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</A> -Cui Bono?-

CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

STUDIES IN INTELLIGENCE
A collection of articles on the historical, operational, doctrinal, and
theoretical aspects of intelligence

WINTER 1999-2000
UNCLASSIFIED EDITION

__________________________


[pages 43-51]

Unlucky SHAMROCK

Recollections from the Church Committee's Investigation of NSA
L. Britt Snider, CIA Inspector General


In January 1975, I was offered a position as counsel on the staff of the
Church Committee. I was 30, and Senator Sam Ervin, for whom I had worked
since 1971, had retired and returned to North Carolina. While I had
participated in Senator Ervin's inquiry into the domestic activities of Army
intelligence apparatus of the United States, which I now confronted, was,
quite literally, foreign to me, as it was to many of those joining the Church
Committee staff.

To make matters worse, I was given the task (along with a staff colleague
Peter Fenn1) of trying to crack what was perceived to be the most secretive
of US intelligence agencies, the National Security Agency (NSA). Unlike the
CIA and FBI, which were the agencies principally in the Committee's sights --
thanks to a number of sensational press accounts -- there had been no press
expos�s about NSA. Our supervisor, in fact, seemed to take particular delight
in pitting Pete and me against this mysterious Goliath. "They call it 'No
Such Agency,' " he said. "Let's see what you boys can find our about it." It
was the first time I had heard the agency referred to this way, and it was
not long before I understood why.

What ensued was something of an odyssey that lasted over the better part of a
year. It began with a series of fruitless, sometimes comical, efforts to
penetrate NSA's defenses. ("They must have done something" our boss wailed.)
Then, an unexpected breakthrough caused us to redirect our inquiry along two
separate, but ultimately converging lines; Peter took the lead on one
inquiry, and I took the other lead. Over a period of months, a story emerged
that previously had not seen the light of day -- a story that had long-term
implications for NSA and for the relationship of the Intelligence Community
to the private sector. Our work also provided the context for a rare
Congressional challenge to the President's authority in the national security
area.

I decided to write about this episode primarily to preserve it for the
historical record. While much of the story was disclosed over the course of
the Church Committee's inquiry, there were aspects that never became public.
Given the way the Committee operated, no one other than the staffers doing
the work knew the whole story.

Initial Futility

We began by asking the Congressional Research Service (CRS) for everything on
the public record that referred to NSA. The CRS soon supplied us with a
one-paragraph description from the Government Organization Manual and a
patently erroneous piece from Rolling Stone magazine. Striking out there, I
paid visits to the Senate Armed Services and Appropriations Committees. which
were responsible for NSA's annual funding. Only one staff person on each
committee was cleared for NSA information, and I managed to obtain
appointments with each. Both committees had budget and program data on NSA,
but nothing that dealt with oversight. Neither of the staffers I interviewed
was aware of NSA ever doing anything to raise oversight concerns. "You've got
to understand," I was told, "they focus on foreign targets."

Regrouping, Peter and I decided to try to identify some former NSA employees
willing to spill the beans on their old agency. Using the connections of
others on the staff, we managed to identify a handful of NSA retirees living
in the Washington area whom we contacted and interviewed. While we were
encouraged by their willingness to talk with us, the most egregious "abuses"
we were told about were complaints about how NSA allocated its parking spaces
among employees and about a few cases of time and attendance fraud. None of
the people we interviewed had any knowledge of NSA's having undertaken
surveillance against American citizens. It became clear to us from these
interviews that NSA's operations were so compartmented that, unless we had
the right person, others were not apt to know. How, though, did we find the
right person? At that point, we did not even have an organization chart.

We decided to try the front door and asked for a meeting with the Director.
It was our first trip to Fort Meade, and, although our visit predated the
construction of the "new" headquarters building, the size of the old complex
was daunting. NSA was housed in an enormous glass edifice, with large
parabolic antennas on its roof and surrounded by acres of parking lots. We
were given visitors' spaces near the main entrance and were met by our
broadly smiling "handlers." After going through the normal security checks,
we were escorted to the top floor into the large and imposing office of the
NSA Director. At the time, this was Air Force Lt. Gen. Lew Allen, who came
across as a stern, no-nonsense sort, and, based on all we had been able to
learn in advance of the meeting, was a man of impeccable integrity.2

General Allen welcomed us and motioned for us to sit at the large conference
table in his office. "Well, gentlemen," he began, "what can we do for you?"

