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- <text>
- <title>
- (Feb. 24, 1992) Reagan & Pope John Paul II
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 24, 1992 Holy Alliance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPECIAL REPORT, Page 28
- COVER STORY
- The Holy Alliance
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Faced with a military crackdown in Poland, Ronald Reagan and
- John Paul II secretly joined forces to keep the Solidarity union
- alive. They hoped not only to pressure Warsaw but to free all
- of Eastern Europe.
- </p>
- <p>By Carl Bernstein
- </p>
- <p> Only President Ronald Reagan and Pope John Paul II were
- present in the Vatican Library on Monday, June 7, 1982. It was
- the first time the two had met, and they talked for 50 minutes.
- In the same wing of the papal apartments, Agostino Cardinal
- Casaroli and Archbishop Achille Silvestrini met with Secretary
- of State Alexander Haig and Judge William Clark, Reagan's
- National Security Adviser. Most of their discussion focused on
- Israel's invasion of Lebanon, then in its second day; Haig told
- them Prime Minister Menachem Begin had assured him that the
- invasion would not go farther than 25 miles inside Lebanon.
- </p>
- <p> But Reagan and the Pope spent only a few minutes reviewing
- events in the Middle East. Instead they remained focused on a
- subject much closer to their heart: Poland and the Soviet
- dominance of Eastern Europe. In that meeting, Reagan and the
- Pope agreed to undertake a clandestine campaign to hasten the
- dissolution of the communist empire. Declares Richard Allen,
- Reagan's first National Security Adviser: "This was one of the
- great secret alliances of all time."
- </p>
- <p> The operation was focused on Poland, the most populous of
- the Soviet satellites in Eastern Europe and the birthplace of
- John Paul II. Both the Pope and the President were convinced
- that Poland could be broken out of the Soviet orbit if the
- Vatican and the U.S. committed their resources to destabilizing
- the Polish government and keeping the outlawed Solidarity
- movement alive after the declaration of martial law in 1981.
- </p>
- <p> Until Solidarity's legal status was restored in 1989 it
- flourished underground, supplied, nurtured and advised largely
- by the network established under the auspices of Reagan and John
- Paul II. Tons of equipment--fax machines (the first in
- Poland), printing presses, transmitters, telephones, shortwave
- radios, video cameras, photocopiers, telex machines, computers,
- word processors--were smuggled into Poland via channels
- established by priests and American agents and representatives
- of the AFL-CIO and European labor movements. Money for the
- banned union came from CIA funds, the National Endowment for
- Democracy, secret accounts in the Vatican and Western trade
- unions.
- </p>
- <p> Lech Walesa and other leaders of Solidarity received
- strategic advice--often conveyed by priests or American and
- European labor experts working undercover in Poland--that
- reflected the thinking of the Vatican and the Reagan
- Administration. As the effectiveness of the resistance grew, the
- stream of information to the West about the internal decisions
- of the Polish government and the contents of Warsaw's
- communications with Moscow became a flood. The details came not
- only from priests but also from spies within the Polish
- government.
- </p>
- <p> Down with Yalta
- </p>
- <p> According to aides who shared their leaders' view of the
- world, Reagan and John Paul II refused to accept a fundamental
- political fact of their lifetimes: the division of Europe as
- mandated at Yalta and the communist dominance of Eastern Europe.
- A free, non communist Poland, they were convinced, would be a
- dagger to the heart of the Soviet empire; and if Poland became
- democratic, other East European states would follow.
- </p>
- <p> "We both felt that a great mistake had been made at Yalta
- and something should be done," Reagan says today. "Solidarity
- was the very weapon for bringing this about, because it was an
- organization of the laborers of Poland." Nothing quite like
- Solidarity had ever existed in Eastern Europe, Reagan notes,
- adding that the workers' union "was contrary to anything the
- Soviets would want or the communists [in Poland] would want."
- </p>
- <p> According to Solidarity leaders, Walesa and his
- lieutenants were aware that both Reagan and John Paul II were
- committed to Solidarity's survival, but they could only guess
- at the extent of the collaboration. "Officially I didn't know
- the church was working with the U.S.," says Wojciech Adamiecki,
- the organizer and editor of underground Solidarity newspapers
- and now a counselor at the Polish embassy in Washington. "We
- were told the Pope had warned the Soviets that if they entered
- Poland he would fly to Poland and stay with the Polish people.
