PUZZLING FRIENDS, PLEASING ENEMIES

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000605250015-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 8, 2012
Sequence Number: 
15
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 17, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/08: CIA-RDP90-00965R000605250015-1 ARTICLE APPEARED QN PE 2`" 4 Puzzling friends, everything passes east and west, what's left? Even Tip O'Neill's Aunt Eunice, the Maryknoll nun who taught the speaker as. much as .he knows about Central America, knows the answer to that one. . The obstacle to Sandinista consolidation - and the establishment of the Marxist base in Central America - is the Nicaraguan resistance. The resis- leasig enemies Nicaragua can't fairly be called a banana repub lic any longer. It still has the bananas, but it's even less a repub- lic today than it was. Even the American friends of the Sandinistas concede that. So it's fashionable now, particularly a2nong the Americans with shame enough not to praise the Sandinistas any longer, to poke fun at the notion that "tiny Nicaragua" poses any kind of .: threat to the "big" and "powerful" United States: ~. William Casey, the director of the CIA argues this morning in The Times that size has nothing to do with the size of the threat. "The Soviet Union and Cuba have established and are consolidating a beachhead on the American continent," says Mr. Casey, "[and] are putting hun- dreds of millions of dollars worth of military equipment into it, and have begun to use it as a launching pad to carry their style of aggressive subversion into the rest of Central America and elsewhere in Latin America. Nicaragua, in this view, is fast becoming to Cen-. tral America what Beirut is to the Middle East, a focus of international terrorists who are in the employ, whether paid in cash or in kind, of those - who plot in faraway capitals in the name of a cruelly intolerant and graceless Marxist. gospel. Nicaragua, with the kind of military resources that Mexico only dreams of, dreams of the day when it can walk through Costa Rica, which has no army, to Panama." says the director of the CIA `and [then] Cuba can threaten our vital sea lanes in the rri bean?' A child's knowledge of geography is enough t67 a fthom what comes next. Only yesterday, James A. Kelly, as assistant secretary of defense, told a House subcommittee that the Soviet Union had enlarged their naval base at Cam Ranh Bay in South Vietnam - that's the one we built and left behind for them - so that it.is now the largest Soviet base outside the Soviet Union. ? This, said Mr. Kelly, dramatically increases the . threat against U.S. forces in the Pacific, South 0 China Sea and Indian Ocean. Once the Soviets con- t of the sea lanes and the canals, through which WASHINGTON TIMES 17 May 1985 active support for the Sandinistas by creating uncertainties about the future of the regime: by challenging its claims of political legitimacy, and by giving hope to leaders of the opposition" ? The man who learned this better than most is Lose Napoleon Duarte, the president of El Salvador, who came to dinner last night at The Times. He believes that democracy has grown in his country almost - almost - to the point that it is irrevers- ible. Some appetites, once whetted, must be sat- isfied. Three years ago, he said, the Sandinista government in Nicaragua was the. "Cinderella" of the Marxist world - idealized, idolized, and worthy to be imitated. The democratic movement in his own country was dismissed as inconsequential. But now, he thinks, the Sandinistas are increasingly discredited, while his own government grows in the respect, if not always the esteem, of --democratic governments everywhere. He agreed to talk to the guerrillas in his country, he says, because as a small-d democrat he "must respect the thinking of everyone." But he does not believe the Communists have any interest at all in a democratic solution. "The Communists give no chance to anyone." ?- ' The Communists in El Salvador have another hand to play. By talking, they are gaining time - time enough, perhaps, to win in the.U.S. Congress what they have not won on the field of battle. 0 Mr. Duarte concedes that such casual disregard by Americans for their interests - he is too kind to say it just this way - is a puzzle to their friends in Latin America. But.as long as the battleground on Capitol Hill is the friendly one, this is where the fighting is likely to stay. Wesley Pruden is managing editor of The Times. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/08: CIA-RDP90-00965R000605250015-1