THE CASE FOR THE NEW F.O.I.A. BILL

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CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4
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June 2, 1984
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Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 STAT Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 Sind; l.t 19R1 T r-" CON TE__11;_N f I is ITORIALS LETTERS 445 While Someone Else Is Eating-VII: 434 At the Heart of All Poverty David Ray EDITORIALS BOOKS & THE ARTS 433 The Jackson Factor 453 Cambridge Women's Peace 435 Locking the Files Collective, ed.: My Country 436 Hunger in Africa Is the Whole World: An 437 Secret Calumny Anthology of Women's Work COLUMNS On Peace and War Laska, ed.: Women in the 438 Beat the Devil .4lerander Cockburn Resistance and in the 440 Sovieticus Stephen F. Cohen Holocaust: The Voices of ARTICLES Eyewitnesses Enloe: Does Khaki Become .433 The Culture Wars: You?: The Militarization of Hard Right Rudder at the N.E.H. John S. Friedman and Eric Nadler 456 Women's Lives Three Poems Karen Rosenberg Patrick Creagh 441 Where the Candidates Stand: 457 Zweig: Walt Whitman: .The Democrats on National Security 460 The Making of the Poet Films Lewis Nvde Katha Pollitt 443 The Papon Case: Editor, Victor Navasky Executive Editor. Richard Lineeman; Associate Editor, Andrew Kopkind; Assistant Editor, Eric Etheridge; Literary Editor, Katha Pollitt; Assistant Literary Editor, Maria Marsaroms; Poetry Editor, Grace Schulman; Copy Chief, JoAnn Wvpijewski; Assistant Copy Editors, Anthony Borden, Judith Long. Art Winslow; Carey McWilliams Fellow. Jane Oski; Interns, David Bank, Phyllis Burns, Karen Fitz- Gerald, Richard Greenberg, Chris Ladd, Douglas Lavin. On leave, Kai Bird. Departments: Dance, Mindy Aloff; Films, Robert'Hatch; Lingo, Jim Quinn; Music. David Hamilton; Correspondents: Washington, D.C., Christopher Hitchens; Latin America, Penny Lernoux; Europe, Daniel Singer; London, Raymond Williams; Paris, Claude Bourdcr, Defense, Michael T. Klare; Columnists and Regular Contributors: Calvin Trillin (Uncivil Liberties), Stephen F. Cohen (Sovieticus), Kai Bird & Max Holland (Dispatches), Alexander Cockburn (Beat the Devil), Thomas Ferguson & Joel Rogers (The Political Economy). Contributing Editors: Blair Clark. Hcrman Schwartz, Gore Vidal. Editorial Board: James Baldwin, Norman Birnbaum, Richard Falk, Frances FitiGerald. Philip Green, Elinor Langer. Sidney Moreenbesser, Arych Neier. El;zabeth Pochoda, Marcus G. Raskin. A.W. Singram. Roger Wilkins, Alan Wolfe. .Nanuscr pts: All work submitted will he read by the editors. The magazine cannot, however, be responsible for the return of unsolicited manuscripts unless they are accompanied by self-addressed stamped envelopes. Locking the Files Volume 238, Number 14 Drawings by Frances Jcttcr Associate Publisher, David Parker; Advertising Manager. Carol: Kraemer; Business afanager, Ann B. Epstein; Bookkeeper. Gertrude Silverston; Art/Production Manager, Jane Sharpies; Circrla:ion Manager, Stephen W. Soule; Subscription Manager, Cookee V. Klein; Classified Advertising Manager, George Monaco; Receptionist, Greta Loeil: Mail Clerk, John Holtz; Administrative Secretary, Shirley Sulat; Nation Associates, Claudine Bacher; Nation News Service,' Jeff Sorensen. The Nation (ISSN 0027-8378) is published weekly (except for the first' week in January, and biweekly in July and August) by Nation Enterprises and 'J 1984 in the U.S.A. by the Nation Associates. Inc., 72 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10011. Tel.: 212-242-3400. Subscription Mail Address: Nation Subscription Service, P.O. Box 1953, Marion, Ohio 43305. Second-class postage paid at New York. N.Y., and at additional mailing offices. International Telex: 667 155 NATION. Regular Subscription Price: One year. S40: two years, S72; six months. S2u. Add S7 per year postage Canada, Mexico; S13 per year other foreign. All foreign subscriptions must be paid in equivalent U.S. funds. Claims for missed issues must be made within 60 days (12U days. foreign) of publica- tion date; back issues available 53 prepaid (54 foreign). Pimse allow 6-8 Meer for receipt of your first Issue and for all subscription trarsactioru. Subscription orders, changes of address and all suoscription :nquines should be sent to: Tire Nation, Subscription Services, P.O. Box 1953, Marion, Ohio 43305. Operational Files Exemption," The Nation, September 24, 19831. Later this month, the House