THE SUBSTANCE AND THE RULES

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CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2
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December 20, 2016
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January 31, 2008
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41
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June 1, 1983
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Approved For Release 2008/01/31: CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 Angelo Codevilla is a professional staff member with the Senate Intelligence Committee. Previously. he was a foreign service officer and a fellow at the Hoover Institution. Stanford Univessuy. Dr. Codevilia has written widely on Europea+t politics and in the field of inuiligence and military policy. elo Codeviiia By focusing so exclusively on rules and standards of operations, the intelligence debate of the mid-1970s 4id not answer the fundamental question of What the United States expects of its intelligence services or what they are to accomplish in order to meet thi challenges of the 1980:. S.. Th E I Su JWL 11 n Since the early 1970s, this country's intel- ligence agencies have been asking, "What does the country expect of us?" That ques- tion bad not arisen in the postwar period be- cause the American political system had left the agencies to the total discretion of those appointed to lead them. In the early 1970s. factional conflict among those leaders spilled over into- a national debate about what America's practitioners of intelligence ought to have foremost in mind. That debate con- tinues. Recently, Admiral Stansfield Turner, President Carter's Director of Central Intelli- gence, and his former special assistant, George Thibault, published an attempt both to answer that question and to indict the Rea- gan administration's handling of intelli- gence. The author's answer seems to be that the American people expect their intelligcnm agencies to be as innocuous as possible.. They charge that the Reagan administration is undermining the agencies by loosening too Many restrictions. The authors thus contend that for our civil liberties' sake, and for tlu sake of the agencies' own standing in the country, the agencies ought to cvnccntratc on formulating for themselves the right kinds of rules and restrictions. However, bne would not suspect from Turner and 'T'hjbault's arti- - ele,that the rules by which intelligence offi- eers live ought to flow from the- intelligence profession's substantive equirements- Nevertheless, in intelligence as in other areas of government, the American people rightly want their employees to accomplish the functions for which they are paid- This author will argue that Stansfield Turner is V0AI I.'1'.CNU Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 wrong to assume that the key factor affecting the quality of intelligence is the quantity of intrusion into the lives of innocent people, that better intelligence-means, less civil lib- erty, and vice versa. This article will then address the real tasks which American intel- ligence must accomplish in peace and war, and the difficulties it now faces in doing so. A revolution took place in American in- telligence during the mid-1970s. That mvo- lution was thorough: by the end of the Carter administration, only a minuscule percentage of the CIA's supergrade officials had held such rank in 1975. Those who became prominent in American intelligence during that period were generally not known either for achievement or technical insight in the special fields they took over. Some, e.g., the man who took over the counterintelligence staff at CIA, were known as non-believers in the very activity for which they became re- sponsible. These men, however, were well attuned to the priorities of the administration they would serve, and to those of the factions which had recently won out in the intelli- gence community's long, ' intramural strug- gles: to lower America's profile abroad; to reduce the importance of clandestine ac- tivities at home and abroad; to assert the CIA's claim to primacy among providers of sed the bounds of propriety and legality_ These accusations against the CIA's di- rectorate of operations in general and par- ticularly against counterintelligence special- ists in the CIA and the FBI had come from other intelligence officers- There had always been controversies among intelligence officers about what. American intelligence should and should not be. The best outline of the views held by the CIA officials who had long fought to reduce the role of the clandestine services and of counterintelligence is an article, "Ethics and. Intelligence" by E. Drexel Godfrey, in the January 1978 Foreign Affairs. William Colby's memoirs, as well as the published writings of lesser officials, e.g ? Herbert Scoville, plus the reporting of books like Edward Epstein's Legend and Henry Hurt's Shadrin, flesh out that outline with examples of *how profoundly this intramural attack af- fected the daily workings of the intelligence system. In sum, clandestine and counterintelli- gence activities were charged with being immoral and developing ihcir practitioners devious thoughts and ways