MONTHLY MEETING WITH SENATORS BOREN AND COHEN, 27 JUY 88

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CIA-RDP89G01321R000600130004-9
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July 27, 1988
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02 CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 RETURN TO DCI MEETING WITH BOREN/ COHEN,- 27-JUL 88, Fld # 135. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02 CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Next 53 Page(s) In Document Denied Iq Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 5 'larch 1989 P. 18R Pentagon, Toshiba deny `chip' charges WASHINGTON (AP) - Toshiba Corp. of Japan illy sold comput- er technology tote Soviet bloc. a lawmaker said yesterday, but Penta- gon officials and Toshiba spokesmen called the charges untrue. 'A wide variety of available evi- dence shows that within the last seven years Toshiba Corp. and other Japanese firms have been heavily involved in Illegally enhancing the micro-electronic capability of War- saw Pact nations.' Representative Duncan L. Hunter. R-Calif.. said through an aide. The issue could affect pending trade legislation restricting the sale of Toshiba products in the United States for two to five years, a ban congressional aides said could cost the company 820 billion In sales. Congressional sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said U.S. intelligence analysts prepared secret reports that said Toshiba: O sold Czechoslovakia a com- plete factory In 1979 to make com- puter chips, In a deal of questionable legality; O sold East Germany a more ad- vanced computer-chip assembly line In 1986. in a deal of clear illegality: O negotiated an illegal deal for a second assembly line in East Ger- many in 1987. In public discussion of the classl- fled Intelligence reports, the deals have been labeled Toshiba 2. Toshi- ba 3 and Toshiba 4. Toshiba I refers to the admission by Toshiba six months ago that a unit had sold the Soviet Union tools for making quiet submarine propel- lers, making it harder for the U.S. military to detect Soviet submarines. U.S. intelligence learned of Toshi- ba 4, the second deal with East Ger- many. protested it through diplomat- ic channels and managed to kill it before the technology was delivered. according to congressional sources. Defense Department officials said they did not have enough evidence to prove that any of the deals went through. 'The information that we have is that we feel these actions. Toshiba 2. 3 and 4. hav not oc- c6rred.' said a Pentagon~6pokes- man, Army Col. Arnold Williams. David i-louilhan. an attorney rep- resenting Toshiba. said the alleged .sales either were legal or had not taken place. Mr. Houlihan said Toshiba 2 was a legal sale of which the U.S. govern- ment was aware: Toshiba 3 'never occurred' and Toshiba 4 involved a proposed deal that was canceled af- ter disclosure of the submarine pro- peller sale. A secot%d Pentagon source. who was familiar with the intelligence re- ports. said the CIA had collected 'ru- mors and allegations' which turned out to be unsubstantiated. rado'a breath.' the source said 'the"re `i5 no evidence. If there were evidence, we would pursue this.' said the source, who deals with technology transfers to the So- viet bloc. Within the next two weeks, a conference committee of 20 repre- sentatives and seven senators are to complete work on a trade bill that would restrict the sale of Toshiba products in the United States. The Senate version of bill, pushed by Sen. Edwin 'Jake' Garn. R- Utah., would bar the sale of any products made by the Toshiba Corp. for two to five years. as punishment for the sale of the submarine tech- nology. Toshiba has sales of between $3 billion and S4 billion annually In the United States, meaning that the ban could cost it $20 billion in sales. The House passed a trade bill that contained no sanctions against Toshiba. House and Senate conferees are due to sit down within the next two weeks to resolve their differences over the sanctions. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Next 18 Page(s) In Document Denied Iq Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 7, STAT STAT ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET SUBJECT: (Optional) Monthly Meeting with Senators Boren and Cohen 27 July 88 5:00 PM FRO EXTENSI N NO. OCA 88-2294 Ac g Director of Congressional Affairs DATE 2 6 JUL 1988 TO: (Officer designation, room number, and building) DATE OFFICER'S COMMENTS (Number each comment to show from whom RECEIVED FORWARDED INITIALS to whom. Draw a line across column after each comment.) 1 2 s UL 198 Executive Registry 2. 3. Executive Director 4. 5. Deputy Director of Central Intelligence 6. 7. Director of Q Central Intelligence 8. 9. Return to D/0CA 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. DC! EXI C 15. R,G FORM 61 O USE PREVIOUS 1_79 EDITIONS Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 OCA 88-2294 26 July 1988 Acting Director of Congressional Affairs SUBJECT: Your meeting with Senators Boren and Cohen 1. On Wednesday, 27 July at 5:00 PM you are scheduled to have your regular monthly meeting with Senators Boren and Cohen. Sven Holmes and Jim Dykstra probably will be present. The new staff director-designate George Tenet may also attend. The date he will take over for Holmes is still up in the air. 2. While you were in Europe Senator Boren was hospitalized for several days for treatment of a very serious infection. The infection apparently originated with an abscessed tooth. You may want to express sympathy. 