43. Memorandum From Robert P. Joyce of the Policy Planning Staff to the Ambassador at Large (Jessup)1
SUBJECT
- NSC 10/3
I think you will find the attached file2 to be self-explanatory and I believe that you will desire to review it before the Under Secretary considers signing the attached draft memorandum addressed to Mr. James S. Lay, Jr. The following considerations with respect to NSC 10/3 have been suggested to me within the Department:
- 1.
- The document as presently worded does not sufficiently assert Department of State responsibility, authority and control over the activities set forth in 10/3. Specifically paragraph 3a would seem to [Page 82] place complete control of covert operations and clandestine intelligence activities within the JCS. Similarly the last sentence in paragraph 3b reenforces JCS control. (In active military theatres)3
- 2.
-
Paragraph 3d then produces [reduces?] the “coordinating” role of the Secretary of State vis-à-vis the Director of Central Intelligence in Washington. It has been suggested that this coordinating role is insufficiently explicit and does not extend down to the theatre commanders through the JCS.
It has been suggested to me that the Department should ask for a great deal more in that the roles between the Department and the Military Establishment have now reached a point where the Department of State is in a position to obtain a great deal more than this document provides for. It was therefore suggested that the two alterations marked on page 2 and page 3 of the draft 10/3 might now be included in the Department’s comment requested by Mr. Lay.
I have the following comments to make:
- 1.
- General Smith and Allen W. Dulles feel that it is necessary at this time to obtain for CIA what is set forth in 10/3. They both feel that they have gone as far as possible in asserting CIA’s role vis-à-vis the JCS in Washington and as related to theatre commanders. As long as the present JCS position remains in its present state, nothing further can be accomplished in increasing the responsibility and authority of the CIA particularly in military theatres. As you know, General Smith and Allen Dulles are presently in Tokyo in an endeavor to accomplish something with General MacArthur and General Willoughby which will make it possible for CIA to play some role in the intelligence field in General MacArthur’s theatre. (Has his theatre ever been defined geographically?)
- 2.
- The Director of Central Intelligence feels that if he tries to get more than 10/3 calls for, he might end up by getting much less. In other words, General Smith is prepared to settle for 10/3 as presently drafted on the theory that this gives him enough to work out CIA’s problems in the command structure given present thinking within the JCS and the personalities of theatre commanders in time of war. General Smith does not feel that it would be wise at this time, in his endeavor to obtain the necessary degree of authority and control over secret operations and clandestine activities, to engage in a jurisdictional battle with the JCS which would raise basic issues, generate heat and [Page 83] conflict and probably result in jeopardizing what CIA now has and can get in the present circumstances.
- 3.
- My own feeling is that the Department of State can probably not go beyond the present language of draft NSC 10/3 in asserting civilian responsibility and authority. General Magruder and Admiral Stevens agree that this is a fact. General Magruder is an outstanding exponent of the theory that war is too serious a business for the generals, is an extension of politics, etc., etc. He advises against the Department’s trying to assert itself further than is now outlined in the present draft and believes that if it did so the JCS would react violently, and immediate conflict would develop and there would be little or no hope of getting even what is set forth in the present language of 10/3.
I think it will be most useful if Messrs. Matthews and Webb could have your comments on the foregoing.4
- Source: Department of State, INR Historical Files: NSC 10 Series, 1951. Top Secret.↩
- Joyce apparently clipped this memorandum to a file folder holding several documents on this topic. The folder has not been found.↩
- The parenthetical phrase was added by hand. References to paragraphs 3a and 3d under points 1 and 2 of this memorandum apparently refer to the earlier draft attached to Document 38.↩
- A handwritten postscript by Joyce reads, “… Another consideration: If this Dept. causes difficulties with the JCS which hold up indefinitely W.B. Smith’s new charter, he and C.I.A., I think, will not appreciate this Dept’s role therein. RPJ.” Ellipsis in the original.↩
- Top Secret.↩