CIA TIED TO CONTRA AID AFTER BAN

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1
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RIPPUB
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K
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7
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 21, 2013
Sequence Number: 
4
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Publication Date: 
May 20, 1987
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OPEN SOURCE
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1 I F-'+ ' / - i W F= Ll /~ i t: lJ l : F: F. L L F- ~. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 WASHINGTON POST MAY 20 UT CIA Tied to Contra Aid after Ban Owen, North's Latin-contact, Says Agency Gave Military Assistance - provided military maps, helped lo- chairman of the Senate Select Com- By Dan Morgan snk tier Pincus cate a site for a clandestine air base mittee on Intelligence, noted that r] ""a""iO1 v"" "4f w""" in Costa Rica, and attempted to Owen's testimony conradicted what - f Jobe W. Ow , who served as help transfer munitions from one the CIA's Central American task tben- ational Security Council aide contra faction to another. force chief had told his panel last Oliver L. North Jr.'s main contact He also said that Tomas Castillo December. with the Nicaraguan rebels, yester- an alias for the CIA station m were eheir~ ope amb~a day provided the first detailed tes- Costa Rica, had helped get weapons the N timony that CIA personnel in Cen- and food for contras inside Nicara- and North d ma end tral American and Washington as- gua. Castillo also was regularly in thstaff, CIA at they wfficials their aas~ained siste~thei contras indE rill after - touch with North' iWU.S. Atnbaa-~ _ ed by law 'i a i L Ri ~mt ew ca . Congress had banned such aid. sador to Costa _ a after October 1984 and ther'aiftet ' fore the House and Senate select viat-ie`t`gnang force 1._ h,. private efforts to support the reb- committees investigating ui uau- contra affair, Owen described how 'southern front," Owen testified. a When acting CIA Director Rob- the Central Intelligence Agency had Sen. David L. Boren (D-Okla.), ert M. Gates appeared bef "t e1' ^ Senate confirms li'dfuun Webster cu new CIA director. 94-1. Pte A3 See OWEH, A12, Col. I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 OWEN, From At Senate intelligence committee for confirmation hearings last Feb. 17, he said, "It was out of caution to avoid crossing the bounds of the permissible that CIA officers at all levels were urged to avoid involve- ment with matters concerning pri- vate efforts to support the contras." Gates said that this approach had been spelled out in a cable to the field soon after Congress passed the Boland Amendment, which ended direct and indirect assistance by the CIA and other agencies involved in intelligence. Echoing testimony given last week by former national security adviser Robert C. McFarlane, Owen described a close relationship between the late CIA Director Wil- liam 3. Casey and North. North ap- peared to be "under the wing" of Casey, Owen said. Pressed for ex- amples, Owen said that on several occasions he was present when North talked to Casey on the tele- phone or received a visit from him. A CIA spokesman last night said the agency is cooperating with the congressional investigation but would have no comment on individ. ual testimony. Owen, who described himself as the "eyes and ears" of North, first worked for contra leader Adolfo Calero. Later, through a nonprofit company he set up. Owen was paid by the State Department under its program of "humanitarian" aid to the contras. From early 1984 until the middle of 1986, Owen said he provided in- telligence on the contras to North, carried money to rebel leaders and generally acted as a liaison between the NSC and the contra fighters in the jungles. As the first witness who was en- gaged with the contras on the ground in Central America over an extended period. Owen repeatedly voiced his emotional attachment to the rebel soldiers. He also voiced his suspicion and occasional con- tempt for their political leaders. In March 1986, he wrote a report to "BG," the Initials for North's pseu- donym, "Blood and Guts," after a trip to Central America: "I care and bel* ve in he boys and girls, men and'women who are fighting, bleeding and d g. But the reality (as 1) see it is ere are few of the so-called leade of the movement who really ca about the boys in the field. T S WAR HAS BECOME A BUSINfSS TO MANY OF THEM: T RE IS STILL A BELIEF THE RINES ARE GOING TO HAVE 0 IN- VADE, SO LET'S GET ET SO WE WILL AUTOMATIC LY BE THE ONES PUT INTO ER." Owen added, referring t the ex- pected resumption of U.S. d to the contras, '7f the $100 milli is ap- proved and things go on a they have these last five years, will be like pouring