70. Memorandum From the Secretary of State’s Special Assistant for
Intelligence and Research (Armstrong) to the Director of the Policy Planning Staff
(Nitze)1
Washington, May 26, 1951.
SUBJECT
- Scope and Pace of Covert Operations
General Smith’s memorandum of May
8 to the NSC on the above subject2 raises a number of not clearly
separable problems and issues. In an admittedly arbitrary delineation,
the following discussion and recommendations for a Departmental position
in the Senior Staff are offered, with an indication, where possible, of
the views expressed by General
Magruder and Admiral
Stevens.3
1. Increased Scope of OPC Operations
The great increase in number and size of projects which OPC has been called on to perform and can
anticipate since the approval of NSC
10/2,4 and particularly since the Korean
war, requires, in General
Smith’s view, a reaffirmation by the NSC of its directive to CIA
contained in 10/2. He as much as says that the character of the mission
for OPC has changed by the change in
size and he believes this should be recognized by NSC.
[Page 153]
There seems to be no disagreement in the Department or with General Magruder, Admiral Stevens, or CIA itself that there is no alternative but
to pursue vigorously the covert operations and to re-affirm the 10/2 in
the light of the changes noted by General
Smith.
2. Cold War Operations vs. Preparation
for Hot War
General Smith points out the
gradual but pronounced shift of emphasis in OPC projects from those in support of cold war activities
to those involved in the planning and preparation for covert support in
the event of war. This presents to OPC a
competing claim upon personnel and facilities and General Smith requires further
guidance.
The Department would join with General
Magruder and Admiral
Stevens in believing that we have no course but to pursue
both objectives simultaneously. However, the Department would feel that,
in the light of the continuing and understandable pressure from the
Military for activities in support of a hot war, it is necessary to
re-affirm that a fundamental mission of OPC is to promote national policy which has been most
recently set forth in the NSC–68
series,5 and that therefore primary emphasis must be upon the cold war psychological
objectives. This would include the underlying principle that every
effort, including psychological, should be made to prevent the coming of
a Third World War, while not overlooking the possibility that such a war
will break out and we will need to be fully prepared for it.
3. Guidance Mechanism;
Support
General Smith directly and
indirectly inquires whether OPC should
look to the Psychological Strategy Board for guidance and coordination.
At the same time he points out that OPC
will not be able to fulfill its mission unless it gets more support in
terms of personnel and assistance in military and political plans and
policies.
The Department would agree with General
Magruder and particularly with Admiral Stevens that the PSB was established for just this purpose
and it should be utilized to the fullest possible extent. The PSB can and should be called upon for
giving or obtaining from the NSC
decision where decision is needed, for giving continual guidance, for
coordinating the various agencies and for marshalling from the agencies
the support required by OPC.
4. Decision and Guidance on Specific
Projects
General Smith asks for guidance
on a number of specific projects some of which will be in conflict in
terms of either the objectives or
[Page 154]
claims upon personnel or facilities in short
supply. Notably General Smith
has pointed out that with respect to the problem of support of
counter-revolution in the slave states—how much support should be given,
when to release it, how much reserve to maintain—presents a conflict in
terms of the objectives of the cold war on the one hand, and of
preparation for hot war on the other.
Although General Magruder does
not address this point, Admiral
Stevens points out, and the Department of State would
warmly endorse his position, that such problems cannot be answered
without further plans and proposals by the CIA and impliedly what the issues are as between the
conflicting objectives. This and every other project on which CIA needs specific guidance or decision
must be presented in terms of the specific problem to the PSB for coordination, and where necessary
presentation to the NSC and the
President.
5. Cover Problems
General Smith’s memorandum points
out that under the rigid specifications of 10/2, all OPC operations must be carried out in such
a way as to remain covert and not disclose the interest of the US
Government; that this tends to limit the effectiveness of OPC, particularly in para-military type
operations which, on the one hand cannot disguise US Government interest
and on the other can be more effectively carried out under
quasi-military aegis.
Admiral Stevens suggests and
General Magruder would
apparently concur that this problem too should be presented in terms of
individual projects and specific recommendations thereto to the PSB for resolution. There is no apparent
inclination to disagree with General
Smith on this.
