JPRS ID: 9654 WEST EUROPE REPORT

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CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9
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APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ ' JPRS L/9G54 - 10 April 1981 - - ~est E u ro e R e~ rt I~ p ~ CFOU~ 2fl/81) FB~~ FOREI~N BROADCAST INFORMAT~ON SERVICE - - ~ FOR QFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 ~ - NOTE _ JPRS publicati_ons contain information primarily from foreign newspapers, periodicals and books, but also from news agency = - transmissions and broadcasts. Marerials from foreign-language � _ sources are translated; those from English-language sources - are transcribed or reprint~d, with the original phrasing and _ ~ other ~haracteristics retained. Headlines, editorial reports, and material enclosed in brackets _ are supplied by JPRS. Processing indicators such as [Text] ~r [Excerpt] in the first line of each item, or following the _ last line of a brief, indicate how the original information was = process~d. Where no processing indicator is given, the infor- mation was summarized or extracted. Unfamiliar names rendered phonetically or transliterated are enclosed in parentheses. Words or names preceded by a ques- - tion mark and enclosed in parentheses were not clear ~n the original but have been suppli~d as appropriate in context. Other unattributed parenthetical notes within the body of an _ item originate with the source. Times within 2tems are a, - given by source. - - Ttte contents of this pub7ication in no way represent the poli- cies, views or attitiides of tne U.S. Government. , ~OPYRIGHT LAWS AND REGULATI6NS GGVERNING OWNERSHIP 0~ \ MATERIALS REPRODUCED ?3EREIN REQUIRE THAT DISSEMINATIOiQ OF THIS PUBLICATION BE RESTRICTED FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY. APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 - F~fR OFFICIAL USE ONLY JPRS L/9654 10 April 1981 . ~ WEST EUROPE REPORT . tFUvo 2o/si) ~ CONTE~! TS TERRORISM _ INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS Sov:~et Responsibility in International Terrorism _ (Giuseg~e Venosta; IL MONDO, 13 Feb 81) 1 - Laurent Book on Terrorism Subject of Interview (Roland Laurent Interview; PANORtiMA, 23 Feb 81) 6 - ITALY Red ~rigades Terrorist Peci Interviewed (Patrizio Peci Interview; PANORAMA, 16 Feb 81) 9 Activity of Armenian Terrorists = (EUROPEO, 9 Feb 81) ............e 16 FCONOMIC FRADICE ~2eport on 19$0 Aid to African, Indian Ocean TerritoriEs (MARCHES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRANEENS, 27 Feb 81) 18 ~ ITALY Trade With East Affected by Resumption of 'Cold War' _ (Nino Ciravegna; IL Pi0ND0, 20 Feb 81) 34 ~conomists' C~pinions on Credit Restrictions ~ _ ~iIL MONDO, 29 Feb 81) 38 Luigi Spaventa, Luigi Spavent~. Interview _ Giovanni Guidi, Giovanni Guidi Interview ~ " Walter Mandelli, Walter Mandelli Interview - a - [I~I - WE - 150 FOUO] _ ~ cn~ nc~r~r ~ r r rc~ n~?rT v APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 r�ux ur�r lci.ai, U5~ UNLY . I. POLIT'LCAL ' J FRANCE - ` CGT Leaders Foresee Political: Financial Problems ~ (LA LETTRE DE L'EXPANSION, 9 Mar 81) 45 ~ Chirac Detail~ Economi~ Plan, Savings, Budget Cuts _ = (Jacques Chirac; VAi~EURS ACTUELLES, 9 Mar 81) 46 RPR Political Defections From Chirac Camp (Chri.stine Orion; VALEURS ACTUELLES, 9 Mar 81) 50 Briefs New SDECE Head 53 ITALY Makno Poll on Government, Parties, Leaders (Paolo Pas~arini; IL MONDO, 30 Jan 81) 54 GENERAL ~ ITALY - A1-Qadhdhafi's Econcmic, Political In�terests in Italy (Cesare Peruizi; IL MODNO, 30 Jan 81) 59 . . ; . I ~ , _ ~ i ~ i� � . ~ ~ , - b - FOR OFFICIAL USE ~NLY ~ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 FOR OFFiCIAL USE ONLY TERRORISM INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS - SOVIET RESPONSIBILITY IN INTERNATIONAL TERRORISM - ' Milan IL MONDO in Italian 13 Feb 81 pp 28-32 _ [Article by Giuseppe Venosta: "From Russia With Terror"] [T~xt] Pertini believes it, Haig is conv inced of it: terrorism has its bases in the East. Is this really true? There is no lack of ~vidence, although some dou~ts remain. And the KGB would like Not only San~iro Pertini holds certain convic*ions concerning the foreign matrix of terrorism which has been raging over Italy and Euroge now for some time. In fact, on 28 January, the new American secretary of state, Gen Alexander M. Haig, in his first o.fficial address, echoed the Italian gresident's declarations and spoke on th e"training, equipping, and financin~" of international terrorism. Thi~ time, however, unlike Pertini, Haig spoke out clearly and named the Soviet Union. The Soviets retorted with protests and denials. The Itremlin is an establishm2nt that - = cloaks itself in a bourgeois respectibility founded on la~r and order [at home and] - = on the planetarq scale as w~11 that stirs envy in the West's most staunchly = reactionary circles. Nonetheless, thP Soviet Union has never repudiated the label~ attached to it as the nation whfch is leading the world revolution a contradiction ' ? tha.t has ~rouse3 a good deal of suspicion. What, then, is ~he truth? Are there actually terrorists coming in from the cold? Perhaps the truth is known cnly to those who work on the third floor of a building, - vaguely Moorish-Assyrian in its architecture, that stands at number 2 Dzerzhinsky - - Snuare in Moscow. In the summer of 1972, a good part of the first general di.rector- _ atE of the KGB (Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti, or Conanittee for State Secur- ity), which oversees the foreign operations of the Soviet secret police, was trans- , ferred to a large, modern, barracks-like st~ucture on a turnoff of Moscow's beltway; yet it is srill on Dzerzhinsky Square (site of the infamous Lubyanka - Pr ison) that all vital decisions are made. Or iental rugs, embroidered divans, mahogany wainscoting, a bedroom and ba~h shut off _ - from th~ rest of the premises: this is the headquarters occupied by Yuri Vladimiro- - vich Andropov, 66, unriisputed boss of the ~GB, even though he has not presided officially over the organization for the past 3 years. Once a telegraphist and movie - - house f ilm operator, he served as Soviet ambassador to Budapest during the Hungarian - 1 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPR~VED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY uprising in 1956. On his desk stands a battery of telephones. One, the Kremlevka, ~ � connects directly with the Kremli.n. A second, the Vertushka, is reserved for com- _ _ munications with members of the political office of the communist party and the ~ Central Committee. The others are plugged into the nerve centers of the ~oviet apparatus. Tall, with the courteous manners of a scholar, Andropov knows English - fairly well and likes to flaunt his command of it before foreign guests at official ceremonies. While it was certainly not Andropov who spilled one of the KGB's thou- _ _ sands of secrets, still something of the wnrld-wide activities pursued by his secret service personnel has filtered through to the West. IL MONDO is now ab'le to reconstruct at least three significant accounts which strongly tend to confirm. Pertini's suppositions and H~?ig's certainties. The Repentant Warrior _ Captured in September 1980 by the Israelis, Adnan Jaber, 32, until 1969 member of . A1 Fatah among the most seasoried nuclei of Palestinian re~,istance and the group guilty of massacring six religjous Jews (2 May 1980) on their way to Hebron, on the o~cupied We~t Bank, to pray at the so-called tomb of Abraham revealed facts on the ties bet-~�*c~n the Palestine Liberation drganization (PLO) and the Soviet Union. His Russian adventure began in March 1974 on an Aerflot flight from Damascus to Moscow with 20 fellow Palestinians. The men were lodged in the village of Sokhod- naya, 35 kilometers from the capital, where they w~re given courses in military eraining and political theory from 0800 to ?600. Some of the instructors wore ~ uniforms, others mufti. Few spoke Arabic, hence there was a ne~ed for interpreters. The Soviets trained the Palestinians in small units of 30 men each not to learn guerrilla warfare but rather conventional military procedure. Only once were the ~ trainees taught how to storm a~building in the center of a city and take possession ' of it. _ Jaber noted that during the course on telecommunications, the Soviet instructors used radio equipment unknown in ~-ne Middle East. He noted also that the Russians ~ - never mentioned the Israelis by name but preferred to ca11 them "the enemy." More- over, excpet for obligatory lessons in Marx~.sm-Leninism, they emphasized the crea- tion of a. Palestinian state on the banks of the Jordan, not the destruction of - Israel, in line with the United Nations' resolution. Despite his dark deed at Hebron, one is little inclined to brand Jaber as a terror- - ist. In committing Yeis criminal gesture, perhaps he f elt the exasperation of a - thwarted patr3.ot determined to see his country liberated. But many ~ther rumors have come t us from behind the iron curtain that have little to do with the eman- cipation of oppre:.