money, dow. a sink- hole." Yesterday Owen stood y that assessment, but said he oiled a recent reshuffling of th4 contra leadership would change t ngs for He also added new deta' to tes- timony he gave Thursday t his handling of cash on behalf it North Yesterday, Owen said th he had made three trips to New irk City beginning in the fall of 198 to pick up money and return it t either North or retired Air For major general Richard V. Secord. On the first trip , in th fall of 1985, Owen said, he was t d to go to a corner Chinese ~marke on the lower west side of Manha an and say he had been seat by meone named " Mooey." A person walked behind the counter, "rolled up his pant leg and pulled out a wad of hundred dollar bills" totaling $9,500. He then returned to Washington and gave the money, folded up in a newspaper, to Secord, who was at the Sheraton-Carlton Hotel. Asked what the reason for the money transfer was. Owen said, "Obviously they were short of cash and must have needed it. It was a bank holiday:" He later said he did not know what the source of the money was. At the time, Secord and North were in the process of establishing a pri- vate, U.S.-run airlift to carry mu- nitions, weapons and other supplies to the contras. Last Thursday, Owen described how North had given hint thousands of dollars in blank traveler's checks from his safe in the Old Executive Office Building and told him to con- vert them to cash and give the mon- ey to various contra leaders. Owen said he believed some of the trav- elers checks originally came from contra leader Calero. Beginning in mid-1984, Calero controlled a hank account that received millions of dollars from Saudi Arabia to sup- port the contra effort. Under questioning from Neil Eg- gleston, House deputy majority counsel, Owen disclosed that North had kept a ledger of all transactions involving traveler's checks, but said he had no knowledge of what hap- 9130 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 P Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 pened to the ledger in which this was done. Eggleston said the ledger had not been located in North's of- fice. Owen said repeatedly that he did not believe North had ever used the travelers checks for his own ben- efit. But Sen. Orrin G. Hatch (R- Utah) questioned Owen about sev- eral such checks that North had cashed in food stores and gas sta- tions in the Washington area, and one for $100 cashed "at a tire store here in this area ... for two snow tires." Owen did say that North had giv- en him $1,000 in traveler's checks at the time of his wedding. Owen frequently expressed his personal admiration for North and said that he had been unfairly made into a "villain," but would yet end up as a "hero." He was particularly critical of the White House for releasing informa- tion about an incident in North's past requiring hospitalization for psychological observation and for calling him a "cowboy." Asked by Sen. William S. Cohen (R-Maine) about reports that North shredded documents pertinent to the Iran-contra operation, Owen said, "I believe that if he shredded documents he would have done it. to protect the president because he felt obligated." On half a dozen oc- casions. Owen said, North told him he would be the "fall guy" if the op- eration were disclosed and repeated that again on Nov.. 25, the day North was fired from the NSC staff. Fe quoted North as saying, "gill :.aeey knows it, and others know it, ;nd I'm ready to take that respon- sibility." Owen is the first witness to tes- tify under a grant of limited immu- nity from the congressional select committees, having initially invoked the Fifth Amendment against self- incrimination. A clue as to why he sought immunity was given yester- day when the committees ques- tioned him about a provision of his company's consulting contract with the State Department, The provision. specifically says that during the term of the con- tract, Owen may not perform any services relating to the handling of arms and ammunition. Yesterday Owen testified at length about at least once instance in which he su- pervised, at North's direction; an attempted shipment of lethal ma- terials from Honduras to El 1- vador. North, he said, told him to say e was doing it on his own time if au s- tioned-a position Owen took s- terday with the committees. The CIA role in the support of the contras is expected to beco a key concern of the committees o r the next few weeks as more fa is emerge about the agency's r Castillo, the former CIA Costa can station chief, is expected to t a- tify in the next two weeksi Acco ing to congressional sources, he s told investigators that he acted t the direction of his immediate periors in the chain of command. Yesterday, Sen. Boren noted t t the CIA's Central American t k force chief, who has been identif d as Alan Fiers, told the