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- <text id=89TT2789>
- <title>
- Oct. 23, 1989: Who Lost Noriega?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Oct. 23, 1989 Is Government Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 39
- Who Lost Noriega?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Mainly the coup's muddled leaders, but there is plenty of blame
- to go around
- </p>
- <p> What kind of rebel officers risk their lives to storm the lair
- of a hated military dictator, capture him at gunpoint, decline
- either to kill him or to turn him over to U.S. forces standing by
- to receive him, then let him contact his mistress, who calls loyal
- troops to his rescue?
- </p>
- <p> That credulity-stretching scenario was among the fresh
- revelations that spilled out last week in Washington during
- recriminations over the botched rebellion against Panamanian
- strongman Manuel Antonio Noriega. Those most to blame for the
- coup's collapse seemed to be the brave but muddled men who staged
- it. But congressional critics from both parties lambasted George
- Bush for failing to dispatch American troops to snatch the dictator
- and spirit him back to the U.S., where he is wanted on
- drug-trafficking charges. The White House in turn scolded Congress
- for trying to micromanage a fast-moving crisis and for
- hypocritically turning hawkish after earlier rejecting
- Administration plans for covert action against the strongman. There
- is plenty of blame to go around:
- </p>
- <p> -- The Rebels
- </p>
- <p> Their first big mistake was trying to persuade Noriega to
- retire peacefully instead of killing him or handing him over to the
- U.S. Their second was counting on Major Francisco Olechea,
- commander of the elite Battalion 2000, to be neutral; instead, he
- brought his troops to Noriega's rescue. The widow of the slain coup
- leader Major Moises Giroldi called Olechea a turncoat. Some U.S.
- officials, however, suspect that Olechea switched sides because he
- did not get timely assurances that Giroldi and his troops had
- succeeded in capturing Noriega. He waited for more than two hours
- after he knew the coup attempt had begun, and then, under pressure
- from loyalist commanders to come to Noriega's aid, Olechea and his
- troops moved out from their base at Fort Cimarron at about 10 a.m.
- Not until an hour later did the rebels manage to seize a state
- radio station and begin broadcasting their capture of Noriega.
- </p>
- <p> -- The Administration
- </p>
- <p> Bush believed, correctly, that U.S. participation in the coup
- attempt would discredit the Panamanian opposition and anger Latin
- American countries in which the U.S. has more important interests.
- The President, however, has sent confusing signals by using macho
- rhetoric about U.S. military options. Such tough talk, designed to
- quiet right-wing critics, raised expectations in both the U.S. and
- Panama of American intervention.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the long-standing contacts between the U.S. and
- Panamanian military and intelligence communities, the U.S.
- apparently did not learn of the coup until Giroldi spilled his
- story. Compounding that failure, the CIA officers whom Giroldi
- informed of the coup failed to arrange for reliable communication
- with him. "The first, the absolute first thing you do in this case
- is put somebody with a radio next to him," says a former CIA
- director.
- </p>
- <p> Communications back in Washington were not much better, in part
- because the Bush Administration did not follow a crisis-management
- practice from the Reagan era: immediately convene the senior
- deputies of the Defense and State Departments, the CIA and the
- National Security Council to compare information. Moreover, Bush,
- a former CIA director who loves to pore over undigested
- intelligence cables, insisted on receiving three streams of often
- conflicting reports from the CIA, Defense and State.
- </p>
- <p> -- Congress
- </p>
- <p> While the coup was under way, Senator Jesse Helms and other
- lawmakers were contacting sources at State, the CIA, the Pentagon,
- the White House -- and even the U.S. embassy and military bases in
- Panama. Those contacts yielded buckets of criticism from mid-level
- officials who considered the Bush response to the coup too limp.
- "This creates all kinds of problems," says Defense Secretary Dick
- Cheney. "You cannot have every member of Congress involved . . .
- while it is still unfolding."
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. ban on political assassinations may also have reduced
- Bush's options. In July 1988 the Reagan Administration proposed
- helping one of Noriega's former cronies, Lieut. Colonel Eduardo
- Herrera, overthrow him. The idea was rejected by the Senate
- Intelligence Committee out of fear that Noriega, who is always
- armed and heavily guarded, might have to be killed. Some of the
- Senators who have sniped publicly at Bush's failure to abduct
- Noriega were among those who privately opposed the Reagan proposal.
- </p>
- <p> In a session with the President last week, Oklahoma Democrat
- David Boren, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee,
- conceded that the assassination ban should be reinterpreted. The
- committee's ranking Republican, William Cohen of Maine, questioned
- whether U.S. officials might be allowed to "provide information or
- assistance to groups seeking to overthrow dictatorial governments
- and establish democracies."
- </p>
- <p> In Panama, meanwhile, Noriega and his terror squads admit to
- jailing 77 opponents, and have beaten up scores of others on the
- street. U.S. officials say that some suspected coup leaders have
- been tortured and executed. Noriega also banned unauthorized
- assemblies and froze salaries of civilian government employees.
- Some of them had celebrated a bit prematurely when they heard news
- of the Oct. 3 coup attempt, cheering and ripping posters of Noriega
- from their office walls.
- </p>
- <p> The Bush Administration hopes that Noriega's crackdown will
- radicalize his opposition, perhaps leading to another attempt to
- remove him. If such an effort is mounted, its organizers would be
- wise to pay more attention to security than those who took part in
- the recent fiasco. Consider the case of "Comandante Romano," a
- rebel officer who managed to escape from Panama to Miami, where
- government and church leaders hid him in a hotel in which he would
- be safe from Noriega's spies. Last week the comandante was granting
- television interviews, unaware that a brochure identifying his
- whereabouts (the Chateaubleau Inn) was cheerfully poking out of his
- breast pocket.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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