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Click Here: <A HREF="http://www.prouty.org/">The Col. L. Fletcher Prouty
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-----
Understanding The Secret Team
Part II



The Power of Indirection --
Military Units Financed and Controlled by the CIA

Prouty: This business of the inner team of workers, all actually operating
within the law (once in a while there was some aberration, but we usually
found it and brought it to Mr. Dulles' attention -- but, generally working
within the law) could get rather phenomenal things done.

For example, one day I got a call from the agency. They had heard of the
capability of a new aircraft that had been designed at MIT and they wanted to
know if the Air Force had an interest in it. The Air Force hardly knew about
it. I had seen a picture of it in the newspaper. The plane was the Helio
Courier manufactured by the Helio Aircraft Co. And I said, `Let me find out
what we can do about that.' I called the company. A small company -- but it
had very preeminent people including Dr. Koppen from MIT and Dr. Bollinger
from Harvard Business School, as well as a lot of very good aircraft
designers and builders. So, the company was solidly on the ground but it was
very small. I told the man I was talking to that I was a Colonel in the Air
Force, that we had an interest in this small plane for certain special
activities, and that I would send a representative of my office up there to
talk with them.

I called in a CIA man -- the same man that had called me -- and said, `Look,
you're from my office, here's some credentials -- you go up there, you see
this company. You know what you want.' I didn't know whether they'd really
want the plane or not. But they decided they did. In fact, they wanted
hundreds of them -- something that company had never heard of before, orders
in that number. We bought hundreds of those airplanes for the CIA,
technically for the Air Force. The Air Force had no concern with this because
the CIA money paid for it -- it didn't cost us anything -- and we didn't go
through the Air Force procurement procedures at all. We were just like a
civilian company buying airplanes.

The CIA was delighted with the plane. They used so many of them in Southeast
Asia that there was a flyer's handbook for what were called Heliostrips. In
other words, air landing grounds that only the Helio airplane could land on,
because it could land in a very short space, and it was under full control
right down to the ground. Some of these little runways were hardly suited for
helicopters but this little Helio plane was operating regularly.

Millions and millions of dollars were poured into that exercise -- a lot of
people were involved in it -- and it never went through any Air Force
procurement. However, the cleared individual -- the man in the team -- in the
procurement offices, made papers that covered up this gap. There were papers
in the files but they had never been worked on -- they were simple dummy
papers. We could do things like that with no trouble at all. The U-2 was
started like that. That's how the U-2 got off the ground. Ostensibly,
purchased by the Air Force, but not paid for by the Air Force, and so on.

So when I say that this team was quite effective, it was very effective, very
strong, handled a lot of money, worked all over the world, thousands of
people were involved. Once when I was speaking to the Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff (at that time General Lemnitzer) he said, "You know, I've
known of two or three units in the Army that were supporting CIA. But you're
talking about quite a few. How many were there?" At that time, there were
605. General Lemnitzer had no idea. It's amazing -- here's the top man in the
military and he had no idea that we were supporting that many CIA units. Not
true military units -- they were phony military units. They were operating
with military people but they were controlled entirely and financed by the
CIA. Six hundred and five of them. I'm sure that from my day it increased. I
know it didn't decrease.

People don't understand the size and the nature of this concealed activity
that is designed for clandestine operations all over the world. It goes back
again to things we've spoken of earlier, that each activity must be under
somebody's control. There is no law for the control of covert operations
other than at the National Security Council level. If the National Security
Council does not sign the directives -- issue the directives -- for covert
operations, then nobody does. And that's when it becomes a shambles as we saw
in the Contra affair and in other things.

But when the National Security Council steps in and directs it and maintains
that control, then things are run properly. During the last decade we've seen
quite a few aberrations where they were talking about Iran or Latin America
or even part of the Vietnam War itself. In fact, it was in the Vietnam War
when the situation really began to come apart -- it just outgrew itself and
the leadership role disintegrated. We see the results of the worst of it in
the Iran-Contra affair.

