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1641 lines
76 KiB
Plaintext
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The following is a transcript of the video, "A NATION BETRAYED". It
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documents alleged CIA involvement in covert drug running activities and
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how they supposedly interfered with the nation's attempts to recover
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POW/MIAs. It is very long (around 75K bytes) so you may wish to save
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it and download it from your network site for offline reading. It is a
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document I promised I'd upload to the net. You may find it
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unbelievable. You may not be surprised at what it says. I have
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several comments which I will append to end of the document. Sufficed
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to say that information of this type is its own shocking kind of
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pornography. As far as I can see Gritz's arguments are more or less
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sound. The evidence from three separate sources is even more
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compelling. As I watched this video I felt thoroughly violated. It is
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not enjoyable reading, but it may well be true.
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Be careful when you seek the truth. Upon finding it you may be forced
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to change your view of the world.
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(apologies to the original quote)
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(Transcriber's note: The following is a transcription of spoken
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english and as such can be difficult to read, much less transcribe. I
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have tried to preserve exactly as was spoken except for a few places
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where I have organized the language used to clarify meaning. I am not
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an English major so don' slam me for not using perfect english
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punctuation in the sometimes rather strange usages.)
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---------------------------CUT HERE----------------------------------
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Colonel Bo Gritz Addressing the American Liberty Lunch Club:
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What I want to tell you very quickly is something that I feel is more
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heinous than the Bataan death march. Certainly it is of more concern to
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you as Americans than the Watergate. What I'm talking about is
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something we found out in Burma - May 1987. We found it out from a man
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named Khun Sa. He is the recognized overlord of heroin in the world.
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Last year he sent 900 tons of opiates and heroin into the free world.
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This year it will be 1200 tons.
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(video showing discussion at Khun Sa's headquarters -- some translation
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of Burmese to English going on..Bo Gritz still talking to Lunch club in
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the foreground)
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On video tape he said to us something that was most astounding: that US
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government officials have been and are now his biggest customers, and
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have been for the last twenty years. I wouldn't believe him. We
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fought a war in Laos and Cambodia even as we fought whatever it was in
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Vietnam. The point is that there are as many bomb holes in those two
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other countries as there are in Vietnam. Five hundred and fifty plus
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Americans were lost in Laos. Not one of them ever came home. We heard
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a president say, "The war is over, we are out with honor - all of the
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prisoners are home." and a few other lies. Now we got rid of that
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president, but we didn't get rid of the problem. We ran the war in
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Laos and Cambodia through drugs. The money that would not be
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appropriated by a liberal congress, was appropriated. And you know who
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we used for distribution? Santos Trafficante, old friend of the CIA
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and mobster out of Cuba and Florida. We lost the war!
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Fifty-eight-thousand Americans were killed. Seventy-thousand became
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drug casualties. In the sixties and seventies you saw an infusion of
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drugs into America like never was before. Where do you think the Mafia
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takes the heroin and opiates that it gets through its arrangement with
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the US government? It doesn't distribute them in Africa or Europe.
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This is the big money bag here. We're Daddy Warbucks for them. So I
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submit to you that the CIA has been pressed for solutions. Each time
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they have gone to the sewer to find it. And you cant smell like a rose
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when you've been playing in the cesspool. We've been embracing
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organized crime. Now you've all looked and heard about Ollie North,
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about the Contras, about nobody knowing anything.
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(cut to part of Iran Contra hearings with Ollie North explaining the
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flow of funds from Iran to the Contras)
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North:
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And Mr. Gorbanifar suggested several incentives to make that February
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transaction work. And the attractive incentive for me was the one he
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made that residuals could flow to support the Nicaraguan resistance.
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Legislator:
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Even Gorbanifar knew that you were supporting the Contras.
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North:
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Yes he did. Isvestia knew it. The name had been in the papers in
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Moscow. It had been all over Danny Ortega's newscasts. Radio Havana
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was broadcasting it. It had been in every newspaper in the land.
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Legislator:
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All our enemies knew it and you wanted to keep it from the United
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States Congress.
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North:
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We wanted to be able to deny a covert operation.