4. You might want to brief the Senators on the highlights of your recent trip to Europe. 5. Senator Boren has written to you transmitting a letter from Senator Proxmire in which the latter complains about the lack of unclassified information on arms transfers. Senator Boren requested that this issue be discussed at your next meeting with him. A copy of his letter and talking points are attached. 7. Russ Bruemmer recommends you raise the attached issue concerning discovery issues in the Iran-Contra prosecution. 8. I suggest you discuss also the following subjects for which talking points are attached: Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 11. The Committee staff is aware that our officers were surprised and uncomfortable recently to be asked to testify under oath. Staff assures us that this will not be a regular practice. If the Senators raise the subject, I suggest you draw on the attached talking points. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied Iq Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 DAVID L BOREN, OKLAHOMA. CHAIRMAN WILLIAM S. COHEN, MAINE. VICE CHAIRMAN LLOYD BENTSEN, TEXAS WILLIAM V. ROTH, JR., DELAWARE SAM FN GEORGIA ORRIN HATCH, UTAH ERN EST ST F. HOLLINGS, SOUTH CAROLINA FRANK MURKOWSKI, ALASKA BILL BRADLEY, NEW JERSEY CRT, SPECTER, PENNSYLVANIA ALAN CRANSTON. CALIFORNIA ICHIC NEVADA OENN S OCCO I OECONCI CINI, ARIZONA JOHN WARNER. VIRGINIA "United tat`N mate HOWARD M. METZENBAUM. OHIO ROBERT C. BYRD, WEST VIRGINIA. EX OFFICIO ROBERT DOLE, KANSAS, EX OFFICIO SVEN E. HOLMES. STAFF DIRECTOR AND GENERAL COUNSEL JAMES H. OYKSTRA. MINORITY STAFF DIRECTOR KATHLEEN P. MCGHEE, CHIEF CLERK SELECT COMMITTEE ON INTELLIGENCE WASHINGTON, DC 20610-0476 July 1, 1988 The Honorable William H. Webster Director of Central Intelligence Central Intelligence Agency Washington, D.C. Dear Judge Webster: Enclosed please find a copy of a letter from Senator William Proxmire regarding information with respect to world arms transfers. It would be my hope that we could discuss this matter at our next scheduled meeting. Thank you for your consideration. David L. Boren Chairman Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 A WILLIAM PROXMIRE WISCONSIN 'United oi5tatez senate WASHINGTON, DC 20510 June 13, 1988 The Honorable David Boren, Chairman Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Washington, D.C. 20510 The Honorable Louis Stokes, Chairman House Permanent Select Commmittee on Intelligence Washington, D.C. 20515 Dear David and Lou: On June 9, I gave a speech on the Senate floor on the subject of arms transfers to developing nations. The idea for the speech grew out of a Memorial Day column in the New York Times by James Reston in which he cited a report that stated that the world was engaged in 25 wars in 1987. Most of these conflicts took place in underdeveloped parts of the world. In preparation for that speech I sought information detailing the value of the arms exported to these nations at war and the countries that were the main suppliers of these arms. I consulted the annual Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA) publication on this issue, titled World Military Expenditures and Arms Transfers 1987, but I was unable to find this information. In fact, the most detailed breakdown of nation-to-nation arms transfers was a table that cumulatively covered the period 1982- 1986, but it did not even include all the arms exporting nations. I contacted ACDA to get some answers but much to my surprise, I was told that this type of detailed information was classified and unavailable to the public. Consequently, I was forced to use aggregate figures that detailed the value of the arms transfers from the communist and non-communist world to various regions of the world for the ten-year period of 1977-1986. I question the decision to keep classified this important information. I propose that the U.S. declassify a list of all the world's arms exports to countries at war. I believe that this would provide the basis for negotiations with the Soviets on limiting or eliminating the export of arms to nations at war. It also would provide a year-by-year public record of' the major arms exporting and importing nations, and the types of arms being transfered. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Page 2 I am interested in the reasons that the U.S. government cites for keeping this detailed arms transfer information classified. I would like to see ACDA publish a yearly report citing the total arms exports of all nations, the recipient nations of these shipments, and the types of weapons transferred. As Chairmen of the Senate and House Intelligence Committees, could you inquire of the administration the justification for classifying this detailed information on global arms transfers and relay to me their response? With best wishes, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Senate The Senate met at 9:30 a.m., on the expiration of the recess, and was called to order by the Honorable JOHN BREAuX9 a Senator from the State of Louisiana. PRAYER The Chaplain, the Reverend Rich- ard C. Halverson. D.D., offered the fol- lowing prayer. Let us pray: Blessed is the nation whose Cod is the Lord ? ? !