I submit my recommendations for making the National Security Council more
capable of carrying out effectively its statutory functions. The principal
recommendations are summarized at the end of the attached Report (Part
IX).1
Since 20 January 1953, I have participated in the daily work of the Council
and its Committees, studied its policy papers and various reports, and held
conferences (including three eight-hour round-table discussions) with
experienced advisers.
The Council, as top mechanism in Government for aiding in formulation of
security policies, has a policy-planning function and a supporting staff
function:
I wish to retain on this permanent Staff Mr. Lay and Mr. Gleason, who are devoted, capable, and well-informed. They
will provide continuity, effectively operate the staff mechanism, and
greatly help in the policy planning.
My recommendations call for adding some Staff personnel to perform functions
for which no Staff personnel now exist (the six NSC Staff “think” personnel being already fully occupied). For
a full year, carrying out all my recommendations would increase White House
and Council expense by some $65, 000.
[Attachment]
Report by the Special Assistant to the President for
National Security Affairs (Cutler)
restricted
[Washington,] 16 March 1953.
Report of Recommendations Relative to
the National Security Council
[Here follows a list of the nine parts of the Report.]
part i. statutory functions of the
council
- 1.
- The National Security Act of 1947 establishes: (Title I) the
National Security Council,* the Central
Intelligence Agency, and the National Security Resources Board; and
(Title II) the National Military Establishment. The preamble to the
Act declares “the intent of Congress to provide a comprehensive
program for the future security of the United States; to provide for
the establishment of integrated policies and procedures for the
departments, agencies, and functions of the Government relating to
the national security.…”
- 2.
- Title I of the Act, titled “Coordination for National Security,”
states the functions of the Council:
- a.
- “to advise the President with respect to the integration
of domestic, foreign, and military policies relating to the
national security so as to enable the military services and
the other departments and agencies of the Government to
cooperate more effectively in matters involving the national
security.”
- b.
- to perform “such other functions as the President may
direct for the purpose of more effectively coordinating the
policies and
[Page 247]
functions of the departments and agencies of the Government
relating to the national security.”
- c.
- from time to time to “make such recommendations, and such
other reports to the President as it seems appropriate or as
the President may require.”
- Title I further states that “it shall, subject to the direction of
the President, be the duty of the Council:
- a.
- to assess and appraise the objectives, commitments and
risks of the United States in relation to our actual and
potential military power, in the interest of national
security, for the purpose of making recommendations to the
President in connection therewith; and
- b.
- to consider policies on matters of common interest to the
departments and agencies of the Government concerned with
the national security, and to make recommendations to the
President in connection therewith.”
- 3.
- Other parts of Title I provide that the Central Intelligence
Agency is “under the direction of” the Council, and that the Atomic
Energy Commission may communicate restricted data to other nations,
provided that the President makes a determination based on a
“written recommendation” of the Council.
- 4.
- Explicit or implicit in the governing statute are these basic
concepts:
- a.
- NSC deals only with issues
affecting the national security;
- b.
- NSC is advisory; by advice
and recommendations to the President, it aids him to resolve
the executive will;
- c.
- NSC seeks to integrate
domestic, foreign, and military policies so as to enable
Government agencies to cooperate more effectively in
national security matters;
- d.
- NSC acts, according to
Presidential direction, to coordinate more effectively
policies and functions of Government agencies relating to
the national security;
- e.
- NSC is concerned with both
our actual and our potential military power;
- f.
- NSC is not limited to
areas of agency agreement; on its own initiative, NSC may seek out areas of
agency conflict or omission to act, so as to present
alternative or new courses of action for executive
decision.
- 5.
- The Council is a mechanism to aid the President in formulating
national security policy. In that area, it should perform whatever
functions the President thinks will help him best. It is believed
that a proper appreciation and application of the foregoing concepts
will make the NSC operate
effectively. No revision of the statutory statement of functions is
required.
[Page 248]
part ii. the council
machinery
The National Security Council now operates through the following
mechanisms:
- 1.
- The Council itself:
- a.
- Council Meetings
- b.
- Special Committee on Atomic Energy—
- Secretary of State, Chairman
- Secretary of Defense
- Chairman, Atomic Energy Commission
- c.