Government Operations Subcommittee on information will consider the bill. Both bodies are expected to make only minor language changes; then the bill will go to the floor for a vote. The Senate has already approved the exemption. Following the predicted passage in the House and resolution of differences in a House-Senate conference, President Reagan '.Fill sign the final bill. Then hundreds of thousands of documents--no one knows the extent of the material-detailing the C.I.A.'s he steady erosion of the Freedom of Information Act continues to disfigure the internal security landscape in the Reagan era. On April 11, the House Intelligence Committee began a public markup of an Administration bill that would largely exempt Central intelligence:\^er,cy "operational files" from public s;ru:iny under the F.O.1.:\. Ise_ Angus Mackenzie, "The Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 436 The Nation. domestic and foreign programs of disinformation, surveil- lance, recruitment of informers, subversion and assassination will be officially and irrevocably closed to, press and public. It is not that C.I.A. Files have been easily pried open in the past. All the agency's files that relate to national security mat- ters or that might reveal confidential sources or investigative techniques are exempt from F.O.I.A. requests. Civil libertar- ians who support the exemption say that operational files contain only unreleasable material and so the bill's passage will not reduce the current flow of information. But the blan- ket exemption would preclude many of the kinds of suits jour- nalists and researchers now bring against the C.I.A. in Federal court for relevant papers. Those suits force'the agency to jus- tify its claims when national security is invoked; judges then re- view the raw files in their chambers and decide whether the documents should be released. The C.I.A. has not lost a single such suit in eighteen years, but even the possibility that a rogue judge could rule against the agency worries the spy- masters enough to press for the exemption. Even suits pending in Federal courts may be removed from judicial review by the Senate's version of the law. Last year, Democratic Senator Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont, a member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, asked the C.I.A. which of the sixty-odd suits then in litigation might be dismissed if the exemption passed. The agency specified twelve that "may be affected," and Angus Mackenzie, of the Center for Investigative Reporting, obtained a list of them for The Nation.' It includes the following: ? Glen L. Roberts, owner of a computer software com- pany and publisher of a newsletter that provides "a fresh outlook on government arrogance," requested C.I.A. Files on David S. Dodge, former acting president of the Ameri- can University of Beirut, who was kidnapped in Lebanon in. July 1982 and was subsequently released. ? The Center for National Security Studies, an A.C.L.U. affiliate, initiated two suits. The first seeks information about the C.I.A.'s covert operations in Central America, in- cluding details of its involvement in El Salvador's March 1982 election. The second is an omnibus suit covering a wide range of center requests under the F.O.I.A. that the C.I.A., in effect, simply ignored. One request relates to the agency's Files on its domestic operations against various organiza- tions and publications. In response to the suit, the C.I.A. re- leased some documents on the Students for a Democratic Society, the Vietnam Veterans Against the War, various bookstores which carry radical reading material, left-wing newspapers, an antiwar convention held in 1972 at the Uni- versity of California and Pacific News Service. The center continues to press for more documents, but the C.I.A. hopes to get the suit dismissed under the exemption. 3 J. Gary Shaw of Cleburne, Texas, is trying to get C.I.A. files on suspects in the John F. Kennedy assassina- tion case, including right-wing French terrorists reported to have been in Dallas on November 22, 1963. 