Secret Team Growth:
Focal Point Personnel Assuming Broader Roles

Ratcliffe: Following on from that you write about Dulles being able to "move
them up and deeper into their cover jobs."[1] Would this be a function of
them being there longer than the people who would be promoted to something
else in time?

Prouty: Yes. When we put them in other departments and agencies, they might
be somebody's assistant. Then they've been there for three years and the man
who was above them, who was probably a political appointee, leaves. That
agency might move this man up. Or when a newer political appointee comes, he
has no knowledge that this man is really from CIA. He's just a strong person
in his office and he gives him a broader role.

Sometimes these people were working in another agency so long we nearly
forgot them. One man I know was in FAA and we needed his work to help us with
FAA as a focal point there. He'd been there so long the FAA had him in a very
big, very responsible job, where probably 90% of his duties were regular FAA
work. A very effective individual. When we needed him to help us with some of
our activities on the covert side of things, he was in a much better position
to handle this than he had been originally.

This happened with quite a few of them. That's why I say in the case of Frank
Hand, he had been in the Defense Department so long he was able to handle
major operations that weren't ever visualized at the time he was assigned.
This carries over into many other areas. I pointed out that the Office of
Special Operations under General Erskine had the responsibility for the
National Security Agency as well as CIA contacts, and the State Department,
and so on. And as we filled up these positions, some of them became dominant
in some of those organizations, such as NSA.

Early people in this program have created quite a career for themselves in
other work. For instance, a young man in this system was Major Haig. Major Al
Haig. He went up through the system. He was working as a deputy to the Army's
cleared Focal Point Officer for Agency support matters who was the General
Counsel in the Army, a man named Joe Califano -- a very prominent lawyer
today. Later when the General Counsel of the Army was moved up into the
office of Secretary of Defense -- in McNamara's office -- he carried with him
this then Lieutenant Colonel Al Haig. During the Johnson Administration,
Califano and Haig both moved to the White House. Then during the Nixon time,
Haig with all his experience in this highly classified system, and already
having been in the White House, worked with Kissinger.

You can see that it was this attachment through the covert side which gave
Haig his ability to do an awful lot of things that people didn't understand,
because he had this whole team behind him. To be even more up-to-date, there
was a Major Secord in our system. And Major Secord is the same General
Richard Secord you've been reading about in the Iran-Contra business.

A lot of these people worked right up into the White House. And there were
these same assigned people even at the White House level that actually were
working on this CIA covert work rather than the jobs that they seemed to
hold, that the public understood was the job that they were working for. It's
a much more effective system than people have thought it was.

Ratcliffe: In the last sentence you said:

Today, the role of the CIA is performed by an ad hoc organization that is
much greater in size, strength, and resources than the CIA has ever been
visualized to be.[2]

(You alluded to this before.) What is your sense of what this ad hoc
organization encompasses today?

Prouty: There is no law, there is no structure, for covert operations. The
Government didn't confront that in 1947 when they wrote the law. There has
been no revision of the law to accommodate that. There have been decisions by
the National Security Council which do assign covert operations, primarily to
CIA but, on a time-to-time basis.

In fact, one of the strongest of these papers -- the designation was NSC 10/2
-- was in my files early in the business back in 1955. And I remember that on
the side of the paper -- written in pencil and in his own hand, President
Eisenhower had written that any time a decision had been made for the Defense
Department to support the agency with arms, equipment, money, people, bases,
etc., that the equipment was to be limited to that one time only and
afterwards withdrawn. He did not want the CIA to create a capability that was
on-going. He was very specific about it.
That was 1955. Those things change with the times. And they got more powerful
and more powerful. And because of that kind of growth, you don't have the
legal structure, you don't have the approved structure to deal with it. It's
an ad hoc creation. Probably the strongest ad hoc creation in our government
today.

Ratcliffe: Again focusing on this Dulles-Jackson-Correa report you write:

The CIA has the authority, or at least it is given the authority by other
Government agencies, to create cover organizations within other parts of the
Government. This is one of the key tasks that the old Dulles-Jackson-Correa
report set out to accomplish.[3]

How is it that other Government agencies give the CIA the authority to create
CIA cover organizations within themselves?

