PROHIBITION OF POLICE TRAINING

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CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0
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June 26, 1974
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Approved For Release 2005y0.7720:!AEA-WP79,3RWA000100040079-0 OLC 74-1357 26 June 1974 MEMORANDUM FOR: Deputy Di rector for Operations Office of General Counsel SUBJECT: Prohibition of Police Training 1. Senator James Abourezk (D. , S. Dak. ) has introduced an amendment to S. 3394 which amends the Foreign Assistance A.ct of 1961. The text of the amendment is on page S 11203 of the attached pages from the Congressional Record. Hearings on S. 3394 are now being held by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. 2. The Abourezk amendment would place a more rigid restriction on U.S. training of foreign police by proh:Lbiting training in the U. S. and by including... "other internal security forces of any foreign government or any program of internal intelligence or surveillance on behalf of any foreign government within the United States or abroad." The amendment further precludes the use of funds for such purposes under the Foreign Assistance Act or any other law. 3. Presently, the prohibition concerns funds under the Foreign Assistance Act, overseas training and only..."police training or related program in a foreign country." You will :recall that when this provision was debated last year, the House then prevailed over a harsher Senate version. The text of the present prohibition (in Public Law 93-189 Foreign Assistance Act of 1973) is as follows: "Sec. 112. Prohibiting Police Training. --(a) No part of any appropriation made available to carry out this Act shall be used to conduct any police training or related program in a foreign country. "(b) Subsection (a) of this section shall not apply-- "(1) with respect to assistance rendered under section 515(c) of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, as amended, or with respect to any authority of the Drug Enforcement Administration or the Federal Bureau of Investigation which relates to crimes of the nature which are unlawful under the laws of the United States; or Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00057A000100040079-0 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 INTERNAL USE ONLY "(2) to any contract entered into prior to the date of enactment of this section with any person, organization, or agency of the United States Government to provide personnel to conduct, or assist in conducting any such program. Notwithstanding paragraph (2), subsection (a) shall apply to any renewal or extension of any contract referred to in such paragraph entered into on or after such date of enactment." 4. Your views and comments are requested as to the effect of the Abourezk amendment upon Agency act:.vities and as to whether we should seek amending language. Attachments: 1) Pages from Record 2) S. 3394 Distribution: Original - Subject file 1 - DDO 1 OGC 1 - OLC Chrono 1 PLC Chrono OLC/PLC:bao (26 Jun 74) GE R.GE L. CARY Legislative Counsel Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 A M11900 Approved For ReleaCt020136137f20)INZA-POPT-09s009?57%9001M040079-0 AMENDMENT OF THE FOREIGN ASSISTANCE ACT--AMENDMENTS AMENDMENT NO. 1511 (Ordered to be printed and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.) Mr. ABOUREZK submitted an amend- ment intended to be proposed by him to the bill (S. 3394) to amend the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, and for other purposes. Mr. ABOUREZK. Mr. President, the now familiar panacea for domestic ills, law and order, has long been used to describe American objectives in the trobuled areas of Africa, Asia, and Latin America. While the Federal Government did not start aiding local U.S. police agencies until 1968, we have been sup- plying the police of selected underde- veloped nations with equipment, arms, and training since 1954. U.S. funds have been used to construct the National Po- lice Academy of Brazil, to renovate and expand the South Vietnamese prison sys- tem, and to install a national police com- munications network in Colombia. The Agency for International Development estimates that over 1 million foreign po- liceinen have received some training or supplies through the U.S. public safety program?a figure which includes 100,000 Brazilian police and the entire 120,000- man National Police Force in South Vietnam, U.S. foreign aid programs in the un- derdeveloped third world call for a modest acceleration of economic growth, to be achieved wherever possible through the normal profitmaking activ- ities of U.S. corporations and lending in- stitutions. It is obvious, however, that an atmosphere of insecurity and rebel- liousness does not provide an attractive climate for investment. In the rapidly urbanizing nations of the third world, civil disorders have become a common phenomenon as landless peasants stream to the cities in search of economic and cultural opportunities. Since most of these countries cannot satisfy the aspirations of these new city- dwellers under present economic and so- cial systems built up tensions are increas- ingly giving way to attacks on the status quo. After his 1969 tour of Latin Amer- ica, Nelson Rockefeller noted in his re- port to the President that while Latin armies: Have gradually improved their capabilities for dealing with Castro-type agrarian guer- rillas, it appeared that radical revolutionary elements in the hemisphere are increasingly turning toward urban terrorism in their at- tempts to bring down the existing order. This prediction has already been borne out in Brazil and Uruguay, where urban guerrillas have in the past staged spec- tacular bank robberies and kidnappings. Since the late 1950's a paramount con- cern of American policymakers has been the preservation of social stability in countries deemed favorable to U.S. trade and investment. U.S. military planning has been shaped by the need to provide, on a moment's notice counterinsurgency forces that can be flown in to the aid of friendly regimes threatened by popu- lar insurreal. ?,? e2 program has 'inn used to =Mt capabilities of indigenous forces to over- come the rural guerrilla forces. Finally, on the premise that the police constitute the first line of deform against subver- sion, the Agency for International De- velopment has funneled American funds and supplies into the hands of third world pollee forces. During hearings on ;he foreign assist- ance appropriations for 1965, AID Ad- ministrator David Bell described the ra- tionale behind "U.S. police assistance pro- grams as follows: maintenance of law and order including internal security is one of the fundamental responsibilities of government. Successful discharge of this responsibility is imperative if a nation is to establish and maintain the environment of stability and security so essential to eonomic, social, and political progress. Plainly, the United States has very great interests in the creation and maintenance of an atmosphere of law and order under hu- mane, civil concepts and control . . . When there is a need, technical assistance to the police of developing nations to meet their responsibilities promotes and protects these U.S. interests. The public safety program is not large in comparison to the military aid pro- gram?but its supporters can muster some impressive arguments in its favor. It is argued, for instance, that the police?being interspersed among the population?are more effective than the military in controlling low-scale insur- gency. Supporters of the police assistance program also point out that police forces are cheaper to maintain than military forces, since they do not require expen- sive "hardware" like planes, tanks, and artillery. These arguments, advanced by men like Col. Edward Lan5dale, formerly of the CIA, received their most favorable response from President John F. Ken- nedy and his brother Robert, then the Attorney General, in the early 1960's. Presidential backing was responsible for a substantial expansion of the public safety program in 1962, and for the cen- tralization of all U.S. police assistance activities in AID's Office of Public Safety. The State Department, memorandum es- tablishing OPS is noteworthy for its strong language?the memo, issued in November 1962, declared that AID? Vests the Office of Pul3lic Safety with the primary responsibility and authority for pub- lic safety programs and gives that Office a series of powers and responsibilities which will enable it to act rapidly, vigorously, and effectively . .. powers greater than any other technical office or division of AID. The two Kennedys also gave enthusi- astic support to the creation of an Inter- American Police Academy in the Panama Canal Zone. Later, in order to open the Academy to police officers from other countries, it was moved to Washington, D.C., and reorganized as the Interna- tional Police Academy. The Office of Public Safety is empow- ered to4=75'rTilIftr-Vitcrrirt-rolice orga- nizations in three wayE : First, by sending "public safety advisers" who provide "in- country" training for rank and file po- licemen only at the expense of the host country; second, by pr Dviding training at VaitglEPagetMe :.11' I I IP cers and technicians; and, third, by ship- June 21, lo? ping weapons, ammunition, radios, patrol cars, jeeps, chemical munitions, and re- lated equipment. Last year, after the passage of an amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act of 1974, I directed a letter to USAID requesting information on what the OPS program would encompass in the next 2 years, taking in consideration the new congressional limitations imposed on OPS. Mr. Matthew Harvey, AID Assistant Administrator for Legislative Affairs, re- sponded only in part to the question by choosing to omit the OPS plans for the continued export of police and para- military weaponry. Harvey states: During the next two years, the Office of Public Safety projected assistance to a num- ber of countries. Currently Public Safety programs are being implemented in 18 coun- tries. Commitments include Public Safety ad- visory assistance mainly in the field of ad- ministration and management ? training both in-country and at the International Police Academy in Washington, D.C.?com- modity assistance which includes items such as vehicles, communcations, police type weapons and training aids. The International Police Academy is sched- uled to provide training for police officers from nations of the free world. Of high priority is training of foreign police officers who are responsible for the maintenance of law enforcement resources which are committed to the international narcotics control efforts. The Public Safety program also includes a training program for the Africa region which will enable police offi- cers from 21 countries to receive U.S. train- ing. The Office of Public Safety is also sched- uled to provide TDY technical assistance to countries in the development of the police institution. The Office of Public Safety has been tasked to provide technical assistance in developing narcotic control programs which include such specialized fields as criminanstics, records and communications. b. As you are probably aware the Senate/ House conferees have reported out the for- eign aid bill which under Section 112 re- quires the ending of all Public Safety over- seas programs. Tf signed into law in this form. the Bill would not affect the activ- ities of the International Police Academy in Washington. The Academy would continue to train police officers in modern police man- agement and techniques as at present. Using Latin America to measure the scone of these activities, we find that over 150 Public safety advisors have been sta- tioned in 15 countries until now, and that some 2.n00 Latin Police officers have re- ceived training at the International Po- lice Academy. In addition, over $42 mil- lion has been given to these countries in OPS supporting assistance programs in the last 3 years alone. Until 1972, the leading beneficiary of the public safety program in Latin America was Brazil, which received almost $8 million in OPS funds by the middle of 1972. Since then, the largest recipients of OPS aid have been Colombia and Guatemala. In providing this kind of assistance, OPS notes that: Most countries possess a unified civil secu- rity service which "in addition to regular police include para military units within civil police organizations and paramilitary forces such as gendarmeries, constabularies, r which perform police lune- a e as their primary mission maintaining internal security. ? June 21, 199wproved For RieemangwOhE Wcite[39,=_QgtRia0100040079-0 'The AID Program is designed to en- eoewass all of these functions, According to OPS: Individual Public Safety programs, while varying from country to country, are focused in general on develoning within the civil se- curity forces a balance of (1) a capability for regular police operations, with (2) an in- vestigative capability for detecting and iden- tifying criminal and/or subversive individ- uals and organizations and neutralizing their activities, and with (3) a capability for con- trolling militant activities ranging from demonstrations, disorders, or riota through small-scale guerrilla operations. As noted in the 1962 State Depart- ment memo, OPS possesses unique pow- ers not granted to other AID bureaus. These powers enable OPS to "act ranidly, vigorously and effectively" in aiding Latin regimes threatened by Popular up- risings When a crisis develons in a Latin canital, OPS officials often stay up "night after night" in their Washington, D.C., office to insure that needed supplies?In- cluding radios and tear gas?reach the beleaguered nolice of the friendly regime. AID officials insist that public safety assistance is "not given to support die- tatorships." But there are apnarently ex- ceptions to this rule: Administrator Bell told a Senate Committee in 1965 that: It is obviously not our purpose or intent to assist a head of state who is repressive. On the other hand, we are working in a lot of countries where the governments are con- trolled by people who have shortcomings. Not wanting to embarass AID or any of the people we support who have "shortcomings" Bell did not mention names. It is entirely possible that one country Bell was referring to is Brazil?a country which until 1972 enjoyed a substantial OPS contribution despite well-docu- mented reports that political prisoners are regularly being tortured by the police. In justifying continued OPS aid to such regimes, Bell explained that: The police are a strongly anti-Communist force right now. For that reason it is a very important force to us. It is no surprise that these men should consider a small amount of allegedly Communist-led terrorism to be sufficient reason to subsidize the repressive ap- paratus of a totalitarian regime. THE "PUBLIC SAFETY PROGRAM" IN SOUTH VIETNAM According to a letter I received from the State Department dated February 5, 1974, Assistant Administrator Harvey stated that after June 14, 1974, there will be no South Vietnamese police officers admitted to training courses of what- ever nature at the International Police Academy. In another letter, dated January 28, the Department states that: No U.S. personnel, either civilian or mili- tary, are advising the Vietnamese National Police under any contracts with the De- partment of Defense or other government agency. Such action would be in violation of the Ceasefire Agreement of January 27, 1973 which has been strictly complied with. great deal of evidence to the contrary. Shipler writes: Although the Paris agreements explicitly rule out -advisers to the poLce force, the South Vietnamese National Police continue to receive regular advice from Americans. In r en th this corre- ?on? n two i h-r rs sa me re uen w - ome m sa c idf 4rgirethe ollee ga er n e once r m ; .0 ?? e p ac b,naiyze tne thitEWSTIEMd7-- --", gone? birfeira ebrifirmed that in some provinces "American liaison mon" who work with the police remain on the job. "There are still some, but not so many," he said. EPISODE IN POLICE STATION Local policemen still refer to "American police advisers," according to James M. Mark- ham, Saigon bureau chief of The New York Times, who was detained by the police late in January after a visit to a Vietcong-held area. Mr. Markham said that in both Qui Nhon, where he was held overnight-, and Phan Thiet, where he IhraS detained briefly while being transferred to Saigon, policenien, talk- ing among themselves, referred to the "po- lice adviser," In Phan Thiet, he reported, a policeman was overheard saying. "Let's get the American pollee adviser over here." In the last six weeks The New York Times has made repeated attempts to interview officials in the United States Agency for International Development who are responsi- ble for American aid to the pollee. Although the officials appeared ready to discuss the sub:feet, they were ordered by- the United States Ambassador, Graham A. Martin, -to say nothing. Contrary to assurances from the State Department, it is doubtful that police as- sistance to South Vietnam has been ter- minated, One is compelled to ask, there- fore, just what the Convress and the American people have to do to stop the incessant funding of the South Viet- namese police forces. What does it take to tell AID, OPS and others in the ad- ministration, no. We have passed a law specifically prohibiting U.S. police as- sistance or training to South Vietnam and yet, the pyograms continue to go on, appgrently almost unabated. Th 1971.? - n an excel- len report on t u sa etuaziaggaza in-South tiLanaiIi. e e report may 1106 Pe a descrintion of the public safety program as it exists today in South Viet- nam, it does rem-esent the most accu- rate history and description of. the pro- gram as it existed until recently. It in- dicates, I believe, the real focus and in- tent of the public safety program even as it exists today. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the report be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection, the report was ordered to be. printed in the RECORD, as follows: REPORT Tho Public Safety program in South Viet- nam is the largest and one of the oldest U.S. police assistance programs--half of AID's Public Safety Advisors and more than half of OPS's annual budget are committed to Vietnam operation, The Vietnam program S 11201 predecessor agency) to assemble a team of police experts to advise the government of Ngo Dinh Diem. Ultimately 33 advisors served in the Police Division of the now famous Michigan State University Group (MSUG); of this group, at least a few are known to have been CIA agents. The police division supervised the reorganization of Vietnam's decrenit police system, provided training in a variety of police skills, provided small arms and ammunition, and helped establish a modern records system for filing data on political suspects. The MSTIG effort was superseded in 1969 by a Public Safety Division (PSD) under direct MS. management. In keeping with President Kennedy's call for increased counterinsurgency initiatives, the program was vastly expanded in 1962. Beginning with a staff of six in 1959, the PSD mission in Viet- nam increaed to 47 in 1963, and to 204 by mid-I968. Total support of the PSD program had. reached $95,417,000 by the end of fiscal year 1968, and has continued at the rate of about $20 million a year; (some of these funds are supplied by the Department of Defense rather than by AID). From the very start of the Vietnam con- flict, the National Police (NP) of South Vietnam has been regarded by our govern- ment as a Paramilitary force with certain responsibilities related to the overall counter- insurgency effort. In the Foreward to a man- ual on The Police and Resources Control in Counter-Insurgency (Saigon, 1964), Chief Frank E. Walton wrote that "the methods included in this text are emergency proce- dures hot utilized in a normal peace-time situation. They are stringent, war-time measures designed to assist in defeating the enemy . . .",In order to upgrade Vietnamese police cans.111ties to carry out its wartime responsibilities, PSD supervised the con- solidation of all regional, provincial and specialized police agencies under the direc- torate of National Police in 1962, and sub- sequently prepared a "National Police Plan" for Vietnam in 1964. Under the plan, the NP's personnel strength grew from 19,000 Men in 1963 to 62,000 by the end of 1965, 70,000 in 1967, and 85,000 by the end of 1969. To keep pace with this rapid growth, the Plan provided for a vast increase in U.S. technical assistance, training and commod- ity support. Public Safety Division aid and management have become so extensive, that the National Police might more properly be considered a U.S. mercenary force than an indigenous institution. SPECIFIC FUNCTIONS The specific counterinsurgency functions performed by the police?resources control, identification, surveillance and pacification? are spelled out in an OPS brochure on The Role of the Public Safety In Suppart of the National Police of Vietnam (Washington, D.C., 1969), and in AID's Program and Proj- ect Data Presentations to the Congress for Fiscal Year 1971. Resources Control is defined by Public Safety Advisor E. H. Adkins Jr. as "an effort to regulate the movement of selected re- sources, both human and material, in order to restrict the enemy's support or deprive him of it altogether .. ." In order to prevent the flow of supplies and people to and from villages loyal to the National Liberation Front (NFL), 7,700 members of the National Police currently man some 650 checkpoints at key locations on roadways and waterways, and operate mobile checkpoints on remote roads and trails. By 1968, more than 468,466 persons had been arrested in this program, of whom 28,000 were reported as "VC sus- pects." AID reported that "Resources control efforts in 1969 resulted in nearly 100,000 ar- rests including more than 10,000 known or David K. Sthipler,a VW York Times cor- Versity rmaugs and 6,000 tons e, n an a ?gd 1. e ruary began in 1956, when Michigan State Uni- suspected Vietcong. Confiscations included respondent stated 214611AMIZAKOMPA9510171211%1 tiA130,civiscrgati Release vi. I S11202 Approved For Releut5AMMVANTRAIIIRMI909-WQR.011100040079-0 June 21, 1974 The National Identity Registration Pro- gram is descrned by OPS as "an integral part of the population and resources control pro- gram." Under a 1957 law, amended in 1967, every Vietnamese 15 years and older is re- quired to register with the Saigon govern- ment and carry identification cards; anyone caught without the proper ID cards is con- sidered a "VC suspect" and subject to im- prisonment or worse. At the time of registra- tion, a full set of fingerprints is obtained from each applicant, and information on his or her political beliefs is recorded. By 1971, 12,000,000 persons are to have been reached by this identification /registration program. "Once completed," AID explains, "the identi- fication system will provide for a national repository of fingerprints and photographs and biological data. It will be one of the most complete national identification systems in the world, and one of the most badly needed." Surveillance of persons and organizations suspected of harboring anti-government sen- timents is the responsibility of the NP's Special Police Branch (SP). The Special Branch is nothing more or less than Viet- nam's secret police; originally the Indo- chinese branch of the French Surete, the SP was known as the Vietnamese Bureau of Investigation during the Diem regime. Ac- cording to the 1962 decree establishing the National Police, the SF' was given the re- sponsibilities of: "Gathering information on political activities," and "carrying out un- dercover operations throughout the country, searching for, investigating, keeping track of, and prosecuting elements indulged in sub- versive activities." OPS documents state that "SP agents penetrate subversive organiza- tions," and "use intelligence collection, po- litical data [and] dossiers compiled from census data . . . to separate the bad guys from the good." AID has nothing to say about the criteria used to separate the "bad guys" from the "good guys"; anyone familiar with the Vietnamese scene knows, however, that the SP's major responsibility is surveil- lance of non-Communist grouns that could pose a political challenge to the regime in power. Persons who advocate negotiations with the NLF are routinely picked up by the Special Police and sentenced to stiff prison terms. Pacification usually brings to mind "good will" protects like school construction and free medical care in Vietnam, however, the paramount task of the U.S. pacification effort is the identification and neutralization of the local NLF administrative annaratus? in Pentagon nomenclature, the "Viet Gong Infrastructure" (VCI). The counter-infra- structure campaign was initiated by the CIA in July 1968 as the "Phung Hoang" pro- gram?better known in English as Operation Phoenix. This program, incorporated into the Civil Operations and Revolutionary De- velonment Support (CORDS) effort, is de- scribed by American officials as "a systematic effort at intelligence coordination and ex- ploitation." In the intelligence phase, all allied intelligence services?including South Vietnam's Special Police Branch and Amer- ica's CIA and military intelligence organiza- tion?are supposed to pool the data they have collected (or forcibly extracted) from Informers and prisoners on the identity of NLF cadres. It is for this ultimate purpose that most of the other police functions de- scribed above?interdiction, identification, registration and surveillance?are carried on. In the exploitation phase of Phoenix, mem- bers of the paramilitary National Police Field Forces, sometimes assisted by the Army, make secret, small-scale raids into contested areas to seize or eliminate persons who have keen identified by the intelligence services ors "VCI agents." In testimony before the I,sl? Senate Foreign Relations, .m te t head of COR WI/Rap- ,= r.1=5- ' ? a mi 0 1.' 4 Isuspected Vol agents had been "neutral- ized"?of this amount 6,187 had been killed, 8.515 arrested, and 4,832 persuaded to join the Saigon side. Colby insisted that Phoenix did not constitute an ' assassination" or "counter-terror" operation. ?Each of the counterinsurgency programs described has been accompanied by an ex- pansion of the prison population of South Vietnam. Since prison management is con- sidered a major task of the overall police 'responsibility, the U.S. Public Safety pro- gram includes substantial assistance to the Directorate of Corrections?the Saigon agency ultimately responsible for the opera- tion of South Vietnam's 41 civil prisons. U.S. aid has enabled the Directorate to enlarge the prison system from its 1967 capacity of 20,000 prisoners to the present capacity of 33,436 inmates. From 1967-1969, OPS expenditures in sup- port of prison maintenance have totaled $1.6 million. Specific project targets in 1969, ac- cording to AID's Program and Project Data Presentations to the Congress, include: "The renovation and expansion of selected correc- tion centers, the addition of up to 1,000 trained pelsonnel to administer correction centers . . . and the implementation of a plan for relocating prisoners in order to re- duce overcrowding and provide greater security frcrn VC attacks." To achieve these targets, "MI) will provide technical advisors to help supervise relocations and to train new recruits . . . [and] will provide sup- plies for prison security . . ." One of the facilities selected for the relocation program ? was the dread prison of Cc n Son Island with its now-notorious "tiger cages." TIGER CAGES GET 155315 RATINGS Americans who were in Saigon in the late Fifties under the Michigan State-CIA police advisory mission noted at the time that op- position politicians were frequently carted off to Con Son. The U.S. government's own figures state that at least 70 percent of the prisoner papulation throughout Vietnam is political, and another nine percent Is "mili- tary?that is, POW's. It has been said for years that to know the status of the non- communist, political opposition, Con Son was the place to go. U.S. Public Safety Advisor Frank Walton, former Los Angeles Deputy Chief of Police, with a reputation for being hard on minor- ities, is one of 225 Public Safety Advisors with the Agency for International Develop- ment in Vietnam. Walton declared Con Son to he "a correctional institution worthy of higher ratings than some prisons in the U.S." with "enlightened and modern administra- tion." In order to upgrade the administrative capabilities of the Corrections Directorate, AID regularly provides training to Vietnam- ese prison officials "outside of Vietnam." Al- though AID does not divulge any details, the ten officials receiving such training in fiscal year 1969 are probably among the 60 Viet- namese police officers brought to the U.S. to attend special courses. According to the AID manual on Public Sa,iety Training, for- eign police personnel can attend an lit-week course in "Penology and Corrections at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale. The Southern Illinois program includes in- struction in such topics as: "disposition of convicted offenders and juveniles; philosophy and practice of correctional institutional management; methods of correctional staff training and development." The program also Includes a course on "Correctional Institute Design and Construction." One begins to appreciiv;e the breadth of the Vietnam program by leading AID's 1971 budget request?$13 million is being sought to achieve the following "Project Targets": 2,,024bnWANN: I ? ? 1,4 A.0 move ent has been Identity Registration Program (NIRP) to reg- ister more than 12,000.000 persons 15 years of age and over by the end of 1971; continu- ing to provide basic and specialized training for approximately 40,000 police annually; providing technical assistance to the police detention system including planning and supervision of the construction of facilities for an additional 2,000 inmates during 1970; and helping to achieve a major increase in the number of police presently working (6,000) at the village level. This presentation, it must be remembered, only-represents programs under AID author- ity; missing from this prospectus are NP ac- tivities financed by the CIA and the Defense Department. Military Assistance funds are used to finance the activities of the parlia- mentary National Police Field Forces (NPFF) , which, by January 1969, constituted a small army of 12,000 men organized into 75 com- panies (our expansion plans call for a total complement of 22.500 men and 108 compan- ies by the end of 1970). Because of the "mili- tary commonality" of their equipment, all commodities support to the NPFF is provided by the Pentagon. The extent of CIA contri- butions to the National Police is of course impossible to determine; it is known, how- ever, that the CIA has been involved in modernizing Vietnam's secret police files since 1955. One does not have to invoke the sinister image of the CIA, however, to estab- lish beyond a doubt that the United States is intimately involved in every barbarous act committed by the South Vietnamese police on behalf of the Saigon government. Mr. ABOUREZK. Mr. President, there are other programs in the Office of Pub- lic Safety which concern me a great deal. According to reports which I received last year, phe U.S 0 I training foreign olicemen in a a remo e eser cam :o ? ? -a ro a emy in Los Fresnos, Tex., foreign policemen are taught the design, manufacture and po- tential uses of homemade bombs and in- cendiary devices by IPA instructors, At least 165 policemen have taken this ,"Technical Investigations Course" since it was first offered in 1969. While I was assured at the time that the course had been terminated, I have recently learned that it has resurfaced? this time in Edgewood. Md. According to E. H. Adkins, Deputy Director of the IPA, In an interview with Carol Clifford of the Los Angeles Times, the course has been "revamped" and renamed preven- tion and investigation of contemporary violence. In addition to the bomb school, I have learned that International Police Acad- emy graduates also attend a school for Psychological Operations at Fort Bragg, . . The school, which is held at the U.S. Army Institute for Military Assistance at Fort Bragg, N.C.,includes courses with such titles as subversive insurgent meth- odology, psychological operations in sup- port of internal defense and develop- ment, the role of intelligence and inter- nal defense. According to Adkins, the purpose of the school is to "teach police how the military handles psychological warfare problems." We have also learned that the IPA counts among its graduates security guards employed by Aramco, the Arabian American Oil Co. a0 o 001000413027394, with other reports of the end of TY 1971 ... assisting the National OPS activity which I have found in the June 21, 1974 Approved For Release 2005/07/20: CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD ? SENATE S 11203 last year including letters from foreign- ers indicating U.S. complicity in- the use of torture in countries abroad, but I think that the point is clear: ? This country is involved in an activity iwhich is totally divorced from the scope and intention of U.S. foreign aid. The Office of Public Safety and the Interrm- tional Police Academy mocks the purpose of other AID programs and has inflicted an indelible blemish on the past record and accomplishments of USAID pro- grams. ? For this reason, I am introducing an amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act of 1975 which would prohibit this in- sensible activity from continuing. Last year we were only partially suc- cessful in curtailing the activities of the OPS. Presently, only U.S. funds for police training in foreign countries is pro- hibited. Obviously, a great deal of activity has continued to persist. The Interna- tional Police Academy has now graduated 4,000 students and they continue to come. Supporting assistance to many of the most repressive governments in the world today continue to go on unabated. And new programs such as the "contemporary violence" course in Maryland continue to spring up. , It is time, I believe that the Congress terminates this program and all related activities in regard to police and prison support. I am hopeful that my colleagues will agree with me, and support this amendment when it comes up for con- sideration later this summer. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the text Of the amendment be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the amend- ment was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: , AMENDMENT No. 1611 On page 7, between lines 13 and 14, insert the following new section: PROHIBITING POLICE TRAINING SEC. 10. (a) Chapter 3 of part III of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 is amended by adding at the end thereof the following new section: "Skc. 659. (a) Prohibiting Police Train- ing.?None a the funds made available to carry out this or any other law, and none of the local currencies accruing under this or any other law, shall be used to provide training or advice, or provide any financial support, for police, prisons, or other internal security forces of any foreign government .or an ro ram Of internal i e i ence otrsur- ye lance on a of any foreign govern- ment within the United States or abroad. "(b) Subsection (a) of this section shall not apply? (1) with respect to assistance rendered under section 515(c) of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, or with respect to any authority of the Drug Enforce- ment Administration or the Federal Bureau , a Investigation which relates to crimes of f the nature which are unlawful under the laws of tbe United States; or "(2) to any contract entered into prior to the date of enactment of this section with any person, organization, or agency of the United States Government to provide per- sonnel to conduct, or assist in conducting, any such program. : Notwithstanding 'clause (2) , subsection (a) shall apply to any renewalAoL92:1,enAlpior_a_ny contract referred to inmeitAw.