4 Henry Hurt, a Reader's Digest writer, is researching C.I.A. involvement in the case of a Soviet defector, ? Mtacc::.zic's esea:_n as pa:t:as'y funded by a grant from the Fund for -r csi:ga:n: Jcu.r:.tsm. ? April 14, 1984 Nicholas George Shadrin, who disappeared in Vienna on December 20, 1975, and is presumed dead-the victim of a botched double-agent masquerade- ? A suit is pending against the C.I.A. for files on the agency's infiltration of the underground, dissident and left-wing press in the United States. Publications believed to have been targeted include Ramparts, Quicksilver Times (both defunct) and the New York City-based Guardian. On March 15, Representative Romano \fazzoli and others introduced a bill (H.R. 5164) to permit all suits filed before February 7 to continue. Even if the ongoing suits are saved, they serve as examples of what would be thrown out of court under the exemption. In many cases, the C.I.A. has released some files, appar- ently in an attempt to head off unfavorable judicial rulings. Sometimes the agency simply stonewalls. In one of the most egregious cases of official obstinacy, the C.I.A. has refused to release a single page of some 180.000 documents on the Guatemala coup of 1954, by which the agency overthrew the elected government of Jacobo Arbenz Guzman and installed a right-wing regime whose successors rule to this day. Writer Stephen Schlesinger, who with Stephen Kinzer pub- . lished a thorough study of the coup in a 1982 book, Bitter Fruit, sued the C.I.A. for its files on the events. Recently his request was denied by the U.S. District Court for the Dis- trict of Columbia. Judge Thomas Flannery held that disclo- sure would be "risking damage to American foreign rela- tions . . . particularly in Central America at this time in light of the delicate political situation." No doubt he was re- ferring to U.S. covert operations against the Nicaraguan government, which are distressingly similar to those carried out by the C.I.A. in Guatemala thirty years ago. What is in the mountains of C.I.A. operational files is not just of academic or historic interest. Much of it is still perti- nent to dirty tricks and drastic practices in progress today. No one claims it will be easy to scotch such schemes, but when the press, the public and independent political forces have access to intelligence information, they are better able to prevent history from being repeated. ast month the Reagan Administration attached a controversial military appropriations bill for Central America to a popular measure for emergency food aid to Africa. Because of that cynical maneuver thousands on that continent continue to die, victims of the worst drought there in recent memory. Emergency food aid for Africa has strong bipartisan sup- port. In January, Republican Senator John Danforth visited an area in southern Mozambique that is suffering terrible famine. His group saw skeletons of cattle Tying where they had died in dry basins that had once been small lakes. Refu- gees from interior regions of the country had fled to the coast, although there was little more to cat there than leaves and roots. A U.S. Air Force doctor with Danforth's group predicted many children would die unless help arrived quick- Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 nri er in Africa une 2, 1984 Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 1 lit The size of the food shortage can be debated; that there is anger in Kampuchea cannot. A February 9 report from the tate Department admitted that the. food situation in .ampuchea is "precarious" and noted that malnutrition lagues many parts of the country. How will the United rates respond? Four years ago, Representative Millicent Fenwick urged er colleagues in the House to approve,aid for Kampuchea: We have never cared who sat in the palaces of the world; ie have always been concerned about who is starving in the treets." Today, those who could make a difference do not hare that sentiment. ? DISPUTE OVER C.I.A. FILES The Case for the New E O.I.A. Bill RA GLASSER Later this month a bill that has evoked concern and disagreement among civil.. libertarians and critics of the Central Intelligence Agency will be sent to the floor of the House of Representatives.. the bill, which would exempt certain kinds of C.I.A. files from normal requirements under the Freedom of Informa- ion Act, has been scrutinized and debated in a series of re- =nt public hearings before various Congressional commit- tees. After many revisions, the latest version of this bill, H.R. 5164, has a good chance of passing in the full House, partly because, after a long drafting process, it has gained the support of the American Civil Liberties Union. ? The A.C.L'.U.'s position has been attacked in several forums and publications, among them The Nation [see Angus Mackenzie, "The Operational Files Exemption," September 24, 1983]. Some of our critics