CONSTRUCTION OF ANTIBALLISTIC MISSILE SYSTEM

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CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100103-0
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K
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4
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December 19, 2016
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January 12, 2006
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103
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September 10, 1967
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Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00 000300100103-0 September 19, 1967 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- SE the Foreign Office to see Mr. Peter Hayman, Assistant Under-Secretary of State. EMBASSY VISLT Mr. Hayman conveyed to Mr. Vasev "the British Government's strong protest against the lawless and outrageous conduct of cer- tain members of the staff of the Soviet Em- bassy in kidnapping Dr. Kachenko on the Bayswater Raad and in obstructing the Brit- ish autharitiea at London Airport when they were engaged in their legitimate duty". -The consequences of this behaviour by Soviet officials were being considered. Last night Dr. Kachenko's wife went to the Russian Embassy. At 11:30 on Saturday mgrning Dr. Ka- chenko was seen by several members of the public. apparently being forced against his will into a car owned by the Russian Em- bassy. He called for help. At the airport he said he wished to speak privately to the British authorities, and when they escorted him from the aircraft Soviet officials tried to stop him physically. He told the British authorities that he did not wish to go to Moscow. He said he had been given an injection against his will at the Soviet Embassy. A medical examination by a British doctor later supported this. Mr. Vasev's meeting at the Foreign Office lasted more than an hour. Aftervvarda he said: "I have received the British version of the incident. But I protested and asked tor' an immediate explanation: ' POLICE CRITICIZED Police action in boarding the aircraft, forcefullq removing Dr. Kachenko, and isolat- ing him from his wile and from the people who could help him and speak the same language was "a travesty of anything which. any country should offer in the way of. hospitality". As translated by a Tasa News Agency car- respandent, a Russian Embassy statement last night said that Dr, Kachenko travelled from Cambr~dge with his wife during Friday night and went straight to the Embassy at 6 a.m. Told to come back later, he returned with her at 9 a.m. The statement said:- He spoke to Embassy officials saying that he .was very tired and was thinking of cutting short his time at Cambridge. His wife hacl Dome to save him at Cambridge on her annual leave, and he thought about going back to Moscow with her before her leave expired. He said his programme at Birmingham ULliveraity was finished and he saw no special reasons to continue staying here. He was told the Embassy would get in touch with the Academy of Sciences in Moscow and would let him know their decision. But during the conversation at the Em- bassy he behaved rather strangely. Far ex- ample, he suddenly asked someone to confirm that the woman was his wife. Everyone was astonished, and started asking his wife what it was all about. She said that lately her husband had been in some strange nervous condition. She did not know the reasons for this condition. The only, thing she knew was that he was taking some medicine far his nerves. WLFE IN CHASE Eventually, he agreed to come inside the Embassy, where he was seen by the Embassy doctor and some people who knew him per- sonally. Asked how he was feeling, he said that he was feeling very badly, but then he said he was feeling perfectly well. It was decided he and his wife should leave London on an aircraft which was leaving that day-in about an hour. He agreed, but then said he had some difficulties about leaving S 13263 Mr. Hayman also protested against the obstructive tactics of the Russians at Heath- row airport after Dr. Tkachenko had been escorted aboard the plane. WARNING TO VASEV-"CONSEQUENCES" CONSIDERED Mr. Vasev, who had. been summoned to the Foreign Office for the hour-long meeting', was told "that the consequences of this be- havfaur by Russian officials are being con- ---- -? -- - ley pa~Sae0. LurV USu uu ~i+c ivuaw.?w.... ----- ----- the plane was getting ready to leave the by four men into aI~ Embassy car, while he ort when the pilot received an order from shouted for the poi He was traced to _ _ v,.,.+..,.,.... ,s.o..o s.o .,.oc aann hninv eantirted nical reasons. -v W - - ~^ aboard a Moscow-bound?