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t on Bueso 's behalf . Then Bueso would be released and deported back to Hondura s . Over the next two weeks North arranged a series of meetings in which he lobb ied the upper echelons of the Reagan administration on Bueso 's behalf . Among t he officials who supported his efforts , according to a several participants in the meetings , were Gorman ; Dewey Clarridge , the head of CIA operations in Lat in America ; and Elliott Abrams , assistant secretary of state for Latin America . Gorman was not available for comment . Abrams declined to answer questions on the matter . Clarridge , now a senior vice president at General Dynamics in San Diego , says North 's actions were appropriate . `` We considered the fact that he ( Bueso ) had been helpful to us in the past . And there was a feeling he ha d been set up as part of some type of overzealous , unfair sting operation . The re was a real question as to whether Bueso even had any idea what was going on a t all . '' At a meeting with top State and Justice department officials on Sept. 24 , 1986 , North argued that Bueso was only tangentially involved in the assas sination plot , according to a deposition given to congressional investigators b y a senior Justice Department official . North proposed that Bueso be released a nd deported to Honduras . Oliver `` Buck '' Revell , then deputy director of the FBI , who also attended the meeting , objected . The FBI was determined not to get involved in the `` manipulation of the case or attempting to get the charges dropped , '' says Revell , now special agent in charge of the FBI office in Dal las . `` There was no way we could do something for someone who had been involve d in drug trafficking aimed against the United States . '' North refused to give up . In early October 1986 , he called another meeting trying to get higher-ran king officials at the State Department and the Justice Department to change thei r position in favor of prosecution . Again , North , Clarridge and Gorman attend ed , and all spoke in favor of letting Bueso go free . But the Justice Departmen t representative at the meeting , deputy assistant attorney general Mark Richard , resisted . Richard asked North to explain why Bueso merited special treatment . North 's answer , according to a deposition Richard gave to investigators for the congressional Iran-Contra committee in 1987 , was `` very ambiguous '' and included `` no specifics . '' `` I said , ` Look .. . anything we do for this ma n seems to undercut our position that we have taken repeatedly that this man is an international terrorist , ' ' ' Richard testified . `` This is certainly not consistent with the position we have articulated throughout the course of this p rosecution that this man is a serious international terrorist and should be trea ted accordingly . '' The Justice Department did make one concession to North . I t acted on North 's request that Bueso be transferred from the medium-security p rison at Tallahassee to a minimum security at Eglin Air Force base in Florida , known as `` Club Fed '' for its comfortable cabins and volleyball courts . Bueso began serving his sentence there on Oct. 9 , 1986 . After serving a total of 40 months ( including time served before his conviction ) , Bueso became eligible for parole and was released in May 1989 , according to Bureau of Prisons records . Bueso is now retired and living in Honduras . What does North 's campaign to free Bueso in 1986 have to do with his effort to get elected to the U.S. Senate in 1994 ? Nothing , according to a spokesman for the North campaign who said , ` ` It 's old news and garbage and nobody cares about it . '' William Webster , th e director of the FBI when Bueso was arrested and later the director of the CIA , has a different view of the Bueso affair . `` Information about past assistanc e to an agency of government can be supplied to the sentencing judge but the bal ancing responsibility lies with the court , '' says Webster , now a senior partn er at the law firm of Milbank , Tweed , Hadley and McCloy . `` It 's important t hat loyalty or zeal not short-circuit the criminal-justice process . '' The judi cial process was not short-circuited in the Bueso affair but not for lack of try ing on the part of the would-be junior senator from Virginia . -O- ( Jefferson M orley is an editor in The Washington Post 's Outlook section . Murray Waas is a Washington-based reporter specializing in national-security issues . ) Gen. Jose Abnego Bueso Rosa was , in Oliver North 's words , a `` friend of the United States '' deserving of `` reward . '' He was the chief of staff of the H onduran armed forces from 1982 to 1984 , making him the second-ranking military officer in that Central American republic . At the time , Reagan administration officials were transforming Honduras , a sparsely populated agricultural republi c , into a base for projecting U.S. military power throughout Central America . VLADIVOSTOK , Russia Russian writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn lost no time Saturda y , 24 hours after his return from two decades of exile in the West , in speakin g his mind , often quite sharply , about his much-altered country . In his first formal news conference on Russian soil , the 75-year-old Nobel Prize winner cri ticized the economic reforms of President Boris Yeltsin as `` brainless , '' cal led ultranationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky a `` caricature of a patriot '' and sa id that swaths of independent Kazakhstan were actually Russia . He also labeled the political system here a `` pseudo-democracy . '' Solzhenitsyn , who has neve r shied from controversy , has made similar statements in the West , where he wa s sent by Soviet rulers in 1974 for his defiance . But his words are taking on a dded meaning now that he is back in Russia and can easily be heard and seen for the first time by his compatriots . He is widely respected here , but whether hi s opinions will carry more weight than those of any other prominent person is an open question . If today was any indication , many of Yeltsin 's moderate natio nalist critics will be quite content with what Solzhenitsyn has to say , while o thers on both the left and right may be less happy . Solzhenitsyn said he does n ot intend to get involved with politics , either through election or appointment . But he will try to `` help our homeland in these extremely difficult conditio ns by public activity , through meetings , by persuasion and through my articles . Of course , I will speak as much as I can . '' Residents here seemed delighte d that the famous writer was in their midst and were willing to listen to what h e had to say . `` People respect him , so he 'll have some influence , of course , but how much depends on how he acts , '' said Nikolai Shemetov , 45 , a mecha nic at a local power station . Solzhenitsyn pointedly avoided direct criticism o f Yeltsin despite several questions about the Russian leader , who sent him a we lcome-home telegram Saturday . Solzhenitsyn supported Yeltsin in the Russian lea der 's past political crises , including last year 's battles with the now-disba nded hard-line parliament . Saturday , however , he had nothing good to say abou t the changes in Russia under Yeltsin 's rule , except to applaud the collapse o f communism and Soviet power . He particularly took issue with Yeltsin 's econom ic policies , which he said he had followed closely through news accounts and co nversations from his home in Vermont . He said he had become convinced that the reforms , including the controversial program to privatize state property , had done nothing more than enrich a few and impoverish many . Solzhenitsyn 's first- hand survey this morning of the new Russian economic world , at an outdoor marke t overflowing with food and clothing , did not seem to alter his opinion . Like many Russians , he appeared shocked by the high prices in comparison to 20 years ago and seemed less impressed that so much more is available now than before . When he commented on the high prices to one merchant , the man responded that be cause of inflation `` the prices will be even higher tomorrow . '' As was the ca se on Friday , when he arrived in this naval port city from the United States , Solzhenitsyn was besieged everywhere he went by well over 100 local and foreign journalists , eager to monitor his every statement and reaction . Some Russians have suggested that Solzhenitsyn himself has created the commotion , by beginnin g his return to Russia here in Vladivostok rather than in Moscow , which is much more accustomed to celebrities . But Saturday he complained bitterly about the constant swarm of reporters , saying it had made it impossible for him to meet w ith and talk to ordinary Russians , his most important goal over the next few mo nths . The family will travel slowly across Russia to Moscow in an effort to get reacquainted with the country . Solzhenitsyn has been so harried by the media t hat one of his best moments so far , according to his sons , was when he and his entourage got stuck in an elevator at the Vladivostok City Hospital for 20 minu tes with the head of the medical facility . `` There was no noise ; no one was t here , '' Solzhenitsyn said . `` I learned a lot . '' BEIT HANINA , West Bank Inside the nerve center for Palestinian economic reviva l , Deputy Managing Director Hasan Abu Libdeh is waiting for the phone to ring . In fact , he 's still waiting for the phone to be installed . So far , the Pale stinian Economic Council for Development and Reconstruction , the agency set up to translate billions of dollars in foreign aid into jobs and prosperity for Pal estinian self-rule , does not have a single telephone line . The Palestinians sa y Israel 's military government in the West Bank is blocking their request for t elephones . The military government says it is a problem of poor West Bank infra structure . Either way , it is a clue to the uncertainty swirling around the amb itious dreams of Palestinian economic renewal and the global rescue plan that is supposed to make it happen . After the self-rule accord was signed last Septemb er between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization , nations around the world promised to help the nascent Palestinian Authority rebuild after 27 years of Israeli occupation . At a U.S.