CONTRA COVERAGE-PAID FOR BY THE CIA

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000402950003-2
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 26, 2012
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 1, 1987
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000402950003-2.pdf212.75 KB
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S7 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402950003-2 f . Uri PA12F a I March/Apri 1 198/ Contra coverage - i~id for by the CIA The Company goes to work in Central America c7 by MARTHA HONEY I n 1977, after a Senate Select Com- mittee on Intelligence report dis- closed that the Central Intelligence Agency had maintained working rela- tionships with fifty American reporters over a period of years. the agency an- nounced new rules that barred it from entering into "any paid or contractual relationship" with U.S. journalists, in- cluding free-lancers and stringers. The regulations say nothing about entering into such relationships with foreign jour- nalists. or about allowing agency oper- atives to pose as foreign journalists. In Central America. it appears that the agency is doing both. Carlos Morales, a Costa Rican pro- fessor of journalism, editor of the Uni- versity of Costa Rica's liberal weekly La Universidad. and former president of the Costa Rican journalists' union. says that at least eight Costa Rican journalists. in- cluding three "top editors," receive monthly payments from the CIA. either directly or through contra groups with offices in Costa Rica. "There may be more, but these I know for certain be- cause most are former students of mine. and some have talked with me about it." Morales says. ''Their job is to get into Martha Honey is a stringer for The Times and The Sunday Times of London. the BBC, the Canadian Broadcasting Company, and ABC. In 1985, she and her husband. Tom .4sir'an. published a book that blamed the CIA for the May 1984 bombing of Eden Pas- tora s ,jungle headquarters - a bombing in Which .4rirgan ssas injured and three other journalists were killed. Honey and .4sirgan are siting several individuals - including contra leader Adolfo Calera and several for- mer CIA officials - who they claim carried out the bombing as part of'a plan to set up a contra force in Costa Rica that would be supported by a drug- and arms-smuggling enterprise. The CIA has consistent/ denied any connection with the Pastora bombing an snit rug smuggling the press stories. commentaries, or ed- itorials attacking Nicaragua and sym- pathetic to the contras.'' Morales says he began investigating press payoffs after a former student con- fessed to him that he was taking money from the CIA to supplement a meager salary. The eight journalists are each paid 30.000 colones (about 5500) a month. Morales says. The monthly sal- ary of most journalists in Costa Rica is about 20,000 colones, The Costa Rican press has become increasingly hostile toward Nicaragua over the last few years. and Morales believes that stories planted by CIA-paid journalists have contributed to this trend. One of the contra groups that paid bribes to reporters in the past, according to one of its former top officials. was ARDE. the Costa Rica-based contra co- alition that was headed by Eden Pastora. The official. who asked that his name not be printed, says that ARDE's press secretary kept a list of "about half a dozen names of local journalists" with amounts of money listed alongside the names. "I don't know how frequently these people were paid. but my under- standing was that they received pay- ments regularly." the former official says. He adds that since ARDE was fi- nanced by the CIA. "this money must also have come from the CIA.'' Pastora himself has conceded that ARDE re- ceived money from the CIA. A fund for bribing journalists was also maintained by the largest contra group. the Nicaraguan Democratic Force (FDN). according to Edgar Chamorro, who was one of the group's seven di- rectors and its press spokesman from 1981 until 1984. Chamorro now opposes the contras as well as the Sandinistas. In an affidavit submitted to the World Court in September 1985. Chamorro said he had been the paymaster. "I also received money from the CIA to bribe Honduran journalists and broadcasters to write and speak favorably about the FDN and to attack the government of Nicaragua and call for its overthrow,'' Chamorro stated. ''Approximately fifteen Hondu- ran journalists and broadcasters were on the CIA's payroll. and our influence was thereby extended to every major Hon- duran newspaper and radio and televi- sion station." Chamorro added that CIA agents told him the same tactic was being used in Costa Rica. Moreover, accord- ing to his affidavit. the budget for all his press activities - including bribes - was put together with the assistance of a deputy station chief of the CIA and paid out of Washington. in cash. Paid-off journalists have helped plant fictitious stories. Former ARDE com- mander Pastora and some of his aides recall that in January 1984, CIA agents told them to distribute a release through their press networks that gave the contras credit for mining Nicaragua's harbors. Ex-paymaster: Fortner contra leader Eds;ur Charnorro vot money from the CIA to bribe Honduran Journalists to attack the Sandinistas in print Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402950003-2 Declassified in Part- Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402950003-2 Free lance or mercenary? Robert Thompson. who vi ent to Central America to fight with the contras, claims to be a reporter. although the contras had played no role in the operation. Aides say that Pastora resisted the order, but eventually con- sented after the release was rewritten in language that sounded more like ARDE and less like the CIA. In his affidavit. Chamorro said that his group. too, was told to take credit for the harbor mining. American also known as ''Mor- On January 4. 