LEL?IYE5S ANI2 Pr9t7W4~ WC?.
FROM. WAME:. A
_
c' ttt Di.rocto~ for Su o~rt 7T~26 IIQS 1 June 71
I7 ~ y laP x0
__u~cC,AS4I~'IF;ll_ _ ' ~(DIV~IICIL,N'~'~A.L, sFC,xr~r
cao>
FORM N0. ~~ 7 Use previous adltinns
1-a7
DD/S: Jwc; maq
Dietributian:
ig - ExDir w/O & 2 ccya DD/S 71-2127 w/atte
~,
1,- DD/S Subject wfccy DD/S 71-2127 wJatts and backgraund
1 - DD/S Chrono w/ccy DD/S 71-2127
DD/S 71-2127: Mema dtd 1 June 71 for I~ fr Jahn W. Coffey, subj:
Letter from Micrographix Date. Services! Inc.
s~:lvtal"r~ s+vsl~r., ct~_tc.e:re ~tw~:~:~lr>rcr~rrs..es~a r z,.or wree.~ ~~ ~ ~ W,~
rov d IE>r>a1C1~gt~a~'00 /04/ 9 e@TFi~yR__
.~,...~.______._._.__._._.._~__._____~_._ ~~ ~~_._._.__ _~ ~.Q I
+tA~~'1C1ATa ~1()1C1~''IIYG ~LII" ,.
RE BATE IMITIA
E A A C1
N
TC?
_
_
_
? ~
ri` ~.
1
2
3
4
5
6
ACTI41Pd
~
IlIRECT REPLY
-
PREPARE_ REPLY
~~
-AFPI$Od+AI~~_____
~
DISPATCH ,_
_
RECOtAPuIEN[1ATIOH
--
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CpP~P4iENT
FIIE
~_ __
R_ETURN___
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COP4GURRENCE
~
_
INfORHIATIgM
SIGNATURE
~y r
'V mow. ~~-~`A I
'~~
_.....~_._...
~ rJAYE__._.__.
_______.__._..___._
ST14T
ST14T
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Approve 0230001-2
TAN M~~f'TAL3/SL/IP ~ ~t 28 May 97 808004 0
To: Mr . Coffey via Mr
ROOM NO. I BUILDING
REMARKS:
Recommend your signature.
FROM:
ROOM NO.
BUILDING
EXTENSION
FEB 55 n4~ REPLACES FORM 36-8
WHICH MAY BE USED.
ST}4T
STJ4T
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I}L1/S fil-Zi37
1 ,lu-~ 1971
li:AI~UA~ FC~As Director of Cenral b~+~lli~+ence
Latter hfl~rographiic I7stta Services, ~+c,
. 'This u~orandtu'~i is fcn? poor infc~~ c~oulp.
~. t?~ 3~4 May 19?1 you received a cater od a ieiter fraEn ,ja~mea
eia~lae, Y#c+e tdeat fvr ~rTar~tfag of ~iicro~raghbc L~a#a. ~r-
STAT vices. ~.. addressed to Deputy Cif, l'riatt~ Ser-
vice~s T3iviaio~n. fir. Srelaos' letter (attached at Tab A}was cr~fcal
~Y? and n9ueated iatarmation ass to what this was all ~.
3. Pris~i~ Ser~-ic:ea Divisicat, in #a e~eet far sew techflical isfor~a -
t~ipt aed athauCBn~ents in the priat#ag a~i assvcia~ted intiuatries. Iean~ed of
a + ~m o! lithe prfsotia~ fra~n micro[i~ which had been developed b3'
STAT ircra~hlx. Data Services. Inc. therefore wrvCe to >~icro-
graPi~c Data Sesvicea. Inc., ~ ~9 Aprli 1971 (e+spy attached st Tab $~ iu-
dcati~ our hters~ !~ this develcyp~ent and xeques#i S fAf`armat#+ae an the
amet3~ods ueeci in this parocesa.
STAT
d. To date he has nst received as aasvaer to leis Setter ~ the cow
~ ~e r Y~ received ~d indLcate that tote or#~inai hacl burn sent to
enclosing a copy of as article frtam the janusrsr 19'71 issue of `The
Am+ericaa tlpinitaz ~~e. A ca~q of this article. received fxcaxi ?4Ir.
GooiA, is attached at Tal: C.
~. I ~-ould not prapo~e ~aat we attempt to aasvrer i~r. Stefanopoulos'
letter.
{signed) Jo},n W. CoYroY
~ ~' ? ~~'
T?ireetor
tar ~
~ ~
Att A. ;ivy, idt-s`
STAT ~ ~ letter
I L L E G I B~~'-~~ Qpdni~ axt#cle
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ILLEGIB gpproved For Release 2003/04/29 :CIA-RDP84-007808004200230001-2
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?;;ENDER WILL CHECK CLASSIFICATION TOP AND BOTT M
I -~'
OFFICIAL ROUTING SLIP
TO
NAME AND ADDRESS
DATE
INITIALS
I
The Director 2 4
MAY 197ti
~
2
-~'
The Exenutive Director 9 5
AY 1971
3
DD/S -2 r
MAY 1911
4
5
6
''"'~
ACTION
DIRECT REPLY
PREPARE REPLY
APPROYAL
DISPATCH
RECOMMENDATION
COMMENT
FILE
RETURN
CONCURRENCE
INFORMATION
SIGNATURE
Remarks s
~ ~~~.
11 15 i}~ ? + F~j
t
FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER
FROM: NAME, ADDRESS AND PHONE NO.
DATE
UNCLASSIFIED CONFIDENTIAL
SECRET
FORM N0. ~~ 7 Use previous editions
1-67 /
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Approved For Release 2003/04/29 :CIA-RDP84-007808004200230001-2 t~ _ ~ ~
DO/S
May 14, ]971
Deruta? Chief
r n?, ng Services Division
Central Intelligence Agency
,Washington, D.C. ~050~
At first, 13'e1t the beat way to handle your letter to MicragrRphiX,
dated April 29, 1n71, requesting information about our capr~t~ilities with
inicropublishing, was to simply ignore your inquiry. Dut this teat began
to rankle me, as I will try to mace clear to you in short order.
I consider the Central Intelligence Agency to be an or~;ani~atian Lent on
the destruction of tlae sovereignty of The iJnited rta,tes of 1'anericrz; not
ita preservation. 'Then even the New York Times newspaper as fax back as
I~ebrue~ry 1967, expres?es shock in the discovery of the CIA'Q surreptitious
role of bankrolling radical students (National Student Association and
The International. Uni_an of Socialist Youth, for example), ,journalists
and researchcars throu~ch such a radical outfit as the American 2~e~rapaper
Guild, then it iv time to sit up and taTCe notice.
I have, therefore, taken pains to provide you with ns convincing background
material as I can find to explain my position. Inclosed ie the J'rznuaxy 1971
issue of The American Opinion maga2ine. F3eTrinning on paUr? ~9 there is
an article on the Central Intelligence A~,encv= T~iO ITiTT~LLIGL`'~TCE, A Worried
Look At The C.I.A.
F'1ee.se read it. If there are any errors of fact in the article, would
you be bind enough to let me }~noir? Or if the information, na matter how
accurate, is used to m3srepreaent the ~CIA'g function, I hope you wi11
make then effort to explain this tomme and convince me otherwise.
Until then, I would gust a3 soon have nathin~; to do with the CIA.
/i
~ ,,
Iter~p~ctfully, yo
7/-.
Jiunes Stefa~6pou].9
;'V'iee~Preaid~nt;.. ;fi~arketing
Enaloaure ~ Am~rican Opinion January 1971
ccr Mr. Richard M. ~ielms
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Approved For Release 2003/04/29: CIA-RDP84-007808004200230001-2
Mr. Richard M. Helms
Central Intelligence .Agency
Washington, D.C. 20505
C^
Approved For Release 2003/04/29: CIA-RDP84-007808004200230001-2
Approved For Release 2003/04/29 :CIA-RDP84-007808004200230001-2
29 April 1971
Micro-Graphix
Data Services, Inc.
2.50 Carew Tower
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
Dear Sirs:
Recently, I was told that your organization had developed a
system of litho printing from microfilm in a form of 25~ pages on
each side of an 8 1/2" x 11" sheet. These images, I understand, are
of a size and quality that permit good legibility.
