LETTER TO THOMAS K. LATIMER FROM (SANITIZED)

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CIA-RDP90B01390R000400510012-7
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June 25, 1986
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 Per our conversation on the 1983 New York Times article. Hope you find it useful. STAT House Affairs Office of Congressional Affairs ELLIGfn,_ - CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Office of Congressional Affairs Washington, D.C. 20505 Telephone: 351-6136 25 Tun 19W TO Mr. Thomas K. Latimer, Staff Director Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence House of Representatives Wnchingtnn, DC 2nciS SOLETE IOUS 1533 PREV EVIO EDITIONS. OCA Record " Orig. - Addressee (w/encs) - OCA Chrono (w/o encs) 1 - JCW Chrono (w/encs) HA/OCA? dpt (26 Jun 86) STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 CRS MAIN FILE COPY I YORK TIMES DEC 6 1983 P THE NEW YORK TIMES, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1983 1, ;Warsaw Arrests 2 as U.S. Spies; Walesa Wants Sanctions Ended Polish authorities today disclosed the arrest of two men who were said to be WARSAW, Dec. 5 (Reuters) - The + Mr. Walese said the sanctions, im- posed after the Polish Government de- spies for the United States, and they ac. used the Warsaw embassies of some 1North Atlantic Treaty Organization carntries of conducting intelligence ac- tivities and subversion in Poland. In a speech before Parliament, the Interior Minister, Gen. Czeslaw K.isac- zak, identified the two men as Jacek 1Jur'Tak, a Polish scientist in Bielsko- Biala near the Czechoslovak border, and Norbert Adamachek, a West Ger- man visiting Poland on business. General Kis?9k said the activities of the two, who were arrested last month, were "dangerous and ex- tremely harmful" and involved gather- ing military, defense and political in-' formation for the United States. The two will be tried for espionage and risk the death penalty if convicted. Their capture followed the arrest in August at Bytom in southern Poland of a woman, also said to be working for the United States, who was caught banding instructions and money to a Smiet citizen- General Kiorzak also accused West- ern intelligence of stepping up efforts tc recruit Poles in Poland and abroad as part of a campaign to disrupt rela- ion= be-weer. the Communist authori- ties and the Roman Catholic Church and to foment civil unrest by sabotag- ing the economy. W alesa Worried About Economy At a news conference in Gdansk, meanwhile, Lech Walesa, the bead of the banned Solidarity trade union, urged Western countries to lift eco- nomic sanctions that the Polish leaders have said are crippling the economy. dared martial law in 1981, had bed a propaganda success but could now cause the camtry serious economic damage. "Sanctions should be ended," be said, "because what Poland needs at the moment is not losses of millions of dollars but aid of billions of dollars." Mr. Waleca, this year's Nobel Peace Prize laureate, said be was eager to ne- gotiate with the Prime Minister, Gen. Wojdech Jaruzelski, adding, "I expect talks will take place." He said 1f the Government could oon- vince him that Solidarity's challenge to Communist rule, which prompted mar- tial law, was wrong be would admit it and apologize. STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 3- ^ T Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 Next 5 Page(s) In Document Denied Iq Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 sinus in pressiag for : traitt on defense and Aid its dcepticism on illy ahtared by most I determination are is opponents in Con- ignore his agenda i, because they ac- Xeater political re- nand. ss not yield easily to 1e very election that ante of forces. Had mpaign to create a e is