THE DOMINICAN CRISIS

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June 21, 1965
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Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500120010-3 June 21, 1965 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE 13637 Helstoski Mink Schweiker Watkins Whitten Wilson, Henderson Mize Scott Watson Williams Charles H. Holifleld Moeller Secrest Weitner Willis Wolff Hosmer Monagan Belden Whalley Wilson, Bob Zablocki Howard Moore Benner Hull Moorhead Shriver So (two-thirds having voted in favor Hungate Morgan Sickles thereof) the rules were suspended. and Huot Morris Sikes the bill was passed. Hutchinson Ichord Morrison Morse Sisk Skubitz The Clerk announced the following Jacobe Morton Black pairs: Jarman Murphy, Ill. Smith, Calif. Mr. Moss with Mr. Fino. Joelson Calif. Johnson Murray Natcher Smith, Iowa N.Y. Smith Mr. Pucinski with Mr. Horton. , Johnson, Pa. Nelsen , Smith, Va. Mr. Rooney of Pennsylvania with Mr. Mc- Jonas O'Brien Springer Ewen. Jones, Ala. O'Hara, III. Stafford Mr. St Germain with Mr. Barrett. Jones, Mo. O'Hara, Mich. Staggers Mr. Boland with Mr. Gurney. Karsten O'Konski Stalbaum Mr. Long of Maryland with Mr. Harsha. Kastenmeler Olson, Minn. Stanton Mr Karth with Mr Ellsworth Keith Keogh O'Neal, Ga. Ottinger Stratton Stubblefield . . . Mr. Schisler with Mr. Thomas. King, Calif. Passman Sullivan Mr. Steed with Mr. Holland. King, N.Y. Patman Sweeney Mr. Stephens with Mr. Irwin. King, Utah Patten Talcott Mr. Hebert with W. Nedzi. Kirwan Pelly Taylor Mr. Weltner with Mr. Olsen of Montana. Kornegay Pepper Teague, Calif. Mr. Charles H. Wilson with Mr. Ryan. Krebs Kunkel Perkins Pickle Teague, Tex. Tenzer Mr. Abernethy with Mr. Johnson of Laird Poage Thompson, La. Oklahoma. Langen Poff Thompson, Tex, Mr. O'Neill of Massachusetts with Mr. Latta Pool Thomson, Wis, Dulski. Lennon Powell Todd Mr. Shipley with Mr. Evans. Lipscomb Price Trimble Mr. Love with Mr. Reuss. Long, La. Purcell Tuck Mr. Herlong with Mr. Hanna. McClory McCulloch Qule Race Tunney Tupper Mr. Grabowski with Mr. Nix. McDade Redlin Tuten Mr. Philbin with Mr. Fraser. McFall Reid, Ill. Udall Mr. Resnick with Mr. Brown of McGrath Reid, N.Y. Ullman Mr. Giaimo with Mr. Culver. McMillan Reifel Utt Mr. Farnsley with Mr. Schmidhauser. Macdonald Reinecke Van Deerlin Mr. Edwards of California with Mr. Mackie. MacGregor Rhodes, Ariz. Vanik Mr Willis with Mr Randall Machen Mackay Rhodes, Pa. Roberts Vigorito Vivian . . . Mr. Gray with Mr. Bonner. Madden Robison Walker, Miss. Mr. Whitten with Mr. Kee. Mahon Rodino Walker, N. Mex. Mr. McCarthy with Mr. Roush. Mailliard Rogers, Colo. Watts Mr. Landrum with Mr. Adams. Marsh Rogers, Pla. White, Idaho Mr. Conyers with Mrs. Hansen of Washing- Martin, Ala. Ronan White, Tex. ton. Martin, Nebr. Rooney, N.Y. Whitener Mr. Wolff with Mr Byrnes of Wisconsin Mathias Matsunaga Roosevelt Roudebush Widnall Wright . . Mr. Toll with Mr. Conable. Matthews Roybal Wyatt Mr. Thompson of New Jersey with Bob Meeds Rumsfeld Wydler Wilson. Michel Sattetfleld Yates Mr. Celler with Mr. Brown of Ohio. Mills Scheuer Young Mr. Murphy of New York with Mr Hal- Minish Schneebeli Younger . pern. NAYS--O Mr. McVicker with Mr. Cahill. NOT VOTING-136 Mr. Multer with Mr. Lindsay. Mr Wa onner with Mr ll H Abernethy Fogarty Mackie . gg . a . Mr. Garmatz with Mr. Pirnie. Adams Fraser Martin, Mass. Mr. Fogarty with Mr Quillen Andrews, N. Dak. Frelinghuysen Garmatz May Miller . . Mr. St. Onge with Mr. Bates. Barrett Giaimo Minshall Mr. Hawkins with Mr. Curtin. Bates Grabowski Mosher Mr. Diggs with Mr. Harvey of Indiana. Betts Gray Moss Mr. Hardy with Mr. Brock. Boland Griffin Multer Mr. Hays with Mr. Bow. Bolling Griffiths Murphy, N.Y. Mr. Zablocki with Mr Broomfield Bonner Bow Gubser Gurney Nedzi Nix . . Mr. Rostenkowski with Mr. Cleveland. Brademas Hall Olsen, Mont. Mr. Miller with Mr. Minshall. Bray Halpern O'Neill, Mass. Mr. McDowell with Mr. Whalley. Brock Hanna Philbin Mr. Leggett with Mr. Andrews of North Broomfield Hansen, Wash. Pike Dakota. Brown, Calif. Hardy Pirnie Mr. Kluczynski with Mr Chamberlain Brown, Ohio Byrnes, Wis. Harris Harsha Pucinski Quillen . . Mrs. Kelly with Mr. Watkins. Cahill Harvey, Ind. Randall Mr. Jennings with Mr. Frelinghuysen. Carey Hawkins Resnick Mr. Hicks with Mr. Cramer. Casey Hays Reuss Mr. Rogers of Texas with Mr, Watson, Celler Hebert Rivers, Alaska Mr. Pike with Mr. Bray. Chamberlain Herlong Rivers, B.C. Mr. Roncalio with Mr. Mosher Cleveland Hicks Rogers, Tex. . Mr Rosenthal with Mr Dickinson Colmer Conable Holland Horton Roncalio Rooney, Pa. . . . Mr. Colmer with Mr. Griffin. Conyers Irwin Rosenthal Mr. Cooley with Mr. Cunningham. Cooley Jennings Rostenkowski Mr. Brademas with Mr. Betts. Cramer Johnson, Okla. Roush Mr. Harris with Mr. Devine. Culver Karth Ryan Mr. Rivers of Alaska with Mr. Saylor. Cunningham Kee St Germain Mr. Casey with Mr. Martin of Massachu- St. Onge Saylor setts. Dickinson Landrum Schisler Mr. Carey with Mr, Gubser. Diggs Leggett Schmidhauser Mr. Rivers of South Carolina with Mrs. Dulski Lindsay Shipley May. Edwards, Calif. Long, Md. Steed Ellsworth Love Stephens The result of the vote was announced Evans, Colo. McCarthy Thomas as above recorded. Farnsley Findley McDowell McEwen Thompson, N.J. Toll The doors were opened. Fino McVicker Waggonner Mr. MONAGAN. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members may have 5 legislative days in which to extend their remarks in the RECORD on the subject of the resolution just passed. The SPEAKER. Without objection, it is so ordered. There was no objection. CORRECTION OF ROLLCALL Mr. DANIELS. Mr. Speaker, on roll- call No. 146 I was recorded absent. I was present when my name was called and voted "yea." I ask unanimous con- sent that the rollcall be corrected ac- cordingly. The SPEAKER. Without objection, it is so ordered. There 1c no objection. / THE DOMINICAN CRISIS (Mr. LAIRD (at the request of Mr. HUTCHINSON) was granted permission to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include extraneous mat- ter.) Mr. LAIRD. Mr. Speaker, in a series of recent newspaper columns, the noted Columnist Ralph de Toledano explored in depth the events and circumstances that led up to the crisis in the Dominican Republic. So that my colleagues may have an opportunity to read the entire analysis in one package, I ask under unanimous consent that the articles by Mr. de Toledano be inserted in the RECORD at this point. The articles referred to follow: [From King Features Syndicate, Inc., May 7, 19651 THE REAL STORY OF THE DOMINICAN CRISrs-I (By Ralph de Toledano) Very reluctantly, the press has begun to recognize that the crisis in the Dominican Republic is Castro-Communist in inspiration and leadership. Even the flat declaration by President Lyndon Johnson that the United States had to move in order to prevent a repetition of the Cuba tragedy has been met by knowing smirks on the part of a few press pundits here. The true story of the Dominican revolt, the steps that led to it, -and the background of ignorance and perfidy which set the stage remains untold. From unimpeachable sources, some of which must remain un- identified in this account, I have pieced to- gether this frightening story. It is being set down here because public knowledge may strengthen the President's hand and prevent another Cuba-type deception on the Ameri- can people. Point No. 1 in this sordid tale is the fact that the United States came within - inches of repeating the same terrible mis- takes which led to the installation of a Com- munist regime 90 miles from the American coast. This account begins with the overthrow of the Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic and the eventual election of Dr. Juan Bosch to the presidency. From the start of Dr. Bosch's political ascendancy, the same groupings within the State Department which had suppressed Fidel Castro's Com- munist and terrorist past insisted that the - Dominican politician, though a leftwinger, was anti-Communist. This argument was used when there were protests over the open espousal of the Bosch candidacy by the Ken- nedy administration and the State Depart- ment. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500120010-3 Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500120010-3 13 63$ CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE June 21, 1965 After Juan Bosch became President, U.S. and economic development. How the United fluenc:e in an increasingly representative intelligence agencies began to receive omi- States permitted subversive and pro-Com- government. nobs reports. It was determined that Press- munist forces to use its own soil to plot When the revolt broke out, on April 24, the dent Bosch's right-hand man was a Commu- against a friendly neighbor remains one of Communists and their military allies passed nist apparatchik. Arms were being smug- the unexplained pieces in the Dominican jig- out guns and ammunition to street mobs gled into the country from Cuba and dis- saw. and robber . Juven, tributed to the Communist underground. That the action was planned in Puerto some as young asg12 and 14i1we eealso given A special militia was organized under the Rico can hardly be denied. While Donald weapons. From the very start, the Com- direction of Bosch's Red lieutenants. And Reid Cabral, head of the junta governing the munists were in control. The Bosch party, a pro-Castro guerrilla army began making Dominican Republic, was improving the hardly protesting its "democratic" nature, raids in the countryside. island's economy, ridding it of corrupt For 7 months, g gen- went along. and United States Domin cano leadersa pleaded araIs free e e tion thisciSeptember Tethei forces veloping facts were known, Atragedy, the t any time, the with U.S. representatives. They wanted the of subversion were busily plotting their re- revolt might have been nipped in the bud- Kennedy administration to use Its good volt. Ousted leftist President Juan Bosch had there been the will to do so among the offices with President