I wanted to respond, "Well, General, you might begin by running through all
your abuses and improprieties, but, with no arrows in our quiver, we were
hardly in a position to be so bold. We told Allen we would like to be given
more information about the Agency's organization and activities, and he
offered to arrange whatever briefings we might require.

These occurred over the ensuing weeks, and implicitly the message came
through: "Whatever you do, kids, don't screw this up -- it's important to the
country." In fact, the briefings did give us a considerably improved
understanding of NSA's mission and accomplishments, but they failed to
identify a single avenue that appeared promising from an investigative
standpoint. Part of it was due to our own ignorance and uncertainty in terms
of where to probe and how hard to push, and part of it was due to NSA's
uncertainty in terms of what to share with us. Given the current highly
intrusive nature of Congressional oversight, it may seem strange that in 1975
NSA was an agency that had never before had an oversight relationship with
the Congress. That became painfully clear as our investigation progressed.

A Breakthrough

In May 1975, after Peter and I had been struggling in vain for weeks, the
Committee received from the Rockefeller Commission3 a copy of the "family
jewels," the name given to a roughly 800-page compilation of the
recollections of CIA employees who had previously been directed by then DCI
James Schlesinger to identify any past abuses or improprieties in which CIA
may have been involved. Buried within this infamous tome were two references
to NSA. The first was a reference to an office in New York that CIA had
provided NSA for the purpose of copying telegrams. The other disclosed that
CIA had asked NSA to monitor the communications of certain US citizens active
in the antiwar movement.

At last we had something to sink our teeth into. We decided that I would run
down the reference to the office in New York, and Peter, together with a
young lawyer who had since joined the staff, would look into the request to
monitor the communications of the antiwar protesters.

I began by making an oral inquiry to NSA, asking for an explanation of the
reference in the "family jewels" to the New York office and any documents
that may pertain to the matter. Weeks passed without a response. In July, out
of growing frustration, I prepared a list of written interrogatories that
were sent to NSA over the Chairman's signature. This at last produced a
response, albeit one in which NSA said the subject was so sensitive that it
could be briefed only to Senators Church and Tower, the Chairman and ranking
minority member, respectively. My efforts to arrange such a briefing failed,
however, largely because the difficulty of getting the two Senators together
at the same time.

In early August, a press leak appeared in an article in The New York Times
alleging that NSA had eavesdropped on the international communications of US
citizens.4 The article discussed in general terms the matters we were
investigating, and it was a source of considerable consternation for the
Committee as well as NSA.5 The leak had the salutary effect, however, of
breaking the bureaucratic logjam that had stymied us. With the allegations
now a matter of public record, NSA wanted to explain its side of the story.
So, in late August, NSA told me a briefing was being arranged.

I can remember the clean-cut, earnest man in his early thirties who met with
me, but I do not recall his name. It was true, he said, that NSA had had
access for many years to most of the international telegrams leaving New York
City for foreign destinations. The program was code-named SHAMROCK and known
only to a few people within the government. Every day, a courier went up to
New York on the train and returned to Fort Meade with large reels of magnetic
tape, which were copies of the international telegrams sent from New York the
preceding day using the facilities of three telegraph companies. The tapes
would then be electronically processed for items of foreign intelligence
interest, typically telegrams sent by foreign establishments in the United
States or telegrams that appeared to be encrypted.

While telegrams sent by US citizens to foreign destinations were also present
in tapes NSA received, the briefer said that, as a practical matter, no one
ever looked at them. "We're too busy just keeping up with the real stuff," he
said. The program had been terminated in May, he told me, by order of the
Secretary of Defense. I asked if the Secretary had ended it because he knew
the committee was on to it. "Not really," he said, "the program just wasn't
producing very much of value."