now advocating, trble in Congress. way to a landslide, eto go its own way hreatens a personal 6dent, whose power 984 victory lack the he embedded in his iced the ooettalls that adore. In 1980 Rea- d campaign carried in it the House and a In 1984, though his the Republicans lost d came up 10 seats be Hone. vvy po6tieal editor of is observed. Reagan r in the House back 10 more Republicans 4eted with Reagan, t in the House on aid would have been increases the cons- 'l choice of tactics in avers without a nary uroenly without cour- ig him effectively. rerun the I&* carn- dge the reality of his eek accommodations s needed to achieve xutright defeats that ing season. )retz, Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 ,/-6 f r[/h'6c t1 d (P Rowland Evans and Robert Novak Solidarity Does Not Exist? Unreported statements by a Treasury official that Poland is beyond American help and that Lech Walesa's Solidarity movement "does not exist" are infuriating Polish American leaders. Harvey Shapiro. the respected deputy director of the Office of East-West Economic Policy, pulled no punches in describing Poland as a basket case nearly beyond economic redemption. He shocked the International Human Rights Committee of the American Bar Associ- ation, which sponsored his March 17 talk, by saying that although martial law "has been lifted in form it has been essentially retained in substance." When he followed that up by saying that "Solidarity does not exist," Jan Nowak, the knowledgeable former Radio Free Europe official, jumped to his feet. "It does!" he proclaimed. That rebuke exposes the chasm between a dynamic policy aimed at encouraging change in the client state Moscow knows is its most vulnerable point and a quies- cent policy expected of Treasury's numbers-crunchers. With the disclaimer that his views were not necessarily those of the Treasury or the administration, Shapiro seemed to rule out any U.S. aid or easing of sanctions for Poland's ravaged economy. He did not mention President Reagan's pledge, made on three separate occasions, that if the military-communist regime of Gen. Wojciedt Jaru- aelsld eased up on human rights, the United States would reciprocate, starting by easing sanctions. But Shapiro told the lawyers that "it would be very dif- ficult to justify" aid with commodity credit bars, with Ex- port-Import Bank loans, with farm surplus loans, or with the Treasury's Economic Stabilization Fund With those methods out, only a congressional aid package, unlikely in the era of Gramm-Rudman, would be left. Shapiro itsiated U.S. aid would "simply aggravate" Po- land's economic mess unless "underlying structural changes" were made. Yet with Secretary of State George Shulti s strong backing, the United States is trying to ar- range a multibilliondollar loan package to Mexico with no real prospect of "structural changes" in Mexico's economy. Poland is not Mexico. But to leaders of the Polish American community, Mexico makes the case that politi- /11111UJ Ut\: uk g11. li nada and, in a strictly will probably work i Britain of old, we it are barely worth phi walls of country chin A team of CIA sh is crazy. And so, app worse than that, h, criminally insane. } cunning evil. Insteai evidenced in the blo of international a botched attempts tc ing countries. Ruler holds a press confer tor seat and then. Iii throws his John De furrows his way inn the tractor and its d oil change. International law hind the United Stal was in undisputed is when it was attacker would be no quests right and who was a is a different mats especially when leg point anyway. the pushing Libya arou has the right to do has the power. As r right. But what is the p action? That it bail Mad and he respond tion. We left the ki waited for some k But now what? The the way to