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(back to Bo at the Luncheon Club)
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We have a constitution that says that the laws will be made by the
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Congress, enforced by the executive branch, interpreted by the judicial
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branch. But in reality we have an executive branch that has for more
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than a twenty years operated in what what Ollie North called a parallel
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government. When the Congress says no, it makes no difference.
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They're gonna do it anyway. And it is special intelligence - top
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secret. Why? Not because the communists don't know what were doing,
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its to keep it a secret from you. You're not capable of making those
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kinds of decisions according to those in parallel government. The
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reason I know ... I was there. I've been a product of parallel
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government myself.
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(Narrator)
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Lieutenant Colonel James 'Bo' Gritz is the most decorated Green Beret
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commander of the Vietnam Era. General William Westmoreland, in writing
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his memoirs, singled out Bo Gritz as the "American Soldier" for his
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exemplary courage in combat and outstanding ingenuity in recovering a
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highly secret black-box the Viet-Cong had taken from a crashed U2 spy
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plane. The feature films "Rambo", "Uncommon Valor" and "Missing in
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Action" were based in part upon his real-life military experiences.
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(Back to Bo)
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Dick Secord, General, United States Air Force, a man I know well, said
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it best. Before the senate investigating committee Dick Secord was
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asked - if we were supporting the Contras, why were we selling them
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arms bought from a communist block nation at exorbitant profit rates.
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(skip to scene from hearings)
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Senator:
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If the purpose of the enterprise was to help the contras, why did you
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charge Colero a mark-up?
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Secord:
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We were in business to make a living, Senator. We had to make a
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living. I didn't see anything wrong with it at the time. It was a
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commercial enterprise.
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Senator:
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Oh..I thought the purpose of the enterprise was to aid Colero's cause.
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Secord:
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Can't I have two purposes? I did.
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Senator:
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Oh..allright.
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(back to Bo)
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And then Dick Secord said in his playboy interview: "I think I deserve
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the eight million that we made from the Iran arms sale for all the hard
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work I did." If you've got to pay a patriot, you've got the wrong guy.
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(applause from audience)
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These are patriots for profit. There has been a guise of patriotism
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that a lot of people have been hiding behind. War is their business.
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Business has been good.
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(fade to shots of the Vietnam 'conflict' - Narrator takes over again)
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Bo Gritz risked his life a thousand times in combat in Vietnam before
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he was sent by a national security council staffer Tom Harvey in the
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White House to Burma in November of 1986 in search of American
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prisoners of war. He discovered instead a heroin highway and a nation
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betrayed by high level American officials involved in narcotics
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trafficking. Tom Harvey and his superiors in the White House were not
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pleased with Bo's report.
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(fade to scene of Bo - now with beard in a field obviously somewhere in
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Southeast Asia - palm trees and oxen indigenous to the area abound - I
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assume its in either Burma or Thailand)
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The thing that I was most concerned about was - and I thought was
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fantastic - was the general's offer to stop the flow of opium and
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heroin into the free world. When I asked him (assume he's talking
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about a conversation with Tom Harvey now) he said "that's fantastic".
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There was a pause, then he said, "Bo, there's no one here that supports
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that." And I said, "What?! Vice-President Bush has been appointed by
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president Reagan as the Number One policeman to control drug entry into
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the United States. How can you say there's no interest and no support
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when we bring back a video tape with a direct interview with a man who
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puts 900 tons of opium and heroin across into the free world every year
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and is willing to stop it?" And he said, "Bo, what can I tell you?
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All I can tell you is there is no interest in doing that here."
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Well that made me wonder. Thats because it doesn't sound American and
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it doesn't sound right. Thats when we began to do our own
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investigation because for about three years people had told me, both in
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Washington DC and, interestingly enough, in Oklahoma city that the
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whole POW situation was being undermined by US government officials
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involved in drug trafficking. I wouldn't believe it. I said, "You
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guys aren't playing with a full deck... you've got yourselves strung
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out too thin." And they said, "Bo, you better listen, because for
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three years we've had prisoners literally within our grasp and
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something has happened at the last minute." (I said), "Each time I've
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made every effort to cooperate with government officials. I can't
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believe that people in the US government would actually, either overtly
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or covertly, do anything to undermine a rescue operation. "
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Well, we're still without Prisoners of War and there is no interest,
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we're told at the White House, in stopping the flow of drugs coming in
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from the Golden Triangle into the free world.