Prouty: It's more simple than you visualize. All of the Government is willing
to cooperate with and work with other parts of the Government at any time. If
it was the Department of Agriculture, we'd never have any trouble working
with them, and so on. So we understand that -- that's a given, in the
beginning. But, what we would do is have a top-level meeting either with
Allen Dulles or somebody like Dick Helms or Frank Wisner or one of those
people. We'd pay a call directly on the head of this department and since
I've mentioned it before, I'll say the FAA.

We might go to the Administrator for the Federal Aviation Administration and
say, `Look, it's necessary from time to time that the CIA has to operate
aircraft perhaps a little differently than your regulations specify because
we're doing a clandestine operation. Or perhaps we have to have two aircraft
with the same number on them at the same time; so that one can cover another
during a covert operation. So if that ever turns up on one of your control
towers that an airplane lands this morning and its tail number is l234;
another plane comes in this afternoon of the same type and its tail number is
1234, don't do anything about it. It's a covert operation that we're
operating.' And they would agree to it. They'd say, `Fine.'

Then Mr. Dulles would say, `I'd like to assign a person to your
administration as a Focal Point Officer, so that if anything comes up like
this, anybody in the FAA will contact that man or vice-versa, he'll contact
them ahead of time to say, We're running this kind of a covert mission, and
you people will know about it.' We never ran into a problem with that. And if
the workload was heavy, we'd augment that man; he'd have two people, three
people. Or if it was something that was going to last for three months, or
six months, we might put ten people there and when we went to take the ten
people back, we might take five back and leave five there.

In this way, over a period of years, what had started as just a simple Focal
Point office became a very large one. When I created Team B in the Air Force
as a Focal Point office, I had one assistant and one secretary, In short
order, I had several thousand people around the world. Such activities grow
by the job.

Obtaining Everything Money Can Buy:
The CIA Act of 1949 and
Secretary of Defense Johnson's paper on Covert Operations

Ratcliffe: This is tied in with all the rest as of course discussions of the
CIA would be: concerning the fact that the National Security Act of 1947 was
quite strict with reference to money for the CIA, please discuss the impact
of the CIA Act of 1949 which made it possible for the Agency to have "no
trouble at all getting adequate funds."[4
]
Prouty: The secret of covert operations is the control of money. And that
begins with having a good-sized account. This includes the ability to use it
throughout the Government. By 1949, the CIA was able to convince Congress
that many of the things it was doing were perfectly legitimate and that many
of these legitimate activities cost money because they were paying for people
in other Government agencies, they were paying their salaries. As I said when
General Lemay promoted Lansdale to be General, it didn't cost the Air Force
anything. His paycheck came from CIA. The Air Force paycheck would be torn
up. It would go to a certain office where they would destroy it so it didn't
cost the Air Force anything.

In 1949, the then-Secretary of Defense, a man named Louis Johnson, wrote a
very important paper with respect to covert operations. He said that the
Department of Defense would fully support the CIA in any of its approved
covert operations, provided that the CIA would reimburse the Department of
Defense for all `out-of-pocket' costs. They wouldn't have to reimburse for
the purchase price of an aircraft because the Air Force had already spent
that money. But they would have to reimburse for the cost of operating that
aircraft, for the cost of any other facilities required, and even for the
salaries of crews that were assigned to that aircraft over a period of time.

This philosophy of reimbursement is very important in covert operations
because it keeps bills from appearing in public that would stir up questions
about why this money spent was when it wasn't spent for the line items in the
budget. Thus when we created the Tab-6 system we worked this reimbursement
system in throughout so that you never saw the spending of any money. The Air
Force never spent any money on the CIA operations, technically. The money was
immediately transferred through a comptroller's office arrangement up in the
office of the Comptroller of the Secretary of Defense. And that expenditure
was, actually, Agency money.