(4ir mil tered Into on or after such date of enact- ment." (b) Section 112 of such Act is repealed. On page y, line 16, strike Out "See. 10' and insert in lieu thereof "Sec. 11". AMENDMENT NO. 1512 (Ordered to be printed and referred' to the Committee on Foreign Relations.) Mr. ABOUREZK. Mr. President, today I am introducing amendment to S. 3394, the foreign aid bill which provides that no military assistance shall be made available to any foreign govern- ment (tying any period in which that government ciom nor-Ai/ow such in 11a1,1011K/ tngutuzacio, a- Pla ? ? ori: mnes Internatioru ? t_? ? Inte mer can omm ss on on ?? :n s prisons or ; s e Zrto .e CIL COMMUIrg inspections wi respect TO---suiegen vinttions o niTtIrdr fl o n a growing number of Americans who are deeply concerned over the ram- pant violations of human?rights and the need for a more effective response from the U.S. Government, Despite national differences, ideological variances, and numerous reacons, a large and ever-grow- ing number of American citizens find a common cause in coming to the aid of the oppressed in countries throughout the world. The sad but unfortunate fact is that gross and malicious violations of human rights continue to persist in almost every part of the world. Torture, mass impris- onment, summary executions, and dis- crimination, and other abhorent viola- tions continue to be used?sometimes quite overtly?in countries whose gov- ernments the United States consider to be among its closest friends. While no one disputes the role cif any government in guaranteeing to its citi- zens the most basic freedoms and rights accorded to every human being, it has be- come apparent in recent years that many governments not only neglect to guaran- tee these rights but actually deny them. Contrary to what many now believe, government repression is not limited to one particular ideology. Governments from every part of the political spectrum have at one time in recent years been ac- cused of violating the fundamental rights of its citizens. While the protection of human rights remains essentially the responsibility of each government, it becomes the respon- sibility of the international community when violations occur at the hands of the government. It must be the respon- sibility of concerned governments and in- ternational organizations to help defend the human rights of all people through- out the world. For this reason, the United Nations and its specialized agencies have de- veloped an extensive body of interna- tional law pertaining' to human rights. In the latest U.N. compilation of specific human rights instruments of the U.N. 13 declarations and 23 conventions are listed. Unfortunately, the U.S. record on ratification of human rights treaties has House Subcommittee ? on International Organizations and Movements earlier this year, the United States, through this failure to become a party to all but a few of the human rights treaties, has become increasingly isolated from the development of human rights law, There can be little question that this embar- rassing failure has impaired both our participation in international coopera- tion in human rights as well as any bi- lateral efforts which this Government may have considered to persuade govern- ments to respect international human rights standards. One major cause for the embarrassing failure on the part of the United States In this regard is that the people in this country have not been made aware of the inhuman atrocities and the repres- sive and barbaric tactics which some gov- ernments in the world insist on using as their only means of staying in power. They have not been told that people are thrown in prison in many countries simply because of their beliefs or their disagreement with their own govern- ment. They are not told that the most unbelievable forms of torture known to man are used daily by some government officials on their own citizens. Ameri- cans are unaware that thousands of in- nocent people are shot each year with- out so much as a hearing on the crimes which they are accused of committing. Most important of all, few 'U.S. taxpayers know that part of their hard earned wages are going, in taxes, to support these repressive measures?sometimes directly through the export of police and prison equipment and many times indi- rectly. through direct payments to many of the most repressives regimes in the world today. A large part of the problem lies di- rectly within our own State Department. The Department as well as the entire Nixon administration chooses to pretend that that repression, torture, and the abridgement of human rights simply does not exist. A recent example of this is the response received by Senator KENNEDY from the State Department in reply to the recommendations contained in a study mission report submitted by his Senate Subcommittee on Refugees. In regard to political, prisoners in South Vietnam, the Department stated: The Department of State cannot agree with the Study Mission's assertion that the rec- ord is clear that political prisoners exist in South Vietnam." We would add that the extensive evidence available to us simply does not sustain the highly publicized charges that civilian pris- oners are subjected to widespread, systematic mistreatment in the jails a the Republic of Vietnam. Time and again, the administration continues to attempt to solve the prob- lems of blatant and gross violations of human rights simply by denying that they exist. The State Department asser- tion that there are no rfUlttical prisoners n ou find ns of 9 I ? the Re u ee Subcommittee, a SO e scores o re or Re4eased2006P071/20 431Adllp s 0- ves a? utelY report on Human Rignts e ori Community submitted to Congress by the no question that these violations exist. izations whose S11204 Approved For ReftecdittggiD2OACIAMM19-f)0?StMigh 00040079-0 June 21, 1974 In Chile, while people are arrested, tor- tured, and summarily killed for any rea- son or even no reason, our Government Is asking $85 million in bilateral aid for the next fiscal year. Unlike other West- ern countries, we have offered no asylum to Chilean refugees. And we have said nothing, officially, about the murder and savagery. If the United States only spoke out against the torture, if our Embassy in Santiago was active in watching the trials and other visible manifestations of oppression, if Congress could, just once, attach conditions to aid, those who rule Chile, South Vietnam, and other repres- sive countries would listen. But we in the Government of the United States show no official concern for human rights. We have nothing to say about the repression and slavery of the Ache Indians in Paraguay or about the documented brutalities which have occurred in some of Paraguay's neigh- boring countries. In Korea, in Indonesia, in the Philippines, in Uruguay, in Brazil, and in scores of other countries whose governments are our "friends," the Gov- ernment of the United States sits idly by as while grave acts of torture and murder continue to be committed. In a recent article in the New York Times, Anthony Lewis summed up American indifference best: Some of the nagtiest governments In the world today were born or grew with Amer- ican aid. That being the case, the most mod- est view of our responsibility would require us to say a restraining word to them oc- casionally. But we say nothing, we hear nothing, we see nothing. Citing the State Department response regarding the nonexistence of South Vietnamese political prisoners which I mentioned earlier, Lewis writes: Thus thousands of non-communists in South Vietnamese jails were made to vanish, the twisted creatures in tiger cages waved away. Thus the idealism that once marked America's place in the world has become in- difference in the face of inhumanity. Mr. President, it is appalling that the concern for human rights is not even considered in our country's foreign pol- icy. It has been pushed from a low prior- ity to total invisibility behind the "more important considerations" of political, ? economic, and military decisionmaking. It has been totally neglected and all but dismissed as a factor in United States foreign policy. While one would be foolish to suggest that the human rghts factor should be the only consideration, or even the single, major factor in determining our foreign policy, there is little doubt that it ought to be accorded far greater import than what now exists. If the United States cannot play a role in setting some kind of example for other countries to follow, then surely we cannot expect some other country or international organization to do so either. In this country, respect for human rights is a fundamental tradition set down in the Constitution. The citizens in this country have long cherished this tradition as one of the most fundamental of all and oneArkkfisafivwdlikfig4M6Ackfa We have encetiKed other counIFfes their governments to accept the princi- ples of our Bill of Rights to the point they are violated. It simply has got to where we hive even helped write their start here. existing constitutions. The U.S. Govern- It is for this reason that I am now ment has had ample opportunity to im- introducing this amendment to the fiscal press upon these governments of the im- 1975 foreign aid bill. portance of guaranteeing human rights The sole Dui:pose of this amendment to all of their people?regardless of be- is re" Insure that those ?7MTe-WMTI^e lief, race, or ideology. imprisoned m countries whose overn- Yet, the State Department has taken mi ary a the position that questions involving hu- are being accorded' tne most basic oh man rights are domestic in nature and human rights, if, in the opinion oh any not relevant in determining bilateral one oh the tour organizations the Gov- relations. With almost weekly charges ernment is insuring these rights to its of serious violations of human rights citizens, then there would be no ques- somewhere in the world, the most the tion as to their eligibility for receiving Department has done is to make private U.S. foreign aid. However, if on the other inquiries and low-keyed appeals to the hand, the organization determines that government concerned, the rights of its citizens are being vio- While the State Department continues lated, the , country would not be eligible to rely on the "nonintervention" ration- for U.S. military assistance until those ale in cases involving human rights, it is rights are restored. all but forgotten at other times. In the The international organizations are a last 15 years alone, we have seen overt vital contributor to the international examples of U.S. intervention in the protection of human rights. Their value Dominican Republic, in Cuba, and in arises from their independence from Southeast Asia, merely lo name three, governments which enables them to view God only knows how many covert opera- objectively human rights situations in tions the United States has been involved various countries without regard to po- in during this same time period. liticol considerations. These traits of oh- In addition, the United States has not jectivity and political independence make hestitated to criticize violations of hu- it possible for nongovernmental orga- man rights in the Soviet Union?espe- nizstions to speak out against human cially in regard to the Solzhenitsyn at- rights violations when governments are fair. Even a vast number of Mernbers in silent. I am therefore convinced that the Senate have attempted to threaten with the 'assistance of such international to curtail trade with the Soviet Union if organizations, the United States can go its emigration policy for Jews is not a long way in insuring that at least in modified. Current U.S. policy, however, those countries who receive U.S. military has made it clear that Soviet violations aid, the basic human rights of their citi- of human rights will not deter efforts to zens are allowed. promote dttente with the Soviet Union. In recent years, the world has wit- I concur with those who argue that as nessed an alarming increase in the viola- the importance of ideology in interna- tions of human rights including the tional relations continues to lessen, the practice of torture. Amnesty Interna- United Statiss must begin to consider a tional estimates that torture exists in certain government's adherence to ob- at least 64 countries at lost count?many jective human rights standards as one of whose governments are considered Important criterion in determining our friends of ours. Until this country speaks foreign policy. Certainly, protection of out in defense of these rights, until we human rights is often a better measure use our massive influence with many of of the performance of a government than these countries to terminate their in- is ideology. humane treatment of their own citizens, In the last year, the Senate has hod the violations will continue to occur and the opportunity on several occasions to most likely increase. emphasize the importance of human This amendment is an attempt to use rights in the implementation of foreign that influence. Members of the Senate policy. We have attempted to establish will have the opportunity to put the Con- some criteria which could be considered gress on record as opposing the repug- in determining who should receive U.S. nant treatment of millions of people by foreign aid and just what that aid should their own government. It is an oppor- consist of. tunity to begin to put an end to the tor- On each occasion, however, the sup- ture, the unjust imprisonment, and the porters of this effort have been accused mass murders of thousands of innocent of intervening in the domestic affairs of people. I believe that it is not only an another country, of using faulty cri- opportunity, but a responsibility. teria in establishing for sign policy, and Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- of jeopardizing U.S. international po- sent that the text of the amendment be litical and military positions by offering inserted into the RECORD. or supporting such legislation. There being no objection, the amend- Mr. President, I Join those who be- ment was ordered to be printed in the lieve that arguments such as these are RECORD, as follows: completely wrong and totally without AMENDMENT No. 1512 merit. I believe that tie only way in which basic houman rights can be con- On page 7, between lines 13 sfid 14, insert the following: sidered in the overall t.etermination of ACCESS OP INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS TO foreign policy is for the Congress to dem- PRISON onstrate its concern. Members of Con- gress should not hesitate to speak out 1-2"seisisset.a1noc.ecaapter 3 of part III of the Foreign Act of 1961 is amended by adding aiggiftalnuatigOpErgibb 0 mom the Internationalfcalowin gnew section: Organiza- tional standards of human rights when tions to Prisons.?No funds made available to Juile 21, /A0geroved For Relei1NCIK0671201ACIA?RCIPM)995715010100040079-0 S 11205/ carry out this or any other law shall be used to provide military assistance or security sup- porting assistance or to make military sales, credit sales, or guaranties, to or for any for- eign government during any period in which that government does not allow the Inter- national Committee of the Red Cross, the International Commission of Jurists, Am- nesty International, or the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, free access into the prisons of that country for the sole purpose of conducting inspections with re- spect to alleged violations of human rights." On page 7, line 16, strike out "Sec. 10" and insert in lieu thereof "Sec. 11". TEMPORARY INCREASE IN THE PUBT.,iIC DEBT LIMIT?AMEND- MEN 'AMENDMENT NO. 1813 (Ordered to\ 1?e printed and to lie on the table.) Mr. MAGNUSO (for himself and Mr. MANSFIELD) submitte an amendment in- tended to be proposedby them jointly to the bill (H.R. 148323k o provide for a temporary increase in t public debt limit. Mr. MAGNUSON. Mr. Preside*, I sub- mit an amendment authored by t dis- tinguished majority leader (Mr. M&s- FIELD) and myself to set a certain do; December 31, 1974, by which time pri- vate citizens shall be permitted to own gold for investment purposes. Under Our amendment, the President would have discretionary authority to remove the present restrictions on private ownership before December 31. However, and I want to emphasize this point, the amendment would permit private ownership as of December 31- even if the President did not act. It should be noted that our amendment is essentially the same as the gold ownership provision contained in H.R. 15645 which has just recently been reported by the House Banking Commit- tee. Consequently, we are confident our amendment would be acceptable to the House. Mr. President, this is a matter in which Senator MANSFIELD and I both have long been interested, and we feel strongly that the time has arrived for resolving this is- sue- once and for all. Last year, of course, the Senate passed legislation (S. 929 that would have permitted private owne - ship of gold beginning on December/ 1, 1973. The House bill, however, did.hot permit private ownership until sucfthime as "the President finds and reportsoto the Congress that international mondary re- form shall have proceeded tole point where elimination of regulatio,' is on pri- vate ownership of gold will not adversely affect the United States Lkernational monetary position." As Stators know, the House provision pre tiled in con- ference. Mr. President, we can,itee how it might be beneficial to allow tiie administration some flexibility in bringing the present restrictions on privaee ownership to an end. However, all of Am in this body know from hard experience how matters of this sort have a habit of just dragging on and on without filial resolution. The amendtrygnt we are offering today on the other hand of assuring that this matter will be brought to a final conclu- sion within a reasonably short period of time. Mr. President, I urge adoption of the amendment. A nIENDMENT NO. 1514 (Ordered to be printeC. and to lie on the table.) Mr. CHILES. Mr. Pres:.dent, I submit an amendment to H.R. 14832, which would prohibit the reduction of certain veterans' benefits as a result of increase in social security or railroad retirement benefits or certain other annuities. I ask unanimous consent that the text of the amendment be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the amend- ment was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: ? AMENDMENT No. 1514. At the end of the bill add a new sectio as follows: SEC. . (a) Section 415(g) of title, United States Code, is amended by adffing at the end thereof a new paragraph fol- lows: . "(4) Notwithstanding the pro Sions of n paragraph (1) of this subsectio n deter- mining the annual income of arfOerson for any year there shall not be lnctiided in such ncome? (A) the amount of 9t;ii increase in , nittithly insurance benefitpliayable to such perg-iduring such year..Onder section 202 or 22gd the Social Secuzity Act, the amount of any Ikrease in the Aionthly payment of annuity ol:`,_vension payable to such person during such. year unAer the Railroad Retire- ment Act of 198115,orlithe Railroad Retirement Act of 1937, or fitr amount of any cost-of- living adjustrnenan annuity under sec- tion 8340 of tltV 5, lalted States Code, if? "(i) such 11Crease rbfyilta from provision of law enacted after Dedebaber 30, 1973, pro- viding increases in the l'Thonthly benefits ? payable trm eliiividuals entitled to benefits under sulh section 202 or 2`jf.3pt the Social SecuritFj, ct, such increase rcsula from pro- visiona, of law enacted after sucIVelate pro- viding Increase; in railroad retiremea,,Toene- fits,-,dr such adjustment results from'keust- of,Ifying adjustment in a civil service- tliement annuity effective after Decembet, W. 1973; and ? ??4.? "(ii) for the month (or any portion there- of) in which the Act containing such pro- visions of law was enacted or for which such adjustment was effective, such person was entitled to (I) a monthly insurance benefit under section 202 or 223 of the Social Se- curity Act, m?