HIGH U.S. OFFICIALS DISCUSS ARMS TO ANGOLA REBELS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP99-00498R000100140082-9
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 20, 2007
Sequence Number: 
82
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 25, 1978
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP99-00498R000100140082-9.pdf90.51 KB
Body: 
Approved For Release 2007/06/22 : CIA-RDP99-00498R000100140082-9 LOS ANGELES TIMES ARTICLE APPEARED 25 May 1978 ON PAGE 1, 11 U.S. Officials Discuss 'High . - ... . . 9.% . I . Arm*s Aid to'Angola.xebels: BY JOHN H. AVERILh...._ Tlmss Staff WT$TN _ . _ . WASHINGTON-High Adminis- ; tration officials have discussed- the possibility of ..resuming U.S. arms shipments to anti-Communist guer rillas in Angola, the White House said Wednesday. ' .: Press Secretary Jody Powell -said that President Carter has not yet made a decision on the matter. s Powell - said that CIA Director Stansfield Turner-and David Aaron, President Carter's deputy assistant for national security affairs, had dis- cussed possible U.S. action in Angola! with Sen. Dick Clark (D-Iowa), au- thor of the 1975 law banning any di- rect or indirect U.S. military involve-. ment.there. ; Neither Turner nor Aaron, meeting separately with Clark, attempted to promote any specific plan, Powell said. Clark,. at a press conference of I his own, said Senate rules prohibited .him from discussing matters- told him in confidence by the Executive Branch. . However, a -iource familiar with the meetings told The Times that Turner in 'talking to Clark said the 'Administration would like to provide- assistance to forces, led by Jonas Si- vimbi, that are opposing Angola s Marxist government- ? . The purpose of the aid, the source; said, would be to occupy the estimat- ?ed 20,000 Cuban troops stationed in Angola, preventing them from under-' taking new adventures in Africa, par- ticularly the possibility that they might enter the Rhodesian conflict. By helping Savimbi, the source- said, the Administration . thinks it could "make it less attractive for the Cubans to involve themselves else- where." - '.:71e proposed U.S_ aid to Savimbi would be charmeled through a third . country, probably France, the source Clark told his press conference that he-would strongly, oppose repeal but that he did not know what Congress would do if the President asked that- `the arrendment.be eliminated..... . n an interview Tuesday. Clark had said-that Carter's repeated criticisms' of:legislative restrictions on foreign policy had convinced him'that. the President had decided "to reinvolve the United States in the Angolan Civil war" This was disputed Wednesday by Powell, who rejected suggestions "that the President has made some sort of decision to plunge us into the Angolan civil war. "I can assure you that. it's not the case," Powell said. Powell said Carter had no knowl- edge of the visits to Clark by Turner and Aaron. In fact, the press secreta- ry called it, "a reasonably routine thing" for an Administration official with a problem to confer with. "a sen- ator who is-well known as an expert ; in. this area and in addition had a par- ticular interest in a particular mat- ter-., Meanwhile, the Senate Foreign Re. lations Committee. of which Clark is a' member, released a study challenging the impression generated by some. Administration officials in ? the past week that the President's foreign pol- icy flexibility is sharply limited-by a .host of congressional restrictions.. . "Applicable statutory restrictions on military involvement have pre- sented no obstacle to the achievement of publicly announced United .States I objectives in Africa," the study said- It noted that the only African countries where U.S.: military 'in- volvement is expressly barred by law:' are Angola and Ethiopia. There are, however, restrictions on economic assistance to some African nations, notably Angola. Mozambique and Uganda. :. a.. Approved For Release 2007/06/22 : CIA-RDP99-00498R000100140082-9 However, for any aid to Savimbi to ; be legal, repeal of the Clark amend- ment would be required, and Press Secretary Powell said the President had made no decision with regard to theprovision STAT