Within a few years, the Agency was able to point out to Congress that a lot
of money was flowing in that channel because, effectively, they were paying
for the utilization of very high cost equipment: aircraft, submarines, even
aircraft carriers in a few places. Very expensive things to operate on a
reimbursable basis. So based on that, the agency began to get a much larger
budget.

Then when they went into the U-2 and the space programs that budget grew
considerably. And it was a completely classified budget and almost
non-accountable as the DCI has the authority to spend that money simply on
his signature. He doesn't have to account for it. It's a rare thing in the
budget process, but the Congress goes along with that, for the CIA.

As a result, because of the law of 1949 which permitted this activity, and
the letter from Secretary Louis Johnson -- the policy statement that we would
carry out all our work on a reimbursable basis with other departments and
agencies of the government then following that procedure -- the Agency was
allocated considerable amounts of money after 1949 and it was under their own
control.

Employing the System of Reimbursement
To Fund Unaccountable Activities

Ratcliffe: Could you comment on the fact then, that, quoting from the book:
. . . more important than the dollars the Agency gets is what it can do with
those dollars to make them cover all sorts of research, development,
procurement, real estate ventures, stockpiles, and anything else money will
buy, including tens of thousands of people who do not show on any official
rosters.[5]

Prouty: One of the most interesting developments with the use of this
horizontal application of money, or reimbursement, is that it can be used to
pay salaries without explaining that it was for salaries -- it was just an
expenditure of money. The DCI would sign it off as an "expense", but it might
have paid for the salaries of a hundred people. I don't know how familiar you
are with the way the Government handles its people, but each department and
agency has a certain stated number of people that are budgeted for because
they have to be paid every year, their pensions have to be paid, some of them
have insurance and other obligations of the Government, so they're very
carefully monitored. This is one of the few places in the Government where
money equals people. And if you're paying people, well say, $20,000 a year,
and you spend $100,000 for five people, the CIA $100,000 did not say it was
for five people whereas all the rest of the Government did. And this enabled
us to put people into programs that were not visible.

If you carry it out to other things, the same way we were able to buy
aircraft that were not visible, we were able to buy radars that were not
visible. So that the money in this method of operation is truly concealed in
a budget without anybody knowing -- Congress doesn't know where it is and I
don't think they've ever made the attempt to try to find out where it is.
They allocate a bulk sum and then just sit back.

There's no end to the things you can do with government money that way. The
Agency, during my period of operation with them, for instance, had an account
with the big banks on Wall Street that is like Cede Incorporated, "street
name" accounts. I don't know whether you're familiar with that finance term
or not, but one of the biggest of the street name accounts is Cede
Incorporated, C-e-d-e. This is where money is that's between transactions on
the stock market. It's got to be somewhere. So, they assign it to Cede and
Company. Well, Cede is nobody; it's just under control of the major banks and
the money's flowing. But while it's flowing, it has to belong to somebody,
especially if it's in big numbers.

The CIA had, and may still have, a street name called "Suydam", S-u-y-d-a-m.
When money was in the Suydam Account -- I don't think the financiers knew it,
maybe a few did -- it was CIA's money. Because in order to cover some of the
activities they did -- like for example, operating Air America -- they would
have to do some overt commercial work as cover for their clandestine work.
They had quite an income from this huge air line. And that money would be put
into the Suydam account.

It interested me at one point, when I had a breakdown on the Suydam account,
to find out that an awful lot of CIA money had been invested in a major
supermarket chain in this country. In today's world, they might have been
able to take over the operation of the supermarket. But it was just a quick
place to put money that the CIA had made and would spend later in their own
operations. And it got to be very large amounts of money at times. By law it
ought to have been transferred to the U.S. Treasury.

If I were in Congress today, I'd take a look at that. Sometimes when you hear
about large sums of money being handled for the "Contras" or received from
the sale of items to the Iranians, you begin to realize there is an awful lot
of potential for money to be handled without an accounting. We saw that back
in the days when we did account for it. And I think people would be surprised
to find out that it was such a large activity.

