The Hunt for Red Menace: - 13
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The Terrorist-Baiting
of CISPES
Paranoid Theories and
the FBI Probe of CISPES
The FBI Probe of CISPES
The genesis of the FBI probe of CISPES was a complex network of groups
and indviduals with a common counter-subversive worldview: · The
underlying theories which prompted the FBI investigation of CISPES were
developed at the start of the Cold War, and reflect the same discredited
view of subversion that the American public finally rejected to end the
McCarthy period. · Individual and groups who hold this discredited
view of subversion played influential roles in shaping the policies of
the Reagan Administration in this area, and then in some cases moved
on to become consultants and staff members in Adminstration and Congressional
posts. · These same groups and individuals then set out to rebuild
a private counter-subversion network among conservative and rightist
groups with the goal of assisting the government, and specifically the
FBI, in investigating subversion. The results of their investigations
were published in a range of newsletters and journals in articles which
frequently cross-cited each other and often traced back to unsubstantiated
charges of communist subversion made by persons testifying before congressional
witch-hunting committees. · Young conservatives from colleges and
universities were recruited and trained to participate in monitoring
and analyzing the activities of alleged subversive groups through a network
of interlocking conservative institutions based in Washington, D.C. · Information
and documents collected by private right-wing groups were provided to
government law-enforcement agencies that would otherwise be prevented
from obtaining the information by constitutional and legislative restrictions.
This biased and unverified information was then used to justify criminal
investigations of dissidents in general and the anti-interventionist
CISPES in particular.
Many activists involved in Central America issues became aware of ham-handed
snooping by Federal Bureau of Investigation agents in the early 1980's.
In 1986 the Center for Investigative Reporting in California used the
federal Freedom of Information Act to obtain FBI files which suggested
a large-scale probe into CISPES. In 1987 testimony by a former FBI informant
Frank Varelli also suggested a broad attack on CISPES by the FBI. Varelli
later told reporters of the involvement of other governmental and private
right-wing groups in targetting CISPES.
Some 1300 pages of additional FBI files released in 1988 by New York's
Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), on behalf of CISPES, reveal in
sharp detail the extent and nature of the FBI probe into CISPES. More
importantly, the files show that the FBI, to justify its actions, accepted
as fact a right-wing conspiratorial world-view which sees dissent as
treason and resistance to oppression as terrorism.
The first FBI investigation of CISPES was launched in September of 1981
to determine if CISPES should be forced to register under the Foreign
Agents Registration Act. Among the documents used by the FBI to justify
this CISPES probe, according to Congressional testimony by FBI official
Oliver "Buck" Revell, was a 1981 article by a former FBI informant
and ongoing right-wing private spy-John Rees. The Rees article appeared
in Review of the News a magazine published by the paranoid ultra-right
John Birch Society. This FBI investigation was terminated without indictments
in December of 1981.
A second FBI investigation of CISPES began in March of 1983. It was
premised on the right-wing conspiracy theory that CISPES was a cover
for "terrorist" activity. To justify this view, the FBI relied
not only on reports from its informant Varelli, but also in part on a
conspiratorial analysis contained in a report written by Michael Boos,
a staffer at the right-wing Young Americas Foundation. This FBI "counter-terrorism" investigation
was terminated without indictments in 1985.
The FBI relying on the malicious musings of paranoid right-wing ideologues
to justify probes of the anti-Administration CISPES is rather like the
IRS assigning Jerry Falwell to audit the financial records of the American
Civil Liberties Union.
The Terrorist-Baiting of CISPES
The June 1984 report on CISPES by Michael Boos, the staff member at
the Young Americas Foundation, was titled: "Group in Nation's Capitol
to Aid Left-Wing Terrorists." In the report Boos wrote that the
D.C. Chapter of CISPES would "soon launch a fundraising campaign
to provide direct military assistance to the Soviet supported Marxist
terrorists seeking to overthrow the recently elected government in El
Salvador." This conclusion was reached when Boos made the Kierkegaardian
assumption that the shoe factory CISPES planned to help build in El Salvador
would not really benefit civilians, but would secretly make and repair
boots for rebel soldiers-and thus constituted military aid for "Soviet
supported Marxist terrorists."
Boos wrote his report after attending a public CISPES meeting in Washington,
D.C. According to a spokesperson at the Young Americas Foundation, Boos
was apparently engaging in a freelance information-gathering activity
not directly connected with his staff position. Boos filed his report
with the right-wing newsletter American Sentinel, and sent an
unsolicited copy to the FBI. The FBI promptly distributed it to 32 of
its field offices and apparently sent it to other federal agencies as
well.
It is ironic that the Boos report on CISPES for American Sentinel was
revealed in the FBI documents on CISPES since the Young Americas Foundation
is only a minor player in the right-wing information network. The Foundation
primarily is involved in recruiting college students into the conservative
anti-communist movement. Boos, while at Young Americas Foundation, circulated
a newsletter reporting on campus activists, but it too is not influential
in right-wing circles.
The Young Americas Foundation is a haven for aging former members of
the right-wing campus-based Young Americans for Freedom (YAF). While
it was started by a former YAF staffer, the Foundation is not formally
tied to that group. They are certainly right-wing ideological soul-mates,
however, and they cooperate closely. The Foundation once sent out a fundraising
mailing calling former Senator George McGovern "anti-American," and
claimed "our classrooms are full of teachers and textbooks that
tear down our system of republican government and free enterprise while
glorifying communism and socialism."
