Chicago Sun-Times

CIA chief, Highland Park native

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SEATTLE — Stansfield A. Turner, who served as CIA director under President Jimmy Carter and oversaw reforms at the agency after the Senate uncovered CIA surveillan­ce aimed at American citizens, has died. He was 94.

Mr. Turner’s secretary, Pat Moynihan, confirmed to the Washington Post that Mr. Turner died on Thursday at his home in Seattle, but Moynihan did not disclose the cause.

A Rhodes scholar and 33- year Navy veteran, Mr. Turner commanded NATO’s forces in southern Europe from 1975 to 1977 before being chosen to direct the Central Intelligen­ce Agency.

Mr. Turner headed the agency from March 1977, shortly after Carter took office, through the end of Carter’s term in January 1981.

Mr. Turner promised at his Senate confirmati­on hearing to conduct intelligen­ce operations “strictly in accordance with the law and American values.” He also said “covert operations must be handled very discreetly. People’s lives are at stake.”

A day later, the Senate unanimousl­y confirmed his appointmen­t.

As in recent years, questions of how to structure and oversee the nation’s vast military and civilian intelligen­ce operations were a big issue in the 1970s.

The investigat­ion of the CIA in 1975 and ’ 76 by the Senate committee headed by Sen. Frank Church had exposed CIA assassinat­ion plots, including the hiring of Mafia hit men in a failed bid to kill Fidel Castro, as well as CIA surveillan­ce aimed at American citizens.

When Mr. Turner was chosen as CIA director in early 1977, New York Times columnist Tom Wicker wrote that “he’s got a bear by the tail, one that even the most bold and determined director probably can’t control.”

Mr. Turner was the first director given full authority over the agency’s $ 7 billion budget. Assassinat­ions and medical experiment­s on unwitting human subjects were prohibited. But he argued that some proposals aimed at sharing agency informatio­n with Congress went too far, because some opera- tions were too sensitive and the possibilit­y of damaging leaks too great.

Among the events occurring during Mr. Turner’s term was the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979- 81 and the disastrous U. S. attempt to rescue the hostages in April 1980 that left eight U. S. servicemen dead.

In 1982, the by- then- former CIA chief Mr. Turner told The Washington Post that the rescue mission should be investigat­ed, “not to look backward and cast blame but to look forward and learn the lessons that surely lie buried in ( it.)”

After leaving the CIA, Mr. Turner’s positions frequently put him at odds with Carter’s successor, President Ronald Reagan. In 1987, Mr. Turner told reporters Reagan had to have known about the diversion of Iranian arms sale proceeds to Nicaraguan rebels at a time when Reagan said he had no knowledge of the plan.

In his 1985 book, “Secrecy and Democracy,” Mr. Turner said the CIA under the Reagan presidency had violated the law in failing to notify Congress of covert operations “in a timely manner.”

“Our ethical standards in dealing with our Central American neighbors were revealed as not what we would like to believe them to be,” Mr. Turner wrote. “The world saw that we had endangered the lives and property of countries not involved with the dispute between us and Nicaragua, and that we were deliberate­ly interferin­g in the affairs of Nicaragua to the point of undeclared war.”

When President George W. Bush revamped intelligen­ce in 2005, naming a national intelligen­ce director with oversight over all operations, Mr. Turner argued for a more radical overhaul that would combine all intelligen­cegatherin­g under one roof, separate from the analytical function.

Born in north suburban Highland Park in 1923, Mr. Turner was an author, professor and corporate director.

He was in the same 1947 naval class at Annapolis as Jimmy Carter, but the men didn’t know each other. Mr. Turner finished 25th in the class of 820 cadets while the future president finished 59th.

After serving in both the Korean and Vietnam wars, Mr. Turner was appointed president of the Naval War College at Newport, Rhode Island in 1972. He was promoted to the rank of admiral and became commander of NATO’s southern European forces in 1975.

Mr. Turner praised his old boss in 2005 at the ceremony when the huge submarine USS Jimmy Carter officially entered the Navy’s fleet.

He said Carter was a model as “an effective president while also showing the world what the United States stands for in values, in integrity, in morality, in unselfish compassion for others, in the pursuit of peace.”

Mr. Turner’s first marriage to Patricia Busby Whitney ended in divorce in 1984. They had two children, Laurel and Geoffrey. Mr. Turner married Eli Karin Gilbert in 1985. She and three other passengers were killed in 2000 in a Costa Rica plane crash in which Mr. Turner was seriously injured. In 2002, he married Marion Levitt Weiss.

 ?? | AP ( ABOVE); SUN- TIMES LIBRARY ?? CIA Director Stansfield Turner ( above) in 1979 and ( left photo, at right) with Gen. Alexander Haig in 1976. Turner was promoted to commander of NATO’s southern European forces in 1975.
| AP ( ABOVE); SUN- TIMES LIBRARY CIA Director Stansfield Turner ( above) in 1979 and ( left photo, at right) with Gen. Alexander Haig in 1976. Turner was promoted to commander of NATO’s southern European forces in 1975.
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