Post WWII War Plans -- CIA Begins Amassing
Its Own Stockpile of Military Equipment

Ratcliffe: This brings us to other ways of spending the money. One of the
ways that the CIA apparently (from reading your book -- as far as my
understanding goes) was able to develop these cover units around the world
that would hold equipment earmarked for its own use (even though it might be
labeled as a military unit), was through the CIA being able to involve itself
in the war plans developed in the late forties and early fifties that
attempted to combine nuclear strategies with conventional strategies. You
write:

As a result of the war planning role of the CIA, it was easy for the CIA
planners to enter in the plans of all armed forces, requirements for wartime
equipment, vehicles, aircraft, and facilities that had to be earmarked and
stockpiled for use by the Agency in the event of war. Once such requirements
were listed in the war plans they could be requisitioned along with all other
war-plan material. This meant that the cost of this equipment would be worked
into the military budget, and then in due time each item would be purchased
and delivered to the advance base site where war plan material was
stockpiled. Warehouse after warehouse of "military equipment" is stored in
the Far East, in Europe, and throughout the United States for the eventual
use of the CIA. The cost of this material and of its storage, care, and
conditioning is inestimable. . . . As the years passed and as the Agency's
"military" role became more a matter of custom and generally accepted, Agency
military cover units became so deeply covered that their neighboring military
units did not know, or forgot, that the unit near them was not a regular
military unit. By that time, requisitions from these CIA units were as
readily acceptable as any others and the units became easily self-supporting
without any Agency funding input.[6]

>From this I'd like you to please discuss this rise and growth of the
logistical global network of the Support side of the CIA, and how the
existence of this relatively unknown component of the Support section is
fundamental to the CIA's ability to engage in clandestine operations.

Prouty: This grew out of the natural war-planning function of the military.
Right after World War II and on into the early fifties, we visualized that a
war would begin with some attack, we'll say on the NATO lines, more or less
like conventional World War II fighting. But that it would immediately
elevate to the level of a nuclear exchange. It was planned that in that
nuclear exchange, we would try to preserve certain areas in the target
countries, say in the Soviet Union, that would not be hit and, judging by
meteorological data, would not be covered by fallout which would be
radioactive for years and years. And that in that area we would have the CIA
create certain network agent functions and groups of Special Forces people
that we could immediately send in by paradrop. This was the original Special
Forces function, not the contrived one that grew out of the Vietnam War.

With this in the war plan, it then becomes included in the basic military
budget each year. And with the CIA considered as a fourth force -- Army,
Navy, Air Force, and CIA -- what the CIA needed for its war planning
functions on behalf of the United States Government, the total Government,
would then be treated as part of the military budget -- not the agency's
budget. In the beginning, this amounted to trucks, aircraft, weapons, radios,
and everything else that they visualized their function would require right
after what we used to call the "post-strike" function.

The agency learned that this system worked in its favor. They had warehouses
under their name, in the name of a military unit. For instance, we'd create a
unit, the 234 Provisional Support Group. And the 234 Provisional Support
Group in Germany, staffed with all military people -- of course, CIA people
in military uniforms -- would begin to fill its warehouses. They'd have
trucks and jeeps and guns and radios and ambulances and everything else the
rest of the military had. So the agency was quick to see that if they
visualized their post-strike function as bigger this year than it was last
year, they'd have more things to put in the warehouse. Then, since NATO
exercises are run every year to train in the war plan, they would have to
have more and more equipment for the NATO exercises. They did a very good job
of filling their warehouses and then in using this equipment, on "exercises",
which really were covert operations.

So this was an area in this business of reimbursement we weren't able to keep
up with. We knew it existed, we knew what they were doing, we supplied the
equipment, and it was sort of an even exchange. We figured, `Well, we've told
the agency they're to be the fourth force and they're going to do a job in
wartime so we might as well let them use it and train themselves and
everything else.'