~Qd peoples. The Lumumba University Founded ~..n 1960 by Nikita IChrushchev, then secretary general of the CPSU, and bap- - - tized the following year in honor of the Congo's assassinated prime minister, the - Patrice Lumumba Universi~y was dedicated to friendship among peoples (six depart- ments). As such, it was the Soviet Union's single educational institution authorized 2 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 ' FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY to accept foreign~ students (in 1957 only 150 specialized in Soviet studies; today - there are an estimated 20,000 distributed among various schools). Lumumba Univer- sity takes in annually some 5,000 foreigners coming from 92 countries, even though - their diplomas are not universally recognized. Local academic authorities, of , course, xefute the notion that Soviet universities only prepare them to ur:leash _ revolutions all ot~er the world, and argue that campus sports rule out marksmanship - as exce.ssively aggressive. Despite their claims, however, the real facts are quite different. " _ First of all, foreign Lumumba candidates are carefully selected by the KGB; what _ parameters are supplied are unknown, but certainly t.hose accepted are not opposed to - Saviet infierests. Secondly, although the courses in Marxism-Leninism are elective, ~ the non-Soviet students are discreetly pressured into attending zhem. It is for a good reason that 25 percent of the student body consists of Russians, among them propagandists and activists. "If parents want their children to be communists, they should send them to Paris. If they want them to be capitalists, they should send them to Lumumba," a former student of the Moscow university recently remarked to IL MONDO. But not everyone agrees with him. Qver the past 15 years, in fact, at least two of Lumumba's foreign students were given front-page headlines for months because of the revolutionary activities. After studying at the university in the 1960s, in 1971 RoYiana Wijiwera, leader of the Liberation Front of Sri Zanka, headed an armed uprising in her country that ended in a blood bath. The other was Carlos "the 3ackal," or Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, the = terrorist most sought after by police all over the world, who masterminded a series of kidnapings, massacres, and holdups. Having totally disappeared some time ago, Carlos is thought to be a gues: of Libya's Colonel Muammar al-Qadhdhafi, Moscow's valuable ally in the Mediterranean basin and the Middle East in general. Ilich, or Carlos, arrived in Lumumba in the autumn of 1968 together with his brother _ Lenin (their father, Jose Altagracia Ramirez, a wealthy Venezuelan lawyer, paid unique homage to the father of the Bolshevik revolution by naming his three sons Vladimir, Ilich, and Lenin). Apparently they were not very serious students; to the contrary, Carlos lived a high life in Moscow on the generous monthly allowance ~ sent him by his father. But then the unpredictable happened: public enemy number I of the future was expelled from the Soviet Union in the spring of 1968 for dis- - o~�derly conduct at the gates of an African embassy, which he denounced for failing to renew the exit visas for a group of its student nationals; he was seen hurling an inkpot against the building and breaking a window. The incident ended in a Tr?ild - West type of inelee and an exchange of blows between Carlos and a brawny Soviet - policeman. Says his father, "In Moscow Ilich learned to loathe Soviet communism." _ Western specialists in Soviet affairs, however, think differently: "His expulsion was simply a ~phony] ideological ploy, enabling him to collaborate with the KGB in more quiet secrecy." Another disturbing type to nurture an ambiguous love-hate attitude toward ehe Soviet - Union was Lee Harvey Oswald, who assassinated President John F. Kennedy (Dallas, 22 November 1963;. Wtiile he never attendEd Lumumba, Oswald nevertheless worked actively = with the KGB, and applied for Soviet citizenship in 1959. When two psychiatrists = = examined him for the Russian secrEt service, they pronounced him too abnormal and - 3 ~ FOR OFFICTAL CJSE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 a = FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ' ~ unstable to warrant a post iti the service. Returning to the United States in June _ 1962, Oswald renewed his request for Soviet ciCizenship 1 year later. A.pplication again denied. Then car~e Dallas. A~~cording to information received by IL MCJNDO, hia crim e provoked a panic on Dzerzhi�r.sky Square. Was it possible that Oswald had been ; hired without headquarters knowj.ng it? A bombardier was promptly d~spatched to Minsk, the last stop of Oswa?u's sojourn in the Soviet Union, and brought back to Moscow a dossier on him, tab..t.ch elicited a sigh of relief; tlie documentation showed _ nothing that could compromise the Soviets. Al.l the same, the KGB, trembling with fear, wondered whether the efficiency of its methods might have been deteriorating. The Czechoslovak Trail Lik~ the American CIA, the KGB, which commands five times as many spies as all West- eri~. secret services put together, does not o�pQrate alone on the global ch~ss board. Just as the Red Army exploits its Cuban, West German, and Sauth Yemenite subordi- nates in sensitive regions of the planet (Africa, Middle East), Dzerzhinsky Square . likewise has its "Negroes," the allied police forces of the Eastern Eur~pean sate- llite nation~. The Czechoslovak trail abruptly came to light in 1978, thanks to the Italian press, when Aldo Nioro, Christian Democratic presider~t, was kidnapped and ~ assassinated: one of the weapons used to kill him was found to have been made in - Czechoslovakia. . Since then, inany journals have ventured hypotheses and stated their convictions. There has been talk of Giangiacomo Felrrinelli's visits to prague; of a base near - Karlovy Vary aet up to train Italian terrurists; of the hospitality extended by _ Czech officiai.s (about 1949) to members of the Milanese Red rlyin~ Squa3ron, perpe- ' trators of various crimes not altogetner p~litical but all without confirmati.on. ' These charges were proved 10 years ago, but a*_ the time not even the most dogged . Western warmongers paid more than pass3_ng atte�ntion, distracted as they ~~e~e by the ~ widespread yearning for decente aftr~ the dramatic show of Sov~et power in the invasion of Czechoslovakia. In addition to the Prague spring, 19b8 was the y�ear that marked the defecticn of a I Czech general, Jan Senja, in the Unit~d States. NQ longer in ~anger of being tracked _ = down by the KGB, Senja gave the French weekly PARIS MATCH a long interview, in which he decl~red that in the West, under Soviet direction, t.he Warsaw Pact countrie~ had established networks of saboteurs primed to knock ou~ vital :.nstallations should a , - conflict eventually break out (including, ior example, a detailed plan to ble~a up - L~ndon's underground with plastic explosives). Senja said also that foreign mili- tants were being trained beh~.nd the iron curtain, and spoke about the Itaiians in- volved, to general indifference. a "The Czechs, too, will be good comrades in the [coming] f ight," a young Palestinian, proud of his affill.ition with A1 Fatah, confessed .