- Special Committee on COMINT (Supervises USCIB)
- Secretary of State, Chairman
- Secretary of Defense
- Attorney General (on matters affecting FBI)
- d.
- Ad hoc Committees and
Consultants
- 2.
- The Council Staff Organization:
- a.
- The Senior Staff
- b.
- The Permanent Staff
- 3.
- Advisory Committees appointed by the Council:
- a.
- Interdepartmental Intelligence Conference—
- Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Chairman
- Director of Intelligence, U.S. Army
- Director of Naval Intelligence
- Director of Special Investigations, U.S. Air
Force
- (NSC
Representative on Internal
Security—adviser)
- b.
- Interdepartmental Committee on Internal Security—
- Special Assistant to the Attorney General, Chairman
- Director, Office of Controls, State
Department
- Director, Continental U.S. Defense Planning
Group, Department of Defense
- Chief Coordinator, Treasury Enforcement
Agencies, Treasury Department
- (NSC
Representative on Internal
Security—adviser)
- 4.
- Joint Chiefs of Staff:
- a.
- “principal military advisers” to the NSC
- 5.
- The Central Intelligence Agency:
- a.
- established “under” the Council
- b.
- functions “under the direction of” the Council
- c.
- intelligence adviser to the Council
- 6.
- Psychological Strategy Board:
- a.
- reports to the Council on its activities and on its
evaluation of the national psychological operations,
including implementation of approved objectives,
policies, and programs by the departments and agencies
concerned.
[Page 249]
part iii. membership in the
council
- 1.
- In order to make possible a genuine exchange of ideas and foster
free discussion, there should not, as a general rule, be more than
eight persons who have the right formally
to participate as Council members. This number includes Statutory
Members and standing-request and ad hoc
Participant Members; but does not include Advisers, Observers, and
the Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs
and NSC Staff Members.
- 2.
- Statutory Members. An ideal statute would
provide that the Council should consist of the President, the
Vice-President, and such other Members as the President from time to
time might designate. However, in view of legislative history and
present circumstances, it may be practicable to amend the statute
only by (a) eliminating the provision requiring Senate confirmation
of persons additionally designated by the President to the Council,
(b) adding the Secretary of the Treasury, (c) transferring the
Council membership of the Chairman of the National Security
Resources Board (which Board is to be merged into ODM) to the Director of Defense
Mobilization. It will be desirable for the immediately ensuing
future that the functions of the Treasury, of Mutual Security, and
of Defense Mobilization be represented on the Council, either
through statutory Membership or standing-request Participant
Membership. Therefore, pending final decision as to statutory
change, this report does not distinguish between Statutory and
Permanent-Request Membership in stating those who regularly attend
Council Meetings as follows:
- President
- Vice President
- Secretary of State
- Secretary of the Treasury
- Secretary of Defense
- Director for Mutual Security†
- Director of Defense Mobilization
- 3.
- Participant Members. In addition to
Statutory Members, the President should be free to invite such other
officials of Government to attend as Participant Members, as his
convenience and the agenda items at a particular Meeting make
desirable. Such invitations may be either on standing-request or ad hoc basis. A standing-request Participant
Member attends all Meetings until the President otherwise decides.
An ad hoc Participant Member attends
[Page 250]
only such Meeting, or part
of a Meeting, as he may be specifically invited to attend.
- 4.
- Advisers, Observers, Staff. In addition to
Statutory and Participant Members, there will be in attendance at
each Council meeting the following persons who do not formally
participate as Council Members:
- a.
- Advisers:
- Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff
- Director, Central Intelligence Agency
- Special Assistant to the President for Cold War
Planning
- b.
- Observers:
- Such person or persons as the President may desire
to attend for the purpose of observing, but not
participating—like his Military Liaison Officer.
Observers are not seated at the table.
- c.
- Staff:
- Special Assistant to the President
- Executive Secretary
- Deputy Executive Secretary
- 5.
- a. Civilians without departmental responsibilities should
not be invited to sit as Participant Members.
- b. In order to bring to the Council deliberations a fresh,
frequently-changing civilian point of view and to gain
public understanding of national security problems through
the use of civilians of stature, from time to time the
President should appoint on an ad hoc
basis one or more Civilian Consultants or small Civilian
Committees as informal Advisers to the Council. This
mechanism should be so used that no public impression arises
that any persons or committees have been interposed between
the President and his responsible Cabinet Ministers.
