THE CIA AND ITS INVOLVEMENT WITH FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS
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Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040037-6
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RIFPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
2
Document Creation Date:
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date:
July 14, 2005
Sequence Number:
37
Case Number:
Publication Date:
August 22, 1974
Content Type:
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ivust 2 2 ,
oved For RettingkiN ?ftWitjg.0g#R74410100040037-6
loi project.More recently:local Units
fi-'CoOperafing wit"hgovernment agen-
'1',,61AM-rig Child CSre'servIces. For ex-
'-"Y 'c'are -Center- lb SEM Francisco
Federal funds it receives through
noise? Department of Social
"Y" in Aurora, Ill.; operates a
ontract with the State._
prTilitotiorzal efforts
an Life Insurance Co. has
4-i'-rfits_ Share in Day Care" and
: d Why." The first of these
OtionaTbrinkr outlines industry's role
-fieting tO?Senel te the; development of
th-S" ma: The second sum-
- 'fel-fines n essaty for a good pro
am id descries1r y the different kinds
of programs.
!- "Plae,Bailk ?Of 'America a.tional Trust and
')56i;11a ltsSnelittleiir of nPi:r..iieise,0 has
Ile,voted 11 Business Re-
iPtirter'' to S;dia1iiri3rO97ss ye operators a
iiDy riniserieS ? th-6 liede' Steps to fol-
:low lit "eitablfahri-4"siieh b eases.
Y CARE
tr
evle
er
tf, St148ii
,;;;404.igemated Clothing 1,Vbr
rlea, faitlinore"RegrOnal loint
? Alad Welfare Enna: 1'11e Facts:
iThe Solution.",f altiincire" 'Mel; "
..Bank ol Atriericit:Sfattaiel"Triis nd Say-
Ings 'Association : bay Attirserieg r Pre-
Business Reporter Iy 15,,
tChild Welfare League if Americ Inc.
hild:Care aiid VOrking.SifotherS St --of
Ardgemente' 'Made for Daytime Ca of
?.,,Ohadren,'PlOrehce A. Anderman. New
-;;1968. " "
'Pa bre M li1ld--156-V6".14-Opirient Conn
0 Arnert0;,' Xne.- Etegottrees "for ritty Care:
I?Of PubliCafinits-, Washington; Septeinte
l'12 -(hirriontlify supplements
iMaX?yland Depart-Ment of 1166,1th and'Men-
t?-1Vredfeine
Adminis-
trlIon, Maternal and Child-Health Services.
_041,4 Cliff& pair for
?OC-Sinf-Dh1161 dare Part:Day-
;?-1y1etrcOpoiltan- Life Inkirance- Co:: Day
iCare.':Vitatrind Why: ,0T2.-Iiidlisyy''s.
CO-nail' of ireiiicSfi
,d-oi9?,-on-15S5r.:C'are i
Ings ' of the Eritional of -
!-:Nirotriti.'lqgry:'lltiblIn ICeiseritiifTNe
s of Amer-
rd, Health
Problem:
s 14'
d-
Tab:
ork,
U.S. Department of Health, Educ
Welfare, -Socha and RelialMitati
Bureau,_ and 11.&De
Xabor,-14go and tAbor gta..nda
f-tratiori-, tuieSia.
-i.range-Ments - Of Working
,17-Alted ptates. Seth Lev
'il-iihai ti
ndler. Children's urea
'306)1
liepartinent of
"StanklardS AdMiniitrati
,dfiqc1., Care ?ervie0
19'0. Da'tnvi5lvesenl, null
y b'
for 11:Sy-CS-re Igio,ce
Yonnd omen's
sour& Center' On
'That Works. bye
.U.S.
Depit
and Welfrste;
4 lee, Childre
tt
on, and
Service,
merit of
Adminis-
Care Ar-
e-rs in the
nd Pearl G,
Pub. No. 461-
I ?
or, Employment
Women's Bureau:
. - -
vied by Hospitals.
