STUDIES IN INTELLIGENCE [Vol. 3 No. 2 , Spring 1959]

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Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA- 8-21A000300240001-8 ?????????????? ? ??????,1 ????????? CONFIDENTIAL NI ILLLIULII JOB NO, _ IJ BOX NO, FOLDER MI .e229 TOTAL DOCS HEREIN 4 DOC 1 RIC DATE Ina COMP it: 091 TYPE Um CLASS ?ADIS nLit CLASS ?C-- *1ST Z 7-, IAA/ igity AUTIli HE 104 VOL, NO. 2 SPRING 1959 CENTRAL INTELTIGEWCE AGENCY r OFFICE OF TRAINING AP Ft I sad Approved For Release : 03921A000300240001-8 CONFIDENTIAL 25k 251 CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 200 ? t,iik-RDP7 -03921A000300240001-8 All opinions expressed in the Studies are those of the authors. They do not necessarily represent the official views of the Central Intelligence Agency, the Office of Training, or any other organizational component of the intelligence community. WARNING 41.??=111.011.1100..01?? This material contains information affecting the National Defense of the United States within the meaning of the espionage laws, Title 18, USC, Secs. 793 and 794, the trans- mission or revelation of which to an unauthorized person is prohibited by law. Approved For Release 200MM: CIA _RDP78 03921A000300240001-8 CONFIDENTIAL 25X1 25X1 QNFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 20P4/12/17 : C 21A000300240001-8 STUDIES IN INTELLIGENCE EDITORIAL POLICY Articles for the Studies in Intelligence may be written on any theoretical, doc- trinal, operational, or historical aspect of intelligence. The final responsibility for accepting or rejecting an article rests with the Edito- rial Board. The criterion for publication is whether or not, in the opinion of the Board, the article makes a contribution to the litera- ture of intelligence. EDITOR EDITORIAL BOARD SHERMAN KENT, Chairman LYMAN B. KIRKPATRICK LAWRENCE R. HOUSTON Additional members of the Board represent other CIA components. Approved For Release 2004/12/ 6300240001-8 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2004/1026/a1A RDP78 01921A000300240001-8 CONTENTS Page Papers from the Conference: Gencrranhic Intelligence K C Duncan 17 Approved For Release 2004/16,6 2J1 25 1 25X1 (A0E00240001- 8 MORI/HRP THIS PAGE r--CiA-R1 Approved For Release 2004/12 ? P78-03921A000300240001-8 SECRET Page Spy at Your Service, Sir Lowell M. Dunleigh 81 Need for analytic guidance of the clandestine collec- tion effort. SECRET Developments in Air Targeting: Data Handling Tech- niques Outten J. Clinard 95 Adaptation to machine methods of retrieval and ma- nipulation. SECRET The Shorthand of Experience . . . . Thomas F. Elzweig 105 True adventures of an extraordinary spy. CONFIDEN- TIAL Communication to the Editors ? Nominates the scientist for the scientific collection vacancy. SECRET UNCLASSIFIED ARTICLES 129 Page Critiques of Some Recent Books on Intelligence . . . . 133 Suspect Documents?Their Scientific Examination, by Wilson R. Harrison. . . . In Flanders Fields, by Leon Wolff We Spied Walter Pforzheimer 139 Evaluates additions to the intelligence bibliography 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1SECRET OF THIS PAGE /IIApproved For Release 2004 2/17 : CIA-6P78-03921A0009164fRP1RARTS 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Next 14 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 CONFIDENTIAL Difficulties and new proposals in a dozen military geographic fields. GEOGRAPHIC INTELLIGENCE K. C. Duncan ? Geographic intelligence is one of the oldest forms of mili- tary intelligence, and one of the most important. From ear- liest times, when man first conspired against man, through ancient history and mediaeval conflict to the most recent wars of our own time, an accurate knowledge and apprecia- tion of geographical factors has been an essential part of strategy and tactics. But today, instead of merely giving some simple information on what lies beyond the neighbour- ing hill, geographic intelligence is required to provide knowl- edge on a world-wide basis and in infinitely greater variety, detail, and (above all) precision than ever before. In the face of unlimited conceivable demands from plan- ning and operational staffs it is essential that our geographic activities should be carefully guided and controlled, so that none may be wasted on aspects which, though previously im- portant in military thinking, have now lost their importance in modern strategy and tactics. It is in the light of this thesis that I propose to examine several fields of geographic intelli- gence and discuss problems encountered in each. Cross-Country Terrain Assessing the suitability of terrain for cross-country move- ment has been a major problem in modern warfare. Of the many instances when failure to ? appreciate this factor has proved disastrous, one is perhaps outstanding. In 1917 Lord Haig launched his Flanders offensive in disregard of his engi- neers' warning that the ground would revert to bog under the necessary preliminary bombardment and his weather ex- perts' advice that the autumn rains, then due, would further aggravate conditions. His failure to take into account the terrain requirements for cross-country movement led to the Approved9MM004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-11 MORI/HRP PAGES 17-30 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 CONFIDENTIAL Geographic Intelligence costliest battle