Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Pubdate: Fri, 17 Jul 1998 Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: PETE CAREY - Mercury News Staff Writer PROBE UNCOVERS NO EVIDENCE CIA CONSPIRED WITH DRUG TRAFFICKERS An investigation into the CIA's possible dealings with Central American drug smugglers during the 1980s has found no evidence that the CIA conspired with drug traffickers who were helping Nicaraguan Contra rebels, sources say. But a classified report of the probe, conducted by the agency's Inspector General's Office, also concluded that some CIA personnel were aware of allegations of drug trafficking by some Contra supporters and failed to adequately check them out. ``In some of these cases the allegations were handled appropriately'' while in others they were not, said an official familiar with the report. According to the New York Times, the report found that the CIA's decision to keep paid agents suspected of drug trafficking, or to continue dealing with them in some less-formal relationship, was made by top officials at the agency's headquarters in Langley, Va., in the midst of the war waged by the CIA-backed Contras against Nicaragua's leftist Sandinista government. But the report also says that ``the central shortcomings in the handling of such allegations have been addressed and corrected in the years since the Contra program ended,'' the official said. The investigation was the second part of a general inquiry by the Inspector General's Office, ordered in response to a series published in the Mercury News nearly two years ago about connections between drug trafficking by CIA-sponsored Contra rebels and the crack cocaine explosion in the United States. Two dealers The series described the activities of two Nicaraguan drug dealers, both Contra sympathizers, who were said to have sold cocaine in the United States and used the millions of dollars in proceeds to buy weapons for the Contras. The series credited one of them, Danilo Blandon, with selling enough cocaine to a South-Central Los Angeles crack dealer to spark a U.S. crack epidemic. The series also implied that the drug dealers received government protection, possibly from the CIA. Last year, the Mercury News reported shortcomings in the series, and the series' author has since left the newspaper. The report contains so much classified information about the agency's sources and methods, according to a CIA spokesman, that the agency is uncertain whether it can publish an unclassified version. There has been speculation that it contains damaging information about the CIA's willingness to ignore the illegal activities of some Nicaraguan Contras. The possibility that the report won't be made public drew a swift and angry response from Rep. Juanita Millender-McDonald, who represents the Watts area of Los Angeles. She said she is disgusted with the turn of events. ``My constituents are waiting,'' the congresswoman said. ``I am disappointed that the inspector general has come up with something that can't be released.'' The completed report has been given to the Senate and House committees on intelligence. Millender-McDonald said she expects the House intelligence committee to hold hearings on the matter. The classified report, running to about 500 pages with various appendixes, found ``no information to indicate that the CIA or its employees conspired with or assisted Contra-related organizations or individuals in drug trafficking,'' said a federal official familiar with the report. `No' CIA involvement The inspector general's mission was to find out whether the CIA or its people were involved in supporting drug trafficking. ``The answer to that is clearly no,'' the official said. Peter Kornbluh, a senior analyst at the National Security Archive, a non-profit organization specializing in obtaining the declassification of foreign policy documents, also challenged the CIA's explanation of why the report could not be released. ``The truth is,'' Kornbluh said, ``even if there is a modicum of validity to the sources and methods argument, and in this case I don't think there is, national security is far better served by the release of the information than the withholding of it.'' A report released earlier this year by the CIA's inspector general found no link between the drug dealers and the CIA and said the CIA did not intervene to protect them. It also found no information to indicate that the drug trafficking was motivated by a commitment to support the Contra cause. The second phase of the investigation looked at any knowledge the CIA had of other alleged drug trafficking by the Contras or people associated with the program. An investigation by the Department of Justice's inspector general also has produced a report that has not been made public. - --- Checked-by: "Rich O'Grady"