Bosch, to warn him was spending large sums in newspaper ads boys of "Foggy Bottom." The intervention that further submission to the Castrcites and in taped radio broadcasts attacking the by President Johnson came at the 11th hour. would not be sanctioned by the United Reid Cabral government. r States. To this, the State Department an- In June 1964 Bosch publicly lie would few have Oeyjeand thDrminrcan Rmeri- swered that this country could not interfere. violent revolution from within byrthose who ca'sene:mies.nlythe U.S. Mari es stand Dr. Bosch, the middle echelon team told the ,ire not permitted to make a gradual revolu- between us and that eventuality. press, was simply allowing leftwing parties ;Ion." This was the signal for an assault on to exercise their civil lihertiac movement, named after the date on which iithersu Theattackemeopfled to the aimeusiii May 10, 19651 an invading forcefrom Cuba had attempted a, nearby university where they were given THE DO]r4INI0AN REPUBLIC AND A SUICIDAL uCT a landing in Trujillo's state-was led by asylum as students. Seven strikes against INBde Toledano) Castro-trained activists and financed by the Government led by Communist-led labor (By Ralph de Communist Cuba was not made known. croups shook the Government. The Castro- Dr. Juan Bosch, Castroism's patsy in the Finally, a military junta took matters i:e June 14 Party agitated openly for revo- Caribbean, has compared U.S. Intervention into its own hands. To prevent what was ltion. The National- Students Federation, in the Dominican Republic to the rape of clearly in the vrorks-a Communist take- affiliatedwith Castro's student international, Budapest by rampaging Soviet troops. Dr. over-the junta overthrew the Bosch re- openly espoused the guerrilla cause and led Bosch has even harsher words to say. about gime on September 25, 1963. The Kennedy tloody strikes against academic authorities, this country and its Government, though he administration Immediately withdrew its ostensibly in protest against entrance ex- is remarkably gentle when discussing Com- military and foreign aid missions and out off aminations which were characterized as serv- munist dictatorships. :Even friends like Dr. all Alliance for Progress funds. For 3 big the Yankee imperialist oligarchy. Jaime Benitez, chancellor of the University months, the new Government, inheriting the Efforts by the.U.S. Immigration Service to of Puerto Rico, condemn Dr. Bosch for his shaky finances of Bosch's incompetence and block the traffic between Puerto Rico and the "reluctance to come out frankly and cate- cut off from American help, slid downhill. Dominican Republic were swiftly blocked by iam.,aliy and reject communism and Castro- Simultaneously, the Castroite guerrillas the administration of Gov. Luis Mufioz flourished. The State Department's middle !i arin. The Central Intelligence Agency, Yet hearts are bleeding for Juan Bosch to- echelon appeared unconcerned, but sudden aroused by the reports of its operatives, night among some of the intellectuals. Not panic at the White House led President sought to mobilize some sentiment in Wash- only are they dragging out the discredited Johnson, new to the job, to restore American it gton for the Reid Cabral government. and hoary argument that by opposing com-righ ing aid. 14 bather the matter was taken up by the-Na- but they are feed the it sir reactionaries, The path ahead for the new junta, led by ti anal Security Council is a question wrapped but they aweeping in their beer because the Scottish-Dominican Donald Reid Cabral, in the enigma of executive privilege, President Johnson has been, to them, fool- was not an easy one. Juan Bosch, who had ish enough to believe that "a few dozen Com- fled fled to Puerto Rico, agitated for his retwn Certainly, the State Department's middle munists"' could take over the Bosch revolu- power. His agents moved back and forth echelon was aware that Bosch's PRD had en- tion. While they weep, Dr. Bosch, in viola- to San Juan and Santo Domingo. All te:'ed into a working arrangement with the tion of Federal law,, directs the activities of pretense pretense at disassociation from the Com- (r-Communist Popular Socialist Party the Communist Castroite rebellion by long was dropped-and Angel Mielan, Co a (FSP), the Peiping-dominated Dominican leaders was dro Dominican Angel MeRevolutionary Pcpular Movement (MPD), and the Castrofte distance phone froth t American on y B "f. Party (PRD), was careless enoelu io ar._ June 14 Party Angel Mielan, leading Bosch's The argument that only a iu dozen eared D) was soil ss enough Communist PFD in this coalition, claimed that his party, se beee oast iaa ce t seriously ?i by ?s~s New York documents. th,a largest, would not be run by the others. n advanced susly be the No York American Quiet requests from Reid Cabral and the But since his allegiance was to the Commu_~' a newspaper whose correspondent, junta that Juan Bosch be asked to settle nilt bloc, his assertions -were simply window Herbert