1984. a CIA deputy sta- tion chief woke him up at 2 .a.H.. Cha- morro stated, handed him a press release, and told him to read it over a clandestine contra radio station. Al- though ''we played no role in the min- ing." Chamorro said, he nevertheless read the release. Two months later. he added. after a Soviet ship struck one of the mines. "the same CIA agent in- structed us to deny that one of 'our' mines had damaged the ship." Derv Dyer. editor of The Tico Times. a respected English-language weekly in Costa Rica, says she has seen her share of fictitious stories. "Our most dramatic and personal experience with disinfor- mation," she says. came after the May 1984 bombing of a press conference at Eden Pastora's jungle contra camp, known as La Penca. One of three jour- nalists who died in the bombing was Linda Frazier. who worked for The Tico Times, and the newspaper mounted an energetic investigation. "We saw, and uncovered as untrue, stones that were planted for political purposes in the local press.'' Dyer says. "For instance. everybody got off track because the first lead put out was that the bomber was an ETA terrorist named Jose Lujua Gorostiola [the ETA is a left- ist Basque group[. But when we checked through Associated Press, the so-called suspect had been for months under house arrest in France." Other false leads pointed toward two suspects from Uru- guay. toward the Sandinistas, and even toward victim Linda Frazier. Dyer says. ''The impact was to delay the investi- gation by days, if not weeks, so that the trail got cold.'' More than three years after the bombing. Costa Rican police officials say all they know for certain is that the bomb was planted by a man pos- ing as a Danish journalist. CIA spokesman Kathy Pherson would not comment on allegations of bribery. ''As an intelligence organiza- tion. there is not a lot we can say." she told the Revie~t. She added. however, that while internal regulations adopted in 1977 prohibit the agency's people from posing as U.S. journalists, they say nothing about operatives posing as for- eign journalists.) gan'' and ''Max Vargas.'' has been posing as a foreign journalist. Vidal carries a press card from the Interna- tional Herald Tribune. which he says he got from the newspaper's Chicago of- fice. But the Tribune has no office in Chicago. and Vidal is no journalist. He has been working to help organize a southern front for the contras out of Costa Rica. and there is strong evidence that he works for the CIA. In a series of interviews conducted over many months, Vidal admitted to procuring arms and other military sup- plies for the contras. to recruiting mer- cenaries and training guerrillas, to participating in raids into Nicaragua. and to coordinating his efforts with unnamed U.S. officials. Eden Pastora and other elipe Vidal Santiago. a Cuban- Nicaraguan rebels, as well as foreign mercenaries aiding the contras, say that Vidal is employed by the CIA. Vidal himself says that he has worked with f' John Hull. an American farmer in north- ern Costa Rica who has been widely re- ported to be a CIA liaison to the contras. Vidal says that his press credentials have helped him move into and out of Costa Rica. Robert Thompson. a former highway patrolman from Florida, has also claimed to be a reporter. In April 1985. he and four other foreigners were ar- rested by Costa Rican authorities on one of John Hull's farms near the Nicaraguan border. The five were charged with il- legal possession of explosives and with ''making hostile acts against a neigh- boring country." Nicaragua. At the time of his arrest. Thompson said he was a correspondent for Scripps Howard news- papers (he was not), and while he was in jail in Costa Rica he told visiting jour- nalists that he had been on Hull's farm only as a reporter and to do research for a book. Thompson and two men arrested with him left the country to avoid trial after Hull made their bail. Thompson did, in fact, publish an ar- ticle about his experiences with the FDN in Honduras and Nicaragua. in the Mem- phis Commercial Appeal. Editor Wil- liam Thomas says he had refused to supply Thompson with press credentials but did give him a letter saying he would look at whatever Thompson wrote from Costa Rica. He adds that The Commer- cial Appeal has not run any more of Thompson's articles. but that he consid- ers him ''a legitimate tree-lancer in Costa Rica.'' Several mercenaries who knew Thompson in Honduras and Costa Rica say that. like themselves. Thompson came to Central America to work and fight with the contras. They say he brought with him battle gear and his weapon of choice, a shotgun. Even Sam Hall. an American who was arrested in Nicaragua in December on spy charges after he was found on a re- stricted military air base, with maps con- cealed in his socks. carried a press card. A television correspondent who exam- ined it says that, while it identifies Hall as a journalist. it doesn't name any press organization. Whether Hall ever tried to use it is unknown. E a. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402950003-2