BY-THE-BOOK CIA AGENT LED CONTRAS, REBELS SAY

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000201080008-6
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RIPPUB
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K
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1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 14, 2012
Sequence Number: 
8
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Publication Date: 
March 1, 1987
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OPEN SOURCE
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/06/14: CIA-RD ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE /d -Seassia By-the-book CIA agent led contras, rebels say By ALFO 0 LUARY. SA5N and TIDt GOLD ' WASHINGTON - He entered the contras' clandestine world in 1987, a carefully tailored man with native Spanish who called himself Tomas Castillo. Beyond that. he kept g-n-4iJ 'f~atd only that he was "working for the U.S. government." For four years. Castillo adminis. tered an insurgency in Nicaragua. American-style He paid salaries and presided at meetings. He negotiated contra disputes. He purged the rebel ranks And. those who have known Castillo sac, he did it by the book One former contra leader re- called Castillo as "the yellow-pad man. a relentless note-scri obler during rebel strateg} sessions. is bureaucrat who doled out stacks of $100 bills from an'attache case but always got a receipt Todat Castillo is in trouble. under investigation for apparently illegal collaboration with Lt Col. Oliver North last year chile Castillo was CIA station cniei in Costa Rica His CIA superiors are depicting him AS a cowboy: an agent gone wrong whose troubles -derived from personal reckiess- The official story contrasts sharply, curiously, with the pic- ture painted by more than a dozen persona who dealt with CaWllo over four years. "An able professional" w would never do anything withou former U.S. Intelligence officer who Served with Castillo in sever- al Latin American pats "An operative, used to working for somebody else, a go-between, as organization man. Always," said Edgar Chamoro. a Nicara- guan exile whom Castillo re- trusted into the contra leadership is 1982. "He could supervise- but sot creatively initials." Castillo was, from 1982 until Jsnuary, a key agent in the US.-backed contra war. In many whys, Castillo's story is the story of the Reagan administration's war on Nicaragua. At least until last tall, his activities have always kftected official administration Jittery. --He was them out of sight but catching. when the CIA unveiled thi Nicaraguan Democratic Force. the rebel army. to a 1982 Fort Lauderdale press conference. H. was then, managing the coataa. when they began mining the harbors in 1983. He was there when they wrote the psychologi- cal warfare manual in 1984. He was there when the CIA support- ed. then undermined. Eden Paste res. Last Marc, as CIA station chief in Costa Rita, he even took his wife to a pavan audience with President Reagan when they ac- companied Conn Rica's outgoing public securit) minister and his wife to a White House thank-you session for the s(ficial's steadfast cooperation will U.S. Initiatives. And when the "private" contra air supply operative became public knowledge last cal afar one of its planes was shot bwn in Nicara- gua. it soon Deane clear that Castillo had been there, too. Newspapers reporter his ties to a clandestine Costa Rcan airstrip and his work dispatdung supply flights into southern Nicaragua. The CIA yanked Castilh home and forced him Into early enurement. Legal murkiness His predicament was Ktzzling. A longtime team player. had he broken the rules. free-lancing his own contra ventures? Or ad he been made a sapegat? Scrutiny of Castillo's carer and his present plight highlights, the legal questions surrounding the CIA's involvement with the on- tras since Congress banned ell contact in 1984. than softened Lk ban a year later. Called before the Tower Coss mission investigating the Iran-coll. tra affair Jan. 28, Castillo himser ,testified that his support for the supply flights had been approved by CIA superiors. Specifically. covert operations chief Clair Georte and Central Amenn"t -AL Tom ilreetor A ices. But acting ggkert. (late,. appealing before the Senate laid OUT the administ auvu .. e. Castlllo's indiscretions had been unauthorized. "The officer was not following policy in terms of contact with private benefactors ... Apparently he has not told US the story straight. I was extremely coo- cerned that this one officer appar- ently had not told the truth.' Gates said. Since Gates' testimony, congres- sional leaders have voiced skepti- cism about his remarks. throwing his confirmation into doubt. Lan weekend. a CIA spokes, woman called The Herald to state categorically that "no senior offi- cial provided authorization" to Castillo for any of his actions On behalf of the contras when con- gressional prohibitions were in effect. She noted that Gates' Feb. 17 testimony was under oath. 