TELEPHONE CONVERSATION WITH PHILIP TAUBMAN, THE NEW YORK TIMES - 29 DECEMBER 1982

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December 29, 1982
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ved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BO0148R000100100001-4 100 SUBJECT: Telephone Conversation with Philip Taubman, The New York Times - 29 December 1982 1. At 10:30 a.m. on December 29th, I contacted Philip Taubman at the Pink Beach Hotel in Bermuda and relayed the following information attributable to you: (a) We cannot afford to let stand unchallenged the charges that we fashion intelligence to fit Administration rhetoric. The charges are absolutely false -- we go to great pains to see that intelligence is just that, intelligence. "From the Spring of 1980 to the January 1981 statement of recently departed Secretary of State Ed Muskie, the previous Administration in various statements recognized that the insurgents in El Salvador were being supported by Cuba and Nicaragua. During 1981/82 the Intelligence Community issued a good number of separate National Intelligence Estimates on Central America. Each of these was concurred in by all 12 of the separate components of the American Intelligence Community." 2. Taubman stated he did not know present status of story and whether it was too late to get these remarks in. I urged him to make every effort to do so and reemphasized that you felt quite strongly that these positions be stated. cc: DDCI EXDIR STAT AVRroved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BOO148R000100100001-4 Central Intelligence Agency WSShingfon.D D.C. 20505 Mr. Philip Taubman The New York Times 1000 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036 Mr. Casey has, in accordance with our agreement, reviewed your submission and approved these quotations and attributions as attached. Mr. Casey does not hold the "relatively simple" view that the U.S. "must" make extensive use of covert operations because the Soviets do. He does believe that to be, or perceived to be, unable or unwilling to act in support of friendly governments facing destabilization or insurgency from aggressor nations or to prevent groups standing for our values from being snuffed out would undermine our security and leadership as well as peace and stability in the world. Mr. Casey does not believe that he should express any views publicly on his qualifications. He does believe a fair and balanced treatment would have to reflect that he came to his present post with experience, which would rate high in any Cabinet, in directing four substantial and complex Government organizations, including intelligence in World War II, and that in books, magazines and newspaper articles by those who studied these activities he has been credited with effective and decisive leadership and with lifting the spirit and morale of the organization. Also attached and approved are the quotes from Bob Gates. Sincerely yours, Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BOOl48R000100100001-4 CASEY QUOTATIONS APPROVED On the estimating process: "We found that estimates had been kicking around for close to a year, going through different drafts. We set up a fast track system. Rather than a lot of pulling and hauling and papering over of differences between agencies, we want to highlight differences and give policymakers a range of views." On having senior analysts brief top Administration officials every morning and return to the C.I.A. with feedback: "It helps us determine and develop the information and the analysis they need for the next day and for dealing with issues on their forward agenda." On the weekly watch meeting: the group assembles every Thursday to survey world events, review trouble spots and, as Casey said, "warn of potential surprise or other significant developments." On covert operations: Casey calls covert actions "special activities." "Through all the investigations and examinations of covert activities," Casey said, "very few people came away with the conclusion that the nation should deprive itself of the ability to move quietly in private channels to react to or influence the policies of other countries." In practice, according to Casey, that means a series of "low-key, low- level" efforts, involving a "small number of people" which are in support of other governments, closer to the area of operation, and with a bigger stake in it and ready to take the main responsibility." This means, he said emphatically, avoiding anything like the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961. What it does cover, according to Casey, are efforts to provide Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BOOl48R000100100001-4 countries threatened by externally supported guerrilla forces with equipment and training to "help them defend themselves." An example often cited by Casey is the behind-the-scenes role the C.I.A. played in assuring free elections in El Salvador earlier this year. By providing the Salvadoran military with equipment and training to help it locate guerrilla units, reduce the flow of weapons from Cuba and Nicaragua, and anticipate rebel offensives, Casey said, the Agency helped the government prevent the pre-election attacks that insurgents promised would disrupt the voting. On the appointment of Max Hugel as DDO: Casey now calls the appointment "a mistake." On the cutbacks in money and manpower: During the 1970's, according to Casey, there was a 40% reduction in funding for intelligence agencies and a 5075 cut in manpower. Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BOOl48R000100100001-4 On exchanging ideas with the academic community and sponsoring seminars and conferences: "The object is to keep the intellectual juices flowing. Sometimes we don't look enough at unorthodox views. By sending analysts out to the field, by sponsoring conferences and seminars, and by consulting more widely with outside experts we're trying to counter the bureaucratic tendency toward insularity and being satisfied with the conventional wisdom. On the quality of finished intelligence: "We produce some work that is absolutely brilliant. We also do a lot of good competent analysis and research. If we have a problem, it's the difficulty of instilling creativity, imagination and independence of thought in a large bureaucracy." Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BO0148R000100100001-4 t Attu Uork Shuts WASHINGTON BUREAU 1000 CONNECTICUT AVE. N W WASHINGTON, D. C. 20036 202 862-0300 Nov. 15, 1982 Externa airs Central Intelligence Agency The article is almost finished, so I'd like to let Bill Casey and Bob Gates know what parts of our interviews I have used. I'm leaving town this afternoon, but I will call you on Tuesday morning to see if they have any objections to the material. CASEY On the estimating process: "We found that estimates had been O kicking around for a year or more, going through different drafts. We set up a fast track system. Rather than a lot of pulling and hauling and papering over of differences between agencies, we want to highlight differences and give policymakers a range of views." ? On having senior analysts brief top Administration officials every morning and return to the C.I.A. with feedback: "It helps us know what we should be doing the next day." .l On the weekly watch meeting: the group assembles every Thursday to survey world events and, as Casey said, "identify trouble spots." On covert operations: Casey calls covert actions "special v activities." "Through all the investigations and examinations of covert activities," Casey said, "very few people came away with the conclusion that the nation should deprive itself of the ability to influence events in other countries." For Casey, the equation seems relatively simple: the Soviets make extensive use of covert operations to advance their interests around the world so the United States must do the sane, though absent some of the more extreme Soviet techniques such as assassination. Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84B00148R000100100001-4 In practice, according to Casey, that means a series of "low- key, low-level" efforts, involving a "small number of people" that are "confined to situations where other governments, closer to the area of operation and with a bigger stake in it, are ready to take the main responsibility." This means, he said emphatically, avoiding anything like the Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1961. What it does cover, according to Casey, are efforts to kit! provide countries threatened by guerrilla forces with equipment and training to "help them defend themselves." An example often cited by Casey is the behind-the-scenes role the C.I.A. played in assuring free elections in El Salvador earlier this year. By providing the Salvadoran military with equipment and training to help it locate guerrilla units and anticipate rebel offensives, Casey said, the agency helped the government prevent the pre-election attacks that insurgents promised would disrupt the voting. On the appointment of Max Hugel as DDO: Casey now calls the appointment "a mistake." On the Senate Intelligence Committee report on his background and personal finances: He calls it a "stinking report." On criticism of his qualifications to run the C.I.A.: "I get annoyed by people who say I'm here because I ran Ronald Reagan's campaign. The press has portrayed me as someone who doesn't have the qualifications ka for this job. That just doesn't shape up. The reason I'm here is because I've got a good track record." On the cutbacks in money and manpower: During the 1970's, accordiig to Casey, there was a 40% reduction in funding for intelligence agencies and a 50% cut in manpower. I have incorporated a lot of the other things Bill said in the story as background, not attributed to him or to intelligence officials. The material is weaved into the story. That also goes for most of the interview with Bob: there was lots of useful background information that is included throughout the story without attribution to him. Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84B00148R000100100001-4 Page GATES On exchanging ideas with the academic community and sponsoring seminars and conferences: "The object is to keep the intellectual juices flowing. Sometimes we don't look enough at unorthodox views. By sending analysts out to the field, by sponsoring conferences and seminars, we're trying to counter the bureaucratic tendency toward isolation and insularity." On the quality of finished intelligence: "We produce some stuff that is absolutely brilliant. We also do a lot of (good competenta analysis and research. If we have a problem, it's the difficulty of instilling creativity, independence and imagination in a large bureaucracy." I don't quote Jim Glerum. The article has yet to be edited, so there may be revisions that involve the use of other quotations. If so, I will let you know. Thanks for your help. Oe N QOD' Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84B00148R000100100001-4 L - the t eW Mork dimes WASHINGTON BUREAU 1000 CONNECTICUT AVE. N.W WASHINGTON. DC 20036 (202) 862-0300 External Affairs The Central Intelligence Agency Washington DC 20505 0 The New York Times Magazine has asked me to do a story on the C.I.A. It has been awhile since the Times Magazine, or any major magazine, for that matter, has taken a comprehensive look at the agency. The last piece published by the Times Magazine appeared in July 1979. Written by Tad Szulc, it was a look at the agency in the wake of the overthrow of the Shah of Iran and Admiral Turner's shakeup of the operations directorate. In September 1976, Taylor Branch wrote a piece about covert opera- tions and the Church Committee investigation. Not surprisingly, both articles concentrated on upheaval and problems. It's time for a dispassionate, in-depth look at the agency. The Reagan Administration has clearly set out to rebuild American intelligence capabilities and Bill Casey has put a pre- mium on improving the quality of intelligence analysis. There's been much talk in the press about improving and expanding opera- tions and an increased use of covert actions. However, no one has stopped to pull all this together in a single story that, in effect, gives the public a status report on the C.I.A. If you strip away the frills, I guess it boils down to a basic question: how good is the C.I.A.? That means beginning with the ultimate product, the intelligence analyses and reports. How accurate are they? How timely? How useful to decision- makers? Since the reports reflect the quality of intelligence collection, I would like to examine the steps that have been taken to make improvements in that area. Given the public fears about covert operations, I should try to report what the agency is, and is not, doing. O Obviously, I can write a story based on interviews with intelligence consumers, members of congressional over- sight committees and intelligence officials from other agencies, but to do justice to what's happening at the C.I.A., I really should spend time with agency officials. I realize I'm asking for unusual access, but I think it's in both our interests. Because the hysteria about intelligence abuses has passed, this is a good time for an even-handed assessment of the C.I.A. The best way for me to understand what the agency is doing, and the best way for the agency to dispel a lot of public rumors and suspicions, is to let me talk with agency officials. Let me give you some examples. For an overview of the C.I.A. I should talk to Mr. Casey and John McMahon. If I am to understand and report on improvements in intelligence analysis, I need to talk to Bob Gates and some of his analysts. I need to find out what problems this Administration inherited in analysis and how you've gone about correcting them. I need to know what changes have been made in the content and timing of intelli ence re orts. In this area, I would also like to meet with Il and some of the national intelligence officers. STAT In operations, I clearly must address the issue of what rebuilding means. What improvements have been made in the collection of foreign intelligence? One interesting issue is training--how does the C.I.A. go about finding and training people for foreign assignments? Without compromising your operations, I'd like to write a little about the teaching of tradecraft. What sorts of covert operations are considered acceptable these days? For all these questions, I'd like to have some time with John Stein and his people. Similarly, I'd like to interview E.R. Hineman about his science and technology shop and Harry Fitzwater about support and logis On the issue of internal checks, I'd like to and the new inspector general, gfApne interviewilcs has been name ecause there is a great deal of interest in, and misunder t, counterintelligence, I would like to talk withl STAT O I am open to discussion about ground rules for some of these interviews. I would like to do as many as possible on the record, but in some of the more sensitive areas, you may prefer background sessions. My deadline for reporting is mid-September, so, if the agency is willing to help, I'd like to get started with interviews as soon as possible. Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied Approved For Rele 105/24 : CIA-RDP84B00148R000100100001-4 Wpproved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BOOl48R000100100001-4 :;P.TSCLE 6?PE z-z-U AGE ammu THE NEW YORK TIMES MAGAZINE 29 July 1979 - furious. He sat in the Oval Office on .-this chill. Novem--11 day; staring at a the note paper be- fore him. Riots were sweeping I Iran. The Shah had just been.' forced to impose a military gov ernment on his nation. And the .President- of. the United States Those handwritten messages of last Nov. 11 were not the President's first expression of concern over the state of American intelligence, but they were by all odds his strongest. They removed any doubts of White House determination to force change upon the intelli- gence apparatus. It had failed him in a most astonish- ingmanner. _ _ .: ~. :. A nation Jimmy Cartel considered America's linch- pin of stability in the Middle East, a nation in which the United States had essential strategic and economic stakes, was in the midst of a profound crisis. By Febru- ary, Mr. Carter would see Shah_ Mohammed -Rita Pahlevi's government replaced by a radical Islamic re- hadn't even known a revolution was coming-had, in fact., been assured all along by the American intelli- Bence community that there was no such danger. Mr. Caner lifted his pen and wrote: "I am not satisfied with the quality of political intelligence." The notes were addressed to "Cy," "Stan" and "Zbig" - Secre- tary of State Cyrus R. Vance, Director of Central In- -i telligence Stansfield Turner and National Security i1 Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski. = a dime with which the United States had established no contact. The loss of America's secret tracking stations that monitored Soviet missile testing would damage prospects for Congressional ap- proval of the latest strategic arms limitations talks (SALT II.) The cutoff of Iranian oil production would spark shortages that plague American motorists to this day. - Yet the President, until the end was almost at hand, had not known the depth or extent of the Shah's problems. That kind of failure over the last few years has led to the most comprehensive shake-up in the history of the nation's intelligence community. A major reorganization, begun early in 1978, continues.- Special groups have been created to critique the com- munity's efforts, including a new top-level unit, the Political Intelligence Working Group, that is forcing traditionally turf-conscious agencies to work together. Hundreds of Central Intelligence Agency operatives have been fired, sending the organization's morale - already low following the traumatic investigations of ' the mid-70's - plummeting to new depths. Congress is . putting together legislation that would, for the first time, legally define the powers of, and limitations on, the intelligence community. Only a few years ago, the C.I.A. and its partner agen- cies were being attacked as too aggressive and too I powerful. Now, irony of ironies, some of the same liberals in Congress and the Administration who had,' led the charge have begun to worry over the failures in political intelligence. And they are calling upon the , C.I.A. to assert itself, to take a greater role in policy t formulation. The watchdog Senate Select Committee_j On Intelligence is actually approving clandestine missions that would have been taboo as recently as 1976. Meanwhile, the uproar over the na- tion's intelligence record has come full circle. The brickbats are no longer re- served for the "producers" of intelli. gence, such as the C.I.A. Critics charge that preconceptions and misconcep- tions on the part of the "consumers," the top policy makers, have prevented good decisions, regardless of the qual- ity of the intelligence material pre- sented them. The "consumers," of course, are primarily the National Se- curity Council - and an angry letter- writernamed Jimmy Caner. THE BERING STORM We will continue to anticipate tomorrow's crises as often as we can." says Adm. Stanfield Turner. "But our record here will never be as good as we would like it to be." Admiral Turner rules an empire with an estimated an- nual bumlget of $15 billion and an army of tens of thousands, at home and abroad- overt and covert. But uneasy lies the read that wears that crown; the record of Admiral Turner's troops is not as good as his peers and masters would Ii$e i c to be_ C.I.A ona of the wartime Office of Spe- cial Se. vices in 1947, the chief of that or- ganizaamo has also been responsible in theory for the larger intelligence corn- munity. Bence Admiral Turner's offi- cial title: Director of Central Intelli- gence/Director of the Central Intelli- genceAgency. But keeping rein on the dozen or so elementsof the intelligence community can try a Director's soul. The C.IA, the mairmprtng of the community, is a single, clearly defined entity. The other members of the community are a dis- parate lot. ranging from the Penta- gon's National Reconnaissance Office, 4 with its spy-in-the-sky satellites, to a i Treasury Department unit that collects foreign financial data. Thus the Direc- tor of the community faces a built-in division of loyalty. The offices of the Department of Defense that collect for. eign intelligence, for example, operate within a military hierarchy as well as within the intelligence community hier- archy. Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BO0148R000100100001-4 heels of two of the worst years in the Admiral Turner and Secretary Vance i Over the years, that arrangement community's history: expressing his unhappiness over the has helped make the Directorship one Attacks on the C.I.A. and its sister quality of American political inteili- of the more notorious revolving-door agencies traditionally focus on interfer- gene. Among his complaints: a lack of jobs in Washington. Between 1973 and ence with the rights of other nations, or basic source material and, as one of his 17,,, for example, four men - James with the rights of American citizens. associates put it, a lack of emphasis on H. Schlesinger, William E. Colby and And it was the illegal surveillance at "making sense." G-crge Bush - held the post. Probably home and abroad of American citizens There were other critics. The Senate the only Director who actually sac- suspected of antiwar activism that Select Committee on Intelligence, in a ceeded in exercising full control over brought down on the C.I.A.'s head the report issued last spring. took the com- the :n.telhgence community as a whole Congressional investigations of 1975 munity's "political-social analysis" was the imperious Allen W. Dulles, who and 1976. The agency's dirty linen was record to task. In some instances, the was forced to resign seven months after the C.1A-sponsored Bay of Pigs disas- terof'961. Admiral Turner was given a decisive I_ up in the struggle. Eighteen months ago President Carter issued an execu- tive order that, for the first time, gave the Director budgetary control over all elements of the intelligence communi- ty. Just how long Admiral Turner - a controversial figure in his own right- would be around to enjoy the benefits of that change, however, has been a mat- ter of conjecture. The Admiral is trim and earnest, a 55- year-old intellectual who