Therefore, as a general rule, a Civilian Consultant should
not formally participate in a Council Meeting and a Civilian
Committee should appear at a Council Meeting only when its
report is presented.
- c. Examples of potential usefulness of Civilian
Consultants or Civilian Committees—
- (1)
- to consider and report to the Council on some
specific new proposal or some long-range general
project, after which its report would be reviewed by
the departments and agencies concerned.
- (2)
- to review for the Council some proposal developed
and recommended by the Policy Planning Board.
part iv. council meetings
- 1.
- A regular Council Meeting time should be established and
maintained, except in emergency or when omitted; such as Wednesdays
from 10:30 a.m. until luncheon. Special Council Meetings
[Page 251]
should be called by the
Special Assistant at the request of the President.
- 2.
- The agenda for a Council Meeting should be determined by the
President, acting through the Special Assistant. Selectivity and
discretion must be used in composing the agenda.
- 3.
- Each Statutory and Participant Member and each Adviser should
attend every Council Meeting in person. If substitution is
necessary, the identity of the substitute should be cleared with the
Special Assistant before the Meeting in sufficient time for
Presidential consideration.
- 4.
- If the President is unable to attend a Meeting, he should
designate to preside in his place (in priority): The Vice-President;
the Secretary of State. The Special Assistant never presides.
- 5.
- The President as Chairman should lead the discussion at Council
Meetings. He should exercise that leadership by asking for views
around the table so as to bring out conflicts and so as to create a
sense of team participation among those present in making the policy
which they must later carry out. The Presidential decision may be
announced at a Meeting or upon further consideration of the
recommendations made to him at such Meeting.
- 6.
- Members of the Congress should not be asked to attend meetings of
the National Security Council.
part v. executive officers of the
council
- 1.
- The Special Assistant to the President for National Security
Affairs should be the principal executive officer of the National
Security Council and should serve as Chairman of the Council’s
Planning Board. He should not have status as a Statutory or
Participant Member or preside at Council Meetings. He should be
appointed by the President on the White House Staff and compensated
at $20,000 a year.
- 2.
- There should be an Executive Secretary and a Deputy Executive
Secretary of the National Security Council, appointed by the
President and compensated respectively at $15,000 and $14,000 a
year. Under the supervision of the Special Assistant, the Executive
Secretary should be the head of the NSC Staff, act for the Special Assistant in his
absence, and advise and aid him in the performance of his
duties.
- 3.
- The principal duties of the Special Assistant should include:
- a.
- Determination of agenda for, and presentation of material
for discussion at, Council Meetings.
- b.
- Briefing the President during the afternoon before each
Council Meeting on matters covered by the agenda, assisted
by the Executive Secretary.
- c.
- Determination of agenda and scheduling of work for
Planning Board meetings.
- d.
- Presiding at, and participating in, Planning Board
meetings.
- e.
- Responsibility for the rate of flow of work through the
Planning Board, and the manner of presentation and quality
of such work.
- f.
- Appointment of ad hoc Staff groups
and ad hoc Civilian or Civilian-Staff
committees.
- g.
- Bringing to the attention of the President, with
recommendations for appropriate action, lack of progress on
the part of an agency in carrying out a particular policy
which has been assigned to it; where it is not possible to
expedite performance at the Planning Board level.‡
- h.
- Supervision, through the Executive Secretary, of the work
of the NSC Staff (See Part
VII).
part vi. planning board of the
council
1. At present, the principal body for formulation and transmission of
policy recommendations to the Council is called the “Senior Staff”.
Composed of Members and Advisers from departments and agencies concerned
with national security, it has these functions:
- a.
- To anticipate and identify problems and situations affecting
the security objectives, commitments, and risks of the United
States, and initiate action to provide the required analyses and
draft policy statements for the consideration of the
Council.
- b.
- To facilitate the formulation of policies, during the process
of drafting policy recommendations, by marshaling the resources
of the respective departments and agencies; by identifying the
possible alternatives; by endeavoring to achieve acceptable
agreements; by discussing differences; by avoiding undesirable
compromises which conceal or gloss over real differences; and by
reducing differences to as clearly defined and narrow an area as
possible prior to reference to the Council.
