LET'S CURB FORMER CIA AGENTS

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CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1
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RIPPUB
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K
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64
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December 19, 2016
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October 11, 2005
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1
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Publication Date: 
September 30, 1981
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NSPR
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Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 PITTSBURGH PRESS 30 September 1981 Let's CU Forme ciA By, MARY O'HARA ?,H They are a little late ? getting earound to it but the Central Intelli- gence Agency and its oversight sem": tinels in Congress are finally: working on methods to prevent fore. mer U.S. agents, from :selling arnis and exper- tise to interna- tional terrorists.. For five years the United States has been tryingto build a Case against for- mer agents Ed- win P. Wilson , and Francis E. Terpil. At every ?ass O'HARA - turn there have . been legal hurdles, making the lavi work for two despicable character ? who are now fugitives. A federal grand jury indieted them in April 1980- for various al- leged violations resulting from their shipments of high explosives, delay-, action timers, sensitive night-vision equipment and commando-training programs to: Libya. . The case includes a charge that Wilson and Terpil attempted.to car- ry- out a '$1-million' assasiinatiod contract against-a critic of Libya's Moainmar IChadafy. .?; . . It's scary to realize,that sensitive government secrets were entrusted to Wilson and TerpiL, . -1 *-* : ANOTHER DISTURBING ele41 ment has come to light as both the: / / House and the Senate Move tq ; clamp down on former CIA agents and their activities abroad. Former CIA Deputy Directhi. Vernon Walters said in an interview. last week that there's "no way'.' to bar retired intelligence official ifrom doing business abroad without; I restricting the individual's freedom: , Mr. Walters, a retired general as well and now ambassador-at-large in the U.S. State- Department s mitted he was paid $300,000? this -year by a company that specializes in selling sophisticated military technology to foreign countries. /. The $2-billion annual trade in r. U.S. weapons technology abroad has lured former CIA agents to cash on their expertise and contacts. ? ' CIA officials have' told some key- members of Congress that their ; lawyers are redrafting the agency's employment contract to include prohibitions against the sale of :--trade crafts to hostile foreign gave ; ernments or terrorist organizations:. . Sen. Lloyd IsiL,Bentsen, of Texas has introduced a bill &easing a loop-.l . hole that has left the, government ; powerless to prosecute Americans] who help terrorists.. - ? ? * * CIA AGENTS have been accused of many wicked acts, particularly ; by the Soviets, who have even charged them with contaminating ; Cuban wells -trail dengue-fever germs. T,he agents have also been ' caught napping in 'sensitive posts such as Iran_ - , But nothing can match in vicinus- ' bess the deeds which some of its' ! own notorious former agents have , _committed against the CIA and the United States. ? ? The agency needs a completh ; overhaul but it's already obviouS: that William. Casey isn't the director. ' ? to dolt - ; - - Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 STAT A!'7IPICLE PhrifirtiMCBor Release 2g65/13142:49TeIZRUFM-01)901RIX040 ON PAGE 29 September 1981 140001-1 STAT \i"' tabs on the spies? Throughout United States history there has always been an urieasy tension between those persons who have sought to protect na- tional security and state secrets and civil lib- ...ertarians who favored maximum freedom of speech and the absolute accountability of pub- lic officials. Sometimes the tension has equal- ized itself out. All too often, however, there have been periods of excess when the hand of authority was used to stifle dissent, as in the case of the Wilson administration during World War I when it vigorously sought to jail -subversives" and Congress enacted the Es- pionage and Sedition acts.. While the present period obviously iepre- , sents nothing like the drama of those years. , there is a certain mood in the land which, un- less carefully controlled. could invitea return to the kind of secrecy and lack of accountabil- ity that often marked government before the Watergate-era reforms of the mid-1970s. Ef- forts are currently underway to so shroud US intelligence agencies ma privileged shield of secrecy as to make such agencies virtually unanswerable to the inquiries of a free press or a critical public. Two recent manifesta- tions of this trend are noteworthy: I. The House last week enacted a measure that would make it a crime for private citi- zens to disclose the identity -of a US intelli- gence agent, even if the, information came from public sources. Lawmakers have sought such a measure for the past five years after a . CIA station chief in Athens was assassinated following publication of his name. ? 