JOURNAL - OFFICE OF LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL

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CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3
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November 2, 2006
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41
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November 24, 1975
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NOTES
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Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 CIA INTERNAL USE ONLY 1f " Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page 5 Monday - 24 November 1975 20. 1 1 LIAISON Called Guy McConnell, Senate Appropriations Defense Subcommittee staff, and alerted him to the fact that in view of the decision of the Senate to let the Senate ,Select Committee release their "assassination report, " 1 have prepared a. letter to enator Howard Cannon (D. , Nev.) for the Director's signature explaining the difficulties involved in trying to keep the Congress. informed i and protecting classified material in the process. I told McConnell I was sending him a copy of the draft for his comments. Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 CIA I iY DTN r~RI U f d rr 448000400030041-3 I ~011 Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Page Monday - 24 November 1975 2.5X1 AGENCY VISIT Met with. Patrick Shea, of the SenaL elects.oi itttee and discussed certain matters relating to the legislative history of the National Security Act of 1947 and the Central Intelligence Agency Act of 1949. Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 CIA INTERNAL USE ONLY plr .0, V" lk~ P. 25X1A 25X1A 25X1A Journal - Office of Legislative Counsel Monday - 24 November 1975 Page 3 CONSTITUENT Took a call from Joan Miller, of Representative William . Harsha's (R., Ohio) office. Ms.. Miller needed information for a group of high school students in the Congressman's district on the Olson law suit, CIA's mail intercept program, the allegation that Alexander Butterfield was a CIA agent, CIA assassination plats, and CIA wiretapping. I gave her an up-date on these issues and referred her to the Rockefeller Commission Report and Senates _._ -r dam. mittee,`vhere relevant. i '!L ra CIA IiNTEfiN4L USE Approved For Release 200?0 Ta )6IA4P97MQO' 44R000400030041-3 NA SSI b Y 1 9 , er ovem N brap.ch to even attempt to impose budget of station travel for military personnel. restraints in this area without jeopardiz- This legislation is not intended to disrupt Ing legitimate Government activities. As the movement of military personnel, but I said then on the Senate floor, the re- it is also not intended to exempt the De- peal of the travel amendment produced partment from trimming the fat in its the sad spectacle of the Government ask- travel budgets. ing the American people to make sacri- The Department of Health, Educa- flees when the Federal Government is tion, and Welfare has a travel budget of showing no willingness at all to tighten $75,027,000, including $22,501,000 for the its own belt. Social Security Administration. Although the administration was Other travel budgets include $84,- d tl o osed to my travel amend- 737,000 for the Treasury Department, man y pp a a , ment last year and worked for its repeal, $74,042,000 for the Transportation De- i D or t er e- th I n or e ,000 f 83 2 $63 sident will sup- partment Pr hat th l u e port this travel cut. The President h* partment, and $34,417,000 for the State asked for a substantial cutback in Fed- Department. eral spending, and with his cooperation, In addition to the well-known depart- the President and Congress can work to- ments and agencies, a variety of 63 com- gether to make reductions in an area of missions and boards will spend $90,- substantial Government waste. 419,000 on travel in fiscal 1976. Therefore, the legislation that I am And although the legislative and Judi- introducing today would call on the Pres- cial branches of Government account for ident, through his OMB Director,. to take less than 1 percent of the spending on steps to'reduce Federal travel by 10 per- Federal travel, my travel legislation will cent, taking care to insure that the cut- also apply to these two branches. backs do not disrupt vital Government If the President is serious about re- services or the movement of military ducing Government spending, he will en- personnel. dorse my efforts to cut Government travel Because of the difficulties involved in spending. If the Government expects the legislating an across-the-board travel American people to sacrifice, then the cut, this legislation is in the form of a Government must be willing to sacrifice. concurrent resolution. expressing the We must act immediately to cut back sense of Congress that immediate steps unnecessary Government costs, reduce be taken by the President to reduce Fed- the duplication of Federal programs, and eral travel expenses. trim the administrative expenses of Gov- According - to- the fiscal 1976 budget erntnent. And as a first step, we must re- estimates, the, Federal Government will duce Government travel expenses by 10 spend $2,314,371,000 on travel and trans- percent and save the American taxpayers portation of Federal employees, and a 10 $230 million a year. . percent cutback, would achieve a savings I ask unanimous consent that the text for the. taxpayers of more than $230 mil- of the concurrent resolution and a table lion. This reduction of $230 million will listing the estimated travel costs for the still allow the Government to spend as departments and agencies be printed in much on travel as it did in fiscal years the RECORD. 1975 and 1974, when it spent $2.1 billion There being no objection, the material and $2,0 billion respectively_ was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, And while I do anticipate objections as follows: from virtually all executive branch de- S. Cox. REs. 74 partments and agencies, I am convinced Resolved by the Senate (the House of Rep- that a substantial amount of waste can resentatives concurring), h the Director throu g id t res en , P y That the o man ' f d vel b u ge t s rom the tr f a be cut, ement and. Budget of Mana Off c f th , g i e e of our departments and agencies. o For example, the projected percentage shall take immediate steps to restrain the inflationary impact of Federal expenditures increases for the travel budgets of many and to conserve the use of energy by ordering departments and agencies are, in my a reduction of Federal travel expenditures by opinion, excessive and unjustifiable. at least 10 percent; and The Agriculture Department is plan- That these steps shall include such pro- ning to spend $.90,049,000 in fiscal 1976, visions as are necessary to insure that such a 25-percent increase over fiscal 1975 reductions are allocated so as not to disrupt spending for traVeh the provision of vital governmental services The Veterans' Administration will or the organized troop movement of military personnel, and spend $74,521,000 this year on travel ex- That the President is requested to submit penses, a 25-percent increase over fiscal to Congress, within 30 days of adoption of 1,975 and, a 4?0-percent increase over As- this Resolution by the Senate and the House cal 1974. spending. of Representatives a report outlining his The Secret Service will spend $10,- actions. 916,000 in fiscal 1976 on travel, an in- Travel and transportation costs crease of 54. percent over fiscal 1975 travel spending. And the Selective Service System, op- erating on a standby basis since the draft was eliminated, will spend $1,- 640 , 000 on travel, an increase of more than 60 percent over last year's travel budget. - These are not the only departments and agencies with large travel budgets. The Defense Department will spend $1,- 477,889,000 it fiscal 1976, wt1h a large portion of these funds spent on change 7~02~0 C P7,,~p R000400030041-3 Ap5pproved For 22pB Z EG S71~NFi rRop% Agency: - - Fiscal year 19,76 Legislative branch_______________ 10, 508 The judiciary___________________ 9.939 Executive Office of the President__ 1,315 Funds appropriated to the Press- -dent ________ ______________ 26, 703 Department of Agriculture_______ 90,049 Department of Commerce -------- 26,117 Department of Defense-military- 1, 477,889 Department of Defense--civil--- 37,516 Department of Health, Education, and Department of of t--he--------Interior _______ _______ 73,83 2 63,832 Department of Justice ----------- 53,173 Department of Labor ------------ 18;170 S 19603 Department of State_____________ 34,417 Department of the Treasury------ 84, 737 Energy Research and Development Administration _______________ 8,040 Environmental Protection Agency_ 12,800 Department of Transportation---- 74,042 General Services Administration__ 10, 887 Department of Housing and Urban Development 16, 448 National Aeronautics and Space Administration --------------- 17,822 Veterans' Administration------__ 74,521 Other independent agencies------ 90, 419 Total -------------------- 2,314,371 ORDER OF BUSINESS Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, un- der the special orders, I believe the dis- tinguished Senator from Idaho is now to be recognized. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. He has been recognized, and he yielded to the Senator from Delaware for a unanimous-consent request. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, it is my understanding that I have 15 min- utes as well. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. That is correct. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I yield my 15 minutes to the distinguished Senator from Idaho. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Without objection, it is so ordered. The Senator from Idaho may proceed. Mr. CHURCH. I thank the Senators very much for their courtesy. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that Mr. Lock Johnson be granted privilege of the floor during the presen- tation of this address. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Without objection, it is so ordered. N IMPERATIVE FOR THE CIA: PRO- FESSIONALISM FREE OF POLITICS AND PARTISANSHIP Mr. CHURCH. Mr. President, "For ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free." So read the words carved in white marble at the entrance to the Central Intelligence Agency. It is a noble Biblical thought, chosen by Allen Dulles when he was Director of the CIA perhaps to remind his colleagues of their ulti- mate purpose: the creation of objective intelligence. - Objectivity ought to be the hallmark of every public trust. As chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Activity, I have done my utmost to as- sure a fair and balanced inquiry into the intelligence services. When the commit- tee was first established. Senate Major- ity Leader MIKE MANSFIELD stressed that the allegations against the intelligence agencies were serious. They deserved, he said, a sober inquiry which would be "neither a whitewash nor a vendetta.". That is how I have tried to conduct this investigation. - Certainly it has not been a whitewash. The committee has already exposed many serious abuses of power within the intelligence services. Working steadfast- ly for 9 months, the select committee has amassed a comprehensive set of records, documents, and sworn testimony. This month, the committee will pub- Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 , , e e f t I am hop 19604 Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE November 11, 1975 fish a detailed interim report on assassi- t;her and make a prediction about future decision now appears to have been taken nation. The committee has voted to make developments. In this sense. an estimate only a few hours before he invasion was the report public, despite an appeal by is forecast, a judgment, a "shrewd guess" launched on August 20. Though the mo- the President to suppress it. Based on the .s to what is likely to happen. bilization of Soviet troots was duly re sworn testimony of over 160 witnesses, Though it is ix possible to predict the ported by the CIA, no ore could say for some 8,000 pages of transcripts, and precise course of events, the good NIE sure that the Politburo decision would countless hours of research, :this report describes in detail how various parties be-they themselves did not know until examines the involvement of our Gov- involved view a situation, and how they the last minute. ernmentin f i i ore anassass naticn intrigue aright act toward hypothetical changes. during the administration of four Presi- 'The estimate wllf lay out, and often rank, dents, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, z, range of possible outcomes, especially and Nixon. Piecing together the avail- those that threaten American Interests able evidence has been an extxaordinar- car present an opportunity for the United ily difficult job. But the result has been ltates. as penetrating an inquiry into this re- The value of national intelligence esti- grettable chapter of our history as the crates to the decisionmakers in our Gov- obtainable facts will allow. ernment should be immense. Our na- Beyond Identifying threat., to the tonal security could depend upon re- liberty of American citizens, the commit- liable judgments as to future actions and tee is working diligently to establish leg- capabilities of hostile nations. The na- islative safeguards to better protect their tional estimate is the final product of an rights in the fuure. These proposals for i.=ztricate gathering and evaluation of in- reform will be the focus for pudic hear- L'lligence, drawn from all sources. ings later this year. If NIES are accurate and timely, and So, a whitewash this investigation is Ieeisionmakers have confidence In them, not. a-e. have spent our money well. But we Just as clearly, it Is not a vendetta. gave both wasted money and posed an In the interests of fairness, wherever added danger to our safety if our esti- the CIA has been wrongly c::narged, I mates are inaccurate, or If they have been have been quick to say so Same alleged distorted by analytic or policy bias. Mis- earlier this year that the CIA had been ,,;tkenestimates of enemy intentions hold involved in plots to murder Charles De- a potential for national disaster. This we Gaulle, the late President of France. An learned almost too late, prior to 1962, immediate review of the facts showed no , om the estimate which assured us that such plot was ever contemplat.:d by the aio Soviet Union would not place nu- CIA or any other agency of the'J.S. Gov- ;,, ear-tipped missiles In Cuba. ernment. What actually happened was We have had other mistaken estimates. this: A CIA agent was approac bed by a ` ire professionals have erred in overesti- foreign citizen who made a totally un resting the growth of Soviet ICBM forces. solicited suggestion of a plan to kill De- The misconceived "missile gap' In the Gaulle. The plan was rejected at once c?,rly 1960's is one illustration. The in- by the Central Intelligence Agency. tclligence estimates on the Soviet inva- On another occasion, the wticusation ions in Hungary in 1956 and Czecho- vas made that the CIA had periodically slovakia in 1968 were also wide of the "infiltrated" the White House end other roark. By far the worst failure of the executive agencies. Specifical13, it was estimative process in many years was the said that Alexander Butterfield, an aide misreading of the imminence of the 1973 to President Nixon, had served In the ,+irab-Israeli war. White House as a spy fox the CIA. There in a word, our national intelligence was no scintilla of evidence that Mr. estimates have certainly been fallible. Butterfield had spied on the President The Committee on intelligence In the for the CIA. I announced this f.nding as House of Representatives is to be strongly quickly as it could be confirmed, in the eom,mended for examining recent esti- interest of fairness both to the CIA and mates by the intelligence services which Mr. Butterfield. h .Awe proven to be inaccurate. Such fall- Where the CIA has erred, the com- lyres need to be exposed so we will not mittee will say so; where it lass per- cie velop a blind faith In our intelligence formed with merit, the committee will a frencies. acknowledge that as well. In short, our However, we should not forget that on objective has never been to wreck the other occasions, our intelligence esti- intelligence system, but to expose wrong- mates have proven to be accurate and ful and unlawful conduct, so that needed valuable. Admittedly, the CIA Directorate reforms can be written into law. of Science and Technology has not yet In appraising the intelligence services, developed a crystal ball. Predicting the a subject of particular concera is the future must remain probabilistic. Though quality of our national intelligence esti- the CIA did give an exact warning of the mates, or NIE's as they are more corn- date last year when turkey would in- monly called. The preparation of na- vade Cyprus, such precision will be rare. tional intelligence estimates is a most Simply too many unpredictable factors important task, for the NIE's from the eater into most situations. The intrinsic building blocks of national security pol- element of caprice In the affairs of men icy. Put briefly, an intelligence estimate sod natons is the hair shirt of the in is a paper prepared by the CIA In co- tailligence estimator, operation with the other intelligence when the Soviet Union mobilized services which assesses the curre"it situa- troops in the sumer of 196i to threaten tion in some part of the world, or ana- Czechoslovakia, no solid indication was lyzes the major forces at work--politi- a railable one way or the other as to when, cal, economic, military, sociological, psyy- or