nowhere gency in opening ii have been there tim the last several ye tions that it is inter more than anyone c showdown, the Uni guns to win. Qaddafr drew a lit cal considerations can outweigh economic factors in terms of America's own interest. Moreover, what happens in Poland, the fulcrum of Moscow's Eastern European em- pire, could be as important in terms of East-West rela- tions as the future of Mexico is to the United States. That Yeas the original case made by President Eisen- hower in 1956. After the first major anti-Soviet up- heaval swept Poland, Eisenhower launched the carrot- and-stick policy to edge Poland into a closer relation- ship with the West. Every president since then has pushed the same strategy, but probably none so moti- vated by anticommunist convictions as Ronald Reagan. There has been no public response from the State Department or the White House to Shapiro's talk. He ignored post-martial-law changes such as record num- bers of churches being built, the visit to Poland by the pope, the fact that Solidarity founder Lech Walesa holds regular press conferences and has never been brought to trial. None of these is conclusive. Together they suggest subtle U.S. responses are needed, but not of the type suggested without rebuttal by Shapiro. As for Solidarity's "death," one underground Soli- darity newspaper has a circulation of 20,000, is fi- nanced by thousands of small contributions from Soli- darity underground members and gives its readers a bi- weekly summary of world news. Another, with a circu- lation between 28,000 and 40,000, reports details of political and economic life inside Poland. If Solidarity is dead, Polish American leaders ask, how is it able to publish whatever it wants underground And despite several amnesties, they privately ask Shultz whether Poland should get some credit arrangements of the land granted Moscow, where sanctions for the Af- ghanistan invasion and Poland's martial law have ended. To the Soviets, such reluctance to loosen American purse strings may be a political bonus. To Jaruzelski, it is, a sweet propaganda excuse for economic deterioration. To Treasury money-men, it is business as usual. But to Polish Americans, it is a symptom that the administra- tion's policy is in a rut when it should be bobbing and weaving, looking for subtle openings to exploit. 019!4 N.,n Amerla Syndicate ;ing End of a `Truly Godly Life'- ie world died this at home, in his own fe and children. He e allotted Biblical He died full of )f many. Neverthe- .y. He died hard. it good night / Rage, e light," wrote Dylan I to his father. Like is a Welshman. and ly but full of rage. I it with my own eyes, xis who quoted ribing for me how another mutual Moynihan, fell back his remarks at the In every other re- ,t kirul of r r- c nent death with a ferocious determination to live and live and live until the moment he died. With every passing day he grew weaker and weaker, but day after day he forced himself to do things that no one around him could believe he had the strength to do. He was in unendura- ble pain, but he would take only enough medi- cation to dull its edge because more than that insulated him from the only life he had left to live. In deciding to die in this way, my friend never, I think, doubted that he was making the right choice. And yet the last time I saw him, about three months ago, I could see that he was in spiritual torment over his inability to re- sign himself, to make his peace with death. That much underrated philosopher, George Santayana, once said: "There is no God and Mary is His mother." My friend would never h2 mLrl flatly "Tharp it rv, ('.M"-kA WN11(1 tain the literal faith of his fathers, still he never lost his belief in the spiritual truth of Christian- ity. Specifically, he never lost