*.o IL MONDO, and continued: "But they are c.ertainly nnt the best instructors in the East. What is more, in 1968 they made it plain that they did know how to fight. Nor do the Soviets, with their noses in the air whenever they encoiinter us Arabs... The best are the Vietnamese; they really know their stuff." Yet the mysteries of P~ague are still unresolved - and will probably reff~a.in so for a long time to come, or until the West is able to cast at least a ray ot light on the East bloc's intended course of action should it -~i,~ ~ = FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ be proved that it holds the reins of terrorism on the international scale; this be- _ cause the circumstances lend themselves to many contradicting interpretations. As UNITA was quick to point out in its comments on Per~ini's 3eclarations (aparC _ from Italy, Turkey, with its 1,000 kilometers of. common border with the SovieC Union, is also a theater of terrorist guerrilla warfare), it is a matter of significance that in September 1980, the terror inflicted by extrem~ factions on the Bosphorus braugh~ to power a military ~unta favorable to the Atlantic Pact, therefore opposed to Moscow. Equally true is the fact that the Red Brigades' bloody deeds in Italy, - ; espeeially the murder of Moro, have not only alienated Enrico Berlinguer's communist party from the constituted government but also from any chance to lay the foundations ' for the historical compromise. The countless ways of the Kremlin are highly enig- matic. What can be said about France, a country spared terrorism, Italian or Turkish style, but where, with chronometrical precision, the Kremlin boycotts Georges Ma.rchais' communists (Marchais is one of the most loyal of the pro-Moscovites) in every electoral campaign bec~u.se the ~oviets insist on their demands which, being extremist, are unacceptable to their French allies. ~ COFYRIGHT: IL MONDO 1981 9653 = CSO: 3104 5 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 , FOR~ OFF[CIAL USE ONLY TERRORISM INTERNATIONAI, AFFAIRS LAURENT B~OK ON TERRORISM SUBJECT OF INTERVIEW Milan PANORAMA in Italian 23 Feb 81 pp 51-52 . [Interview with Roland Laurent by Bruno Crimi: "Northeast Passage"] [Text] A French author and newspaperman has some sensational things ta say on internati~ns~ terrorism. Saon aiLer 35-year old Roland Lau~ent completed his university _ studies (he ol~tained his law degree in 1967), he was devoured by two passions: novels about secret agents and the diplomatic ' . career. He chose to become newspaperman and to get involved in real life with the affairs of international espionage. And, there- fore, at 3east indirectly, with diplomacy. Having learned the ropea for some years at PARIS-PfATCH, Roland Laurent .joined the CANARD ENCHAINE, the satiricai weekly most feared by the political establishment, for which he has been working for the last 10 years. Newspaperman-sleuth Roland Laurent is the author of a - book, ~ust published in Nicp by Publisher Alain Lefeuvre, which is creating quite a turmotl in France: "L'Internationale Terror- iste Demasquee" [The Inten~ational Terrorist Unmasked]. T�~ith this interview whi~.~ he granted PANORAMA, Laurent goes beyond the revelations contained in his book and tells of some unpublished episodes which occurred while he was conducting his research on international terrorism. [Question3 Were you surprised by President Pertini's statements on French tele- - vision that the sanctuaries o~ international terrorism are in the East? [Answer] T was surprised by its form. I did not expact a Western head of State to speak with suci~clarity and with such precise allusions. As far as the ~substance - is concerned, on the contrary... [Question) Did Pertini hit i'~ mark? [Answer] I would say so. [Question] The Italian president, however, did not furnish any proof of his statements. An3, all in all, neither have thc parliamentarians who supported him. Do you have anything to say on the matter? - 6 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/48: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 _ I FOR OFFICIAL JSE OIYLY - [Ans~Ter] A few years ago, when General Haig was head of NATO, the organization's Military Committee had requested from the aecret serv~ces of the individual countr~~ members a d~tailed report on terrorist activ~ties and on the connections among tha various groups. A synthesis had been made, then, from which it clear~y appeared that the larges t quantity of weapons employed by terrorist organization3 came - from the Soviet Union, Bulgaria and Czechoslovaki.a. And it was accurately proven that in Czechos lo~rakia (at Karlo~}? Va~y), in East Germany (at Wund~orf), in cuba ' (on the isle of Youth) and then in Lebanon, in Syria, Iraq and Libya there were Craining camps for IRA terrorists, ttle Red Brigades and Prima Linea meaibers, for the Basque ETA [Basque FaCherland and Libertq Group] ar~d Germany's Red Arm;~ Faction. - [Question] You are speaking in the past tense. What is th~ present situation? - [Answer] That ~eport has been recently expanded by a CLP investigafiion which con- _ firms everything and supplies additional details~ This report from the American agency is presently on Ronald Reagan's desk. Haig saw it, and seems to be = extremely worried. To the point that at the SJtiite House they ar~ examinin.g the ~ possibility of a summit of NA~O countries on problems concerning terrorism and the measures to be taken ta neutralize it. - [Question] Wha t are th.e "additional 3etails" contained in the CIA reporti all about? - [Answer] Details on how weapor.s are deli�~ered to terrorists in various counti�ies, ~ Italy includ~d: through the diplomatic pouch of some of the embassies of the so- - called progressive Arab countries. [Question] L;bya, for instance? [Answer] For instar.ce...but that's not all. Tiie weapons utilized by terrorists, - usually imported from the East, are n~ost of the t_iwe made to order. Namely, they are specifically manufactured for terrorist,a an~ qr.iite often do not have a regis- - tration number. Furthermore, it is definitely known that in countries like Libya and in some Palestinian camps in Lebanon there are "bureaucrats," usually East Germans, who wo rk full time at training future t~rrorists. - [QuestionJ What is Tripoli's ir.terest in upsetting the stability of a country = like Italy? [Answer] Qadhdhafi plans to assume on a dominant role in international affairs. And for him all is fair. but one should not forget two things: first, that - Libya is only ~ne of the intermediaries in the strategy for creating chaos. Second, that the Libyan leader could suddenly decide that the strategy of ~romoting terrorism is not rewarding for him and could abandon this scheme. [Question] It remains to be seen why countries of Eastern Europe, and Russia in particular, int end to upset stability in Italy. _ [Answer] Your country is in a strategic area of utmost importance. Fueling terrorism there means evaluating the degree of psychological "restraint" of the population, of the pol9ce, of the armed forces. And this is, obviously, fun- - damental for the global atrategy of the orier.tal bloc. 7 FOR OFFICIAL IJSE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 FOR OFFICIAL US~ ONLY _ , i _ [QuesCion] Even admitting that the orchestra leader of terrorism is in East~rn Europe, Red Brigade and Prima L~.nea members are often arrested in France. Haw do you account for that? ' [Angwer] Up to a few years ago, there was an organization which supported ter- ' - rorists, the Cr~mnuttee agai.nst Repression in Europe, whose members were intellec- ~ - tuals, lawyers, and even priests and ;judges. Later the committee was diss~lved, ~ but the sugporting network remained. And it is is not difficult to know that - Italian terrorists find hide-outs in Paris and in the Lyon region, Spanish [terrorists] in the Toulouse regioa and Perpignan and so forth. _ ~ [QuestionJ TYie Action directe group, anyway, of �ers protection to Italian, German _ terrorists, etc. _ [Answer] True, but Action directe ie infiltrated by the French secret seYVice and ~ , does not have a very active organization, on the contrary... I ~ ' [Question] Is it for this reason that Marco D~nat Cattin has been arrested? - [Answer] Also L-or tt~is reason. I know for sure that Mareo Donat Cattin was "tailed" - for about a munth. His �aay of setting up appointmen~s with his "contacts" had upset the working methods of t::~ ~'rench services. He used to give three or four different appointmen~ts to the sar~ie peY�son in three or four metro stations at a - - time of light traffic. As the train approached, if he noted that his contact - was waiting for him he would ge'c off. But if he realized that he was being ~ followed, he pretendeu not to laiow the person waiting fo r him. He would, then, _ meet the person at the next stop. Thus the French police did not manage to cat~h - the men whom Donat Cattin used to meet. And they deci~ied to arrest him when they - found out that he was about to leave French territory. ; ~ [Question] Terrorism in most lace~ i^ ' p ~ being hard hit. Is it reasonable to sup- pose that it is being defeated? - [Answer] I don't think so; Lerro�ism has entered the psychologi~~al mass reality. _ Its actions provoke enthusiasm l.ii certain persons who are led tc, imitate the "masters." I think thatthe future of terrorism does not concern so much the armed - groups as much as the individuals. It is not outside the rE~alm of possibility that to~norrow a physicist may succeed in building a 3ma11 atomic bomb or that a biologist may isolate the germs of a serious infectious disease. And that with these means one person alone may tlacl~ail a country or an entire population. Th~ terrorist of tomorrow may, perhaps, be called Dr Strangelove. ~ COPYRIGHT: !)81 Arn~ldo Mondadori Editore S.p.a. Milano 9758 - CSO: 3104 _ E- 8 - ~'OR OFFICIAL flSE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 _ FOR OFFiCIAL USE ONLY - T~RRORISM ITAyy ~ ?tED BRIG.