U.S. BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE

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CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100106-7
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January 12, 2006
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106
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September 18, 1967
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;F.; ~~-- Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100106-7 September 18, 1967 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -- SENATE confident that Am:erica's commitment to the rule of law would prevail. Realis~tiaally, the cultural deficiencies at a slave heritage which had made African men and women humanoid robots, pxagrammed only for work 'but with the capacity far regr~ductian, were recognized. However, it was confidently believed that these shart- camings, massive as they were, could be sur- mounted Jrast as lrnrnigrant Europeans, many with substantial personal obstacles to over- come, had demonstrated.. Negroes `burned no buses, dynamited no achaola or churches, slaughtered no innocent children at warship and lynched no one. No leaders ai groups dedicated to segregation were assassinated from ambush. Instead, patiently, slowly, and after with maddening frustration, Negroes undertook countless legal battles to achieve equal treatment as citizens. Finally, alter a series of defeats, the public climate changed and in 19'54 the legal wail was breached by the U.S: Supreme Court's school desegregation decision. The enactment of the first national civil .rights legislation in the twentieth century heightened the anticipation. However, the view on the other side of the wall was not that of the promised land. In- stead there was a steeper cliff of stubborn citizen resistance to the clear mandate of the courts and the Congress. To many Negroes the great American dream had turned into a nightmare. Many who had drunk great draughts of the heady intoxi- cant of liberty acrd believed the assurances of Negro- leaders and national leaders were hurt, frustrated, confused and then angered. The wisdom of established leaders was questioned and angry new voices are heard demanding a showdown with white America. Those voices proclaim that Negroes have been tricked into reliance on law and legislative efforts, and now, without defining the con- cept or how it will be exercised, they call for Black Power. This new reaction repudiates any hope of integration into the life of America. Instead of wanting "in," -its proponents want "out" i am not speaking of the Nation of Islam whose members are popularly called Black Muslims. I speak instead of the less venturesome Negro who lives in a ghetto where employ- ment is precarious, education inferior and rebuffs based on race a daily experience. He is a young person Sn his late teens or early 20s whose personal experience does not include the oft-cited "great gains" of the last three decades. He was born during World War II or shortly thereafter and grew up during the Korean War and now lives during the Vietnam adventure. He has seen violence legitimized as an, instrument of national policy. Ta him, God is dead ~or possibly never lived. He sees the sons of the poor and dis- inherited bearing the brunt oP the fighting in Vietnam where by an ironic twist an army career affords him the best hope of equal opportunity for advancement in a fight pro- claimed as an effort to bring, democracy to another people across the sea. He wonders would it not be the wiser per- sonal choice for him to risk his life to better his own conditions here than to lay it down on foreign soil far someone else. I believe this group comprises a small minority of America's Negroes, but I believe with equal conviction that the great major- ity, although eschewing this direction, are without a_n alternative which offers any rea- sonable hope of a solution to his plight. The majority of America's Negroes stand at the crossroads. Can they believe in the sin- cerity of America? Consider the decade from 19b0 to 1960,. which I characterize as the- lost decade. Some 330,000 new housing units were built in the Detroit area, principally in the aub- urba. They were largely financed by federal programs which forbade racial discrimina- tion yet only three percent of these neW houses were made available to Negroes and much of this- was public housing. Still, no effective official action was taken to enforce the non-racial guarantees and we see today a suburban ring around Detroit 96.4 :percent white. During this same decade, Detroit's Negroes could purchase only used housing at sub- stantially greater costs usually without mort- gage financing. The result was the doubling up of families to meet the monthly land con- tract installments. The enforcement of city zoning and health ordinances has been lax to non-existent fn predominantly Negro neighborhoods. School attendance has increased because of over- crowding so the Negro pupil often has a cus- todial instead of an educational experience. The attitude of many policemen and the recent incredible behavior of some of Lietroit's Recorder's Judges during the riot convinced the Negro citizen that one of the missions of these agencies is containment of the ghetto population. The resultant citizen animus (hostility) against law