I am interested in this type of development and would appre-
ciate any information you could send, particularly samples of the
micro-litho printing and some idea of the methods used.
.Any information may be sent to the address below. Thank
you.
Deputy Chief
Printing Services Division
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, I7. C. 20505
STAT
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Approved For Release "200~~ an~'~,I~Z~~-00780R0042002300Q1-2
.,E~ ~~~ ~r~I:~zCCI. ~.,ao~~ .fir r~`1.->:~ ~.~i.l-~.
has been several. trmcs rc}enttficd under lnc~ O.S.S. Comrade hajans, had been a
oath as a member of ?the Communist member of the Abraham Lincoht Drir ade
Party. Using the most highly classified ~ ~ altd fought with the Communists it
infonuation, he supervised the titaking of Spain. After the 1Var he became Natrona
charts on technical reports for higher echo- Corrunander of a Communist Front called
ions of the Army, the Nary, the Joint ~ the Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln.
' "1Vell, in addition to all the information ~ ment?when questioned about their man}
I'ranlc A. Capell is ri professional iJrtelli- which OSS was getting; on Latin America,? 'Communist activities. Philip Keeney wa
Bence specialist of almost thirty years' he had access to the cables which the OSS chief researcher for the United Stater
standing, IIe is Editor and Publisher of was getting in from its agents abroad,' Coordinator of Information, assig~ted tc
tine fortnightly newsletter, The hlerald Of worldwide information of various sorts, the O.S.S.
Freedom, !r!!S CO7711'ibrltCd t0 SrlCl! IirrpOr'- ?
~ .and also the OSS hang an agreement with Dona]d \Yheeler of O.S.S. was another
. !taut national magazines as The Review Of ;the State Department whereby he also Communist underground ?contact identi
I The News, crn~l is atrtlror of Robert I'. ~ could sec State Department cables on Pied by Elizabeth Bentley as being ac?
I Kennedy -- A Political L'iography, The ~ vital issues.".IIalperin was Chief of the tively enga.,ged in espionage for the Soviet
Untouchables, and other books of inter- ; O.S.S. Latin American Division at the ~" Union.
? est to C.'oirscn~atives. 111r. C.npcll appears ~ time when, as Ivliss Bentley has sworn, lie, ' 1Vhcn questioned under oath before
frequently on radio and television lechrres
~ was one of her contacts in a Soviet ~ Carlgressional Committee;, Dlilton 1'/olff
x~idcly, acrd never fears conU?oversy.?Ile ;espionage ring. ~ of the O.S.S. took the Fifth Amendment
lives irr 11'ew Jersey, is an active Cnth- ,
olio layman, and father of seven sons. ~ Car] Aldo Marzani Sias Chief of lire ,rather.' than admit his past and present
_^ -~ _ I .Editorial Section of the O.S.S. Marzani 'members?up in the CO[tulllrnlst Iarty. I-IC,
r? ~
r3 1'rIE Central Intelligence Agency was
established in 1947 after its wartime
predecessor, the Office of Strategic Serv-
ices (O.S.S.), was exlsosed as thoroughly
infiltrated by the Canunun}sts..Lct us
examine some of that Q.S.S. pcrsonnci.
1n 1918, former Communist spy Eliza- ?
bcth Bcnticy aplyeared as a witness before
the Ilousc Committee an Un-American
Activities. On Page 529 of the formal
report of those Ilcarings is the record of
Miss Bentley's testimony "about intclli-
gertce s}te received Pram Canlrades inside
O.S.S. w[tile she was operating as a Soviet
courier: .
All t}~pes of information were
given, highly secret irrfor?nurtiorr on
what the O.SS was. doing, such as,
for example, final they were trying
?to make secret negotiations with
goverrmrenfs in the Ba1>`an bloc in
'case the war ended, that they were
parachuting people into flurrgary, '
that they were serrdirtg O:SS pcoplc
.into. Turkey to .operate in the
? Balkans, acrd so on. 77re fact that
Cenernl Dorrovari [head of O.S.S.]
was interested irr Iravirrg an ex-
clrarrge between lire NIii~D [the
Soviet secret police] and the OSS.
That's right, 0.5.5. and fife N.I~.V.D.
were working very close indeed.
1Yhen asked what kind of information
Communist O.S.S. o~terative Maurice
tilalnerin ,rave her to be forwarded to the
Chiefs of Staff, and the O.S.S: Comrade
D4arzani r>adc policy decisions and was a
liaison officer between the Deputy Chief
of Staff of the Army and the Office of
the Undersecretary of 1Var.
~Vhcn questioned before a Congres-
sional"Conunittec, Irving Fajans of O.S.S.
took the Fifth Amendment rather thatt?
adnut to his Cornnnrnist Party menlber-
of the day" he was questioned by
Congressional Contrnittee.
I'Stilip Keeney of O.S.S. was treasure
of the Conunittee for a Democratic Fa
Eastern Policy, a cited Contrmrnist Fran.
vrhich was active in promoting Cortunu
nism Lt Cttina. Botit I:eeney and his wife
Mary Jane, invoked the Fiftlt Amend
Brigade.
George S. lYuchinich of "O.S.S, wa;
also identified in sworn testimony before
Congressional Conunittecs as~ a men7bcJ
?of the Cornntunist Party. Given the op
portunity to deny it, he too tool th;_
Fifth Amendment.
Jane Foster Zlatovsky was an identi
Bed Soviet agent, married to a well
ship and long history of activities on known Commuiust who }lad fou~ltt .fo:
behalf of the Soviets. Comrade Fajans the ComTunists in Spain. She was none
was a key O.S.S. opcrati~~c despite the. theless recruited by O.S.S., and while in t
fact that he was known to have been a ]:ey position supplied top secret informa
member of the Conutlunist Party and to ~ tiart to Soviet Intelligence. On~ June S
have served in the Canununists' Abraham ~ ]957, a federal Grand Jur3~ in Ncsv Yorl_
Lincoln Brigade in Spain during the years indicted Dors. 7_latovsly and her husbanc
1937-1938. ~ on charges of espionage for the Savie_
Robert 'Talbott D4iller III was another Union. As is so often the case when ou
contact of Soviet courier Elizabeth Bent- government finally decides to prosecute
]cy. An 0.5.5. employee assigned'to the the defendants were permitted to slip ou
Slate Department, he was Assistant Chief of the country. The indictment ,agains
in the Division of Research. On a trip to the Zlatovskys showed they had turner
D4oscow, Conuade hlill.cr married a mcm-" over to Soviet agents important U.S
ben of the staff of theAloscowA'ews, defense secrets, including the names anc
Leonard E. Mine, a p:riter wlto had backgrounds of anti-Communists in the
worked fbr the LTtern?tional .tlnion of American intelligence services.
Revolutionary 1'lriters in Dtascow and Exactly hate many such Cornntunist
written far New ]glasses, was also on the and Soviet agents were in }:ey positions it
staff of the "top secret O.S.S., Comrade the O.S.S. is unlikely ever to become
D4ins took fife Fifth Arnendmbnt rather public. Elizabeth Bentley testifi~cl tha
than deny his past and present moanbor- there were at least two other Sovi~.
eh;n ;n rho Communist Party ~"]r. re_fnsed oci,;nna?e tinnc rtneratinn tYithitt the iI S
Approved For Release 2003/04/29 :CIA-RDP84-007808004200230001-2
entpla):ecs went dip~?~d~~t~t"n~~}~~~asel~0~Q91i:~~~~~t~?~'~~~4
'
thc ,Conununtst GOV~rIt-
Littclligence Agcitcy. ~ fu] overthrow of
Lylc Mlautson, an anti-r'omnnutist who ~ merit of Guatemala, to organize an in-
served in both the O.S.S. and the G.LA., vasion of Cuba and oust lire Comnntitist
Etas observed; that- the American public regitna of Fidel Castro. 7'he Cuban opera-
"has logically assumed the f the opera? tiol~ was taken out of Willauer's hands
iional arm of the C.i.A. was chard-hitting without explanation and turned over to
lion, since the only avowed enemies of
this country are the communists." This,
he tells us, ? "has proved to be a tragic
misconception," the tnlth being that "the
operational arm of the C.LA. has been
the ]raven for mare left-of-center
dreamers, social climbers, draft-dodgars,
do-goodcrs, one-worldcrs and anti-anti-
conutiunists than any ather single clepart-
meat ar agency in Washington."
