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Nominee for US defense secretary advocated bombing of Nicaragua
By Joe Kay
28 November 2006
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In December 1984, Robert Gates, the Bush administrations
nominee to replace Donald Rumsfeld as defense secretary, advocated
military strikes against Nicaragua in response to what he considered
to be a growing threat to US interests in Central and South America.
Gates was then deputy director of intelligence at the CIA.
Gates made his proposal in a newly declassified document that
is part of a collection put together by the National Security
Archives, a private research group, to mark the twentieth anniversary
of the Iran-Contra affair. The scandal involved top Reagan administration
officials secretly selling arms to Iran in order to finance right-wing
contra guerillas in Nicaragua in violation of a congressional
prohibition. Gates has long been suspected of involvement in these
illegal activities, though he was never indicted.
Leading Democrats have already indicated that Gates will be
easily confirmed with bipartisan support before the end of the
lame-duck congressional session in December.
In a memorandum to then-CIA Director George Casey, Gates urged
that the administration use all necessary measures (short
of military invasion) to bring down the regime in Nicaragua.
Among these measures, he advocated the use of air strikes
to destroy a considerable portion of Nicaraguas military
buildup.
Without a comprehensive campaign openly aimed at bringing
down the regime, at best we somewhat delay the inevitable,
Gates wrote. Without US funding for the Contras, the resistance
essentially will collapse over the next year or two.
In the memo, Gates advocated a view with which he had become
associated within the administration and the intelligence apparatus:
a hard-line militarist position against the Soviet Union and any
regimes considered to be left or pro-Soviet. Gates
denounced negotiations with Cuban President Fidel Castro in 1958-60,
wrote that the conduct of the Vietnam War consisted of half-measures,
half-heartedly applied, and denounced congressional legislation
that placed constraints on executive power to conduct foreign
policy. In the latter category he included the Boland amendment,
which prohibited US backing for the anti-Sandinista contra forces
in Nicaragua.
The lesson he drew from this historical experience was the
need for direct military action in Nicaragua, which would have
to circumvent congressional restrictions. Any negotiated
agreement simply will offer a cover for the consolidation of the
regime and two or three years from now we will be in a considerably
worse shape than we are now, he wrote.
Gates position mirrored that of others in the Reagan
administration who now occupy prominent positions in the Bush
administration, including then-ambassador to Honduras John Negroponte.
Negroponte is currently the director of national intelligence,
a position that was first offered to Gates, but which Gates declined.
(See Democrats
back Negroponte nomination as new documents detail role in contra
war).
The Reagan administration decided not to follow Gates
suggestion to carry out military strikes and instead elected to
illegally pursue CIA financing of the contras, paid for through
sales of weapons to Iran. Lawrence Walsh, the independent counsel
in the Iran-Contra investigation, decided not to indict Gates
for involvement in these activities, however there is little doubt
that Gates played a prominent role. Walsh later wrote that he
was highly skeptical of Gates claims that he did not learn
of the secret funding until 1986.
Robert Parry, an investigative journalist who helped uncover
the Iran-Contra scandal, noted in an interview on Democracy
Now! November 9 that, even while serving as a member of the
Carter administrations National Security Council, Gates
helped arrange contacts between Iran and the Reagan presidential
campaign. These contacts continued through the 1980s, and, according
to some reports, Gates helped manufacture an intelligence rationale
to justify the sale of weapons to Iran.
Primarily because of his role in Iran-Contra, Gates was forced
to withdraw his nomination as CIA director in 1987, however this
nomination was resubmitted and approved by the Senate in 1991.
Thirty-one senators voted against Gates, an unprecedented number
for a nominee to head the CIA.
Gates role in the Iran-Contra scandal is not uncharacteristic.
He has a long and sordid history as a leading figure in the CIA.
When nominating Gates, Bush said that he helped lead Americas
efforts to drive Soviet forces from Afghanistan in the 1980s.
At that time, the CIA was financing Islamic fundamentalists in
Afghanistan, including Osama bin Laden, in the American proxy
war against the Soviet Union.
Even as he was helping sell weapons to Iran, Gates played a
role in weapons sales to Iraq. Throughout the 1980s, the two countries
were at war with each other. An affidavit submitted by Howard
Teicher, a former National Security Council member under Reagan,
names Gates as one of those involved in approving the sale of
chemical weapons precursors and cluster bombs to Saddam Hussein.
Gates has also been accused of politicizing intelligence
while at the CIAthat is, manufacturing intelligence to justify
US policy. In particular, he has been accused of helping to concoct
a supposed Soviet plot to assassinate the Pope in 1981 in order
to push for a harder line against the Soviet Union.
The confirmation hearings for Gates are scheduled to begin
next week, but leading Democrats have already indicated that he
will be easily confirmed. Earlier this month, the incoming Senate
majority leader, Harry Reid, said he hoped that Gates would be
confirmed as soon as possible. The one thing
he has going for him ... is that we want the change to take place
very quickly, Reid said.
Before Gates was nominated as defense secretary, he was part
of the Iraq Study Group, which consists of top strategists and
former officials from both the Democratic and Republican parties.
The group, led by Republican James Baker and Democrat Lee Hamilton,
is expected to issue recommendations next month, which are said
to include initiating talks with Iran and Syria. The Democratic
Party as a whole is lining up behind the Iraq Study Group. The
White House, meanwhile, has announced the formation of its own
study group.
See Also:
Rumsfelds firing: First casualty
of post-election crisis in US
[9 November 2006]
Iran-Contra gangsters
resurface in Bush administration
[1 August 2001]
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