even if, the assembled forces would ac- chological-on some aspect of the world tttally be used. The Poltiburo was sharply situation. Often an estimate will go fur- daided on the Issue of intervention. The While it is unreasonabie to expect pre- cise predictions, a dewToping situation ought to be well-understood and re- ported to policymakers. Also, competent intelligence should ahi'ld the United St ter against major surprises. In this $Old, the intelligence services earn higher marks. Examples are plentiful in the crit- ical areas of military, economic, and po- litical intelligence. Militarily, the intelligence agencies must detect new weapons systems. Before anything else, we need to know the num- bers and characteristics of the weapons that can strike us directly, the doctrine for their use, intentions for further de- ployment, and, most importantly, the new weapons still on the die wing boards. In the last 25 years, no important new Soviet weapons system, from their H-bomb to their most recent missiles, has appeared which had not been heralded in advance by NIE's. The new Soviet Polaris-type "Y" missiles and the submarines on which they are carried v ere anticipated well before the first boats slid down the ways. The CIA, with the hdp of the other intelligence services, iden.ifled and moni- tored the development of the Soviet ABM system around Moscow some 7 years before it became operational. Individual ABM radars were identified in the early phases of their construction-up to 5 years before they became active. Our Government would never have been able to enter Into the SALT nego- tiations wore it not for the ability of the intelligence services to verify--that is, detect through our own independent means-any significant violation of the agreements. This capability gave us the confidence to take this important step toward arms control. Moreover, U.S. in- telligence studies on Soviet strategic mis- sile programs, as they might develop without a further SALT agreement, played an important role in determining the ceilings reached at Vladivostok. Even in the estimate failure I cited earlier concerning the Cuban missile crisis, we should not forget that ulti- mately it was the CIA-developed U-2 plane which detected the missiles in time for us to act. Moreover, 2 months before, John McCone, then Director of Central Intelligence, had warned his colleagues on the National Security Council of his belief that the Soviet might place ballis- tic missiles in Cuba. He in fact took is- sue with the national intelligence esti- mate that discounted this possibility. The economic intelligence estimates we have recelved have also been valu- able. The great wealth of OPEC govern- ments now gives them an enormous po- tential to exert Influence and to create disruption throughout the Western World. The quadrupling of oil prices in 1973-74 has given them a huge surplus to invest-over $40 billion In this year alone. Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 Approved For Rele se.2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 November 11, 1975 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE Our intelligence agencies have been successful 'in tracking the flow of petro- dollars _ worldwide' and have alerted U.B. policymakers to significant changes in OPEC inbestment strategies. In addition to comprehensive estimates on produc- tion, consumption, and pricing, they have given us timely assessments on the strengths and weaknesses of OPEC as a cartel and the availability of alterna- tive sources of energy. To ' further assist the State Depart- ment in its overseas relations, the CIA regularly prepares valuable biographic profiles on political officials throughout the world, many 'of whom would other- wise remain strangers to us, concealed within their closed societies. These examples illustrate ' the point: Nat onal intelligence Is by no means lilydled to the prediction of specific events. Its, primary purpose is to help our leaders protect the national interest by making available the best possible mmerstanding of foreign capabilities, leaders, and developing events. To accomplish this purpose, we must continue to demand of our intelligence officers the standards suggested by Sher- man Kent, who for many years was chairman of the CIA Board of National Estimates. He observed that these men and women must have "the best in pro- fessional training, the highest intellec- tual integrity, and a very large amount of worldly wisdom." But this in itself will not be sufficient. It is imperative that we preserve the professional stature of the Central Intel- ligence Agency, keeping it free from the eroding forces of politics and partisan- ship. Only in this way will the CIA con- tinue to serve as an adequate counter- balance to the intelligence estimates that come from other quarters of the Govern- ment, including the Pentagon, and to the other 'pressures which develop even in the White House Itself. 'Let us not forget, Mr. President, it was for this very purpose that we created the Central Intelligence Agency in the first place. If the Central Intelligence Agency becomes so discredited through an overemphasis on its failures in the drawing of estimates, we may find this crucial task lodged exclusively within the Pentagon in the future. Often the military has exhibited a built-in bias to take the most dour view on enelkiy threat assessments. The "worst-case" approach so often adopted by the military leads to the most fright- ening forecasts. The rule-of-thumb at the Pentagon still appears to be "the big- ger, the better." Distortions in these judgments sometimes arise through pressures to justify larger military budg- ets or new weapons systems. In contrast, the CIA national esti- mate~ process is- more apt to be free of such self-serving interests. This is why the Central Intelligence Agency was created in the first place. It was to be an agency without policy blinders; one dedicated, as Allen Dulles put it, "to get qt the hard facts on which others must determine policy." 'Lt. Gen. Daniel O. Graham, who was Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency until the administration shakeup last week, wrote recently that he thought the time was "ripe for the military pro- fession to reassert its traditional role in the function of describing military threats to national security." One must view with some alarm the prospect of a silenced CIA succumbing to an increas- ingly dominant military voice in calcu- lating the foreign threat to our Nation. The ABM debate in Congress a few years ago illustrates the problem. In the debate, large outlays as well as questions of U.S. security in the 1970's rode on the decision of whether to deploy a nation- wide ABM system. The debate was marked by conflicting analyses and dif- fering forecasts between the CIA and the military of what the U.S.S.R. could achieve with nuclear weapons, given time. Technical details became crucial for assessing the opposing points of view. The Pentagon was driven by Its own policy considerations, based on a "worst- case" analysis. The questions they asked themselves led to one answer: The need for a nationwide ABM system. The price tag would have been something like $100 billion, a bonanza guaranteeing a bloated military budget for years to come. The congressional coalition against the ABM had to have reliable informa- tion to counteract the reams of data turned out by the military. This informa- tion was available only at one source: The Central Intelligence Agency. The CIA had no policy ax to grind, and no pressures upon it to protect lucrative contracts. Through a series of CIA brief- ings, Members of Congress were given the whole range of information on the strengths and weaknesses of the ABM system. These briefings went far beyond the selective data provided by the Pentagon. The data presented by the CIA indi- cated the futility of an ABM system. Since no way existed to prevent a satura- tion of the system by enemy missiles, the ABM's would not provide an adequate shield. This evidence enabled opponents to mount an effective debate against the concept. By 1967, Congress had deeided. that a nationwide ABM deployment against a Soviet attack was not desirable and even a limited ABM deployment was approved in the Senate by only a single vote. The insights provided by the CIA briefings helped immeasurably to stop the stampede toward the costly decision to construct a national system, and laid the foundation for a ready acceptance of the ABM treaty which soon followed. As recently as last week, CIA testimony before Congress contradicted claims by the Pentagon that massive Soviet military buildups are reducing the United States to the status of a second-rate power. In contrast to gloomy Defense Department estimates, the Central Intelligence Agen- cy figures Indicated that Soviet military spending has not leapt forward at all. In- stead It has been