THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

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CIA-RDP02T06251R000900260001-0
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RIPPUB
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K
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23
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December 22, 2016
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March 2, 2012
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1
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Publication Date: 
March 1, 1959
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MISC
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY ILLEGIB Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Trench Coats Are Scarce at the CIA Alvin Silverman (Cleveland Plain Dealer) The CIA Story Don Whitehead (New York Herald Tribune) America's Secret Army Feared, Respected by Reds Powers Spending Billions on Intelligence Network Allen Dulles, `Master Spy' with Look of a Professor U. S. Got Advance Report That Hungary Might Revolt Agents Chosen with Care to Keep U. S. Secret Safe The $350-Million-a-Year CIA Writes Its Own Tight-Mouthed Ticket (Washington Post & Times Herald) The Other Mr. Dulles-of the CIA Russell Baker (New York Times Magazine) The Secret History of a Surrender Forrest Davis (Saturday Evening Post) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 "REPRODUCED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF THE CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER" MARCH 1, 1959 Trench Coats Are Scarce at the CIA For Reel . li7,e come tvith me to Crlshall." By ALVIN SILVERMAN Plain Dealer Bureau ASHINGTON, Feb. 28-There are two types of United States intelligence agents. One wears a trench coat, spotless white and buttoned tight beneath the chin. His narrow-brimmed hat snaps low across the eyes, so that vision is exercised by peer- ing sidewise. His habitat is Marrakesh, Morocco; Aleppo, Syria, and Kirkuk, Iraq, although, on oc- casion, an assignment takes him into a heavily shadowed alley of the Casbah in Algiers. college debates than football names. It also is quite likely that the real agent of the CIA will be a woman and one who is more adept at running a Univac than in mixing drug-laden cocktails. That there is so much mis- conception about our Central Intelligence Agency and its personnel is hardly an accident. Dy law, it is empowered to "withhold publication of titles, salaries or numbers of person- nel employed." Its director has specific authority to spend money "without regard to the provisions of law and regula- tions relating to the expendi- ture of government funds" on a voucher certified by him alone. the arganization tirst formed for this purpose originated in a letter dated Jan. 22, 1946, in which President Harry S. Tru- man directed Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, Secre- tary of War Robert P. Patter- son, Secretary of the N a v y J a m e s V. Forrestal and the President's personal represent- ative, Admiral William D. Leahy. to form the "national intelligence authority." This authority was instructed to plan, develop and co-ordinate "all federal foreign intelligence activities" in order to accom- plish "the intelligence mission related to the national security." The National Intelligence Au- thority and its operating com- ponent, the Central Intelligence Group, were in existence for 21 months. Under the terms of the National Security Act, which became effective in September of 1947, they were superseded by the National Security Coun- cil and the Central Intelligence Agency. Central Intelligence does not confirm or deny stories of the press, whether good or bad. It never identifies its alibis never , can run faster in his personnel He suede, pointed shoes than Jesse except for a few in Owens could sprint in spikes. the top echelon and will not. dis- from the arms cuss its methods of operation Ile breaks away or sources of information. an amorous female barely in . It time to avoid a m i n i a t u r e sloughs off just about every- scimitar between the shoulder thing by blandly explaining: blades but soon enough to lay "We can't live in a goldfish low his s w a r t h y assailant, bowl." either with judo or 25 shots For obvious reasons. its bud- ,-(without reloading' from a six- et is secret, although this hard- shooter. 1y is a mark of distinction in This agent is found on tele- Washington. Try to find out vision, the motion picture some time, Mr. Taxpayer, how screen and in paper-bound nov- much your congressman spent els at bus terminals. on an overseas junket or what Then there is the other type. it costs to run his office or how He is employed by the federal Much pension he will get when government, probably in the he retires, voluntarily or at the Central Intelligence Agency. suggestion of the electorate. He is more likely to have a There is, however, nothing slide rule in his pocket than a vague about the responsibilties revolver. It is more probable of the agency, whose Washing- he will be in a laboratory peer- ton operations alone are housed ing through a microscope or at in 38 buildings, all of them so a cartography desk drawing a closely guarded that you need a map than racing across the pass to enter the rooms where desert atop a commandeered cigarettes and Cokes are sold, I camel. Incidentally, by the spring of His training has been in for- 1961, CIA will be in one $46,- eign languages, economics and 000,000 building situated on a history, sociology and political 14U-acre tract near Langley, Va. science, rather than in how to The United States has carried I appear inconspicuous at a coun- on intelligence activities since cil of African pygmy chiefs. the d a y s of G. Washington, He knows far more about president, but only since World electronics than breaking out War II has this work been sys- of a Harbin hoosegow and the tematized on a government-wide rhaace.s arc that hr won more basis. The National Security Coun- cil, which meets weekly, is com- posed of the President, vice president, secretaries of state and defense, the head of the Office of Defense Mobilization and a couple of advisers and executive assistants. Central Intelligence Agency was ordered by the act to: ADVISE the National Secu- rity Council with respect to governmental intelligence ac- tivities related to the national security. CORRELATE and evaluate intelligence related to the na- tional security. PERFORM ser\ices of com- mon concern for the benefit of existing intelligence agencies. PERFORM other functions and duties as directed by the National Security Council. The agency was given no police, subpoena, or law en- forcement powers or internal security functions. Thus, the Central Intelligence Agency has become the federal government's analyst of infor- mation affecting our security. its director, at present Allen Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 W. Dulles, brother of the sec- retary of state, acts in con- junction with the heads of the intelligence organizations of the Army, Navy, Air Force, State Department and Atomic Energy Commission, plus rep- resentatives of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the joint chiefs of staff. He then makes recommendations to the National Security Coun- cil concerning the intelligence structure of our government as a whole. intelligence vital to the se- curity of the United States and on which our foreign policy is based has become as extensive and involved as the methods of our enemies. No longer do we need know only about the number of sub- marines prowling off North American shores or the guided missile arsenal or the move. ment of troops. Perhaps more importantly we must know about the build- rip of industries in foreign lands, economic conditions, the popularity of office holders with their people, weather and its effect on crops and transporta- tion, propaganda techniques and how. much and what kind of assistance these countries are getting from whom. Thus, the gathering of this intelligence has expanded from mingling with people to an analysis by scientists, account- ants, historians and geogra- phers. It entails translating dif- ficult foreign languages and es- tiniating political and technolo- gical trends. For that reason, the person- nel being admitted to the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency today are, in a large degree, special- ists, or individuals with a scho- lastic and environmental back- ground that can help them be- come specialists. And how does one obtain em- ployment with the CIA? It isn't easy. Ira the first place, the agency is, to quote one of its key administrators, "not looking for people in any large numbers." Out of every 1,000 applica- tions for employment, some 800 are screened out by the per- sonnel officials. That leaves 200 applicants. Of these, 22 are eliminated because security in- vestigation disclosed they d_in'.c too much, talk too much or have relatives behind the Iron '~'IiIIMIU~!I'IfIllllllillli!illllii!I!!!!!illi!i!IIfilCuliB!IIICIiCiClhlBil!IIIIIPC!CI !.",IIrIiIP-/ For Real " ... oh, I'm not an egghead, I'm a U.S. intelligence agent.' Curtain which may make them subject to foreign pressure. The vast majority of the ap- plicants actually has been sought out by the Central In- telligence Agency, which main- tains a regular staff of recruit- ers to persuade certain kinds of college students that they may have a fascinating career awaiting them. Assistance from College Placement Officers Recruiters work through col- lege placement officers and talk only to potential candidates in- dividually, never in groups. The students they are specially look- ing for are outstanding in for- eign languages, or the sciences, have shown some interest in foreign affairs and, while not necessarily the top c a m p u s leaders, h a v e demonstrated some capacity to assume re- sponsibility. They need not be intellectuals but they must have stood high in their class. It is not necessary that the males he athletic, although that certainly is no handicap. Above all, they must have a good rep- utation for dependability and "loyalty." Incidentally, t h e y either must have completed military service or be prepared to take a leave of absence from the C. I. A. to complete it. The agency wants no dodgers and it does not want to be an escape hatch for those disinclined to take basic training. If a student evidences inter- est in the C. I. A. even after .he 'has been told that his starting salary will not exceed $5.000 and there is not much chance that he ever will go beyond $14,000 a year, he is brought to Washington for a series of tests. These make the college board examinations seem like study hall doodling. Half of them concern his intellectual abilities, the remainder his likes, dislikes and attitudes. Provided he is adjusted bright enough and able to work well with people under trying cir- cumstances. The potential in- telligent agent then must un- dergo a series of rather rigor- ous physical examinations. That negotiated, a back- ground check is started which encompasses his family, friends, habits, viewpoint, personality and how many eggs he had for breakfast. All that the agency cares to say about this phase is that the check is "extensive and expensive" and takes six weeks to four months to com- plete. If still "in line," the applicant is told to report for an on-the- job training program. This takes from one to two years. It depends on his special field how broad the program is. That is, an electronics engineer would not be put through the same "general" training as a foreign language specialist. Wish for Overseas Duty Isn't Satisfied Fast Many of the agents desire overseas duty. They seldom get it before the third or fourth year in the agency. While working for the C. I. A., the agents enjoy regular civil service status and their pay is in accord with the civil service bases of other depart- ments. A number of intelligence agents are attracted to private industry, particularly the sci- ence specialists. Rarely does one leave to go to another gov- ernmental agency. The girls leave for marriage in about the same proportion as the girls of other divisions, which is why the agency leans to the employ- ment of men. Why would a want to be an agent? young man intelligence "He knows that he is helping furnish information on which our foreign policy is based," an official of the agency explained. "He knows that the work is apt to take him into any part of the world. He has access to infor. mation not held by the public, which is a satisfying matter to many. "He realizes he is making a real contribution to world his- tory. He is serving his country and free men. The pay is not too bad, as government pay goes, and he has, although we don't like to mention it, oppor- tunity to go into private in- dustry, which always is looking for people with his background and training." As the man said, Central In- telligence Agency is "not look- ing for people in any large numbers." Especially those with cloaks and daggers and cigar- ettes that dangle from the lips. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 "REPRINTED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF DON WHITEHEAD AND TEE NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE" JULY 13, 1958 The C. I. A. Story America's Secret Army Feared, Respected by Reds The following series was guard against American - in - written by Don Whitehead, spired espionage and subver- author of "The F. B. 1. sion. Radio Moscow complains that Story" and former Wash- the United States has raised ington Bureau Chief of the subversive activities "to the New York Herald Tribune. level of a state policy," spy This is the first of five warnings are echoed by the articles. press and radio in East Berlin, The United States is deploying a secret legion throughout the world today in the grim battle against communism. This legion is something new in American history. It's a pro- fessional undercover army of men and women who walk the streets of strange cities in far- away countries living two lives -- sometimes in the shadow of death. Its members are recruited from many na- tions and they are drawn to- gether with two common goals -the defense of the free world and the even- tual downfall of dictatorial communism. Prague, Warsaw and Peking. From time to time there are hints that the C. I. A. has pene- trated the Iron Curtain and at times has reached even into the councils of the Communist leaders in satellite states. In informed Administration sources it is said the C. I. A. is nearing maturity-and can now be rated among the top intelli- gence agencies in the world. Status 11 Years Ago transmitted to the interested military commanders." At the time of Pearl Harbor there was no one person or group responsible-as the C. I. A. is now responsible-for pulling all intelligence informa- tion together for an evaluation and warning. And throughout World War II there was no completely centralized intelli- gence system. Chinese Reds' Surprise of 1950 In 1950 there was plenty of information, too, that the Chi- nese Reds were massing in Manchuria along the Yalu River and that they intended to launch a massive attack against the army of Gen. Doug- las MacArthur. At that time Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, then director of C. I. A., was in the process of establishing a new procedure Contrary to some reports, president Eisenhower and Sec- retary of State John Foster Dulles were not caught by sur- prise even though the attack was masked behind a wall of official secrecy. Israel Army Build-Up Was First Tip to C. 1. A. Here is what happened, ac- cording to a reliable source: American intelligence agents in Israel noted the sudden mo- bilization of Israeli youth who left their jobs in shops, in fac- tories and on the farms to join their units. This build-up of the Israeli Army to two-thirds of total mobilization simply could not be hidden in a country the size of Israel. The Administration was ad- vised that Israel was not going to attack Jordan-and that any moves in that direction were nothing more than a smoke- screen for an attack toward Suez. Agents on Cyprus watched the British and French activity there, the combat loading of troops, and readying of war planes and paratroopers. The British were so secret in their intentions that they did not reveal the plan to some of their commanders - but the French gave briefings to their news- paper correspondents assigned to combat units. Additional information came from London and from Paris as the then Prime Minister An- thony Eden and French Foreign