Published on CIA FOIA (foia.cia.gov) (https://www.cia.gov/readingroom)


TRUMAN'S MISGIVINGS OVER CIA

Document Type: 
CREST [1]
Collection: 
General CIA Records [2]
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP75-00149R000700550006-2
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 10, 2004
Sequence Number: 
6
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 1, 1967
Content Type: 
MAGAZINE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP75-00149R000700550006-2.pdf [3]239.72 KB
Body: 
Approved For Release 2004/12/15: CIA-RDP75- is to encourage further escalation. The amendment lauded the President as a peacemaker even as he committed the country ever more deeply to the con- flirt that Mansfield once described as an "open-ended" war. The White House, the State Department, and the Pentagon were quick to interpret . the amendment as the most generous blank check handed over to them for military purposes in Vietnam since the Senate's Tonkin Gulf resolution of 1964. The two Senate doves who stood fast and voted their convictions on this historic occasion-which was given only a fraction of the attention it deserved by any objective news standard-made their position as clear as words could make it. "I am voting against the sup- plemental authorization," Senator. Nel- son stated, "in order to express my op- position to past escalation of the con- flict and the future escalation that is certain to follow. Furthermore, I am voting against it to express my deep regret that we have failed to explore adequately the possibility of reaching the negotiating table by the cessation of bombing for a sufficient time to test the real intent of Hanoi." Senator Morse decared: "These successive mili- tary fundh , ; bills for the war do not relate so much to supporting the boys and giving them what they need as they provide funds for new expanded forces to be sent." In the House approval of the ap- propriation came by voice vote after it had defeated, 372 to eighteen, an amendment by Representative George Brown of California which was similar to the Clark anti-bombing amendment. In a later statement-' expressive of the views of the eighteen Democrats, in- 'cluding himself, who voted for the Brown amendment -- Representative Robert Kastenmeier of Wisconsin said lie had voted "no" in the voice vote on the appropriation because he could "not support a measure that promises only to continue the present course which will send still more troops to Vietnam, widen the land war in South- east Asia, and further increase Ameri- can casualties." House members who voted for the Brown amendment in addition to the author and Kastenmeier were : Jonathan B. Bingham, Leonard Farbstein, Benjamin S. Rosenthal, Wil- liam F. Ryan, and James H. Scheuer, all of New York; Phillip Burton, Don Edwards, Thomas M. Rees, and Ed- ward R. Roybal of California; John Conyers, Jr., and Charles C. Diggs, Jr., of Michigan; Donald M. Fraser of Minnesota; Edith Green ,of Oregon; Truman's Misgivings over CIA Former President Harry Truman'; who created the Central Intel- ligence Agency, soon afterward developed the "gravest misgivings" about it, Smith Simpson, a former State Department oficial, re- minds us in his forthcoming book, Anatomy of the State Department. Simpson recalls that Mr. Truman wrote in a syndicated newspaper article in late 1953: "With all the nonsense put on by Communist propaganda ... in their name-calling assault on the West, the last thing we needed was for the CIA to be seized upon as something akin to a subncrting in- fluence in the affairs of other people... . "There are now some searching questions that need to be answered. I ... would like to see the CIA restored to its original assignment as the intelligence arm of the President, and whatever else it can prop- erly perform in that special field-and that its operational duties be terminated or properly used elsewhere. "We have grown up as a nation, respected for our free institutions and for our ability to maintain. a, free and open society. There is some- thing about the way the CIA has been functioning that is casting,a shadow over our historic position and I feel that we need to correct it." 2( H elstos i/of New Jersey; Patsy T. Mink of Hawaii; and Sidney R. Yates of Illinois. One out of four Americans wants the bombing of North Vietnam stopped. Although this is a minority, it does embrace millions of voters. Except for Senators Nelson and Morse in the Senate and eighteen members of the House, these millions had no Congres- sional voices courageous enough to cast clear-cut votes against the bombing. and other escalation measures which block the road to peace. Once again events have demonstrated that when it comes to making undeclared war- and widening it when it suits him- President Johnson has Congress in the hollow of his hand. Democracy Betrayed If two years. from now our Govern- ment-with tltc tacit and sometimes outspoken approval of sonic segments of the Establishment-is still employ- ing force, deceit, and corruption as tools of U.S. policy, then it will be quite appropriate to celebrate 1969 throughout the land as the 500th anni- versary of the birth of Nicole di Ber- nardo Machiavelli. For the Florentine' statesman and political writer, in his work The Prince, sought to justify the use of violence, dishonesty, and corruption in statecraft. His contetit- porary and model, Cesare Borgia, built his power on such principles, the prin- ciples we now practice in modern fashion in Vietnam ' and in other countries. The practice of a Machiavellian na- tional policy has been clearly exposed to public view by the latest series of revelations. on the Central Intelligence Agency's penetration, over two decades, of nearly every type of free institution operating in this country and abroad. The pumping of many millions of dol- lars in CIA funds into the nation's academic, cultural, labor, church, and journalistic fields has been so compre- hensive that it is becoming increasingly difficult to find,' organizations com- pletely, free