- The church was of primary assistance. It was half open, half
- secret. Open as far as humanitarian aid--food, money,
- medicine, doctors' consultations held in churches, for instance--and secret as far as supporting political activities:
- distributing printing machines of all kinds, giving us a place
- for underground meetings, organizing special demonstrations."
- </p>
- <p> At their first meeting, Reagan and John Paul II discussed
- something else they had in common: both had survived
- assassination attempts only six weeks apart in 1981, and both
- believed God had saved them for a special mission. "A close
- friend of Ronald Reagan's told me the President said, `Look how
- the evil forces were put in our way and how Providence
- intervened,'" says Pio Cardinal Laghi, the former apostolic
- delegate to Washington. According to National Security Adviser
- Clark, the Pope and Reagan referred to the "miraculous" fact
- that they had survived. Clark said the men shared "a unity of
- spiritual view and a unity of vision on the Soviet empire: that
- right or correctness would ultimately prevail in the divine
- plan."
- </p>
- <p> "Reagan came in with very simple and strongly held views,"
- says Admiral Bobby Inman, former deputy director of the CIA.
- "It is a valid point of view that he saw the collapse [of
- communism] coming and he pushed it--hard." During the first
- half of 1982, a five-part strategy emerged that was aimed at
- bringing about the collapse of the Soviet economy, fraying the
- ties that bound the U.S.S.R. to its client states in the Warsaw
- Pact and forcing reform inside the Soviet empire. Elements of
- that strategy included:
- </p>
- <p>-- The U.S. defense buildup already under way, aimed at
- making it too costly for the Soviets to compete militarily with
- the U.S. Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative--Star Wars--became a centerpiece of the strategy.
- </p>
- <p>-- Covert operations aimed at encouraging reform movements
- in Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Poland.
- </p>
- <p>-- Financial aid to Warsaw Pact nations calibrated to
- their willingness to protect human rights and undertake
- political and free-market reforms.
- </p>
- <p>-- Economic isolation of the Soviet Union and the
- withholding of Western and Japanese technology from Moscow. The
- Administration focused on denying the U.S.S.R. what it had hoped
- would be its principal source of hard currency in the 21st
- century: profits from a transcontinental pipeline to supply
- natural gas to Western Europe. The 3,600-mile-long pipeline,
- stretching from Siberia to France, opened on time on Jan. 1,
- 1984, but on a far smaller scale than the Soviets had hoped.
- </p>
- <p>-- Increased use of Radio Liberty, Voice of America and
- Radio Free Europe to transmit the Administration's messages to
- the peoples of Eastern Europe.
- </p>
- <p> Yet in 1982 neither Reagan nor the Pope could anticipate
- the accession of a Soviet leader like Mikhail Gorbachev, the
- father of glasnost and perestroika; his efforts at reform
- unleashed powerful forces that spun out of his control and led
- to the breakup of the Soviet Union. The Washington-Vatican
- alliance "didn't cause the fall of communism," observes a U.S.
- official familiar with the details of the plot to keep
- Solidarity alive. "Like all great and lucky leaders, the Pope
- and the President exploited the forces of history to their own
- ends."
- </p>
- <p> The Crackdown
- </p>
- <p> The campaign by Washington and the Vatican to keep
- Solidarity alive began immediately after General Wojciech
- Jaruzelski declared martial law on Dec. 13, 1981. In those dark
- hours, Poland's communications with the noncommunist world were
- cut; 6,000 leaders of Solidarity were detained; hundreds were
- charged with treason, subversion and counterrevolution; nine
- were killed; and the union was banned. But thousands of others
- went into hiding, many seeking protection in churches, rectories
- and with priests. Authorities took Walesa into custody and
- interned him in a remote hunting lodge.
- </p>
- <p> Shortly after Polish security forces moved into the
- streets, Reagan called the Pope for his advice. At a series of
- meetings over the next few days, Reagan discussed his options.
- "We had a massive row in the Cabinet and the National Security
- Council about putting together a menu of counteractions," former
- Secretary of State Haig recalls. "They ranged from sanctions
- that would have been crushing in their impact on Poland to
- talking so tough that we would have risked creating another
- situation like Hungary in '56 or Czechoslovakia in '68."