Minister Guy Mollet met in un- usual conferences. he prepared an estimate for President Truman to take with him to his celebrated meeting with Gen. MacArthur on Wake Island in the fall of 1950. The estimate indicated that the Chinese Communists would in- tervene in Korea to protect the reservoirs. After the conference, however, the President said that Gen. MacArthur had assured him that the Chinese would not intervene. They did-and with tragic results. Through the years the myth grew-with some truth involved -that Americans were suckers around an international con- ference table and in the field of international intelligence. Eleven years ago the C. I. A. was a gawky amateur among the big-power professionals in the field of espionage, counter-espi- onage, the gathering of intelli- gence and the evaluation of information gathered. The C. I. A. developed from historical necessity. Perhaps the worst intelligence debacle in American history was the failure of government and mili- tart' leaders to anticipate the Japanese attack on Pearl Har- These faceless and nameless men and women are agents of the Central Intelligence Agency (C. I. A.) - the super-secret Federal agency which was born just eleven years ago this month. Their primary mission is to siphon information from behind the Iron Curtain and to place in the hands of Administration leaders the intelligence they need in zhaping American for- eign policy and in countering Kremlin maneuvers. Alarms are sounding through- out the Communist world from Moscow to Peking, warning officials and others to be on bor. There were enough facts known for the Army and Navy commanders in Hawaii to have been alerted by Washington in time to avert the disaster. From a Hoover Commission report: "Information necessary to anticipate the attack actu- ally was available to the gov- ernment, but there was no sys- tem in existence to assure that the information, properly eval- uated, would be brought to the attention of the President and his chief advisers, so that ap- propriate decisions could be made and timely instructions The C. I. A. has tried to over- come in eleven years what this country failed to do for 165 years-establish a professional corps of experts to gather, co- ordinate and assess world-wide information. Its operation is shrouded in such secrecy that only the Pres- ident and a few top administra- tion officials really know how good or even how big the C. I. A. is today. But an encour- aging sign that our intelligence system has made long strides came in October, 1956, when when - without diplomatic warning - Britain, France and Israel launched their attack against Egypt and the Suez Canal. Twenty-four hours before the attack, it is said, the White House had specific warning in the form of an intelligence esti- mate that Israel would attack Egypt while British and French forces would invade the Suez Canal. One source who should know said: "Suez was the best intel- ligence job ever done by the C. I. A." TOMORROW: Mr. White- head reports how the world's ,great and small powers are pend.ino billions of dollars on espionage and counterespio- nage. L 1958, N.Y. Herald Tribune Inc. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 "REPRINTED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF DON WHITEHEAD AND THE NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE" JULY 1 4,, 1958 The C. I. A. Story Powers Spending Billions On Intelligence Networks The following series was written by Don Whitehead, author of "The F. B. I. Story" and former Wash. ington Bureau Chief of the New York Herald Tribune. This is the second of five articles. By Don Whitehead "Gentlemen don't read each other's mail." This was the naive and trusting statement of Secre- tary of State Henry Stimson In 1929 when he denied fur- ther funds to the State De- partment's modest foreign intelligence op- eration then known as "The Black Chamber. But the gentlemen of yester- day have had to face the facts of life in a world where Infor- mation is an essential part of government operations. Today the great and small powers collectively are spend- ing billions of dollars to "read each other's mail" in a twilight world of espionage and coun- ter-espionage. Russia alone is estimated to have 250,000 agents in her intelligence network in addi- tioan to the Communist party members and fellow travelers who willingly feed information into the pipeline. This esti- mate has been given to the Senate Internal Security sub- committee by former Soviet intelligence agents who de- fected to the West. Also, it is believed that Rus- sia spends some $2 billion a year to support the vast sys- tern which achieved its great- est success in filching atomic ~)omb secrets from the United States-by Persuading British scientist Klaus Fuchs, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg and others to betray their own countries. Intelligence System Survival Insurance Since the start of World War IT. the United States has been forced into a growing aware- ness that intelligence is a form of insurance for survival. It has been defined in this way: "Intelligence deals with all the things which should be known (by the government) in advance of initiating a course of action." For 165 years, the United States stood on the sidelines and took the view that clandes- tine intelligence operations were at best a sordid business. This attitude was , possible because our government was isolated from the main stream of world politics and world responsibility. But today the United States is, the leader of the free world. President Eisenhower and his lieutenants must know what is going on in the Middle East, in the Far East, in Europe and South America and-most im- portant of all-behind the Iron Curtain. Ironically, even though intel- ligence work has become such a vital function in government planning and policy-making, the armed forces to this day have never made a career in this branch as attractive as other branches. In all the serv- ices, a tour in intelligence tra- ditionally has been regarded merely as a stepping stone to promotion-not as a career in itself which can lead to the highest rank and prestige. 12 U. S. Intelligence Agencies in 1955 In 1955, the Hoover Com- mission task force reported that some twelve major Federal de- partments and agencies were involved In some form of in- telligence work. But the prin- cipal agencies are the Central Intelligence Agency, the State Department, the armed forces, the Atomic Energy Commission and the F. B. I., the latter be- ing responsible in. the field of domestic espionage and coun- ter-espionage and other activi- ties relating to internal security. The C. I. A. Is responsible for co-ordinating the foreign intel- ligence effort, and it is seeking to build a career service and an organization commanding the respect and prestige enjoyed by the 300-year-old British "Silent Service." The first major effort of the United States in foreign intelli- gence came In 1940 when Pres- ident Franklin D. Roosevelt au- thorized the F. B. I. to organize a Special Intelligence Service (S. I. S.) to combat Nazi spy rings using South America as a base for espionage in the Western Hemisphere. F. B. I. secret agents slipped into Central and South Amer- ica and uncovered ring after ring using clandestine radios to transmit information to Germany. And then the Ofllce of Strategic Services t,0. S. S..i evolved during the war as the government's arm for espio- nage and sabotage against the Axis powers outside South America. It was commanded by Maj. Gen. William (Wild Bill) Donovan. The 0. S. S. was a pioneer in big-scale foreign intelligence work-but in its crash develop- ment it was Infiltrated by Com- munists. Also, it had the repu- tation, deservedly or not, of be- ing a haven for some socialites whose undercover work seemed to be confined largely to the Washington and New York cocktail circuits. Pipeline to German High Command Some wags said the Initials 0. S. S. means "Oh, so social." And this cloud hung over 0. S. S. at war's er.d, although the organization had achieved some spectacular successes such as establishing a direct pipe- line into the German High Command. The Truman administration and Congress recognized the urgent need for more and better intelligence gathering and as- sessment as the cold war spread over the world. And so it was that Congress enacted legisla- tion in July, 1947, which established the C. I. A. as an arm of the National Security Council. This action tied the intelli- zence operation directly to the President's office since the K. S. C. is responsible for ad- vising the President "with re- spect to the integration of do- mestic foreign, and military Policies relating to the national security so as to enable the military services and other de- partments and agencies of gov- ernment, to co-operate more effectively in all matters involv- ing' national security." While the C. I. A. has no di- rect administrative authority over other intelligence groups, it does have the responsibility under law "to correlate and evaluate intelligence relating to national security" and it must perform "such additional services of common concern as the National Security Council determines can be more effi- ciently accomplished centrally." TOMORROW: Mr. White- head draws a profile of Amer- ica's "master spy"-Allen W Dulles, C. I. A. director, whc guided one of the most suc- cessful and daring espionage operations of World War II. 71958. N.Y. Herald Tribune Inc. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 "REPRINTED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF DON WHITEHEAD AND THE NEW YORK H1LD TRIBUNE" The C. 19 A. Story Allen Dulles, `Master Spy With Look of a Professor By Don Whitehead The folloNsing series was written by Don Whitehead. au- thor of "The F. B. 1. Storv" and former Washington Bureau Chief of the New York Herald Tribune. This is the third of five articles: America's "master spy" looks more like a college professor than the man who pulls the strings in a vast game of inter- national In- trigue. He greets his visitors with a booming voice and a quick smile and, as he talks, sprawls his tall frame in an easy chair, puffing on a battered pipe. On the wall behind his desk is a map of the world-his field of operations in gathering in- telligence on which President Eisenhower must depend for so many vital decisions in foreign policy. He chooses his words care- fully and leaves the impression at times that he's thinking out loud as he mentally places the pieces together in a giant puzzle. He told a recent visitor: "The present danger is not nuclear war. The Russians know what nuclear war would mean in terms of destruction. "They're moving cautiously. They don't want to create an incident that will lead to war or open intervention by the United States. But this caution doesn't mean they are not exploiting every advantage possible short of war." C. 1. A. Not at Best, but 15, 1958 and which included Allen Dulles. Gen. Smith called Mr. Dulles --then practicing law in New York-and said: "You wrote this damn report-now come on down here and help me carry it out." "ix-Month Stay Extends to Six Years Mr. Dulles came to Washing- ton in early 1951 intending to stuy six months but was per- suaded to remain as deputy di- recto.. Ana tireu in February, 1953, he was named director by President Eisenhower. Now it's Allen Dulles' job to see to it that there isn't an- other "Pearl Harbor" in Amer- ica's future. Mr. Dulles has been called America's "master spy" not only because he directs the C. I. A. operation-but also be- cause he directed and of the most successful and daring es- pionage, operations in World War II. In November, 1942-just as the Allied armies were invad7 ing North Africa, Mr. Dulles slipped across the border of Switzerland from German-oc- cupied France. He set up head- quarters in Bern. His mission was to contact the anti-Nazi underground in Germany-if there was one. There came a time when Mr. Dulles sat in a hotel room in Bern and faced a visitor from Germany. He was a huge man, six feet four inches tall, named Hans Bernd Gisevius. He repre- sented himself. to be a member of the Abwehr, the German secret intelligence service. -will go in talking about the effectiveness of the C. I. A., which he has directed for the last five years. The C. I. A. is eleven years old and its agents are Steployed around the globe in a dangerous game of seeking information which will disclose, among other things, the capabilities and in- tentions of the Soviet Union and Its satellites! Supplementing the work of these agents is a research or- ganization which pulls together Information from news dis- patches, foreign radio broad- casts, technical publications. interviews with travelers and scores of other sources. At the center of this infor- mation network sits Mr. Dulles, who quit a lucrative New York law practice to return to an absorbing game which first fascinated him as a youth in World War I. when he was in the diplomatic service. Around him he has some 100 veterans who have had from ten to fifteen years' experience in intelligence work-some of them as saboteurs and spies op- erating behind the enemy lines in World War II. These experi- enced men form the hard core of the C. I. A. A source familiar with the development of the C. I. A. re- calls: "For the first few years, the C. I. A. had trouble establishing Its position and relationship with the older intelligence agencies in the government. There were some jealousies and frictions. C. I. A. didn't have much prestige until "Beedle" Smith (Gen. Walter Bedell Smith) became director in late 1950. "Smith let everybody know he was in command. He cleaned up the organization - kicking out the misfits, the martini set and those who couldn't pass a strict security test. He was tough, and he hardened the or- ganization." Soon after he became direc- tor, Smith came across a 1948 study of C. I. A. operations made by a special board ap- pointed by President Truman Better Than Realized When asked to rate his or- ganization-the central Intelli- gence Agency-alongside for- eign intelligence systems, he says: "We are maturing. We're not as good as we want to be, but we're better than a great many people realize." This is as far as Allen Welsh Dulles-America's "master spy" Dulles later told a friend: "We circled each other like a couple of strange dogs, neither knowing whether he could trust the other." Brit the American decIded to trust the German. Gisevius said he and others-including some of the top German military leaders-were convinced Hitler must be destroyed to save their country from ruin. He said the [underground was planning -to [kill Hitler. Gisevius wanted the United States to pledge support to a new anti-Nazi regime if and when Hitler was killed. Mr. Dulles tried to enlist American support for Gisevius. No support came-but this didn't stop the plotting which was climaxed when a bomb ex- ploded near Hitler at his East Prussian headquarters on July 20, 1944. History might have been changed had the blast not been deflected by the heavy leg of a table. Hitler was badly hurt. He screamed orders to find and kill the platters. But Gisevius escaped with help from Dulles and now lives in Dallas, Tex. During this plotting. Mr. Dulles established contact with another anti-Hitler German who was an official in the Ger- man foreign office-with access to vital war secrets. The British had cautiously refused to deal with this man who Mr. Dulles to this day will identify only as "George Wood." Again Mr. Dulles decided to trust "George Wood" as he had trusted Gisevius. The trust was well repaid - because Wood slipped more than 2,600 secret documents from the War Office and the Foreign office to Mr. Dulles in Switzerland-evading the Gestapo by elaborate sub- terfuge. It was in this operation that Mr. Dulles learned of the top- secret Nazi rocket experiments being carried on at Peene- munde. He was able to warn the British who verified the infor- mation in time to turn their ...ambers against Peenemunde and the rocket sites. It has been estimated that this information alone set the Germans back six months in their rocket plans - and saved England from weeks of batter- ing by the rockets. Even though the C. I. A. is a youngster compared with the British "Silent Service," Mr. Dulles is convinced it is better than the British-and improv- ing with age. The C. I. A. chief, now sixty- five, is a gregarious, fun-loving man with a twinkle in his blue eyes. He likes parties-but he and his wife have learned the trick of showing tip at swank official functions-and then ducking out early so that he can receive after-dark callers and catch up on reports from around the world. He is married to the former Clover Todd, whose father was a Columbia University profes- sor. They have two sons and three daughters. On his broad shoulders, Mr. Dulles carries a terrific respon- sibility. He knows that if there is a failure in intelligence-the buck stops at his door. Tomorrow: Flow the United States was advised by the C. 1. A. well in advance of the Hungarian revolt and the re- cent struggle for power in the Kremlin in contrast to the fail- ure of intelligence in the Ko- rean War. ?1958; N.Y. Herald Tribune Inc. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 "REPRINTED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF DON WHITEHEAD AND THE NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE" JULY 16, 1958 The C.1. A. Story U. S. Got Advance Reports That Hungary Might Revolt By Don Whitehead The following series was written by Don Whitehead, au- thor of "The F. B. I. Story" and former Washington Bureau Chief of the New York Herald Tribune. This is the fourth of five articles. More than two years ago a small group of men gathered behind locked doors in Wash- ington to as- sess the mean- ing of secret reports of growing unrest in Russia's sat- ellite states of Poland and Hungary. Their conclu- sion: The peo- ple in these two countries were becom- ing so bitterly defiant of Russian domination that a revolt was quite pos- sible-and the explosion logi- cally could be expected first in Poland. The explosion came first in Hungary-after rumblings in Poland-because events that no one could foresee combined to touch off the spontaneous out- burst which rocked the world of communism. But the estimate prepared long in advance of the event by the Central Intelligence Agency, informed sources say, alerted the Eisenhower administration to expect the violence when it did erupt. C. 1. A. Gave U. S. Warning Thus the super-secret C. I. A. -while unable to say precisely where and when the event would occur-did succeed in warning the United States gov- ernment of the crisis taking shape behind the Iron Curtain. A few weeks after the October revolution in Hungary, reports reaching intelligence sources here disclosed a power struggje under way in the Kremlin. These reports were that the Politburo was split, with Com- munist party boss Nikita Khrushchev heading one far- tion against another including V. M. Molotov and Georgi Ma- lenkov-and Marshal Georgi Zhukov in a position to swing the balance of power. Six months later the world was "surprised" by the news that Khrushchev-with Zhu- kov's support-had won a crushing victory against his op- position. Since then Molotov has been exiled to a post as ambassador to Outer Mongolia, and Zhukov himself has been banished from power. The success achieved in these intelligence efforts strongly hints that the eleven-year-old C. I. A. at last is rounding into a position where it can be re- garded as a mature service that is fast correcting mistakes of the past. Eight years ago the C. I. A. had not developed the ma- chinery for making intelligence estimates as it does today-with the result that the United States suffered sorely in Korea. The tragedy there was that the government had ample infor- mation on the intentions of the North Koreans and Red Chinese -but no one read it correctly. In March, 1950, American in- telligence received reports out of Red China that the North Korean Red army would at- tack across the 38th Parallel in June. But this warning was discounted by the Pentagon, the State Department and United States headquarters in Tokyo as just another false alarm. The North Koreans succeeded in achieving surprise by masking their intentions behind a series of false alarms and minor forays across the parallel. Reports of Chinese Attack Discounted The second failure of intelli- gence in Korea involved the massive attack by the Chinese Reds-the attack in November which shattered Gen. Douglas MacArthur's home-by-Christ- mas offensive. As early as September, Amer- ican intelligence had reports from Chinese and Northern Korean agents that the Chinese Reds were massing troops in Manchuria along the Yalu River on the border of North Korea. This fact was disclosed to the American troops and war corre- spondents then en route to make the assault at Inchon harbor - the landing which crushed the Northern Korean Army. On Oct. 3, the Foreign Min- ister of Red China informed the Indian Ambassador that if the United Nations troops crossed the 38th Parallel, then Red China would intervene in de- fense of North Korea. Similar warnings were given by the Chi- nese to other U. N. representa- tives in Peiping. Also they were broadcast by radio. But not every one in Wash- ington or Tokyo drew accurate conclusions. Estimates that were at least on the right track either never reached the proper commanders or were not acted upon if they did. The optimistic -and false-estimate was, of course, that the Chinese Reds would not intervene and that their talk was a bluff to intimi- date the U. N. into halting at the 38th parallel. Since that time, C. I. A. chief Allen W. Dulles has worked to strengthen the machinery for analyzing such reports and placing the information in the hands of those responsible for counter-action. No one can say outside a small circle in the government and Congress just how good the C. I. A. is today. Under the terms of the laws which brought C. I. A. into being, the agency's methods of operation and sources of information must be kept secret. Two investigations have been made of the C. I. A. operation, one by a group headed by Gen. James Doolittle and another headed by Gen. Mark W. Clark. Each had some public criticisms to make relating largely to ad- ministrative matters-but the secret reports have never been opened to the public. Some Congressmen Want Data Some members of Congress are chafing over the fact that the C. I. A.'s operating budget -which is hidden in items scat- tered throughout the Presi- dent's massive budget-is not open for review at least by a joint Congressional committee such as the joint committee which is the watchdog of the atomic energy program. Director Dulles has defended this secrecy on the ground that vital intelligence secrets will be in danger of disclosure if too many people are given access to this information. His argument is that the C. I. A.'s budget is scrutinized by subcommittees of both the House and Senate Armed Serv- ices and Appropriating Commit- tees-and that this provides Congress with an adequate check against his agency. There have been guesses that C. I. A. spending runs in the neighborhood of $500,000,000 a year and that it employs up to 30,000 people. But these are only guesses and Allen Dulles Says the figures are grossly inflated. Tomorrow: C. I. A., in con- stant search for personnel, cannot offer rocking-chair fu- ture, public recognition and fat salary, but for applicants who survive rigid tests there is adventure with cloak and dagger supplied. 71958, N.Y. Herald Trihinie. Tnr Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 "REPRINTED BY SPECIAL PJRMISSION OF DON WHITEHEAD AND THE NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE" JULY 17, 1958 The C.I. A. Story Agents Chosen With Care To Keep U. S. Secrets Safe By Don Whitehead This is the final article of a series written by Don White- head, author of "The F. B. I. Story" and former Washington Bureau Chief of the New York Herald Tribune: If C. I. A. agents in the field pick up reports that the Rus- sians are about to shoot the moon or that the Chinese Reds are preparing to invade For- mosa, what happens to this in- formation? Who evaluates It? How does It reach the officials respon- sible for reacting to threats to American prestige and security? Evaluation is after all one of the most vital functions of in- telligence work. It is of little avail to have information about hostile forces if the meaning and purport of this information is not properly understood. Under the procedure now In effect in the Central Intelli- gence Agency any report re- ceived from a clandestine agent or other source goes through a series of evaluations. First the C. I. A. officer in the field makes his own evaluation of the Information as well as of the reliability of the source. Next his initial evaluation is studied and evaluated anew by the desk in C. I. A. headquarters here to which the material is transmitted. Following that a full report is circulated among other government agencies which are properly concerned with the subject matter-the Army, the Navy or the State Department, for example. These agencies then put their own experts to work on the material and provide their own evalua- tions. As a general rule, when all the preliminary evaluations from the C. I. A. and the other agencies have been assembled, they are placed before one of the C. I. A.'s highest bodies for a second-last evaluation. This is the Board of National Esti- mates, headed by Professor Sherman Kent, of Yale, the author of "Strategic Intelli- gence." The board consists of both civilians and military officials. The final evaluation is made by the Intelligence Advisory Board, which is chaired by C. I. A. director Allen W. Dulles. In addition to the C. I. A. the agencies represented on this board are the Army, Navy, Air Force, Joint Chiefs of Staff, State Department, Federal Bu- reau of Investigation and Atomic Energy Commission. The final evaluations placed on intelligence reports are car- ried from this body directly into the National Security Council by Mr. Dulles, one of the five statutory council members. On the basis of these evaluations the N. S. C. advises the Pres- ident, and it is the President's ultimate responsibility to make whatever decisions are neces- sary. C. I. A. personnel are care- fully chosen and well trained. Some are sent to universities for post-graduate study in economics, law, science and other fields. Many study lan- guages, off and on the job. Only a relatively small group go into the "cloak and dagger" branch and they must have the special qualities required for losing themselves and their identity in strange lands-and taking the tremendous risks which a secret agent must take while establishing contacts with those who can provide reliable information. The C. I. A. Is exempted by law from the civil service re- quirements imposed on most government agencies, and thus the agency has a free hand in establishing employee policies to meet its own peculiar needs for secrecy. Director Allen W. Dulles has sought to create a. pride of service and "team morale" to match that which has made the F. B. I. famous. He is con- vinced this is necessary to keep talented people in the C. I. A. when they could earn more money and have an easier life perhaps in following a business or professional career. Close Watch Kept To Protect Secrets The C. I. A. keeps a close watch over its own-not only to help build this corps spirit but to protect the government from disclosures of secrets. Whenever an agent becomes ill or is injured, he is attended by a C. I. A.-approved doctor. And there are C. I. A.-cleared psychiatrists to help those who might be threatened with a crack-up under the unusual stresses in certain jobs. President Eisenhower has an independent check against the operations of the C. I. A. in the board of consultants on foreign intelligence which he appointed two years ago. `Independent Evaluation' The duty of this board is to "examine and report" on all foreign intelligence activities- with special attention to the work of the C. I. A. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 REPRINTED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF JOHN SCALI AND THE WASHINGTON POST AND TIMES HERALD JUNE 29, 1958 The $350-Million-a-Year CIA Writes Its Own Tight-Mouthed Ticket By John Scali Associated Press A MONEY - CONSCIOUS Congress bestows an esti- mated $350 million a year on an agency so secret that only a handful of the highest offi- cials know how the money is spent. The hush-hush expendi. tures are charged off to the high cost of spying. And the supersecret outfit is the Cen. tral Intelligence Agency. The CIA operates a vast espionage network in an atomic-space age when the merest scrap of information could mean the difference be- tween survival and annihila- tion. So rigid is the secrecy that when brickbats fly, when Con- gress grumbles over failures, real or, imaginary, the CIA takes it in silence. It says simply: "We never alibi. We never explain." To alibi or explain might reveal a source and endanger the undercover legion of, men and women who gather its in- formatior throughout the world. THE CIA IS unique among American governmental agen- cies. Its estimated budget of $350 million is little better than a reasonably good guess. No one outside the highest official circles can say for sure. But if the estimate is cor- rect, it is $130 million more than the State Department spends on its 282 diplomatic outposts around the world. Only a handful of tog Gov- ernment executives know ex. actly how many people work for the CIA. The State De- partment has about 16,000 American employes. It has been estimated that the CIA has almost as many. (Russia is believed to be spending six times as much as the CIA on espionage. And up to 45,000 Soviet agents are said to be directly engaged in spying.) COMPARISONS drawn be- tween CIA and State are par- ticularly apt. Each is run by a man named Dulles. CIA Director Allen Welsh Dulles, 65, brother of Secre- tary of State John Foster Dulles, is a heavyset man with a bushy, white, walrus- type mustache. He tells friends that his sole ambition in government is to stay on as intelligence chief until he dies. He's headed the CIA for 51/2 of its nearly 11 years of existence. Allen Dulles' job is unique in at least one respect. He can write a check for a mil- lion dollars without telling even the Government Ac- counting Office exactly why he is spending the money. Most Congressmen, who watch financial matters like a detective eyeing a pick- pocket, have onty a vague idea of how much the CIA spends and what it spends it for. Yet each year the agency's budget is appro- priated promptly. The exact figure is known to six Senators and Repre- sentatives who form the spe- cial subcommittee w h i c h handles CIA finances. They alone of Congress see the agency's detailed budget. WHY SPEND so much on espionage? Like everything else, the cost of spying has shot up like the sputniks and missiles which make it urgently necessary. Only a small percentage of ALLEN W. DULLES ... top Ivy Leaguer CIA funds goes to pay the salaries of its thousands of men and women employes, stateside and overseas. A big chunk goes for maintenance of its Washington nerve cen- ter, housed in 35 buildings. Headquarters is a gray, for- bidding quadrangle of three- story buildings on a hilltop in the Capital's "Foggy Bot- tom" area. Tourists see little more than spike-tipped wrought iron gates and barbed wire fences. There are armed guards at each building en. trance. Privileged visitors are escorted through the build- ings to keep appointments. Inside the administration building hangs a sign. It says: "Classified W a s t e Only- Stapled Bags Only-0830- 1300." The sign means that bags of waste paper--each bearing a red band with the ward "secret" in white stencil-are burned only at specified times. THE ESSENCE of CIA in- telligence reports winds up each morning on President Eisenhower's desk. It covers the high spots of the previous 24 hours in the world's trou. ble spots. The report goes to the President as a terse 500-word summary, written in short, punchy sentences. It can be digested by a busy President in about two minutes. The streamlined, more sprightly written report has replaced a lengthier summary previously given the Presi- dent. The change was made shortly after Russia beat the United States to the satellite punch. That's only a coincidence, says Allen Dulles, whom the Russians call "America's mas- ter spy." But Administration foes say it's more than that. They say the Administration did not heed previous CIA warnings so the agency now is resorting to simple ABC language in its reports. WHAT KIND of records has the CIA compiled in fore- casting cold war events? A newsman going to the source invariably runs into the tight secrecy surrounding the heart of the operation. But from other sources, in- cluding congressional, it is Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 possible to estimate the CIA record on nine important world developments of the past three years. The scoreboard: Russian