Matthews, sold Washington and the elsewhere, rather than on an island so close dressing for naive Americana. country on the sterling democracy and antf- communis of del to the Dominican Republic, were ignored. ]n the days before the revolt, intelligence th at Castro was bein Castro. At the time Charges that Bosch and the PRD were ac- solaces were aware that a Communist junta York Tinges; - there were ionlye a handfull of g g in the tively plotting the overthrow of Reid Cabral had been organized to rule the united front. Communists running a small revolt in the were Sled , and forgotten when it became At the same time, there were stirrings in Sierra Maestra Mountains. A relative hand- known that the former Dominican president Puerto Rico-which Indicated that.r?a.n B. sch f l . . u Rico's eccentric Governor Luis Mufioz-Marfn. public at the head of his allies. "u y~c At the same time, the Dominican Repub.. The names of the members of the unofficial lio's military junta was urged to encourage junta were well known to Latin American "free political ,activity"-a beautiful sound., experts in Washington. They included Ing slogan which in reality meant readmit-, Ma:Iuel Gonsalez, representing the Soviet ting the Communists of various shades and Cormunist Party; Carlos Dore, a PSP Com- allegiances who had flourished under Juan. mulist and activist in the Dominican Stu- Bosch, dent Federation; Hector Florentino, head of It was at this time that the seeds of the Fra;ua, a Communist student organization; present Catsroite revolt were planted by Dr. and Daniel Ozuma, of the Castroite June 14 Bosch's PRD under the local leadership of Party. Activists trained in Cuba and in Angel Mielan, in a "united front" with Cas- Czei:hosiovakia, where the international Red trolte, Soviet Communist, and Chinese Com- conspiracy maintains special camps for this munist subversive movements. Puri ose, began infiltrating the Dominican Rep ablic. Some of them entered openly, un- [From King Features Syndicate, May 9, 1965] molested by a government trying hard to THE REAL STORY OF THE DOMINICAN prove to Washington that it was not CRISIS-II reps-assoc. (By Ralph de Toledano) In typical Castro style, the Red junta be- gan maing - American refusal to look communism in tary men. These allianceswerweitnh disaff hard tto find. the eye planted the seeds for the present The Reid Cabral junta had mercilessly Dominican revolt. This refusal led to the rooted out graft in the armed forces. Am- withdrawal of U.S. support for the Domini- bition also played a part among those mili- can Republic at a critical time In its political tary leaders who saw themselves losing in- Revolution and destroyed: the Kerensky re- gime which Lenin himself had described as the "freest In the world." And from all sides, at this critical moment in our history, organized punditry has begun a sustained assault on the new American pol- icy of , opposing communism rather than sheepishly making accommodations which weaken us and strengthen our enemies. President Johnson's present determination must, the pundits feel, be sapped and weak- ened by a campaign of breast-beating and phoney rhetoric. Harry S. Truman, who demonstrated his courage in - the Korean crisis, must feel strongly for the President today. The mountains of evidence, proving be- yond a peradventure of a doubt that the Dominican- revolt was Communist inspired and Communist directed, 'continue to pile up. The administration has- belatedly issued a list of names and a chronology of the revolt which can hardly be brushed aside by reasonable men. The chronology is too kind to the rebels since it still insists that the Communists took over after the outbreak of Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500120010-3 June 21, 1965 hostilities. But this fact is belied by the administration's account itself, so there is no point in belaboring it. Why, then, do grown men continue to mis- represent or misinterpret known facts? Why do they strive so passionately to prove that this country is in the wrong when it takes self-evident measures of self-preservation? It is a question that is asked over and-over by Americans who do not have the benefit of long immersion in the ideological steam baths of Washington, New York, and the other urban areas of disaffection. The answer has been repeatedly offered by such brilliant diagnosticians of our po- litical diseases as James Burnham. Long before him, Karl Marx had predicted that in the destruction of Western society there would be considerable help from well- meaning people who would by a kind of osmosis 'unconsciously turn to the support of Communist causes. Mr. Burnham has seen it as the manifes- junta now battling the Bosch rebels should not be too strongly supported by us-and that there should be some kind of compro- mise, some deal, to bring the two sides to- gether. This would be catastrophic, for the rebels could claim a victory, and Communist elements, working from within the coalition, could subvert it to their own