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(fade to front-page articles about Bo Gritz in Parade magazine and
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Soldier of Fortune...narrator picks up here)
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Lieutenant Colonel Bo Gritz is no stranger to controversy. In thirty
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years of devoted service to the US Army and to the recovery of American
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prisoners of war, he has encountered plenty. The making of this
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American warrior began early. He was five years old when his father, a
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B-17 pilot, was shot down over Europe during World War II. His mother,
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a pilot with the women's Air Force, would later marry a master sergeant
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and remain with the occupation forces in Germany after the war. Raised
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by his maternal grandparents in Oklahoma, young Bo Gritz began training
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at Fort Union Military Academy in Virginia. He was named Corps
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Commander in his senior year when he chanced upon a recruiting poster
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that changed his life. In short order, Gritz won his green beret in
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the Army Special forces by passing all courses in the unconventional
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warfare training. After graduating from officer's candidate school, the
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newly-commissioned second lieutenant then insisted on Ranger training.
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Assigned to the command of the first mobile South Vietnamese gorilla
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forces to be organized, Gritz also operated secretly in Cambodia and
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Laos with his force of Cambodian mercenaries, or "Bos", as he called
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them. By official body-count, over 450 of the enemy died as a result
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of Gritz's actions. His wartime records are replete with examples of
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Bo's concern for keeping Americans alive in a war gone mad.
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As recon chief of the supersecret delta-force, Bo was cited for Valor
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in saving the lives of 30 US Infantrymen from the BigRed-One division.
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More often than not, his valor was in placing himself between the
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enemy and his men. According to an official military report dated 31
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July 1967 submitted on then Major Gritz, "His personal bravery is
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legendary exemplified by the fact that he has been awarded five silver
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stars and numerous other decorations for valor." In all Bo Gritz was
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awarded 62 citations for valor, five silver stars, eight bronze stars,
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two purple hearts and a presidential citation.
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Bo was ready to sign up for a fifth tour of duty when he had a talk
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with General Fred Weiyan (sp?), the "daddy-rabbit" in Vietnam. As
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Gritz described it, "I was a major and special operations chief. I'll
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never forget that day. I stood there and heard that man say. Bo, your
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not going to win the war and neither am I." That was the most
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disillusioning moment of my life. It meant that every man who had ever
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lost his finger or his life had lost it for nothing. I decided, on the
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spot, to leave Vietnam. I would not kill another enemy or risk another
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comrade's life."
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(back to Bo at the luncheon)
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I've had the opportunity to do a lot of things that other officers have
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not. I was the first recon chief and intelligence officer for
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delta-force. Commanded the first gorilla forces that went behind enemy
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lines. When I commanded special forces in Latin America, we did It
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exactly right. And we did exactly what men in camoflage are supposed
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to do. It was very natural that Harold R. Aaron (sp?) would single me
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out because, besides having a sixth-degree black belt in karate, I have
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established an ability to operate on my own. And I think when Aaron
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said, "Bo, we want you to do this", he understood that I'm also hard
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headed enough that I wouldn't cave in. He said, "I want you to
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consider retiring. I would only be temporary. We have overwhealming
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evidence now that people are still there, being held in communist
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prisons." Mr. H. Ross Perot had been asked by Eugene Tighe, director
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of the Defense Intelligence Agency, to back a private mission that
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would look into the POW situation. Perot said, "Bo, I want you to go
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there. I want you to do everything you have to do. You come and tell
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me there aren't any prisoners of war left alive."
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(narrator)
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Bo returned from IndoChina with extensive evidence that there were
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indeed American prisoners of war in captivity, including a solid report
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of 47 at one particular camp. Perot turned the project back over to
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General Tighe who wrote to Secretary of Defense, Harold Brown asking
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that the source, a Nguyen Dok Jong (sp?) be brought to the United
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States for a polygraph test. Brown repeated the request to Secretary
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of State Cyrus Vance. One month later, Vance finally responded that
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the commissioner of immigration would not permit Jong into the United
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States for further questioning. As Bo puts it, "Think about it. One
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man, not a thousand and the defense intelligence agency chief and
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secretary of state can't get him into the country. That was a pretty
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clear signal that the military was politically handcuffed on the
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prisoner of war issue."