in British military history, Passchendaele, in- volving the sacrifice of some 400,000 men.1 The suitability of cross-country terrain is today in some ways more critical than ever because of heavier equipment, increased speed and mobility, and probable need for dispersal off surfaced roads as a precaution against tactical nuclear at- tacks. Its assessment, however, is a most difficult matter, involving a matching of the characteristics of various types of military vehicle to a wide range of detailed information on the terrain?local or seasonal variations of bearing capacity, width and depth of water obstacles, height and steepness of their banks, and the effect of day-to-day or seasonal climatic influences. The task is rendered especially difficult when no practical precedent exists: take for example the movement of tanks across ricefields. The military geographer really has two major tasks?first, to acquire and collate the necessary mass of factual data on the terrain, and second, to apply those data to foreseeable military operations on the basis of proved vehicle perform- ance. For both, I suggest, careful liaison with planning staffs is essential. It is beyond our resources to acquire and collate detailed information on all areas; we must concentrate on areas where the planners consider movement most likely to occur. And we must keep aware of movement plans for par- ticular vehicles in order to spot the need for experimental maneuvers as basis for an adequate assessment of the prac- ticability of these movements. Ports and Beaches An outstanding feature of World War II military opera- tions was the extensive use of beaches for landing troops with their arms and supplies. New techniques led to operations of this kind on a far greater scale than had previously been thought possible. It became the policy to by-pass the sea- ports in the opening stages of a campaign, relying on the beaches until harbors were captured and reopened to the use of conventional vessels. It was found possible to land stores and equipment on beaches and clear them inland at remark- able rates, averaging 2,500 tons per day per mile of beach. Thus performance over a good beach compares favorably with 1 Cf . Leon Wolff's In Flanders Fields, reviewed on pp. 134-138 of this issue. la Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP7RMIatatb0240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Geographic intelligence CONFIDENTIAL that of a medium-sized seaport, and in some cases can be bet- ter: on the basis of the wartime formula a two-mile stretch of beach west of Tourane, in South Vietnam, would have a capacity of 5,000 tons per day, as against only some 500 for the port. The importance of beaches for military operations has prob- ably increased since the war. Modern weapons seem likely to damage seaports more effectively and thus delay their rehabil- itation for longer periods, while improved equipment for beach landings will probably permit the movement of tonnages far in excess of the figures achieved in World War II. In these circumstances, I suggest that our organizations should con- sider carefully whether they are over-concentrating on de- tailed studies of ports and their capacities to the neglect of beaches. We should at least aim at a high standard in respect of those beaches which the planners consider may be used in op- erations. Experience in Melbourne indicates that accumu- lated beach intelligence is generally sufficient as a guide to planners, but lacks the detail required for mounting specific Operations with confidence. It is a fallacy to suppose that observations made years ago are necessarily accurate today and adequate for present requirements. The characteris- tics of some beaches can change surprisingly overnight in a storm, and the heavier equipment available today poses prob- lems not previously encountered. Factors such as bearing capacity (involving assessment of the sub-strata), slope at various tides, variations of surface and slope at different sea- sons, effects of tide and local currents on inshore ap- proaches?these are typically deficient in our present infor- mation. These deficiencies could be reduced, I suggest, by carrying out special technical reconnaissance, whenever practicable, in respect of those beaches which are of interest to our mili- tary planners on the evidence of present information. Where this reconnaissance is not possible (e.g., beaches in potential enemy territory) our procurement channels should be acti- vated far more than at present. If this is not done, we can only continue to plan on imperfect data, risking uncertainties and perhaps jeopardizing the success of vital amphibious op- erations. CONFIDENTIAL 12 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-o Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 CONFIDENTIAL Geographic Intelligence Railways An important problem in the study of railways is the as- sessment of route capacities. In ideal circumstances this assessment would be made by analyzing the physical charac- teristics of the lines?gauge, number of tracks, weight of rail, length and spacing of passing loops, speed or weight re- strictioris, and so on?to arrive at a theoretical physical ca- pacity. The practical operational capacity would then be determined by such factors as size and type of locomotive and rolling-stock park, fuel