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CIA Covert Operations Panama And Nicaragua

CIA Covert Operations: Panama And Nicaragua Essay, Research Paper


CIA Covert Operations: Panama and Nicaragua


In the 1950’s, the repression of domestic political dissent reached near


hysteria. In the process the CIA’s covert operations, already in progress in


Europe, expanded worldwide. By 1953, according to the 1970’s Senate


investigation, there were major covert programs under way in 48 countries,


consisting of propaganda, paramilitary, and political action operations. In


1949, the agency’s covert action department had about 300 employees and 47


stations. In the same period, the budget for these activities grew from $4.7


million to $82 million. In this paper I will discuss the United States’ use of


covert actions using Panama and Nicaragua as examples. I had planned on writing


my paper on Manuel Noriega and his connections with the CIA but the more I read


into him I found the major topic outlying him was much more interesting. So


with that I will continue on with this paper showing my findings on the CIA and


thier covert operations.


Covert operations have become a way of life and death for millions of


people world wide who have lost their lives to these actions. By 1980, covert


operations were costing billions of dollars. CIA Director William Casey was


quoted as saying ?covert actions were the keystone of U.S. policy in the Third


World.?(Agee, 2) Throughout the CIA’s 45 years, one president after another has


used covert operations to intervene secretly, and sometimes not so secretly , in


the domestic affairs of other countries, presuming their affairs were ours.


Almost always, money was spent for activities to prop up political forces


considered friendly to U.S. interests, or to weaken and destroy those considered


unfriendly or threatening.


The friends were easy to define, they were those who believed and acted


like us, took orders and cooperated. Until the collapse of communism in Eastern


Europe, enemies were also readily recognized: the Soviet Union and its allies,


with China having ambiguous status since the 1970’s. But there were other


countries the CIA took actions against who were not associated with the Soviets.


Iran in 1953, Guatemala in 1954, Indonesia in 1958, Cuba in 1959, Ecuador in


1963, Brazil in 1964, Chile in 1970, Nicaragua in 1979 and Grenada in 1983 to


name a few.(Agee, 2) These governments, and others attacked by the U.S., were


left, nationalist, reform-minded, populist or uncooperative and U.S. hostility


drove some of them to seek arms and other support from the Soviet Union.


Usually, the CIA mounted covert operations to weaken and destroy the programs


supporting communism by leading and advertising anti-Communist solidarity. The


local elites, whose privileged position was also threatened by movements for


social change, were the CIA’s natural allies.(Agee, 3) For more in-depth


examples, I will look at some covert operations in the 1980’s.


Central America was a major focus of U.S. attention during the 1980’s.


Through CIA covert and semi-covert operations, the U.S. tried simultaneously to


overthrow the government of Nicaragua and to destroy the movement for


revolutionary reform in El Salvador. In Nicaragua the means were terrorism and


destruction through a 10,000 man paramilitary force, along with a economic


blockade, propaganda and diplomatic pressures.(Stiles, 346) About 1% of the


population, some 35,000 people, died. In El Salvador, the CIA an U.S. military


expanded local military and security forces, and with the use of death squads,


the U.S backed forces killed over 70,000 people. Although they targeted trade


unionists, student activists, human rights advocates and peasant organizers, the


majority of the deaths were killed to instill terror. The CIA in El Salvador


used demonstration elections as public relations exercises to cover their


atrocities. The military controlled civilian government could then be renamed a


“democracy”.


In the 1980’s, in both Nicaragua and El Salvador, the U.S. introduced a


new way for exporting U.S.-style democracy, the National Endowment for


Democracy(NED). The NED allowed money to flow from the CIA to a bogus


foundation, then to U.S. private organizations like the National Student


Association(NSA), and from there to a foreign government. The money was to flow


to foundations that were fighting the ?global ideological challenge.? The


projected beneficiaries were governments, political parties, media, universities,


trade unions, churches and employer associations, all traditional CIA covert


action targets.(Agee, 5) In the Soviet Bloc, the NED money would be used to


promote anti-Communist dissidence through propaganda and would support internal


opposition programs. The NED was also used as a way to spot potential recruits


as sources of intelligence and agents of influence.


Panama was an early example of political intervention through the NED.