'The yellow-pad man' Tomes Castillo is a pseudonym. When he served as station chief in Costa Rica. his public identity was as first secretary of the U.S. Embassy. Nearly all of Costa Rican officialdom seemed to know Castillo, by what one U.S. official said was his real name. It is illegal to disclose the true name of is CIA agent. It is not absolutely certain, but careful examination of govern- ment records and interviews with former intelligence officials indi- cate that Castillo's early career with the CIA, starting in the early 1970s, included diplomatic stints in Uruguay, Peru and Mexico. When the contra war began, Castillo appears to have been assigned to CIA headquarters in Langley. Va. He appeared in Miami in 1982. with the contra movement still in its infancy, recruiting Chamorro and other Nicaraguan exiles to serve on the directorate of the Nicaraguan Democratic Force (FDN), the rebel army the CIA had started funding a year earlier. An olive-skinned, heavy-set man, maybe 5-foot, 10 inches. with black hair graying at the temples. Castillo took a special care with clothes that impressed Chamorro. "Dark, quality suits, like an executive," Chamorro recalls. "And if you were well-dressed. he'd notice, and tell you." Where was he born? He said "Galithia," intentionally Lisping the "c" of the Spanish province Gallia to imply an accept. Cha- morro guesses Cuba: Pastors thinks Puerto Rico. MIAMI HERALD 1 March 1987 In contra meetings at Miami's Four Ambassadors hotel, Castillo liked to follow an agenda. "He'd come with his briefcase." Charade- to said. "pull out the pad, take notes. He was a man who's used to organizing his work on paper.' CLamorro recalls Castillo's de- liveries of attache aces stuffed with ash. "I'd have to sign to my I received $10,000. He said they had a little old lady in Washington who would be very upset If we didn't get receipts," ChamorrO 'ecalled, in Chamorro's view. Castillo vas of "moderate intelligence," with distinctly middle-class tastes. He once confided his life's dream: to retire to a suburban home with a backyard barbecue. Anti-communism dominated his political vision. U.S. and rebel officials said, Late in 1983, after a year of working together in Tegucigalpa and Miami. Chamorro and Castillo talked over drinks at Biscayne Bays Rusty Pelican. Chamorro, shocked by discoveries of multiple murders of contra combatants by their officers. was having doubts. Maybe the contras were no good, and they should negotiate with the Sandinistas. he suggested. Castillo reacted sharply. An accommodation with the Sardinia. ter? Impossible. "They're Commu. nists. They're evil," Chamorro quoted Castillo. Castillo said that communism was an international conspiracy." he said. "He wanted everyone to be defined, ideologically. He couldn't discuss anything that didn't fit into his world of black and white." CIA's main liaison ' Throughout most of 1984. Css- tillo was known as the rebels' main CIA liaison, traveling to Miami and Central America from Langley. It was a trying year for the program. beginning in January with a rebellion by more than two dozen contra field commanders in Honduras. They complained that corruption in their general staff was causing hunger in the camps. CIA headquarters backed the general staff despite the com- plaints. and Hugo Vlllagra, the most important dissident, was forced to leave Honduras. His arrival in Miami caused a Sur among exiles. Castillo. fearing Villagra would take his allegations to the press, drove to the former contra commander's Kendall home and invited him to dinner. Over maws de puerco. as Villa. fire. recalls it. Castillo was all sympathy. He offered to intercede with immigration. He arranged for Vlllagra to fly to Washington to pass on his complaints. He awed Villagra that his allegations were being taken seriously. "He wanted me to believe he was very concerned with the corruption. But they lust wanted to neutralize me." Villagra said. Later the same year, a CIA contract employee under Castillo's supervision wrote a psychological warfare manual, counseling the contras on the "selective use of violence" to "neutralize" Sandinis- ta officials. Congressional outrage led President Reagan to discipline several CIA employees for "poor Judgment and lapses in oversight." Disciplined over manual Castillo was among them. His punishment involved a demotion from his Langley-based position to a new post in 1983: station chief in Coen RICA. Castillo's tenure in San Jose roughly coincided with that of U.S. Ambassador Lewis Tambs. Shortly after Tombs' arrival in P90-00965 R000201080008-6 July 1985. Tambs called Castillo and two other embeary officials together to say "be had really only one mission in Cass Rica. and that was to form a Nicaraguan rests- tam southern front,' Castillo later told the Tower panel. The two men worked closely on that mission. His cover as an Embassy first secretary didn't lag Soon after Castillo's arrival, a minor rebel official emerged from a meeting to boast widely that he had been consulting with the CIA station chief: Castillo was instantly known in the rebel ranks. Castillo worked closely with Costs Rica's then-security minis- ter, Benjamin Pica, overhauling the Intelligence and Security Di- rectorate. the Costa Rican equiva- lent of the FBI and CIA. In two recent interviews, Piza