STINGERS FOR SAVIMBI

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000504820025-9
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 7, 2012
Sequence Number: 
25
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 31, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000504820025-9.pdf78.34 KB
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STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/08: CIA-RD WASHINGTON POST 31 MIarch 1986 Rowland Evans and Robert Novak Stingers for Savimbi A secret decision to send Stinger anti-aircraft missiles to Jonas Savim- bi's anticommunist rebels in Angola is a breakthrough for the Reagan Doc- trine. It marks the first time in the long history of U.S. clandestine operations that a president has decided that top- of-the-line American weapons, not for- eign-made castoffs, can be used to ad- vance U.S. interests. The Stinger is at the very top. The shoulder-tired weapon can penetrate titanium-pro- tected cockpits of Soviet MI-24 Hind helicopters, the gunships that control the battlefields of Angola as well as Nicaragua and Afghanistan. The fact that previously skeptical Secretary_of State George Shultz now is as enthusiastic about the Stinger as Now, Shultz insisted that whatever covert aid was given, it must guarantee "sustainabdity" for Savimbi's rebeWon. That is, it would do no good to give the rebels weapons that did not prevent their annihilation by some 30,000 Cubans and their Soviet advisers. In a scheduled 45-minute session, which lasted twice that long, the sena- tors persuaded him that only Stingers would do that. They correctly argued that the most valuable part of the MI- 24 gunship is its Soviet-trained pilot, who would become vulnerable to the Stinger. Shultz agreed, and Reagan signed off on it. But the president expressed special concern about what has always wor- ried Shultz: the sub rosa alliance be- tween South Africa and Savimbi. Rea- gan sought ways to insulate the U.S. aid program, particularly if sweetened with the potent Stinger, from any con- nection with the apartheid regime. He wanted South Africa, as one official told us, to he "hermetically sealed oft" from any possible connection with the U.S. program. That job, administration insiders ton us, was accomp is e y asey himself. tAILNULIgn o icia s never confirm or deny anyt ing eoout t eir c i s rave sc e u i s Hawn will have any connection with the new U.S. program. No U.S. covert aid m :l flow to Savimbi across the border of South Africa or Pretoria-controlled Namibia. which separates South Africa from Angola. That makes Zaire, a longtime friend of the United States, the necessary gateway for new weap- ons into Savunbi-controlled eastern Angola. It is far too soon to know whether the tasted Stinger will prove effective in the African bush against the flying tanks. But if it pays off, the decision to break a 40-year ban on the use of top- grade American weapons in covert competition with the Soviets could be of historic importance in pumping life into the Reagan Doctrine. I'~Nrl. News Anteric..i Syndicate ecretary of Defense Caspar einber- ger and Director William Casey signals an end to prior restraints. That opens an important new chapter in the long struggle between the West an the Soviet Union where the ideological tide Ion has flowed for . oscow. .. No other deci points up eagan's heightened intent to bring to life his rhetoric t at the West should as contnutted to widening democracy as the Krenii is committed to the spread o communism. Just how seriously this is taken is shown by the secret dispatch of the director of Central Intelligence to Pretoria to make sure the white South Africa overnmer.t is not connected to covert _e for .t~ini i. If the Stinger neutralizes the MI-24 "dying tanks" in Angola, it almost surely will be sei,.t to ant;-Sandinista guerrillas in Nicaragua once Congress finally approves Reagan's contra aid plan. This represents a long path traveled by George Shultz, who started out skeptical about the whole idea of covert aid. When the secretary early in March journeyed up Pennsylvania Avenue for a crucial closed-door discussion of the aid program with Senate Majority Leaders Bob Dole and several other Republican senators, he had previously agreed to the principle of anti-aircraft and antitank weapons for Savimbi. that Casey in mi -; arc spent several days in South . trica ma ing ejK in ; ase. neither the Pretoria regime nor inv South African nongovernment body Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/08: CIA-RDP9O-00965ROO0504820025-9