So the first thing we knew, the agency was able, despite President
Eisenhower's warning, to create quite a well-equipped military force. And
they had a lot of aircraft of their own, they had trucks of their own, they
had all this equipment and this was the way that they ran their business
under the war plan.[7]

I don't know what has happened to that in today's world. I assume it has
grown. I have never heard anything about it since the days when I worked on
it regularly. I think if anybody looked into the war planning in the Far East
or in Europe, they would find that this still exists under one cover
arrangement or other.

This is the reason why the Agency is able to get equipment immediately for
almost for any covert activity in any part of the world. Just as an example,
when we heard a lot about the Nicaraguan-Contra-El Salvador problems in
Central America during the last decade, I noticed that the plane that went
down with a man named Hassenfuss on board was a C-123. That was one type of
aircraft in the Agency's stockpile. It was an Air Force plane category and it
was one used by the Agency -- I knew the designation. Very few people have
ever heard of an airplane called a Chase. But the C-122 was designed by an
airplane company called Chase Aircraft and the C-123 was a modification of
that. With situations like that, you can see that the Agency is still
operating within this same structure of the fourth force concept and d I
imagine it still exists.

>From the Chairman of the JCS On Down:
"where the CIA was concerned
there were a lot of things no one seemed to know"

Ratcliffe: You describe what seems to be a very enlightening day -- an event
in 1960 or 1961 when you briefed "the Chairman of the JCS [Joint Chiefs of
Staff] on a matter that had come up involving the CIA and the military."[8]
As you described it:

The chairman was General Lyman L. Lemnitzer, and the Marine Commandant was
General David M. Shoup. They were close friends and had known each other for
years.
When the primary subject of the briefing had ended General Lemnitzer asked me
about the Army cover unit that was involved in the operation. I explained
what its role was and more or less added that this was a rather routine
matter. Then he said, "Prouty, if this is routine, yet General Shoup and I
have never heard of it before, can you tell me in round numbers how many Army
units there are that exist as `cover' for the CIA?" I replied that to my
knowledge at that time there were about 605 such units, some real, some
mixed, and some that were simply telephone drops. When he heard that he
turned to General Shoup and said, "You know, I realized that we provided
cover for the Agency from time to time; but I never knew that we had anywhere
near so many permanent cover units and that they existed all over the world."

I then asked General Lemnitzer if I might ask him a question. He said I
could. "General," I said, "during all of my military career I have done one
thing or another at the direction of a senior officer. In all those years and
in all of those circumstances I have always believed that someone, either at
the level of the officer who told me to do what I was doing or further up the
chain of command, knew why I was doing what I had been directed to do and
that he knew what the reason for doing it was. Now I am speaking to the
senior military officer in the armed forces and I have just found out that
some things I have been doing for years in support of the CIA have not been
known and that they have been done, most likely, in response to other
authority. Is this correct?"

This started a friendly, informal, and most enlightening conversation, more
or less to the effect that where the CIA was concerned there were a lot of
things no one seemed to know.[9]
Can you recount more of the details of this enlightening conversation for us?

Prouty: It astounded me, that day. I assumed that there were a lot things the
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff was not aware of every day in the Air
Force, in the Navy, and in the CIA. But I had never expected such a blanket
answer, that he didn't know, and that General Shoup didn't. Now, what we were
talking about was rather specific.

At the time of the rebellion in Indonesia in 1958 when the CIA supported tens
of thousands of troops with aircraft, and ships, submarines, and everything
else, in an attempt to overthrow the government of Sukarno, we needed rifles
pretty quick to support these rebels and I called out to Okinawa and found
out that the Army didn't have enough rifles for what we wanted. We wanted
about 42,000 rifles and they had about 30,000. But that he said he thought he
could get more -- General Lemnitzer was the Commander at that time in
Okinawa. So he was right up close to this situation. He said that he'd have
somebody call the Marine Corps and see what he could get from them. It just
happened that General Shoup was the head of the Marine unit at Okinawa and he
said, sure, he could provide the extra 12,000. So without delay, we had
4-engine aircraft -- C-54's -- flown by Air America crews but under military
cover -- appearing to be military aircraft -- come into Okinawa, pick up
these 42,000 rifles, prepared for an air drop in Indonesia. They flew down to
the Philippines and then down to another base we had and then over into
Indonesia and dropped these rifles.