~ES TERRORIST PECI INTERVIEWED - Milan PANORAMA in Italian 16 Feb 81 pp 140-147 - jInterview with Patrizio Peci by Antonio Carlucci: "Why I Surrenc:ere: [Text] The workers defeated the Red Brigades, says the most famous of the "p~~nitents" in his first newspaper interview. He asks that the government extend the same - clemency given to the Black Brigades after the war. . _ Patrizio Peci, Red Brigade column leader in Turin, speaks out after his arrest. _ He is determined to cooperate with the 3udges. For 11 months Peci talked only - with the investigating magistrates, the Carabinieri and members af his family: _ Now he as agreed to answer PANORAMA'S questions. In his first interview the repentant BR [Red BrigadesJ member ~explains why he has decided to cooperate with the authorities by denouncing his ex-comrades, disclosing Cheir hideouts and arms caches, He reconstructs the terrorist activities in whlcl-~ he himsPlf participated and even those, such as the ambush of Aldo Moro and " the five men in his party, which he was told about. ~ Peci complai.ns that the phenomenon of collaboration has not been encouraged and rewaraed by ~he new laws and says clearly that he expects steps will be taken soon _ to open Che doors of the jail for him and for those who followed his example. He appeals to the youths w~o are about to take the leap into clandestinity Co turn back. But the ex-group leader also talks about the choice he made when he joined the Red ~ Brigades and he tells about the internal life of the terrori5t organization (from - financial problems to recruiting~-even to summer vacations) the political problems, and dissension within the BR. - Question; Why did you ~oin the BR? - Answer: Because I saw it as the only group that could achieve revolutionary change of the injustices surrounding me. - 9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY = APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ Question: How does an underground fighter live, but abova all how much does he - need and how does he get money? ' Answer: It is impossible to give a precise figure. In any case, everything - included (salary, rent, travel, clothing) let us say that 1.5 millf=~n lire per month are needed. The BR e~ropriated property in order to get moi~ey. The - money was first gathered in a central place and then redistributed. A very : - careful budget was maintained in which shortages ox waste in general were not - possible. This was true at the top as Well as among the organization's rank and file. Question: You pointed to Mario Moretti as a"spiritual father." What were your ~ relations with him? What influence did Moretti have in the Red Brigades? What do you think of him today? Do you think Moretti is one of the top BR leaders? - Answer: I knew Moretti in 1978, but I have never said tie was my spiritual father. We met in several political meetings; nothing more. The top echelon of the Red Brigades is the executive committee composed usua2ly of four comrades, and Mo retti is one of them. Question: A German terrorist, Hans Joachim Kiein, who years ago gave up the armed struggle, told a German weekly that as far as he knr~ws MAretti and another - BR member are reported to have quit the organization and taken refuge abroad. - Answer: I think those statements are unfo unded. Question: Why do the BR write so much:' Every time one of their hideouts is discovered thousands of documents arc found. Your ex~comrades give the idea of - a gru up o� graphomaniacs who are certain they wi11 pass into history. ~ Answer: It is Che best way to advarce debate throughout the entire organization _ without possib3lity af misunderstanaing and without violating the pr3nciple of - - compartmentalization. Question: Even the vacation s~.t,adule was found in a BR base~. How are vacations organized in the Turin group, accor3ing to what plan, selecting what places, appropriating how much money? - Answer: The men went on vacation because in a certain sense they were "somewhat obliged to." Actually, in summer, in addition to a lack of possible targets, there was a lack of groups that made it possible to adopt disguises. The _ - irregulars (ed. note: BR members who were not underground, and who of ten worked on securir~r) went on vacation as they wished; the regulars were given money to _ rent a house in ~ tourist resort for about a month. - _ Question: First there were the events of Corrado Alunni, then those of ~ Valerio Morucci and Adrian~ ~',randa, and finally those of the Walter Alasia - ~ group of Milan. Disagreements within the BR seem to be constant. When you were - a member how were they resolvedY = 10 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 FUR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - Answer: Tiie instrument was political debate. If that was not sufficient, there was a delineation of the split. Then there was ~ wai~ing period, and F - after that the dissidents were free to go. No one was ever forced to remain - against his will. The situation was different for one who left without sayin~ _ = anything, carrying with him everything he could. Question: What did you think as qou participated in murder or while in~uring _ a person? ~ ~ Answer: From the human point of view there un~doubtedly was hesitation. But ~ political cansiderations overcame them. According to our understanding of - politics, murder unfortunately was a form of struggle which, together with other _ forms, would lead us to a society without exploitation. Therefore we saw murder - as an act of ~ustice. Question: Were you ever afraid to die? _ Answer: Fear of death is innate 3n every human being. I am no exception. - Question: What kind of relations existed between the Red Brigades and the other terrorist organizations? What did they talk about? - - Answer: The relations~~the few that existed~~involved political confrontation. Questivn: Who approved admission of irregulars into the Red Brigades? Answer: Recruiting was done by other irregulars who already were in the organization. Question: But were there tests ~r examfnations to take in passing from the status of irregular to regular? Answer: Before becoming regulars, the irregulars were checked out in the practice - of fighting. Question: How many terrorists, including regulara and trregulars, can the BR = count on today? Answer: Overall about Z00. But my est3atate is made with reservations, Question: There have always been considerable polemics concerning the international contacts of the BR. With what foreign terrorist organizations were you in contact? Answer: W3th a11 foreign armed organlzations to same extent. But the.relat~.ons were very unst~bstantial. Question: How did contacts occur? Answer: I don~t know because such contacts.were not part o~ my 3ob. ~ ll FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 _ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ Question: What was the purpose of contacts between the BR leaders and agents of - tr~e Israeli intelligence service? Answer: There was only one meeting. We immediately tcld the I~raeli agents that we of the BR were not interested in certain relatians. . . Question: D~d you ever feel you were a pawn of fiy intalligence agency? ~ Answer: No, absolutely not. Question: Did you ever think of the possibility of g~tting political or military aid from any foreign country? ~ Answer: From no co untry, in this phase. Question: Were any brigade members trained abroad? ` Answer: The BR did not train abroad. Ques~ion: In ~he attack on the DC headquarters in Piazza Nicosia in Rome, the BR used a Soti.l.et Kalashnikov machinegun. Special training is needed in that weapon . - Answer: There was only one Kalashnikov in the BR, The person who used it _ obviously knew how. Question: What does General Dalla Chiesa represent for the BR? _ Answer: Undoubtedly he is one of the most important enemies. Question: Why, after your arrest, ~lid you ask specifically to meet Aalla Chiesa? Answer: He seemed to me to be th~.