NICARAGUA ALLEGES U.S. PLOT TO OUST SANDINISTA REGIME

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000201090073-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 24, 2012
Sequence Number: 
73
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 11, 1982
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000201090073-3.pdf101.2 KB
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000201090073-3 ARTICLE AFFEARED 0i1 FAGE___1LA PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER 11 August 1982 Nicaragua alleges U.S, plot to': oust Sandinista regime By Alfonso Charily inquirer Wien Bureau WASHINGTON - Nicaragua is ac-, cusing the Reagan administration of plotting a war between Honduras and Nicaragua in hopes .of ousting ! Nicaragua's revolutionary govern- ment. U.S. officials deny the accusation but say that Nicaragua's neighbors - particularly Honduras and Costa Rica - are fearful of military attacks against them now that Nicaragua, with help from Cuba, has become a base for the spreading of Marxist subversion in the region. Both Honduras and Costa Rica have requested US. security assis- tance, according to the U.S. officials. The positions of the two sides have been gleaned from a diplomatic note of protest that Nicaragua delivered to the United States last week and. from conversations with Nicaraguan diplomats and State Department offi- cials in the last few days. Both sides agree that tension is increasing in Central America, par- ticularly along the Honduran-Nicara- guan. border area.. which frequently is used by Nicaraguan exiles based in Honduras for cross-border strikes against Sandinista forces. Nicaragua says a warwith Hondu- ras cannot be ruled out because the. Hondurans not only refuse to bring the exiles under.control but also are probably arming and guiding them with US. help and encouragement. "What the United States wants to do is crush the Sandinista revolu- tion," said an angry Nicaraguan dip- lomat here. But US. officials believe that al- though more border clashes are pos- sible, a war seems improbable at the moment. In any case, officials say they have advised the Hondurans not to overreact by invading Nicara- gua. - ' "Honduras' interests would be bet- ter served if it did nothing and wait- ed for Nicaragua to strike first and- then act ?asthe aggrieved party in this case,", tine State Department offi- cial said. "We are in frequent contact with the Hondurans," he added. "We are constantly reassuring them." The charges and countercharges are visible evidence of the deteriora- tion of U.S.-Nicaraguan relations af- ter an apparent relaxation in ten- sions in April, when the United States offered an eight-point plan to improve strained relations between the two countries. Washington recently insisted that Nicaragua, despite denials by Mana- gua, was continuing to supply weap, ons to rebel forces in El Salvador. Nicaragua retorted that the Uited States was trying to arm Honduras so that the Honduran government could police Central America in the place of President Anastasio Somoza, overthrown as leader of Nicaragua by the Sandinista revolutionaries in 1979. The hardened U.S. attitude toward Nicaragua was . spelled out to the. House Foreign Affairs Committee late last month by Nestor D. Sanchez, assistant secretary of defense for in- ter-American affairs, in testimony aimed at justifying US. military co- operation with Honduras. "In Honduras," said Sanchez, "the Cuban-Nicaraguan coalition has been working very hard to prepare the groundwork for an eventual full- scale insurgency such as has been sponsored in El Salvador.... They have regularly and systematically vi- olated the sovereignty of this peace. ful nationlHondurasi, using Its terri- tory as a supply conduit to support the guerrillas in El Salvador.... The Cuban-Nicaraguan coalition _ seems ready to begin regionalizing the war." Also last month, there were reports from the area of intensified border fighting. A few days later, the Penta- gon announced joint military exer- cises with the Honduran army. "All of these elements have forced us to realize the inevitable," said the _ Nicaraguan diplomat. "The United States is fortifying Honduras for a first strike against Nicaragua." Late last week. Nicaragua's ambas- sador to Washington, Francisco Fial- los Navarro, called on the State De- partment _,with the protest note, which indirectly accused the United States of fomenting war. It expressed Nicaragua's alarm at the US: Honduras maneuvers be- cause they coincide with an "in- crease in counterrevolutionary, ac- tivities carried out against `-our territory" by former Somoza soldiers. The maneuvers and recent ' pub- lished re its about a. S19 million VA p an for covert anti-Nicaragua activities are "clear examples of the serious attempts to destabilize my country:" the note said. It added: "The ... maneuvers con- firm the interventionist attitude of the United States toward the Central American region, and further repre- sent a clear and open provocation which appears to be aimed at causing an unnecessary war between Hondu- ras and Nicaragua, with unforesee- able consequences." Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/24: CIA-RDP90-00965R000201090073-3