[1 paragraph (12 lines) not declassified]
6. Organization
General Smith’s memorandum does
not directly address this question but implicit in his approach as well
as in the memoranda of General
Magruder and Admiral
Stevens is the problem of organization for covert
activities. The Department would join with Magruder and Stevens in feeling that within
OPC and CIA organizational changes, particularly in any distinction
between wholly covert type operations and para-military operations,
should be handled by CIA itself and
should not be of concern to the other agencies except where they may
impinge upon the responsibilities of the other agencies or upon the
intelligence effort of the Government. On the other hand, with respect
to the organizational location of covert operations in the Government as
a whole, the Department would agree with Magruder and Stevens that there is no alternative to the present
allocation of this responsibility, almost in toto, to CIA–OPC.
[Page 155]
Proposed Action
Only Admiral Stevens has
suggested what specific action should be taken on General Smith’s memorandum. Even
General Smith’s
recommendations call for “guidance”, without any indication as to the
nature or form of such guidance.
The Department would concur in Admiral
Stevens’s specific suggestion that the Senior Staff
recommend that the NSC approve a
statement of policy with respect to General
Smith’s memorandum. In brief, Admiral Stevens recommends that this
statement of policy contain the following points:
- a.
- CIA should increase the scope
and pace of its cold-war activities without jeopardizing its
planning and preparation for covert, hot-war activities.
- b.
- There should be no change in the present Governmental
organization for covert activities, but that the newly created
Psychological Strategy Board should be fully utilized.
- c.
-
(1) Present mechanisms for coordination on planning for hot
war are available with elements of the Military
Establishment.
(2) The PSB should give the
necessary guidance on any conflicts which arise in pursuing
the objectives for the cold and the hot war.
(3) The PSB can and should
ensure that political and military considerations are
applied to covert activities.
(4) All agencies should give fullest possible support to the
covert activities and this support should be insured and
coordinated through PSB.
- d.
- PSB should be specifically
directed (by the NSC and the
President) to provide or obtain the guidance required by CIA.
Annex 1
Washington, May 23, 1951.
Memorandum From Brigadier General
John Magruder to the Department of Defense
Representative on the Senior Staff of the National Security Council
(Nash)6
SUBJECT
- Scope and Pace of Covert Operations (memo to NSC from Director, Central
Intelligence dated 8 May 1951)
- 1.
- The Director, Central Intelligence is faced by problems
created by the cold war in which our enemy has the initiative
and by the fact
[Page 156]
that
our Government as a whole has not adapted itself to the
flexibility of action demanded in the circumstances. The
Departments of State and Defense in the face of swift and
uninhibited manuevers by the Kremlin are
still bound by formal traditions of political action and
conventional war planning as if peace and war were absolute
conditions. CIA alone has been
conceived and patterned to exercise relative freedom of action
in a world situation which is more akin to war than
peace.
- 2.
- Nationally we are not mobilized to face the kind of challenge
forced upon us by the Kremlin. That
challenge obviously cannot be met by the CIA alone, or by the totality of our so-called
psychological resources. The Soviets have enlarged the cold war
by the coordinated employment actively or potentially of all
their resources, orthodox as well as unorthodox.
- 3.
- The issues raised by the DCI
are not administrative or jurisdictional. They can be understood
only in light of the inflexibility of our governmental
organization and concepts in facing urgent and unusual
requirements. While the orthodox departments think and plan too
largely in terms of a D–Day that no man can predict, we deprive
ourselves of full resources in fighting a cold war which might
be decisive. While our psychological and covert agencies remain
a “thin red line of heroes”, there is no authoritative agency
geared to ensure them mutual and continuous support from
orthodox national forces.
- 4.
- The National Security Council cannot serve as this agency. Nor
can it solve the problems of CIA
by any broad statements of principle or detailed delineation of
functions. The Council can, however, urge expedition in the
activation of the required agency and ensure its unquestioned
authority to solve the major issues raised by the DCI, as well as other varied
problems yet to be created by the cold war
- 5.
- I refer to the Psychological Strategy Board. When activated
this organization, within the terms of the Presidential
Directive of 4 April 1951,7 can resolve most
of the difficulties facing the DCI through its authority to:
- (a)
- Consider on the national level major covert projects
coordinated with all other psychological
operations.
- (b)
- Give authoritative decision with respect to the
necessity and propriety of CIA undertaking major projects requiring
resources balanced as between cold war demands and
future war plans.
- (c)
- Provide coordination and guidance which will ensure
that covert operations at all times are contributory to
the attainment of national objectives.
- (d)
- Promulgate programs which will include provisions for
such supplementary support as may be required from other
departments and agencies, including manpower, money and
general logistics.
- 6.