increasing at the steady 3-percent annual rate which it has main- tained for the past 10 years. S 19605 forces along the Chinese-Soviet frontier. Also, the CIA has taken a much calmer view of Soviet naval developments in the Indian Ocean than have assessments prepared by the U.S. Navy or the De- partment of Defense--who just happen to have a Diego Garcia cure-all. Without these independent civilian contributions from the CIA, we would be forced to rely solely on the military point of view. The Congress can Ill afford to do without the more impartial judgments offered by the Central Intelligence Agency. However, it is not only a matter of standing up to the Pentagon. We need a CIA that can resist all the partisan pres- sures which may be brought to bear by various groups inside and outside the Government-including partisan pres- sures from the White House itself. We must seek to insulate the Central Intelli- gence Agency from the ebb and flow of political considerations. If we have learned anything out of the last 2 years, considering the way that agency has been used for political pur- poses, if there is any constructive result to come from this whole, lengthy, con- scientious investigation, It must be that we have to protect the impartiality, the independence, and the professionalism of that agency. This does not mean that we must al- ways select a Director from within the Agency or from outside the Government. The critical factor is the selection of a person of demonstrated independence, someone who would have the ability to say: No, Mr. President, I believe you are wrong. According to our best information, the policy you propose will fail. It is based upon in- correct assumptions, which are contradicted by the underlying facts. And unless we have a man with the strength and resolution to stand up and fight for the facts as his agency has found them, even when it is very tough going, then the role and purpose of the agency itself has been undermined. This is why, in my judgment, the ap- pointment of Ambassador George Bush is so ill-advised. It is one thing to choose an individual who may have had political experience, or diplomatic experience. That is fine. It is quite another to choose someone whose principal political role has been that of chairman of the Re- publican National Committee. There is no need to eliminate from consideration an individual simply because he or she may have held public office. But the line must be drawn somewhere, and a man of Mr. Bush's prolonged involvement in partisan activities at the highest party level surely passes over that line. Indeed, it appears that Mr. Bush's nomination to be Director of the CIA may even be regarded at the White House as a springboard to higher political office. When asked at a press conference if the nomination of Mr. Bush would eliminate him as a Vice-Presidential running-mate possibility, President Ford replied: portion of Soviet military spending has nothing directly to do with the United sideration by anybody. The delegates to the convention or myself. States, such as the expenses incurred by Significantly enough Mr. Bush also their positioning of great numbers of leaves the door open. When asked by a Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 S19606 CONS RESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE Novem,bi 11, 1975 reporter in Peking whether this new as- signment would end a political career that could lead to a Vice-PraAdential nomination, his response was:' Well, I'm not sure I've ended it foi ever .... If this is to be the nature of the re- form of the CIA, I just wonder why we have gone to such an effort to try and analyze the problems, the abuses, and the overreach of the executive author- ity these past months. What If CIA assessment should collide with the judgment of the President who wants to embark upon some new policy in the coming year? It is, of course, the President's final decision, but can one Imagine In an election year so partisan a man, the past chairman of the Repub- lican National Committee, standing up to a President in that situation under all the pressures of a partisan character that would be focused upon him? The question answers itself. George Bush is a likable man. He is a capable man, I find him to be a per- sonal friend. I think there are many po- litical offices that he could hold with dis- tinction. But he is not the man to head tip the CIA. I find the President's appointment as- tonishing. The Senate and the House committees-not to mention the Presi- dent's own Commission on Intelligence-- have labored for months reviewing the problems of the intelligence agencies. These problems have been plentiful, and the areas for new legislation arm! many. Still, the prospects for starting afresh are good, and I have viewed the chances to restore public trust and confidence in the CIA with considerable of tilnfsssl. But this is no way to begin the -estora- tion. No new set of laws, no new guid- ing principles-regardless of how skill- fully drawn-will restore this trust if the credentials of the new Director raise serious questions of propriety. I can just Imagine what the uproar In this Cham- ber would have been if a Democratic President had nominated Larry O'Brien to be the Director of the CIA, as fine a man as Larry O'Brien may be. Let us not undermine the goad work of the Rockefeller Commission and the committees of the House and Senate by placing a former party chairman at the head of a highly sensitive intelligence agency. Let us not make a travesty ou . of our efforts to reform the CIA. The Senate and the people we represent have the right to insist upon a Central Intelli- gence Agency which is politically neu- tral and totally professional. I urge Senators to stand up sad op- pose this nomination. I can choose no other course, for if the CIA is to play its intended role in our Government, it must be impartial and nonpolitical. Its ability to be so depends. In the final analysis, on a Director who Possesses. ORDER OF BUSINESS The PRESIDING OFFICER. Ui:der the previous order the Senator from Ala- bama (Mr. ALLEN) is recognized for not to exceed 15 minutes. Mr. ALLEN. Mr. President, time was nLLotted to me in anticipation that the distinguished: Senator from Idaho (Mr. (;rruRcn) might need this additional t;sne. I yield back the remainder of my t-uie. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order the Senator from West Virigina (Mr- RosERr C. Evimi is recog- riL,ed for not to exceed 15 minutes, Mr. MAN,D. Mr. President, I i :r ld back the S'enator's time. ROUTINE MORNING BUSINESS The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the v.*i vlo,is order. there will now be a period f c' the transaction of routine morning business for not to exceed 15 minutes. with statements therein limited to 5 rc.inutes. Mr. MANSFIELD. Mr. President, I sug- geast the absence of a quorum. The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk v,M can the roll. The assistant legislative clerk pro- c-,.Lded to call the roll. `Jfr. WILLIAMS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for thr quorum call be rescinded. 'I'he PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. GARY HAMT). Without objection, it is so Ordered. MFSSAGES FROM THE PRESIDENT Messages from the President of the ViAted States were communicated to the Sonate by Mr. Hefting, one of his sec- retaries. EXECUTIVE MESSAGES REFERRED As in executive session, the Acting President pro tempore (Mr. FORD) laid before the Senate messages from the President of the United States submitting sundry nominations which were referred to the appropriate committees. (The nominations received today are printed at the end of the Senate pro- ceedings.) MESSAGE FROM THE HOUSE At 3:15 p.m., a message from the House of Representatives delivered by Mr. Hackney, one of its reading clerks, at n.ounced that the House has passed the following bills in which It requests the concurrence of the Senate: A.R. 4287. An set to provide for additional law clerks for the judges of the District of Cotuuabla Court of Appeals; h n. 6481. An slot to amend certain pro- visions of the Comaunications Act of 1984 to provide long-term financing for the Cor- poration for Public Broadcasting, and for other purposes; SI.R. 9958. An act to transfer certain real pro erty of the United States to the District ,of Columbia Redevelopment I-and Agency; 131t. 10035. An act to establish the Ju- iaihil Conference, of the District of Columbia; t. 10041. An act to amend section 739 ve, and for other purposes. At 5 p.m., a message from the Houma of Representatives by Mr. Hackney, one of its reading clerks, announced that the House agrees to the report of the com- mittee of conference on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses on the amend- ments of the Senate to the bill (H.R. 8365) snaking appropriatins for the De- partment of Transportat in and related agencies for the fiscal ye.