called Cas- tillo a "good friend." Costs Rican officials called Pin Castillo's key to obtaining cooperation for the contras from the government of Costa Rican President Luis Alberta Monger Taking stock of his generous s_stance, Pica one day told Castillo that be wanted to meet President Reagan. Personality. Pia keeps a framed photograph of his handshake with President Reagan on the wall of his presi- dent's office at Seagrams. Costs Rica. CastiUo's presence at the session came to light in the Jan. 29 Senate Intelligence Committee re- port on the Iran-contra affair, which noted that a Central American security official and his wife" and "the senior CIA officer" in the same country had met with Reagan. White House chief of staff Donald Regan, Adm. John Poin- dexter and North. Pita said he. Castillo and their wives had topped off the trip with a weekend in Miami. But Castillo's main work in- volved the contras, and it brought ^ showdown with Commander Panora. The Southern Front had flourished. briefly, in late 1983, when the CIA had been funneling millions of dollars in cash and weaponry to Pastore's growing Democratic Revolutionary Alli- ance army. But even in those glory days Castillo had disdained the charismatic "Commander Zero." Chamorro, who noticed Castil- to's dislike for Pastore early on. chalked it up to Castillo's overall ideological rigidity. Castillo couldn't understand. or control, a political chameleon like Pastors, a Sandiina guerrilla hero who only turned against his former com- rades in 1982. "He was uncomfortable with Eden's imagination." Chamorro said. In September 1984. Castillo had dealt with Pastors face to face. arbitrating the terms of a tense divorce in a San Jose safe house between Pastore and his former ally, Alfonso Robelo. CIA ordered the leaks staunched. Castillo ordered lie detector tests. Technicians and machines were sent down from Langley. and over a period of weeks, nearly 20 contras were brought to a San Jose sale house and strapped in. More than a dozen rebels flunked the polygraphs, and a purge followed in the contras' southern front hierarchy. purged rebel officials said they learned later that their dismissals had been ordered by Castillo. The CIA's strategy was to sideline Panora and put his troops at the disposal of Fernando "El Negro" Chamorro, a lesser com- mander known for exploitable weaknesses of the flesh. Since mid-1985. Castlllo's CIA agents had been meeting with Pastore's field lieutenants in San Jose, always emphasizing that they were only seeking informa- tion about contra needs. about where the rebels were Operating in Nicaragua. The CIA was not offering weapons, they Bald. Than Castillo's agents changed their tune, offering weapons to commanders who would leave Pastoral. Castillo demonstrated the seriousness of his offers, rebel officials said, by sending Pasore's men in southern Nicaragua at least two air drops and two small boatloads of weapons and supplies between February and April of 1986.' In a final, personal pitch. Castll- Io stood before the Pas ors lieuten- anu in a May 1986 meeting in a San lose safe house. telling them they could get more U.S. Aid only if they abandoned Panora for Chatorro. Six consented. According to several contra officials. Castillo funneled each of them asb m wards of as much as $5,000. To supply the commanders, Castillo played a key role in negotiations in the final months of the Monge administration in Costa Rica to gain permission for the use of the secret airstrip, according to two senior Costa Rican officials. The "private" strip was built by ^ company tied to North and used by planes based in El Salvador. With the strip in operation. Castillo dispatched tar drops to the rebels. From rebel officers, he learned contra troop movements inside Nicaragua. then passed the coordi- hates to North to the White House over an encryption device North had provided him. Castillo told the Tower Commission. Castillo told the Tower Commis- sion he had asked North about the legality of this work. "Are You sure this is OK? He said yes. Ye& all you're doing is passing'nfor- mation,' " Castillo told the Tower Commission. In one April 1986 message quoted by the Tower Commission. Castillo confirmed the success of one air drop to North. then went on grandly: "My objective is the creation of 2.500 man force .. realize this may be overly ambi- tious planning, but with your help. believe we can pull it off." Ordered purge But Castillo's final encounter with Pastore in June 1985 was apparently another exasperation. according to Pastora. Pastora's combatants seized a barge packed with American pacifists on the San Juan River, part of Nicara- gua's southern border: Castillo radioed from San Jose. ordering Pastors not to harm them. The station chief's concern went be- yond the obvious: The CIA had also infiltrated one of its agents into the group. While Castillo had been infiltrat- jog the pacifists, the Sandinistas had been infiltrating Pastore. The southern front was riddled with spies: even Pastore's lover was a Sandinista agent. In late 1985, the STAT STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/06/14: CIA-RDP90-00965R000201080008-6