availability, quality and location of repair shops and engine sheds, etc. In foreign countries, however, particularly those which are behind a "curtain," acquisition of all the detailed information necessary for these analyses is most difficult, and present as- sessments of the practical capacities of railways in those countries can at best be regarded as approximations based on very imperfect data. Unfortunately, there is little prospect of obtaining the detailed information required to fill our gaps, and it is therefore worth considering whether some short-cut method might improve our assessments. One such method might be to make an all-out effort to ac- quire working timetables of those lines which have impor- tance in planning. These working timetables?not to be con- fused with passenger timetables?contain details of all classes of traffic, both passenger and freight, and are available in one form or another on all railways. An analysis of them in conjunction with other textual and photographic infor- mation might give reasonable accuracy in the assessment of practical capacities. It would not be easy, but if our agen- cies agreed on a standard approach it seems likely that the assessments achieved would be more soundly based and ade- quate at least for the purposes of war potential appreciations. Roads The great effort devoted to reporting on roads has amassed a considerable amount of information, which, however, is de- ficient in certain technical aspects critical for accurate as- sessments of road potential. This deficiency is due chiefly to the fact that reports come from nontechnical observers, but a contributing cause is that reporting officers not unnaturally tend to judge the condition of roads in foreign countries on N3 proved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78C4901986240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Geographic intelligence CONFIDENTIAL the basis of road standards in their own, so that their assess- ments tend to vary inversely with these standards. The effect of inaccurate reporting can best be shown by a practical example. Let us take a road across undulating coun- try with an overall width of 20 feet and a waterbound mac- adam surface in bad condition. Applying the standard NATO Road Capacity Table to these details, we arrive at an estimated capacity: 550x-30x1000-132 vehicles per hour. 100 If 3-ton vehicles are used for a 10-hour running day, the esti- mated capacity becomes 3,960 tons per day. But if the reporting officer, because of the bad condition of the surface, mistakes the waterbound macadam for crushed rock, our calculations would be: 280x-25x-80 ?56 vehicles per hour. 100 100 With 3-ton vehicles and a 10-hour running day, the estimated capacity is only 1,680 tons per day. A simple mistake on the nature of the surface has thus resulted in an error of 57% in the capacity of this particular road. Cumulative errors in the NATO Table factors, applied to a number of roads in a given area, might seriously affect logistic planning. But the full assessment of a road's potential requires also consideration of the maximum live-load capacity, i.e. the weight of the heaviest vehicle that can use it. This involves Other technical reporting, in particular on the strength of bridges and culverts, which not infrequently impose strict limits on traffic. In the example we gave just now I assumed that 3-ton vehicles were used, but planners might well want to know whether they could move 10-ton trucks or even 50-ton tanks along a given road. This problem is one of educating reporting officers so that the technical details they supply are far more accurate than at present, or of obtaining this necessary information in some other way. A secondary problem in this field, as in many others, is to ensure that procurement and research are conducted in ac- cordance with the priorities of planning requirements, for the potential areas to be covered are so vast that with the CONFIDENTIAL 21 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 CONFIDENTIAL Geographic Intelligence limited resources available we cannot hope to achieve detailed results on everything. If this control is not exercised, there is a real danger that essential work will be neglected. Inland Water Transportation Compared with railways and roads, inland water transporta- tion is being neglected by intelligence. This, I believe, stems largely from a natural tendency to think first of rail and road transport for military movement because of their greater speed. Moreover, railways and roads, being able to traverse natural obstacles such as mountain ranges, can link widely separated regions and provide local access in any direction. Rivers and canals cannot provide the same through access or choice of direction, and the capacity of rivers normally de- creases as one proceeds upstream. Another reason for the preoccupation with rail and road transportation systems has been the relatively large reporting on them in connection with Western aid to backward countries, in which the con- struction or rehabilitation of these systems has loomed large. This neglect of waterways has meant that we have acquired insufficient detail to permit a rational reconsideration of the validity of our preferential emphasis on railways and roads. The situation, in short, presents a vicious circle. The vulner- ability of rail