When I asked how long this had been going on, he said he did not know. When I
asked how it had begun, he said he did not know. When I asked who had
approved it, he said he did not know. I then asked who would know, and he
said he thought the only person alive who would know the whole story would
probably be "Dr. Tordella." That name was familiar to me. Louis Tordella had
been the civilian Deputy Director of NSA for many years and had recently
retired.6

The Story of SHAMROCK

I wasted little time in locating Dr. Tordella . To my surprise, he readily
agreed to see me. On a Sunday afternoon in September 1975, I visited his home
in suburban Maryland. While he greeted me politely, Tordella was clearly
uncomfortable with the whole idea of confiding in someone like me, young,
with little knowledge or appreciation of intelligence, who was, as far as he
knew, hell-bent on making NSA look bad.

Wc began by questioning each other about our backgrounds. I tried to convey
the impression I was "responsible," interested only in the facts. He said he
was not so worried about me as about the Committee and what it might make of
the "facts." He asked me what I knew about SHAMROCK. I told him. He sighed a
long sigh and then began a discourse on SHAMROCK that lasted into the early
evening. The more he talked, the more he seemed to relax. SHAMROCK actually
predated NSA which was created by President Truman in 1952. It had been
essentially a continuation of the military censorship program of World War
II. Copies of foreign telegraph traffic had been turned over to military
intelligence during the war, and, when the war ended, the Army Security
Agency (ASA) sought to have this continue. All the big international carriers
were involved, Tordella said, "but none of them ever got a nickel for what
they did."

Tordella thought the companies had been assured at the time that President
Truman and Attorney General Tom Clark were aware of and approved the
continuation of the program, but he did not know if any subsequent President
or Attorney General had ever been briefed on it. He did say he had personally
briefed Secretary of Defense Schlesinger on the program in 1973, and, to his
knowledge, Schlesinger had been the only Secretary to have such a briefing,
at least before Tordella's retirement.

Tordella went on to describe in detail how the program evolved. During the
1950s, paper tape had been the medium of choice. Holes were punched in the
paper tape and then scanned to create an electronic transmission. Evey day,
an NSA courier would pick up the reels of punched paper tape that were left
over and take them back to Fort Meade. In the early 1960s, the companies
switched to magnetic tape. While the companies were agreeable to continuing
the program, they wanted to retain the reels of magnetic tape. This
necessitated NSA's finding a place to make copies of the magnetic tapes the
companies were using. In 1966, Tordella had personally sought assistance from
the CIA to rent office space in New York City so that NSA could duplicate the
magnetic tapes there. This lasted until 1973, Tordella said, when CIA pulled
out of the arrangement because of concerns raised by its lawyers. NSA then
arranged for its own office space in Manhattan.

Tordella recalled that while many NSA employees were aware of SHAMROCK, only
one lower-level manager -- who reported to him directly -- had had ongoing
responsibility for the program over the years. The first person who served in
this capacity had started doing it in 1952 and had continued until he retired
in 1970. Another person was appointed to take his place. Tordella recalled
that years would sometimes go by without his hearing anything about SHAMROCK.
It just ran on, he said, without a great deal of attention from anyone.

I asked if NSA used the take from SHAMROCK to spy on the international
communications of American citizens. Tordella responded, "Not per se." NSA
was not interested in these kinds of communications as a rule, he said, but
he said there were a few cases where the names of American citizens had been
used by NSA to select out their international communications, and to the
extent this was done, the take from SHAMROCK would also have been sorted in
accordance with these criteria. He noted that, at the time the Huston Plan7
was being considered, the Nixon administration had thought about turning over
SHAMROCK to the FBI, but the FBI did not want it.

When I asked if it was legal for NSA to read the telegrams of American
citizens,8 he replied, "You'll have to ask the lawyers."

I noted that l would have expected the companies themselves to be concerned,
and Tordella remarked that, "the companies are what worry me about this." He
said that whatever they did, they did out of patriotic reasons. They had
presumed NSA wanted the tapes to look for foreign intelligence. That was
NSA's mission. If the telegrams of American citizens were looked at, the
companies had no knowledge of it.

I countered with the observation that, by making the tapes available to the
government, the companies had to know they were providing the wherewithal for
the government to use them however it wanted. They had to bear some
responsibility.

