An FBI memo dated May 30, 1990, from the Atlanta field office to then-FBI Director William Sessions about Mandela's upcoming visit noted that the bureau had cultivated a confidential informant close to his entourage, who had provided logistical information about his travel itinerary.
The South African leader arrived in the US in June 1990, four months after his release from 27 years in prison, as the world's most celebrated political prisoner and liberation icon for his struggle against apartheid.
Also, it was widely alleged that the CIA had provided information to the apartheid authorities in South Africa that led to Mandela's arrest in 1962.
The memo says the FBI was told by its informant (who is described as "newly opened, and whose reliability is not yet established") that Mandela was in contact with Coretta Scott King, widow of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
The 334 pages of records, which Shapiro provided to Al Jazeera, largely cover the June 1990 time-frame and represent the FBI's first interim release of files on Mandela. The FBI withheld 169 pages in their entirety on national security grounds.
"What's missing from these documents is often as illuminative as what's disclosed," Shapiro told Al Jazeera. "Not only did the FBI heavily redact and withhold documents, but there's virtually no discussion of US intelligence community involvement prior to Mandela's 1990 release from prison."
During Mandela's six-week tour of the US and Europe, he spoke against apartheid and urged the US and foreign governments to keep economic sanctions against South Africa in place until the regime had conceded to democratic majority rule.
Mandela, South Africa's first elected black president, died in December last year aged 95.
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