419. Memorandum From the Secretary of State’s Special Assistant for
Research and Intelligence (Armstrong) to the Under Secretary of State (Webb)0
Washington, March 6, 1950.
SUBJECT
- National Security Council Directive on Covert Operations
Problem:
- To revise the organization for the conduct of covert
operations.
Discussion:
- 1.
- NSC 10/21 created a new
Office of Policy Coordination (OPC)
within CIA, to plan and conduct covert operations under the direct
policy guidance of the Departments of State and Defense.
- 2.
- NSC 50,2 following the
recommendation of the Dulles
Committee Report, recommended that CIA combine in one office the Office
of Policy Coordination (OPC), the Office
of Special Operations (OSO), which is
responsible for espionage and counter-espionage, and the Contacts Branch
which is responsible for collection of foreign intelligence within the
United States.
- 3.
- The attached proposed NSC directive to
implement NSC 50 and, therefore, revise
NSC 10/2 has been worked out by the
Department with General Magruder
of the NME, and has been approved by
Secretary Johnson. The Executive
Secretary, NSC, has been informally
consulted.
- 4.
- The substance of the revision proposed by this directive is as
follows:
- a.
- Distinction is made in covert operations between:
- (i)
- Those which are subtle and truly covert and remain so,
such as political and economic warfare and propaganda;
and
- (ii)
- Those which are “rough” and tend eventually to become
known, for example, sabotage, guerrilla and
para-military operations, etc.
- b.
- CIA is directed to combine under one Assistant Director of
CIA, espionage and counter-espionage, all covert operations and
the Contact Branch, but in so doing, to place subtle covert
operations in the same
[Page 1077]
organizational unit with espionage and counter-espionage and
apart from the unit which will plan “rough” covert
operations.
- c.
- Furthermore, it is directed that the “rough” operations which
are approved in peacetime will be carried out by the unit
responsible for espionage and subtle operations, even though
planned by the unit responsible for planning “rough”
operations.
- 5.
- The problem of appropriate organization within the State Department to
deal with the revised CIA organization will be the subject of a separate
paper.3
Recommendation:
That you approve the attached proposed NSC
directive for submission to the NSC as a
joint State–NME proposal.
Attachment5
Memorandum for the Executive Secretary of the National
Security Council (Lay)
The Departments of State and Defense jointly submit the attached paper
for consideration by the National Security Council.
Attachment6
PROPOSED NSC 10/3
NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL DIRECTIVE ON COVERT
OPERATIONS
- 1.
- In NSC 10/2 the National Security
Council agreed:
- a)
- “The National Security Council, taking cognizance of the
vicious covert activities of the USSR, its satellite
countries and Communist
[Page 1078]
groups to discredit and defeat the
aims and activities of the United States and other Western
powers, has determined that, in the interests of world peace
and US national security, the overt foreign activities of
the US Government must be supplemented by covert
operations.”
- b)
- “The Central Intelligence Agency is charged by the
National Security Council with conducting espionage and
counter-espionage operations abroad. It therefore seems
desirable, for operational reasons, not to create a new
agency for covert operations, but in time of peace to place
the responsibility for them within the structure of the
Central Intelligence Agency and correlate them with
espionage and counter-espionage operations under the overall
control of the Director of Central Intelligence.”
- 2.
- In approving NSC 50, based on the
Dulles–Jackson–Correa Report, the NSC agreed that
“The operations of the Office of Special Operations, the
Office of Policy Coordination and the Contact Branch of the
Office of Operations should be integrated under single
over-all direction in an operations division, with its
separate administration, within CIA.”
- 3.
- Therefore, under the authority of Section 102(d)(4) and (5) of the
National Security Act of 1947, as amended, the National Security
Council hereby directs, in accordance with NSCID 5, in lieu of NSC
10/2, and in light of paragraph 6a(1) of NSC 50, that:
- A.
- As used in this directive, “covert operations” are
understood to be all activities which are conducted or
sponsored by this Government against hostile foreign states
or groups or in support of friendly foreign states or
groups, but which are so planned and executed that any U.S.
Government responsibility for them is not evident to
unauthorized persons, and that if uncovered, the U.S.
Government can plausibly disclaim any responsibility for
them. Specifically, such operations shall include any covert
activities related to: political manipulations; propaganda;
economic warfare; preventive direct action, including
sabotage, anti-sabotage, demolition and evacuation measures;
subversion against hostile states, including assistance to
underground resistance movements, guerrillas and refugee
liberation groups, and support of indigenous anti-communist
elements in threatened countries of the free world. Such
operations shall not include armed conflict by recognized
military forces and cover and deception for military
operations; nor shall they include espionage and
counter-espionage as provided for in NSCID 5.
- B.
- It will be recognized that there are two broad types of
covert operations, namely:
- (i)
- Those activities which by their nature are truly
covert and must remain so if they are to succeed,
e.g., political and economic warfare, and propaganda
operations, which types of activity have a close
affinity to espionage and counter-espionage;
and
- (ii)
- Those activities whose development designedly
leads to physical manifestations and therefore cease
to be covert, which include all other covert
operations.
- C.
- The following organizational changes will be affected
within CIA:
- (i)
- A new office of operations with specialized
organic administrative services shall be created
within the Central Intelligence Agency to embrace
the functions now being performed by the Office of
Special Operations, the Office of Policy
Coordination, and the Contact Branch.
- (ii)
- A highly qualified person, nominated by the
Secretaries of State and Defense, and acceptable to
the Director of Central Intelligence, shall be
appointed as an Assistant Director, CIA, as head of
the new office of operations.
- (iii)
- The Assistant Director for the new office of
operations shall report to the Director of Central
Intelligence. For the purposes of security and of
flexibility of operations, and to the maximum degree
consistent with efficiency, the new office of
operations shall operate independently of other
components of the Central Intelligence
Agency.
- D.
- The new office of operations shall consist of three
operating units which shall perform the following functions:
- (i)
- A unit which will perform the functions now
carried out by the Contact Branch as prescribed in
NSCID–7.
- (ii)
- A unit which will perform the functions now
carried out by the Office of Special Operations,
namely: espionage and counter-espionage as
prescribed in NSCID–5. Additionally, this unit shall
plan and conduct covert political and economic
warfare and propaganda operations in peace and war.
All covert operations authorized in peacetime shall
be conducted under the direction of this
unit.
- (iii)
- A unit which shall plan and conduct all other
covert operations enumerated in Paragraph A above.
However, such operations as may be authorized to be
undertaken in peacetime shall be conducted under the
direction of the unit specified in (ii)
above.
- E.
- Plans and preparations for the conduct of covert
operations in time of peace which require physical support
or assistance of the military services, and plans and
preparations for the conduct of covert operations in time of
war or national emergency, or when the President directs,
shall be coordinated with the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Such
preparations and plans shall be drawn up with the assistance
of a representative of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and plans
for wartime covert operations shall be accepted by the
latter as being consistent with and complementary to
approval plans for wartime military operations. The
execution of covert operations in military theaters shall be
under the control of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
- F.
- The Director of Central Intelligence shall be responsible
for ensuring that:
[Page 1080]
- (i)
- Through designated representatives of the
Secretary of State and of the Secretary of Defense,
covert operations are planned and conducted in a
manner consistent with foreign and military policies
and with overt activities;
- (ii)
- Through appropriate channels, agencies of the U.S.
Government, both at home and abroad (including
diplomatic and military representatives in each
area), are informed of such operations as will
affect them.
- (iii)
- Covert operations pertaining to economic warfare
will be conducted under the guidance of the
Departments and agencies responsible for the
planning of economic warfare.