Intersting item; mentions the 40 committee as who operate in secret
setting themselves above our laws and constitution in man instances -
you want good look at Mafia connection to Mossad, KGB, CIA.....this is
it.

License to kill......and they want to take away Amrican guns?   First
get those Uzzi's from the Israelies they flaunt about the Palestinians
for which we paid.

Saba



Laws and Directives
Enabling Intelligence Work
Or Counter-Terrorism

In the following paragraphs, we outline major aspects of various legal
actions taken by the U.S. legislature. In many cases, the legislation is
incremental, that is, approves all previous legislation, modifies that
older legislation, or makes additions. In our research, the only
exception to this statements occurred during fights between Congress and
a minority party President over War Operations, or Clandestine
Operations (such as President Reagan and the Contras). For more
information on this and related topics, see Hughes-Ryan Act. One
exception to the stated exception is the rescinding of the ability for
CIA covert operations to assassinate world leaders by President Ford in
February of 1976 (see below).
National Security Act of 1947
Established the Central Intelligence Agency, giving the DCI the
authority to protect secrets, specifically sources and methods. The
agency would receive its funds directly from Congress in a lump sum so
as to insure secrecy of activity and of which there would be no
accounting outside the agency. Details of the types of overt and covert
information collection sources were spelled out and the drafters of the
act thought that the CIA should have an "instant" capability for
subversive operations. Note the use of capability rather than
establishing the the CIA could actually execute subversive operations.
Is is said that NSA47 also contains the language spelling out the tasks
of the National Security Agency, however this section of the act is
classified.
NSC Directive 4/A
December, 1947, placed the CIA in charge of covert "psychological"
operations, with the US State Department supplying policy guidance. 1
Un-numbered Document, 1948
Truman, Forrestal, and Marshall overruled DCI Hillenkoetter thus
allowing James Angleton to set up a covert operation in Italy to counter
communist subversion of the Italian government.
NSC Directive 10/2
June 1948, superseded NSC Directive 4/A, established a covert
operational branch within the CIA in the interests of world peace and US
national security. Specifically, its covert operations would have to be
of a type for which "the US Government can plausibly disclaim any
responsibility", and could not involve "armed conflict by recognized
military forces". Activities premitted included "propaganda; economic
warfare; preventive direct action, including sabotage, anti-sabotage,
demolition, and evacuation measures; subversion against hostile states,
including assistance to underground resistance movements, guerillas and
refugee liberation groups, and support of indigenous anti-communist
elements in threatened countries of the free world".
The "10/2 Panel" containing representatives from the Department of
Defense and Department of State, was given the responsiblity to
supervise covert operations with the NSC being the mediator on disputes.
2
Central Intelligence Act of 1949
Authorized the Director of Central Intelligence to receive, exchange,
and spend money without giving account to Congress in accordance with
the laws governing other agencies. It also authorized special training
for CIA officers as well as other administrative things such as
employment conditions; hiring practices (storage or shipment of
household goods, etc.); allowed CIA to borrow personnel from other
agencies or the military; to ignore immigration laws in recruiting up to
100 defecters per year; and gave the DCI the authority to declare and
keep secrets.
NSC Directive 68
04/14/50, called for nuclear and conventional arms build up as well as
covert operations to subvert Communist regimes. 3
McCarren Act of 1951
Passed via override of Truman's veto, placed severe restrictions on
civil liberties, also known as the internal security law. Chief concern
to intelligence agencies was the provision which prohibited the
admission to the U.S. of territory and citizenship of radical aliens,
thus cutting off the supply of valuable defectors.
Communications Intelligence Activities Memorandum
Approximate date, 10/24/52, President Harry S. Truman, an eight page
document, only now partially declassified, abolishing the Armed Forces
Security Agency and placing their resources into the new National
Security Agency. Specifically gives to the NSA the control over, and
coordination of, the collection and processing of Communications
Intelligence. NSA considered to be "within but not part of the DOD". 6