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For eight years Gritz sought to find and free American POW's. He
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crossed five times behind enemy lines into communist Laos and Vietnam.
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Three times he was within moments of embracing those American heroes
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our government had declared dead. Each time something unexplained
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caused Gritz and his Operation Lazarus team to fall short with freedom
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and victory in sight for the POWs.
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There has never been a shortage of criticism from any number of
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armchair generals such as Robert K. Brown of "Soldier of Fortune"
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magazine who devoted an entire issue to condemning Gritz's efforts.
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Even to the extent of publishing documents stolen from Bo while he was
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on the mission in Laos. They have even belittled his prayer before
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crossing enemy lines. (Gritz is a devout Mormon...Ed) His critics said
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he should have looked more like the Rambo in the movies, who actually
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avoided the draft in an all-girls school in Switzerland.
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More debilitating than the hundreds of miles on foot within enemy
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territory has been the disinformation propagated by those within our
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government who have covered up the plight of our prisoners of war.
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Gritz has been accused of being a media hound. He insists he has never
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sought the spotlight, but when confronted has always been a positive
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voice for our prisoners of war and will continue to be until they are
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home to speak for themselves.
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Working as an agent for the Intelligence Support Activity (ISA) in the
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CIA, it was fine for Gritz to travel at great peril using false
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documents, as Ollie North and Bud McFarland did when they traveled to
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Iran on phony Irish passports. On one occasion he was stopped by US
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customs at Seattle-Tacoma airport with four separate passports. He was
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quickly released when his intelligence contact in Washington confirmed
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his mission. It was quite acceptable with the US government for Bo
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Gritz to travel at such great peril until he returned from Burma's
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infamous Golden Triangle on December of 1986 with information
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concerning with involvement of high-level US officials involved in
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large-scale drug trafficking in Southeast Asia. His tremendous courage
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in refusing to back down to their threats has lead to his current
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indictment for misuse of a passport in order to keep him from getting
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this information to the American public.
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(back to Bo at the luncheon)
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There a book out now called Secret Warriors, I think. Its about an
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organization called the ISA. Congress never knew about and everybody
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gives me credit for exposing it, but that's not true. When I was
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called before congress in 1983, they said, "Bo, are you working as an
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official agent for the US government?" And I said, "Yes". And they
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said, "For what organization?" And I said, "I will not identify that
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organization, other than to call it the activity." This is because
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even the initials I-S-A were top secret. Because it wasn't an
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oversight. It was created by Carter. Can you imagine that? He did
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one good thing that I know of. (laughter) But it was parallel
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government. He created a secret organization to do things that the CIA
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could not do and he didn't dare let congress know about it.
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Now ISA got Dosier back, the general that was captured by terrorists in
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Italy. And ISA did a lot of other things. You can read about them now
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because its in this book by some guy who write for the Wall Street
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Journal. The point is that Jerry King was the head of ISA. Jerry King
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called me on the telephone and said, "Bo, we have been ordered to put
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operation Grand Eagle...", which was the governments name for the
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prisoner of war rescue mission. It certainly wasn't grand and it sure
