|
|
Gerald R. Ford Library1000 Beal Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2114www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov |
LEO
CHERNE
Member
and Chairman,
President's
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board;
Member,
Intelligence Oversight Board:
Papers,
(1969) 1973-77 (1986)
SUMMARY DESCRIPTION
Materials on the origins and administration of the President's
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board and the Intelligence Oversight Board, and Cherne's activities on both. Also, information
documenting Cherne's informal exchanges of advice and
comments with prominent people in the intelligence community, and his interest
in the collection of economic intelligence.
QUANTITY
3.6
linear feet (ca. 7,200 pp.)
DONOR
Leo Cherne (accession number 90-NLF-029)
ACCESS
Open. Some items are temporarily restricted under
terms of the donor's deed of gift, a copy of which is available on request, or
under National Archives and Records Administration general restrictions (36 CFR
1256).
COPYRIGHT
Leo Cherne has donated to the United States of America his
copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives
collections. The copyrights to materials
written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees
as part of their official duties are in the public domain.
Prepared by Geir Gundersen, May 1991
[s:\bin\findaid\cherne, leo - papers.doc]
BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION
Leo Cherne
September
8, 1912 Born, New York City
1931 New York
University (B.A.)
1934 New York
University Law School (LL.B.)
1936-90 Executive
Director, then consultant, Research Institute of America, Inc.
1938 Helped draft
the U.S. Army and Navy industrial mobilization plans for war
1946 U.S. Adviser
on taxation and fiscal policy to General Douglas MacArthur
1946-52 Honorary faculty
member, and member of
board of advisers,
1946-76 Chairman,
Executive Committee, Freedom House
1946-present Chairman, Board of
Directors, Lawyers Cooperative Publishing Company, Rochester, N.Y.
1951-present Chairman, Board of
Directors, International Rescue Commission
1967-68
1971-76 Member, U.S.
Advisory Commission on International and Cultural Affairs
1973-77
& 1981-90 Member,
chairman, and vice chairman, President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board
1976-77 Member,
Intelligence Oversight Board
1978-present Chairman, Citizens
Commission on Indochinese Refugees
INTRODUCTION
Leo Cherne's
career spanned more than fifty years. Cherne, an economist, first gained prominence in the
private sector, as Executive Director of the Research Institute of America,
founded to translate complex government legislation for the businessman;
Chairman of the Executive Committee of Freedom House, established to advance
the struggle for freedom at home and abroad; and Chairman of the International
Rescue Committee, formed to assist democratic leaders, scholars, and others to
escape Fascism, Communism, and other forms of totalitarianism. He maintained these positions for the greater
part of his career. Cherne
also served many Presidents, from Roosevelt to Bush, in a variety of
capacities. These roles were primarily
on an intermittent consultant basis, and included service as economic advisor
to General Douglas MacArthur, memberships on the U.S.
Select Committee for Western Hemisphere Immigration and the U.S. Advisory
Commission on International Educational and Cultural Affairs, as well as his
activities on the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB) and
the Intelligence Oversight Board (IOB).
The majority of
papers from Cherne's career are at Boston University
Special Collections. The official
records of the International Rescue Committee are at the Hoover Institution at
Stanford University.
Of the Cherne papers at the Ford Library, approximately
four-fifths concern his activities as member, then chairman, of PFIAB. The remainder concerns his activities as
member of the IOB during the Ford Administration. The collection does not include material from
Cherne's return to PFIAB, 1981-90, as vice chairman
under Presidents Reagan and Bush. These
records were, prior to donation, separated by PFIAB officials for shipment to
the Reagan Library. Described below
under separate headings are Cherne's role in PFIAB
and the IOB, the scope and content of his papers, and related materials in
other Ford Library collections.
PFIAB, the IOB,
and Leo Cherne
In the year
preceding Cherne's selection as chairman of PFIAB and
his appointment to the IOB in 1976, the Church Committee, the Pike Committee, and
the Rockefeller Commission engaged in exhaustive investigations of the
intelligence community (comprised of the CIA, Departments of State, Treasury,
and Defense, ERDA, FBI, NSA and others).
The investigations examined charges of intelligence agency abuses
accumulated over the course of more than twenty-five years.
These
allegations resulted in widespread distrust of the entire intelligence
community, and an increased concern as to whether intelligence agencies could
exist and operate within the law. President
Ford responded to these developments on February 17, 1976, by issuing Executive
Order 11905, the first major reorganization of the intelligence community since
1947. This order, in addition to
restructuring the intelligence community and establishing guidelines for the
intelligence agencies, created the Intelligence Oversight Board.
Upon taking
office, President Ford continued PFIAB in the form established by Richard Nixon
in 1969 through Executive Order 11460.