NSC Directive 5412/I
03/12/55, Defines covert operations as "all activities...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." Thus we have plausible
deniability. It also listed the covert operations the CIA was expected
to undertake as:
"Propoganda, political action; economic warfare; escape and evasion and
evacuation measures; subversion against hostile states or groups
including assistance to underground movements, guerillas and refugee
liberation groups; support of indigenous and anti-communist elements in
threatened countries of the free world; deception plans and operations;
and all activities compatible with this directive necessary to
accomplish the foregoing." 4
NSC Decision Memorandum 40, 1970
February 17, 1970, established the 40 Committee to oversea covert
operations just as in the 303 Committee and Special Groups had in the
past, in this case, the 40 Committee was made up of the Chairman, Henry
Kissinger (Nixon's Foreign Policy Advisor) as the Chairman of the
committee, the Deputy Secratary of State, the Deputy Secratary of
Defense, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and DCI Richard
Helms.
The Committee quickly established the following set of requirements of
covert operations that would be brought before the Committee for review:
Operations costing more than $25,000, or
Support political or military groups, or
Economic, paramilitary, counterinsurgence in nature, or
Politically sensitive
1971 Fund Cuts for CIA SEA Action
12/71, Congress cut off CIA funds for use in Laos and Cambodia. Proposed
by Senator Clifford P. Case in July of 1971, prohibiting the use of
funds to pay for U.S. paramilitary operations in Cambodia and Laos
(especially prohibiting the CIA).
Case-Zablocki Act of 1972
Insisted on Congressional review of all executive agreements.
War Powers Act of 1973
Prohibited the President from waging war for more than sixty days
without congressional approval.
HUGHES-RYAN ACT OF 1974
Amendment to the Foreign Assitance Act of 1974, requiring the President
to report and nonintelligence CIA operations to relevant Congressional
committees (at the time this numbered around 8 committee) in a timely
fashion.
Church Committee, 1974
On January 27, 1974, the U.S. Senate voted to create the Select
Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence
Activities. During the study, a complete history of the CIA was
documented by Anne Karalekas. 1
Clark Amendment, 1975
1/75, the House passed this amendment (having already been passed in the
Senate) to cut off funds for covert operations in Angola.
House Select Committee on Intelligence, 1975
02/19/75, created by the U.S. House of Representatives to provide House
oversight in addition to Senate oversight, since the House provides all
appropriations. The Committee was made the House Permanent Committee on
Intelligence on July 14, 1977.
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, 1976
05/19/76, US Senate voted to establish their own committee to oversee
Intelligence operations in the U.S.
1976 Presidential Directive
2/18/76: Henry Kissinger, Chairman of the NSC under Ford, created the
Committee on Foreign Intelligence reporting to the NSC Chairman, with
the DCI as the chair of the new Committee. Ford also replaced the 40
Committee with a five-man Operations Advisory Group. Ford also outlawed
assassination as an instrument of American Policy. In this directive he
also detailed the CIAs domestic duties, and accepted the principle of a
joint Congressional oversight committee. Congress did not set up a joint
committee however, the House and Senate each having their own
committees.
Presidential Executive Order 12036, 1978
President Carter, reiterating changes made by his predecessor Gerald
Ford, retension of the Intelligence Oversight Board to mointor activiies
possibly involving illegality or impropriety, listed a number of
prohibited activities which might concievably impinge upon the rights or
privacy of U.S. citizens and resident aliens. The order was rescinded
until 1981.
Foreign Intelligence Surviellance Act of 1978
10/25/78: Following the lead by the Carter administration, Congress
passed this law which legalizes the use of wiretaps and bugs in
suspected cases of foreign espionage, terrorism, and sabotage; but only
after a case by case review by a new set of Federal Judges, who must
issue a Federal Warrant.
Classified Information Protection Act of 1980
Sets a procedure for revealing of sensitive classified information in a
trial, such that only a few of the people in the trial may see it, and
who must also sign an oath not to reveal any part of the information.
It's intent is to allow the course of justice to continue in cases where
the government pleads that release of information needed in the case