Senate int I- ligence committee last Decem r that he turned down requests fr North in 1985 to prepare inte i- gence for delivery to the contr . Fiers, sources said, has deni d knowledge of Castillo's activit' a with the contras. From October 1984 until Decem- ber 1985, Congress stopped all funding for intelligence activities in support of the contras. This specif- ically covered the CIA, which had been the agency in charge of devel- oping the contra program since 1981. Owen said, "I know that one of the sets of maps (of military sites inside Nicaragua) was provided by a CIA courier." He added that he was present during one telephone con- versation between North and the task force chief. Investigators also introduced into the record a Feb. 27, 1986, Owen report to North in which Owen said that the agency was giving orders concerning the handling of "lethal supplies." Owen also reported involvement by the CIA operation in Honduras. He told of asking a local CIA official to request the release of munitions from one contra faction so they could be transported to the south- ern front. O/M 3r% Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 THE IRAN-CONTRA HEARINGS The Testimony of Robert W. Owen The oup that provided that plane had been referred to NHAO [Nicaragua Humanita an Aid Office] by the CIA and, In my mind, it was stupidity to use a plane that at on time had been used-or at least targeted as having been used to carry drug and also it was stupidity to use people who had a criminal record." Excerpts/turn testimony byformer State Department consultant Robrrt W. Owen in response to House select cornmitlee deputy chief counsel W. Neil Eggleston. ... M the fall, September and October of 1965, did you have occasion to take trips up to Now York at the Instructions of (Lt.] Col. Oliver (L.] North? The first time I went, it was not at the instruction of Col. North. but, yes, I took three trips to New York. And the first time, did there come a time when you went up on a bank holiday? Yes, on Sept. 16. 1 believe it was Rosh Hashanah and the banks were closed, and I was asked to go up there then. And you were asked to go by Col. North? No, Col. North gave me a phone number to call and a person to ask for. And that person was Mr. "Kopp," who obviously was Mr. (retired Air Force major gen. eral Richard V.] Secord. Did you know at the time he was Mr. Secord? I had a very good idea, yes. And ... you, I take It, then had a conversa? tins with S.cord? Yes, sir, I did. He gave me instructions, the address and in essence a code to use when I went and ap- proached the person. Where did you go? I flew up to New York and I took a cab down to the Lower West Side,. and I was instructed to go to a cor- ner Chinese market. ... Did you give a code ham.? I asked for the person. I don't remember his name, and then I said that--I used the code name saying this person sent me, and I'm afraid I don't remember, I think it was something like I "mooey" or something along those lines. Did that parses then, give you anything? Yes, he did. He walked behind the counter, I be- lieve he rolled up his pant 14 and pulled out a wad of hundred dollar bills. Did he give a part of this wad to you? He gave the whole wad to me, and he asked me if I wanted to count it. I didn't know how much I was sup- posed to be getting, but I decided I better count it anyways. And how many hundred dollar bins did he give you? There were 95; it was $9,500. [Owen further tes- tified that he returned to Washington and gave Secord the $9,500, then traveled twice to New York to ob- tain additional cash for North and Secord.] Now did you got the money on those occa- slons? I went to a bank which was I think in the mid-40s in Manhattan, and I went up to the sixth floor- unfortunately, I don't remember the name of the bank-(and i] asked for a person whose name I had been given and told him that I was expected to pick up an envelope, and they provided me with an envelope each time Y were simply handed the envelope filled wit cash or whatever was In It? Yes, an I can't necessarily. testify that it was cash because I idn't know, but it certainly felt the same shape an iae. And, o those two occasions after getting the envelop from the bank, the person at the bank, w it did you do with the envelopes? I retu el to Washington and on these two occa- sions, I b ieve, I took the envelopes to Col. North in his office !I'30 L11 / 7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 WELT V0 !z-5 E:UF:'FR ELLES P _ 1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 The following i$ in response to Sen. David L. Boren (D-Okla.): .. Did you ever tell Mr. (Robert) Duemling (head of the State Department's Nicaragua Hu- manltarlan Aid Office) that you were asked by Col. North to be his eyes and ears as a consul- tant to NHAOI ... t Did you ever tell him that you were