was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University after graduation from Annapolis. He was sworn in as Director by Jimmy Carter in 1977; Senate opposition had led Mr. Carter to drop his first candidate for the job, former Kennedy speechwriter Theodore Sorensen. Those who have worked with the Ad- miral say he's "tough" and "mean." Presumably they were necessary qual- ities for a man who commanded fleets for the United States and for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and who was in charge of Allied Forces Southern Europe. Presumably they came in handy on his C.I.A. assignment. But the Admiral has drawn different kinds of comments of late, the kindest of them being "inept." The White House staff complained that he had failed to breathe new life into the C.I.A. There was a pronounced coolness to- ward him at the top of the Defense De- partment's intelligence establishment. Many of the Congressmen involved in C.I_k. oversight were dissatisfied. And he was not liked within the agency it- piled sky high: secret assassination committee found, "the performance of plots against Patrice Lumumba in the specialized public sources," such as Congo and Fidel Castro in Cuba ... sub- trade publications, "equaled or ex- version of the Marxist regime in Chile ceeded that of the intelligence com- ... mind-control experiments with dan- mumty." The community was said to gerous drugs ... unlawful ties with emphasize current developments at the American journalists and academics. expense of analysis, and to have a lim- The necessity for the gathering of for- ited ability to integrate political and eign intelligence was never seriously in economic factors in those analyses it question. For a President to make in- Produced- formed decisions about arms-limita- Ray Cline, former C.IA. Deputy Di- tion talks or oil imports, he requires rector for Intelligence, says that the some kind of intelligence-gathering and agency's political' intelligence skills '960' _ _ h ' `- - - s as a e ate disu sional revelations led to demands that the intelligence community cease in- fringing upon individual liberties, and forsake its aggressive role in the mak- ing of foreign policy. Congress named a total of eight committees in both houses to oversee C.I.A. operations. The intelligence community was shaken, but its problems were just beginning. Having been tried and con- victed in the public eye on charges of being unethical, it was up an charges of being inefficient. The issue was apparently first raised by National Security Adviser Brzezin- ski at a dinner given by Admiral Turner at C.I.A. headquarters in Langley, Va., on Oct. 27, 1977. Brzezinski complained to the senior officials present that the intelligence community had allowed its human-intelligence (known in the trade as "HUMINT") skills in gathering political data to decay because of the increased emphasis on technical intelli- gence - essentially the use of elec- tronic and photographic devices- The data and information he was receiving at the White House, he said, fell far short of the mark in terms of policy- self making requirements. (He noted along For close to a year, there has been the way that he had stopped reading insistent speculation that Admiral telegrams from most American ambas- Turner was on his way out of the job. sadors abroad because they provided However, there is some doubt that the no coherent assessment of political President would wish to give the re- situations.) voiving door another turn so soon. Meanwhile, the staff of the National Mr. Cartel s executive order of Jan. Security Council, the President's chief 24, 1978, calling for reorganization, was policy-making body for international ,not greeted with great enthusiasm affairs, was undertaking a full review throughout the intelligence communi- of American security and intelligence, I ry. It was, after all, the first public sign and that led ultimately to President of the deep discontent the community's Carter's executive order. Ten days be- top consumers were feeling about prod- fore that order was issued, Brzezinski uct quality. Moreover, it arrived on the wrote forceful secret memorandums to _ mite by cutting down on detailed re- porting from the field - "in favor of summary analytical reporting." But, he insists, "if you don't have patient ac- cumulation on political and economic events and trends, you're at a loss for relevant estimates when new data come in." The critics have no dearth of specific instances of community failure: ? A still-classified Senate committee study claims that the C.I.A. led the Ad- ministration to believe that Cuba was actively behind the 1978 invasion of Zaire's Shaba province by exiles at- tacking from Angola, an assessment that has never been adequately docu. mented. It led President Carter to pub- licly denounce the Cubans for mounting the invasion, to his subsequent extreme embarrassment- a When the President announced in 1977 his plans to reduce the United States military presence in South Korea. he was not aware of the extent to which the North Koreans had been building up their armed forces since 1970. Army intelligence campaigned for a full review, but was ignored for nearly a year; only last spring did the community finally conclude that there were 550,000 to 600,000 troops arrayed in North Korea rather than the 450.000 it had previously reported. And nine days ago the White House officially an- nounced the indefinite suspension of troop withdrawals, citing "security considerations." CONTitY_I 4Q Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BO0148R000100100001-4 ? Both the C.I.A. and the State De- partment mistakenly predicted that, thocgh Saudi Arabia might make ap- propriately loud noises about an Egyp- tian-Israeli peace treaty, the Saudis would not actively oppose the treaty or join Arab "rejectionist" states in pun- ishing President Sadat. In fact, the treaty led at least temporarily to a souring of United States-Saudi rela- tion-s. In May, for instance, the C.I.A. station chief and five of his subordi- nates were quietly asked to leave that country, ostensibly because they probed too deeply into politics within the royal family. And given the Ameri- can dependence upon Saudi oil, the repercussions of such a mistake in judgment could clearly betraumatic. Another kind of criticism, one with more than a few ironic overtones, is leveled at the community. Once ac. cased of forcing its views upon policy makers, of reveling in "dirty tricks," the C.I.A. is now said to be too timid. It failed to come up with an in-depth study of Zimbabwe Rhodesia last spring, for example; State Department officials think the agency simply considered the topic too politically controversial. It turned down a State Department re- quest this year for a study of the flow of Indochinese refugees, the "boat peo- ple," on the grounds that it was not im- portant enough. And even though it re- ceived encouragement from a Senate oversight committee, the C.I.A. re- fused to provide a foreign government assistance in combating terrorism be- cause the agency feared being identi- fied with what it called "repressive po- lice action." The community has its defenders, of course. They cite successes to match the failures. Last winter, for example, the C.I.A. predicted that China was about to invade Vietnam, that the inva- sion had limited goals and that the Soviet Union would remain militarily uninvolved unless the struggle esca. lated into a major conflict. The agency turned out to be right on all counts, ena- bling the Administration to respond ap- propriately. Moreover, agency officials are quick to point out, some of the problems laid at the community's door have less to do with the quality of the product they pro- vide than with the inability or refusal of the President and National Security Council to use the product efficiently. A dramatic instance of policy failure was played out in Nicaragua. By the spring of 1979, after having un- derestimated the national following of the Sandinist guerrillas, the intelli- gence community finally started warn- ing the White House that the guerrillas had a good shot at toppling thedictator- ship of Gen. Anastasio Somoza De- bayle. But the Administration paid lit- tle mind. No in-depth studies were or- dered that looked toward a post- Somoza Nicaragua, nor did the intelli- gence com mu ni ty generate any. Late in June, as a major guerrilla at- tack was bringing the Somoza regime close to collapse, the United States policy makers succeeded in antagoniz- ing both the dictator and the guerrillas by proposing, over objections from the State Department, the dispatch of an inter-American peace force to Nicara- gua. It was unanimously rejected by the Organization of American States. Given the historic Latin American fear of United States intervention, that reac- tion was easily predictable, in fact inevitable, notwithstanding the multi- nation makeup of the proposed peace force. The question critics asked: Why was this not evident to the leaders in the White House who made the decision? On New Year's Eve, 1977, in the Niavaran Palace in Teheran, Jimmy Carter offered a champagne toast-to Shah Mohammed Riza Pahlevi. Iran, the President said, "is an island of stability in one of the most troubled areas of the world." A year later, a bloody revolution forced the Shah to ab- dicate his throne. It was only a few months before the end that the Presi- dent's intelligence aides gave him any clear idea of how serious the situation was. The material that follows, a study of the Caner Administration's response to the Iranian crisis, is based upon scores of interviews with senior civilian and military policy makers, intelli- -ge ace officers and -mm bets of Cott- gress. It documents the errors in intelli- gence gathering, analysis and policy making, precisely the kind of errors that had led Jimmy Carter to impose a massive reorganization on the intelli- gencecommunity. _ BLESS IN IRAN On Oct. 9, 1977, students rioted in Te- heran, demanding the return of the exiled Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the supreme leader of Iran's conserva- tive Shiite Moslems- On Jan. 3, a week after President Caner departed, the Shah's police killed 20 religious demon- strators in the holy Shiite city of Qum. Protests and strikes erupted through- out the country. These events before and after the President's stay were dutifully re- ported to Washington by the American Embassy, which employed more than 100 professionals. They were reported by the Teheran station of the Central Intelligence Agency, which employed about 50 persons; the agency had other sites in the country as well, plus an un- known number of covert agents. But embassy and C.I.A. telegrams minimized the significance of the rising unrest in Iran. As a senior State De- partment official later explained, "We didn't think it was important." For the United States was totally dependent on the Shah and his sewn police, Sarak, for an understanding of the situation, and the Shah didn't think it was all that important, either. American intelli- gence gatherers were allowed no ac- tions that would upset the Shah, and that ruled out any C.I.A. or embassy contact with his real or potential politi- calopponents. Though on United States official, past or present, interviewed