and road transportation networks, particularly around major cities and ports, to modern techniques of attack suggests that greater attention should be paid to the capabili- ties of waterway systems as a means of moving supplies inland. They merit at least sufficient procurement and research that their role may be more accurately assessed in those areas which have the highest priority in over-all planning. Airfields The basic problem of airfield intelligence is the assessment of the capabilities of a given airfield, i.e. to decide what aircraft can operate from it, and in what circumstances. Before this assessment can be made it is necessary to know in detail such physical characteristics of the airfield as the dimensions, sur- face, and weight-bearing capacity of the runways, taxi-tracks, and dispersals, the nature and disposition of supporting facili- ties, the location and height of obstructions to the approaches, 22 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-ROPAZONARAb0240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17: CIA-RDP78-03921AMEML8 Geographic Intelligence the altitude, and the temperature. It is necessary to know, too, the seasonal variations in some of these factors. Except when photoreconnaissance and detailed reporting are available, it is extremely difficult to get this information with the required accuracy, and even then a full knowledge of bearing capacity is practically impossible. Detailed tests have been conducted at a negligible proportion of the airfields in which we are interested, and we are therefore compelled to base our opinions largely on a knowledge of what aircraft have operated from the fields, without any real means to assess their surplus of bearing capacity. In addition, we all too often have no knowledge of how a runway will stand up to inten- sive or prolonged usage, or of how its capacity will vary at different seasons. The rated requirements of aircraft which use the field, moreover, may bear only a very indirect relation to opera- tional requirements. For example, ublications state that the MIG-17 requires only 2,640 feet to take off and clear 50 feet. Yet intelligence research shows clearly that the Communists, having built their run- ways for these aircraft to an original length of 6,560 feet, subsequently lengthened them to at least 7,200. For the MIG-19 the technical handbooks give a requirement of 2,240 and 3,000 feet whereas research indicates that the Communists are lengthening some runways for these air- craft from 7,200 feet to at least 8,200. There is thus a wide margin between the minimum length of take-off run and the length of the runway itself. There is no easy solution, but I feel that considerable im- provement would be achieved if our respective air forces and airfield intelligence could reach some agreement on the total lengths of runway from which enemy or friendly forces would be prepared to conduct both sustained and limited occasional operations. If lists could be agreed, showing on a country-by- country basis the full runway requirements for the operation of various aircraft likely to be used by that country, then the airfield intelligence branches would at least have a basis for their assessments and could write with far greater unanimity than at present. CONEIDENTIAL 23 Approved ror Keiease 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 A_pproved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 CONFIDENTIAL Geographic Intelligence Climate Climate of course affects most other aspects of geographic intelligence, but some applications of its study in modern war- fare may not yet be generally appreciated. For example a full knowledge of local wind variations is necessary for the study of the movement of radioactive fallout from nuclear explo- sions. Important as this is in strategic nuclear attack, it is even more so in tactical applications, when friendly forces are relatively close to the point of impact or may have to ad- vance towards it. The same principle applies to chemical or bacteriological warfare. The study of local temperature in- versions and local rains will also be very important should gases be used by either side in a future war. You will note my repetition of the word "local." Intelli- gence is on the whole fairly well provided with generalized data on climate, normally based on long periods of observation, which gives a reasonably accurate basis for regional apprecia- tions. What is lacking?and I suggest it is the main defi- ciency in this branch of geographic intelligence?is informa- tion on local peculiarities or variations within the broad re- gional pattern. Mapping The need for accuracy in mapping has always been impor- tant, but today this need is greater than ever before. Whereas minor inaccuracies can reasonably be corrected by visual ob- servation in conventional air operations, the concept of guided-missile warfare highlights problems which have hith- erto been only marginal. One of the greatest limitations to ICBM accuracy is the present inadequacy of intercontinental geodetic survey. The use of any guided missile which is not equipped with some terminal-guidance system requires precise knowledge of the relation between launching point and objec- tive, and though some margin of error may be allowed where area damage is acceptable, no such margin is permissible if it is desired