ANGOLA BILL FUELS NEW DEBATE OVER U.S. COVERT ACTION

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000302490019-5
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RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 2, 2010
Sequence Number: 
19
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 14, 1986
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OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000302490019-5.pdf144.9 KB
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Approved For Release 2010/09/02 :CIA-RDP90-005528000302490019-5 ~- REUTERS 14 May 1986 ANGOLA BILL FUELS NEW DEBATE OVER U.S. COVERT ACTION BY CAROL GIACOMO WASHINGTON Legislation designed to force public votes fn Congress on U S aid for Angolan rebels has fueled new debate over President Reagan's use of covert .action paramilitary operations -- against foreign governments .While few exoerts propose an end to all covert action as a U S foreiy n olic tool some contend it should be employed more sparingly and that there be maximum o en deba a on ecisions o in ervene in o er coun rtes -- y .when a decision, such as on re e s n ngo a, s con rovers a "Few foreign policy decisions are equal in importance to a decision to go to war or to su part a war " said Req. Lee Hamiit^n, chairman of the House p ~Iiaence, o_ ee, w o sponsore a ngola bill "The extreme complexity of the modern world, the growth of America's responsibilities and the ambiguous nature of many international causes a 1 1 demand that Congress and the president pool their judgments on these questions," the Indiana Democrat told the House Foreign Affairs Eommittee. Reagan, according to many analysts and published reports, has vastly expanded covert actions during his five years in office in his personal crusade -- called the "Reagan Doctrine" -- to bolster anti-Communist insurgencies around the world, particularly in Nicaragua, Afghanistan, Cambodia and Angola. Jay Peterzell, in his 1984 book "Reagan's Secret Wars," said the president made "far-reaching changes in U.S. covert action policy, increasing the use of such operations an severe y limiting the role in reviewing them by officials outside the in a tgence commune y. Peterzell, who works for the American Civil Liberties Union's Center for Naudies, added: "The changes reflect an apparent consensus within the administration that covert action should be a routine rather than an exceo Tonal instrument in American foreign relations " It is generally believed U S covert operations declined after a committee aded b the late Sen. Frank Church in 1975 held rare public hearings and s purred changes in the congressional oversigh process The Reagan administration and many U.S. officials formally refuse to disclose details of most current U.S. operations. But many of the facts have leaked out through a variety of sources, including the White House, Congress, rebels and private analysts. "There is a dilemma in trying to conduct any secret activity in American cause of the tendenc to ask uestions and debate at the top of our voices." former Central Intelligence Agency Director i Tam o v o ~ - _RCU~ar`.~~rra~~ dyu, une utun~L even a5K" a00UL covert actions new g0 t:~ Approved For Release 2010/09/02 :CIA-RDP90-005528000302490019-5 Approved For Release 2010/09/02 :CIA-RDP90-005528000302490019-5 2 The result has been a curious hybrid, often called an "overt-covert" program, that has the effect of ensuring the public knows the United States is loing ~ 'someLnlnq ` r'or L'nese myriad guerrilla tortes, u eeping most ec~aiTs secret and denying Congress a role n e ec s on-ma ing process. A Senate intelligence source said the "overt-covert" tactic is useful because it allows Washington and governments assisting Washington officially to deny knowledge of U.S. parami i ary opera ions. Marton Halperin, a former deputy assistant secretary for defense, contends that defining interventionist activity as covert is a clever way for a president to avoid public debate and scrutiny, "Often they remain secret long enough for the United States to get involved, then the argument becomes that we can't abandon our friends in the field," he told Reuters, The debate over U.S, support for the so-called contra rebels trying to topple Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista government has been the most divisive o eagan s cover exploi s. Polls show a majority of Americans oppose such aid and this resistance has been reflected in Congress. With attention centering now on Reagan's request for $100 million in mostly military aid for the contras, what was once an entirely covert operation has seen rorceo by circumstance an poI-i'~ics almos en irery ~n o e open The request, however, is bogged down in Congress and will not be resolved at least until June. Meanwhile, a new fight is brewing over Reagan's decision to send $15 million in covert military aid -- including highly-portable Stinger anti-aircraft missiles -- to the UNITA forces of Jonas Savimbi in Angola. Hamilton's bill, which passed the House Foreign Affairs Commit tee and is waiting action by the full House, does not directly bar U.S. aid to UNITA (National Union for the Total Independence of Angolal. But it would mandate that aid cannot be given until Reagan publicly declares that support for UNITA is important to U.S. national security and Congress concurs. Hamilton told his colleagues that aiding UNITA represented a significant policy change and should be openly debated and voted by Congress "so tha t ultimately it can be sustained" by popular consensus. 1i.s. aid was halted a decade ago after disclosures the CIA funded UNITA and r oro-Western group in a three-sided civil war following Angola's independence from Portugal. Many lawmakers, including Hamilton, oppose renewed aid, fearing it would align Washington with South Africa and destroy efforts to reach a negotiated settlement to conflict in southern Africa. More compelling, some say. is the dichotomy of an administra inn tha insicrc the ro ram be treated as "covert" while Rea an and other to officials publicly endorse support for the rebels and welcome Savimbi at high-visi i ty ~ e ouse ceremony. Approved For Release 2010/09/02 :CIA-RDP90-005528000302490019-5