for this article was aware of any written directive issued by any Admi.nisoration forbid- ding contact with the Shah's opponents, it was clearly understood to be policy. "Everyone knew it," a senior official i said-"It didn't have tobe on paper." In any event, as late as fall 1978, the Carter Administration was absolutely convinced that the Shah was politically invulnerable. One reflection of that at- titude: The C.I.A. in 1978 decided not to do a full-dress update of its 1975 Iran National Intelligence Estimate (N.I.E.) - an in-depth study designed to analyze present and future trends - on -the-assumption -that at- would -be a pointless waste of its relatively limited analytical assets. So it happened that the C.I.A. and other American intelligence agencies basically did business only with the Shah and Savak. It was familiar terri- tory for all involved; they had worked together before. It was the C.I.A. that had restored the Shah to power in 1953. after he fled in the face of a challenge from Prime Minister Mohammed Mos- sadegh- The C.I.A. actually helped to organize Savak four years later. And the special relationship deepened when Richard M. Helms, for nearly seven years the Director of Central Intelli- gence, was named Ambassador to Iran by President Nixon in 1973. There was, however, some question about Savak's effectiveness. A senior American official well acquainted with its operations commented, "Savak break out in 1978, but the top-secret document did discuss in long-range terms the viability of the Iranian armed forces, the political attitudes of Iranian students at home and abroad, and the growing disaffection in the cities. Some agency officials say that the authors of the 1975 estimat h d e a ac- wasn't all that good.... Though it did many tried to "talk up" a better oven ali right on Soviet clandestine opera- and covert collection effort in Iran, but Lions inside Iran, it found itself Pere- had been ignored by their bosses, trated by the Russians.... Savak also On March 18, 1978, the Shah an- overreacted when it came to any politi-: notunced what would be the first of a cal opponents. One time, in 1977, itsi series of concessions - the release of agents badly beat up some innocuous 385 prisoners. But day after day, kids in Teheran. So it was the sort of through May and into June, chi demon- thing that just added to the pressures for the Shah's overthrow." strations and riots continued, as did the There was a third leg to the basic in- '. flow of assurances from the Iranian teiligence relationship in Iran - Mos- Government that all was, in fact, tinder sad, the Israeli secret service. Mossad control. Ambassador Sullivan was tell- did not labor under the same kind of tog Washington that things were "stir- self-imposed limits as did the Ameri- ring." but not enough to prevent him Gans- Moreover, they enjoyed the ad- from flying home for a summer vaca- vantage of a major source of informa- lion at the end of June. The British Am- tion in the influential Jewish com- bassador, Sir Anthony Parsons, with muniry of 80,000 in Iran. Thus, Israeli whom Sul Ivan was in close comac:t, left Ambassador Uri Lubrani was able to on vacation at the same time. correctly inform a visiting United Ambassador Sullivan returned to Te- States senator in 1976 that the greatest heran late in August. On Sept. 7, mar- danger to the Shah tame from the con- tial law was declared, and the following l servative Islamic clergy. And early in 1978, the Israeli Embassy in Washing- ton sought to alert the' State Depart- ment to danger signals in Iran. (It was repeatedly assured that all was well with the Shah.) William H. Sullivan arrived in Tehe- ran in June 1977 to replace Helms as American Ambassador. (Sullivan's background included a stint as Ambas- sador to Laos, during which he in effect ran the "secret war" of the C.I.A. and the Air Force against the North Vietna- mese.) He quickly sized up the inade- quacies in the collection of internal political intelligence. Even contacts with the middle-of-the-road opposition, the men who would soon form the Na- tional Front movement, were limited because many of the leaders were in exile and some of the others feared Savak reprisals if they talked to Ameri- cans. There were only three officers in the embassy who could speak the Per- sian language, Farsi; that was not enough to keep tabs on "the bazaars" - shorthand for the thousands of small shopowners who are the commercial and social heart of the big cities. One source of information the C.I.A. ignored was in its own files, the Na- tional Intelligence Estimate of 1975. It identified the Islamic religious corn- munity, including Khomeini, as a basic cause of future unrest. It did not, of course, Predict that a revolution would fired into protesting crowds; the oppo- be had selected as one of his principal sition claimed that thousands of civil- sources of information He had other ians were killed. outside sources as well, including some From Baghdad, the Ayatollah Rho- - meini called upon the Iranian armed Iranians who had been among his forces to rise against the Shah. In Qum, ?` graduate students at Columbia Univer- the Ayatollah Shariat-Madari asked for sity. "revenge from God against those who During November, Brzezinski appar- so bestially treated our children." And ently persuaded Zahedi to fly to Tehe- in Camp David, Jimmy Carter took ran to keep him advised of develop- time out from his meetings with menus- Zahedi's communications were Egypt's President Sadat and Israeli invariably optimistic, and they became Prime Minister Begin to telephone the the- central influence on American Shah and assure him of continued policy decisions. United States support. ~ Brzezinski was the principal officer What could have led President Carter, in charge of American policy in Iran. to go out on such a limb? One factor Secretary of State Vance spent most of was a report produced by the C.I.A. on his time on the Israeli-Egyptian peace Aug. 16, following three days of riots in negotiations, and was for all practical Isfahan and presented to Mr. Carter i purposes cut off from Iranian decision personally by Admiral Turner in the ! making- So were his top deputies. course of a regular Wednesday White: Nor did Admiral Turner playa major House briefing. This top-secret, TSpage' policy role - his agency's stock at the document was far less exhaustive a White House was that low. A small but product than the National Intelligence telling example of how that had hap. Estimate of three years before, and it pened was making the rounds of Wash- took a different tack. Its conclusion: ington_ The C.I.A. had just discovered "Iran is not in a revolutionary or even that Khomeini had written and pub- prerevolutionary situation." The re- fished years before a book about his port stated that "those who are in oppo- philosophy. The book was said to state sition, both violent and nonviolent, do precisely what he would do should he not have the capability to be more than come to power. It was the kind of infor- troublesome." mation an intelligence apparatus might have been expected to turn up automat- COViI::uE-? The C.LA.'s confidence in the Shah knew no bounds. In midSeptember, as part of a routine rotation of personnel and as though no crisis existed, a new station chief, Horace Fleischman, was installed in Teheran. He had been serv- ing in Tokyo. There is general agreement today that the worst period of the "intelli- gence gap" ended in September. Thee C.IA. station acquired a Farsispeak_. ing officer who could pick up the gossip in the bazaars- Ambassador Sullivan's reports home were taking on a more worried tone, as were those of the C.I.A. station. Strikes were erupting all over Iran - in the oil fields, the refin- eries, the banks. Yet even as the intelligence gap was being closed by the "producers" in the ` field, another gap was yawning among the intelligence "consnets" back in Washington. Pessimistic views were, being consistently rejected by the ' White House in general, and by Na- tional Security Adviser Brzezirsld in Particular. He remained convinced' that the Shah should and would survive, ' and be was receiving assurances to this effect from Ardeshir Zahedi, the Ira-. icaLly; in fact, it was not found until late in the game, and even then it was a private citizen who happened upon it and informed the agency. Brzezinski was putting ever more trust in the Iranian armed forces to keep the lid on. But there were high- level doubters. In November, Lieut. Gen. Eugene F. Tighe, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, visited Teheran. He came away with the im- pression that the army was trained and equipped to defend the country from ex- ternal attack, but that it had not been taught how to deal with an internal threat. Another November visitor to Teheran was then-Treasury Secretary W. Mi- chael Blumenthal, who upon his return recommended that Mr. Carter get an independent evaluation of the mounting Iranian crisis. On Nov. 28, the Presi- dent asked George W. Ball, a New York investment banker and Under Secre. tary of State in the Kennedy and John- son Administrations, to prepare a spe- cial report. Two weeks later, as Iranian ttoops were killing at least 40 demon- strators in Isfahan, and Ambassador Sullivan was preparing the evacuation of dependents of American diplomatic and military personnel, George Ball submitted his report to the President, a document the Administration chose not to make public. Ball had come to Wash. ington with his mind pretty much made up that the Shah was finished; his study of the situation had reinforced that view. Ball presented his pessimistic report at a meeting in the Oval Office on Dec. 12, but later in the day, Mr. Carter told a news conference: "I fully expect the Shah to maintain power in Iran and for the present problems in Iran to be re- solved. ... I think the predictions of doom and disaster that came from some sources have certainly not been realized at all." White House officials said that the "doom and disaster" reference reflected Mr. Carter's unhap- piness with the reporting by the em- bassy in Teheran and the C.I.A. station there. Another Presidential mission was in the works. According to White House sources, National Security Adviser Brzezinski had proposed that he him- self secretly travel to Teheran to get the facts, hiding his presence there as Henry Kissinger had done in Peking in 1971. The President had agreed, but just beforethe scheduled Dec. 13 depar- ture. Mr. Carter canceled the expedi- tion, convinced that it simply could not remain secret' Meanwhile, voices were being raised, particularly in the State Department, about the need for the United States to establish some form of contact with Khomeini, who had moved from Bagh- dad to a suburb of Paris, from where he was running the revolution. Men like Ambassador Sullivan thought that it would be impossible for the Adminis- tration to plan future policies without understanding the Ayatollah, and a sound judgment required a face-to-face meeting. In December, there were ac- tually some secret meetings between a political officer at the American Em- bassy in Paris and Ibrahim Yazdi, an adviser to Khomeini. Yazdi told the American diplomat that the Ayatollah was interested in conferring with a