returned to the capital Sunday night. At about 9 p.m. that Saturday, Mr. Carter te:ephoned Mr. Sorensen. As Mr. Sorensen's associates remembered the conversation, the President-elect -said he had called Six of the eight Democrats and only one vote wak se- cure. "It's up to you," Mr. Carter told him, adding that he would support the decision if Mr. Sorensen chose to fight. Mr. Sorensen said he would "have to think about it." The President-elect said he had just spoken to Clark Clifford. "Call Clark if you want some advice bn this," Mr. Carter sUg- gested. "He's sitting by the phone." Mr. Sorensen telephoned, and Mr. Clifford did not try to dissuade Mr. Sorensen from abandoning the effort. A CALL TO HIS WIFE About midnight Mr. Sorensen called his wife, Gilian, and said he would withdraw at a news conference Sunday afternoon. While Mr. Sorensen drafted a withdrawal announcement, two of his New York law partners, Arthur Liman and Mark Aloott, prepared a brief responding to the questions raised about the use of classified data 13 years earlier. For the second morning in succession, the Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5 1970proved February 2, bOditntR9igettl MCOMDRDIMMOR000100070001-5 S 2053 newspapers were loaded with leaked versions of the fateful' affidavit, speculation that the nomination was in jeopardy and anonymous complaints from the Senate about Mr. Soren- sen. The nominee got angrier and angrier, convinced Ile had been judged without a hearing. He went to Langley and told his lawyers he would answer the critics at the hearing Mon- day morning and withdraw there, with a na- tional television audience to hear his side of the story, rather than at a news conference. Mr. Sorensen telephoned Mr. Carter once more in Plains and described his intentions. Mr. Carter asked him to meet with Mr. Mon- dale and Hamilton Jordan about the plans. Early Sunday afternoon, Mr. Mondale met with the two men at Mr. Mondale's home in the District of Columbia. THE VOTES AREN'T THERE "I recognize that Jimmy Carter has tried and the votes aren't there," Mr. Sorensen said. "Therefore, it's a losing battle." But he said he was determined not to withdraw without a hearing. Mr. Mondale and Mr. Jor- dan concurred. Arthur Liman, aware that some 30 hours had passed without a statement of support for Mr. Sorensen from the President-elect and that Mr. Carter had avoided reporters outside the Plains Baptist Church that morning, called Mr. Carter's conduct "un- fortunate." Later that afternoon, Mr. Carter did issue a statement defending Mr. Sorensen's han- dling of classified documents and saying it would be "most unfortunate" if frank ac- knowledgement of common practice should "deprive the administration and the country of his talents and services." The next morning, Monday, Jan. 17, Mr. Sorensen was en route to the hearing in a C.I.A. limousine. Eventually, Jody Powell would say the new President had abandoned the fight on Saturday. Another White Howie official would explain the capitulation by saying Mr. Carter had limited political coin- age in the Congress and "nobody wanted to spend it yet." As the limousine moved across the capital, the Langley command post notified the driver by radio that Mr. Carter wanted Mr. Sorensen to telephone him right away. The vehicle pulled up to the Old Senate Office Building, and Mr. Sorensen ducked into a phone booth in the building. He told the President-elect he was about to withdraw. Mr. Carter said he was terribly sorry about the way it had turned out. Mr. CRANSTON. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll. The second assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll. Mr. CRANSTON. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The PRESIDING OtoriCER. Without objection, it is so ordered. bia, to be Secretary of the Army, which was referred to the Committee on Armed Services. MESSAGES FROM THE HOUSE At 5:21 p.m., a message from the House of Representatives delivered by Mr. Berry, one of its clerks, announced that the House has agreed to the report of the committee of conference on the disagree- ing votes of the two Houses on the amendment of the House to the bill S. 474, to authorize the President of the United States to order emergency de- liveries and transportation of natural gas to deal with existing or imminent short- ages by providing assistance in meeting requirements for high-priority uses; to provide authority for short term emer- gency purchases of natural gas; and for other purposes. ENROLLED BILL SIGNED At 5:46 p.m., a message from the House of Representatives delivered by Mr. Berry announced that the Speaker has signed the enrolled bill (S. 474) , supra. The enrolled bill was subsequently signed by the President pro tempore. ENROLLED BILL PRESENTED The Secretary of the Senate reported that today, February 2, 1977, he pre- sented to the President of the United States the following enrolled bill: S. 474. An act to authorize the President of the United States to order emergency de- liveries and transportation of natural gas to deal with existing or imminent shortages by providing assistance in meeting requirements for high-priority uses; to provide authority for short-term emergency purchases of natu- ral gas; and for other purposes. REPORTS OF COMMITTEES The following reports of committees were submitted: By Mr. EASTLAND, from the Committee on the Judiciary: S. Res. 65. A resolution authorizing addi- tional expenditures by the Committee on the Judiciary for routine purposes. Referred to the Committee on Rules and Administration. EXECUTIVE REPORTS OF COMMITTEES As in executive session, the following eports of committees were submitted: John F. O'Leary, of New Mexico, to be Ad- inistrator of the Federal Energy Adminis- ration. (The above nomination