2. The name, “Senior Staff”, should be changed to planning board. This
Board should have the same functions, be strictly limited
[Page 253]
as to membership, and be
composed of persons from these offices:
Members
|
Special Assistant to the President(Chairman) |
|
Department of State |
|
Department of the Treasury |
|
Department of Defense |
|
Director for Mutual Security |
|
Office of Defense Mobilization |
Advisers |
Office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff |
|
Central Intelligence Agency |
|
Psychological Strategy Board |
Staff |
Executive Secretary |
|
Deputy Executive Secretary |
|
Coordinator, Board Assistants |
- a.
- Each Adviser has the full right to have included in any report
sent up to the Council, in his own words, any disagreement on the
part of his department or agency with any part of such
report.
- b.
- Other departments and agencies may be asked by the Board’s
Chairman to attend meetings of the Board on an ad
hoc basis, in accordance with the agenda to be taken up at
a particular meeting.
3. The effective functioning of the Council is directly related to the
calibre of the Planning Board personnel and to the amount of time which
each Member or Adviser devotes to his Planning Board work. To that end,
a Member or Adviser should:
- a.
- be nominated by the head of the department or agency to the
President;
- b.
- be appointed by the President, upon approval by the Special
Assistant; with the title of “Special Assistant to the
(Secretary of State) for NSC
Affairs”;
- c.
- have as his principal responsibility, which overrides all
other duties and with which no other duty can interfere, his
work with the Board, including preparation for and attendance at
meetings; yet at the same time continue to be sufficiently in
the stream of activity of his department or agency so as to be
capable of representing its views;
- d.
- have direct access to and the personal confidence of the head
of his department or agency;
- e.
- have the authority of the head of his department or agency to
utilize its resources to perform his Board function;
- f.
- have an unbreakable engagement to brief the head of his
department or agency before every Council Meeting;
- g.
- have such Assistants as the size and demands of his department
or agency require;
- h.
- have access to a study room at the NSC offices.
4. The Planning Board is assisted in the drafting of papers by the
[Page 254]
Assistants (4[3]–g above), acting under a Coordinator selected
from the NSC Staff.
5. The Special Assistant, as Chairman, should preside at Board Meetings.
He should set the frame of reference and analyze the problem at the
outset. He should lead the discussion in such manner as to bring out the
most active participation by all present and the most expeditious
dispatch of business.
6. In order for the Board properly to function, each Board Member and
Adviser should be prepared promptly to state to the Board the views of
his department or agency as to a report being prepared in its final form
for submission to the Council.
7. Since each Board Member or Adviser must express and stand by his
honest views, those views, if substantial conflicts cannot be fairly
resolved, may never be suppressed or compromised, but should be reported
to the Council.
8. The traffic of ideas to the Board may be either (a) from the Council
downward for study and report back with recommendations, or (b) from any
department or agency, or (c) from any Member or Adviser of the Board.
Good ideas may germinate at any level. It is important that the Board be
constantly made aware of the matters in which the Council is interested
and desires to have worked upon in priority. It is also important that
if an idea germinates other than in a department or agency which is
concerned with the general area, such department or agency should be
consulted in establishing the frame of reference.
9. Papers sent up from the Board to the Council for action, if longer
than a few pages (which may well be necessary for background material)
should be preceded by a summary or the specific recommendations
(referring to numbered paragraphs in the longer text).
part vii. the nsc staff
1. The NSC Staff will continue to perform
the following duties—
- a.
- Furnishing the secretariat for the Council, including the
preparation of the agenda, record of actions and status of
projects, reproducing and distributing papers for the Council,
and maintaining the official Council files.
- b.
- Acting as the official channel of communication for the
Council, including notifying agencies of assignments to carry
out approved policies.
- c.
- Briefing the Vice-President before each Council Meeting on
matters covered by the agenda, and providing him with such other
staff assistance on NSC matters
as he may desire.
- d.
- Matters related to personnel, pay and office
facilities.
- e.
- Preparation of the Budget.
- f.
- The operations of the Reporting Unit.