satellites-Excel. lent. The CIA warned for a year that Russia would be capable of launching its first sputnik in 1957. Missiles-Good. But the agency was conservative in forecasting the size and thrust of Soviet rockets. Anti-Nixon riots in Latin America-Very good. But the CIA apparently failed to fore- see the dangerous disorgani- zation of the new Venezuelan police force. Indonesian revolt-Excel- 'lent. Soviet nuclear test ban- Excellent. Bulganin - Khrushchev re- shuffle-Very good. The CIA not only forecast this three months earlier but it finger- ed Frol Kozlov as a fast-rising Kremlin newcomer. Hungarian revolt - Fair. The CIA reported signs of mounting unrest in Hungary but even it was surprised when the people actually re- volted. Suez war-Good. The CIA predicted that British and French troops would invade Egypt a few days before they did. Suez Canal seizure-Not good. The CIA failed to es- timate fully Nasser's reac- tion to the withdrawal of a proposed United States loan for construction of the Aswan Dam: THE TOUGHEST employ- ment hurdles in the Govern- ment are those set up before applicants for jobs with the CIA. Only about 1 in 15 makes the grade. A whole section of a CIA headquarters building is taken up by elaborate equip- ment designed to probe the thoughts, feelings, inhibitions and rationality of those who w o u 1 d become American espionage agents. There's even a lie detector -and it's used as a matter of course. The rigorous tests are set up to weed out the security risks, who may range from infiltrating Soviet agents to just plain blabbermouths. Rumors occasionally make the rounds to the effect that the CIA pries unnecessarily Into the sex lives of its wom- en employes. The agency de- nies that it asks questions about what is regarded as normal sex experience. The only sex question asked, says the CIA is: "Are you a homosexual?" A second question which might have bearing on sex is: "Have you ever done any- thing for which you could be blackmailed?" AS FAR AS can be learn- ed, the CIA is the only Gov- ernment agency which em- ploys the lie detector on a mass scale as a normal per- sonnel practice. An applicant can refuse to take the test and still be hired, but it is extremely un- likely. And if he is hired, his chances of advancement to a more sensitive post are vir- tually nil. Even after he lands a job, a CIA employe may be ask- ed to take the test again. Some employes have taken second and third tests after being suspected of wrong- doing on the job. Have the Russians ever succeeded in planting an op- erative inside the CIA? There has never been a di- rect public answer to that question. Some time ago Dul- les was asked about it and he skirted a flat yes-or-no reply. "I naturally assume," he said, "that the Soviets will attempt to penetrate the CIA I don't think they are going to find it easy, (but) we are going to keep on our guard all the time." THE DANGEROUS role of spy holds a strange attraction for many wealthy socialites and college graduates who could take it easy or strike it rich in other fields. In fact, you might say the CIA's top leadership wears an Ivy League look. Of the 20 highest officials, 17 are graduates of Eastern Universities. Harvard, Yale and Princeton each gradu- ated three. So did West Point. The others came from Colum- bia, Virginia, Williams, Johns Hopkins and American Uni- versity. Dulles acknowledges that 5 Of his top 20 are independ- ently wealthy, earning as much from outside sources as they do from CIA. That in- cludes Dulles himself, a Princeton grad, who makes $21,000 a year as director. THE CIA operates on the theory that a person's Ivy League background, social graces or wealth should not bar him from a spot in the Nation's espionage network. What Is more important, says CIA, is a person's compe- tence, his dedication and his willingness to accept the anonymity that necessarily goes with the job. Those who treat the work as a glamorous sideline don't last long. This policy apparently is paying off. A newsman check. ing into CIA's record finds surprisingly little criticism, even from those who turn a fishy eye on almost every. thing the Eisenhower Admin. istration does. "I won't knock them," says one former leader of the Tru? man Administration. "I think most of this Administration is lousy. But this is one outfit that knows its business, be- lieve me." PART OF THE reason CIA has escaped widespread criti- cism could be the above-aver. age quality of its rank and file employes. This has been noted by congressional com- mittees and study groups which looked into its person- nel. CIA salaries follow closely the regular Civil Service scales. But Dulles, who prob- ably operates under less re- strictions than any other Gov ernment department head, Is not required to abide by those rules. Salaries of new CIA em- ployes are sometime,; low. Some recruits quit early to seek more lucrative rewards in private industry. Many re- main. What holds them? Mostly it's the lure of an exciting cloak-and - dagger existence combined-with a deep sense of patriotism that keeps them on, year after year, playing a deadly, undercover game of wits against the Kremlin. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 ROOO9OO26OOO1-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 "REPRINTED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF RUSSEL BAKER AND THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE". MARCH 16, 1958 The Other Xr. Danes of theC.LA fit. has shop d Assess. int.Ui don.? s.r wis.. good a job has h* ft Run=& Baum WASHINGTON. W HEN Archduke Francis Ferdi- nand was assassinated at Sar- ajevo in 1914, the young man who was fated to become director of fhi United States' world-wide intelligence system read the news over an apdritif at a Paris Sidewalk cafe. He did not instantly leap up, crying, "This means war!" The news, he ad- mits now, did not even strike him as particularly ominous. Having read it, Allen Welsh Dulles, then 21 and fresh out of Princeton with a Phi Beta Kappa key, continued his journey to India-where a year's job as an English teacher awaited him -serenely unaware that the terrorist's bullet had opened a new age that would cast him in a role more exotic than Princeton had yet taught its young men to dream of. For Mr. Dulles, whose job today is to sense the daily waxings and wanings of international peril and keep the White House alerted, it was an in. auspicious beginning. But although he still misses occasionally-too often, some of his critics contend-two "hot" wars and the. long "cold one have made him one of the world's most sophisticated travelers in the shadow land of intelligence and espionage. Since February, 1953, he has been director of the little-known, top-secret Central Intelligence Agency, which sits as a mysterious gray presence at the most solemn councils of Government. When the news of Stalin's fatal illness broke in March, 1953, Mr. Dulles was one of the first persons summoned hur- riedly to the White House. When Israel invaded Egypt in October, 1956, he was among the seven present at President Eisenhower's historic decision to act immediately through the United Na- tions. He regularly briefs the National Security Council, not only on events RUSSELL BAKER is a member of the staff of The New York Times bureau in Washington. behind the Iron Curtain, but on devel- oping situations in potential world trouble spots from Guatemala to East Pakistan. IN the present debate about Amer- ican responses to Soviet demands for a summit meeting, he is the unseen agent whose analyses of Russian moti- vations, and of opportunities and pit- falls in a top-level meeting, may be crucial to this Government's final de- cision. One of the few men in Washington with immediate access to the White House, he has made long strides to- ward realizing the ambition that brought him to Washington. This, he told a visitor recently, was to make a permanent place for an intelligence service in the United States Govern- ment. "What interested me," he said, "was the idea of building up a new kind of structure in the American Government, creating a good intelligence organiza- tion and giving it its momentum, its start." To put it dramatically, Allen Dulles is the nation's "master spy." And, ac- cording to Moscow, a most sinister fel- low to boot. The Soviet pamphleteer, Ilya Ehrenburg, was driven to religious metaphor some years back in describ- ing him in that dedicatedly atheistic journal, Pravda. "If the spy, Allen Dulles, should ar- rive in Heaven through somebody's ab- sent-mindedness," Ehrenburg wrote, "he would begin to blow up the clouds, mine the stars and slaughter the angels." Yet, seen in the modest, gray-car- peted office from which he directs an undercover network that-it can only be hopefully assumed-rings the globe, Mr. Dulles seems the unlikeliest of "master spies." He has the soaring forehead of a professor, and a thatch of white hair. Full gray moustache, slightly rumpled tweeds and bow tie, glasses perched jauntily above his eye- brows and ever-present pipe round out the impression of a prep-school head- master. THE eyes are perhaps a bit too pene- trating to go with the big booming laugh; the hands. are certainly too broad, too strong for anyone but a man .of action. Although he will be 65 next month, he still plays a strenuous game of doubles, swims, goes around the golf course in 90 on a good day and ago- nizes over the ineptitudes of the Wash- ington Senators. He admits to reading spy thrillers and to a passion for Erie Stanley Gardner's mysteries. But intelligence work, he suggests, is not what the spy thrillers have led us to believe. "I've never been shot at. I don't know that anybody has ever even tried to kidnap me," he told a visitor recently. As C. I. A.'s director, his job is to furnish information, including esti- mates of foreign governments' inten- tions, on which United States policy decisions are shaped. Thus he has an intimate working relationship with his brother, the Secretary of State, John Foster Dulles, who is five years older than Allen. Between the two there are striking similarities, despite their differert tem- peraments-Foster with his awkward, nervous smile; Allen with his easy charm. Both are big, broad-boned, rugged men with a zest for physical activity. Both were bred to a family tradition of public service. Both at- tended Princeton, studied the law, spe- cialized in diplomacy and practiced law in the New York firm of Sullivan & Cromwell. Though there is a fierce family loy- alty within the Dulles clan when one of them is under fire, there is also con- siderable evidence of an old competitive rivalry between Allen and Foste; , dat- ing back to Princeton days. Foster was Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02T06251 R000900260001-0 the stiff intellectual; Allen, coming along a few years later, was the cam- pus social lion. The rivalry was still strong when both were members of Sullivan & Cromwell. Informed judg- ment in Washington today is that the two men still have their disagreements about substantive points affecting pol- icy formation, but Allen, who has no responsibility for policy-making, does not discuss them. The fact that family loyalty does not dominate their working relationship is probably crucial to American foreign policy, for nothing could be more dan- gerous than to have Allen Dulles mold his intelligence appraisals to suit Fos- ter's theories. Even critics of the Dulles family insist that this does not occur. More than any other individual, Allen Dulles is responsible for C. I. A. as it exists today. In one way or another, he has been involved with the creation of the agency almost frorn its inception and over the last five years has put his personal stamp on it. HOW good is C. I. A. under his stewardship? What are Its strengths and weaknesses? Is its peculiarly privi- leged independence essentially healthful in a democratic government? Absolute answers to such questions are hard to find. By statute, the agency's opera- tions are secret. Its size, its budget, the character of its operations-all the facts that other agencies must report in detail-are known to only an elite handful within the Government. In this secret atmosphere a pervasive cynicism about C. I. A. has been culti- vated in Washington. There are such stories as the news account in a Washington paper some months back of a free-for-all in a downtown res- taurant between C. I. A. and F. B. I. men. Each group, the paper reported, had mistaken the other for Communist agents. In casual conversa- tion one is told vaguely that C. I. A. crawls with incompe- tents and poseurs, that it is inefficient and bungling, that it is not heeded by the policy- makers. EW well-informed critics- including men who are severe critics-support these charges. The consensus of these critics runs as follows: (1) Personnel: Internal mo- rale is unusually good, espe- cially in comparison with the State Department. When threatened with a McCarthy assault a few years back, the agency was saved from the rack when Allen Dulles inter- vened at the White House. This has given C. I. A.'s people the reassuring conviction that they are working for a man PROFESSORIAL-"Seen in the modest office from which he directs an that-one assumes-rings the globe, Allen Dulles seems the unlikeliest who is prepared to go to bat for them. As a result it has been able to hold good men and attract more of the "quality" type that once concentrated on getting into State's Foreign Service. It has drawn heavily on the national university com- munity and the over-all quality of its personnel is unusually high for Government, perhaps better now than State's. (2) Intelligence reporting: The bitterest Democratic crit- ics of the Administration and State Department critics of the agency concede that the quality of its intelligence- gathering is extremely high, perhaps as fine as any other intelligence service in the world, including the highly touted British. (3) Intelligence evaluation: The most common criticism is that C. I. A.'s evaluation of the material it gathers is likely to be incautious, to leap to con- undercover network of 'master spies."' clusions that more conserva- tive students of, say, the Soviet Union, believe unjustified. This, the critics say, has put the Government in the position of acting on erroneous assump- tions at times in the past. ON the other hand, the crit- ics contend-and Mr. Dulles agrees-that the agency has failed to lick the problem of getting its mass of intelligence Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02T06251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02T06251 R000900260001-0 information across to the peo- ple who should have it for policy formation. For example, C. I. A.'s reporting on Soviet technological achievement has been extremely good, yet its implied warnings went un- heeded at the White House until after the sputniks. Dem- ocrats contend that the failure here was not in intelligence but in the Administration's policy of giving sound money a priority over expenditure for technology and science. As part of its self-improve- ment program, the C. I. A. has begun holding post-mortems on its failures. Information that was on hand before the event is re-examined to learn if another method of analysis might have pointed to the right reading. One of the disasters of the intelligence community, for in- stance, was its failure to fore- see the Chinese Communist entry into the Korean War. In its post-mortem, the C. I. A. discovered one critical bit of information that had been overlooked: The Chinese Army, shortly before it moved across the Yalu, was known to have provisioned itself with large quantities of antibiotics. Prop- erly weighed at the time, this scrap of information might have provided the warning tho Government needed. (4) Operational secrecy: This is an area of great debate. C. I. A. contends that secrecy and freedom from Congres- sional scrutiny are essential to the operation of an intelligence system. Senator Mike Mans- field, Montana Democrat, dif- fers. He has proposed that the agency be put under scrutiny of a joint Congressional com- mittee much like the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. There have been no notable security breaches by the atomic energy committee, he contends, and there is no reason to as- sume that C. I. A. security could not be similarly main- tained. AT present there is a small degree of Congressional control exercised by the Armed Serv- ices and Appropriations Com- mittees. Key members of these groups oppose the Mans- field proposal, contending that their control amply fulfills