This comment caused Tordella's temper to flare for the first time during our
interview. The companies were not responsible, he reiterated, they were just
doing what the government asked them to do because they were assured it was
important to national security. If their role were exposed by the Committee,
it would subject them to embarrassment, if not lawsuits, and it would
discourage other companies from cooperating with US intelligence for years to
come.

I told him that the Committee had yet to determine how the whole matter would
be treated, including the involvement of the companies. We parted amicably,
but he clearly had misgivings about how this would turn out. His distrust of
politicians was manifest.

The Companies

Several days after my interview with Tordella, an NSA official briefed the
Committee in closed session, confirming essentially what Tordella had told me
about SHAMROCK.

It was clear that the issue for the Committee was likely to be the companies
themselves and how to treat them in its report. We decided to explore for
ourselves the companies involvement to see whether they were as oblivious to
the implications of their conduct as Tordella and the NSA briefer contended.

We sought pertinent documents and witnesses from each of the three companies
involved: RCA Global, ITT World Communications, and Western Union
International. No one could find any record whatsoever of an agreement with
NSA or ASA setting forth the terms of the operation. Only RCA Global could
produce a witness who had been involved in establishing the arrangement after
World War II; the other two companies could produce a few witnesses --
mid-level executives -- who had become aware of the arrangement over the
course of its existence. I deposed each of the witnesses the companies
identified.

The RCA Global executive, then retired, was the most colorful and forthright
of the lot. He offered no apologies for what he or the company had done. He
said the Army had come to him and asked for the company's cooperation, and,
by damn, that was enough for him.

The executive from ITT World Communications, by comparison, came to the
deposition surrounded by a phalanx of corporate lawyers who proceeded to
object to every question I asked once I had gotten past the man's name and
position. I pointed out to them that this was the United States Senate -- not
a court of law -- and, if they wanted to object to the questions I was
asking, I would have a Senator come in and overrule every one of their
objections. They piped down after that and allowed the witness to respond to
my questions.

The executive from Western Union International gave a slightly different
version of the operation. He said that in his company, employees would
microfilm copies of outgoing international telegrams that would then be
picked up by a government courier.

All the company witnesses testified that their companies had assumed NSA was
using the telegraph traffic only for foreign intelligence purposes. It did
not occur to any of them that NSA might have used their access to look for
the international telegrams of American citizens, nor were they aware that
their companies had ever sought assurances from NSA on this point. Moreover,
all were adamant that their companies had never received any compensation or
favoritism from the government in return for their cooperation.

Action Within the Committee

Based upon the information I had developed, I prepared a report on SHAMROCK
for the Committee, outlining the facts as we then knew them. I submitted it
to the Committee Chief Counsel, Frederick A. O. "Fritz" Schwarz, a lineal
descendant of the toy store magnate on leave from a Wall Street law firm,
with a recommendation that the Committee not make public the names of the
three cooperating companies.

Fritz called me into his office to discuss the report and told me he
disagreed with my recommendation that the companies not be identified. I
pointed out to him that the companies had cooperated purely out of patriotic
motives and, as far as we knew, had never received anything from the
government. I said that if we exposed them, it would cause them public
embarrassment and perhaps subject them to lawsuits, thereby making it
difficult for US intelligence agencies to obtain the cooperation of private
companies in the future. Fritz countered that the companies had a duty to
protect the privacy of their customers. In his view, they deserved to be
exposed. If the Committee did not do it, it would become the subject of
criticism itself. So, for the time being, the names stayed in, and the draft
report was submitted to NSA for security review.

The next step in the process took place on 28 October 1975, when the
Committee met in executive session to consider what it would do with respect
to the matters the staff had been investigating: SHAMROCK and the NSA "watch
list."9 Lieutenant General Allen, the NSA Director, was scheduled to appear
before the Committee the following day in public session. It would be the
first time that an NSA Director had appeared in public before a Congressional
committee, and the Committee was meeting on the 28th to get its ducks in a
row.

The Ford administration had agreed to allow Allen to testify publicly about
the "watch list" but had refused to allow him (or anyone else) to testify
about SHAMROCK. While NSA had little to say about the accuracy of the draft
report on SHAMROCK, it objected to making the report public. Without a
knowledgeable advocate for NSA's position in the room, however, Chairman
Church rather easily obtained consensus from a bare quorum of the Committee
-- without taking a vote -- that the SHAMROCK report should be made public,
notwithstanding the administration's objection This action by Senator Church
and the Committee was based on a provision in the resolution establishing the
Committee that allowed it to release information in its possession,
classified or not, by majority vote.