-r ending June 30, 1976, and the period a ..ding Septem- ber 30, 1 976, and for other purposes; that the House recedes front i?;; disagreement to the amendments of the Senate No. 49 and 50 and concurs the:'cin; that the House recedes from its c :.agreement to the amendments of the 3enate No. 20, 21, 31, 32, 42, and 47, each with an amendment in which it requests the con- currence of the Senate. The message also announced that the House disagrees to the amendments of the Senate to the bill (H.Il. 4073) to ex- tend the Appalachian Regional Develop- ment Act of 1965 for an additional 2 fiscal year period; requests a conference with the Senate on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses thereon; and that Mr. JONES of Alabama, Mr. Wsucsr'r, Mr. JorresoN of California, tor, ROE, Mr. HARSrsA, and Mr. HAMMEI:SCHMIDT were appointed managers of the conference on the part of the House. The message further ainounced that the Speaker has appointee; Mr. Lujan as an additional conferee on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses cn the amend- ment of the Senate to the bill (H.R. 3474) to authorize appropriations to the Energy Research and Development Administra- tion in accordance with sec tion 261 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, section 305 of the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, and section 16 of the Federal Nonnuclear Energy Research and Devel- opment Act of 1974, and 'or other pur- Poses. COMMUNICATIONS FROM EXECU- TIVE DEPARTMENT S, ETC. The ACTING PRESIDI:NT pro tem- pore (Mr. FORD) laid before the Senate the following letters, which were referred as indicated; IetORT OF TIM COMPTROm..r.Ha OENERAI. A letter from the acting Comptroller Gen- eral of the United States transmitting, pur- suant to law. a report on a :stain deferrals contained In the sixth special message of the President of the United States submitted to the Congress on October 20. 1.975 (with ac- companying report) : referre l jointly, pur- suant to the order of January 30, 1-975, to the Coosmitteea on Appropriations, Budget, La- bor and Public Welfare, slat Finance, and ordered to be printed. OENERALxsED SYSTEM OF I'nxFrRETSCE A communication from t` a President of the United States notifying, pusuant to law, the Senate of his intention to designate ad- ditional beneficiary developin., countries and territories for purposes of t -is Generalized System of Preference: to the Committee on Finance. FINAL DETERMINATION OF rHE INDIAN CLAIMS COMMISST(+N A letter from the Chairnia* of the Indian Claims Commission transml;t.ing. pursuant to law, a copy of the final tic termination of the Commission in the case f the Klamath and Modoc Tribe and Fah(-,Skin Band of Snake Indiana: v. U.S. (with accompanying papers) ; to the Committee on appropriations. REPORT OF TIIE COMPTROLLEROe THE Ct*AENCy A letter from the Comptroller of the Cur- rency transmitting, pursuant to law, his an - Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 Approved For Release 22 pp~~/ / DP 4R00 0030041-3 S 19913 November 13, 1975 CONGRESS18NA .3EC~5 Jq' United nations is based; we are unleash- are Israel's friends.' Let us see who are two terms), Bush is one of Mr. Ford's guys, jug a great evil. The U.N. has enough our friends. And then let us stand to- which is fine. But at the CIA he would be trouble maintaining a modicum of world gether on principles and ideals sound the wrong kind of guy at the wrong place at the worst possible time. peace and desperately clinging to credi- and true. based CIA is under a cloud of The dark suspicion suspicion on proven bility without propagating vicious lies Mr. President, I cannot condone the and casting salt into divisive wounds. irresponsible, spiteful action of the U.N. that the CIA is a threat to civil liberties, and It is bitterly disillusioning to see an in- General Assembly in passing a resolution perhaps to tranquility, because it is insub- ternational organization of the stature designed to thwart the interests of peace ordinate or otherwise immune to proper con- of the U.N. General Assembly stoop to and sow the seeds of discontent, for, in But lack of control over the CIA Is no such Ignoble pursuits. These pursuits, the the words of Secretary General Wald- longer the gravest problem. Congress, venting of a vehemence unmatched since helm, we may indeed lose the future awakened from its long sleep, is alert to its Hitler's time, do not do justice to the through discord and confrontation. oversight duties. And the executive branch, having been reminded of the law, can keep noble principles In which the U.N. Was the CIA operating this side of criminality. conceived. (HEhCIA DIRECTOR DETERMINEToday the most pressing problem is not to The preamble of the U.N. Charter THE ROLE OF THE CIA prevent the CIA from Going what is for- raises men's hopes for abetter future, & ren. Rather, the obdo is to see that i- future where war, poverty, and oppres- r. CHURCH. Mr. President, as I said Goes what it is supposed to do, which is sion give way to world peace, world pros e Senate on November 11, the Cen- gather and report accurate information. perior, and freedom and respect for all tral Intelligence Agency, if it is to play But gathering and reporting are different nations and peoples of the world. Article. its intended role, must be nonpartisan, operations. And it is possible to imagine would I of the charter states that one of the professional, and sufficiently independent sured situations in which the CIA e t information, purposes is: of outside pressures to stand firmly be- ssuppress nconvenient to the politi- ings solving achieve international cooperation in hind its assessment of foreign intelli- or report purposes ph an aonve convenient administration looking to the solving international problems of an eco- gene information. Imagine an nomk:, social, cultural, or humanitarian char- This does not mean that persons who next election and determined to celebrate acter, and in promoting and encouraging have held public office are disqualified detente as its finest achievement. Imagine respect for human rights and for funda- mental from serving as the Director of the CIA. that the administration is excessively freedoms, for all without distinction Elliot Richardson, for example-having anxious to achieve another strategic arms as to race, sex, language, or religion. demonstrated the capacity to withstand agreement with the Soviet Union. Where is the respect for human rights great pressures within the Government, Suppose the administration triumphantly and for fundamental freedoms in the ig- and the personal strength to take issue signed an agreement limiting the number of nominious resolution passed the night of with the President, himself, when he felt strategic vehicles-missiles and bombers- November'10 by the General Assembly? it necessary-is a man who would be on each side. Critics might say the limit is a false ceiling. Critics might charge that the Mr. President, I have long been a eminently qualified to serve in this office. limit is as high as the Soviet Union can or staunch supporter of the U.N. The Char- There are many others. wants to go during the term of the agree- ter of the U.N. is one of the most lofty But a person whose political experience ment. Therefore, the agreement is an empty and exalted texts of political history in- has been highly partisan in character- exercise, a limit that does not limit. (That is corporating mankind's greatest hopes. such as the Chairman of the Republican what Senator Henry Jackson said about the The uniqueness of this document, and National Committee-cannot be said to 2,400-vehicle limit agreed to at Vladivostok.) the organization it created, is its wide- meet this test. Then the administration would appreciate a CIA report arguing that the Soviet Union spread `acceptance. The U.N. has pro- When the picture is further compli- has the ability to surpass the limit in the vided and maintained a forum for air- cated by the apparent intention that the near future, and would do so if there were Ing the problems of the world and has directorship of the CIA is to be used as no agreement. proven that nations in disagreement can a springboard for higher office, then it is Or suppose the administration wanted an reason with each other to solve their impossible to conceive that the nominee intelligence report minimizing this or that differences. could discharge his responsibilities in a verification problem-say, the difficulty of But this widespread acceptance, this proper fashion. verifying Soviet compliance with range limits basic presumption of the existence and These fatal flaws in the nomination of on cruise missiles. Or suppose the administration could get worthiness of the U.N. is fragile. Pushed George Bush to be the new Director of a CIA report supporting the hitherto unsup- beyoncT their limits or to the depths of the CIA are