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Executive Secrets

Page 33

by William J. Daugherty


  Meese, Edwin, 203

  Memoranda of Notification (MON), 93, 104. See also Presidential Findings

  Meyer, Cord, 179

  Millis, John, 59

  Mitchell, John, 169–70

  MI-6. See British Secret Intelligence Service (BSIS)

  Mondale, Walter, 183, 190

  Monroe, James, 23, 31

  Morrison, James, 143

  Mossadegh, Mohammad, 6, 127, 137, 140

  Most Favored Nation status, 199

  MPLA (Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola), 179–80

  Mujahedin, 42, 189, 206

  Murphy, Walter F., 91

  myths of covert action by CIA, 23–45, 221, 230n6

  assassination of John F. Kennedy, xvii, 78

  assassinations of foreign leaders, xvi, 42–45, 78, 157–58, 173, 198, 233n40

  CIA exists only to run covert action programs, 32–34, 231n19

  CIA independent of president’s control (“rogue elephant”), xvi–xvii, 3–4, 24–28, 34–37, 100, 110–11, 151, 225n2, 232n27

  CIA originates covert action plans rather than president, 102–3

  Congress does not know about it, 28–32, 230n12

  consumes most of the budget, 34, 231n22

  covert action renamed “special activities” to obscure meaning, 40–41

  created AIDS virus, 77–78, 198, 225n5

  expensive paramilitary actions, mostly about, 40, 84

  harmful to United States interests, 37–39

  illegal under the Constitution, 31–32, 230–31n18

  Iran-Contra a rogue CIA program, 34–37, 232n27

  Iranian hostage rescue operation, 45

  meddling in other countries illegally, 41–42

  overthrowing governments, mostly about, 40, 232n31

  reported in the media, 40

  trained Osama bin-Laden, 42

  undemocratic in concept, 31

  Watergate scandal, being involved with, 42

  narcotics cartels, 5, 11, 88, 219, 220

  Nasser, Gamal, 149

  National China News Agency, 73

  National Front for the Liberation of Angola (FNLA), 179

  National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) 65–57, 142–43

  National Psychological Strategy Board (PSB), 124. See also 10/5 Panel

  National Review, 76

  National Security Act (1947), 31, 115, 116

  National Security Council Action Memorandum (NSAM). See National Security Council Documents

  National Security Council Directive on Covert Operations (NSC-5412), 134–37

  National Security Council Documents: Approval and Review of Special Activities (NSDD-286), 101, 196, 240n20

  Basic National Security Policy (NSC-162/2), 132–33

  Change in Name of Special Group 5412 (NSC Action Memorandum 303), 159

  Combating Terrorism (NSDD-138), 208

  Coordination of Foreign Intelligence Information Measures (NSC-4), 118

  Covert Action Policy Approval and Coordination Procedures (NSDD-159), 101, 196

  Intelligence Requirements/National Needs Process (PDD-35), 218

  National Security Council Directive on Covert Operations (NSC-5412), 134–37

  National Security Council Structure (NSDD-2), 194

  NSAM 303, 159

  NSC-1/1, 115–17

  NSC-1/2, 116–17, 243n11

  NSC-1/3, 117, 243n12

  NSC-4, 118, 123

  NSC-4/A, 118–19, 121

  NSC-10/2, 120–24

  NSC-10/5, 123

  NSC-20, 126

  NSC-20/4, 126

  NSC-50, 121

  NSC-59, 123

  NSC-68, 38

  NSC-74, 124

  NSC-136, 6

  NSC-136/1, 7

  NSC-141, 124

  NSC-162/2, 132–33, 138

  NSC-5412, 134–37, 151

  NSC-5412/1, 135

  NSC-5412/2, 135, 168

  NSC-5518, 141

  NSDD-2, 194

  NSDD-32, 197, 201, 202

  NSDD-54, 198

  NSDD-66, 199

  NSDD-75, 199–200

  NSDD-138, 208

  NSDD-159, 101, 196, 240nn19–20

  NSDD-166, 206

  NSDD-286, xv, 101, 105, 196, 240n20

  NSDM-40, 168

  NSD-1, 214–15

  NSR-29, 214

  Organization of the National Security Council (PDD-2), 216

  Organization of the National Security Council System (NSD-1), 214–15

  PDD-2, 216

  PDD-35, 218, 219

  PDD-39, 219

  Protracted Economic Warfare Against the USSR (NSDD-66), 199

  Responsibility for the Conduct, Supervision, and Coordination of Covert Action Operations (NSDM-40), 168

