EDEN PASTORA: A WAY OUT IS BEING WASTED

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000504880030-5
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RIPPUB
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K
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1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 15, 2010
Sequence Number: 
30
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Publication Date: 
August 20, 1984
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OPEN SOURCE
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STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/15: CIA-RDP90-00552R000504880030-5 ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE I Y A____ MIAMI HERALD 20 August 1984 Eden P~stora: A way out is being, wasted l By SANFORD J. UNGAR S HORTLY before the Fourth of July, Eden Pastora, the hero of the Nicaraguan revolution who feels it has been betrayed by Sandinista extremists, came to Washington. ; He was seeking American support - more politi- cal and rhetorical than material - for his democratic program for Nicaragua's future, a middle ground that is neither pro-Soviet nor pro-American. Pastora, recovering ''from wounds he suffered in May when a bomb exploded at his clandestine camp in the jungle along Nicara- gua's southern border, seemed a shadow of his former charismatic, macho self. He was We, his voice was weak, and he leaned heavily on a cane. His news conference was well-attended, but the jour- nalists there either found little to report or treated him as a curiosi- ty. He saw officials at the State Department, members of Congress and their staffs, but there was no obvious, or even subtle, benefit for Pastora's cause. A FEW days after the Fourth of. is July, astora had to __O, av M. de arture from Washington- for )=`uro w gee buLLw Planned to__ spread his_messggg. because he could not scrape together enough money to pay the hotel bill for .himself and his entourage The _Centralln1e1fl nee Ag n y ( IAZ bating long cis nce decided that Pastora was too independent, had no interest in helping_ Finally Pastora asked one friend in the capital where he might go to pawn his fine gold watch - an especially poignant symbol, since the watch had once belonged to a relative of dictator Anastasio So- moza and the Sandinista director- ate had presented it to Pastora as a trophy of victory. Pastora's experience in Wash- ington is a metaphor for the problems of U.S. policy in Nicara- gua and perhaps all of Central America. It is no secret that the leftist Sandinist government has become unpopular among many of the same people who helped over-. 'throw the repressive, feudalistic Somoza government in 1979. Even if the current Managua regime is not guilty of all the offenses that the Reagan Administration has charged - such as being the main arms supplier to leftist guerrillas in El Salvador - by many accounts, it has pursued ideologi- cal purity at the cost of economic decline. Nicaragua's free press has been virtually squelched. and many citizens live in fear of party militants. It is not clear whether elections scheduled for the fall will be meaningful and democrat- ic. But the guerrillas fighting the Sandinistas in the northern part of Nicaragua, until recently with substantial American help, have hardly emerged as a viable alter- native. Because of their leaders' ties with the despised Somoza. many of them are feared and distrusted by ordinary Nicara- guans, and some of their more-ex- treme, American-supported tac- tics, such as mining Nicaragua's harbors, have been condemned the world over. Under the circumstances, Pasto- ra would seem to e t e i eal solution, theperfect "third force" who might achieve a historic Comp_romise in Nicaragua, aw- less he is not but he has great credibility from the days when. as "Commander Zero," he la yed a kev roe in the insurrection t at roux t omoza s downfall. Ever since breaking with the Sandinis- tas, he has refused to cooperate with the Contra forces in the North, a stance that cost him CIA support. Pastora's own military effort in .the southern part of Nicaragua has apparently lost momentum, but the political platform he embraces, in conjunction with other former Sandinista officials and support- ers. such as Arturo Cruz and Alfredo Cesar, is reasonable and, from an American standpoint, appealing. It criticizes Nicaragua's military buildup, urges the remov- al of Eastern-bloc and Cuban advisers from the government and economy, and advocates political plura ism at home. It has the support of leading Latin American intellectuals and statesmen, in- cluding former Venezuelan Presi- dent Carlos Andres Perez. Yet Commander Zero seems to score zero on the American politi- cal scene. Conservatives shun him because they think he is too revolutionary and because he re- fuses to make the obligatory, obsequious pro-American state- ments characteristic of those who usually get aid from Washington. Liberals are afraid to support him because his achievements are pri- marily military. The liberals con- fuse his motives with those of his Sornocista counterparts, and they are understandably worried about being accused of meddling in another country's affairs. WHAT is more, Pastora suffers from a bad sense of timing. He came to Washington while Con- gress was in recess, and every would-be foreign leader is sup- posed to know'that nothing impor- tant is allowed to happen then. Eden Pastora thus is left very much out in the cold, a tragic figure who seems unlikely to attract the American and other external support he needs if he is ever to achieve his objectives. But he is proud and defiant. As he told one gathering that he addressed in Washington, "If necessary, we will go back to'the jungle, and if necessary we will die with our boots on." If that is the case, Pastora and his cause will not be the only losers. For he represents just the sort of alternative that Americans ought to be able to support and encourage openly in the Third World, without necessarily under- mining our own system and val- ues. Finding a way to do so is a real test of our political maturity. Sanford J. Ungar is editing a collection of essays on postwar American foreign policy at the Carnegie Endowment for Inter- national Peace. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/15: CIA-RDP90-00552R000504880030-5