Little is revealed about the actual
StrUCttll'C of C.I.A. The llirector and
Deputy I)ircctor of the Central Intclli-
Bence Agency arc appointed by the 1'resi-
dent with the advice and consent of the
Senate. Coordinating the intclligencc
i activities of. the several government dc-
parhnents and agencies, the. C.I.A.
f tl c t?'ational Secu-
. Nilliam Bissell, an intimate of 1Vlutc
~ >g ~~ o to win bast: their cc~~
~fi~~~l'lr~I~~artino comments:
The abauclorunerlt of ilre Cubul]
rmdergrorrud may l:rrne beer: the
result of clnrrulative blr.rulcrs, but,
to the Cubans in prisolr and the
Cubans abroad, it'had the reels of
treason. ~ thorough investigation
of?tvlrat happelred would seem to
be an elemelltaly act of justice
toward those u~ho died because of
what the CIA did and because of
what the CIA firilcd to clo.
hlaynes Johnson, author of The 13.
house advisor McGeorge ?Bundy. The
result was orchestrated disaster at the Bay
of Pigs. The C.I.A. Ilrsiclers who had ~
assisted Castro in capturing Cuba in the
first place were no?,~~? fully in control.
T]tey were immediately successful in
sabotaging the invasion and formally
securing their man In IIavana. It was the
culntinatian of a move dating back to the
first efforts of subversives at C.I..A, to
eliminate Cuban 1'resictent hulgencio
Batista by assassination.
Early C.I.A, involvemcirt }n the sellout
of Cuba is. described by Cuba authority
Jolut Dlartino in his highly informative
book I }Vas Cash?o's 1'risorrer, There Mr.
A'Sartina reports as follows:
Irl addition to being ultra-liberal
i1r tlrcir political thi111cillg; some
CIA oleo tt'cre irnplicatcd in a series
of colrspiracies to nun~der Presidelrt
Ilalistn, supposcclly a fi?ielld of the
Ulritcd Stales, and fn overtlu?ow his
reginrc, There tr'as a scarr!lalnlcs
lflYOll'Cr11C111 Of t1riS SOT't ill t~le
so-called Cienfuegos 1~'m'al Conspir-
acy, an assassinatial plot against
the Cubarr Chief E.xeclrtive.
a CIA nran named Earl )t'il-
Ii~iiirSOri islet with sonic of 1%idel
CasU?o's agents alyd supporters at
the Retiro Odontologico, a dentists'
blri,lding, iVit/lout the lcnowledgc or
atproval of American Anlbassndor
Smith, }tJillialrrsol: stated that the
United States wolrld recognize the
Castro Govcrrvrrcllt as soon as the
Rebels ol~crthrew ratistn. There.
was also some ciiscussinn o_ f the
arms which the C'IA was giving
Castro surreptitiously.
iVillianlsoal's rentarlcs were re-
corded or] tape ar:d given rrrroffi- .
cial(y to Ambassador L'ar?1 I;.T,
Smith.
Of figs, also conchtdes that responsibili
for the sellout of Cuba must rest with t
Central hntelli~ence Agency. He says t
.betrayal at the 13ay of Pigs was
carcfuliy ~n?anged that later there was
way for Cubans drawn into the project
prove tliey had been pramised anythi
at all. "Lt American tcrminaloay," Jol-
son says, "they were left balding t
bag." Martino confirms this from '
interviews with fellow prisoners insi
Castro's political prisons:
~.
.. I learned about the wren
tit~ho were supposed to have been
alerted by the CIA so they could
leave Havana inlrTrcdiatcly before
~I the inrasioll and proceed sterrltlrily
t to the Escarnbra}' Molnrtains, there
to organize gue111i11a x'al fore. There
'i tvcrc only two things t.7?ong with
'~ this opcrntio7l. ?Thcy were never
told drat the illvnsion t~>as conlillg
~ arld SO111CbOC1y, preslrnrably solne-
j , body?iirside the ClA, betrayed the.
operates as an,arm o t
city Council, now under ?ihe thumb of ~
IIcnry A. Kissinger. '1'hc United States
C.ovcrnlrlcrlt Ol;~alrizatiorlal Atalrrral dc-
- 1. Advises fhc A'ationrll Sec,rl?iry
COlU1C)l ill Tnat1C1'S CO11Ce171i1r~ S11C.11
intclligellce actiYities ... as relate
to trational security. 2. ::takes
recnnlmenclatiolu, to the National
Security Cour:.cil for the coolrlina-
'tr011 of SrrClr r11tC1lIgC1rCC actlYl- '
lies .... 3. C.'orrclatcs and evalu-
ates intclligelrce rclatillg to the na-
tional security, alu1111?nvidcs for the
appropriate dissenrinatioTl of such
intclligencc within the Gorern-
nrerrt .... 4. PeTfornls, for the
benefit of the existing intelligence
agencies, such additional services of
corrlrnorr concerlt as the National
.Security Colurcil determines ... .
S: Pcifornrs such..othcr functions
and duties relate{I`,to intelligence
affecting tlrc ? rtcltiotal security as
tl~e Natiatlal Sec;:city Council play
front -tune to tirrle ~'irect.
Ail of wltlcli sounds rather vague. It is
supposed to. A :oak .at some specifics
over the last decade may prove more
enliglttcning.
lyhcn the l;isenhowcr Adntinistraiian
~avc way to that of Jahn P: Kennedy,
mm~es of these Cubans to. the G-2,
The result was -vholesalc execrl-
tions.. In ogle irlstalrce, tllrec
brothers tvere'sTrot.
. tlnother instance.. A mnrr has
been dropped.into Cuba by the CIA
American Ambassador Smith had 1Vi1-
]iamson sent home, but lus machinations
on behalf of a Conuttultist takeover of
Cuba were apparently a part of his job as
~ he continued lIl C.I.A. service within the
1 State llepartnteni slid was sent to Madrid
and then to San Jose, Costa,Rica, where
he is nosy operating:
to organize art ulldelg;?ourrd. !Ic
rec>:uitcd a glrcl7?illa band and teen,
into action. ?71 err his radio contac.
with -the U~lited States evaporates
into thin afi?. Ile -was given nc
' orders, no arms, lro slrpt~lies, nc
contacts with other?grolrps. Isblatec.
in a hostile police state, he tried tc
encourage his oleo to rely or
prayer. Ire too was captured.
The same modus opcrnncli was t
shartly~after World 1'lar II when anti-C
rnltl115t Albanians were "supparted"
C.I.A. in effarts to free that country f
the Conununists. The mastermind of
111hanian betrayal `_v~s 1Cin_i P_)iil_by,
Approved For Release 2003/04/29 :CIA-RDP84-007808004200230001-2
ligence agency ~'. ~. A ~ ~r ivr,~ to tiit~
in a joint 13riiish-~`.m~i~ca~i per ~j~~{~a't3r~f~
about. a general upr}sing behind the Iron
Curtain. Philjty,-later revealed to have been
a Soviet agent, was selected by C.I.A. to
coordinate the operation.
In the summer of 1949 a "committee
of free Albanians" was formed in Italy, end
an the spring of 1950 they were shipped in
small groups through Greece and over the
mountains into Albania. I:im Philby had
drafted detailed plans whereby sotue were
to go to their homes, others to designated
points of rendezvous. 1Vithin a month,
half of the infiltra.tars were either killed
or captured. Those who sheltered there
were butchered..
A few of these. operatives mangy ged to
escape back over the mountains to
Greece, knowing they had been betrayed
but not knowing that Soviet agents in
C.I.A. }tad seen to it that the ~amm~nisis
had advance l.nowledge of their every
move. The icchni ,ue of encouraging air up-
rising and then withdravrirtg support has
been used again and main to identify and
destroy enemies of the Conumrnists. 'The
people of 1~Iungary, cast Berlin, Poland,
and C?recho-Slova};ia -- all spurred to
premature revolt by promises of Amer-
ican aid which was never forthcoming -
are only too well aware of how C.LA.
cooperates in such efforts.