was reported with the recommendation that it be con- firmed, subject to the nominee's com- mitment to respond to requests to ap- pear and testify before any duly con- stituted committee of the Senate.) MESSAGES FROM THE PRESIDENT Messages from the President of the United States were communicated to the Senate by Mr. Marks, one of his secre- taries. EXECUTIVE MESSAGE REFERRED As in executive session, the Presiding Officer laid before the Senate a message from the President of the United States submitting the nomination of Clifford L. Alexander, Jr., of the District of Colum- INTRODUCTION OF BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS The following bills and joint resolu- tions were introduced, read the first time and, by unanimous consent, the second time, and referred as indicated. Hy Mr. MATSUNAGA (-for himself, Mr. RANDOLPH, and Mr. HATFIELD) : S. 572. A bill to promote the peaceful res- olution of international conflict, and for other purposes; to the Committee on Gov- ernment Operations. By Mr. MATSUNAGA: S. 573. A bill to amend the Federal Avia- tion AM, of 1958 to authorize reduced rate transportation for certain additional persons on a space-available basis; to the Committee on Commerce. By Mr. BAKER (for himself, Mr. TOWER, Mr. BENTSEN, and Mr. Sas- SER): S. 574. A bill for the relief of Doctor Lawrence Chin Bong Chan; to the Commit- tee on the Judiciary. By Mr. PEARSON; S. 576. A bill to amend section 236 of the National Housing Act, to require the pay- ment of operating subsidies for projects sub- ject to mortgages insured under such sec- tion, and for other purposes; to the Com- mittee on Banking, Housing and Urban Af- fairs. By Mr. MAGNUSON: S. 578. A bill for the relief of Anacleto Aboyabor Dotollo and Turtosa Acompanado Dotollo; to the Committee on the Judiciary. S. 571. A bill for the relief of Neam Vone Sae-Karin (Paul Kuan) ; to the Committee on the Judiciary. S. 576. A bill for the relief of Joaquin T. Quijencio; to the Committee on the Judici- ary. S. 579. A bill for the relief of Imelda C. Jayag Potter; to the Committee on the Ju- diciary. S. 580. A bill for the relief of Sang Ii Tong; to the Committee on the Judiciary. S. 581. A bill for the relief of Judith Karen Bliss Halvorson of Edmonds, Washington; to the Committee on the judiciary. By Mr. JACKSON (for himself, Mr. MAGNUSON, Mr. CHURCH, Mr. MET- CALF, Mr. MELCHER, Mr. HATFIELD, Mr. PACKWOOD, and Mr. McCranez) : S. 5821. A bill to amend the Colorado River Basin Project Act to extend the period dur- ing which the Secretary of the Interior shall not undertake reconnaissance studies of any plan for the importation of water into the Colorado River Basin; to the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. By Mr. THURMOND: S. 583. A bill to amend the corporate name of AMVETS (American Veterans of World War II), and for other purposes; to the Com- mittee on the Judiciary. By Mr. HEINZ: ? S. 5E19:. A bill for the relief of Inas Tsakalis; to the Committee on the Judiciary. By Mr. BROOKE: S. 586. A bill to amend. title II of the Social Security Act to increase the amount a recip- ient may earn before deductions are made from benefits due to excess earnings; to the Committee on Finance. S. 586. A bill to amend title II of the Social Security Act to shorten the marriage dura- tion requirements for eligibility for benefits for a divorced wife; to the Committee on Finance. By Mr. STEVENS: S. 587. A bill to amend section 170 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 with respect to certain charitable contributions by mem- bers of the Civil Air Patrol; to the Committee on Finance. By Mr. STEVENS (for himself, Mr. BARTLETT, Mr, GOLDWATER, Mr. MELCHER, Mr. RIEGLE, Mr. THUR- MOND, and Mr. YOUNG) : S. 588. A bill to amend title II of the Social Security Act to increase to $5,100 the annual amount which individuals may earn without suffering deductions from benefits on account of excess earnings; to the Committee on Finance, Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5 S 2054 Approved For RelEGOMOSSSMATIPRIROMI11-0SPROPPI0007???1-# ebruary 2, 1977 By Mr. McINTYRE: S. 589. A bill for the relief of Ioannis Tsironis; to the Committee on the Judiciary. By Mr. THURMOND (for himself and Mr. MATCH): S. 590. A bill to amend title 38, United States Code, to make the Veterans' Admin- istration an executive department, and for other purposes; to the Committee on Vet- erans' Affairs. By Mr. PERCY : S. 691. A bill to reorganize the executive branch of the Federal Government to restructure Federal energy agencies, to estab- lish an Energy Policy Council and a Depart- ment of Energy Supply and Natural Re- sources, to enhance energy conservation pro- grams throughout the executive branch, to study energy regulatory policies, and for other purposes; to the Committee on Government Operations. By Mr. DOLE (for himself, Mr. CLARK, Mr. TALMADGE, Mr. YOUNG, Mr. MC- GOVERN, Mr. CURTIS, Mr. HUMPHREY, Mr. PEARSON, Mr. EAGLETON, Mr. HUDDLESTON, Mr. DANFORTH, and Mr. TowER) : S. 592. A bill to establish an advisory com- mittee to provide consultation and advice to the Administrator of the Federal Grain In- spection Service and to amend the U.S. Grain Standards Act with respect to supervision fees and recorclkeeping requirements; to the Committee on Agriculture and Forestry. By Mr. HUDDLESTON: S. 693. A bill to amend the U.S. Grain Standards Act with respect to recordkeeping requirements, and to establish an advisory committee to provide consultation and ad- vice to the Administrator of the Federal Grain Inspection Service; to the Committee on Agriculture and Forestry. STATEMENTS ON INTRODUCED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS By Mr. MATSUNAGA: S. 573. A bill to amend the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 