-Psalm 33:12. Eternal God, Just and holy in all Thy ways, thank You that our Pound- ing Fathers took seriously the words of the psalmist-that nation is blessed whose God Is the Lord. The profes- sional athlete calls It fundamentals-'' the sociologist calls It roots-but by whatever name it is Indispensable to self-understanding, self-worth and dig- nity, self-realization and progress, per- sonally and collectively. Our Founding Fathers debated long and hard as to the relation between church and state-but whatever their views, they believed earnestly that virtue and faith in God were indissoluble. They crafted our political system in the con- viction that a Creator God endowed human rights, which are inalienable- and to secure which is the mandate of a government which receives its power from the consent of the governed. Help us, Righteous Father, to see that at the heart of present frustration with imponderable social evil is discon- nection from our spiritual/moral roots-that to return to these funda- mentals which guided and nurtured our unprecedented blessing as a nation is essential to our preservation. Hear us and awaken us, 0 Lord, our God. Amen. APPOINTMENT OF ACTING PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will please read a communication to the Senate from the President pro tempore (Mr. STENNts]. The legislative clerk read the follow- ing letter. U.S. SENATZ, PRESIDENT PRO Tf- 5PORg, Washington, DC, June 9, 1988. To the Senate: Under the provisions of rule I, section 3. of the Standing Rules of the Sarate. I hereby appoint the Honorable JeuN THUILsnAY, JUNE 9, 1983 (Legislative day of Wednesday, June 8,19881 BRZaux, a Senator from the State of Louisi- ana, to perform the duties of the Chair. JOHN C. STMMIS. President pro tentpore. Mr. BREAUX thereupon assumed the chair as Acting President pro tem- pore. RECOGNITION OF THE MAJORITY LEADER The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Under the standing order, the majority leader is recognized. Mr. BYRD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that my time be reserved until later. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Without objection, it is so or- dered. RECOGNITION OF THE REPUBLICAN LEADER The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Under the standing order the Republican leader is now recognized. Mr. DOLE. I make the same request. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Without objection, it is so or- dered. MORNING BUSINESS The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tem- pore. Under the previous order there will now be a period of morning busi- ness not to extend beyond the hour of 10 am. with Senators permitted to speak therein for not to exceed 5 min- utes each. The Chair recognizes the Senator fro vvisconsin, Mr. PRoxMrRz. OUR MOST DISGRACEFUL FED- ERAL WASTE: ARMS TO DEVEL- OPING COUNTRIES Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, re- cently, senior New York Times colum- nist James Reston observed a chilling fact. On last Memorial Day, when many of us were speaking in our home States about the blessings of peace, much of the world was engaged in deadly and heartbreaking wars. How many wars were going on last year? Answer. 25. That is the report of a Washington research Institute called World Priorities. Reston reports that Ruth Leger Sivard, who signed the report, asserts that more wars were fought In 1987 than in any previous year on record. Of course, practically all of these 25 wars are still going on. Already, World Priorities estimates that 3 million people-15 percent of them civilians-have died in these wars. It also estimates that in all the wars since the end of World War II in 1945, the death total exceeds 17 mil- lion. This wholesale and largely senseless killing has been going on in Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. The location of these wars tells us something. North America has been spared this bloodshed. So has Europe. The killing, the tratmra, the misery of war has been entirely imposed on the people of -the underdeveloped world. But the efficient, deadly weapons to fight many of these wars came from the United States and the Soviet Union, from France and Poland. from West Germany and Czechoslovakia. Much of the cost of these weapons was extracted from the already impover- ished developing countries and all of the profits from fabricating these weapons of death went to developed countries like the United States and the Soviet Union. The huge war casualties measure only a part of the misery imposed on these countries. People in these devel- oping countries are desperate for cap- ital. They suffer grossly Inadequate housing. Many are literally starving. Most are able to afford