COUP PLOTTERS IN SURINAME

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90B01390R000500670026-4
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
March 8, 2011
Sequence Number: 
26
Case Number: 
Content Type: 
MISC
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP90B01390R000500670026-4.pdf262.64 KB
Body: 
STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/08: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000500670026-4 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Denied Iq Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/08: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000500670026-4 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/08: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000500670026-4 Phob by Don PM W MW wrrl VkN Trlr. o members of the 29th Division of the Maryland National Guard rappel ?m a helicopter at the Ethan Allen Military Reservation in Vermont. ummit on track, Reagan says. BB Jeremiah O'Leary W-s1.NOTON TIMES President Reagan said yesterday serious talks are under way again to lay the groundwork for a U.S.-Soviet summit in the United States later this year. Mr. Reagan said that in his recent letter to Soviet leader Mikhail Gor- bachev he agreed to the general sec- retary's suggestion of a series of preliminary meetings that could lead to a second face-to-face meeting between the two leaders. The Kremlin last May canceled a presummit meeting to protest the U.S. raid the previous month against terrorist targets in Libya. "I have now sent a letter to Gen- eral Secretary Gorbachev that un- derlines my determination to keep the momentum going;' Mr. Reagan yesterday told a group of summer government interns. It was the strongest indication yet that a Washington summit meeting between Mr. Reagan and Mr. Gorba- chev is now back on track and likely to take place in late November or December. At their first summit meeting last November, the two leaders agreed to a second meeting in the United States this year and another in the Soviet Union the following year. Administration sources yesterday said a meeting between Secretary of Conservative members of CCs' gross warn Reagan about fug for SDI. Page 2A. Coup plotters claim ties to senators, Dutch By James Morrison T"k W'.SNINOTON TIMES American mercenaries arrested in a plot to overthrow the leftist mili- tary government of Suriname claim they were promised $500 million by Dutch financiers and supported by several unidentified U.S. senators and the Dutch government, federal investigators said yesterday. In Suriname, the official Sur- iname News Agency quoted the country's leader, Col. Desi Bouterse, as saying attacks on two military posts last week were part of a failed invasion plan and that 12 troops cap- tured in the raids were still being held hostage. SNA said Col. Bouterse told a meeting of the ruling 25 of February Party Monday two military posts in the eastern Marowijne district were attacked on July 21, the date of the planned invasion that was to center on Zanderij international airport, 29 miles from the capital. The govern- ment said Ronny Brunsjwick, 25, a former bodyguard of Col. Bouterse, led those attacks. The Netherlands officially denied any involvement in the abortive coup against its former South American colony, and a White House source said the American government had no role in the caper, which ended with the arrest of 14 mercenaries in Louisiana on Monday. "We strongly deny any support or apy involvement with these kind of see DUTCH, page 10A State George Shultz and Sovisi or- eign Minister Eduard Sheva d ze now is planned in Washington t. 19-20, prior to the Sept. 22 og of the U.N. General Assem in New York. Mr. Reagan, who has temperebs criticism of the Soviet Union over the past six weeks, yesterday took an upbeat view of arms control pros- pects. "Even though I can't get specific see REAGAN, page 10A INDEX Wednesday. July 30. 1986 Wume 5, Number 151 5 Sections. 