sen- ior United States official, and Ambas- sador Sullivan called Secretary Vance to recommend that the United States send an envoy to meet with Khomeini. Vance agreed, and called Theodore L. Eliot Jr., who had retired three months earlier as Inspector General of the Foreign Service. But the mission was aborted On Jan. 6, Vance received a telegram from Guadeloupe, site of a summit meeting of Western leaders. It was signed by Brzezinski, who was with the President at the meeting and was speaking in the President's name. The mission to Khomeini was canceled. Later, White House officials would ex- plain that if word of Eliot's trip were to leak out, the mission might be con- strued as undermining the Shah. By the first week of January, Iran was virtually paralyzed by strikes in every sector of the economy. The Shah named Shahpur Bakhtiar, a political moderate, as Prime Minister with a general understanding that he would be asked to organize a transitional govern- ment. Ambassador Sullivan was sure that it signaled the Shah's decision to leave Iran, at least temporarily. Now American policy makers fo- cused once again on the army. Would it stand by Bakhtiar in the immediate post-Shah period and prevent Khomeini from grabbing power? Ambassador Sullivan asked Washington to rush a senior United States military officer to Iran to establish liaison with the com- manders. Air Force Gen. Robert E. Huyser, deputy commander of United States forces in Europe, was tapped for the job. On Jan. 16, the Shah left Iran for Egypt, his first stop in exile. The mili- tary question was no longer academic, but General Huyser and Sullivan had a problem: They were receiving from Washington "tactical instructions" - how to deal with Bakhtiar on a day-to- day basis - when what they wanted was policy guidance. For the two men had developed very different assess- ments of the situation- The Ambassa- dor felt the armed forces had been "shellshocked"by theShah's flight and thought they would split under a severe challenge. He worried that General Huyser was concentrating only on the top brass. The general, on the other hand, felt that the army had adjusted to the loss of the Shah and that morale was so high that they would bold fast it challenged by Khomeini. C.I.A. Station Chief Fleischman agreed with Sullivan. The three men openly discussed their differences, and when Huyser was called to Washington early in Febru- ary, he presented both sets of views- Brzezinski and his aides gratefully ac- cepted General Huyser'sestimates. The Ayatollah Khomeini returned to Teheran in triumph on Feb. 1. In Wash- ington. the Administration still ex- pected the Iranian military to hold the fort for Bahktiar. Even at this 11th hour, no alternative policies had been devised. On Feb. 11, following a pro- Khomeini demonstration at an air- force base outside Teheran. the army withdrew to its barracks. The end had come - an historic defeat for one of Washington's most important allies, for the entire American intelligence community and for the Carter Adminis- tration i tself- PUTTING BACK THE PIECES The office is quiet, spare: a wooden conference table, a large desk. no ash- trays, some big briefing charts with their transparent overlays. Adm. Stansfield Turner takes his private elevator to the top floor, the seventh, and moves toward his desk. It is Febru- ary 1977, and he has just been con- firmed in his new posL The C.I.A. is emerging from a public battering over its illegal misadventures in the United States and abroad. Morale is in need of a boost. But there is nothing to suggest to the Admiral that, before the year is out, he and the intelligence community will be under concerted bureaucratic attack and subjected to a sweeping reorganization. Admiral Turner's tenure has seen a dramatic change in the relationship among the members of the intelligence community. The intelligence units of agencies outside the C.I.A., once pretty much autonomous, have been incorpo- rated into a new chain of command -Appr ved For Re~ease 20q /0&34 cI&-RDP84B00148R000100100001-4 under the trec:or. e c echo tion Tasking, responsible for economic and political materi- lso been given the power of the purse assigning intelligence units in als spew out of banks of com- over :hem. Thus, the Pentagon's Na- other directorates to do the ac- puters. Experts in a dozen dis- tional Security Agency. for example, that collection of data. (In the ciplines analyze the results, which specializes in such arcane tasks as breaking Soviet codes, has become more responsive to overall intelligence community needs. Moreover, new com- mittees have been created with ex- traordinary powers to poke into the nooks and crannies of the community and to cut across traditional tables of organization. Such moves, plus whole- sale firings, plus continuing bureau- jargon of the community, "as- and finally a report emerges to signing" is translated as make its way back up the "tasking.") Within the direc- chain of command through the torate, the assignment job is Director's office to the Na- farmed out among specialists tional Security Council and, -in PHOTINI' (Photographic eventually, to the top con- Intelligence) and HUMINT sumerof the intelligence com- (Human Intelligence), for ex- munity's product, the Presi- ample - who will figure out dent. what community resources to O cratic hassles, have exacerbated the tap. Along with the administra- morale problem. And there is concern In addition to Collection tive changes has come a star- within the community that the legisla- 1 Tasking, the Director and tling turnover in the top eche- tion now being drawn up in Congress to Deputy Director supervise Ions over the past 18 months. define the parameters of intelligence three other operational dirk- Frank C. Carlucci, for exam- operations will cut further into C.I.A. torates: National Intelligence, ple, has taken over as Deputy prerogatives. Science and Technology, Director, second only to Admi- The central goal of virtually all of Operations. All are to be in- ral Turner in the community. these changes is to improve efficiency, volved in the Soviet troop- A short, slim bureaucratic in- to prevent the kind of failure of intelli- movement inquiry. The Direc- fighter, the 49,-year-old Car- Bence gathering and analysis that took tor also has the authority to lucci is a career Foreign Serv- place in Iran. And the cutting edge of task member agencies of the ice officer who won high change has been bureaucratic - the intelligence community. For marks as ambassador in Lis reorganization of the community, from this inquiry, be calls upon the bon during the Portuguese a relatively loose assemblage of ele- National Reconnaissance of. revolution of 1975, but he also ments into a tightly structured table of j fice and the National Security served as director of the Office organization (see chart, Page 15). Agency, both Pentagon-con- of Economic Opportunity and At the top sit Director Turner and trolled operations. in other domestic posts under Deputy Director Frank C. Carlucci. Re- At the supersecret National the Nixon Administration. porting to them are six deputies, each Photographic Interpretation President Caner named him of whom supervises a number of spe- Center, part of the Science and to his current post in 1978. He cialized offices. And within each office, Technology directorate, spe- has the respect of virtually all the personnel may beall C.I.A. or a mix cialists are instructed to the power centers of Washing- of C.I.A. and otheragency staffers. The search high-resolution photo- ton, legislative as well as bu- theory is that the integration improves graphs from satellites and U-2 reaucratic, to a degree not en- coordination among the elements, mak- spy planes for details of the joyed byAdmiral Turner, ing use of the best skills of the entire troop movements. The Na. One of Carlucci's major re- community on any given assignment. tional Reconnaissance Office, sponsibilities is his role on the Moreover, the six directorates make it which spends the largest share Political Intelligence Working more easily possible for those seeking of the intelligence communi- Group, created this year with li to apportion blame to pin the tail on the ty's budget, may be asked to no public notice to find waysof right donkey. send new satellites aloft. The improving the product. Under How does the intelligence complex National Security Agency or- Secretary of State for Political actually operate when confronted with ders a major new campaign of Affairs David D. Newsom and a problem? The following scenario re- electronic eavesdropping on Deputy National Security Ad- flects the community's workings as of coded Soviet communications. viser David L. Aaron are the the summer of 79. Meanwhile, the Deputy Di- other members of the group, Assumption: The United States Gov- rector for Operations, the which has no chairman but op- ernment becomes aware of a sudden, cloakand-dagger chief, has erates with a small staff. It unexplained movement of Soviet troops alerted his network of agents in Eastern Europe. around the world to be on the In the National Security Council, it is the Special Coordination Committee that considers what is officially de- scribed as "sensitive foreign-intelli- gence collection operations." The Na- tional Security Adviser takes the chair; the Director of Central Intelligence, the Secretaries of State and Defense, the Attorney Genera! and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff are in attend- ance. The Director of Central Intelligence is instructed to find the information lookout for information bear- ing on the Soviet troop move- ments. More specifically, he has set his operatives in East- ern Europe and the Soviet Union itself to ferreting out the reasons for the moves. All the data stream in to the directorate for National Intel- ligence. Here the thousands of bits and pieces are shaken down and pored over; related conducts regular studies on what it calls "vulnerable coun- tries," recommending priori- ties in political and sociologi- cal intelligence reporting in the field by embassies and C.I.A. stations. The principal objective of the organization is to improve the coordination of overt and covert reporting by the State Department and the C.I.A.; they are now under orders to work together, pooling their necessary to understand the scope and intent of the Soviet troop movement. Upon his return to his Langley, Va., base, he calls in his Deputy for Collec- Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84B00148R000100100001-4 -Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84B00148R000100100001-4 assets, rather than pursusing the kind of separate operations typical of the past. In the course of its coordinating ef- forts, the group takes up such matters as "nominal" versus "integrated" covers for C.I.A. personnel in the embassies. A "nominal" cover is usually known to the host govern- ment; an "integrated" cover is deeply concealed. international networks of nar- cotics smugglers. The State Department's Intelligence and Research Bureau specializes in analyzing information flow. ing from American embassies and consulates abroad. The Pentagon's Office of Net As- sessments is concerned with the balance of strategic and conventional forces between the