Adolfo Calero, Nicaragua’s CIA Man

Published in El País
(Spain) on 3 June 2012
by Carlos Salinas (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Marie Winnick. Edited by Laurence Bouvard.
Adolfo Calero, one of the fiercest opponents of the Sandinista movement in the 1980s, died of a lung condition on Saturday in Managua. He was 81. Calero was the founder and principal leader of the Contras, the right-wing guerrilla group financed by the United States that tried to overthrow Daniel Ortega’s first administration through an armed conflict that left thousands dead and destroyed Nicaragua’s economy. Ironically, Calero died during the second term of his former arch-enemy, who returned to power in Nicaragua in 2006.

Born in Managua in 1931, Calero was an opponent of the Somozas, who had turned Nicaragua into their own family fiefdom, ruling for 47 years with an iron fist until the Sandinista revolution victory in July of 1979. During the Somoza years, he studied at the University of Notre Dame in the United States. In the '80s, he was manager of the Coca-Cola plant in Managua, and the CIA's connection in the anti-Sandinista movement. He had previously collaborated with the Sandinistas in fighting the Somoza dynasty, but then distanced himself for ideological differences. “They (the Sandinista National Liberation Front) wanted to overthrow Somoza, and we wanted to overthrow Somoza, but we wanted to replace him with a democratic government and elections,” said Calero in an interview.

In 1983 he founded the Nicaraguan Democratic Force, which later became the Nicaraguan Resistance. It was the armed guerrilla movement that mobilized more than 10,000 men to fight against the Sandinista regime.

As a member of the Conservative Party (which today is a divided political organization with no significance in Nicaragua), Calero was one of the main players in the Central American country’s recent history, though in later decades he stayed away from politics. He founded the Contras “to liberate the homeland from Cuban-Soviet domination,” and became their main leader. An admirer of the United States, he was a coarse-spoken man with political aspirations that never materialized.

Calero was the administrator of the funds received by the anti-Sandinista guerrillas, through which he was directly involved in the Iran-Contra affair, which put the Ronald Reagan administration in jeopardy. In 1987, Reagan himself stated in an address to the nation that he assumed “full responsibility” of what was also referred to as Irangate: the illegal sale of weapons to Teheran during its war against Iraq, behind Congress’s back, in exchange for hostages from the United States. Some of the funds from those shady transactions were used by the CIA to finance the Contras (labeled by Reagan as “freedom fighters”) and their fight in Nicaragua. Calero swore at the time that he did not know that the $30 million-plus received by the Contras for the purchase of weapons and supplies had come from the sale of weapons to Iran, but in May of 1987, General Richard Secord, a specialist in clandestine operations who had been heading a network to arm the Contras, admitted before Congress that "this Administration knew of my conduct and approved it," and that he "believed very much in the significance of what we were doing and that our conduct was in furtherance of the President's policies."

In 1989, disillusioned after the scandal because Washington had turned its back on the Contras, Calero blamed the United States for the failure of the armed group that he founded and directed. He said, “From night until morning, the North Americans told us, ‘Abandon these people, tell them good bye, and go back to the political struggle in Nicaragua.’ I don’t accept the United States’ decision that the struggle is now in Nicaragua. I don’t adhere to pressure.” However, trapped by international pressure and abandoned by the United States, Calero decided to return to Nicaragua in 1988 to negotiate the end of the war on the Sandinista regime.

He was also an influential force in the National Opposition Union, a coalition of 14 parties: conservative, liberal, Christian Democrat and Socialist, which became the main political opposition to Daniel Ortega at the end of the '80s. However, because of differences with other leaders in the organization, Calero resigned before the elections in 1990, when the UNO democratically defeated the Sandinistas. At the time, the UNO was led by Violeta Chamorro, wife of Pedro Joaquin Chamorro, a political opponent and president of the daily newspaper, “La Prensa,” who had been killed by Somoza.

Calero was one of the key players of Nicaragua’s recent history, who defended his people’s fight until his last days. “If not for the Contras, who knows what would have happened here,” he recently declared.


Adolfo Calero, el hombre de la CIA en Nicaragua

Fundó y dirigió la Contra, la guerrilla antisandinista

Adolfo Calero, uno de los más feroces opositores al sandinismo en la década de los ochenta, murió el sábado en Managua, a los 81 años, debido a afecciones pulmonares. Calero fue fundador y principal dirigente de la Contra, la guerrilla derechista financiada por Estados Unidos que intentó derrocar al primer Gobierno de Daniel Ortega, a través de una lucha armada que dejó miles de muertos y destrozó la economía de Nicaragua. Irónicamente, Calero murió bajo el segundo mandato de su otrora archienemigo que regresó al poder en Nicaragua en 2006.

