EX-CIA ANALYST DISPUTES U.S. AIDES ON NICARAGUA
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP90-00552R000606120078-3
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
1
Document Creation Date:
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date:
September 2, 2010
Sequence Number:
78
Case Number:
Publication Date:
June 13, 1984
Content Type:
OPEN SOURCE
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STAT
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90-00552R000606120078-3
ARTICLE APPEARED
ON PAGE-'
By Don Oberdorfer
although he had a top-secret clear-
~lance and other authorizations to see
highly confidential data, colleagues
and senior officials of the agency
could produce only vague and out-
dated responses to his questions.
Rather than showing communist
origins or Nicaraguan complicity,
MacMi 1iiael said, weapons captured
from Salvadoran guerrillas "in the
last year or so have, originated with
Salvadoran government sources."
. Shultz, questioned at a luncheon
meeting with diplomatic correspon-
dents, said, "It is inconceivable that
an informed, honest person" could
deny the arms supply from Nicara-
gua to El Salvadoran guerrillas. "The
evidence is everywhere. I've looked
at a lot of it and I think it is totally
and absolutely convincing that the
direction and the supply of the guer-
rillas in El Salvador comes from Nic-
aragua." -
At another point Shultz expressed
astonishment at being questioned so
persistently on this point, and sug-
gested that MacMichael "must be
living in some other world."
Casey told an American Stock
Exchange meeting here, in response
Ex-CIA Analyst Disputes
U.S. Aides on Nicaragua
and John M. Goshko
Watihington Po5LStaff Wrltera
A former . CIA analyst charged
yesterday that the Reagan admin-
istration is misleading Congress and
the public about Nicaraguan activity
in El Salvador. He was contradicted
immediately by Secretary of State
GeorgeP.'Shultz and CIA Director
William J. Casey.
David * C. MacMichael, who
worked on Central American intel-
ligence estimates as a CIA contract
employe from 1981 to 1983, said the
administration lacks credible evi-
dence of a substantial flow of arms
from Nicaragua to El Salvadoran
guerrillas since the spring of 1981.
The existence of a continuing
cross-border flow of arms, -which
President Reagan described last
month as "a flood" of Soviet weap-
onry, has been a central feature of
the justification for the U.S. "secret
war" against the Nicaraguan govern-
ment that began late in '1981.
MacMichael said he questioned
the lack of recent intelligence 'to
back up U.S. claims of a massive
Nicaragua-to-El 'Salvador arms flow
during an interagency meeting in
September, 1981, and in subsequent
memoranda to his superiors at the
CIA.
In an interview with The Wash-
' ington Post, MacMichael said that
WASHINGTON POST
13 June 1984
to a question, that. MacMichael s
charges were "just one man's opin-
ion." Casey acknowledged that Mac-
Michael had been a contract em-
ploye of the CIA but insisted "there
is ample evidence" that "the activ-
ities and the ability of the guerrillas
in El Salvador to threaten the-Sal-
vadoran government springs in large
measure from the support, that is
provided them from Nicaragua,
-. Cuba and so on."
Neither Shultz or Casey provid-
ed evidence to refute MacMichael's
P challenge. The State Department,
)`which has been asked repeatedly by
-reporters in recent months to, make
public its evidence that the ,illicit
'.arms are flowing, has not :provided
such information.
Shultz said publication of another
administration "White Paper" on
external support for the El Salvador
guerrillas is not being planned but
that "I'll go back and examine the
issue" of making public the admin-
istration's data.
MacMichael, 56, said he joined
the CIA in March, 1981, under a
two-year contract to be an "esti-
mates officer" for the National In-
telligence Council, which produces
national and interagency intelligence
estimates, and that he spent more
than half his time on Central Amer-
ica. -
His contract was not renewed
when it ran out last March. MacMi-
chael, an ex-Marine with experience
as an analyst in Southeast Asia, said
a superior told him he was "not a
match" with the CIA.
? After leaving CIA employ, he
made trips to Nicaragua in August-
September, 1983, and March-April,
1984, "to see for myself" because he
was bothered by the lack of informa-
tion within the government and a.
seeming lack of interest in finding
out, MacMichael said.
Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90-00552R000606120078-3