his belief in the idea that the reason we are here on Earth is to serve God and to praise Him. Serving God as my friend came to under- stand it translated into devoting oneself to the service of something greater than self-in his own case it was a great national institution, but almost anything large would do-and praising God translated into praising life. Although hymns and hosannas were certainly necessary to glorify what deserved to be glori- fied, one was not mainly supposed to praise We by verbal affirmation. Mainly one praised it through a readiness to enjoy what there was to be enjoyed, to relish what there was to be rel- ished, to savor what there was to be savored, and most especially to accept every invitation to a men. His own laugh was so loud and b that-I do not exaggerate-it becanv from one end of England to the other. exaggerate when I say that his entry i invariably made everyone in it smile, i ticipation of the laughter he was sure That such a man-a man so alive ing of him dead seems a contradicts- -should rage against death is not s But why should such a man torment over dying in a state of rage? He hinted at the answer in telling r day, when his physical pain was at its bearable, he turned in a desperate se: help to a cantata about dying by Johan. Bach, Ich hate genug-"I have had e And he asked himself: "If Bach can s can't I?" He meant that if Bach, in hi haps the greatest of all men, was per vo- fn r rln2th as an escape from thi Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90B01390R000400510012-7 1,fo ,?.h.. eh,,,,u h. ..... Sanitized ~~Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 tarn r[~ mAbo alM-a-PeT =L! V smaw wsm ~r?? -~ ? - -. OR oilPaii soy to'ba-Na up probleini aired by a dial Prices, btereet rata and gorern- - Vest" contact with the IMF. Wait au- the stac~ltY dlgereirt boards d ewftive b orn wsa borrower's Poor economic Pofidee. On :.'ma moriopd`. 'am the other hand, indr.id%W Pe'o d loans ; strsrcttaal s ` - %_7 ~ert0~+ 6'equej* can be or even cam- k' hewn card d atrch tending is mixed tezmt ministries in their govenu , -M hwi4nin& _J -A - ata& the ism a( Ydes utan the governmeGt: ?i1 Creaisrur ru wwlmdi find Rowiatx , Evane'itnd Robert Ndrat'arguimg in' ? favor; 4f 'sewardeg ~Gea: - Wofae i , i fatbis poiicy_ A? UM , sad toda~t s r t" food to tfrci Pbhiehr'pai~itiad'lib~{. k. , by Does Not Exriet?" wed, 261. W l firth W&;_1 ash- - Wh i the = i y es n :..: Sobdarity certaihly does exist. But meatdt6e. ptroggOfocD~ ama so long as Janxeh ii refuses to give it bership. Bat US.' goMannent has Euron. Amer an, Ca ,and West or other elements of the opposition riot re -=n d its policy. Eihrop an bankers and academic re movement any role in planam the fu- The circulation figures of the under- searchers apemhzing in the study Cl turq the cotnetr,, iC-d hg the we r' g cited ly ; Evans and Poland's indebtedaeea_ concluded that d to be made 0 Wet d of churches . Poland could riot rOoef ve treatment as defies b~ adstenhoe b sup- ,~ f~_,, ~vorabb : as 1het -accorded Brazil or., the ' =~ X 'bel,ould be , >T ?..t ~??,it10~ ,., words of and l aki g - - 'a; , 4 Pad Marer a - that L- I_ ,ieece in tt'wAr t ooclaai4n itotn pabbc,' jaru>s+u ?-*,s' ~F been taDdngoopomac 1144111 for contxnues to put theta 0n.",trial; "as he did last June with Sogddit 1,1244 Ism `Malt. Rope bhn Paul IPs 1983 admit to s 30 years,' but have SO not made the Mhchnik. and ' Whdpslaw ;Frasynul~' >` Poland and the fad; ffiat,';after" to9ing necessary r cocoa ` and to OW them arrested, as he more with the idea d putth* Walest nit trial, The amwer' 7. _nc ' fo give moors recently has Cseslaw Biekcki. Bogdan , the coaomwW regime at the bat nw- credits to the corruniahists in Moscow -Borusewlcz and Tadeuss Jedynak. as mmt.aerys z d ` or, as