3 BILLS AIM AT CURBING THE CIA
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP90-00965R000201090055-3
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
February 9, 2012
Sequence Number:
55
Case Number:
Publication Date:
April 28, 1983
Content Type:
OPEN SOURCE
File:
Attachment | Size |
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Body:
10 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: C
PFILAD,PH.IA INQUIRE?
28 APRIL 1983
3billsaim
at curbing
the CIA
House ex~g
foreign activities
By Alfonso Chardy
lnpulrer Washinpon-8uroau
WASHINGTON Three separate
efforts are under way in the House to
curb the ability of the CIA to carry
out or support covert actions against
other governments.
President Reagan and CIA Director
William J. Casey already are lobby-
ing members of the House Select
Committee on Intelligence against
one of the proposals, a bill by com-
mittee chairman ward P. Boland
(D., Mass.) that won a covert
CIA support for guerrilla forces
fighting against the leftist Sandinista
government of Nicaragua.
Today the committee will take up
the Boland bill, which also would
establish an overt S50 million fund to
help friendly countries combat ille-
gal arms trafficking for insurgent
groups in Central America.
The legislation would also amend
the congressional resolution govern-
ing the current budget. That resolu-
tion contains an amendment written
by Boland and adopted in December
that prohibits the use of federal
funds for the :purpose of overthrow-
ing the Nicaraguan government or
provoking.a military confrontation
between Nicaragua and neighboring
Honduras. Some members of Con-
gress have accused the Reagan ad-
ministration,of.violating that restric-
'ion.
Boland's new measure would cut
off all funds for the Nicaragua opera.
tion and give the CIA 45 days to
phase out its support for the guerril-
la group, the Nicaraguan Democratic
Force.
Also, a proposal to give Congress
veto power over all covert CIA opera-
tions was contained in legislation
-introduced yesterday by Rev. W.vche
Fowler Jr. (D., Ga.). He is chairman
j of the Intelligence Committee's over-
sight and evaluation subcommittee
and is one of those who accuses the
administration of violating the Bo-'
land -amendment.
And i:xhe- douse Foreign Affairs
Committee will consider later this
week or next week another related
proposal. It is a bill offered by Rep.
Michael D. Barnes (D, ,Mg
)
chair-
an o the subcommittee on western
hemisphere affairs, which would al-
low covert operations only if ap-
proved by a joint resolution of Con-
gress: The subcommittee approved
the Barnes bill two weeks ago.
Fowler's proposal for congression-
al veto power represents me first
attempt at maior reform of congres-
sional intelligence-oversight meth-
ods since 1974, when Congress -
after an investigation that disclosed
i some CIA abuses - required the CIA
to notify Congress of existing covert
Mftvities. Until then. U.S. intelli-
;ence branches essentially operated
without congressional controls. '
President Reagan, on the advice of
;asey, summoned Boland and five
ether Intelligence Committee mem-
bers to the White House on Tuesday
and begged them not to shut down
the Nicaraguan operation.
The covert action involves CIA and
other U.S. support for armed Nicara-
guan exiles of the Nicaraguan Demo-
cratic Force, who are already fight-
ing within their country against the
Sandinista government.
According to congressional
sources, the intelligence panels au-
thorized $19.9 million for fiscal 1983
to finance the operation, including
about $3 million to fund, equip and
train the insurgent force. Casey re-
portedly asked for more funds for
fiscal 1984, which begins Oct- 1, per-
haps up to S25 million, to continue
financing, the oprration. ,,
The new CIA budget
are
being debated by the House and Sen-
ate panels, and members in both
have drafted resolutions aimed at
eliminating the funds because they
feel that the CIA misled the commit-
tees and actively sought to over.
throw the Sandinista government.
In announcing his bill to curb co-
vert action, Fowler said yesterday on
the House floor that the issue "raises
again the question of the adequacy of
the current system when and under
what kind of controls covert actions
Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/09: CIA-RDP90-00965R000201090055-3