In 1976 President Ford expanded PFIAB's
membership from ten to seventeen, and chose Leo Cherne,
appointed in 1973, to succeed (Ret.) Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr., as PFIAB
chairman. Ford also placed Cherne on the IOB, along with fellow PFIAB members Robert
D. Murphy (as chairman) and Stephen Ailes. The memberships overlapped because Executive
Order 11905 stated that IOB members could also serve on PFIAB.
Cherne served in this
dual capacity until President Carter dissolved PFIAB and replaced the IOB
membership five months after taking office.
PFIAB was eliminated because Carter thought the National Security
Council system and the intelligence community had been restructured to
effectively review and assess foreign intelligence activities. Cherne rejoined
PFIAB as vice chairman when President Reagan reactivated the Board in 1981.
In addition to
overlapping memberships, composed of private citizens with various disciplines
and backgrounds, PFIAB and the IOB shared other similarities. Cherne and the
members of both Boards were paid as citizen consultants on a per diem basis,
and permitted to work only so many days per year. In addition, the offices of PFIAB and the IOB
were located in the Old Executive Office Building, and both made due with small
budgets and staffs.
While similarities
existed, the responsibilities of the two boards differed markedly. PFIAB focused on the objectivity and quality
of intelligence, while the IOB addressed propriety and legal compliance within
the intelligence community.
PFIAB strived to
stimulate creativity, give birth to new ideas, and encourage the development of
new techniques and concepts. The Board
intended to assure that the intelligence gathering process met the specific
intelligence needs of the President and his principal advisors.
As PFIAB chairman,
Cherne met several times with the President and his
two closest White House aides involved with intelligence, Counsellor
John
Marsh
and Counsel Philip Buchen. This access no doubt helped shape PFIAB
meeting agendas, set by Cherne and the Board's Executive
Secretary, Wheaton Byers.
PFIAB met on the
first Thursday and Friday of every other month, with ad hoc committee meetings
as required. During its meetings, the
Board met with various intelligence principals, Cabinet officers, and other
officials as necessary. When necessary,
PFIAB, due to its limited staff, used consultants and relied on elements of the
intelligence community for additional assistance. The Board reported directly to the President.
The IOB met
according to need and averaged one formal meeting every 3 or 4 weeks. Between meetings there was frequent contact
between the Board and its staff. In
order to provide the members of the Board with an understanding of current
intelligence agency practices and personnel, the staff frequently met with
representatives of the intelligence community.
In addition,
Executive Order 11905 required all elements of the intelligence community to
report to the IOB, at least once quarterly, concerning any activities which
raised a question of legality or propriety.
Since the general counsels and inspector generals of the intelligence
agencies did the reporting, they, in effect, acted as field staff for the
IOB. The IOB also received annual
reports from the heads of departments and agencies comprising the intelligence
community, as well as allegations, regarding intelligence agency improprieties,
from other employees of intelligence agencies, and from members of the public.
Scope and
Content of the Cherne Papers
Some of the
collection's strongest materials concern the origins and administration of
PFIAB and the IOB. The papers also
document Cherne's informal exchanges of advice and
comments with many people prominent in the intelligence community, such as
William E. Colby, William E. Simon, and Edward Teller, during a time of intense
controversy. Cherne's
interest in the collection of economic intelligence is evident in several
special instances. Other files often
include published material related to the boards, while there are virtually no
files on specific intelligence operations.
However, there
are few or no formal files about PFIAB and IOB meetings. Official PFIAB and IOB records are located at
their respective offices in Washington, D.C.
Related
Materials (April 1991):
Related materials
on PFIAB and the IOB are located in several other Library collections. One good source is the White House Central
Files subject categories FG 208 (President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory
Board) and FG 422 (Intelligence Oversight Board). White House staff files containing
documentation on PFIAB and the IOB include those of Staff Secretary James E.
Connor, the Presidential Handwriting File, and the White House Records Office:
Legislation Case Files.
The 1975-76
intelligence investigations and reorganization of the intelligence community
are extensively documented in many Library collections.
Series
Desciptions
1-8 President's Foreign
Intelligence Advisory Board Subject File, (1969) 1973-77 (1986). (2.9 linear feet)
Memoranda, correspondence,
reports, clippings, publications, and notes on PFIAB and its history,
functions, meetings, and budget. Also,
miscellaneous information on intelligence-related topics such as: the Central Intelligence Agency,
congressional investigations, legislation and executive orders, economics,
international cultural affairs, refugees, strategic and critical materials,
arms control, the Soviet Union, Soviet grain sales, oil, terrorism, and
Watergate.
Arranged
alphabetically by subject.