-sponsored conference in Washington , $ 2.1 bi llion was pledged to the Palestinians over five years , including $ 600 million for the first year . Seven months later , the global rescue program is looking m ore like a mirage . So far , only a tiny fraction of the money has trickled in . And now that the Palestinians and Israelis have started to implement their agre ement , the Palestinians are facing enormous financial problems that they are wo efully unprepared to solve . For now , Palestinians in the street are still cele brating the arrival of their own police force in the Gaza Strip and the West Ban k town of Jericho . But the best and brightest Palestinian technocrats are deepl y worried about what will happen when the celebrations fade , when the people on the street discover that the government under their own flag cannot deliver the same services that the Israeli occupiers did . `` We 'll be drinking a lot of u nsweetened coffee , '' said Libdeh . `` It will be the real life . '' The reason s why the money has not yet started flowing from abroad are complex and help ill uminate the uncertain nature of the new Palestinian experiment . PLO Chairman Ya sser Arafat , who single-handedly controlled the finances of his revolutionary o rganization for three decades , has not yielded to the demands of the World Bank and donor nations that he give up his old methods when running the new Palestin ian Authority . While Arafat has made some concessions under pressure , authorit ative sources said he has not given up his desire to run everything . Worried ab out corruption , as well as about political favoritism , the international donor s have not yet made good on their major pledges . According to these sources inc luding Palestinians and Western diplomats familiar with the events the whole con cept of a coordinated , global aid effort to the Palestinians may be stalling . Instead , the sources report , Arafat is actively looking for ways to bypass the World Bank by dealing directly with individual companies and countries for lucr ative projects in Gaza and Jericho . This system would help preserve his central role , without the headache of restrictions being imposed by international dono rs . The sources said British , American , French , German and Danish firms quie tly have been beating a path to PLO headquarters in Tunis recently , with the ap proval or acquiescence of their governments , seeking contracts for long-term de velopment projects such as printing a new currency , building a new telephone sy stem and constructing airports and an electric system . `` The reasons the donor s are going to Tunis are the same reasons Israel decided to go there : That 's w here the decisions are made , '' one diplomat said . The Palestinian economic co uncil here , based just outside Jerusalem , was originally intended to channel t he aid from abroad into useful projects in the West Bank and Gaza . But for mont hs the international donors complained the council was not adequately set up to avoid abuse . Recently , the council 's bylaws were approved , and six top offic ials were given six-month reappointments , including several prominent Palestini an economists . Last week , Arafat also selected the U.S.-based investment bank Morgan Stanley to help manage the reconstruction efforts , according to the Pale stinian news agency Wafa . But the big money has not started flowing , and there is a growing fear that it may never materialize on the scale promised . The Pal estinian economic council `` is doing some good work , '' said another Western a id expert , `` but the question still lingers : Who is the genuine authority ? ' ' While some countries are anxious to win lucrative contracts , they are loath t o pour money into an organization that will be exclusively controlled by Arafat , he said . The suspicion is strong among donors that Arafat , if left to his ow n devices , will channel aid to political friends in the territories-for example , that he will build health clinics to reward operatives in his Fatah movement , rather than where the clinics are needed . There is also a reverse suspicion : The Palestinians complain that foreign donors are only interested in projects t hat look good back home , with a plaque on the front door , rather than let Pale stinians build what they want . But the Palestinians admit they are not in a pos ition to turn anyone down . In the near term , the Palestinians are heading for an economic upheaval . The Israelis have turned over to them health , education and other government departments in Gaza and Jericho , but the 7,000 workers ' s alaries have been paid only through June 1 . After that , the Palestinians have to begin running their own government and they are short of cash . The new Pales tinian national authority has about $ 19 million in a special emergency fund , o fficials said . But after a few months , it will be severely strained . During t he occupation , Israel spent about $ 70 million a year to provide services in wh at are now the self-rule areas of Gaza and Jericho ; by most accounts , the Pale stinians will need two or three times that amount , since they must support poli ce as well . Already , thousands of Palestinian policemen in Gaza and Jericho ar e unpaid and sleeping on mattresses ; Israel recently donated military rations t o keep them from going hungry . The Palestinians have been given the authority t o set tax rates and collect taxes . But all the Palestinian workers in the tax d epartment of the Israeli military government resigned six years ago at the begin ning of the intifada , or uprising against Israeli occupation . In addition , th e Palestinians lack expertise to run the computerized tax system left behind by Israel , which is entirely in Hebrew , said Elise Shazar , spokeswoman for the m ilitary government . Moreover , it is not at all certain that Palestinians in Ga za already hard-pressed by high unemployment and Israel 's closure of the territ ories will be willing to pay taxes to the new authority . Palestinians estimate it may take months to begin to generate revenues and that the collection rate