Published on Saturday, August 12, 2000 in the International Herald Tribune 

CIA Reneges On Making Public Chile Documents
by Vernon Loeb 
 
After promising for months to make public a wealth of information about 
covert operations by the Central Intelligence Agency in Chile, senior CIA 
officials are refusing to give up hundreds of documents compiled under a 
declassification process ordered by President Bill Clinton.

Mr. Clinton announced the effort after General Augusto Pinochet, the former 
Chilean dictator, was placed under house arrest in England in 1998. Mr. 
Clinton ordered agencies throughout the federal government to review and 
broadly make public secret U.S. documents relating to political violence and 
human rights abuses in Chile from 1968 to 1991.

But the director of central intelligence, George Tenet, decided this week 
against declassifying hundreds of documents culled from files and databases 
inside the agency's secretive Directorate of Operations. He based his 
decision on grounds that making them public them would reveal too much about 
CIA sources and methods.

An agency spokesman, Bill Harlow, said hundreds of other CIA documents would 
be released as scheduled Sept. 14, including some pertaining to covert 
operations in 1970 that were aimed at keeping Salvador Allende, a socialist, 
from taking the presidency. But agency officials have determined that 
hundreds of others, Mr. Harlow said, cannot be made public without damaging 
intelligence sources and operational methods.

Another senior intelligence official said that ''a compelling case has been 
made with regard to how methods would be affected'' if certain documents 
related to later covert activities in Chile were made public.

''No one is hiding a human rights abuse in what's left,'' the official said. 
''This was not a frivolous decision. At the end of the day, we could only go 
so far.''

But the CIA's last-minute reluctance to make public the documents compiled by 
its own personnel has triggered criticism inside and outside the Clinton 
administration.

''We have built an inter-agency process to declassify as many documents as 
possible, consistent with protecting sources and methods,'' said P. J. 
Crowley, a spokesman for the National Security Council. ''Between now and 
next month, we will be pushing everyone involved to make sure we declassify 
as much as we can.''

Another administration official, demanding anonymity, offered a harsher 
assessment. ''The credibility of the whole project has been hurt by the way 
the CIA has handled it,'' the official said.





Copyright 2000 IHT


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