'CONTRA' PLAN WOULD RELEASE SECRET FUNDS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000100620001-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 23, 2010
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 11, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000100620001-3.pdf84.77 KB
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/23: CIA-RDP90-00552R000100620001-3 ARTS; 5 i -;; ON PA: ~r.. BALTIMORE SUN 11 March 1986 STAT `Contra' plan would release secret funds Aid request includes freeing of CIA money By Stephens Broening Washington Bureau of The Sun WASHINGTON - Con ressional approval of President a an s r uest for aid tote Nicaraguan in- su en would permit the a mins- tra on to use a vast secretintelll- gence fun , on top of the 810 mil -4 ton the president has formally pro- pose to spend. -, house intelligence om ii~Meen told. ' Committee sources disclosed yes- terday that a high administration of- ficial had testified in a closed session that the aid request was intended to remove restrictions on the use of CIA contingency funds against the pro- Soviet government of Nicaragua. The administration official was summoned to clarify an ambiguous- ly worded section of an appendix to the proposal that h^d caught the at- tention of congressional staff mem- bers. the sources said. A State Department official said the request, if approved, would re- move the special restrictions on CIA activity in Nicaragua. He said It would mean that "Congress would have the same kind of oversight over intelligence operations in Nicaragua as over similar operations anywhere else in the world." Representative Michael D. Barnes. D-Md.-8th. said the revela- tion about administration tntenttons meant "the president is asking for a blank check." Mr. Barnes. chairman of the House Subcommittee on West- ern Hemisphere Affairs, has been a critic of the administration's aid pro- posal. The size of the CIA's contingency fund is an official secret. One con- gressional staff member said it had been authoritatively described to him as "a bottomless pit." Another said it was "several times as large" as the formal aid request of $ 100 mil- lion. Representative Edward P. Bo- land, D-Mass., former chairman of the Intelligence Committee, said. "I think we have to understand clearly what we're being asked to approve. It's not just $100 million for the 'contras.' "If we approve the resolution, we make available other funds in the intelligence budget, specifically .those in the CIA's reserve for contin- gencies. We also remove all current legal restrictions on CIA and DOD [Department of Defense[ assistance to the contras." Mr. Boland Is the author of the first legislative prohibition against U.S. covert action aimed at over- throwing the Sandinista govern- ment. His name also has been at- tached to congressional restrictions on the use of U.S. funds for arming the Nicaraguan rebels. Without the secret funds, the president was asking Congress to appropriate $100 million for the contras over the next 18 months - $70 million in military aid and $30 million in non-lethal supplies. The contras are now receiving the last segment of a $27 million appropria- tion whose use was restricted by Congress to non-lethal aid. Even before yesterday's disclo- sure about the CIA fund, the new aid measure was considered unlikely to pass when the House votes on it March 19. "I think this is a strong reason to oppose the bill." said Mr. Barnes, who will manage part of the floor debate in the House. "Even if a mem- ber of Congress favors aid to the con- tras, he should know how much aid he is approving. I doubt the Congress is going to want to approve this." Under rules adopted for consider- ation of the riquest, Congress is re- quired to vote yes or no on it. It can- not be amended. Congressional sources said staff members were first sL^uck by what they called the "lawyer's language" of a paragraph In the administration proposal that said the approval of the resolution by Congress would "be deemed to satisfy" the terms of Sec- tion 105A of the Intelligence Autho- rization Act of 1986. Section 105A sets restrictions on the use of U.S. funds for the contras. Mr. Barnes said he had sought clarifications from Elliott Abrams. the assistant secretary of state for Inter-American Affairs. But Mr. Abrams. in a public session of the Western Hemisphere subcommittee. had claimed ignorance. The House Intelligence Committee was more successful in closed session with an administration offical whose identity was being kept secret under commit- tee rules. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/23: CIA-RDP90-00552R000100620001-3