- </p>
- <p> Haig dispatched Ambassador at Large Vernon Walters, a
- devout Roman Catholic, to meet with John Paul II. Walters
- arrived in Rome soon after, and met separately with the Pope and
- with Cardinal Casaroli, the Vatican secretary of state. Both
- sides agreed that Solidarity's flame must not be extinguished,
- that the Soviets must become the focus of an international
- campaign of isolation, and that the Polish government must be
- subjected to moral and limited economic pressure.
- </p>
- <p> According to U.S. intelligence sources, the Pope had
- already advised Walesa through church channels to keep his
- movement operating underground, and to pass the word to
- Solidarity's 10 million members not to go into the streets and
- risk provoking Warsaw Pact intervention or civil war with Polish
- security forces. Because the communists had cut the direct phone
- lines between Poland and the Vatican, John Paul II communicated
- with Jozef Cardinal Glemp in Warsaw via radio. He also
- dispatched his envoys to Poland to report on the situation. "The
- Vatican's information was absolutely better and quicker than
- ours in every respect," says Haig. "Though we had some excellent
- sources of our own, our information was taking too long to
- filter through the intelligence bureaucracy."
- </p>
- <p> In the first hours of the crisis, Reagan ordered that the
- Pope receive as quickly as possible relevant American
- intelligence, including information from a Polish Deputy
- Minister of Defense who was secretly reporting to the CIA.
- Washington also handed over to the Vatican reports and analysis
- from Colonel Ryszard Kuklinski, a senior member of the Polish
- general staff, who was a CIA informant until November 1981, when
- he had to be smuggled out of Poland after he warned that the
- Soviets were prepared to invade if the Polish government did not
- impose martial law. Kuklinski had issued a similar warning about
- a Soviet military action in late 1980, which led the outgoing
- Carter Administration to send secret messages to Leonid Brezhnev
- informing him that among the costs of an invasion would be the
- sale of sophisticated U.S. weapons to China. This time,
- Kuklinski reported to Washington, Brezhnev had grown more
- impatient, and a disastrous harvest at home meant that the
- Kremlin did not need mechanized army units to help bring in the
- crops and instead could spare them for an invasion. "Anything
- that we knew that we thought the Pope would not be aware of, we
- certainly brought it to his attention," says Reagan.
- "Immediately."
- </p>
- <p> The Catholic Team
- </p>
- <p> The key Administration players were all devout Roman
- Catholics--CIA chief William Casey, Allen, Clark, Haig,
- Walters and William Wilson, Reagan's first ambassador to the
- Vatican. They regarded the U.S.-Vatican relationship as a holy
- alliance: the moral force of the Pope and the teachings of their
- church combined with their fierce anticommunism and their
- notion of American democracy. Yet the mission would have been
- impossible without the full support of Reagan, who believed
- fervently in both the benefits and the practical applications
- of Washington's relationship with the Vatican. One of his
- earliest goals as President, Reagan says, was to recognize the
- Vatican as a state "and make them an ally."
- </p>
- <p> According to Admiral John Poindexter, the military
- assistant to the National Security Adviser when martial law was
- declared in Poland, Reagan was convinced that the communists had
- made a huge miscalculation: after allowing Solidarity to
- operate openly for 16 months before the crackdown, the Polish
- government would only alienate its countrymen by attempting to
- cripple the labor movement and, most important, would bring the
- powerful church into direct conflict with the Polish regime. "I
- didn't think that this [the decision to impose martial law and
- crush Solidarity] could stand, because of the history of Poland
- and the religious aspect and all," Reagan says. Says Cardinal
- Casaroli: "There was a real coincidence of interests between the
- U.S. and the Vatican."
- </p>
- <p> The major decisions on funneling aid to Solidarity and
- responding to the Polish and Soviet governments were made by
- Reagan, Casey and Clark, in consultation with John Paul II.
- "Reagan understood these things quite well, including the covert
- side," says Richard Pipes, the conservative Polish-born scholar
- who headed the NSC's Soviet and East European desks. "The
- President talked about the evil of the Soviet system--not its
- people--and how we had to do everything possible to help these
- people in Solidarity who were struggling for freedom. People
- like Haig and Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige and James
- Baker [White House chief of staff at the time] thought it
- wasn't realistic. George Bush never said a word. I used to sit
- behind him, and I never knew what his opinions were. But Reagan
- really understood what was at stake."