The American Sentinel, the newsletter which published the Boos
report on CISPES (without attribution) is, however, one of the core right-wing
outlets for red menace diatribes. The Sentinel frequently touts
its relationship to law enforcement. The Sentinel raised funds to send
its blacklist-style report to "723 FBI offices and local police
departments," pledging to keep track of "the liberals, the
left-wingers, the radicals and the Communists."
Paranoid Theories and the FBI Probe of
CISPES
That the views of the paranoid right wing find safe harbor at the FBI
is supported by the documents they released under the FOIA concerning
the probe of CISPES. As Alicia Fernandez of the Center for Constitutional
Rights explained in an article appearing in the Movement Support Network
News:
=== "In order to justify its investigation, the FBI utilized
two rationales: it posited the existence of a covert program and it
resurrected a 1950's favorite, the concept of a `front group.' These
two notions were extremely useful. By positing a covert program, FBI
headquarters was able to reason away the lack of findings in investigations
conducted by the field offices. === "When a field office reported
that assiduous investigation had revealed that a local CISPES chapter
pursued only such projects as teach-ins, slide shows, and pickets,
headquarters would remind the field office of the `covert program'
This, headquarters explained, was known to only a few CISPES members,
but represented CISPES' true intentions and activities. Thus headquarters
would caution the field office not to be deceived and urge it to dig
deeper. The deeper the field office dug, with no results, then clearly,
reasoned the FBI, the deeper they needed to dig. === "When field
offices cabled headquarters to inform it that they had located no CISPES
chapter but had found a Central American solidarity committee, or a
Latin American human rights group, or a sanctuary church, headquarters
would recommend aggressive investigation and explain that CISPES operated
through `fronts,' in which respectable people were duped for its `terrorist
purposes.'
In this way, any group which ever worked with CISPES or shared members
became a potential `front.' "The very logic of these rationales
increased the pressure to expand the hunt for fronts and intensify the
search for covert activities," Fernandez points out.
The FBI probe of CISPES involved 52 of the 59 Field Offices of the FBI.
Dossiers were compiled on hundreds of other organizations which intersected
in some vague way with CISPES during the course of the investigation.
Margaret Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights called the FBI
probe of CISPES a "sweeping and intrusive investigation. . .the
FBI utilized wiretaps, undercover agents, and informants in addition
to the type of intensive physical surveillance that is normally reserved
for investigation of serious crimes." According to Ratner:
=== "The investigation, which was begun in 1981 to determine
if a violation of the Foreign Agents Registration Act existed, was
quickly turned into a `Foreign Intelligence/Terrorism' inquiry, even
though no basis for such existed. The new category, however, allowed
the FBI to utilize `special techniques,' that are considered illegal
when applied to domestic investigations. It allowed the FBI to avoid
strictures developed to remedy the abuses that came to light in the
post-Vietnam protest era."
Ratner charges that "the investigation was used as one of the pretexts
for the harassment and surveillance" being reported by those who
oppose the Reagan administration's foreign policy.
FBI director William Sessions, however, defended the CISPES investigation
as a legitimate probe into criminal activity. But one FBI agent assumed
a more sinister motive for the CISPES investigation in a memo which warned:
=== "It is imperative at this time to formulate some plan of
action against CISPES and, specifically, against individuals [deletion]
who defiantly display their contempt for the US government by making
speeches and propagandizing their cause while asking for political
asylum. === "New Orleans is of the opinion that the Departments
of Justice and State should be consulted to explore the possibility
of deporting these individuals or at best denying them re-entry after
they leave.
Among the many groups named in the CISPES FBI files were: Central American
Solidarity Committee, Clergy and Laity Concerned, Church of the Brothers,
Chicago Interreligious Task Force, Fellowship of Reconciliation, Friends
Religious Society, Maryknoll Sisters, National Education Association,
Southern Christian Leaderhip Conference, United Steel Workers Union,
and the United Auto Workers union. Also named in the files were a number
of individual churches, colleges, religious orders, community organizations,
women's groups and political groups.
The following excerpt from the Pittsburgh FBI field office file on the
local CISPES affiliate, the Central American Mobilization Committee (CAMC),
showed the ideological framework which forms the basis of the FBI investigation:
=== "The membership of the CAMC and its affiliated groups appears
generally to be of two type groups: the `core' membership and the `affiliate'
membership. The `core' membership consists of individuals with strong
Communist or Socialist beliefs who have a history of being active in
Communist or Socialist political organizations, some since the Vietnam
War era. The `affiliate' membership, on the other hand, consists in
large part of local college students relatively new to the political
scene. It has at least one female high school student member. Some
of these younger `affiliate' members appear to be politically unsophisticated
in that they know little of current international events save what
they read or hear at their political meetings. Pittsburgh has noted
at least two of these members or affiliates both were young females."
The CISPES FOIA revelations came on the heels of charges by former FBI
informant Frank Varelli that he was pressured into inventing information
to show that CISPES was tied to terrorists. Varelli told a Congressional
subcommittee in 1987 that his reports were designed to provide an excuse
for the FBI to intimidate critics of Reagan's Central America policies.
According to Varelli:
=== "The FBI led me to believe that CISPES was a radical `terrorist'
organization. . . .Ironically, never once during the
next three years of my association with CISPES did I encounter anything
even close to the picture painted by the FBI. The CISPES organization
was peaceful, nonviolent, and devoted to changing the policies of the
United States towards Central America by persuasion and education.
Varelli sued the FBI, alleging they refused to pay him $65,000 in back
pay. Varelli was terminated as an informant when the FBI agent controlling
him carelessly lost in a car burglary files containing secret information
that might have blown Varelli's cover.
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