Evans and`Novak`96 as a sides .' .: reooaunlend, M Warsaw Rather. well be:focmdet; of he hardly ritti tI d~ peace boa , ,of t3 npato,rics They in a legacies 4 the~'pe revo-. further credits,'., * extended to and P'iotr Niemcsylc, and many moc~ : kitim" of 1980.81, which 66-Warsaw Soviet union. we sho-sid iomat that the rn atop the genocide In Deoember 1984, the U.S. gov- regime has been aaable to aacbcate, or Gorbachev leadership ement-r>ade_a aig~iant concession tactical moves n the comm"st teader- in Afgln~tan. ieiase Andrei Sakharov to Jt announced, the -with-. ship seeks support of noemakation" in and the thousands d other political prP- where it is Isolated from every ones now in prison; ~ and exile, and .cost li ; s a ca dl HE WED an Polands spp ,~,,,..,.., soil ? py_ iat liftats ?veoo onreform in Poland In War- ~thon t I the - nteinatlonal Marl the group. _ *~oweaoJarurW i .has taw; ju l release the polltr Fund." was wixm theald. th group. the cal P jr: permit.thz char h '~' Ijanto at 1984, ~ also .baested . the didick '?d- ing John' to start fib fund tql p private fanners; R" We about 650 political prix- Paul's 1983 intiex~oedamoe with begin that, lalogue for whhcb' Lech onens'were freed. But Lis and Plotr which' c>nat5[wttAed W to call, zi4 so- Miersewskl were" not among them. with West n fim dwip t beset rip tv dertalm the reforms about which his ' every . other Polish When, in Dom, jarutelsid finally help Poland's pilafs _ ' "go men let, them g%'- then United States an- - In the d this ' sa has tallied so ~so little Until these' ? nocmc6H tht Man of *a veto.,Whert~*j that the 'fdE gi b ti E Western aid and upon,- having trapped Lis in a secret- new Western-A id, lion, the communist au- new credits seems fit+' for-aid X Pal f rohhld make no.Cnse. a ,. thorities February 1985 rearrested is why, in e~reardng Warsaut from hint Michnik and Wladyslaw Frasy- to Poland. Wiled has s id. 'the West 77W writer, M&MdOr to AwkOwe 1973 W 19M W diairman of the board of "toad"?Wd.smtexhad them most be Ow Saidar* l. iuii>t: slid ; es the reach ii a lyupcksl prunes. 'a - people_ .lard. as ? ILLEGIB Y hehas'4r~ed finbe I kred-bis-vie" fir thin, would he go d k .One answer-tor tl ` recalls shares the r bent 09Patch d 7 Alaska.Conversati inHouston But g s turn to, Reagan tax reforrn- provocation. E. p the d>cy. Wtutc Buss un&aiin' . 4111 niaL He,- I Arabia forDcttapv hittad- tbit: nhat>bexr: totes of abuse t other Od Fetch 9'r he defended the e Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 X00 - let. National security 4. t9chart a strategy for its lending 'before . undertaking . the xi; oadvS btbet ~? ,x= cries about the c ttriic[lt or the loss of a ?ed'l:mic~he. familiar: tide,. bat in band, up Penn.yl? c dM ;Oct; MPP& same GGmC Ata~tts, c at?ior Wei pr's at Met. Gott. Mark White an t3 'eeouloadl4+se;?.'.}hefiew lt~Nr In tr hthrrn'fas oil is dam k wil "r ~ ever ohm th in Titusville, Pa. A r 1= =Make No Sense It tt& barrel prim w, W& 0* a &Mt t; to m* ~ . ':.. the only way Q d the other` pcia-- was so much of the =25 billm it credits John D. Rodode8er b' 1984' >~hav~e'bee ' -extended in the 1970., simply to beep ; market. The Tessa i Uarch ?? 17: the commra>i is in power ?.Tbet is why F~ tea and OPEC aim ~mlecicm BaC, Aseoclll~ 1hod omd Y ?Pebr nary : time anti it i4 OPOP 1985 issueda static thatthle In them acid lbmic'C hstdalMF cg8aboration :ls \' diectiesed, and the li7cdy merit ofa 1, t .mercer hate also been oa~de:ed. . Lin abort, it may be even more hn- At last, the truly n hungry, about whom is the domestic adz inc the name of national , the Ow Sophie T. you re goon miss n x It is a 1Vahkgta 4r4 cites national secant Row. And Rober Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 Rambo, but you do not ,pr:;k for opposed President Reagan's