FACT SHEET ON SEQUENCE OF EVENTS LEADING TO THE PREIDENT'S DECISION ON 12 SEPTEMBER 1975 TO SUSPEND PROVISION OF CLASSIFIED MATERIA

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CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3
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RIPPUB
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K
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10
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 15, 2006
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2
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SUMMARY
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Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 w' Fact Sheet on Sequence of Events Leading to t e President's Decision on 12 September :o Suspend Provision of lassified Materials to the House Select Committee on Intelligence At an open hearing of the House Select Committee - on Intelligence (HSC) on September 12, 1975, Assistant Attorney General Rex E. Lee, speaking on behalf of the entire Executive Branch, read a statement to the Chair- man of the HSC, Representative Otis Pike, which con- tained the following statement: "...the President's responsibilities for the national security and foreign relations of the United States leave him no alternative but to direct all departments and agencies of the Executive Branch respectfully to decline to provide the Select Committee with classified materials, including testimony and interviews .which disclose such materials, until the Com- mittee satisfactorily alters its position." As background, it should be noted that from the moment of the establishment of the HSC, as well as the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, guidelines for the transmittal, processing, utilization and storage of classified materials provided the HSC by CIA and other intelligence agencies have been in effect. Di- rector Colby included these guidelines in a letter dated Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 .Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 -2- 3 September 1975 to Chairman. Pike. The pertinent portion of this letter reads as follows: "'With respect to the documents to be made available to the Committee, there are certain sensitive materials that must be protected not only from exposure but even the risk of exposure. Included in this sensitive category are: --identities of agents and sources-; --identities of persons involved in- Agency operations who would be sub- ject to personal, physical danger, to extreme harassment or to economic or other reprisals if their names were to be publicly identified; --material provided confidentially by cooperating foreign intelligence services; --details that would reveal the nature of sensitive intelligence methods and techniques of collection, by techni- cal and human means; --identities of cooperating Americans and American organizations and con- tacts to whom we have a confidential relationship. In making such deletions, our staff has, been instructed to describe the deletion., e.g., as a CIA officer or a source, in order to place the material in context. Where your. staff believes that a particular name or detail is critical to their inquiry, this then should be brought to the attention of our staff and the matter can be negotiated. I believe this procedure is consis- tent with your statement to me that the Committee is not interested in our sources and methods, or in the names of agents as such." Other important reference points are House Resolu- tion 591, July 11, 1975, which established the HSC and Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992AO00100020002-3 NWO, -3- Rules and Security Regulations of the HSC itself. House Resolution 591, Section 6.(a) states: "The select committee shall institute and carry out such rules and procedures as it may deem necessar to prevent (1) the disclosure, outside the select committee, of any informa- tion relating to the activities of the Central Intelligence Agency or any other department or.agency of the Federal Government engaged 9n.. intelligence activities, obtained by the select committee during the course of its study and investigation, not authorized by the select committee to be disclosed; and (2) the disclo- sure, outside the select committee, of any in- ormation which would adversely affect the in- to fence activities of the Central Intelli- gence enc in foreign countries or the inte='_li- e9 nce activities in ores;n countries of any other department or agency of the Federal Gov- ernment." (Emphasis added.) Rule 7 (Protection of Papers and Documents) of the Rules and Security Regulations of the HSC states: "7.3 Until such time as the committee has submitted its final report to the House, classi- fied or other sensitive information in.the com- mittee records and files shall not be made avail- able or disclosed to other than the committee membership and the.committee staff, except as may be otherwise determined by the committee." (Emphasis added.) The sequence of events that brought this issue to a head is as follows: a.. Late on Monday, 8 September, the CIA and other members of the intelligence community were advised by the HSC staff that the HSC would hold Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78BO2992A000100020002-3 Approved For Release.2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 open sessions on the intelligence postmortems con- cerning the Arab-Israeli war of 1973 and the Greek/Cyprus/Turkish events of July 1974 on Thursday, September 11, and Friday, September 12, respectively. This countermanded previous advice that these hearings would deal with a differeiit?