Entrevista Richard Helms
Entrevista Richard Helms
Entrevista Richard Helms
t,
by Robert M. Hathaway
15 June 1983
Washington, DC
FINAL DRAFT
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straighten that out, he is in town here too; at least I
see him on the street all the time. Have you talked to
him? It might be useful to talk to1 I
Anyway, it was following that meeting that President Nixon
called the meeting that was attended by Attorney General
Mitchell, Henry Kissinger, the meeting in which President
Nixon decided that we should develop what turned out to be
the Track I1 program. A meeting in which I made some
notes on a yellow pad while we were meeting with the
President. Those notes later were taken out of my
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personal files and presented not only to the Rockefeller
Commission, I think, but also to the Senate [Church]
Committee. I've never liked that. Nobody asked my
permission to do it, and it was among a lot, not a lot but
a tidy number of documents that had been my, sort of my
personal property, and when I left the Agency I left them
in the Agency's custody but sort of in my name, because
some of them were classified and I didn't want to remove
them from the Agency and not have them properly
protected. So I would have thought that courtesy dictated
that I'd be told that somebody had gone through them and
had turned them over to various people who were
investigating these matters.
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do you remember specifically things that were talked
about? Was it Edwards giving you information for the most
part, his assessment?
A: Yes, I was there really to hear,what Edwards had to say,
and it was quite clear that Kendall was backing him up,
that he had been the moving force in setting up the
meeting. The trouble is that so many years have gone by -
and there's been so much testimony and the air has been
blue with allegations and charges of one sort and another
that I no longer remember the specifics of any
conversation [in] which I participated at that time, and
it's sad because it would be nice if it was good and clear
in my mind. I did have the impression though that, there
were some things said at that meeting that later, I
believe, Kendall denied ever having said or been involved
in or something but--
Q: This would have been testimony for the Senate?
A: Probably. In any event we're not here to decide who
perjured themselves and who didn't, but I unfortunately
can't remember the details of that meeting any more.
Q: Did you meet with Edwards other times during this fall?
A: I don't recall having done so.
Q: What about Kendall? Did you see Kendall often in relation
to, or more than this one time, in relation to Chile?
A: Yes. Well, once in a while I would see Kendall. I'd see
Kendall at the Business Council meetings, f o r example,
twice a year down at Hot Springs. Once in a while I would
see him at the White House. So I saw Kendall off and on.
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Not necessarily on any specific business, but I would
physically see him, since you asked me.
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we can. He is very interested in this Chile matter and
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business down there and Agustin Edwards and so forth, and
we ought to really try to help." That was Kendall's
connection with Chile.
Q: What about John McCone? I believe you saw John McCone a
number of times in the summer and fall of 1970 about
Chile. Can you describe--
A: Well, he would call. He kept himself as a consultant to
the Agency and I had no reason to change his status. He'd
been consultant under Admiral Raborn. He used to come in
from time to time and talk about the fact that we ought to
be on the ball about Chile and we ought to be pushing to
see that Allende didn't get elected and so forth. In
other words, as a director of ITT, McCone was thoroughly
versed in the problems of Chile. He didn't want to see
ITT's interest down there hurt, and besides he was aware
of what had happened during the Kennedy administration
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when actually we had had a very successful covert action
program going in Chile, which saw to it that Frei became
the president. I think that he, McCone, was rather hoping
or expecting it would be a rerun of that operation.
Unfortunately, this time the administration decided too
late- that
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they wanted to prevent Allende's advent. The
Agency, including myself, had tried a year earlier to
impress upon Kissinger the fact that if anything was going
to be done about the election in Chile, we'd have to have
plenty of lead time in order to get the assets in place
and to do the necessary things to become effective in any
political campaign. He frankly didn't take the matter
seriously until much too late. He's admitted this. I
think the record's clear that he made a mistake.
0: To what degree was McCone privy as to American actions, or
Agency activity in Chile?
A: I don't know but I don't think he was privy to the
details. If he was, he didn't get them from the Agency.
Q: But he was dismayed, then, at what he perceived as a lack
of effort, extensive efforts to work against Allende?
A: McCone was a hard man to dismay but he kept pushing--let's
put it that way.
particular candidate?
A: Not particularly, no. I think you can split hairs, you
can argue and debate about matters of that kind, but as I
sit here, I don't recall this having been an issue that
crossed in front of my vision: that I T T had their own
candidates and were using the Agency to get money to
them. Now it may have been, I'm not denying it, Bob, for
a moment. I just don't remember. This is something that
Halpern and1 land people like that can help out
with. If you are writing a history of this period, you
obviously want to try to get it as accurate as possible,
and I have no interest in tilting it one way or the other.
I'm interested in having it show what was there.
Q: I understand. And this brings up a problem we've got.
We've not so much interested in writing the full history
a
possible to really have any, let's say, major or
significant effect on the outcome of the election.
for.
A: He was not easy.
of that?
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meeting?
A: Well, it seems to me that I came back to the Agency and
had a meeting with some of the people there, and I believe
notes were made of that meeting, but I didn't make them.
Q: I've seen notes of those meetings. I wondered if you
recalled making a memorandum of your meeting at the White
House.
