50. Memorandum From William Odom of the National Security Council Staff to the President’s Assistant for National Security Affairs (Brzezinski)1
Washington,
January 28,
1978
SUBJECT
- Items of Interest from the NMCC Visit2
First, I could not hear all of the conversations but the following points emerged from what I did monitor. I put them down for our record and possible follow-up.
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- The President seems not to have been aware of some of the vulnerabilities of our warning satellites (DSP). This also relates to Soviet laser R and D, as I understood this part of the discussion.
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- Your question about varied Soviet attack strategies raises many questions about our command and control which have concerned me for a long time. The President responded, as I understood him, with a desire to do something about command and control as well as the vulnerability of our warning systems (doing something of course requires a large step over a number of years; it also requires a change in some of our doctrinal assumptions.)
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- Harold Brown seems extremely reluctant either to announce a launch on warning policy or to allow the impression to emerge that we might have such policy. I missed other interlocutors’ responses.
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- I will get you some better information on the operational significance of DEFCON levels.
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- Harold Brown’s mention of changing Soviet strategic doctrine about limiting use of nuclear weapons raises a key issue in which we will possibly see major revisions in the next year or two. The intelligence community has a lot of work yet to be done. [3 lines not declassified] I have the impression that the President’s view on this is taking a rigid shape. He is justified in this view, [less than 1 line not declassified], but it is conceivable that they will change.
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- Your question on the chances of a false warning from the various systems is being researched in the JCS. An answer will be forthcoming shortly. In this connection, I do not believe it was made clear that the DSP systems are not simply waiting for a Soviet launch. They record launches almost everyday, ours, the Soviets, and others world-wide. Thus, we have a vast experience with their reliability and sensitivities.
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- Finally, the “feedback” has been very positive. General Rogers observed that had we had to go to war at this level a few years ago, [Page 227] things would have worked rather poorly. The IVORY ITEM series has altered that situation remarkably.
- Source: Carter Library, National Security Affairs, Brzezinski Material, Agency File, Box 4, Defense Department: 12/77–1/78. Top Secret; Sensitive. Outside the System. Brzezinski initialed the top right corner of the memorandum and wrote “good.”↩
- Reference is to Carter’s visit to the National Military Command Center on January 28. (Carter Library, Presidential Materials, President’s Daily Diary) No record of the meeting was found.↩