strongly underscored in two ported Soviet contention that the Soviet their convictions nations will quit the columns which appeared yesterday Backfire bomber--which can deliver nuclear organization. If the resolution passed by morning in the Washington Post: one by weapons over intercontinental distances- the General Assembly last night is an in- George F. Will entitled, "George Bush: nevertheless lacks the strategic significance, dication of the general intolerance per- Political Ambitions" and the other by and should not count against the Soviet total vading the U.N., the widespread accept- Rowland Evans and Robert Novak en- of 2,400 strategic vehicles permitted by the ante of the organization may evaporate titled, "And Overlooked Political Real- Vladivostok agreement. Such a CIA report seem- would concede a Soviet point without seem- Ism countries may resort to the isolation- ities." ing to be a concession, and could grease the Ism distrust which has thrown pre- These columnists clearly demonstrate skids for a pre-election agreement. ceding generations into the scourge of why, under the circumstances, the nomi- Recent events have made it wise to worry war, nation of George Bush to be Director of about the possibility that the CIA will be- Mr. President, the United States will the CIA raises such serious questions of come compliant to political pressures in re- never agree to abandon or pervert the impropriety. porting intelligence information, especially noble ideals upon which the U.N. is based. I ask unanimous consent that the two information that might tarnish the image of detente. Nor will the tTnited States ever acquiesce articles be printed in the RECORD. Defense Secretary Schlesinger, an apolitical to tyranny, even should it appear in the There being no objection, the articles , within the dal guise of a U.N. mandate. However, if it were ordered to be printed in the RECORD, man mini was stration the of foremost Secretary critic itic wger's policy in is determined that the U.N. is no longer as follows: negotiating with the Soviet Union-some- living true to its charter, then the GEORGE BUSH: POLITICAL AMBITIONS times called "the policy of preemptive con- United States should consider withdraw- (By George F. Will) cession." Mr. Ford wants to replace Schlesing- ing Its membership. I think it is time for When nominated to be Director of the er with Donald Rumsfeld, another vice presi- the United States to assess its role in Central Intelligence Agency, George Bush dential aspirant. Thus it is all the more im- the U.N. to determine whether or not said he did not think that being Director perative that the CIA be run by a man not continued participation is in the best would forever prevent him from seeking po- susceptible to political considerations or pres- interests of the United States. litical office. Obviously he hopes it will not. the attempt his hope was stroked by President Ford's The problem with Bush is less that he has If pt of the resolution was declaration that Bush is not excluded from a political past than that he so obviously and to ostracize Israel, that thrust has failed. consideration as his 1976 running mate. avidly wants to have a political future. Israel will' not lose U.S. friendship, be- Bush may not have to worry about a CIA As chairman of the Republican National cause of this resolution; indeed if the at- attachment becoming a political handicap. Committee during Watergate Bush was very tempt was to isolate Israel and her The Senate may refuse to confirm him. considerate about the man who appointed friends, I say let it be so. Let us see who Like some other ex-Congressmen (he served him. In spite of all the available evidence, he Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 S 19914 Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 never expressed independent ~kidgments CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE Novpr, ber 13, 1 )7.a convenient to Richard Nixon. lntil a.esu cessorkhad himbeen s onfirtcd 'dent Ford proposed gra tjve dv oted it wl, It might be rash to expect Bu ;h to display by the Senate. Earlier; when,Colby left Mr the and House supported, instead, .ginstead, ?vore s string it down at the CIA a capacity for polit. cally incon- fibrd's oval office on the morning of Sunday, ent rules. venience rode endence in to roll back prices. A it h after the con- e jud Ing intellf- Nov. 2, he was preparing to pack out of the trgls expired, the Presielde +atand Congress got gene. That is why the Senate may ask Mr. CIA Instantly. Wgcther Ford for another nominee. :ti Still one of Washington's darker mysteries retroactive Tlexa temon xngx~i g Congress s brie] lu Congress time why the President chose to put the long- to work out a permanent law. That extension OVES, oOKEo POl.ITicAI, RErr.rrrr:s F~ulering Bush through such a wringer with- expires on Nov. 15. (By Rowland Evans and Robert Novaki out understanding the political realties. The Conference on th permanent law i The wholly predict able storm over Presi- White House aides normally involved with now in Its final stages. The President ha dent Ford's nomination precle former Republican CIA affairs, Including the Congressional said that he is willing to extend controls to National National 's pogo Bush to head ''robes, knew nothing of Colby's sudden sack- all domestic oil, somewha, below the current has foChairman rced the Georg House into a dan- `ig or his replacement by Bush until too late, market level, if Congress will agree to peel CIA h erously fooverdue rced t alchitei s Indeed, on top of the CIA's long misery is off all controls gradually ever the next several political re- `.Ire grip of Congressional investigations and , with withdrawal of the nomination yea alines r,- ag considers hlghe: prices necessary to now a possibility. press exposes, the Bush nomination is re- encourag.^ greater produc on and to enforce The political realxt;as. a arded by some intelligence experts as an- conservation. But the co ;sessional conferee,,, Pparerrtly never ,her grave morale deflator. They reason t hat considered by the President or the very fee; i.ny identified politician, no matter how re- are sharply divided uses the principle of top aides privy to his secret plans to replace , lved to be political] even a pl int, attrol. Central Intelligence Director William Colby 2 I Y pure, In, tewould nd o aggravate One oly at least, s to,arguable: it would .with Bush, boil down to this essential: to he CIA's credibility gap. Instead of an idea- he wantonly dangerous to let all controls end avoid possible refusal of the this even Demo- .fied politic:.an like Bush former Member abruptly on Nov 15, with en immediate jump y cratic Senate to confirm Bush, he or Presl- ' the House, twice-defeated Senate nominee upward of all prices to the world level. That dent Ford must absolutely rule cut ally esi- em Texas and Vice Presidential aspirant- dentty r must absolutely rule jolt could well destroy thus present economic Mr Fordy VPOS ice `bat is needed they feel, Is a respected non- recovery and throw the country back into of Bush, up as 's Presidential running mate. olit,ician, perhaps from business or the renewed recession. But the effect of perma- Such a condition has now reached the ademic world. nent controls would also be deeply=harmful. Stage of Not all experts agree One former CIA of- Over the long haul, contro,s tend to turn into Sen- ate establis of gospel inside tthepDtick 1ar)v with '. sal wants the CIA placed under political price-fixing and carteli :atioii agreements. Democrats on the Senate Arm d Services `-adership capable of working closely with Worse, holding prices down means letting Committee. Although Senate r mStennis, "ongress. But even that distinctly minority imports rise unnecessarily high. To the extent conservative mmit e. Alhog chairman of the Sen. Coln Ste has tosition rebals again-t any Presidential that the United States has an oil policy these c rintimates of the highly y enario that looks to the CIA as possible days, that-by default--J:; it. This country said nvthii g at al pan fall ppi g-stone to the Vice Presidential is Im now he Pp y agree that all ,,initiation. pmba g more oil g than before t. Is Vice Presidential doors must be closed to J Arco embargo, and a rst -?r Gulf. The of it Bush to avoid an inflammatory crtofirmation - is corning from the that Per will ev The woes- battle. OIL, GAS, AND CONGRESS den drastic a bill oil priwill prevent any sud- Failure of the President to consider thisas- den trecou try jump in decontrolling ces, but adil cover pect of his appointment of Bush, a highly Mr. MATHIAS. Mr. President, as our mkt the country or three yea s. steadily over ~, period regarded and extremely popular politician, a nergy problem becomes more complex is right of two r three years, The mock fir was further exacerbated during Mr. Ford's nd more partisan with each passing ms aon this