United States and the Soviet Union. The net-assessments func- Specific intelligence assess- ments are produced for Bowie by the corps of National Intel- ligence Officers. Years ago. the Office of Estimates drew on information and views from the entire intelligence com- munity and reached conclu- sions by consensus (with dis- sents footnoted). Today, a Na- tional Intelligence Officer, a specialist in a given area, may seek cooperation from others in the community, but he drafts his own assessment. leader charged with increas- ing coordination among agen- cies is Lieut. Gen. Frank A. Carom, who runs Collection Tasking, a new C.I.A. post. A lanky, 6-foot 4-inch native of Kentucky, he holds graduate degrees from Harvard (engi- neering) and George Washing- ton (international relations) and has helped to run the Corps of Engineers and the Atomic Energy Commission. He's been given the job of set- ting priorities within the com- munity as to who will do what jobs and how the available re- sources in terms of people and money will be expended. Under General Camm's wing, for example, is the newly created National Intelli- gence Tasking Office, staffed by representatives of the civil- tween the Pentagon and the C.I.A., the kind of issue that suggests why there's a need for coordination. The Defense Department insists that with- out access to the most classi- fied aspects of the United States defense posture - ac- cess that the Defense Depart- ment denies to the C.I.A. -net assessment should not be made. Let the C.I.A. stick to its collection of information on the war-making potential of foreign nations, says the Pen- tagon, and leave the weighing of the balance of forces, histor- ically a military-command function, to the military. Admiral Turner protests that his agency "is not in the business of making net assess- ments nor does it intend to get into it." However, he does add ian and military agencies that that through the National In- make up the intelligence com- telligence directorate the munity along with the C.I.A. C.I.A. is "trying to find ways The center is intended to to make our assessments more "coordinate" the intelligence meaningful (and) this inevita- units of these agencies, units bly involves some compari- that had been relatively au- sons...." tonomous before President ^ Carter's Executive Order The single most criticized forced cooperation upon them. area of intelligence activity is The Energy Department, for now centralized in the direc- example, is charged with - - - overt collection of all informa- torate of National Intelli- tion on energy masers gence, which is responsible for abroad, and it cooperates with maintaining the now of data the C.I.P.- in preparing against and analysis, short-and long- the day terrorists might try term, to policy makers. This nuclear thefts. The Treasury army of 1,500 analysts is com- Department collects foreign manded by Deputy Director financial and monetary data. Robert R. Bowie, a dapper, 69- The Drug Enforcement Ad- year-old lawyer, educator and ministration is supported by foreign-policy specialist whom the C.I.A. (abroad) and the Admiral Turner hired in 1977. F.B.I. (at home) in rooting out He had once been chairman of the State Department's Policy Planning Staff, but this is his first job in the intelligence community. It' is 'the N.I.O.'s who produce the lengthy National Intelligence Estimates (N.I - E.'s), sometimes projecting a nation 10 years into the future; these papers, which include dissenting views in the actual text, must be approved by the National Foreign Intelligence Board, made up of the chief in- telligence officers of the com- munity. The trouble with such studies, as members of the community reluctantly admit, is that policy makers have no time to read them. Only the annual N.I.E. on the Soviet Union's strategic posture and intentions has a wide reader- ship. As a rule, policy makers prefer daily current intelli- gence ("the quick fix," as a C.I.A. official calls it) al- though they complain about a lack of in-depth material after something - like Iran - has gone wrong. All of which poses what Bowie calls "tensions" between long-term and short- term intelligence require- ments. He is constantly urged to provide current intelli- gence, making it increasingly hard to spring analysts loose for the N.I.E.'s and other in- depth studies. Last fall Bowie established the post of National Intelli- gence Officer for Warning. and gave it to Richard Leh- man, a C.I.A. Aveteran of 30 years. The Pentagon's Strate- gic Warning Staff, which had been primarily designed to provide advance notice of an impending nuclear conflict, was absorbed and its role ex- panded by Lehman. It now keeps the Government abreast of major developments through "alert memoranda." It was Lehman's staff, for ex- ample, that warned the Ad- ministration that China would invade Vietnam last February and provided a correct merit of how the situatio would develop. Basically, tht warning system is geared tc situations with a potential tot a Soviet-American confronta Lion- A coup d'etat in, say. th Chad. does not trigger ale memorandums. Yet another newly created unit is the super-secret "Mos- cow Committee," set up by the C.1-A. this year. It seeks to deal with Soviet efforts to de- stroy American intelligence networks abroad. Meanwhile, Bowie has created a little-known but much-experienced group to oversee the whole collection and analysis effort The Senior Review Panel is headed by the former Ambassador to Tana nia and Yugoslavia, Willies Le nhart- Its other members are retired Army Gen. Bruce Palmer, a former Vice Chief o Staff, and Princeton Univer siry Prof. Klaus Knorr, scholar in the field of intelli gence. The full-time panel serves as an in-house critic o the quality of intelligence; it' involved at the inception o every estimating process in all of the post-mortems. and 0 The most demoralized of tim departments under Admiral Turner's wing is the director ate for Operations, home of th< cloak and dagger. John N McMahon, a graying, 50-year old veteran of almost three de, odes with the C.A, brings quiet demeanor to his post is said to have considerabl popularity with his subo nates - but be has bad an bill snuggle coping with body blows his organizati has absorbed. The Operations responsibi ities are officially defined the collection of "foreign in ligence,largely through secyl CONTli.v UED means," counterintelligence der whether the SALT II missions abroad and "other treaty was even verifiable. secret foreign intelligence Government experts claimed tasks." But for all the roman- tic and/or grisly tales of its oceratives. coven spying today s devoted more to so- phistictted espionage - re- cruiung foreign officals to serve as American spies, for example-than to the subver- sion, political action and guer- rilla warfare of the past. In that reflects the in, are major outside check on the community, however, is the Senate and House over- that because of complex satel- ! sight committees. And it is in lite and radar surveillance the Congress that the most sig- networks around the world, nificant limits ever imposed the United States would not be- on the country's intelligence come blind altogether, even if apparatus are now being de- it takes three or four years to signed, in the form of draft replace fully the stations in legislation. The so-called Iran. What's more, though no "charters," drawn up by the one in Government will die Senate Select Committee on cuss the matter in detail, there intelligence, will cover the are other sources of informa- C.LA-, the Defense Intelli- p vestiga[ions of a few years lion concerning new missile igence Agency and the Federal 1. ago: Congressional oversight designs, even before they have I Bureau of Investigation. The committees are still sensitive, been test flown. The indica- goal: to definewith reasonable about approving major covert tions are that these sources precision the parameters for operations, and the National are human agents who have in spying operations in all fields, Security Council's Special some fashion penetrated the including the setting of certain Coordination Committee Soviet defense establishment. , constraints on what the agen- (chaired by Brrwrinski) is re- Thus the human element cies are permitted to do- The luctant to propose "special ac- HUMINT - can still have a central dilemma: how to tivities." Moreover, this major role in strategic intelli- reconcile national-security change has dramatically af- gence; presumably it will con- needs with the constitutional fected personnel. The agen- tinue to do so. "We have to rights of Americans. cy's paramilitary capability, play all the systems together." Reasonable men may differ for instance, has virtually van- ished_ Some 27 percent of the C.I.A-'s clandestine services staff is now 50 years of age or d lacemenrs don't re d a senior C.I.A. officiLl said the on such an issue. The White other day. "Spies tell you that House, for example, opposes there's something unusual on! as too cumbersome the com- the ground, say, in the Soviet) mittee's desire to require the Union, so you order photogra-I President's personal approval an er, ol p h and signal intercepts, and grow on trees As Admiral p Y of all major covert operations. Turner recently remarked, then you have to go back to the The C.I.A. is holding out spy. On the other hand, you against Senators who would "You can't just recruit from the street for the spy urcP - don't want to send a spy to get deny the agency the right to hat can be obtained from ~ecretly use electronic Recruiting of course has what been a major activity photographs. So it's a syner- lance nce on on officials ials of of foreign within the community of late. genic affair; the problem is countries who hold American During the last two years the how to get the synergism citizenship. Admiral has fired more than going' The committee staff hopes tc 400 officers in the clandestine O have a draft completed by services. The C.I.A. had be- Labor Day, in an atmosphere come 't he says- The public concern over the viewed as remarkably favora- wry', ethics of the C.I.A. was re- - personnel cutback has bie toward the intelligence damaged the agency's morale flatted in the creation of the community, given past histo- more than the Congressional Intelligence Oversight Board, rv. "The environment has rove tigatiorvs and all the other a private citizens' panel ap- cyanQed.,, says Senator Birch criticssm put together. pointed by the President and Bayh of Indiana, committee operating from the Executive chairman. He says that the All of which is not to suggest Office Building next to the proposed charter will not in- tronic gadgets have totally Thomas L. Farmer, a Wash- "ability to penetrate the deci- taken over from flesh-and- ington lawyer, chairman; for- sion-making process of foreign blood spies. Covert operations mer Senator Albert Gore of nations." But some members continue, and in at least one Tennessee and former Gov. of the intelligence community, important instance, they may William S. Scranton of Penn- given the shaking up they've be taking the place of scien- sylvania. received of late, feel they're tific hardware. The board reviews all activi. entitled to a few doubts. The loss of the missile-track- ties of the