MISINFORMATION ON DISINFORMATION

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP91-00587R000100010028-2
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 25, 2011
Sequence Number: 
28
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Publication Date: 
July 16, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/02/25: CIA-RDP91-00587R000100010028-2 ARV!I.F A??EARED WASHINGTON TIMES r' 1 ' r 16 July 1985 Misinformation on dismiormarion recently read a review, pub- lished in a certain magazine to be identified later, of a book, Dezinformatsia, by two respected academics, Professor Richard H. Shultz Jr. of 'Rifts Uni- vbcsity's Fletcher School of Diplo- macy and Roy Godson of Georgetown University. The review chide the following serious charges against this book: ? The book was said to use "spe- ?ious arguments to prove the obvi- 01$." . ? It misrepresents reality to prove a simplistic point. ? It is "misguided;' exhibits a "total lack of understanding" about Clausewitz, shows "a superficial understanding of current history and the Soviet Union:' ? It didn't "fairly report" the con- tent of Soviet journals, it has treated the subject "irresponsibly," it suffers from "extraordinarily naive assumptions" and "erroneous his- tory" ? And the book was said "ulti- mately" to serve "neither scholarship nor the national inter- est." Such harsh language about the published work of academics can be defined as a form of character assas- sination, since it questions their honor as teachers and researchers. For my part, to be even harsher, I would say that this review could, with little editing, have appeared in a Soviet publication. Now, then, would you like to guess in what left-wing, pro-Soviet, pro- gressive journal this book review appeared? If you're very smart and sophisticated, you might try and guess, but you'd be wrong. I'll have to tell you: This book review appeared in an official magazine of the government STAT of the United States, a magazine pub- lished by the Central Intelligence Agency - yes, by the CIA under the supervision of the Deputy Director- ate ate for Intelligence that is responsi- ble for all CIA analyses of world affairs. The publication, a quarterly called Studies in Intelligence, is an "in-house" publication. It is not dis- tributed publicly since some articles are classified; others, such as the book review I am discussing, are unclassified. The essay-review, in the magazine's winter 1984 issue, was written by Avis Boutell, a CIA analyst, who works for the Foreign Broadcast Information Service. When I read the Shultz-Godson book some months ago to prepare my own favorable review, I found it a cool, scholarly examination of Soviet propaganda and disinfor- mation strategies. So did a number of other distinguished Sovietologists and publicists, such as Professors Adam Ulam and Uri Ra'anan, Dr. Robert Conquest, and Professor Sid- ney Hook, who wrote the laudatory introduction. The book, now in its third edition, included what I regarded as highly informative interviews with defec- tors who had specialized, while in the service of the KGB in the U.S.S.R. and Czechoslovakia, in "active measures." The Soviet strategy of "active measures" involves, for the most part, covert disinformation as "a non-attributed or falsely attributed communica- tion, written or oral, containing intentionally false, incomplete, or misleading information (frequently combined with true information), which seeks to deceive, misinform, and/or mislead the target:' accord- ing.to.the Shultz-Godson definition. In other words, the book describes a panoply of Soviet tactics to mantpu at e tt e. metia in the democracies, the use of "agents of influence:' sponsorship of clandes- tine radio broadcasts, and use of international front organizations. These strategies and tactics are excellently described in this impor- tant book, Not only is Studies in Intelligence an official government magazine, but it also is published by a U.S. secret service. It therefore must be assumed that whatever is publistyed therein represents the official vow of the CIA or, at the very least, the point of view of CIA analysts. As an analogy, a Voice of America edito- rial, for example, must be approved by responsible State Department officials before it can be read on the air. If the CIA book review reflects the political culture of the CIA and the world in which its analysts live, then some of the egregious errors about Soviet intentions made by the CIA over the past 15 or more years, errors which have been publicly dis- cussed in the press and by the two congressional committees on intelli- gence oversight, become under- standable. One could take apart, paragraph by paragraph, this CIA book review to demonstrate its use of the rhetoric of overkill. Here I want merely to deal with the political approach of a CIA ana- lyst whose views, no matter what the CIA might say, seem to harmonize with the agency's ethos, which I pray is not that of William J. Casey, CIA director. That this review got past Mr. Casey, I can understand; he has more important problems to deal with. But isn't there somebody in his organization who has the wit, under- standing, and common decency to realize that the language used to dis- cuss the Shultz-Godson book might be better suited to a review of Hit- ler's Mein Kampf? Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/02/25: CIA-RDP91-00587R000100010028-2