2. CIA chief William Casey is urging Con- gress to exempt national intelligence agen- cies from the Freedom of Information Act, which allows private citizens (including jour- nalists) the right to petition government agencies for nonclassified information. - Admittedly there is something to be said on behalf of both moves. Identifying names of secret agents is reprehensible. The press, for its part, must exercise the highest degree of responsibility and professionalism in national, security matters. ,-.. 7 ? - ? .What is worrisome,. however, is that the way the House bill has been drafted could pre- ' vent the disclosure of abuses by intelligence ? agencies. The measure says that a person, in- cluding a journalist, would be criminally lia- ble if he or she had "reason to believe" that disclosure of the agent's identity would harm national security interests. This was a change from a more restrictive House Intelligence Committee version that said criminal liability would result if the person doing the disclosing had specific "intent to impair or impede the foreign intelligence activities of the United_ States." ??- ' ? The Senate should reject the House phras- ing and adopt the stricter-intent requirement. The fact is that in recent years there have been disclosures of a number of cases where ? federal officials and intelligence officials have misused their authority and violated the law. Would the public be better served for not having had the abuses come to light, or even letting the persons involved continue in their Wrongdoing? The House bill invites coverups based on "national security" allegations-. ' As for totally excluding the CIA 'and other intelligence agencies from the Freedom of In- / formation Act, such a step would be injurious- to the public:- The Freedom of Information Act already excludes the release of abroad range of classified information. To exempt a I. ? . spy agency entirely from any measure of at.? countability is to make that agency in a sense the master of the public For lawmakers ahd the Heagan adMiiiis- tration, the delicately balanced goal Must be to protect?US agents and spy agencies-- as well as the public and nation ihey'arecalled ,npon toserve.?- - ? . 'ti?gsd CA:la sisa %Art Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000 ARTICLE APPEABEa ON PAGE / Sr. , CHICAGO TRIBUNE 28 September 1981 By William Safire .. "THIS IS NO cakewalk." said Transportation Secretary Drew 'Lewis about the air-controllers' strike. He was using a word that has come Into sudden popularity in Washington. ? When Director of-Central Intelligence (not "CIA Director") William Casey went: to Capitol Hill to extinguish a firestorm of criticism, he used-.three figures of speech in rapid succession: "The bottom of the barrel has been -reached," he said. "My life is an open bcolc.?.This is going to be a cakewalk." . The first two are cliches, but the third is a delicious Ameri- canism that had become a rarity until Casey rescued it. Far from being current speoltspeak, it finds its roots lathe Civil War: Richard Thornton's "American Glossary" defined it as "a walking competition among Negroes, in which the couple who put on most style 'take the cake."' _ The high-stepping "cake-walk" soon attracted musical ac- companiment: The walk became a dance, and the word was immortalized in Claude Debussy's "Golliwog's Cake Walk." Soon the phrase came to. mean "generally stylish"?Mark Twain called a Shelley biography "a literary cakewalk." By the .turn of the century, the cakewalk?one word--;was :a stage ? William Safire writes a column on language for The New 1. York Times. ? . . a STAT dance, drawing on the fancy walking a the previous genera- tion, as well as a mechanized promenade in amusement parks. At some point, it became allied with something easy to do or a pleasure to perform. A cakewalker was someone having a good time; this was not to be confused with a "cake eater," or effeminate man, that derogation based on the preference of he-men for old-fashioned pies over fancy cakes. WHILE ALL this was going on in the United States, the British were using a similar expression to denote ease of accomplishment: "A piece of cake," along with "cakewalk," were expressions used by Royal Air Force-pilots to describe , missions against weak defenses. ? The British probably derived "piece Of cake' from "cakewalk"; then the- Americans of this generation dropped "cakewalk" and adopted the Britishism "piece of cake"?that is, until Bill Casey revived the earlier term to describe what he was -sure would be an easy time before a Senate committee. _ That's how the language refreshes itself; nothin' to it. ? - In that secret "cakewalk" session of the Senate Intelligence Committee, William Roth (R., Del.) told Casey: "The Director of Central Intelligence must be like Caesar's wife?clean as a hound's tooth." The mixed metaphor drew a laugh in the committee room, and Casey waxed Roth with an apt: "In Washington, it's easier to be cleaner than a hound's tooth than it is to be above suspicion." ? ? .!;,: . ? Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : C1A-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 STAT Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-0090' ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE Lifit U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT 28 September 1981 Headlines are focused on mavericks who train terrorists, spy for hostile powers, leak vital secrets. But the vast . majority of former agents exploit their . unique expertise for different purposes. When an American spy ends his cloak-and-dagger work for Uncle Sam, his life in the shadows may not be over. A few maverick .ex-agents have continued to lead the covert life even after "coming in from the cold." Often operating outside the law, these onetime spies cash in on clandestine skills honed?and secrets learned?as govern- ment agents. Sometimes earning millions of dollars, they move in a mysterious, violent world of guns, explosives, criminals and foreign agents. Two former operatives of the Central Intelligence Agen- cy are accused of masterminding a terrorist training school for Libya's Muammar Qadhafi and supplying him with ex- plosives and technical expertise. A third has been convicted of selling secrets to Russia?the only known case of a double agent in the agency's 34-year history. Some former CIA contract agents, free-lance operators who undertake specif- ic contracts from the agency, have been arrested on drug- smuggling charges. While only a relative few become outlaws, these none- theless have caused headaches for the vast majority of ex- spies who go into legitimate work. As a reult, sentiment is building for tighter restraints on all former agents. Experts agree that.those who resort to questionable activ- ities are rare among the thousands of CIA operatives who quit the agency during the 1970s because of purges, scan- dals and disillusionment. Yet the pressures that can create a rogue are felt by all. Foremost is the difficulty of making a new life after a career spent spying, often in exotic places and sometimes amid great danger. Some say it is an addic- tive combination. There are other problems. Many potential employers are sensitive to public hostility toward the espionage trade and worry about any CIA ties that may remain. Many agents, especially those who have spent a long time spying, lack readily marketable job skills in the business 'world. And some spies simply find themselves suited for no other work. For them, covert activity has become not just a job, but a way of life. For a le,:ks at what spies do after leaving the government, US.Netes & World Report has focused on a score of ex- agents who have entered private life ih,recent years. While most are respected businessmen, others operate on the wrong side of the law. Both are-Examined in this_report - Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : Global Terrorism: Making It Pay A few former agents have turned to selling covert skills to R000400140001-1 early 1970s in internat ping explos nate enern by a federa in the Mid( Wilson v been heavi invasion ol Cuban exi dummy co could be cOmmunic CIA in 19' Mideast and India. long prison term fo cover agent posing Terpil, after his ( world's biggest g-ui the conflict in Le Palestine Liberatio In 1976, he and of other former ag Middle East. Corp( operation. Prosecutors say to open a terrorisi terrorists were sch craft powerful bon alarm clock to a te The two recruit structors, includin e Hops experts and cret Navy facility of weaponry are I ployes, later fired e them obtain weap them in other wa) At one point, st -- RDP91-00 R00040614 tor* Approved For Release 2005/11/28: CIA-RDP91-00901 ARTICLE APPEARED NEWSWEEK ON PAGE 3'o 28 September 1981 The U.S. Vs. illiam arly this month, Attorney General Wil- AL:. ham French Smith revoked Carter Ad- ministration guidelines that limited legal recourse against current or former govern- ment employees who publish information about intelligence work without clearing it with the government first. Smith obviously meant business: NEWSWEEK learned last week that the Justice Department plans to sue former CIA director William E. Colby for publishing his memoir, "Honorable Men," without clearing all editions with his former employer- Justice officials said the Colby case did not portend a barrage of lawsuits against leaicers of sensitive infor- able to or critical of t! involved will be a far' er to sue," he said. ment sources said, p tied with a consent forcing the former over some profits f government. The Colby case is Reagan Administrz leaks of information It was learned that t ordered several inv national-security bre ance of State Department policy papers on southern Africa, the removal of MX- missile studies from the Pentagon and the acquisition by NBC's Marvin Kalb of position papers on Pakistan. Similarly, CIA director William J. Casey has asked for a special FBI team to conduct an internal investiga- tion of agency leaks--a request the bureau has rejected because its top officials do not believe that the FBI should be working for the agency. Irritated: Less sensitive leaks are "more of an annoyance," says Presi- dential Counselor Edwin Meese, but the White House is tracking them as well. After The New York Times sug- gested in June that Reagan was will- ? ing to compromise on his tax bill, ' irritated aides checked Secret Service computer logs to learn which officials the reporter had seen. The leak was traced to budget director David Stockman. Stockman's job isn't in danger, but it is the