AIDE DETAILS U.S. MISGIVINGS ON ANGOLA

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP81M00980R000600050021-8
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RIFPUB
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K
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2
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 24, 2004
Sequence Number: 
21
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Publication Date: 
September 14, 1978
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NSPR
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Approved For Release 2004/07/08 : CIA-RDP81M00980R000600050021- 14 September 1978 off, ivinuS Aide Detans U. s. THE WASHINGTON POST ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE A-18 Covert Military Operations?.Were,-Mounted in 1975 Despite. the `Longest of Odds' By . Jim Hoagland Wasbtnston?Pwt staff wrlisr,"z:. One of Henry A. Kissingerrs. princi- pal aides during the Aniola crisis of 1975 reports in a-forthioming. maga- z1he article that the'Tord a,dministra-' tion mounted- covert.. military opera- tions in Angola' despite a- strong con- viction by -they officials most -directly involved that :, the., effort would faill *Ad I ultimately' -damage-American--i erests abroad:,' Providing` the-.first. public account Vby a high-level insider of the. policy tattle- over Angola,. Nathaniel Davis writes in the- fall , issue of', the guar. Z#erly journal Foreign Affairs that Kis- .iinnger and President Ford seemed to relieve during both the final weeks of Vietnam and the Angola, crisis "that it ,was better to roll. the dice against the - 4s a diplomatic-political problem. that "3u tensee-policg"debate;.Davis=portrays` ?,.'; Kissinger "saw Angola: as part`-of -the U.S.-Soviet relationship; ? and not as an African problem," argues`Davis,?. :gho served aeassistant secretary of ;-state for African affairs' under Kis- singer from March to July 1975, when e- secretly resigned because. of his 2ifferences with Kissinger and Ford. Asked fore comment,-. Kissinger said .tat he was- "astonished that a serving nbassador would publish such a one- ;sided and distorted view of events. and, the State-Department -has cleared Bch a piece; -it is not-: conducive to -nonpartisan forei_gh policy .' . ; Quoting-from two highly. classified -qnemos' that he prepared during the. `3ongest of odds than, to abandon the competition against-our great' adver- ._ n ?-of Zaire s Shaba Province surface onflicts of Ethiopia and Somalia and d ,quest--appears only-a few-months af? fer the same kind of policy battle over Approved Although - partial% accounts :, of . the 1975 Angola policy'struggle and Davis' resignation were eventually-leaked to .reporters,,Davis himself had'sougbt,to keep .them- secret until; now; His ac- count entitled a"Memoir," is his. first effort:.to explain publicly, the painful dilemmahe felt. the. Angola cris}s.rep-; resented for him. W. It is aft account filled. with strong. suggestions- of manipulation of the bu reaucracy and the-press not only to preserve secrecy but also to improve the chances -for getting presidential acceptance of covert operations.. Davis` draws a number of parallels betweenn. the - dangers of covert in- volvement in Angola and Initial U.S. involvement in Vietnam.: He. states that. Kissinger seemed to, share fully those perceptions, but eventually ov- errode them to go more deeply into Angola "I believe- the secretary is right in his conviction-if I understand his views-that if we go in, we must go in quickly, massively and decisively enouglt to avoid the. tempting, grad- ual, mutual escalation that character- ized Vietnam during the 1965-67 pe- riod," Davis wrote in a memorandum on July 12,1975..' . . If we are to have a test of- strength-with the Soviets, we should: -=find - a?; ?. mom-advantageous - place: `+: Davis- wrote.'-the memorandum to head, off- . a: Central.. Intelligence Agency covert. operations proposal for, Angola-ordered: up by the administra?. tion in- April. He -urged Kissinger and Ford inatead'to adopt the "diplomatic option" developed at the same time by a high-level interagency task force on Angola,. which suggested that the ad- ministration work with Portugal and a i few key African countries to reduce the flow of arms to the three warring black nationalist factions. The task-force included senior rep- resentatives from the CIA, Defense Department, National Security Coun- cil and. other agencies involved in Af- rican policy: Davis writes that the task force--"in its great majority" fa- vored the diplomatic option