TIME TO MEND FENCES

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CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2
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April 30, 1984
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L ; . 7 tt 7, 7s 7 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R0 BALTIMORE SUN 30 April 1984 ? 2ek A- )0400040001-2 Time to Mend Fences President Reagan's top priority when he re- turns from his China trip late this week should be a major fence-mending effort on Capitol Hill. His Central American policy has been blown all over. the Washington landscape in a stormy clash be- tween the legislative and executive branches. Mut- ,- terings about bad faith and a loss of credibility are louder than at any time since Mr. Reagan took of- fice. Administration hardliners may be advising ,1 the president to hang-tough by threatening to hold congressional critics ? especially Democrats responsible .for any CommImist advances in the ':s: Caribbean. But Mr. Reagan should be savvy enough to reject such tactics. Even CIA director William .1. Casey, a quintes- sential hardliner, has found it prudent to apologize to the Senate Intelligence Committee for provid- ing inadequate briefings on the mining of Nicara- guan harbors. The committee was also at fault in not pursuing details on covert activities that were widely reported in the press. But Mr. Casey, a key player in Mr. Reagan's 1980 campaign, saw that' the politics of the situation required the soothing of ruffled senatorial feathers. To have balked would have killed what little chance is left of get-..,., ting appropriations to fund Contra forces fighting the Sandinista government. Just what the president thinks of Managua's Marxist regime was made clear, just before his China trip, when he accused it of "savagely" mur- dering Indian tribes, persecuting Christians, driv- ing Jews into exile, censoring the press and re- stricting business and labor organizations. This is the kind of rhetoric that is supposed to rally the people around'the president out of a fear of Com- munism in the U.S. backyard. But it also is the kind of talk that stirs fears of U.S. military inter- vention in Central America ? a prospect that -scores poorly in the opinion polls. ? Barring an economic, downturn, which seems unlikely, Mr. Reagan's greatest re-election liabil- ity is the perception that he is too belligerent ? too inclined to seek military solutions. We would not want Mr. Reagan to minimize what he considers a threat to U.S. national securi- ty. But if he is to get the funding he needs tv.At3s-4, tam n war-wracked El Salvador and to keepipres-- sure on-Nicaragua; he will have to improve hikad- ministration's liaison with Capitol Hill. Congress as a whole does not wish to pull the plug on Cen- tral America, and Mr. Reagan has to take care not to goad his critics into just such a course. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 AppregerciVorpi l' ggI1161R16,-FTRAlpo9oi R000400 30 April 1984 CIA's 'covert war leaves battle scars ? By Terry Atlas Chicago Tribune ? WASHINGTON?Although CIA Di- rector William Casey made his peace with angry senators last week, their new accord left unsettled the administration's controversial re- quest for more money to support Nicaraguan rebels. What happens next depends heavi- ly on the outcome of the May 6 presidential runoff election in El Sal- vador, and the amount of lasting political damage in Congress done by disclosures of the CIA's not-so- secret war against Nicaragua. But it's clear that the Reagan ad- ministration faces a difficult battle to get the $21 million it says is neecied to continue the "covert war" against Nicaragua. Aid to anti-Sandinista rebels, over- whelmingly passed by the Republi- can-controlled Senate before thepub- lic flap over the CIA's role in mining Nicaraguan harbors, is strongly op- sed in the House, where Speaker Thomas O'Neill [D., Mass.] has led the Democratic opposition to the ad- ministration's Central American pol- icies. HOUSE MAJORITY Leader James Wright [D:, Tex.), who supports the administration's request for more military aid for El Salvador, said last week that he doubts that a majority of the House is willing to approve even $7 million for the so- called contras, who oppose Ni- caragua's Marxist-oriented govern- ment. And Senate sources said that be- cause of the controversy, a vote there on covert aid would, at best, pass by only a slim margin. The administration, prohibited by Congress from trying to topple the Sandinistas; said aid to the anti- Sandinista insurgents is necessary to pressure the Marxist-oriented Ni- caraguan government to stop sup- rang leftist guerrillas in nearby El &yawn Money for the U.S.-backed insurgents will begin running out by the end of this month, But Wright said that public dis- closures of CIA activities, which in- clude directing last fall's attack on Nicaragua's a supplies, and the re- sulting controversy have ;eft the 9- eration "-too thoroughly discreditec.' to be continued. -??? THE SENATE last month passed an emergency appropriations bill that included $21 million for the Ni- caraguan rebels, along with $61.7 million in military and medical aid for El Salvador, after rejecting by a 2-to-1 margin an amendment by Sen. Edward Kennedy [D., Mass.] to end funding for the rebels. The House cut the Senate's figure for El Salvador to ?32.5 million, and provided no money for the Nicaraguan rebels. A Senate Republican leadership aide said that continuation of the covert aid is "in trouble," with sup- port in the Senate undercut by the recent controversy. But he added that "there may be some way of ' salvaging it" in the House-Senate conference committee. As a-practical matter, congression- al sources said members of the con: ference committee are likely to delay action on the two versions of the bill until they see who wins the. May 6 presidential runoff in El Sal- vador. Administration officials believe that if moderate candidate Jose Napoleon Duarte wins, as expected, much of the congressional opposition to President Reagan's aid package . for Central America will vanish. ? "Duarte's election will probably set the stage for the administration to get funding for El Salvador in full," said a senior State Department official who asked not to be identi- fied. HE CALLED AID to the caraguan rebels less certain He said - the administration may get less , money that it has asked for, but "will squeeze out something to keep. it going." In its meeting with Casey, the Senate Intelligence Committee didn't address in detail the future of the., CIA's support for the contras, sever- - al committee members said. "That's for another day,"- ?said , Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan N.Y.], who withdrew his resignation,, as vice chairman after Casey apolo- gized to the committee for failing to adequately inform it of CIA activi- ties in Central America. - Senate sources said Casey's apOlo:: gy headed off the likelihood that the. Intelligence Committee would -re: verse course and vote to pull the plug on the contras, which would' have doomed the administration's:: Approved For Relea'aNb5/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 "I support the covert aid," Sen. Lloyd Bensten [D., Tex.) said after, the Intelligence Committee meeting:' "And I think it can pass the Senate': , ? - THE SENATORS, embarrassed to.' have been caught unprepared by dis- closures of the CIA's involvement in ? the mining, said their first priority was to get a pledge from Casey that ? he will better inform them in the future. More than a little senatorial e o was involved in the matter. senators, particularly -the-Republi--? cans, were angered that House De- " mocrats, who were more aggressive in their pursuit of Casey during his, briefings, apparently knew far more : about the covert activities. One' . House member said the information was available for any committee member who asked the right ; questions, an opportunity the sena-. tors missed. What the senators wanted from , Casey was a chance to put a damper, on what some have caned his arra- :? gant manner in dealing with Con-. .gress. They got that, along with a public apology and a promise to be,, more forthcoming in sharing his po- tentially embarrassing fcreign policy: i secrets n the future. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R A.F, T. I CIL' AP FE 132D ON BOSTON GLOBE 30 Apri 1 1984 00400040001-2 STA an's Lahti' policy in disarray By Pamela Constable Globe Staff WASHINGTON ? Until recently, the Reagan Administration presented a _ united front on Central America. Its policy seemed a juggernaut, carefully -orchestrated by a handful of key con- servative aides, while congressional op- ponents floundered for an opening of attack. Today, there is a growing perception ,among both critics and supporters that. the Administration is 'lurching from..-.. :noclear sense of where its regional poli- .one political brushfire to the next, with cy is headed, while top aides compete. for for influence and fail to cultivate con- gressional allies. At the same time, despite its recent bipartisan vote condemning covert. mining operations in Nicaragua, Con- gress remains painfully ambivalent on larger regional issues. Critics are afraid to seriously challenge a popular Presi- dent, while supporters are embarrassed at Administration blunders, such as - -the failure to inform intelligence panels of the mining or to adopt all the recam- - mendations of the Kissinger COMMIS- 1 sion. _ ! Administration officials assert their. regional goals ? preventing a rebel vie--; tory in El Salvador and pressuring the left-wing Nicaraguan government into negotiations ? have remained ; changed, and that their military-orientae ed strategy for achieving those goals 1..(7,- making progress. ' Privately, however, conservative sources in in the Administration and on 'Capitol Hill now say they fear the policy is being undermined by internal con- flict and poor communicaflon among., -- decision-makers, by a lack of coherent. planning, and by insensitivity to do- , mestic political concerns. "The foreign policy management of this Administration has been ghastly. When I read about the mining. I almost fell out of bed," said Mark Falcoff, an analyst with the conservative Ameri- can Enterprise Institute. "They haven't thought through the policy, and they have little sense of political reality." "There are so many different groups working on parts of the problem that no one has a good overview. Decisions are made on the basis of one-line memos, and there is no free flow of dis- cussion," added one former military an- alyst who now works on Capitol Hill. Among congressional supporters, there is growing confusion over who is actually in charge of policy-making. De- spite the rising influence of military and intelligence officials, sources say, many day-to-day decisions are made on - the advice of White Fouse aides who have little experience in foreign policy, and much expert advice never filters up to-the President. "A lot of good ideas never get proper- ly staffed. There are too many actors, and no one knows whom to go to," said one Republican congressional aide. "One day we're told it's (Kenneth) Dam (an assistant secretary of state), the ? next day we're told it's (national securi- ty adviser Robert) McFarlane. And with problems like the mining, they keep shooting their supporters in the back." Ideologieally, observers say, there is little disagreement among top officials in the Pentagon, the ClA, the National Security Council and trusted White -House aides such as UN Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick over the Administra- tion's primary goal: to prevent the ' spread of-communism in Central Amer- ica. 'Little interest exhibited As the emphasis on strategies such as troop maneuvers in Honduras and covert operations against Nicaragua in- creasingly replaces diplomatic ap- proaches, analysts say, the views of military and intelligence officials have supplanted the more cautious advice of professional-diplomats. Secretary. of _ , State George P. Shultz is seen as having .; ?Little interest in Central America, and Langhorne Motley. deputy assistant . secretary of state for inter-American af- fairs, is viewed as an affable Adminis- tration team player. - "The people who implement policy always have the greater power in mak- ing it," said Robert Pastor, a former for- eign policy aide to the Carter Adminis- ? tration. "In Honduras, the Pentagon is in the driver's seat-. hi Nicaragua, the CU has been calling the shots. And our negotiators are on such a tight leash . that it's impossible for them to achieve anything." Yet a number of observers suggest that even within the military and Intel- . ligence communities, there is growing dissent over the direction of Central -American policy. Pentagon officials are -anxious to avoid the embarrassment of r another Vietnam-like military, quag- ' mire. sources say:At the CIA, they add, high-level officials have been appalled at the clumsy handling-of US covert op- erations against Nicaragua, and doubt ::,they will be able to force its regime into ? political concessions. "Some people are convinced that military pressure is a valid instrument against the Sandinistas, but I have a _ lot more doubts about that than I did a 1 year ago," said one Administration source. "I'm no longer sure whether there is a connection between the means and the ends of our policy in Nicaragua." Another Administration source dis- - agreed, saying that continued military ,,pressure is the only strategy that can convince the Sandinistas to abort their regional revolutionary aims. "I'm not afraid of Vietnam. I'm afraid of Mu- 'a-Web," he said, referring to the 1939 summit at which European leaders ac- cepted Hitler's promise of limited ex- .:, pansionistic goals. . The recent contretemps over revela- tions of CIA involvement in the mining of Nicaraguan ports. observers say, highlighted both strategic conflicts and political ineptitude within the Adminis- tration. While some top advisers al- ready see covert operations as a no-win substitute for true regional policy, the White House has -now further damaged its -case by failing to take important congressional allies into its confidence, thus requiring a belated apology from CIA director William Casey. . Both 'hands behind their backs' As one conservative congreSsional aide familiar with the issue explained it, "the Administration couldn't sell its policy, so they decided to make it secret, but then they did a crummy job of ex- plaining it to the only groups who can et intelligence operations into the pub- 4&1801408fil1idg. So now they have. Citoiinvi/EP Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RD.P91-00901R AT-=7"LE APPF?m-v1;roved For ReleaTaiS266?IT1742 ON PAGE 5,Sec. n 30 Apr :11 19 ZWRDP91-00901R000 00040001-2 CIA Should Stay Out of Po icy Involvement There Hinders Vital intelligence-Gathering RITA: TAT By ERNEST CONINE Assume that the situation of the anti- Sandinista rebels in Nicaragua grows hope- less and that U.S. intelligence sources in the area pass the word to Washington. Can anybody imagine William J. Casey, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, march- ing to the White House and telling President Reagan that the CIA's not-so-secret war in the region is doomed to failure? The answer is self-evident, which means that maybe it is time to consider what might be done to discourage CIA chiefs from becoming involved in policy-making. It is hard for close readers of newspapers or magazines to go longer than a month or two without reading an interview in which Casey assures us that the Boss is on the right track in his policies toward the Soviet Union, the Middle East or Nicaragua. Is that really an appropriate function for the head , of the CIA, who by definition is supposed to provide the President and other policy- makers with objective