U. S. POLICIES TO UNDERGO WIDE CHANGE
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP75-00001R000100160061-3
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date:
August 23, 2000
Sequence Number:
61
Case Number:
Publication Date:
April 23, 1961
Content Type:
NSPR
File:
Attachment | Size |
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Body:
BALTIMORYpIi 6(Je)d For Release 2000/09/08 : CIA ~7I-Qg9Q1R000100160061-3
SUNDAY AMERICAN
Circ.: S. 314,499
Front
Page
Date:
To. Undergo
III. S. P0. lacies
CPYIGHT
Edit Other
Page page
PR 2 0 1961 _.._ , ----,-
,;,,,,WASHINGTON PREVIEW
7H :k ! 9
rst Head me Service
bPYRGHT
And a new way of dealing with the Russians is'?
April 22-In the coming weeks the
series of hushed conferences between President Kennedy
and his key advisers will continue, as the U.S. begins an
extensive re-examination of its tactics and institutions in
all phases' rq-% n i$1iy'o~~
r~tr "hiaior' lesson t?fity ' ovhiiitxi'e`ii 'llas learned from
the sorry story of Cuba is that the free world must find
new diplomatic methods, new intelligence machinery,
new decision-making techniques if it is to compete with
-
i police states far ahead of us in guerrilla warfare and
1 tactics of?infiltration.
already being considered. Russians for years have com-
partmentalizcd their foreign policy. They have smiled
in one corner of the world, while they growled in an-
other. And the U.S. may discover, for example, there is
no reason why it can't, begin doing the same.
The'President is ?serious and concerned these days.
swings in the back yard. As he stepped out of the car,
she raced up to meet him: He scooped her up, hosited her
on his shoulder, and jogged with her piggy-back into
t his office.
Then he kissed her, gently shooed her back outdoors,
Central Intelligence Agency. At present, there is no
plan to oust C1.4 head Dullesor deputy' s9eiiT"`tial-
tiiou'gA1~lA badly miscarculatec he,situatj,on m Cuba,
(1 P Wasp"'8ri"ffie "basis V& A epors of Castro weak
nesses that President Kennedy made the decision to
There will be, reliable sources say, a thorough
shakeup in our intelligence operations, directed by the
" let the rebels invade, with American logistical support.) i
f The administration is deeply concerned about its in-
CIA cannot get accurate l 'el- I
iigrn e reports from a country only 90 miles off our own
coast, how poor must our information be about strongly-
guarded-police states clear across an ocean?
PRESIDENT KENNEDY is not trying to pass the.
blame for U.S. mistakes in Cuba, although the Cuban
rebelplans were begun a year ago and encouraged by
the Eisenhower administration as well as Kennedy's'
own. But he has spent the past days seeking Republican
support for his foreign' policy. In talks with former'
President Eisenhower, former Vice President Nixon, and'
leading Republican congressmen, the President hopes to -
head off a- GOP temptatiori to lambast his miscalcula-
tions. - ,
The President feels, -besides, that the Republican
leadership has a legitimate need to know what is going.,
on in matters that affect the national security so much.
By explaining- to them the details of the crisis In U.S.- ? 1
Soviet relations in isolated pockets all over the globe,
Not only the mechanizations of government are go-
ing' to be studied in the . coining weeks, but - our whole.
concept of foreign policy. Anew relationship with Latin,
America as a yvhole.:may eyolye~.
Approved For Release 2000/09/08 : CIA-RDP75-00001R000100160061-3