  Scope and Pace of Covert Operations (NSC-10/5), 123

  U.S. National Security Strategy (NSDD-32), 197

  U.S. Objectives with Respect to the USSR to Counter Soviet Threats to U.S. Security (NSC-20/4), 126

  U.S. Policy, Programs, and Strategy in Afghanistan (NSDD-166), 206

  United States Policy Towards Eastern Europe (NSDD-54), 198

  U.S. Relations with the USSR (NSDD-75), 199–200. See also Executive Orders; Position of the United States with Respect to Italy series

  National Security Council (NSC), xvi, 24, 31, 37, 53, 118, 142, 159

  approval and review of covert action by, 101, 106, 122, 132, 194–95, 197, 217

  establishment of, 115

  exclusion of from running covert action, 100

  as highest Executive Branch entity to review covert action, 195

  meetings under Bush, George H.W., 215–16

  and propaganda, 79

  National Security Council Structure (NSDD-2), 194

  National Security Decision Directive (NSDD). See National Security Council Documents

  National Security Decision Memorandum (NSDM). See National Security Council Documents

  National Security Directive (NSD). See National Security Council Documents

  National Security Planning Group (NSPG), 101, 194–95, 197, 203

  National Security Review (NSR). See National Security Council Documents

  National Student Association, 125

  National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA) Party, 179–80

  Neustadt, Richard G., 19

  neutron bomb, 186

  Newsom, David D., 20

  news organizations, and propaganda, 72, 73–74, 76–77, 78–79

  New York Times, 141

  Nhu, Ngo Dinh, 43–44

  Nicaragua, 54–56, 190–91, 203–5, 238n23

  compromise of covert action in media, 253n30

  mining harbors in, 55, 204, 234n11

  Nixon, Richard M., 30, 98, 124, 165, 167–77

  and Chile, 21, 34, 44, 48, 102, 156, 157, 171–73

  and the CIA, 26, 34, 169, 172

  congressional oversight, lack of under, 168–69, 172

  continuing Johnson’s covert action programs, 160

  and Iran/Iraq/Kurds, 173, 174–77

  and Japan, 140

  security organization under, 168–71

  and the Soviet Union, 7, 83, 174, 186

  and Tibet, 144–45

  understanding of covert action, 9, 48, 167

  Noriega, Manuel, 95

  North, Oliver, 31

  North Korea, 128, 143

  North Vietnam, 21

  Nutter, John J., 148

  Office of International Information Programs (IIP), 73, 237n4

  Office of Management and Budget, 146, 177, 184

  Office of Policy Coordination (OPC), 123, 124, 244n29, 244n33

  Office of Special Operations (OSO), 119–20

  Office of Strategic Influence, 68

  Omnibus Crime Act (1986), 209

  Omnibus Findings, 184–85. See also Presidential Findings

  “open sources” of intelligence collection, 10, 227n2

  Operation
Eagle Claw. See Iranian hostage rescue operation

  Operation Fortitude. See World War II, covert action programs

  Operation Mongoose. See assassination plans: for Castro

  Operations Advisory Group (OAG), 177–78

  Operations Coordinating Board (OCB), 135

  Operation ZAPATA. See Bay of Pigs operation

  Organization of the National Security Council (PDD-2), 216

  Organization of the National Security Council System (NSD-1), 214–15

  Paese Sera, 78

  Pahlavi, Shah Mohammad Reza, 17

  Pakistan, 206

  Panama, 95

  paramilitary operations: in Afghanistan, 84

  in Central America, 45

  against China, 128

  during cold war, inside the Iron Curtain, 126–27

  as component of covert action discipline, 15–16, 64, 71, 84–85

  in Cuba, Bay of Pigs operation, 154–55

  difficulty of keeping covert, 40, 49, 67

  and Eisenhower, 132, 135, 138, 139, 143

  in Guatemala, 138, 139

  harmful to United States interests, 6

  in Indochina, 45

  in Indonesia, 143

  Iranian hostage rescue operation, support for, 45

  under Kennedy, 152, 156

  in Laos, 20–21

  legal aspects of, 19, 122, 123

  myth of most covert actions being, 40, 84

  in Nicaragua, 204

  number of compared with other types of programs, 40

  in Philippines, 128

  risk in, 110

  and “special activities,” compared with, 15–16

  “stay behind” program in Europe, 126

  in Tibet, 143

  training foreign military forces, 84–85, 96

  and Truman, 122, 123, 126–27, 128

  and war on terrorism, 68–69, 231n22

  during World War II, 59

  Pasternak, Boris, 75

  Patterson, Robert, 115

  PBSUCCESS. See Guatemala: and 1954 removal of Arbenz

  Peoples’ Democratic Republic of Yemen, 189. See also Yemen Arab Republic (YAR)

