DEFENSE PICTURE: A ROLE FOR RIVERS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP70B00338R000300080034-0
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RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 19, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 9, 2006
Sequence Number: 
34
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 7, 1966
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP70B00338R000300080034-0.pdf161.82 KB
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Approved For Release 2006/01/30 Defense Picture: A Role for Rivers By Marquis Childs OF ALL the characters in the cast that will determine whether the United States is to spend $30 billion to $40 bil- lion on an anti-ballistic missile system, none is more flamboyant - or unpre- dictable than Rep. L. Mendel Rivers. The South Carolinian with the dramatic mane of silver hair and a manner to go with it is chairman of the House Armed Services Committee. He might have come out of one of William Faulkner's n o v e l s of the Snopeses, the poor boy rising to power and position in the remnants of the aristocratic South. Seniority gave him his chairmanship. and he exercises his power with the imperial touch. As for Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNa- mara, when he comes to Capitol Hill to testify the chairman looks on him frowningly as an emissary from a hostile power. Rivers is planning the kind of mission to Puerto Rico that he led last January. He orders an Air Force plane-using Air Force planes to commute to Char- leston and wherever the whim directs him he considers his prerogative - that will. take a number of committee mem- bers to Ramey Air Force base near San Juan. There in early January they will plot the strategy to give McNamara his comeuppance. cv.0 THE REPUBLICANS with their vic- tory of 47 seats in the House will carry far more weight in the committee than they did in the 89th Congress. If they decide to make the "anti-ballistic missile gap" a political issue it would be sur- prising not to find Chairman Rivers giving them tacit and perhaps open sup- port. He led the committee last year in adding nearly $1 billion to the defense appropriation that McNamara insisted the Defense Department did not need or want. Committee members, most of them on .the conservative side, are singularly susceptible to the pressures of big con- tractors who are part of what President Eisenhower called in his farewell ad- dress the military-industrial complex. In his zeal to keep the shipyards of- his native state in operation Rivers has had a running battle with McNamara for ap- proval of two nuclear-powered frigates. The frigates are still an angry gleam in Rivers' eye. Understandably in view of the enor- mous complexity of the decision on the anti-ballistic missile, members of the committee with the best will in the world are likely to be'swayed by emo- tions. The whole matter is shrouded in secrecy. The National Intelligence Esti- mate, revealing what the Soviets have done to place anti-ballistic missiles, is a top-secret document for the eyes of a half-dozen policymakers. The story, so far as it is known, is as follows. About five and a half years ago the Russians began to build the sites for anti-ballistic missiles around their principal cities. After somewhat more than a year the operation was suspended. The reason for the suspension is con- jecture - the possibility that they were devising more sophisticated devices for destroying incoming missiles at a much greater height and at a distance of sev- eral hundred miles from the target, Then a year ago they began to build a more extensive system. McNamara will say only that despite rumors that the Soviet system is poten- tially more effective than any official is ready to acknowledge he considers the National Intelligence Estimate valid. On this basis he reaffirms his 1964 state- ment that there is no break in the stale. mate foreseeable into the '70s. If either of the two scorpions should try a first- strike knockout the result would be death for both. cf.0 ---- rr HAS been said on apparently good authority that the U>}1tg_.4tates had anti-ballistic missile. If_ you don't build it, we won't. But in the opinion of the most-season- ed Kremlinologists this has not pre- vailed against a deep and growing under- current of fear. Marshall D. Shulman of llarvard's Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and an associate of the Russian Research Center there, wrote recently in The Washington Post after a stay in the Soviet Union that almost everyone he talked to believed the John- son Administration was on a course of conquest. They simply did not credit the President with sincerity in his expressed desire to improve relations with the Communist world. McNamara has always been confident that the United States with its fabulous productive system could afford what- ever the nation's defense needs might be. He cannot escape seeing now, how- ever, that the cost of the Vietnam War is cutting deeply into p r o g r a in s for domestic reform. And if on top of this i, billion or so a year is added for a Nike X system of questionable value the cuts will be even deeper. CJ 19G6, United Feature Syndicate, Inc. By George C. Wilson Waihtnaton Poet Staff Writer The United States last year underestimated the future pro- duction of Soviet intercontin- ental ballistic missiles, De- fense Secretary Robert S. Mc- Namara said yesterday in Aus- tin, Tex., after meeting with President Johnson. But McNamara stressed that the U.S, offensive missile force was built big enough to cover such underestimation and would continue to have a 8 or 4 to 1 edge over the So- viet force. The Defense Secretary said the 1.965 national Intelligence estimate of future Soviet mis- sile strength was proving to be accurate for 1966, still looked good for mid-1867 but not for mid-1908. "Evidence n o w suggests that the Soviets In mid-1968 will have more ICBMs than were predicted for that time period by Intelligence esti- ntates in 1065," McNamara said. "But we had more than an- ticipated this development in our planning," he added. "This new Intelligence estimate, therefore, has no basic impact on our offensive strategic force requirements." McNamara then made these three points, declaring "it is vital" 'that they "are clearly understood by the American public: ? "Even if the new Intelli- pence estimated for mid-1968 proves accurate, the United Stales, without taking any ac- t 6 ns beyond those already plAUned, will continue to have qualitative superiority over I the Soviet Union in ICBMs' at that time. as many ICBMs today as the latest national intelligence estimate gives the Soviet, Union several years hence. ? "Our strategic offensive continue to have in the future strength to inflict unaccept: sor or any combination of ag gressors." The United States has a force of about 1000 ICBMs hacked up by a fleet of 41 carrying 16 nuclear4t i p p e d are ready to fire. The plan is to have a total ICBM force Titan 2s. IICBMs now. The worrisome ligence officials, is that the Sovict_s are increasing their ICBM production rate. Quan- tity production has always 1 well. surances that the U.S. of- fensive missile force will stay well ahead of Russia's, his j latest disclosure about Russian; missile progress cannot help but escalate the strategic bal- eWinlT oil1 51 Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000300080034-0