the requirement. Other critics, however, are not so sure and there are great misgivings about whether the agency is subject to even the minimum of accountability to the public which is the essence of demo- cratic government. The public, almost totally ignorant of what goes on behind the cur- tain of legalized secrecy, can- not know how its money is spent or how many costly blunders lie quietly buried under the "classified" labels. In broad, fuzzy outlines, some of C. I. A.'s operations are understood. The agency was created eleven years ago to coordinate all of the nation's diffused in- telligence activities. To prevent any development of an Ameri- can Gestapo, Congress specifi- cally denied "police, subpoena. law-enforcement powers or internal security functions" to the C. I. P_ Its aim is to lay hands on every available piece of infor- mation and speculation about the Communist world and to winnow these into a coherent, accurate picture for the guid- ance of the nation's policy- makers. Much of this task is clearly dogged, day-in, day- out analysis of overtly pub- lished reports, data, statistics. Painstaking study of readily available data builds up the background for evaluating se- cret intelligence funneled in from the field. The morsel of high-level secret information -whether collected by acci- dent, by intricately devious design or by derring-do at great risk to the agent-is still of the utmost importance. THUS, although the C. I. A. has institutionalized intelli- gence work, the secret agent remains an important figure. "You still need people with the characteristics of the cloak- and-dagger man, but we don't want him to act in a cloak- and-dagger way. That's the main point," Mr. Dulles ex- plained recently. Parenthetically, Mr. Dulles insists that the era of the heavy-lidded female spy is gone, another of science's con- quests over romance. The C. I. A. does not deny that some female operatives still work their perfumed wiles for Uncle Sam. But scientific snoopers, like the radar that detected the first Soviet in- tercontinental missile tests, promise to dominate the new era of espionage. Being a hothouse of secrecy, the C. I. A. breeds a jungle of rumor and speculation about itself. It is universally sus- pected of being a global mis- chief-maker. It has been estab- lished, for example, that the agency was behind Guatemala's 1954 revolution against the Americas' first Communist regime. On this evidence, it is generally assumed that its agents are busy muddying waters in other sensitive areas. When, as happened a year ago in Syria, an anti-Communist coup fizzles, word spreads mysteriously that the C. I. A. has bungled. ALTHOUGH he himself has broken with all secret-service tradition by speaking publicly and maintaining press con- tacts to prevent total mystery from enveloping the C. I. A., Mr. Dulles concedes that "an element of faith" is required from the public. Sometimes, because the whole story can- not be told, "we have to take it on the chin." Most recently, Mr. Dulles himself has been taking it on the chin for a speech last sum- mer predicting that military dictatorship might be "one of the possible lines of evolution" in the Soviet Union. When Marshal Zhukov, the only po- tential military dictator in sight, was abruptly dumped from power a month later, Mr. Dulles was as conspicuous as a base runner trapped between second and third in the decid- ing game of the World Series. Hadn't he failed to predict a major shift in the power struggle? "Sure," he told a recent visitor, "but plenty of people in the Kremlin seem to have missed it, too. Certainly Zhukov himself didn't know it was coming, or he wouldn't have been in Albania [when the plot against him was per- fected]." But the C. I. A.'s most im- portant job, Mr. Dulles com- mented, is not crystal-balling each specific event so much as "flagging critical situations" which this Government must watch and seek to turn to ad- vantage. The first hint that Allen Dulles might have an extraor- dinary interest in world af- fairs came when, at the age of 8, he produced his own his- tory of the Boer War. "Eng- land," goes a sample passage, "ought to be content if she owned the mines where gold is, but no, she wants to have the land to [sic]." AbTE" his year in India, he returned to Princeton for his M. A., then joined the State Department's Foreign Service. Stationed in Vienna when the United States went to war in 1917, he was transferred to Bern, where part of his work was to set up contacts in Austria-Hungary and the Bal- kans. It was his first experi- ence with espionage. In 1926 he quit the State Department when he was of- fered a chance to begin in law at double his salary as a vet- eran Foreign Service officer. First, however, he fired off an angry letter, which hit the newspapers, commenting on the department's miserable pay standards. "Made quite a splash," he recalls with relish. "I think it may have had something to do with upping salaries." When World War II came, the international lawyer joined the Office of Strategic Serv- ices-"that heterogeneous out- fit of intellectuals, dilettantes and footpads," as one historian has called it, put together for espionage and sabotage behind enemy lines. Mr. Dulles, remembering Switzerland's potential as a spy center, persuaded his chief and old friend, Maj. Gen. Wil- liam J. Donovan, to cut him loose to set up operations in the heart of Festung Europa. Late in 1942, with American forces landing in Africa and the Nazis sealing Vichy France, he dashed across Southern France from Spain, talked fast to a suspicious Gestapo agent at the frontier and slipped into Switzerland. THE story of those war years in Bern is raw material for a paperback thriller. The spy network Allen Dulles built from scratch reached into Germany, Yugoslavia, Czecho- slovakia, Bulgaria, Hungary, Spain, Portugal, North Af- rica, France, Italy and Aus- tria. He produced the first re- ports on the Nazi experi- mental rocket laboratory at Peenemuende and on the V-2 installations aimed against Britain. Through his contact with Hans Bernd Gisevius, a Nazi counter-intelligence man Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02T06251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 with an abiding hatred for the Nazis, he kept informed of the developing plot of July, 1944, against Hitler's life. Finally, Mr. Dulles commanded the fantastically delicate negotia- tions, reaching into the high- eat levels of the Gestapo and Wehrmacht, that ended in the surrender of a million enemy troops in Northern Italy some two weeks before the war's end. SHORTLY after C. I. A. was created in 1947, President Truman assigned him to a three-man panel to recommend ways of perfecting its opera- tions. His report gathered dust until 1950, when Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, then di- rector, phoned him in New York. "Well," said the general. "you've written this report. Now get down here and tell me how to put it into effect!" Assured that the job would take only six weeks, Mr. Dulles came to Washington. He has been here ever since. How does he envision the C. I. A.'s future? "We've got to keep our absolute integrity," Mr. Dulles insists. "Keep out of politics. Be absolutely fear- less. Report the facts as we see them regardless of wheth- er they're palatable or unpal- atable to the policy-makers. If we ever lose that objectiv- ity, then we are finished." What about the public con- science, the morality of the C. I. A.'s operations? "I don't think that immorality pays very much, so I don't believe in carrying out a program that's immoral," said Mr. Dulles. At times in his work, he was reminded, even a pro- gram that is not immoral may result in someone's getting hurt. Mr. Dulles conceded the point. "If you believe in a program," he replied, "you may have to break a little crockery in the cause of put- ting it into effect." THE END Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Tu SATURDAY Evslaxc J%VND&O ZAr 1711 rr Reprinted by Special Permission of -f THE SATURDAY EVENING POST Copyright 1945 by The Curtis Publishing Company This article, reproduced in convenient form for filing and future reference, has been authorized by the Saturday Evening Post under the following condi- tions: (1) That it may not be used for advertising under any circumstances, (2) that no one outside The Curtis Publishing Company may affix an organi- zation name or any other matter to it, and (3) that no solicitation or sales-promotion material may ac- company it. The Secret History of a Surrender By FORREST l)AVIS HE precise details of how the war in Italy guttered out at noonday on May second, last, with the orderly surrender of what Mr. Churchill exuberantly computed at "a million men"-although only twenty-six combat divisions were left afoot-may well have escaped you. His- tory was piling up too fast around the beginning of May. The fall of Northern Italy was overshadowed by other events: the putative suicide of Hitler, the degradation of the mortal remains of II Duce in a Milanese square, and the crumbling of the utterly beatgn Reichsuvehr in Germany itself. After D day in Normandy the war in Italy had seemed, in any case, a sort of side show-the "for- gotten front," Mark Clark's men termed it with some bitterness-and no American back home de- serves censure for being hazy about the signing of the Northern Italy capitulation on April twenty- ninth at Field Marshal Sir Harold Alexander's AFHQ at Caserta. AFHQ was domiciled, in case you've forgotten, in the summer palace of the ancient kings of Naples, a minor Versailles with some of the finest gardens in Europe. Present for the enemy, at the signing, were Lt. Col. Viktor von Schweinitz-a towheaded, wispy- mustached Junker who happens to be descended through an American grandmother from John Jay, our first chief justice-and Maj. Max Wenner, short, dark and definitely non-Nordic. You will come across Schweinitz and Wenner again in this narrative when certain of their superiors will vainly attempt to dishonor their signatures at the eleventh hour and fight on back into the Alps. The Caserta ceremony, signalizing the first of the historic Nazi surrenders of 1945, took only twenty minutes. For so brief a function it accomplished The mass surrender of the German armies in Northern Italy didn't just happen. Be- hind that event is an amazing story with all the trimmings of an Oppenheim novel. much, putting an end, for one thing, to American casualties in that theater and sending home many a G. I. who otherwise would have been buried in Italian soil. Forestalling fanatical Nazi hopes of a last stand in an Alpine redoubt, the surrender like- wise checkmated a plot for organizing remnants of the defeated armies into a corps of Werewolves. Contributing to the subsequent surrenders in Ger- many-in Bavaria, Von Kesselring finally sued for peace through Caserta-the April twenty-ninth event definitely shortened the war in Europe. Cer- tain authorities believe that, by breaking the spine of German resistance, the surrender of Northern Italy provided an early, clean-cut termination to a war which might otherwise have dragged on for days, or even a week or two, longer. So much is known. What could not be made pub- lic until now was the background of the capitula- tion, which, by no means an impromptu act, had been preceded by eight weeks of conversations between American intelligence authorities and de- featist Germans; negotiations-although the Amer- icans, bent on unconditional surrender, disliked the word-that were conducted principally in neutral, spy-infested Switzerland by Maj. Gen. William J. Donovan's Office of Strategic Services. The O. S. S. throughout its career has indignantly denied that its far-flung activities go forward in a cloak-and- dagger atmosphere. In the case of the Italian sur- render, General Donovan's men have preferred to say that it was, while skillfully handled, the work of earnest amateurs. Actually, however, the proceed- ings at times had all the trimmings of an E. Phillips Oppenheim novel, at other moments providing tongue-in-cheek melodramatics reminiscent of Al- fred Hitchcock's movie thrillers. Little Wally, the Czech operator of clandestine radio stations inside the enemy lines, provided most of the Hitchcock moments. Men risked their lives carrying the word across the Swiss-Italian and Swiss-Austrian borders-some crossing "white," that is, in a routine way with papers, others stealing over "black," by remote mountain passes. Among them were the Italian Baron Luigi Parrilli, who, before the war, sold American motor cars in Europe; Schutzstaffel officers surreptitiously selling out the Fiihrer, and an Amer- ican operative functioning as a Scarlet Pimpernel in reverse. It was his job to rescue the most notori- ous SS man in all Italy from the partisans because peace needed his assistance more thah the partisans needed his blood. Looming at all times over the conspirators was the black-hearted shadow of Heinrich Himmler- the evil genius of the surrender-engaged in coun- terespionage, dealing in agents provocateurs and holding the family of an SS general as hostages for his loyalty. Through the parleys came glimpses of a demoralized Fdhrer, stewing in one air-raid shelter or another, alternately planning im- possible counteroffensives, threatening the use of frightful last-resort weapons and issuing secret orders calculated to drive a wedge between Russia and the Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 western powers. At the other end of the Axis, Mussolini supplied a kind of com- edy relief; at one moment meditating death in battle at the head of a black- shirt brigade, at the next induced by the curvesome Petacci sisters to ar- range a refuge in Spain. Apart from their military conse- quences, the negotiations, frequently discouraging and once abandoned by the Allies for four days at their very crisis, had wide political and economic results. Through these negotiations, Northern Italy was spared physical destruction and a vengeful massacre ordered by Hitler. The great cities, power plants and factories of the rich industrial north were salvaged for the stricken Italian economy because the Americans demanded it as the price of peace. The ports of Genoa and Trieste were, more- over, preserved intact for Allied use, expediting the conquest of Austria-400 charges placed in Genoa harbor being defused by the Nazis themselves. It is this story, the secret history of Northern Italy's deliverance, which can now be told because the Office of Strategic Services believes that the epic accomplishments of a handful of Americans can now be spread before the people through the Post. The records of the operation, known by the undescriptive title of Sunrise Crossword, are replete with the nec- essary subterfuges common to such fascinating archives, down to code names and agents' numbers. Therein, for example, Kesselring may appear as Emperor, one SS officer as Critic, another as Grad- uate. A nom de ruse is chosen, it should hastily be explained, at complete random. The first move in Sunrise-the shortened title which the O. S. S. gave this endeavor-came, a bit improbably, from a young SS first lieutenant named Guido Zimmer. His motives were equally improb- able. A good Catholic who, loving his wife, resented Himmler's order enjoining illicit procre ireness on likely young SS officers, Zimmer unquestionably set the ball rolling. This was back in January of this year. The Nazis in Italy, although dreading Alex- ander's promised spring offensive, still were riding high, wide and handsome along the Po. The SS officers were doing themselves especially well. Hav- ing enriched themselves by extorting bribes from rich Jewish hostages and muscling into Italian in- dustries with Nazi war orders, the elite guardsmen occupied the villas of the nobility and the high bourgeoisie and monopolized the best cafes in Milan, Genoa and Como. Among the wealthiest and most exquisite of the SS plunderers was Gen. Karl Wolff, supreme com- mander of the Waffen, or fighting, SS, and police chief of Nazi-held Italy. An explosive, hard, blond Aryan, General Wolff had been a personal adjutant to Himmler. Coming to Italy from a high post at Fiihrer headquarters, he was rightly regarded as a favorite of the Nazi upper crust, deriving great prestige from that assumption. A former advertising man in Berlin, Wolff fancied himself as an intel- lectual, a mystic of the Rudolf Hess school and a connoisseur of art. Subsequently Wolff was to lay unction to his soul because he claimed to have pre- served the picture collections of the Uffizi and Pitti galleries as well as King Victor Emmanuel's coin collection. Outwardly resolute, Wolff was in Janu- ary privately reading the handwriting on the wall. Soon, as we shall note, he would be as deep in the plot to betray the Fi hrer and deliver Northern Italy as was his solemn young aide, Zimmer himself. In January, with Wolff spreading defeatist doubts in the mind of his friend, Field Marshal Albert Kesselring, the Oberkommandant in Northern Italy, Zimmer was hearing the Hitler scorched-earth policy discussed in inner SS circles. Already disgruntled, as we have seen, Zimmer professed him- self sickened at the prospect of seeing all Northern Italy blown to bits as the Nazis fell back on the Alps. Resolving to act, he turned to Baron Parrilli, who, as all Milan knew, had aceuaintances in the Allied camp. 