After the meeting, however, Senator Tower and other Republican members who
had not been present began voicing their displeasure with the Chairman's
action. In a rare display of administration concern, President Ford
telephoned the Chairman and other members of the Committee imploring them to
reconsider. While the Chairman may have been confident he had the votes to
maintain his position, no vote had actually been taken.

This disagreement among the members played itself out in public the following
day at the conclusion of General Allen's testimony. Senator Church raised the
matter himself and proceeded to describe SHAMROCK in general terms, alluding
to the "companies" but not actually naming them. In his view, the program was
illegal, and its disclosure would not harm national security.

According to Church, moreover, the Committee had acted in accordance with its
rules. Senators Tower, Goldwater, and Baker challenged him on both
substantive and procedural grounds, among other things, revealing that
President Truman had approved the program and contending that disclosure of
the details would have far-reaching repercussions for US security. In what
seemed a pre-ordained finale to the discussion, Church gave in to the
dissenters, agreeing that the Committee would consider the matter further and
take an "up or down" vote on disclosure.

In the next few days, the Committee met to consider the disclosure of
SHAMROCK. For the first time since the Committee began operations, Attorney
General Edward Levi, speaking expressly on behalf of the President,
personally appealed to the Committee not to publish the SHAMROCK report on
the grounds that publication would damage national security. Before a hushed
hearing room, Levi made an eloquent appeal to the Committee, objecting to the
publication of the report, and, in particular, to disclosing the names of the
three companies. Levi's arguments generally mirrored those I had made to
Fritz Schwarz a few weeks before and I was hoping they would carry the day.

In the discussion that followed, however, with Levi out of the room, it soon
became clear which way the wind was blowing. Senators were bothered that the
telegrams of Americans had for years been handed over to an intelligence
agency. Whatever its legality, it should not have happened. The program was
now terminated. Why would it matter if it were disclosed? Why was the
identification of the companies a national security concern? Yes, the report
might be embarrassing to them and they might even get sued because of it ,
but why should that make it classified?

In what I recall was largely a party-line vote, the Committee voted to ignore
the President's objections and to publish the report with the three companies
identified therein. It remains to this day the only occasion I know of where
a Congressional committee voted to override a presidential objection and
publish information the President contended was classified.

A few days later, on 6 November 1975, the Chairman read the report I had
written, including the names of the companies, into the public record of the
Committee. The witness table was empty that day, the executive branch having
refused to send witnesses to testify.10

Related Discoveries

For all practical purposes, my investigation work on SHAMROCK ended with the
Chairman's recitation, and I moved on to other tasks for the Committee. In
March 1976, however, as the Committee staff was at work putting together its
final seven-volume report, a lawyer in the General Counsel's office at the
Department of Defense call me to say that "a lower-level employee" at NSA had
recently discovered a file relating to SHAMROCK and, while "it did not really
change anything," he asked whether I would be interested in seeing it.

The file proved to be a mother lode of information. In it were internal
memorandums of the Army Signal Security Agency that described visits by Army
representatives to the three international telegraph companies in August 1945
at the conclusion of the war and reflected the initial responses of the
companies. ITT World International at first refused to cooperate, but went
along after it was told that the presidents of RCA Global and Western Union
had agreed to cooperate if Attorney General Tom Clark said the operation was
"not illegal." ITT said it would cooperate on the same basis.

According to the Army memoranda, however, the program began shortly after the
August 1945 meetings without an opinion from the Attorney General. It
involved all the international telegraph offices of the three companies, not
simply those in New York, but those in Washington, DC, San Francisco, and San
Antonio as well.

The file also indicated that the concerns of the companies over the legality
of their cooperation did not abate once the operation began. In an internal
memo written more than a year later, the Army noted that, because of the
concern over the legality of their conduct, the companies had limited
knowledge of the operation to two or three individuals in each company.