- </p>
- <p> By most accounts, Casey stepped into the vacuum in the
- first days after the declaration of martial law in Poland and--as he did in Central America--became the principal policy
- architect. Meanwhile Pipes and the NSC staff began drafting
- proposals for sanctions. "The object was to drain the Soviets
- and to lay blame for martial law at their doorstep," says
- Pipes. "The sanctions were coordinated with Special Operations
- [the CIA division in charge of covert task forces], and the
- first objective was to keep Solidarity alive by supplying money,
- communications and equipment."
- </p>
- <p> "The church was trying to modulate the whole situation,"
- explains one of the NSC officials who directed the effort to
- curtail the pipeline. "They [church leaders] were in effect
- trying to create circumstances that would head off the serious
- threat of Soviet intervention while allowing us to get tougher
- and tougher; they were part and parcel of virtually all of our
- deliberations in terms of how we viewed the evolution of
- government-sponsored repression in Poland--whether it was
- lessening or getting worse, and how we should proceed."
- </p>
- <p> As for his conversations with Reagan about Poland, Clark
- says they were usually short. "I don't think I ever had an
- in-depth, one-on-one, private conversation that existed for more
- than three minutes with him--on any subject. That might shock
- you. We had our own code of communication. I knew where he
- wanted to go on Poland. And that was to take it to its nth
- possibilities. The President and Casey and I discussed the
- situation on the ground in Poland constantly: covert operations;
- who was doing what, where, why and how; and the chances of
- success." According to Clark, he and Casey directed that the
- President's daily brief--the PDB, an intelligence summary
- prepared by the CIA--include a special supplement on secret
- operations and analysis in Poland.
- </p>
- <p> The Pope himself, not only his deputies, met with American
- officials to assess events in Poland and the effectiveness of
- American actions and sent back messages--sometimes by letter,
- sometimes orally--to Reagan. On almost all his trips to Europe
- and the Middle East, Casey flew first to Rome, so that he could
- meet with John Paul II and exchange information. But the
- principal emissary between Washington and Rome remained Walters,
- a former deputy director of the CIA who worked easily with
- Casey. Walters met with the Pope perhaps a dozen times,
- according to Vatican sources. "Walters was sent to and from the
- Vatican for the specific purpose of carrying messages between
- the Pope and the President," says former U.S. Ambassador to the
- Vatican Wilson. "It wasn't supposed to be known that Walters was
- there. It wasn't all specifically geared to Poland; sometimes
- there were also discussions about Central America or the
- hostages in Lebanon."
- </p>
- <p> Often in the Reagan years, American covert operations
- (including those in Afghanistan, Nicaragua and Angola) involved
- "lethal assistance" to insurgent forces: arms, mercenaries,
- military advisers and explosives. In Poland the Pope, the
- President and Casey embarked on the opposite path: "What they
- had to do was let the natural forces already in place play this
- out and not get their fingerprints on it," explains an analyst.
- What emerges from the Reagan-Casey collaboration is a carefully
- calibrated operation whose scope was modest compared with other
- CIA activities. "If Casey were around now, he'd be having some
- smiles," observes one of his reluctant admirers. "In 1991 Reagan
- and Casey got the reordering of the world that they wanted."
- </p>
- <p> The Secret Directive
- </p>
- <p> Less than three weeks before his meeting with the Pope in
- 1982, the President signed a secret national-security-decision
- directive (NSDD 32) that authorized a range of economic,
- diplomatic and covert measures to "neutralize efforts of the
- U.S.S.R." to maintain its hold on Eastern Europe. In practical
- terms, the most important covert operations undertaken were
- those inside Poland. The primary purposes of NSDD 32 were to
- destabilize the Polish government through covert operations
- involving propaganda and organizational aid to Solidarity; the
- promotion of human rights, particularly those related to the
- right of worship and the Catholic Church; economic pressure; and
- diplomatic isolation of the communist regime. The document,
- citing the need to defend democratic reform efforts throughout
- the Soviet empire, also called for increasing propaganda and
- underground broadcasting operations in Eastern Europe, actions
- that Reagan's aides and dissidents in Eastern Europe believe
- were particularly helpful in chipping away at the notion of
- Soviet invincibility.