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wasn't an eagle 'cause it never got off the ground. But he said,
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"We've been ordered to put operation Grand Eagle on the shelf as if it
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never existed." Hand before God he said, "there are still too many
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bureaucrats that don't want to see American prisoners of war come back
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alive." Now I didn't know what Jerry King meant then. I thought he
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was angry because there was a bureaucratic tug-of-war going on between
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ISA, the CIA and defense intelligence and maybe he was losing. But
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remember Jerry King's words, 'cause they'll tie in here. I'm wondering
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why that the Vietnamese intercept Colonel Richard Walsh (a POW..Ed)
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moments before the turnover and capture not only him, but the General
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also (unclear who the General is here ... Ed.) And I knew that we
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still had him, because in the newspapers it appeared that, "The
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Vietnamese and Lao delegations of the United Nations confirm that they
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are holding an American citizen in custody." And I said, "By golly, we
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||
|
in our state department are going to press for an identity." Because
|
||
|
doesn't it say that the president is required to safegaurd American
|
||
|
citizens in hostile hands. And I knew when when we pressed what would
|
||
|
happen? Richard Walsh would be identified. Who is he? A prisoner of
|
||
|
war. Hooray! Now the log jam is broken. And who can Walsh testify
|
||
|
to? The other men he was with. And they can testify. Were going to
|
||
|
get them all out now, even though its going to cost us something. Did
|
||
|
you ever see Richard Walsh's name identified? I didn't.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mrs. Walsh showed me a newspaper article that said where a Air Force
|
||
|
casualty officer came to her at this time and said, "Your husband is
|
||
|
alive. He's a prisoner of war. We have high hopes he'll be coming
|
||
|
home soon." They put it in the newspaper there in Minneapolis. She
|
||
|
was told that Air Force Two was spooling up...who's that belong
|
||
|
to?..George Bush...to go get her husband. That's what she told me, but
|
||
|
it never happened and I thought again, "What rotten luck and what a
|
||
|
bunch of wimps in the state department for not going and demanding that
|
||
|
they identify that citizen." They probably did. They found out who he
|
||
|
was and they said, "lets forget it." Because when I walked into the
|
||
|
state department shortly thereafter, a friend of mine said, "Bo, we
|
||
|
thought that you'd been captured. Your passport turned up in a very
|
||
|
unlikely place." And I said, "Yeah, I know all about it." (not sure
|
||
|
what he's referring to here ... Ed.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Do you think that all of this has just been rotten luck. Well, when
|
||
|
you wear the uniform of the United States you have this faith ... hope
|
||
|
that the system will do it. Just like General Aaron said, "Let the
|
||
|
system do the rest." Now comes truth...
|
||
|
|
||
|
We were training Afghan freedom fighters in the deserts of South Nevada
|
||
|
near where I live and I was proud to do so. In cooperation with the US
|
||
|
State Department Office For Security Assistance. We finished that
|
||
|
mission. A man by the name of Tom Harvey who is National Security
|
||
|
Council Ollie North look-alike. Ollie comes from Annapolis, Harvey
|
||
|
comes from West Point. Tom Harvey called me and said, "We have
|
||
|
information ...", and here is a copy of the letter that's why I brought
|
||
|
all these documents. I hope some of you challenge them. I hope the
|
||
|
White House, the Pentagon would challenge them. Because if they would
|
||
|
publicly that would have to admit to the truth. This letter was sent
|
||
|
to Vice-President Bush by an American citizen by the name of Aurthur
|
||
|
Soucheck, it is dated 29 August 1986. It says that General Khun Sa has
|
||
|
American prisoners of war. It says that Khun Sa tried to rescue four
|
||
|
of them. It says his forces escorted the four to the Mekong river.
|
||
|
While attempting to cross the rain-swollen river, the four US
|
||
|
personnel, three of Khun Sa's soldiers and two horses were swept away
|
||
|
by the raging water and all drowned. It goes on to say that Khun Sa
|
||
|
has repeated intelligence reports of location of US prisoners being
|
||
|
kept in Laos ... that he says that has seventy prisoners of war. Tom
|
||
|
Harvey said, "This is getting TOP priority."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now in G. Gordon Liddy's book, "Will", he says, "no American has ever
|
||
|
come out of the Golden Triangle alive." But that's what we were being
|
||
|
asked to do. Tom Harvey said, "Bo, do you think you would be able to
|
||
|
infiltrate into Khun Sa's inner sanctum and determine if this report is
|
||
|
true or not?" Do you think maybe somebody is trying to get me bumped
|
||
|
off? (laughter) It didn't make any difference. Brothers and sisters,
|
||
|
you and I are small compared to this nation and the risk that we take
|
||
|
if there is one American there is worth it. God's will they'll be home
|
||
|
while they're still alive. I told Harvey, "We didn't fight a war in
|
||
|
Burma, why should there be prisoners of war there?" But you know a guy
|
||
|
like Khun Sa has got connections all over. And I said, "We'll try."
|
||
|
|
||
|
I speak Chinese. Khun Sa speaks Chinese. He's right along the
|
||
|
southern China border. Surrounded by communists, he's fighting the
|
||
|
communists. He has a forty-thousand man army. About eight-million
|
||
|
Shan people that make up the minority Shan state. Burma is communist.