~lane. and one person, in civilian dress, who knew Kac enko; pointed him out. A policy, officer then. demanded that Kachenko leave the plana~ in order to speak with representatives the pilaf Then turned it r. Kachenko was pulled off the air- t ask for it. She refused and re- m the airport to the Embassy. ally Telegraph, Sept. 18, 1987] SOVIET OFFIS~IALa FACE EXPULSION-BRITAIN CONDEMNS!!? IDNAP PLOT-DECISION TODAY ON RUSSIAiS'CIENTIST SBy Waite Farr and David Loshak) Britain is c nsidering expelling Russian Embassy officio who tried to kidnap a young Russian ~hysiciat on Saturday. This waa made clear 1st night alter the Fbrefgn Office sharply pro~ested to the Soviet Charga? d'Affaires, Mr. Vlaglilleu Vasev, against the The Soviet Em ' say countered with a statement attackingBritain for taking the physicist, Dr. Vladi ~ it Tkachenko, from' a -1Moscow-bound airliner. The Embassy put 'the blame for "the a~onsequences of these anti-humanitarian actions" on the British authorities. Mr. Vasev flew last nigght to Prestwick Air- port where today ha vd~ll see his Foreign Minister, Mr. Gromyko, ~vho is en route to England where he is and vision. said last night: henko has been All through the day Tka recovering from the drugs Soviet Embassy officials. He fined by doctors and by an atrist. Their reports are being ur, :after telling the man at the door that it vdks_ should be done. not the Soviet Embassy at all. '~?...,,~ aoINT nECxsroN after him and caught up with him near Lancaster Gate. They offered to take him back to the Embassy and got into a car. He hesitated, and then agreed to get into the car, The statement added:- When they got back he kept saying it was not the Soviet Embassy and wanted some- one to confirm that it was. The Chargd d' Affaires, Mr. Vasev came out.... Kachenko asked him to confirm that he was the Chargd d'Affaires and asked him to produce some document. "the Home Secretary in consultation with the Foreign Secretary." Earlier at the Foreign Office, Mr. Peter Hayman, Assistant Under-Secretary, pro- tested strongly at the "lawless and outra- geous" conduct of Soviet Embassy Staff in- volved in the kidnapping attempt. Mr. Vasev was told that Britain could not allow the stair of a foreign Embassy to take the law into their own hands. Dr. Tkachenko, it was pointed out, was entitled to the full protection of the police. which was not allowed tof leave until Dr. Tkachenko had been taken"off. Atug-af-war between British and Russian officials devel- oped on the steps to the plane. Dr. Tkachenko confirmed to the British authorities that he did not wish to go to Moscow in the plane. He said that "after being kidnapped in the Bayswater Road he had been taken to the Soviet Embassy and was there given an injection against his will. "His general manner confirmed that he was under the influence of some drug. Sub- , sequent medical examination by a British doctor showed that an injection had indeed been given and the physical evidence "in- dicated the use of a drug." It was emphasized in Whitehall that al- though expulsions are being considered it is not intended that the incident should be allowed to cast a shadow over Angles-Soviet relations as a whole. Mr. Brown, the. Foreign Secretary, is ex- pected to meet Mr. Gromyko, the Soviet For- eign Minister, at the United Nations this week. As a result ai information about the kid- napping in the Bayswater Raad, the Chief Immigration gfficer at Heathrow, accom- panied by police officers, boarded the Soviet Aeroflot glans on which Dr. Tkachenko was about to leave far Moscow on Saturday. Dr. Tkachenko said when they entered the plane that he wished to speak to the British authorities privately. The Soviet Consul, who had joined the aircraft at the same time as the British authorities, at- tempted to prevent a conversation and said that the British authorities had no right to respond to Dr. Tkachenko's request. The Gonsul said Dr. Tkachenko was not to be allowed to leave the plane. When alter prolonged attempts to resolve the matter by discussion had failed, and Dr. Tkachenko was being escorted from the aircraft, Soviet officials tried to obstruct this physically. After leaving the plane, in the presence of the Soviet Consul and Mrs. Tkachenko, Dr. Tkachenko repeated his request to see the British authorities alone. After leaving the Foreign Office, Mr. Vasev said Dr. Tkachenko was a very _111 man. "He was not drugged. I must most em- phatically deny this, "The kind of illness he had was mental, which needs isolation and requires him to be with people most close to him, his wife and parents. Certainly treatment in these cases Ls better in Russia than in a foreign country." WIFE LEFT PLANE-WHEREABOUTS UNKNOWN Mr, Vasev added that Dr, Tkachenko was to have been taken to Russia by his wife. Mrs. Tkachenko left the aircraft on Saturday with her husband but her whereabouts are not now known. She is regarded as a free agent by British authorities. Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100103-0 Approved For Rele~~~~'4//~~ACI~~8~00~~3001001ember 19, 196'1' c ,I 2~~n Dr. Tkachenko would probably have re- turned to Britain. "The police action in boarding the plane, forcefully removing him, isolating him from his wife and from the people who could help him and speak the same language, under his very medical condition, is, of course, a travesty of anything which any country should offer in ways oP hospitality." BIRMINGHAM STUDIES-DUE HOME NEXT MONTH Dr. Vladimir Tkachenko, who is about 25, had been at Birmingham University since January, doing post-graduate work irI low- tempertaure physics, using helium gas. He was not due to return to Russia until next month. He came to Brita_ in under a science at.udent exchange scheme; administered by Royal So- ciety, which was set up by the current Anglo- Russian cultural agreement. He was one of Pour scientific research workers exchanged in the last academic year. He was regarded as a highly able student but was not engaged on any secret work. Prof. P. B. Moon, head of Birmingham Uni- versity's Department of Physics, said yester- day that he was "a very good physicist indeed, good enough for the Russians to waxit him back". He is understood to have worked in close and friendly cooperation with British scien- tists on the highly-specialized problems of low-temperature physics. Dr. Tkachenko was due in Caxnbridge in the next few days to work in the Cavendish laboratories. He should have been staying in the Kapitza Hostel, which is leased to Churchill College by the Soviet Academy of Sciences. Last night Lady Cockcroft, wife of the Mas- ter of Churchill College, Sir John Co' th.e deployment With this clear warning, with the best of the Soviet ABM system means that military judgment of the opinion that the we will have to do far more than has Soviet Union is not only closing the of- been planned to protect the American fensive missile race, but also ahead of us people against a surprise attack. in deploying the ABM, I believe that the In this regard I take issue with one of Secretary of Defense -and the Johnson the basic principles of t11e announced administration are the victims of fal- U.S. ABM deployment. It is, according lacious reasoning. As early as April 1963, to Secretary McNamara, a "thin" mis- I warned the Senate that Russia had an rile defense system- that is "Chinese- operational ABM system, and I urged im- oriented," and not the more extensive mediate construction of an ABM system Soviet-oriented system that has been for our defense. The problem has not Approved For Release- 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100103-0 September Y9, Y96T roved CONc~RE~~IONAL1CRDP~~~38R000300100103-0 S 13265 gone away. It cannot be rationalized out 2. In mid-November and again in early May conference. Nevertheless, Bagga anal oY existence. December, Mr. Boggs was joined by Mr, Ash- Ashmore said they could send any messages Whfle I am pleased to see a change of more in calls at the Department. In these for Hanoi through the regular mail to a heart in the administration's Stand Ori calls, the progress of the conference plane North Vietnamese representative in Phnom was reviewed, and the two visitors indicated Penh, who in turn would relay it to a North this Vital issue of missile defense, the that they had a tentative invitation to go to Vietnamese official who .had been the -prin- proposed system is not enough. I will con- Hanoi, with Mr. Luis Quintanilla of Mexico. cipal contact of Messrs. Boggs and Ashmore tinue my fight to make the administra- Messrs. Boggs and Ashmore also suggested in Hanoi. Accordingly., the letter now pub- tion take its hEad out of the sand and -that, if they were able to visit Hanoi, they lashed by Mr. Ashmore was worked out with give the country the ABM defense that it might be able to conduct useful explorations the representatives of the Department, and deserves. of North Vietnamese views towards peace. authorized to be sent on February b. We were Mr. George Ball having then left the Depart- subsequently informed by Mr, Ashmore that ment, the primary responsibility for these this letter reached Phnom Penh on Febru- VISIT TO VIETNAM BY HARRY conversations passed to his successor, Drlr. ary 15. ASHMORE AND WILLIAM BAGGS Katzenbach, who kept the President and the 7. No useful purpose could be served by Secretary of State informed as a matter of giving further details on what took place in Mr. LAUSCHE. Mr. President, I think course. tho Moscow channel. We can say, however, as h l it is most unfortunate that a public dis- pute has arisen, growing out of the visit made by Mr. Harry Ashmore and Mr. Williams Boggs to Hanoi. In my opinion, the Department of State, true to its statements, attempted to explore every means of bringing the South Vietnam dispute to the negotiating table. It went out of its way in collaborating with Mr. Ashmore and Mr. Boggs in the hope that they would be able to produce advance toward bringing an end to the South Vietnam war, It should, however, be re- membered that while the State Depart- ment and the present administration at- tempted to utilize the seryices_ of these two men, it would have been completely wrong to abdicate to them the per- formance of the principal responsibility, which lay with the President and the _ Secretary of State. These two men expected, obviously, by what has recently been said, that the President should have gone into the background and allowed them to be the negotiators of peace, which all our citi- zens and public officials are praying for. They arrogated to themselves a power and an efficiency which are completely unjustified. They derogated, by the state- ment which was recently made, the duty and the responsibility of the President. If any mistake was made by the ad- ministration, it was in giving to these two men a credit completely beyond that to which they were entitled. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the statement issued by the Department of State be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the state- ment was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, aS fOl1pWS: STATEMENT SY THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE, SEPTEMBER 13, 1967 We have had a number oP inquiries con- " cerning news stories published today, based on an article by Mr. Harry Ashmore in a pub- lication of the Center for the Study of Demo- cratic Institutions (CSDI). The facts concerning the' Department's contacts with Messrs. Ashmore and Boggs are as follows: 1. During the summer of 1966, Mr. William Bagga told the Department that CDSI was planning a major conference in May of 1967 in Geneva, to follow up' on the first P?cem In Tera?is meeting held in New York in Feb- ruary of 1965. Mr. Boggs disclosed to ,us ef- forts that the Center was making to invite North Viet-Nam to attend, and the Depart- ment responded sympathetically to the idea of the Conference and to these efforts. These initial contacts were with Mr. George Ball and Mr. William Bundy. The President and Secretary Rusk were informed, and Mr. Ball was directed to handle contacts with Mr. Boggs on behalf oP the United States Gov- ernment. w anne In these conversations, Department rep- that an February 7, while that c resentatives accepted the Boggs/Ashmore still open and in operation, separate dis- suggestion and undertook to cooperate iul.ly, cussions were initiated in London between Accordingly, the position of the United Prime Minister Wilson and Premier Kosygin States Government on key issues relating to of the USSR. The combined reading of the peace was discussed at some length, so that Moscow channel and of these discussions led Boggs and Ashmore could represent it ac- to the dispatch on February 8 of President cu.rately in Hanoi. Johnson's letter to President Ho. This letter 3. On December 23, Boggs visited the I)e- was of course published unilaterally by pa,rtment just prior to the departure of the Hanoi on March 21, and is a matter of pub- three-man group on December 28. At that lac record. It rested on, and was of course meeting, the basic understanding of the read by Hanoi in relation to, the various pro- United States Government position was re- pawls that had been conveyed in the Moscow afftrmed, and it was further agreed that Boggs ,channel. There was no change of basic posi- and Ashmore would report confldentia,lly tion whatever between February 5 and Febru- what they were able to pick up in Hanoi. ary 8, but President Johnson's letter did in- 4. Messrs. Boggs and Ashmore visited elude a specific action proposal that speaks Hano4 from January 6 to January 14. They "for itself, as does the tone of his commu- dictated for the Department a full and con- fidential account of their conversations. This covered in particular a conversation with President Ho an January 12. In this conver- sation, Ho had insisted that there could be no talks between the US and Hanoi unless the bombing were stopped, and unless also the US stopped all reinforcements during the period of the talks. Ho was reported to be adamant against any reciprocal military re- straint by North Vietnam. The record does not show that he solicited any USG response to these remarks. 5. Concurrently, prior to January 18, on US initiative and without any connection to the Boggs/Ashmore actions, US Govern- ment representatives had established a direct channel far communication with North Viet- namese representatives in Moscow. With the apparent agreement of both sides, this chan- nel was being kept wholly confidential, and was therefore not revealed to Messrs. Boggs and Ashmore in their discussions at the De- partment. It is, of course, fundaments) to the USG dealing with Messrs. Boggs and Ash- more that there existed at the time -this dtrect and secret channel. Exchanges throixgh t17fs direct channel continued through Jan- uary and early February and culminated in President Johnson's letter to President Ho a:f February 8 (mistakenly stated by Mr. Ash- more as February 2). As has been stated by representatives of .the Department, a wide variety of proposals was put before Hanoi in these Moscow contacts, without at any time producing any useful response. 