'I here are two stories about Parrilli. Certain partisans hold it against him that he had friendly relations with cer- tain SS men. In his defense it is said that he dealt with the SS only for the purpose of extricating Jews from the Nazi clutches, having been instru- mental in saving many. However that may be, Parrilli made thirteen trips across the border as a courier, daring Allied bombings on the roads, Himm- ler, the neo-Fascist secret police and the hostile partisans. To Parrilli young Zimmer reported that high SS officers-for instance, Standartenfuhrer Eugen Dollmann, a hard case, and even the potent Karl Wolff himself-were talking among themselves about how one might get in touch with the Allies with a view to ending a hopeless war, thus saving one's neck and Northern Italy at the same time Others Zimmer mentioned as disheart- ened were even more exalted. Kesselring, for ex- ample, and Dr. Rudolf Rahn, Hitler's ambassador to Mussolini's sawdust republic. Even Heinrich Himmler's personal lackey in Northern Italy, a Gruppenfuhrer named Harster, was reliably reported to be casting about for a way to leave the ::inking ship with advantage to himself. Although Kessel- ring-who later was transferred to succeed Von Hundstedt in the West--was at this stage highly sympathetic with Wolff's sentiments, he became, as we shall see, a principal thorn in the side of Sun- rise. The Zimmer disclosures convinced Parrilli of two things: first, that behind its harsh facade, Nazi morale in Northern Italy was cracking wide open; and, secondly, that the weakest sector was the out- right Nazis. Parrilli, quickly discovering that he had no direct access to Allied authorities, bethought himself of his old schoolmaster in Switzerland. Dr. Max Husmann, the master of a famous boys' school on the Zugerberg, near Zurich, was, as Parrilli knew, a dedicated busybody and a noble soul who circulated everywhere in Switzerland. No un- likelier actor ever took part in a drama of inter- national intrigue than the unworldly, intense Hus- mann. Through his friend Max Waibel, both a doctor of philosophy and an intelligence major on the Swiss army's general staff, Doctor Husmann was able to complete the ring. Weibel took Husmann and his information to the one man in Switzerland able to deal with it effectively, Allen W. Dulles, the chief representative of the O. S. S. in Switzerland. As such, Mr. Dulles-who is the grandson of one Sec- retary of State, Gen. John W. Foster, the nephew of another, Robert Lansing, and the brother and peace- time law partner of John Foster Dulles-managed varied and important activities for the United States in the common meeting ground of every hostile interest in Europe. With the war ended, it can be no secret that his jurisdiction included the enemy countries as well as those occupied, together with the underground forces therein. A man of resource, Mr. Dulles had slipped into Switzerland in the fall of 1942 a few hours after the Nazis had closed the French border upon taking over unoccupied France. He crossed the frontier with the friendly connivance of the French guards, who outwitted the newly arrived Nazi agents out of admiration for Mr. Dulles' eloquent invocation of the memories of Lafayette and Pershing. A judgmat- ical man of genuine charm, Mr. Dulles conducted the secret affairs of the United States, including Sunrise, with discretion, skill and perseverance. For Sunrise alone he deserves a medal. T HE intelligence brought by Doctor Husmann left Dulles fairly cold. At the moment, Himmler, inspired by Hitler, was waging a peace offensive, primarily through Vienna, aimed at splitting the anti-Axis front. Himmler had sent word that the Nazis were willing to quit to the Western Allies alone, excluding the Soviet Union. This was natu- rally unacceptable. Suspecting that the word from Milan was another salient of Himmler's offensive, Dulles was also skeptical of inducing the surrender of the German military on other grounds. Although the Western Allies never attempted to duplicate the Russian experiment with captured German officers, the O. S. S. had interviewed a num- ber of imprisoned general officers late in 1944 with a view to using them as a lever on their colleagues still in the field. To this job was assigned Gero von S. Gaevernitz, a German-born American who became Dulles' chief coadjutor with Sunrise. A year younger than Karl Wolff, Gaevernitz belonged to the same disillusioned German generation, but where the SS dignitary had taken the easy path of Nazi affiliation, Gaevernitz had migrated to the United States. He did so at the prompting of his liberal father, Dr. Gerhart von Schulze-Gaevernitz. In New York, young Gaevernitz had learned the banking busi- ness. Pearl Harbor day found him in Germany. A friend in the Foreign Office warned him that Hitler planned an early declaration of war. Gaevernitz reached Switzerland only six hours before Hitler acted. The attempt to use the captured German generals had come to nothing, although it had the whole- hearted support of Gen. Omar Bradley and the able collaboration of his G-2, Maj. Gen. Edward L. Sibert. While the captured German generals agreed with Gaevernitz that further resistance was useless, their overtures to their comrades across the lines broke against the Gestapo agents who surrounded each Reichswehr field commander. Still shaken by the purge following the July twentieth attempt on Hitler's life, fearful of the reproaches of history, the West-front commanders fell back on the personal oaths they had sworn to Hitler. The O. S. S. had not yet learned that Hitler's elite corps, the SS, had less compunction about deserting him. While Professor Husmann's seed fell at first on barren soil, other reports reaching Dulles from Northern Italy soon inclined him to listen more at- tentively. A Reichswehr staff officer, in Zurich ex- changing free marks for Swiss francs, indiscreetly gossiped about the defeatism prevalent at head- quarters. Dulles learned that the German consul at Lugano, a son of the one-time Reich foreign secretary, Con- stantin von Neurath, had been sent by Kesselring to Von Rundstedt's head- quarters to talk about peace. It seemed apparent to Dulles-and he so advised his superiors at AFHQ, London and Washington-that the situation in Northern Italy might be ripening to- ward capitulation. A month intervened between Hus- mann's first soundings of Dulles and Dulles' first talk with Baron Parrilli. That delay was due to Swiss skepticism as well as the American's reluctance. Not until late in February did the Swiss authorities accept the thesis that they had a stake in the orderly surren- der of Northern Italy, preserving the economy of that region. The Swiss, moreover, did not want hordes of ref- ugees and the wash of a defeated army Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 ITS; A *V Meeting of Dulles, Lemnitzer and Airey with Wolff ARN? ~~ t7. Dulles' O. S. S. associate confers with Dollmann at first meeting Lemnitzer and Airey smuggled into Switzerland as U. S. Army sergeants Airfield to Caserta in Southern Italy "Little Wally," Czech operator of underground radio station Baron Parrilli and Zimmer start peace conspiracy The scene of the action. The battle-weary Nazis wanted to surrender an army and shorten the war and save thousands of lives. But they mistrusted one another, mistrusted the area's top commander and, above all, they mistrusted Adolf' Hitler. First meeting of Dulles of O. S. S. and Wolff Lemnlizer and Airey secreted in Dulles House Dr. Husmann meets Wolff, Zimmer and Dollmann on way to Zurich At H. Q., Wolff, Kesselring and other high Nazis talk of surrender Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 pounding on their frontiers. Earlier they had withheld a visa from Parrilli, finally requiring a 10,000-franc bond from the professor, which be supplied. Seeing Parrilli late in February, Dulles agreed to receive a duly authenticated Nazi emissary, stipulating, however, that the terms must be unconditional surrender to all the Allies. The Nazi conspirators selected Stan- dartenfiihrer Dollmann to make the first cast. By then Professor Husmann, committed heart and soul to the cause of peace, thought it his duty to travel into Italy to indoctrinate Dollmann, warning him that the Americans would not negotiate terms, would spurn him if he Came from Himmler, and under no circumstances would discuss accept- ing a surrender without Russia. Al- though Dollmann, described as "a vivid personality, temperamental and egotistical," came with the prestige of a liaison officer among Kesselring, Wolff and Mussolini's generalissimo, Rodolfo Graziani, Dulles did not re- ceive him personally. Instead he sent an associate to confer with him in a private room in the Restaurant Bian- chi in Lugano. The associate confined himself to exacting, as a test of good faith, the delivery to the Swiss frontier of two important Italian partisan leaders held by the Nazis-Prof. Ferruccio Pam, chief of the military resistance in Northern Italy, and a Major Usmiani, an officer who had been collaborating with the Americans. Parri was in the dungeon at Verona, Usmiani in Milan's notorious San Vittori prison. The door to negotiations being left open, Doll- mann departed, promising to send back someone of higher rank. Wolff arrived, with Dollmann and Zimmer, on March eighth. Still in this thing to the hilt, Husmann met the Germans at Chiasso, on the frontier, riding with them to Zurich. Recur- rently, he asked Wolff if the most tragic chapter in Germany's history was to end without one German per- forming a great and humane act. Once Wolff, traveling in a sealed compart- ment, asked the schoolmaster to leave him, but he did succeed in persuading Doctor Husmann that he had a better side to him and that he, with Kessel- ring, had prevented the destruction of Rome, contrary to Hitler's orders. On the same train were Parri and Usmiani, still mystified by their deliverance. Declining to receive Wolff until he had assured himself of the condition of the two patriots, Dulles visited Pam and Usmiani at the Hirslander clinic in Zurich, where they were under ex- amination. Neither had been tortured. Dulles and Parri were warm friends. At that moment-with the Italian re- calling his fear when brought from his cell that he was about to be shot- neither could have foreseen that within four months Parri, a member of the non-monarchist, non-Marxist Action party, would be prime minister of Y. Dulles met the SS general in his Zurich apartment. Also present were the German-American Gaevernitz and Schoolmaster Husmann. The Americans knew that Wolff had a long record as a dyed-in-the-wool Nazi, that he had served with the notorious Von Epp at Munich as well as with Himmler. Be- fore the meeting, Wolff had submitted numerous credentials, including a full- page photograph of himself in a Ger- man weekly publication and a list of references headed by Rudolf Hess. While Dulles listened impassively, Wolff, a rapid-fire talker, explained that both he and Kesselring knew the war to be lost and wished to quit, with- out reference to Hitler or Himmler, in order to avoid further bloodshed and the razing of Northern Italy. Profess- ing himself a friend of England and America, he expressed the hope that something he might do might palliate the aversion in which he knew Ger- many to be held in those countries. Unlike Dollmann, he did not speak of his personal fate beyond saying that, not being a war criminal, he had no fears of Allied justice. Promising to hand Northern Italy to Dulles on a silver platter, he agreed in further token of good faith, to deliver into Switzerland several hundred interned Jews, to stand personally responsible for the welfare of 350 American and British prisoners of war at Mantua, and to free another important resist- ance leader, Sogno Franci. Accustomed to the blatant tirades of the party comrades, Wolff confessed himself enormously taken with Dulles' correctly firm suavity. "How different these Americans are from what we have been told," he exclaimed to Hus- mann. To the Swiss he confided a curi- ously mystical belief that he was being spared for some great purpose. A year before, he had walked away from an airplane that had crashed a tree, kill- ing the other passengers. Twice during the Sunrise conversations, that faith was confirmed. When he was returning from the March-eighth interview with Dulles, Allied fighter bombers raked his motor car as it proceeded from Milan to his headquarters at Fasano on Lake Garda, wounding his chauffeur and a staff officer. A machine-gun bul- let punctured the tail of his blouse, and on Parrilli's next trip Wolff sent the scorched shred of the garment to Dulles, asking that the Allied air forces work over the Milan-Fasano road lightly in future. Again, while he was riding to an inspection with Mussolini, the road was attacked, killing a lieu- tenant and wounding the chauffeur of Wolff's car, but leaving him skin- whole. So confident had been Wolff, so closely did his assurances jibe with other information, that Dulles felt jus- tified in asking AFHQ for assistance in buttoning up the surrender. Alexander accordingly sent two senior officers: Maj. Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, U. S. A., assistant chief of staff at Caserta, and the British Maj. Gen. Terence S. Airey, AFHQ intelligence chief. The story of how O. S. S. smuggled the generals into Switzerland under the dog-tag identities of two U. S. Army sergeants, Nicholson and McNeely, and how they lived for weeks behind drawn blinds in Dulles' house at Bern-venturing out only to buy dog biscuit for the dachs- hund Fritzel acquired by Airey-is already familiar to some Post readers. Before the generals reached Bern, the negotiations struck the first of sev- eral infuriating snags attributable to Hitler or Himmler. Upon reaching Fasano on March tenth, Wolff learned that, the day before, Hitler's personal airplane had come for Kesselring, tak- ing him to Fiihrer headquarters, the supposition being that the field mar- shal was being relieved of the Italian command. Blow No. 2 was delivered by Dr. Ernst Kaltenbrunner, chief of the Gestapo under Himmler, who, hav- ing got wind of Sunrise, ordered Wolff to break off whatever contacts he had with the Allies. Gruppenfiihrer Har- ster, as it transpired, had turned in- former. The news of Kesselring's transfer- verified when Baron Parrilli hurried across the border from Wolff-struck Dulles between wind and water. What had made the Italian situation hopeful was the identity of interest between Wolff, the SS chief, and the Wehrmacht authorities. Receiving Parrilli after midnight in his Zurich apartment, Dulles bade him ask Wolff how he would proceed with a new Oberkom- mandant not committed to surrender. He strongly urged the SS general to return at once to Switzerland to discuss the technical details of the capitulation with Dulles' military advisers-his de- scription of Generals Lemnitzer and Airey. On March nineteenth Wolff was back with Major Wenner and young Zimmer, the Swiss secret service facili- tating their trip by motor from Chiasso. The talks were held at Ascona on Lake Maggiore near Locarno, every precau- tion being taken to keep them from prying eyes. The Americans came on two trains, dividing up to avoid notice. Being a resort, Ascona had sufficient visitors coming and going even at this season, so that a dozen more or less would not be likely to excite comment. However, in order to avoid contact with the villagers, the conferees sub- sisted for the most part on Army ra- tions brought in for the purpose. Dulles had two villas at his disposal, one for the Germans, the second for the Amer- icans. In the second villa a clandestine radio transmitter was installed for com- munication with Caserta. Wolff reported-what our people al- ready knew-that Kesselring, trans- ferred to Rundstedt's command, had never returned to Italy. Hence, he had not been able to convey his desire for surrender to his successor, Col. Gen. Heinrich von Vietinghoff. In as much as Vietinghoff, a nonpolitical general, greatly respected Kesselring, it was Wolff's opinion that a recommendation from Kesselring would be enormously helpful in winning over the new Ober- kommandant. This entailed a journey to Kesselring's headquarters, which, having to be made by motor because the Allies had command of the air, would take five, possibly seven, days. To this the Americans regretfully agreed, it seeming an unavoidable de- lay- To the generals, who were not iden- tified to him, Wolff explained why the Germans had held Northern Italy ;r.