which. would Prove dangerous to American civil liberties. The allegations claimed that these: activities present the rest of the world with an a nfavor- able picture of the..Unit-d States. and that they analytical products. They were also intent on,_ makiag suer that the- ru=nt revoTutiba ii-the field -of intelligence would not be reversed. As a result of all this, the leading men of President Carter's intelligence community, led by Admirals Stansfield Turner and Bobby Ray Inman, argued with great per- sonal vigor for the enactment of legislative charters for the intelligence community. These charters would have codified and ap- proved in law the changes in orientation which had occurred in the mid-1970s. Of course the proposed charters' chief feature was an absorbing concentration on rules and restrictions. It is essential to understand whence came this concentration on rules. The debate of the mid-1970s had concen- trated so exclusively on rules and restrictions because it had begun with public accusations that some intelligence officers had transgres- tunr.the-intel lgeacc cominnunity':s tbouLbts -` and energies toward combat with the Soviets rather than toward accirrate assessments of reality. Beginning in 1974. some intelligence officers who. had been making such. charges. gave to their allies in CoY~gress and tbe~ press items of information embarrassing to some . of the leading men in the directorate of oper- ations and in the counterintelligence ser- vices. In 1975-1976 the select conunitte es on intelligence led by Senator Church and Rep- resentative Pike laid out these embarrassing items, along with a coherent critique of American intelligence- Understandably, the intelligence officers whose critiques of their bureaucratic adversaries were now being es- poused by congressional committees were hardly reluctant witnesses. Director Colby, Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 for example, did not have to wave the far-- ous poison dart gun in the air before the cameras. When he did, the stock of some at the CIA fell, and the stock of others rose. As late as 1978, a senior CIA official, John Hart, spoke on the CIA's behalf to the House Select Committee regarding the investigation of President Kennedy's assassination and, despite the committee's efforts to stop him, delivered a passionate indictment of a former colleague, once head of the Soviet division of the directorate of operations, for allegedly violating the rights of a Soviet defector whose bona fides was in doubt. In sum, a long-festering intramural battle was decided . when one side went outside the walls and linked up with superior political forces which, for their own reasons, were willing to . help. The Church and Pike Committees had been organized as a result of years ofeffort by the American Civil Liberties Union and Ilkeminded groups, e.g., the Institute for Policy Studies. These organizations sup- ported able individuals like William Miller and Morton Halperin. These efforts were based on the contention that intelligence in, vestigations are inherently dangerous to civil liberties. Thus, these efforts were aimed at restricting the scope of such investigations. The proximate goal was to force the agencies henceforth to apply the standards of criminal law to intelligence investigations-: . livid rals' v+ork`cir intellig-itcc =vas=-girt-'of- their broader campaigns for a re-direction of U.S. foreign policy toward reduced Ameri- can self-assertions, greater friendliness with revolutionary fors in the Third World, and reduced hostility vii-a-vii the Soviet Union. The reaction of many intelligence officers, active and retired, against the Church and Pike Committees was to uphold the intelli- gence profession's good name against what they perceived as the far leh's almost unpat- riotic attacks. They proceeded by arguing that American society must be willing to bear the burden of the agencies' intrusive exis- tence if it is to live in a dangerous world. They therefore continued to work in public and in private against every restrictive rule that was proposed. In their single=minded effort to stand up for the notion that the in- telligence agencies' role ought not to be re- duced, they put themselves in the unenviable position of seeming to argue for the. right of U.S. intelligence agencies to invade the pri- vacy of innocent Americans The Asuezican Civil Liberties Union, Morton H;alperin's Center for National Security Studies, and the Institute for Policy Studies understandably did not protest having the intelligence o?