--- subject. The Committee had requested and received on 18 August, the key document, and the one from which the HSC released excerpts: a postmortem of the Arab-Israeli 1973 war conducted by the intel- ligence community itself. b. On Tuesday, 9 September, a letter was received by CIA asking for other CIA documents per- taining to the Middle East war and Cyprus. This letter was responded to by CIA on that same day and a substantial number of documents were delivered to the HSC that evening. Additional materials were promised for the following day, Wednesday, 10 Sep- tember. c. A subpoena from the HSC Chairman was de- livered to CIA during the afternoon of Wednesday, 10 September, requesting additional material, some of it duplicative of the materials already Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 intended for delivery that day to the HSC. This material and the documents requested in the sub- poena were hurriedly assembled and delivered to the HSC staff late that night. d. On Wednesday, 10 September, the HSC Staff Director urgently requested that...six pages containing the principal conclusions and .recommendations of the Middle East postmortem be declassified so that they could be read into the record during the open heari-ag the following day. The Director of Central Intelligence acceded to this request with the understanding on the part of the HSC Staff Director that certain de- letions would be made to protect sources and methods. Nothing.was said or implied by the HSC Staff Director at that time or by the Chairman of the HSC in a telephone conversation with Director Colby late Wednesday afternoon that indicated an intention by the HSC to vote to declassify and publish any material over the Director's objections. e. Prior to the opening of the hearing on the morning of Thursday, 11 September, the HSC Staff Director asked that the CIA area specialist read the declassified portion of approximately Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992AO00100020002-3 six pages of the Middle East postmortem into the record.. When this was completed, Chairman Pike insisted on the reinstatement of five deleted passages and indicated that the Committee would. vote in Executive Session on their declassifica- tion. f. Director Colby was reached on the phone, and, to accommodate the.Chairman, he reluctantly agreed to reinstate these passages subject to the continued deletion of four short phrases which he regarded as being of continuing high sensitivity because of the impact abroad should these items be published. During the ensuing executive session, the Chairman rejected repeated requests by the Director's Special Counsel. to postpone the Com- mittee vote until experts in the field of communi- cations intelligence could be consulted or could appear to testify before the Committee. In the votes that followed, the Committee did agree to the deletion of three of the?four phrases, but in- sisted on retaining the one that all intelligence community representatives at the hearing stressed was the most important and most sensitive of the Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 f Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 four. The passage which 'contained the phrase reads as follows: "Egypt - The current large-scale mobilization exercise may be an effort to soothe internal problems as much as to improve military capabilities. Mobili- zation of some personnel, increased readiness of isolated units, and greater communications security are all assessed-'as' parts of the exercise routine....there are still not military or political indicators of Egyptian intentions or preparations to resume hostilities with Israel." (DIA Intel- ligence Summary, 6 October 1973.). The intelligence representatives argue that the context of. the passage would indicate to other nations an American capability to monitor and analyze foreign communications.and derive information from them. This specific knowledge of time and location would alert other nations to reexamine and tighten their communications security procedures and thereby impair the ability of the U.S. to obtain communi- cations intelligence. Despite these entreaties and over the strenuous objections of the intelligence representatives present, the HSC voted to declassify the phrase and Chairman Pike, immediately follow- ing the executive session, held Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 8 - a press conference at which he described what had transpired. g. On the following morning, Friday, 12 .September, after Assistant Attorney General Lee had read the Presidential message to the HSC,_ the Chairman, still in open hearing,',had the Staft.?-? Director read into the public record the five passages referred to above, including the dis- puted phrase which the HSC had voted to declassify. In Summary: a. This incident does not question Congress' access to classified material, large quantities of which were provided to the Committee. b. It does question the unilateral action of one committee to release such material over the. objections of the Executive representatives present, without hearing the views of those technically' qualified to describe the signi.fi- cance of the material and without due consulta- tion with responsible senior officials of the Executive. c. If the Committee's position were to remain unchanged, large amounts of sensitive in- telligence and other types of material would be Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 Approved For Release 2006/12/1?9CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3 subject to release without notice, which would require a responsible Executive to restrict the provision of such information to the. Committee. el. A resolution of the problem can be ob- tained by a return to the previous understanding that the classification of material provided will be respected pending full consultation-,and negotiation in good faith with respect to the form of its possible public release. Approved For Release_2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992AO00100020002-3 Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992AO00100020002-3 STAT Approved For Release 2006/12/15: CIA-RDP78B02992A000100020002-3