The pro-Cottutuutist Bias of the Cen-
iral Iritclligenca Agency is even more
obvious in the role. it played in the
assassination of anti-Communist President
Rafael Trujillo of the Dominican.Repub-
lic. As Norman.Gali revealed in "Maw
Trujillo llied," an amaring admission
against interest which ahpcared several
years ago in the "Liberal"Newl:epublic:
' T)te assassination of the I)omirt-
icnir Republic's P.afnel L. Trujillo
~1,~~( ~{ ~j t~ S g
~e ~7t~f~~Yc~irrlar~~`ifi`~~~~c~~t~1Pt'gR0
port :...
Arturo Espaillat~ explains in Trujillo:
The -bast Caesar. that "The arrival. of
weapons front the .Government of the
United States was, for the platters, tan-
gible evidence that the might of the
United States was behind them. 1~'ilhout
that support there would simply have. ~
been no conspiracy. 'Trujillo had put
together . a powerful political-military
machine which could `? only have been i
destroyed by inien~cntion .from the out-? ;
side world." Ancl the State Deliartmertt
had decreed that P.afael Trujillo, our '
most reliable anti-Communist ally in the
Caribbean, must die. The C,LA. did the
job. ~ ,
It also arranged to do the job when the ,
Diems oC South Vietnam were no lonuer '
useful. In fact the Reverend Paul D.
Lindstrom of the "Remember The Pilcblo ~
Committee" has determined from ahigh-'
ranking government source that a C.LA.
official involved in setting up the recent
Green Beret assassination case was also
neck deep in the 1963 e~:ecution of the
Diem brothers. This C.I.A. officer eras, in
fact, identified as a Soviet esp}onage
agent by Colonel hliclial Golcnictvski, a
top defector from Polish Intelligence, in
hearings before a C.I,A. review board. '
The Golcructvski case is a fascinatin;
one. 1'he Colonel had been cooperating
with the United States by supplying
information from behind ttte Iran Cur-
, taro. ti'Ihen his own information began
coming back to him in his capacity as a
high official of the .Communist Secret
Police, he realized he would soon be
exposed and . escaped from \'larsaw, via
Berlin, to the United States.
Shortly after his arrival in this coun-
try, Goleniewski was scheduled far a
debriefing conference with lire C.I.A.
1Vlten he entered the room he recognized
one of the C.T.A. agents present as an
~t~~i~1~~{}t~r~t-dal hundred l..V.l3. c t
in?cs rn urope and the United l:ingdo~
- including such top ajcnts as Gcori;
Blake, Jahn Vassall, Israel Beer, Gordo
T.onsdale, and Stig ~Vennerstroetn. A'
vrere itportant figures in ,the Sovie
espionage apparat. 1'he Europeans wer
prosecu'ed by their governments; th
Americans were nat.
Vaba Lesti Sona, a I\cw York foreiq
language newspaper; carried a most rc
veiling article concertung Ca}one] Golcn
ierrski in its issue for I+Iarch 5, 1964. Th
following excerpt was translated far ou
ttse by the Library of Congress of
Novcntbar 6, 1970:
Former Polish intclligertcc mmt
A9ichal Goleniewski, >?:ho together
with his Gerrrran-born tt~ife defected
Jo the IUcst arrd since 1961 has
t'esidect in the USA, has Ewen US
authorities vahrable information
about Russian espior:nge it aiitst the
USA. Irt closed ltearinns of the
Special Corr~ressiorial Corn>tittce
oit Tuesday, he gave more nc?~v arrd
sensational irrformtation while ex-
posing four US diplomats , . , ,The
diplomats retained resporrsible posi-
tions at the embassies arrd the State
I~epartntettt, arrd their "contribu-
tion" Iris been trsccl vy 1iloscoiv for
several years ....
Colenietvski has gircn the names
of... secret cornnumists tvho suc-
ceeded in obtaining responsible
'positions iu US Gover7rmtent agcrr-
cies. Some Of thel72 are evert errr
ploycd in intelligcrtce. Onc .. ,teas
a CIA
tvorkcr ... ort duty
in
Vierrrtn.
Ite ntartnged to give
1.?
million
dollars to the Corminumist
parties in the USt1, Italy, arrd else-
where fiomt the stoney assigr;ed for
US counter-intclli~ence. Ile [Golen-
iewski] fin?ther disclosed the mn>tes
of three scientists who are working
for the benefit of P.ussinn~~espio-
nnge. Stfpposcdly there are many
more such scientists, but.hc did not
krroty their names.' `
Russian I~GI3 (NI~'VDJ n~cnts
have successfully infiltr"nted rrtrnry
US embassies. Only rise I'1DI is not
infiltriztcd by corrv;tumist agents,
according to Goleniewski, or if
there are any there, their names are
not known to hint.
After questioning Golcrriclvski
the Special Congressiorrnl C.nmmrit-
tee~ htua~iedly took the necessary
steps arrd ordered an investigation
wtdcrcover operative far the Cotnmunists
and, under a pretext, refused to talk.
There was plenty to ,say -but to wham?
It was Goleniewski vrlto exposed an
American Embassy official in 1Varsaw
who had been a Soviet agent far eighteen
years. 'Plus man was Eclvrard Symar3s.
Yet, in spite of his exposure, Sytitans eras
not proser_.utcd but allo~~'ed to retire on a
federal pension. Edward Syntans was an
agent of C.i.A.
Colonel Goleniewski disclosed 'the
presence of tuneteen Americans vrorking
in important capacities for the Soviet
Secret Pn1icC - tw~lYe in the. State
the Dowcinican .Republic in late
wtrs carried out .with assistar:ce
front the U.S. Central Intelligence
Agency. Arras for .:.slaying .. .
lire 69 year-old dictator... were
srrnrggled by CIA into lire country
at 71te rerluest .of the-. assassins,.
accnrrlirig to highly ;;qualified
sotn~ces I irttcrvietved, tit Santo
Domingo shortly after the collapse
of the Trujillo rule.
77:e ClA began shipping gums to
C? ~~~
1960.... .
?%re key linlc between the assas-
sins arrd the CIA in the m?rm.s ship-
,ntent ryas a long-tithe Americas
Cis>ilidri re~idertt of Ciudad Trujillo
wlro operated a supermarket in
a frrsltiQnaltl:a ttt'i~ltttar/tood x~Itcrc
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Corfccntrlrb ilu ~. r~r~,i cUirle rlrlriu
nraf5 ring' officirr~~~rd~l~ir~-fj~ele~
the benefit of the 1, Gl3 ... .
t That Ccilonc] A~Iichal Goleniewski.~
knew' vrhat he \vas tat}:ing about is be=
? yard question.'" Certainly C.1.A. support
of Conuuunist intbrests is so shockingly
aggressive that even American "Liberals"
i have been }:no\vn to find it offensive.
' In L'ebruary of 1967, for instance, the
1lrexr }'ark Ti,~:es expressed shock at
revelatiails that tale C.1.A. had been
'Sec Anpcrinl Agcrrr, Guy Richards, i)cvin-
Adair, Nev: Yorl:, 19SG.-_~~__w.,..___--.__...._.
~cavertly financing' radical students, aca-
demics, researchers, journalists, entire
businesses, and legal and labor organiza-
tions at Name and abroad. It was revealed
in the Neiv Yo~?k Tirnc~s for February ] 8,
1967, illat literally millions of dollars.had
been channeled by C.I.A, through tax-free
foundations to.sucll radical-Leftist organi?
za'tions as the Natianal Student Associa-
tion, the International tJnion of Socialist
~~outlt, tilc Llicrn~ational Confederation of
l~ree.'I'racle Unions at Brussels, tllc Amcri-
cail Ne\vspapr.r Guild, and others.
The international operations of the
American Newspaper Guilct,~ alone, \vcre
financed by the C.1.A, io i11e tune of
mitlioris. This is dishuliing since. the Gtiild
was thoraughly dctminatccl by Comnnt-
nists thraughotlt t11e Tllirlics and has
rCJllallled a farce for radicalism in the
American mass media. ]t \vas arganized
by Ile}~\vood Braun, described by Rearl-
cr's Digest senior cctitor Eugene Lyons as
a "literary trig;;er man" for the Comnur-
nists. Dormer General Secretary of the
Communist Party I3cnjanun Gitlow tesii-
. ficci under oath that "Broun was under-
stood by domestic Calilrnnllr$ts to be
carrying out }:rennin policies in the news-
. paper unions."