chilling prospect of being found out?and possibly fired?that keeps most potential leakers in line. Intimidation may be the b est weep- on against leakers simply because it is so difficult to prosecute them. Feder- al law prohibits the unauthorized dissemi- nation of national-security information, but . the statutes are "so vague as to be virtually worthless," says a former CIA official. De-, fendants also can resort to "graymaile" forc- ing the government to disclose even more sensitive information so that a jury can de- cide the relative importance of the leaked material. Given the legal, and practical pitfalls, the Administration is searching for more effec- tive ways to stop leaks: not passing some information to leak-prone departments and routinely collecting important briefing books after meetings. Attorney General Smith's new edict on unauthorized publica- tion of sensitive information may help to CIPOODP61-02 soniago dit ob.!! Lfflovtivt leaks of less sensitive material may simply be beyond control. - IDAOR 11EX lir LIFE THE 4 I 1 BY 111111111 tf Pktt Colby: His loyalty to the CIA isn't at issue mation; the idea was to send a message that the Administration would not tolerate breaches of the legal contracts between gov- ernment workers and their employer. The Colby case was also designed to "get at the heart of the question of whether we deal only with the little fish," said a senior Administration official. Colby's alleged breach of security occurred in 1978 when galley proofs of his book reached a French publisher before the CIA could demand that its former chief delete certain passages. In those passages, Colby revealed that the CIA spy ship Glomar Explorer had failed in its attempt to recover nuclear missiles, steering and transmission devices and codes from a Russian submarine three miles be- ApoptchtedriaogrAdleakeiltiAttitri /28 : Consent: There was no question that Colby's book was entirely loyal to the in A __twat ftnewerrii ri a 1. rt Smith that later the AP ARTICLE APFE4 Aaproved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R0004 EJ!-.11 CHICAGO TRIBUNE 27 September 19E')1 In his, first interview since the midair confrontation Aug. 19 between Libyan aircraft and fighters of the American 6th Fleet', over-the Gulf of Sidra, Libyan leader ? Moammar: Kliaadafg? tells the West German news magazine, Der Spiegel, how he plans to: ? deal with "American imperialiam." He-cieserte that the CIA was ? behind a recent alleged assassination attempt against him, and calls President Reagan "an onsuicessful, third-rate actor." ?? ' '- Der Spiegel,-Colonek; Khaddafy. 'in- the West, especially in America, you .are.regarded as the most dangerous man in the. worla. Do you think that is justified? ? IC.haddafy?It depends- on what you mean. by dangerous.. , Q?What the 'Americans mean- by that is.- really dangerous. They are convinced that ?you, next to the Russians, are the worst evildoer of all and the one who is behind all the uproar, especially here in Africa: On top of that is the fact that you have threatened to: attack American-bases in the Meditere ranean, even at the risk of unleashing an international catastro- phe and a third world war,the-American-6th Fleet once again enters the Gulf of Sidra off the Libyan coast. . , A?I can tell you why America calls- me the most dangerous' man. It is part of the political and psychological preparations for the conquest of Libya. America intends to, attack Libya and bring it under its domination again. -- ? .: . . - ' Q?So you- don't 'believe- that in Reagan's scenario you are merely the bad cowboy with the black hat? You really seriously maintain that the Americans intend to attack anti''conquer Libya? A?That is my opinion. ? Q?This is a -very gave allegation. How do you visualize the conquest of Libya taking place? - ? " A?There are various methods, but they all have the same :aim of subduing Libya and incorporating it in the American ephere of influence again. To do this, a direct occupation of the country with troops,is not necessary. It is enough to overthrow the revolutionary regime and replace it, with another laro. American. :regime. That is one pzethori oi American. inalkerialisrat and that is what I meant when- I spoke of America's plans for conquest. Q?Is that what you were thinking of in the recent speech in which you spoke of an attempt to poison you? A?Of course, the ,Americans were behind that. To attain their ends they must get rid of me. This base plot, worked out by the American president with his CIA, to get me out of the way, was a further step in the direction of getting Libya into their hands. , . , ? ; Q?It is a fact that. thei American press early in August reported an operational plan of the CIA aimed at removing reel from office. This plea was said to have been proposed before the .Select Committee on Intelligence, after, it had been ap- ? proved by CIA chief (William) Casey and the crisis-manage- .rnent team of the White House. Members of the committee. are ? said to have sent an indignant protest to Ronald Reagan because it appeared to them that your assassination was planned. However, therAreweenideditreSpReleieesiftYROP/141 know about all this? -"a.."' z : ' - : : ? 