and law enforcement agencies too frequently is Justified by inci- dents of insult and brutality. The recent irrational and destructive civil disturbance in Detroit, paralleling those in other Northern cities, was easily predictable. The proposed panaceas oP more He:adstart programs and Job upgrading projects suggest treating a cancer with aspirin. What is required is equal treatment under the law. What is required is more law enforce. ment instead of less. The Negro wants en- forcement of the laws which were enacted to give, him equal access to Jobs, housing, and places of public accommodation. The enforcement of these laws is essential and not only Por the Negro. For nothing can be more corrosive of our national ,moral fiber than to have the stated law ignored by the vast majority of our citizens. I realize the difficulty of the challenge I announce. A Scottish legal philosopher once said that a society's civilization is measured by its obedience to the unenforceable. I recognize that every white American can- not be compelled by law to accord to his Negro fellow citizens the rights the Consti- tution and laws of this nation guarantee him. Laws are effective only when they have the support aP the majority. He must decide fm himself whether he wants this nation to continue as the noblest experiment 1n human relations the world has ever seen. He must, by a revolutionary re- orientatfon of h.is personal conduct, tell the great majority of Negroes standing at-the crossroads that we shall oantlnue this ex- periment together. if he does na+t, James Baldwin's pa?aphecy of the flee next time, a preview of which we are witnessing across the nation, may be realized. I fear the result could be genocide because'reservations, such as those in which American Indtans were crowded, would be inadequate to contain twenty million black people. U.~BAL IS IC MISSILE DEFENSE Mr. BYRD of West Virginia. Mr. Pres- ident; in a front-page article published Saturday, the Washington Post stated that President Johnson "has decided to go ahead with a thin ballistic missile defense." The purpose of this so-called thin de- fense will be to counter the nuclear threat likely to be posed by the Commu- nist Chinese in the early years of the coming decade. That this threat exists is no mere idle fear. A July 1967 report by the Joint Committee on Atomic. Energy, chaired S 13099 by the distinguished Senator from Rhode Island CMr. PASxoaEl, painted out that: The Ghinese ..are making excellent progress in thermonuclear design. They now have the capability of designing a multi- megatan thermonuclear device suitable for delivery by aircraft. We believe the Chinese will continue to place a high priority on thermonuclear weapon development (and) with continued. testing we believe they will be able to develop a thermonuclear warhead in the ICBM weight class by about 1970. We believe that the Chinese can have an ICBM system ready far deployment in the early 1970'x. A low order of magnitude attack could possibly be launched by the Chinese Gommunists against the Uxiited States }jy the early 1970'x. At pres- ent we do rat have an effective anti-ballistic missile system which could repel such a suicidal (far the Chinese) but nevertheless possible strike. ' There has been a prolonged debate, both in these Halls and in public over the need far this antiballistic missile system.. That the United States possesses of- fensive missiles of unquestioned strength and magnitude is obvious. We are said to be the strongest nation on the face of the earth. Our weapons have the capac- ity to greatly cripple or destroy much of civilization on earth as we know it. Yet, no matter how powerful our of- fensive weapons, our defensive posture- our ability to fend cif attack-is only as strong as our ability to instill the fear of an unacceptable loss from our offensive weapons in the mind- of a potential enemy. This necessarily means that we give a potential enemy credit far rational thought; far being able to weigh in the palance his weapons against ours; for being able to understand that no matter haw great his offensive threat, our own offensive weapons are so many times greater that any attack an our land would mean the total and immediate de- struction of his own. Unfortunately, however, the present Chinese Government apparently looks even the basic requisites. of rationality and stability. Its leaders are aging, des- perate, irrational, and utterly militant and belligerent. Despite the overwhelming internal problems which presently beset the Chi- nese people, these leaders are continuing to press forward with the production of nuclear weapons and the development of intercontinental ballistic missile systems with which to deliver those weapons. It is a strain. on the limits of credulity and commonsense to assume that the hand an the Chinese nuclear trigger will be directed by a mind which has thought- fully and carefully weighed the utter foolishness of embarking on an act of nuclear war. Are we to permit ourselves the luxury of letting a mad government, such as presently rules in Peking, decide the fate of even. one of our great cities? Could we ever forgive ourselves,. as a nation, if, because we felt it "not worth the money," we left our cities open to and defenseless from a nuclear attack by Red China? " For, it would not take but one such thermonuclear