CIA ROLE IN ARMING CONTRAS SEEN LARGER THAN WHITE HOUSE HAS ACKNOWLEDGED

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000605050010-8
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 19, 2013
Sequence Number: 
10
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 15, 1987
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000605050010-8.pdf174.97 KB
Body: 
A' Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/02/19: CIA-RDP90-00965R000605050010-8 January 170/ PACE_ CIA Rote in Arrning Contras Seen Larger Than White House Has Acknowledged 3/ By JOHN WALcarr And ANDY PASZTOR Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL WASHINGTON ? Information gathered by federal and congressional investigators suggests the Central Intelligence Agency played a larger role in recruiting, training and arming Nicaraguan rebels than the White :House or the CIA has acknow- ledged. Congressional and law enforcement sources said the Federal Bureau of Investi- gation early last year urged that a federal grand jury begin investigating allegations that CIA operatives were involved in hiring mercenaries and shipping weapons to the rebels, known as Contras, in violation of federal laws. But the U.S. attorney's office in Miami resisted such suggestions. and didn't launch a grand jury investigation until late in the year, according to law en- forcement officials. The new information indicates that as early as 1985, FBI and Justice Department investigators suspected that CIA opera- tives may have gone far beyond sharing in- telligence with the Contras?an activity that Congress approved a year ago. Presi- dent Reagan authorized the agency to spend $13 million carrying out the intelli- gence sharing, the Washington Post re- ported. Now, independent counsel Lawrence Walsh and the Senate select committee in- vestigating the Iran-Contra affair want to determine what role the CIA played in sup- porting the Contras and whether the Jus- tice Department aggressively pursued its earlier investigations into the rebels' sup- ply network. Suppression and Delay The Justice Department's handling of the early stages of those investigations, "at a minimum, gives the appearance of attempting to prevent certain information from coming to the fore," asserted Sen.? Joseph Biden (D., Def.), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, in an inter- view. At worst, Sen. Biden said. "someone tried to actively suppress an investiga- tion." In recent weeks, Acting CIA Director Robert Gates and other CIA executives have told working-level officers that the agency's role in the Iran-Contra affair was "marginal." The officials tried to reassure agency workers that the agency won't be blamed for what top CIA officials privately have called the Reagan administration's amateurish and undisciplined secret diplo- macy. 0 FBI Director William Webster has told congressional investigators that he doesn't believe senior Justice Department officials acted improperly to thwart criminal in- quiries. To coordinate the distribution of CIA as- sistance, State Department "hurnanitar- ian" aid and private donations to the Con- tras, top CIA officials called a meeting of the agency's Central American station chiefs, according to intelligence sources. At the meeting, which was attended by the head of the CIA's Central American task force, the station chiefs were told they could share intelligence, but were warned they shouldn't do more. One source, however, remembers the discussion this way: "The word was not to do A. B, or C. But some people got the clear impression that meant everything from D to Z was fair game." Pressure on Costa Rica One such official, intelligence sources said, was the CIA station chief in Costa Rica. Working closely with U.S. Ambassa- dor Lewis Tambs and with Lt. Col, Oliver North of the National Security Council staff, the CIA officer pressured the Costa Rican government to permit the construc- tion of an airfield for the Contras and to al- low other Contra supply operations to use Costa Rican soil or airspace. according to these officials and diplomatic sources. The CIA station chief in Costa Rica. en- couraged by agency officials in Washing- ton. began passing information to the Con- tras about coming supply flights, accord- ing to intelligence sources. These activi- ties, intelligence sources said, were re- ported on CIA back channels, not in the agency's routine cable traffic. But the re- ports were directed to the attention of the CIA's director and its operations chief. The intelligence sources said the presi- dent's Intelligence Oversight Board con- ducted a preliminary review last week of the Costa Rica station chief's activities on behalf of the Contras and concluded that while a number of them had been "impru- dent," they probably didn't break any laws. Intelligence sources say the CIA's top 1 man in El Salvador, however, took a very narrow view of the agency's mandate dur- ing the station chiefs' meeting. Wary of a repeat of the 1984 scandal over the CIA's role in mining Nicaraguan