Hon. Clark Clifford, former Chairman, President's Foreign Intelligence WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1978 Hon. William E. Colby, former Director of Central Intelligence Hon. E. Henry Knoche, former Deputy Director of Central Intelligence WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1978 Mr. John H. Nelson, chief, Washington Bureau, Los Angeles Times. 133 135 Mr. Richard H. Leonard, editor, Milwaukee Journal Mr. Philip L. Geyelin, editorial page editor, Washington Post, on behalf of the American Society of Newspaper Editors Gen. Richard Giles Stilwell, president, Association of Former Intelligence Officers, accompanied by Mr. John S. Warner, legal adviser to the Associ- ation of Former Intelligence Officers Mr. Morton H. Halperin, director, Center for National Security Studies Ms. Ethel Taylor, national coordinator, Women Strike for Peace, accompanied Mr. Louis W. Schneider, executive secretary, American Friends Service Com- mittee, accompanied by Ms. Margaret Van Houten, associate director, Ameri- can Friends Service Committee, program on government surveillance and citizen's rights; and Ms. Catherine Shaw, Friends Committee on National Mr. Richard M. Gutman, director, Chicago Political Surveillance Litigation and Mr. John H. F. Shattuck, director, Washington Office, American Civil Liberties Union; and Mr. Jerry J. Berman, legislative counsel, American Civil Liberties Ambassador Laurence H. Silberman, senior fellow, American Enterprise Insti- tute, and of Counsel, Dewey, Ballantine, Bushby, Palmer & Wood Mr. Richard M. Abrams, professor of history, University of California at Berkeley; and chairman, Statewide Committee on Academic Freedom for the Gen. Samuel Wilson, former Director, Defense Intelligence Agency Gen. Russell Dougherty, former Chief, Strategic Air Command.. Statement of Mr. William E. Colby before the Subcommittee on Secrecy and 40 Testimony of Mr. William E. Colby before the House Permanent Select Com- 42 Article "Antiterrorist Policy of U.S. Called Week," by David Binder, New York Article "I've Got a Secret," by Mr. Daniel Schorr, New York Times 138 Statement of Mr. Morton H. Halperin, before the Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations With Respect to Intelligence Activities, APPENDIXES Appendix III.-Executive Order 12036 and Pages from Government's Memo- randum in Opposition to Defendant's Motion to Suppress Evidence in United Appendix IV.-Copy of the Guidelines for the FBI's Foreign Intelligence Collection and Foreign Counterintelligence Investigations, from Morton H. Halperin's appeal under the Freedom of Information Act Appendix V.-"Trust In Laws, Not 'Honorable Men'," by Harry Howe Ransom.. Appendix VI.-Letter from Towsend Hoopes, president of Association of Ameri- Appendix VII.-The CIA and the Academic Community Papers Delivered at a Meeting of University Professors, June 10, 1978, New Haven, Conn Appendix VIII.-Letters from Admiral Stansfield Turner to United States S. 2525 NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE REORGANIZATION AND REFORM ACT OF 1978 TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 1978 U.S. SENATE, SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE, The committee met, pursuant to notice, at 11:05 a.m., in room 5110, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Senator Birch Bayh (chairman of the committee) presiding. Present: Senators Bayh (presiding), Huddleston, Stevenson, Morgan, Goldwater, Mathias, and Chafee. Also present: William G. Miller, staff director; Audrey Hatry, clerk of the committee. The CHAIRMAN. Let us call our committee to order. I might say to the reporters, to those present and to our distinguished witness, Mr. Clifford, one of our colleagues who has played a key role in our whole purpose of being here to launch these hearings on the need for charters is our distinguished colleague from Kentucky, Senator Huddleston. He is en route at this particular moment from the airport. I would suggest that we proceed now and let me as the chairman make some opening remarks that will not, I am sure, be missed by our distinguished colleague from Kentucky, and by the time I finish with those, we will hope that he is here. If he is not, we would ask our other colleagues, Senator Stevenson and Senator Morgan if they have comments, and by then I am certain he will be here. I know how busy you are, Mr. Clifford, and I don't want to keep you waiting unnecessarily. I also might make one note of concern, that Mr. Clifford is experiencing some rather critical speech problems. He is in the process of recovering, we hope, from a bout with laryngitis, and we will try to be as conserving as we possibly can of his limited speech capacity at this moment. The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence opens its hearings today, the purposes for which are to establish the need for intelligence activities and to establish how these intelligence activities are to be placed within our constitutional framework. Intelligence activities have functioned since the end of World War II without the benefit of clear legislative authorities or limitations, and without an effective oversight system. It is the intention of the committee to hold most, if not all, of these hearings in public. We shall |