device as the Chinese are now manufacturing, to totally destroy a San Francisco, a Los Angeles, or a Seat- tie., And while our retaliation might be Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100106-7 Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100106-7 ~- _, 513100 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE September. Y8, 196T massive ~ and virtually instantaneous, would that bring back those lives lost, that property destroyed? Our only protection .against such a .threat as the presently erratic, billiger-, ent, and irrational Communist Chinese Government poses, is an antiballistic missile system. It will be -able to stop those missiles which such a misguided Red Chinese Government might inten- tionally launch. And, importantly, such ~a system would not only provide a deter- rent but would also protect us against an accidental launching of a ballistic mis- sile which might otherwise trigger an -all out nuclear holocaust. True, it would be nowhere near ade- quate to taunter an, offensive attack by the Soviet Union-but that Nation, no matter what else we may say about ft, is at least ruled by somewhat rational meri, men who understand and recognize the overwhelming and destructive power posed by our own offensive weapons. I think there is no question but that the Chinese nuclear threat is a real. one. .And if we do not prepare for it today, we may ever rue that fateful decision long into the future. I commend the President for this de- cision anal I urge that this vital defense effort go forward without further delay. I also ask unanimous consent that the .Washington Post article entitled "United States To Bind `Thin' Shield of Mis- sfles" and excerpts from the report of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy --on "Impact of Chinese Communist Nu- clear Weapons Progress on U.S. National Security," be printed in the RECORD. There being na objection, the al?ticle and excerpts were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: [Pram the Washington Post, Sept. 16, 1967] UNITED STATES TO BUILD "THIN" SHIELD OF MISSILES .. (By George C. Wilson) President Johnson has decided to go ahead with a "thin" ballistic ml~ile. defense. The plan ca1Ls far spotting missile sites far enough apart to give the entire United States some measure of protection against -enemy ICBMs, rather than trying to pro- test only key military bases and cities. "The ABM decision may be announced as early as Monday when Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara addresses the United Press International editors in San Francisco. Or President Johnson could wait a while longer in hopes of pressuring the Soviet Un- Lan into setting a date far talks an an ABM freeze. But Johnson Administration officials yes- terday did pass the word to key policy makers that the decision has been made to take the next big step toward an operational Ameri- can missile defense. LITTLE AT A TIME The thin missile defense the Administra- tion has decided upon can be built a little at a time, like an erector set. Called Nike X, it consists of elaborate ra- dars and two types of anti-Iriissile-missiles. The long-range missile, the Spartan, 1s sup- posed to interoept enemy warheads 400 miles out from its launching pad. This means =the first contest is a silent one out in soundless space. The shoat-range missile, the Sprint, is designed to whoosh up a:t tremendous speed to destroy any war- heads that elude Spartan. This last ditch fight is near earth, with Sprint having a range of 26 miles. A bargain basement missile defense could be built in flue years for $3 bll11o2I. It is billed as -one which would protect the U.S. against the first ICBMs Oh1na Ls expected to have in 1971 or 1972. But the $3 billion defense would be thlek- ened by putting in mare sites so the pro- tecting missiles do not have to guard suell large expanses of the countryside. .. RAISES PRICE TAG Also, missile bases and key cities in the U.S. can be selected for special protection in this thickening process. The thickening raises the price tag. But Penatgon leaders contend a good measure df protection can be bought for $10 billion, Such a system would consist of about 1000 long-range Spartans and 100 Sprints at sites spread across the U.S. President Johnson and Secretary McNa- mara, when they do speak out on the thin ABM,-are expected to stress that the United States has by no means passed the point of no return in missile defense. Critics of the ABM contend that it could lead to a new nuclear arms competition between the United States and Soviet Union. But advocates stress that a go-ahead on the thin ABM does not lessen American -in- terest in reaching an agreement with Russia on controlling both offensive and defensive missiles. The subject is sure to come up when Sec- retary of State Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko meet ire New Yank at the e?nd of this month. Their meeting was set' up yesterday by Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin in a 40-minute call on Rusk. Dabrynin, who had returned from Russia early in the week, -said Gromyko is scheduled to arrive in New York Monday for Tuesday's opening of the United Nations General Assembly. Rusk plans to go to-New York Sept. 24. The erector-set quality of the ABM could leave the President room far diplomatic maneuver. He can push at each ABM mile- stone far an arms control agreement such as the preproduction, production and deploy- ment phases. The decision to go ahead with ABM means the release oP $377 million already in the present fiscal 1968 budget for the engineer- ing drawings and factory equipment needed to put the ABM system into production. The President, by announcing the go- ahead, also takes the steam out of the Con- gressional drive far a start. on a missile de- Tense system. Chairman Jahn O. Pastore (D.