|
||
|
Every one of his weapons are M16s and M60 machine guns. All the latest
|
||
|
stuff that we have. I found out why later. Too make a long story
|
||
|
short, we got in to see Khun Sa and he didn't have any prisoners of
|
||
|
war. And let me caveat it by saying this. We traveled three days
|
||
|
going and three days coming by horse over mountains that were literally
|
||
|
vertical up and down. I made the comment at that time to Scott Weekly
|
||
|
(sp?) who was Ollie North's classmate at Annapolis and went with me.
|
||
|
I said, "I would hate to be an engineer that had to build a highway
|
||
|
through these mountains because they're virgin teak forests ... rain
|
||
|
forests .. tremendously beautiful."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Six days coming and going. Khun Sa didn't have any prisoners of war.
|
||
|
We gave Khun Sa the letter from the White House that I had. Thats the
|
||
|
only thing that let me get in there. You don't walk in because the CIA
|
||
|
has a seven digit figure on Khun Sa's head and they haven't been able
|
||
|
to collect. You think they're gonna let somebody like me in there.
|
||
|
Say, "Hi! I wanna go visit Khun Sa!" Doesn't work! But I guess they
|
||
|
thought this guy is crazy enough because I gave this letter ... I told
|
||
|
Harvey, "We got to have a credential, guy." He said, "We can't do
|
||
|
that, Bo. We never do that." I said, "Harvey, has anyone ever gone to
|
||
|
the Golden Triangle and come out alive? I need something that will
|
||
|
convince Khun Sa were not there to kill him, we're there for
|
||
|
humanitarian purposes." So Harvey said, "Well, this will be the
|
||
|
language. 'You are operating in cooperation with the White House ..
|
||
|
etc .. etc.'" It worked! Khun Sa didn't have one single prisoner of
|
||
|
war, didn't know anything about prisoners of war.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
(switch to a scene with Bo and Khun Sa talking at Khun Sa's camp with
|
||
|
Khun Sa's troops doing practice drills in the background. Bo is
|
||
|
discussing the letter from Soucheck with Khun Sa. It is nearly
|
||
|
impossible to decipher what is specifically being discussed because
|
||
|
Khun Sa's troops are incredibly loud and drown out the conversation, so
|
||
|
I will proceed to the next scene. Don't worry...there are more Khun Sa
|
||
|
meetings to come. The long and short of it is Khun Sa says he will
|
||
|
decrease or stop the drug shipments and Gritz gets it on videotape. Now
|
||
|
back to Bo at the luncheon.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now with Nancy Reagan saying no to drugs and Judge Ginsberg not allowed
|
||
|
to sit on the supreme court because he smoked marijuana .. and you're
|
||
|
an accessory to murder if you ever smoke marijuana, according to Nancy
|
||
|
Reagan. I figured we'd get an 'attaboy'. We didn't have prisoners,
|
||
|
but we had three video tapes showing Khun Sa himself. And I thought,
|
||
|
"Boy, is George Bush gonna be thrilled about this!" (much laughter)
|
||
|
We delivered those tapes to Tom Harvey just before Christmas. You try
|
||
|
to call Tom Harvey now, because some news people did, and he doesn't
|
||
|
return your calls. We delivered those tapes just before Christmas, Tom
|
||
|
Harvey called me back and said, "Bo, Fantastic! You guys actually got
|
||
|
in to see Khun Sa. The CIA said he had been assasinated." Somebody
|
||
|
needed some pocket change. "And there he is talking." And I said,
|
||
|
"That's right, Tom. Harvey, what about the 900 tons?" I figured they
|
||
|
were just bubbling over. They were all right, they were dripping in
|
||
|
their knickers. But it wasn't from joy. Harvey said, "Bo..", these
|
||
|
are quotes ... hand on the square .. he said, "Bo, there's no interest
|
||
|
here in that." You be on the other end of the phone. You've just come
|
||
|
out of Burma. You've brought what you consider to be a way to stop 900
|
||
|
tons of heroin, not marijuana and get rid of the cancer that has
|
||
|
infected the bureaucracy and there's "no interest." I challenged
|
||
|
Harvey because I'm pretty hard-headed. I said, "Tom, didn't President
|
||
|
Reagan appoint George Bush the number one cop to stop drugs before they
|
||
|
come into the United States?" I wanted to remind him of these little
|
||
|
things. And he said, "Bo, what can I tell you? There is NO INTEREST
|
||
|
here in doing that." Now that is White-House-ese for saying, "Get of
|
||
|
this subject, leave us alone." I knew that we had trod upon some very
|
||
|
sensitive toes. I still didn't have a clue to what was going on, but I
|
||
|
knew that we were getting close to finding out and I took off and went
|
||
|
to Burma again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now I want to show you some things when I got back to Burma. (he shows
|
||
|
some newspaper headlines) The United States government wanted Khun Sa
|
||
|
killed quick and here's how they did it:
|
||
|
|
||
|
US CALLS FOR NO MERCY IN DRUG WAR
|
||
|
|
||
|
These are over-there newspapers...
