EXPERTS REVERSED ON NUCLEAR SHIP
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP64B00346R000400040006-2
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
2
Document Creation Date:
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date:
March 12, 2004
Sequence Number:
6
Case Number:
Publication Date:
January 17, 1962
Content Type:
NSPR
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Body:
80U010 006-2962
Approved For Release 2004/03/25: CIA-RDP64BOO346
>tte ash1ingion Merry-Go-Round
By Drew Pearson
The biggest prize in the
shipping world in the last four
years has been the operation
of the first atomic merchant
built, the Sa-
vannah. Every
qualified ship-
ping line in the
United States
has wanted to
get it.
It ended up,
through a rriys-
terious set of
c i rcumstances
in then Pearson
~s2f. Stags .Marine, which oper-
ates 4, large number of for-
`eign-flag ships manned by for-
eign crews, but which hap-
peals to be in partnership with
Tin ,. Mc one, who at the
tuno. ? tl>e Sav44:. Cci?trCact:
aarnan . of the
Atomic Energy Commission.
McCone is now up for con-
firmation to be head of The all-
Important Central Intelligence
Agency, and a long set of cir-
cumstances put him in the po-
sition of /having favored close
business associates, such as
the Henry Kaiser interests,
when he has been in Govern-
ment.
The inside facts in the
award of the SS Savannah to
the States Marine Line, which
has 'a working partnership
with McCone's personally
owned Joshua Hendy Line,
are hitherto unpublished.
In the spring of 1958, as
seven stuishig lines applied
to operate the Savannah, Clar-
ence. Morse, then Maritime
Administrator, appointed a
special selection board of
maritime experts to recom-
mend the most qualified.
They recommended , the
American President Lines,
with more than 30 years of
Ameaican??flagship experience
behind it, as the best qualified.
The others, in order of their
qualification, were: Isbrandt-
sen, Farrell, Moore-McCor-
mack, Pacific Far East, States
Marine, and U. S. Lines.
In other words, States Ma-
rine, the line with which John
McCone has a working part-
nership, was next to last. Yet
it ended up with the contract.
What happened was that
Maritime Commissioner Morse,
answerable directly to Secre-
tary - of Commerce Sinclair
Weeks, overrode his own board
of experts. Morse explained
lamely that the board had put
too much emphasis on pas-
senger service.
So the board went back into
session, eliminated passenger
experience as a criterion, and,
adding up all the remaining
factors, still came up with
American President Lines as
the best qualified ship op-
erator.
I-Iowever, States Marine, no
longer handicapped by its lack
of passenger experience, rated
second. Higher ups in the
Commerce Department then
gave the , contract to States
Marine as if the board had
never met,
When I asked Under Secre-
THE WASHINGTON POST Wednesday, Jan. 17,1962
tary Louis Rothschild, now re-
tired; why he reversed the
board of experts, he replied:
"There had been too much
lobbying."
He did not elucidate.
"But States Marine chiefly
operates foreign-flag ships," I
pointed out. "The Savannah
is to be the pride of the U. S.
Merchant Marine. Did John
McCone talk to you about
this?"
"No," protested Rothschild
emphatically. He added that
one of States Marine's sub-
sidiaries operated under the
American flag.
"Besides," he said, "the
House Merchant Marine Com-
mittee completely approved
our decision."
Weeks Stepped In
Congressman Herbert Bon-
ner, North Carolina Democrat,
chairman of the House Mer-
chant Marine Committee, told
a different story. He had in-
troduced the bill authorizing
an atomic merchant vessel.
"We never approved their
decision," said Rep. Bonner.
"They came down here and
told us what they were going
to. do and that was that.
"Morse had talked about
putting the Savannah in the
hands of different companies
-the United States Lines in
the Atlantic, the American
Export Lines in the Mediter-
ranean, Moore-McCormack in
Latin America, and the Ameri-
can (President Lines in the
Pacific.
"But Sinclair Weeks, the
calling the shots. He came be-
fore our Committee and told
us that States Marine was go-
ing to get the Savannah. There
must have been a terrific lot
of influence used to give this
to States Marine."
Whatever influence may have
been used probably took place
before John McCone took of-
fice as Atomic Energy chair-
man. He was confirmed on
July 9, 1958, and the Savan-
nah contract was awarded on
July 25. ?
A busy Senate paid little
attention to all this. Only
one Congressman, Bonner of
North Carolina, "father" of
the SS Savannah, challenged
McCone's apparent conflict of
interest. In a speech on the
House floor, Aug. 21, Bonner
said:
"I have no concern with the
arrangements- made by Mr.
McCone to meet the technical
requirements of the law in re-
gard to the difficult problem
of avoiding conflicts of inter-
est faced by so many able and
successful businessmen when
called to public service.
"However, the facts concern-
ing the intimate business re-
lationships which have existed
between Mr. McCone and Mr.
Mercer (head of the States
Marnie Lines) raise certain ob-
vious questions when we seek
to find the answer to the appar-
ently illogical assignment of
the nuclear ship Savannah to
States Marine Lines by the
Department of Commerce and
the . Atomic Energy Commis.
Sion.
Secretary of Commerce, was cg
p_Yright, 1352, 8811 y,dicate, Tuck
Approved For Release 2004/03/25 : CIA-RDP64B00346R000400040006-2
Experts Reversed on Nuclear Ship
Approved For Release 2004/03/25 : CIA-RDP64B00346R000400040006-2
The Washington Merry-Go-ltouuel
By Drew Pearson
The biggest prize. in the
shipping world in the last four
years has been the operation
of the first atomic merchant