Monday, Feb. 26, 1990
World Notes ORGANIZATIONS
For years young contra leaders tried to topple their autocratic military commander, Enrique Bermudez. The former Somoza colonel, though, was the CIA's man in the jungle and invulnerable to rebel coups. So when Bermudez was removed two weeks ago, it was clear that he had lost the CIA's backing.
Bermudez had long received regular payments and cagily spread funds among key loyalists. Just before his ouster, however, the agency took the commander off the payroll. Bermudez found himself without supporters.
The move signals the end of CIA involvement in the moribund struggle against Nicaragua's Sandinista regime, since Bermudez was the last contra on the payroll. By severing its sole known tie to the rebels, the CIA acknowledged that the contras are finished as a fighting force. The cutoff also signals a small victory for Secretary of State James Baker. He wants the contras to negotiate an end to their dispute with the Sandinistas.
Bermudez's departure leaves leadership of the 10,000-member contra force in the hands of Israel Galeano, 29. He and the new leadership recognize the futility of further armed struggle.