Published on CIA FOIA (foia.cia.gov) (https://www.cia.gov/readingroom)


COSTA RICA FLASHES WARNING TO MANAGUA ON SKIRMISHES

Document Type: 
CREST [1]
Collection: 
General CIA Records [2]
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000706620002-2
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 13, 2011
Sequence Number: 
2
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 11, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000706620002-2.pdf [3]147.03 KB
Body: 
STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/13: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706620002-2 ORTmICLE GE`~ J-- ON PA MIAMI HERALD 11 August 1985 Around the Americas Costa Rica flashes warning to Managua on skirmishes By JUAN O. TAMAYO Herald Staff Writer SAN JOSE, Costa Rica - An- gered by a string of border incidents with Nicaragua, tradi- tionally tranquil Costa Rica is warning that it is reaching the end of its patience. "We're like a beehive," said Minister of Information Armando Vargas. "Everybody works, but the day anyone touches us, we all attack." The Costa Ricans' sting so far has been more rhetorical than military, befitting a nation that abolished its army in 1948 and adopted a Swiss-style neutrality law two years ago. Newspapers carry shrill attacks on the Marxist-led Sandinista gov- ernment, fueling what pollster Miguel Gomez calls "the feeling that something must be done about Nicaragua." Anti-Communist graffiti is turn- ing up on the walls of the placid capital of San Jose, a startling sight in a region where leftists usually hold the monopoly on spray-can propaganda. Foreign Minister Carlos Gutier- rez has said that he soon will ask the Organization of American States to rush a team of interna- tional military observers to the 198-mile frontier. And President Luis Alberto Monge. who had downplayed some of the incidents as the spillover of the war between Sandinistas and their rebel- foes known as contras, accused Nicara- gua Aug. 1 of a willful "policy of aggression" against his country. Vargas said Monge's Cabinet voted the same day to "respond with all patasible vigor" to future attacks. "Any aggression will carry a large political price tag ... and we will send the bill to Nicaragua," he said. The warnings took on an omi- nous tinge after Security Minister Benjamin Piza last week visited military leaders in Venezuela and Panama. The two nations rushed planeloads of military aid to San Jose during a similar border crisis in 1978, when the late President Anastasio Somoza ruled Nicara- gua. Asked if Piza sought military aid, Vargas told The Herald Friday that the minister "simply relayed our growing concern." He added. however: "We're not closing the door on any option." Venezuela and Panama have been providing some military'aid since 1982 to Costa Rica's security forces - 8,000 poorly trained and lightly armed policemen in the civil and rural guards - but the bulk of the guardsmen's foreign support has come from the Reagan administration. U.S. military aid to Costa Rica has totaled $21 million since 1982. Twenty U.S. Special Forces mem- bers are now in the country, training about 700 guardsmen in communications and patrol tactics. The Sandinistas charge that Washington is "militarizing" Cos- ta Rica to increase U.S. pressure on Nicaragua. Yet they say the guardsmen's very weakness makes the border a potential flash point for a U.S. military interven- tion against Nicaragua. "Imagine what would happen if we attack poor little Costa Rica," Nicaraguan Defense Ministry spokeswoman Capt. Rosa Pasos said earlier this year. "That's why our troops are under strict orders to respect the border." Orders or not, Costa Rica's Vargas said, Sandinista forces have staged 34 "major" border raids since late 1983, including an attack in May that killed two guardsmen and wounded nine others. The latest incident was a July 26 rocket attack by four Nicaraguan warplanes against a civil guard outpost 71/2 miles south of the border, he said. Nicaragua has denied responsi- bility for the attacks, usually blaming them on anti-Sandinista guerrillas bent on provoking a U.S. military intervention. And the Sandinistas have hinted that the CIA is behind the cam- gn by San Jose's newspapers, traditionally among the s s t in Central America, to beat the drums o war. Vargas said he had no informa- tion on the c arse but added. " e don't doubt all kinds of secret services are taking advantage of the Central American tragedy not only the CIA, but also the ovi- ets One ranking government official noted, however, that President Monge's 1983 declaration of Costa Rican neutrality was "a tactic to shield us from U.S. efforts to persuade us to take sides in Central American conflict." If the CIA is behind the cam- paign, it would a an agency L un m ut c opin on uo s s ow twat 8 rcent of Costa Rica's 2.5 m1 on o e v ew t o an in is- his ommunis s w o t reaten eir country. An official at the U.S. Embassy, expanded from 35 to 150 Ameri- can staffers since mid-1983, said the mission has a legitimate duty to make U.S. policies known in Costa Rica. "We try to make the U.S. point of view known to journalists here," he said. "but as to whether the United States is developing a frenzy against the Sandinistas. that's not true [because] the people here are smart enough to develop their own views of the Sandinis- tas." Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/13: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706620002-2 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/13: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706620002-2 The official said he recently mailed copies of a speech by a i Sandinista leader, questioning the value of Western-style elections, to 150 Journalists, politicians, busi- nessmen and youth leaders. Two i days later, two newspapers pub- lished editorials on the speech, first reported by The Herald in mid-June. One ranking Costa Rican official said the anti-Sandinista uproar was stoked by. newspapers whose conservative owners include rich coffee and sugar growers and industrialists. "I don't believe it's been neces- sary for the newspapers to heat up the situation," said Guido Fernan- dez, former editor of the leading IA Nacion newspaper. "The situa- tion has heated up because of the facts, and the newspapers have only mirrored this." Fernandez and pollster Miguel Gomez stressed that Costa Ricans have their own reasons to criticize Nicaragua and need little egging on from the outside. Nicaragua and Costa Rica fought brief border clashes in 1949 and 1955, and Somoza threatened to invade this country in 1978 in pursuit of Sandinista guerrillas then based in Costa Rica. Most Costa Ricans enthusiasti- cally supported the Sandinista-led revolution that toppled Somoza in 1979. They shifted when the Sandinistas broke their promises of democracy and turned toward a Nicaraguan mutation of Marxism. Vargas said the traditional enmi- ty between the two neighbors was best described in 1910 by Costa Rican President Ricardo Jimenez. "Costa Rica has three seasons," the president is supposed to have said. "Rainy, dry, and conflict with Nicaragua." Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/13: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706620002-2

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Links
[1] https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/document-type/crest
[2] https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/collection/general-cia-records
[3] https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP90-00965R000706620002-2.pdf