intelligence agen- iog stations in Iran was a low ties that might raise questions blow to American surveillance of propriety and legality. It of soviet strategic testing. and has a mandate to report di- it made some in Congress won rectly to the President any such flaws. E NEW ItE IN-FEW GENCE There has been no obvious change in the status of Ameri- ca's intelligence community- Each morning, the President of the United States still re- ceives the topsecret docu- ment called the President's Daily Intelligence Brief. (Only five copies are produced.) Once a week, the President continues to welcome Admiral Turner or Deputy Director Carlucci to the Oval Office for a half-hour intelligence up- date. The very reorganization that Jimmy Carter has de- manded of the intelligence community indicates his con- tinuing interest - not to men- tion disappointment. Yet the glory days of the C.I.A. seem to have passed. When the Cold War was per- ceived by the nation and its President as representing a clear and present danger, the intelligence community had a special aura. There was little public discussion then of its "efficiency" (which in all like- lihood was no greater than it is today) and Congress tended to look the other way when ques- tions of means and ends arose. There is no lack of major problem areas for the modern intelligence community to ex- plore, from the growing turbu- lence in Latin America and the Caribbean to the strategic issues of SALT II and the eco- nomic threat posed by the Or- ganization of Petroleum Ex- porting Countries. And the C.I.A- is expected by its mas- ters in the White House to come up with the data and analyses needed to deal with those issues. But it is apt to be a more careful, deliberate ef- fort, relying more on elec- tronic tools and patient collec- tion than on the cloak and dag- ger- -Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BO0148R000100100001-4 On the top levels of the Intel- ligence community, there is some uncertainty about that prospect, and considerable re- sentment of the criticism the agencies have attracted. A Senator recently commented, for example, on the failure of today's C.I.A. to play a role on the policy-making level: "They must have some opin- ions." To which a top C.I.A. of- ficial responds: "What is it that they want us to do? It's damned if we get involved in policy and damned if we don't. I guess, on balance, we prefer to stay out of it.., The complaints about the agency's efficiency, according to Admiral Turner, reflect some confusion as to the na- ture of intelligence work. Ac- curate political analysis, he says, "depends upon anticipat- ing and correctly interpreting human action and reaction, some of which is inconsistent, or irrational, or driven by per- sonal rather than nationalcon- siderations. The best the ana- lyst can do is to alert the deci- sion maker to trends, possibil- ities, likelihoods." As Admiral Turner sees it,: the whole process of intelli- gence gathering and analysis is undergoing evolution from what he has called the old- fashioned "military-intelli-I gence mentality" to a modern political, economic and socio- logical approach. "We are re- tooling," he says, "trying to understand the world." There is, however, pressure to speed up the process. The Congress and the President are impa- tient. /0 'Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BO0148R000100100001-4 / Zbigniew Brzezinski Assnronl to P. Prn dent for 7 Notional Secur,rvAfiairs In on effort to improve the quality of its "product," the intelligence community-the C.I.A. and h b een as other ogencies- reorganized. Four of the key new - ?- ?RODUCERS ;, rgye ~p R pse 2007/05/24 : CIFX>hiE 48Ot21 QQ~?@Q1ejJ001-4 1 7 o v PAC P- ~? 12 SS?:-7h3^3 1-q70- -Not all its covert actions have succeeded; but the .agency did manage to outfox Congressional investigators.. There have been enough revelations about the iCentral 'Intelligence Agency over the past two years to keep diplomats, prosecutors, reporters and philosophers busy for entire careers. Three separate investigations not only stretched the imagination with show-biz material about cobra venom and deadly skindiving suits but twisted the lens on the American self-image in j foreign affairs. The investigations rewrote history-the history, for example, of the relationship between the United States and the Castro Government in Cuba. They showed that -the C.I.A., in some COG foreign interventions over the. past two decades, has run secret wars around the globe and has clandestinely-dominated foreign governments so thoroughly as to make them virtual client-states- In contrast to Watergate, the C.LA. investiga-. tions proved that abuses of power have not been limited to one particular Administration or one political party. They also established facts that few people were prepared. to believe -such as that distinguished gentlemen from the C.I.A. hatched assassination plots with Mafia gangsters: With 'all these surprises percolating, the most interesting surprise has been largely ignored. And that is how the C.I.A- investigations ceased. The'-- topic faded away so quickly as to make the whole episode look like a fad. Unlike the. F.B.I. issue, which' has moved to the prosecutors' offices and stayed on the front page, the vaunted trial of the C.I.A. has already become a memory. And the agency itself has survived the scandals with its covert operations intact, if not strengthened. The collapse of the C.I.A. investigations has been duelargely to in- eptitude, poorjudgment and lack of will on the part of the Congressional committees. But the agency also played a role. Its strategy was flawless. "Those guys reallyknew what they were doing," says a staff member of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence chaired by Frank Church. 'T think they defended themselves just like any other agency would, except they're better. They had a whole office set up to deal with us, and I some- times had the feeling that they ran operations against us like they run them - against foreign governments. It was like the C.I.A." station for the Congress instead of for Greece or Vietnam." The story of how they came out ahead of their investigatorssays a great deal about both the Congress and the agency, and about the problem of reconciling the demands of the superspy with the democracy he is supposed to protect. Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84BOOl48R000100100001-4 Co IN TIN_UEE whee!s'or several months without much success. Charged with the task of nvesugating more than a dozen intelligence were stalling, hoping to deflect attention else- ,' here. Then the committee got a break other cases, someone else got there first Of the Diem assassination the ommittee could only say that the C.I.A. had sanctioned and encouraged a little blurred. Even the most direct written communications, as in the Lumumba case, were couched in opaque C.IA. language: -Hunting good here when tights right." . Smoking guns are considered thoroughly unprofessional in- clandestine operations, where secrecy is paramount and it is a mark of skill to channel existing forces subtly. The assassination report, on the other hand, was publicly judged by standards built for palpable terest was down. Assassin and exotic murders. Because tions proved peripheral to t no foreign leaders were main business of C.I.A. con(] killed outright by American action, and the investigati initiative, planning and ex- of that unknown realm h ecution, the C.I.A. benefited scarcely begun. With li from a general impression vestigations of the other int assassination inquiry - with clean hands. This impression is false. Certainly many thousands of people have died as-a result of secret C.I.A. paramilitary interventions in countries ranging from Laos to Cuba to the Congo. (The Church com- mittee obtained some casualty figures but did not publish them at the agency's request) And, in the case of selected killings detailed in the report, the line between involvement and actual murder is often shadowy. For example, the Church committee reported extensively on the maneuver-_i ing that preceded the assassi_ nation of Rafael Trujillo io 1961. It showed how Ameri-1 can policy turned against the-1 Dominican strongman, how- F.B.I., still ahead or them, f crucial months had been I -along with much of committee's momentum. Senate's February 1976 de line for the completion of work loomed large. Church wanted to wrap his investigative chores order to begin his own Pry dential campaign. The Church committee 1 gambled heavily on the ass sination report. And 105L chording to Mitt) ttogovm, tme u.. special counsel ing the invest tion, the crux of the inq from the agency's point of %+ was covert action-secret terventibns abroad by me of propaganda, bribes, trial ulation of foreign agents , antes of support to those who plotted- against him, how force - as distinct from g, ering and analyzing int C.I.A. officials smuggled gence.-The promotion sys weapons into the country and for C.I.A. case officers exchanged cryptic messages on the likelihood of a success- ful assassination. In keep'ng with its courtroomdefinition of assassination, however, the committee exonerated the been built around operati and C.I.A. leadership has drawn from the operato Allen Dulles, Richard He William Colby-inste?d o telligence analysts. Vet agency of Trujillo's murder on agency operatives often the ground that the weapons - that without covert action it smuggled in were probably not the ones used in the kill- our own energy and will power, and our leadership. Quite candidly, we had lost Frank Church." The Senator,, according to this investigator, had given up hope of achiev- ing major reforms in the pre' nailing atmosphere. Public in- - the assassination report, re- he cialized version of the calls the leader of one of the- committees task forces. "we Department - - - had lost three things-the The .I.A. approached public's attention, much of CongreCssional investiga . C.I.A. would be nothing a _collection of sophistic professors with mounds o telligence, and the-agent 5 ~kpneoocentralved Re Ite~aese 22QO7/05/2gie(;IA-RDfRdB001 f o 8RO.0010 0 , t h4 Attorney seeking. on one occasion, to ch f 1 Cire'ri -r. n +~ :?~, ti;v i'~ -.`?'