of any taint of CIA, subsidy. This frightful and frightening policy the Government pursues-- that the end 6 THE PROGRESSIVE Approved For Release 2004/12/15 : CIA-RDP75-00149R0007005.60006-2 April, 1967 Approved For Release 2004/12/15 : CIA-RDP75-00149R000700550006-2 justifies the means-has boomeranged. Our credibility in the eyes of other countries and peoples has been severely damaged by the CIA's infiltration of our institutions. More than ever be- fore, American delegates-whether stu- dents, professors, labor leaders, lawyers, or cinirchnrcr, to international con- ferences will he viewed with suspicion as possible hirelings of the U.S. espio- nas' ' apparatus. The damage (lone to free institutions in this country may he even, greater., The CIA web of propaganda and in- trigue-spun with the generalized ap- proval of four Presidents, the blank check endorsement of Congress, the acceptance and sometimes connivance have been caught cheating, and it is in the cheating and not the exposure of it that we betray our ideals. The country has a choice between the philosophy of the Machiavellians and the beliefs of those deeply concerned citizens who know that if we continue to justify ruthless means because of our professed ends, eventually democ- racy will be destroyed. Destroyed not by Communism but by the witless and reckless policies of the Government itself and the acquiescence of the un- informed and the unconcerned. Negroes and Jews headed by eminently respectable Eleven out of one hundred Ameri- PeI'sor-s--demonstrates how cold war Herblock in The Washington Post cans are Negroes and about three out values threaten to transform a country The of one hundred are Jews. In his sttug- founded in liberty into an authoritar- Student Prince g- gle for civil rights and equality of op- ian state. portunity the minority Negro often There is "an alarming trend in this curbed. has had the support of the minority country toward the use of police-state (See box on Page 6.) tint tactics," Senator Gaylord Nelson, Wis- President Johnson, it is reported, Jew. have worked together, cons in an end to secret subsidies by rights and and hundreds in Democrat, told his colleagues. CIA y civil ri ts advocates, in hundreds of Ile cited CIA subsidies, wiretapping the Cto private organizations- n es citiignedzensto give the Ne eg and eavesdropping by Government after Ramparts' recent revelations re- the first class c firstn cdesigned agencies, and the financing of sup- garcding the' National Student Associa- citizenship he has been poscdly legitimate books by the U.S. tion hit the headlines. A next logical so long denied. Information Agency among examples step would be for the President and There has been some friction, at of "un Congress to initiate a A of openly times, between Negroes and Jews. Oc- -Amcri'can practices. polic y casionally this has broken into the If there is to be a halt to the process declared and openly administered aid open but more frequently it has by which the Government and some of to U.S. groups and individuals repro- seethed below the surface. our institutions are being subverted to seating democratic ideals overseas. Pri vat, foundations should be encouraged Jews, e or among between Negroes practices which mirror the Communist and d Jews, or among other elements of tactics we condcurn to provide their own funds for si the first st il , m ep must ar be a thorough-going Congressional in- activities and to make full disclosure quiry into the CIA's activities and the of these activities. relationship of the executive and legis- ' Apart from the question of morality lative branches to this dangerously involved in the secret practices that powerful agency. To press for such an have been disclosed, the Government, inquiry may be futile in view of the and many cooperating members of the disposition of the Administration and Establishment, have demonstrated an many Congressional leaders to white- abysmal lack of common sense. They 4va;;h the CIA. But the citizen who should have foreseen that their secret truly cares about the survival of the operations inevitably would be ex. American venture in demo osed t h ld ld id cracy s o wor p -w ou e condemnation. Ellis and published last year, charged demand of his Congressman, his Sena- We cannot play international ames th t N g , a egroes in Harlem were exploited tor, and the White House that the said Walter Lippmann, as if we were by merchants and landlords; most of inquiry be initiated. a totalitarian society. "The American' the exploiters, the author wrote, were' What would follow such an explora- way of life," he added, "does not pre- Jewish. He also claimed 'that "Zion- tion, it is hoped, is new legislation pare our people for continual decep- ists" dominated Negro colleges and specifically limiting the 'CIA to the' tion. We had better make up our Negro organizations' and manipulated gathering and evaluation of intelli- minds to play the game from the the civil rights movement. gence. President Truman, under whose American strength and not from Author James Baldwin and actor Administration the CIA was estab- 'American weakness, and to stamp out and playwright Ossie Davis, both Ne- lished, warned after he left office that lying as a public policy." groes, have now resigned from' Liber- the agency's growing power must be In the struggle for men's minds we ator's advisory board in protest against April, 967 Approved For Release 2004/12/15 : CIA-RDP75-00149R000700550006-2 7 our pluralistic society,. are best brought out into the open and discussed. For that reason, the disagreement that has developed over a series of articles ap- pearing in Liberator, a Negro month- ly, could prove to have positive value. It may help clear the air of some of the misunderstandings that have been developing between Negroes and Jews. The Liberator series, "Semitism in the Black Ghetto," written by Eddie

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[3] https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP75-00149R000700550006-2.pdf