crucial choice, the Democratic appearance on Meet the Press last Sunday 4a5' t wih majority the House a wrong. Instead of seeking to cairn the bailed waters > it becomes difficult to comment with Second i~srie~ What he ~ the price of iat- when asked if he should not elan mate both ;entry, WiSc Onl, and foresight. Never- oral gas and the shortage; in the industrial Bush and Secretary of Defence-designate ti'eless, the Washington Post editorial of Northeast? For more than 20 years the fed- Donald Rumsfeld from all consideration for -Thursday, November 6, entitled "Oil, eral government has regtv'ated the price of second place on the 1978 Republican ticket; Gas:, and Congress" meets this test, gas sold across state line:;. but not within Mr. Ford bristled. As we face the expiration of price con- states. The current fedei ceiling is one- one- "I don't think people with talent. ought trols, shortages of natural gas, and ac- phird the unregulated price within the gas-rodu equiva 'to be excluded from any further public lent cost states and o you th nk the. t those service," he replied coolly. Cons by the OPEC countries to hike oil lent cost of oil. When you think about those Thus, the plied col gravely mistaken ii ices, it would be well for Senators to disparities, the present shortages in this part readi Thus othe Preside impact e l the Sunday reflect on the thoughts so well expressed of the country-which depends upon inter- of , Morning Massacre contimies in 'cis failure t'r the Post in its lead editorial of Novem- state sales--are not hard t ,understand. to perceive that to the eontrolbng Demo- f+el' 6. I ask unanimous consent that the The Senate has passed an excellent bill, oats on Capitol Hill (and many Republicans tfmt of that editorial be printed in the permitting short-term emergency sales at higher prices this winter and, next spring. as well), the Director of CIA must be above l ECOnD. political suspicion. beginning lat deregulation of prices. Since There being no objection, the editorial this deregulation would apply y only y to new ew But some Presidential sides are inoiw keen- eras ordered to be printed in the RECOilo, gas production as it comes onto the market, ly tuned in to Congressional fregaencies, it follows: the bill threatens no abrupt surge of costs. is no accident that even though Bash's Com- ination has ben formally sent to the Sen- On., GAS. Apo CotvcxFSS But the bill has now gone to the House Rep. ate for confirmation hearings, no hearings Once again the law controlling oil prices John morns DCommittee, Mich, chairman, Rep. D. Dingell (D-M)a 1.5 evidently bill are now scheduled for several weeks at best- is about to expire- Once again Congress IS in termined not to report cht the half lf of of the he bill and possibly not until next year. 'e final stages of enacting an extension. But that provides permanent deregulation, That That raises the question of a deliberate- 'r'~ one knows exactly what form it will take, makes a hard choice for the administration stall, based on the President's suddenly- 0' whether the President will sign it. The and the Senate majority: Should they set- expressed desire to keep Bush at his present ministration seems optimistic that the new tle only for a ferry-rigged emergency sales post in Peking at least until Mr. Fo 'd's China b 4l will be, by its terms, acceptable. But for procedure, or use the shortage as a lever to trip. If, as presently assumed, Mr Ford goes bath consumers and producers, the present to try to get the whole Senate bill? Probably, to China within the next month, 11 ish would a+!tuation only deepens the extreme un- on balance, it's better get -et whatever can not be available for his confirmaticirhearing 'crtainty that hangs over every aspect of be passed quickly. There are jobs at stake, until well into December. 'i ?l and energy policy in this country. Since and a legislative stalemate here would be With Congress eyeing either December 12 . great deal cf complex legislation is new very bad for public morals. But not much or December 19 for the start of the -'hristmas ,, -;ceeding simultaneously, it is helpful to gas Is going to be sold tinder short-term recess, it now looks doubtful that Bush could -enarate the main lines of the debate- emergency procedures, and 3Ir. Dingell's tac- be confirmed before next year. By then, with First issue: How much should oil and gaea- tics are already contributing to a further far deeper understandint; of the :anti-Bush %re_ cost, and who should decide? Congress gas shortage in the winter of 1976-77. sentiment, the President could make another irxes to carry on this kind of battle in morel Third issue: Should Co...gress enact uii- mid-course correction, giving Bust a differ- le-ma, but it i, essentially a sectional issue, focused multibillion dollar subsidies for the eat post that would keep him available for a Take rising costs of fuel mean a tremendous production of synthetic fuels? The President possible Vice Presidential nominaa';ion next iLift of wealth and power into the states that and Sen. Henry M. Jackseei (D-Wash.) are summer (the job Mr. Ford came within a pi educe oil and natural gas, at the expense enthusiastically allied in. furor of this one whisker of giving Bush Instead of Nelson of those that consume it. The prices of some and they are both wrong. Rockefeller last year) and naming some one erode oil and all oil products are regulated The authorization bill for the Energy Re- else to succeed Colby. by the federal government under the last search and Development Administration was Precisely that probability was instantly remnant of President Nixon's wage-price corn- in conference a few weeks at o when the Sen- perceived by Capitol Hill operati?!es when tr 4 apparatus. That last remnant was to ex- ate members began pasting in a generous $6 Mr. Ford summoned Colby back to the White pine in August. Earlier in the summer Prer- billion fund for loans and guarantees to sup- Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 Approved For Release 2007/02/07: CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 :November 131 1975, CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE Candidate for another four years. In 1948, to native courts, to dinner with the Wall of PresidentTru)nan Wanted Douglas to run for Swat, and to -extended visits with individual vice-president hbith him. Once again, the Afghans whom he found "the most friendly matter arose when` Douglas was in a remote and hospitable people I have met." Other western place. President Truman arranged' travel books include North From Male, (1953), for Mrs. Roosevelt to call Douglas and ask and an exploration of Russia, entered from him to run. After full consideration, Douglas Soviet Central Asia. The works touch on such finally told the President that he preferred colorful small details as the service of the to stay on the Court. He also declined to head of the lamb, "seared and shrunken, as leave to become Secretary of the Interior in repulsive a dish as I ever faced"; and go into the Truman Adininis%ration. This'time the legal practices, particularly in criminal jus- negotiations were carried on by Secretary of tice, wherever he saw them. Douglas has Defense Forrestal, who urged Douglas that it picked up firsthand information on the ques- was his patriotic duty both to serve and to tioning of prisoners, on secret trials, and on provide a link between the conservative and conditions in labor camps. In 1958 he took a liberal elements of government. Douglas felt 4,000 mile auto trip from Karachi in West that the President really wanted relief from Pakistan to Istanbul, Turkey. inconvenient political' embarrassment more From all these experiences, Douglas has than he wanted Douglas. In any case, he did developed his own philosophy that Ameri- not take the position. cans should make things better rather than All of these political and appointment talks simply underwrite the status quo in the were essentially the flirtations of a man countries of the world. He developed his whom the Supreme Court job could not keep views in Democracy's Mani/esto (1962) , re- busy. There is, great unevenness in the slating the policy of containment of com- rapidity with which individual Supreme munism because it puts the problem of com- Court Justices can do their jobs. Douglas has munism in negative terms. He believes rather never felt that the Court was overworked, that there should be a counterplan of grand stressing in public statements that during design, such as the Alliance for Progress in his time of service there has been a marked South America. The common people, as he decline In the number of opinions produced found them in the countries around Rus- by each Justice in a year. Beginning in 1955, afa, want to avoid having their country be- the Court. abandoned its system of arguments come the battleground of the giants. He re- for five days a week