PRESIDENT BOSCH AND INTERNAL SECURITY IN THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

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CIA-RDP79T00429A001300030031-9
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S
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15
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December 12, 2016
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January 2, 2002
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31
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Publication Date: 
June 14, 1963
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IM
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e 2002/01/24: CIA-RDP79T00429A09.100030031-9 SECRET CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY PRESIDENT BOSCH AND INTERNAL SECURITY IN THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC D I R E C T O R A T E O F I N T E L L I G E N C E ~T Approved For Release 2002/01/24: CIA-RDP79T00429AO013000 GROUP I e m automatic downgrading Tp and declassification Approved For Ree 2002/01/24: CIA-RDP79T00429Ac300030031-9 : A T(i RIAL CONTAINS INFORMATION AFFECT- TONAL DEFENSE OF THE UNITED STATES MEANING OF THE ESPIONAGE LAWS, CSC. SECTIONS 793 AND 794, THE TRANSMIS- U REVEI.,ATION OF WHICH IN ANY MANNER TO UNAUTHORIZED PERSON IS PROHIBITED BY LAW.. Approved For Release 2002/01/24: CLA-RDP79T00429A001300030031-9 Approved For RA W& 2002/01/2 It T00429A QA00030031-9 OCI No, 1564/63 14 June 1963 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY MEMORANDUM President Juan Bosch of the Dominican Republic rightly considers that he has a popular mandate to bring about a radical transformation of political, economic, and social conditions in the Dominican Republic. He hopes to accom- plish this purpose by such measures as agrarian and tax re- form, economic development primarily through private for- eign investment, and a more equitable distribution of earnings than has been the case hitherto. There is currently under way a concerted campaign to discredit Bosch by charging that he is himself a crypto- Communist engaged in establishing a Communist dictator- ship, or else that his ineptitude will lead to a Communist takeover in the Dominican Republic. Manifestly, this cam- paign represents the reaction of vested interests who see their privileged position threatened by Bosch's revolutionary purposes. It also reflects genuine concern regarding Bosch's remarkably tolerant attitude toward Communist ac- tivities. With reason, Bosch believes that the principal immedi- ate threat to the accomplishment of his mission is the pos- sibility of a reactionary coup. In this context, he has not hindered Communist organizational and agitational activities, so long as the Communists have avoided direct interference with him. He argues that to crack down on these activities would only precipitate a campaign of urban terrorism and guerrilla resistance like that in Venezuela, which would hin- der the accomplishment of his constructive purposes. Bosch understands that the security of his regime de- pends ultimately upon continued US support, particularly as a restraint upon the Dominican military. At the same time, he is nationalistic, egotistic, and aware of the politi- cal inexpediency of appearing to be a US puppet. Conse- quently, he is not readily amenable to US advice regarding Approved For Release 2002/01/24: CIA-RDP79T00429AO01300030031-9 -&E-CR = Approved For Ree 2002/0'1:[P79T00429A000030031-9 his policy with respect to Communist activities. The Communist danger in the Dominican Republic is not immediate, but potential. It is none the less serious. Given present freedom to organize and agitate, the Communists will become better prepared to exploit some future opportu- nity. If Bosch should fail to satisfy the expectations of the Dominican masses, or if he should be overthrown by a re- actionary coup, the Communists would have an opportunity to seize the leadership of the popular revolutionary move - ment. This does not mean that they would directly come to power--the Dominican military have the will and ability to prevent that for the foreseeable future. It does mean that the Communists would have gained the advantage of identifi- cation with the popular side in a continuing class struggle. Approved For Release 2002/CII&VRIWI75T'00429A001300030031-9 Approved Forease 2002/01/24: CIA-RDP79T004201300030031-9 BASIC FACTS ON DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Capital City: Santo Domingo (pop: 350,847) Area: 18,815 square miles Population: 3,100,000 (1961) Racial Composition: White 13% Mulatto 67% Negro 20% Rural to Urban Ratio: 76 to 24 per cent Illiteracy: 36 per cent Budget: $174,371,498 (1963) Percent of Budget for Military: Total Value of Exports: 18 per cent $172,500,000 (1962) Total Value of Imports: $123,300,000 (1962) Chief Exports: Sugar 56% of Total Value (1962) Coffee 11.6% of Total Value (1962) Cacao 7% of Total Value (1962) U.S. Investment: Per Capita GNP: $105,000,000 '$234.00 (1961) , Distribution of GNP. Agriculture 41%; trade, 17%; manufacturing, 15%; government, 7%; other, 20%. 