advantage. Unless the Communist rebellion is put down and pro-Western leaders allowed to continue at the job of reconstructing the Dominican Government and economy, the Communist timetable (with some minor changes) will once more prove accurate. Highly reliable sources here point out that the Bosch rebellion was part of a stepped-up campaign against all of Latin American countries. The chief targets, after the Do- minican Republic, are Venezuela, Colombia, and Guatemala. According to secret CIA reports to the Congress, some $10 meson has poured out of Castro Cuba and into the hands of Communist guerrillas in those countries and in Panama, Paraguay, El Sal- instinct which sends the lemming on his march to the sea, and to death. Marx saw it as the manifestation of a massive guilt sense. Both aspects of the problem are per- ceptible in the reaction to the Dominican crisis. At the same time, there is a certain ele- ment of intellectual dishonesty involved in the state of mind under discussion. If or- ganized punditry said frankly: "Yes, the Do- minican revolt was engineered by commu- nists and would have established another Kremlin-Peiping outpost in the Caribbean- but U.S. Intervention is wrong under any circumstances," this would at least state a case. Instead, the issue is completely confused by arguments, charges, and claims designed to "prove" that the immutable evidence just doesn't exist. Castroites and Communists are painted as inconsequential or harmless. The "sins" of the anti-Communists become the subject of discussion-as if an ardent integrationist should insist that a Soviet landing in Mississippi should not be re- sisted because the State has a bad record on civil rights. The issue in the Dominican Republic, and in Vietnam, for that matter, is survival- and only someone ready to leap off a bridge would see it in any other way. 'l en minion aoaiars may nos seem so ue much in these days of $100 billion budgets. But in Latin America, and employed for guerrilla and other subversive activities, it is a very large sum. It does not include, moreover, other substantial sums from Mos- cow and Peiping which not only lend-lease treason to Cuba but lavishly support their own activities in the political underworld.- The proof of that-if any is needed-came to light when three couriers were arrested in Caracas carrying $330,000 for the use of Communist plotters seeking to assassinate President Leoni and overthrow the legitimate Government of Venezuela. This sum was for a single operation, and can be multiplied many times in that country and others of Latin America. The money had traveled from Moscow to Prague, from Prague to Rome, and from Rome to Caracas, with Italian Communists working the last stretch. As this writer has previously noted, the Communists in Colombia have used a tech- nique of kidnaping to raise funds and to terrorize the countryside. These kidnapings have averaged two to three every week. Now the guerrillas, having built up large caches of arms, have begun to distribute them to bands of desperados and other outlaws that have preyed on the rural population for years. The use of bandits to aid in creating a revolutionary situation is standard operating [May 19, 1965] procedure among Communists. The father CRISIS IN LATIN AMERICA-THE FIRST PHASE: of Communist terrorism, a Russian named CONTINUES Nechayez, laid out the rules in the 19th cen- tury. Lenin developed them, and Stalin- (By Ralph de Toledano) once a bank robber-put them into practice. Captured documents and highly secret re- It is significant that when the Bosch revolt ports in the hands of the Central Intelli- broke out, party activists in Santo Domingo gence Agency show very clearly that the crisis immediately armed the street gangs. in the Dominican Republic was merely the If the Dominican crisis is brought to a first on a long Communist timetable for the successful end, with the Communist thor- takeovet of Latin America. oughiy defeated and discredited, the Moscow- President Johnson's energetic, though Peiping-Havana axis will suffer in the rest of 11th-hour, moves to stop the Communist- Latin America. If it is allowed the smallest run, attempted coup d'etat of Juan Bosch vestige of victory, then the large groups of may have forced a change in plans for the activists from 10 Latin countries now train- Moscow-Peiping-Havana axis. But the crisis ing In Cuba-according to CIA rcanrtswill is far from over, even in Santo Domingo. be sent out. c asses'-will be begun and There are small signs disturbing observers the tragic, crisis-strewn road will become both here and in the Caribbean that the endless. Johnson administration is giving up the high - ground' it gained by acting forthrightly-to [From King Features Syndicate, May 28, the astonishment of the rest of the world. 