to authorize reduced rate transportation for certain addi- tional persons on a space-available basis; to the Committee on Commerce. Mr. MATSUNAGA. Mr. President, I am introducing today a bill which would amend the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 to authorize reduced fare transportation .on a space-available basis for the elder- ly?age 60 and over?and the handicap- ped. There are several existing Federal pro- grams which attempt to make transpor- tation for the elderly and handicapped more readily available and acce,ssible. There are, however, no special programs for these individuals in air transporta- - tion. Furthermore, at the present time the Civil Aeronautics Board has only limited authority to permit discount fare transportation for deserving groups, such as the elderly. My bill would -make air transportation more widely available to the public. Every citizen needs the mobility which air transportation affords. Unfor- tunately, for many consumers, inflation has placed air transportation far beyond their reach. The problem is especially acute for the elderly and the handicap- ped, many of whom tend to have below- average incomes and often rely upon public transportation. Fares presently charged for air trans- portation tend to exclude both the elder- ly and the handicapped. A survey by United Airlines, for instance, indicated that only 5 percent of its passengers were 65 years of age and older. Yet, persons in this age bracket ac- count for 10 percent of the total popu- lation. Such disparity is largely attribu- table to the low income levels of many of the elderly. The merits and appeal of this proposal are obvious. It would enable those re- tired persons who generally have the time and desire to travel, but all too often lack the money, to do so. It would enable more of our elderly and handicapped citizens to visit their relatives and close friends living in widely scattered and far-distant areas of the country. Such a program would be of great importance to my own State of Hawaii. One can well imagine the numerous difficulties a large percentage of the senior citizens on neighbor islands encounter in traveling to vital medical facilities on .the other major islands. Well-designed reduced airfare pro- grams for the elderly can be highly suc- cessful and beneficial to both the travel- er and the airlines. To illustrate, for 7 years?between 1967 and 1973? Hawaiian Airlines offered reduced stand- by fares for the elderly. During this period when such fares were effective, the senior citizens traffic aboard the car- riers grew by 340 percent, while the over- all traffic grew by only 80 percent. My bill would not only remove a bar- rier to mobility by the elderly and the handicapped, but would enable airlines to decrease their operating losses by filling otherwise vacant seats. This legis- lation envisions no expenditure of Fed- eral funds. It would work very much to the advantage not only of senior citizens and handicapped but of the transporta- tion industry, as well. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the text of this bill be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the bill was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: S.573 Be it enacted by the Senate and Rouse of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That (a) the last sentence of section 403(b) of the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 (49 U.S.C. 1373(b) ) is amended by inserting "elderly persons and handicapped persons" immedi- ately after "ministers of religion". (b) Such section 403(b) is further amended by adding at the end thereof the following new sentence: "As used in the pre- ceding sentence, the term 'elderly persons' means individuals aged sixty and older; the term 'handicapped persons' means individ- uals who have severely impaired vision or hearing, and any other physically or men- tally handicapped persons as defined by the Board". By Mr. PEARSON: S. 575. A bill to amend section 236 of the National Housing Act, to require the payment of operating subsidies for proj- ects subject to mortgages insured under such section, and for other purposes; to the Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. Mr. PEARSON. Mr. President, in 1974 the Congress amended the National Housing Act with the intention of secur- ing the long term housing needs of families and elderly in lower-income brackets'. A substantial expression of that intention was contained in amendments providing that operating subsidies for section 236 housing projects be made for rent increases resulting from rising util- ity and tax rates. It is now 1977, and op- erating subsidies have yet to be paid. And so, Mr. President, I am today of- fering an amendment that simply seeks to assure that express congressional in- tention in this area is no longer thwarted. Mr. President, the Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee was con- cerned, during consideration of the 1974 amendments, that rapidly rising utility and tax costs might endanger the success of Federal housing projects. The commit- tee rightly feared that after an initial operating expense level was established and rent subsidies set, that there would be no mechanism to adjust the subsidies to meet these rising costs. The increases would become an ever- growing burden for the tenants, who would then be required, in direct con- tradiction of the program's goals, to pay much more than 25 percent of their in- comes for rent. To avoid this problem, the committee proposed, and Congress passed, a provision that authorized the Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development to pay subsidies for those rent increases justified by in- creased utility and tax rates. But the De- partment has not authorized