Services: Industry's
Federal _Funds
.1,Srophiet 14. 1972.
_
riStian Association, Re-
men: Child Care: A Plan
ork, 1972.
OOTNOTES
eat Of -Health,_" Education,'
ial and Rehabilitation Serv-
ureau, andty.S:De-pftidnis..o.t
e and Labor Standards AdMin-
ontensylatifeati. Child Care Ar-
'of Working Mothers in the
ates, Seth Low, and pearl p.
Children's Bureau ,Pub. No. 461-
ietrefide '
trnit0-
-
Spindle
' -
;Care
rati
d Welfare League of America. Child
nd Working lifothers'i A -study-br Ar-
ments Made for DaYtime Care of Chil-
Florence A. Ruderman. New York, 1968.
Approved
3 Marat 171 r.tliniffiary data from the DS:
Department of qealth, Education, and Wel-
fare.
, iFurther nett s are in Federal Funds for
Day Care Projs t's, Pamphlet 14, published
by the Women ureau. Employment Stand-
ards AriminIstiltion, U.S. Department of
Labor, 1972.
5 Follow Thro 1;h is designed to extend and
supplement the r sins made by deprived chil-
dren who have 1,..irticipitted in Head Start or
similar preschi training, by continuing
their participat .;11 in a program of compre-
hensive instru ional, health, nutritional,
psychological, ,Sittl work, and parent in-
volvement serv: -5. It may ser7e children in
-kindergarten E, I ld the early elementar
grades.
?See page 7 - 4-0 Program summa
7 These are b revised.
U.S. Depart tient of Labcr, Wo lace
Standards Adm nistration, Women' reau.
Day Care Servi Industry's In ement.
Bull. 296. 1971.
_
Center now Ailed Cristus ucics
Chil-
dren's gente, r. _
10 U.S. Depar;oent of L r, Wage and
Labor Standard ; Admini tion, Women's
Bureau. Child :are Se es Provided by
Hospitals. Bull 295, 1
1-1. Further trv ,rma may be obtained
from Associate Prole ? Bernard Greenblatt,
School _of Soria Hey ane Community
Seridees; St-ate- n
falo, New York .
13 National
dows on Day
tugs of t
Women.
1972.
r_Sity of Now York, BJ47
eil of Jewish Women. Win-.
e: A Report Based on Find-
itional Council of Jewish
tblin Keyserling. New York,
ik,FNINCI? IN ARIZONA
FANNIY. Mr. President, we hay
ged in rtany discussions recently
t the v8,1 ie of strip mining and its
on_peov, I and the environment It
en my r =intention that strip
ecessa and it can 'oe conducted
nner 1,:h1ch is not detrimental to
onim 1St.
ing
in a
the e
In
of how
how pro
a,fid pres
On Aug
staff, Rich
body Coal
joint use ar
in northeaste
dum to me,
ona have a prime example
n.7riing carrpro vide jobs and
st ts can be taken to restore
Ii e land.
3, 1974, a member of my
Thomas, toured the Pea-
s at Black Mesa on the
f the Hopi-Navajo land
Arizona. In a memoran-
omas reports:
facility and inspecting it
_ground arid air, I wish
pany is doing an out-
ing coal for electrical
ts at Page and near
0 protecting the en-
-paying jobs
After_ total
thoroughly fro
to report that _tile
standing job or pr
power gerierati
Bullhead City__
vironment _ant' prov
for Navajos.
-
On the lat4r point,
Kayenta mine'; emplo
earn the United Mine
between $41 art $50 per
day. Actually, ; crne Of the
earned as min It as $18,00
overtime. One avajo emp
company had '"ver earned
annually prior .0 the openi
Mr. Preside.ot, Mr. Thom
the efforts to I- lend the fad
the terrain the work to
mined land vv:ee extremely e
e Black Mesa and
04 Navajos who
exs pay scale of
l'or a 71/2 hour
dian employees
ast year with
d by the coal
re than $600
ti of the mine.
ound that
s in with
tore the
tive. Mr.
r
Thomas desc led it this way:
From the a it would be ye
completely aye ook the mines, pi
"-? 4 -
,
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asy to
ne fa-
_
s.3
?
