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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEditorials | Issues | June 2007 

Fighting War Protesters
email this pageprint this pageemail usJerry Markon - The Washington Post
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Mariela Perdomo of the Buena Vista locality of Havana, watches as Cuban President Fidel Castro speaks on television 05 June 2007 in Havana, Cuba. The CIA offered 150,000 dollars to members of the US mafia to kill Castro with poison pills, according to classified documents released Tuesday. (AFP/Adalberto Roque)
In the early 1970s, as Vietnam War-era protests swirled around the Washington area, local police borrowed riot equipment and received intelligence training from an unusual source: the CIA.

The agency, which is barred from domestic law enforcement, provided gas masks, stun guns, searchlights and protective vests. CIA specialists trained more than 20 officers - from the District, Fairfax and Arlington counties, and Alexandria - in surveillance photography, countersabotage and surreptitious entry.

The CIA-local nexus was included in hundreds of pages of documents released yesterday by the agency that detailed a quarter-century of CIA history. The records said the agency recruited officers primarily to protect CIA facilities from attack by protesters. "A conscious decision was made . . . to utilize the services of local police to repel invaders in case of riot or dissension," a top CIA official wrote in May 1973.

But the documents make it clear that the intelligence agency also wanted to keep tabs on the mammoth antiwar demonstrations that rocked Washington from 1969 through 1971. The D.C. police department, for example, was given a communications system "to monitor major anti-Vietnam war demonstrations," the records said.

The CIA aid also extended to basic law enforcement. Police officials in Montgomery County told The Post in 1973 that they received CIA surveillance training to combat street crime. The agency also gave Arlington and Alexandria a substance it had developed to detect whether someone had recently handled metallic objects, such as firearms.

Local police officials said yesterday that the CIA connection was too old for them to provide additional details. "We don't have any records," said Arlington police spokesman John Lisle. "We have no way to determine if we did receive any equipment or what we did with it."

Although the National Security Act of 1947, which established the CIA, says the agency has no stateside police or law enforcement powers, legal experts said it's unclear whether the CIA aid was illegal because the agency was only assisting local police.



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