U.S. PRESSURE ON SANDINISTAS IS WORKING, CONGRESSMEN TOLD

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000201090032-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 24, 2012
Sequence Number: 
32
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 4, 1983
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000201090032-8.pdf99.12 KB
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ST"T n i . , a: a n a ., A -J s . - M - 1---- nn4 nin4 inn min or-%r-)nn nnncconnnnn4 nnnnnn 0 41P FLEE MIAMI HERALD 4 August 1983 i U.S. ressure on Sandinistas s told.-, worklngcongressmen When Rep. Ed Zschau (R., Calif.) Cuban news agency report Tuesday in order l s cking the rebe States is ba et freighter Alexander Ulyanov and to force democracy on Nicaragua, asked it to identify itself, list its the State Department official did cargo and give its destination just not demur. "We would like to see a govern- before it anchored off the Nicara- ment integrating democratic ele- guan port of Corinto Saturday. ments," be-said, adding that Wash-, The Associated Press quoted Pen leased if the tagon sources assaying that- the ld be " p wou gton in Sandinista .government were to be motivated in order to go in the di- rection that the Salvadorans. are trying to go When Rep. Stephen Solari (D., N.Y.) asked how effective the CIA- backed rebels had been in interdict. ing Sandinista arms shipments to El Salvador, Sanchez answered that "interdiction efforts have resulted in~,,a diminution -of the flow of arms ? Abrams, the State Department's human rights specialist, suggested that the guerrillas' role would di- minish if Nicaragua turned to de- mocracy and stopped violating the human rights of its people. Abrams' comment prompted a sharp exchange with Rep. Michael Barnes (D. Md.), an administration ship in the first Abrams known U.S. approach to vessels al- legedly carrying weapons to the Sandinistas. The McCormick is on maneuvers off Nicaragua in what U.S. officials say is part of a campaign to pres- sure the Sandinistas to stop- export-ing their revolution abroad and adopt democratic policies at home. Langhorne Motley, assistant sec- retary of state for inter-American affairs, suggested at a congressional hearing that the pressures - in- cluding those exerted by CIA- backed Nicaraguan guerrillas - have begun to work. Motley and two other top admin- istration officials indicated to a joint session of two House Foreign Af- fairs subcommittees that the rebels' activities had forced Sandinista leaders to worry more about their internal problems than about "de- stabilizing" their neighbors. "They have had to look inward," said Motley, who was accompanied by Nestor Sanchez, deputy assistant secretary of defense for inter- American affairs, and assistant sec- retary of state for human rights El- liott Abrams. The statements by Motley, San- chez and Abrams were unusually frank - apparently part of an ef- fort to mend the damage caused by the House vote last week to cut off CIA aid to the rebels. The Navy ad- mitted, 'mean- while, that the missile frigate USS McCor- mick had hailed a Nicaraguan- bound Soviet ceeded in forc- ing the Sandi- nista govern- ment to trim its revolutionary sails. By ALFONSO CHARDY Herald Washington Bureau WASHINGTON - Reagan Ad- ministration officials suggested to congressmen Wednesday that U.S. pressures on Nicaragua have suc- critic, who asked, "Did you in fact say that the pressure the United States is bringing against Nicaragua is part of our human-rights policy?" "What I said was," said Abrams, "we are pressuring Nicaragua, just like we are pressuring the other countries in the area, to move in the direction of democracy." -`Well," said Barnes, "we haven't hired 10,000 or 12,000 guerrillas to invade Chile." At the Pentagon, Navy Cmdr. Fred Leeder confirmed that the Mc- Cortnick "questioned a Soviet ship Saturday in international waters prior to the Soviet cargo ship enter- ing a Nicaraguan port. It was never impeded at all. It was merely ques- tioned by radio. " Leeder's version coincided with a l McCormick's request for the 'Ulya- nov's identification and destination was not unusual, but that the query about its cargo was "not normal." Although the Ulyanov's skipper was not obligated to reply to the question about his load, sources said the Soviet captain told the Ameri- cans that it had general cargo .aboard. This report was supplemented by Herald wire services.- . Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000201090032-8