1r;663
conveyor belt, and rail loading opera-
tion. The two mines ar..., miles from Kay..
U.S. 160. The road
constructed by the
enta, and 15 miles
back to the mines
coal company.
I inspected ar
moved and th
I don't belie
area from
terrain,
with 1
ess o
where coal had been re-
rburden has been replaced.
nyone could tell the mined
undisturbed adjacent natural
coal company is experimenting
ieties of grass, and is in the proc-
cing the areas because the Navajos
owed sheep to graze on earlier plant-
! efore the grass could get a good start.
ithout going into detail or citing statis-
s, I would say that the entire operation is
a model of efficiency, combining the best of
automated equipment and human resources.
Mr. President, this is an area. where the
land has been badly overgrazed in the
past. It is an area where the Indians have
been subsisting on very small incomes.
There were forecasts when the mining
began that the land would be ruined and
made uninhabitable. It appears to me
that just the opposite has happened.
Indians who were locked into poverty in
the past now have the opportunity to
earn middle class wages. The land is
yielding the coal which our country
needs, and it is being restored to a con-
dition that is as good as?perhaps
better?than before.
Mr. President, I have argued that it is
possible for us to utilize the rich re-
sources of this country and at the same
time preserve the environment. It ap-
pears_to me that this is being proven on
the Black Mesa.
HE CIA AND ITS INVOLVEMENT
WITH FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS
Mr. ABOUREZK. Mr. President, in the
ugust 19 Washington Post, Mr. Jack
Anderson in his column reported the op-
position of the Central Intelligence
Agency to my amendment No. 1511 to
the Foreign Assistance Act, which pro-
hibits the use of U.S. foreign aid for as-
sistance to any foreign police or security
forces. This amendment was approved
several days ago by the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee.
Certainly it is no news that the CIA
relies on friendships with police or in-
telligence networks in other countries;
however, it bears reiteration that the
CIA is tightly involved, often through
other U.S. agencies, with some of the
most unpopular governments in the
world. It is my strong opinion that we
must start drawing the line on these
relationships as we begin to actively use
human rights as a factor in foreign policy
decisions.
I ask unanimous consent that Mr.
Anderson's article be printed in the
RECORD.
There being no objection, the article
was ordered to be printed in the RECORD,
as follows:
CIA ADMITS USING FOREIGN POLICE
(By Jack Anderson)
The Central Intelligence Agency has ad-
mitted in an extraordinary private letter to
Sen. J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark.) that the agency
has penetrated the police forces of friendly
foreign countries.
The remarkable confession by CIA Director
William Colby came in the course of a dis-
creet but intensive lobbying effort to keep
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ugt 22, 1974
that world not even be subject to review.
and it amid be nearly impossible to d
this ind vidual.
Mr. K lpatrick said that in a diffe e so-
ciao. U tder a different concepttate
supreme sy. we would call such an ear a
C01311:111141V. "What in the world e want
with a e immissar here?" he asks
There has been in the past decades
Iii this country an unending of fed-
eral buesucrecy and that h has had
a 'sates ic price tag with ifully small
return in benefits to ericana. Now,
in this tree of rampant on, a problem
widely recognized as uestioned prior-
ity for the nation, co this suggestion that
an entirely new b y be created.
alive U.S. support for foreign police pro-
grams.
Colby told Fulbright that the "relation-
ships" built up with polIcethen through
these programs had been highly useful le
"obtaining foreign intelligence" from foreign
constabularies.
The friendly foreign cops, like national
police everywhere, are privy to their riatIon'e
darkest secrets. And while Colby does not say
so, our government sources tell us the for-
signers are not above trading a national
secret or two for a little CIA cash.
