U.S. WEIGHS ANGOLAN REBEL AID

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000604900069-1
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RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 19, 2013
Sequence Number: 
69
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 16, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/02/19: CIA-RDP90-00965R000604900069-1 ARTICLE APoRED ON PAGE U .S. Weighs WASHINGTON 16 October way to determine the Soviet role,. 'A#. b. A ' A I t Rebel Aid Resumption Is Urged Tor Show Resolve "r. Against Communism LBj assD in. SOt~W wg an sf lTaf rater - ; s m ngo a, en cans an Prospec according to- intelligence and con- gressional sources. At issue is whether the United States should provide either mili- tary or humanitarian aid to the non- communist National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA) led by Jonas Savimbi, whose guerrillas fighting in south- ern Angola have recently been un- der heavy pressure from the Soviet- supplied and Cuban-aided forces of the Marxist government. A subsid- iary question is whether this aid should be provided through covert or overt U.S. channels. Earlier this month, sources said t -1 .1 T1. 1 ! R POST 1985 the midst of a major policy review to favor covert military aid similar to decide whether to resume U.S. military aid to noncommunist guer- rillas fighting Angola's Marxist gov- ernment, according to congression- al and intelligence sources. The review has touched off an acrimonious interagency debate that pits the administration's global strategists, intent upon showing U.S. resolve against the growing Soviet and Cuban military role in Angola; against its "regionalists," who fear U.S. aid to the guerrillas will end U.S. efforts to negotiate a peaceful settlement to the dispute over Namibia, or Southwest Africa. The debate takes place amid ad- ministration preparations' for the Nov. 19-20 summit between Pres- ident Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, and a number of policy-makers are arguing that now is the time for Washington to send a strong message to Moscow about the U.S. resolve not only to help noncommunist guerrilla forces in Angola but elsewhere in the world. In addition, they are arguing that Gorbachev is behind recent offen- sives by Soviet-allied governments in Afghanistan, Nicaragua and Ethi- oria against noncommunists fight- ing in those countries and that ?.the. United States must respond to bol- ster its position going into the sum-. mit. At least two National Security- Council-chaired meetings have been held, the latest last Friday. In ad, ditian, a Special National Intellii g Estimate, a quick in-depth-. study by the various branches of the intelligence community, is under to tie distance being given to the rebels in Af ' an. A lso.Being studied is the possible imposi- tiotY trade embargo, affecting either U.S. exports.to Angola, the importation of Angolan oil,;or both, a step being urged on the admin- istiiatiott by conservative Republican groups like the Conservative Caucus and the Amer- ican Security Council. According to government sources, the Central Intelligence Agency the Pentagon aid the NSC staff all strongly support mili- aid-perhaps even covert assistance- e the State Department is said to be just as vehemently opposing any shift from the current U.S. policy of no assistance at all. "We still don't think providing arms is the way to do it," said a State Department spokesman, adding, "We think negotiations is the wry-but." He was referring to U.S efforts to resolve through negotiations the twin problems of the withdrawal of Cuban troops from .Angola-now said to number as many as 35,000, up 5,000 from last year-and in- dependeiice for South African-administered Namibia. An.gdministration decision to ask Congress foz.o*rt assistance is likely to touch off an- otper bitter debate there similar to the one over U). aid to anticommunist forces, known as :thq "Contras," in Nicaragua. A debate over U.S. policy toward Angola took place in 1975-76 after it was discovered that the CIA was secretly funneling more than million in mill ary and other as ist- anre to two rebel factions, one of them UNITA, which were then locked in a three- way civil war and power struggle ultimately won by the now ruling Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA). In January 1976. Congress passed the Clark amend- ment, which was sponsored by then-Sen. Dick e arlc (D-Iowa), banning any further covert m ary aid to Angolan rebels. That amendment was repealed by Con- gress last July, opening the way for the de- bate now going on inside the administration over whether to resume aid to UNITA. Supporters of a renewed American involve- ment on the side of UNITA say there may be less congressional opposition this time be- cause of Soviet and Cuban involvement in Angola and the fact that the United States has never had diplomatic L. relations with the Marxist Angolan government. In addition, State Department efforts to negotiate a so- lution to the Namibia dispute, or a withdrawal of Cuban troops from Angola, have been un- successful. Opponents of such a policy say an open U.S. alignment with UNITA will inevitably draw Washington into a closer alliance with white-ruled South Africa, UNITA's most im- portant source of support, and undermine the administration's efforts to pressure Pretoria to reform its apartheid system. South Africa is presently the main supplier of arms and the conduit for other outside military aid to UNITA. e, Rep. Claude Penner (D-FFla, chairman of the House Rules Committee, introduced a bill earlier this month authorizing the U.S. gov- ernment to provide up to $27 million in hu- manitaiian aid only to UNITA, and Sen. Steve Symms (R-Idaho) is "seriously thinking" about sponsoring a similar bill 'in the Senate, accord- ing to an aide. "We're waiting for word from the White House," an aide to Pepper said. "We feel there will be significant developments in a matter of days." Savimbi has asked the United States for military aid, though he has not submitted any written request to Washington yet, according to Jeremias K. Chitunda, UNITA foreign af- fairs secretary. Chitunda said in an interview that UNITA's top priority right now was antitank and an- tiaircraft weapons to counter the Angolan government's Mig fighters, Hind helicopter gunships and tanks recently supplied by the Soviet Union. He said $50 million in military aid would be more useful than $100 million in humanitar- ian aid. "Humanitarian assistance is just a way of evading ... the issue ... , " he added. Chitunda asserted that the Soviets had de- livered $2 billion worth of arms in the past 18 months. but U.S. intelligence sources said it was more like $1 billion worth since January 1984. Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/02/19: CIA-RDP90-00965R000604900069-1