A: No, I don't think so. I think I just reported orally.
Q: After that 15 September meeting, what other guidance did
you get from the White House about Chile?
A: I don't know that I got any other guidance, At least I
don't recall any, I believe that at the time I put Tom
Karamessines in charge of attempting to carry out this
Track I1 approach, He and Kissinger were to deal with
each other--in other words, to keep the security of the
operation, to keep it from getting all over the place.
Karamessines and Kissinger were to deal on whatever basis
was necessary in order to get whatever guidance was
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required or to report as desirable or whatever the case
might be, and I rather stood aside from the thing at the
moment so that I wouldn't get the lines all crossed up. I
thought it was better to have Karamessines, who was
running it, in touch with Kissinger, rather than going
through me, which simply complicated the business.
. " Q: Do you recall going back to the White House at all on
Chile?
' . A: I may have on some occasion or other mentioned to either.-- V, .$I .r
the President or Kissinger that we had done this oratthat, .jb:L f,z:J. 1,
A: That may well be. Maybe that was when we were setting up
the whole approach to this thing, and getting an agreement
that Karamessines and Kissinger would work together.
0: Other than that I don't have any other. ... You left
the country for several weeks, of course. You went to the
Far East, in October, and I think you were gone for two
weeks, or slightly more than two weeks.
A: Is that the time I went to the Far East?
Q: Yes, So this again gets back to the problem I mentioned
earlier: what was Richard Helms's role in all of this?
Because we're not interested in writing the history of
Chile; we're interested in writing the history of Richard
Helms. Given the fact that you did tend to turn over
day-to-day operations to your deputies, given the fact
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that you were out of the country, how would you answer
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A: Everybody, we were under pressure from the White House,
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problems setting up channels so that these people would
the time involved that you all were not very optimistic.
A: Correct. As a matter of fact, I thought there was very
little possibility from the very time we were asked to do
it. But since it was a Presidential order, I thought it
was incumbent upon us to do the best we could to fulfill
the order.
Q: I want to throw out two hypothetical propositions simply
to get your reactions. The first is, that Richard Helms
recognized that this probably was going to be a losing
proposition and therefore deliberately distanced himself
from it, not taking a day-to-day interest, delegating
responsibility. How do you react?
A: You sound like some young lawyer on the Senate
Committee.(laughter)
la
0: Well, I don't, I consider that an insult because I don't
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mission. This is what we came up with. Whether it was
good or bad judgment, it was the best we could do.
Q: Had you had dealings with Phillips in the past?
A: I knew him, He seemed like a steady officer that could
possibly bring off something like this. At least he'd
give it a good shot.
Q: What about your relationship with--and again, this may be
below your level, I don't know. It seems that the Agency
established a particularly or unusually close working
relationship with the military attache in Santiago, A man
by the name of Col. Wimert. Are you familiar. . ,?
A: I don't remember why. B u t l l c o m e s down here
every once and awhile, doesn't he, from Princeton? I saw
him at a lunch not long ago. He could tell you all these
things very easily. Or call him on the telephone and talk
to him. You could get that kind of thing just by raising
the phone, But I don't recall why they were in touch with
him or what exactly, I don't remember anymore what role
specifically he played,
You know this Chile thing, in my opinion, has now been
blown out of all proportion. It has been blown out of all
proportion by Nixon and Kissinger's mistake of not getting
into the thing in time. But the Hersh book about
Kissinger, the allegations that Kissinger lied about
Chile, all of this business has got that Chile thing now
in letters of light on the wall, and it doesn't deserve to
be there in the context of what was going on at the time,
life on this globe, our problems with Vietnam, and all the
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other things that were going on. It is just amazing to me
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A: Well, if there was any conflict, it would have been static
Agency?
A: No, not that I'm aware of.
Q: No impact of the Agency standing in the White House?
A: What do you mean? We've been over this. Because the
Agency's standing with Nixon was never very good, never
has been very good. It starts back at the time of his
campaign against Kennedy when there was something called
the "missile gap." Nixon held at that time that he was
defeated by Kennedy because the Agency came upIw,it$ a - n - < . I 1 , U C . 7 t ,\
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said a moment ago, an uphill battle with him all the time, ...,
and so Chile may have been one more nail in the Agency's
coffin, if you like, but it wasn't all that significant or
important in terms of his feeling of the Agency's adequacy
or inadequacy. So anybody that focuses on Chile and gets
that all out of perspective as being something that really
upset Nixon should have a look at a whole lot of these
other things that already upset him, or were upsetting
him, or were going to upset him.
Q: You mentioned before about lessons. You suggested t h a t r 1 .. 'ff+ .--I, )7,
Q: Not much.
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A: I just told you that those were decisions that I could
Q: Fair enough.
A: I would like to have seen it succeed, obviously. Nobody
likes to be involved in something that loses or is a .-I j T . .
failure. This is something that you have to either get
used to and accept, particularly in covert action
operations, or you just will find yourself a very unhappy
human being because you can't win them all,
Q: Is there anything I should have asked you before we cut
this off? I;
Q: Fair enough.
.End of Interview
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