"C.I.A. ACCUSED OF TOLERATING KILLINGS IN HONDURAS"

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90G01353R000300320011-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
3
Document Creation Date: 
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 16, 2012
Sequence Number: 
11
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 14, 1988
Content Type: 
LETTER
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90G01353R000300320011-6.pdf167.46 KB
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90G01353R000300320011-6 .3ECRETARIAT ROUTING SLIP TO: ACTION INFO DATE INITIAL 1 DCI X 2 DDCI X 3 EXDIR X 4 D/ICS 5 DDI 6 DDA 7 DDO X 8 DDS&T 9 Chm/NIC 10 GC 11 10 12 Compt 13 D/OCA X 14 D/PAO 15 D/PERS 16 D/Ex Staff 17 C/LA/DO X 18 Ci /DO X STA1 19 Ci !F x STP 20 -2-S C/EPS/DO X 21 cippsivo X 22 C/PCS/DO X SUSPENSE Remarks D/OCA to have response prepared for his signature. STAT 14 Jun 88 Date 3637 (1041) Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90G01353R000300320011-6 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90G01353R000300320011-6 R Next 8 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90G01353R000300320011-6 25X1 _ mru vnnv True- r. .04 QTAT Declassified in Part -Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90G01353R000300320011-6 .,4 - yr. twit reur uary Ivo? 'C.I.A. Accused of Tolerating Killings in Horidura's ? .6 By JAMES LeMOYNE Special to The Niro Yark time TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras, Feb. 12 ? The Central Intelligence Agency aided Honduran security forces that it knew were responsible for having killed a number of people they detained for political reasons between 1981 and 1984, according to two American offi- cials and a Honduran military officer. The C.I.A. agents did not directly take part in actions by the Honduran Government units, the two American officials said. The help. they provided included training and advice in intelli- gence collection as part of a program to cut off arms shipments from Nicara- gua to leftist rebels in Honduras and El Salvador. "The C.I.A. had nothing to do with picking people up," said one of the American officials, who has intimate knowledge of American policy in Hon- duras. "But they knew about it and when some people disappeared, they looked the other way." Abuses Appear to Stop An American official said the politi- cal killings troubled some members of the American Embassy and the C.I.A. Although embassy human rights re- ports at the time mentioned abuses, they minimized the extent and seeming systematic nature of the killings, offi- cials said. ; As many as 200 people, almost all of ; them suspected leftists, may have been I killed or made to disappear for politi- cal reasons in Honduras between 1981 and 1984. It is not clear how many were killed by the units in question. Since a new Honduran military com- mander ordered an end to the practice a year and a half ago, the abuses ap- pear to have virtually stopped. According to the two American offi- cials and to Congressional SOUrCe5, the C.I.A. used intelligence collected by Honduran security forces to cut the flow of arms sharply. The officials, both of whom served in the American Embassy at the time, said the pro- gram, strongly backed by the Reagan Administration, was considered a major success. The officials asked that they not be identified in order to protect their careers. Honduran and Salvadoran leftists conceded in recent interviews that most of the victims were involved in arms trafficking. Two Honduran sources and an Amer- ican official said Argentine military advisers, as well as Nicaraguan anti- Government guerrillas, were also re- sponsible for a number of the killings and disappearances of leftists. 'Asked to comment on reports of kill- ings by Honduran units that were aided by the C.I.A., Michael O'Brien. a spokesman for the United States Em- bassy in Honduras, issued a prepared statement drafted with the aid of Statr Department officials in Washington. The statement said: "There is no connection between spe- cific professional training which may . have been provided by the United States Government to Honduran se- curity forces and charges that Hondu- ran security personnel subsequently may have engaged in improper activi- ty. At no time has there been any United States Government involve- ment in supposed death squad activi- ties." Silent on Inquiry Asked to comment on a report that there may have been a secret United States Government investigation of abuses by the Honduran secunty forces, Mr. O'Brien declined to do so. "This is an intelligence issue on which, as a matter of policy we do not com- ment," he said. A spokesman for the Central Inte!li- gence Agency in Washington, Patti Volz, denied any C.I.A. involvement Vvrth' any group that may have killed or caused the disappearance of people it detained. The Honduran Army issued a report last year absolving itself of blame for most of the reported abuses. The United States Ambassador in Honduras at the time of the killings, John D..Negroponte. declined to com- ment on the embassy's knowledge or concern about such abuses. A Honduran military officer who is now dead reportedly told Congres- sional staff members in 1984 of C I ..A involvement with a Honduran .Army unit that the officer charged wa.; guilty of abuses. Accounts of the meeting were given by Dick McCall, a foreign policy aide to Senator John F. Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, and Bruce Cameron, former legislative director of Amer- icans for Democratic Action. They said in telephone interviews from Washing- ton that the officer, Maj. Ricardo Zutia- ga, had charged that the C.I.A. helped set up a secret Honduran intelligence unit known as the 316 Battalion. Major Zuniga contended the unit was guilty of killings and disappearances, they said The accounts of Major Zuniga's statements could not be further con- firmed because he was killed last year by a business associate who owed rum money. Killings Are Selective Unlike the mass slayings carried out by the Guatemalan and Salvadoran armies in recent years, the political killings in Honduras appear to have been highly selective. A number of Honduran political analysts view this as further evidence that the killings in- volved trained units under tight super- vision. When asked recently what had be- come of suspected leftists in Honduras. an officer in the Honduran Public Se- curity Forces said they might be qui- etly regrouping for new attacks Or . maybe we already cut all their heads off," he said, drawing a finger across his throat. The killings began, according to American and Honduran sources, when it was discovered that safehouses in i Honduras were being used to supply leftist rebels there and in El Salvador I with arms from Nicaragua and after al number of guerrilla bombings and kid- nappings between 1980 and 1982. The Reagan Administration and the I head of the Honduran Army, Gen. Gus- I tavo Alvarez Martinez, declared at the time that they were determined to cut I these supplies and, according to sey- I end American officials, the Admirus- I tration began an arms interdiction pro- gram. More Active C.I.A. Role General Alvarez, who was ousted in 1984 and went into into exile in the United States, worked closely with the C.I.A., several American and Hondu- ran sources said. A graduate of the Ar- gentine military academy, the general I was strongly anti-Communist. He brought Argentine experts in ; counterterrorim to Honduras in i980 to train Honduran security forces and Nicaraguan anti-Government guerni- ? las, according to rebel, American and : Honduran sources. The Argentines said they had previously helped run govern- ment death squads in Argentina that eliminated thousands of leftists there. according to a Honduran military offi- cer who met them. According to one American official. the C.I.A. may have helped finance some of the Argentine training. The C.I.A. later took a more active role, di- rectly helping Honduran intelligence , units, he said. According to both an American and a Honduran official, the C.I.A. also had contacts with a Nicaraguan guerrilla counterintelligence unit. Senior Ho,idu- ran Army officers charged last years that the Nicaraguan rebels were re- sponsible for a number of the killing- and disappearances of leftists. The killings eventually became a political issue in Honduras. Such kill- ings had been commonplace in neigh- boring El Salvador for years but had never been the custom in Honduras. After General Alvarez was deposed. the army conducted an internal Insist.- gation in which it acknowledged that abuses had occurred, but blamed Nica- raguan rebels for almost all of them. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/08/16: CIA-RDP90G01353R000300320011-6