Approved For. ?Release'200BiTATAtl7rLCIA-RDP75-001'4
WASHIN ;TON SEAR
MAY 1,8 1966
:,'DAVID LAWRENCE : .
anger Seen an Pro posaIor-
s
e
e
Armed 'Services Committee'?' rem is gals es i c
The risks in changing the by the number of leaks that
~nnA thn A.n%rnnrintinnc Cem.., , __ _e ~ _ ~L ,.. -41 . ..
V V1IUIuur.cc "VW kviiii,vocu v+ " American interests arouna une mittee--of - which he is
small group from the Senate world ti
"d ti
h i
lf
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dealt with casualty and Senator Russell's subcommit='J
should the Senate Foreign "leaked" to the press like'. tee has "distinguished itself'~;Y
Relations Committee wish to : domestic news, this could by not, leaking information;
ti~al way, keeps in touch with respect to what's going on in'!- dent, of course, has access tb'
'the . operations of the Central '.. foreign countries, there has to everything the CIA is doing. r
~:; Intelligence Agency. ? be restraint. For if the infer-':, Senator Frank J. Lausche,`~
o
. carne in
e u as np0 ant. ui a cod war
of tli
rt 1
sight commltt:ee o e
Senate which in a confiden- ' 'domestic policy. But with as in -a "hot war." The Presi-'
own to the "legislative over, to divulge things trey nave ? This kind ? of caution is just
I
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'. It "'
1 d b
?
ore gn
a
on
,
to add three members' of its senators every now and then.i:'of the United States:"
:proposal to allow the Senate cy. always ask the- commander in
s Committee It is customary for various ? chief--namely the President
F
Rc1
ti
the eye in the innocent-looking.. with the secrets of the agen-' what was Coming, he could
'. There is more' than meets foreign policy were entrusted of-the Navy wanted to find out
a
nn e v
y r J, V governments to get secret . because it,would cause man c
influence foreign y ~_
? pulley." data in washin~aton. ' They ? nnnnlo in hacifiaka rtn halm frirfi~
wLU eatlC the devious efforts of foreign gathering of information,
~omth uLLcCIAy VHU~
r
:: (and that theoretically 'same At-ter worm war ii was ~? ?u??w ?? + ^? ?~
representation ? from the .over, the late Admiral Ernest';, develop contacts in foreign l
Foreign itelations Committee,,, `King, chief of naval opera '. countries, ralmost a16ng with members of the tions, told this correspondent .' To'
~,:'Appropriations Committee A hat in two of the important ;requirethe agency to reveal
and the Armed Services.. engagements in the Pacific he much of its . information to
Committee'truth would be logical. never even told the secretary, members of the Sei~ate who..
But the is _ that the of the Navy -,ahead of time are themselves , involved in'~
operations of the Central : ;. that a certain battle plan was s foreign-policy., mitroversles.
?Intelligence Agency could be', about to.be'put into operation, could r cult In fa substantial
a?: imperilled of members of the "Myy job" ' he saidl "was ,y drop "hi tho a lc~ency off Q.,1hl
!'Se~-ate who mire' cirimaruly strictly c:tvithin ; the`. "srzned ':;'Prgantzsklon, .o.''A ?
>. On the surface, it ? might the people who knoRvv anything some of the CIA informants
.'.
,.., see ,.,m- that the whole thin is 'about the operation, the better.,,,, even in the national capital.
:,a,. .., ++n, ?o -,; ,,,-o . _' in fiho Inno ,?nn.
o
vis s p y Cm. ng _ week, said that the mere
%that "it is just pure poppy- with the technique of keeping discussion of what appears tot
cock that the CIA fixes, and,.
things really secret, the CIA ?
- -. -- ~-_--__ it , , .,_? .L_ .'__._-., ,be a jurisdictional squabble'4
r
s s
i
` fcommiittce ' which now super- information that comes to l ? speech to the Senate this
e ericiice
e CIA o -nations as s th Aft t
L -ichard B. ? Russell, D-Ga., themselves may not know just their identity became known,.;..'
i,ichaininan ' of the special . ~ who is behind the request for T1
enator in his
Geo
i
But, in rebuttal, Senator employ go-betweens who ` rear of eventual reprisals if