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Antall APPZARED
01 PAGE.. E-9
NEW YORK TIMES
20 JUNE 1 982
Headliners
Inman's inside Gambit
Bobby R. Inman, former Deputy Director of Central In-
telligence, was considered one of the brighter lights in the
intelligencecommunity until policy differences with the
Reagan Administration ttuned him off. His resignation
from the agency had hardly taken effect before the House
Select Committee on Intelligence offered him a job. He ac-
cepted the part-time consulting post last week. That could
make for lively times whenever Mr. Inman's former boss,
C.I.A. Director William J. Casey, goes to the Hill to testify.
Committee chairman Edward P. Boland said he hoped the
Inman deal didn't look like "a !dap at Casey."
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STATI NTL gav6c
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:pp RED
THE WASHINGTON POST
ON PACT! 4y 19 June 1982
Senate Intelligence Committee
Hires Inman as a Consultant
United Press International
Bobby Ray Inman, who recently resigned as
deputy director of the CIA, has agreed to serve as
a part-time consultant to the House Select Com-
mittee on Intelligence, a committee spokesman
said yesterday.
Inman, a retired four-star Navy admiral, is
highly respected on Capitol Hill, and his decision
to leave the No. 2 post at the CIA was a disap-
pointment to many in Congress who relied on his
expertise.
When Inman made public his intention to de-
part, House intelligence committee chairman Ed-
ward P. Boland (D-Mass.) expressed the "deepest
? regret," and described Inman as "this nation's fin-
est professional intelligence officer."
A spokesman for the committee had no details
on what Inman's work would involve or how long
he would serve as consultant.
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STATINTL
Approved For Release 2001/03/070NEW iKCIAOD
ARTICLE 4'11RED P91-
18 JUNE 1982
ON PAGE
WASHINGTON TALK
Briefing
Assignment for Inman
?
Bobby R. Inman, who lett his post
as Deputy Director of Central
Intelligence last week partly be-
cause of policy differences with the
Reagan Administration, has agreed to
serve as a part-time consultant to the
Democratic-controlled House. Select
Committee on Intelligence.
Mr. Inman, who is respected '
on Capitol Hill by conservatives and
liberals of both parties, accepted the
offer from the committee chairman,
Edward P. Boland, Democrat of Mas-
sachusetts.
The agreement With Mr. Inman, a
retired Navy admiral with an inti-
mate knowledge of the C.I.A., is likely
to cause some discomfort in the intel-
ligence community.
"I hope this doesn't appear as a slap
at Casey," Mr. Boland said in a refer-
ence to William J. Casey, the director
of the agency. "It's not intended as
such. The committee is fortunate to
gain Mr. Inman's services and advice.
He knows as much about intelligence
as anyone alive."
Phil Gailey
Warren Weaver Jr.
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STATINTL
.RADIO REPORTS,Hkic.,
4701 WILLARD AVENUE, CHEVY CHASE, MARYLAND 20815 656-4068
FOR
PUBLIC AFFAIRS STAFF
PROGRAM CNN2 News
DATE
? STATION WMAR TV
CN Network
June 10, 1982 6:20 AM ON Washington, DC
SUBJECT Vice President at Langley
NEWSCASTER: Vice President George Bush believes there
is a need for a strong intelligence community and lawmakers on
Capitol Hill apparently believe the same. A bill making it a
crime to disclose the names of US intelligence agents has been
sent to the desk of President Reagan and his signature is?cer-
tain.
Andrea Stroud has more.
ANDREA STROUD: A homecoming occurred today and the
former CIA Director told his audience that his years at Langley
were the happiest of his career.
Bush also referred obliquely to the fighting in the
Middle East and the Falklands, saying he was hearing too much of
Director William Casey in the past few days during meetings ail
the White House.
Bush [unintelligible] that the bad days at the CIA were
past, the country once again understands the need for a strong
intelligence agency.
VICE PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH: The President's embarked on
a major campaign to rebuild the capabilities of the intelligence
community. I'm a great believer in the pendulum theory and I
believe this country now appreciates -- maybe not understands
all the complexities of intelligence -- but truly appreciates the
need to have an intelligence capability second to none. And they
see this as vital; they see it vital to our own national interest
-- our own survival, if you will.
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'STATINTL
IIIIIIIIIM.
APPTPve.$1 For Release 2001/9140YoneheneEP91-00901
- ....1.0
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......_ 27 9 JUNE 1982
? - /-.
,....
WASHINGTON.