[Page 255]
2. The present NSC Staff consists of:
- (a) Executive (7)—Executive Secretary,
Deputy Executive Secretary, Administrative Officer, 3
secretaries, 1 chauffeur-messenger
- (b) Internal Security (2)—Internal
Security Officer, 1 secretary
- (c) Registry (8)—Assistant to Executive
Secretary, Administrative Assistant, 6
secretarial-clerical
- (d) Reporting Unit (3)—Assistant
Executive Secretary, 1 Assistant, 1 secretary
- (e) Staff Assistants (3)—Coordinator of
Staff Assistants, Research Assistant, 1 secretary
This total personnel (23) is fully engaged in carrying
on necessary staff work.
3. There has been too great a time-lag between the initiation of a
project and action upon it by the Council. As of February 16, 1953 20
projects were before or on their way up to the Council, after time-lapse
as follows—
Number of Projects |
Pending Final Action
|
3 |
over 20 months |
3 |
over 10 months |
5 |
over 4 months |
1 |
over 2 months |
8 |
less than 1 month |
This time-lag can be reduced by a strengthened Planning
Board, by provision of a directing executive with ready access to the
President, and by adding three Special Staff personnel.
4. The NSC Staff should be strengthened
by the creation of a small Special Staff to assist in performing, among
other, the following duties—
- a.
- independent analysis and review of each Planning Board report
before its submission to the Council by—
- (1)
- examination of all documents (such as intelligence
estimates, JCS papers,
evaluations by theater commanders, etc.) referred to in
the report in order to verify the reference.
- (2)
- examination of the report to determine that it states
the issues comprehensively and clearly; that it develops
the subject logically and presents, as a standard
procedure, the alternative courses of action and the
factors which support and which oppose each alternative;
and that the conclusions reached are meaningful as
operational guidances.
- (3)
- amendment of the report, in conformity with (1) and
(2), before final approval and forwarding by the
Planning Board. If the reviewing function cannot be
completed by a deadline, the report should be forwarded
marked “tentative” and later be fully reviewed before
the subject is considered disposed of.
- b.
- continuous examination of the totality of national security
policies with a view to determining if gaps exist which should
be filled and if important issues or anticipated developments
are sufficiently explored.
- c.
- continuing integrated evaluation of the capabilities of the
free world versus the capabilities of the Soviet and satellites,
and estimates of the situation, in order to bring such
evaluations and estimates before the Council.
- d.
- providing a chairman or member of, or observer with, ad hoc civilian or civilian-staff
committees, and assistance, in recruiting such
committees.
- e.
- keeping currently informed on the status of all national
security programs and seeing that reports and pertinent
information thereon are currently available (thus incorporating
the present functions of the Reporting Unit).
5. a. Members of this Special Staff should be employed (full or
part-time) by the Executive Secretary, subject to the approval of the
Special Assistant. The annual compensation depending upon age and
experience, should be between $6,000 and $14,800.
b. The ideal person for the Special Staff should have intellectual
breadth and acuity, general experience, capacity for work, selflessness,
tact and ability to work with others, rather than any specialized
knowledge in a particular field. It will be desirable that one member of
the special Staff have an experienced background in scientific
problems.
c. The Deputy Executive Secretary should be a member of and supervise the
Special Staff, and be responsible for its assignments, work load, and
functioning.
6. The Internal Security Officer should be provided with a Staff
Assistant, because of his work load and responsibility.
7. The permanent Council Staff, upon carrying into effect the above
recommendations, would consist of 28 persons:
- (a) Executive (6)—Executive Secretary,
Deputy Executive Secretary, Administrative Officer, 1
Administrative Assistant, 1 secretary, 1
chauffeur-messenger
- (b) Internal Security (3)—Internal
Security Officer, 1 Assistant, 1 secretary
- (c) Registry (8)—Assistant to the
Executive Secretary, 1 Administrative Assistant, 6
secretarial-clerical
- (d) Board Assistants (3)—Coordinator of
Board Assistants, Research Assistant, 1 secretary
- (e) Special Staff (8)—3 Staff members,
2 Staff Assistants, 1 Administrative Assistant, 2
secretaries
The above tabulation does not include the Special
Assistant to the President and his secretary, who are members of the
White House Staff.
[Page 257]
8. There should be allocated in the Executive Offices Building space
sufficient to accommodate the personnel described in this report,
including the Special Assistant to the President and his secretary. Such
space should be so located as to be capable of being made a restricted
security area.
[Here follow Part VIII, “Estimated Council Budget” (1 page), and Part IX,
“Summary of Principal Recommendations” (4 pages).]