& eers' view of the world identified with breaches of Americans' civil liberties, Igor did they protest having their own pref==aces for American foreign policy identified with the protection of individuals' rights by impli.. cation. - The debate of the mid-19705 did not totxb on the quality of American intelligence, on what ought to be accomplished in each ofthe intelligence community's functional areas, and on precisely how well each of e=se areas was functioning. The anti-inleiulg = lobby's fundamental message was that ibe United States was suffering from an -ext s of intelligence capability, that we had room intelligence than we n'x d._T.he agencies' defenders did not challcn -the impzess on that though the American intelligence la+o.., fession might have i ansgresscd here and there, at least it had been doing its ;job.. So, each for. their own reasons,all sides of the cl6 ate ag~naL an she most important- sion3 by` d`largc the quality of intelliaenc bad been either acceptable or more than ac- ceptable; that the quality of intelligence, de. pends on the degree of intrusion into inmo cent lives; that the only questions about in- telligence worth discussing concern what rules and restrictions shall be imposed on the agencies; and that the essential 1s what hal- ante should be struck between good imelli- gence and civil liberties., Hence, the debate which first a=m_ panied the Church Committee's propose charters fpr intelligence was over rrninutiae. The public position of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers (AfLo) was that there should be no charters and that the intelligence agencies should be allowed to do Acwzranw_ Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 what they thought is necessary to accomplish their job. But the written critique of the charters which AFIO submitted to the Senate consisted exclusively of minute changes in the details of the proposed rules. By not ex- pounding a full-fledged, intellectually ap- pealing contrast to the set of arguments which underlay the charters, and by disput- ing the details of individual restrictions, AFIO and its supporters confirmed those ar- guments' legitimacy, and accepted the bulk of those restrictions. Moreover, by basing their arguments on the politically unappeal- ing notions that good intelligence means in- trusion into the lives of innocent people, and that the extent of that intrusion into civil lib- erties is strictly the concern of the intelli- gence agencies, they virtually guaranteed their opponents' popularity. fact, it had undertaken. In short, the es- timators had missed a huge, ominous devel- opment unfolding before their very eyes. In the fall of 1978 the country learned that, even as the shah of Iran was being toppled from his throne by a movement openly or- ganized in Paris, Washington, Beirut, Teh- ran, as well as in Baku, U.S.S.R,., the CIA was estimating that Iran was not in a revolu- tionary or even in a prerevolutionary situa- tion and that the shah would be an important part of Iranian politics into the foreseeable future. - - That year, the public also learned about a nasty quarrel within the CIA over the trustworthiness of a Soviet defector, Yuri Nosenko, who had come to the United States to assure the CIA that the Soviet Union had bad no involvement with President Ken- "The prevalent attitude in American. counterintelligence today seems to be to sit and wait for indications.and then check them out." By .1978, however, events.,ba&::.led a un v's:.assassin?_.According. to.: pub3;c ac- who}!y'different set of people i s"tii~9? tfic counts;, even -though everyone- agnxd there. d o d grnun f the ebate and to point out that, in was undeniable proof that key elements. of - intelligence as in anything else, the priority Nosenko's story were lies, he had been offi- of rules over substance makes no sense. Here cially believed for administrative reasons. is a sample of those events. Moreover, those intelligence office who In 1977 the country first learned that the Soviet Union's buildup of strategic weapons was rapidly achieving its objective: to pro- vide the Soviet Union with the equipment to survive, fight, and win a nuclear war. It also learned that this equipment would be largely in place by about 1980, that the Soviets had been pursuing this capability since at least the mid-1960s, and that the United States' intelligence agencies had had enough data to sound the warning. Instead, however, the National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs) had been telling policymakers that the Soviet Union would not undertake efforts that, in had. resisted believing him had been; de- moted. Then the public learned from Reader's Digest that the FBI and the CIA had had a curious reversal on another key agent, code named Fedora, who had corroborated Nosenko's lies. First the CIA had officially deemed Fedora bad and the FBI deemed him good. Then, after a changing of the guard at the CIA, Fedora was deemed good, while at the FBI he had become bad. This hardly had the hallmark of competence. The public also learned that the CIA had asked an American citizen, Nicholas Shadrin, to play a danger- ous double agent's game with the Soviet Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 KGB, and that Shadrin had vanished without a trace while meeting the Soviets under sup. posedly competent CIA control. Finally, as struggles for power in Africa, Asia, and even in nearby Nicaragua resulted in victory after victory for the Soviet Union, Americans began to ask, "Where is the CIA?" They learned that the CIA had never even suggested plans for thwarting these So- viet drives. Thus from 1977 to 1980, as Senators con- sidered passing the proposed restrictive charters, the arguments of both proponents and opponents began to sound hollow. Clearly, none of the shortcomings of Ameri- can intelligence of which the nation was painfully learning was rooted either in too much or too little intrusion. Hence, though the debate about proper safeguards against intrusion remains interesting, since the late 1970s. there has been no excuse for confus- ing that debate with discussions of what the country needs by way of intelligence. . But what are those needs? What is the job to be done in the 1980s and in what areas should the professionals' habits be changed in order to ensure that the job is done? In what ways would the charters' proposed rules, or any other possible set of rules, affect the ability and motivation of intelligence operatives to do their jobs? What happens when .one tries to remove chance f risk:;.. . U inbemntly:iisky profess ` ?