'COERCIVE UTOPIANS': CHURCH GROUPS BLESS SANDINISTA CAUSE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00806R000100200067-5
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 9, 2010
Sequence Number: 
67
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 12, 1985
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OPEN SOURCE
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STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/09: CIA-RDP90-00806R000100200067-5 E!! 12 April 1985 Agri WASHINGTON TIM `Coercive Utopians' bless Sandinista groups cause By John Holmes I and Ed Rogers THE V,MSHINOTON TIMES American church groups, many ORK of which have long histories of TARGET: involvement in national politics, are ^ turning their attention to Central America in increasing numbers. Reagan 's Central And while some church groups American Policy 'remain dedicated almost exclu- sively to promoting church exten- - sion, evangelism and the protection of human rights throughout Central America, others have become more involved in the movement to oppose U.S. foreign policy in the region.. Now, many church groups share common goals, projects, ideology and membership with some leftist political organizations. As a result, they are tightly woven into "The Net- work" of organizations whose pri- mary goal is to seek radical change in'Reagan administration policies in "Church groups in general, and leaders of the Catholic Church in particular, have become the most vocal and persistent opponents of . the administration's anti-communist strategy in Central. America;" the Wall Street Journal reported in a 1983 news report. Commenting on this church oppo- sition, a senior administration offi- cial was quoted in the Journal as saying, "It's the toughest nut we have to crack:' The number of church and religious-affiliated organizations involved in these activities has grown in recent years. Some intel- ligence experts say that as much as 50 percent of the left-wing Latin American "Network" effort comes from groups and organizations manned, funded or coordinated by elements of some of the nation's. major religious denomiations. And in many cases, they say, these groups are more radical, more active and much more heavily funded than their secular counter- parts. These church groups are "tltd" most effective in lobbying ... because they wear a cloak of legiti- macy," said Michael D. Boggs, for- mer director of international affairs at the AFL-CIO. ' "They get folks to write letters who don't have the faintest idea what they're talking about," Mr. Boggs was quoted as saying in a 1982 arti- cle in Congressional Quarterly. "The churches are the most active group and the most influential group lobbying against US. policy [in Latin I America], without any doubt, con- curred Kerry Ptacek, research director for the independent Insti- tute for Religion and Democracy (IRD). "I would say that the churches and their various executive groups were primarily responsible for the initial cutoff of aid to to the Contras," he said. I Perhaps most infuriating to crit- ics is that some churches have pro- vided money, credibility and an audience to a host of other groups critical of U.S. policy, ranging from "human-rights" organizations - such as the Washington Office on i Latin America.(WOLA) - to a net- work of organizations openly sym- pathetic to guerrilla movements in Latin America. "So many left activists are linked up with church-groups that it's hard to know what is a real church group,' IRD spokesman Perm ? Kemble said in the Congressional Quarterly wry. Few of the religious/political con- nections are overt but, in many cases, they are strong. And though some liberal churches maintain their own agenda, it bears strong resemblances to that pursued by many of their political counterparts. the church and political groups is the link between the National Coun- cil of Churches and the North American Congress on Latin America (NACLA). According to a 1984 study by the conservative Heri- tage Foundation, much of the research used by those who oppose Reagan policy in Central America is derived from NACLA. NACLA was established in the NCC's offices in Washington in 1966, and receives financial support from numerous Protestant churches through the NCC'a Latin American Division. and through specific projects such as the Presbyterian hunger program, according to an IRD report. . Other groups, such as the Wash- ington Office 0117 Latin America, also benefit from church funding. WOLA's 1983 Annual Report, for instance, lists $124,602 in contribu- tions from religious organizations including the National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA; the American Lutheran Church; St. Luke Presbyterian Church; American Baptist Churches, USA; Board of Global Ministries (United Methodist Church); Maryknoll Father and Brothers; Maryknoll Sis- ters; Jesuit Missions; World Council of Churches; the Presbyterian Church, U.S.A.; the Episcopal Church, and others. The IRD also has documented mainline Protestant church support for radical political movements in the United States and in other nations, including Vietnam. "Direct NCC involvement with the governments and Communist Party structures of the Indochina region is intense, conscious and on- going" IRD stated in a 1983 report titled, "A Time for Candor. Mainline Churches and Radical Social Wit- ness!' The institute also has reported that the United Methodist Board funds the National Network in Soli- darity with the Nicaraguan People, which was founded "to support and defend the Nicaraguan revolution," and other solidarity groups that assist the Salvadoran. rebels. "Support for the pro-Sandinista network in Nicaragua and the Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/09: CIA-RDP90-00806R000100200067-5