-R.I.) of the Joint Atomic Energy Committee may well have .pushed the Johnson Administration into its- decision. Pastore Sept. 9 had called for building a missile defense, announcing at the time that Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D- Wash.) would hold hearings "soon" on the ABM issue. IMPACT OF CHINESE COMMUNIST NUCLEAR WEAPONS PROGRESS ON U.S. NATIONAL _ SE- CURITY DACKGROUND As the nuclear threat posed by the Chinese Communists became more .pronounced, Chairman Pastore decided to conduct a spe- cial inquiry regarding Chinese Communist nuclear weapons development. This probe began on January 11, 1967, and was formally announced at the Joint Committee's first public hearing of the 90th Congl?ess on Jan- uary 25, 1967. ~In connection with this study the Joint Committee received the following testimony in executive session: January 11, 1967: Richard Helens, Director of the Central Intelligence Agency. February 1, 1967: Dr. Norris Bradbury, Di- rector, Los Alamos Scie~ntiflc Labaratory~ and Dr. Michael May, Director, Livermore Radia- tion Laboratory. Mar. 13, 1967:. Secretary~oP State Dean Rusk. July 13, 1967: Representatives of the De- partment of Defense, CIA, and AEC. These witnesses presented testimony con- cerning advances being made by Communist China in developing nuclear weapons as well as their progress in developing the capability to deliver these. weapons against neighbor- ing countries or the United States. Detailed technical presentations were heard concerning each individual Chinese Communist nuclear test and an assessment was made of future developments by Red China Sn the field of nuclear weapons and associated delivery sgstems. An analysis of the impact of the emergence of Red China as a nuclear power on U.S. foreign policy with particular emphasis on the proposed. nonproliferation_ treaty -was also presented. Information concerning French and Sov- iet nuclear weapons and delivery methods were also discussed but principal emphasis was on Red China. CONCLUSIONS On the basis of various hearings we have had and studies made by the Joint Com- mittee, the following committee conclusi~~^ have been developed: 1. Chinese nuclear weapons capabilities The Chinese Communist test of June 17, 1967, at the Lap Nor Nuclear Test Site was her sixth nuclear. test in fire atmosphere and her first in the megaton range. Such a test was expected because of the success of the preceding thermonuclear experiment conducted on December 28, 1966. The Chin_ ese purposely may have limited the yield aP that test-their fifth test-to keep the fall- out in China at an acceptable level. The fifth test indicated that the Chinese had taken a major step toward a thermonuclear weapon. There is evidence that the sixth test de- vice-with a yield of a few magetans-was dropped from an aircraft. Analysis of the debris indicates use of U~a~ U23ft, and thermonuclear material. As in the other tests, there is no evidence that plu- tonium was used. The preliminary indication . is that a considerable improvement accom- pae}ied the increase in yield. A large amount of U~B was used in the device. The sixth Chinese nuclear test has con- firmed the conclusion reached from the an- alysis of the fifth Chinese nuclear test that they are making excellent progress in ther_ monuclear design. They now have the ca- pability to design a multimegaton thermo- nuclear device suitable for delivery by air- craft. We believe that the Chinese will continue to place a high priority an thermonuclear weapon development. With continued test- ing we believe they will be able to develop a thermonuclear warhead in the ICBM weight class with a yield in the megaton range by about 1970. We believe that the Chinese can have an ICBM system ready for deployment in -the early 1970's. On the basis of our present knowledge, we believe that the_Chinese probably will achieve an opera- tional ICBM capability before 1972. Con- ceivably, it could be ready as early as 1970- 1971. But this would be a tight schedule and makes allowance for only minor difRculties and delays. We believe that the Chinese have already completed the development of a medium range ballistic missile. We have no indication of any deployment. We also believe that by about 1970 the Chinese Communists could develop a ther- monuclear warhead with a yield in the few hundreds of kilotons in the MRBM class and that they could develop an MRBM warhead with a megaton yield about a couple of years later. Meanwhile, should they desire a ther- monuclear bomb for delivery by bomber, they Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100106-7 ~- ~~ "` Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100106-7 September I8, 1967 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE could probably begin weaponizing the design employed in the sixth test. The missile-delivered fourth Chinese test demonstrated