8 per cent (1958 AID estimate) Armed Forces: 28,250 280 12 "Army , 100 3 Navy , 700 3 Air Police , 9,170 Approved For Release 2002/01/24: CIA-RDP79T00429AO01300030031-9 Approved Fo 'elease 20 IOR -RDP79T004 001300030031-9 President Bosch and Internal Security in the Dominican Republic 1. Release from the repressive stability of the 30-year Trujillo dictatorship suddenly confronted the Dominican government and people with accumulated political, economic, and social problems with which they were ill-prepared to cope. To survive, and to conduct the first free election in Dominican his- tory, absorbed the energies of the interim Council of State. The more fundamental problems were left for President Bosch to solve when he took office in February 1963. They include: (1) how to make demo- cratic processes work in a country which has had no experience of civil liberty or representative govern- ment; (2) how to use efficiently or distribute equi- tably the vast properties accumulated by the Trujillo family; (3) how to obtain the capital required for economic development while at the same time denying economic special privilege and ensuring a more equi- table distribution of earnings; (4) how to prepare the largely illiterate and unskilled Dominican peo- ple to participate efficiently and gainfully in a modernized economy; (5) how to transform a traditional society without precipitating either social disorder or a reactionary coup. In dealing with such formid- able problems, popular impatience for results, two years after the demise of the dictator, must also be taken into account. President Bosch and His Program 2. Juan Bosch, now almost 54, is a native Dominican of humble origin, though white. In his youth he worked as a clerk in a tobacco warehouse. His formal education was limited, but he was a part-time student at the University of Santo Domingo, where he led an anti-Trujillo student organization. This activity led to 25 years of exile, chiefly in Cuba--his wife is Cuban--but including sojourns in the US, Puerto Rico, Venezuela and Costa Rica. On a visit to Israel, he was much impressed by Israeli agricultural cooperatives. 3. During his years of exile, Bosch occupied himself as a teacher and writer, but was also an active participant in various revolutionary con- spiracies against the several Caribbean dictators Approved For Release 2Q9_qqA4E)R79T00429A001300030031-9 Approved Fo Iease 20 (d; , '-RD a N K71 0 of that period. He thus be- came closely associated with. the leaders of the "Democrat- is Left" in the Caribbean, notably with Jose Figueres, the former President of Costa Rica, Romulo Betancourt, now President of Venezuela, and Governor Munoz Marin of Puerto Rico. 4. Bosch's political attitudes are conditioned by this background of experience. It has prepared him to func- tion as an eloquent protago- nist, but not as an efficient administrator of public af- fairs or as a politician adept in the accommodation of various political interests. Bosch is a professed revolutionist against the traditional order in Caribbean society. He is also a professed democrat--but, as is the case with many new rulers in countries which have never known representative government, his concept of demo- cracy is mass support for his one-man leadership. In the light of his own experience of Caribbean intrigue, he is not only deeply suspicious of any manifestation of political opposition, but even indisposed to share power with colleagues of any stature. 5. Bosch rightly considers that he has a popular mandate to bring about a radical transfor- mation of political, economic, and social condi- tions in the Dominican Republic. In a free election held in December, 1962, he won 58 percent of the presidential vote, gaining a two-to-one advantage over his principal opponent, the relatively con- servative Viriato Fiallo. His party, the Partido Revolucionario Dominicano (PRD), won overwhelming control of the legislature (22 of 27 seats in the upper house and 49 of 74 seats in the lower house). Insofar as the electoral process confers authority, Bosch has a free hand to accomplish his purposes. 6. The principal accomplishment of Bosch's "hundred days" has been the formulation and promul- gation of a new constitution. In keeping with -2- Approved For Release 29 -RDP79T00429A001300030031-9 Me* Approved Fo` elease 2005/ 1''R RDP79T004 001300030031-9 Bosch's reformist purposes, the tenor of this docu- ment has been very disturbing to the traditionally privileged elements in Dominican society. The Church, for example, has been offended by omissions and provisions affecting the traditional relations of Church and State. Provisions of the original draft regarding proprietary rights and worker- management relations have been modified in such a way as to leave the specifics to future legislation, but the implication of an impending "syndicalist" development remains. 7. Bosch's most immediate socio-economic prob- lem.s.. are agrarian reform and urban unemployment. With respect to the former, Bosch is fortunate in that he does not have to expropriate any present pri- vate landholdings in order to obtain lands for dis- tribution to landless peasants. The already con- fiscated Trujillo properties include 60 percent of the country's arable land, as well as a large pro- portion of its industrial capacity. So far, however, very little of this land has been distributed. One reason is probably bureaucratic unpreparedness for the task. Another consideration may be that, with present high sugar prices, these national properties are making good profits, useful for financing other government undertakings; it may seem inexpedient to disrupt a going and profitable concern. A more impressive distribution of land will soon be neces- sary, however, in order to allay peasant impatience. 8. Bosch plans to relieve unemployment by means of a program of public works to be financed by a new line of credit ($150 million) recently obtained from a consortium of US and European inter- ests. These public works--chiefly highways and hydroelectric dams--are also intended to provide a base for further economic development. 