ChAnging the Guard
By James Reston
WASHINGTON, June 8 Around
the halfway sruarin most. four-year
Presidential terms,..there is a =turd.,
tendencyta snake changes in the Cabi-
net and. the White House staff. Ronald
Reagan is now teething this pietist, a
little earlier than usual.. ? S -
Re ? has :already replaced Richard
Allen;- his national security adviser;
Lyn Notziger.- tis political -adviser,
and Max L Friedersdort, his legisla.
, R. Inman.. Director of Central
tive sideetis ityalso lost Adm: Bobby
oseph W. Canzeriv a
dePtaY.:-Preskiential.. assistant; Awl
Max Hugel. C.LA. Deputy Director of
? In additionaames B. Edwards. the .
Energy Secretary, has indicated that
he will be-leaving in the fad. More im-?
portant,. there are -reports that
Deaver, and maybe even Ed. Meese, ?
two of his most trusted White House
advisers,: are thinldng.. about :other
green-back pastures.- ? . --.. ? .
Now comes Jeans Kirkpatrick, Mr.
Reagan's delegate to the United Na-
tions, with her own public condemna-
tion of ,whist she regards as the Admin.
istratinn's misconduct of foreign miss
dons. . , . . -
"I believe very reluctantly," the
told the Heritage Foundation in what .
can only -be- interpreted as a farewell
address, ".:fshat the decline of the
United States' influence in the United
Nations is part of the U.S. decline in
the world, and it is a direct reflection
of a persistent ineptitude in interne--
tional relations, an ineptitude that has
persisted., through several. decades,.
several Administrations."
"We have not been good at the poll-
tics of theUrdted Nations," Mrs. Kirk-
patrick.added.? 66? we simply have ?
behaved, like a bunch of amateurs, in
. ? . ? ,
generalize
? about:INS:Omani for the. shakeup in
.V?tbs Reagen4earn:400w have lett be-
cause they weren't tit for their jobs;
others . because, they- were ,bored or
broke..And one?ortwo,like Secretary
of Labor Dow* probably should re-
sign betause they are simply an ern,
' barrassinent tathePresideat. ? ?
1 Mn. Kirkpatrick is a different and',
more :,signifirant-case. She.' simply
does not agree With Many aspects of
the President's foreign policy,- partic;..
- ularly,sta it *miles to Latin America
In generaratd Argentina in pardon-
tar
It ts nniziniiiilin
itti'?iise doesn't get
. 7 ?
alOng:' pen:lankily', with Secretary ? of
State Klig..though he is not her buddy,
but that the thinks. Mr. Kaig and his
. two principal- foreign policy aides
IV_ally.Stoesserand" Larry Eaglebure-
er; have persuaded thi-Prislident to go
along with the European allies on
clear arms control andforeign policy ,
In genera/ at the expense of Israel. Ar-
gentina and the future relations of the
United States in the Western Rani-
sphere
Shenuiy be right in her analysis of
Wharis best in the long-term interests :
of the United?States, and-since she is .?
not only the President's chief delegate:,
tothe United Nations but also a mern.:j
ber of his Cabinet, she is entitled to
argue for her point of view within the.,
privacy of the White House, no matter
how much Secretary of State Haig To.
seats iL
Nevertheless, what she is not end- .
tied to do, having been invited to state
her case to the Secretary of State and.
the President. personally, and having
.' done so, is to carry her fight on televi-
sion' to the public and proclaim the
, "ineptitude" of her country's "bunch
of ? amateurs," precisely when the
,President ? is in Europe trying to ?
'demonstrate that he is a masterful ?
leader, a "man of peace," presiding
Lo_ver a unitectGcrvernment. ?
Also, it is not Oultelair, though it Is
true, for Mrs. Kirkpatrick to blame
; the .United States for losing influence
at the United Nations. The United
? States has lost influence there not be.
? cause the United States has changed,
but because the world and the United
? Nations have changed.
Mrs. Kirkpatrick forgets it was the
United States that introduced bloc you.
Ing into the early years of the United
Nations, 'When it had only about 50.
menthe& In those. days. Nelson
Rockefeller and Adlai Stevenson? no
less ? were the political whips who
rounded up the Latin American and
European votes to assure a majority
for Washington'spolicies.
Since then, the United Nations has
grown to over 150 members, and the
_third.werld and Communist countries
are now copying the same Rockefel-
lerStevenson whip tactics to oppose
manyU:S. proposals. We had the ma-
jority in the ItHO's and 506s; they have
the majority now, lardy for mathe-
matical reasons, and not because the
United States has "declined.** ?