that the Chinese now have tYie capabllity to design a low yield flexion war- head compatible in size and weight with a missile. With. a few tests, the Chinese could probably design an improved fission weapon for MRBM or bomber delivery. However, they may forego extensive fission weapon produc- tion in order to have materials and facili- ties available for thermonuclear weapon sy~- tems. The Chinese bomber forces consist of a few hundred short-range jet bombers and a handful of somewhat longer range bombers. We have no knowledge of a Chinese plan to develop heavy intercontinental range bomb- ers. Earlier, the Communist Chinese conducted four other nuclear detonations: October 16, 1964: Low yield (up to 20 kilotons) . May 13, 1965: 200 kilotons). craft with a atockplle of 80 to 70 KT nu- clear weapons. At this time the Chinese do not have such an operational strategic force. SUMMARY The Joint Committee believes that the American public needs to know the threat that is posed by Red China. Communist China has emerged with a fledgling, but effec- tive, nuclear weapons capability. This ca- pability has and will continue to have a great effect on U.S. foreign policy in the Far East. It will have an effect on our relations with the South East Asia Treaty Organization. It will have an effect on the nonprolifera- tion treaty principally because of the close. connection between Chinese nuclear power and the national security of India. Its effect will also be felt by Japan. Moreover, the Chinese Communists could use nuclear blackmail to assert their position not only broadly in Asia, but specifically in Southeast Asia. Perhaps most significant for the United States is the fact that a low order of mag- nitude attack could possibly be launched by the Chinese Communists against the United States by the early 1970'x. At present we do not haUe an effective anti-ballistic-missile system which could repel such a suicidal (for the Chinese) but nevertheless possible strike. It is for these reasons that the Joint Com- mittee feels the assessment it has made, based upon information received in executive sessions, should be brought before the American public-not to overemphasize or to underplay but to state clearly and con- cisely with due regard for the protection of intelligence sources where we stand in rela- tion to this emerging threat to our national security. May 9, 1966: Intermediate (lower end of 200 to 1;000 kiloton range) . October 27, 1966: Law intermediate (20 to 200 kilotons). The Chinese were able to continue their nuclear program after the Soviets apparently ceased technical assistance in this area by 1960, and detonated a uranium device in October 1964. . All of the Chinese detonations have util- ized enriched uranium {U~) as the primary fissionable material. Uranium-238 was also present in all tests, The detonation of any device which also contains U~~ results in some flssioning of the U='~. The debris from their third and fifth tests indicated some thermonuclear reactions had involved lith- ium-6 in those devices. We believe that the Chinese are interested in the development of submarines equipped with suitable relatively long-range missiles; at this time we have not determined the exact nature or status of the program. 2. French nuclear test program Turning to the French nuclear test pro- gram, in February 1900 the French tested their first atomic device. In 1966 the French conducted five nuclear tests. In 1967 they held a short series of three tests. Another series of tests is planned far next summer. All of the 1968 tests were plutonium fission devices. The last two teats in 1966 were expe- riments aimed at the thermonuclear develop~~ ment. The year's tests were conducted on June b, June 27, and July 2. They were suspended by balloons, above the Mururoa Lagoon. ThE; tests all had low yields. The French an- nounced that all of the tests were to be of triggers for thermonuclear devices which the French still have not tested. Although French officials continue to state publicly that France will detonate her first; thermonuclear device in 1968 when enriched uranium becomes available, there have been. hints in the press that France is having dif- ficulties with its program. Should this be true, the first generation of both the land- based and submarine-launched missile sys- tems might have to use warheads developed in the 1986 series. To recapitulate, the Chinese are well. ahead of-the French in thermonuclear weap- on design. In 211/a years and six tests the Chinese have successfully tested a multi- megaton thermonuclear device. The French, on the other hand, .have conducted many more tests over a 7-year period and have not yet tested a true thermonuclear device or achieved a megation size yield. The French have developed higher yield fission weapons than the Chinese. The French have~clIIeved yields of up to 2b0 kilotons while the Chinese fission devices have had lower yields. , The French now have an operational strategic force of about 60 Mirage IV air- PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S ADDRESS TO THE INTERNATIONAL ASSO- CIATION OF CHIEFS OF POLICE Mr. BAYH, Mr, President, last Thurs- day evening, at the convention of the International Association of Chiefs of Police in Kansas City, Mo., P1?esiderit Johnson delivered what has been justifi- ably acclaimed as a major and