to hit a single objective with the minimum of dam- age to surroundings. If a terminal-guidance system is fitted to the missile, a prerequisite is often a knowledge of the radar return from the target area. In peacetime or in the early stages of a war, when it may not be possible to acquire this 24 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP7RARM*0240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17: CIA-RDP78-03921AEMN001-8 Geographic Intelligence 11AL knowledge by prior reconnaissance, the only alternative is the simulation of the return by a careful analysis of maps. Since mapping represents graphic collation of many as- pects of intelligence, it is pertinent to examine briefly our role vis-a-vis that of the map-producing authorities. Procedures no doubt vary between our countries, but certain fundamen- tal principles are valid irrespective of their detailed applica- tion. First, there must be a system for feeding our informa- tion to the map producers, and for checking their drafts. This assumes particular importance when no recent photography is available to the mappers, but even when it is, there is in- evitably a time-lag between it and the map compilation, and in that interval changes may occur. A map becomes out of date all too quickly; we must at least ensure that it is as ac- curate as possible when issued. Second, there must be a system for informing the mappers of inaccuracies detected after issue, and for letting them know when certain series or individual sheets have become obsolete. Many of us, noting inaccuracies on maps, have done nothing to draw attention to them because there was no routine pro- cedure for doing so. Third?and this applies primarily to areas over which peacetime photoreconnaissance is not prac- ticable?there must be a system whereby doubtful map de- tails noted in everyday research are recorded, so that procure- ment agencies may be briefed to check them. Fourth, there must be a system whereby mapping priori- ties are related to planning. This is primarily a matter for liaison between planning staffs and the mappers; the respon- sibility of intelligence organizations lies mainly in drawing attention to the deficiencies and inaccuracies in existing maps of the priority areas so that new editions may be put in hand. Photography Photography is a basic requirement in mapping, in most forms of intelligence research, and in operational planning; and any deficiencies of photography must adversely affect these activities. Of the two forms of photographic coverage, print coverage and negatives backing it up, the need for the former is well recognized, but the need for film is not so gen- erally appreciated. Film is required to meet the demands of various sections and organizations in peacetime and in war, CONFIDENTIAL 25 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 CONFIDENTIAL Geographic Intelligence and the alternative of copying from prints, besides being slower and more costly, does not provide first-class quality, especially when, as frequently, the original prints have de- teriorated through age. It seems somewhat illogical that whereas the exchange of textual information between our agencies has been developed to a high degree, the exchange of photographic prints and film has been comparatively neglected. In addition to the direct advantages of such an exchange to peacetime intelli- gence research, we should not overlook its importance in those "hot" situations which occur from time to time and in the period of extreme military activity which would imme- diately precede the next war. At such times it is clearly a complicated and inefficient procedure to be obliged to signal 25X1 I Ifor urgently required photographs and film, and then to await their arrival "by best possible means." Once the war had started, it is reason- able to suppose that fresh photographs would become avail- able, but in the pressure periods in the meantime we have to depend on existing holdings. One appreciates, of course, that clauses in peacetime re- connaissance contracts may preclude the exchange of the resultant photography, but this restriction applies to a very small proportion of overall available holdings and does not invalidate my thesis that much more could, and should, be 25X1 25X1 done in the matter of exchange. I Geographic Names Much painstaking work has been done by the U.S. Board on Geographic Names towards the standardization of place names and generic terms, and this has been of particular value where transliteration from a non-roman to a romanized form is required. Difficulties are still encountered by the in- 26 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78C61'gMW3V0240001-8 ApprovecbFeoorgRieOppn Fegging1 7 : CIA-RDP78-03921A0 &WNW. telligence community, however, in applying the authorities' decisions. The main difficulty arises from the fact that the decisions, being based on academic principles, are sometimes ahead of popular usage, and in such cases the "preferred" (or decision) name tends to make the text less readily intelligible to the non-specialist reader. In current intelligence reporting, it is desirable to use a style which permits the easiest compre- hension by a wide range of usually high-level generalists; any irritant which interrupts their concentration on the subject matter is undesirable, and might even result in failure