The C.LA, tlll'Iled a million dollars
ot'er to Charles ,~. I'erlilc Jr., secre.tary-
trcasurer of the Arilerican Newspaper
Guild, who deposited it in a special
"internatianal affairs fund." I'he Guild's
international activities arc, carried out by
the lniernational l~ede.ration of Journal-
ists in Brussels, and the Inter-American
Federation of \Vorking Nevrspapcnnen's
Oi'gani-ration in 1'anarna City. The tatter,
an organization v~hich ignores anti-Corn-
munisi journalists, received direct C.I.A,
grants totaling 51 million.
Iicginninl; in 195& the American
Federation of State, County and Munici-
lial Employees also fronted intenlational
operations 1V111C1i were financed by, the
C.I,A. Arnold Zander, former president
U n that are current]' lt~~,~
s ? ~t~~i~S~~2~31jj1~ l ~'~' dcl~~o~t o4 b d
~.~.A. \vas puttlnr -0,6DD per year Int~ ~~ ~~~ tS}~-~Aleksanclr Sllell)ill, forruc
the operation tlu'au~lt one of its "duns- chief of the Soviet political police."
my" conduits, 111e Gotham Faitndation '. It \vas in 195S, says the Nc~w }'or
of Ne\v York, This rnoncy \':as in turn Tunes, that the A?I.D. Anderson Pound_
..funneled into unions representing meal- ? tiorr pf Ilouston began to recciv~. fungi
bers of the public bureaucracy at all levels front such C.I,A. "dummy" conduits ;
in governments throughout 1hC \'!Ol'1Cl - t11G GOthalll Fallndailon, Borden '1'nls
especially in Africa and Latin America, the Beacon Funcl, the Price Ftuld, th
Given lander's COI111n1t111CI1t to the Far 'fo\ver Fund, tiVilliford-Telford fund, an
'Left, the purpose of this operation is ', the San Miguel Fund. The amaunt n
entirely too obvious. As we shall see, the ~ cei\'ed just happened to match th
man \vho cleared these'ftulds inside C.LA. I amount it passed all to the America
was a fanner president' and founder of 'fund For hrce Jurists, Inc., a radio;:.
the t)nited 1Vorld Federalists. group no\v called the American Counc
The Intemationa] Canfedcration . of for the International COnlln]sStOn c
I~rce i'rade. Unions at Brtissels is another Jurists, whose principal officer is }~
group \vhich has boon an the take for 1'i'hitney ])ebcvoise, law partner of Prar
C.T.A. millions. 'this while. its activities in cis T.Y. Pliniptorl, U.S. Delegate to th
Algeria, Alal.i, Guinea, and Ghana were United Nations and an intimate of Adl;
1]]Stl'lllilelltal in turning those countries Stevenson. '
over to t11C Calllmtnlist$. A ~;cy interna- ~ The I;oblitzclle Foundation of Datla
tional labor operative was Jay Lovestone Tczzs, one of whose trustees \vas Feder;
of the t)nited States." Ile was a founder of I Judge Sarah T. ihrglies who administere
t11C COlllllltl1115t Party, L1.5.A.., and editor the ,oath of office to President Johnso
of the. Party nev~spaper, The Conunrnrist, ~ following the assassinsttion of Presider
h4r. -Lovcstone was a member of the ~ Kennedy; began making major C.i./
Central Executive Conunittee of the ~ grants in 1955 to the International Ct
Colllmtlrlist Party until his contentian operative l~e?~elopment Funds and tl'
that Comrade Trotsky \vas a better dis- ~ Congress of Cultural Freedom.'fhe lattc
~ ciple. of 1`larx than Comrade Lenin re- subsidized a Socialist magazine in Britai
salted in his "CXpt1151011" from the Party called Lncourrte,:
pcnnitting him to prontate tlic "Marx- Another Texas founclatlan, the I-Iobb
1S111" of Tratsky without the stigma of T'oundation of 'Hauston, also receive.
Party nlembenhip. ~ motley from C.1.A, fronts riltich it passe
--_:_~~~,__~y-_~,. ~ slang to designated radical groU,ns. b1r;
?`-
'Thomas w. Ilraden, former assistant to C.I,A. ~ (7V0ta CUIp I-IObby, Chalrr]lail Of th
Director Allen \V. Dulles, revealed to the Nety ? faurlClatiall, was Secretary- of lIealil
Yark Tirrtcs of htay S, 1967, that he ltad turned ~ 1Sdtl0at1011 and lYelfarc in the Liscnhowc
~ over sizaUle sums of C.1.A. money (nearly S2
. :Administration. \Vllile in that post he
million a year) directly to Jay Lovestone and
assistant was the wife of to C.I.A, nta
the 1.C.F.1'.U.'s Irving P,rown. Ire also admitted p
dclivery,of large sums from C.LA, to.P/alter and ThOInaS ~~r. Braden: Ar]long t)le afgatli7F
Victor Reuther. At Victor Reuther's reducst, t101]S t0' \V111C11 the Bobby Foundatio
Braden told the 7'r>tcs, "I went to Detroit one delivered C.I.A. mOlley were -the Ame:
morning and gave Walter SS0,000 irr 50-dollar
bills. Victor spent tltc money, mostly in west ican Friends of the illiddle East (S-50,00
Germany .... " \`Jalter Reuther responded by ]ri 1963, 575,000 in 1964, and 550,00
revealing that P.radan had tried to recruit Victor ]ri 1965), Flrnd for Internatianal Saci<
,lltto its.,c~I,A_;~,:..,F,.,-~~~~..,.,~.~.w.._ ----_- and Econo;nic Education (S X0,000 i
Commenting on Lovestone's efforts ' 196, and S100,000 in 1964 and ]955;
far the LC,P:f.U. on behalf of the and the pro-Conurnulist Foreign Folic.
Communist F.L,N. in Algeria, Hrlalre Flu
Berner wrote in 1967.: "`Vhcn F.L.N.
control of Algeria results in the inevitable
consequences -Communist outflanl;.ing
of Europe, Red control of the A4editer-
ranean,.and a \vave of racial vialence that
Association.
Two names emerged at the time of th
"scandal" concerning all of thin secre
C.I.A. financing which have foamed large
on the national scene \vithin the past yea
One was that of Sam I3rown, \vho was i
' will spread to the Near East -doubts. ~s ~ 1967 a "student spokesman" and chat
to Mr. Lovcstone's break with Comma-
nisnl will increasr.."
~ The C.i.A.-financed International Con-
I federation of Frce'Trade tlnians finally
I bccanlc so well known for what it is t3iat
i A.F,L,-C.1.U. President George )Gicany an-
nnuncecl in Fcbruarv 192 that he was
man of the supcn'isory bo~lyd of the N;
tional Student Association. Ile lets sine
associated himself with tl-e 1'icsidenti,
campaign of Senator I:u~cnc 1~~1cCarth
and was much publici-r,ed. as the coordin;
for of the pro-Gomnn-nist "Vietnam Alori
tnrittm" whn dCCIaiCLI tfl[Il "t1tQ 1?ltllttl
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... f .-1i.1 l
Victcon ; vict~l: , tu::~n eras hen a Har- A
Yflrd.Clrt7111ty sl~~rr~~~t~>~ot~t~2g~~~;; s~~'f~St~~i11~I~~I~p~~S~~8~R~~~4~0~~3IlUD'h-Lrc born ire 1','ashinttun, 1~
SII]'1, 1'ln arlCl, In ul. 1 iroug t ter , on Novcntber 10, 1920. Tltcir fat]ICr
broke, he said he was "shocked at the ethi- i efforts over a hundred young American ~
cal tra U11nn I11eI1 of ,1'Cat 111tenFlt were .career officer ai the State Ucpartntc
P Y b ~ ~ Y radicals there recruited to attend the ~~ >>
~ was a t:c.l]-known Liberal. Cord t
.placed in" by the C.I.A. Until the expose, ,~ Communist Vienna Festival,' and before I educated at St. Paul's School in Conco
however, there . is no record that Sam the IIelsinki l~cstival the group again New Ilarnpshirc, and graduated from Y
dies tv1-ich had for fifteen years been sup-
plied by C.I.A. to sul)port the radical tictiv-
ities of the National Student Association
aIi Ch11GSe supervisory board he sewed.