~ best person under the circumstances. Question: What did you talk aouut during that meeting? Answer: Of my availability as a"collaborator" because of the crisis in my _ political thinking. - - Question: Almost a year has passed s3nce the day of your arrest and the decision to collaborate with the goverriment. Why did you make that choice? Answer: ,~~~:~e all because I was convinced of the political failure o~ armed - struggle~ The .;R began their guerrilla history start3ng with a practice of armed propaganda that gradually developed. The objective was to sensitize the proletariat, and then make them active participants. With the passage of years ~ (in the post-Moro period) ~~1.~ process of eonsciousness-raising was considered started and there was the gradual passage from armed propaganda to a fighting war. The organization adapted itself pol3tically and ~mil~tarily to this later - _ phase, but we became aware that the pro~etariat was not participating actively: - 12 FOR OFFICI~L USE ONLY - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 ~OR UFFICtAL U5E ONLY The �amous mass organizations remained immobile on passive cansensus; in practice the touted availability for armed struggle was a fiction. That is the historical defeat of the political hypothesis we practiced: In fact, every premise of = a Vanguard of the fighting communist organizations falls. In practice, to - continue along that road means participating in a war by groups. Question: Was it after you arrived at these conclusions that you decided to collaborate with the government? _ Answer: Starting with that assessment, there is no possible halfway. Let me explain: If the hypothesis of armed struggle is considered correcC, then shooting . must take place. But if that does not happen, and it is considered that armed " struggle is damaging for the class itself, then it is necessary to do everythin~ _ possible to stop it. To fail to do it means three things: To be an indirect - accomplice of future armed actions; to passively permit other comrades to take the road of armed struggle which is destined to defeat; to create a situation in which the government can criminalize forms of independent struggle by the working class, which are not part of a power system, with the pretext that society is faced by potential "terrorists." Therefore, my decision collaborate remains - more than valid, so much so that it was a decision made by more than 100 comrades. ' Question: What do you think of the government~s attitude toward those who ; ' collaborate? Answer: The government has begun to face the possibility of surrender (that is ~ - what it comes to in reference to the use of arms as a form of political struggle) ~ of inembers of the communist fighting organizations by issuing Che Cossiga law - (ed. note: the measure that provides for reduction of penalties far those who = cooperate with the law) which was supposed to be the first. sign of its own wi11- ingness. I say a first sign because that law is not applicable in the least possible way except in some minor cases~ Nor could the government, to tell the truth, have done much more at that time because it was in a situation which in - some ways could have been described as weakness in dealing with the armed struggle. The present situat3on is different. ~ Question: How? Answer: Taday the surrender of entire armed sectors :Ls a real fact (among the most significant examples is the t~tal surrender of Prima linea [Front Line~) and their willingness to fight those tenacious pErsons who do not want to admit - defeat of their political plans. Aside from this new situation, it is a matter of going further, since it is a political error to delay: This impasse : permits armed organizatior.s (within which undoubtedly there is a collective , or subjective debate on tY~z possibility of surrender) to hold on to the comrades _ who continue in the armed struggle by force of circumstances since they see no ' pract3cal way out. Question: Did your attitude convince others, or even independently of th3.s, is there a willingness to specifically collaborate wi.*_hin the oiganizations? J 13 FOIt OFFICIAI. USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY - Answer: Within tr~e fighting orgau:izations there now exists a tendency which recognizes the political-militar.y defeat of armed struggle. This Cendency, ` however, is not conceived in cleai terms also beca.use there is st.'Sl no reply that : would cau~e underground groups to defect. - Question: The kidnaping of Judge Giovanni D'Urso has demonstrated that terrorism ~ - is still capable of striking. Can you say something to those who are about to ~ - take the leap inCa the underground, or who have been engaging in terrorist _ activities~for some time? Answer: I do not think I can say much to the comrades who sti11 militate in _ the communist ~fight3ng organizations. They are capable of choosing, of understanding whether, if beginning with the present situation it is possible to continue with some hope of victory. Certainly, ta continue fighting only ' to avoid admitting defeat is horriblel Y do not understand their logic in changing the problem of choice of more than 100 comrades, reducing it to that of two or three comrades who are branded as "infamous" or "new traitors," when the - recollection should still be fresh of their long militancy and their generosity f rom the human as well as political point of view. To thus reduce the problem - _ and not seriously discuss the validity of armed struggle means that their total - - annihilation =s merely a question of time. This statement naturally is directed only to the fighters. Question: Therefore you believe you can speak only to those who are still on - the sidelines of underground groups ~ Answer: To tho se comrades who are app~roaching armed struggle~ whose number cannot be very large, I say, they sh~uld consider it well since they would be _ going to fight for a cause that cannot be resolved with weapons. , Question: What d~ you expect from *hose who must judge you ~or the murders you i canfessed? Answer: To see the ~roblem only from the po3nt of view of 3ndividual responsi~ - - bility is not right, and the ml~ter is not seen in its real terms. Here, first - of all, it is a matter of having the courage and the socio~political conscience _ - to take steps capable of defeating the fighting organizations and to rescue many youths who, believing that they can improve this society, have made more drastic choices. W:Lth new measures, the government would not demonstrate weakness: Rather, anything but, It is not by chance that the officials who are most involved in the inveatigations of the armed organizations and all the police forces, who cert~inly cannot be accused of weakness, are oriented in - this direc~ion. Question: But wha~ should these measures be? Are you perhaps thinking o~ - expatriation or amnesty for the terroriats who have collaborated? Answer: In ancient Greece~~we are talking about 2000 and more years ago~~- _ every political "crime" was punished by ex31e. But without going too ~ar - back into history it is sufficient to think o� clemency for the fascist - 14 - FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY ' APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - - criminals who committed horrible crimes 40 years ago. We all know whaC positions = they prer_~ntly hold. ~Great Bxitain uses tr.e ''crown witness." The lattPr example does nut precisely fit our case, but it can give us an idea of how to ~aso~.v~ the problem without being too shocked. Thc~se who maintain that public _ _ opinion would not understand are in bgd faith. More than an exaggerated searCh - for punishment, .