9. In the longer view, Bosch hopes to accom- plish social amelioration through economic develop- ment and a more equitable distribution of earnings. For such development he relies primarily on foreign private investment, considering US governmental aid too slow and ineffective. He hopes to attract pri- vate investment, not only by providing the necessary infrastructure through public works, but also by restoring the financial credit of the Dominican Republic. To the latter end, he has paid off existing foreign obligations and is seeking to balance the Approved For Release 201 I RDP79T00429A001300030031-9 GIVISY' Approved Fo lease 20dM' Ii-RDP79T004 1001300030031-9 budget by the reduction of unessential expenditures and by the imposition of more effective and pro- gressive taxation. However, his antagonistic atti- tude toward foreign corporations already estab- lished in the Dominican Republic (which he tends to identify with the old regime and with his pre- sent political opposition) and the measures he has adopted to secure for the workers greater bene- fits from the present high price for sugar may repel the new foreign private investment which he desires to attract. 10. Bosch's organized political support comes from the Partido Revolucionario Dominicano. The PRD was organized by Angel Miolan before Bosch-Is return from exile, at a time when political activity in the Dominican Republic was still a risky venture. Miolan is still the effective head of the party organization. His relations with Bosch are political, not personal. He is presently disgruntled by Bosch's denial of anticipated patronage. This denial is the result of Bosch's penchant for personal leadership, his distrust of any potential alternative leader, and his disinclination to accept political dependence on Miolan. The organizational development of the PRA is hindered by this attitude. The possibility of a disruptive clash between Bosch and Miolan is evident. Such a clash may occur at the party con- vention to be held in July. Opposition on the Right 11. Bosch came late to the Dominican political scene. While he was safe in exile, other men, at the risk of their lives, endured the Trujillo tyranny, overthrew it, and made possible the free election which brought Bosch to power. Notable among them are Antonio Imbert and Luis Amiama, the only sur- vivors of the group which assassinated Trujillo, and Viriato Fiallo, leader of the Union Civica Nacional (UCN), a liberal organization (conserva- tive by comparison with Bosch) whose persistent pres- sure was instrumental in bringing about a democratic solution of the succession crisis. Such men nat- urally resent their own displacement and Bosch's authoritarian tendencies. Moreover, many of them are sincerely concerned about the political trend in the Dominican Republic. Approved For Release 202?,rRDP79T00429A001300030031-9 Approved Foi ?elease 20.l -RDP79T004 001300030031-9 12. The more conservative elements in the Dominican Republic cannot effectively oppose Bosch by political means. Fiallo and the UCN were soundly defeated in the 1962 election. The grounds on which they criticize Bosch are not likely to en- hance their popular appeal. Indeed, the UCN itself is apparently breaking up as the result of a policy dispute between its liberal and conservative wings which Fiallo has been unable to resolve. The only alternative focus of political opposition is the Partido Revolucionario Social Cristiano (PRSC). It is bitterly opposed to Bosch, but there is little to distinguish its program from his except its Catholic rather than secular inspiration. The PRSC got only 5 percent of the vote in the 1962 election, but might serve as a rallying point for popular as well as conservative opposition if Bosch should fail to satisfy popular demands for effective change. 13. The present danger to Bosch from the right resides in the fact that he does not have effective personal control over the armed forces and the national police. A military move to depose him might be instigated by disaffected civilians who see their vested interest threatened by his reform- ist. programs, or by the personal ambition of a military leader. The principal deterrent to such a move is the well-known attitude of the US in sup- port of the Bosch administration as the duly elected constitutional government. 14. For the present, Bosch appears to have an effective understanding with the military high com- mand. He has pledged himself to respect their con- trol of the armed forces (and their perquisites), and they in turn have engaged themselves to respect his constitutional position. However, neither party to this agreement can be fully confident of the other; the relationship is a wary and uneasy one. Bosch's tentative approach toward the develop- ment of a peasant militia (through the organization of unarmed "vigilantes" to prevent the burning of canefields) has stirred some military resentment and suspicion. 15. The national police are controlled by General Antonio Imbert, a national figure in his Approved For Release Z '2 -RDp79T00429AO01300030031-9 Approved Fo lease 20CR' -1-RDP79T004 001300030031-9 own right, but one who is mistrusted by most of the military. Before Bosch's inauguration, Imbert several times moved tentatively toward seizing power for himself and was dissuaded only by stren- uous US representations. Bosch greatly fears Imbert's ambition, but dares not attempt to remove him. 16. There is currently under way a campaign to discredit Bosch by charging that he is himself a crypto-Communist engaged in establishing a Commu- nist dictatorship, or else that his ineptitude will lead to a Communist seizure of power in the Domini- can Republic. The recent concerted propagation of this theme suggests a deliberate effort to win US sanction for a military coup against Bosch. There is in fact no evidence that Bosch is a Communist-- that charge is actually a matter of tenuous infer- ence from the alternative charge that he is too tolerant, to which Bosch is indeed vulnerable. In the circumstances to be reviewed below, concern on this score is reasonable. 