only the most rudimentary kind of health care. For them, war has been especially cruel. War has taken from these people much of the pathetically limited re- sources they so urgently need to scrape a bare living from the soil. War' has brought widespread burning of their homes. It has brought the killing of their livestock. War has directed the energies of their youngest and strongest manpower from constructive work to killing- equally poor and miser- able neighbors. So what can we do about this gro- tesque situation? Reston proposes as a starter that the major nations that dominate world communications pub- lish an annual tally of those who have been killed in war in the preceding year. This is a wise beginning. I pro- pose that we go further- I propose that the United States declassify a list of all the world's arms exports to countries at war. We should report this along with a record of the number of human beings killed in each war Lt the preceding year. ? This "bullet" symbol identifies statements or insertions which are not spoken by a Nlember of the Senate on the floor. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02 : CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 S 7460 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE June 9, 1958 On the basis of this kind of data, the United States would provide the basis for public and congressional as well as administration support for negotia- tions with the Soviet Union and other major arms exporters to stop export of arms on all sides. We should strive for a mutally agreed elimination or limita- tion on arms exports to countries at war. Obviously, much of our export business is based on the fear or suspi- cion that the warring side we oppose in Central America or Africa is receiv- ing heavy arms shipments from the Soviet Union. Similarly, much of the Soviet shipment of arms to warring nations is based on a reciprocal fear that if they do not get there first, the United States or other NATO coun- tries will. Just possibly, with the new sensitivity in the Soviet Union to the public advantage in promoting peace, an intense campaign by this country could help remove Soviet weapons from Cuba' and Nicaragua as we remove American weapons from the Contras. In Angola, we could press for the evacuation of the 35,000 Cuban troops now serving there and the mas- sive Soviet weaponry in return for our ending the arming of the Angolan rebel Savimbi. Mr. President, the cost of the lethal weapons that have poured into devel- oping countries to provide the Instru- ments of death is appalling. In the 10 years from 1977 thru 1986. according to data provided to me by the State Department. the United States and other non-Communist countries have shipped $140.1 billion in weapons into developing countries! The Soviet Union and its Communist allies have pumped in even more, a grim total of $167.5 billion in weapons of war. The non-Communist world has pro- vided in this 10-year period $13.3 bil- lion in weapons of war to Latin Amer- ica, with the United States accounting for a surprisingly small percentage of that amount-$2.3 billion. Both West Germany and France provided more than the United States in the 10 years from 1977 through 1988. The Commu- nist nations moved even more weapons into Latin America than the free world-providing $14.9 billion worth, with nearly 90 percent of that, or $13.2 billion, coming from the Soviet Union. In East Asia, the impoverished but warring developing countries received $23 billion of war materials from the non-Communist countries, including more than two-thirds of that sum from the United States-a total of $18.8 billion. The Communist coun- tries shipped $19.3 billion of weapons and ammunition into developing coun- tries of East Asia with more than 90 percent. $18.4 billion, coming from the Soviet Union. In Africa, the Communist countries really swamped the impoverished war- ring nations with $44.5 billion of mili- tary weapons, a total of $37.4 billion, or 80 percent, came from the Soviet Union. while the free world provided far less-$17.3 billion of military weap- ons. A total of $2.2 billion or less than 15 percent came from the United States. In that terrible cauldron of death and violence-the Middle. East-the free world poured almost $77 billion of military weapons, of which $28.4 bil- lion. or about one-third, came from the United States. The Communist world shipped $67.9 billion of military weapons into the violent Middle East with about 75 percent or $51.2 billion coming from the Soviet Union. Mr. President, altogether, this is an unsurpassed monument to mankind's revolting stupidity. In the name of communism and the brotherhood of the world's workers, the Communist countries, led by the Soviet Union, are depressing the living standards of their own countries by diverting their limited resources to the 25 or so wars that bedevil the poorest people on Earth. And, in the name of freedom. we are nearly matching this disgrace- ful performance during a fiscal year crisis that cries out for us to cut all spending, and certainly, to cut spend- ing to cIU more impoverished people. Does anyone really believe that this flood of deadly weapons will truly ad- vance either brotherhood or freedom? Mr. President, I ask unanimous con- sent that the column to which I re- ferred by James Reston from the New York Times be printed at this point in the RECORD. There being no objection. the article was ordered to be printed in the RECORD, as follows: 25 WARS Aaz STIu. GOING ON (By James Reston) WAsxnw ox.