Calero (Managua, 1931) fue un opositor al régimen de los Somoza, que tuvieron a Nicaragua como su finca familiar durante 47 años, gobernando con mano dura hasta el triunfo de la revolución sandinista en julio de 1979. Fue director de la Coca-Cola, en Managua, durante el somocismo, se educó en la Universidad estadounidense de Notre Dame, y en los ochenta fue el hombre fuerte de la CIA en la lucha antisandinista. Antes, había colaborado en la lucha contra el somocismo, pero se distanció de los sandinistas por diferencias ideológicas. "Ellos (el Frente Sandinista de Liberación Nacional) querían botar a Somoza y nosotros queríamos botar a Somoza, pero sustituirlo con un Gobierno democrático y hacer elecciones", dijo Calero en una entrevista.

En 1983 fundó la llamada Fuerza Democrática Nicaragüense, que más tarde se convertiría en la Resistencia Nicaragüense, la guerrilla armada que llegó a movilizar a más de 10.000 hombres para luchar contra el régimen sandinista.

Miembro del Partido Conservador (hoy una organización política dividida y sin importancia en Nicaragua), Calero ha sido uno de los personajes principales en la historia reciente de este país centroamericano, aunque en los últimas décadas se mantenía alejado de la política. Fundó la Contra bajo la premisa de "liberar a la patria de la dominación cubano-soviética", y se convirtió en su principal dirigente, un hombre de discurso rudo, admirador de Estados Unidos, con aspiraciones políticas que nunca cuajaron.

Calero era el administrador de los fondos que recibía la guerrilla antisandinista, por lo que estuvo directamente involucrado en el escándalo Irán-Contra, que puso en jaque a la Administración de Ronald Reagan. De hecho, en 1987 el mismo Reagan afirmó en un mensaje a la nación que asumía "toda la responsabilidad" del también llamado Irangate, la venta ilegal de armas a Teherán durante la guerra contra Irak, a espaldas del Congreso, a cambio de rehenes estadounidenses. Parte de los fondos de esas oscuras transacciones fueron usados por la CIA para financiar la lucha de la Contra en Nicaragua, una guerrilla a la que Reagan calificaba de "luchadores de la libertad". Calero aseguró entonces desconocer que los más de 30 millones de dólares que había recibido la Contra para compra de armamentoy avituallamiento venían de la venta de armas a Irán, pero en mayo de 1987 el general Richard Secord, especialista en operaciones clandestinas que dirigía una red para armar a la Contra, admitió ante el Congreso que "la Administración sabía al más alto nivel lo que estábamos haciendo para ayudar a la Contra y nosotros creíamos ejecutar la política del presidente".

En 1989, decepcionado porque Washington dio la espalda a la Contra después del escándalo, Calero culpó a Estados Unidos por el fracaso del grupo armado que fundó y dirigió: "De la noche a la mañana, los norteamericanos nos dijeron: abandonen a esta gente, díganles good bye y regresen a la lucha política en Nicaragua. Yo no acepto la decisión de Estados Unidos de que ahora la lucha es en Nicaragua, yo no acepto presiones". Sin embargo, acorralado por la presión internacional y abandonado por Estados Unidos, Calero decidió regresar a Nicaragua en 1988 para negociar el fin de la guerra con el Gobierno sandinista.

Calero fue también el hombre fuerte de la Unión Nacional Opositora (UNO), la coalición de 14 partidos conservadores, liberales, democristianos y socialistas que se convirtió en la principal oposición política a Daniel Ortega a finales de los ochenta. Sin embargo, por diferencias con otros líderes de la organización, Calero renunció a la misma antes de las elecciones de 1990, cuando la UNO, liderada por Violeta Chamorro —esposa del político opositor y director del diario La Prensa, Pedro Joaquín Chamorro, asesinado por Somoza—, derrotó democráticamente al sandinismo.

Calero fue uno de los hombres fuertes de la historia reciente de Nicaragua, que hasta sus últimos días defendió la lucha de su grupo. "De no haber sido por la Contra, quién sabe qué hubiera pasado aquí", declaró recientemente.
This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Austria: The US Courts Are the Last Bastion of Resistance

       

Germany: It’s Not Europe’s Fault

Canada: No, the Fed Was Not ‘Independent’ before Trump

El Salvador: The Game of Chess between the US and Venezuela Continues

Poland: Marek Kutarba: Donald Trump Makes Promises to Karol Nawrocki. But Did He Run Them by Putin?

Topics

Austria: The US Courts Are the Last Bastion of Resistance

       

Poland: Marek Kutarba: Donald Trump Makes Promises to Karol Nawrocki. But Did He Run Them by Putin?

El Salvador: The Game of Chess between the US and Venezuela Continues

Austria: Donald Is Disappointed in Vladimir

Austria: If This Is Madness, There is a Method to It

Germany: It’s Not Europe’s Fault

Germany: Donald Trump’s Failure

Canada: No, the Fed Was Not ‘Independent’ before Trump

Related Articles

Spain: Spain’s Defense against Trump’s Tariffs

Spain: Shooting Yourself in the Foot

Spain: King Trump: ‘America Is Back’

Spain: Trump Changes Sides

Spain: Narcissists Trump and Musk: 2 Sides of the Same Coin?