  Pforzheimer, Walter, 92

  Philby, Kim, 127

  Philippines, 128, 245n48

  Phu, Dien Bien, 141

  Pike, Otis, 175

  Pike Committee, 43, 167, 173, 175, 176, 177, 178. See also congressional/senatorial investigations

  Pinochet, Augusto, 173

  pitfalls of covert action, 47–57

  arrogance of appointed staff, 53, 65, 235n10, 236n13

  causing tragedy, 5, 38–39, 139–40, 176–77

  compromise of, 40, 57, 65, 95, 98, 110, 127, 143–44, 175, 253n30

  conflict between President and Congress, 54–56

  creating worse situation for U.S., 6–7, 37–39, 139, 140

  expense of, 55

  inserting too late in foreign policy initiatives, 54

  limited knowledge/excluding experts, 98–99, 154

  substituting covert action for foreign policy, 51–53

  success creating misguided notion of ease of covert action, 140, 245n48

  thought of as “silver bullet” to slay Communism, 139, 140, 144, 149

  unclear objectives, 56–57

  zealotry of those running covert action, 205, 253–54n34

  Planning and Coordination Group (PCG), 101, 135

  plausible deniability, 93, 94, 98, 99, 122, 135, 143, 152, 165, 240n12

  Poindexter, John, 30–31

  Poland, 4, 83, 188, 194, 201–3. See also Solidarity

  Policy Coordination Committees (PCC), 215

  Policy Review Committee (PRC), 184

  political action programs: in Afghanistan, 188–89

  in British Guyana, 157

  in Chile, 156–57, 165, 171–72, 171–73

  costs of, 40

  and covert action, as part of discipline of, 64, 71, 81–84

  in Dominican Republic, 147

  economic disruption, 83

  in Europe in 1970s/80s, 186, 198–99

  in France, 6, 20, 114, 243–44n20

  in Indonesia, 83

  in Italy, 6, 83, 115–20, 159–65, 238nn20–21

  in Japan, 6, 83, 140–41

  “Nationalities” program against Soviet Union, 187

  against Soviet Union during 1980s, 197–200

  types of actions in, 82

  Popieluszko, Jerzy, 203

  Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), 179–80

  Position of the United States with Respect to Italy in the Light of the Possibility of Communist Participation in the Government by Legal Means (NSC-1/3), 117, 243n12

  Position of the United States with Respect to Italy, The (NSC-1/1 and NSC-1/2), 115–16, 243n11

  Predator UAV, 63

  Presidential Decision Directives (PDD). See National Security Council Documents

  Presidential Findings, xxi, 13, 41

  Afghan Finding, 189

  applying only to classical covert actions, 96

  banning of retroactive, 97, 109, 196

  under Bush, George H.W., 213, 216

  under Carter, 184–85, 189–92

  under Clinton, 219, 220

  committees required to know about, 94

  and computer hacking, 88

  development of use of, 92–98

  under Ford, 178

  format for, 109–10

  and forty-eight hour notice to Congress, 25, 98, 107, 242n28

  Lethal Finding, 110

  Memoranda of Notification (MON), 93, 104, 185

  not needed in DoD operation, 68–70, 88

  Omnibus Findings, 184–85

  for paramilitary operations, 96–97

  place of in planning covert action, 104–7

  and plausible deniability, 94, 99

  under Reagan, 193, 196, 203, 205, 208, 209, 252n2

  as report by president to Congress about covert action, 27, 61, 93–95, 107, 108

  “single country/single issue” Findings, 185

  Worldwide Findings, 178, 184. See also Hughes-Ryan Amendment to Foreign Assistance Act (1961)