-rC- w -.k-counse any cl Isis, -:roteCt the?mean< and prat -, ^al r -em - ice .a covert action. it way.n ~'o it -en 'e , n - i7g n lira ?uirn '-I's >rrategy that , ctie .nay had ,'~atnr _bout Ca.,lro herder verified story trot r icon aido Colby and Rogovin gave covert action in the course of -The assassination report, Alexander Butterfield had 11 g on the marginal issue the assassination investiga- outside sources generally been a C.I.A. "plant" in t ee was of assassination, cooperating tion had made them realize it agree, was the high point of White refuted. lHouse. eaving ng the The story committee with the Church committee, was one of the hardest but the committee's investi-gation. wih less l credibility th at B : turning over more informs- also one of the most important After that, the staff divided with less jealousy tion than committee could i issues to deal with. "That is into two groups, one known be fall, the traditional jealousy digest, helping the committee why we went so heavily, into: informally as "the lawyers"- Sees the Ho and in cse itself up. Then, when the Mongoose in the assassinz' Sennatate had flared se d up behind a group o` attomeys drawn the scene's, and ,l Sieben Ro- assassination report was com tion repod, Schwe_ ex- together largely by'Schwarz is eted. Rogovin became tough Plains- -and the other as "the ovin, negotiating with both about information to be grant- Operation Mongoose was a - professors," who were g enet- c committees, was finding them ed for the remainder of the covert action designed to ally foreign-policy experts Roovincogovin,i"h. "hh'toxi nays hear- investigation - especially in vreaken and destroy the Cas- with academic roots or Ca pi- us e he was he was afraid n d regard to covert action. The Under ings ' because affr tro regime through an_orches- tot Hill experience- Under committee was floundering; trate*A program of economic task - force leader William Pike would do it if he didn't.". Rogovin pressed his advan- sab.,tage, commando raids Bader, the "professors" be- By December, the House and tage. "We agreed with the and paramilitary. harassment. came responsible for the C.I.A. Senate committees were set on committee that ;hey could it was the heart of the agen- imps courses. Pike wanted information for yens" ig went while the "law- oppositte have access to c~ s effort to overthrow Cas- yes" went[ off after the to impale the the C.I.A. . for its six case studies in covert ac- tro; simultaneous assassins= F.B.I.- Frictions developed be- abuses- Church wanted to Lion," he says. "provided they. tion attempts complemented, der the _ two a growps, the show that a Senate committee. would o public with only one Mongoose g rather than vice Bader g~ovp tending to eriti- could. handle national secrets ?. of them- They swore all kinds . versa. Although the campaign._ - of secrecy oaths that they failed, it was kept so secret "uze the "-lawyers--- as too responsibly. The Ford Admini- would not even let the names that the American public was prosecutorial and,"Watergate- tees played -the commit- of the other five countries a fundamentally ills- minded," and the Schwarz toes against each other. When" left with team hinting that leak." The case study he chose ,orted view of United States- the Bader Pike demanded information was C: ile-a selection favora- 1 Cuba relations for more than group was too soft in its and denounced "delaying tae ble to the agency, since a loth - .--., - handling of the C.I.A.'s pros.- tics," Administration spokes- a decade- inany event, discouraged by men-would point to the ex--. of material on the C.I.A.'s in-'I Before the committee's re- tervention in Chile had al- the-covert-action compromise, emplary behavior of the Church 1 { port, it was generally accepted - ready leaked the professors never recov- committee and appeal for a - to the - "It was a bad pre ss. that the Kennedy Admimstra dealsays tion ceased hostilities against crag the initiative more cooper m spirit V.1hen F.A.0. Schwarz,.. the commit-- Bay of the Church committee cooper- { Castro. after the Pigs. n the House, the Select sled, the Admin heist ion tended until forced to act t defensively f; - by the unprovoked introduc- Committee"- on Inteiii- to see it as a sign of weakness .T - tion of Russian missiles on ? genre chaired. by Otis and feel freer to hold nark Cuban soil. The Church com-- [-, Pike-the counterpart on information. Secretary of mittee revealed that not only of lire Church committee- State Henry Kissinger and C-IA director William " E. were there repeated attempts pursued an arduous and ir- on Castro's life before and dependent course. Created Colby simply boycotted aJ after the missile crisis but only after a long internecine the covert-action hearings, covert Mongoose raids were squabble over its leadership, and the committee accepted being its mandate weakened by con_ the rebuff instead of subpoe the e intensified Thentensified assass throughout ination tinuirg feuds in -Lee House, naing them. ? - - : - -.~ ' report .quotes the-minutes of. the committee.-:struggled The object of the exercise,"- high-]eve! tee tings, less than though the sun-ner of ,1575 says a Church com-i-.tee ..taff two weeksbefore t, 'missile to-breathe-life `into itself- - iember;"was to p ovcroot- Approved For Release 2007/05/24 : CIA-RDP84B00l48R000100100001-4 we were dot Pike. WNe were C.I.A. secrets is an invitation C.I.A. official by Greek news- !!_ Pike developed two themat- 'nc going t,y n"ve the Corr to the killing of C.I.A. uffi- papers and an American is cnt:cisms of :tee C.I.A. tress or the public by more vials. magazlnd. First, he amaise+t e-1111, "We Or expose. What was going to Sources on both sides of the. On Jan. 29, 1976, Represent- repeated intelligence failures. carry us was the kind of edi- C.I.A. investigation now agree ative John Young, Democrat showing how the agency had tonal we finally got in The that neither the magazine nor , of Texas, offered a motion on failed to anticipate such major Washington Post: 'An Intelli- the Church committee is the House floor to suppress world events as the 1968 Tet Sent Approach to Intelli- likely to have caused Welch's the final report of the Pike offensive in Vietnam, the Rus- Bence."' The committee evi- death. He was a relatively committee. The ensuing de- sian invasion of Czechoslova- denced an increasing aware- ness of its public image, of its ability to keep secrets. avoid leaks and work in some semblance of public harmony with the C.I.A. Many on the committee staff endorsed this approach as the path toward "establishing a relationship" that would serve the Congres- sional committee that was to be set up to exercise over- sight-supervision of the in- telligence agencies. Some of these investigators have, in fact, moved on to jobs with the oversight committee, now in business. Their attitude was infectious: Even today, many _ former Church committee staff members are more reti- cent in discussing C.I.A. mat- ters than C.I.A. officialsthem- selves. n Dec. 24, a band of =P_ iunknown terrorists i assassinated Rich- ard Welch, the C.I.A. chief of station in Greece. Welch had been identified as a C.I.A. official by a small anti-C.I.A. magazine, and a furor immediately arose over whether the revelation had anything to do with his death. The Senators on the Church committee received a flood of letters denouncing its work on the grounds that exposure of well-known figure in Athens, bate was not distinguished. 1 Via the same year, and the certainly to the kind of organ- Some speakers argued that 1973 Yom Kippur war in the ized political groups likely to I the report-which they admit- Middle East. Citing various have killed him. These proba- ted they had not read - bureaucratic entanglements bilities were overwhelmed, would endanger national se- and preoccupations as the however, by the emotional curity and align the House ~ cause of poor performance. power of the tragedy, and the C.T.A. encouraged the idea that C.I.A. critics might have contributed indirectly to the murder. Rogovin would only tell the Church committee that its own investigations were not "directly" responsi- ble, Colby lashed out in public at those who revealed C.I.A. secrets as being more sinister than the secrets themselves. Ford made public statements to the effect that inquiries into C.I-A. methods were unpatriotic. No single event did more to turn public opinion against the investigations than the Welch affair. As 1975 ended, the press was shying away from the C.I.A. issue, and hos- tility toward the inquiry was building up in Congress itself. As to the C.I.A's private thoughts on whether naming senior officials makes them more vulnerable to "the other side," a move that escaped public attention may provide some insight: Welch was re- placed in Athens by a man who had been identified as a with the murderers of Richard Welch. Others, like Wayne Hays, argued for suppression on the grounds that the report would be boring. "I suspect ... that when this report comes out it is going to be the biggest nonevent since Brigitte Bardot, after 40 years and four husbands and numer- ous lovers, held a press con- ference to armounce that she was no longer a virgin." Views like these prevailed. and the House, by a vote of 246 to 124, ordered its own Pike took the agency to task for bungling the one function - gathering intelligence - against which there is no au- dible dissent. Pike's second 11 tine of criticism was more substantive: He attacked cov- ert action by revealing a few of the more startling case studies. His most poignant ex- ample involved the Kurdish minority in Iraq. Like many of the world's mountain peoples-the Tibe- tans, the Mee in Laos, the blontagnards of Vietnam, the report to be locked away in I, Indians of South America- the clerk's sate. the Kurds have always The document did not re- t seemed destined for a hard main suppressed very long. It ' time. They have been strug- was leaked to CBS comes- gling against the Iraqi Gov- pondent Daniel Schorr, who in ernment for years. For years turn leaked it to The Vilage they have been losing. In Voice through a series of inter- 1972, when the Kurdish cam- mediaries. When The Voice paigri for autonomy was in a published the report in two brief period of dormancy, the special supplementsunderban- Shah of Iran asked the United ; ner headlines, it became the States to help him in one of most spectacular leak of the his perpetual feuds with' C.I.A. investigations, neighboring Iraq- This time it h was a border dispute. T e: Shah -wanted the United States to channel clandestine military aid to the Kurds, rea- soning that American support would inspire the Kurds for i another. military offensive against the Iraqi Government, thus weakening Iraq and aid- ing the Shah. - Secretary of the Treasury John Connally, acting on be- half of Henry Kissinger and President Nixon, informed the Shah that the United States would go along. A S16 million covert - action project went into effect According to Pike's documents, the deal was made in a convivial spirit -a favor to the Shah as one of the fellows. (He himself had been returned to power by the C.I.A. in a 1953 coup.) Even the C.I.A. opposed the scheme, but was overruled. .nd money to the Kurds for - -.v? teen tw'r nears, and the -:::cads once again rose up in rebellion. Their leader was so moved by American support for the Kurdish cause that he sent Kissinger a gold, and pearl necklace for his new bride. He also sent word to Kissinger that the Kurds were ready "to become the 51st state" after achieving libera- tion. In March 1975, the bloodied Iraqi Government came to urns with the Shah. The very next day, Iran and the United States cut off all aid to the ?Curds, and the Iraqi Army mounted a full-scale offensi/e :.gains[ them. The Kurdish leader, who could not bring himself to believe the United States had reversed itself so cynically, wrote desperate, pitiful appeals for help, to Kissinger- Kissinger did not reply. An estimated 5,000 Kurdish refugees died fleeing the Iraqi 'Ins Iaught. The Shah, prag- matic to the last, forcibly repatriated 40,000 Kurdish refugees to Iraq, where their fate. while unknown, has presumably been sad. The United States declined to pro- vide any relief assistance to tnz remaining refugees and refused to accept a single b_ur'dish application for asy- ,ind tb