So Mrs. Kirkpatrick will prnbably
have to go, which is too bad in a way,
for she is one of the most intelligent
and courageous members of the Rea-
gan Administration, and the Prod-
. dent will have to change his lineup for
the last half of his Administration.
?
Maybe this isnot abed idea, condd-
, ening the truths of Mrs. Kirkpatrick's
? recklesrcandorthat the Reagan for-
eign policy is a disappointment and
needs some changes
?
?
?
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ARTICLE APPEARED
ON PAGE
_?M_
lasivarimtcogjenivern
ijry
h o'S
-11,
0 0
SCil,4 e
13y ROBERT C. 'roma,
:4?i74ee Staff Writer
' Las t DeCeni-
b:-..T, when West Gorman Chancellor
e I ro.,.!.t. F.4:11eaidt tinexpecteclly tele -
p'nont..:Prdut Itc-I_Tan at the
White Iltiuse to di:Jell:1s a key
forelsn pulicy point, the flustered
l'resIdent feeundied as F. he didn't
know what ,74elunitit w toreing
about ?
Be didn't. That was .heeausr.: an
erIir lettev from Schmidt, raisin:1T
the iue raid sayinf,Y the C...-2rman
would follow up with a!
rnehOw waJj
the briefcaw of White
IIonc-L. cop ,lor Edwin Meese III.
(2;) hio of as. briefing pa-
pers hying out the Issue for the
? Prd.ent.
? The President sent a letter of
kgy to Schmidt, peraonally tak-
in bi,?Me frie the Cf.)!IELL3i
rutcrobrirrassingly slow staff
work no loner pli?Iguel the Pres-
ident in Can foreign policy cirea?
ti milks to XV illia?n P. Clark; his new
n2tional secteeity adviser. Since he
tcok over in Jenuary. Clark's deci
rive nature and closerit.ess to Reagan
have enabled him to impose order
arid diecipline where confusion and
intemiency hick-ering once pre-
vailed. ? y
, 17.;:eirie
.tensr:t.
3. 'COrflo onrP cv
yolved fOrei ?pifei_m,
and ite11nc' iSU2S. in -rieceut
n
ynor..!, officials !
ith dministra flan
7.? . -
THE LOS ANGELES TIMES
1 June 1982
benous questions have begun to
arise, however, ris Clark has moved
o ert traditioarWhite Hot.r.,c
control over natioral- security af-'
fairs or. at least, the wide-
spread view President
plays no significant .2 in the area.
. 1>:spita a year's service as deputy
secretary of state, the affabli.:, slow
-
talking former California judge is
the least experienced man. to hold
the nationsl c:Irity adviser's post
since it. was created shortly after
World War 11. .
?Prealelent's
?
Clark's Inexperience has caused
concern on two counts: Although he
is celf-aseured and . increasingly
posnrful, Clark lecke the detailed
familiaxiLy with i?omplex issues thiat
Be; necessary to avoid missteps
and to lyne Cie kind of creetive,
heriovelere hello neee that most ot
s.-seers ee. been.
? '1'he ciee.:tions r??-..out Clarl,.'s hick
expel; crice lose ea all thu be-
came tlee netiorl mcurity ad-v-iwr
Iv come to v; -wed as "the PIT'S-
hatAtectf el" on foreign af -
folio, Eeld w'nfiell Reagan is also
a r el allw rr Ti
e!zooer. ?
.An cT:unr,1`, of the problems that-
incterience co7nhined with self -
07.surence can cause occurred so. on
after Clark took his White House
poat. Within :Et ionth. he, approved
promulgii4ed se veva I le.il!cy roftz_.'
zrn.1 14; the liation?31 Si-c-
omity dourg On int?el %fence..
Ke..ietter.i?!ci-.,?..ary. that ilatibem bot
under Clerk's pr,af.lt:ci..:zer.,..
tif.s5ard V. Aikr
The memos cone Ls an unhg_uy _
surprise to the Penta en
pri d the
Ccntfa
,
atifast one of-dieinland-ev.eri-tqall_y__
that directive was subAantirdiy re- _
-As the-President moves more and
more under Clarl:'s tutelage, dome
n ttional ?-ee.:urity
that the p-otentill for more serious
iccite? may inzre.
A1rey, e; gan hns asci Led
hilelseli on foreign policy
...i.tst
euvers without i consulting
STAT INTL
last' April to announce thathe
would address the United
Disermarnent Conference in Jun,
Ra n ale? e,rpred hcz.;.; th
tt
Sovit President Leoni..,!, I.