information and anal- yses on what is happening in the world outside our borders? Surely not. What we need is a tradition of CIA directors who look an interviewer straight in the eye and say that assessing the wisdom or stupidity'of policies being pursued by an Administration in power is none of their ? business, that their only job is to provide reliable intelligence. It would be nicer still if CIA chiefs would tell Presidents and White House advisers that they would rather not offer advice on policy questions, and would prefer to limit themselves to presenting ? intelligence that. -policy-makers 'need in choosing among alternative actions. Unfortunately, it's unlikely -to .happen. There have been notable exceptions, but Presidents tend to appoint CIA chiefs who are personally close and/or politically relia- ble. Casey is a case in point; he has an intelligence background, but is first and foremost a Reagan man. - Unlike British or Soviet intelligence chiefs, American CIA directors are public figures who appear on television and are interviewed in newspapers. They make speeches and give public testimony before congressional committees. All of this means that they are thrust into the role of advocates for Administration policy. . Less visible-, but -perhaps more important, is the ?fact that, they can come under pressure to tailor intelligence assessments to support policy. During the Carter Admin- istration, the Senate Intelligence Committee worried that the much-publicized CIA study. of Soviet oil production was being manipu- lated by the White House to develop support for the Carter energy program: :.Justly or. not, some people in the intelli- gence communityltself charged that Adm. Stansfield Turner, then head of the CIA, was distorting intelligence estimates to make them dovetail with the Carter Admin- istration's foreign policy. As one critic said at the time, "The great trap of intelligence is to search for evidence supporting your own view. .1f you have access to policy-makers, you can become sensitized into. justifying their decisions." The temptation is. especially strong when the CIA chief becomes directly involved in policy-making, and stronger still when the ? CIA is itself involved in covert operations. When the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba turned into a deeply embarrassing fiasco for President John F. Kennedy, it was - pretty obvious that the failure was due in part to faulty intelligence that over- estimated the likelihood of an anti-Castro PPY, IF I FIND OUT wiAATs Got -."" T) BE FuR1ou5.I. uprising in support of the invaders. Would the CIA have done a better job if it had not been running the invasion? A lot of people thought so. For a time there was serious debate as to whether covert military opera- tions should be done by the CIA, with the recurring danger of warping the agency's intelligence function, or by special units -.within the Defense Department. .Nothing was.done, partly because -there are some good arguments against such 'it' shift in jurisdiction. But the question is still : relevant, as demonstrated by the example of Casey and covert operations in Nicaragua. With some reason. Congress is in another of its periodic bouts of disillusionment with CIA involvement in covert military opera- tions. But the mood will pass. As former Deputy CIA Director Bobby R.. Inman once said, ,'Every Administration ultimately - turns to the use of covert operations when they become frustrated about the lack of' coatinuati Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 maliMm STAT TICLE APPEARED WASHINGTON TIMES AR 1z_.2.2.T.ry.ved For Release 200?P11428j.-tIA9kbP91-00901R0 0400040001-2 .4?'- '- ------ BOCK REVIEW! Charles M. Lichenstein eg's effort at tant revisionism To the Finland Station, -amund Wilson subtitled the vction on Lenin, "He identi- es himself with history." Trp isy, in pointed contrast, said ?ilson, "identifies history with ^ Mr. Trotsky, meet Al Haig.. The publication of Caveat ? v a:ch, let heaven forfend, the for- r.,er secretary of state hints may be but the first in a series ? is one of those great non-events in the his- tory of literature, or memoirs, or backstairs gossip, or even indeed in the history of history. Snitching in self-defense is still snitching. And insofar as Gen. Haig is up to some serious, substantial purpose, beyond simply fattening his take on the rubber-chicken circuit, the unrelenting pettiness, the self- justification, and the glorification with the ever-present "I am" cause the eyes to wander and the mind to glaze over. This may be "setting the record straight" but it is not neces- sarily what_ happened. I know -15.66-aiise, even as an ant among ele- phants, I was there. . - What did happen during Mr. Haig's 18 months as "vicar" was that U.S. foreign policy was formu- lated, debated, articulated, imple- mented. Some of that policy was good and effective. Some of it was bad and ineffective. Entirely too *much of it, good and bad, was made on the front pages of elite news- papers, through leaks, on the basis of unnamed "sources." A lot of peo- ple took part: William P. Clark, Jeane Kirkpatrick, William Casey, ; Caspar Weinberger, Larry Eagle- burger, senators, congressmen, sometimes even a president named Reagan. And of course Alexander ? Haig. Memos became optioniation papers, which became statements and speeches and press conference ,Q&As and the stuff of talk shows and interviews, by all those named labove and then some. :The process was messy. It still is. Occasionally, falmost coincidentally.:_the U.S. national interest is served. Often it is not. And books like Caveat, an exercise in instant revisionism, help not at all: to the overall mes- siness, they add vaulting egoism, bias, tunnel vision, and partiality. This is really too bad. Gen. Haig deserves better. His grasp of strate- gic design in foreign policy is not inconsiderable. On. 'more issues than not ? the Middle East, arms control, southern Africa, the threat of state-sponsored terrorism, Soviet imperialism ? he was and is more right than wrong. Even on Central America (where he was conspicuously not, as he claims, "virtually alone," where his allies were named Reagan and Kirkpat- rick and Casey), his recognition both of the roots of the conflict and of the nature of the imminent dan- ger is precise and compelling. But here especially Mr. Haig's worst enemy. is Mr. Haig. His nig- gling, contemptuous disregard of the role of Jeane Kirkpatrick, to cite one recurring example, and his outrageous misrepresentation of h?e?r public posture during the Falk- I . lands crisis? he stops just short of ' , an accusation of outright disloyalty ' and lays it Off-dri Britiih'percep- tion" of her private pot-stirring ? - rewrite history and undermine his own credibility as a witness to it., Because of a friendship of sev- eral decades and because rnY admi- ration of Jeane Kirkpatrick borders on awe, I cannot let this particular point lie. All through the book, Gen. Haig goes out of his way to nut her down W. put her in.her:. "place" as a pushy (if intellectuallY'' formidable) sort of."Mrs." Where ? . others dufing the transition drop ? by to. talk substance, she registers complaints about personal perks. Her superbly successful negoti- ation with the foreign minister of Iraq on the bombing of the Osirik reactor is never mentioned: we had "some differences of opinion on. this question!' Her trenchant ana- lysis and recommendations of U.S. options in reaction to the imposition of martial law in Poland are reduced to a "not unnatural wish" to take the issue to the U.N. Security Council. So, in the end, we have ba citing and biting back. As I've said, hat is too bad. Al Haig almost certainly is capable of more and better than that. His promise of subsequent installments holds out the possibil- ity at least of serious, substantive reflections on the Reagan adminis- tration and U.S. foreign policy ? but I don't think I'll hold my breath in anticipation. _ ? Charles M. Lichenstein, deputy U.S. representative to the United Nations Security Council from 1981-84, is now a senior fellow at The Heritage Foundation. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 ARTICLE APPEARED U.S. NEWS 01 PAGE Approved For Relsk9sh21q?15/1 ? ? ?A` i&P?liEgil-00901R0 1/-k1 400040001-2 Washington Mk-jowt. Anti-Casey. Grumbling at the CIA. Members of Congress aren't the only ones upset at the "secret war" in Nica- ragua being directed by Central Intel- ligence Agency chief William Casey. Growing numbers of CIA veterans fear that the operation is exposing the agency to exactly the sort of pounding from the press and lawmakers that tore it apart a decade ago. Their ur- gent plea: Leave paramilitary opera- tions to the Pentagon. * * * * * * There's an outside chance that Daniel Moynihan might withdraw his resig- nation as vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Fellow Democrats are urging the New York lawmaker, who quit over the CIA's mining of harbors in Nicaragua, to stay on because nobody else in line for the post carries his prestige. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 ARTICLE AppEkAsproved For Release 210M11/28 : CIA-RDP ON PAGE /2 30 April 19814 o 2iace Left t In rebuilding the CIA, Casey has made missteps and infuriated Congress y most of the usual tests, William J. Casey has amply fulfilled his 1981 pledge to lead the Central Intelligence Agency to "good new days." The decimated spy agency he took over as director at the start of Reagan's term has been fattened by budget in- creases that not even the Pentagon can match in percentage terms. Staff has mul- tiplied, intelligence collection and analy- sis have vastly speeded up. Morale has soared as public animosity engendered by the assassination plots and other "dirty tricks" of the 1960s and '70s has faded. The agency is again recruiting on college campuses, where its initials were once re- garded as an anagram of evil. But by another test the agency at times seems to be heading straight back to the bad old days. Once more, relations be- tween the CIA and Congress are being en- veriomed by mutual distrust and anger. Prominent members of both parties charge that Casey not only broke interna- tional law by having the CIA mine three Nicaraguan harbors, but flouted the agen- cy's obligation to keep the intelligence committees of Congress "fully and cur- rently- informed of what it was doing. For his part. Casey, in the words of one of his Administration colleagues, "views Con- gress as a bunch of meddlers, messing around in his business." Vermont Democrat Patrick Leahy, a member of the Senate Intelligence Com- mittee, warns that support for the CIA is eroding because "many Republicans and Democrats in Congress are saying that they consider Mr. Casey's credibility to be at an alltime low." Storms Minnesota Re- publican Senator David Durenberger: "There is no use in our meeting with Bill Casey. None of us believe him. The cava- lier, almost arrogant fashion in which he has treated us as individuals has turned the whole committee against him." To dramatize his protest that Casey kept the group in the dark about the Nicaragua mining, New York Democrat Daniel Pat- rick Moynihan vows to resign as vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Some Administration officials are concerned that Casey will never be able to restore enough trust in Congress to win continued funding for the covert opera- tions that are the CIA director's special pride. Indeed, there are whispers around the White House from pragmatists as well as a few hard-liners that the best service Casey could now perform for the CIA would be to quit. There is little chance that Casey or his boss, Ronald Reagan, will heed or even hear such advice. Casey, who managed Reagan's 1980 campaign, is closer to Rea- gan than perhaps any previous CIA direc- tor has been to his President. He has become one of the driving forces in setting?as well as carrying out?U.S. policy toward Nicaragua. The Administration asserts that its aim is to harass the Sandinista government until it stops trying to foment Communist revolu- tion throughout Central America. The main instrument for achieving this is CIA training, arming and financing of the con- tra guerrillas who are waging war against the Sandinistas. Many lawmakers have long been afraid that the CIA backing of the contras would drag the U.S. into a war against Nicaragua, and Casey's briefings did not always reassure them. One Senator told TIME last week that the CIA director once went so far as to present a plan for a possi- ble eventual partition of Nicaragua be- tween a Sandinista regime in the west and a contra-ruled state in the east. Though the congressional committees cannot veto any OA activities outright, they can, in Moynihan's words, "push and pull" the agency away from dubious schemes (as Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R0004000400ThV"d NEWSWEEK Approved For Release 200V1V213i1C114-RIDID91-00901R00 1 ..1.1. \ 0i'il.,... A frustrated Congress is administration is 'casually Congress took its Easter recess last week, but there was no break in its building fury at the Reagan administration. Recent revelations that Reagan's CIA has been directly involved in military operations against the Nicaraguan government?with- out Congress's full knowledge?frustrated and embittered legislators in both parties. 'We've been used," complained House In- telligence Committee Democrat Norman Min eta. The White House, said Republican ords Front worried that the Reagan playing war' in Nicaragua. ollary, that the CIA is unilaterally running the war?immediately threatened critical elements of administration policy. The extraordinarily lopsided congressional vote against using more U.S. funds to mine Nicaraguan harbors-84 to 12 in the Senate, 281 to 111 in the House?presages a fierce struggle over the president's latest aid re- quest for the U.S.-supported contra rebel- lion against the Sandinista government in Nicaragua and, to a lesser extent, the gov- eminent in El Salvador. But the breach between Congress and the administration could have even more far-reaching ef- fects--especially in an election year. Even the normally san- guine White House acknowl- edged that Reagan's standing with Congress has suffered widespread and lasting dam- age. "There's a feeling they were not dealt with in good faith, that they were misled," says a presidential adviser. 'Nasty': Proof, if any was needed, lay in the bitter resig- nation of Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan from his post as vice chairman of the Intelligence Committee. "Something went wrong," Moynihan explained, "and the seriousness of this must be expressed." In particu- lar, he protested a "breach of faith"---misleading admin- istration briefings suggesting that the contras, and not the CIA, had mined Nicaraguan harbors to destabilize the coun- try's economy. That breach has apparently convinced some senators that Congress should exact revenge. Tired of playing?and los- ing?a cat-and-mouse game with the CIA to secure intelligence that it is legally entitled to, the Senate may try to force CIA Director William Casey to be more responsive. The Senate Intelligence Committee is considering requiring Casey to testify under ? oath when he next appears, a procedure that has usually been abandoned in the name of collegiality; in addition, it is contemplating ttel?u?- 'ag VayM-MVprO R000400040001-2 Casey (above), Moynihan: 'Something went wrong' Sen. David Durenberger, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, has treated Congress with contempt: "The folks down there think we're a bunch of yahoos." But behind the intramural squabbling was a deeper concern?that the administration, by its ? secretive machinations, has bungled U.S. policy in Central America. While Con- gress was kept in the dark, warned Demo- cratic Sen. Fritz Hollings, the administra- tion has been "just cas llv nlaying war." sendina Casey. 