such pay- ments except in those instances when tenants have resorted to the courts. As section 236 tenants have suffered the blows of repeated rent increases, thcy have been forced from the projects or have brought suit under the 1974 amend- ment. Those who have litigated the is- sue have been successful without excep- tion. Every action regarding operating subsidies has been resolved with the same result?the court finds HUD must fulfill its congressional mandate. In a typical decision, the District Court for the Dis- trict of Utah found: The Court is convinced that the primary purpose of the 1974 amendments is to aid Section 236 Low-Income Housing Projects. The funds are to go directly to the project owner, but the real purpose of the legislation 13 to aid the low-income tenants. If the rental payments from tenants in existing projects are allowed to increase too much, many tenants may be forced to leave and the success of the individual project may be jeopardized. It is incumbent upon the Secretary to respond to the Congressional emphasis on fulfilling the purpose of exist- ing projects. . . . re is clear that the wording of the Act gives some discretion to the Sec - rotary. It seems certain to the Court, how- ever, that the Secretary cannot refuse to exercise her discretion at all by completely refusing to implement the operating Subsidy program. Mr. President, I am confident that Eti: action on behalf of all section 236 ten- ants will be heard and that the courts will eventually require HUD to fulfill its intended role nationwide. But I see no reason to further clog our court dockets, no reason to force expensive litigation. Mr. President, the bill I have just intro- duced will avoid these problems and Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5 NEW YORK '140k:died For Releaiges-kti5/11 jAkiith_9i-olosakDototoocgool--5------ r Srnokebornbs and Sorensen The first thing to be said about Theodore Sorensen's withdrawal yesterday from , designation as Director of Central Intelligence is that he deserves full personal vindication against a subterranean stream of accusations made against him. For the most part, they were unjust or irrelevant and, as one Senator observed, smacked of conviction without a trial. Consider, for example, the matter of leaks. Members of the Senate Intelligence Committee, which was to pass on his nomination, are much concerned to demonstrate their capacity to keep secrets. They are said to have been shocked when they learned that Mr. Sorensen acknowl- edged, in two court affidavits, that he gave classified information to reporters during his years in the Kennedy White House. This is not a subject on which we are dis- interested; indeed, one of the affidavits was made in the ,iuit brought against this newspaper concerning the Pen- tagon Papers. But we do know something about the way government works; about how common?and proper? this practice has been for officials up to and including Presidents; and how few former officials would muster the simple courage Mr. Sorensen did to say so. Then there is the question of personal use of Govern- ment papers, including classified papers, by outgoing Government officials. Mr. Sorensen freely concedes hav- ing done so. We are not sure, in the abstract that this is a salutary practice. But there is no doubt that frii?a proper one, validated by the conduct of Presidents, aides, and other high officials for years. Suddenly to single out and assail Mr. Sorensen seems unfair, even captious. The suggestion of captiousness, even of an ide +logical campaign, against Mr. Sorensen is heightened oy the TB' *OW ????^ ? rm. circulation of a variety of other rumors or irrelevant reasons for opposing him. These include the fact that he has been married three times, which, one would think, would be especially awkward grist in a Senate recently characterized as undergoing an epidemic of divorce. What is equally regrettable is that these smokebombs of objection prevented his nomination from being consid- ered on the merits. We were encouraged by his nomina- tion last month and believe he would have performed creditably. Still, his nomination presented other, fairer questions. It was bruited about that he sought to avoid military service as a pacifist. The darker implicatii on-riere is grossly unfair to him. But the inherent philo ,phical question would have been legitimate: Can someo ,ie with deep nonviolent views fully act on the need?awful, rare but conceivable?to be cold-blooded? , ) , Still more important is the principle of accountability to Congress and to the public for which Mr. So ensen's nomination seemed to stand. He has long urged the Congress to greater vigilance over the C.I.A. ("The word 'oversight' has two meanings," he once wrote, "and they chose the wrong one.") In his withdrawal statement today, he stated a worthy principle: "I believe in the application of moral and legal standards to national security decisions, including the limitation ol covert operations to extraordinary circumstances invari vital---nainterests of our country, wit!. review by the appiat-e-Congressional conunitees and written authorization by the President and his Cabinet officials." js a worthy standard, one by which both President- elect Carter and the Senate should be judged as they now decide not only who should head the C.I.A., but how. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5 9-1?000/0001.000t16801.0-06dCIU-VIO : 8Z/1.1./900Z eseeieu Jod peAwddv WASHING TON STAR DATE Critics On Critics On Hill Set to Mount Attack By Henry S. Bradsher Washington Star Staff Writer President-elect Jimmy Carter's nomination of Theodore C. Sorensen to head the U.S. intelligence com- munity and direct the CIA has run into strong opposition. He will face hostile questioning before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence beginning tomorrow. Both the Democratic and Republi- can leaders in the Senate, Robert C. Byrd and Howard H. Baker Jr., have predicted difficulty in getting Soren- sen's nomination approved. ' The opposition focuses on several charges: ? Sorensen took secret government documents with him when he left the White House inN 1963 and used them to write a book about President John F. Kennedy, whose top aide he was. ? He defended the leaking of the Pentagon Papers to the press. See SORENSEN, A-12 CnRFNSFN NbAnner if 1 1 11 err ori untinued From Ai ? He waS involved in policy-making during the early 1960s, when the CIA was plotting to assassi- nate foreign leaders-. ? His gov-ernmental experience is only in domestic affairs, and he lacks qualifications in foreign af- fairs Or intelligence. ? He waq a conscientious objector in the Korean War. ? SOME 'OF THESE charges have come out of an intensive:scrutiny of Sorensen's record by the Sen- ate corn r4ittee. Its staff members expect Sorensen to be on the witness stand all day tomorrow answer- ing questions and possibly into the second day of a scheduled three-day inquiry. Witnesses who want to testify in support of Soren- sen include former senior government official W Averell flarriman; Clark M. Clifford, a former secretaryt of defense, and two former senior Penta- gon officers, Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt Jr. and Gen. James M!Gavin- ? - a e Critics inctude at least one committee Member, Robert B. Morgan, D-N.C. Those listed to testify against Sorensen include Reg., Lawrence P. McDonald. D-Ga and spokesmen for several pri- vate organizations, including Francis J. McNamara of the American Conservative Union. Sorensen, 48, joined Kennedy's staff when he be- came a senator in 1953 and soon was his closest adviser. Since leaving WashingtoW:after Kennedy was assassinated, he has been iitaCticirig law in New York. Long before Carter's pr.esidentiel quest looked promising, Sorensen became a supporter of and adviser to the former Georgia governor. CARTER REPORTEDLY selected him for the dual job of running all government intelligence operations and heading the CIA because his keen mind and-analytical ability were considered more pertinent qualifications for dealing with a troubled and controversial area of government than prior experience in intelligence and foreign policy. Byrd, the Senate majority leader, said yesterday he considered Sorensen's nomination to be "in con- siderable difficulty. His chances are, at this point, questionable' The 40?4410kerl said he. thought 'there would be 'Sign cant. oppbsitiOn to Sorensen'. The newspaper Newsday reported yesterday that ?lirke;,; committee had circulated to its members iies of an affidavit Sorensen presented to the 1972 Pentagon Papers tri6.1 of Daniel Ellsberg. Sorensen reportedly said he took seven cartons of secret ma- terial from the White House for use in his book Thereport also said Sorensen repeatedly leaked secret information to the news media. But Wash- ington` observers noted that many White House aides do that. Sorensen yesterday called "totally false? the newspaper report that he took secret documents for the book and leaked classified material to report- ers. Sorensen, in a statement read by his law partner Mark Alcott, said he talked yesterday with Carter, who "reaffirmed his strong determination that I serve as director of central intelligence and I ex- pect to do so." MeNAMARA, a staff director of the late House Un-American Activities Committee, is scheduled to testify that Sorensen submitted an affidavit in the case involving The New York Times' publication of the Pentagon Papers. The American Conservative Union quoted Sorensen as saying in the affidavit: "I believe the national security interests of the 'JP SORENSEN " In trouble? Sunday, January 16, 1977 The Washington Star United States will be irreparably injured if tli0 documents are suppresseu from puulie and con- gressional view." Morgan sa S)fer,sr, wil face oppcsian over his role in the Kennedy administration " Or- ing .the period in which the CIA hatched plotVto assassinate foreign leaders." In announcing Son- se/1's appointment Dec. 23, Carter had emphasd that he attended meetings of the National Secu Council under Kennedy and knew "at first hand inner workings of the decision-making process Within the White House." Sorensen told a Senate investigation of the CIA in 1975 he was certain Kennedy knew nothing of asses. sination plots. CONTRARY TO THE picture of Sorensen as knowing everything that went on during the Kennedy era is a criticism that he has no experi- ence in intelligence or foreign affairs. This point will be made by McNamara and several other wit- nesses. Both Morgan and Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., have questioned publicly whether Sorensen's "pacifist background" makes him fit to run the CIA. The American Conservative Union contended that it poses a potential threat to the agency's morale. THE wAspftwoyer.f\iFilrdliztlease 2005/11/28 : Ck4IRDE90-014089M0010017/710c9cA-,- - -74 orensen Nommatim In Trouble Senators Cite His Affidavits on Classified Data List By Spencer Rich Washington Post Staff Writer - The nomination of Theodore C Sorensen as Central Intelligencr Agency director -appeared in gra' danger 'yesterday, amid repo that several members of the Ser Intelligence Committee, have askto. President-elect Jimmy Carter to withdraw Sorensen's name or face the possibility, he will not be con- firmed. ? The Intelligence Committee begins hearings Monday on Sorensen. His problems result from sworn affidavits, which he submitted in the 1971 Penta- gon papers case .and the 1972 trial of Daniel Ellsberg, that he had taken classified