-
In view of the foregoing considerations, the following
comments are pertinent to the Conclusions
and Recommendations in paragraph 16 of the basic
paper, by sub-paragraphs as numbered therein:
Sub-paragraph a and b. It is useless
to belabor the question as to whether or not CIA should continue to be the
agency primarily responsible for conducting “covert”
operations. This matter has long been debated with the same
conclusion. The answer should be affirmative for two
reasons: one, there is no other agency of government which
can as logically be assigned the responsibility; two, the
cold war is on, and the ground lost by any major
reorganization at this time would be hazardous. The
reasonable concern of the DCI regarding guidance he requires in the
stepped-up covert operations can be dispelled by the
coordination and guidance forthcoming from the Psychological
Strategy Board which should be expected to make logical
distribution of responsibilities in the conduct of cold war
operations.
If this statement of the scope and authority of the
Psychological Strategy Board should be in question, the
National Security Council should recommend in unequivocal
terms to the President an interpretation of his Directive
which would establish the validity of the concept.
Sub-paragraph c(1). Provisions for
joint planning with the armed forces for covert operations
in war time exist in the established procedures for the
preparation of covert annexes to joint war plans through the
mechanism of the Joint Subsidiary Plans Division of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff in Washington and the Commander’s
Staff in theaters of operations. Unusual adjustments should
be provided in PSB
programs.
Sub-paragraph c(2). Guidance in the
allocation of available resources of CIA for covert operations as between cold war
missions and preparations for overt war should be made in
the programs promulgated by the PSB.
Sub-paragraph c(3). The PSB should have the authority
and responsibility for determining the relative weight to be
ascribed to political and military considerations involved
in covert operations, and be the arbiter as to whether the
operations should or should not be undertaken by CIA.
Sub-paragraph c(4). The administrative
and logistical provisions of projects or programs
promulgated to operational agencies, including CIA, by the PSB should provide
authoritatively for the necessary supplementary support, if
required, in types and quantities of personnel, and other
administrative and logistical assistance.
Sub-paragraph d. The guidance herein
requested is a normal responsibility of the PSB as prescribed in the
President’s Directive.
- 7.
- It is probably true that the major departments have looked to
CIA for accomplishments
wholly beyond its capabilities, particularly in available
manpower. Furthermore, the same departments, when requested by
CIA for assistance in
supporting its overload, have been loathe to depart from
administrative rigidity and war mobilization objectives in order
to aid CIA. The recruitment of
types of Americans with talents required by the varied
operations of CIA is rendered
almost impossible by favorable employment conditions in civil
life and the absorption of such types into the armed forces. It
is literally impossible for CIA
to expand operations unduly unless the armed forces make
available manpower in keeping with the tasks imposed. Decision
must be made as to whether the manpower demands for war
mobilization or cold war operations are to have precedence in a
rational division of scarce categories of personnel. If it be
assumed that the cold war can be won, then it is rational to
divert manpower for psychological operations at a relatively
minor charge against orthodox mobilization plans and routine
administrative conveniences.
- 8.
- Reconsideration should be given to the provision of NSC 10/2 which requires that covert
operations be “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.” It is obvious that the
international atmosphere and conditions requiring this highly
restrictive security provision no longer exist. Publicly
announced national policy asserts the determination of the
Government to fight Soviet aggression wherever it appears and
implicitly by any means necessary. If for no other reason, the
magnitude and variety of cold war effort renders the security
formula invalid except for genuinely covert
operations. Certainly it is not a secret to the enemy
that the U.S. Government supports unconventional warfare. We
should not accept the handicaps of unduly rigid security
measures respecting para-military types of operations beyond
those required to obscure our strategy and tactics. The
acceptance of this reasoning is important in that it facilitates
all administrative and logistical steps in combining overt and
covert national resources in pursuing the cold war.
A clear differentiation can be made between two categories of
“covert” operations to the first of which the security formula in
NSC 10/2 should remain
applicable, and to the second of which the formula should be
modified. These two categories are:
- (a)
- Covert operations of a political, economic and
psychological character, which by their nature remain truly
covert and which are employed abroad to influence
developments favorable to the United States, and
- (b)
- Operations which, while initially covert, are by their
nature designed to create psychical manifestations which
cease to be covert,
[Page 159]
such as, sabotage, support of underground and guerilla
movements and para-military activities.
Annex 2
Washington, May 17, 1951.
Memorandum From the Chief of the Joint Subsidiary Plans Division,
Joint Chiefs of Staff (Stevens) to the Joint Chiefs of Staff Representative
on the Senior Staff of the National Security Council
(Wooldridge)9
SPDM–208–51
SUBJECT
- Scope and Pace of Covert Operations
- 1.