*_re paople want to live with 3ustice without being surrounded ' by violence, and they wa~t to rescue the youth. Question: Did you ever r~_ceive direct threats in ~ail? Answer: No, but that is not the problem. To receive them would be something pathetic and would demonstrate the impavQr~shment of spirit by those who seek - to make them. The problem is to guarantee us all that peace and serenity necessary for survival. - Question: But then what are the concerns of today? Answer: They are three. The first: Our particular presence in jail opens a basic contradiction in th~ institution itself. If we were to be gathered into a single building, we would become, together with the guards, an attractive target that would be difficult to defend militarily. If instead we were in separate sections in any ~ail, there could be a repetion of what happened at Nuoro. Question: The second? Answer: It is the mr~rbid curiosity that surrounds us and that is normally transformed into a campaig~ of deni.gration against us. Question: And the third? Answer: It was not an easy and painless choice to denounce our comrades-in~arms. _ That choice is the weight we wi~l carry for the rest of our lives, but it was and is the price, even though very high, that is to be pa3d to avoid further and useless bloodshed. Therefore, assessing these problems overall, there is a = collapse of the absurd hypothesis t:~at he who chose t~~ c^'1laborate was motivated by opportunism. Certainly, each of us desires to be released as soon as _ possible, but this is a distinct human tactor. Who is the prisoner who does not wish to be released? - Question: What will you do when you leave pr3son? Are you already thinking = about how the life of an ex,terrorist would be? Answer: One problem at a t~me! We want to get out first. Question: Some weeks ago you appeared for the first time in a court of ~ustice - as a witness. But you must face the ~udges as a defendant, on the same basis as your ex-comrades. What wi11 your attitude be? Answer: My behavior is and wi11 be what it is now, As far as ~ am able, I will clarify the individual and collective responsibilit3es, And I will once more clearly explain the reasons for my choice. COPYRIGHT: 1981 Arnoldo Mondadori Editore S. p. A, Milan 6034 - cso: 31oc? 15 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 FOR OFF~.C~AL U$E QNLY TERRORISM ZTA~Y ACTIVITY OF ARMENTAN TERRORTSTS Milan EUROPEO in Italian 9 Feb 81 p 11 jArticle: "The Nitro Is Armenian, But It Has a Russian Accent"] [Text] We reveal the secrets of a terrorist organizati,on operating in Italy. The Italian secrei services say they have nothing to hide, no Soviet connection up their sl~eves. The other viewpoint is that they are blind only because they do not want to see. For political reasons, the secret services are said to have decided not to look too far in the direction of tl~e USSR, Czechoslovaki~: and some Arab movements - when it comes to finding out wfi at Italian terrorism~s international connections are, = ~Yho is right? The answer is not easy. But EUROPEO can now state that something more than mere hints are coming out concerning the Armenian terrorist organization that has made attacks in Rome and, more recently, in Milan, 1'he English acronym is ASALA, which stands for Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia. It is known as the Secre* Army to "experts." ~t was formed in Lebanon in December 1974, where more than 200;OC0 Armenians live. It is celebrating its anniver- - sary on 24 April, when the Turks com~nitted their great massacre of Armenians in 1915. - But it has also claimed attacks as the 3 October group, because two of. its terrorists were arrested in Switzerland on 3 Uctober 1980 (Suzy Mahseredhjian, 24, an American of Syrian origin, and Alex Yenikomeshian, 30, from a good middle-class Lebanese family). - In April 1980, their chief held a press conference in the old city of Sidon, Lebanon; he wore a stocking cap to make himself unrecognizable and introduced himself under his nom de guerre of Hagob Hagobian. He claimed more than 40 attacks in western Europe alone, including the bombings of th~ Turkish offices in Rome and the attack of 17 April 1980 on the Turkish embassy in Italy, where the bomber was seriously injured. The connection wit,~ ~he USSR is obvious in ASALA's very program: Turkey is enemy number one. This enn~ity wr~s so pronounced that for a while the Turkish government ~ was convinced that ASALA was a Greek-Cypriot organization. But a series of investi- gations disproved that idea. ther, it was discovered that the origins of this terrorist group were to be found in the serpentine Lebanese civil war and ~n the clash of factions in that war. The Secret Army had chosen its allies and protectors in two Palestini.an extremist groups: the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (FPLP} of George Habhash (the same one who "lent" missiles to Daniele Pifano) and the Marxist Popular Democratic Front for tfi e Liberation of Palestine [MPDFLP]. Both groups are - fellow travelers under the leadersfiip of Yasser Arafat's PLO [Palestine Liberation 16 _ FOR OFFICiAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 - FOR O~FI.CZAL USE ONLy ~ Organization] and axe $upported by t:he pro-Soyiet states o� S~.x~a, L~hya~ and - South Yemen, What the Secret Army wants is very explicit: a�ree Republic of Armenia, One did = exist far a couple af years after tFie Russian revolution, but it was invaded by the 5oviets, who took 4/5 of the territory, and by the Turks, who took the rest. 'I`he ~ecret Army~s "intermediate objective" is to take this remaining 1~5 �rom Turkey and give it to tfie USSR. TTiis ddes not displease Nl~scow, and it is a _ threat to NATO. To increase the threat, the Se~ret Army fias allied itself with a small grot~p of Kurds (the Kurdistan Workers' Party), which is also pro~Soviet and bent on lo~ping - - off a part of eastern Turkey, To complete the picture, both ~roups have su~ported - the Soviet inva$ion of Afghanistan. These are not the only indications, Tt is said that there is a lot of money available, lavish publications (always published in Beirut~ and especia~ly ~ierce hostility �or the moderate Lebanese Armenian Party, Tasfinak, wfiicfi is financed largely by 1lmmerican Armenians in California (the state Ronald Reagan is from). This hostility is supposed to fiave alerted the Italian intelligence services. _ Suspicions began to solidify when tfiey realized that among the Secret Army's objec~ - tives were the Ttalian offices o~i the Tolstoy Foundation, an organization dedicated - to helping refugees from the USSR and which could, in particular, help Soviet Armenian refugees go to the United States, The Secret Army want to'~lock tliis .route. Was this what President Pertini was thinking about wlien he linked Turkey and Italy toget~her as prime targets for foreign-led terrorism, when fie was interviewed on - French television? COPYRIGEIT: 1981 Rizzoli Editore 8782 CSO; 3104 ~ 17 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY _ APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 FUR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ~ - BCONOMIC FRANC~ = REPORT ON 1980 AIll TO AFRICAN, INDIAN OCEAN TLRRITORIES Paris MARCIiES TROPICAUX ET MEDITERRENEENS in French 27 Feb 81 pp 470-474 [Text] In 1980, low prices fox tropical co~nodities reduced the resources of . most African countries ~t a time when their ~etroleum purchases have become more expensive. This imbalance is added to the permanent one, caused by a series of poor harvests, some unsuitable economic structures and ambitious programs. As a result, several countries have payueent problems, often _ exacerbated by excessively short-term loans. _ In a report of its 1980 ~ctivities, the CCCE [Central Fund for Economic - _ Cooperation] noted that, for this reason, in addition to the conventional sid granted as discounted loans, whi~h increased 25 percent during the fiscal year, it also expanded i.ts long-term "second window" loans. At the request of the French government, it has made available through this window exceptional aid amounting to 536 million francs in the form of three loans to Senegal, - Upper Volta and the Tvory Coast. The loans made in 1980 totaled 2.6 billion francs, as compared ~aith 1.6 billion in 1979. In addition, operations have been extended to Ghana, Angola and Mozambique. _ . Growth of Operations a) Commitments Since 1975, the volume of commitments for soft-te~a~ loans from the Central - Fund increased an average of 26 percent annually, so that in 6 years, it has _ increased fourfold in current francs and 2.5 percent in constant frsncs. It amounted to 1.5 billion francs in 1980 and its ceiling was raised to 2 billion in 1981. ~ Evolution of First Window Commitments from - 1960 to 1980 in Constant Francs - (Index of 100 in 1980) Average 1960-1964 41 1974 40 . Average 1965-1969 44 1975 50 - Average 1970-1974 41 1976 61 Average 1975-1979 69 1977 69 18 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 FOR UFFICIAL USE ONLY - 1978 79 1980 100 1979 89 1981 119 (estimate) - Second wi.r~d~w loans were offered in 1975 to make available, at conditions similar to the market, long-term additional resources to the most advaiiced nations or to finance very profitable operations. After an extr.emely br~.sk start, these loans decreased appreciably. They more than doubled in 1980, _ amounting to almost 1 billion francs. Including joint financing venturAs, in real terms, the overall volume of - Central Fund commitments, stable from 1976 to 1979, rose 46 percent in 1980; it has about quadrupled since 1974. - Evolution of Second Window Commitments and Overall Commitments From 1974 to 1980, in Constant Francs (Index 100 in 1980) 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 Second Window Commitments 24 79 61 58 41 100 Total Commi.tments 23 39 59 66 70 69 100 The fo~.lowing indicates this evolution in millions of current fra.ics: 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 Loans: First Window 650.9 800.4 965.6 1,200.4 1,499.5 Second Window 613.6 521. 