REAGAN'S MILITARY BUILDUP

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000504880066-6
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 15, 2010
Sequence Number: 
66
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 19, 1984
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000504880066-6.pdf132.59 KB
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STAT 4 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/15: CIA-RDP90-00552R000504880066-6 A:F, TI C;,3 J,PP ,D NEWSWEEK Oii FQ;E 36 19 March 1984 III T E RNATIONAL Z!L .9 ,~~agan_ Buildup . Despite election-year risks, the administration digs in deeper in Central America. S ometime this week, small units of the told NEWSWEEK that the unit's OV- I Mo- U.S. Army's 193rd Infantry Brigade hawk observation planes were flying "intel- will leave their base in Panama and head ligence missions" over El Salvador. Some north to Honduras. Their destination is a administration officials also hope that Hon- remote, densely forested area along the bor- duran units will play a more aggressive role der with El Salvador, where the Americans in attacking rebel bases and supply lines. willjoin with Honduran soldiers in a series of In an election year, Ronald Reagan might small-scale training exercises. But just have been expected to pull his punches in across the border, El Salvador is infested Central America. But the administration's with leftist guerrillas. The rebels use the policy in the region just isn't working out. Honduran outback for sanctuary, and their The Salvadoran Army has nearly used up supply lines snake through the area toward both its ammunition and its morale. Wash- Nicaragua. Under the auspices of a training ington is afraid that the country's leftist mission, the Americans and _ Hondurans guerrillas will stage some sort of spectacular may manage to disrupt the guerrillas' back- to steal the spotlight from the Salvadoran yard at an opportune time for some ofWash- presidential election on March 25. Reagan's ingtons hard-pressed friends. "secret war" against the Sandinistas is faring The operation along the Salvadoran bor- even worse. The contras, the Honduran- der is part of a bold new military buildup in based rebels sponsored by the United States, Central America by the Reagan administra- have made little headway. Nicaragua has tion. In recent months the Pentagon has responded to their attacks, however, with a erected a network of airstrips, supply depots military buildup of its own aimed at both the and training camps all over Honduras contras and their hosts in Honduras. (map). From that base, the administration Reagan is losing another sort of battle on plans to step up its covert war against Marx- Capitol Hill. Congress still refuses to come ist Nicaragua by equipping antigovernment up with more military-aid money for El rebels with helicopters and naval mines and Salvador and for the contras; the Repubb- perhaps with T-28 ground-attack planes. can-controlled Senate rebuffed the White Already Nicaragua's major ports have been House again last week. With the Lebanese mined to interfere with its foreign trade and fiasco fresh in their minds, some administra- to block what Washington thinks will be a tion officials worry that a balky Congress major influx of Soviet-made arms this year. mayyetcontributetoanotherforeign-policy The administration hopes that by raising its defeat for the president. Remnnaissnce: ? The new facilities in turned down a proposalforU.S. personnel t Honduras also enable the Americans to play participate direectlyin the Salvadoran t- a more active role in the Salvadoran conflict. ing_. The plan camefrom Gen. Paul Gorman, From Panama and from an air base at Pal- head of the U.S. Southern Command (box, merola in Honduras, U.S. reconnaissance page 38) and from CIA offices in Central planes fly over El Salvador looking for guer- America. They suggested that unmarked rillas. Recently a U.S. Army intelligence AC-130 Spectre gunshjps flown by the CIA battalion was sent to Palmerola, and last should patrol the skies over El Salvador, week Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger using rapid-firing cannon to break up rebel troop concentrations. tack. Last week more U.S. power was pro- advisers have proposed desperate remedies. jected into the region when the aircraft Recently the administration rejected a plan carrier America and three escort ships were to arm the Salvadorans with Stinger anti- ordered to leave Puerto Rico for the Carib- aircraft missiles. And two weeks ago bean coast of Honduras. NEWSWEEK has learned, the president According to two senior administration officials, Jeane Kirkpatrick, the hawkish U.S. ambassador at the United Nations, led a spirited attack on the proposal, arguing that Americans should not pull triggers in El Salvador. Sources said Reagan himself ve- toed the plan. But U.S. warplanes still could join the fighting later on. Some administra- tion officials fear that American air power may be needed to prevent the loss of El Salvador to leftist guerrillas. Once the U.S. presidential election is out of the way, the planes maybe sent into action. So far, El Salvador's guerrillas are far from winning a decisive victory over the government. But the armed forces will use up all of their U.S. aid money by March 23 and will be out of ammunition by the end of the month. Two newly trained battalions have no radios, and 19 newly trained pilots have no aircraft. Last month the guerrillas said they would not attempt to block the presidential election. But now that foreign reporters are flooding in to cover the vote, the rebels may try to grab some favorable publicity by attacking the threadbare Army. Even if the election comes off smoothly, the outcome may not be to Washington's liking. The leader among the eight candi- dates still appears to be Jose Napoleon Duarte, a moderate Christian Democrat. But archconservative Roberto D'Aubuis- son, the alleged godfather of the Salvadoran "death squads," seems to be hanging on in second place. Many Salvadorans assume that D'Aubuisson will end up in a runoff with Duane later this spring. Washington's most vivid nightmare is that D'Aubuisson will somehow engineer a victory in the end. "We're having a harder and harder time military profile, it can deter any counterat- Spectres : Some of Reagan's more jittery buying bullets for the present government," says a top U.S. official. "It would be just about impossible to buy any for a D'Aubui- .son government." D'Aubuisson denies the charges about his involvement with the death squads. But an' anonymous Salvadoran informer has sup- plied some U.S. congressmen and The New York Times with detailed information about D'Aubuisson's role in right-wing atrocities. The source was identified by NEwswEEK as retired Col. Roberto Eulalio Santivanez, Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/15: CIA-RDP90-00552R000504880066-6 ,