- The action to be taken by the National Security Council on the
Central Intelligence Agency memorandum of 8 May 1951, “Scope and
Pace of Covert Operations,” hinges on the acceptance or
rejection of two propositions which are implied but not
discussed in that memorandum. They are:
- a.
- Although global overt war may occur at any time, the
possibility that the cold war will continue is
sufficiently great to warrant a strong effort in the
planning and conduct of the cold war as well as of a hot
war.
- b.
- There is a possibility that by the planned use of all
our capabilities, including covert ones, we can win the
cold war, thereby averting global hot war.
- 2.
- Acceptance of these two propositions means that we play it
both ways, for either war or a continuation of the uneasy
“peace,” without putting all our eggs in either basket. Although
there may be differences of opinion as regards the degree of
probability of both of the two above propositions, there seems
to be general agreement as to their validity as stated, and
consequently as to the desirability of our playing it both ways.
This is the only course which seems consistent with our
intelligence and the national thinking behind the great bulk of
National Security Council papers in recent years.
- 3.
- As a result of past experiences, we are better organized to
deal with overt war than with the unprecedented situation of a
protracted
[Page 160]
all out
cold war. The President’s directive of April 4, 1951,
establishing the new Psychological Strategy Board but requiring
maximum use of existing agencies, seems to go far towards
providing the necessary mechanism. PSB can be expected to function not only as a
coordinating agency for guidance, but, when it is unable to
reach decisions and provide guidance itself in the light of
approved policy, to formulate and recommend in the premises to
the National Security Council and the President.
- 4.
- A decision to play it for both hot war and a continuation of
the cold war gives a definite answer to the basic question
raised by the CIA memorandum.
CIA should increase the
scope and pace of its capabilities and action directed towards
the winning of the cold war, but should not jeopardize its
effectiveness for hot war, including planning and preparations
therefor by so doing. When detailed and specific conflicts in
priorities arise, they can and should be settled through the
Psychological Strategy Board. CIA is also required to insure that its
intelligence activities will not suffer by such an increase in
scope and pace, and its internal arrangements should take this
into consideration.
- 5.
- The extent to which the United States will support and follow
up on counter-revolution in the slave states, how much of that
potential to develop, when to release it, and how much to hold
in reserve, cannot be answered without the development of more
concrete plans and proposals to this end. Such plans and
proposals are entirely suitable for presentation by CIA to the PSB, which, after study, criticism and
coordination, should obtain final decision from the President
via the National Security Council. The potential forces for
counterrevolution may, with sufficient time and skill in their
development, be capable of eventually providing a final solution
for the cold war, or, in case hot war intervenes, of raising
covert operations from a series of minor conspiracies to the
stature of a weapon on a par with land, sea and air
forces.
- 6.
- [1 paragraph (9 lines) not
declassified]
- 7.
- Consistent with the foregoing, it is suggested that the
following action be proposed to the National Security Council on
the specific recommendations of the CIA memorandum:
- a.
- As a result of a comprehensive review of the covert
operations situation, the CIA should increase the scope and pace of
its capabilities and action directed towards the winning
of the cold war, but should not by so doing jeopardize
its effectiveness for hot war.
- b.
- Covert operational responsibility should remain as now
directed. Although all organizational problems are not
completely solved, there is no reason to believe that
they cannot be solved within the existing framework.
Moreover, the urgencies of the situation will not permit
major structural alterations, which would in themselves
create new problems. Such clarifications of present
broad responsibilities as may be essential should be
handled through the PSB.
- c.
-
(1) Directives are in existence which appear to
make basic adequate provisions for joint planning
with the Armed Forces for covert activities and
operations in support of wartime military
operations. The mechanism of the PSB should be employed
for any clarifications which may be necessary.
(2) Specific guidance for dealing with the military
in fields where the same covert apparatus is being
developed for both cold and hot war purposes should
be obtained from the PSB.
(3) The PSB should
insure that the foreign policy and political
considerations which are involved in covert
operations are brought to bear on determinations of
politico-military significance. To accomplish this,
the PSB has recourse
up to the NSC and
the President, and down to operating agencies either
directly or through the consultant mechanisms that
are established by NSC 10/2 and NSC 59/1.
(4) Within the limits of security, all government
agencies should be directed to provide appropriate
personnel, administrative, and logistic support for
the covert effort. The detailed nature of this
support should be coordinated through the PSB.
- d.
- The Psychological Strategy Board should be directed to
provide or obtain guidance as necessary to the covert
effort.
L. C.
Stevens
10Rear Admiral, USN