--To one familiar with U.S. intelligence suggests that the United States receives any- thing like the kind of intelligence it needs. The public record of the few human sources the United States has enjoyed in the com? munist world strongly suggests that we do not recruit agents, so much as accept and use those who approach us. This should hardly be surprising given that the United States does. not have a really clandestine service. All but a handful of our clandestine officers are under rather thin official cover, that is, they are known to be employees of the U.S. government. A high percentage do riot speak the language of the country they work in. They can hardly approach someone who is required to report his contacts with Ameri- cans and unobtrusively suborn treason or conduct false flag recruitment. Since our agents live as official representatives of the United States, it is not surprising that most of- their reports read like diplomatic dispatcbes. Of course, nothing prevents the United States from acquiring the service of people who can credibly pass themselves off as something other than Americans. But many - professionals oppose this, claiming that such people would be unwieldy for the present ? personnel and promotion system to, bandk Thus the professionals at the CIA resisted William... Casey's. early efforts to change the character of the clandestine service_The.op. position to the nomination of Max Hugel to the post of director of operations was due to - this. Nevertheless, Casey's early efforts were on the right track. . No one familiar with the subject doubts the sophistication of our means of technical collection. Yet no one would contend that these means were concei,?d as an intezro. laced system to collect a set of data. Each of the present systems-is a technical extrapola- tion of previous systems, and exists in ntmn- bers dictated more by the budget than by any nat%un.saf operational.n{ed, . ltc: prcmzcss- by-_... whirlrthese?systenis_have been acquired hays been irrational. We have not decided what information is required and then allocated re- sources among technologies, but the oppo. site-with one significant exception, arms control. For fifteen years, much of the im- petus for buying technical intelligence de- vices has come from those who wished to monitor certain kinds of arms-control t eaties with the Soviet Union. As a result, our-cumnt technical architecture is fit only for operation in peacetime and is focused to a large extent on the rather narrow parameters of past arms-control agreements. Of course, this could be changed. But that would require ho-.- posing upon the several agencies some sort of strategic vision and a consequent coherent set of requirements. Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 Approved For Release 2008/01/31: CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 Collection without good operational secu- rity can be worse tha,tt useless because it can provide channels for disinformation by hos- tile intelligence services. Today there is no reason to be complacent about the opera. tional security of American intelligence. Although nowadays the bulk of collection is through , technical means, technical opera. tional security is barely in the conceptual stage. Indeed. some professionals are unwil. ling to conceive that technical means routinely might be subjected to the same kinds of checks for reliability that human agents must undergo before the information they generate is accepted. This is not to suggest that the operational security of our human collection system is sound. Traditionally, challenging and testing the credibility of human sources has been the least popular and least career-enhancing job in the clandestine service, because whoever does it must question the good judgment of higher-ranking people. In the late 1950s and early. 