17. Present Communist strength in the Domini- can Republic is not formidable. For the present at least, it is Bosch who holds the leadership of the popular revolutionary movement. 18. There are four Communist or quasi-Commu- nist political organizations now operating in the Republic. They are: (1) the Partido Socialist. Popular Dominicano (PSPD), the orthodox Communist party; (2) the Partido Nacionalista Revolucionario (PNR), a heterodox Communist party; (3) the Movi- miento Popular Dominicano (MPD), a Communist-dom.- inated pro-Castro party; and (4) the Agrupacion Politica Catorce de Junio (APCJ, or 14th of June), a Communist-infiltrated pro-Castro party. Of these, only the 14th of June group has legal status as a political party. All told, the four groups have about 4,000 active members concentrated chiefly in urban areas and among youth and student elements. 19. Since taking office, Bosch has permitted the return of about 100 Communist leaders and agitators Approved For Release.20 19 -RDP79T00429A001300030031-9 Approved Folease 20,BTk-RDP79T0042fi001300030031-9 expelled from the Dominican Republic by the interim Council of State--but it should be noted that even Fallo was committed to permit this, as a restoration of civil liberties to all Dominicans. Notable among these returnees are Juan and Felix Ducoudray Mansfield, leaders of the orthodox Communist PSPD, and Maximo Lopez Molina, Communist chief of the pro-Castro MPD. Bosch has allowed these well-trained and dan- gerous men complete freedom of organizational and agitational activity--so long as their attacks are directed against the traditional social order and not against him. 20. Given this freedom of action, the Commu- nists have been busily engaged in infiltrating labor organizations and (to a lesser extent) the bureaucracy, in stimulating popular demands for a prompter realization of anticipated benefits, and in recruiting, indoctrinating, and organizing new members. There is no effective government surveillance of these activities, but current rumors on the sub- ject are almost certainly exaggerated. 21. Efforts to form a united front of all four Communist elements have so far been frustrated by the refusal of the 14th of June group to merge itself with the others. This refusal reflects the personal ambition of the 14th of June leader, Manuel Tavarez Justo, and the advantage which the group enjoys as a legal party with a larger member- ship than the other three combined and no public commitment to communism. 22. Confident of his own popular strength, Bosch sees no threat to his regime in Communist activity. He may consider that his tolerance demon- strates this strength and the democratic character of his rule. He probably welcomes any assistance in discrediting the traditional society and any potential support in resisting a possible military coup. His own explanation of his remarkable tolerance is that to crack down on present Commu- nist activities would only precipitate urban terrorism and guerrilla resistance like that in Venezuela, to the great hindrance of his constructive program, the success of which will defeat the Communists. However, when some Communists recently Approved For Release 0&"J?Lp7FRi:YP79T00429A001300030031-9 Approved Folease 20&BW-RDP79T004001300030031-9 ventured to call an illegal strike of government workers, Bosch's reaction was immediate and ef- fective. 23. President Bosch understands that the security of his regime depends ultimately upon US support, particularly as a restraint upon the Domin- ican military--and that his tolerance of Communist activities is a sensitive issue. At the same time, he is nationalistic, egotistic, and aware of the political inexpediency of appearing to be a US puppet. Consequently, he is not readily amenable to US advice regarding his policy with respect to the Communists. Although he may accommodate to US demands in incidental matters, he is not likely to proscribe all Communist activities unless and until convinced that they are a direct and immediate threat to his regime. 24. The Communist danger in the Dominican Republic is not immediate, but potential. It is none the less serious. Given present freedom to organize and agitate, the Communists will become better prepared to exploit some future opportunity. There is at present no effective non-Communist political alternative to Bosch's personal leader- ship. If Bosch should fail to satisfy the expec- tations of the Dominican masses, or if he should be overthrown by a reactionary coup, the Commu- nists would have an opportunity to seize the leadership of the popular revolutionary movement. This does not mean that they would directly come to power--the Dominican military have the will and ability to prevent that for the foreseeable future. It does mean that the Communists would have gained the advantage of identification with the popular side in a continuing class struggle. Approved For Release d -RBPY9TT00429A001300030031-9 Approved F6%Welease 2002/01/24: CIA-RDP79T004 001300030031-9 " Navassal. (U S.) JBrBmie St. Malec; f,yY s4{A tia 40ea9 A C'`~.`1 7 Approved For Release 2002/01/24: CIA-RDP79T00429AO01300030031-9 Approved F elease 200&EoR DP79T004Z A001300030031-9 Approved For Release 200 101./2l"DP79T00429AO01300030031-9