materials from the White House when he left it in 1964 after be- ing a top 'aide to the late President Kennedy. Sorensen, who was at the CIA head- quarters in Langley, Va., yesterday, is- sued a statement last night saying Carter "has reaffirmed his strong de- termination that I serve as director of central intelligence and I expect to do so." Mark Alcott, a law partner of Sor- ensen who was acting as his spokes- man, said the reaffirmation came dur- ing a telephone conversation between Carter and Sorensen yesterday. Sorensen said in his statement that Carter had read the affidavits which have been on the public record for five years, and "is familiar with all the facts." He said, "Any charge that I have acted improperly with respect to clas- sified information or White House pa- pers is totally false." Members of the Senate Intelligence Committee, who received copies of the Sorensen affidavits Friday, said they ?show that he, used some of the materials in his 19(5 book, "Kennedy," and reOlved a tax pirOvetbfatitiRelease 2005/11/28 those and otIler Papers to the govern- ment. The affidavits also state. members said, that he leaked classified materi: als while in the White House for polit- ical and other purposes. The affidavits were called to the committee's atten- tion by Sen. Joe Biden Jr. (D-Del.), a member. Yesterday, three members of the In- telligence Committee, who asked not to be identified, said they had been told that Committee Chairman Daniel: K. Inouye (D-Hawaii) and Senate Mi- nority Leader Howard H. Baker (R. Tenn.), as well as several others, had. advised Carter that he should con- sider withdrawing Sorensen's name, because he lacked judgment and re- spect for the classification process. Spokesmen for both Inouye and Baker declined to confirm or deny the report. A spokesman said Baker, an ex officio member of the committee and its former senior Republican, had talked with Carter about Sorensen. Baker told reporters on Jan. 7 that there was "significant opposition" to Sorensen. Senate Majority Leader Robert C.- Byrd (D-W.Va.), meanwhile, told re- porters yesterday that the Sorensen nomination "is in considerable diffi- culty" and he "wouldn't be willing to say" at the moment that he will sup- port Sorensen. He said Sorensen's "chances, at this point, are questiona- ble." See SORENSEN, A7, Col. 2 : CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : C1A-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5 `0,16, 'Ur -111?' Sorensen Nomination to CIA in Trouble THEODORE C. SORENSEN ... "charge ... is totally false" SORENSEN, From Al A Carter spokesman in Washington said that the President-elect "is going to stand by this nomination fully." In Plains, Ga., Carter's deputy press sec- retary Rex Granum said Carter is "aware of the problem." Sen. Jake Garn (R-Utah), a member of the 15-man Intelligence Committee, said he opposes Sorensen, and he be- lieves Sens. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.), Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.) and Robert Morgan (D-N.C.) have also decided to oppose Sorensen. "First of all, I don't think he has any experience at all," Garn said. "Secondly, I'm very concerned about someone who would leak classified documents out of the White House." One committee Democrat, who asked not to be identified, said that both Sorensen and Carter "are being urged to withdraw the nomination? in a most emphatic way?by senators on the committee and by others. They're not all Republicans. It's coming from both sides. "I think a majority of the commit- tee would vote against him now. It was marginal to begin with. He wasn't qualified. It never made any sense. The job requires a man of authority, a civilian who can control the entire in- telligence community?a Jim Schle- singer, not a Sorensen. Tope director of the largest intelligence service The world is a leakert It undermines the whole intelligence effort. It raises questions about his judgment. "He didn't tell Carter. This was nip and tuck before. Now it's impossible." First reports of Sorensen's difficul- ties appeared yesterday in the Los Angeles Times and Newsday. The Pentagon papers case arose in 1971 when the government attempted to prevent The New York Times, Washington Post and other publica- tions from publishing Pentagon docu- ments, which had been obtained from a then unknown source or sources, giving the history of secret govern ment deliberations involving the Viet- namese wgr. Later, Ellsberg Was accused of leak- ing the secret documents,, which he had obtained wh n working for the Rand Corp., a government contractor, by duplicating a copy of the papers in Rand's possession. Ellsberg was tried in 1972 on a 15- count indictment alleging national se- curity violations, but the charges were dismissed after 89 days of trial in 1973 because of the "plumbers" break-in of his psychiatrist's office. Sorensen filed the affidavits on be- half of Ellsberg and a codefendant in an effort to show that it was not un- common for high government officials to take documents with them when they left the government and that leaking secret information was done often. In his affidavits, according to sev- eral members of the Intelligence Com- mittee, Sorensen admitted that when he left the White House in 1964, he took with him 67 boxes of material ac- cumulated during his years as Presi- dent Kennedy's top White House staff aide, including seven boxes of classi- fied documents, such as copies of Ken- nedy-Khrushchev materials, materials on the Congo, Bay of Pigs, Laos and Berlin crises, and a transcript of the Kennedy-Khrushchev meetings in Vi- enna. The affiaavits also indicate he do- nated some of the material to the Na- tional Archives and received a tax break. Senate aides said the hearings arc scheduled to