19651 It is no secret here that the State Depart- AFTER THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC--PUERTO ment's middle echelon, protesting all along that the Bosch rebel movement was not Rico? Communist-dominated, still would like to see (By Ralph de Toledano) the Dominican ex-President back in power. The forces of "compromise" are passion- Those same groupings within State which ately at work to bring the Dominican crisis gave Fidel Castro his start fought bitterly to an inconclusive settlement-the kind of to save Senor Bosch when he was alienat- result which will snatch victory from those lug his own people by giving the Communists jaws of defeat for the Juan Bosch cabal and a free hand in the Dominican Republic. its Communist allies. That Is the news as They are now arguing behind the scenes this is written, although it may change be- that U.S. support of the anti-Communist fore the morrow. Approved For Release 2003/10/15': CIA-RDP67B00446R000500120010-3 13639 But communism and its activists never sleep. Already there are plans for a new onslaught on the soft underbelly of the United States-should Santo Domingo suc- cumb to the tender mercies of a coalition government. From very reliable sources comes the report that the next target is Puerto Rico, a Commonwealth attached to the United States by ties of history, politics, and eco- nomic self-interest. For many years, the Reds and a handful of addlepated national- ists have called for Puerto Rican Independ- ence. Neither the insular government nor the man in the street has had very much interest in any such eventuality, but the Red and their allies have shouted loudly for a freedom which would only spell eco- nomic calamity and political chaos. The chances for real trouble on the island began when Fidel Castro made Cuba a Com- munist outpost. Infiltration and propa- ganda began almost simultaneously. The movement attained respectability when former Dominican President Juan Bosch was given asylum in Puerto Rico by Gov. Luis Munoz Marin and immediately abused it by using his home as a base for subver- sive action-in consort with the Reds- against the Reid Cabral government in Santo Domingo. Jaime Benitez, chancellor of the Univer- sity of Puerto Rico, and a controversial character in his own right-"who was that Bobby Baker I saw you with last night?"- became a spokesman for Senor Bosch, as well as President Johnson's representative in the cease-fire negotiations in Santo Domingo. He gave the independentistas a respectabil- ity they had never known. Even without this help, the Castro-Com- munist onslaught on Puerto Rico has been no joke. Though the American press has almost studiously ignored events on the island, much has gone on. Puerto Rico, for one, has been given high priority by Castro's General Directorate of Intelligence (DGI). This agency for espionage and revolution is run by a half dozen Soviet specialists, all trained in the best schools of guerrilla war- fare that the Kremlin can afford. The DGI, since 1961, has been sending agents into Puerto Rico from Cuba. One Congressman puts the number at more than a thousand, though it is known that all of them have not remained on the island. (There are bigger and better targets in main- land United States, like the Statue of Lib- erty.) Many of these agents are Puerto Ricans who were already in training in Czechoslovakia and in Russia. The American Security Council, which has kept an eye on these doings, reported re- cently on the work of these professional sub- versives: "Castro's DGI is working in concert with Puerto Rican Communists and splinter fac- tions of the Puerto Rican independence movement, accelerating their attacks against the social and govrnmental structure of the island. Since 1961, a number of Castro- supplied -arms caches have been uncovered. Gun battles have been fought between the police and insurrectionists. Castro agents have infiltrated both 'exile and student groups, their purpose being to stimulate the kind of rioting which would require armed intervention * * * When the (United Na- tions) General Assembly convenes again, there is little doubt that agitation and propa- ganda will be stepped up in New York and San Juan, with the possibility of more vio- lent actions erupting in Puerto Rico." Violence on the island will be a signal for the U.N. committee on anticolonialism- which has already placed a demand for Puerto Rican independence on the U.N. agenda, in violation of the charter-to beat the drums for American withdrawal from a territory that is an Integral part of the Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500120010-3 13640 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE United States. The precedent was set In the Algerian crisis when what was a part of Metropolitan France received support as a nation in its own right. If the Puerto Rican newspaper, El Mundo, is correct and some 12,000 puertoriquenos have received training in Cuba, then the fat will be in the fire. Only a categorical defeat of the rebels In Santo Domingo can com- pletely forestall this probability. [From King Features Syndicates, May 26, 19651 STOP-AND-Go- DIPLOMACY IS HURTING THE U.S. GAUSS (By Ralph de Toledano) In politics, diplomacy, and