- stead of retiring to the natural bastion of the Alps. Back in September when Hitler had ordered six crack divisions from Italy to the Western front, pre- paratory to such a retirement, Kessel- ring and Wolff had objected, pointing to the value of Northern Italy as a source of food and industrial supply. Whereupon Hitler yielded, giving as Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 his reason a fear that a withdrawal psychosis might spread through the Reichswehr, especially after the sweep- ing advance of the Allies in France. This governed his decision to stay in Norway also. The Allied generals and Wolff did agree on a surrender procedure. Wolff was to deliver two parliamentarians, armed with full powers, to the O. S. S. in Switzerland when the time came for a flight to headquarters at Caserta, where the deal finally would be but- toned up. Dulles engaged to get them across Switzerland to the French fron- tier and back to their own lines. When Wolff reached Kesselring's headquarters he found the field mar- shal only fifteen kilometers ahead of the hard-driving Gen. George S. Pat- ton's Third Army. Nevertheless, Kes- selring, according to Wolff, took time out to authorize Wolff to recommend surrender to Vietinghoff in his name. He explained that he could not himself move because he mistrusted his asso- ciates. "Our situation," he told Wolff, "is desperate, but nobody dares tell the truth to the Fuhrer, who is sur- rounded by advisers who still believe in a last, specific secret weapon, which they call the Verzweillungswaffe. " Trans- lated, that means last-resort weapon. He professed not to know the weapon's exact na- ture. Although encouraged, Wolff was subjected to further de- lay. Himmler summoned him to Berlin, upbraided him for yielding the Italian partisans, Parri and Usmiani, and asked for a full report on his visits to Switzerland. Wolff' dissem- bled. Ordered to remain in Berlin temporarily, he fled back to Italy when Himmler was unexpectedly called to Hungary. All this promptly was reported to Dulles by the German lieutenant, Zimmer, who crossed the border twice in four days. Back in Italy, Wolff en- countered two new obstacles. Although the new theater commander, Vietinghoff, and his chief of staff, Roettiger, were impressed by Kessel- ring's endorsement of Sunrise, Vietinghoff declined to move until the situation north of the Alps was clearly seen to be hopeless. He argued with some reason that he had no wish to inspire another stab-in-the- back legend for the postwar consola- tion of the German people. Hitler was at the moment assuring his people that victory would turn on the battle of Berlin. It seemed plain that Vieting- hoff, believing a majority of his officers and men still under the Fuhrer's spell, feared disorder if he acted prematurely and in defiance of Hitler's reiterated orders to hold Italy at all cost. Vietinghoff'sobstructionism wasgrave enough, but graver troubles were piling up for Wolff on the personal side. Back in Berlin, Himmler telephoned, order- ing Wolff not to leave his post again under any circumstances. Employing a characteristic instrument of Nazi terrorism, Himmler broadly hinted that Wolff's family were now being held as hostages for his obedience. Wolff had removed his wife, formerly a Frau von Bernstorff, who once lived in New York, and the children to a refuge in his command near the Brenner Pass. Himmler had returned them to Wolff's estate at St. Wolfgang in the Tyrol for, as he put it, "their safety." Wolff could not know what orders the Ge- stapo had direct from Himrpler, and this new turn gave him cause for fear. To Dulles, via Baron Parrilli, he explained that be must be careful in as much as he would be of no further service "as a corpse," even though he were a corpse "at a state funeral." Previously he had promised to be in Ascona on April second with authority to surrender. He sent Parrilli instead, insisting, however, that he was not yet licked. Because of the twin setbacks, Generals Lemnitzer and Airey returned to headquarters at Caserta. Sternly Dulles admonished Wolff, through Par- rilli, that Allied successes were shorten- ing the time for surrender. Warning him that he and Vietinghoff would be held personally responsible if Hitler's scorched-earth policy was executed, he reminded Wolff of his detailed promises to safeguard hostages, prisoners and partisans against the Fdhrer's murder- ous intentions. Since Dulles never put himself in the position of bargaining with the Nazis, all his communications to Wolff had been oral. This time Parrilli had to memorize long passages. The power drive launched by Alex- ander and Clark in the first week of April hampered, threatening to dis- rupt, the line of communications be- tween Dulles and Wolff. More than ever the highways of Northern Italy were unsafe to travel. To Dulles it seemed the time had come to avail him- self of Wolff's offer to shelter an Allied radio station within the enemy lines. Chosen for the unprecedented and haz- ardous mission was a young Czech known as Little Wally, who had been trained as an operator by O. S. S. for a job where a knowledge of German was required. Wally had been studying medicine at the University of Prague when called into the army before the German occupation of Czechoslovakia. Going underground thereafter, he had been caught, imprisoned at Dachau, had escaped, becoming a parachute saboteur with the British, been caught again and had for the second time es- caped, this time to Switzerland. In- terned, he again got away and in France volunteered for duty with the 0. S. S. Lieutenant Zimmer took Little Wally with his transmitter, cipher books and secret instructions-which, however, divulged nothing of the Sunrise opera- tions-with him to Milan, installing the operator in his own apartment. It had been thought easier to conceal him in Milan than at Wolff's headquarters. Besides providing direct communica- tions from Wolff to Caserta and Bern, Wally engaged in extracurricular activ- ity, pointing the Allied Air Forces to likely targets. In one case, where the target was Mussolini's current hide-out quite near the Zimmer apartment, Wally's directions were understand- ably precise. When a tip came from Little Wally to touch up General Vietinghoff's headquarters, which were separate from Wolff's, the Americans marveled at this peculiarly Germanic method of applying pressure. Wolff had inspired the tip. By mid-April, with the British Eighth and the American Fifth armies ad- vancing steadily toward the Po, the prospects for a useful surrender ap- peared dim indeed. Meanwhile, two agents provocateurs showed up to add zest to the flagging Sunrise. One, a German consul in Italy known to be a Kaltenbrunner man, sought an interview with Dullesin Wolff's name, exhibiting too much knowledge of the conspiracy for comfort. A pseudo-British officer tried to gain audience with Vietinghoff on behalf of Dulles. This so alarmed the Ober- kommandant that he wrote a full explanation to Jodl at Fiihrer headquarters, asking absolution and advice. Only after the strongest representa- tions from Wolff, Ambassador Rahn and Roettiger, did Viet- inghoff tear up the letter. Arriving in Switzerland on April sixteenth, Lieutenant Zimmer brought a letter from Wolff containing condolences on the death of President Roosevelt together with as- surances that the army com- manders underV ietinghoff had been enlisted for Sunrise and that capitulation was immi- nent, with or without the Oberkommandant. Zimmer re- ported Gauleiter Franz Hofer, of the Tyrol, just back from Hitler's headquarters with word that the Fuhrer was "crazily" planning vast new counteroffensives. Despite Wolff's optimism, his letter contained a disquieting note, sharp- ened the next day when Parrilli ap- peared with fresh advices. Himmler had ordered Wolff to Berlin. At first he took evasive action, refusing to answer the telephone, but Parrilli reported that Wolff, after drawing up a new will, finally had taken off for Berlin via Prague. At the American end of Sun- rise it seemed that little hope remained of ending the Italian war rationally, sparing the Allied forces and the Ital- ian people the final draught of blood. Knowing Himmler, Dulles supposed that Wolff's persistent treachery to the Fiihrer was about to meet its due re- ward. This was on April seventeenth. The pay-oft came four days later in a dis- patch from Washington, quickly con- firmed by AFHQ, ordering Dulles to terminate all surrender conversations with the Germans forthwith. The or- der, bearing the imprint of the High Command, carried no explanation. To Dulles it appeared that all hope had fled; that the war in Italy must now go on to its bitter and appointed end. Editors' Note-This is the first of two articles by Forrest Davis. The second will appear next week. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 The Secret History of a Surrender By F ORR ESi 1AVIS In the second and last chapter of this story of an American triumph, the author gives you fascinating glimpses of Hitler, Himmler, Kesselring and other high Nazis in the dying days of the Reich. If II T seemed for a few hours on April 21, 1945, that the exasperatingly slow endeavor to wind up the war in Italy by surrender had fallen irre- trievably flat. The negotiations, crammed with the standard ingredients of spy fiction-suspense, danger and the startling experience of meeting notorious enemy characters face to face while the fighting was still going on-had lasted seven weeks. But while Allen W. Dulles, the astute chief of Maj. Gen. William J. Donovan's Office of Strategic Serv- ices in Switzerland, was dejectedly preparing to break communications with the Nazi peace con- spirators, in obedience to the day's orders from the High Command in Washington, a message came from the other side of the lines. Relayed by Little Wally, the clandestine radio operator in Milan, it announced that the SS General Karl Wolff and the Reichswehr Col. Gen. Heinrich von Vietinghoff were at last unreservedly ready to down arms. Even then, in fact, emissaries, armed with full powers, were preparing to cross the frontier and put them- selves in the hands of the O. S. S., according to agreement, for the journey to the Caserta head- quarters, where the surrender would be completed. Two days later, Baron Luigi Parrilli, the faithful Italian go-between, arrived in Switzerland with word direct from Wolff. The prime mover in the peace junta was coming with the emissaries. Parrilli had been waiting at Fasano, Wolff's headquarters on Lake Garda, when the SS general returned from his unsought visit to Himmler and Hitler in Ger- many. Himmler,' Wolff reported, was badly frayed, in- decisively pondering whether the top Nazis should fight it out in Berlin, retreat to a northern redoubt or fly to Berchtesgaden. Against the third option stood the Fuhrer's recently acquired and somewhat hysterical aversion to flying. Both Himmler and Dr. Ernst Kaltenbrunner, chief of the Gestapo, castigated Wolff for his part in Sunrise; Kalten- brunner, reading from stacked documents, confront- ed him with details which he had thought deeply secret. Wolff quaked as Kaltenbrunner read. Ex- pecting to be liquidated, Wolff thought he owed his escape solely to the fact that the nerves of the high Nazis already had cracked. Once, testing Kaltenbrunner's mood, Wolff bristled, saying, -'.I will not accept. being treated as if I were on trial; if I have done anything dishonor- able take me out and shoot me." Kaltenbrunner thereupon subsided. Emboldened, Wolff charged Himmler with having miscalculated Germany's ca- pacity to resist in the Rhineland as well as in the east against the Russians. When the SS Reichs/uhrer offered no defense against these reproaches, Wolff declared that, Himmler having proved a false guide, he felt entitled now to shift for himself. At the moment, Himmler seemed acquiescent. Kalten- brunner, however, insisted that all must go down together. Late that night the Gestapo chief ordered Wolff to accompany him to Hitler's headquarters. Arriving at 4:30 in the morning, they found the Fiihrer, gray and despondent, in his hunker, pre- paring to sleep. He asked them to return at five i>.m. At that hour there took place one of the last. con- versations with Hitler as reported directly from high Nazi sources. The talk began with Wolff explaining that he undertook the parleys with the Americans only after the Fuhrer, in February, had sent out secret instructions to establish contact wherever possible with the Allies. Making no comment, Hitler launched instead into a harangue, giving Wolff explicit orders concerning the last-stand de- fense of Northern Italy and the scorched-earth policy he expected to be pursued. When Wolff ad- vised against leveling Italy, Hitler listened quietly, but again made no comment. Preoccupied with the defense of the Italian front, he remarked that Italy must be held for at least two months. He was con- vinced that the Russians could be stood off for two months. "We must fight to gain time," Hitler told Wolff, as reported to Dulles. "In two more months the break between the Anglo-Saxons and the Russians will come about and then I shall join the party which approaches me first. It makes no difference which." As for himself, Hitler added that he would then fulfill the personal ambition he had nourished from the beginning of the war, retiring from active duty in order to "observe and influence the fate of the German people from a distance." This was on April eighteenth. Thirteen days later the German radio announced his death. To Wolff, intent on quitting the sinking ship, Hitler seemed as uncon- scious of the realities of his disintegrating situation as a sleepwalker. Back in Fasano, convinced that there was little more to fear from Hitler and Himmler, Wolff finally persuaded General Vietinghoff that the sands had run out. On the twenty-fourth, Wolff reached Lucerne with the emissaries, Lt. Col. Viktor von Schweinitz, of Vietinghofl's staff, and his own aide, Maj. Max Wenner. The parliamentarians were in borrowed civvies, Wenner wearing Wolff's shoot- ing jacket, an aggressively checked tweed. The Ger- man party was secretly installed in the villa of Maj. Max Waibel, of the Swiss general staff, who had been a participant in Sunrise almost from the start. The presence of Wolff and the plenipotentiaries in Lucerne confronted Dulles with a problem. Upon receipt of word that Wolff was at last delivering what he had promised early in March, the American had notified Caserta, London and Washington. Dulles and his principal aide, the German-born American Gero von S. Gaevernitz, reasoned, rightly as it turned out, that the High Command would not have halted the conversations had they known the Germans to be on the point of capitu- lation. Caserta took that view also, and Field Marshal Sir Harold- Alex- ander urgently cabled the High Com- mand to reconsider. From Caserta came word likewise to hold the Ger- mans in Lucerne. Yet under terms of the order terminating the parleys, Dulles could not communicate directly with Wolff. Fortunately, Switzerland also having a vital interest in the out- come, Major Waibel was willing to bridge that hiatus. The High Coinmand was slower to resume than they had been to interdict the negotiations. Hence, for nearly four days, while Alexander and Mark Clark were driving toward the Po with rising fury, the emissaries idled in Lucerne. Wolff got out earlier. The sweeping advance of the Allies threat- ened, as he thought, his escape road back to his headquarters, which were in process of being moved, along with Vietinghoff's, to Bolzano, in the Dolo- mites, under the Austrian border. It seemed to Dulles, as well as Wolff, that the general was needed in Italy to re- deem his promises regarding destruc- tion of property and the safeguarding