-On Memorial Day, or, as the British call it, Remembrance Day, there were many solemn tributes to the dead of past wars. But what we forgot to remember is that in the real world, below the summit meeting, 25 wars are still going on. That's not a typographical error. 25 Is the number, as tabulated by a Washington re- search institute called World Priorities. Ruth Leger Sivard, who signed the study, concedes the difficulty of getting an accu- rate casualty toll in these wars, but she esti- mates that they have already taken the lives of three million people, four-fifths of them civilians. She also noted the following: "The United States and the Soviet Union together spend about $1.5 billion a day on military de- fense.... The developing countries spend almost four times as much on arms as on health care of their people. Yet 20 percent of their children the before their fifth birth- day." She went on: "To protect Kuwaiti oil tankers in the Persian Gulf costs the United States Navy an extra $365 million a year above normal operating costs." More wars, she said, were fought In 1987 than in any previous year on record. uprisings have taken fewer than 1,000 lives a year. as in Israel.) Africa-Angola and Namibia, 213.000 since 1975. In addition, the Angolan war is linked to a smaller conflict in which 5,000 people have been killed In the south West Africa People's Organization fight to expel South African troops from Namiba: Chad, 7,000 since 1980: Ethiopia. 500.000 by war and re- lated famine since 1980: Western Sahara. 10,000 since 1975: Mozambique, 400.000 since 1981 (plus 850,000 more refugees). Also In Africa-South Africa, 4,000 since 1985; the Sudan, 10.000 since 1984, and Uganda, 102,000 since 1981. Asia-Afghanistan, 14.000 So%ict troops and 85,000 Afghans since 1979: Burma, 2.000 since 1985; separatist violence in India, 5,000 since 1984; Indonesia (there are no reliable estimates In the fighting over East Timor): Cambodia, 24.000 since 1979; Laos and Viet- nam. 30,000 since 1970: the Philippines. 60.000 since 1970, and Sri Lanka, 6,000 since 1984. This study estimates that over all, since the end of World War II in 1945, the death total In all wars, rebellions and uprisings of various sorts have taken the lives of 17 mil- lion people, about half the deaths of the last world conflict. The Economist of London, commenting on this study, notes that, outside the Persian Gulf war, all wars between nations have dis- appeared. The magazine also notes progress In the present evacuation of Soviet troops from Afghanistan and the United States- Soviet efforts to reduce atomic weapons. The World Priorities study said: "Present nuclear arsenals, scattered worldwide. alone represent over 28,000 times the explosive force of all armaments used in World War II." But there are other. problems. Many of the present wars are fueled by the Unite? States, the Soviet Union and other industri al nations, and the technology to producE nuclear weapons continues to spread. Also, the news of the present wars is limit ed by indifference, censorship, as in the Iraq-Iran conflict, and unwillingness on the part of the major governments to share what information they have on these w,-r. with the public. To a large extent, therefore, these arf "the forgotten wars," neglected even ,b,, those countries that preach the preclou: value of every human life. Much was said at the Reagan-Gorbache% summit conference in Moscow about avoid Ing future nuclear wars, but little If any thing about trying to end present war` fought with everything from clubs arc stones to poison gas. Or even about reducing the flow of military weapons to the combat ants. At least, the major nations that domina:( the communications of the world could pub lish an annual tally of the world's dead. As it is now, if a war is not on television. it's not happening. Mr. PROXMIRE. Mr. President, suggest the absence of a quorum an( yield the floor. The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tern pore. The clerk will call the roll. The legislative clerk proceeded t( call the roll. Her catalogue of present wars follows: Mr. REID. Mr. President, I as, Latin America-Colombia, about 1.000 unanimous consent that the order fa deaths a year since 1958: El Salvador. 65.000 the quorum call be rescinded. deaths since 1979: Guatemala, 138,000 since The ACTING PRESIDENT pro ten- 1966; Nicaragua, 30,000 since 1981, and Peru. 10.000 since 1981. pore. Without objection, it is so c: The Middle East-Iran-Iraq. 377,000 lives dered. in eight years: Lebanon. 52.000 since 1982. The Chair recognizes the Senate (The study does not include countries where from Nevada, Senator REID. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9 Iq Next 11 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/02: CIA-RDP89G01321 R000600130004-9