invasion If indeed the party intends to jetty in ( l1c'r cast s, as e5- arid compro- 'Itiation~, over access uld tell congressional ,r have because that facts ... may well be on they part of Mr. At motivation or crimi- ssary element in any so---and motion ordeal through which ssarliy. But these are Meese should have let ndenc a could not be rrL NRA support of the NRA on 'ed NRA contributions, Otto, voted #gat the from tie i~1RA` tion will try to mead pread around with it. 3 are, asking. senators s: 1)- to mainfain the transport of firearms interfering with the ort across state lines its - for-- eperting-pi- in the House bill that gtrlbUt>o~gf ~w~egpQag '.. . erm ures gilt +dealeis 'to ore valuable to'them .nforoement fatnily- s everywhere must hese reasonable pro- PAMELA C WILKIE Washington of Grenada and oppose U.S. support son its liberals, and if the party for the contras. doesn't stand up for the so-calk-d' I regret, Mr. Ailanan, that for the "constituencies of discontent," then British as for most of the world Presi- the Democrats can't, won't and dent Reagan remains nothing more don't deserve to win anything in ^ Mr. Altman tries to give the im- presssion that the vast majority of Britons support President Reagan's attack on Libya. This is quite untrue. ~ ? ~"~~' "JOHN ALVBY . H. K. CAMPBELL- *ttnf 446 i gjWlldlS~? X c . J STAT ,['Credit l4or Poland, Does Make Sense," op-ed,'April 171, while bringing many valid arguments for lifting economic sanctions against Poland, used one argument com- pletely' out of line: " further de- terjoration oUlying conditions could 'lead +.IrI ., fir' ex losiori, ?i-ttich f aruseiski might tibt be able to suppress without Soviet Moo 'litical repe=,4 bath in the hea would s-?aot&baa .Lo: polish Ord Let'asoiand ?a little long-- - er! It is obvious fiat this argument of Mr. Nowak, is wrong. The message that Polish people received during Solidarity' times : is cleat': the Soviets will go to war in vcdes1o prevent the tin df frei'Polimd; the West will not imd foolttRobelp fight-shch an iavaskrL; and theVest will oot> even impose an anee Ing w eco- nomic sanctions ,against the Soviet all Polish -people`oS' great" fteedad-' of expression than in any other conic' Qu nist country." Jr, Therefore, continuing economic' sanctions against Poland is like beat ing a dog on a chain in anger. ZhIG? EWHPIAIT e' maton cos er~ff~'~CSOb~sTtDi ta76=ife1 t b3 F s ~`r Q `-te; m~HS~'At } r'le,iu' * ~~ L o ~ - .+ ~_ I iL 3 DOlU1I.D O li D- e , as, G r 'Ta so e d f he o pppg !q me ia i t a fenr. patnots.. avill s y. -vast mji5ot*, af:+ 'O1tah exftes, We ntoersRanowirnaa ai m s -d letters - should -be- Aig$.d ,lnd" i !-'a ~w..w.~,I.s~.,...'.q ..w ?.. '- r\ 'D ttaoi{tatadlLa $ ' Ind 1E j the.world fa it io e + ? ,?4 nust.~ the writer's- not "itce , . -` ' Pewasat am o~oerzl Hahser Dy' .Tu ~TiM ?1 t~ ~ marrtoaarn: f:. atrmts ~r 7dsry i ,r 'ABZriH 8T. J ib sar...e .sho.a $u.n..~ _sti _Y ~ '~]~~~ ,-?.: ZRiib bamounloWo~ _ ~ ~Ylf ?f T~ 47~. l /1.rftL.A~ ; rtdkhe famous bttiflde +t`Ibf. esident`rr+?!! !' ' mQ?'~"t~'t' Ford when he statedth of id is a N!4i70's. mctonrostD-n* i a? ?ree nation. Quoting iihr. Nowak: us their noat~,1t, ter; ut- ', tended for pe~'blioating should be > M'. tjoet--without,. i of tsdL es eJ n 4".t1;e Uitor, _ ' . u l,ae,;: any legal - saact -does r ? r - i -t ist.tn' today's Poland,: and,. _'T xATBARnis GRAHAM Ch?1rm~n tl the Hoge ' Z - sri~- rtaottsotra .tom i isaaiaecxwrn. (30)=,Fw~k F Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 ruugn wane cook. MA ooueaguur-w1a) i longer trusted hutr -became" nag- at Worst and "fiscal' and economic [tesj" at best.