52 pages GARNER / Pa?e 9A l , Bridge / 9M Foreign / 6-7A,6C Business / 7-10C Horoscope / 6M Capital Life / 1-48 Metro / 5.88 Chess 19M Movies / 48 Classified / 5-8D National / 2-S&4D Comics / 14-15M Obituaries / 94 Commentary / 1-3D Sports / 1-5C Crossword / 9M Steiner / 10A Dear Abby / 8Ml TV/Radio / 10-13M Editorials / 9A Weather / 100 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/08: CIA-RDP90BO139OR000500670026-4 I 9W -Wwm~ -_ Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/03/08 L- i vii From page ]A groups. Under international law, countries are not allowed to support actions aimed at getting rid of other governments, and we abide by those laws;' a Dutch Foreign Ministry spokesman said. Tommy Lynn Denley, who U.S. authorities said is the self-pro- claimed mastermind of the plot. claims be was supported by Amer- ican senators, Dutch authorities and the Ansus Foundation, a corporation based in Amsterdam, according to J. Robert Grimes, regional commis- sioner of the U.S. Customs Service in New Orleans. "These claims are all being inves- tigated" he said. The SNA report from Suriname linked the aborted invasion to "se- cret talks" between former Prime Minister Wim Udenhout and for- eigners who were said to have of- fered the government a $511 million loan. The amount was later reduced to $300 million and the date post- poned to July 28, when a group of foreigners was to arrive in Suriname to sign the contract, the report said. In the Netherlands, the Dutch news agency ANP said the Americans arrested in New Orleans had posed as the "bankers" offering a loan to Surinam with the aim of getting into the country. According to SNA, Mr. Bruns- jwick, the former Bouterse body- guard, met in the Netherlands with former Foreign Minister Andre Haakmat before returning to Suriname to begin the guerrilla attacks earlier this month. Mr. Haakmat appeared on Dutch televi- sion over the weekend and said Mr. Brunswijk's activities were an at- tempt to create a popular uprising against Col. Bouterse. The Customs Service and the Fed- eral Bureau of Investigation learned of the plot in May and infiltrated the group, Mr. Grimes said. Mr. Denley and 12 other alleged mercernaries were arrested as they planned to board a plane at a small airport about SO miles northwest of New Orleans for a flight to Sur- iname. Another man charged in the plot was arrested in Lafayette, Ia., a Customs Service spokeswoman said. Mr. Denley, 45, of Grenada, Miss., is a former Customs officer and Pa- nama Canal Zone police officer, and lived with a woman and her son who were among those arrested. Authorities confiscated thou- sands of rounds of ammunition, American M-16s and Israeli Uzi ma- chine guns as well as small arms, communications equipment, sur- vival supplies, facial camouflage paint and knives when they searched one of two vans the suspects used to transport equipment to their plane, the spokeswoman said. "There is still the second van to search;' she said. A federal judge yesterday morn- ing denied bail and ordered the group held at a federal prison in New Orleans on charges of violating the U.S. Neutrality Act, which prohibits American citizens from trying to overthrow foreign governments with which the United States is at peace. 'D'easury Department spokes- man in Washington said the group expected to receive 1.5 billion Dutch guilders, which he said was equal to about 5500 million, to kidnap Col. Bouterse and turn 'the government over to the Ansus Foundation. Investigators yesterday still had no information about the Dutch cor- poration or the identity of any Amer- ican politician involved in the plot, Mr. Grimes said. He added that investigators also did not know whether the suspects were associated with other Amer- ican-based paramilitary groups. The plot was outlined by author- ities at a press conference in New Orleans. A wiretap affidavit made public Monday said Mr. Denley, as pres- ident of a company named Tango Lima Delta Inc., showed an under- cover agent a contract to receive 1.5 billion Dutch guilders in return for turning over the Surinamese govern- ment to the Ansus Foundation. Mr. Denley contended the Dutch government and several U.S. sen- ators had approached him about ar- ranging the coup, according to the document. The senators were not named. The mercenaries, from various parts of the United States, planned to join an army of Central American Indians in the coup attempt, Mr. Grimes said. He said Mr. Denley promised the others they would be mid $1 million each if successful. The plans called for three combat teams led by former US. Navy SEALS and armed with U.S. M-60 and Israeli Uzi machine guns to pull off the coup, authorities said. Suriname is one of three small countries east of Venezuela on the northern coast of South America. Formerly called Dutch Guiana, it won independence from The Neth- erlands in 1975. Col. Bouterse took over in a mili- tary coup in 1980, and the United uNTTEDSWEg . ;: . v AI'.. -, .. %W . F.i. M .esq. . '