love, there is a rule that if it becomes necessary to do some- thing unpleasant or unpopular, it's best done quickly, decisively, and gotten over with. This is a rule that Hamlet never learned. By the time he had finished with his step- father, Denmark was strewn with corpses, Lyndon Johnson has always been aware of this since his days as Senate majority leader. He has followed this rule in the arena of domestic policy. But in foreign policy, a field which is relatively new. for him, he has tended to operate on a stop-and-go basis, This has not enhanced his reputation for cau- tion and it has complicated the American position in the world of nations. Much of the present trouble in the Domini- can. Republic is due to this stop-and-go ap- proach. From the moment of intervention, ,it was clear that there would be a hullabaloo among the more vocal of the homegrown dissenters and by the critics of the United States in Latin America, Europe, and points north, east, south, and west. It was ab- solutely necessary for President Johnson to order that Intervention. Another Castro- Communist state in the Caribbean would have been a catastrophe. The President, however, moved uncertain.. ly. Had he sent the Marines and paratroop- ers in to stabilize the situation as quickly as possible, the shooting match would be over. Lives would have been spared and the paralysis of the Dominican economy pre- vented. Those who are now bedeviling us 1 from the United Nations or from ether capi- tals would have tothing left to scream about. By now, only the diehards would still be talking. The more practical politicians would realize that you can't unmake an omelet; they would be turning to other cam- paigns of yelp and vilification. Instead, the administration has acted ten- tatively and with an occasional lack of can- dor. Troops were landed and wheeled into position. They began the necessary clean- up, then were told to halt while the Presi- dent seemed to show an atypical indecisive- ness. The United States seemed to be work- ing at a compromise, as if this were pos- sible when dealing with Communist-domi- nated revolutionary movements. In this period of backing and filling, the fighting has continued, the situation has remained chaotic, and the critics of the United States have had a chance to build up their propaganda offensive so that It has begun to hurt us seriously. The tentative approach has made matters worse rather than better. An action quickly executed would have won some grudging admiration and some loud wails, but the worst of the tumult would now be over. The net effect of the President's seeming timidity, after taking a courageous step, has been to involve us in the Florentine machinations of the Organization of Ameri- can States, the United Nations, and every ambitious politician In the parliaments of Europe. What is true of the Dominican Republic is doubly ttrue of Vietnam. Relief at the President's reversal of policy and his acquiescence to Pentagon suggestions that the U.S.-created Communist sanctuary in North Vietnam be struck from the air have made many Americans forget that' the Ken- nedy policy of go with too little and then stop aggravated the situation in southeast Asia. Had there been the kind of command decisions now being made by the White house, the guerrilla and regular army opera- Sons of the Vietcong and the North Viet- :,amese would have been brought under con- fol long ago. The bombing of Communist North Viet- ilam has not brought any counter moves by iced China or the Soviet Union. There )ottld have been even less of a flutter had this country acted when the Vietcong had riot a ghost of a chance. Instead we mud- c led about with South Vietnamese policy, made and broke governments, and showed t3at we really didn't know what we wanted t) do. This was wonderful news to the Communists who are now rubbing their mounds, watching military defeat move in on them, and foreseeing new and added difil- cizlties in their guerrilla onslaught on southeast Asia. If the President has gained in experience wrat he lost in time, then the events of the pit years will be a net gain. If he holds to the stop-and-go approach--one condi- tioned by the State Department-then this country is in for trouble. [Sing Features Syndicate, Inc., June 4, 1965] STATE DEPARTMENT CONTINUES TO WORK FOR BoscH (By Ralph de Toledano) 'or reasons best known to himself, Secre- taiy of State Dean Rusk has gone out of his way to create the impression that United Stites intervention in the Dominican Re- pu')lie was a hasty and unjustified action. Mr Rusk, of course, knows better-or he has been keeping his head buried in the sand. In a press conference much quoted by those who would undercut President John- son's policies, Mr. Rusk stated quite clearly that the marines and paratroopers had been see; into Santo Domingo as-the result of a sinile message from the U.S. Ambassador there. This is, on' the public record, not true, and it ignores the mountains of information supplied to the