521. 399.5 1,094.5 Joint Financing 7.8 17.9 6.5 2.6 7. Total 1,272.' 1,339.3 I,493.1 1,602.5 2,601. b) Payments The increase in commitments a~ain affected the volume of payments in 1980. The _ latter rose to 1,65 0 billion francs, partially because of the effect of the immediate payment of 38 0 million as exceptional aid. On the other hand, because of the 5 year grace period usually given to borrowers, reimbursements will not rise uztil ~98Z. Net payments, almost 1.4 billion francs, increased 83 percent in 1980 (in miLlions of francs): 1975 1976 1g77 1978 1979 1980* _ Payments 359 582 793 991 1,016 1,647 Reimbursements 230 243 241 253 259 261 Total Payments 129 339 552 738 757 1,386 *Estimate d figures The Central Fund, whose net resources were reduced prior t~ 1975 because its operations remained stable, ras again recome an essential source of capital for Africafl nations at a time when they are having very difficult treasury . 19 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY ' APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 i FOR OFEICIAL USE ONLY - problems, both in external financing and their public finances. Intiernational bank loans, becau~e they are often paid immediatel3~, in recenC - years added to the euphoria of countries with substantial resources because of high coffee and cocoa prices. Paid in installments as the projects are being carried out,Central Fund loans then seemed very limiting. In reality, - they were an assurance of resources during less affluent periods. This assurance remains: in late 1980, the 4.2 billion francs committed but still to be paid guarantees the continuity of Central Fund financing in the - coming, apparently austere years. ` As of 31 December 1980, the vol.ume of C�ntral Fund cmuunitments, including what still must be paid out, a~ounted to 10.3 billion francs, up 30 percent. Cooperation Tailored to the Situation in Borrower Countries Loan Conditions In recent years, the Central ~und has ~dapted the conditions for its assistance _ to the various countries involved an~i the programs financed. In 1980, it established new operating methods which deal with the inadequate national resources in some countries where it operates. Four types of loans are made: - Normal, first window loans--1,343.8 million francs; Soft-term first window loans: 155.7 million francs; Normal , second window loans--558.5 million francs; . Exceptional, second window loans--536 million francs. a) Despite steep interest rates on the market, the normal, first window loans = have, because of the French government's intervention, been approved with more - - favorable conditions than last year's--average rate of interest was 5.8 percent, for an average length of 16 years, 4 months. b) As in 1979, a portion of soft-term loans, with an interest rate below 2 percent (1.5 percent for 10 years and 2 percent thereafter) for 30 years, with - a 10 year grace period, was again reserved for th~ poorest countries or those _ experiencing exceptional difficult ies. E ight countries have benefited-- the Central African Republic, Upper VoZta, Niger, Mali, Senegal and the Comoro Islands. _ c) Normal second window loans have been granted for an average length of almost 14 years, at the rate French national credit charges for its industrial financing. The rate is, in theory, decided when the contract is signed, but borrowers have the option of chosing the rate in effect at the time of payment. Because of the situation in African countries in 1980 and the high cost of money, 19 or most second window loans were mixed with first w indow aid to attain an interest rate compatible with the projects' potential for profits. 20 � FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 NOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Most financing dor~e in this manner involved energy, industrial and highway projects in Zaire, Gabon, Cameroon, Madagascar, Senegal and Guinea, d) France made exceptional aid available to African countries because of their difficulties in 1980. In the beneficiary countries, ~his aid entailed an effort at ec onomic and financial restructuring, to lay the foundations graciua 11y for better development, within the programs set up with the IMF [International Monetary Fund] and the World Bank. The Central Fund was involved in related studi~s and, in this area, made - available exceptional long-term aid, from its own resources or with the French government's guarantee. Three countr ies benefited in 1980: Senegal received 80 milTion and 200 million francs; the Ivoxy Coast, 206 million and Upper Volta, 50 million. The 80 million franc loan to Senegal and the 50 million franc loan to Upper Volta were put together w ith reduced interest rates from FAC [Aid and Cooperation Fund] which lowered the rate to a level similar to first window loans. Area of Activity Although several of the most developed countries in its area had difficulties in 1980, the continuing fundamental problem for the Central Fund is the ~ ~ - extreme poverty of most African peoples south of the Sahara. In all, the - 34 countries where it operates had, in 1978, for a population of almost = 150 million inhabitants, an average income of $305.00. Fourteen countries with 80 million inhabitants have an average income of $180.00 and 8 countries with 30 million inhabitants have an average income of $270.00. For this reason, the Central Fund has, since 1978, substantially increased aid to the least- _ developed countries, and increased it by two-thirds in~1980. The Central Fund has started to ].end again to the Centxal African Republic (50 million francs) and expanded their operations in Zaire (235 million in _ 1980), Burundi (60 million), Sierra Leone (32 million) and Mauritius ~65 million). The new c~untries have increasingly become borrowers, even ~ though the Ivory Coast (421 million), Senegal (409 million) and Camero~n (313 million) head the list of countries financed. Sectors Financed and Methods of Financing The very limited development of African nations in the last decade means that most aid should be allocated to projects providing real growth. Increased production, which eases the old debt load, is one requirement for financial equilibrium. - In 1980, the Central Fund i~mains committed to its priority of encouraging product ion in rural areas, although it also finances modernization of infra- structures when they hinder economic expansion. The Central Fund, in 1980, allocated a sizeable portion of its aid to - 21 EOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY - APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 FOR OFF[CIAL USE ONLY rehabilitation programs--nearly 500 million francs were allocated for such _ operations because in some countries affected by economic disorganization, - it was necessary and more profitable to restore and modernize installations than to begin new projects. _ - Finally, since inadequately prepared programs often limited the expansion of financing when quality implementation and management of the planned installations � . were needed, five new study projects or sectorial programs were financed according to procedures established in 1979. A personnel training section and a maintenance of installations section were included in many loan proposals, especially those involving transportation networks. In all, 113 groups of experts were sent from headquarters for 1,490 days to assist agencies overseeing the effectiveness of operations financed. There were 82 such operations in 1980, plus 5 joint ventures and 4 exceptional loans to supplement the financing of some 40 projects. Agroindustrial, electrificatian and road investments were particularly large in 1980. - _ Geographic Breakdown of Central Fund Aid (Loans and Joint Ventures) (Classification by countries, by ave~age income in 1978) _ (In millions of francs) ~ - 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 Tota3. (5 years) From $110.00 to $220.00 . ; Niger 134.7 113.7 81.7 245.7 110.1 685.9 Upper Volta 38.3 40.7 17.1 85.8 187.8 369.5 Zaire 20. 22.6 10. 12.2 234.8 299.6 . Mali 55.1 44.3 42.3 57.5 42.3 241.5 - Guinea 1.3 23.2 151.3 175.8 Rwanda 5. 28. 1.2 54.3 30.5 119. Burundi 3.9 1.8 15. 60. 80,7 Chad 50.6 11.6 12.8 .2 75�2 - Sierra Leone 15. 31.5 46.5 Miscellaneous (G) .3 (2) 4.4 (1) 4.8 (2) 6. 29.1 (3) 2.7 (3) 2.4 (4) .1 (3.) 