'A--The signs' only became clear to me afterward. Shortly before. these plans ? were disclosed, many American visitors came to me, as. journalists, as businessmen, as politicians..I They all suddenly found they had-a great interest in speaking to me. Only later did. I discover that this was all organized by the CIA. with the purpose of discovering my daily-living habits, where?I sleep, where I eat, what I - . ? I also hahtips from Americaafrom friends of Arab origin who have become American citizens and who perhaps have worked more or less for the CIA or were?supposed to be recruited by them. These persons_ had noticed that the CIA was becoming more active inthe direction of Libya. They--let me kniiw that information had. been obtained about my eating habits. They warned me that I should have all food and drink tested, ..- ? I did not take these reports seriously at. the time because I. did not think that America would pursue such a base plot with the participation. of its president. . , - I The canipaign -against me. and against my policy became stronger. I was saic.i to be behind. every act-oi terrorisx . and: responsible for all evil deeds that.happened lathe world. When they sawn that they were not getting very far.witle their plan to poison me,- they suddenly decided to clese our People's Bureau ' (embassy), in Washington, ordered the personnel to leave- the country, -and broke with us completely. Following that, they n tried to slip one across me in the Sidra. ' ; Q?That sounds to our ears; of course, like a cops and robbers.' story. But, unfortunately, one has to admit that .the CIA plans , his getting rid 'of Fidel Castro, the full details of Which became known some years ago, also sounded like one. They planned to- get Castro by using poisoned bootlaces or-poisoned cigars... A?Those are facts-that cannot be denied. It is-also a fact that they tried to kill ,me-. - _ _ ? - The. CIA. has . Martin Luther King -on its consciencee it? has 1 [Chilean leader Salvador] Allende on its conscience, it has't [Congo's Patrice] Lurnurnba on its-conscience. Why should they: recoil from having me-on their conscience?-.?--- ? , --- Q?We cannot agree with that list, but a lot is possible in the CIA and that is something that worries even the American;" public. We-in Europe, for our part, are equally shocked tlaet you threatened to attack the American feh Fleet if it turns up in the -Gulf of Sidra again. Have you not lost all sense of proportion? i ? A?Nonsense. What I wanted to say was that some formations of this fleet carry, atom bombs. If the Americans attack us irt the Gulf of Sidra, ?Innmust. reckon that-they will also attack us with atonebonabs. ? a - ? , ? ne. . . In that ciee.I have the right to defend my people-and my country by attacking the NATO bases in southern Europe or the ! ships from which these atom bombers start before they can I reach us. If we have the-chance of destroying these bases. or I ships, we shpuld da ' Q?Are -you. really determined to attack American or NATO .defense base in Greece, Italy, or Spain? A?Understand me correctly. I did not say I wanted to attack ; Greece, Italy, or Spain.'! said if I discover that an American attack is being made front these bases and I have _the i 8 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 ,CONTEVETED. AkiiiiriWid ON PAGE_ e 2005/i11W8.(WRIP*1-00901R000400 0001-1 27 SEPTEMBER 1981 C.I.A. director William' Y. Casey, on crutches because of a leg Injury.: ? A Bid to 'insure Secret Agents Stay That Way ... Though many would consider the disclosure of a secret agent's identity :,a crime, efforts to make it one have ,yeE. to succeed. -But last Week the I -,,-, Houseapproved a bill that would send . Those convicted , pf betraying an 1, . operative to prison for up to Id years. ! and passage of a similar measure in. - ' : the S enate is considered likely.. '..,... , Proponents had been pushing for.: such a measure for.,?more than five -: years, after the Central Intelligence- Agency station chief in Athens, Rich- . I 1. ard Welch, was a ,bs.....,..64inated follow-. i ing publication of his name, and the i - ; subsequent disclosure of ether agents -! ...by a ,notorious former one,: _ Philip - Agee.. ; .. .". -.L..; 4...:-....,..-,',,,;.:.:;',..; :,t ? -. ?- :In- moving from the House Intelli- gence Committee to the floor, how- - ' ever, the bill was expanded to cover not just those with .an -"intent" to harm the agency through such activi- ties but those who Merely "had rea- . . son to believe" they would, a category' i thought to include journalists'. Wary ' ! `,. of constitutional difficulties, Repre- sentative Edward P. Howland, the _ ! ' committee chairman, who originally ! had sought such a law?joined 55 other :Democrats in opposing it. - . -- Testifying.before a Senate suhcorn-- mittee the next day, William J. i :. Casey, Director of Central: Intelli- gence, asked Congress to go further, - * and exempt the agency from the ' Freedom of Information Act. "There i .,?, are inherent Contradictions in "apply- ,: ing a statute designed to secure open- . ness in government to agencies whose -work is necessarily secret,". Mr,..;.; k- Ca.seysaid.... ...--:,, _- ,.--z;;:,',:-....7, .- : ..,.4,--..,. ,?.....A. .? .-.. : . , .. , . How open? How secret? The Justice: ' Department was reported readying a . 3 Suit last- week against an ex-C.I..1L chief,.William E.. Colby, who failed to ' ..