- </p>
- <p> As Republican Congressman Henry Hyde, a member of the
- House Intelligence Committee from 1985 to 1990, who was apprised
- of some of the Administration's covert actions, observes, "In
- Poland we did all of the things that are done in countries where
- you want to destabilize a communist government and strengthen
- resistance to that. We provided the supplies and technical
- assistance in terms of clandestine newspapers, broadcasting,
- propaganda, money, organizational help and advice. And working
- outward from Poland, the same kind of resistance was organized
- in the other communist countries of Europe."
- </p>
- <p> Among those who played a consulting role was Zbigniew
- Brzezinski, a native of Poland and President Jimmy Carter's
- National Security Adviser. "I got along very well with Casey,"
- recalls Brzezinski. "He was very flexible and very imaginative
- and not very bureaucratic; if something needed to be done, it
- was done. To sustain an underground effort takes a lot in terms
- of supplies, networks, etc., and this is why Solidarity wasn't
- crushed."
- </p>
- <p> On military questions, American intelligence was better
- than the Vatican's, but the church excelled in its evaluations
- of the political situation. And in understanding the mood of
- the people and communicating with the Solidarity leadership,
- the church was in an incomparable position. "Our information
- about Poland was very well founded because the bishops were in
- continual contact with the Holy See and Solidarnosc," explains
- Cardinal Silvestrini, the Vatican's deputy secretary of state
- at that time. "They informed us about prisoners, about the
- activities and needs of Solidarity groups and about the attitude
- and schisms in the government." All this information was
- communicated to the President or Casey.
- </p>
- <p> "If you study the situation of Solidarity, you see they
- acted very cleverly, without pressing too much at the crucial
- moments, because they had guidance from the church," says one
- of the Pope's closest aides. "Yes, there were times we
- restrained Solidarnosc. But Poland was a bomb that could explode--in the heart of communism, bordered by the Soviet Union,
- Czechoslovakia and East Germany. Too much pressure, and the bomb
- would go off."
- </p>
- <p> Casey's Cappuccino
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, in Washington a close relationship developed
- between Casey, Clark and Archbishop Laghi. "Casey and I dropped
- into his [Laghi's] residence early mornings during critical
- times to gather his comments and counsel," says Clark. "We'd
- have breakfast and coffee and discuss what was being done in
- Poland. I'd speak to him frequently on the phone, and he would
- be in touch with the Pope." Says Laghi: "They liked good
- cappuccino. Occasionally we might talk about Central America or
- the church position on birth control. But usually the subject
- was Poland."
- </p>
- <p> "Almost everything having to do with Poland was handled
- outside of normal State Department channels and would go through
- Casey and Clark," says Robert McFarlane, who served as a deputy
- to both Clark and Haig and later as National Security Adviser
- to the President. "I knew that they were meeting with Pio
- Laghi, and that Pio Laghi had been to see the President, but
- Clark would never tell me what the substance of the discussions
- was."
- </p>
- <p> On at least six occasions Laghi came to the White House
- and met with Clark or the President; each time, he entered the
- White House through the southwest gate in order to avoid
- reporters. "By keeping in such close touch, we did not cross
- lines," says Laghi. "My role was primarily to facilitate
- meetings between Walters and the Holy Father. The Holy Father
- knew his people. It was a very complex situation--how to
- insist on human rights, on religious freedom, and keep
- Solidarity alive without provoking the communist authorities
- further. But I told Vernon, `Listen to the Holy Father. We have
- 2,000 years' experience at this.'"
- </p>
- <p> Though William Casey has been vilified for aspects of his
- tenure as CIA chief, there is no criticism of his instincts on
- Poland. "Basically, he had a quiet confidence that the
- communists couldn't hold on, especially in Poland," says former
- Congressman Edward Derwinski, a Polish-speaking expert on
- Eastern Europe who counseled the Administration and met with
- Casey frequently. "He was convinced the system was falling and
- doomed to collapse one way or another--and Poland was the
- force that would lead to the dam breaking. He demanded a
- constant [CIA] focus on Eastern Europe. It wasn't noticed,
- because other stories were more controversial and were perking
- at the moment--Nicaragua and Salvador."
