TURNER GIVES HILL EVIDENCE OF CUBA ROLE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP81M00980R000600250057-7
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 30, 2004
Sequence Number: 
57
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 6, 1978
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP81M00980R000600250057-7.pdf111.63 KB
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WASHING For Release 2004/08/19DAVA-RICP8 Turner Gives IfillEvidence Of Cuba Role Photos, Reports Said To Back U.S. Charge Of Zaire Involvement By John M. Goshko and Mary Russell Washington Post Staff Writers The Carter administration yes- terday showed Congress some of the evidence-satellite photo- graphs and reports from diplo- mats and prisoners-on which President Carter based his charge that Cuba assisted the rebel inva- sion of Zaire last month. Uella-ble sources said the evidence, presente by _Nntral Intelligence Agency Director Stansfield Turner to a closed session of the House Intelli- gence Committee, consisted jnostly of information collected from el ris- oners, diplomats and persons in coun- tries surroun a z e7__ In addition, the sources said, Turner displayed various satellite photos that he said spr rje en- campments near the Zaire border and a u an s ip un oa a in An- goa, the neighboring arxist st country f om which the rebels launched their attack on Zaire's Shaba Province. Although the evidence was de- scribed by the sources as largely cir- cumstantial, committee Chairman Ed- ward P. Boland (D-Mass.) said, "14msat- isfied. and the enmmitte itself is eatis. fled, that the president's statement was correct." His words added the committee's backing to the support given Carter last week by the top leadership of Congress: Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd (D-W.Va.) and Minor- ity Leader Howard H. Baker Jr. (R- Tenn.), House Speaker Thomas P. (Tip) O'Neill Jr. (D-Mass.) and Minor- ity Leader John J. Rhodes (R-Ariz.). After a meeting with Carter and Turner at the White House on Friday, all four said they believed the presi. dent's charges that Cuba helped train and equip the invading force. 8060600250057-7PAGE~ However, it was not immediately clear whether this growing congres- sional support will end the questions and doubts that have been expressed about whether the administration has sufficient evidence to prove its charges against the Cuban govern- ment of President Fidel Castro. These doubts have come from some members of Congress, most notably Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.), and from some officials of the administra- tion itself. ? The officials, who have asked not to be identified, have said the evidence appears too circumstan- tial and too susceptible to differing in- terpretations to be conclusive. Turner, speaking to reporters after his two-hour session with the commit- tee yesterday, tried to address that' point, saying: "T"o sum up, we have made a very careful and' objective evaluation of this evidence. In intelligence, nothing can be black and white. But from the preponderance of the evidence and the'vari of Sour time We can nnl^ aome to the conclu- sion that we did." A limos certain to add to the contro- See AFRICA, A16, Col. 2 The issue of Cuban surrogates in Africa is not a new one, 1964 cables show. Page A14. AFRICA, From Al versy was the revelation by adminis- tration sources yesterday that none of the evidence will be declassified and made public-at least not under pres- ent White House plans. The sources said public disclosure had been considered but was rejected out of fear it would reveal the CIA's sources and methods of collecting in- formation. As a result, they added, current plans call only for the evidence to be given to the Intelligence and Foreign Relations committees of Congress on a restricted, nonpublic basis. That de- cision, one source said, seems certain to be adhered to even "if it means a credibility gap." Despite a statement yesterday by House Speaker O'Neill that the ad- ministration had evidence of Cubans in Zaire, the administration has said only that Cuba helped to train and equip the rebels in Angola and that. Havana knew of the plans for the in- vasion and did nothing to stop it. Turner underscored that point anew yesterday. "This government made no statement that Cubans were in Zaire or they were not. The evidence is not clear one way or the other," he said. Among those who have seen or been briefed on some of the evidence, the biggest argument involves the reliabil. ity of the sources from whom the CIA obtained its information. Persons present at yesterday's com- mittee briefing said Turner referred to sources only in such general terms as "an African diplomat" or avian believed to have been one of the rebel inv3 erc who was iW6ii ed and inter- viewed while a hospital ri over." A source who has seen one of the intelligence reports in question noted, though, that it contained a CIA nota- tion that the African diplomat who provided the information had never been used before and was therefore of unknown reliability. One committee member said the most detailed identification given by Turner yesterday i national who was taken risoner by the inva ers and traninorted to a rear area,` apparently in Angola, for execu- tion. However, the committee member said, the man spoke Spanish and used that language to plead successfully with persons in command over his captors for his release. Approved For Release 2004/08/19 : CIA-RDP81 M00980R000600250057-7