go on Monday unless Sorensen's name is withdrawn and that Sorensen is preparing a spirited defense before the committee in the hope of saving his nomination. Staff writer Helen Dewar contributed to this article. Approved For Release 2005/11/28: CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5 NEW YORK. TIMES PAGE Approvea For Release 1/28 . Cik--RDP90-411-089R0001000700CPC:5 SORENSEN APPROVAL BY SENATE IN DOUBT Use of Classified Material for His Book on Kennedy at Issue By WENDELL RAWLS Jr. Special to The New Yoric Times WASHINGTON, Jan. 15 ? President- elect Carter's selection of Theodore C. Sorensen to be Director of Central Intelli- gence ran into unexpected difficulty in the Senate today, with a growing possibil- ity that the nomination might be with- drawn. Robert C. Byrd, the Senate majority leader, told reporters that there could be "considerable difficulty" in gaining Sen- ate approval for the nomination of Mr. Sorensen, formerly an aide to President Kennedy, to the top intelligence post. One apparent difficulty surrounding the nomination was an objection in Senate dircles that Mr. Sorensen, on leaving the White Housestaff in 1964, took with him certain 'classified information to help in writing a book on the Kennedy Adminis- tration. Sources close to the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, which has scheduled a hearing for Monday morning on the nomination, said that the opposi- tion also stemmed from his inexperience in foreign intelligence; his role in help- ing Senator Edward M. Kennedy, Demo- crat of Massachusetts, explain the Chap- paquiddick incident; his status of con- scientious objector in avoiding military service; and the role of his law firm, the New York firm of Paul, Weiss, Rif- kind, Wharton & Garrison, which repre- sents several multinational corporations and such foreign Governments as Zaire, Sierra Leone and Iran, where the CIA. has influence. Baker and Goldwater Consulted In advance of the scheduled hearing, several senior members of the committee were consulting today among themselves and with Carter aides as to how to pro- ceed with the nomination. It was not immediately known whether Senator Daniel K Inouye, Democrat of Hawaii, had advised Mr. Carter, either directly or indirectly through Vice Presi- dent-elect Mondale, a former member of the committee, tO withdraw the nomina.- ton. Several members of the committee, however, made clear in separate inter- views that the committee's questions and concern over Mr. Sorensen had been con- veyed to M. Carter in Plains, Ga. Senator. Howard It Baker Jr. of Ten- nessee, the ranking Republican member on the committee, said "I know there has been a great deal of concern" about the Sorensen nomination. Senator Baker said there were "rumors" on the Senate floor yesterday that Mr. Carter had been asked to withdraw the nomination, but he said he did not have any first-hand knowledge of a specific move by committee members to prevail upon Mr. Carter to cancel it. The? key as to what action might be Continued on Page 16, Column 1 16 SORENSEN APPROVAL BY SENATE IN DOUBT Continued From Page 1 taken by the committee rested with Sena- tor Inouye, who could not be reached for comment. It was learned, however, that Mr. Inouye in the past two days had discussed ' the nomination, and its possible withdrawal, with Senator Baker and Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona, another senior Republican member of the committee. Rex Granum, Mr. Carter's deputy press secretary, said in Plains that the Presi- dent-elect "is certainly aware that there is a problem" with the Sorensen nomina- tion. Asked whether the nomination would be withdrawn, Mr,. Granum said, "Well, we all know that there has been an ex- pression of a problem." Mr. Granum said Mr. Carter had been informed either directly by Senatoi Inouye or indirectly through Mr. Mondale ol tne 'problem concerning the nomina- tion. The problem apparently first developed ( se.'" ? The New York Times Theodore C. Sorensen on Thursday, when, according to one member of the intelligence committee, the group was presented with information "about the performance of Mr. Sorensen in relation to classified information." ' The committee was shown an affidavit Mr. Sorensen gave for the trial of Daniel Ellsberg, who was involved in the unau- thotlized release of the Pentagon papers, in which Mr. Sorensen said he had used classfied White House material in writ- ing his book on the Kennedy Administra- tion, thes took a tax deduction when he returned the material to the Government. Mr. Sorensen did not break any laws in the action because what he did was then legal. Efforts by The New York Times to reach Mr. Sorensen yesterday and today have been unsuccessful. ' The effect of the presentation of the affidavit to the committee, according to one member, was to "raise increased reservations" about Mr. Sorensen in the top intelligence post. According to one RepubPican member of the committee who declined to be quoted, Mr.Sorensen's statement about his use of classified information "can be interpreted in several ways," and "as he explained it to me, it was not sinister." Even before the Sorensen affidavit was shown to the committee, the nomination had encountered some reservations in conservative circles of the Senate. Senators Robert J. Dole, Republican of Kansas, and Robert B. Morgan, Democrat of North Carolina, had expressed misgiv- ings because of what they called Mr. Sorensen's "pacifist background." Senator Morgan, who served on the special Senate committee that investigat- ed allegations of Nvrongdoings by the Cen- tral Intelligence A,gncy, said Mr. Sorensen also would face opposition because of his role in the Kennedy Administration "dur- ing the period in which the C.I.A. hatched Oats to assassinate foreign leaders." The Sorensen nomination was the first of Mr. Carter's prospective appointments to rim into serious difficulty in the Sen- ate, The rest seem likely to be approved speedily after Mr. Carter, is inaugurated as President on Jan. 20. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5 Mr.A, ?era-wen/16)m ? On any scale of relevance to the Central Intel- ligence Agency and its future, the issues that figured in the torpedoing of Theodore Soren- sen's candidacy as its director would rank well down. The charges that suddenly surfaced last week are not trivial, yet they are hardly serious dis- ? qualifications. ? Mr. Sorensen's former draft classification, for instance, strikes us as a sideshow of the sleazi- est sort. When Mr. Sorensen registered for the , -draft in 1946 he sought and obtained classifica- tion 1A0 ? a designation given to those agreeable to hazardous duty as non-combatants. ", 'Mr. Sorensen's conscientious objections were - ? ' known, and publicly noted, 16 years ago. And in ' any case the CIA is not an army ? indeed, its , involvement in secret para-military operations .? is among the practices that need searching re- examination. Must a prospective CIA director ? -come before the Senate accoutered like a dra- . ? goon, brandishing his saber? Similarly, in the affidavits he filed in the New York Times and Ellsberg cases, Mr. Sorensen ? ;was only one of more than a dozen reporters and -, former officials who sought to establish perspec- tive on the uses and abuses of government secrecy. That perspective was needed then, and ;is no less needed today. The hypocrisy, the gap between law and custom, pretense and practice, is nowhere else so great. - There are two workable approaches to official secrecy. Ideally, government should use the privilege of secrecy, as the Prayer Book once -"advised people to marry, "soberly, advisedly, -. discreetly" and above all sparingly ? and ex- pect officials and reporters to respect secrets on pain of severe legal penalty. But that is the ideal. The other system, the system in use, is to wield the "secret" and "classified" stamps with ? abandon, relying on curiosity and self-interest ? to force exceptions. Mr. Ellsberg's handling of the Pentagon Papers was only an especially spectacular ? example of the working system described , above. Yet it was honestly feared, both in gov- ? ernment and the press, that the Pentagon Papers episode signalled a departure from the 'unwritten rules. Officialdom, or much of it, con- sidered that Daniel Ellsberg had overstepped; ? :the press, or much of it, viewed the Justice De- partment's invocation of prior restraint against the Washington Post and the New York Times? - and its subsequent prosecution of Mr. Ellsberg ? as equally aggressive. Did these legal steps herald a new literalism in the enforcement of ,laws and rules that had previously been ob- served most casually, and flouted when the r ? -mutual interest of press and government could ' be served thereby? d100070001-5 _ Pentagon Papers, and only in it, that Mr. Soren- sen's true confessions about his use of classified papers were offered. He was not boasting; he was attempting to school the courts in an "anomalous" practice. Max Frankel, then Washington Bureau Chief of the the Times, deposed in another of the same group of affidavits that "without the use of 'se- crets,' there could be no adequate diplomatic, military, and political reporting of the kind our people take for granted. . . and there could be no mature system of communication between the government and the people." The Navy, Mr. Frankel continued, used secrets to "run down" Air Force weaponry, and the Army to suggest its "superiority" over the Marines. President Kennedy had divulged his "secret" conversa- tions with Mr. Gromyko about Berlin, while President Johnson later relayed (to Mr. Frankel personally) the skinny on his "secret" conver- sations at Glassboro, N. J., with Premier Kosy- gin. Mr. Sorensen in his statement to the Intelli- gence Committee conceded that he used classified papers in his book, Kennedy, but pro- tested most persuasively that he did not depart from accepted practice as understood (and ac- cepted by the General Services Administration and goverment archivists) in the mid-1960s. His critics made effective use of hindsight and ex post facto rules. By the tests implicit in the hostility of some members of the Senate Intelligence Committee, few if any people with extensive experience in government and few Washington reporters (in- cluding some of Mr. Sorensen's severest critics) could qualify for presidential appointments. Many have handled secrets without authoriza- tion. The feeling can't be avoided that the stir over these matters ? Mr. Sorensen's draft status, his use of classified documents ? was a smoke- screen for unstated personal and political objec- tions. Mr. Sorensen could not be described as an ingratiating or popular man, and his aspiration to play reformer to the CIA had been adver- tised. If the other issues hadn't queered his chances, something of equal irrelevance might have served the same purpose. The trouble with this is not that Mr. Sorensen was an obvious and natural choice for the post of CIA director; in some ways the appointment was puzzling. The trouble is that Mr. Sorensen has been smoothly axed for reasons which, as stated, have little to do with his qualifications for the job, and less to do with the future direc- tion of the agency. We hope Mr. Carter, un- daunted by this setback, will not desist from his attempt to bring a fresh approach and new per- i spectives to a department of government that It was in the context of the battle over the needs both. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP90-01089R000100070001-5