THE CABINET: OPERATION CANDOR

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
02181236
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
U
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
March 8, 2023
Document Release Date: 
August 26, 2019
Sequence Number: 
Case Number: 
F-2014-00426
Publication Date: 
August 28, 1953
File: 
Body: 
rk. rt K mica imistmApproved for Release: 2019/08/08 CO2181236ENCY 3-1 YHE CABINET: Operation Candor President Eisenhower's top planners and policymakers were busily at work last week on a mammoth reporting project. In the Administration's books, it was labeled Operation Candor�a series of speeches by the President, his Cabinet members, and others of quasi-Cabinet rank report- ing to the American people just what the government was up against in such areas as defense, foreign policy, atomic weap- ons, and taxation. The idea of a comprehensive report, to be carried to all corners of the nation by television and radio, grew out of Mr. Eisenhower's pre-Inauguration conviction that the American people often opposed necessary programs because they did not fully understand the facts which moti- vated them. He felt, for example, that had the people been told about Soviet military strength right after the second world war, they would never have per- mitted hasty demobilization. Atomic Revelations: Operation Candor called for seven major policy speeches. The first, delivered by the President himself., would lay out the broad outline of the series. In general terms,. it would get down to the hard truth on the state of the world and then describe the Administration's proposals for coping with the situation. Specifically, the President would lay on �the line cur- rently secret information about America's atomic position and the Soviet Union's. The President's speech, tentatively scheduled for the early part of October, would be followed by a full rehears,a1 of U.S. foreign policy. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Sen. Alexander Wiley, chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, were expected to lean heav- ily on the need for allies and foreign bases as requisites to international secu- rity. A panel discussion of defense would be handled by Defense Secretary Charles E. Wilson, Admiral Arthur W. Radford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, and Deputy Defense Secretary Roger Kyes. Air defense against atomic attack and the dangers of relaxing military pre- paredness would be stressed. Cloak and Dagger: If the President agreed, the next feature of Operation Candor would be a full, frank discussion by Allen Dulles, director of the Central 'Agency, and Lewis Strauss, chairma-n of the Atomic Energy Commis- sion, of the Soviet Union's atomic muscles �even to estimating as closely as possible its A-bomb stockpile. Treasury Secretary George Humphrey would answer the key question: Who pays the piper, and how much? Taxes, the balanced budget, and the percentage of the national income necessary to ffi- nance an adequate air-atomic defense' would be his topic. Before the President � summed up, in the last broadcast of the series, U.N. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge and Foreign Operations Adminis- trator Harold Stassen would talk on col- lective security and the United Nations. Last week, White House advisers and teams from various government agencies were busy writing the speeches. The . President's kickoff address was in almost final form. Some of the other programs, . such as the Lodge-Stassen talk, which did not present too many difficulties, were well along. But the exposition of atomic strategy, both American and So- viet, was still largely in the talking stage. Approved for Release: 2019/08/08 CO2181236