6. Toward the end of January, Messrs. Boggs and Ashmore returned to Washing- ton and expressed to the Department the strong hope that they could be given a mes- sage for transmission to Hanoi. The Depart- ment decided that, while the direct channel in Moscow was crucial and must at all costs be preserved, it would be useful to send a more general message through Messrs. Boggs and Ashmore, which would be consistent with the important messages being ex- changed in Moscow. In view of this channel (oP which Boggs-Ashmore were unaware) there was some question as to tie further utility of detailed informal communications. It seemed clear from the account given by Messrs. Boggs and Ashmore that their chan- ne~I of communication had been established vrith the primary purpose of exchanges con- cerning North Vietnamese attendance at the sponded in any useful way to the variety of suggestions conveyed in the Moscow channel, its sole and apparently final response was re- flected on February 13, in a letter by Presi- dent Ho to Pope Paul VI. This letter, in the words of one press account today, "coupled an unconditional end to -the bombing with the withdrawal of American forces and the recognition of the National Liberation. Front:' On February 15, President Ho replied formally to the President in similar terms. At the same time, Hanoi broke off the Mos- cow channel. 9. Hanoi's attitude remained negative throughout. The Boggs/Ashmore efforts were necessarily handled by the Department with an eye to the direct and then-confidential channel that existed concurrently to Hanoi. The latter appeared to be by far the more reliable and secure method of ascertaining Hanoi's views, 10. Finally, we note with regret t$at Mr. Ashmore is apparently ignorant of t e sub- sequently published report .af the Moscow contacts, and of their confirmation by De- partment representatives. We note with still greater regret that at no time since has he consulted with the Department in order to attempt to understand the interrelationship that- necessarily obtained between -the Moscow channel and his own efforts. As this case shows, the Administration has been prepared at all times to cooperate with private individuals who may be in .contact with Hanoi in any way, and who arc pre- pared to act responsibly and ,discreetly. This policy continues, although it seems clear that the present disclosure will not reassure Hanoi that such private contacts will be kept secret. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres- ident, Isuggest the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Mc- INTYRE in the chair) . The clerk will call the roll. The assistant legislative clerk proceed- ed to call the roll. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Presi- dent, Iask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call be rescinded. The VICE PRESIDENT. Without ob- jection, it is so ordered. Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100103-Od S 13266 Approved For Release-2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100103-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE September~l9,~ 1967 APPOINTMENTS TO 12TH MEETING OF CONSULTATION OF MINISTERS OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS, ORGANI- ZATION OF AMERICAN STATES The VICE PRESIDENT. The Chair wishes to announce the appointment of Senators WAYNE MORSE and BOURKE HICKENLOOPER?.a5 representatives to the 12th Meeting of Consultation of the Min- isters of Foreign Affairs of the Member Nations of the Organization of .American States to be held in Washington, D.C., September 22 through September 24, 1987. ADJOURNMENT TO 11 A.M. Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres- ident, if there be no further business to come before the Senate, I move, in ac- cordance with the previous order, that the Senate stand in adjournment until 11 a.m. tomorrow. The motion was agreed to; and (at 5 o'clock and 35 minutes p.m.) the Senate adjourned until tomorrow, Wednesday, September 20, 1967, at 11 o'clock a.m. NOMINATIONS Executive nominations received by the Senate September 19 (legislative day of September 18) , 1967: INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY Glenn T. Seaborg, oP California, to be the Representative of the United States oP Amer- ica to the 11th sessiGn of the General Con- ference of the International Atomic: Energy Ageney. The following-named persons to be alter- nate representatives of the United States oP America to the 11th session of the General Conference of the International Atomic En- ergy Agency: Verne B. Lewfs, of Maryland. Herman Pollack, of Maryland. James T. Ramey, oY Illinois. Henry DeWolf Smyth, oP New Jersey, Gerald F. Tape, of Maryland. IN THE NAVY Having designated, under the provisions of title 30, United States Code, section 5231, Rear Adm. Noel A. M. Gaylen, U.S._Navy, for commands and other duties determined by the President to be within the contemplation of said section, I nominate him for appoint- ment to the grade of vice admiral while so serving. Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100103-0