In the 1984 election, General Manuel Noriega selected an economist, Nicholas


Barletta, as the presidential candidate for the military controlled Democratic


Revolutionary Party(PRD). The U.S. feared that, if elected, Barletta and his


anti-military platform would bring instability to Panama. The U.S. interest was


to ensure that a new Panamanian president would continue to cooperate with U.S.


efforts to overthrow the Sandinista government in Nicaragua and to defeat the


insurgency in El Salvador. Noriega, a long-time CIA ?asset?, was at the time


providing services of great importance to the U.S., allowing Panama to be used


for Contra training and supply bases, as well as for training Salvadoran


military officers.(Kinsley,46) Barletta’s election would ensure untroubled


continuation of these activities. During the election campaign, the NED passed


money through the Free Trade Union to finance Panamanian unions which actively


supported Barletta. The vote count fraud organized by Noriega gave Barletta his


election victory, but the Reagan-Bush administration made no protest even though


the U.S. Embassy count showed Arias the winner by 8,000 votes.(Kinsley, 46)


Reagan received Barletta in the White house and Shultz attended his


inauguration. A more thorough study of the 1984 Panamanian elections would


probably uncover more NED money and showed that the CIA funded the victory. By


1987, Noriega’s usefulness to the U.S. was coming to an end. A military mission


went under way for his indictment by the Justice Department for drug trafficking


and the CIA began to plot his removal from power.(Kinsley, 47) The lesson of


the Noriega saga seem very clear. The Bush justification of the invasion to


combat drug trafficking and bring Noriega to justice could not be the real


reason because the CIA and other agencies had known of his drug dealing since


the early 1970’s. The real reasons were that Noriega was no longer needed for


support of U.S. goals in Nicaragua and El Salvador and it was Noriega himself


that was becoming the source of instability in Panama. Using Noriega as a


pretext for invasion, the Bush administration could destroy the Panamanian


Defense Forces and reverse the social reforms favoring the poor


majority.(Kinsley, 48) This keep the door open to the U.S. to retain its


military bases and control of the Panama canal past the 1999 turnover date set


by the Carter – Torrijos treaties. On the night of the invasion, Guillerma


Endara, was sworn in as President on a U.S. military base and democracy was


restored. Within a short period of time, the drug deal

ing and money laundering


in Panama would exceeded that of the Noriega period(Kinsley, 48)


A military force was also required to ? restore democracy? in Nicaragua.


In this case, however, the invasion was carried out by a surrogate army of


10,000 contras built by the CIA around the remnants of the 43-year old Somoza


dictatorship’s National Guard, itself a U.S. creation.(Agee, 7) Beginning in


1981, through terrorism and destruction, this force gradually bled the economy,


undermined the Sandinista social programs, and demoralized the a large sector of


the population which had supported the revolution. By 1990, faced with nothing


but worsening poverty and continuing terror, the Nicaraguan electorate gave the


victory to the Nicaraguan Opposition Union (NOU). This anti-Sandinista


coalition was created and financed by various U.S. agencies, including the CIA


and the NED. In order to undermine links between the Sandinistas and the people,


the CIA deflected the Contras away from the Nicaraguan military toward ?soft?


targets having minimum defenses: clinics, schools, infrastructure like roads and


bridges. They also destroyed port installations and mined harbors. As a result,


average individual consumption dropped 61% between 1980 and 1988. On estimate


puts the U.S. investment in the Contra war at $1 billion.(Agee, 7) Though the


Contras successfully sabotaged the economy and terrorized large sectors of the


rural population, they failed to defeat the Sandinista military or even take and


hold the smallest town for any length of time. Meanwhile, the U.S. economic


blockade cost the economy $3 billion. Another very popular covert action that


the CIA is guilty of is that of the propaganda war.