have gone so far as to suggest that the A.C.L.U. has become, wittingly or un- wittingly, an accomplice in weakening the F.O.I.A. In fight of those charges, it is important to understand what the American Civil Liberties Union has been doing, why it supports a much-changed version, of legislation it originally opposed and why it thinks the legislation represents a modest victory for those who support the The Freedom of Information Act is one of the most im- portant laws enacted by Congress. By making government information available to the public, the act strengthens America's commitment to informed, robust debate on all public policies. The act is especially vital with respect to the C.I.A., whose, illegal activities are encouraged by the shroud of secrecy that envelops them. While the shroud has not yet been sufficiently lifted, over the last decade the F.O.I.A. has been a significant tool in bringing the C.I.A. Ira Glasser is national executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union. The New York Public Library rma A.waw i 4J Sea N. Ya.Y On Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 0 "IMPUDENT, COURAGEOUS, CONCERNED AND FUNNY. 'END OF THE WORLD' HAS GUTS, FEELING AND A FINE AMERICAN IMPERTINENCE. HAROLD PRINCE HAS DIRECTED AS IF THIS WERE THE LAST MUSICAL-WHOSE SCORE'IS A SCARED SINCOPATION OF OUR OWN HEARTBEATS." _Jack ten, Mm.eek JOHN BARNARD SHEA HUGHES LINDA .HUNT In A New Ptay ARTHUR KOPIT Directed by HAROLD PRINCE CALL Iele-ct 0rge (212) 239-6200 (7 Day, week) MUSIC BOX THEATRE, 239 West 45th Street ? e~w" "c'" 500 YEARS OF CONFLICT The Nc+Ym Public L ev. annotmco the coo comPr~ve abibldon t matured oo tee btunbea hood amaaelNA CENSORSHIP: 500 YEARS OF CONF1JCr premem the oe.msmdma tov le ben.. fr m of acprsbo Nod the theot Of ~,ajOn m a n wok, itim d booth thvwo ht? On.iw to the ne-ly resmrad D. Surd cod )t>me H. Got>:m' Eae>bfef ' Ha4 the ahmie ilktminem the oodba bct the nor rod the omaad fns tb ad.mt of pritalo6 to the pvmt Fate ed will be (iR adthom. rate oapio eed ar4aed -aetTwat:, D. awmoe on comy om The Ubarts exploration of meamoro five month of athonl and edunuooal evens Including ial fed exhibits on ccoeo&tlp in Fytern Europe. Black Amerc` theatre mid librarie. r well as a film eerie and public ftwttma Qaminins contemporary irate. For more information call: 66940e9. Open from )une 1a through October 1S& 1984. the exhibition is free- See the words, the books, t e declarations and madfesms that have mrnd philosophers kem rebels, artMO ism outlaws std sec tb world .fba. ao.bfe CENSORSHIP: 500 YEARS OF CONFLICT ~~'Fmd. iac- b ch. H~ E- T h. W. Yui T? C. FFaso"r L__ Ts i. d o- d__ Fj&iai lieuu wa..a.?swara., IOAO..?e.oo 11 Tau., 13.1 P. 3.1 PM IFvfwoop Tau. ata9 "670 Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 The Nation. ? June 2, 1984 Find Out Who Rules America Now! At least 500,000 copies of G. William Dolnhoff's Who Rules America? were sold between 1967 and 1975. Now you can read the same author's all-new Who Rules America Now? A View for the '80s. The book is a sequel, not an update. Who Rules America Now? A View for the '80s G. William Domhoff Among the new hools*s many features are: ? a diSet SCi/m i>f the feminine half of the uplx'r class. ? an explanation of why individual corlx>rate leaders complain alxwt their alleged lack of power. ? an elaboration of the policy network that connects the corporate community and government. ? an explanation of v memunity power structures as comilx-ting gn>wwth machiexs that prepare the land for national capital. ? resealing new data from Yale- and local Chamlx'r of Commerce archives tbai refutes fiulx?rt A. Dahl's claims in '.%'hr. Governs? alxmt the (list ributum of Ixwwer in New Haven. Says the author: "This is my best book since The Higher Circles in 1970. 1 challenge my pluralist, Marxist. and structuralist critics alike to take it on in open debates, preferably with more data and, for a change, less rhetoric." Available in your local lxxokstore for $6.95. or for $8:50.' including UPS insured postage. by writing to: Guild fkxoks. 