to appreciate the importance of the intelligence. A few examples of what I term irritating preferred names are Krung Thep (Bangkok), Kuang-chou (Canton), Chin-men Tao (Quemoy Island), Sulawesi (Celebes), Shen-yang (Mukden) and Hsia- men Tao (Amoy Island); there are many others which, being less common, are perhaps all the more irritating when they are encountered. The problem is complicated by the fact that some of these preferred names may, in course of time, become more com- monly accepted in daily usage throughout the world. This raises the question whether we are to concentrate on ease of comprehension at the present time or should tolerate irritat- ing names with the object of gradually educating ourselves and our readers to accept the academic decisions. The deci- sions of the two boards are progressively being incorporated in new map series, and therefore confusion is likely to arise in basic or long-term reporting if we do not adhere rigidly to them. One can imagine, for example, the frustration of a commander in the field when he realizes that he has the task of reconciling the "preferred" names used on his basic maps and the "conventional" names used in a detailed study of the region's topography. Another aspect of the decisions which brings complications is the retention of many indigenous generic terms for such topographical features as capes, rivers, islands, mountains and lakes. The topography of foreign lands is sufficiently diffi- cult for generalists to comprehend without the added diffi- culty caused by the use of these terms, and there would ap- pear to be a strong case for the substitution of English-lan- guage equivalents. Although we, the peacetime elite of CONFIDENTIAL 27 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 CONFIDENTIAL Geographic Intelligence intelligence activities, can perhaps overcome the difficulties by acquiring familiarity with new terms, the problem would assume increased significance in wartime, when a large body of untrained recruits would be unfamiliar with our nomen- clature. Air Targeting While the production of air targets material is primarily a Service responsibility, the intelligence organizations must provide the basic information required and play an important part in writing the appreciations on which the priority of target systems and individual targets are based. It is there- fore relevant to examine whether we are devoting our resources to any non-vital aspects of targeting, or on the other hand are neglecting others of importance. Let us look first at strategic targeting. In World War II the basic documents for operations were detailed information sheets and annotated photographs of individual targets, and similar, usually more generalized, graphics on important con- centrations of targets. These were necessary for attacks by manned aircraft, since visual recognition of the target and of the selected detailed aiming point within it played a major part in such attacks. With the concept of nuclear and guided- missile strategic attack, it should be examined whether it is still necessary to devote a major part of our targeting ac- tivity to detailed graphics on individual targets; in view of the area damage attainable by modern weapons, should a greater proportion of effort be devoted to urban and industrial com- plexes? There is probably no aspect of aerial warfare on which more has been written than target selection. It is fairly easy to be wise after the event, as we have seen from the spate of criti- cisms of allied bombing policy published since World War II. It is very difficult to be equally wise before the event, and to be sure that the golden role of targeting is observed?hit the enemy where it hurts him most. In a future war, because of the striking power of weapons likely to be held by both sides, it is more than ever essential that target selection be right, and from the very beginning of hostilities. There may be no opportunity to experiment with priorities as in the last war. We in intelligence have, therefore, a responsibility to 20proved For Release 2004/12/17: CIA-RDP78-SR21IRSATIt240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A9EM8 Geographic Intelligence ensure that our recommendations in this field are based on sound principles. The discharge of this responsibility is rendered more diffi- cult, in my opinion, by the lack of any sound system for as- sessing the relative priority of complexes as targets. This is quite a different task from assessing the priority of a single installation relative to others of like function. One complex may, for example, contain a transportation target of major importance to the country's war potential, a steel plant and oil refinery of medium importance, and so on. How can the priority of this complex be determined in relation to that of other complexes which contain various other combinations of installations, each with their own relative importance within their functional systems? This is too critical a mat- ter to be left to haphazard methods, and merits some close examination. I have long felt that the solution may lie in some sort of point system. What I have in mind is that within each coun- try for which strategic targeting is undertaken a factor should be agreed on for each functional system (e.g. oil-refin- ing, transportation, steel industry, administration), the