ma y be only 40 percent of what is sought . While tax revenue is supposed to also c ome from Palestinian workers in Israel , so far Israel has only permitted a tric kle to return to their jobs . The result will be a skyrocketing deficit for day- to-day needs the first year , perhaps $ 150 million or more . The Palestinians a re hoping the international donors will decide soon pick up the tab . But a seni or Israeli official , who spoke to reporters on condition he not be identified , was skeptical . `` We know that the international community is insisting on spe cific projects to support , '' he said . `` They don't want to pay for daily exp enses . If everyone is stalling and there is no money for expenses , the whole t hing may collapse . `` It 's going to become our problem in no time , '' said th e official . `` And then what ? '' WASHINGTON An unresolved feud in the Clinton administration , which abruptly cu t off Peru and Colombia from access to U.S. counter-drug intelligence , has blin ded all three nations to the flights of drug smuggling aircraft and threatened t o fracture a brittle alliance against the northward flow of drugs . The sudden h alt in cooperation has created a significant opportunity for traffickers , accor ding to civilian and military narcotics experts . Relatively few drug flights ha ve ever been intercepted , but data on their origin and destination has set the stage for raids on drug labs and storage facilities that netted some 300 metric tons of contraband last year . Because the State and Defense Departments could n ot agree on a policy and failed to coordinate their moves , Peru and Colombia re ceived no warning and scant explanation of the May 1 intelligence cutoff . On th at day , the U.S. . Southern Command suspended operation of U.S. ground-based ra dars in those countries and stopped allowing their nationals aboard U.S. surveil lance flights launched from Panama . The two South American nations have begun t o retaliate . Peru has banned the American AWACS and P-3 surveillance craft from its air space , and Colombia threatened in writing last week to expel two U.S. mobiground radars . At issue is the use of American flight tracking data by Colo mbia and Peru to locate and then force down or shoot down suspected drug planes . The United States has long regarded any attack on civil aircraft as illegal un der international conventions and detrimental to U.S. interests as the world 's leading aviation power , but it sometimes has winked at quiet efforts against dr ug traffickers . The Pentagon , supported by the Justice Department and a recent review by lawyers for eight government agencies , maintains that assisting in t he shootdowns breaks U.S. and international law . Senior State Department offici als , while acknowledging what one called `` legal concerns , '' want to continu e some form of a policy under which the United States would share the tracking d ata but express its official disapproval of attacks in flight . Beyond the legal concerns , the Defense Department worries about the possibility that the two So uth American nations will down innocent aircraft by accident . Days after U.S. . F-15 fighters shot down two American helicopters in northern Iraq , Defense Und ersecretary Frank G. Wisner wrote on April 20 to Undersecretary of State Peter T arnoff . `` Recent events in Iraq , '' said his classified letter , underscored the need to protect innocent aircraft . The Defense Department would stop the in telligence sharing on May 1 , he wrote , unless Colombia and Peru agreed not to use weapons against aircraft in flight . What threw the interagency dispute into crisis was its uncommon rancor and the willingness of U.S. adversaries to let i t spill out into relations with Colombia and Peru . Noteworthy because it accomp anies new claims of bureaucratic peace within the Clinton administration , the p olicy feud has `` descended into hatred , '' according to one senior participant . Defense Department officials charge that the State Department deliberately fa iled to provide advance notice of the May 1 cutoff to Peru and Colombia or even to U.S. ambassadors there in order to create maximum backlash . When the two cou ntries protested , one Colombian diplomat said a State Department contact told h im the Defense Department cut off the aircraft intelligence `` unilaterally '' a nd that the military `` didn't even tell the State Department about it . '' In a remarkable suggestion that one U.S. official likened to `` treason , '' the sam e State Department official even encouraged Colombia to lodge a strong protest , according to the Colombian diplomat and another U.S. official with knowledge of the conversation . `` I have been through a lot in 27 years of service , '' wro te Alvin Adams , U.S. ambassador in Peru , in a classified May 3 cable to compla in that he received no word in advance . `` Of the little I can remember in my a dvanced middle age , this is in my ken of experience a standout . '' Adams asked `` urgently for coordinated guidance from you . '' In Washington , two of the p rincipal adversaries , Assistant Secretary of State Robert S. Gelbard and Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Brian E. Sheridan , each in charge of counter-na rcotics policy for his department , are said to be not on speaking terms . State Department officials , according to sources there and on Capitol Hill , have to Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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