-usthly payment of annuity or pension under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937 or the Railroad Retirement Act of 1935, or an annuity under subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 5, United States Code, (or other comparable provision of law), as the case may be, and (II) dependency and indemnity compensation under the provi- sions of this chapter; and "(B) the amount or any lump-sum pay- ment paid to such person during such year if? '(i) such payment is attributable to an Increase in (I) the monthly insurance bene- fits to which ,;lich person is entitled under -section 202 or 223 of the Social Security Act, or (II) the amount of the monthly payment of annuity or pension payable to such per- son under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1936 or the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937; "(ii) such increase results f::om the enact- oft,'e December 30, 19'73, of any. need on one prov1- addresses bot or those concerns--the Egon of_ Low_ nwreasin2aa =Datil iiitA tion some exibil tY and the neemity efits under section 202 or 2211 01 the Social ? Security Act, or (II) the monthly payme,,fies' of annuity or pension payable to indiviplials under the Railroad Retirement Act 1935 or the Railroad Retirement Act of 1,07; and "(iii) such lump-sum payment 4paid sep- arately from the rest of any mr,9lthly insur- ance benefit of such person uriAr section 202 or 223 of the Social Securlt, Act or of any monthly payment of annuy or pension pay- able to such person unapt the Railroad Re- tirement Act of 1937." -; (b) Section 603 of?iitle 38, United States Code, is arnendedviy adding at the end thereof a new snhtection as follows: "(d) Notwitlittanding the provisions of subsection (t)f this section, in determin- ing the annual income of any person for any ? year for puftioses of this chapter or the first sentence.zOf section 9(b) of the Veterans' Pensio0ict of 1959 or any prior law, there shall npt be included in such income? "oy the amount of any increase in mrthly insurance benefits payable to such pp Son during such year under section 202 Ve 223 of the Social Security Act, the amount - bf any increase in the monthly annuity or pension payable to such person during such year under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1935 or the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937, or the amount of any cost-of-living adjust- . ment of annuity under section 8340 of title 5, United States Code, if? ? "(A) such increase results from provisions of law enacted after December 30, 1973, pro- viding increases in the monthly benefits pay- able to individuals entitled to benefits under such section 202 or 223 of the Social Security Act, such increase results from provisions of law enacted after such date providing increases in railroad retirement benefits, or such adjustment results from a cost-of-living adjustment in a civil service retirement annuity effective after December 30, 1973, and "(B) for the month (or any portion there- of) in which the Act containing such pro- visions of law was enacted or for which such adjustment was effective, such person was entitled to (1) a monthly insurance benefit under section 202 or 223 of the Social Secu- rity Act, a monthly payment of annuity or pension under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937 or the Railroad Retirement Act of 1935, or an annuity under subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 5, United States Code (or other comparable provision of law), as the case may be, and (II) pension under the provisions of this chapter or the first sentence of section 9(b) of the Veterans' Pension Act of 1959 or any prior law. "(2) the amount of any lump-sum pay- Went paid to such person during such year , "eitiv. such payment is attributable to an increa5h.;4n (1) the monthly insurance bene- fits to which such person is entitled under section 262\or 223 of the Social Security Act, or (ii) ;tile amount of the monthly pay- ment of annhilly or pension payable to such person under tiOtRailroaci Retirement Act of 1935 or the Rallrafq, Retirement Act of 1937; "(13) such increasp results from the en- actment, after Decembpr 30, 1973, of any provision of law increa:'ng (1) the monthly benefits payable to incW lduals entitled to benefits under section 202 .57723 of the Social Security Act, or (ii) the risof:thly payments of annuity or pension payable 10 individuals under"the Railroad Retirement "?,t of 1935 or the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937; :and "(C) such lump-sum payment H paid separately from the rest of any monthly in- surance benefit of such person under section 202 or 223 of the Social Security 'Act or of any monthly payment of annuity or pension payable to such person under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1935 or the Railroad Re- tirement Act of 1937.". Q00340146 1614 earsertyo I rheeard "e a: se "An Act public debt limit, and for other purposes." Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 93D CONGRESS 2D SESSION S. 3394 IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES APRIL 29, 1974 Mr. SPARNMAN (by request) introduced t Ice following bill; which was read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations A BILL To amend the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, and for other purp( )ses. it Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representa- 2 tives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, 3 That this Act may be cited ns the "Foreign Assistance Act 4 of 1974". 5 TITLE I MIDDLE EAST PEACE 7 SEC. 2. The Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 is amended S by adding at the end thereof the following new part: Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Irr VI 1.101. ST XTEMENT ( ingress recognizes that a peaceful and lasting resolution of the di- visive issue, that have contributed to tension and conflict between nations in the Middle East is essential to the se- curity 4 the United States and the ell ris.e of world penee. TI Congre, declares and finds that the United States can and should ulav a constructive role in securing a just and I) durable peace in the lliddle East liv facilitating increased Itt nnderstandine- between the Arab nations and Israel, and by Ii it.sistinti, the nations in the area. in their Mutts to achieve i2 economic pri irrus and poruical stability, which are the es- sential Mimi:Ilion, for a just and durable per cc. It is the 14 sense of Coni,ress that United States assistant.c programs in 15 the Middle East shonld he designed to pronure mutual re- it; spc and security among the nations in the arta and to ft. 17 ter a climate conducive 10 increwsed economic development, thereby Conti:11)111111g In a c mmunitv of free, secure, and 19 prospering nation, in the Middle Last 20 ''SE( . 902. ENERAI, A FITIORITY.?The Pt CSMVIII is an- 21 (lionized to furnish. on such terms and (-()ndit tot s as he may 22 oetermine. a:,istaliet, minimized liv this Act and credits and 2. guaranties authorized I iv the Foreign -Military 4ales Act in 21 order to carry mit the purposes of this part. 25 "SEC. 90, AuxwATIoNs.?(a) Of the ftmds approp Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved For Release 2005/07/20: CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 3 1 ated to carry out chapter 2 of part II of this Act, during the 2 fiscal year 1975 up to -100,000,000 may be made available 3 for military assistance in the Middle East. 4 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 " (b) Of the funds appropriated to carry out chapter 4 of part II of this Act, during the fiscal year 1975 up to $377,500,000 may be made available for security support- ing assistance in the Middle East. " (c) Of the aggregate (1ihng on credits and guaranties established by section 31 (b) of the Foreign Military Sales Act, during the fiscal year 1975 up to $330,000,000 shall be available for countries in the Middle East. "SEc. 904. (a) SPECIAL IREQ1JnEIENTs FUND.? There are authorized to be appropriated to the President for the fiscal year 1975 not to exceed 100,000,000 to meet special requirements arising trona time to time in carrying out the purposes of this part, in addition to funds otherwise avail- able for such purposes. The funds authorized to be appropri- ated by this section shall bc available for use by the Presi- dent for assistance authorized by this Act in accordance with the provisions applicable to The furnishing of such assistance. Such funds are authorized to emain available until expended. "(b) The President shall keep the Committee on For- eign Relations and the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives cur- Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 4 rently informed on the pr graming and obligation of funds under subsection (a) ." Six.. 3. Section 620 (p) of the Foreign Assistance Act 4 of 1961 is repealed. (i 7 Ti Fix, II 1 N I NA POSTWAR RECONST1?I7CT1ON SEC. 4. Section 802 of the Foreign As:istance Act of 8 1961 is amended to read as follows: 9 "SEC. 802. At-rpoRtz km)\-.?Th .re are authorized to m be appropriated to the President to furnish assistance for 11 relief and ? ue.truction of South Vietnam. Cambodia. and 19 Laos as authorized hv this part, in addition to funds other- 13 wise availahle for such purposes. for the 11SeIll Vear 1974 not 14 to exceed 8504.000,000, and for the fiscal year 1975 not to 15 exceed $939,800.000 which amounts are authorized to re- it; main available until expended." TITLE III 18 FourinN ASSISTANCE AcT A MENDMENTS 19 DEVELOP 11 ENT ASSISTANCE A 11-1 DOP I Z ATIONS 90 SEr. 5. Section 103 of the Foreiffn A ssktance Act of 21 1961 is amended bv striking out the words "$291,000,000 for each of the fiscal vears 1974 and 1975" and inserting in 93 lien thereof ":29 000.000 for the fiscal year 1974, and 24 8546,300,000 for the fiscal year 1975". Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 5 1 HOUSING GuARANTTE8 2 SEC. 6. Section 223 (i) of the Foreign Assistance Act 3 of 1961 is amended .by striking out "June 30, 1975" and 4 inserting in lieu thereof "June 30, 1976". 5 INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS. AND PROGRAMS 6 SEC. 7. Section 302 (a) of the Foreign Assistance Act of 7 1961 is amended by striking out the words "for the fiscal 8 year 1975, 8150,000,000" and inserting in lieu thereof "for 9 the fiscal year 1975, $153,900,000". 10 MILITARY ASSISTANCE 11 SEC. 8. (a) Chapter 2 of part of the Foreign As- 12 sistance Act of 1961 is amended as follows: 13 (1) In section 504 (a) , strike out "$512,500,000 14 for the fiscal year 1911" and insert in lieu thereof 15 "$985,000,000 for the fiscal year 1975." 16 (2) In section 506 (a) ? 17 (A) Strike out "the fiscal year 1974" in each 18 place it appears and insert in :lieu thereof "the fiscal 19 year 1975"; and 20 (B) At ? the ead of subsection (a) add the 21 following sentence: "Orders not exceeding $250,- 22 000,000 in value may be issued under this sub- 23 section, upon such determination, during th.e period 24 of any succeeding fiscal year that precedes the S. 3394 2 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 111101011411 of lorislation authorizing appropriations 2 for toilitarN assistance for that lisral year.". CO After section 506, add the following new 4 section: 5 Situ. 507. LIMITATION ON THE OR OF EXCESS fi 7 ' (a) Except as provided in 'section 506, the aggregate 8 value of excess defense articles ordered during the fiscal 9 year 1975 tinder this chapter for foreign countries and inter- 10 11 12 13 11111it nal 0 ,IttniZatiMIS shall not exceed $150,000,000. ?? (h) The Secretary of State shall promptly and fully inform the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Foreign Relations and the Committee on 14 A ppropria le Senate of each decision to furnish on a 15 grant basis to any country excess defense art cies which are 16 major wet pons systems to the extent such major weapons 17 system was not included in the presentation material pre- 18 viously submitted to the Congress. Additiomwhlv, the Sure- 19 tars' ol State shall also subunit a quarterly report to the Coim- 20 listing by country the total value of all deliveries of 21 excess defense articles. disclosing both the aggregate original 22 anotisition cost and the aguegate value at the time of de- livery.- 24 (14 Section 655 (c) of the Foreign Assistance Act of Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 7 1 1961 shall not apply to assi lance authorized under any pro- 2 vision of law for the fiscal year 1975. 3 (c) Section 8 of the Act entitled "An Act to amend the 4 Foreign Military Sales Act, and for other purposes", ap- proved January 12, 1971 (84 Stat 2053) , as amended, 6 is repealed, effective July 1, 1974. 7 SECURITY SUPPORTING ASSISTANCE 8 SEC. 9. Section 532 of the Foreign Assistance Act of 9 1961 is amended by striking out "for the fiscal year 10 1974 not to exceed 125,000,000, of which not less than 11 $50,000,000 shall be available solely for Israel" and insert- 12 ing in lieu thereof "for the fiscal year 1975 not to exceed 13 14 15 385,500,000". TITLE IV FOREIGN MILITARY SALES ACT AMENDMENTS 16 SEC. 10. (a) The Foreign Military Sales Act is amended 17 as follows: 18 (1) Section 3 (d) is mended to read as follows: 19 "(d) A country shall remain ineligible in accordance 20 with subsection (c) of thi,, section until such time as the 21 President determines that such violation has ceased, that the 22 country concerned has giv(?ii assurances satisfactory to the 23 President that such violation will not recur, and that, if such 24 violation involved the transfer of sophisticated weapons with- Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 8 out the consent of the President. such weapons have been o rot rned to the country concerned." 3 (2) In section 24 (a) and section 24 (b) the parch- 4 thetical phrase in each is amended to read: " (excluding 5 United States Clovernment agencies other than the Fed- ('ral Financing Bank) ". 7 (3) .(,,etion 24 (o) is amended to rad as follows: 8 " (c) Funds made available to carry out this Act shall In' obligated in an amount equal to 25 per centuni of the 10 principal amount of contractual liability related to any guar- 11 may isiied prior to July 1 1974, under this section. Funds 19 made available to carry out this Act shall be obligated in an 13 amount equal to l U per centum of the principal amount of 14 contractual liability related to any guaranty issued after 15 J ine 30, 1974, under this section. All the funds so obligated it; shall constitute a single reserve for the paynent of claims 17 18 19 90 21 (yi) under such guaranties, and only such of the funds in the reserve as may be in excess from time to tunic of the total principal amount I contractual liability related to all out- standing guaranties under this section shall be deobligated and transferred to the general fund of the areasury. Any (rtetranties issued hereunder shall be backed by the full faith o., and credit of the I' 'lied States." 24 (4) in suction 31- 25 (A) Subsection (a) is amended by striking Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 1 3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 out 1325,000,000 For fiscal ,year 1974" and in- serting in lieu thereof "$555,000,000 for the fiscal year 1975"; and (B) Subsection (b) is amended by striking out "$73,000,000 for the fiscal year 1974, of which amount not less than $300,000,000 shall be avail- able to Israel only" and inserting in lieu thereof $872,500,000 for the fiscal year 1975.". (5) In section 33? (A) subsection (a) is repealed; (B) subsection (b) is redesignated as subsec- tion (a) ; and (C) a new subsection (b) is added as follows: "(b) The President may waive the limitations of this section when he determines it to be important to the security of the United States and promptly so reports to the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Committee on For- eign Relations of the Senate." (b) Obligations initially charged against appropriations made available for purposes authorized by section 31 (a) of the Foreign Military Sales Act after June 30, 1974, and prior to the enactment of the amendment of that Act by paragraph (3) of subsection (a) of this section in an amount equal to 25 per centum of the principal amount of contrac- tual liability related to guaranties issued pursuant to section Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 I 0 24 (a) of that Act shall be adjusted to reflect such amend- 9 meat ',Aid, I?. per credit to the appropriation: made available in the fiscal year 1975 to carry out that Act. Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 93D CONGRESS 2D SESSION S. 3394 A BILL To amend the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, and for other purposes. By Mr. SP kR1121TAN APRIL 29, 1974 Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 June 21, 1974 ApprovedCRONINIESSIMMOrt2COUVREM201357A000100040079-0 STATEMENT BY SENATOR BROOK I am delighted to join the Senator from Wisconsin (Mr. PsoXelleS) in sponsoring legislation o amend the Truth-in-Lending Act to subs ute a qui tam remedy for class actions. When the ubconunittee on Consumer Credit was wor s g on Truth-in-Lending Act Amendments we found that the Federal courts had exper ced problems in certify- ing class action sui i, for the enforcement of that Act. Section 13'..f the Truth-in-Lend- ing Act permits con mars to bring civil actions in the Federa ourts against any creditor who fails to disc e the information required by the Act. A pro m has arisen in applying the minimum Ha lity provisions of the Act in class action su volving mil- lions of consumers. As a resu the present civil remedy serves neither th consumers intended to be aided by the Tru in-Lend- ing Act nor the creditors inten to be subject to its controls. In addition, t ling of the Supreme Court in the Eisen c re- quiring persons initiating class action its to notify at their expense all other per s in the class, wit make it next to impossi for consumers to utilize the class actio rernedy. As a solution to the problem a number of scholars have sugeeeted that the class action device be statutorily limited to the recovery of actual damages and ? that a new tech- nique?the qui tam action?be utilized to encourage the private attorney general to prominently participate in the enforcement of truth-in-lending. In an effort to fashion a legislative ap- proach which Will improve the effectiveness of the Truth-in-Lending Act, / join with Senator Proxmire in offering this amendment to the Truth-in-Lending Act. This will give the public an opportunity to comment on the provisions in this legislation, on which I retain an open mind. 8.3690 Be it enacted by the Senate and Rouse of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, Section 130(a) of the Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. Sec. 1640) is amended to read as follows: "(a) (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section, any creditor who, with respect to any person, fails to comply with any re- quirement imposed under this title (othe than Chapter 3) is liable to such person an amount equal to the greater of (1) e the finance charges imposed but not less an $100 nor more than $1,000, or (2) the tual damages sustained by that person; Pr however, however, That in the case of a viol,on in- volving conduct which was part of a editor's, course of conduct with respect which a judgment has been entered aga that cred- itor pursuant to Paragraph (3 the creditor Is liable under this proviso r any actual damages sustained by a per n bringing an action wader this Paragrap "(2) (A) Except as oth wise provided in this section, any obligor, ether or not actu- ally damaged, may bri g a civil action in any United States dist ct court pursuant to Title 28, U.S.C. Sec. 22 for a declaration that a creditor of such ligor has engaged in a course of conduct in violation of the re- quirements impo d by chapter 2 of this title (provided t at at least one such viola- tion occurred v in one year before the initi- ation of the tion), for injunctive relief and for the r ef provided by Paragraph (3). "(8) Exce t as otherwise provided in this section, an bona fide consumer protection organizati n, whether or not actually dam- aged, bring a civil action in any United States strict court pursuant to Title 28, U.S.C. 201 for a declaration that a creditor has e gaged in a course of conduct in viola- tion the requirements imposed by chapter 2 of this title (provided that at lease one such violation occurred nithin one year be- fore the initiation Of the action and regard- less of whether such or' aization is an obli- gor of such creditor), fee' injunctive relief and for the relief provelled by Paragraph 3. In the case of actions lin Ight under this sub- paragraph, the court sheet determine, as. soon as practicable, whether he plaintiff is a bona. fide consumer protect: organization. In making this determtnation, the court shall consider, among other eactors, the length of time the organization as been in active ex- istence, the nature and nivel of its actinities, the size of its member-1p, and its experi- ences in consumer preelection litigation. An organization establiehed solely or primarily for the purpose of bringing the particular action in which the determination is being made is not a bona fide consumer protection organization. "(C) The person bringing an action 'under this paragraph shall &liege all such courses of conduct by the cretin:or that are claimed to be in violation and iniown to the person. Such action shall be brought in the name of and for the United etates as well as to the private plaintiff. The: person bringing t action shall immediate i y give notice of e ndency thereof to tile United Stet by ding to the Board e id to the A rney ral of the United States by etified a copy of the etnnolaint to er with a so ary statement in writ' outlining the e nee and information the posses- sion of plaintiff ma eerial the effective prosecut of the action, copy of the notice, wi roof of re. g, shall be filed with the c t. If wi1,i sixty days after notice, the ed S es fails to file with the Court a to il n. re of its intervention as a co-plaintiff, earlier declines in writing to the co I enter such action, . the action may ?eel on by the person bringing it, pro ed t the court finds, on motion made such .son within 61) days after the e ration of ch period or the declinatio f the Units tates, that such person c and will adve ia prosecute the action. "(3) . the event that more n one civil actio shall be institute e pursu to Para- gra (2) involving tin same cou of con- d the court shall determine in h case e plaintiff will best, :cost effectiv rep- esent the position or positions adve to the defendant, and shell stay furthee o- ceedings in the other acetone until that has been adtudicated: between two plainti who represent those petitions equally well, the one who filed first !shall be preferred. If a person bringing such ectiern, or the United States, prevails in the nation, the court may enjoin the course of conduct, and shall im- pose a civil penalty or the creditor within the limitations specifteet in Paragraph (4), of which amount not less than $50/0 nor more than $10,000 ehail be awarded 1:0 the rerson who prevailed end the balance shall be awarded to the Urieed States. No such civil penalty shall be ievarded in any other action with respect tc the same course of conduct of the credit: occurring prior to the time at which the iudgment imposing the penalty or enjoinine such conduct be- comes final. "(4) A creditor shall s liable under para- graph (3) for not less than $15,000 nor more than $200,000. In deterinining the amount of this civil penalty, the eourt shall consider the resources of the creeitor, the number of persons adversely affected by the course of conduct, and any alit ireative action taken by the creditor, prior the filing of the suit, to achieve comphence with chapter 2. The court may permit the defendant to pay the United States share of the judgment in installments. "(5) In any succesesul action brought under paragraph (1) or (2), the coure shall award to the person who prevailed in the action costs and a reasonable attorney's fee. In determining the amount of a reasonable attorney's fee, the court shall con en among other relevant factors, (A) the time required to prosecut e ac- tion; (S) the novelty and difficulty the issues involved and the skill requi o prosecute the cause; (C) the contingency o rtainty of suc- cess; and, (D) the amount of unsel fees that the defendant incurred connection with its defense of the act The fact that a nttff is represented by an attorney retai or employed by a non- profit organ i ion, shall not preclude an award of ey's fees under this sub- section. "(6) sectiot. ny not be enforced in a class ac- tio remedies provided by this sub- 2. The amendments to section 130(a) the Truth in Lending Act made by this at shall apply to actions initiated after the date of enactment of this Act and to any action pending on such date if such action is so amended with the consent of all par- ties. All other actions pending on the date of enactment of this Act shall be subject to the provisions of section 130(a) in effect prior to the date of enactment of this Act. ADDITIONAL COSPONSORS OF BILLS s. 2801 At the request of Mr. PROxeLIRE, the Senator from California (Mr. CRANSTON) was added as a cosponsor of S. 2801, to prevent the Food and Drug Administra- tion from regulating safe vitamins as dangerous drugs. S. 3879 At the request of Senator MeGOVERN, the Senator from Georgia (Mr. TAL- MADGE), the Senator from Alabama (Mr. ALLEN) , the Senator from Mississippi (Mr. EASTLAND), the Senator from Min- nesota (Mr. HUMPHREY) , the Senator from Kentucky (Mr. HunmEsToN) , the Senator from Iowa (Mr. CLARK) ,the Sen- ator from Texas (Mr. BENTSEN), the Sen- ator from New Mexico (Mr. MONTOYA) , the Senator from Vermont (Mr. AIKEN) , the Senator from North Dakota (Mr. YOUNG) , the Senator from Nebraska (Mr. trims), the Senator from Kansas (Mr. LE), the Senator from Oklahoma (Mr. B moN) , the Senator from Colorado ( HASKELL), and the Senator from Sou Dakota (Mr. ABOUREZK) were adde cosponsors of S. 3679, a bill to provid mergency financing for live stock pr cers. SENATE OLUTION 345?ORIG- INAL RES ION REPORTED AU- THORIZIN UPPLEMENTAL EX- PENDITURE Y THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN LATIONS (Referred to the mmittee on Rules and Administration.) Mr, FULBRIGHT, the Commit- tee on Foreign Relatio reported the following resolution: S. REs. 345 Resolved, That Senate Resol el 241, 93d Congress, agreed to March 1, 1974, mended as follows: (a) In section 2, strike out th ount $708,800" and insert in lieu ereof "$851,000". Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 1200 Approved For RedgancAlMeitiALCROVEMISIMCM100040079-0 June AMENDMENT OF THE FOREIGN ASSISTANCE ACT?AMENDMENTS AKEND MINT NO. 1611 (Ordered to be printed and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations Mr. ABOUREZE submitted an amend- ment intended to be proposed by him to the bill (S. 33941 to amend the libretto Assistance Act of 1981, and for other purposes. Mr. ABOURECE. Mr. President, the now familiar panacea for domestic ills, law and order, has long been used to describe American objectives in the trobuled areas of Africa, Asia. and Latin America. While the Federal Government did not start aiding local U.S. police agencies until 1968, we have been sup- plying the police of selected underde- veloped nations with equipment. arms, and training since 1954. U.S. funds have been used to construct the National Po- lice Academy of Brazil, to renovate and expand the South Vietnamese prison sys- tem, and to install a national police com- munications network in Colombia. The Agency for International Developmeni. estimates that over 1 million foreign po- licemen have received some training oi supplies through the U.S. public safety program?a figure which includes 100,000 Brazilian police and the entire 120,000- man National Police Force in South Vietnam. U.S. foreign aid Programs in the un- derdeveloped third world call for a modest acceleration of econonlIc growth, to be achieved wherever poe.sible through the normal prontrnairing activ- ities of U.S. corporations and lending in- stitutions. It is obvious, however, that an atmosphere of insecurity and rebel- liousness does not provide an attractive climate for investment. In the rapidly urbanizing nations of the third world. civil disorders have become a common phenomenon as landless peasants stream to the cities in search of economic and cultural opportunities. Since most of these countries cannot satisfy the aspirations of these new city - dwellers under present economic and so- cial systems built up tensions are Increas- ingly giving way to attacks on the status quo. After his UMW tour of Latin Amer- ica, Nelson Rockefeller noted in his re- port to the President that while Latin armies: Have gradually improved their capabilities for dealing with Castro-type agrarian guer- rillas. it appeared that radical revolutionary elements In the hemisphere are increasingly turning toward urban terrorism In their al - tempts to bring down the existing order. This prediction has already been borne out in Brazil and Uruguay, where urban guerrillas have in the past staged spec- tacular bank robberies and iticinapptuge Since the late 1950's a paramount con- cern of American policymakers has been the preservation of social stability in countries deemed favorable to U.S. trade and investment. UB. military planning has been shaped by the need to provide, on a moment's notice counterinsurgency forces that can be flown in to the aid of friendly regimes threatened by popu- lar insurrection. The military assistance program has been used to upgrade the capabilities of indigenous forces to over- come the rural guerrilla forces. Melte, on the premise that the police constitute the first line of defense against subver- sion, the Agency for International De- velopment ha a funneled American funds and supplies into the hands of third world police forces. During hearings on the foreign assist- ance appropriations for 1965, AID Ad- ministrator David Bell described the ra- tionale behind U.S. police assistance pro- grams as follows: Maintenance of law and order Including internal security is one of the fundamental responsibilities of government... Successful discharge of this responsibility is imperative If Es nation is to establish and maintain the environment of stability and security 84) essential to economic, social, and political progress... Plainly, the United States has very great interests in the creation and maintenance of an atmosphere of law and order under hu- mane, civil concepta and control . . . When there is a need, technical assistance to the police of developing nations to meet their responeibiiities promotes and protects these US. Interests. The public safety program is not large in comparison to the military aid pro- gram?but its supporters can muster some impressive arguments in its favor. It is argued, for instance, that the pollee being interspersed among the copulation?are mere effective than the military in controlling low-scale insur- gency. Supporters of the police assistance program also point out that police forces ere cheaper to maintain than military forces, since they do not require expen- sive "hardware" like planes, tanks, and artillery. These arguments, advanced by men like Col. Edward Lansdale, formerly of :he CIA. received their most favorable response from President John F. Ken- oedy and his brother Robert, then the Attorney General, In the early 1960's. Presidential backing was responsible for a substantial expansion of the public safety program in 1962, and for the cen- tralization of all U.S. police assistance activities in AED's Office of Public Safety. The State Department memorandum es- tablishing OPS is noteworthy for its strong language--the memo. issued in November 1962, declared that AID? Vesta the Office of Public Safety with the primary responsibility and authority for pub- lic safety programs and gives that Office a series of powers and responsibilities which %All enable it to act rapidly, vigorously, and Effectively ? .. powers greater than any other Leohnica: office or division of AID. The two Kennedys also gave enthusi- :Lane support to the creation of an Inter- American Police Academy in the Panama canal Zone. Later, in order to open the Academy to police officers from other countries, it was moved to Washington, D.C.. and reorganised as the Interna- tional Police Academy. The Office of Public Safety Is empow- ered to statist Third World police orga- nizations in three ways: First, by sending "public safety advisers" who provide "in- country training for rank and file Po- licemen only at the expense of the host ountry ; second, by providing training at the International Police Academy and other U.S. schools for senior police offi- cers and technicians; and, third, by ship- 21, 1974 Ling weapons, ammunition, radios, patrol cars, jeeps, chemical munitions, and re- 1 net! equipment. Last year, after the passage of an amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act of 1974, I directed a letter to USAID r squesting information on what the OPS program would encompass in the next 2 years, taking in consideration the new e mgressional limitations imposed on C IPS. Mr. Matthew Harvey, AID Assistant Administrator for Legislative Affairs, re- s )onded only in part to the question by c loosing to omit the OPS plans for the cnntinued export of police and para- military weaponry. Harvey states: During the next two years, the Office of Public; Safety projected assistance to a num- bir of countries. Currently Public Safety grograms are being implemented in le coun- ts les. Oommltments include Public Safety ad- v Dory assistance mainly in the field of ad- inistration and management ?training both in-country and at the International P slice Academy in Washington. D.C.?corn- wodity assistance which includes items such a: vehicles. communcations, police type w moons and training aids. The International Police Academy is ached- ed to provide training for police officers from nations of the free world. Of high pilority is training of foreign police officers A 20 are responsible for the maintenance co law enforcement resources which are ammitted to the international narcotics ccntrol efforts. The Public Safety program also includes a training program for the A' rice region which will enable police offi- etre from 21 countries to receive U.S. train- ing. The Office of Public Safety Is also sched- uled to provide TDY technical assistance to ccuntri.s in the development of the police institution. The Office of Public Safety has Ix en tasked to provide technical assistance In developing narcotic control programs which include such specialized fields as criminalistics. records and communications. b. As you are probably aware the Senate/ House conferees have reported out the for- e! fri aid bill which under Section 112 re- mires the ending of all Public Safety aver- se-Es programs. If signed into law in this to-m. the Bill would not affect the activ- ities of the International Police Academy in Washington. The Academy would continue to train notice officers in modern notice man- apement and techniques as at present. Usincr Latin America to measure the -scone of these activities, we find that over If-n nubile safety advisors have been sta- tioned in 15 countries until now, and that seine 2.r0m lAtin nolice officers have re- lved training at the International Po- lite Academy. In addition, over $42 mil- li( on has been given to these countries in 0-213 supporting assistance Prorersms in e last 3 years alone. Until 1972, the le tding beneficiary of the public safety ogram in Latin America was Brazil, w itch received almost $8 million in OPS funds by the middle of 1972. Since then, tte largest recipients of OPS aid have be en Colombia and Guatemala. In providing this kind of assistance, 0'S notes that: Moat countries possess a unified civil Been- ril yr service which "in addition to regular pc lice include pant military units within crii police organizations and paramilitary fovea such as gendarmeries, constabularies, and civil guards which perform police func- Ursa and have as their primary mission ni.Eintaining Internal security. Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved Feo?eitysti9ftge7 j,/,2%,7e.S.ItApRIDIRSINKYMA000100040079-0 S 11201 itine 21, 1974 The AID program is designed to en- cornnass all of these functions. According to OPS: Individual Public Safety programs, while varying from country to country, are focused in general on develoning within the civil se- curity forces a balance of (1) a capability for regular police operations, with (2) an in- vestigative capability for detecting and iden- tifying criminal and/or subversive individ- uals and organizations and neutralizing their activities, and with (3) a capability for con- trolling militant activities ranging from demonstrations, disorders, or riots through small-scale guerrilla operations. As noted in the 1962 State Depart- ment memo, OPS possesses unique pow- ers not granted to other AID bureaus. These Powers enable OPS to "act ranidlY, vigorously and effectively" in aiding Latin regimes threatened by Popular up- risings When a crisis develops in a Latin canital, OPS officials often stay up "night after night" in their Washington, ac., office to insure that needed supplies?in- cluding radios and tear gas--reach the beleaguered Police of the friendly regime. AID officials insist that public safety assistance is "not given to SupPort dic- tatorships." But there are annarently ex- ceptions to this rule: Administrator Bell told a Senate Committee in 1965 that: It is obviously not our purpose or intent to assist a head of state who is repressive. On the other hand, we are working in a lot of countries where the governments are con- trolled by people who have shortcomings. Not wanting to embarass AID or any of the people we support who have "shortcomings" Bell did not mention names. It is entirely possible that one country Bell was referring to is Brazil--a country which until 1972 enjoyed a substantial OPS contribution despite well-docu- mented reports that political prisoners are regularly being tortured by the police. In justifying continued OPS aid to such regimes, Bell explained that: The police are a strongly anti-Communist force right now. For that reason it is a very important force to us. It is no surprise that these men should consider a small amount of allegedly Communist-led terrorism to be sufficient reason to subsidize the repressive ap- paratus of a totalitarian regime. THE "PUBLIC SAFETY PROGRAM" IN SOUTH VIETNAM According to a letter I received from the State Department dated February 5, 1974, Assistant Administrator Harvey stated that after June 14, 1974, there will be no South Vietnamese police officers admitted to training courses of what- ever nature at the International Police Academy. In another letter, dated January 28, the Department states that: No U.S. personnel, either civilian or mili- tary, are advising the Vietnamese National Police under any contracts with the De- partment of Defense or other government agency. Such action would be in violation of the Ceasefire Agreement of January 27, 1973 which has been strictly complied with. Yet, in an article dated February 16, David K. Shipler, a New York Times cor- respondent stated that he has found a great deal of evidence to the contrary. Shipler writes: Although the Paris agreements explicitly rule out advisers to lie police force, the South Vietnamese National Police continue to receive regular adyfre from Americans. In a recent conversation with thifi corre- spondent, two high-reeking officers said they and their staffs met frequently with the Saigon station chief of the C.I.A. and his staff. Sometimes, they said, the C.I.A. chief asks the police to gatk er intelligence I or him, and often they meet to help each other analyze the data collec ted. A police official co termed that in some provinces "American falson men" who work with the police remain ,sn the job. "fliere are still some, but not so many," he said. EPISODE IN P MICE STATION Local policemen 8-ell refer to "American police advisers," accord t lig to James Mark- ham, Saigon bureau ohief of The New York Times, who was dette ned by the police late in January after a welt to a Vietcong-held area. Mr. Markham said hat in both Qui Nhon, where he was held overnight, and Phan Thiet, where he was detained briefly while being transferred to Saigon, policemen, talk- ing among themselve s referred to the "po- lice adviser." In Phan Thiet, he reported, a policeman was overlarord saying. "Let's get the American police adviser over here." In the last six weeks The New York Times has made repeated attempts to interview officials in the Uni ed States Agency for International Development who are responsi- ble for American aid to the police. Although the officials appearee ready to discuss the subject, they were ordered by the United States Ambassador, (Ilrahain A. Martin, to say nothing. contrary to assurances from the State Department, it is doubtful that police as- sistance to South Vietnam has been ter- minated. One is compelled to ask, there- fore, just what the Conaress and the American people hee to do to stop the incessant funding of the South Viet- namese police forcel;. What does it take to tell AID, OPS and others in the ad- ministration. no We have passed a law specifically prohib: ting UB, police as- sistance or trainir g to South Vietnam and yet, the programs continue to go on, apparently alrpest unabated. In 1971, Michael Flare wrote an excel- lent report on the public safety program in South Vietnam. While the report may not be a descrintion of the public safety program as it exists today in South Viet- nam, it does renresent the most accu- rate history and description of t:ae pro- gram as it existed until recently. It in- dicates, I believe, the real focus and in- tent of the Public safety program even as it exists today. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the repc rt be printed at this point in the RECORE There being no objection, the report was ordered to be ininted in the RECORD, as follows: EXPORT The Public Safety program in South Viet- nam is the largest ard one of the oldest U.S. police assistance prsgrams?half of AID's Public Safety Advisee-, and more than half of OPS's annual bulget are committed to Vietnam operations. 'Me Vietnam program began in 1985, when Michigan State Uni- versity received a cop tract from the Interna- tional Cooperation Administration (AID's predecessor agency) to assemble a team of police experts to advise the government of Ngo Dinh Diem. Ultimately 33 advisors served in the Police Division of the now famous Michigan State University Group (MSUG); of this group, at least a few are known to have been CIA agents. The police division supervised the reorganization of Vietnam's decrenit police system, provided training in a variety of police skills, provided small arms and ammunition, and helped establish a modern records system for filing data on political suspects. The MSUG effort was superseded in 1959 by a Public Safety Division (PSD) under direct U.S. management. In keeping with President Kennedy's call for increased counterinsurgency initiatives, the program was vastly expanded in 1962. Beginning with a staff of six in 1959, the PSD mission in Viet- nam increaed to 47 in 1963, and to 204 by mid-1968. Total support of the PSD program had reached $95,417,000 by the end of fiscal year 1968, and has continued at the rate of about $20 million a year; (some of these funds are supplied by the Department of Defense rather than by AID). From the very start of the Vietnam con- flict, the National Police (NP) of South Vietnam has been regarded by our govern- ment as a Paramilitary force with certain responsibilities related to the overall counter- insurgency effort. In the Poreward to a man- ual on The Police and Resources Control in Counter-Insurgency (Saigon, 1964), Chief Frank E. Walton wrote that "the methods included in this text are emergency proce- dures not utilized in a normal peace-time situation. They are stringent, war-time measures designed to assist in defeating the enemy . . ." In order to upgrade Vietnamese police capabilities to carry out its wartime responsibilities, PSD supervised the con- solidation of all regional, provincial and specialized police agencies under the direc- torate of National Police in 1962, and sub- seouently prepared a "National Police Plan" for Vietnam in 1964. Under the plan, the NP's personnel strength grew from 19,000 men in 1983 to 52,000 by the end of 1965, 70,000 in 1967, and 85,000 by the end of 1969. To keep pace with this rapid growth, the plan provided for a vast increase in U.S. technical assistance, training and commod- ity support. Public Safety Division aid and management have become so extensive, that the National Police might more properly be considered a U.S. mercenary force than an indigenous institution. SPECIFIC FUNCTIONS The specific counterinsurgency functions performed by the police?resources control, identification, surveillance and pacification? are spelled out in an OPS brochure on The Role of the Public Safety In Support of the National Police of Vietnam (Washington, D.C., 1969), and in AID's Program and Proj- ect Data Presentations to the Congress for Fiscal Year 1971. Resources Control is defined by Public Safety Advisor E. H. Adkins Jr. as "an effort to regulate the movement of selected re- sources, both human and material, in order to restrict the enemy's support or deprive him of it altogether .. ." In order to prevent the flow of supplies and people to and from villages loyal to the National Liberation Front (NFL), 7,700 members of the National Police currently man some 650 checkpoints at key locations on roadways and waterways, and operate mobile checkpoints on remote roads and trails. By 1968, more than 468,456 persons had been arrested in this program, of whom 28,000 were reported as "VC sus- pects." AID reported that "Resources control efforts in 1969 resulted in nearly 100,000 ar- rests including more than 10,000 known or suspected Vietcong. Confiscations included 50,000 units of medicine/drugs and 6,000 tons of contraband foodstuffs. Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 S 11202 Approved For Re8?Nneigiiisioi.: frict8E793m7AA/990100040079-,une ?400790 June 21,- 197.4:- The National Identity Registration Pro- gram is descrfeed by OPS as "an integral part of the population and resources control pro- gram." Under a 1957 law, amended in 1967, every Vietnamese 15 years and older is re- quired to register with the Saigon govern- ment and carry identification cards; anyone caught without the proper ID cards is con- side red a "VC suspect" and subject to itn- prisenment or worse. At the time of relflist111- Mt, a full set of fingerprints Is obtained from each seplicarit and information on hie or her political beliefs is recorded. By 1971. 12.000,000 persons are to have been reached by this identificattooiregistration prognon "Once completed," AID explains. "the ideate ncation system will provide for a nations! repository of fingerprints and photograph and biological data. It will be one of the mos" complete national identification systems in the world, and one of the most badly needed." Surveillance of persons and organizations suspected of harboring anti-government sen- timents is the responsibility of the NP's &rectal Police Branch (SP). The Special Branch is nothing more or less than Viet- nanes secret police; originally the Indo- Chinese branch of the French Surete, the SP was known as the Vietnamese Bureau of Investigation during the Diem regime. Ac- cording to the 1962 decree establishing the National Police, the SP was given the re- sponsibilities of: "Gathering information on political activities," arid "carrying out un- dercover operations throughout the COlIntry searching for, investigating, keeping trteck of and prosecuting elements indulged In sub- versive activities." OPS documents state that "SP agents penetrate subversive organiza- tions." and "use intelligence collection, po- litical data land] dossiers compiled from census data . . . to separate the bad guys front the good." AID has nothing to say about the criteria used to separate the "bad guys" from the "good guys"; anyone familiar with the Vietnamese scene knowa, however, that the SP's maior responsibility is Inman- lance of non-Communist nouns that could pose a political challenge to the regime In power. Persons who advocate negotiations with the NLF are routinely picked up by the Special Police and sentenced to stiff prison terms. Pacification usually brings to mind "good will' protects like school construction and free medical care in Vietnam, however, the paramount task of the U.S. pacification effort is the identification and neutralhation of the local NLF administrative anearatuse in Pentagon nomenclature. the "Viet Cong Infrastructure" (VCI). The counter-Infra- structure campaign was Initiated by the CIA in July 1988 as the "Pbung Roane" pro- gram?better known in English as Operation Phoenix. This program. incorporated into the Civil Operations and Revolutionary De- velopment Support (CORDS) effort, is de- scribed by American officials as "a systematic effort at intelligence coordination and ex- ploitation." In the intelligence ohase. all allied intelligence services--Including South Viet:metes Special Police Branch and Amer- ica's CIA and military intelligence organiza- tion- -are supposed to pool the data they have collected (or forcibly extracted) from Informers and prisoners on the identity of NL? cadres. It ls for this ultimate purpose that most of the other police functions de- scribed above--interdiction, identincetion, registration and surveillance- -are carrlod on. In the exploitation phase of Phoenix, mem- bers of the paramilitary National Police Field Forces, sometimes mated by the Army, make secret, small-epee raids into contested areas. to seise or eliminate persons who have been identified by the intelligence services as "VCI agents." In testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the head of CORDS, ex-CIA agent William E. Colby stated that in 1969 a total of 19,534 suspected VCI agents had been "neutral- ized"- oi this amount 13.187 had been killed, 8.515 arrested, and 4e432 persuaded to join the Saigon side. Colby inalsted that Phoenix i.tet not constitute an "assassination" or counter -terror- opera ;ion. Each of the counterinsurgency programs deecribeel t,aa been accompanied by an ex- pauelon ,3i the prison population of South '.letnain Since prison management is con- fettered it major task of the overall police responsibility, the U.S. Public Safety pro- gram includes subsist tial assistance to the 15iree orate of Corrections?the Saigon a4ency uiternately responsible for the opera- tion of South Vietnam e 41 civil prisons. U.S. aid has enabled the Directorate to enlarge tee prison system from its 1967 capacity of 21.000 prisoners to the present capacity of 33.436 inmates. Prom 1967-1969, Ofl- expenditures in sup- port cif prison maintenance have totaled 61.6 milLon Specific project targets ha 1969, Re- cording to ATVs Program and Project Data Preseniat ions to the Congress, include: "The renovation and expansion of selected correc- tion centers, the addition of up to 1.000 traitied pereonnel to administer correction centers . and the .mplementation of a teen for relocating preveters in order to re- dace overcrowding and provide greater security from VC attacks." To achieve these ti4rgets. "AID will provide technical advisors to help supervise relocations and to been 11,5W recruits . . land i will provide sup- piles for prison /*curly . . ." One of the facilities eelected for the relocation program was the creed prison oi Coe Son Island with its now-notorious "tiger GligGli." TIGER CAGES GET HIGH RATINGS Americana who were in Saigon In the late Penes under the Michigan State-CIA police advisory mission noted at the time that op- position politicians were frequently carted oil to Con Son. The U H. government's own ngures state that at least 70 percent of the pawner population throughout Vietnam is p4.11tICIII, and another nine percent is "mill- tary"--that is, POW's. It has been said for yearn that to know the status of the non- communist political opporetton, Con Son was the piece to go. LIB, Public Safety Advisor Prank Walton, former Los Angeles Deputy Chief of Police, with a reputation for being hard on minor- ities, is one of 225 Public Safety Advisors with the Agency for International Develop- ment in Vietnam. Walton declared Con Son to be 'a correctional Institution worthy of higher ratings than some prisons in the U.S." with "enlightened and modern administra- tion," In order to upgrade the administrative capabilities of the Corrections Directorate, AID regularly provides training to Vietnam- ese prison ?Metals "outilde of Vietnam." Al- though AID does nut divulge any details, the ten ?Meals receiving loch training In fiscal year 1969 are probably among the 60 Viet- namese ponce officers brought to the U.S. to attend special courses. According to the AID manual on Public Seeety Trainfne, for- eign police personnel can attend an I8-week course in "Penology and Corrections at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale. The Southern Illinois program includes In- etruction in such topics as: "dispoedtion of convicted offenders and juveniles: philosophy ard practice Of correctional institutional in tna,gemPnt: methods of correctional staff training and development." The program also include:: a cAmrse on "Correctional Institute Design and Constructime" One begins to appreeiste the breadth of he. Vietnam program by reading MD's 1971 budget request---$13 million is being sought to achieve the following -Project Targets-: , provision of oornrhodity and advisory etipport fer a police force of 108,000 men by the end of FT 1971 .assisting the National Ide ntity Registration Program (NIB?) to reg- tst tr more than 12,000.000 persona 15 years of age and over by the end of 1971: continu- im to provide basic and specialized training for approximately 40,000 police annually; pr. viding technical assistance to the police de"ention system including planning and supervision of the construction of facilities for an additional 2,000 Inmates during 1970; awl helping to achieve a major increase in the number of police presently working (8.)00) at the village level. This presentation, it must be remembered, oniyzepresents programs under AID author- ity missing from this prospectus are NP ac- ne ties financed by the CIA and the Defense De iartment. Military Assistance funds are uw U to finance the activities of the parlia- me itary National Police Field Forces (NPFF), wbich, by January 1989, constituted a small army of 12,000 men organized into 75 com- p/isles (our expansion plans call for a total cos nelement of 22.500 men and 108 compan- ies by the end of 1970). Because of the "mill- tart commonality" of their equipment, all commodities support to the NPFF is provided by the Pentagon. The extent of CIA contri- bulons to the National Police is of course Imnossible to determine; It is known, how- ever, that the C/A has been involved in mo tethering Vietnam's secret police files ainre 1955. One does not have to invoke the sin titer Image of the CIA, however, to estab- list beyond a doubt that the United States Is I itimatelv involved in every barbarous act committed by the South Vietnamese police on behalf of the Saigon government. /!r. ABOUREZIC. Mr. President. there are other programs in the Office of Pub- lic 3afety which concern me a great deal. Aer ording to reports which I received las ? year. the U.S. Government has been tra ning foreign policemen in bomb-mak- ing at a remote desert camp in Texas. At the U.S. Border Patrol Academy in Los Fresno.