REPORT TO REAGAN AIDES URGES ENDING MANY RESTRICTIONS ON U.S. SPYING

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP99-00498R000200010035-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 22, 2007
Sequence Number: 
35
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 21, 1980
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP99-00498R000200010035-4.pdf101.83 KB
Body: 
STAT Approved For. Release 2007/03/22 : CIA-RDP99-00498R00020 ARTICLE Ai' Z NEW YORK TIMES 21 NOVEMBER 1980 anyR e*ict ons ono S py ' By JUDTTH MILLER . -? t*TbeNewYorkTimes ?:ti WASHINGTON, Nov; 20 A, report prepared for.national securityadvisers to President-elect Ronald Reagan calls for 'sweeping changes: in intelligence prac- tices and the elimination of many restric- tionsontheintelligence community. , '-The 97-page report; prepared under the auspices. of the. Heritage Foundation, a conservative research organization here, concludes:that in order. to revive- the na- tion's intelligence capabilities, "agencies must be rebuilt through a combination of legislation; executive orders, administra- tive actions and Presidential leader- ship.". It suggests. separating clandestine operations from.the. Central Intelligence ;Agency, hiring,. more and better-trained, ,agents establishing competing sources; .of intelligence analysis and changing' ;laws that restrict intelligence activities. i The report characterizes the current, intelligence apparatus as being "in the worst condition since- before Pearl Har-, bor" and blames nut only President Car- ter but also three previous Administra- tions for politicizing intelligence gather ing and analysis... .. _..... : . a . Officials., stressed that key Reagan; aides had only begun to think about how intelligence should, be reshaped, and the ] report, they said, is only a tentative list of ,options open to a Reagan administration. As one indication of the tentative na- ture of the options, .I., William Midden- dorf, former Secretary of the Navy and I acting head of the transition's task force, on intelligence, and other members of the j task force, met Today for the first timed with. Adm. Stansfield Turner,. Director of Central Intelligence.. However,: officials close to, the Republi- can transition effort in intelligence said it was likely that several of the proposals inl the report would be pursued by a Reagan, administration and the new. Republi majority In the Senate. Y r: ,.:: The officials said that Mr. Reagan had not yet chosen a Director of Central Intel- ligence but that- William J. Casey, the Reagan campaign director, was known to be the front-runner. Mr. Casey is known to support a much more. aggressive ap- proach to intelligence operations. Moreover, many of the report's propos- als resemble portions of a now-dormant legislative charter, introduced last sum- mer by Republican Senators, that would restructure intelligence agencies and relax restrictions on domestic spying. Many of the changes advocated in the report are bound to be resisted by civil liberties groups, which have fought for years for the laws and executive orders that now limit intelligence activities and protect individual liberties. Other-struc- tural recommendations are bound to be4 controversial, since they would require an overhaul of the current intelligence scheme. They stem from an assumption t that the. organizational setup is. largely' responsible for what the report contends; is the poor quality of intelligence. The report accuses the Carter Adminis- tration of weakening American intelli- gence "through mass dismissals of C.I.A. officials and partial replacement of them by inexperienced employees," :a charge that agency officials have denied. "Presidential leadership must play a role in rebuilding our intelligence, serv- ices, which have not been so weak since Pearl Harbor, and can instigate not only; administrative reform ,but also promote,, legislation and give the intelligence com-< munity the moral and political support4 necessary to fulfill its mission,". the re4 port concludes. .. i Many of the report's recommendations! would not require legislation. For exam-, ple, it urges the revocation of an execu-l tive order that governs intelligence strut-I, ture and provides operational guidelines: and restrictions for the intelligence agen- i ties. The report recommends that "lan- guage training, as well as adequate r_Tii.-l tary and political instruction" should be standard for agents. .