From the beginning of the war against Nicaragua, the Reagan-Bush


administration faced the problem of overcoming public opposition at home. The


solution was to repeat Edward W. Barrett’s 1950 domestic propaganda campaign to ?


sell the soviet threat? . In 1982, Walter Raymond, moved from the Agency to the


National Security Council to head the campaign while the Contras, under CIA


direction, began their own PR campaign in the U.S. A public office was set up


in the State Department as the Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America and


the Caribbean and the man behind the scenes was Raymond. The office then


handled the contacts with think tanks, researchers and media. The purpose was


to place, in the public’s imagination, black hats on the Sandinistas and white


hats on the Contras.(Agee, 8) In effect, it became a huge government campaign


using taxpayer money to propagandize the same taxpayers and their


representatives in Congress. By 1987, it was clear that, although they could


continue to terrorize and destroy infrastructure, the Contras could never win a


military victory. So the CIA needed a way to mobilize a large propaganda war to


divide the Sandinistas and the 3.5 million Nicaraguan’s


A U.S. plan called for mobilizing three main bodies, a political


coalition to oppose the Sandinistas, a trade union coalition, and a mass civic


organization. The most important part of the propaganda campaign would be the


use of the media operations. The first group that was targeted was the


political coalition in Nicaragua. The operation was to use the U.S. Embassy in


Managua and let it be known to about two dozen disparate factions that money


would be available only to those that ?got on board?.(Agee, 8) The result was


UNO, whose electoral budget was prepared in the U.S. Embassy, and whose


presidential candidate, Violets Chamorro, owned the anti-Sandinista daily La


Prensa, which had received money from the CIA.


The second operation involved the labor coalition which was called the


Permanent Workers Congress(CPT). This organization, crucial to using the


economic crisis as a principal campaign issue, grouped five union centers for


propaganda and voter registration. Some of these unions had also received prior


U.S. funding. The NED spent at least $12.5 million to finance this election in


Nicaragua but the NED spent upwards of $2 billion in the total U.S.


intervention. Most of that $2 billion was spent on an array of intermediary


organizations in the U.S. and other countries that spent it for programs in


training, propaganda and support of the coalitions. The CIA, in addition, is


estimated to have spent $11 million, possibly even more, in these fraudulent


elections.(Agee, 9) Even though the U.S. has been easy to spot behind these


covert operations, it seems that the CIA does not plan anytime soon to abort


with future actions.


The 1993 U.S. defense plan, at $1.5 trillion for the next five years,


suggests that the money will be there for covert interventions. The Bush plan


called for a 3% reduction in defense spending under the projections made before


the dissolution of the Soviet Union. According to the then Director of Central


Intelligence, Robert Gates, reductions in the intelligence community budget


hidden in the overall defense budget but generally believed to be in excess of


$31 billion will begin at only 2.5%.(Wilson) Meanwhile plans under discussion


in Congress for reorganizing the whole intelligence community would maintain the


capability and legality, under U.S. law to continue covert operations. The


Defense Department, CIA and other intelligence agencies have had to make new


justifications for their budgets now that the Soviet menace is gone.


The worldwide opportunities and needs for covert operations will remain


as long as stability, control and authority form the cornerstone of a U.S.


policy that permits it. In fact, Congress passed the National security


Education Act in 1991, providing $150 million in ?start up? money for


development and expansion of university programs in area and language studies,


and for scholarships, including foreign studies, for the next generation of


national security state bureaucrats.(Wilson) The notable fact is that this


program is not to be administered by the Department of Education but by the


Pentagon, the CIA, and other security agencies. Alternatives to continuing


militarism abroad and social decay at home still exist. Yet militarism and


world domination continue to be the main national priority, with covert


operations playing an integral role. Everyone knows that as long as this


continues, there will be no solutions to domestic troubles, and the U.S. will


continue to decline while growing more separate and unequal. The U.S.


government has no ?red menace? to whip up hysteria, but the war on drugs seems


to be quite adequate for justifying law enforcement practices that have


political applications as well. The U.S. should note that in the current


political climate, with clamor for change everywhere, the guardians of


traditional power will not give up without a fight. The CIA will find their new


“threats” and “enemies” in black youths, undocumented immigrants,


environmentalists, feminists, gays and lesbians and go on to more “mainstream”


opponents in attempts, including domestic covert operations, to divide and


discredit the lager movement for reform.


Works Cited


Agee, Philip. Covert Action Quarterly.


Washington D.C. 1991. Kinsley, Michael. Time. We Shoot People Don’t We.


October 23, 1989. Time Warner. Stiles, Kendall. Case Histories in


International Politics.


Harper Collins Publishers, New York 1995 Wilson, Catherine. The


Philadelphia Inquirer.


New trial is ruled for Noriega. March 28, 1996.

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