2456 N. Lincoln. Chicago. Illinois 60614 1312-525-3667) 'Illinois resiek'nts aekf 7' sales tan, THIS CHAIR IS POLITICALLY CORRECT ? MACUELIZO )tropical whIte oak) OR MAHOGANY ?ROCKS ON ANY SURFACE ? FOLDS FLAT ? REMOVABLE 100% COTTON DUCK COVER ? COOPERATIVELY PRODUCED IN CENTRAL AMERICA ? SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Make sure you're sitting on the proper side of the fence: the side of hope, cooperation and grassroots democracy. This chair was made cooperatively in Honduras by members of the Union Nacional de Cacnpesinos, a sixty thousand member peasant league working for land reform and democracy. One UNC coop mills the lumber in the field with a two man pit saw and hauls it out by oxcart. The wood is then dried and carefully crafted into chair frames by UNC cooperative "La Popular". Pueblo to People provided training and financed the shop which the UNC now owns and controls. PUEBLO TO PEOPLE works with other grassroots cooperatives and peasant organizations in Honduras, Nicaragua and Guatemala, providing technical assistance and non-profit marketing in the U.S. TO ORDER: Send S39 plus $6 shipping. Specify canvas color (chocolate, navyor beige), and wood (mahogany ormacuelizo). FREE CATALOG ON REQUEST. Palm leaf hats, hammocks, Guatemalam weaving, baby baskets, coffee, PHONE OR MAIL YOUR ORDERTODAY! VISA. MC, CHECK ADD S2 FOR C.O.D. PUEDLO to PEOPLE 5218 CHENEVERT 5513 HOUSTON, TX 77004 (713)523-1197 Approved For Release 2008/12/11 under increased public and Congressional scrutiny. But most people who submit requests to the agency under the F.O.I.A. encounter two main problems: the C.I.A. withholds information it should release by hiding behind ex- aggerated claims of national security, which the courts have never had the courage to reject; and when it does decide to release information it takes an intolerable amount of time-often two to three years. Aside from pure obstructionism, a primary cause for delay is the time-consuming search the agency undertakes through its "operational" files when processing an F.O.I.A. request. Basically, operational files contain documents and information related to the intelligence process rather than the intelligence product. For example, a document that describes the technical capacity and location of a sophisti- cated optics device is considered operational; the informa- tion obtained by that device is not. Similarly, how an intelli- gence source was spotted and recruited, how much he is paid, the details of where and when he meets with his case officer, are all considered operational; any information pro- vided by that source is not. Such operational information, with a few important exceptions described below, is invariably classified and therefore exempt from release under the provisions of the F.O.I.A. The courts have never ordered the release of such information, and are not likely to under any conceiv- able standard of classification. Nonetheless, every time an F.O.I.A. request is made to the C.I.A., all operational files have to be reviewed. To alleviate the problem of delays, the A.C.L.U. set out to draft legislation that would spare the agency from searching through its operational files. At the same time we wanted to insure that the kind of information currently being released or likely to be released in the future would not be exempt or improperly hidden in operational files. We felt that such legislation would obligate the C.I.A. to respond to requests more quickly, while guaranteeing that no new curbs on in- formation would result. Of course, the C.I.A., already on record as favoring legis- lation that would exempt it from all provisions of the act, jumped at the opportunity to support a bill that would ex- empt it from searching its operational files. Our task, there- fore, was to defeat the legislation unless its language strictly limited the exemption. That was not easy. After much lobbying, the Senate passed S. 1324 which, while much improved over the version that was introduced, was not adequate in several important respects. If that had been the final version of the legislation, we would have opposed it and we believe our opposition would have killed-it. Fortunately, the legislative process is just that, a process. Accordingly, after the Senate approved its bill, we set to work on the House version. For us, the House is a much more hospitable forum, and we thought we stood a good chance of getting everything we wanted. We did. In its pres- ent form this bill differs markedly from the Senate's. We support this version because we believe it will obligate the C.I.A. to release information more quickly and prevent it CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 671 from withholding any information it is currently obligated to release. Here is a summary of the major provisions of H.R. 5164: ? Operational files in three divisions of the C.I.A.