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Richard M. Helms Dies at 89; Dashing Ex-Chief of the C.I.A.

October 23, 2002
By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS






WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 - Richard M. Helms, a former director
of central intelligence who defiantly guarded some of the
darkest secrets of the cold war, died today. He was 89.

An urbane and dashing spymaster, Mr. Helms began his career
with a reputation as a truth-teller and became a favorite
of lawmakers in the late 1960's and early 70's.

But he eventually ran afoul of Congressional investigators
who found that he had lied or withheld information about
the United States' role in assassination attempts in Cuba,
anti-government activities in Chile and the illegal
surveillance of journalists in the United States.

Mr. Helms pleaded no contest in 1977 to two misdemeanor
counts of failing to testify fully four years earlier to
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. His conviction,
which resulted in a suspended sentence and a $2,000 fine,
became a rallying point for critics of the Central
Intelligence Agency who accused it of dirty tricks, as well
as for the agency's defenders, who hailed Mr. Helms for
refusing to compromise sensitive information.

A 1979 biography of Mr. Helms, by Thomas Powers, was called
"The Man Who Kept the Secrets."

After he left the C.I.A. in 1973, Mr. Helms served until
1977 as the American ambassador to Iran under Shah Mohammed
Riza Pahlevi, who was supported by the United States. He
later became an international consultant, specializing in
trade with the Middle East.

Born on March 30, 1913, in St. Davids, Pa., Richard
McGarrah Helms - he avoided using the middle name - was the
son of an Alcoa executive and the grandson of a leading
international banker, Gates McGarrah. He grew up in South
Orange, N. J., and studied for two years during high school
in Switzerland, where he became conversant in French and
German.

At Williams College, Mr. Helms excelled as a student and
leader. He was class president, editor of the school
newspaper and the yearbook, and was president of the senior
honor society. He fancied a career in journalism, and went
to Europe as a reporter for United Press. His biggest
scoop, he said, was an exclusive interview with Adolf
Hitler.

In 1939 he married Julia Bretzman Shields, and they had a
son, Dennis, who became a lawyer. The couple were divorced
in 1968, and Mr. Helms married Cynthia McKelvie later that
year. There was no immediate word on any survivors.

When World War II broke out, Mr. Helms was called into
service by the Naval Reserve and because of his linguistic
abilities was assigned to the Office of Strategic Services,
the precursor to the C.I.A. He worked in New York plotting
the positions of German submarines in the western Atlantic.


>From the beginning, he worked in the agency's covert
operations, or "plans" division, and by the early 1950's he
was serving as deputy to the head of clandestine services,
Frank Wisner.

In that capacity, in 1955, Mr. Helms impressed his
superiors by supervising the secret digging of a 500-yard
tunnel from West Berlin to East Berlin to tap the main
Soviet telephone lines between Moscow and East Berlin.

For more than 11 months, until the tunnel was detected by
the Soviet Union, the C.I.A. was able to eavesdrop on
Moscow's conversations with officials in East Germany and
Poland.

Over the next 20 years, Mr. Helms rose through the agency's
ranks, and in 1966 he became the first career official to
head the C.I.A. He served under such men as Allen W.
Dulles, Richard M. Bissell, John A. McCone and Vice Adm.
William F. Raborn.

During most of his time as C.I.A. chief, Mr. Helms received
favorable, occasionally fawning attention from lawmakers
and the press, who remarked on his professionalism, candor
and even his dark good looks.

But Mr. Helms found himself fighting for that reputation,
when in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal, the Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence delved into the agency's
efforts to assassinate world leaders or destabilize
socialist governments.

The committee, which was led by Senator Frank Church, an
Idaho Democrat, accused Mr. Helms of failing to inform his
own superiors of efforts to kill Fidel Castro of Cuba,
which the Senate panel called "a grave error in judgment."

A separate inquiry by the Rockefeller Commission also
faulted Mr. Helms for poor judgment for destroying
documents and tape recordings that might have assisted
Watergate investigators.

But the most contentious criticism of Mr. Helms centered on
Chile. In testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, Mr. Helms insisted that the C.I.A. had never
tried to overthrow the government of President Salvador
Allende Gossens or funneled money to political enemies of
the Marxist leader.

Senate investigators later discovered that the C.I.A. had
run a major secret operation in Chile that gave more than
$8 million to the opponents of Mr. Allende, using the
International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation as a
conduit. Mr. Allende died in a 1973 military coup, which
was followed by more than 16 years of military
dictatorship.

Mr. Helms was forced out of the agency in 1973 by President
Nixon, who considered him insufficiently cooperative in
providing C.I.A. support to the Watergate cover-up,
although the agency had been criticized in Congress and in
the press for having been too cozy with Nixon aides in
their quest to silence or destroy political enemies.

Mr. Nixon appointed him ambassador to Iran, a post in which
Mr. Helms served until 1977, when he returned to Washington
to plead no contest to charges that in 1973 he had lied to
a Congressional committee about the intelligence agency's
role in bringing down the Allende government.

"I had found myself in a position of conflict," he told a
Federal judge at the formal proceeding on his plea bargain
with the Justice Department. "I had sworn my oath to
protect certain secrets.

"I didn't want to lie. I didn't want to mislead the Senate.
I was simply trying to find my way through a difficult
situation in which I found myself."

"You now stand before this court in disgrace and shame,"
the judge told him, and sentenced him to two years in
prison and a $2,000 fine. The prison term was suspended.

Mr. Helms said outside the courtroom that he wore his
conviction "like a badge of honor," and added: "I don't
feel disgraced at all. I think if I had done anything else
I would have been disgraced."

Later that day he went to a reunion of former C.I.A.
colleagues, who gave him a standing, cheering ovation, then
passed the hat and raised the $2,000 for his fine.

For a man who considered himself a genuine patriot, it was
a bleak note on which to end his professional career. Mr.
Helms believed he had performed well in a job that,
although many Americans considered it sinister and
undemocratic, was nevertheless a cold-blooded necessity in
an era of cold war.

Mr. Helms, who was allowed to receive his government
pension, put his intelligence experience to use after his
retirement. He became a consultant to businesses that made
investments in other countries.

He was known as a charming conversationalist, a gregarious
partygoer and an accomplished dancer, and he and his wife
continued to be familiar figures on the capital party
scene.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/10/23/obituaries/23CND-HELM.html?ex=1036383324&ei=1&en=4c84103f6c827139



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