8.4 ~ - Total 310.6 267.7 188.2 513.6 862.7 2,122.9 ~ FOOTNOTES - 1. Cape Verde 2. Comoro Islands 3. Guinea-Bissau 4. Somalia ~ 22 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02108: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 FOR OFFICiAL USE ONLY Geographic Breakdown of Central Fund Aid _ 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 Total - (5 yeara) From $220.00 to 330.00 ~ - _ Madagascar 2.9 6. 149. 94. 131.9 383.8 Togo 72. 3.2 32. 9.4 60.4 177. _ Mauritania 158.9 6.6 1.3 166.8 Benin 13. 210 39.9 40.1 38. 152. - Central African Rep. l0 50. 51. Haiti 20a _ 20, Total 87.9 31,2 379.8 170,1 281.6 950.6 From $330.00 to 550.00 Cameroon 267.6 24108 453.8 314.3 313. 1,590.5 Senegal 83.3 14404 185.4 140.1 408.6 941.8 Congo 27. 42. 55.7 37.5 162.2 Djibouti 32. 32. _ Total 277.9 386.2 661.2 542.1 759.1 2,726.5 More than $55~, ~0 Ivory Coast 342.1 410.5 202.6 174.2 42104 1,550.8 Gabon 104.4 160. 73.4 147. 178. 662.8 _ Mauritius 33. 47. 3.1 54. 85. 202.1 Seychelles 23.2 3. 13.1 39.2 - _ Total 479.5 640.7 282.1 375.2 677.5 2,455. General Total 1,255.9 1,325.8 1,491.3 1,601. 2,580.9 8,254.9 {Excluding multicountry operations) Sectorial Break",wn of Central Fund Loans in 1980 . (In millions uf L-rancs and pe rcentages) _ Average 1980 1976-1980 (Millions of (Percentage) (Percentage) - francs) - Rural development 782.3 30.1 30. - Mining 10~. 3 4. 2 7, 5 Industry-handicrafts 205.5 7.9 10.9 ~ ' Electricity 463.1 17 . 7 17 , g Tourism 83.1 3.2 3, - Productiv~ Sectnr Total 1,642.3 63.1 69.2 Railroads 59. 2.3 7, : _ Roads, ports, airports 481.3 '18.5 9.5 - Telecommunications 7.10,9 g, l g. _ Urban equipment 106. 6 4.1 2,,5 Total public equipment 857.8 33. 27, Total financial operations 100.5 3.9 3.8 General total 2,601. 100. 100. 23 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 FOR OFHIC[AL USE ONLY 1) Rural development was allocaCed 782 mi]_lion francs. With 30 percent of the commitments, rural development has, by far, remaine the largest area of - activity. Low-interest, 30 year loans, were granted on a priority basis to raising food crops, breeding fish and developing forests. - Large programs to process local commodities are being carried out in ~ Madagascar and Zaire. E_ Several of the projects financed are experimental or, as in breeding fish, the application of the results of previous pilot projects, As an example, a program to mechan~ze peasant farming will experiment, on a limited number of farms, with vehicles adapted to the savana area; a pilot project will encourage small animal, short-cycle breeding firms and a program to dig 400 wells will help determine how to organize a village water supply system rationally. ~ The purpose of a reforestation project, financed with the World Bank, is Co achieve better forest management. 2) Mines, industries, electricity and tourism will receive 860 million francs. _ Loans for generating and transmitting electric energy, especially to develop hydroelectric resources were much larger in 1980 than in 1979. - The following were the major industrial programs: expansion of an aluminium _ factory in Guinea, mining a tin deposit in Zaire, expansion of a cement - - factory in Senegal, expansion of an oil refinery in Madagascar, doubling the _ - Poubara hydroelectric installations and hydroelectric development in _ Champagne, Mauritius. Moreover, PROPARCO, the firm set up by the Central Fund to promote and finance medium-size firms in Africa began to operate on a regular basis in 1980. French and African industrialists studied more than 100 proposals and 13 were _ approved for financing. PROPARCO commitments rose, by the end of the year, to - 8.6 million francs for an estimated total investment of 244 million francs. 3) Public works received 858 million francs. In Central Fund pledges, roads and truck routes in 1980 took on exceptional importance beside the more frequently financed r~:ilroads, ports, airports and telecommunications. _ Cameroon thus obtained, from the first and second windows, 220 million francs for a heavy truck route Douala-Edea-Yaounde, which will allow for regular traffic among its major cities. More than 100 million francs have been alloca~ced to airports so they can accommodate new heavy-load cargo planes. - Joint Financing Through joint financing, the Central Fund collates its experience with that of . other institutions for development to benefit borrower countries. The - development of restructuring programs in 1980 allowed for renewed contacts with the French ministries, the IME and the World Bank group. - _ In 1980, under the heading of its ordinary operatians, the Central Fund made . 21~ ~ - FOR OFFIC[AL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 ~ FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY loans amounting to 2,058 million francs and had an average participation of 36.5 percent in financing investments of 5.64 billion francs. _ The principal partners in these joint financing ventures were: public _ bilateral aid (380.8 million francs or 6.7 percent~ especially Arab financing; multilateral aid (937.3 million or 1~.6 percent), especially the World Bank group (463.6 million) and the EEC (EDF [European Developmenic Fund] and the BEI [European Investment Bank] - 269.7 million);grants (747.4 million or 13.3 percent, 176.6 million from the FAC [Aid and Cooperation Fund] and 98.4 million - from the EDF)~export credits (775.8 millio~ or 13.~ percent); medium-term = local loans (127.2 million or 2.3 percent); and finally, its own funds - (616.6 million or 10.9 percent). Loans Granted by the Central Fund in 1980 to African and Indian Ocean Nations (In 1,000 French francs) I - Productiv~ sectors 11 Rural develoament 520,280 a) Food crops 94,270 Non-irrigated: - Ivory Coast: National experimental pro~ram to 30,000 mechanize peasant agriculture - Upper Volta: Program to spread draft animal 2,000 cultivation during the 1980-1981 harvest Niger: Integrated rural development in the 12,000 Dosso Department Niger: Integrated rural development in the 18,000 Maradi Department Irrigated: Upper Volta: Development of the irrigated pilot 2,600 area of Bagre (supplementary financing) - Upper Vol~ : Expansion of the Lanfiera truck 20,000 garden area Mali: Building of the Costes Canal and re?ated 7,000 projects by the Office of i�i:.ber (supplementary financing) _ Niger: Feasibility study about using the underground 2,670 water of the Tarka Va;.ley for agricultu:al purposes - 25 � ' FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007102/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY b) Export crops 62,400 - Cotton: - Central African Republic: Repair of roads and paths 6,.000 - in cotton-growing areas in the center of the country (north of Bangui) ` ~Central African Republic; Emergency program to 24,000 - deve lop cotton production (SOCADA) Rubber : Ivory Coast: Rubber tree planting program in _ Rapides Grah in southwest Ivory Coast, third phase - SAPH [African Rubber Plantation Compa~y]: First window 18,000 _ Second window 6,000 Misce llaneous: - Upper Volta: Experimental cashew ~rowing pxogram 8,400 in southwest Upper Volta ` c) Stock raising 69,680 Ivory Coast: Project to develop cattle raising in the 40,000 north of the country (second phase) Ivory Coast: Pilot pro ject to raise short- - cycle animals in southeast Ivor_y Coast: - First window. 11,200 Second window 8,000 Ivory Coast: Making medium-tarm loans to stock 6,200 raisers involved in the preceding project - Mauritius: Pilot projects in stock raising and 3,000 the agriculture sector Mauritania: Integrated assistance plan for Gorgol 1,280 stock raisers d) Agroindustries; 244,530 Cereals: Guinea-Bissau: Technical and training aid for the 8,400 Cumere agroindustrial complex 26 - FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02/08: CIA-RDP82-00850R000300100017-9 APPROVED FOR RELEASE: 2007/02148: CIA-RDP82-44850R000300104417-9 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Mali: Construction of a multipurpose mill and a . - fectory for livesCock feed at Koulikoro _ First window 10,000 Second window 5,000 Cotton: Madagascar: 1980-1981 program to develop cotton 39,000 production: factories to gin cotton Togo: Construction of two factories to gin 24,000 ~ cotton at Lama-Kara and Notse = _ Sugar: _ Mali: Studies and preliminary operations to set up 3,300 - a sugar ref inery Zaire: Enla.�ge the sugar refinery of the Sugar Company of Kwilu N'Gongo - First window . 29,900 3econd window 85,100 ' Miscellaneous: Cameroon: Expansion of the Soca-palm factories 22,000 ~ which produce cooking oil - Ivory Coast: Construction of a cc+''fee processing 10,000 facility at Aboiso (Unicafe) (SPcond window) Rwanda: Construction of a quinine sulfate 6,000 extraction plant at Rirambo (1