-the Directorate of Operations, the Directorate for Science and Technology and the Office of Security-would be exempt from search and review. (A few important exceptions are noted in the bill and summarized below.) The term "opera- tional" is defined narrowly to include only files that docu- ment the means of acquiring information, as opposed to those that contain the information itself. All other C.I.A. files, including those in the three specified divisions, will be subject to search and review under the Freedom of Informa- tion Act. ? All documents from operational files that are dissemi- nated outside the three divisions, whether within the C.I.A. Dr elsewhere in the government, will be subject to search and -eview-even a document that concerns the most intimate details of an operation and is. sent only to the director of Zentral Intelligence. Once disseminated, information can- tot be exempt, even if it is kept in an otherwise exempt )perational file. That includes any document shown to someone outside the three divisions on an "eyes only," to-copy basis and returned to the operational file. ? All information in operational files concerning covert )perations will be subject to search and review, unless the very :xistence of the covert operation is properly classified nformation. ? All information in operational files concerning the sub- ect matter of an investigation of improper or illegal conduct )y the C.I.A. will be subject to search and review. Such in- -estigations may be conducted by the agency's inspector .eneral or general counsel, by Congressional oversight com- aittees or by the President's Intelligence Oversight Board. he C.I.A. also initiates an investigation whenever a pri- ate citizen makes an allegation of improper or illegal con-. .uct: for example, that an organization has been illegally ifiltrated. (It does not investigate claims of a clearly rivolous.nature, such as "the C.I.A. is manipulating my rain waves.") Regardless of an investigation's outcome, ae C.I.A. will be required, in response to an F.O.I.A. re- ;uest, to search its operational files for information concern- rig the alleged abuse. This provision insures that all infor- aation in the operational files concerning abuses inves- igated by the Church and Pike committees will continue be accessible and that in the future, similar information n alleged abuses will be available. ? Operational files must be searched in response to U.S. itizens or permanent resident aliens who request informa- on about themselves. This provision preserves the access to [formation currently available to individuals. ? Federal courts will have the right to review whether a articular file meets the legal definition of ` operational" or 'hether particular documents are improperly kept solely in perational files. This guarantee significantly improves on e Senate version and clearly opposes the C.I.A. position, .ken during Senate hearings last June, that no judicial view should be permitted. ? Finally, the bill does not apply retroactively to any law- suit pending on February 7, 1984, the day before the House began hearings on the bill. Some critics of the A.C.L.U.'s position say the bill would allow the C.I.A. to withhold information it is currently obli- gated to release, or conceivably would be obligated to re- lease under a more liberal standard of classification. That claim is false. Various people have shown us documents re- leased under current law that arguably might not be released under the proposed legislation. We have examined them all, and in every case the document would still be released under one of the exceptions provided in H.R. 5164. Moreover, even a liberal administration would without doubt con- tinue to classify the kinds of sources and methods the bill would exempt. Others suggest that the A.C.L.U. has compromised im- portant principles by lobbying for the bill. That, too, is false. If anyone has compromised in this process, it is the C.I.A., which initially opposed many of the provisions on which we insisted. Our position was unflinching: from the beginning, we maintained that we would oppose the bill unless each of our concerns was adequately met. Although the Senate bill did not meet them all, H.R. 5164 does. As A.C.L.U. staff counsel Mark Lynch testified before Congress on May 10, "Any movement away from what has been achieved - in H.R. 5164 would be unacceptable, and we would oppose any tinkering with this bill in a House-Senate conference." Such tinkering is unlikely because Senators Barry Goldwater and Daniel Moynihan, chair and vice chair, respectively, of the Senate Intelligence Committee which helped draft the Senate version, have informed the House Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 6's? Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4 I T---- .. rnei CENTRAL AMERICA WALTER LAFERER ram: U1 $ e WILLIAM M. UOORANOE LRIIEM 12 .G.NOIL' R AST PETER OAVIS a RYf?OR~ ANNE NELSON ?wO CYNTHIA ARNSON GEORGE BLACK iYTE.YA VICTOR PERERAiAPAERICAS WATCH rdlT..C. CLOITRET FOX CENTRAL AMERICAN LITERATURE 'POETRVART'"Ll^ The Nation. On January 28 The Nation published this Special Issue on Central America. Now in its second printing, it has been read by more than 250,000 people. Rarely in our 119 years have we produced a more urgent, important and informative issue. It is ideal for classroom use, for distribution to the membership of your organization or-for passing along to friends. Send in the attached coupon for your order today. Central America Price List 1 -9 copies ...... $3.00 each 10-49 copies .... $1.50 each 50-99 copies .... $1.00 each 100-499 copies . . $ .75 each 500 or more copies $ .50 each Prepayment is required (price includes postage). Send me copies of The Nation Special Issue on Central America. I enclose $ - payment in full.' Name Address City State Zip Phone N ? Mail check or money order to Nation Bulk Sales. 72 Fifth Avenue, New York NY 10011 (U.S. currency only. N.Y. State residents must add 7 percent sales tax. N.Y. City 81/4 percent). committee in writing that they will accept H.R. 5164 without a conference. The.A.C.L.U. believes that the bill deserves the support of information act advocates. It promises to speed up the response to requests and imposes various legal obligations on the C.I.A. that insure against the loss of information now available or likely to become available. While it is not the biggest triumph, it is a significant step forward. It is cer- tainly not the disaster some have made it out to be. D Vatican (Continued From Front Cover) testify to that. Missionaries from France, Ireland and else- where implanted their faith in Africa, where Catholicism is a fast-growing minority in some countries, under siege in others but recognized, as everywhere else in the Third World, as a religion of the elite. For a long time the Third World Catholic elite,. shaped in the image of Rome, lacked self-confidence when confronted by the- will or displeasure of the Vatican. But that has changed in recent years. Since it appeared in Latin America more than fifteen years ago, liberation theology has bothered the Vatican. Priests who allied themselves with the poor or opposed brutal governments embarrassed bishops who tolerated or were friendly to those,in power. The situation was worse for the bishops whenever they sided with the priests. In the 1970s Dom Helder Camara, Archbishop of Recife in overpopulated and perennially drought-stricken northeast Brazil, became perhaps the most famous of the sympathetic bishops. The Brazilian press was forbidden to mention his name, except critically. He was called a communist. His home was burned down several times. His priests were beaten and arrested, and one of his aides was killed. Dom Helder may be a hero to the priests, the nuns and the people, but the Vatican has never really supported him. Also important was Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero, the primate of El Salvador, who started out as a quiet con- servative but became openly critical of the government after the murder of a priest who was a close friend. On March 24, 1980, just before Easter, Romero was murdered as he said mass in a chapel in San Salvador. The order was widely reported to have come from Maj. Roberto d'Aubuisson, who had been the National Guard's intelligence chief only a few months before. On the fourth anniversary of that event, with El Salvador rent more than ever by a bloody civil war and d'Aubuisson standing as a presidential candidate, an unauthorized parade of mothers of the desaparecidos marched in commemoration to the.cathedral where Romero is buried, carrying- banners with the Archbishop's words: "Do not fear those who kill, because they cannot kill the spirit." Maurizio Clerici, correspondent for Milan's Corriere delta Sera, described the scene outside the cathedral, T.M. Pasca is an American journalist who writes for The Nation from Rome. Approved For Release 2008/12/11 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000200190026-4