- </p>
- <p> In Poland, Casey conducted the kind of old-style operation
- that he relished, something he might have done in his days at
- the Office of Strategic Services during World War II or in the
- early years of the CIA, when the democracies of Western Europe
- rose from the ashes of World War II. It was through Casey's
- contacts, his associates say, that elements of the Socialist
- International were organized on behalf of Solidarity--just as
- the Social Democratic parties of Western Europe had been used
- as an instrument of American policy by the CIA in helping to
- create anticommunist governments after the war. And this time
- the objective was akin to creating a Christian Democratic
- majority in Poland--with the church and the overwhelmingly
- Catholic membership of Solidarity as the dominant political
- force in a postcommunist Poland. Through his contacts with
- leaders of the Socialist International, including officials of
- socialist governments in France and Sweden, Casey ensured that
- tactical assistance was available on the Continent and at sea
- to move goods into Poland. "This wasn't about spending huge
- amounts of money," says Brzezinski. "It was about getting the
- message out and resisting: books, communications equipment,
- propaganda, ink and printing presses."
- </p>
- <p> Look for the Union Label
- </p>
- <p> In almost every city and town, underground newspapers and
- mimeographed bulletins appeared, challenging the
- state-controlled media. The church published its own newspapers.
- Solidarity missives, photocopied and mimeographed on
- American-supplied equipment, were tacked to church bulletin
- boards. Stenciled posters were boldly posted on police stations
- and government buildings and even on entrances to the
- state-controlled television center, where army officers
- broadcast the news.
- </p>
- <p> The American embassy in Warsaw became the pivotal CIA
- station in the communist world and, by all accounts, the most
- effective. Meanwhile, the AFL-CIO, which had been the largest
- source of American support for Solidarity before martial law,
- regarded the Reagan Administration's approach as too slow and
- insufficiently confrontational with the Polish authorities.
- Nonetheless, according to intelligence sources, AFL-CIO
- president Lane Kirkland and his aide Tom Kahn consulted
- frequently with Poindexter, Clark and other officials at the
- State Department and the NSC on such matters as how and when to
- move goods and supplies into Poland, identifying cities where
- Solidarity was in particular need of organizing assistance, and
- examining how Solidarity and the AFL-CIO might collaborate in
- the preparation of propaganda materials.
- </p>
- <p> "Lane Kirkland deserves special credit," observes
- Derwinski. "They don't like to admit [it], but they literally
- were in lockstep [with the Administration]. Also never forget
- that Bill Clark's wife is Czechoslovak, as is Lane Kirkland's
- wife. This is one issue where everybody was aboard; there were
- no turf fights or mavericks or naysayers."
- </p>
- <p> But AFL-CIO officials were never aware of the extent of
- clandestine U.S. assistance, or the Administration's reliance
- on the church for guidance regarding how hard to push Polish and
- Soviet authorities. Casey was wary of "contaminating" the
- American and European labor movements by giving them too many
- details of the Administration's efforts. And indeed this was not
- strictly a CIA operation. Rather, it was a blend of covert and
- overt, public policy and secret alliances. Casey recognized that
- in many instances the AFL-CIO was more imaginative than his own
- operatives in providing organizational assistance to Solidarity
- and smuggling equipment into the country. According to former
- deputy CIA director Inman, Casey decided that the American labor
- movement's relationship with Solidarity was so good that much
- of what the CIA needed could be financed and obtained through
- AFL-CIO channels. "Financial support wasn't what they needed,"
- says Inman. "It was organization, and that was an infinitely
- better way to help them than through classic covert operations."
- </p>
- <p> The Solidarity office in Brussels became an international
- clearinghouse: for representatives of the Vatican, for CIA
- operatives, for the AFL-CIO, for representatives of the
- Socialist International, for the congressionally funded National
- Endowment for Democracy, which also worked closely with Casey.
- It was the place where Solidarity told its backers--some of
- whose real identities were unknown to Solidarity itself--what
- it needed, where goods and supplies and organizers could be most
- useful. Priests, couriers, labor organizers and intelligence
- operatives moved in and out of Poland with requests for aid and
- with detailed information on the situation inside the government
- and the underground. Food and clothing and money to pay fines
- of Solidarity leaders who were brought before Polish courts
- poured into the country. Inside Poland, a network of priests
- carried messages back and forth between the churches where many
- of Solidarity's leaders were in hiding.