1970s internal criticism of the CIA's counterintelligence staff mounted, because that staff had questioned the bona fides of too many agents, and had become bureaucrat- ically too powerful to suit the strong.geog_ raphic divisions of the direetorsirc"of opera.. boas:. Bcginning, in' 1975.. the: staff f was- eiis- mantled and replaced with non-specialists from the geographic divisions who are tem- porarily assigned to counterintelligence. Thus, those responsible for catching the col- lectors' embarrassing mistakes are them. selves responsible to those very collectors for their careers. Clearly, operational security is a thankless job which, if it is to be done well, must be done by people who are not totally dependent on those whose work they check. The division of responsibility in counter. intelligence between the FBI and the CIA is understood perhaps least of all by the two agencies themselves. Of course. each knows perfectly what it thinks it should do, and even better what the other ought not to at- tempt in its field! Both cooperate more or less satisfactorily in pursuit of known cases. But neither has the responszsibility, the data, or the inclination to conceive of the overall problem of counterintelli gence. Conse- quently. not knowing the whole, their con. ception of their own parts is necessarily a hit-or-miss proposition. This is true for indi- vidual cases, but is quite undeniable as re- gards the comprehensive counterintelligence picture. Anyone who knows counterintelli_ Bence realizes that gaining aw eness that a case might exist is the hardest part of any case. The prevalent attitude in Aurae i counterintelligence today seems to be to sit and wait for indications and than check them out. Awareness of possible rases sometimes comes through allegations or because the in- dividual sees before him the disastrous ef- fects of'enemy intelligence.. At present, that is how most of ourcases be r_ But there is a preferable way, counterintelligence: analysis- Yet, counterintelligence analysis of serious sophisticated or known intel ii=cr threw is not possible on the basis ofdara as limited as the CIA and FBI separately possess. Surely we can expect a scrious.,tnovc by a hostile intelligence service to. ej:compass, elements both foreign and American? both human and 'technical. Yet the -FBI does not routinely examine the take from the CIA and the N-a- - tionaf Security Agency for its counter nielli Bence implications, and vitae versa. Witiuout analysis of all irrtriligencc" data from a coon- j terintelligence perspective, no agency can hope to do anything but stumble-onto cases. The overall picture built up by this sort of fragmented, reactive counicrintelligence is also quite unsatisfactory. One is limited to listing cases. But one cannot begin to esti- ` mate the scope of a problem-.say the trans- fer of technology or the potential for agent- of-influence operations in Sector X -until one takes the problem itself as a point of dc- parture, and brings to bear upon it all the available data. In the case of technology transfer; we are just beginning to learn how t dearly the United States has had to pay for a counterintelligence system whose structure precluded asking substantive questions and kept data in tight bureaucratic compartments- If the press is to be believed. President Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 Reagan and his National Security Council have noticed these shortcomings in the an- alysis of counterintelligence. It remains to be seen whether they will have the moral and intellectual wherewithal to translate their in- tuition and their legal authority into changed behavior on the part of a recalcitrant bureau. cracy. There is no denying the low quality of all too many NIEs, nor the serious effects which some of these have bad upon the nation's se- euriry. The mere fact that, in the late 1970s, the public and the president, who bad been reassured for fifteen years that the Soviets were not even trying to gain strategic superiority, woke up to find that the Soviets had in fact achieved it is a sufficient indict. ment of the NiEs. The American people pay billions for an intelligence community to avoid precisely this kind of surprise. More galling is the knowledge that the data for a correct assessment was not lacking and that in fact quite a few analysts in the Pentagon bad pretty well figured out the nature and size of the forces the Soviets were building. But the process by which the NIEs are writ- ten smothered the correct analyses with the incorrect ones. The president and other re- sponsible officials did not have the chance to cxercise,their responsible iu the. evid They had no idea thafa nrewotficr than the official one existed, much less a chance to decide which was correct. How does one go about improving an- alysis? Better analysts would do a better job. That is not just a truism. All too often analysts in our intelligence agencies are promoted not for being good interpreters of the real world but rather for being good sol- diers in the intelligence community's in- tramural battles. If they stoutly uphold the office view, they are often preferred to those who prefer reality. It is often better to be wrong for bureaucratically acceptable rea- sons than to be right about the facts and gal- ling to one's superiors. Suict accountability and quality control would help. But who is to control the controllers? After all, the office view of things comes from precisely those longtime officials responsible for quality control. The insertion at high levels of numerous outsiders who are not congenial to, the senior analysts would really help. But unless these outsiders were exceptionally honest, new office views would staort forming around them. There is another way of keeping analysts honest, and of ensuring that those respoj_- ble people who read intelligence estimates get to exercise their responsibility: allow both the CIA and the DIA to produces esti- mates an important subjects, each Using all sources but neither coordinating with one another. The products would contain less of the bureaucratic prose which long coor- dinating sessions substitute for data. They would also-1e. more closely arguedd, tlzaa is now the case; they would have to be, be cause they would be written with the suue: knowl- edge, that they would have to confront caoun- teraargurnents. Unfortunately, that is rx* now the case. Finally, they would be compelled not to try to fill with the putty of judo ts. the gaping holes we have in ourknow edge. The words cornpetitivc ilysis have been widely accepted. But, in the view of proses sionals at the CIA competitive analysis neatly describes the system by which NMs have been produced for the past quart= cca_ tury ; A=ir--rt.