Colby, in his message to Fulbright. deli-
cately &kW the matter of corrupting foreign
police, conceding only that the liaisons
bring the CIA vital information on "illicit
narcotics traffic, International terrorism and
hijacking.-
Colbra covert lobbying was directed
against a bill by Sen. James Abouretk (D-
ark) that would kill U.S.sid to foreign police
and prison operations. The measure was
drafted after enacting abuses were disclosed
in !tenth Vietnamese prisons constructed
with the U.S. taxpayers' funds.
The CIA director, who as a top US. hand
In Vietnam saw the abused Ant hand, said.
nevertheless, that the Aboureak measure
would "appear to restrict activities. . . by
the The Main cutback would be in
"Obtaining foreign intelligence information"
from fithindly espionage services and agents
"within national police forces . . ." Colby
Watt ote
ac ast4e, foreign police forces.
4Icste4, been developed during
tratederg and other support"
givicabithe
Ccilreat lobbying proved effectire. In secret
widen, the committee permitted the CIA
to go on famparting foreign polio* operations.
DIstders suspect that Colby's effort to de-
feat the Abourinik proviskru was actually
*Weed at proiwrift.- the Isit,ermational Police
Aeleitenly,. an en. dear to the hearts
of the option.
According to Victor htarchetti and John
Werke *litho= Of "The CIA and the Cult of
Intelligence," the agency has funded train-
ing of fteringa Police at the academy and
recruited Oleg Mena
Colby himself wrote to Aboureek last Jan-
uary that the academy, ostensibly run by
the State Deportment, had "called on us In
the past for some support for their pro-
gram. nut," be added. "all such support has
been terminated."
We also reported last September that the
CIA was involved In a Texas bomb school
where the academy trained foreign police-
men on explosive devices. A State Depart-
ment canal later admitted the CIA pro-
vided ".guest lecturers" for the course, which
has now been moved to Edgevrood Arsenal.
Md.
Footnote. Both. the CIA and the academy
say no CIA funds are now going into the
school. Colby has also personally said sup-
port by the CIA for the school has been
ted.
WEST VIRG
Mr. MOSS. Mr.
able Arch A. Moore, Jr..
West Virginia, has written to
sponse to my request to him re
the ERTil satellite.
Here is part of what the Cicrverrio
mei
iRjerview of some of the work
been done elsewhere encourages me
that the ERTS Pregame main be
beneficial to the states in the
their planning and regulatory
it
COURAGED BY
Honor-
or
Mr. President, I ask unaniraous eon-
sent that the letter of the Governor Of
West Virginia be printed In the Recant.
There being no objection, the letter
wee, ordered to be printed in the RecOlte,
as follOwS:
Orrice or retx Oovionoa,
Charleston, W. Va., July 24, 1974.
nor Feeinc E. Moss,
Charman. Committee on Aeronautical and
Space Science. 11.5. Senate, Washington,
Mee Tri: Thank you for the opportunity
to comment on the Earth Resources Tech-
nologY Satellite Program.
The 'West Virginia DeparUnent of Natural
Resources hes worked with the Earth Satel-
lite. Corporation In frying to develops project
In the State on both the and the
IIRTS-B Satellite, and my Odic* of Federal-
State Relations has worked with Battelle Cor-
poration to initials a similar program. These
prejosta were aimed primarily et reematinn
inventory, land-use inventory, mining Ma-
turbancee and natural and man-made im-
poundments. Neither of these programs is a
reality at prement, so we have no direct ex-
perience from which to speak.
However, review of MOMS a. the work that
hap been done elarorbere smeourages rpit to
believe that the WIT$ Program could be
extremely beneficial to the Oates In the dis-
charge of their planning and regulatory re-
spoildhelithie
Tf may be of furthsr sesjrntaacs,. PI
do not IHeltate to let me know.
Stameidy "mile
Aiwa A. liocas. Jr..