  President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence, 152

  Principals Committee (PC), 215, 216

  Propaganda and Political Action Staff (PPS), 33

  propaganda operations, 156, 160, 185, 197

  in Afghanistan, 188–89

  attitude toward by CIA officers, 4, 33

  “black” propaganda, 77–79

  in Central America, 190

  in Chile, 156–57, 165, 171–72

  coinciding with foreign policy objectives, 79

  during cold war, 74–75, 118–20

  by Communists, 16, 21, 116, 118, 125, 133, 187

  compromise of, 13–14, 196

  Congress for Cultural Freedom program, 124–25

  costs of, 21, 40, 206

  and covert action, as part of discipline of, 64, 71, 72–79

  against Fidel Castro, 154

  future of, 222–23

  “gray” propaganda, 75–77

  in Italy, 116–20

  “Nationalities” program, 74, 187–88

  news organizations/journals serving, 72, 73–74, 76–77, 78–79

  and political actions, working with, 81–82, 115

  in postwar Europe, 122

  reaching audience, methods used, 76

  against Soviet Union during 1970s, 186–88

  against Soviet Union during 1980s, 197–200, 206

  and State Department, 74, 79, 106, 118–19, 121, 123, 154

  time required for, 72–73

  in war on terrorism, 68–69

  “white” propaganda, 75

  during World War II, 59

  Protracted Economic Warfare Against the USSR (NSDD-66), 199

  public entities taking on previously covert actions overtly, 32

  Qaddafi, Muammar, 209

  Radio Free Europe (RFE),
xviii, 5, 74

  Radio Liberty (RL), xviii, 5, 74

  Radio Moscow, 73

  Ramparts magazine, 125

  Ranelagh, John, 43

  “raw” intelligence, 10

  Reagan, Ronald W., 33, 34, 193–211

  and Afghanistan, 38–39, 71, 189, 195, 205–7

  and Angolan civil war, 209–10

  and Cambodia, 210

  Carter covert actions continued by, 184, 193

  and Central America, 26, 191, 203–5

  and congressional oversight of covert action, 55, 95, 196, 204

  covert action programs under, 193–94

  and EO 12333, 13–15, 40, 67, 69, 195–96

  and Grenada, 192

  and Iran/Iraq/Jordan, 57, 97

  and Lebanon, 207–8

  and Nicaragua, 54–56, 203–5

  numbers of covert actions under, 26, 131, 193

  and oversight of covert action, 100–101, 195–96

  and Poland, 4, 83, 188, 194, 201–3

  and Pope John Paul II, 201

  Presidential Findings under, 193, 196, 203, 205, 208, 209, 252n2

  programs of awaiting declassification, 210–11

  and review process for covert action, 100–101

  security organization under, 194–96

  and Soviet Union, 198–99, 200, 203

  and Soviet Union, covert action programs against, 194, 197–200

  and “special activities,” 40

  and Surinam, 197

  and terrorism, 207–9

  understanding of covert action, xviii, 48, 54, 193, 213

  and Yemen, 190

  Responsibility for the Conduct, Supervision, and Coordination of Covert Action Operations (NSDM-40), 168

  risk involved in covert action, xx, 18–19, 39, 52

  assessment of, 96–99, 103–4, 105, 108, 110, 153, 236–37n2

  high-risk, low-gain, 92, 226n9

  low-risk, 24, 98, 153, 178

  Roberto, Holden, 179, 180

  Rogers, William P., 175

  “rogue elephant” myth about CIA, xvi–xvii, 3–4, 24–27, 34–37, 100, 110–11, 151, 225n2, 232n27

  Roosevelt, Kermit, 137–38

  Rostow, Walt, 148

  Rumsfeld, Donald, 68–69

  Rusk, Dean, 158

  Rwanda, 51, 52

  Saltonstall, Leverett, 92

  samizdat, 187

  Sandinistas, 54–56, 190–91, 203–4, 205

  sarin gas, 86

  satellite photographs, use of in intelligence, 10

  Saudi Arabia, 189–90

  Savimbi, Jonas, 179, 180, 210

  Schweizer, Peter, 202

  Scope and Pace of Covert Operations (NSC-10/5), 123

  Scowcroft, Brent, 215

  Senate Armed Forces Committee, 92

  Senate Armed Services Committee, 92

  Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI), 28, 49, 68, 95, 107, 189

  opposing covert action in Grenada, 192

  senatorial investigation of CIA. See congressional/senatorial investigations; Pike Committee

 

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