-remains ter-bc- seca?_s~rbciher the Magar-ad rni'nistration,baving publicly accepted the concept will prove to have enough understanding of it and eommuo enj CDVMUAC 0M The Church Committee, echoing many, professionals, characterized covert seder.._ that is, secret activities to influence the out- come of foreign situations.--as. exceptional means to be undertaken when all orbs had failed or no others could be emp)o.)Yd_ The Church -Committee maintained that the United States had resorted to covcatiC action too often. The debate within thegove:Tnment has been.between those who warn more Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2 sand and done, ally X should be in office and ? any tool of foreign polity unless the ends of movement Y should no Longer be in a posi- policy are spelled out specifically and a seri- tion to do harm. These objectives could be ous commitment is made-to achieving them. achieved by various combinations of means, Clearly, the question of what the United overt and covert. The particular combination States erects of its intelligence services has matters much less than the result. not been answered with intellectual authority Today all too many people tend to ask by those who have had the political authority about any given situation, "Is there anything to do so. We have mad-- the case here that itt that the CIA could do here?" In many cases, order for the United States to meet the chal- there-is or could be. Nonetheless, that is the. lenges of the 1980s, American intelligence is wrong question. Covert actions decided upon going to.have to perform quite differently in answer to that question may be well-in- from the way it has been: performing. tensioned. but they will not be part of a co-,' Bureaucracies being what they are, change is herent, success-oriented plan. Rather, one unlikely to take place without some powerful should ask, "What combination of actions external stimulus-such as an act of Con, by various agencies can actually bring about * gross. - covert actions and those who want fewer. I gime. That official's understanding of pol- believe that history shows both sides have icy, if the Times reported it correctly, is pu- missed the point. erile. To conduct military or paramilitary op- - The point is to achieve the ends of foreign orations against a regime by any means. policy. Is ally X in trouble in Country A, and overt or covert, without a plan for toppling it has the president decided that the aim of is against one of the most elementary norms U.S. policy is to save his office? Is move- of politics: never do your enemy a small meat Y in Country Z so menacing that the hurt. president has made it U.S. policy to reduce The problem of covert action is funda- its influence? Affirmative answers to such mentally that of the conception and execu- questions imply nothing about the means to lion of foreign policy. It is impossible either be employed except one thing. when all is to rationally discuss or to successfully use the desired objective?" if -that- overallglaa - The intelligcnce agencies urgently- ncod them, if not, there is not. Today, covert ac- complish. The - executive orders and Presi- calls for secret acts, there there is a: ce fdr: clear statements- of- wbatr; they are to ac== F Lion is touted as one more thing going for us, or something else to push the situation in the tight direction. Such categorizations are not helpful. In the international area, there are no rewards for good intentions or for pushing in the right direction or for sending signals. Policy fails if it does no; succeed. The press has recently carried allegations that the United States has a covert action going against Nicaragua. The New York Times quoted a U.S. official as admitting it but jus- tifying it on the ground that it was not suffi- ciently large to topple the Nicaraguan re- dent Carter's proposed charters consisted of authorizations for investigations under highly specific circumstances. They did not begin to tell the agencies what kind of infor- mation they were to collect, what kinds of analysis they were to provide. what sort of = security against hostile intelligence services and terrorists they were to ensure, and what ': - sort of influence they should be prepared to exercise abroad. Perhaps a legislative state- ment of these missions could begin to answer . the question, "What does the U.S. expect of = its intelligence services?" wa t Approved For Release 2008/01/31 : CIA-RDP85M00364R002204280041-2