On Iebruary ]4, 19G 1, U.l'.I. reported
~~,tliat since the early Fifties some $3
million dollars had been poured by C.I./>.
into the National Student Association. In
short, C.I.A. had 1)icl~ccl ttp the tab for up
to eighty percent of N.S.A.'s e~:pcnses
.since 1951.. Phis is the same National
Student Association which during that
sank period heel urged that Contrinuiists
be allowed to leach in the public schools;
condemned the maintenance by the U.S.
Aitorncy General of a list of subversive
organizations; dcrnandcd that Communist
litcrature.be made available on campus to
college shrdents and teachers; called far
abalitiat of the House Canunittec on
Un-American Activities; rejoiced at the
Communist takeover of Algeria; .urged
U.S. sponsorship of the admission of P.cd
China to the tJ.N.; extended hose itality
at its 1962 convention to the Coritnnurist
I'ariy, U.S.A.; allotivcd distribution by
S.D.S. of Communist literature at the
1965 N.S.A. Congress; and, even de-
manded repeal of fire Ilitcrnal Security
Act. This is Oltl}' a partial listing: The
CaI1tlltttnist CaIISCS pUS1iCd by N.S.A. with
that fi3 million 'from the Central Ilrtclli-
gence. agency would, if fully listed; G11
the next three pages.
Another "student spokesman" fi-
nancecl by C.1.A. was Gloria Stcin-em,
now identified with the Cominun]St-
inspired Women's I,ibcration Aiovement.
Along with Comrades David Dellinger,
Arthur Itiinoy, and 1'e.te Sccger, she is
now a national sponsor of the COni-
mittec Ta Defend the Panthers.- Gloria,
hotvcvcr, rues not "shocked" at the
idea of using C.I.A, money to support
..radical senses. Iii fact size said. that she
had welcomed it and wori:ed gladly far
a C.I.A..-financed operation origina:ly
called the ? lndcpcrident Service far
Information on the Vienna Festival,
later renamed the Lulcpendenc~ l:e-
search Service. Phis outfit, had head-
quarters in Cambridge, blas~arhusetts,
and concentrated on disseminating infor-
rntrtiori about the y Calttltitrrti$t Youth
Festival at ~'lenrla in 1959. '
-Miss Steinem continued as a full-time
recruited young teachers, lattyers, schol-
ars, linguists, and journalises to attend.
She described them as rrioslly "very
liberal llemocrats." 1Vhich 11as got to be
the euphemism of the year.
The secrecy necessary for its opera-
tions has made C.Lti.:a perfect haven for
i employing as well. as 'subsidizing subvcr-
slues. As the Nett fork Times observed in i
its issue for Aiarch 30, ] 967: ,
In the late 19~Os and early
I9S~s nraaty liberals wlro wished to
sore ilr~ir toroth}~ found iu the
CfA rtof ortl}~ rc persorrrel hn. r~err, safe
fi"arrt the ortslau~lrts of nlcCm?thy-
isrn, but also rn oplrortunity. to
brim to bear ott the problcntr of
fire cold tear a realistic and liberal
urrlcrstanditt~ of the plurnlisrrt of
errtcryirt~ courrlrics.
Yes, American history' is replete with
examples of how "I_.i'uerals" afraid of
IvicCartlq?ism serve their country. They
in the Class of 1913. Later he attenc
I]award. On April 19, 1945, he rnarr
Mary hno 1'inchot, the WGdCllllg bc.
performed by the Reverend Rcinhc
Niebtlhr, whose active participation
Communist Fronts is well documented
government records. MissPinchot'sfath
Amos, was an active Leftist ~;rho heel be
vice chairman of the Civil Liberties Buret.
founded by such Comrades as Soviet s
Agnes Smecllcy a1]d CaItlltitlrtist Iilizab::
Gurley Flynn. 1Ier mother was chairrn
of ilie super-radical Woruen's Peace Par.
of New York City. ?
? 1V)tilc at Harvard on a LowclI Fella
ship, Card ;tlcyer Jr. was invited to atte;
a Conference on ~'Jorld Government pr
sided over by Justice Utvcn J. Rower
~ and ~ called by Grenville Clark, ]:obe
j I;ass (former governor of New Ham
shirt), and Thomas II. Afahony,'a hosts
]attyer who was chairman of the Aias~
chusetts Conunittee for Worlcl Feder
Tian. The Conference was held in Clarl;
Lome at Dublin, New Ilampshire, ar
arc typified by flee man at C.1.A. wito was ~ launched Cord on his career as a radic
in cherge of covertly subsidizing N.S.A. Leftist.
and a long list of other Lcfiist causes and In February 1947, all the U.S. organ
organizations. That man's nania is ~:ard zations' working to ,destroy America
hlcyl:r Jr. IIe. has been described b}' flee sovereignty in the quagmire of a wort
Nety York Times as a "hidden libers:l," ? governnicni met in Asheville, Nort
anonymity of the Central Intclligenc~.
Agency," but is said to be well }:no:;ri in
Washington's social and intellectual cir-
cles. The revelation of Cord Meyer's role ~ LJnited States promoting this cause.
came as a surprise evert to his friends, ate , It teas as president of fire Ulute
of ~:~hont- is quoted by the Times of ~ 1Vor]d hcdcralists that Cord Ideyer J
March 30, 1967, as observing: "IJe was ; wrote a bool? entitled Pcare Or;rinarcln,
not the C.LA. type. He was a t~rorld ; in v,~iich he outlined a plan for militaril
government man." That friend ?hnew disamting the United States and merger.
Meyer, all rig; tt, but Ile did not know it in a "Federated Pr'orld Government
i_ C.I.A. 1'he Tirttes acids that "at age 4"/, Urldef file COlltral of t110 Uftlted 1~T8t10i]
bor. A'Ieycr seems no less dedicated to the- , hgcyei proposed. t11at "."...once Navin
~..i.~i, liiall w wwiu lcuc~a.u~u~.
Cord Met'er's association with the Cen-
tral Intelligence Agelicy rues first revealed
at fire flare of the murder of his divorced
,wife, Mary Pinchot l`itt'er, on October
13, 1964. The Neiv York Tithes states
that this murder was never solved. T'hc
Meyers lead been divoi?ccd five years
earlier after the death of a son in "an
automobile accident." blcyer 'quickly
remarried.
aralina. Out of this meeting was create
the United Wand Federalists. Card i`4cy
Jr, was Wanted its first president and mac
Iwndreds of lectures throughout tl
ntcnt no nation could secede .or revol
...because with the Atom hoinb in i1
possession the Federal Govenunent (c
the world) would blow that nation of
the face of fire carili."
Cord hlcyer Jr. t:~as no small-tim
radical. In fact he had been Harol~
Stassen's aide during the summer o
19=15 when fete United I\'.^,tion, Organi
nation was being set up in San Fran
Cisco. A story concerning young; i+4cye
which appeared in the radical I:Rf,, of
ta___l. nr ~neo J--1-..J _f L. ue.
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up li,eyer in the i,~i,l of }tis activities in
behalf ?. of tvoy~p~p~Clr1~~?R~~~~
? young roan has t((te best litind,' Stassen
skid vrithqut hesitation, `of? oily young
ntait )n Arl1C1')Ca."' AfOUIICI 1ltlS t117tC
Cord Was getting a heavy buildup by' the
Comrades, and another "profile" (in
Closcup -for January 1 ~., ] 9~}fi) observed:
"'I'o a grouting number cif Americans -
and people in other countries, too -Cord
Meyer, Jr. is taking lus place rapidly ut
the select "ranks of 'the shining young
hopes of the World."
l'}llS ~"Shlllilrg young hope" was per-
sonally placed at the adrtt)nistrative level
of ihe. C.LA. by Allen Dulles, o?~'er the
objections of the late Senator Joseph
114cCarthy: There, under the cloak of
anonymity, he has labored diligently for
world govcrnntent. In an article he wrote
for ,rny yet
become the sy>tbol alyd insUumcnt
of a just order anrorlg men. No
rrrattc~r how remote our clra>ces or?
how distnrrt our success, the have irr
simple honesty no altcrnalive but
the attempt to rnal:c it that, ~1s I
Irm~e srrr;gested, it is possible drat
ive stroll fail, and that the death
agony of rrntiorralis>r trill be pro-
longcrl beyond our lifcti>re. llut
evrntually, if the civilization ojt/re
iVcst, is not to disintc~rnte corn-
plctely, otlJCrs wlro believe ns tvc do
will succeed .... ?
