Bombshell Interview Suggests CIA Played a Role in Mandela's '62 Arrest

A former CIA spy says the CIA tipped off cops to Mandela's whereabouts in 1962.

The anti-apartheid revolutionary and future president of South Africa was arrested by police in 1962 while posing a chauffeur to avoid detection, and the possibility of CIA involvement in tracking his whereabouts at that time has long been a subject of speculation. He was jailed in Johannesburg and went on to spend the next 27 years of his life behind bars.

Rickard also allegedly called Mandela "a toy of the communists" in the interview.

A request for comment from the CIA by ABC News was not immediately returned.

Critics of the CIA, like Jeffery Sachs of Columbia University's Earth Institute, took to social media to voice outrage of the CIA's alleged involvement in Mandela's incarceration.

"Stop all CIA covert ops NOW," Sachs wrote on Twitter. "They are disastrous for the world -- including US."

Although many observers had long suspected the involvement of the CIA in Mandela's arrest, no one from the agency, past or present, had ever acknowledged it until now. Rickard himself denied the allegations as recently as 2012 in an interview with The Wall Street Journal.

"It's not true," he told the paper over the phone. "There's no substance to it."