fac- tor being based on the characteristics of the war potential of the particular country. Then within each system a factor should be agreed on for individual installations in accordance with their various degrees of importance. A combination of the two factors would give a points value for each installation, and the sum of these values would give the total value of each complex, thus providing an indication of its relative priority for attack. It would, of course, be necessary to keep all the factors under periodic review, and to adjust them in the light of changes in the war potential of the country con- cerned. While this method would not be without its difficul- ties, it provides the basis for a positive approach to the matter and should, I suggest, be investigated. One important aspect of graphics on complexes is a repre- sentation of the anticipated radar return from the various installations, buildings and natural features. In the absence of actual radarscope photos?and this must at present apply to vast areas which might be attacked in war?it is necessary to simulate the return, basing the simulation on an analysis of such factors as the height of buildings, their type of con- CONEIDENTIAL 29 Approved r or Keiease 04/12/17:20 CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 PeshoFyrsgfirArelease 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Geographic Intelligence struction, their lay-out, the density of built-up areas, and the configuration of such features as rivers, lakes, and woods. All this information must be provided by the intelligence agencies. I doubt whether our procurement policies take sufficient ac- count of this requirement. Are we equipped to provide such Information with the degree of detailed 'accuracy which is required? In respect of a country such as China, for example, I am fairly sure we are not, particularly when the constant development of existing and new centers is borne in mind. I suggest that this deficiency is worth examination, with a view to the better briefing of procurement agencies active in the field. In World War II probably as much activity was devoted to tactical targeting as to strategic, and the allied tactical air forces played an important part in the victory. Today, the tendency to talk in terms of a short, decisive nuclear attack or at least an air offensive conducted at long range with guided missiles has given rise to a feeling that in the next war little in the way of tactical bombing will be needed. But this is not necessarily so. In some areas where our forces might be engaged it is still probable that for various reasons tactical attacks would be required, even if they did not actu- ally predominate. Because of this, some effort directed towards the preparation of tactical target material can still be Justified, but we must ensure that the effort is commensu- rate with the use that will be made of the material, bearing In mind that on the outbreak of war photoreconnaissance would quickly 'provide completely up-to-date information. Conclusion The field of geographic intelligence, as we have seen, is a very wide one, affecting either directly or indirectly most forms of military operations and planning. If there is any common factor in the problems I have indicated, I believe it to be this: priorities for procurement and research must be more closely related to planning requirements than they are at present, not only in respect of the degree of detail but also In respect of the areas covered. For geographic intelligence Is not an end in itself; it is a means to an end--military opera- tional efficiency. 30 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP7i2WPRJA63100240001-8 25X1 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Next 48 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 SECRET A clandestine requirements of- ficer reveals to the intelligence analyst a magic formula to summon and command the powerful ginni of last resort. SPY AT YOUR SERVICE, SIR Lowell M. Dunleigh "The obtaining of intelligence by covert means is an ineffi- cient, expensive and unsatisfactory business. No secret in- telligence is worth collecting unless it is absolutely certain that the intelligence is genuinely and urgently required by some executive authority. . . . The art of being an executive in a secret service (and it is an art, not a science) consists largely of seeing that the operating case officer knows exactly what intelligence he is required to obtain, or what? target he has to attack. . . . The further the best brains of a secret serv- ice divorce themselves from this basic problem, the less effi- cient the service will be." So writes a distinguished British colleague, crystallizing these nuggets of wisdom from his wide experience and the long traditions of his service. It is the duty of headquarters, he adds, "to see that the customers don't ask the field damn fool questions." To this negative thumbs-down on foolish questions we would add an outstretched palm begging for good ones, questions calculated to produce the highest yield of essential information.1 Putting the right questions to the covert collector in order to get the right answers is not simply a matter of professional neatness, it is imperative to the performance of the intelli- gence function. Clandestine assets for the collection of in- formation are limited, and