State Department and the National Security Council by the Central In- telli;;ehce Aggee~n Tn eemgencereports that expose Commu- nist perfidy have, we saw in the case of Cuba, a tendency to disappear before they reach high level officials. But in the case of the Dominican crisis, the facts were in the hands of berth Secretary Rusk and President John- son for days before the White House ordered inter vention. - In order to make the President's action seem like a case of shooting from the hip- and to confuse matters so that only the most devoted scanner of factual material can really know what went on before and is going on now-+=a whole mythology has been created of what presumably went on between April 24, when the actual trouble began, and April 29, when we moved. It las been necessary to paint the rebel- lion as a reaction to the "reactionary" poli- cies of Donald Reid Cabral, the Dominican leader, and General Elias Wessin y Wessin, who has been made into the ambitious vil- lain of the piece. The- plain facts are as follows: on April 24, Reid Cabral had sent his army chief of staff to fire two officers for graft and cor- ruptioit. The chief of staff was instead ar- restedby rebels. General Wessin, instead of moving to crush what was then a small muting , tried to act as mediator between the rebels and Reid Cabral. The rebels refused to bud, e, and General Wessin still held off. "We don't want bloodshed," he told Senor Reid C7tbral. "It would be better if you re- signed." " Even after therebels had indicated June 21, 1965 that they were pushing for a full-scale civil war, General Wessin offered to set up a mili- tary junta with there, if they would agree to free elections within 90 days. The -rebels refused. From that paint en, -the rebellion was taken over completely by Communist activ- ists. Those naive members of Dr. Juan Bosch's Dominican Revolutionary Party who believed that he was interested in restoring a leftwing democratic regimen took asylum in the embassies of ether !Latin American coun- tries. - Meanwhile, as eyewitnesses have de- scribed, the Communists began distributing weapons--some of them Soviet made-to the "turbas" or street gangs. Looting, rape, and indiscriminate killing became the order of the day. Communists In control of the radio station broadcast the names of Cuban ref- ugees from Castro and urged that they be liquidated. Oddly enough, the ambitious and reac- tionary General Wessin still had not moved to crush the rebellion. In fact, the national police, under the Reid Cabral regime, began to free political prisoners, including Commu- nists, who immediately joined in the blood- letting. Finally, there was real counterac- tion by the government against the rebels. As Paul Bethel, editor of the liberally slanted Free Cuba News, puts it: "By Tuesday night, April 27, the PRO Party of Juan Bosch had been defeated militarily by the Dominican armed forces and absorbed politically by its Communist colleagues." If Bosch, making safely defiant noises from the safety of Puerto Rico, was finished, the Communists were not. In full control of the rebellion and working through their pup- pet-the until-then obscure Lieutenant Colonel Caamano-they had created utter anarchy in Santo Domingo. On April 28, a military junta, which had taken over from Donald Reid Cabral, for- mally asked the United States for "temporary intervention," pleading that it could no longer guarantee the safety of Americans and other foreign residents. As a result of this desperate plea, which only confirmed what Central Intelligence Agency reports had been informing the White I-louse and the State De- partment, the marines were sent in. For a brief time, it looked as if the United States would take its thumb out of its mouth and act like a grownup nation. The rebels fell back and the dominant loyalist forces could have mopped up in a matter of days. But President Johnson, beset by the neo- isolationist and appeasement wings of his party and assailed by college professors, began to worry, - - Now the Organization of American States is trying to create a coalition government which will include the instigators of the re- bellion and their Communist allies. The United Nations is trying to take over and make the mess even messier, and the quick and healthy solution that was in our grasp seems impossible of'achievement. The myth makers are busily at work and it can almost be predicted that in a matter of weeks mil- lions of Americans will believe that the Cas- troite rebellion was a democratic uprising, defeated by President Johnson's Fascist ad- visers. SENATE -JOINT RESOLUTION 22 (Mr. DERWINSKI (at the request of Mr. HUTCHINSON) was granted permis- sion to extend his remarks at this point in the RECORD and to include extrane- ous matter.) - Mr. DERWINSKI. Mr. Speaker, on April 14, 1965, the Illinois State Senate passed-Senate Joint Resolution 22, which I place in the RECORD at this point as part of my remarks. Approved For Release 2003/10/15 : CIA-RDP67B00446R000500120010-3