penetrat- ing speech on crime in America. In this speech, President Johnson crystallized the thoughts and fears that have been preying upon the minds of mil- lions of Americans far many months. He related in a forthright manner what he and his administration have done anti are doing to meet the challenge of crime. Congress, too, has its own grave re- sponsibility in this struggle. Two of the mast vital and most urgent measures proposed by the President to combat crHne-the Safe Streets and Crime Con- trol Act of 1967 and the Firearms Con- tras Act of 1967-still remain ill com- mittees of this body. I strongly urge Sen- atars to read the President's speech with the utmost care and to hasten considera- tion of this vital legislation and ask unanimous consent that it be printed in the RECORD. There being no abjection, the speech was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: REMARAS OF THE PRESIDENT BEFORE THE IN- TERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF CHIEFS OF PO- LICE~ KANSAS CITY, MO. President Morris, Mayor Davis, Chief Law- rence, Mr. Tamm, Chief Kelley, ladies and gentlemen: There is an old story about President Cal- vin Coolidge and his response to the ques- tion, "What do you think about sin?" As you may remember, President Coolidge 1s supposed to have answered, "I'In against it." S 13101 Most Americans would say the same thing today about poverty, disease, and ignorance- and crime. So I don't expect special credit this morn- ing for coming before the International Asso- ciation of Chiefs of Police to talk about?crime and only say, "I'm against it " It would not enlighten your discussions, nor contribute to public understanding, if I were to spend my time here in a long lament about the evil consequences of crime. I think they areas self-evident as they are real. Neither am I going to be content to just preach about the decline in morality in America. In the first place, I just do not believe that moraltty is declining. The responsibility that this Nation has shown, in meeting its human obligations at home and abroad, convinces me that America is a Nation that is strong today. In the second place, I do not believe that sweeping indictments of our Nation's moral- ity will help us get at the solution of the real problems that affect morality-the problems of poverty, the problems of disease, the prob- lems of ignorance, or of international aggres- sion, or of crime. Self-righteous indignation is not a policy. It is a substitute for a policy. What America needs fa not more hand- wringing about crime in the streets. America needs a policy for action against crime in the streets-and for all the people of tihs country to support that policy. Believing that, as I .strongly do, I estab- lished in March, 1965, the President's Com- mission on Law Enforcement and Adminis- tration of Justice, I instructed and charged this Commission to deal with the following questions: Iiow can law enforcement be organized to meet present needs? What steps can be taken to.insure protec- tion of individual rights? Through what kinds of programs can the Federal Government-af which I am a part- be most effective in assisting and supple- menting, not supplanting, State and local law enforcement? I asked the members that I carefully se- lected from thrott'ghout the Nation to con- sider the problem of making our streets, homes, and our places of business safer-and to inquire into the special problems of juve- nile crime, to examine the administration of justice in the lower courts-to explore the means by which organized crime can be ar- restetl by Federal and focal authorities close- ly coordinating and cooperating together. The Commission's report, rendered last winter, is a study of crime and a study of ' criminals, But it is much more than that. It is a systematic analysis of the strengths- as well as the weaknesses-in our American law enforcement. It is a prescription for ac- tion-action-action at every level oP govern- ment, and it is a constructive guide for thoughtful citizens throughout this land in every walk of life. Acting on its report, I urged the Congress this year to promptly act-promptly act- upon the most comprehensive Federal legis- lation that has ever been devised to help local authorities meet the problem of crime at the local level in their cities. That legislation was called the Safe Streets and Crime Control Act. Tt was based an the flue fundamental principles of the Crime Commission Report: First, that crime prevention is of para- mount importance. Second, that the system of justice must itself be just. The system of justice must itself be just and it must have the respect as well as the cooperation of all of its citi- zens. Third, better trained, better paid, and bet- ter equipped people are- desperately needed throughout the land. Fourth,. police and correctional agencies must have better information and deeper and broader research into the causes,. and into- the prevention and control of crime. Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100106-7 Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDP70B00338R000300100106-7 --'~`-- ~ 13102. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE September 1 &, 1967 Fifth, and last, substantially greater re- If they decide that they want something This- summer, some of you experienced sources such as more judges and prosecutors, better for their communities than what they anew kind ai disorder in your cities. You and faster court action, more and better are getting today, then we think that ii they faced, net individual acts of violence or just court personnel, more modern court adman- make this decision-and .they can make it thievery, but you faced massive oaimes istration-thus modernizing, Improving and today through their Congressmen and their against people and against property. bringing the entire criminal justice system Senators supporting the recommendations -Much can explain-but nothing can jus- up to date in the 20th Century. that the President has made-some of which tify-the riots of 1967. I did not propose that the Federal Govern- have been before the Congress many years- They damaged a great deal mare than the ment take over the jab oP dealing with crime then their national government can, should storefronts and the American homes. They in American streets because from the birth and will help them get it-not by taking damaged the respect and the accommodation . of the Republic to the present moment re- over the system of law enforcement, but by among men an which a civilized society sponsibility for keeping the peace in our cities helping them strengthen and reform it. ultimately depends, and without which there has been squarely on the shoulders of local That is what the Safe Streets Act which I can be no progress toward social justice. authorities. recommended to the Congress would do. iP its The violence of this summer raised up a Respect far law and order begins at home. spirit and if its purpose survive, it will pro- -new and serious threat to local law enforce- Children must learn it and must be taught vide grants to those cities and to those states meat. It spawned a group of men whose in- it from their parents. Your children learn who not only increase their present commit- tercet law in provoking-in psovokfng- it from you-and by what you do and by ment to criminal justice, but who are willing others to destruction, while 'they fled its the example you set. That moans that every to go out and develop programs for better consequences. time we water the lawn when there is an training, for better use of their personnel, or These wretched, vulgar men, these poison- ordinance agaizvst it at a certain time oP day, for higher standards and innovations such as .ous propagandists, posed as spokesmen for the children learn their own lessen about tactical squads and community relations the .underprivileged and capitalized on the respect for law and order-if we water the units, and new techniques of reheebilitation. real grievances of suffering people. grass at the wrong time. it will help pay the salaries of those who And the vast majority oP those peaple- That means-that every time a parent writes operate these programs. It will help. pay the the vast majority of _them-believe that a note to the teacher to discuss Mary's or salaries up to one-third of the grant which obedience to the law, 1n Abraham Linoodn's Johnny's absence ..from 'school when they could be used to increase the pay of police- phrase, must bo our religion here in America. really don't need to be excused and are not men and other crimina_ 1 justice personnel They have neon the law change. They have sick, they, the children, learn cram the par- working with them. seen it become more just as the years passed cuts the wrong lesson about respect for law The key' to this program 1s experiment, in our times. They have seen their rights and respect for order. innovation-end better use of the most ad- mare firmly established, their oppartusuties .The crimes that have most disturbed our vented knowledge that we have gained in sharply increased in the last decade. people-homicides, robbery, phyrical as- this country oP crime, its treatment, and its They know that the law in a democratic. saint, burglary, automobile theft and driving causes. In my opinion, every law enforcement sacie~ty is Choir refuge, and that lawless vio- while intoxicated-are crimes against local official in this country ought to welcome it in lence is a trap for all those who engage in it. and statz law. the spirit in which it is offered: as a practical We must redeem their faith in law. We Those laws are made by the city caun.cils and imaginative tool for helping our law must make certain that law enforcement is and- made by the state legislators. They must enforcement officers cope with crime in the fair and effective-that protection is afforded be enforced by the police and the state pa- cities without in any way-in any way- every family, no matter where they live- trol. Their perpetrators are tried in local diminishing either their responsibility or that justice !a-swift and justice is blind to courts, by local citizens. They are sentenced their authority. religion, color, status, and favoritism. locally. They are prosecuted locally by Now to a matter that affects you and af- We cannot tolerate behavior that destroys judges-by prosecutors who are elected by fects you much more than most of the cat- what generations of men and women have local people and by judges who are selected izens, but in the end it will affect every sin- built here in Amerioar-no matter what stim- by local people. gle one of us-it will reach into every home elates that behavior, anti no