% Tex., foreign policemen are taught the design, manufacture and po- tential uses of homemade bombs and in- cendiary devices by IPA instructors. At lea ;t 165 policemen have taken this "Tr chnical Investigations Course" since It was first offered in 1949. Mile I was assured at the time that the course had been terminated, I have rec mtly learned that it has resurfaced? tlil in Edgewood. Md. According to E. II. Adkins, Deputy Director of the IPA. In in interview with Carol Clifford of the Los Angeles Times, the course has bee a "revamped" and renamed preven- tion and investigation of contemporary violence. It addition to the bomb school, I have learned that International Police Acad- env graduates also attend a school for Psychological Operations at Fort Bragg, N.C. The school, which is held at the U.S. Amy Institute for Military Assistance at Fort Bragg, N.C., includes courses with suci titles as subversive insurgent meth- odology, psychological operations in sup- port of internal defense and develop- mei it, the role of intelligence and inter- nal defense. According to Adkins, the Pur pose of the school is to "teach police how the military handles psychological war fare problems." Vre have also learned that the IPA cou 'its among its graduates security guards employed by Aramco, the Arabian Am !dean Oil Co. I could go on, with other reports of OPtl activity which I have found in the Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 Approved Foolfeftsfsiliffiga29theiRliparge41517LA000100040079-0 S 11203 `-* 21, 1974 last year including letters from foreign- ers indicating U.S. complicity in the use of torture in countries abroad, but I think that the point is clear: * This country is involved in an activity which is totally divorced from the scope and intention of U.S. foreign aid. The Office of Public Safety and the Interna- tional Police Academy mocks the purpose of other AID programs and has inflicted an indelible blemish on the past record and accomplishments of USAID pro- grams. For this reason, I am introducing an amendment to the Foreign Assistance Act of 1975 which would prohibit this in- sensible activity from continuing. Last year we were only partially suc- cessful in curtailing the activities of the OPS. Presently, only 'U.S. funds for police training in foreign countries is pro- hibited. Obviously, a great deal of activity has continued to persist. The Interna- tional Police Academy has now graduated 4,000 students and they continue to come. Supporting assistance to many of the most repressive governments in the world today continue to go on unabated. And new programs such as the "contemporary violence" course in Maryland continue to spring up. It is time, I believe that the Congress terminates this program and all related activities in regard to police and prison support. I am hopeful that my colleagues will agree with me, and support this amendment when it comes up for con- sideration later this summer. Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the text of the amendment be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the amend- ment was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, RS follows: iwwww.? AMENDMENT No. 1511 On page 7, between lines 13 and 14, insert the following new section: PROHIBIT/NG POLICE TRAINING SEC. 10. (a) Chapter 3 of part /I/ of the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 is amended by adding at the end thereof the following new section: "SEC. 659. (a) Prohibiting Police Train- ing.?None of the funds made available to carry out this or any other law, and none of the local currencies accruing under this or any other law, shall be Psed to provide training or advice, or provide any financial support, for police, prisons, or other internal security forces of any foreign government or any program of internal intelligence of sur- veillance on behalf of any foreign govern- ment within the United States or abroad. "(b) Subsection (a) of this section shall not apply? "(1) with respect to assistance rendered !under section 515(c) of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, or with respect to any authority of the Drug Enforce- ment Administration or the Federal Bureau of Investigation which relates to crimes of the nature which are unlawful under the laws of the United States; or "(2) to any contract entered into prior to the date of enactment of this section with any person, organization, or agency of the United States Government to provide per- sonnel to conduct, or assist in conducting, any such program. Notwithstanding clause (2) , ilubsection (a) shall apply to any renewal or extension of any contract referred to in such paragraph en- tered into on or after such date of enact- ment." (b) Section 112 )r such Act is repealed. On page 7, line 16, strike out "Sec:. 10" and insert in lieu thereof "Sec. 11". AMENDMENT NO. 1512 (Ordered to be (minted and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.) Mr. ABOUREZFL Mr. President, today I am introducing ,imendment to S. 3394, the foreign aid bill which provides that no military assistance shall be made available to any foreign govern- ment during any period in which that government does not allow such inter- national organizaions as the Interna- tional Committee of the Red Cross, the International Commission of Jurists, Amnesty Internal onal, and the Inter- American Commis.;lon on Human Rights free access into th2ir prisons for the sole purpose of conduc.;ing inspections with respect to allegee violations of human rights.' I join a growing number of Americans who are deeply concerned over the ram- pant violations of human rights and the need for a more effective response from the U.S. Governinant. Despite national differences, ideological variances, and numerous reasons, %, large and ever-grow- ing number of American citizens find a common cause in coming to the aid of the oppressed in com:.'ziet throughout the world. The sad but unfortunate fete': is that gross and maliciouo; violations of human rights continue to persist in almost every part of the world. Torture, mass impris- onment, summary executions, and dis- crimination, and other abhorent viola- tions continue to be used?sometimes quite overtly?in countries whose gov- ernments the UnLed States consider to be among its closet friends. While no one disputes the role of any government in guaranteeing to its citi- zens the most basic freedoms and rights accorded to every human being, i t has be- come apparent in r 3ent years that many governments not only neglect to guaran- tee these rights 131,1, actually deny them. Contrary to what many now believe, government repre.::::ion is not limited to one particular iti,!ology. Governments from every part of the political E pectrum have at one time in recent years been ad- cused of Violating I, e fundament al rights of its citizens. While the proteAion of human rights remains essentially the responsibility of each government, A becomes the respon- sibility of the international conununity when violations occur at the hands of the government. it must be the respon- sibility of concernocl governments and in- ternational organi 2,..ations to help defend the human rights of all people through- out the world. For this rea-son the United Nations and its specialized agencies have de- veloped an extenove body of interna- tional law pertaining to human rights. In the latest U.N. compilation of specific human rights instruments of the U.N. 13 declarations and 23 conventions are listed. Unfortunately, the US. record on ratification of human rights treaties has been a dismal failure. According to the report on Human Rights in the World Community submitAded to Congress by the House Subcommittee on International Organizations and Movements earlier this year, the United States, through this failure to become a party to all but a few of the human rights treaties, has become increasingly isolated from the development of human rights law. There can be little question that this embar- rassing failure has impaired both our participation in international coopera- tion in human rights as well as any bi- lateral efforts which this Government may have considered to persuade govern- ments to respect international human rights standards. One major cause for the embarrassing failure on the part of the United States in this regard is that the people in this country have not been made aware of the inhuman atrocities and the repres- sive and barbaric tactics which some gov- ernments in the world insist on using as their only means of staying in power. They have not been told that people are thrown in prison in many countries simply because of their beliefs or their disagreement with their own govern- ment. They are not told that the most unbelievable forms of torture known to man are used daily by some government officials on their own citizens. Ameri- cans are unaware that thousands of in- nocent people are shot each year with- out so much as a hearing on the crimes which they are accused of committing. Most important of all, few U.S. taxpayers know that part of their hard earned wages are going, in taxes, to support these repressive measures?sometimes directly through the export of police 'and prison equipment and many times indi- rectly. through direct payments to many of the most repressives regimes in the world today. A large part of the problem lies di- rectly within our own State Department. The Department as well as the entire Nixon administration chooses to pretend that that repression, torture, and the abridgement of human rights simply does not exist. A recent example of this is the response received by Senator KENNEDY from the State Department in reply to the recommendations contained in a study mission report submitted by his Senate Subcommittee on Refugees. In regard to political, prisoners in South Vietnam, the Department stated: The Department of State cannot agree with the Study Mission's assertion that "the rec- ord is clear that political prisoners exist in South Vietnam." We would add that the extentive evidence available to us simply does not sustain the highly publicized charges that civilian pris- oners are subjected to widespread, systematic mistreatment in the jails of the Republic of Vietnam. Time and again, the administration continues to attempt to solve the prob- lems of blatant and gross violations of human rights simply by denying that they exist. The State Department asser- tion that there are no political prisoners in South Vietnam defies not only the findings of the Refugee Subcommittee, but also the scores of reports by respon- sible humanitarian organizations whose documented evidence leaves absolutely no question that these violations exist. Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 S 11204 Approved For WilitMitggIfitRogp Ickitsaft7-a-9#945f-ftp00100040079-9une 21, -1974,- In Chile, while people are arrested. tor- tured, and summarily killed for any rea- son or even no reason, our Government is asking ;85 million in bilateral aid for the next fiscal year. Unlike other West- ern countries, we have offered no asylum to Chilean refugees. And we have said nothing, officially, about the murder and savagery. If the United States only spoke out against the torture, if our Embassy in Santiago was active in watching the trials and other visible manifestations of oppression, U Congress could, just once, attach conditions to aid, those who rule Chile. South Vietnam, and other repres- sive countries would listen. But we in the Government of the United States show no official concern for human rights. We have nothing to say about the repression and slavery of the Ache Indians in Paraguay or about the documented brutalities which have occurred in some of Paraguay's neigh- boring countries. In Korea, in Indonesia, in the Philippines, in Uruguay, in Brazil, and in scores of other countries whose governments are our "friends," the Gov- ernment of the United States sits idly by as while grave acts of torture and murder continue to be committed. In a recent article in the New York Times, Anthony Lewis summed up American indifference best: Some of the nastiest governments In the world today were born or grew with Amer- inn aid. That being the case, the most mod- est view of our responsibility would require us to say a restraining word to them oc- casionally. But we say nothing, we hear nothing, we see nothing. Citing the State Department response regarding the nonexistence of South Vietnamese political prisoners which I mentioned earlier, Lewis writes: Thus thousands of non-communists in South Vietnamese Jails were made to vanish, the twisted creatures in tiger cages waved away. Thus the idealism that once marked America's place in the world has become In- difference in the face of inhumanity. Mr. President, it is appalling that the concern for human rights is not even considered In our country's foreign pol- icy. It has been pushed from a low prior- ity to total invisibility behind the "more Important considerations" of political, economic, and military decisionmaking. It has been totally neglected and all but dismissed as a factor in United States foreign policy. While one would be foolish to suggest that the human rghts factor should be the only consideration, or even the single, major factor in determining our foreign policy, there is little doubt that it ought to be accorded far greater import than what now exists. If the United States cannot play a role in setting some kind of example for other countries to follow, then surely we cannot expect some other country or international organization to do so either. In this country, respect for htunan rights is a fundamental tradition set down in the Constitution. The citizens in this country have long cherished this tradition as one of the most fundamental of all and one which is worth fighting for. We have encouraged other countries and their governments to accept the princi- ples of our Bill of Rights to the point where we have even helped write their existing constitutions_ The U.S. Govern- tne.nt has had ample opportunity to im- press upon these governments of the im- portance of guaranteeing human rights to all of their people--regardless of be- lief. race, or ideology. Yet, the State Deportment has taken the position that questions involving hu- man rights are domestic in nature and not relevant in determining bilateral relations. With almost weekly charges of serious violations of human rights somewhere in the world, the most the Department has done is to make private Inquiries and low-keyed appeals to the government concerned. While the State Department continues to rely on the "nonintervention" ration- ale in cases involving human rights, it is all but forgotten at other times. In the last 15 years alone, we have seen overt examples of U.S. intervention in the Dominican Republic. in Cuba, and in Southeast Asia, merely to name three. God only knows how many covert opera- tions the United State; has been involved in during this same time period. :Oa addition, the United States has not hestitated to criticize violetions of hu- twin rights in the Soviet Union?espe- cially in regard to the Solzhenitsyn af- fair. Even a vast number of Members in the Senate have attempted to threaten to curtail trade with the Soviet Union if Its emigration policy for Jews is not modified. Current U.S. policy, however, hes made it clear that Soviet violations of human rights will not deter efforts to promote detente with the Soviet Union. T concur with those who argue that as the importance of ideologY in interna- tional relations continues 1;0 lessen, the t'nited States must begin to consider a certain government's Adherence to ob- tective humen rights; standards as one important criterion in determining our foreign policy. Certainly, protection of human rights is often a better measure of the performance of a government than is Ideology. In the last year, the Senate has had the opportunity on several occasions to emphasize the importance of human riehte in the implementation of foreign policy. We have attempted to establish eirne criteria which could be considered in determining who should receive U.S. forelan alci and just what that aid should consist of On each occasion, however, the sup- porters of this effort have been accused of Intervening in the domestic affairs of another country, of using faulty cri- teria in eqablichinit foreign policy, and teopardizine U.S. international po- Alegi and military positions by offering Or supporting such legislation. Mr. President, I Join those who be- lieve that arguments such as these are completely wrong and totally without merit_ I 'oelleve that the only way in which basic houman rights can be con- sidered in the overall determination of foreign policy is for the Congress to dem- onstrate its concern Members of Con- -eess should not hesiihte to speak out forthrightly in calling for action by the executive branch in defense of interna- tional standards of human rights when thee are violated. It simply has got to star there. It is for this reason that I am now Introducing this amendment to the fiscal 197 1 foreign aid bill. The sole purpose of this amendment is ti insure that those people who are Imprisoned in countries whose govern- mer ts are receiving U.S. military aid are being accorded the most basic of human rights. If, in the opinion of any one of the four organizations the Gov- ernment is insuring these rights to its eith ens. then there would be no ques- tion as to their eligibility for receiving U.S foreign aid. However. If on the other buil, the organization determines that the rights of its citizens are being vio- late I. the country would not be eligible for U.S. military assistance until those riet Ls are restored. Tie international organizations are a vita contributor to the international protection of human rights. Their value ails-is from their independence from govt runients which enables them to view objectively human rights situations in yeti xis countries without regard to Po- litest considerations. These traits of ob- ject vity and political independence make It eossible for nongovernmental orga- nize tions to speak out against human rights violations when governments are silent I am therefore convinced that witt the assistance of such international ?rise nizations. the United States can go a long way in insuring that at least in thee e countries who receive U.S. military aid, the basic human rights of their citi- zens are allowed. Ir recent years, the world has wit- nested an alarming increase in the viola- tion; of human rights including the prat tine of torture. Amnesty Interne- tion el estimates that torture exists in at It sat 64 countries at last count?many of 'those governments are considered friends of ours. Until this country sneaks out in defense of these rights, until we use 3ur massive influence