of prisoners and hostages, as well as to effectuate the surrender when signed at Caserta. Furthermore, Wolff was concerned, unnecessarily as it turned out, over reports from Milan of mys- terious activities of Mussolini. As Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 soon would become known, with pe- culiar force to Wolff, It Duce was merely planning his ill-starred get- away. A more compelling reason for Wolff's speedy return developed before he left Lucerne. The evil spirit of the North- ern Italy undertaking, Heinrich Himm- ler, had again been moved to action. Obviously reflecting Hitler and Kal- tenbrunner, he had telegraphed Wolff at Fasano, saying, "It is more than ever essential that the Italian front hold and remain intact. No negotia- tions of any kind should be under- taken." The order was read to Wolff by telephone while in Waibel's pres- ence. To the Swiss he said, "That no longer counts; Himmler has played his last card." Yet Himmler, through the Gestapo, was still in a position to cause harm. Two of his most lethal hatchet men were, as Wolff knew, circulating in Italy. Crossing the border at Chiasso with- out incident, Wolff soon found his way south blocked by resistance groups. The patriots, thinking liberation at hand with the great drive of the Anglo- American armies, had poured out of the mountains, occupying Como and other northern towns and blocking the highways. This was on the afternoon of April twenty-sixth. That morning a squad of partisans had caught Musso- lini, fleeing north along Lake Como with Clara Petacci, his mistress, and the infamous pair were slain. Partisan blood was up, and Wolff, the supreme SS police chief of Italy, would have been another rich catch. Taking refuge in a villa near Cernob- hio, Wolff soon found himself again thwarted. The patriots surrounded him, too weak as yet to attack, but rapidly gaining reinforcements. Hap- pily for him, the telephone still worked. A call to Major Waibel brought Gem Gaevernitz at once to Chiasso, where, luckily, he encountered Donald Jones, of the O. S. S., an old hand with the partisans who had just returned from a visit with their leaders in this dis- trict at Como. Jones agreed that prompt action was vital. There could be little doubt that once in partisan hands Wolff would be shot forthwith and, from our point of view, that would be bad. With Wolff gone, the whole long maneuver might easily fall to the ground. Jones, therefore, volunteered to rescue Wolff. No better man could have been found. Known to the patri- ots as Scotti, Jones had for two years been going and coming among them, arranging communications, carrying in currency and playing the part of a Dutch uncle to them all. First tele- phoning Wolff that his men should hold their fire when his motorcars ar- rived, Jones set out with a strange cavalcade hastily assembled. In the leading car he placed two German officers who had managed to get away from the villa together with a large white flag. Jones followed in the sec- ond car, shining his headlights on the flag ahead. In the third car he put trustworthy partisans armed with au- tomatic weapons. While rolling out of Chiasso the motorcade was fired on by a partisan band. Calling a halt, Jones coura- geously left his car and walked unarmed into his headlights with the hope that someone among the band would recog- nize him and put a stop to the firing. So it happened. An old friend ran from the cover, crying "ii amico Scotti," the firing stopped and the expedition re- sumed its way. At Como a friendly pre- fect armed Jones with a pass through all partisan lines. Often halted, but not again made a target, the party finally reached Wolff's villa. Wolff was in full uniform. While he changed to mufti, members of his staff offered Jones some Scotch, and American ciga- rettes, which they assured him had ac- companied them all the way from North Africa. Wolff was delivered by Jones to Gaevernitz at Chiasso, taken from there across Switzerland to Feldkirch on the Austrian border, from which he could reach the new headquarters at Bolzano by way of the Vorarlberg. Before departing from Chiasso, Wolff uttered a new set of pledges to Gaever- nitz. His life having been actually saved by Jones and the O. S. S., the SS leader put genuine fervency into his promise to arrest Himmler should he show up in Italy bent on destruc- tive ends. While at the villa, Wolff re- ported, he had telephoned Rauch, his SS commander at Milan, renewed in- structions to avoid fighting and pillage, ordering him to surrender even to the partisans if necessary. Gaevernitz had put these directives in writing, later entrusting them to Parrilli for delivery to Milan. Wolff further agreed to take forcible measures against any military leaders who should attempt to block surrender. As we shall see, this prom- ise was fulfilled. The High Command reversed its in- structions on the twenty-seventh, and Schweinitz and Wenner got away the next day. These German emissaries crossed the French frontier at Geneva to Annemasse, proceeding at once to the air base at Annecy, where an Amer- ican C-47 picked them up and flew them through the foulest weather of the late spring to Caserta. Although it might wet a seemed to the O. S. S. authorities at the worst was over, actually the, course of Sunrise from April twenty-eighth to May second at twelve noon, mean Greenwich time- when arms finally were grounded on the Italian front-was checkered, dogged by bad weather, faulty com- munications, treachery in the German ranks and Heinrich Himmler. Since the High Command did not see fit to explain its intervention in the negotiations, the files of Sunrise are bare of anything that might account for the motive. It may be surmised with fair assurance, however, that the reason for abandoning the matter on the verge of success, leaving the Ger- man parliamentarians dangling for four days in Lucerne, was political and not military. The transaction ending the war in Italy detained the German parlia- mentarians at Caserta only twenty- four hours. Gaevernitz fortunately had accompanied them, and when Von Schweinitz, representing General Vie- tinghoff, raised some minor points con- cerning procedure, the O. S. S. man was able to persuade him that the surrender had to be unconditional. Back at the Swiss-French border with three copies of the protocol for delivery to Vieting- hoff and Wolff, the first in a series of hitches which were to become monoto- nously disheartening developed. Be- cause of a communications delay the O. S. S. man assigned to meet and assist the emissaries over the border did not appear. None of the party remembered the names under which the Germans were traveling. In that extremity, Gaevernitz re- sourcefully stepped across the border and asked the Swiss guards if they would oblige him by identifying his companions as the men who had gone out with him yesterday and allow them to return. This the Swiss did, literally permitting Schweinitz and Wenner back into Switzerland on their faces. As this was the evening of the twenty- ninth, the capitulation being set for three days hence, and they had an all- night drive ahead of them to the Aus- trian frontier, every minute counted. The surrender party reached Dulles' house in Bern just before midnight, tired and discouraged. None had slept for thirty-six hours. Arriving at Feld- kirch the next morning, the German emissaries met another, more serious delay. During the night the Swiss had closed the frontier. As the order stemmed from the highest quarters, the old Swiss friends of Sunrise lacked the rank to get around it. Dulles there- upon appealed to an elevated Swiss functionary, telling him how material was the passage of these men and re- minding him of Switzerland's interest in an orderly surrender and the pres- ervation of Northern Italy from demo- lition. The official, a man of decision, acted promptly, and Schweinitz and Wenner crossed the frontier-the only exceptions made that day. In Austria and Italy, where the emissaries had only a battered German jalopy instead of the powerful Amer- ican car that had sped them across Switzerland, they met with rough going, the highways being often blocked by late snows. Although expected at Bolzano by midday, they did not reach there until 12:30 A.M. on May first. Meanwhile, Dulles was beset with communications difficulties. With the capitulation signed, it was clearly of the utmost importance that it be con- firmed by the Germans at Bolzano to the Allies at Caserta, so that the order to cease firing at noon of the second be co-ordinated. Little Wally, the radio operator secreted in Milan, had been extricated by Dulles when negotia- tions were broken off. The problem now was to get Wally to Bolzano. To this chore was assigned First Lieut. Guido Zimmer, the humble author of Sunrise, who previously had taken Wally to Milan and installed him in his own house. Zimmer, who had been stationed at Buchs, opposite Feldkirch, in a switch of courier posts, had suc- ceeded in getting Wally to Bolzano on the twenty-eighth. At Caserta and Bern, Wally's first signals from Bolzano impatiently were awaited. Bolzano was pocketed by mountains. Could Wally's crystals clear them? Actually, the word from Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0 Wally was spotty, he was unable to receive the text of the capitulation coherently, and Caserta's first word that the Germans were going through with the surrender came from clear signals to field commanders from Bol- zano ordering them to stack arms at the appointed time. Fearing communications delays, Dulles had withheld one copy of the protocol. From Caserta he heard of Alexander's urgent desire that the text reach Bolzano expeditiously. For a time Dulles thought of dropping his copy with a parachutist-Tracy Barnes, of the legation staff, volunteering for the job and a Swiss pilot being retained. Barnes, as a parachute officer, had made a daring operational jump in Normandy after D day, being subse- quently decorated for it. Fortunately, in as much as the jump into the Bol- zano pocket would have been extremely hazardous, this expedient was dropped when it appeared certain the emissaries would reach Nazi headquarters in time. May Day was one of intense anxiety at Caserta and Bern. No word came from Bolzano, and at 8:30 that night Field Marshal Alexander dispatched a stiff note, demanding an immediate reply if the Germans wished the firing stopped at noon next day. That mes- sage got through. The silence at Bol- zano covered a frenetic sequence of happenings which threatened, until eight hours before the time set, to nul- lify the long and tortuous negotiations which had ended at the Caserta cere- monies. Upon General Wolff's arrival at his headquarters on the night of April 28-29, he conferred until 7:30 A.M. with Vietinghoff, Ambassador Rahn, Gauleiter Franz Hofer and others. To all but Hofer the surrender was re- garded as a fait accompli. Hoping, as afterward became known, to keep the Tyrol as an unreconstructed strong- hold of Nazism, policed by Werewolves, Hofer had insisted that the surrender terms forbid entrance into those prov- inces to the Allied forces. When he learned that the military had never considered making such a request, knowing its uselessness, Hofer at- tempted to inject a monkey wrench into the surrender. Although a ring- leader in the Sunrise cartel on the Nazi side, Hofer now turned informer, tele- phoning Himmler and Kesselring the whole story. His treachery worked. On Himmler's advice, Kesselring-who had been placed in over-all command of the Ital- ian theater along with Southern Ger- many since Wolff's visit-at once re- moved Vietinghoff and his chief of staff, Roettiger, replacing them with an in- fantry general named Schultz and a Major General Wentzel. In the begin- ning, Kesselring had been a tower of strength to Wolff and the surrender junta. Only a week before, two officers, sent by Wolff to Kesselring, reported the field marshal regretful that he could not join in surrendering before the "im- pending death," the bemrstehenden Tod, of Hitler. The uncertain Kesselring now ordered an army investigation of the surrender enterprise, holding that the sending of Schweinitz and Wenner had been "too far-reaching." In the explosive atmosphere pro- duced by Hofer's ratting, the emissaries reached Bolzano. At 6:30 A.M. of the first, Wolff got together Roettiger, Standartenfrihrer Eugen Dollmann, who had been an early participant in Sun- rise, and staff officers, to discuss the terms with Schweinitz and Wenner. The principal fruit of these talks was a decision to arrest the new Oberkom- mandant and his chief of staff. This was done at seven A.M., Schultz and Wentzel being confined in an air- raid shelter carved out of the moun- tain just back of the Reichswehr head- quarters. Roettiger assumed de facto command, but Wolff was pulling the strings. Vietinghoff meanwhile had retired to a retreat for high-officer re- serves. The telephone circuits to Ger- many were cut to prevent news of the insurrection reaching Hitler, Himmler or Kesselring. When two army com- manders, Herr and Lemmelsen, de- dined to go along with the surrender as long as Schultz and Wentzel were under detention, Wolff talked with the arrested officers for two hours. The most they would concede was their willingness to intercede with Kessel- ring in behalf of surrender. The situation that day was not eased by the visit of an Allied bombing squadron. One bomb damaged a build- ing within a couple hundred yards of where -Wally was struggling with his crystals in the marble villa occupied by Wolff's headquarters. Wolff took time off from his other labors to prod Wally into hurrying a message of pro- test to Caserta, asking air headquar- ters, if they must bomb Bolzano, to aim for the other side of town. An SS officer threatened Wally with extinc- tion if the visitation was repeated. When the operator reported the threat to Wolff, the general ordered the officer summarily punished. At 8:30 P.M., when Alexander's per- emptory note came, Wolff undertook to force an immediate response from Kesselring. He had no luck. In the field marshal's absence from his0bead- quarters, Wolff demanded by telephone of his chief of staff that Kesselring at once appoint a new Oberkommandant with authority to capitulate. The chief of staff promised a reply by ten o'clock. When none arrived, Wolff gained the consent of all the subordinate com- manders to send out orders to quit firing at noon the next day. It was these signals that Caserta heard. An hour later, at eleven P.m., the Berlin radio announced Hitler's death. Curiously, that event, which had been counted upon to ease the surrender situation because it relieved the Reicha- wehr officers of their personal oath to the Fdhrer, produced no such effect. As Wolff and three associates pre- pared to leave the headquarters, their way was blocked by a crowd of armed and threatening officers. The surrender clique escaped through the air-raid shelter and, back at his headquarters, Wolff ordered out seven tanks and 350 SS men with machine guns to ring the building. At 1:15 A.M., Keaseh-ing, pursuing his obstruction to the bitter end, or- dered the arrest of Vietinghoff, Roet- tiger, Schweinitz and other Reichswehr officers. He also recommended similar action to the Luftwaffe and SS high commands in Germany. No arrests were made. Three quarters of an hour afterward Kesselring telephoned Wolff, and after more than two hours of abusive tirades finally yielded at 4:30 A.M. Only seven and a half hours re- mained in which to effectuate the sur- render. Fortunately, the orders that went out at ten P.M. sufficed, except for two parachute divisions with which disciplinary action had to be taken later in the day. The surrender put an end to twenty months of fighting-often gallant, al- ways dreary-spared Northern Italy the ravages visited on the south, and brought to Dulles from General Lem- nitzer, who had supervised the show at Caserta, a telegram hailing Sunrise as a "complete and tremendous suc- cess" . spelling "the end of Nazi domination in Europe." To General Donovan came a message from General Lemnitzer hailing O. S. S. for its "vital part" in the Northern Italy surrender. Because of O. S. S.'s operations, Lem- nitzer wrote, "the war in Europe has been brought to a successful conclu- sion much earlier than would other- wise have been possible, with the con- sequent saving of many lives and much treasure." Editor.' Note-This is the second of two article. by Mr. Davis. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/03/02 : CIA-RDP02TO6251 R000900260001-0