- clear a European edition Of his 1978 book about the agency, ."Honorable? Men," with the Government. Though no criminal charges are ant1cipated,fl .?-?:. Mr. Colby might be forced to-share , some of his royalties with his, former employera:,:*i..-e'r.,...: .. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 ARTICLEAO ON PAGE (PkViEbr Releasit R.evAIRG:TwTlif,R91 -00901R 26 September 1981 Even though Joanne King Her- ring was not at the opening of The Second Annual Afghan Fair last night -- she was with her ailing hus- band ? it was very much her eve- ning. About 200 people gathered at the Youth for Understanding Grounds on Newark Street; NW, for the premiere of Herring's. film, "Courage Is Our Weapon,",a. docu- mentary about the AfghatOefugees in Pakistan co-produced with Charles Fawcett. So powerful were the scenes-of the Afghair-suffering, many guests wept softly throughout the screening. ? . It was the sensitive iide :of the flamboyant -Joanne Herring:- loved but Controversial in the social set both here in Washington' -and in Houston, where she lives with her husband,_ Bob,.., chairman of-- the board of the Houston Natural Gas Co. "This is the first filth to capture, the true moocl the, Afghans," said Ejaz Azim, the amba.ssador of Pakistan, who has been in theUnit- ed States eight weeks. ? . Before the film, the International Rescue Committee and the Afghan- istan Relief Committee -hosted a' benefit dinner for the -refugees, as well as a preview of this Weekend's fair. Guests included CIA Director William Casey; Rep. Do-inlitter. (R- Pa.); former ambassador to Saudi Arabia Robert Neumann; former assistant secretary of state Harold Saunders; journalist and author Ar-: ,naud de Borchgrave; and American Federation of Teachers head Albert 0400140001-1 From left, Arnaud de Borchgrave, Rep. Don Ritter, William Casey & ' 't,Charles Fawcett; by Lucian Perkins !-4 The-WashingtoniPost I .1 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 STAT ARTICLE AERPpEprAFove2Md For Release 21?951-112131? -RDP91-00901R000 ON PAGE I-I -? September 1981 Exempt all spy agencies from FOI, Casey asks Washington (AP)?CIA Director Wil- liam J. Casey asked Congress yesterday to exempt all U.S. intelligence agencies from the federal Freedom of Information Act. Mr. Casey told a Senate Judiciary sub- committee that the FOI law has seriously jeopardized U.S. relations with other na- tions and put the intelligence agency's net- work of covert agents "in jeopardy." The law?which permits scholars, jour- nalists and citizens to obtain information about government operations--"has never been an effective method for oversight of the intelligence community," Mr. Casey testified. - But Morton H. Halperin, a former offi- cial of the National Security Council, told the subcommittee that the CIA "is a better institution and . . . is more responsive to the dictates of the Constitution" because of the law. Mr. Halperin, who testified on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the information act has brought public dis- closure of valuable information about the CIA, including new revelations about the Bay of Pigs operations in the 1960s, use of mind-drug experiments and illegal sur- veillance of Americans. Mr. Halperin now is director of the' Center for National Security Studies, which publishes' reports on intelligence abuses. Senator Alfonse M. D'Amato (Ft, N.Y.) has introduced legislation to partially ex- empt the CIA and other intelligence agen- cies from FOI coverage. But Mr. Casey, arguing that intelli- gence organizations should be free of all requirements of the act, said, "it has seri- ously impaired the operation of the intelli- gence apparatus with no significant public benefit." Since 1974, when Congress enacted provisions requiring CIA compliance with the law, the agency has handled 1,212 FOI requests at a cost of $3 million, an effort that drew highly trained and experienced intelligence officers away from other- work of greater importance, Mr. Casey, said. ' . The 1974 provisions all-ow those seek-- ing information ta ask federal judges to reverse an agency refusal to meet a re- quest. Mr. Casey conceded that only once in 198 cases 'has' a ' judge overruled the CIA, and that case is on appeal. But the CIA occasionally has let infor- mation that it should have kept secret "slip out accidentally," Mr. Casey said. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 ART I CIL ?; APPEARED ON FAG129Ty B pf3E Release 20WV ptemper. 