4,.71.,ek That widely held co OtgleAtRfcgele4PV4PRIVOK-al? T,AT P400040001-2 activities?and demanding a response with- in 48 hours. "It starts to get very nasty," says a committee staffer. The frustration over the CIA's failure to keep Congress fully in- formed is compounded by genuine confu- sion over what is actually being accom- plished in Central America. "I have no idea whether we are making any progress," says ? D urenberger, who has supported the mon ey for covert operations in Nicaragua. Last week's developments only added to the confusion. Bolstered by new recruits and arms, the -Costa Rican-based Democratic Revolutionary Alliance (ARDE), led by Eden Pastora?the legendary "Command- er Zero" of the Sandinista revolution?was reveling in its first notable military victory. But after occupying the small coastal fishing. village of San Juan del Norte for three days, ARDE forces retreated into the hills in the face of a strong Sandinista ground-and-air counterattack. The Sandinista Air Force devastated what was left of San Juan del Norte, dropping 500-pound bombs from Soviet-built MI-8 helicopters and 0-2 "push and pull" spotter planes. "Our objective is not to defend [fixed] positions," said Pastora in a taped message from an undisclosed location following the retreat. "We are fight- ing a guerrilla offensive." 'Crocodiles': One U.S. official hailed the "m ajor psych ologi cal impact" of th e ARDE effort. However, diplomatic sources in Costa Rica questioned how much it really meant. "If it weren't for its political signifi- cance," said one, "the Sandinistas could just leave Pastora down there to rot." Pastora '44 ....Approved For Release 2005/11/2q.i1,9A-RIDPrin9NEV040069040001-2 30 April 1984 Pitchman of the Power House How top Lobbyist Bob Gray makes friends and sells influence ?yr here was a time when lobbyists were discreet, working their deals behind closed doors. But Robert Keith Gray is a new breed of lobbyist, preferring to enter by the front door and stay in the limelight. The dapper. polished Gray, 62. is the founder and president of Gray & Co., an 86-member lobbying and public relations firm located in a lavishly decorated for- mer generating plant in Georgetown im- modestly named the Power House. His of- fice is decorated with photographs of him shaking hands with every President since Dwight Eisenhower. "With appreciation and warmest friendship," says a photo inscription from Ronald Reagan. whose Inauguration cere- monies Gray helped arrange. _By day he likes to be seen with his pals in high places. including CIA Direc- tor William Casey. Senator Paul Laxalt and most of the Cabinet. By night, if his friends have to work, Bachelor Gray squires their wives ip to so many Washington panics that he claims he wears out two tuxedos a year. Gray cultivates his connections by hiring people on the basis of whom they know. "I only want the stars," he says. It is a policy that gets him publicity, not always wel- come. Four months ago. Gray hired Alejandro Orfila. the Secretary- General of the Organization of American States and former Ar- gentine Ambassador to the U.S., at $25,000 a month. At the time Or- fila, who is an accomplished Wash- ington socializer, was still working for the O.A.S. and collecting his $88,000-a-year salary. He contin- ued working as both a diplomat and a member of Gray & Co. until his resignation from the O.A.S. on March 31. Last winter, a black limousine with diplomatic plates that read "OAS 8" was often seen idling outside the Power House. while Orfila worked within. Al- though Orfila insists that he did no lobby- ing while he was on both payrolls and that he was moonlighting from the O.A.S. on accumulated leave time, the O.A.S. this month rebuked him and began an investi- gation of his nine years in office. A few days later. Gray was back in the news for getting Ursula Meese a job running a small foundation. The wife of embattled Presidential Counsellor Edwin Meese. she has maintained that she took the 540.000- a-year job as executive director of the foundation at American University in early 1982 because her family needed the money. She still has the pofipproved For For all his intimate connections, how- ever. Gray is not just a political fixer. The rules of lobbying have changed since the days when the legendary Thomas ("Tom- my the Cork") Corcoran could pick up the phone and deliver the goods for a client. As federal regulations have grown ever stricter in the past 15 years, the number of registered lobbyists has quadrupled. There are now about 6.500, or just over twelve for every member of Congress. But while this growing cacophony of special- interest groups is fighting to be heard, lob- bying has become more open, thanks to the full-disclosure demands of the post- Watergate era. What Gray offers is a prized .Wash- 6 the persuaders," he explains. "But today's lobbyist has to be a straight shooter." Contends Staffer Frank Mankiewicz, who until last year ran National Public Radio: "He's a small-town boy, like Ronald Rea- gan. In a small town, you help your friends." Gray, who was born in Hastings, Neb.. is a good deal more than just a small-town boy grown big. He is a Har- vard Business School graduate who since going to Washington as a low-level offi- cial in the Eisenhower Administration has had the knack for cultivating the pow- erful of both parties. He left the public re- lations firm of Hill & Knowlton Inc. in 1981 to build a company that by 1983 was earning 511 million a year. He owns 75% of Gray & Co.'s stock, and enjoyed a sala- ry last year of $401,500. Gray has produced results for many ?clients, including the government of Turkey, which has little support in Congress. The powerful Greek ilobby was determined to trim back Turkey's military aid last year, but Gray sent Lobbyist Gary Hymel, a former top aide to House Speaker Tip O'Neill, to work on House lead- ers. Martin Gold, former counsel to Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker, was sent by Gray to deal with Republican leaders in the Sen- ate. Turkey ended up getting more military aid out of Congress than the year before. "1141; At the Capitol: "Today's lobbyist has to be a straight shooter" A small-town boy who gets along, at $350 an hour. ington commodity called access. His spe- cialty is the returned phone call. "A Bob Gray can get your case heard," says Jack Albertine, president of the American Business Conference. Declares the New Republic columnist TRB: "Gray's firm has broken new ground in the brazenness with which it presents itself as selling not legal services or even public relations, but connections pure and simple." Gray maintains these connections by performing small favors. like getting the job for Ursula Meese or helping Nancy Thurmond, the wife of Senator Strom ?Thurmond. Republican of South Caroli- na, organize charity balls. (He once put Mrs. Thurmond on his payroll, but criti- Viilnrtsrn of ft.10151.C2ti I IVA ra sto asks for favors in return. "There was a time when booze, blonds and bribes were Such services do not come cheap. The firm often charges clients both a monthly retainer and high hourly fees. An hour of Gray's time costs 5350. Says a former em- ployee: "Suddenly, at the end of the month, the client is hit with a $40.000 or $50.000 bill. He says, 'My God, what have I gotten for this?'" Sometimes little more than a handshake. One arms dealer paid Gray 565.000 to help him make his case to the Pentagon on a foreign spare-parts deal. Gray set up a meeting for the client with Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, but the arms dealer did not get the contract. Nor can Gray always deliver the handshake. The National Food Processors paid him a major fee largely in the hope that he could - persuade President Reagan to speak at their annual convention in early February. The President declined. Gray insists that he will not take on just any client, and hints that he has turned away the government of Libya and the Rev. Sun Myung Moon. But how ?did he know, for instance, that more mili- tary aid for Turkey was in the national interest? "I always check these situations out with Bill Casey.- says Gray, dropping like a brick the name of his friend the CIA like tialqtPitrmlo be ntliee-ntrillsehyipcsan be marketed. ?By Evan Thomas. Reported by David Beckwith and lay Branegan/Washinelon IAI preked For Release 2005/1M: CIA- 30 April 1984 VTL7E Mystery Money A new Meese puzzle yIIet another cloud has appeared over the troubled nomination of Presiden- tial Counsellor Edwin Meese as U.S. At- torney General: a tax-exempt Reagan Administration transition fund, headed by Meese in 1980-81, that refuses to reveal where its private donations came from and where much of its money went. The New York Times reported last week that the fund has even refused to open its books to a federal audit. The disclosure led Senate Judiciary Committee Member Ted Kennedy to ask Jacob Stein, the spe- cial prosecutor looking into allegations raised against Meese, to include the fund in his probe. A source close to the investi- gation insisted that Stein, with his far- ranging mandate to sort out the tangled Meese affair, will almost surely decide to look into the matter. Meese served as president and the only salaried director of the Presidential Tran- sition Foundation Inc., set up to plan the transfer of executive power from the Car- ter Administration to Reagan's team...The other directors were William Casey, now CIA director, and Verne On, now Secretary of the Air Force. In addition to receiving $2 million in operating expenses from the Government and $250,000 from the Presi- dent's campaign treasury, F., the foundation raised $688,931 from unidenti- ?6fied private donors, ac- :cording to its tax return. No limit was set on the amount people could do- nate, but On said at the time that single contribu- tions were being limited to a maximum of $5,000. The foundation also promised Edwin Meese that its books would even- tually be made public. 1 tir R000400040001-2 DC_ That never happened. The fund de- clined a request by the General Accounting Office (GAO) in 1981 to provide an account- ing of privately raised receipts and their disbursement. A similar request to the White House in 1981 produced a vague promise that it was "attempting to formu- late a response," according to the GAO. Even though the foundation has claimed tax exemption, the Internal Revenue Ser- vice has never approved that status. Noting that the IRS is headed by a presidential ap- pointee, Kennedy asked, "Why has it not audited the foundation?" If the transition fund is not tax exempt, the donors of the $688,931 could not claim tax deductions. Meese's attorney, E. Robert Wallach, said that "explicitly, Meese didn't handle fund raising, he didn't handle disburse- ments." Another member of his legal team, Leonard Garment, promised that if Prosecutor Stein decides to probe Meese's role at the foundation, "we are prepared to answer all of his questions." ? Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 NEW YORK 30 April 1984 - ? - ---Apurgved For Rel, -00901R000400 The National nterest/ ael arner THE -11130.'ZIONI THAT ULD REALLy TTSEt D'Aubuisson (center) campaigning: A death sentence for U.S. aid) Big Stakes in El Salvador THREE ia't ELECTIONS OF THE 1984 SEA...- son will soon be held within four days of one another. On May 5, Texas will hold its caucuses, and although Gary Hart's high-tech message should do?well in the Southwest, the smart money is on Wal- ter Mondale. And three days later, on May 8, the Ohio primary should further confirm Mondale's appeal to Democrats in the industrial Midwest. In between these contests, on May 6, an even more important election will take place, in El Salvador?the runoff between Napoleon Duarte and Roberto d'Aubuisson for the Salvadoran presi- dency. The Democrats may have their attention fixed on Texas and Ohio, but the Reagan administration has its mind firmly set on El Salvador. With the Mid- die East receding as a flash point (at least for now) and the recent Soviet suc- cession diverting attention from the ad- ministration's reluctance to reopen arms talks, Central America stands as the key foreign-policy issue of the 1984 cam- paign. A victory by d'Aubuisson, a for- mer army officer linked to the death squads, would be disastrous not only for El Salvador but for Ronald Reagan's Central .4--nerican policy as well. D'Au- buisson's prescription is more killing. He believes the bulk of El Salvador's trouble is generated by about 5,000 sub- versives (besides thAppithigrFfigihAtill as guer:illas), and he would "wipe them out." D'Aubuisson may well be engag- ing in campaign hyperbole, but if he is elected, Congress will probably cut off American aid before waiting to find out. Duarte, on the other hand, is a con- ciliator. He has said he will conduct a "dialogue" with the guerrillas, and while he has steadfastly refused to define his terms; it is understood that some con- crete attempt at peacemaking would be his first priority. Duarte is not only ac- ceptable to the administration's con- gressional critics, he is acceptable to the administration itself. "God, how we want Duarte to win," says a senior ad- ministration aide. "He gives us cred- ibility?and more important, as we head into an election here, he gives us time. His presidency would be like the Cher- nenko ascendancy. All sides will have to permit Duarte time to work his magic. And for sure we'll support whatever he does. Duarte can get us off the hook." The catch is whether the Salvadoran military, which continues to wield the real power, will permit Duarte to govern effectively. The very same military stole the 1972 election from Duarte, and.when he finally did become president, in the early '80s, he was little more than a fig- urehead. Back then, Duarte's contempt for the military he theoretically oversaw was the region's worst-kept secret. "AJI they know is how to kill," Duarte. told me two years ago. "They want to keep on protecting the rich, and as long as there ae't2oetspievii2s globviRDiztmiz000bsi that's exactly how they'll continue to operate." To hear the White House tell it, the Salvadoran armed forces are now a model of professionalism. But the death squads still roam at will, which they couldn't do without the military's ac- quiescence. And the new military com- mander, General Vides Casanova, has himself been implicated in the cover-up surrounding the murder of the Ameri- can churchwomen four years ago. Assuming Duarte wins, will the army permit him to talk with the guer- rillas and institute the sweeping land- redistribution program he has prom- ised? When Duarte tried economic re- forms during his presidency, they were quickly undermined by the legisla- ture's actions, something that couldn't have happened without the military's tacit blessing. . For the record, Duarte now says that the army is "better," that it has "changed," and he obviously hopes for an accommodation. Whether he gets it will depend on how far he wants to go and how quickly. Duane figures his best chance would be to act swiftly. He be- lieves the army would realize that Amer- ican aid would end if the military staged a coup or otherwise crippled his presi- dency. The White House concurs in this analysis?and is keeping its finger crossed. "We've made it as clear as we can," says a State Department official. "If Duarte wins and is rendered irrele- vant, then we're out of there. We think the message has gotten through. If it has, we'll have a defensible position in El , Salvador at least through the fall elec..