SECRET ARMS BID REPORTED

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000403750001-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 24, 2010
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 17, 1984
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000403750001-3.pdf77.46 KB
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/24: CIA-RDP90-00552R000403750001-3 ARTICLE APPEARED BALTIMORE SUN ON PAGE ' /Y-/ 17 May 1984 Secret arms bid reported CIA was proposed to panel as conduit for El Salvador ' WASHINGTON - The Reagan administration has reportedly de- veloped a plan to send some mili- tary equipment to El Salvador se- cretly through the Central Intelli- gence Agency. The plan, submitted this month, was blocked by the House Commit- tee on Intelligence, members of Congress and administration offi-' cials said. According to the lawmakers, the committee objected on the ground that it appeared to circumvent aid limits set by Congress. The chair- man, Representative Edward P. Boland (D, Mass.), reportedly was angered and told William J. Casey, the director of central intelligence, that the committee would not toler- ate the shipments. The plan came to light yester- day when Representative Clarence D. Long (D, Md., 2d), chairman of the House Appropriations subcom- mittee on foreign operations, an- nounced that he had received a let- ter from Mr. Boland about "CIA arms shipments to El Salvador." Lawmakers said that the amount of arms involved was not clear but that it involved heavy military equipment, including four combat helicopters. "While we are sitting up here painstakingly debating -how much military assistance to give El Sal vador," Mr. Long said in an inter- view, "the Reagan administration is figuring out how to secretly send everything they want down there. It is outrageous. I won't stand for it." Mr. Long, who said he was re- stricted on what he could say about' the secret plan, said he had asked, for a CIA briefing for today. . Other lawmakers and tration officials later prove e-' tails. The disclosure came as House and Senate members met to try to. resolve differences over regular. military aid to El Salvador and to' Nicaraguan rebels in a supplemen- tal financing bill. The Senate ver sion includes $62 million for El Sal- vador and $21 million for Nicara-" guan rebels. The House version.; provides no aid to either party. The military equipment the ad- ministration planned to send through the CIA would have been in addition to the regular aid ap-- proved by Congress. It also would.' have been in addition to $32 million in aid Mr. Reagan authorized earlier this year under discretionary powers. The idea of using the CIA, ac__ cording to lawmakers familiar.' with the proposal, was developed., as a way of swiftly getting military equipment to El Salvador. According to the. sources, the., plan called for the Pentagon to de- clare some military equipment sur- plus and to give it to the CIA at a . nominal price for forwarding to El. Salvador. The monetary value as listed on government ledgers would;, thus have been much smaller than the actual value. An administration official said . that, because of the objections of the House committee, the proposal would be temporarily set aside. "Congress has overreacted," he said. "Once we have a chance to educate them on this idea, we may try to submit it again." Mr. Long said he estimated the actual value of the military equip-'; ment at more than $20 million. "This administration is playing all kinds of games, and I deeply re- sent it," Mr. Long said. Members of the Committee on Intelligence said the panel had ob- jected to the plan in part because, as one member put it, "it proposed an inappropriate role for the CIA." The members said they thought the timing was especially unfortu- nate because the proposal was sub- mitted just as Congress was in the midst of debate about aid to El Sal- vador. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/06/24: CIA-RDP90-00552R000403750001-3