14)0901R 0400140001-1 CIA Chief Asks Exemption From Disclosure Law United Press Inte rnati anal CIA Director William Casey said yesterday all U.S. intelligence agen- cies should be exempted from Free- dom of Information Act requests, to end a growing fear that secrets are not safe in this country. Processing requests under the law for secret records is an enormous- burden and some classified informa- tion has been released inadvertently, Casey said. But the greatest harm is an ero- sion of trust that has reduced coop- eration, of allies and dried up intel-h ligence sources, he told the Senate judiciary subcommittee on the Con- stitution Because of uncertainties created by the information act's coverage, 15 friendly' nations have notified the- CIA that they no longer will share their? intelligence with the United States, Casey said. He said the National Security Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency and the CIA should be ex- empted from having to receive and ? process requests for "intelligence records" and deciding if information should be released under the act. Casey said that a number of bills being considered by the House and Senate would improve the situation, but that intelligence-gathering can- not be freed entirely, of the stigma the act causes unless agencies are' given a blanket exemption. He insisted that congressional oversight is all the public needs to guard against official abuses. Classified material has been re- ? leased inadvertently, causing diplo- matic embarrassment and risking lives, because deciding what must be disclosed under the FOIA is not fool- proof, Casey said. A single FOIA request by former CIA agent Philip Agee cost $325,000 in manpower and $70,000 -worth of' computer time, Casey said. The searches and reviewi are es- pecially costly to the CIA because they cannot be done by clerks but only by high-level officials,,who have access to the information o Approved For Releftsifhafiifialaa 901R000400140001-1 Approved For Release ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000 NEW YORK TIMES 25 SEFTEMBEK 1981 lPl 400140001-1 Casey Urges Intelligence Agencies Be Exempt From information Act By DAVID SIIRIBMAN Special to TheNew York Tfraes WASHINGTON, Sept. 24 ?William J. deputy director of the National Security Casey, the Director of Central Inte111-! Agency, said that several law clerks and gence, recommehded today that intelli-1 other court personnel had handled top- gence agencies be granted "total exclu ' secret documents while the courts de- sion" from the provisions of the Free- cided whether an intelligence agency was justified in refusing to provide clas- sifted documents. The subcommittee is considering legislation introduced by Senator Al- fonse M. D'Amato, Republican of New York, that would exempt documents de- tailing the internal management of the intelligence agencies from the act and tighten , exemptions covering covert operations. Mr. Casey said foreixfagents and in- telligence sources regarded the Free- dom of Information Act as "a threat to our country's ability to maintain the confidentiality of its intelligence sources," and added that the possibility of public disclosure had prompted 15 for- eign agents to refuse to continue to coop- erate with American intelligence offi- cials or to restrict their flow of informa- tion in recent years. He also said American intelligence of- ficials spent 5 percent of their time re- viewing information requests, locating records and determining what informa- tion could be released without jeopardiz- ing the security of intelligence opera- tions and personnel. "We spend more time on responding to Freedom of Information Act requests than we are able to spend on some intel- ligence problems of the highest order," Mr. Casey said, adding that compliance with the act cost the agency about $3 million a year. Requests from Philip Agee, a former C.I.A. agent who has publicized many of the agency's activities, cost $325,000 in personnel time and $70,000 in computer time, Mr. Casey said. dom of Information Act. Mr. Casey said that national security secrets had been released in the course of complying with the act, which per- mits the public to request documents de- tailing Government activities. He urged that all documents created or main- tained by the Central Intelligence Agen- cy, the National Security Agency and the Defense Intelligence Agency be ex- empted from the act. Mr. Casey's remarks were made in testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee's Constitution Subcommit- tee, which is considering adjustments in the act, and came a day after the House approved legislation making disclosure of the identity of American intelligence agents a Federal crime. "There are inherent contradictions in applying a statute designed to assure epenness in Government to agencies whose work is necessarily secret," the director testified. "This application has caused intelligence functions to be seri- ously impaired without significant pub- lic benefit." Data Unintentionally Released Mr. Casey said the C.I.A. had uninten- tiona Hy released "sensitive intelligence information" while complying with the act. Information that the agency pro- vided to other Federal agencies has also been released in response to requests under the Freedom of Information Act, Mr. Casey said, and has caused "serious compromises of classified informa- tion. He refused to disclose details in In later testimony, Ann Caracristi, Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-0090 ARTICLE APPEARED WALL STREP JOU11-1, 25 September 1981 ON PAGE I , 1 R000400140001-1 hat's News-- U.S. Intelligence agenclei should be ex- empted- from compliance with the Freedom of Information Act, CIA Director William Casey told a Senate panel. The 1974 law al- lows journalists and others to get access. to government data, but the CIA fears that sec- rets aren't safe anymore. He said 15 nations no longer share intelligence with the U.S. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R00040 140001-1 ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE C.