in the progressive complexities of the modern world we must be sure we are aiming them at the pivotal factors of power. On the other hand, the flooding of 'See William P. Bundy, "The Guiding of Intelligence Collection," Studies in Intelligence III 1 (Winter 1959), p. 49, for a review of guidance problems in clandestine collection as presented to the Melbourne Research Methods Conference. SECRET Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A0003002400043-i MORI/HRP PAGES 81-93 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A000300240001-8 SECRET Spy At Your Service, Sir the information channels is already acute and may soon become overwhelming. Every day more than 1,000 classified documents are poured into the intelligence stream. How many are brightly illuminating, how many of low candle- power? That depends not entirely on the validity of their information, but on what questions they answer. Process and Rapport From the viewpoint of the collector, the whole intelligence process has four phases, represented by quadruple R's?Re- search, Requirements, Reports, Reaction (or evaluation). The third phase is the collector's own, but is dependent on the other three, which belong to the analyst. The analyst or producer must approach his analysis of the past or present and his estimate of the future through re- search?the assembling and collation of raw information. He usually finds that he needs more information than he has on some phases, or perhaps current coverage of a developing situation. So he levies a question on the collector, overt or covert. The question is answered by an information report. Then if the system is working properly, the analyst will react, evaluating the report to let the collector know whether he is on the beam. So the intelligence wheel turns: Research, Re- quirements, Reports, Reaction. Whether it turns smoothly or develops an eccentric wobble depends very considerably on the relation between analyst and collector. This relation- ship is the key to a pair of most critical and sobering prob- lems?how to get the indispensable information, and con- versely how to avoid choking the intelligence stream with the luxuriant water hyacinth of trivia. In simpler days the operations of the quadruple R's could be combined in one man. In the fifth century B. C., Thucydides both reported and analyzed the Peloponnesian War, ranging the fields of politics, economics, military action, psychological and subversive warfare. He set down a creed that can be warmly embraced by modern practitioners of the intelligence arts and sciences: And with regard to my factual reporting of the events of the war I have made it a principle not to write down the first story that came my way, and not even to be guided by my own general impressions; either I was present myself at the events Wpproved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921AVOW)240001-8 Approved For Release 2004/12/17 : CIA-RDP78-03921A0003002fflegT8 Spy At Your Service, Sir which I have described or else I heard of them from eye- witnesses whose reports I have checked with as much thoroughness as possible. Not that even so the truth was easy to discover: different eye-witnesses give different accounts of the same events, speaking out of partiality for one side or the other or else from imperfect memories. . . . It will be enough for me, however, if these words of mine are judged useful by those who want to understand clearly the events which happened in the past and which (human nature being what it is) will, at some time or other and in much the same ways, be repeated in the future. . . . I do not think that one will be far wrong in accepting the conclusions I have reached from the evidence which I have put forward. It is better evidence than that of the poets, who exaggerate the importance of their themes, or of the prose chroniclers, who are less interested in telling the truth than in catching the attention of their public. . . . We may claim in- stead to have used only the plainest evidence and to have reached conclusions which are reasonably accurate. Alas, no modern Thucydides is competent to undertake alone the full reportorial description and the analytic evalua- tion of the Cold War; they are a task for many men and many minds. And, perhaps unfortunately, the stylus and papyrus which limited even the prodigious industry of the phenomenal Greek have been replaced by a boundless pro- liferation of paper and the ever faster writing machines of today. But let us waste no time in tears for the past, for we cannot become our own ancestors; we have no choice but to seek some contemporary means of elevating the quality and reducing the quantity of information which now pours into the intelligence hopper. I believe the way lies in a closer integration of the question and answer process, a better understanding between producer and collector as to their functions and mutual responsibil- ities, a realization that they are parts of the same body, lobes of the brain of a master institutional Thucydides. To the superficial observer there is no problem here. Machinery exists, and generally it is good machinery. With minor ad- justments it would win a good rating from management ex- perts. The river of paper, properly diked and leveed, flows smoothly from port to ordained port. There is a procedure to SE C 83 RET Approved ror r