THE C.I.A.'S LINK TO CHILE'S PLOT

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP91-00901R000700060054-9
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 17, 2005
Sequence Number: 
54
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 12, 1982
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP91-00901R000700060054-9.pdf129.65 KB
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Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP91-00901R00 ARTICLE APPMR1',T) THE NATION 12 June 1982 F7A FOLLOW-UP ON THE LETELIER CASE I-A 1i plot JOHN DINGES AND SAUL LANDAU 'most six years after the assassination of Chilean exile leader Orlando Letelier in Washington, ,..? D.C., information cons? ties to surface in_ - -- _ .dicat.ing that the Central Intelligence Agency concealed facts abort its relations with DINA, the Chilean secret, police, that might have helped sc`ve the inurde;- quickly. In our earlier report [see "The Chilean Connection," The Nation, November 28, 1981], we showed that DINA's head, then-Col. Manuel Contreras, visited Washington secretly only days after he gave his agents orders to begin the assassination operation. Contreras made the trip to f;.rr- chase weapons illegally from a company run by former C.I.A. officers Edwin Wilson and Frank Terpil. New information from a year-old Congressional hear- ing---..unnoticed at. the time-reveals ttiat Contreras had another meeting, this one with the second-ranking officer of the C.I.A., Deputy Director Vernon Walters. Walters told a March 10, 1981, hearing of the I-louse Foreign Affairs Sub- committee on Inter-American Affairs that he had two meetings with Contreras in Washington: one, previously publicized, in August 1975, t=i; second "a year" later. An aide to Walters says that "every meeting" with Contreras involved "agency-to-agency business" and none took place after Walters's retirement from the C.I.A. on July 2, 1976. We don't know the nature of the business, nor is there any evidence that Contreras told Walters of the Letelier assassination plot. But it is noteworthy that, according to F.B.I. investigators, Walters never told them about the sec- ond meeting with Contreras, even though its proximity to the assassination on September 21, 1976, made it particr.rlar- ly relevant to the investigation, Walters's name has arisen several times in connection with Contreras and the DINA agents plotting the murder, according to the evidence compiled by the F.B.I. That evidence shows that Walters traveled to Asundan, Paraguay, in June 1976 on agency business. A month later, two DINA agents assigned to kill Letelier arrived in Paraguay to obtain false passports, using Walters's name and alleging that Walters and the C.I.A. knew about the DINA mission to Washineqon. Waiters has denied he had anything to do with the DINA agents or the false passports. STAT Contreras's ti Lance to hitheri head of the Par Guanes was the the two DINA agents were tral Intelligence Agency A?u ua- small arms." (Interestingly, Contreras's deal with Wilson and Terpil was for 1,059 Colt Cobra revolvers, a small handgun widely used by plainelothe: police.) Guanes also said the two agents "had the coop ration of the C.I.A. / U.S.A.," which `suggested that the y t i l y rave w th documents with another nationality since, as Chileans, it would be dif- ficult to take such material out of tl U " had prohibited arms sales to Chile earlier in 1976 because of human rights violations.) Guanes portrayed Walters, whom he had met in Paraguay, as helping arrange the DINA agents' trip. He said he met U.S. Ambassador GeorT Landau on August 6, 19,76, at a Chinese Embassy reception: "[Ile) took us aside and said, `I received a call from Geneial Walters stating that problems had arisen with the passports given to the Chileans and that the State Department had cancelled the visas. It is possible for the same two to enter [the United States] direct- ly using Chilean passports, for which they would make direct contact.' This information should be sent to my friend Colonel Contreras.... " Because this account differs frorij Walters's denial' and Landau's testimony about the reception, F.B.I. agents at first discounted it. They also assumed that because Guanes was a friend of Contreras he might have concocted the C.I.A. story to embarrass the United States. Bur in light of Walters's admission of a second m~eti:ng with Contreras, Guanes's testimony takes on new weight. The Chilean government of Gen. Augusto Piriochet has stonewalled on the Letelier case, de>`iying the U.S. request for Contreras's extradition, terminating the military and judicial investigations it had begun, and expelling from the country the attorney for the Letelier family, former Justice Minister Jaime Castillo. Our new information indicates that the C.I.A., which had pledged to cooperate with F.B.I. investigators, has joined in that stonewalling. The C.I.A. and GOneral Walters had full information about the incidents in' Paraguay, including photographs of the two DINA agenth, within days of their occurrence. The information was never turned over to the F.B.I. Its importance is indicated by the fact that when the photographs and cable traffic about the incidents were unearthed by Federal investigators niore than a year later, they led to the arrest of DINA agent Michael Townley, who confess .d to having been involved in the plot, and to the in- dictrnenis of Contreras and two other LDINA official Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000700060054-9 S.