With the discovery of this file, I set about revising the chapter of the
Committee's final report that deal with SHAMROCK to incorporate the new
information. About a month later, in April 1976, as I was putting the final
touches on the revision, I received a call from the Department of Defense,
this time advising that nine more documents pertaining to SHAMROCK had been
discovered at the National Archives and were en route to me.

These documents filled out the picture even further. They reflected that in
1947 the three companies had sought assurances from the President, Attorney
General, and Secretary of Defense that their cooperation in the SHAMROCK
program was essential to the national interest and that they would not be
subject to Federal prosecution for their activities. In fact, the documents
showed that Secretary of Defense James Forrestal, stating that he was
speaking for the President, had met with representatives of ITT and RCA in
December 1947 and provided such assurances, but with a warning that he could
not bind his successors in office. Western Union representatives were briefed
subsequently on this meeting.

In apparent follow-up to this meeting, the documents showed that Secretary
Forrestal  in June 1948 quietly tried to have Congress amend section 605 of
the Communications Act of 1934 in a way which would have made the companies'
cooperation in SHAMROCK clearly legal. He met informally with the Chairman of
the Senate and House Judiciary Committees to explain the situation, and an
amendment was drafted to accomplish the objective. The amendment was never
reported by either committee.11

With the failure of the effort to enact legislation, the companies in 1949
sought and obtained assurances from Forrestal's successor, Louis Johnson,
that they would not be prosecuted. On this occasion, Johnson said he was
speaking on behalf of the President and the Attorney General as well.

I found it highly suspicious that these documents had been located by the
government months after the Committee's investigations had closed. (Why were
they still looking for them at this juncture?) The documents also cast doubt
on the veracity of the companies' claims that they could find no
documentation pertaining to SHAMROCK. After all, this had concerned the
highest levels of their corporate management for at least four years. With
the Committee about to go out of business, however, there was no time for me
to investigate the failure to produce these documents earlier. I had to be
content that they had arrived in time to be reflected in the Committee's
final report.12

Denouement

Several weeks after the Committee issued its final report, I walked over to
the House side of the Capitol to attend a hearing of the subcommittee chaired
by Bella Abzug, the "gentlewoman" from New York, as she was referred to by
her colleagues. Her hearings brought to mind the days of Nero, when
Christians were thrown to lions for sport. Ms. Abzug's "red meat" that
particular day consisted of executives from RCA Global, ITT International,
and Western Union International. As I leaned back against a wall of the
hearing room, I saw many of those I had met months before.

Berating the witnesses as only she could, Ms. Abzug made it clear she "stood
solidly for the privacy of the American people and squarely against the
corporate thugs of this country who thought they could run rough-shod over
the rights of the American people." (I am paraphrasing here.) I knew they
were getting a bum rap, but they had no defenders that day. One of their
attorneys turned and caught my eye in the back of the room, nodding grimly as
if to say I told you so.

And the companies' troubles would not end there. In the weeks that followed,
they would be sued by a group of people claiming their rights had been
violated by the SHAMROCK program.

As I walked back to the Senate side after the hearing that day, it occurred
to me that none of this would be happening if not for me. Yet I hardly felt
like gloating. Indeed, I was somewhat shaken to see the consequences I had
predicted to Fritz Schwarz a few months before come to pass. For the moment,
I was overcome by doubt. Had we, in fact, "poisoned the well" in terms of
future cooperation with the private sector, as Dr. Tordella had feared?

Because I decided to stay in government and, indeed, served in positions that
offered a vantage point, I came to see that relations between intelligence
agencies and the private sector endured. Lawyers became more involved than
they used to be, but questions of legality were no longer ignored or
unresolved. Agreements were put in writing and signed by the responsible
officials.

I also came to think that the investigation, in the long term, had a
beneficial effect on NSA. With no desire to undergo another such experience,
NSA adopted very stringent rules in the wake of the Church Committee to
ensure that its operations were carried out in accordance with applicable
law. Where the communications of US citizens were concerned, I can attest
from my personal experience that NSA has been especially scrupulous. As
upsetting and demoralizing as the Church Committee's investigation
undoubtedly was, it cause NSA to institute a system which keeps it within the
bounds of US law and focused on its essential mission. Twenty-three years
later, I still take some satisfaction from that.

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