and a conference to de- ports the masses of these countries are large- Ode the cases, ion Saturday, substituting ly illiterate but intelligent all the same, argument on four days a week with con- "when it comes to their own needs and their ferences on Friday. This Douglas found own welfare." He reports that he feels that "symbolic of a slower pace," so that "we have America is maintaining conditions as they fewer oral arguments than we once had, fewer are in lands of constant hunger and of con- opinions to write, and shorter weeks to work." stant exploitation, and sadly reports that "I Bence, as he said in 1960, have never visited a village of Asia where "I do not recall any time in my twenty America was revered as a symbol of freedom years or more of service on the Court when and justice." American aid, he believes, we had more time for research, deliberation, should be conditioned on reform. detaate, and meditation," Without doubt, if The fascinations of the world abroad have the Court decided twice as many cases a not diminished Douglas's love for America year as it has recently, Douglas could do twice at home. Two volumes on wilderness areas as many opinions a year himself and, when contain reports on hiking trips from the the docket was heavier, he did. Sierra Mountains in California north to the The practical consequence of the schedule Olympics in Washington; on excursions in has been to permit Douglas to travel, write, Alaska; on an area of the Mexican desert and study nature; he is by a very wide margin south of the border near Tucson; and in- the most,, traveled and the most published elude chapters on the Everglades in Florida, Justice in the history of the Court; in this the White Mountains in New Hampshire, and respect, no other Justice can even be com- hikes throughout the mountain areas of the pared. These travels have involved little trips, Central Atlantic states. Such explorations as for exaniple, one reported in the July, 1963 were never free of danger: on one occasion he Field & Stream magazine, "Why We Must appeared to have been seriously lost in the Save the Allagash," an account of a Maine snow of New Mexico. But his greatest in- river of great natural beauty deteriorating jury came in a horseback riding accident in from overuse, Douglas pleaded for park status October, 1949 near Tipson Lake in Wash- for the Allagash ington. Douglas has given his own descrip- "The Allagash needs friends more than it tion of the accident: ever needed them before.,Roadbuilding would "Then the accident happened. I had ridden bring in hordes of debris-scattering picnick- my horse Kendall hundreds of miles in the err that shortly would ruin it as a wilderness mountains and found him trustworthy on sanctuary..$uilders of dams would put the any terrain. But this morning he almost re- glories of the river under dark waters from fused, as Elan led the way up a steep 60 now until eternity. The Allagash needs pro- degree grade. Knowing my saddle was loose, tection from both aggressions. All who hunt I dismounted and tightened the cinch. Then or fish or canoe; all who stalk game with a I chose a more conservative path up the camera; or who are hikers or bird watchers? mountain. Keeping in on my left, I followed all who enjoy the still quiet of a wilderness- an old deer run that circled the hillside at these and more must join hands if we are to an easy 10 degree grade. We had gone only a find a sane, practical way to preserve the hundred yards or so when Kendall (for a Allagash in its pristine condition for all reason which will never be known) reared time." and whirled, his front feet pawing the steep Douglas' book publications run some slope. I dismounted by slipping off his tail, twenty volumes; when assembled together I landed in shale rock, lost my footing and they extend for more than a foot and a half, rolled some thirty yards. I ended on a nar- They include Strange Lands and Friendly row ledge lying on my stomach, uninjured. I people (1951) reporting travels throughout all started to rise. I glanced up, I looked into of the Arab world except Saudi Arabia and the face of an avalanche. Kendall had slip- Bgypt, and including a visit to Israel. The ped, and fallen, too. He had come rolling book shows exceptional flair in picking up down over the same thirty precipitous yards personal descriptions of such simple people I had traversed. There was no possibility as the sheep and goat herder in Iran w'ho of escape. Kendall was right on me. I had gave Douglas the hospitality of his tent for only time to duck my head. The great horse a nap. Beyond the High Himalayas (1952), hit me. Sixteen hundred pounds of solid reporting exploration of Central Asia, ranges horseflesh rolled me flat. I could hear my own from a meeting with Nehru in Delhi to visits bones break in a sickening crescendo. Then S 19951 Kendall dropped over the ledge and rolled heavily down the mountain to end up with- out a scratch. I lay paralyzed with pain- twenty-three of twenty-four ribs broken." Of Men andMountains (1950).] Douglas recovered, though the acc'dent almost proved fatal. He was found some twenty minutes after. the accident, carried out an hour or so later, and eventually came out of the hospital short half of one lung, but able to go back to the active life. Douglas has summarized his wilderness philosophy in a Wilderness Bill of Rights (1965), a volume which begins with a chapter entitled "Sewage, Automobiles, Population and the Rights of Man." This is a volume written with knowledge and with passion, and with a particularly grim set of pictures showing fish dead in the rivers, detergent foam In a Pennsylvania stream, and in- dustrial pollution in New England. It is a solid chart of what to do-how to get multi- plq use of land without exploitation; how to make fair decisions and wise ones about public land uses; how to control fencing, restrict mining claims which will ruin wilder- ness areas, and protect against sewage and industrial waste. It is a book which is written with feeling for the ivory-billed woodpecker which needs the grub-and-insect-supplying dead or dying logs of a wild area and for the wood duck which needs rotted holes and tree trunks for nesting. He strongly endorses the proposal to preserve the few wild rivers that are left, saying, "We need all the free-flowing rivers that are left for adventure-loving Americans of the twenty-first century. A decade ahead wil be the one when the fateful decision is made to forfeit them for special interest or to hold them inviolate in perpetuity." Douglas' personal life has included four marriages, and three divorces. His marriage to the former Mildred Riddle, ended in 1953; to the former Mercedes Davidson in 1963. He was divorced from his third wife, Joan Douglas, in 1966, and married Kathleen Heffernan in that year, Douglas is totally capable of doing his judicial work by himself, and he uses his law clerks probably less than other Jus- tices, He usually writes the first draft of an opinion longhand, preferring this to the method of dictation and frequent revision. Because of his extraordinary brilliance, he is probably the fastest worker of any Justice of this century, except perhaps Justice Holmes. The range of his work is vast, running not merely to great constitutional questions, but also to matters of taxation, matters of busi- ness reorganization in bankruptcy, truly difficult and technical, questions of law in every area which comes to the Supreme Court. Particularly in business matters, Douglas has been virtually indispensible to the Court for many of his years on it. It is his range which is the most incredible fea- ture of his workmanship; most Justices are richly experienced, but quite possibly no other Justice has ever had so wide a knowl- edge of so many different things. Douglas' concentration on writing has given him a flair for style. His power to em- phasize with brevity is shown in the Steel case where he said, "Today a kindly Presi- dent uses the seizure power to effect a wage increase and to keep the steel furnaces in production. Yet tomorrow another President might use the same power to prevent a wage increase, to curb trade unions, to regiment labor as oppressively as industry thinks it has been regimented by this seizure." Douglas often makes his point with a sin- gle sentence. Referring to community stand- ards as a test of obscenity, he said, "It creates a regime where in the battle between the liberati and the Philistines, the Philistines are certain to win." Or, speaking of the exclusion of a doctor from the practice of his profession in New Approved For Release 2007/02/07 : CIA-RDP77M00144R000400030041-3 Approved For Release 2007/02/07 CIA-RDP77M00144R0004, CON(; RtESSIONAL RECORD-SENATE No? 'e ? b r 13, 19'; 'peck, "When a doctor cz,nnot save livers In ^,~nerica because he is opposed to l+`'anco in i,:,in, it is time to call a halt and 1>ok criti- c