harbors and preparing a guerrilla manual for the rebels, the official vowed to keep his dis- tance from the Contras and told his col- leagues he didn't even want to share intel- ligence information with them. Intelligence sources say he's kept both his job and his word. Expulsion From Honduras By last March, FBI agents working in several southern states and in Central America were investigating whether the CIA was involved with some of the Con- tras' backers in the U.S. Jack Terrell, a former mercenary who worked with an Al- abama-based group that called itself Ci- vilian Military. Assistance the name has since been changed to Civilian Materiel As- sistance), told FBI and Justice Depart- ment investigators last March 25 that the CIA hired him in October 1984 to form a Green Beret-style special forces unit to ? fight for the Contras, investigators said. During a nine-hour interview with those investigators. Mr. Terrell said he and other CMA leaders then met in Honduras with Enrique Bermudez. the military corn- mander of the largest Contra group, the ' Nicaraguan Democratic Force. Ten merce- naries recruited by Mr. Terrell then flew to Honduras in mid-November 1984 and re- ported to Contra bases at La Quinta, out- side the Honduran capital of Tegucigalpa, and at Las Vegas near the Nicaraguan bor- der. They were expelled by the Honduran government before seeing any action. Mr. Terrell told FBI and Justice Department officials. Law enforcement officials in Miami said they also have found that Cuban exiles with past and present CIA ties have been arming and training the Contras at least since 1981. But they said it isn't clear whether the Cubans did so at the behest of CIA officers or other U.S. officials. And they said it isn't known whether the Cu- bans reported their activities to CIA agents. Arms Shipments in 1981 Max Vargas, a Nicaraguan exile in Mi- ami. who has been identified by Justice Department officials as a CIA operative, has told investigators that he and his brother bought two AR-15 rifles at the Costa Gun Shop in Miami on Aug. 6. 1981, and sent them to Contra leader Fernando ("El Negro") Chamorro in Honduras that month. Mr. Chamorro's agent in Miami, Raul Arana, has told investigators that he flew several large arms shipments from Miami to Honduras in 1981. Justice Department officials in Miami also have concluded that Bay of Pigs vet- eran Rene Corvo, the leader of a Miami- based Cuban exile group called Cariac (for Nicaraguan Anti-Communist Aid Commit- npclassified and Approved For Release 2013/02/19: CIA-RDP90-00965R000605050010-8 Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/02/19 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605050010-8 tee), has raised funds and recruited mer- cenaries in Florida for the Contras. FBI agents have been told that Mr. Corvo also shipped arms from the U.S. to the Contras. Investigators said Customs Department records show that on March 6 and June 13, 1985, Mr. Corvo chartered planes to carry cargo from Fort Lauder- dale, Fla., to the Ilopango military airfield in El Salvador?which was used as a base for COntra resupply flights. But those rec- ords don't indicate whether any weapons were shipped on the planes. Ranch Used by U.S. Military Also, the CIA station chief in Costa Rica told law enforcement officials last year that until March 1984, the U.S. military used a ranch owned by John Hull, an American living in Costa Rica, to deliver equipment to the rebels. He told law en- forcement officials that since then Mr. Hull had been providing the rebels with food, medicine, and other nonlethal supplies. It isn't clear whether Mr. Hull was a CIA operative, a front for the CIA, or a pri- vate citizen with only incidental ties to the CIA station in Costa Rica. Investigators said Mr. Hull canceled a scheduled inter- view with FBI and Justice Department of- ficials last March 3, after the U.S. consul general in Costa Rica, Kirk Kotula, ad- vised him not to speak to the investigators without a lawyer. Law enforcement officials said FBI agents worried early last year that the fail- ure to begin a formal grand jury probe into alleged activities of CIA operatives sup- porting the Contras could damage the credibility of the bureau and the Justice Department. Leon Kellner? the U.S. attorney in Mi- ami, initially rejected the FBI's request for a grand jury probe as premature, ac- cording to investigators. But the U.S. attor- ney's office continued to gather 'additional information, and it began presenting evi- dence to a grand jury in Miami sometime last November or early December, law en- forcement officials said. Mr. Kellner, who has said that he re- calls several conversations with senior Justice Department officials about certain aspects of the arms-smuggling investiga- tion, has asserted that all of the earlier leads and allegations were aggressively pursued "without any interference from anyone from the outside" or from head- quarters. Declassified and Approved For Release 2013/02/19: CIA-RDP90-00965R000605050010-8