CARTER'S EVIDENCE ON CUBA'S ROLE IN ZAIRE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP81M00980R000600230037-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 24, 2004
Sequence Number: 
37
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 2, 1978
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP81M00980R000600230037-1.pdf107.59 KB
Body: 
Approved For Release 2004/07/08 WASHINGT .?oweland Evans and Robert Novak I I 1 PAS .T(,,-er's Evidence on Cuba s Role in Zaire 1 h htercepred coded messages to Fidel CasLo's Arica corps in Angola "cover- ;ng a Der,od of several days" before the invasion of Zaire's Shaba province make up art of the evidence to sup- port Pr" ..tent Carter's charge of u ban c )mplicity in the invasion. i1 addition, the CIA has possession of "human intelligence" reports-possibly from Cana, possibly from Angolan sour? ces--that ?c;rroborate the intercepts. That background explains Carter's cold anger in totally disregarding Castro's ?ersonal protestation of inno- cence in a Carter-Castro confrontation that may have wide-ranging interna- tional impact. Challenged by Sen. George McGov- ern (D-S.D.) to prove his accusation against Castro, Carter ordered CIA Di- rector Stansfield Turner to begin testi- mony on Capitol Hill before the Senate and House Intelligence committees, probably next week. ? Turner labors under a heavy burden of responsibility to protect American intelligence agents and sources. A leak from a member of Congress could de- stroy sources and cost lives. The necessity for protecting sources, then, could leave the president open to renewed challenges from McGovern -t.nd other congressmen: Supply proof positive that Castro was lying when he denied any Cuban role. That does not disturb Carter. He is certain that Con- gress will take his word over Castro's or Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei. Gromyko, who infuriated the president with his May 27 statement on the White House lawn that Carter's information- was faulty. Indeed, evidence now being collected to prove the complicity of Moscow, Havana and other Soviet satellites in the murderous rampage of the Angola- based Shaba invasion force leaves no possibility of doubt. A central element has been Soviet use of communist East Germany. In his hard-hitting "Meet the Press" appearance on May 28, Zbigniew Brze- zinski fingered the East Germans, but only obliquely. In fact, the record of East Germany as a chief Soviet agent in Africa is just now becoming clear. Moscow assigned East Germany the -principal communist coordinating role for intelligence and "security matters" in Ethiopia, Mozambique, Angola and several others states targeted by ? the Soviet Union. A special secretariat to handle that task, and oversee supplies of arms, was created in the early 1970s under East Germany's deputy foreign trade minister. In those Soviet-targeted countries, East Germany is credited with having more on-the-scene agents than any country except the S--;. 'Union itself. . Special targets are the "liberatiot:"' armies now poised outside Rhodesia's frontiers under Robert Mugabe and Joshu: Nkomo and the "National P ,o- ples' Armies" of Angola, Ethiopia wid .Mozambique. Early this month, in a speech in Addis Ababa, Lt. Col. Haile-Marian Mengistu, the Ethiopian strongrn.:n. boasted that "progressive comrad:ls' from East Germany "live with us, ; iaht with us and die with us." When ne speech was broadcast later in Engl,sh. that phrase was deleted. One year t ,ar- tier, a Western European intelligt r(,e service reported the capture of three East German soldiers in the Zairian town of Mutshatsha during the first (1977) Angola-based incursion into Zaire. With such a wealth of evidence at his disposal, Carter's charge of non-African communist complicity in the 1978 inva- sion of Zaire is beyond dispute. But ad- ding to the White House use of harsh rhetoric is the president's anger at the Cuban denials that led McGovern to demand that the president, in effect, "prove it." Carter was made to look ridiculous when he volunteered on Feb. 16, 1977, that he had received "information from indirect sources" that Castro had "promised" to remove his Africa corps ;.then numbering about 15,000) from An- gola. Instead of withdrawal. the force has been increased. .Tiat was a repeat of history. Henry ;issinger, as secretary of t tate, in- iormed the world on May 26, 1976, that Castro had told then-Swedish Prime Minister Olaf Palme in a letter that he would withdraw 200 Cubans a week from Angola. The letter indicated that Castro would send no Cuban troops elsewhere in Africa, adding, "I do not wish to become the crusa'.icr of the 20th century." In May 1977 Castro told interviewer Barbara Walters he would send neither advisers nor troops to Ethiopia, where today some 17,000 Cuban troops are in res, fence. .-,eai..st that record, Carter and Brze- ,tnsl., were not impressed on May 18 ,ien Castro summoned U.S. diplomat v:e F. Lane in Havana to deny any Lu>>a:' role in the invasion of Zaire. Castro';: i, , Ord is not highly regarded in the White louse. How the CIA will handle the evi- dence in supposedly confidential brief- ings on Capitol Hill is not }et known. `or can it yet be known where the bold ?hetoric from the White House about communist marauders in Africa will fi- nally lead. What is clear is one fact: .;ammv Carter knows he has been lied to. 1978, Field Enterprises, Inc. Approved For Release 2004/07/08 : CIA-RDP81 M00980R000600230037-1