- </p>
- <p> In the summer of 1984, when the sanctions against Poland
- seemed to be hurting ordinary Poles and not the communists,
- Laghi traveled to Santa Barbara to meet with Reagan at the
- Western White House and urge that some of the sanctions be
- lifted. The Administration complied. At the same time, the White
- House, in close consultation with the Vatican, refused to ease
- its economic pressures on Moscow--denying technology, food and
- cultural exchanges as the price for continuing oppression in
- Poland.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the equipment destined for Solidarity arrived in
- Poland by ship--often packed in mismarked containers sent from
- Denmark and Sweden, then unloaded at Gdansk and other ports by
- dockers secretly working with Solidarity. According to
- Administration officials, the socialist government of Sweden--and Swedish labor unions--played a crucial role in arranging
- the transshipment of goods to Poland. From the Polish docks,
- equipment moved to its destination in trucks and private cars
- driven by Solidarity sympathizers who often used churches and
- priests as their point of contact for deliveries and pickups.
- </p>
- <p> "Solidarity Lives!"
- </p>
- <p> "The Administration plugged into the church across the
- board," observes Derwinski, now Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
- "Not just through the church hierarchy but through individual
- churches and bishops. Monsignor Bronislaw Dabrowski, a deputy
- to Cardinal Glemp, came to us often to tell us what was needed:
- he would meet with me, with Casey, the NSC and sometimes with
- Walters." John Cardinal Krol of Philadelphia, whose father was
- born in Poland, was the American churchman closest to the Pope.
- He frequently met with Casey to discuss support for Solidarity
- and covert operations, according to CIA sources and Derwinski.
- "Krol hit it off very well with President Reagan and was a
- source of constant advice and contact," says Derwinski. "Often
- he was the one Casey or Clark went to, the one who really
- understood the situation."
- </p>
- <p> By 1985 it was apparent that the Polish government's
- campaign to suppress Solidarity had failed. According to a
- report by Adrian Karatnycky, who helped organize the AFL-CIO's
- assistance to Solidarity, there were more than 400 underground
- periodicals appearing in Poland, some with a circulation that
- exceeded 30,000. Books and pamphlets challenging the authority
- of the communist government were printed by the thousands. Comic
- books for children recast Polish fables and legends, with
- Jaruzelski pictured as the villain, communism as the red dragon
- and Walesa as the heroic knight. In church basements and homes,
- millions of viewers watched documentary videos produced and
- screened on the equipment smuggled into the country.
- </p>
- <p> With clandestine broadcasting equipment supplied by the
- CIA and the AFL-CIO, Solidarity regularly broke into the
- government's radio programming, often with the message
- "Solidarity lives!" or "Resist!" Armed with a transmitter
- supplied by the CIA through church channels, Solidarity
- interrupted television programming with both audio and visual
- messages, including calls for strikes and demonstrations. "There
- was a great moment at the half time of the national soccer
- championship," says a Vatican official. "Just as the whistle
- sounded for the half, a SOLIDARITY LIVES! banner went up on the
- screen and a tape came on calling for resistance. What was
- particularly ingenious was waiting for the half-time break; had
- the interruption come during actual soccer play, it could have
- alienated people." As Brzezinski sums it up, "This was the first
- time that communist police suppression didn't succeed."
- </p>
- <p> "Nobody believed the collapse of communism would happen
- this fast or on this timetable," says a cardinal who is one of
- the Pope's closest aides. "But in their first meeting, the Holy
- Father and the President committed themselves and the
- institutions of the church and America to such a goal. And from
- that day, the focus was to bring it about in Poland."
- </p>
- <p> Step by reluctant step, the Soviets and the communist
- government of Poland bowed to the moral, economic and political
- pressure imposed by the Pope and the President. Jails were
- emptied, Walesa's trial on charges of slandering state officials
- was abandoned, the Polish communist party turned fratricidal,
- and the country's economy collapsed in a haze of strikes and
- demonstrations and sanctions.
- </p>
- <p> On Feb. 19, 1987, after Warsaw had pledged to open a
- dialogue with the church, Reagan lifted U.S. sanctions. Four
- months later, Pope John Paul II was cheered by millions of his
- countrymen as he traveled across Poland demanding human rights
- and praising Solidarity. In July 1988, Gorbachev visited Warsaw
- and signaled Moscow's recognition that the government could not
- rule without Solidarity's cooperation. On April 5, 1989, the two
- sides signed agreements legalizing Solidarity and calling for
- open parliamentary elections in June. In December 1990, nine
- years after he was arrested and his labor union banned, Lech
- Walesa became President of Poland.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-