- tion here. Whether we'll have the same kind of 'bye' in Nicaragua is a whole different question." Yes, it is. Tnanks mainly to the C.I..A.'s mining of-Nicaragua's harbors, the administra- tion is now facing congressional re- sistance to the continued funding of the American-supported counterrevolu- tionary operations directed against the Managua regime. The mining may have been sound tactically?another weapon in the war to pressure the Sandinistas to cease their support of the Salvadoran guerrillas?but the international and domestic backlash offsets the gain. Part of the current flap is justified. Mining is a legitimate act of war? whether declared or not?but it is nor- mally undertaken openly so that neutral vessels have fair warning. The C.I.A.'s 0004000410001n2 which was bound surface sometime, has only heightened , the outcry. As for the agency's briefing ARTICLE APPARKPved For ReleastigiNgVigit-RDP91-00901 ON PAGE 10, Sec. I 30 April 1984 What a relief; Relax, everyone. You can sleep a little easier ? tonight, comforted in the knowledge that Daniel ? Patrick Moynihan has reversed his decision to as vice chairman of the Senate Select :Committee on Intelligence. . ?,. The man so inattentive to matters important to his committee that he did not even read his `,0W11 staff report on the mining of Nicaraguan :harbors has again lent the country his eyes and 17ears. The New York senator so outraged be- ' 'Ca:use the report telling of:the CIA's role in the ,..inining wasn't underlined in red is .once 'again 'poised to wield the mighty .hammer of his eadership over the intelligence proceduresof R000400040001-2 I Mr. Moynihan the United States. Mr. Moynihan agreed to stay on 'after. CIA Director William J. Casey apologized to the committee for not having kept Congress ade- quately informed of.--the mining operation, . which for weeks had been oneof Washington's - most open .secrets. It seems .that Mr. Moynihan was one of the few people. in Washington not aware of the mining...-Among the new procedures the com- mittee Might ir.nplernent.fis the purchase of a = - trumpet :.Mr. Casey can use to -awaken Mr. Moyailian" to key element's in upcoming CIA briefings Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 ti LEApptEMM o r Re lease490q/c1A282-RDP91-00901R00 ? CZ RAGE 2-- 29 April 1984 Casey,?Senate- Patch .Things On Nicaragua Willianagt..Casey,:the Director of - Central Intelligence, must have found it awkward, to apologize. But with the survival of the Administra- tion's military support of the Nicara-- guan rebels hanging in the balance, Mr. Casey swallowed hard and au- thorized an on-the-record apology to the Senate ,Intelligence Conirnittee. ? last week.: _-.. The committee-complained that it e`was not adequately informed in a timely manner"-of the C.I.A.'s role in mining Nicaraguan harbors, add-. lag ing that Mr. Casey "concurred in that assessment." At the same time, Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York became vice chairman again. He had quit to protest the min- ing, Which, Mr. Casey said, has STA 0400040001-2 The requests for Central military aid are to come velure a Senate-House conference committee this week. The Senate has approved $21 million for the Nicaraguan insur- gents and $61.7 million for the El Sal- vador Government. The House has approved $:32.5 million for El Salva- dor and no additional money for Nicaragua operations. Washington says it is acting in the collective defense of El Salvador and other Central American countries against subversion by Nicaraguan- supported guerrillas. The United States has also urged free elections, a plea echoed last 'weekend by Nica- ragua's nine Roman, Catholic bish- ops, who said the votingshould also be open to the Tebels..."But Daniel Ortega 'Saavedra,. the. junta corinl- ? nator, rejected- .tha;:.bishop's pro- posal, contending if was "orientedby the Nicaragua,- be added, was placing " little faith in the mediating efforts of the five nearby countries known as the Contadora group. The group's foreign ministers, from Mexico, Co- lombia, Panama and Venezuela, were to meet again today with Cen- tral American officials. Taking its case against the United States to the World Court, Nicaragua asked for an interim ruling enjoining Washington from supporting the in- surgents. Davis R. Robinson, a State Department lawyer, denounced the complaint as ?propaganda" and urged dismissal. Besides, he said, Nicaragua has not recognized the court's authority. But Carlos Ar- guello Gomez of Nicaragua said his country had gone before the cowl in a 1960 dispute with Honduras. The court, which has no enforcement au- thority, was expected to hand down a preliminary ruling _within 15 days. Milt Freudenbehin and Henry Giniger Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R DALLAS NEWS (TEXAS) 29 April 1984 CIA director speaks so Casey's mumbling contributed to furor over Nicaragua mining By Richard Whittle Washington Bureau oj The News WASHINGTON ? When William Casey talks, members of the, House and Senate Intelligence committees listen ? but some say they often can't hear. ' The CIA director, who turned 71 last month, speaks in a voice as wispy as his thin white hair. Like the Allied agents he helped infiltrate be- hind German lines as a World War II officer in the Office of Strategic Services, Casey's words have a way of fading murkily into the ether. "I think I am not being unkind to say (that) Mr. Casey is not known for having high marks in elocution; that it's not always clear what exactly is being said when he is talking," said Sen. Wil- liam S. Cohen, a Maine Republican who sits on the Senate Intelligence Committee. Waxing unintelligible is so much Casey's trademark that even President Reagan has joked about it. He has said that one of Casey's assets as .head of the nation's top spy agency is that he requires no electronic "scrambler" to garble his telephone conversations as a guard against in- terception. Far from just an amusing quirk, Casey's mumbling has been a factor in his dispute with members of the Senate Intelligence Committee over whether he properly informed them of the CIA's direct role in mining Nicaragua's harbors. Casey took the extraordinary step of paying ' personal "fence-mending" calls on committee members. last week and even signed a formal memorandum of apology at the behest of Sens. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, and Richard Lugar, R- But Casey, who declined through a spokes- man to be interviewed, was slow to admit any error. At first he had CIA officials issue state- ments saying he had complied with the 1980 In- telligence Oversight Act, which requires him to keep Congress "fully and currently informed" of any "significant" intelligence operations. As a result, before his apology, Casey's rela- tions with the Senate committee had grown so sour that some members were suggesting that he resign. Though it is not likely that Reagan would ask him to quit, it is less likely that Casey would volunteer to leave a job that has let him delve again into the mysterious world of secret intelli- gence operations, which by his own past admis- sion he came to love as a young OSS officer. ,? Whatever the course of his future dealings viith Capitol Hill, it is widely agreed that the epi- sode has raised the ghost of the sinister, head- strong image the CIA acquired after 1970s revela- tions of past CIA assassination plots and coups. ; It is no secret that Casey has a special bond With the clandestine service ? the arm of the organization that plots and implements covert programs in the realms of propaganda, political iatrigue and paramilitary operations ? based on his experience in the kind of work they do. It is said that he has even gone into Central America himself, traveling in unmarked planes, to check on the progress of his agency's operations. ' For that reason, said a former intelligence official who has worked with Casey personally, the director is unlikely to change his ways with- out direct orders from Congress. The former offi- Oal asked not to be identified. ' "Running the clandestine service," the offi- cial said, "well, he just loves to do it." ? Some of Casey's supporters disagree that his affinity for covert action has hurt the agency's image. Former CIA Director William L. Colby, for one, said the congressional furor reflects no distrust of Casey but merely a lack of consensus .on Whether the CIA's Nicaraguan operations are, I wise. But the controversy appears to have killed whatever chances the administration had of get- ting the House to approve $21 million to resupply the CIA-backed rebels, known as contras, who are warring against Nicaragua's Marxist San- dinista government. ? Cohen and other Senate committee members are still saying that while Casey may have re- ferred during March briefings to mines being placed in Nicaragua's harbors, the words he used and his customary mumbling prevented the committee from understanding the CIA's role in placing them. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-009 STAT 1R000400040001-2 Approved For Releaa4805/21'11428141C4A-RDPI1RG8901X0004004000 29 April 1984 ei4te CIA and Congress In theory, at least, the Central Intelligence Agency has an absolute obligation to keep Congress informed of operations which Congress is called upon to fund. The resignation of Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan as vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee and a sub- ' sequent apology offered by William J. Casey, the CIA head, for failure to brief the committee as fully as some members desired shows how seriously that obligation is taken both on.; Capitol Hill and in the executive branch of government. Not quite so seriously taken, however, is the obligation on I Congress' part to guard secrets that the CIA imparts to it in . the course of keeping senators and representatives well- informed. No wonder the CIA thinks twice before being candid with Congress when it knows the place is full of blabbermouths who consider it their duty, upon being informed of CIA un- . dertakings they don't approve of, to immediately hold a press conference to denounce them. , Whether,' in the closed session Wednesday which culmi- nated in Mr. Casey's apology and Mr. Monynihan's return to the vice chairman's seat, this concomittant obligation on the part of Congress was discussed, reports have not' yet made clear. All we know is that at the end of what was apparently a spirited give-and-take between senators and spymaster, all hands, emerged radiating sweetness and light. For the record, anyway. There are still no doubt many members of the committee who have reservations about the CIA and all its works. Still, no doubt, a certain skepticism on Mr. Casey's part about the ability of Mr. Moynihan and his colleagues 'to keep their mouths shut: On whole, however, this clear-the-air episode should have a healthy effect not only in Congress and covert action cir- cles but upon the public, which has been a little too quick to jump on the CIA in connection with the Nicaraguan mining, assuming that there was some plot afoot in Mr. Casey's office to sneak something by. It is not at all clear, for one thing, whether members of the committee, when com- plaining about lack of information, are fully entitled to the gripes they have been expressing. Some senators had no complaints. Perhaps the others just weren't listening ? ?- ? CG9t94K1 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 Approved For Release 2005/11 TiCLE LFF7'..! 772, STAT r28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 STAT WASHINGTON POST 29 April 1984 ? Itimate Goal of U.S. Latin Policy By Joanne Omang and Don Oberdorfer Vt.b.5 InF ton Post SL.:: Writers In making the long-neglected re- gion of Central America one of its top international priorities, the Rea- gan administration is trying to stop the spread of communism near the southern U.S. border by using indi- rect military and paramilitary power ? and attempting to restructure polit- ical and social institutions in coun- . tries there. . The ambiguous nature of this pol- icy has been shaped by an American political paradox, reflected in opin- ion poll after opinion . poll, that is partly a legacy of the Vietnam war. A majority of American voters agrees that vital U.S. interests are at stake in Central America but flatly op- poses having U.S. troops fight to de- fend those interests. Guided by this domestic imper- ative and its own instincts, the ad- ministration has determined that further military victories by commu- nist troops will not be permitted in Central America and that this policy can be enforced short of sending U.S. troops into combat there. This is the answer administration officials give in interviews, public stateents and-internal doc-uments to questions about what the United States is trying to do in Central America. However, the officials said a central question remains unre- solved inside the administration: Should the U.S. objective be only to . stop the spread of communist influ- ence in the region or to go further ! . and eradicate it in Nicaragua and ? Cuba? These officials expressed the be- lief that democratic institutions? even if they must be created virtu- ally from scratch in countries that have very little democratic tradition, ? such as -El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala?nonetheless can re- spond to the needs of. downtrodden people and that the people will then reject communism. Approved For Still Unresolved In effect, the theory holds that if El Salvador, the crucial battleground in the administration's view, can be militarily protected long enough --from outside leftist revolutionary in- fluence, it can leave behind its long history of corruption, human rights _abuses, illegal behavior and inepti- '. 'tude and be transformed peacefully into a smaller version of the United States, a responsive, democratic so- ciety. This fundamental approach, re- jected as impractical or insincere by many critics of the administration's policy for Central America, is behind the steady buildup of a U.S. "mili- tary shield in Central America, be- hind which, administration officials said, democratic institutions may ' flourish with U.S. help. However, the most visible result so far of this two-pronged approach has been the military buildup. Im- plemented in piecemeal and incre- mental fashion throughout the three years of the Reagan administration, it has changed the face of Central America. With US. aid, Salvadoran mili- :,tary forces have more than doubled and those of neighboring Honduras have increased 30 percent. Without -direct U.S. aid, Guatemala's forces have increased 50 percent. Covert U.S. financing and direc- through the CIA have helped the insurgents fig_hting -the' 'leftist government of- adjacent Nicaragua, .known as contrasz grow from a few ragtag exile banois to three well- nanized, well-equipped guerrilla _groups totaling 15,000 fighters. U.S. military assistance to the Sal- vadoran government in its war against leftist rebels has grown from about $6 million in the last full year of the Carter administration to this year's total of $243 million either al- ready sent to El Salvador or awaiting congressional approval. U.S. military aid to Honduras has inereaseitKen Re letairgti290?04/q8)ircatk-KuP91 :00901 Powerful U.S. armadas have sailed into the waters surrounding Central America to show the flag. U.S. ground, air and sea maneuvers ocf unprecedented size and scope have become a nearly continuous feature there. The jackhammer of U.S. military construction has be- come commonplace, especially in Honduras. But the other part of the policy? .,-the building of flourishing democrat- ic institutions?is not yet apparent. Critics of the Reagan administration have said they doubt that it is pos- sible, although new elections have been held or scheduled in several countries of the region. The most. important, and possibly riskiest, of these elections so far will be presi- dential balloting scheduled next Sunday in El Salvador. All sides agree that stability in the region, to say nothing of peace, is far off. The economies of the Central American countries have been hit hand by global recession and the fileat of capital, which have hurt the region far more than increased U.S. economic