with many of thea r countries to terminate their in- hurrane treatment of their own citizens. the dolations will continue to occur and most likely increase. This amendment is an attempt to use that influence. Members of the Senate will aave the opportunity to put the Con- greet on record as opposing the rePlige nate treatment of millions of people by their own government. It is an oppor- tun! ;v to begin to put an end to the tor- ture the unjust imprisonment, and the mass murders of thousands of innocent peoe ie. I believe that it is not only an oPix rtunity, but a responsibility. IA% President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the text of the amendment be inserted into the RECORD. There being no objection, the amend- men; was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: AMENDMENT No. 1812 Ott page 7, between lines 13 144:1 14, insert the f >Bowing: ACCEI IS 07 INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS TO PRISON Sat. 10. Chapter 3 of part III of the Foreign Ayala auce Act of 1861 is amended by adding at th ) and thereof the following new section: "St c. 659. Access of International Organiza- tions to Prisons.?No funds made available to Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 June 21, 1974Approvede_ S 11205: carry out this or any other law shall be used to provide military assistance or security sup- porting assistance or to make military sales. credit sales, or gnaranties, to or for any for- eign government during any period in which that government does not allow the Inter- national Committee of the Red Cross, the International Commission of Jurists, Am- nesty International, or the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, free access into the prisons of that country for the sole purpose of conducting inspections with re- spect to alleged violations of human rights." On page 7, line 16, strike out "Sec. 10" and insert in lieu thereof "Sec. 11". TEMPORARY INCREASE IN THE PUBLIC DEBT LIMIT?AMEND- MEN NIMIENT NO. 1513 (Ordered to e printed and to lie on the table.) Mr. MAGNTJSO (for himself and Mr. MANSFIELD) submitt an amendment in- tended to be propose y them jointly to the bill (H.R. 14B3 2'o provide for a? temporary increase in t1 public debt limit. Mr. MAGNUSON. Mr. Presld I sub- mit an amendment authored by dis- tinguished majority leader (Mr. FIELD) and and myself to set a certain da December 31, 1974, by which time pri- vate citizens shall be permitted to own gold for investment purposes. Under Our amendment, the President would have discretionary authority to remove the present restrictions on private ownership before December 31. However, and I want to emphasize this point, the amendment would permit private ownership as of December 31 even if the President did not act. It should be noted that our amendment is essentially the same as the gold ownership provision contained in H.R. 15645 which has just recently been reported by the House Banking Commit- tee. Consequently, we ? are confident our amendment would be acceptable to the House. Mr. President, this is a matter in which Senator MANspinn and I both have long been interested, and we feel strongly that the time has arrived for resolving this is- sue, once and for all. Last year, of course, the Senate passed legislation (S. 929 that would have permitted private own ship of gold beginning on December 1973. The House bill, however, dlt ot permit private ownership until suc ime as "the President finds and repor o the Congress that international mo ary re- form shall have proceeded to e point where elimination of regulati s on pri- vate ownership of gold will adversely affect the United States ternational monetary position." As S ators know, the House provision pr ,iled in con- ference. Mr. President, we ca ee how it might be beneficial to allow e administration ;ome flexibility in b ging the present 'estrictions on priv e ownership to an nd. However, all o s in this body know rOM hard experi ce how matters of dis sort have a it of just dragging on id on without i al resolution. The amend nt we are offering today dresses bot Of those concerns?the ed on one nd to give the administra- n some exibility and the necessity on the other hand of assuring that this matter will be brought to a final conclu- sion within a rear cnably short period of time. Mr. President, E urge adoption of the amendment. AlVIENOM T NO. 1514 (Ordered to be orinted and to lie on the table.) Mr. CHILES President, I submit an amendment Lis H.R. 14832, which would prohibit tip- reduction of certain veterans' benefits ;is a result of increase in social security ir railroad retirement benefits or certaii other annuittes. I ask unanimot s consent that the text of the amendmen t be printed in the RECORD. There being no objection, the amend- ment was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as : AMENDM INT No. 1514 At the end of the bill add a new sects) as follows: SEC. . (a) Section 415(g) oi' titl , United States Coil', is amended by ng at the end thereof a new paragraph;.'fol- lows: "(4) Notwithstahding the pro ons of paragraph (1) of ,his subsectio n deter- mining the annual Income of a person for any year there shall not be in rd in such opcome !' (A) the enrol, it of 461C ns y iurance benefi per ' during ? sue' t year or 223 the Social 1ec of any i.ease in the annuity o enslor during such r tr ment Act of 1 .he Railroad Retirement Act of 1937, or amount of any cost-of- living adjustme# ffan annuity under sec- tion 8340 of ti E. LVted States Code, if? "(i) such i4trce ittkirlts from provision of law enacted after Dedgpaber 30, 1973, pro- viding inc ses tri the payable under s Securit vision ' vidi fits of- increase in ayable to such nder section 202 y Act, the amount onthly payment of able to sv.ch person r the Railroad Retire- indtvitt. als enti sectioe 202 or 22 ct, such irmrease resu f law ena such" ?ted after.. t ncreases in railroad retirenn. r such adjustment results fr Dm ing adjustment in a civil irervic ment annuity tfffective after Deeem ,1973; and "(11) for the month (or any porlon there- '7 of) in which the Act containing such pro- visions of law was enacted or for which such adjustment was effective, such person was entitled to (I) a mpnthly insurance benefit under section 202 or 223 of the Social Se- curity Act, monthri payment of :annuity or pension under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937 or the Rel.:road Retirement Act of 1935, or an annuity under subchapter III of chapter 83 of ttte 5, United States Code, (or other comparet ie provision of law), as the case may be, and (II) dependency and indemnity comper.tation under the provi- sions of this chapter; and "(B) the amour t of any lump-sum pay- ment paid to such person during such year if? "(1) such pay/lie:it is attributable to an increase in (I) the monthly insurance bene- fits to which such person is entitled under section 202 or 223 of the Social Security Act, or (II) the anneun of the monthly payment of annuity or pension payable to such per- son under the 111-.1:road Retirement Act of 1935 or the Ramie, Retirement Act of 1937; "(Si) such inereese results from the enact- ment, after Decenncr 30, 1973, of any provi- sion of law increat'org_ (I) the monthly ben- efits payable to inlividuals entitled to ben- efits under sectior 202 or 223 of the Social nthly benefits to benefits the Social EOM pro- te pro- ene- st- Security Act, or (II) the monthly paym of annuity or pension payable to indi ale under the Railroad Retirement Ac 1935 or the Railroad Retirement Act of 7; and "(ill) such lump-sum paymen paid sep- arately from the rest of any thly insur- ance benefit of such person r section 202 or 223 of the Social Secur r Act or of any monthly payment of ann or pension pay- able to such person u the Railroad Re- tirement Act of 1937." (b) Section 503 o tie 38, United States Code, is arnende y adding at the end thereof a new s ction as follows: "(d) Notwit ending the provisions of subsection ( f this section, in determin- ing the ann income of any person for any year for p oses of this chapter or the first sentence section 9(b) of the Veterans' Pensio) ct of 1959 or any prior law, there shall d be included in such income? the amount of any increase in m ly insurance benefits payable to such on during such year under section 202 223 of the Social Security Act, the amount f any increase in the monthly annuity or pension payable to such person during such year under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1935 or the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937, or the amount of any cost-of-living adjust- ment of annuity under section 8340 of title 5, United States Code, if? "(A) such increase results from provisions of law enacted after December 30, 1973, pro- viding increases in the monthly benefits pay- able to individuals entitled to benefits under such section 202 or 223 of the Social Security Act, such increase results from provisions of law enacted after such date providing increases in railroad retirement benefits, or such adjustment results from a cost-of-living adjustment in a civil service retirement annuity effective after December 30, 1973, and " (8) for the month (or any portion there-- of) in which the Act containing such pro- visions of law was enacted or for which such adjustment was effective, such person was entitled to (1) a monthly insurance benefit under section 202 or 223 of the Social Secu- rity Act, a monthly payment of annuity or pension under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937 or the Railroad Retirement Act of 1935, or an annuity under subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 6, United States Code (or other comparable provision of law), as the case may be, and (ii) pension under the provisions Of this chapter or the first sentence of section 9(b) of the Veterans' Pension Act of 1959 or any prior law. "(2) the amount of any lump-sum pay- t paid to such person during such year if such payment is attributable to an increa n (1) the monthly insurance bene- fits to o h such person is entitled under section 2 or 223 of the Social Security Act, or (ii) amount of the monthly pay- ment of annu or pension payable to such person under ailroad Retirement Act of 1935 or the Railr Retirement Act of 1937; "(B) such incr results from the en- actment, after Dec r 30, 1973, of any provision of law incre g (i) the monthly benefits payable to in uals entitled to benefits under section 202 3 of the Social Security Act, or (11) the m ly payments of annuity or pension payable individuals under'the Railroad Retirement t of 1935 or the Railroad Retirement Act o 37; and "(C) such lump-sum payments paid separately from the rest of any mont in- surance benefit of such person under se on 202 or 223 of the Social Security 'Act off any monthly payment of annuity or pension payable to such person under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1935 or the Railroad Re- tirement Act of 1937.". Amend the title so as to read: "An Act to provide for a temporary increase in the public debt limit, and for other purposes." Approved For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 S 11206 Approved For 413061:1530,7A10 RIEUGGIMP7-98VirS711000100040079-fiune AMENDMENT NO. 1515 (Ordered to be printed and to he on the table.) NELSON. Mr. President, today I am troducing an amendment to H.R. 14832, se Debt Ceiling Act, providing for a $ tax credit in plate of the per- sonal e ption in existing law. This $205 t:ax c, .it, which would be used by all taxpay , is a proposed substitute to the ame ent offered by some of my colleagues pro ing for a $190 tax credit or a $825 pers al exemption at the option of the t ayer. Their amend- ment is tax redu n without tax re- form. A fundamental Ineq i.. of our present tax law is that the v e of personal exemptions depends on on tax bracket. The personal exemption is deduction from adjusted groes inco d Is of substantially greater value ealthy families. For example, today's $750 exe tion reduces the income tax of a pe in the lowest income tax bracket by 0 14 percent of $750--but save; a hiq income person as much as *525-70 per- cent of $750. Let us consider a man with half a million dollars of income who is in tau 70-percent bracket and a man era/ling $5,000. If each is married with two children, the wealthy man will save $2,100 because of the personal exemp- tion and the man with $5,000 will save about $470. For a man in the 14 percent bracket, the birth of a child provides him with tax relief of $105; for the man in the 50-percent bracket whose income may be over $50.000, the relief is $375, tand for the wealthy men in the 70-per- cent bracket, the relief is 3525. Log1'. would suagest that tax relief based on family size, should be greater TABLE I.-FEDERAL INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAX IAA BILIT1 UN rexereses OPTION (PROPOSAL NO. I), AND UNDER AS 2, AND 4 DEPENDENTS or at least the same for low-income families than for the high-income one. The advantage of a tax credit over the personal exemption has been recognized by tax experts and public, leaders for many years. For example. this April 11 Seaater KENNEDY. in a Senate speech stated tee 44-0 aeod to overhaul the relationship ?ween tax credits anti tax deductions in ',tie etettnel Revenue 0,3de, In the past, as parr, o; overall tax reform.. I have urged Con- ;iters araw credits lOstead of deductions In A liiiratnar of major :Jess, Including the >i;rsonlat exemption, It makes no sense to int thett, betesohe of I rot,. ci:ructure of our revenue laws, a "1115le a wealthy farelly is worth a ,,rivIng of SF.2b to his parents while a 1.11d is worth only $106 la tax relief. Rather than ending this inequity optional approach increases it. ? op- tior.al approach of a tax credit o in- ereesed tax exemption would f er re- duce the progressMty of our system above the cut-off point-' case, around $20,000-since th -income taxpayers would still be relatively nore than the indivich o takes the he across-the-bo $205 tax credit hieve not ty tax relief but uity in law. A $205 tax credit a deduction from the fina ould he of equal value to all f ?Acne* for a credit in- stead of an ption will make the in- come tax s far more progressive, and prov tantial new equity for niillions Pa Flirt ore, a credit concentrates Lex re among low d middle-income where it is t needed. For ex , a study by *int Economic Cojttee shows that w fly with a Is Sintle person Under Under present proposal Adjusted iron income law No. I RESENT LAW, UNDER A $199 NONRE REFuNDANtE MANDATORY TAX C 1974, bud let of $12,614 had ay an extra $1,118 just to maintai eir 1972 living star dards. Over the '. -kend, the Labor Department publis a report demon- strating the dev ng effect on middle Amg ric,ans' d of living and pure chef ifig power provided fresh evidence that last y inflation squeezed lower ince me an termediate families harder that. ? "higher" levels. This is be- cause f prices rose the most last year and f. . , in percentage terms, is a bigger buck item for the lees-well-off than th ell-to-do. r example, a typical lower income ban family of four needed 10.8 percent ore money to sustain itself at the same start lard of living in 1973 as they had in 1972 A middle-income family needed 10.3 percent more money to Maintain the sem* standard of income. It is these very people that would be helped the most by an across-the-board $205 tax credit rather than an optional credit. For example, a couple with one depe ident whose adjusted gross income is $12,500 would have a tax savings of $75 from present law under the optional credit, but $120 under the $205 tax credit. If this couple had two dependents, the tax savings would be $111, and $171 re- spectively. Mi. President, I ask unanimous con- sent to insert into the CONGRIRSSIONAX. Raco te at this time, two tables, one show- ing the Federal individual income tax liebil ty under present law and under the optioaal tax credit and the $205 tax credit, and the other showing the differ- ent het savings for certain categories of taxpe yers. Thfre being no objection, the tables were erderecl to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: ABLE TAX CREDIT OR AN $325 PERSONAL EXEMPTION DEDUCTION AT THE (PROPOSAL NO. 2)-SIT GLE PERSON AND MARRIED COUPLE WITH NO, 1, -nos deductible personal 'stmt.'s of 15 de ollflconrel Tea liability 14 is, co,pie wit r Ma vied couple with 1 dependents dependent sr Ur-der Umler 'Jrider Undo Usner Und 10051! prison I proposal proposal Drawl proposed proposli No. 2 (a,. No. I No,? 1ew No. 1 No. 2 $3,000 '$133 $54 1128 . '37? '$194 1 454 1773 1545 1753 1,140 1,110 1,625 1,578 2,345 2,062 7,6(4 2, S66 3, 135 3.098 1,310 4,268 15.000--- .......... .___ 1 491 147e . 7 1 632 rb0,20-.. 1,530 1 1,100 084 '1,073, 512 1, SIC 111k05i0110- $17,500 ;20,000 i225,000. 2,059 2,630 3, 9 5, 2, 040 2,610 3.226 3.00 5, 392 2,054 2,643 3,276 3 965 5, 506 I Computed wIttout relerenc ;10,000. ? tel tables for returns with ed,O151 dross Inc) TABLE II TAX SAVINGS Adjusted gross Married couple with 2 dependents - - Under etternative Undo' $205 tax credit tis credit $8,000...,.. ......... $196 $256 $10,000....-175 235 $12,500 111 171 $15,000 77 157 'ELSON. Mr. President, there are tw other major reasons why the $205 $159 '$285 1 346 36? 183 723 '*1 '563 1,0110 1,048 020 1.548 1,483 1,381 2.038 1,983 1,828 2,546 7,416 2,160 3.130 2,948 2,191 a 370 4,100 4,037 Mauled maple %with 2 Married male with 4 desendents dependents Under Under Under Under Under Under eel I roposal proposal present proposal proposal No. 1 No. 2 law No. 1 No. 2 - ? ..... .... 1 $135 1 511 575 1,343 1, re 2,364 2,923 4,165 1,309 1,765 2,213 2,760 3,830 $373 I $313 607 1,138 1,628 2, 159 2,720 3,960 620 1, 024 1,435 1,903 2,385 3,470 $350 $28 818 77 1.308 1,804 2,273 3,344 en Savo): Stan of the joint Committee on Inhaal R n, May 30,1974. Lax credit is to be preferred over the oP- ttor.al tax credit. First, it costs leas, sec- ond, since it would take effect after De- cember 31, 1974 it would not be financed by retroactive repeals, as of January 1, 1974. of existing laws. The $205 tax credit would provide 28,786 billion in tax relief to 58,603 mil- lion American taxpayers It would eltrai- nate entirely the tax burden for 7,857 American taxpayers-mostly working families with moderate and low incomes. The net cost to the Treasury, however, would be $5,274 less ti an the op cause tax relief b would oe of equal v Mr. President, / ask on-about 1 bil 1 tax credit- on family to all taxpf our sent to insert into th ONGRZS Raceme at this time, a t ehowf aggregate decrease and inc eral in itvidual income liab from tie $205 tax credit. Thee being no objection, was ordered to be printed in th as follows: Approved' For Release 2005/07/20 : CIA-RDP79-00957A000100040079-0 ai