( THE WASHINGTON POST 24 September 1981 ? By Maria kissed cheeks and petted The ta.- was of budgets. and box-,.i ,:"each other's mink' s. About 25 guests,, inglat last, night's. benefit.dinner. foe ' including Sen. Robert Dole (R.; tha:Claarles ECILIOEI Niercorial-YoUth-..-:f Kan.), William Casey, director of the Fund at- the= Sheratoo.,Weshingto' CIA, political analyst P:--CM--f-,i- l'V1Ore. tlaart,700.peopla'aitanded .thee-.4. White and the Ray. Richard Halver- $2b0-a-plate affair,: honaringe son, attended a smaller pre-dinner Barri Gold (R-Ariz.);-' involved party called "the-special:VIP, recap- in l the pregrank- sinos it.. weeestabe - ;., fished in, 1969-- Several,. of the: fund's scholar; :Edison,' the eon. of-Ilventor.Tho';'+'" stood outside the door, peering in at mas,, created the fund to sponsor ed---;ctthe select group of guesta,"Sorneday ncntional."Prnigraple"-for well be Very Important People," one atifli as a six-week summer institute of them said with a laugh ? in. comparative- politic, at George-.::-', ., They are well on way, Dia I toiva University'. "rile future of our of the fund's graduates now work in- coi.intry is determined by the positions of authority in .. variois catian at am% Ycuth''' 5aid Mikei Cas' i brandae4 a the government. And executve director. of :the- pro--? . ; boethe impact of the $1,700 proprogram?gouif, mho attended the institute in ? . . . . beyond intellectual enrichment 1973 as a Manhattanvillee Collegoes? stu , "It changed my whole life, says Cas- dent. ? - ; Many of the guests, however,.were- ulifamiliar with the. piogranr. "Oh, I Jeffrey Simmons, a participant ? thought this was all for Barry Gold- last year from Cochise College in Ar- - izona, cukid, "I learned so much, but Ar- water's birthday or somethirtg,? said one. wOman. - ? , it was also a lot of fun being exposed Another woman asked a- barten- to these people in government.* de'r,st "Who's Charlie Edison?' He ? Meanwhile,- in the VIP- room, a shiviged and poured.,. her another group gathered around Goldwater, drink, ? ? who wanted to talk about education, : ;The furs came. out of the cleeet - not budgets. "Budgets, budgets," he, ;for the evening. At the smoke-filled said, shaking his head. 'It's gotten so ? recep6ore --before- thez`. dinner; ?. the that I dream about them."... ? Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-0090 24 September 1981 STAT 1R000400140001-1 - 2 7, ? 7 ?-? : 7 - . LACI=Y RTD.JODFY ':INRDRTE?LEED V ?SECETS THE HRD VE Y RLREEITRL RE ? cbmPiYINci_ WITH Rizij.il-STE: UNDER THE FRET:DCM jr iNFriPL7=T . ? ?1 T URr;PD LESS TC. EXEMPT THE CIA E.NTI'RELY. FROM .THE WHICH R.--RUIRi7S.?GOVPRNMPt4..T. RGENCIES EITHER TO DIVULGE REf2UESTELI ?T,t4FORM-P,TION OR .PX.PIRIN WHY IT CPNN.DT tEGELLY SE REtEASED. ?THP?riiRPrToR TO!D SPN.FiTi7 JUDICIRRY SUSDMMITTE THAT5 r.!OU.GH OFFIrIFoc.?THORQUc3HLY, .SCRUTINIZE RP.J.!HPSTS !..2-.PRRR:-HPS.R.Ps.,.:iiT.,...tp IN TH;T. ;IF S;CRi.7.71S F. ......F EN-DFi:NQ'ERED ,LIVES.": ? ERi7-6.:Fi..ELOWO-W-N IN CODPER710N WIJH' FiGT=Nr7:7-F- FiSRO.ED sERiou's IIPLOMF,TIC t1 p. r LH1LIN Fi'?. '77i.;SL'.;C?Hc'FiRTNG.: -TRin?ThFiT5 Ac-.P.RwSULT FORPIGN,INTELLIGENCE AGENCIES HPVP.f:ITHPR Tr;PPPrs-r-rifiPPRFITTNi'i W:TH ....,HM-.RuIrTFN . T .., RPcT-R.I-rT7n THEIR I .P1 I JDINOFPInNS NOAREnINRPTIn. 2.1 *N!.,LV;7NN T RA RSH F;DM N, CO ? Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 aApproved For Release 2005/ 8 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 monk TETAL SECRET RGPNTS AND INTELLIGENCE SOURCES RPROAn FFRR?THF ArT 1PRD TO THPTR .1n;:NTTFTrETInN.ANn,THPRPFORP IfOORPRRT.P.FET EFFORP THP SPCRMP:SUEjECT TO IT IN ;'::DENTIPICRTION AS R L?IM RGPN7 CRN RUIN R CRREPRI; ENORNGER R PRM.DY!, OR EVEN F. F. TO IMPRISONiqPNT!. TORTURPli OR OPATH35 PR7n. "i4P MUPTE PP TO. PRnVInP HMRN POURrPS i.4ITH- ? RROfUTP RPPNRRNrP rONFTnPNTTRITTY).55 iHP..n7Rpf-ToR ponpn cKTIAr--.n I:TELLiE4CE ANA!YCTC UCP NPRR1Y .I- PRrPNT TP R4PNrY2P 14 n;;F ORP TwRT'nPOFVP OF H MR-HR N I VTFF T.O TFR.RnRIPM,OR?TO- i41:;prnTir=. -- TN RPVIFWTN Rr:fs!iii=-.7.T,t-Fnp: ? INFORMRTION. FnR THF ?SPNRTP Tn PA";i:P 1P1;IPIRTT-nN PTMTi-ARTTn THAT APRRnVpn YPPTPRORY Pcf .THP RPFRPFPNTATTVPP. MAKTNi; IT R... 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Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400140001-1 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-0090 ZVTC:GvY :ITFR T-2iLIGE,4CE AgE4CIE SE 3OHiiF"JA4FORM.ATION STAT 1R000400140001-1 24 September 1981 O FR-01 FRfFEOM TEY UR'GEO Tr:GAY THAT H ,RTEO FROM CO1F41.AW-F..MITH TE OWS JOURNALISTS !'4--ESERRCES.5.:7 OTHFR rITIZ;*N TO 5PECIFIC INFORMATI.ON ASOUT .1,1:.VERNMi:NT R4:TrzvITI P.,"',"E@L(IENTLY 5I)CH REaES-TS ;2?"N NATDONAL SECURITY GROT-4,2S. THE. e.,11.7pRE SENATE ICIARY EUSCOMNITTE ON FOLtr,14E0 Hbusg. APPROVAL ONEY?.OF 'RELATED L5GE:F OX ocu 0F:FiA?TICJFA .rPr10 Yii:Ec OF ' INTFLZGENCE SAIO THE 2.7.Lt IS "A'SFRI.OUS BLOW TO. CLVT.i. !ISERTIEF 45 A rES:T,"ONY 8;7.10N:.7 THA.T SECRTS =1!'":CE -I FiNYONE N.H0.91.1.7- FOR :7.1) GHANGE'S Lt4HTNE? FO6N t.07-5 7'1 REFUF... rfNFraR1?17,27J2N-- T F,U.SL SENEFI,, FOREXGN HFWE 7'OLCt ?THEY 7W7 ITE 3TP'TES -::TE OF FEAR THAT EENSITIVE SECRETE.-MIGHT EE MAOE PI?ELiC.THROUTH tP14 HE SAID. AL-OITiON! HE -,;a...fol ??"OUR ? 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