We replaced those rifles. The General didn't know where they were going, we
just borrowed them, and the unit that borrowed them was military and the call
had come from the Pentagon. There was no problem with supplying the rifles.
So years later, we replaced them. Then when I told him about that in the
Pentagon, he said he never knew where those rifles went and General Shoup
said, "You know Lem, when you asked me for 12,000 rifles, I thought you
wanted them and, of course, being a good Marine, I gave you 12,000 rifles."
He said, "You owe me 12,000." They were sitting there kidding but they never
knew they went to Indonesia. They never knew they were part of a covert
operation going into Indonesia.

This is true of a lot of the things that go on. We kept the books in the
Pentagon. We covered that. We got reimbursement for it. That part of it was
all right. And that's what kept it from being a problem because as long as
General Lemnitzer's forces got the 30,000 rifles back and Shoup got the
12,000 back for the total of 42,000, they didn't complain to anybody. They
had their full strength of rifles. That's the magic of reimbursement.

This kind of operation was run on an established basis -- the units are
there. When I said there are 605 units, those are operating units. Now some
of them may only be telephone drops, because that's their function, they
don't need a whole lot of people, they're just handling supplies, or
something like that.

But put this in present terms. When Colonel North believed that he had been
ordered to take 2,008 T.O.W. missiles and deliver them to Iran -- there has
to be some way that the supply system can let those go. You can't just drive
down there with a truck to San Antonio at the warehouse, and say, `I want
2,008 missiles.' You have to have the authority. And 2,008 T.O.W. missiles --
I don't know what one of them costs, but it's an awful lot of money. Somebody
had to prepare the paperwork for the authorization to let the supply officer
release those. I'm sure they went to a cover unit that North was using for
that purpose. But it appears from what we've heard from this that, unlike the
way we used to run the cover operations, when those missiles got to Iran,
these characters sold them for money. In fact, they sold them for almost four
times their listed value.

This is the problem Congress has been having. What happened to the money they
received from the Iranians after they got there? And you can see how the
system developed. Originally, we developed it on this one-for-one basis. Also
we never used this kind of supply, to deliver grenades to the Contras and
charge them $9.00 a grenade or whatever it was. We just delivered the
grenades. It was part of a Government program. And the CIA would reimburse
the Defense Department. Everything came out even. We didn't sell anything. We
never charged such cost to the "Contras" or other people we supported.

So I know how it worked in the fifties and sixties but I can't tell you how
it's been working in the eighties. I'm just astounded by what has developed.
Just like the General not knowing that we had so many units, in so many
places around the world, in another case, we learned that a scientist (as I
recall at CalTech) had learned how to interpret a radio transmission that was
so brief that a whole paragraph would be a blip -- an electronic blip, a
matter of milliseconds -- and he learned to stretch that millisecond blip
into readable language. He did it with, I think what electronics experts
would say -- and I certainly am not one of them -- is like this
characteristic of a cathode tube, that when you turn the thing off that for a
little while it still glows? This was called the Rambo Effect. And Dr. Rambo
realized he could do that with a radio wave just as well as a cathode tube
could do it. The Soviets were using this blip transmission on CW Wave,
Constant Wave, like Loran to deliver secret messages.

When CIA heard about that, obviously they wanted to exploit the capability.
We used an Air Force unit to go to one of the major radio suppliers, an
electronics supplier for the Air Force, and by feeding CIA dollars into that
on-going contract, and without raising any eyebrows at all, we had that
company, over a period of about a year and a half, develop a super receiver
capability that could listen to the CW tone, discover that millisecond blip
the Soviets had concealed there, stretch the blip to readable language, and
then get a translator to translate from Russian to American. That's a
tremendous achievement when you think about it, because it broke the whole
system of that kind of cryptology and it was done with dollars that never
affected the Defense Department. But we used the Defense structure to do it
so that the company that did it had no idea that they were dealing with CIA.
They just thought it was part of an ongoing Air Force contract. That's one of
the ways these things are done.