CONSUMER PROTECTION Ac icy
Mr. McCLURE. Mr.
geed to the Consumer
bEl, El 707, I wish to bri
tkei of my colleagues a
editorial which appeared
port Times, Shrev
August 18. 1974. anti
Oestitunier." I comm
dm comments set fo
and ask unanimotsa
printed in the
There being no
war. ordered to
as follows:
The Arne
degree of pro
he needs
are seekin
One of
hag been
advocates
been a
ward
este,
win.
re-
Agency
atten-
tive
Shreve-
Sunday.
Protect the
my colleagues
In this editorial
that this be
action. the editorial
Ire the Raman.
Cometrosa
nsumer indeed. needs a.
and among the things
rotection from Is those who
rotect him,
henomans of life in the 1970s
advent of so-galled conaumer
In recent months theme has
S building of public opinion to-
ng the ultimate coneumer advo-
nd of super Ralph Nader. if you
* unprecedented authority of the
govermnent
bill now pending in the United States
Is approved, a vendor; of which has
y passed the federal Rouse. then Amer-
would have its most poweehal unelected
bill In gnostic:1 would crust.. Con-
annattl Protection Agency witti.extraordinary
powers.
James J. Kilpatrick, one of America's most
political observers. and a man not
to exceedve language desceibes
tundly tm " The
proposed Noose, would
almost uninhibited powers that
ottici affect to day life of every
at American.
As the insisiatiesi now Blonds that pinion
woadbe saes to mks swaging assallalm
It murit not be.
The Rouse,
year pro sures,
provel of the
The Tree.
parte:Well
Long at
against
defeat.
bill
the standard election
stampeded into its ap-
of-
d hope that the Senate,
'a senators, Russell
tt Johnston, would vote
and work to achieve its
person can speak for the Ameri-
can timer? Certainly the person who
r your point of view does not speak
neighbor or for the man down the
or around the comer.
ere eve, of course, widely divergent con-
inlesieste, each as valid as the other.
conitimer commissar who speaks for one
'Cold be speaking-agsdnet another
group, arid it Is not Pint that-fhia ocean
would be going extriMd vaddng. -or she,-
walla be soCi Mite
ing all in us how to lead our Bees.
Anemic-um could be seat-belted and air
bagged to death in short order by one person
and the; is, as Mr. Kilpatrick noted.
uri-Anterl can.
Calif. Coe. Ronald Reagan points out that
American" need less?not more?federal con-
trol of their lives. The Consumer Protection
Agency %mad merely be one more serious
intrusion into the Individual freedom of
choice that is uniquely the American way.
And, at /t.T. Sen. James Buckley notes,
there is no such thing as s single, identi-
nable, monolithic consumer interest," and
he adds that the proposed agency would only
"create o re more costly agency, hamstring
other age ides and bury the American busi-
nessman =der even more red tape."
It is bad business, this bill. It must be
defeated.
for
at
HUMAN DISASTERS IN CYPRUS,
BANGLitDESH, AND AFRICA
Mr. 1024NEDY. Mr. President, earlier
this 111064 the Subcommittee on Refu-
gees and the Subcommittee on Health
resumed their Joint inquiry into world
hunger, neelth, and refugee problems,
with special attention on the human dis-
asters which have struck Cyprus, Bang-
ladesh. aid Africa. I would like to share
with my colleagues the prepared testi-
mony received by the subcommittees on
this area of important public concern.
Even as the drought and famine has
spread across Africa, compounding last
year's tragedy, new human disasters have
struck otaer areas of the globe. In Bang-
ladesh?where heavy floods have swept
over two-thirds of the country?literally
millions c f Men, women, and children are
in urgent need of elnergency relief and
rehabilite tion gut/Port. And in. Cyprus,.
we find the latest link in the chain of
ravaged ,iopulations, which has circled
the globe in recent years.
Par the people of Cyprus this is a peril-
ous thanr?aii It is for the renewal aids-
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