Involved ... on the side,. as you put it In arranging shipments of arms, drawing up wish lists of arms, of munitions ... ? ... No, I did not. What Mallon to t time inwhit for the gove mationW ... . rler to take I ly provided? I once aske material had check on that. .. Your about wheth tras In way delivered m various corn February any Indication tl North was g for that purl I was in his made phone c Did you s task force c No. I did a What ab nlcations a earlier C know, what Iknowh communicat ?..Did~ ting milital In P$Imera ras? They did i ?.hHaw North over I've stayed away ... I be used that talked abi rough-tool of your ci that might . The referred to stupidity ti used, or at drugs, and a criminal it the delivery of a secure comm eo vice, known as the 1(L43, by you A official in Costa Rica? Did you rse he made of that device? was going to use it to keep in secure ins with Cot. North and with the others. 1A personnel ever assist you In get. V supplies moved from a warehouse la [air beset to Aquacate In Hondu. of assist me .... you had any conversations with Col. te last two or three months? h had several .. We both studiously from (discussing pending issues] .... leve you talked about a plans being ad been used to run drugs .... You pt some of the crew being a pretty Ing bunch .... What was the nature corn about Involvement of people have had ties to drug-running? coup that provided that plane had been HAO by the CIA and, in my mind, it was use a plane that at one time had been ast targeted as having been used to carry ry so it was stupidity to use people cord. ... The t Senate Into dusrin that this delivery to posltilon to I caft't can Tied. ... And conversaN< North whiff I be'ieve s bout carrying Intelligence infer. obviously, It as against e the law meat to supply Intelligence Infer- low do you feel about being a cou? formation that could not be legal- s that an appropriate means? Col. North about that, and he said the Cen declassified. I guess you'd have to CIA personnel assisted thetcon, s l prohibited by the law. When YOU s and photos from Col. North to sApleaders in ril of 1995, did you have any CIA personnel know that Col. Ing to use C A pr.Pared m ter?ials se? ffice on several occasions ... when he Its to what I believed was the CIA. r most or talk directly to the CIA of about such materials? sk force chief testified before the illgence committee in December s turned down requests from North period to prepare Intelligence for he contras. Would you ... be in a contradict that)? radiict it. I can only tell you what I car- here was at least one telephone i with the task force chief and Col. you were In his office? Yes, sir. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 Robert W. Owe= "We were In a polltlically c1 Robert W. Owen, a former consultant t made these points during his testimony y ON THE CIA ? Owen described how the Central Into Costa Rica. He also said that the CIA st helped get weapons and food for rebels 1 e? i H ou te in regular contact with then-Wh S. ambassador to Costa" Rica. the U . Investigators Introduced a 1986 letter North as "8G," for Blood and Gut$. In it, - giving orders about the handling of "leth ON MONEY ? Owen described several trips to;New including one in 1985 In which h# recet retired Air Force major general Richard Washington. igence Agency provided a clandestine air field in tion chief in Costa Rica side Nicaragua and was Owen that referred to Owens said the CIA was supplies." rk City to pick up cash, d $9,500 in $100 bills k the money out of his n a folded newspaper to V. Secord in downtown Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 F~~ -, kc ,' WE. 11 kt ,' : S f =i'IJRRELLE3 F' . 1 4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1 ON THE CONTRAS ? While expressing an emotional attachn Owen also was sharply critical of their F 1986, Owen wrote North, "There are fei of the movement who really care about t WAR HAS BECOME A BUSINESS TO MA $100 million [in U.S. aid] is approved i nave these last five years, it will - be like sinkhole." ON NORTH ? North told Owen last November that "the !all guy" if the secret network to aid Owen said. He quoted North as saying Casey knows it, and others know It, and sponstbility." ON THE'RED TIDE' ? Owen ended his testimony with a poet gallant fighters." The poem noted, "We strike back at those whose intent is to e~ the red tide that threatens to overwhelm ant to the rebel soldiers, litical leaders. In March of the so-called leaders e boys in the field. THIS iY OF THEM .... If the nd things go on as they pouring money down a he expected to become the contras was exposed, "(then-CIA director] Bill m ready to take that re- i praising North and "our have a burning desire to slave us, to try and stern Us.,, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/02/21 : CIA-RDP90-00965R000605090004-1