Rementbcr that the above is from the
man in charge of the unvoucherecl funds
for C.LA.'s clandestine operations! With
unlimited amounts of I]tallCy frortt the
coffers of C.LA. at his disposal; Cord
Meyer has subsidized exactly those argan-
izations most interested in'concluding
America's "death agony of natiorialisrir"
?with a coup de gi?,icc. Through devious
channels (ant of which was tltc J.}r),
Kaplan Func}, Inc., of SS Fifth Avenue,
New Yor}; City) Meyer dispensed C.I.A.
monies to such wildly Leftist organiza-
tions as .the Instihrte of International
Labor Research, Inc. Tltis outfit main-
tains an affice at 11_~ Last 37th Strcct,
New York City, and hss also. been known
as Labor Research, Inc. It tvas beetled by
tilt; late Norritan. Thomas-.Chairman of
llnancrng-what the 11'ety }'o ?'- "i [
aa~~r~->a~2~f ~~r,~~~~~~~~~~~4,
ticall}' as. "17 ,left-of?center parties
throughout Latin America."
Secretary-Treasurer of the Institute of
Labor Research alas Socha Volmari.?.IIe
sei up ?radically Leftist "institutes" im
Costa Rica and the Dominican Republic.
According to Otilia Ulate, former I'resi-
dent of Costa Pica, the San Jose Institute
supported only those Parties Wlticlt "Have
the characteristic features which make
ihent identical in cl,octrine and hontag-
enous in political and social attitudes
? with Russian Communism." Ulate said
that all democratic 1'artics opposed to the
Diara.ist' regirna in Cuba were excluded
from this offshoot of the Norritan
T1lomas and Socha Volman Institute.
Through the llomin}can Institute,
using C:I.A. funds, Volm^n promoted
political careers for such l:e}~ Communists
as the notorious Juan Posi;h. Socha had '
close ties with Cormrades throughout Latin
America coil teas neck deep in the Marxist-
L eninist "Center of Research in.hconamic'
and Social Development" at Santa
1)Omlirg0. Thls organization (C.LD.h.S.)
was finartced by the C.I.A., the. V.5. State
D~)-~artment, and the ]~ard Foundation.
1~'hen his intelligence organization infil-
trated C.I.D.13.S., General F/essin y ti;'essin
of the Dominican Republic found it to be a
Communist train}rag and indoctrination
operation. Socha Volman was an instructor
in that operation and vas the man who,
with State Department and C.I,A. direc?
tiara; promoted Communist Juan Bosch
all the way to the Presidency of the ~
Dom}rattan Republic ~
Dolman is suspected of being a Soviet
agent assigned to Latin Alnerican Affairs.
lIe was born in Russia, lived in I:omania, ?
and came to the United States. as a
"refugee." IIe is now a U.S. citizen and
]tas been livinU. at 24S bast 80th Street,
New Yor}: City, In the .hear}rags of the ~
Senate Internal Security Subcomm)ttee f
on The Conurnlnist Tl>?ent To 772e United .',
States T/u?ough The Cnribbcar:, General
Nessin y 1Vessin testified under oath
about Volntan's C.I.A. operation:
I
lrttt. soul;wlNE. Now, yar
spol;r' Of AQ Co>II111111iSt 11lr10CIl'lrla-_?
tiorr cerrtcrs opcratbrg in thc.I)o>rin-
icarr Republic r!>derJuan I;osclr. Did
these centers operate openly as a
Conrrrrunist oper-ntion?
c1:N1:RAI, tivrsslN. (jpenly. .
b4F.'SOLlltll'1NEi, 1)id tl:cy' dis-
play Comnuurist banners or si,;ns?
GENEiLA1. 1VIiSSIN.' ~r1C of
these schools located ort Caracas
f ([r~;! 1101 Ji(Sl a C.~ONl1r!{1R151 t. -
~b02~gAAa-~$rrrn>lcr rand sic>tilc, but the
Soviet jing?
G1iN1iItA1, WJiS.SIN. It WOS t/rC
red jJng with the hnrnmerarrd sidle.
It?]]t. soultvrlNE. 11'ou', clo yol,
krroty tvhcre. these ccnlcrs tivere
opernted? You rhznred the laccitiorr
of orre. Ca> you tell us where others
were?
G1;N1i1tAL ' W1:SSIN. Irt t1rC
school 1'arb?e Villini Cnlle-1tlcrccdes.
Tlris builrlirlg, in spilt ojthe fact that
i! belorrgcd to the GovervuJrent, runs
ttn?rrcd over to the Co>vrrrrnist Kato
Pagan I'erdomo to instal! a school of
political scicrrcc.
There teas another oue, tvlrich
went rrndcr the irritirrls of CIDL'S
located i> the farm, or I'i>ca Jai>a
Afoan. In tkis ;cchool, the teachers
' were arrrorrg the others, Jrrrur Rosch,
f1 ngclAliolan, nrld Saclla Vohnnrr.
' M1Z, soulrwtNt:. oJre of tlrosc
names bras corrre up before. Orre is
'rrerr. Let's irlentijy these nren.
tVho is or x'asAngclrlliolarr?
GI;NEIZAL W1iSSIN. ?~lrrgel
1lliolnn is n Conlrrttiuist, rand I say
that !re is a Cannurnist because irr
order to be secretary of hiccrlte
ho>rburdo T olcdano for? 10 years
you have to ben Comrrrrrrrirt.
ntli, soultwlNE. Vicerrtc hom-
bnrdo Tolerlnno was n> artstarxlirrg
Ca>rnrrmist, was he not?
?GENERAL W1:SSIN. Yes, sir
[I)c was, in fact, head of all
Communist political activities in
J\lcxico.]
>tt]t. sourtwlNl:. Now, tvho is
Socha Volman? ? .
GENEILAL WESSIN. Ile tuns a
Rtrrrrnniarr brought there by June
13osclr. I don't know hire.
etlt, sour.wlNE. Did you eon-
? S1dC1' llirir a CorrrrJ'rrrrri$t? ,
. GIiNEP.AL WESSIN. 111 >ly
? country there is a saying that says
tell rare will! whom you go, and I
will tell yotr tw'ro you arc. '
Also invoh'ed With the Camnn-ni~
oriented C.I.D.L.S. organization' Vas S
preme Court Justice 1Villiam 0. lloirgla
The I'arvirt Foundation, of which Dougl;
was a~mentber of the board of director
joined with the National Assbe.iation t
I3roadcastcrs and C.I.D.h.S, to produc
"educational" films. According to theNe
York'li>res of February 27., 1967, Dougl:
became a member of the board c
C.Lll.L.S., which administered the fill
project in the field, The "ec}ucatitznal
Approved For Release 2003/04/29 :CIA-RDP84-007808004200230001-2
` nist tai:cover anclgpipravtp~f~trFi~nF$~I?ase 2>G1P0ti4f0~'/2~8~ A~[~*'~4-13'A7e8t(lr' RO
rtlilitary coup late,in 1963. T'lte C.J.A. had close corrtrtct Ivitlr Jvltn f I. Rrun?ay,
been financing an effort to tuns the
Dominican Republic into another Cuba.
One of the most important of the
cotintless operations of the C.L.A. is the
Center for International Studies, estab-
lishecl in ]950 with an initial C.I.A. grant
in. excess, of ~a5 million. The Center urns
founded at N,:1.T. by Walt tiVhitman
~' I2osto~-r, wh,o served in the O.S.S. during,
1Vorld 1Var II and went to A~l.l: i', in 1950
from the staff of Swedish laarxist Gunnar ,
Myrdal after leaching briefly at Oxford. '
l:ostow, was associated with the Center
from 1950 until a~ security checl: was i
rraivcd in 196] anti he was appointed by
President IieIlnCCI}' as lleln+ty Special
~ Assistant for National Security Affairs at
the 1'lititc House: ]n the meantime he had
~' three times been turned d_ own for a
security clearance ,- twice by rice State
Department and once by' the Air Force.
Another }:e}' roan, in the C.L.A. Center
at A?I.1.T. since 1953, has been Harold I:.
