Monday, April 20, 2020
Iran-Contra Essays - Nicaraguan Revolution, IranContra Affair
  Iran-Contra    The Iran-Contra affair is not one scandalous incident, but rather two covert  operations started under Reagan's administration. In the beginning, these two  operations were independent of each other, but eventually became linked  though funds received from the sale of arms to Iran for hostages and then  given to the Contras fighting to overthrow a Marxist government in  Nicaragua. The scandal began with Nicaraguan politics. After the Marxist  Sandinista regime took over Nicaragua in 1979, the government was faced  with a growing communist threat to US interest in Central America. When  President Reagan took office in 1981, he was vehemently determined to halt  the spread of communism, especially in Central America (Arnson 1989, 8).  Seeking to bolster US prestige and military power, Reagan took a tough  stand against communism in the Western Hemisphere. In Nicaragua, he gave  the Central Intelligence Agency the approval to help organize and aid a group  of Contrarevolucionarios or Contras who were in opposition to the  Sandinista regime (Arnson 1989, 6). Congress, unwilling to fight in another  country's war after the devastating loss in Vietnam, began restricting the use  of government funds for rebel guerrillas in Central America. The CIA,  concerned that soon Congress would cut off the funding for their program,  began to stockpile arms for the contras (Walsh 1997, 18). Their fears were  realized when Congress enacted the second Boland Amendment which  stated: No funds available tot he Central Intelligence Agency, the Department  of Defense, or any other agency or entity of the United States involved in  intelligence activities may be obligated or expended for the purpose of which  would have the effect of supporting, directly or indirectly, military or  paramilitary operations in Nicaragua by any nation, group, organization,  movement, or individual (Arnson 1989, 167-8). The Reagan administration  interpreted the Boland Amendment as not covering the activities of the  National Security Council (NSC). The NSC was established in 1947 with  the explicit purpose of advising the President on all matters relating to national  security. Beginning with the Eisenhower administration, the NSC was given a  small staff that ultimately grew and turned into a vital arm of the presidency.  As years went by, the NSC staff began controlling the policy-making output  of both State and Defense Department, as well as the activities of the CIA  (Draper 1991, 11). When the CIA was banned from acting in Nicaragua by  the second Boland amendment, President Reagan surreptitiously bypassed  Congress and employed his NSC staff instead. National Security Council  staffer Oliver North became the central coordinator supplying aid to the  Contras. After Reagan's reelection in 1984, he began an additional covert  operation. This time, it was the effort to release seven American hostages  being held in Lebanon by a radical Islamic group called the Hezbollah. The  operation included trading arms for hostages, which clearly violated the Arms  Export Control Act, the National Security Act, and stated US policy not to  deal with terrorists (Walsh 1997, 3). Iran, in the middle of a war with Iraq,  was desperate for weapons. Many Iranians approached US officials offering  t help free the hostages in Lebanon in exchange for arms. National Security  Adviser Robert McFarlane was approached by Israeli intermediaries and  was persuaded to ask the President about negations with the Iranians.  Reagan approved a shipment of 96 wire-guided anti-tank missiles to be  delivered to Iran on August 30, 1985, and another 408 to be delivered on  September 14. After the secret exchange of these weapons, the Iranians  released only one hostage. In an effort to release more hostages, a second  large shipment of weapons was to take place in November. The Israeli  aircraft intended to ship the weapons could not fly directly to Iran. The plan  was to fly to a European air base, transfer the cargo to another plane and  then fly to Iran, but they were not able to obtain the necessary clearance to  do so. From that point on, Oliver North began arranging for CIA planes to  carry the shipment of weapons to Iran (Walsh 1997, 5). The President then  decided to drop the Israelis as middlemen and negotiated the direct sale of  arms from the United Stated to Iran. HE also decided to keep these actions  secret from Congress. North subsequently began selling the Iranians missiles  at marked up prices. He negotiated low purchase price with the Department  of Defense and the surplus funds were then used to pay for aid to the Contras  (Walsh 1997, 20). Two unrelated incidents that revealed Iranian and Contra  covert operations occurred within one month of each other. On October 5,  1986, Sandinista troops shot down an    
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