will damage National Security if released to the public.
This law was used in the April 1986 trial of former U.S. Army
Intelligence agent Richard C. Smith who was acquitted of all charges.
Smith's story was that he had been an agent posing, at the bequest of
the CIA, as a disgruntled former Intelligence officer to entrap KGB
agents.
Althought the story was never confirmed, certainly there was not enough
evidence to the contary leaving room for much doubt in the government's
case and Smith was acquitted.
Intelligence Authorization Act of 1981
In the case of necessary immediate action, only the Chairman and Vice
Chairman of each committee, and the majority leaders of the Senate and
House would have to be notified with a follow on briefing when time
permitted. The method for notification was specified as a "finding"
which would fully describe the activity, and be given to Congress within
a reasonable period of time following the activity beginning.
Presidential Directive 12333, 1981
President Reagan, on December 12, 1981, re-issued (as each President
must do as part of the transition process) the Presidental Directive
which defines the U.S. Intelligence community and its tasks. In this
directive, Reagan is purported to have allowed more scope to spy at home
and to follow up the domestic dimensions of foreign agent activity with
which it was concerned. CIA was given more power to act within the
confines of the U.S., but only where surveillance or covert activities
did not target U.S. corporations or citizens, and where such activities
are not intended to influence U.S. political processes, public opinion
or the media.
Boland Amendment, 1982
12/08/82, Introduced by the chairman of the House Intelligence
Committee, Edward P. Boland, prohibiting intelligence agencies from
providing military equipment, training or support to anyone "for the
purpose of overthrowing the Government of Nicaragua". 5
House Intelligence Identities Act of 1982
06/82, protects against disclosure of the identities of agents either
directly or through release of incriminating information. Provides for
penalities for those who named names in a deliberate attempt to harm the
U.S. Intelligence effort.
Amendment to the Freedom of Information Act, 1984
11/84, sponsored by Senator Barry Goldwater, Head of the Senate Select
Committee on Intelligence, exempts CIA employees from responding to
Freedom of Information Act requests except where such requests are from
former employees of the CIA who are in legal action with the government.
Additional Information on the Freedom of Information Act is well
organized by  John Greenawald, Jr. at his site.
Army Intelligence Oversight Regulation
According to Antonio Rucci of U.S. Army Intelligence, the law that
governs what Army Intelligence CAN do in terms of domestic surveillance,
AR381-10 is the Army's Intelligence Oversight regulation which breaks
down what we "can" legally do as part of our investigations." 7 It
includes "...15 separate 'procedures' or categories." Mr. Rucci points
out in the discussion, that the regulation specifying what is legal and
how to ensure activity is kept legal is a protection for Army
Intelligence agents...keeping them out of jail. A rather nice way of
putting it, in our opinion.
Bibliography
(also see the MILNET Bibliography)
1. History of hte Central Intelligence Agency, Anne Karalekas, in
"Supplementary Detailed Staff Reports on Foreign and Military
Intelligence", Final Report of the Select Committee to Study Govermental
Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, Book 4), "Senate
Report", 94 Congress, 2nd Session, no 94-755, April 23, 1976, also
printed seperately as "History of the Central Intelligence Agency", Anne
Karalekas, Copyright 1977, Aegean Park Press, Laguna Hills, CA. Page 50.
2. Quoted as coming from "Souers interview", in CIA and American
Democracy, Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones, Copyright 1989, Yale University Press,
New Haven and London, Printed in the U.S. by Vail- Ballou Press,
Binghamton, New York. ISBN 0-300-04149-7, Page 55.
3. Ibid, pg. 62
4. quoted in "The CIA and the Intelligence Community", Paul W.
Blackstock, Copyright 1974,
Forum Press, St. Charles, Mo.
5. Viel: The Secret Wars of the CIA 1981-1987, Bob Woodward, Copyright
1987, Simon & Schuster, Simon & Schuster Building, Rockefeller Center,
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y., 10020.
ISBN 0-671-60117- 2.
6. The U.S. Intelligence Community, Jeffry T. Richelson, Copyright 1989,
Ballinger Publishing Company, 54 Church Street, Harvard Square,
Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138. ISBN 0-88730-226-2
7. OSPro-L April 97 #3, WWW, Antonio A. Rucci
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Last Updated: 11/15/95



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