and op- posed the covert intervention., which "would commit: -U.S. resources and prestige in. a situation the outcome of. which was' in 'doubt ' and 'over which R we could at best exercise limited in- fluence.!' . -. . ' But the task: force diplomatic..rec- ommendation''-was_ rewritten on in- structions from. the- National Security Council staff 'ta -give- equal- weight to-. two other options, a? complete hands-?. off policy 'or - military?intervention; ac-. cording to a report of the House Se- G lect Committee ..on Intelligence that.1 was published ? in February 1976 and?' which Davis quotes. with evident ap- proval. Davis suggests he was also bureau! cratically outflanked at the crucial: July 14- meeting of Kissinger's highly secret "Forty Committee," a high-level, review body for covert actions. Davis; asked to be present at the meeting to- argue his case, but he notes that he "was not invited" to the meeting. It ended with an order for further study of the covert operation plan. Within a week, Ford had approved a $6 million guns-and-cash operation for the Angolan forces of Holden Roberto' and Jonas Savimbi, according to the House Intelligence Committee report A month later, the figure had gradu- ally escalated to $14 million,, and reached $32 million before the Senate legislated an end to the covert. sup- .port on Dec. 19. - Davis, who has served at lower level posts since his break with Kissinger, is currently state department adviser at the Naval War College. He de- scribes his opposition. entirely on pragmatic grounds.- He suggests at. several points that he did not disagree- with Kissinger's concern' over Russian moves in Africa and he sidesteps the question of his own. views on the prim . ciple of covert action im, such situa tions.. In the July memo- he submitted to Kissinger through Undersecretary- of State Joseph J. Sisco, Davis argued that the- CIA proposal "grossly 'under. estimates the 'risks of disclosure abroad" because of the operation's high visibility. The CIA had- Instead stressed the danger of leaks inWash- ington and the need to restrict infor?1 mation to Congress, Davis notes. The Russians; Davis argued, would quickly know of theAmerican. support ,for. the ' Roberto and; Savimbi forces For Release 2004/07/08 : CIA-RDP81M00980R000600050021-8 CI1?ZYt1ED Approved For Release 2004/07/08 : CIA-RDP81M00980R000600050021-8 and could easily increase' their sup. plies to their client, the, Popular Movement for the Liberation of An- gola. He described the Roberto and Savimbi forces as having serious mili- tary weak points, and noted that Sa- vimbi was reported to- be ' receiving. South African assistance, a link that would cause problems with African opinion. In a section that gives a broader scope to the CIA proposal than has p. eviously been officially confirmed, the July 12 memo noted that "the CIA paper envisages covert CIA-organized! military training, organization, orien? tation and, leadership,'.' along the lines of CIA activities "in the Vietnam hign- lands and elsewhere in East Asia." Davis. resigned Immediately after Ford approved the, covet optloa;'-and was offered a job as ambassador to Switzerland. He paints- the period that. followed his resignation as a difficult, time of feeling that he could not talk about his resignation without disclosing the covert. operation. The article discloses that Davis and Kissinger aide Lawrence S. Eaglebur? ger deliberately scheduled Davis to be on vacation on July 28 when the Sen- ate Foreign: Relations African sub- committee began hearings at which .Davis should have testified. When The Washington Post discovered the) resignation a month later, Davis ac- quiesced in what he now calls' "a cover story" that he had quit because of the frustration of "working against too many psychological obstacles" from African and congressional oppo- sition. The secret Angola operation first came to public notice on Sept. 25 in a New York Times report that reported including that both "East and West," the United States, were pouring mil-l .lions of dollars covertly into Portugal and Angola. Davis writes that he is still ' puzzled why that particular re- .port "had so little impact in the United States," but suggests that it was=because the story's. sources put the main emphasis on the political ac- tivity in Portugal rather than the{ s military operation in Angola and b cause` it "emphasized Soviet- action in support of the leftists in Angola." Staff. researcher Jane Freunder,',c tributed'to-this report..: Approved For Release 2004/07/08 : CIA-RDP81M00980R000600050021-8