Brealinev would do the tx;, ?and
suggested that the two 1:-.:ade;'s
could then "have a rries;tini.:,...
" Reagan refused to call it
'mit," but that apll-esc,-,-edto
was irop?.efl. ? -
Neitiv:r '-i.-..",4..14..:retary of St,te.
ander 14. Ilaiz Jr. T1CT Dtzfeus,li
rtary CASpar
. been asked in Ettivare r.thir..
views on this approach to a,
Nor..clid any of the vo-e!...d.Lti White
House trolka.--.11etce, Chi,: 7 or. StiffJames A. TIal:er CIM
; of 'Staff 14ie1T1e1 Ic. tviier-ef.,;et
, more than 10 re;mitee' witn'ere on-.
:what the Pe. to.,
cay, Ger.Ior =
-? ?
? ?
Such everts are tti1, to na.:
tional
most Pr'.:Z3ideil;t31 have tal-en ts
into thtroWri rnds fro!: -tha7,.,. to
time?-"and the re.,1,7,ult; ha at-
. ways been bad. -4, .
?-fi? As former Selretreey of
Dean Itus% has pote...
often ignore the corrirel rctiJ
"There-el organi'ation LI ,Lovc,Trt- ?
ment at higher eelleloies :;e rot what
you End in textbook!! oe oezat.317,a-
tion th.arts,"13.wskliss Weittere it is.
'how confidence I'llotets from the
President." ? .
In any c le ase, t prcbit: that
have arsizz:n tin.71'ar Cla:;1;. z egn-
sidercd a FrialLpetee to ay the
iinprovements naticeed seeurity
affairs that it ? 113 c:r,-,liteti with
achieving. I- ? -
After lrnort rt c A' the
job, CLarles - i3 ifehlet
ed this way by *-11/46%.,,liti. Otljt
o voverninent:
, ?High rn-arics 1.6r end inz.; tb con-
fusion at the 'White I.:x.f.1;re wider
Allen r_yr..1 Mc tir -.3,1!!,11 whoth
Allen rortexi t th Fdent.
Clark has direct Iteegeet,
which va.stly Incrcas I ,is influence
and authorit
y.
he has devoted one-third of his ' , marlei, for entlin;:: ?th?
acne to natieria.1 security matter8-- hick c.,?rin3
the Deplrtment, the Pz2nt!?gon
tbrE,e tirfwn 11.tuch attntion, as he. Defenee clepartir.
or tner...'7-2cs of Hs top White House
on TREItilyty. cc;.,f),-Ecyrri.p vyase 200110310711VIALRDP91-00901R00050
Weillb?irg..ar now cl-r
ntrIff (--_?;?cz-pt on? Eerior Ad-
fewe
will hold bold summit r. Pplectin'? 0/8
fcreien rind militzry afeiirs with 1.'or e ears;r1e, when the President
RP.Plaii
STATINTL
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ARI1c.AX, APPEARED WASHINGTON MONTHLY
ON PAGE 22. June 1982
WHO'S WHO in the Administration
White House insiders assure you that their resident
Soviet expert, Richard Pipes, has little access to the
president and no real power. So, they argue, you
shouldn't worry about his excursions into the more
exotic forms of super-hardlining. What worries us is
that the gentlemen in the Kremlin might not be privyto
this inside information?or might not believe it, as
hawks everywhere tend to discount dovish intelligence
?and might be taking Pipes' views as the real Ameri-
can position.
In
WHITE HOUSE
?
Director of Public Affairs?Michael E. Baroody has
been deputy assistant to the president.
Deputy Director, Office of Management and
Budget?Joseph R. Wright Jr. has been a deputy
secretary in the commerce department.
Special Assistant to the President for
Communications--Joanna E. Distally has been an
aide to communications director David R. Gergen.
Special Assistant to the President?Melvin L. Bradley
has been a senior consultant in the office of policy
development for urban affairs and housing.
Special Assistant to the President?Wendell Wilkie
Gunn has been an assistant treasurer at PepsiCo Inc.
Deputy Ass, istant to the President?Michael A. Mc-
Manus has been a lawyer for Pfizer Inc., a pharmaceu-
tical company.
AGRICULTURE
Assistant Secretary for Governmental and Public Affairs
?Paul S. Weller has been vice president for public
affairs at the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives.
" COMMERCE
Deputy Secretary--Guy W. Fiske has been an under-
secretary in the energy department.