Isaacs, asuper-radical with awell-ctocu-
mentcd record as a subversive. 'l'he fol-
~, Ioti~~ing quotations, with the pages on
' ~ which they appear, arc from the record of
the Senate Internal Security hearings on
the Institute. of Pacific Relations:'
Page 2C~7 -- "In rice last issue of
Pacific Affairs ' tlrcrc .appears an
article by Ilarold Is.?^cs entitlcrl
`Perspectives of rice Chirtcse IZevolu-
tinn, A Alarxist 1'icx~.' ? I'a~ c 3G3
- ..`Borne years a?ro, hfr. Is~~cs
publislrcd a book called `7he ?'~ng-
edy ' of the C'TtirreseRevolution,'
with a preface by neon Trotsy."
I'egc 91D.i, n letter to 0+vctr la!tl-
tnore front Fl'edel'.rclC ? Vrndcrhilt
Field, both idetrtificd urtr.?', r oatit as
Connttrrrists -- "Since I first
lcar?rted that you hacl arranged~far
an article on fire Chitrese Corrtmu-
nist movement from Ilarold Isaacs,
I hnperf it would be possible .... I
Suns very pleased x~ith the way
Isaacs' article tru?ned out. " P~gc
I2?.D -Soviet agent "Agues Srnea'-
lcy~ was an associate of flarnld
?Isaacs and C. Frarrlc Glass, locally
classified as a carol-bem?i'ng ~.'o>rrnu-
nist. Isaacs was far solve time I'di-
tor of fire China Forum, mr I;'tr~lislr
language C.ornmunist periodical first
publislrcd irr 1932." Page 12?.l -
Soviet agent '~"Agnes Smedley
' joined fire A'ouletrs, tuba ttiere jailed
by Chinese authorities for espio-
nage activities noel U?ied and tort-
- - ~, - --
the flrrrerican co~?~'esponrlcut fo'the
.
Pacific Mews Agency, listed as 'art
outlet for fire Cotnintenr. " Page
CC,S( llt ciViu~:..
420~,~Q~1~" the C.I.A.'s Ccutc, 1s
International Studies at A4.1 ~1'. fr.om 195:.
until liis death in Dcce_nlbcr, ]>69, wa
Dr. 1,'iax F. Alillil;an. I)r. lt,illikan ova
president of the ti~'orld 1'eacc Foundation
a collaborator on at least one boo?: wits
Walt Rostovr, acid a nlz;nlbcr of ih
Council on Foreign Relations. ];e wa
simply transferred to the job. of Directc
of the A4.LT. Center frolu his position a
Assistant Director of file C.I.A.
Kyle ?viunson, formerly of both O.S.
and C.I.A., discusses file strategy be17ir7
creation of fhe_ C.1.A. Center at M.L'1
and a genera] diversification of C.L./
operations:
1297 - "Tire Society of Friends of I
' the USSP., Shanghai branch, ti:~us
fointrled in 1932 by I'dnrorrrl rgorr
Fisch, a Czeclr journalist, and long
krrotvrr as. a Comic;tern agent,
Among fire more. important mem-
bers vas ftar?old Isaacs (G-2 Do.crr-
ment No. 31, S.11I j: ;File D-971St. ? .
As eve have noted, this same Ilaiolcl
Isaacs has been at 1tl.LT.'s C.I.P,: created
and C.L.A.-financed Center for Interna-
tional Studies since 1953. He went there
directly fiprit stints at Netrswcel~ and
llarper's, where he hacl praised IIo chi
1`linh as "dre George 1'dashington of '
Asia." Toda}~ ho coa;t'ents ~rirnself with '
preparing position ~?apcrs for the C.I.A.
and other sensitive a~encic.s. The Twelfth
Annual Report of the Ai.I.T. Center says
that Isaacs has been conducting investiga-
tions concerning "political change" in a
nunlbcr of countries -- supported by
what is likely a dummy grant from the
Ivrational institute of 14ental I-lealth. The
records of the Department of Health,
Education anti Welfare shove another such
direct grant to Ilarold lsaacs
(,`i~i.ll.-09179-2) for "A Comparative .
Study of Personality I)cvelopment," fur-
ther defined as (get this). "Stress, Social
Chan~c, 1Vorld Politics, Compa.rative''
Study." Isaacs is the Ccntcr's top brain-
truster. '
The hi.1.1'. Ccntcr has published
nUIT1eIOL15 books and studies by P.ostow,
ISaaCS,alld other security risks. For exam-
ple, the. U.S. Arms Control and. Dis-
armament Agency made a grant to Dr.
LincoL-t P. Rloo;nfield, a m::;nber of the
Center's staff, for studies in "Regional
Arens Control Arrangements" and "Soviet
Interests and Attitudes Toward Disarma-
`Agnes Smcdlcy was an went In the direct
'ser~?ice of the Far Eastern E;ure.an of the Central
Committee oC the Third International or
Comintern. She received orders directly from
the Central Comtnittce In P.7osconJJrist Threat To
?7:e Unifed States T lu?ough The Cm'ib-
hearr in ihe tCStl]nOlly an Navcntber 5,
1959, of General C.I'. ~ Cabell, then
lleput.y Director; Central Intelligence
Agency. 1`Ihen asked to supply figures
C concerliing Connrnulist Party mcntbcrship
' iIr Latin Aliterica, General Cabc11 have the
number for the llominican I:elnlblic as
50, for Ilaiti as I S, and for Panama as
1 I O.I-Iis testimony beginning on Page 162
2003/O~f?,~9t7z~1~4--~p~~ :O~~~QJRp,04200230001-2
TrrL cttAtr 1`r.~N. Yes, 511',
G1~NERAL CA FIE LL. Tlrat QUCS-
tion Is related to the Qucstiotr: Is
Cuban PJ?iJJre llliJristeJ? F'iclc~l Cr1S11'O
,, n ................~ '
fnenclly relalJOrts with the UJdtcd
StatC$, Or C71dlJ1~P lIS tO1C1'ai2CE; Of
CoJJrJ7tcrJrist CICt1VJtiiS.
Orrr co7rclusioJr, therefore, is drat
Fidel Castrv is not n COJ7IJ71rJJIlSt ... .
'J
This is 'the same quality of C.LA.
"intclligerice" we may expect from Direc-
tor Richard IIelms -who at the time was
the C.LA? deputy in charge of espionage?
aj ents: l Ie apparently did not cornnnl-
nicate the reports of his agents that
Castro had been a Convnunist since he
was a teenag^r. Or that Castro had been
identified as an Intarnational Communist
agent by tltc Government of Colombia as
early as 19=18, when he was arrested for'
participating 9n an attempted revolution
in~ Bogota. '
At the ver}~ time General Cabell, using
the reports of Richard Hclins' agents, had
declared the C.I?A. "conchtsian" t}tat
hidcl Castro "is not a Communist," lttcn-
clreds of reports ]tacl came in (and had been
ignored) frarn U.S. Ambassadors, foreign
service ofCcers, friendly diplanats, and
"other" intelligence sources -all tvarn.ing
of ihe inuninent Cornntunist takeo~,~er of
Cuba. nne begins to wonder if "blew
Team" llirector Richard Helms and }cis
C.I.A. are on our side.
Suppose they are notl tt rr ?
Approved For Release 2003/04/29 :CIA-RDP84-007808004200230001-2
? ? xC.A~I:~.11.5 CX'1pl~dpdk3i~-d For Release 2003/04/19: ?~A?-J~~P84-007808004200230001-2
" ~r;ilv>:ls
:; Front Edit (Jti,or ~
? Popo PoUo f ago
.~ ~~~,ir ~~ ~~~+~~ ~~~~ ~~a/ J - ? "" n ', ,`i2l~gtui ?aalute,~heard a"?speech' dc?~
~.? ?,,.
rasrt;~: JUL ~~i~ir'
v ~~'ere ' pinpointed last night by
~~ "a 2F?year-old editor of an anti?~
(;' Conv)tranist maga?rine '.peaking,
?
to n)oro titan ]GO persons at the
holiday Inn in Kansas City,
Kansas.
,l Scott Stanley, jr., managh)g
(, editor of the American Opinion,
~'? who is also a native of I{ansas
;' City, Kansas, and a, graduate of
' ??