- He assails James A. r ill, then chief of staff at the White as not "very versed on matters of policy, nor intensely interested in them." baker, along.with other top aides, "never r anything They lived off the [TV] tut DotioQ Regan is a yes man toady log to Reagan: Caspar Weinberger, Alex- uider Haig and Rep. Jack Kemp all take Stodmttln descends into such petty and v ictive'stuf` s'a reference to House Tip (YNeIU's "massive corpu- leiii6e and scarlet; varicose nose" and to House Majority Leader James Wright as "a. snakea7 vendor par excellence, a demagogue of frightening . rhetorical .n the cost of innteri Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7 , ,, and that reaffirming the an-L 111 neary IQ um ~A k 1 ' face of violations would;" a'clear.signal that IN. 1wwv,wnc wow. s+w.u 1, w,u.wdW, ISO forei nStfUrtOni CoMm ittee. member of the 1 fu w V Jan Nowak Credit for Poland Does Make Sense ~f& prattiaaeyw d~N.afam Arnmicau.txeolodoQCJglAer , sex nh ly. :. c', i,:.!!' i'l ~ t r}`!t vro ,}trdretl ~eir1F a ,.Orr republic W r bary `Pirate, k1 ?uw aw?u. ?avvv i,r,.L.~...yW,~----- STAT ~~ .pltgtlW!~beCMIU r ~r ~ _ fence." We are riot tempo nt t1WGmpogi t a) r o u+!4 Q wt11'! tDw!tt 41 k. ? ;r ,isV6 oug l e ng c - e r alian s muri parties have attribute I and. n ~r3~of'Stadrwn'a'.cl eagues an deal .. es< rata W buy Anerlcurad Canadian graitti Itvsz: or some of -the Solidarity activists. This did hap. illidii Ocini car the case of hhchruk, Lis, Frasynfuk, Moc"n'? thee d decllns'to the suppression of Sob." e not hope ti .getntzedif$l19-4Il C1 't . fi him'tai coe6dence in the future In an 1984 akMie Est Germany received $2.S b lit , &r.ice..a.. rPb& _ ...` _ kH.w.Aa L L'1 w"?" G"a h.." Wnrkt Rink iinL.YavirrntiA these few cep p' R i nnr? ? excerpts, pe aaya that- tut the mar JUG-I, Cerved $125 ntt1111on-from WesC7r1 uuwu ..-+-... __-"I__.~.. :. C..-.n 'remain Tree Like Walesa they daily walk a tight c.tafru tratnthe larumiski government's efforts to Jaruzelski e6oulcL s d b u. - .~. ? ww __.._.___ _, r _ _..__ . . l awn w ove gIoun _L, 1,...,....rt about fine minutes ern Europel admitteW to membership of the ? ropC by engaging it a r -. nA il4eaf hip Mltvil.~'nrha ML Ttw~'`rhurrh'remairo atrrulg irainmkisdo-ahn2svnli oe;sE 'i In aK gaywvc auCdUr,IU4U ~~ iw. iivir am aptry~~rua~arv~an...nr , .._.,..- -- -- ----- - - _ 7--can't corer up: Wall Street investors no trade?withtheUuitedStases.-.. They are subject to considerable harassment) indepeiideh4k'14( o~,the agricultural landthe Polish people bdie'pttstntdea clr'- tha l ui ratlte Pil te b Th t i be td i ) q g c 4 a peop e e ~annrrs pr va 'tior longs less than Was sIagton politicians may feel > Poland alone an ?+ but the constant reminders of their presence lit d, i y blic life are met with a kind of angry toktana 'o'. enjoy gr~ eateNfeedota' of'expression' than in an h -Z f f h e ree n o o- tg tvith a man, w lf OnlyWitlu d marrow margin V. vulnerable lieai be q writer, d rwtirHgiJ dur+cld, o/ ~,~rM kirmer Economic Council Chairman Mur- dom that Gen. WojoechJnnel ly a either willing by the regime. This means that open opposition other communist wintry. Last year, between 5 The Y L yleideobaiitli s phrase-Ls prone to or to exploit^Pivaiderit Reagan trade '. -without, of course, any legal santzioa-dos , millionf and 7 million Pia boycotted the Soviet icon Congress, was flu direcrpr f41'f,' 1t# 1, 1 1 of Rods Fri* t wo[ e f ear ; Wy lect n ti, it ;, ~t(tl>lieh'llidt teIl" memoirs. sanctipn reteiaibie and :a eQ id it the Pblials, exit In todays Poland. SLY= 8c"Cirm e Puk v1 r ' 111 , b v a t 4 ~1ri: :~ -1?t .'+~' ' .l !ice. 1' .. 4 r ~'.~ a _,'.rr ~L ..t.:N R. ~ i. Nobody, including Wakpa. tern ' tp repetition of the err9ro?cominitted inefficient and overcentral~ld7zraarAl9fledW0o~+ omy with no strings atl edsr. ? . at; Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/04/20: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000400510012-7