Pubdate: 4 Nov 1998 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Copyright: 1998 San Francisco Chronicle Section: Page A14 Author: Walter Pincus CIA KNEW OF CONTRA PLAN TO SELL DRUGS IN US In September 1981, as the Reagan administration was approving a covert CIA program to finance anti-Sandinista exile organization attempts to overthrow the Nicaraguan government, ``an asset'' told the agency that one of the major Contra rebel groups intended to sell drugs in the United States to pay its bills. The cable described for CIA headquarters a July 1981 drug delivery from Honduras to Miami, including the names of those involved, and called it ``an initial trial run'' by members of the Nicaraguan Revolutionary Democratic Alliance. An earlier cable had said the rebels felt they were ``being forced to stoop to criminal activities in order to feed and clothe their cadre.'' Although the cables were circulated to the departments of State, Justice, Treasury and Defense and all U.S. intelligence agencies, the CIA neither followed up nor attempted to corroborate the allegations, according to a 450- page declassified version of a report by the CIA's inspector general released last month. Nearly a decade after the end of the Nicaraguan war -- and after years of suspicions and scattered evidence of Contra involvement in drug trafficking - -- the CIA report discloses that the agency did little or nothing to respond to hundreds of drug allegations about Contra officials, their contractors and supporters contained in nearly 1,000 cables sent from the field to the agency's headquarters. In a few cases, the report says, officials instructed the Drug Enforcement Administration to hold back inquiring about charges involving alleged drug dealers connected with the Nicaraguan rebels. Looking back, Frederick Hitz, the now-retired CIA inspector general who supervised the report, said, ``We fell down on accountability. . . . There was a great deal of sloppiness and poor guidance in those days out of Washington.'' - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski