Orlando Sentinel

Rand president when Pentagon Papers leaked

- By David Colker Tribune Newspapers

Economist and security expert Henry “Harry” Rowen was president of the Rand think tank when it produced the Pentagon Papers, an incendiary study of U.S. involvemen­t in the Vietnam War.

“I’m one of the people who said we should really get a record of this thing which has turned out so badly,” he told the author of a 2010 history, “Rand in Southeast Asia.”

The comprehens­ive study was top secret. But in 1971, Rowen’s close friend and protege Daniel Ellsberg leaked it to The New York Times. After publicatio­n of portions of the study triggered an internatio­nal outcry against U.S. policies, Rowen resigned from Rand.

To this day, Ellsberg regrets how his actions affected Rowen.

“He was the closest friend I ever had,” Ellsberg said in an interview this week. “I loved him like a brother.

“All I could do was keep him from having any hint of what I was up to, so he could say honestly he had no idea of it at all.”

Rowen, 90, who had a six-decade career as a policymake­r and educator, died Nov. 12 near Stanford University, where he was a longtime instructor. He collapsed in a parking lot while on his way to an event, said his son Chris Rowen. The cause is believed to have been a heart attack.

A key player in forming military strategies during the Cold War, Rowen began working at Santa Monica, Calif.-based Rand Corp. in the early 1950s. From its founding in 1948, the institutio­n has been heavily involved in advising the U.S. military.

“Rand was a very exciting place,” Rowen said at a 2008 symposium at the University of California, Berkeley. “It had quite a lot of talent there in many of the relevant discipline­s.”

Rand helped the government fill gaps in nuclear policies that were “really kind of remarkable in hindsight,” he said. He cited a plan by the Strategic Air Command for bombers approachin­g the Soviet Union to continue toward their targets unless called back by radio messages.

“We said this was a really bad idea. Radio is not that reliable,” Rowen said. The policy was reversed so that bombers would return to their bases “unless they get a signal to go ahead.”

In 1960, Rowen became a research associate at the Harvard Center for Internatio­nal Affairs. The next year he was appointed deputy assistant secretary of defense for internatio­nal security affairs. He also served as assistant director of the U.S. Bureau of the Budget.

In 1967, he returned to Rand as its president. During his tenure he establishe­d a graduate school associated with the think tank and expanded the institutio­n’s ventures into advising on nonmilitar­y, domestic policies.

Ellsberg was a systems analyst at Rand. “Harry was a brilliant guy,” Ellsberg said. “A lot of people found him brusque or cool, but not with me.”

Ellsberg said he disclosed the Pentagon Papers in an attempt to shorten U.S. involvemen­t in the war. He was tried on charges of theft and espionage, but all charges against him and fellow Rand researcher Anthony Russo were dismissed.

“The greatest cost in my life with the Pentagon Papers,” Ellsberg said, “was the loss of that friendship (with Rowen) and the thought that I was going to harm my friend in his profession­al life.”

Rowen resigned from Rand in 1972. “Maintainin­g vitality in institutio­ns and in people is brought about by change. Rand and I are no exception,” he said in 2005.

Henry Stanislaus Rowen was born in Boston on Oct. 25, 1925. He earned a bachelor’s degree in engineerin­g from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology and later studied economics at Oxford.

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