There's a major company in this country in the Fortune 500 listing called
EG&G. It's full name is Edgerton Germeshausen and Grier. Most of their work
is in a very highly classified area of operations for the U.S. Government.
I'm not sure to this day that EG&G realizes that in their earlier days, when
they were a somewhat smaller company, much of the funding that went into
their company came through this channel: from the CIA, to the Air Force, and
to EG&G. So that EG&G would actually develop these very, very special devices
for covert operations -- not for Air Force, or Army. There are a lot of
companies that have had those contracts. And this is not a small operation.

What bothered me then -- and it bothers me today -- was that there was no way
to let the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff know this. I tried to do
this when I could in my own role, since -- I had just been assigned to the
Joint Chiefs of Staff -- in my work, I was five years with the Air Force and
then two years with the Office of Secretary of Defense. And then Mr. McNamara
decided to transfer that function to the Joint Chiefs of Staff. One of my
functions there was to become a briefing officer for the Chairman so he would
know what was going on. I think we served quite a purpose there because from
that time on, every time we got into one of these situations, I would brief
him right away. And that at least kept him alert to what the services and the
CIA were doing.

I fail to see that function in this Iran-Contra era. I don't think anybody
from National Security Council was going down to the Chairman or the
Secretaries of the various departments of the military and saying `This is
what we're doing,' just to keep them current. After all, they have the right
to know all this. It's an important function. It's a much larger function --
a much more costly function -- than people realize and because of the odd way
this country has decided to do covert operations, it's almost uncontrolled.
Except for NSC. If NSC does not do their job, then it is uncontrolled. This
is the big issue today, even after Ollie North's trial. The NSC members are
sitting back and saying `We didn't do any of it.' It seems to me the jurors
realize they did. They think Reagan was involved. Bush was involved.
Weinberger and Schultz were involved. They had to be involved. They are the
NSC and no one else.

This is the breakdown now. We're going to have a hard time restructuring this
business again, because all covert operations require foreign alliances. They
are all bilateral. You can't take an aircraft and make a paradrop in Tibet
without letting the Indian Government know that you are using their airways
to fly to Tibet for an illegal or covert drop. So we would notify the Indian
Government. Or we'd notify the Pakistani Government. Or the Government of
Thailand. And so on.
I can not think of any way to operate a covert operation without at least a
bilateral agreement. If we don't have our agreements in order, how on earth
can we work with these other people around the world? This is serious
business. And this is why the other countries around the world have begun to
lose faith in what we're doing because either we're not telling them, or
we're getting them involved in something that they don't want to be involved
in. They don't want to even be connected with it.

Ratcliffe: From the end of the previous excerpt: What was the sense among the
three of you talking there about the implications that, "where the CIA was
concerned there were a lot of things that no one seemed to know"?[10]

Prouty: My office had just been moved from the Office of the Secretary of
Defense into the Joint Chiefs of Staff structure. It was a very formal
structure. At that time it was legally controlled at 400 officers and even to
move my small office down there, they had to increase the Congressional
approval of the more-than-400-limit on the Joint Chiefs of Staff. So it was
an important move when they made it.

Now although I may have joked a little bit about the Generals not knowing
that such an enormous organization existed around the world in our support of
CIA, they were very serious about it. They felt it was a real oversight, to
have this sort of thing going on without review. And I am of the opinion that
this is one of the real reasons why the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Mr.
McNamara had agreed to establish this office of Special Operations within the
Joint Chiefs of Staff: so that all the military forces would be treated
equally in their supporting activities in the CIA, and so that the Chairman
would always be briefed on what was going on in covert work. The support of
covert work goes on every day. One covert operation might be ten days. But we
were supporting them year-round. This was a serious business and they
recognized it as such.
--[cont]--
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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