NEW TWISTS IN THE PLOT TO KILL THE POPE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000505140004-4
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 3, 2011
Sequence Number: 
4
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 7, 1983
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000505140004-4.pdf64.57 KB
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Approved For Release 2011/05/03: CIA-RDP90-00552R000505140004-4 ARTICLE APPEARW O PAGE 3 ITALY New Twists in the Plot to Kill the Pope As Italy presses the Bulgarian connec- tion in the plot to kill the pope, the Reagan administration is keeping mum. In Wash- ington, officials continued to warn journal- ists not to jump to conclusions, based on circumstantial evidence, that Yuri Andro- pov's KGB masterminded the affair. From Rome, NBC complained that the CIA was doing more than that: actively discouraging journalists from pursuing leads in the case. Whether that was true or not the adminis- tration had a problem on its hands. If the Italians make their case, the ensuing out- rage would convulse East-West relations and might scuttle any arms-control talks. Ronald Reagan's reticence to speak out on the case has left the Italian government feeling a little isolated. Still, nothing seems NEWSWEEK 7 FEBRUARY 1983 to have stalled the probe itself. Sources close to the investigation say that Musar Cedar Celebi, a Turk who was extradited earlier this month from West Germany by the Italians, has now admitted that he met Mehmet Ali Agca several times in Europe and gave Agca money some time before the shooting. Agca claims that Celebi was his go-between with the Bulgarians in the plot. Celebi counters that he gave money to Agca just to help out a fellow countryman fallen on hard times. Turks in Rome find Celebi's explanation unconvincing because Agca was well known in the community as an escaped terrorist. Said one Turkish source: darity leader. Giuseppe Consolo, Antonov's lawyer, calls that charge "incredible" and insists that "as Agca's position becomes weaker, anew absurd story comes along." The Bulgarian government, meanwhile, has launched a public-relations campaign of its own. In Sofia, The New York Times interviewed some of the prime suspects in thecase: two former employees of the Bul- garian embassy in Rome-Todor Aivazov and Maj. Zhelyu Vasilev-and a Turkish businessman and reputed drug-smuggler- Bekir Celenk. Predictably, all protested their innocence. "Do you really think I look like a conspirator of murder?" asked a jovial "Why would he give money to Agca? Ev- Aivazov. The suspects were in no danger of eryone knew who he was." j extradition. In Rome, Antonov, a Bulgar- In another development, NBC News re- I ian airline official, stayed in jail.. Magis- ported that some ofthe samecharacters may trate Ilario Martella, who heads the Ital- have plotted to kill Lech Walesa. During tan investigation, recently turned down an Walesa's six-day visit to Rome in 1981,Agca appeal by Antonov's lawyers, who contend- and Sergei Antonov supposedly met at the ed that he should be set free for lack of Hotel Archimede todiscussa hit on the Soli- evidence. Bulgarian witnesses had claimed that Antonov was in his office on the day of the shooting. By rejecting their testimo- ny, Martella demonstrated his determina- tion to press the case to its conclusion. Even if the judge doesn't find Andropov's own fingerprints on the plot, lingering suspi- cions about KGB conspiracies are bound to soil the new Soviet leader's image for some time to come. KIM ROGAL with ANDREW NAGORSKI in Rome and DAVID C. MARTIN in Washington Approved For Release 2011/05/03: CIA-RDP90-00552R000505140004-4