AGENCIES AND COMMISSIONS
CIA
Deputy Director?John N. McMahon has been
executive director of the agency.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission '
Member?James K. Asseitine has been associate
counsel for the Senate Environment and Public
Works Committee.
Our reports about James Baker's attempts to under-
mine Ed Meese were recently confirmed in an article
about Baker in The Texas Monthly. Written by Taylor
Branch, a contributing editor of this magazine, it calls
Meese "a roving mistake in search of a tide," and adds:
"There have also been stories suggesting that Meese too
often leaves the command center to make trivial politi-
cal speeches and that he mishandled the administra-
tion's policy on tax exemption for segregated private
schools. Baker had complicity in all these leaks."
Out
White House
Assistant to the President for Personnel?E.
Pendleton James will leave in June.
Special Assistant for Policy Development?Doug L. ?
Bandow is the new editor of Inquiry magazine.
Special Assistant to the President?Dennis M. Kass is
returning to private employment.
Defense
Directoc of Manpower Management?John C.F.
Tillson has been dismissed after allegations that he
leaked embarrassing budget figures to the press.
Education
Undersecretary?William C. aohan Jr. has resigned at
the request of the administration.
Undersecretary for Management?Kurt Lloyd has
resigned to run for California state treasurer.
Energy
Secretary?James B. Edwards will resign to become
president of the Medical University of South
Carolina.
State
Ambassador to Austria?Theodore E. Cummings died
on March 30.
AGENCIES AND COMMISSIONS
CIA
Deputy Director?Admiral Bobby R. Inman will resign
soon to enter the private sector. .
United States bdernistional Trade Commission
Chairman?Bill Alberger is resigning this month to
join the Washington office of the law firm of Garvey,
Schubert, Adams and Barer.
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PERISCOPE
AFIO
SUMMER 1982
ARI:=Cil.:172, APPEARED
ON PAGE 1
Top Intelligence Officials to Participate
In 8th Annual AFIO Convention, Oct. 1 - 2
STATI NTL
A distinguished group of U.S. intelligence experts
has been lined up to appear as guest speakers and pan-
elists at AFIO's 8th annual national convention on 1 - 2
October, focussed on the theme "Soviet Penetration of
the Americas." Two panels, morning and afternoon,
have been arranged for October 1, the first day of the
convention. The morning session, dealing with Soviet
penetration of North America (U.S. and Canada) will
have as panelists Edward J. O'Malley, Assistant Director
of the FBI, and Major-General William Odom, currently
Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence (ACSI), U.S.
Army. Moderator for this panel is Rear-Admiral William
C. Mott (USN ret), now vice-president and general
counsel for the National Strategic Information Center.
The afternoon discussion, concentrating on Soviet
penetration of Latin America, will have as panelists
Nestor Sanchez, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense
for Inter-American Affairs and a former chief of the Latin
America Division of CIA's clandesline service; Jeremiah
O'Leary, veteran Washington diplomatic and foreign
correspondent now with the Washington Times and
recently with the National Security Council; and Kath-
leen B. Hayden, a DIA analyst in Latin American affairs.
John Barron to Speak
Guest speaker on Saturday, October 2nd, will be
John Barron, senior editor of Reader's Digest, award-
winning journalist, and author of a definitive book on the
KGB.
Tentative speaker for AFIO's banquet on October
2nd which officially closes the convention will be
Admiral (USN ret) Bobby Inman, until recently Deputy
Director of Central Intelligence and former Director of
the National Security Agency.
On the second and final day of the convention, six
new Board members will be selected by convention
delegates to serve on AFIO's Board of Governors. The
'names for these vacancies wit be offered to the mem-
bership by a nominating committee consisting of mem-
bers from the AFIO Executive Committee, from the floor
and write-in candidates.
Chairman Bob Brown and his small but exceedingly
hard-working committee have made full arrangements
for ensuring a smooth-running convention. Much more
hall space for all meetings, meals and other activities
will be available at prices which compare favorably with
those of previous years. The new convention site, the
Springfield (Va.) Hilton, has ample free parking space
and other facilities which will easily handle all of the
attending delegates. The hotel itself, located just south
of the Beltway (Route 495), is less than 30 minutes
driving time from the District of Columbia, on Route 95.
The convention insert in this issue of Periscope
describes registration formalities and the tentative
schedule. Members desiring to make convention reser-
vations are requested to do so as early as po5.sible in
order to ensure hotel reservations and attendance at
convention functions.
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