and military aid has hebed. Only in the past few months, fm the first time since the late 19770s, has this economic decline ap- peared to level off in several Central .American countries, with hopes for improvement ahead. In the military. competition, the 'growing strength and resources of opposition elements also has offset some of the U.S. buildup in friendly countries. The military forces of Nicaragua's Sandinistas, backed by Soviet and Cuban equipment and advisers, have grown from about 4,000 on their day of rictory over the late dictator Anastasio Somoza in mid-1979 to about 48,000 now, about half of them reservists. While the United States has ? helped the Salvadoran military grow from 16,000 at the end of the Carter administration to 39,000 today, aid from communist nations helped the Reett401104000Idels there to grow from 2,000 only four years ago to about 10.000 now. S I ARTICLE AP ON PAGE roved For ReleaselF6519%8D.AW-F30?1-00901R0004 29 April 19 00040001-2 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 TAT Apprpved For ReleaStr2005/1112809ZIAMIFAVIOW000t 29 April 1984 Where Was The versight? Every agency of the federal government is supposed to be accountable to Congress, and that goes for the Central Intelligence Agency, which despite ? claims of secrecy- cannot claim secrecy from Congress. Otherwise, the CIA would be an unaccountable aiserw'of the executive branch, not far different from, say, the Soviet Union's KGB. Unfortunately, the CIA has not 'always been all that accountable to Congress. CIA Director William J. Casey has conceded as much to members of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Mr. Casey apologized for not adequately informing the committee about the CIA's supervision of the mining of Nicaraguan ports. As a result, Sen. Moynihan of New York has withdrawn his resignation as vice chairman_ of Thrc?fiimthee ad-d6- doubt .Sen.. Goldwater of Arizona is less outraged by the Reagan administration's alleged refusal to give the committee a full briefing. STAT -2 We do not know, however, whether Mr. Casey's apology was entirely necessary. The House Intelligence Committee, through careful probing, did learn at least something about the policy of mining Nicaraguan harbors. The Senate committee, apparently, didn't do much probing. It might be asked if some senators really wanted to know what the CIA was doing. Ignorance may not be bliss, but it allows members of Congress to permit CIA operations to go unchallenged until they are ? revealed, somehow, by the press. Then the congressmen can react according to whatever seems politically required. The case of the mining of Nicaraguan harbors ought to embarrass Congress as much as the administration. If anything const_ructiy,e _r?esults, it shQu1 be.jhat Congress will demand that it be fully informed about CIA activities. Otherwise, the public can't have much confidence in the way its government operates. Approved F,or Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 ,row.????????????',. NBC MEET THE PRESS Approved For Release 2995/A1ly :1q1RDP91-00901R KALE: Good day from Washington. I am Marvin Kalb inviting you to Meet the Press with Sen. Joseph Eiden, a strong critic of the president's foreign pc ANN-DUNCER: Meet the Press, an unrehearsed press conference, is a public affairs presentation of NBC News. KALE: Our guest today on Meet the Press is Sen. Joseph Eiden of Delaware who was first elected to the U.S. Senate 12 years ago, when he was 29. Sen. Biden is now the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee. Re is also a member of the Foreign Relations, Budget and Intelligence Committees, and with this background he challenges administration policy across the board. Our reporters today are Morton\Kondracke of The New Republic,. Gloria\Bwrger of Newsweek, Robert\Novak of The Chicago Sun-Times, and to open the quiestioning, our regular panelist, Bill\Monroe of NBC News. NOVAK: Sen. Eiden, there's been a lot of noise from Democrats in the Senate about beine...information being withheld from you by the CIA on the mining of the Nicaraguan harbors by the contras. Isn't it a fact that you were well aware. of that operation, you personally, were well aware of that operation when the debate in the Senate took place? BIDEN: We were well aware of it from news accounts. I quite frankly find myself in a bit of a bind answering that question because I was the only person voting against that operation from the aid to the contras since the changing pf the so-called presidential finding, the second finding. I think the admini...that the committee's almost as much at fault here as in fact, the agency is. The agency did not level. The agency did not tell us the extent of their involvement. And they did not tell us the extent of the president's involvement. But we did not ask the right questions. NOVAK: But sir, isn't it true that you were personally, quite apart from news accounts, that personally you were briefed by the CIA on the mining operations before the debate in the Senate? BIDEN: No. That's not true. What we were in fact briefed about, on two occasions, about two months after the fact, was that in a compendium of a number of things that were occurring., dropped in as number 17,. was, and by the way, there are mines there.. They never told us though, the degree to which there was direct U.S. involvement in that process. NOVAK: Well, aren't the mines a red herring, sir? Isn't it a fact that you're opposed to the contras being financed to U.S. funds to overthrow the Sandinista regime? BIDEN: He, personally? NOVAK: Yes, sir. BIDEN: Yes. I am personally opposed to the way in which we are going about that. NOVAK: Can I ask you one other thing, sir? BIDEN: Sure, you can ask me... NOVAK: Who would you prefer running the government of Nicaragua, the communists who are in power there now, or the people who are trying for a democratic regime and fighting with the contras? BIDEN: ? I'd- prefer the people trying for the democratic regime. Continued Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 Approved For ReleaseE200AprAP9t')WRI5W6i9oi\Tli _0040 Casey comes clean central Intelligence Director William Casey has admitted to members of the Senate Intelligence Committee that he failed to inform them of his agency's covert activities in mining the ports of Nicaragua. , Under the law, the intelligence committee is supposed to I exercise oversight over the CIA in order to ensure that it does not; engage in secret wars, assassinate foreign leaders, or otherwise take actions that are contrary to U.S. laws and publicly stated foreign policy. The law is designed to ensure that the legitimately elected representatives of the people -stay in control of the :government and its policies without weakening the CIA by exposing all Its operations to public scrutiny.. - It's difficult to run a spy agency in full Public view, we all agree, ? but we don't want it operating totally without control. - So it is refreshing to see Director Casey come forward in such a forthright and honest manner (one of the greater attributes of Reagan appointees) after having the details of the mining leaked to the press, the Senate Intelligence Committee publicly flay him, a majority of both houses pass resolutions condemning the mining operation, and generally cause an uproar throughout the world. Yes, indeed, his candor is refreshing. Calling for his resignation is the farthest thing from our minds, Quite the contrary, this incident has shown that Mr. Casey is the perfect man to head the CIA. He has clearly shown that he has the -requisite character traits ? deviousness, a conveniently weak memory, and the ability to withstand tough questioning without giving away valuable information (the mining operation) to the enemy (the Senate Intelligence Committee) ? to be the country's -chief spy. Rest easy America, with Mr. Casey in charge of the CIA the nation is safe as long as it doesn't travel by ship near Nicaragua. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 ARTI OLE APPEL kirD - Agpcoved For ReleaseAiSkITA kA-m1DPEAIE9Egia0400 ON PAGE 5, Se c . Apr..1 9 Senate wants CIA to keep By Terry Atlas and Dorothy Coffin Chicago Tribune WASHINGTON?The Senate Select Committee on Intelligence has an- nounced it will meet Wednesday to work out "more thorough and effec- tive oversight procedures" in the wake of an apology by the CIA for failing to give Congress adequate information about the mining of ,Ni- caragua's harbors. ' The committee said in a statement it would move quickly to develop new procedures to see that the Sc-, nate is more fully informed, espe- cially about covert activities.- The vice chairman of the committee, Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan: [D., N.Y.), said the group will consider requiring the CIA to disclose any activity that might require presiden- tial approval, such as the mining of harbors. The committee's determination fol- lowed an apology by CIA Director William Casey for failing to keep it fully informed about the CIA role in the mining of the harbors. Casey - met with the committee, behind closed ',doors for- about two hours Thursda out ? of cold America. The controversy, in the .process, undercut congressional sup- port for President Reagan's Central American policies. .. - " BUT THE RESOLUTION of the battle over CIA briefings left unset- " tied basic questions about adminis- tration policies in the region and CIA., activities. The Senate has voted ni million to continue CIA support for IheNiciiregruan_rebels fighling the., Sandinista government, but that aid - is opposed by the House. - At the end of the closed-door meeting, which one senator said was marked by a "spirited and sharp exchange" with Casey, the commit- tee issued a brief statement outlining its new agreement with Casey and the CIA. The carefully worded statement said that Casey had "concurred" with the committee's belief that it -hadn't been "adequately informed in a timely manner!' of the miningand that he had agreed on the "for consider in detail what those new procedures might be. And the statement purposely evaded the question of whether Casey had violated the law requiring him to keep the--committee "fully and currently informed" of all intel- ligence activities. , Last month, after details of the CIA's role in the mining became public, an uproar developed on Capi- tol Hill as senators claimed that they hadn't been told about an activity that some viewed as a violation of international law. - . The CIA contended repeatedly that Casey had mentioned the operation in briefings but that the senators and their staffs had failed to follow up with the right questions. One senator said the committee was told Thurs- day by Casey that.the plan to mine Nicaragua's .ports was made last fall, months before hints of the oper- ation reached Congress. T -.- COMMITEE MEMBERS at tinies acknowledging he failed to provide a more thorough and effective over- appeared Lobe as upset with the way adequate information and promising sight procedures" involving covert they were treated by Casey and the to be more forthcoming in the future. activity. CIA as they were with the mining -7 ."We were all there to do a'repair AS . A _RESULT, Mqniliiin job on our communication lines," drew his resignation as vice chair- .said Sen. David Durenberger [R., man and agreed to continue serving. Minn.). Taken together, it appears- these Previously, the CIA claimed it had events have defused the confronta- informed various committees or tion over the mining. staff members several times of the Casey also assured committee mining. That was hotly challenged' Members that the CIA-directed min- by the committee staffs, who said ? ing has been halted and that there the briefings had been vague and. are no other covert activities in Cen-': indirect concerning the imning tral America of which they have not ?" ' been told. THE COMMITTErw by 'saying .it Committee members said they be. would develop new procedures- to ? lieve Casey will keep them iietter monitor CIA activities, appeared to informed through future briefings take part of the blame for the contro- about major covert operations. Sen. versy by failing to pursue the matter Lloyd Bentsen [D., Tex.) - said he after references to the mining by believes that Casey will be "more Casey in an earlier briefing. . forthright." - However the . conunittee didn't Casey's apology capped several days otintense behind-the-scenes-ac- ; tivity as the CIA director, the Senate Republican leadership and key mem- bers of the Intelligence Committee looked for a way to cool what had become a heated public debate over the CIA's covert activities in Central itself, and the ,tonflict became so public that. by this week all sides were looking for a way to settle the dispute. ".At some point, we had to have a truce," said a - Senate leadership source. "They couldn't keep savag- ing each other." Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RD?91-00901R000400040001-2 Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 RADIO TV REPORTS, INC: 4701 WILLARD AVENUE, CHEVY CHASE, MARYLAND 20815 (301) 656-4068 KA PUBLIC AFFAIRS STAFF PROGRAM Agronsky & Company DATE STA) SKIXA WOVM-TV Syndicated April 28, 1984 7:00 P.M. ON Washington, D.C. w&s= Casey/Nicaragua MARTIN AGRONSKY: Elizabeth, the CIA Director, Mr. Casey, had now said that he feels he was wrong in not having revealed more clearly and explicitly to the Senate committee in charge of oversight of CIA operations what they were doing in Central America, and specifically the mining by the CIA of the harbors off the coast of Nicaragua. Now, Senator Moynihan, who said he was going to resign as deputy chairman, apparently has been sufficiently mollified, so he's going to remain as deputy chairman, though he says he'll forgive but not forget. Now, where are we now with the CIA, with the secrets and keeping those secrets secret from the Congress? ELIZABETH DREW: I think it's pretty clear what hap- pened, Martin, is that it was -- Mr. Casey was made to understand that he was about to lose it all if he didn't mollify the senators, and that this was probably more a tactical move. I don't know that he lost a lot of sleep at night over --contrition over not having been, perhaps, more fully informative of the Senate committee. But people in the Senate and elsewhere said to him, "Look, you're about to lose a very important constituency up there. You'd better mend your fences." Particularly, some Republican senators said that. And so he went up and he said, "I'm sorry," which for him was a very big thing to do. There's another sub-thing that was going on here having to do with some people not wanting Mr. Moynihan to give up that slot, fearing it would go to someone who might be more critical of the CIA. So, there was a lot of dancing around. I'm not pure that any tAppri-v-i-n-SvetcPFrcTrilkUsiasi Y elAtikiNi9f-61901 R000400040001-2 OFFICES IN: WASHINGTON D.C. ? NEW YORK ? LOS ANGELES. ? : CHICAGO ? DETROIT ? AND OTHER PRINCIPAL CMES Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000 RADIO TV REPORTS, IN 4701 WILLARD AVENUE, CHEVY CHASE, MARYLAND 20815 (301) 656-4068 KA PUBLIC AFFAIRS STAFF PROGRAM Agronsky & Company STATION W DVM-TV Syndicated DATE SUBJECT April 28, 1984 7:00 P.M. ON Washington, D.C. Casey/Nicaragua MARTIN AGRONSKY: Elizabeth, the CIA Director, Mr. Casey, had now said that he feels he was wrong in not having revealed more clearly and explicitly to the Senate committee in charge of oversight of CIA operations what they were doing in Central America, and specifically the mining by the CIA of the harbors off the coast of Nicaragua. Now, Senator Moynihan, who said he was going to resign as deputy chairman, apparently has been sufficiently mollified, so he's going to remain as deputy chairman, though he says he'll forgive but not forget. Now, where are we now with the CIA, with the secrets and keeping those secrets secret from the Congress? ELIZABETH DREW: I think it's pretty clear what hap- pened, Martin, is that it was -- Mr. Casey was made to understand that he was about to lose it all if he didn't mollify the senators, and that this was probably more a tactical move. I don't know that he lost a lot of sleep at night over --contrition over not having been, perhaps, more fully informative of the Senate committee. But people in the Senate and elsewhere said to him, "Look, you're about to lose a very important constituency up there. You'd better mend your fences." Particularly, some Republican senators said that. And so he went up and he said, "I'm sorry," which for him was a very big thing to do. There's another sub-thing that was going on here having to do with some people not wanting Mr. Moynihan to give up that slot, fearing it would go to someone who might be more critical of the CIA. So, there was a lot of dancing around. I'm not sure that anything terribly substantive took place. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-Rnaui-00901K000400040001-2 OFFICES IN: WASHINGTON D.C. ? NEW YORK ? LOS ANGELES ? CHICAGO ? DETROIT ? AND OTHER PRINCIPAL CITIES Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 2 HUGH SIDEY: But let' p also look at the other side of this. We've looked at it from Mr. Casey's standpoint. Let me say flat-out that the mining of the harbors, as it was done, was wrong, obviously a bad decision. It had political fallouts. [Confusion of voices] SIDEY: But isn't it curious that the people who wanted to be informed were informed? Eddie Boland and the people in the House, they found out; that Senator Biden wanted to find out, and he got well briefed on it; and that the people that really made an effort, they picked up the subtle hints. AGRONSKY: Why should there be subtle hints about something so important in terms of national policy? SIDEY: Well, I'm not justifying Casey. I'm saying that he was wrong in this. But what I am saying is, what is the responsibility of the Congress in this? Those people... AGRONSKY: What are you saying, if you don't do your homework, you can't complain? ' SIDEY: I think it's always going to be the case that if they are not diligent and they do not ask and do not probe, that these things are going to happen. And there's a case where they could have found out had they worked at it. And they did not. CARL ROWAN: Well, I agree with Hughin this respect. I think Moynihan is doing a dance around the lily pads. This is what worries me about oversight. If you've got people there who aren't conscientious enough when they see hints like this to say, "What are you talking about? What are you doing?" they don't have any right to come up with any big dramatic resignations later, and then, after Casey apologizes, say, "I'll go back into this post." So, you're right. There's a lot of blame here. MARIANNE MEANS: The senators are ambivalent in their attitude toward it. I think they understand that they have a responsibility. But this is -- the CIA is engaged in distasteful business. And the politicians feel the same way toward it, I think, as the public does. And yet they realize it has to be done. So they just as soon not know too much. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 ARTICT.7 AP, ved For Release 2995/Adav";KM-RDP91-00901R000 03Z PAGE 28 April 198.4 AMERICAN SURVEY The CIA again Decomes central If there were any doubts remaining about who is running United States policy in Central America, they were dispelled last week when the Reagan administration rejected the appointment of Miss Nora Astorga, a heroine of the Sandinist revo- lution and deputy foreign minister of Nicaragua, as that country's new ambas- sador to Washington. Mr George Shultz, the secretary of state, and his assistants in charge of Latin American policy, while hardly planning a grand fete in Miss Anorga's honour, had urged her accep- tance as a means of reducing the number of issues in dispute with the Nicaraguans? But the source of Miss Astorga's hero:- ism?her part in the murder in 1978 of a general in the Nicaraguan national guard?was also the source of her notori- ety. For the general in question, ReinaJdo Perez Vega, had been one of the Central Intelligence Agency's men in the old Nicaraguan regime of Anastasio Somoza, and when Mr William Casey, the present director of central intelligence, told the president that he must not lei a terrorist join the diplomatic corps in Washington, Mr Reagan complied. The balance of power among those competing for control of American for- eign policy is constantly shifting. The Astorga incident symbolises the fact that, for all the elaborate procedures for dis- cussion within the executive branch and for .consultation with congress, it has now shifted towards the CIA. Ti-ie agency's influence over Central American policy is particularly strong: There is a temptation to interpret the circumstances in a primarily personal way?as a sign of Mr Casey's closeness to the president he served as campaign man- ager in 1980. It is true that this Wall Street entrepreneur, having survived one con- gressional investigation after another, has easy access to the Oval Office and enjoys 2 camaraderie with Mr Reagan matched only by Mr Edwin Meese and others who served with the president when he was governor of California. Certainly, Mr Casey's personal status has enhanced the CIA's role in the many briefings on WASHINGTON, DC _ ? foreign affairs that the president receives every day, and this role becomes all the more important given the fact that Mr Reagan has little experience of interna- tional affairs. ? But there is more to it than that. Mr Casey's arrival at CIA headquarters sig- nalled a genuine ascendance for the intel- ligence community after several years of decline. Responding to congressional criticism and public opinion, President Carter's director of central intelligence, Admiral Stansfield Turner, had cut the CIA's staff greatly and had followed orders to.reduce the role of covert opera- tions in the agency's business. Mr Casey, who had become a hero himself during wartime operations behind German lines for the Office of Strategic Services, promptly declared that he would put the CIA back into the covert business and, although the figures are secret, he is said to have presided over a percentage in- crease in the intelligence budget that makes even the growth of the Pentagon's funds look modest by comparison. At one point Mr Casey had a plan to put the CIA back into cicimestic intelli- gence work?illegally?in apparent rival- _ ry with the Federal Bureau of Investiga- tion, but he seems to have been held back by bureaucratic caution if not by wise policymakers. One thing is clear, howev- er: the CIA is dominant in the field and has less competition now from the De- fence Intelligence Agency or the National Security Agency. The NSA is still the leader in communications intelligence (comint), but human intelligence (hu- ? mint) is firmly in the hands of the CIA, and it is being eiven more importance than at any time since the war in Vietnam. Still, it is not as if the CIA has returned to its halcyon days, in terms of freedom of action or public acceptance. When the agency restored the Shah of Iran to the peacock throne in 1953 and overthrew the left-leaning regime of Jacob? Arbenz in Guatemala the next year, few people asked questions. Indeed, the congressio- nal attitude of that era was exemplified by Casey overlooks Moynihan and Goldwater the late Leverett Saltonstall of Massachu- setts, a long-serving Republican senator, who observed in 1956 that he "would Tather not have" information and knowl- edge about the CIA activities. There is no such reluctance on Capitol Hill today, at least not officially. Both the senate and the house of representatives have, at different times, given the admin- istration so much critic:6m of its activities. in Nicaragua?and members of. the con- gressional intelligence comminees have leaked so much information about them to the press?that they are hardly "co- vert" any longer. During the recent up- roar over the mining of Nicaraguan har- bours, it became obvious that the CIA had hardly kept its congressional over- seers "fully and currently informed", as it is legally obliged to do. Some thought its dereliction worse than that. Mr Barry Goldwater ofArizona, the venerable Re-- publican chairman of the senate intelli- gence committee, wrote to Mr Casey, declaring that be was ''pissed off". Mr Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York, the Democratic vice-chairman of the group, did him one better by announcing - Continuwi Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 ARTICLE APP7AR63pr0ved For Relean,q09allt?,gjaCIA-RDP91-00901R000400.04 ON PAGE /7/ 27 April 1984 By DOROTHY RABINOWITZ. ABOUT two years ago, a representative of the Sandinist government identified as the, great- est threat to his coun- try's survival the "sys: tern of communica- tions" at the disposal of the U.S. ? i.e., its press and other 'organs of propaganda." This comment ? con- sidering the public rela- tions efforts and enthu- siasm 'U.S. journalists had se tirelessly show- ered upon the Sandinist revolutionary forces seemed, even at the time, as gross a piece of ingratitude as the world has heard. It comes to mind with a special irony now. For even the revolutionary representative who spoke thus, the emmi- nent Ernesto Cardenale, Nicaraguan minister of culture, could surely today not find it in his heart to refuse a word of gratitude for those same organs of "communica- tion" in the U.S. Did the Sandinists ever in their wildest dreams dare hope for so stunning a display of sympathy and coopera- tion as provided-by this Same "communica- tions" network? Would even Cardenale . have imagined so prized a boon as the savaging of the CIA and the Contras, the anti-administration handwringing and moralizing, such as we have seen from our jour- nalists and opinion makers in the course of the current debate on Nicaragua? Surely he could not have dared hope for such a report as we in fact heard on ABC News recently, one Which began with word of a New York Times story charging that the CIA "made a group of Nicaraguan rebels obey its orders" by threaten- ing to cut off supplies. Here, ABC introduced "an exclusive" piece of news of its own a de. tailed report on the loca- tion, complete with aerial photographs, of the CIA's secret center from which Contra operations in Costa Rica were directed and con- trolled. Here, correspond- ent , John Quinones an- nounced, was where -the orders were carried out," and "the secr8t landing strips" to which CIA arms and supplies were delivered. But it was not only from the CIA that the Contras received help. U.S. citizens in Costa Rica, we were further in- formed, contributed to the support of the anti- Sandinist effort. Lest we lack detail as to the loca- tion of those providing such aid to the Contras, we were provided with pictures of a supply plane landing at a ranch owned by these Contra supporters. In addition, we were provided with more facts concerning these individ- uals: facts which, how- ever brief, contained what their author doubt- less understood to be a clue as to their, moral status and general charadter. For these peo- . pie were, . we learn, -. "wealthy Americans." . But in reports of this sort and others con- cerning Central Amer- ica, no reportorial ener- gies equal those nowa- days expended daily on- the perfidies of the CIA. One of the inner circle of Sandinist leaders un- dertook recently to ex- plain to the Nicaraguan public the reason why so many Americans come to Latin America to adopt babies. There were, he explained, 'three reasons: . so that the babies could be used by the Americans for medical experiments, or made into slaves, or impressed into service as spies for the CIA. The weight of moral argument raised against the CIA on our own- shores nowadays is only - slightly more refined. Consider a recent seg- ment, on the CBS Eve- ning News on which there appeared a variety of experts all bearing witness aginst the CIA. One of those quoted was a Congressional staffer who testified that CIA Di- rector William Casey was a man whose atti- tude was one of "crimi- nal carelessness." Rep. Norman Y. Mineta (D-Cal.) charged, in addition, that if your coat were on fire, Casey was the sort of man who wouldn't tell you unless you asked him ? an apt enough complaint com- ing from that Congres- sional population nowa- days incapable of recog- nizing the heat of danger close to home. In addition to these es- teemed voices, we heard on Easter Sunday from Bishop Paul Moore Jr, of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, who an- nounced that we stood "naked and ashamed be- fore the eyes of the world" as a result of our immoral action 'against the Sandinistas ? a com- ment forthwi reprinted in the Sandinist newspa- pers. As, doubtless, were de- tails published by our press concerning the location and identities of those involved in sup- porting the Contra operation. Recently, the world learned details of a 40- year-old military se- cret. This concerned the fate of some 740. Amer- ican troops lost off the coast of England when, during exercises preparatory tO D-Day, they were torpedoed by German U-boats. Lest the invasion plans be compromised by news of this tragedy, their bodies were buried amid great secrecy on local farms, and the few Brit- ish citizens privy to the fact were warned not to reveal them. In the ensu- ing 40 years no one did reveal this story until now, the need for secrecy being long since past. What would have been the behavior of our pre- sent day journalists con- fronted by such a choice ? a story rich in sugges- tions of coverup and catastrophe, as opposed to the danger of betray- sing our D-day plans? We have cause to wonder. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 C:LE APAP YO O pi..c7.3proved For RelpIn MOYNIHAN TO KEEP ; INTELLIGENCE POST Withdraws Resignation After CIA. Chief Apologizes By PHILIP TAUBMAN Spectal to The New York Times WASHINGTON, April 26 Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan withdrew his resignation as vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelli- gence today after the Director of Cen- tral Intelligence, William J. Casey, apologized .for ? not -keeping the panel better informed about covert opera- tions by the United States in Nicara- gua. Mr. Casey also told the committee ; today that the mining of Nicaraguan harbors had been halted. ? Mr. Casey's comments and Mr. Moynihan's decision to remain as vice I chairman were part of a compromise worked out over the last several days that was designed to reduce tensions between the Central Intelligence ? Agency and the Senate over covert ac- tivities in Central America. CIA-RDP91-0090IR000400040001-2 would be "a damn sight more forth- right" with the committee. Resignation Letter Submitted Mr. Moynihan, who announced his in- tention of resigning on April 15 and ac- tually submitted a resignation letter on Wednesday, said today that he had reconsidered after Mr. Casey agreed late Wednesday to apologize to the committee. Mr. Moynihan and Senator Barry M. Goldwater, Republican of Arizona, the chairman of the intelligence commit- tee, complained publicly earlier this month that the C.I.A. had not ad- equately informed the committee about its direct involvement in the min- ing operation. :When he voted April 5 in favor of providing the C.I.A. with an additional $21 million to support Nicaraguan rebels, Mr. Moynihan said, he did not know the extent of the mining operation or the C.I.A. role in it. . " ? ? Intelligence officials contended they had kept -the committee informed, 'cit- ing brief references to the mining in briefings on March 8 and March 13 and a detailed accounting for committee staff members on April 3. Mr. Moynihan said that on-April 5 he had not seen a memorandum about the mining prepared by the staff after their meeting with C.I.A. officials. But he said he had been given a brief oral re- port by Gary J. Schmitt, the minority ? staff director. The compromise worked out by Senator Lugar and Senator Bentsen provided Mr. Moynihan and Mr. Casey with a chance to end the argument, al- though colleagues of both said they ini- tially resisted the formula. ? . For Mr. Moynihan, the colleagues' said, the concern was centered. on his reversing direction and leaving the im- pression that his recent actions were inconsistent. Casey Concurs on Statement As part of the effort, the Senate intel- ligence committee agreed at a meeting today that it had not been adequately informed about American involvement in the mining of Nicaraguan waters. Mr. Casey, who attended the meet- ing, agreed in turn to approve a com- mittee statement that said, "The Di- rector of Central Intelligence con- curred in that assessment." In addition. the committee and Casey pledged to develop improved ways to keep the Senate informed about intelligence operations, particu- larly about covert activities. The compromise was initiated by , Senator Richard G. Lugar, Republican of Indiana, and Senator Lloyd Bentsen, Democrat of Texas, "I think it's time we had a cease-fire with the committee and the C.I.A.," Mr. Bentsen said after the meeting. He said he hoped that in ; the future Mr. Casey and the C.I.A. Mr. Casey, for his part, was reluc- tant to apologize to the committee be-1 cause that is not his style and also_ STA cause he felt the C.I.A. had kept the commit ee notified. Intelligence offi- cials said that Mr. Lugar had been in- strumental in persuading Mr. Casey that an apology was necessary to end the controversy. Sharp Exchange Reported When he announced his intention to 'resign on April 15, Mr. Moynihan said, "This appears to me the most em- phatic way I can express my view that the Senate committee was not properly briefed on the mining of Nicaraguan harbors with American mines from an American ship under American com- mand." In its statement today, the Senate committee said, "Ai the request of the committee, and in light of the Direc- tor's acknowledgment, Senator Moyni- han withdrew his resignation as vice- chairman." Mr. Moynihan said that Mr. Casey called him on Wednesday and urged . him to remain as vice chairman. Mr. Bentsen said that after a "spir- ited, sharp exchange between com- mittee members and Mr. Casey at today's meeting, both the committee and the C.I.A. approved the compro- mise statement, which was drafted on Wednesday and informally accepted by Mr. Moynihan and Mr. Casey before the meeting. Mr. Moynihan said after the meeting that the committee would meet next week to begin developing new proce- dures. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 STAT ATI CLE ON PAGE A,REDpproved For Release 24M1JFil5-0134100901R0004000 Pr What's News? * * CIA Director Casey admitted he failed to 1 inform the Senate Intelligence panel ade- quately about his agency's role in mining Nicaraguan ports, the committee said. After Casey's apology, New York Sen. Moynihan withdrew his resignation as vice chairman of the panel, whose statement stopped short of acknowledging any law violation. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 ART I= A PPEANaroved For Releawt209?M128 : CIA-RDP91-00901R0004000 ON PAGE FAL 27 Apr 11 19814 .0001-2 USA TODAY'S SPECIAL REPORTS FROM THE CAPITAL Moynihan stays; Casey admits to error on mines CIA Director William Casey told a Senate Intelligence Committee members Thursday he failed to adequately inform them of the CIA's role in mining Nicaraguan ports, the panel said. After Casey's apolou, Sen. Daniel Moyni- han, D-N.Y., agreed to stay on as vice chairman of the committee. He resigned Wednesday in protest of the lack of briefing on the operation. A statement released after the hearings said the senators "agreed that there is a need for more thorough and effective oversight procedures, particu- larly in the area Of covert activity." Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 AINMO.yetgletip'Bfipase 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R0004 :()N WASHINGTON POST 27 April 1984 1 - ,. do- ,o izes iii for Lanse fort By Helen Dewar Wa5hington Post Staff Writer ? tion, then sent. the letter to Goldwater and finally indicated he would agree to the Lugar-Bentsen language. While disputes over details continued until shortly before the Senate Intelligence Committee meeting with Casey, members said the statement remained basically as Lugar and Bentsen had drafted it, although a reference to its adoption by "unanimous vote was deleted. Lugar said it was approved- by voice vote with- out. apparent dissent, and the reference to una- niniity was .deleted because of some disagreements . _ expressed "during the meeting. . In its statement, the committee said it "agreed that it's not adequately informed in a timely CIA Director William J. Casey ......._ manner .of,c_ertain .significant intelligence activity yesterday formally apologized to the .in sucl-C-;"nia-nner as to permit the committee to ' Senate intelligence .Committee for ..e???? .carry otit,iti Oversight. function" and added: "The - tion on the agency's role in mining 04.....,....,:,T' _ ., , ..,_ . 4.... : director -cif 'central intelligence concurred in that : failing to provide adequate informa- :-. ? Nicaraguan harbors and agreed to assessment,": give prior notice of "any significant "z:4.tr.r.- ifoii?: . The statement continued: anticipated intelligence activity," as .- "The committee and the CIAhave agreed on .:...?...,.,,,,,,,,:. required by law. the need for more thorough and effective over- - .,- In response, Sen. Daniel Patrick -sighfrprneedures, especially in the area of covert Moynihan (D-N.Y.), who had re- ??4.-- -actiort.-The'aommittee will move promptly to de igned as vice chairman of the corn - . - qii?lem ,velop,J2aw,,R.rocedures to ensure that the Senate s- ?,-,:i: rriittee to protest the CIA's handling "-will be faly and currently informed. - of consultations with Congress on ?. "The Central Intelligence - Agency has pledged the in:lining, withdrew his resignation ,....r..k, - 4.*?... its "cooperation in this effort and recognizes .and expressed satisfaction with the ?,:v*.'.2,- the revilement to provide the committee with agreement. P? - ?e0??? The agreement was announced by -4??:- ' .4e-iiis: ' prior. notice of 'any significant anticipated intel- 144 ' .' .. Intelligence Committee members ..., - itteii. ?4,-:-.,-4tm. ? ligence .activity,' as provided by the Intelligence after what was described as a "stir- OversighAct." ited, sharp" closed-door meetingSEN. DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN Meetings are planned starting Wednesday to with Casey, during which agreement develop.new briefing procedures, which M. oynihan . . ,.. ... will keep Intelligence panel post.-- also was reached on working out spe- _ ___ ._ . _ -suggested mig 1 ? include a requirement to inform cific new procedures for CIA consul- . The statement of agreement be- ______. tations with the committee. tween the CIA and the committee Congress of Anything important enough to require Committee . members said they was worked out largely by Lugar and ,, presidential approval, as the .harbor mining .was were reassured in the roughly two Sen. Lloyd M. Bentsen (D Tex) i; deemedlci- be. - hour session that the Nicaraguan . whose roles as chairmen of their re- ' ? ". The statement did not go into the question of mining operations had ceased and i spective senatorial campaign corn- whether the CIA violated the law in failing to in- that no similar covert operations had mittees underscored an apparent bi- form Congress of its role in the mining of Ni- been undertaken without notice to partisan queasiness over the political caraguan ports, as some lawmakers have con- the House and Senate Intelligence risks at stake in continued feuding. tended. "The director has apologized, I don't know committees. ? - ? .Republicans and conservative what more You can do," said Bentsen. ? - The meeting followed 21/2 day' s of , Democrats also were reportedly con- door-to-door visits ?by Casey with , cerned that, unless Moynihan was , committee members to repair what . persuaded to reconsider his resigna- fte090 many of them described as a serious tion, the vice chairmanship might cieterioration of their relations and fall into the hands of someone less the delivery of a hand-written note sympathetic to the administration's of apology from Casey to Senate Central American policies.. committee Chairman Barry Goldwa- In explaining his decision to re- ter (R-Ariz.). main as vice chairman, Moynihan ! Goldwater, who had written a cited a series of events starting late scathing letter to Casey earlier this Wednesday afternoon when Casey month, was described by Sen. Rich- asked him to reconsider his resica- I., ard G. Lugar (R-Ind.) asAmtmetd For Release 2005/11/28 :-CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 with the outcome. 1 1 ARTICLE APPthffroved For Releasf11210ETA:ACIA-00901R0004 ON PAGE /14Q.A1- 27 April 1981+ A 0 .Is cuvi its ,Lati Lra -710 .ed. over. .pohe By James McCartney inquiry. Washingtot Bureau WASHINGTON ? The Reagan ad- ministration -is torn with internal dissension over Central America pol- icy on the eve OT a major struggle with Congress about the future American role.in the region Sharp differences have-developed between factions on the White House staff over policy priorities: Should Reagan's re-election campaign, or the future of El Salvador, come first? The State Department and top mili- tary officers in the Pentagon are in conflict over how U.S. power should . be used. Ironically, officials on both sides of the dispute acknowledge, the State Department has argued for a, greater use of power while top mill- tarY officers have argued for re- ' straint. And White House officials are re-. ported to be dissatisfied, in one way or another, with the performance of virtually all Of the administration's top foreign policy advisers. The depth and sharpness of the disarray and disagreement was dis- ? closed in a series of interviews with high-level administration officials who take opposing sides,. as well as members of Congress and congres- sional staff members. Many of those who agreed to be interviewed have strong personal and professional in- terests in the questions, and all re- ? fused to be identified. The stakes in the struggles are huge: The future .01 - several -high- i level officials, including CIA Direc- tor William J. Casey; the future of. { . continued financing of the adminis- tration's anti-communist policy in Central America and, ultimately, whether U.S. combat troops may wind up fighting there. From the interviews, ;these other points were made: ? President Reagan has become deeply dissatisfied with the Penta- gon and is concerned about its abili- ty to fight a successful guerrilla war._ 10040001-2 Some on ouse sta say they think Reagan must make a dra- matic major effort to rally public support for his hard-line approach or El Salvador may fall to guerrilla forces. They say time cannot be wak- ed, and they speak of possible col- lapse or defections from the Salvadoran army. But, these sources say, top White House staff members James A. Baker 3d. Edwin Meese 3d and Michael K. Deaver fear that if Reagan made too great an effort, the public might come to fear possible war and turn against Reagan in the election. Some offidials see the dilemma ao sharply that they say it may boil ---i-trn-ifiiii-nid-Officersin-the-Penta-- down to whether Reagan wins the e gon, in. turn, have left some White election, but IosesEl Salvador in the House officials with the impression _ProPess-? - ? . that they lack confidence in Reagan . Questions about how-military _and other top political leaders, in- force, or the threat of military force, eluding Defense Secretary-Caspar W. s"'should be 'applied have split the ad- n_ Weinberger,- and National Security .mi istration in several ways, accord- 'Adviser Robert C. McFarlane. .;ring to officials in several areas of ? Some high-level White House of- -.government. " ficials would-like to force Casey out. The "doves" have been the mit- of his CIA job because, they say, he formed military, led by the Joint has irreparably damaged relations Chiefs of Staff, who have been con- with Congress and has failed to pro- sistently reluctant to apply ? duce at the CIA.. They acknowledge, threaten ? U.S. military power. ? however, that is is doubtful 'that Rea- "Hawks" have come from the civil- gan would fire a personal friend of ian leadership in the Pentagon, led longstanding. . by Fred Ikle, undersecretary for poll - ? Secretary of State George P. cy, and from the State Department Shultz, some top administration offi- under both Shultz and his predetea- cials believe, has been weak and in- sor, Alexander M. Haig Jr. - effective. - For example, the joint chiefs, now The series of interviews suggested' headed by Army Gen. John Vessey that.none of the.major governmental Jr., are said to have Opposed a deci- bodies involved in Central America sion to stage extensive naval maneu- PPlicy ? the White House, the State, vers off Central American coasts last Department, the Pentagon and the -summer to try to intimidate Nicara- CIA ?is incomplete accord with any gua and Salvadoran ,rebels. The top ? of -the others. military officers also are reported to A major immediate issue is how far, have originally opposed last year's ...?716 go ..in- seeking to dramatize the invasion' of Grenada. , -:stalemated watt:1'El -Salvador to try But Shultz and others at the State . to save the administration's aid pro- Department favored both, officials gram, which is in danger of beingsay. . . stripped to the bone and possibly scrapped by Congress. ' Lesson of Vietnam Money sought Military men are reluctant to dis- . Reagan is seeking 'from Congress , cuss their views.publicly, but many $62 _million in emergency military I have discussed them privately. Es- ..?sentially, they argue that the lesson aid for El Salvador,- $178 million in ? economic aid and $21 Million for the _ . of Vietnam is that both Congress and CIA for support of the contras, or. the American public must support U counterrevolutionaries, opposing !.S. military action abroad, -or that the Sandinista government in :action should be avoided: . .:.; Nicaragua. _ Many- military 'officers say the' think that it is up to the nation's House Democrats, led by Speaker political leadership ? the president Thomas P. O'Neill (D., mass.,),. say ,, they will not go along with money in particular ? to-explain the ne-c-es- requested for the CIA effort in sity for the use of power to the pub. requested ?lic, and that the military should be , called upon only after a political con- COrttinuag Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 ARTiaiE AppEApproved For Release 3g45/15R3 tE,14-RDP9M ON 27 April 1984 rito By DEBORAH ORIN WASHINGTON ? Sen. Daniel Patrick Moyni- han yesterday withdrew his resignation from the Senate Intelligence Committee after CIA di- rector William Casey apologized for failing to brief the committee on the CIA role in mining Nicaraguan harbors. The dramatic develop- ments came at a closed- door meeting. between Casey. and the commit- tee at a time when both the CIA and Senate Democrats were wor- ried about who might replace Moynihan in the sensitive post. Casey admitted he failed to "adequately" , inform the committee about the CIA role in the harbor mining ? and virtually conceded that the failure was a viola- tion of the law under which the committee oversees the CIA. After the session, Moynihan revealed that he had withdrawn his resignation and read a statement from the full committee that said: "The committee agreed that it was not adequately informed in a timely manner of cer- tain significant intelli- gence activity in such a manner as to permit the committee to carry out its oversight function. "The director of Cen- tral Intelligence (Casey) concurred in that assessment." Casey ? who has been under heavy fire from both Republicans and Democrats who said they lacked. confidence In him ? was ."pro- el foundly apologetic" dur- ing the session, congres- sional sources said. The statement also said: "The CIA has pledged its full coopera- tion and recognizes-the requirement to provide' the committee with prior notice of 'any sig- nificant anticipated in- telligence activity' as provided by the Intelli- gence OversightAct." The committee and CIA representatives? are to meet next week to work out a new set of procedures for such notification. A major concern for the CIA was that the man likely to step into SEN. MOYNIHAN Sack on job. Moynihan's shoes was Sen. Pat Leahy of Ver- mont, a liberal Demo. crat who is an outspo- ken critic of CIA covert actions and known for something of a loose lip. Democrats feared that any time sensitive intel- ligence information was leaked, a finger would be pointed at...them ? via Leahy. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 Approved For Release 21STRA2M-RDP91-00901R0 27 April 19314 CIA: the Reagan se.. The Central Intelligence Agency, under President Reagan's?pld friend William Casey, is the fastest growing part of the federal govern- ment. Although the budget of the CIA is appropri- ately secret, recent reports suggest that funding has expanded more rapidly than Pentagon spending. In 1981, 2 percent of CIA's budget was devoted to what is euphemistically termed clandestine services. Today the portion of its budget for undercover operations is about 10. percent. These figures outline a crucial change in the way the silent sector of the American govern- ment operates. In the 1970s most Americans were shocked and chagrined to learn that, act- ing in their name, the CIA overthrew elected governments; hired Mafia hit men; helped to transport heroin from Indochina to the South Bronx; and ran phony banks and businesses to launder, money and finance a myriad of con- spiracies and counterrevolutions. President Carter reduced the CIA's clandes- tine services. Eight hundred operatives were cut from the agency payroll. Reagan has re- stored them all. Recent disclosures of illegal CIA activities in Central America ? the mining of Nicaraguan harbors and the destruction of oil storage facili- ties ? may be the tip of a covert iceberg. "New CIA offices have been opened around the world." according to an investigative report in last Sunday's Globe. "And new plans have been laid for supersecret projects built on hu- man intelligence techniques. involving spies, saboteurs, guerrilla warfare specialists and many other kinds of secret operatives." .This groundwork for restoring the CIA's clandestine capability was accomplished before the April announcements of a "new" tough policy ostensibly directed against international terrorism. On April 3, the President signed. Na- tional Security Decision Directive 138 outlining a range of antiterrorist measures, including preemptive actions. The Administration has openly declared that the new policy will stop short of authoriz- ing assassinations. Yet. in a reprise of "earlier. good days," a congressional source cited in the Globe article indicated that Fidel Castro "may be back on a hit list as a potential target for non-Americans, possibly with the unspoken acquiesence of the CIA." 00400040001-2 restoration Terrorism does exist. It threatens innocent people and serves as a policy tool for regimes such as those of Hafez Assad in Syria, Moarn- mar Khadafy in Libya, Saddam Hussein in Iraq or Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran. The suicidal truck bombing that killed 241 US servicemen at the Beirut airport demonstrated that state- sponsored terrorism can be an effective weapon against American policy and American inter- ests. Nonetheless, any American program to fight political terrorism by means of a commensur- ate counterterror has intrinsic limitations and nasty implications. . There is the moral dilemma of hiring mur- derers to kill other murderers ? or to kill any- one defined as an enemy. The CIA's Phoenix Program in South Vietnam, a conscious effort to assassinate the political cadres that made up the "infrastructure' of the Vietcong, caused many Americans to think of their government as a branch .of Murder Incorporated. There is also evidence that counterterror simply does not work as a deterrent to state- sponsored terrorism. Iraq and Syria have used terrorism-against each other to no avail. Fanat- ical Iranian terrorists, who immolate them- selves to fulfill Khomeini's promises of a quick trip to paradise, will ignore efforts to punish them for their martyrdom. The R ,mg?an Administration has insisted, at every opportdnity, that the Soviet Union and its satellites sponsor terrorism. There is evi- dence that they do, but their terrorism is a side- show. As America enters the lists of interna- tional terrorism, it will compete against the As- sads, Khomeinis and Khadafys. One unintend- ed result of Reagan's Directive 138 may be to make explicit what his often been concealed: that the President's vision of a "resurgent America" leads to confrontations not merely with Moscow, but also with the disparate forms of Third World nationalism The stir the Reagan Administration has cre- ated to launch its antiterrorist policy looks like a rationalization for a CIA comeback in clan- destine operations. Once again, officials of democratic America will forsake the wisdom of Jefferson and Thoreau for the bloody instruc- tions to be found in Machiavelli's "The Prince" or Mario Puzo's "The Godfather." Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 6 I A Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R0 AIL! AFFLARrt. WASHINGTON POST PAGE f? 27 April 1984 Stephen S.:,,Rosenfeld So WeWon't Invade? The painful and; ii official quarters. unsuspected inadequacy of the adminis? tration's Central - American policy is etched in the remarkable joint state- ment of April 10 by George Shultz, Cas- par Weinberger, William Casey and Ro- bert McFarlane.' These worthies threw. their collective Vie:fait behind a declara- tion that the United States is not plan- ning to invade Cent:rill America; now or after the election. Given the peAlirve -suspicion that such a plan is 'exaiitly. What President Reagan has in latest affirma:- tion of non-intervelitiori would seem be extremely important, the very pledge of self-denial thaelleagan's critics have been demanding1 Many of them. qi-eit'VeVer, still suspect that the administrarian merely intended to put out that paitiEnlar day's fire. It is further suggested that this latest gang of four was playing iOith-words:the United States isn't "plaralink" an invasion but is preparing to have 1..ine thrust upon it and may even be dbing its provocative bit to bring one on..Hence the bases and maneuvers (scheduled until 1989!) .in Honduras, the inching toward combat in El Salvador, the barely offshore role in Nicaragua. ;13A If a full-fledged invasion is in the works, then Shultz, Weinbe en Casey and McFarlane?and their chief?are being cynical and will deserve contempt -But this is an -unkind- and surely premature verdict-I think the gang_of four means its vow of restraint As eager flts members majbe to intimidate the Sandinistas and the Salvadoran guerril- . . las. they realizUhstan.Amerjcanjuya- sjgn would inflict vv ts, rip the United States apart in the Viet- ron7n-War fP,think and damage_Amer- ican standiu,_ in the jiernispkis_and elsewhere. It would___49_13rden Rea- gafs reelection prospects, the su2L:cess of , the_Ggenadainvasicamotwithstanding. t-Therefore, they have spoken out against an invasion, in a newly vigorous and explicit style, on the theory that, a Congress thus relieved is more likely to vote 66:requisite aid to allow friendly . Latina to fight their own battles. - This is the explanation one hears fromadministration officials, who note that Reagan has repeatedly said that al- though he plans no invasion, a president should "never say never." Reagan wants to calm Congress but to give some pause to the Marxists at the same tirne. - The new statement, however, merely Underlines his dfiemma, Partly because of its Own rigidities and partly because .7 of its adversaries', the administration -harbeen conducting a policy based chiefly on applying force. To the extent that it now removes the threat of lava- ' sion, it torpedoes that policy. . - . For removing the threat only makes sense if simultaneously a negotiating passage is opened?something the ad- ministration has not yet done: Other- wise it risks encouraging its foes to be- lieve that they have just seen the United States blink, big, and if they hold on the _United States mayaventually. blink its way right out of Central America. 1 find it almost impossible to imagine that a conservative president such as 00400040001-2 Ronald Reagan is prepared to ignore the principal thrust of American postwar policy and?at least on his watch?to see parts of Central America "lost" to armed, Marxist-led, Soviet-linked revo- lutionary forces. Jesse Jackson and Gary Hart talk as though they could live With that outcome. The prospect agitates Walter Mondale greatly, though he is not sure what could be done at this late date to prevent it. But for Reagan the prospect is unthinkable, right? How, then, does he intend to prevent -"a slide in that direction as long as he rules out an American intervention on ? the one hand and fails to move toward a ? negotiated solution on the other? The narrow altErnative he reserves for him- self is to keep on pursuing the policies that have brought him to his present, deepening discontent One result of those policies is the current. crisis of aid. Here lies the trouble Reagan has courted by having the Pentagon and CIA run his policy. The danger is not that these agencies mean to sneak the United Statesjnto__a wan_or_even that they will lose contras much anxious and hostile comment on the American and Latin left suggests. The danger is that Casey and Weinberger?even Weinberger, with his passionate aver- sion to messy TiiiTh-World military in- volvements?may leave the president no other way of averting El Salvadori- Reagan's intent is to be strong. His grasp of his dilemma is weak. Central America is torn and he is tearing fur- ther, not mending. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 L.\ Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 1,F.; 7- I CIE AFFT-11.12: ON G WASHINGTON TIMES 27 April 1984 STAT Casey apologizes to Senate committee permit the committee to carry out its By George Archibald oversight function," the panel said in THE WASHINGTON TIMES a statement issued by senators after yesterday's meeting. "The director of central intelli- gence agreed in that assessment," the statement said. "The committee and the CIA have agreed on the need for more thor- ough and effective oversight proce- dures. especially in the area of covert action;' the statement continued. "The committee will move promptly to develop new procedures to ensure that the Senate will be fully and cur- rently informed." Senators said the panel and CIA officials will meet again May 2 to dis- cuss such procedures. The commit- tee will also "reorganize" its staff, Mt Moynihan told reporters. "The Central Intelligence Agency has pledged its full cooperation in this effort and recognizes the requirement to provide the commit- tee with prior notice of any 'signifi- cant anticipated intelligence activity: as provided by the Intelli- gence Oversight Act," said the com- mittee statement. "At the request of the committee, and in light of the director's acknowledgment, Sen. Moynihan withdrew his resignation as vice chairman," the statement concluded. Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, R-Ariz., chairman of th..; committee, said, William J. Casey, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, apologized yesterday to members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence for the CIA's failure to inform the panel fully on American involvement in the raining of Nicara- guan harbors. According to committee mem- bers, the apology came in a stormy closed session in which senators and Mr. Casey had "a spirited, sharp exchange" about the CIA's incom- plete disclosure of the U.S. role in the - harbor mining that started in early January The apology led Sen. Daniel Pat- rick Moynihan, D-N.Y., to agree to stay on as vice chairman of the panel. He had resigned Wednesday, protest- ing that the CIA had broken its "rela- tionship of trust" with the Senate committee. Mr. Moynihan helped write the law that requires the CIA to keep its con- gressional oversight committees "fully and currently informed of all intelligence activities," including "any significant anticipated intelli- gence activity" "The committee agreed that it was not adequately informed in a timely manner of certain significant intelli- gence activity in such a manner as to "They [the administration) have a very heavy responsibility to us. We received a complete briefing on the history of the decision by the pres- ident to use mines in harbors in Cen- tral America." Mr. Moynihan said the committee was assured that no other covert actions were going on in Central America beyond those already revealed to the panel. Sens. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, and Richard Lugar, R-Ind., who jointly drafted the committee statement, stid the CIA director admitted that the panel was inadequately briefed. There was "a very spirited, sharp exchange [with) strong statements made on both sides," said Mr. Bent- sen. "Mr. Casey said, 'I apologize; he used that word," he reported. The CIA director promised to be "not a little more forthright ?a damn sight more forthright. I have confidence in Mr. Casey," Mr. Bentsen added. "The bipartisan character of this committee has been extremely important" in resolving the dispute with the CIA, said Mr. Lugar. "It [intelligence oversight] does not work well if these issues become polarized," he added. "The CIA was very wrong not to have informed the committee. It was a dumb thing," said Mr. Bentsen. "Now it's time to have a cease-fire between the committee and the CIA," he added. Approved For Release 2005/11/28 : CIA-RDP91-00901R000400040001-2 ARTICLE APPEARPIpproved For Relea4R2Ogttiggg :f3lOgRIDPM9MC190400 ON PAGE 27 April 1984 Senators Get Apology From Casey on Mining ? Ey DON SHANNON,: Times Staff Writer -- WASHINGTON?CIA Director William J. Casey :apologized to the Senate Intelligence Committee at closed-door meeting Thursday -for failing to informit adequately about the CIA's keY iole'inthe?mining Of Nicaraguan ports,-. :committee- said in a statenient. - Casey's acknowled.genient,?irlidF in a spirited -three:hour-session With--; ? committee member-, helped per- suade Sen. Daniel Patrick Id ayTan= ?(D-N.Y.) to =withdraw :his resigna- tion as vice chairman of the panel. Moynihan had -resigned to protest CIA briefings On the-mining opera- tion that he said. Were Ticit adequate under the law, Which .states that the agency must: 'keep -"congressional intelligence oversight -panels '"fully and currently informed?"-' = Bipartisan Spirit On behalf ofAhe committee, Moy- nihan , read a statement that de- clared: '.'At the: conclusion of this review, the committee agreed that it -was not adequately informed in -a . timely manner of -certain significant intelligence activity in such a man- ner as to permit the committee to carry out its oversight function: The director of central intelligence con- curred in that assesarnent:", - . After the meeting, at which Depi" uty Secretary of State.Kermeth W.." Darn and other 'CIA -,.officials also testified, both Democratic and Re- publican ccirnmittee members ex-' ? pressed their - satisfaction at -the restoration: of the-bipartisan spirit that has preVailed on. the panel in _ .; the past. ? ; Chairman 'Rai-17 .Goi'd water