8-9 Intelligence Oversight Board
Subject File, (1975) 1976-77 (1980).
(0.6 linear feet)
Memoranda,
correspondence, clippings, publications, reports, and notes on the IOB and its
history, procedures, and meetings. Also,
miscellaneous information on intelligence-related issues such as: the Central Intelligence Agency and its
Inspector General and General Counsel, legislation and executive orders, and
the Carter transition.
Arranged
alphabetically by subject.
9 Personal Subject
File, 1974-78. (0.1 linear feet)
Items
on the International Rescue Committee's work with refugees, including those
from
Arranged
alphabetically by subject.
Container List
Accuracy in the
Media
Anderson, George
W., Jr.
Baker, William
O.
Buchen, Philip W.
Bush, George
Byers, Wheaton
Casey, William
Central
Intelligence Agency
‑
Background Materials (1)‑(4)
‑
Congressional Subcommittees List of Members
‑ Research
Studies
Cherne, Leo ‑
Cherne, Leo ‑
PFIAB Appointment (1)‑(2)
Cherne, Leo ‑
PFIAB Chairman ‑ Appointment
Cherne, Leo ‑
PFIAB Time Logs
Church Committee
(1)‑(2)
Citizens
Committee for U.S. Intelligence
Colby, William
E.
Connally, John
Economic Growth
Economic
Intelligence (1)‑(3)
Economic Policy
Board
Economic
Stockpiling
Economics ‑
"The Corporation" ‑ Television Transcript
Electronic
Surveillance
Energy
Europe
Executive Order
11652
Executive Order
11905 (1)‑(3)
Federal Bureau
of Investigation
Ford, Gerald R.
Foreign
Assistance Act of 1974
Foreign
Investment in the
Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1976 (S.3197) (1)‑(3)
Freedom of
Information Act ‑ State Department Testimony
Galvin, Robert
W.
Gray, Gordon
Green Book ‑
Patty Hearst Affair (1)‑(2)
Intelligence (1)‑(2)
Interagency
Classification Review Committee
Jerusalem
Joint Committee
on Intelligence Oversight
Kissinger, Henry
(1)‑(2)
Laird, Melvin R.
Luce, Clare
Booth
Marsh, John O.,
Jr.
"Military
Aspects of Change, National Security, and Peace" ‑ Published Article
Miscellaneous
National
Security Act of 1947 ‑ Amendment
National
Strategy Information Center, Inc.
National
Security Agency
Navy
Notecards Re Intelligence
Community
Oil
Olmer, Lionel (1)‑(2)
Omnibus Crime
Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968
Pike Committee
President's
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board
‑ Budget
‑ Dinner:
Arrangements
- Dinner: Guest
Correspondence
- Dinner:
Speeches
- General
Correspondence (1)‑(2)
- History (1)‑(2)
President's
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board
‑
Intelligence: Newsclips (1)‑(9)
President's
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board
‑
Intelligence: Published Articles (1)‑(2)
- Meetings
- Membership
Expansion
- Miscellaneous
Clippings
- National
Security Leaks, 1982‑86 (1)‑(2)
- National
Security Issues
- Termination (1)‑(2)
Publications ‑
Miscellaneous
Rockefeller,
Nelson
Rockefeller
Commission
Rumsfeld, Donald
Schlesinger, Arthur,
Jr.
Schlesinger,
James R.
Seidman, William L.
Simon, William
E.
Soviet Union ‑
Grain Sales (Mostly Publications)
Standards of
Conduct
Strategic and
Critical Materials
Technology
Teller, Edward
Terrorism (1)‑(3)
U.S. Arms
Control and Disarmament Agency
Watergate
White House
Press Releases
White House
Study Project ‑ Report No. 2 (1)‑(4)
Williams, Edward
Bennett
Willison, Sir David
Intelligence
Oversight Board Subject File
Central
Intelligence Agency
Central
Intelligence Agency ‑ Inspector General and General Counsel Organizations
Cherne, Leo ‑
IOB Appointment
Cherne, Leo ‑
IOB Appointment: Congratulations (1)‑(6)
Cherne, Leo ‑
IOB Notes
Executive Order
11905 ‑ Intelligence Reform Package
Executive Order
12036 ‑ Foreign Intelligence Organization and Control, 1978
(Press Releases)
Federal Intelligence
Agencies Control Act of 1977
H.R. 12618 ‑
Joint Committee on Intelligence Operations Act
Intelligence
Oversight Board
‑ General
Correspondence
‑ History
‑
Intelligence: News Clips
‑
Intelligence: Periodical Articles
‑ Meetings
‑
Procedures
Murphy, Robert
D.
Personal Subject
File
Birthday Cards
International
Rescue Committee