matter what is They are returned to local communities in this land-and this is the gun sale law. offered to try to justify it. when their sentence has been served-their A law to limit--a law to safeguard-the sale Neither can we abide a doubke standard penalty paid. These local communities look of guns has been before our Congress for of justice, based on the color of a man's skin upon their record and they are under the several years. or the accent of a man's speech. supervision of local authorities. Its passage would plug up one more big Those who wear the police officer's badge- Unlike mast other countries, we-Amer- loophole to save your life, and mine, or the those who rosecutedinthe chambers-t ose ice-have no national police force. It desires life of some innocent child down the street. who managpe our correctional institutions- none. Our founding fathers were very I hope it will pass. careful to see that none was provided tor. `Its purpose is simple-lt is to keep lethal all of these have a very special responsibility Why, today in this country our largest city weapons out of the wrong hands-gut of the for the maintenance of order and the achieve- has more police officers than the entire hands of dangerous criminals, out of the ment oP justice throughout the land. United States Government. One city has mare hands of drug addicts, out of the hands ai But every single one of us-private citizen police officers than the entire government of mentally ill geople who really know net what and government official-shares some 1n that the United States of America. they do, responsibility. Its basic aim is to limit the out-of-state We can all say very easily, "We are against Officials in Washington just cannot patrol purchases and the interstate mail-order sale crime"-and then we can let it go at that. a neighborhood in the far west, or step a of firearms. We believe this is the most effec- We can preach sermons, we can write edi- burglarly in the south, or prevent a riot tlve way that the Federal Government has torlals, we can make speeches, and we can in a great metropolis. of protecting your safety and the safety of got der' picture made talking about crime In the end, then, the quality of the local your children from criminals,- drug addicts, and moral behavior-we can think that we police, the action of the local prosecutor, the and the mentally ill. have done our duty. local grand juries, the fairness and the justice If we want to curb crime-ii we want to Or we can respect--we can encourage-all of the local courts, the effectiveness of the arrest crime-iP we want to restrain crimi- of our citizenry to respect the law and to local correctional systems-all of this respon- nals-here is an action that we can take respect those who protect us in the name of sibility is lodged appropriately and properly that will be a long step forward. the law. in the hands of local authorities-of local ~t us not be content to bewail the rising We can be willing to pay the bill or im- citizens. crime rate or to talk about the statistics proving the performance of our police, our They at the local level must decide how of the numbers of repeaters who fill our courts, and our correctional institutions and good they want their law enforcement in jails and prisons while we turn our back give them- the salary, pay and equipment their local titles bo be. _ and ignore the Pact that they can go to any that they need. We can insist on devoting They must determine whether it is right- mail order house and get a weapon to shoot enough of our resources and enough of our whether it is just and whether it is fair-to your wile after they tear the door down at brainpower to meet the problem of crime- ask amen to risk his fife to protect their midnight. to make America safer and more just Por all life for a salary that Ss lower than they pay Let us act instead of talk against crime. its citizens. another man for working behind a desk or Let us repair as many shattered lives as we I have always felt that we could make standing on the assembly line in an in.dus- can, Let us do it within and through the great strides forward if we would only realize trial plant.- American system of due process and in that the nu_ rse and the medical attendant.. They must determine at the local level keeping with our tenacious regard at -all who in the middle of the night may deter- whether they want a court system that they times for the blessings of i~zdividual free- mine whether we live or die when we need select and provide for which delays justice dam. attention-that they have better training, until justice is denied. You, and the men who you command, are better pay and better inducements-that the They must determine locally-whether they America's front line in the fight against teacher who prepares our children, sets an want a correctional system that deals with crime. You endanger your lives every day- example for them and SnPuses knowledge youthful offenders, not as lives to be re- just as the man does in the rice paddies of into them-and sets an example-that they deemed, but as people who are doomed to Vietnam to protect freedom, to protect lib- should be among our best trained, our best clash repeatedly with the law. erty, to protect your country. prepared and our best rewarded. , Approved For Release 2006/01/30 :CIA-RDPT0B00338R000300100106-7