|
||
|
|
||
|
AIRSTRIKES AGAINST KHUN SA's HEADQUARTERS
|
||
|
BURMESE AND THAI TROOPS MOVE ON KHUN SA
|
||
|
|
||
|
Finally it says, and there is a picture of Burmese and Thai troops
|
||
|
standing on top of a high mountain top:
|
||
|
|
||
|
KHUN SA'S STRONGHOLD SEIZED
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now many of you are soldiers, airmen, marines, sailors. You know that
|
||
|
airstrikes, troops mean war. There's hair, eyes and teeth everywhere.
|
||
|
When I went back into Burma in May I took two other Americans with me.
|
||
|
It was the most peaceful area. It was exactly like we left it except
|
||
|
for one big change. Remember I told you it took us three days to ride
|
||
|
by horse to get there in November and come out in December. Well, when
|
||
|
we went in May, we went by pickup truck. Straight from the Thai border
|
||
|
all the way right to the General's front door. And on the other way
|
||
|
coming back there were Thai military 10 ton trucks covered and loaded.
|
||
|
There's only one thing that comes out of the Golden Triangle and that's
|
||
|
heroin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When we got there General Khun Sa said, "What took you so long?" I
|
||
|
said, "General, I was waiting for the war to die down. I didn't want
|
||
|
to get caught in all of this 26,000 troops and airstrikes", and he just
|
||
|
laughed. He said, "That was a newspaper war!" I said, "What do you
|
||
|
mean newspaper war?" He said, "The Thai and Burmese came to me and
|
||
|
said that if they don't make it look like there doing something, they
|
||
|
stand to lose tens of millions of dollars this year in drug supression
|
||
|
funds from American taxpayers." So Kuhn Sa said, "Make it look like
|
||
|
anything you want to, but I want a rode built here." They used the
|
||
|
newspapers and I want to show you something. This one here says, "US
|
||
|
PROVIDES ANOTHER 1.8 MILLION TO FIGHT DRUGS" So it worked! And this
|
||
|
guy is really smiling. This is a Thai receiving a check from the US
|
||
|
Ambassador.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Khun Sa got what he wanted. Now he began to assemble his officers. It
|
||
|
took him a week to get them all together because he brought them from
|
||
|
all over the place. And now I understand why. I thought I was just
|
||
|
going to talk to him, but he said no and put me off for a week. He
|
||
|
assembled officers from the entire Shan territory from all over the
|
||
|
Golden Triangle. They came in. He sat everybody down. He brought his
|
||
|
secretary out. He had his secretary read from their log.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Scene switches to Khun Sa's headquarters. All of Khun Sa' officers
|
||
|
are here along with Khun Sa. I'd say around twenty in all. Bo and his
|
||
|
companions are sitting with them. This is where it gets VERY
|
||
|
interesting. The following conversation was in broken english from
|
||
|
Khun Sa's end so some of the syntax may be a bit wierd.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bo:
|
||
|
|
||
|
I cannot ask the General to cut your throat by revealing any contact
|
||
|
that would hurt your economy at this moment. But I pray that he will
|
||
|
reveal any connections from the older time or that will not hurt you
|
||
|
now. That if they are still in power, we might be free of them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Khun Sa:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some of the connections I can expose to you. Some were in Burma, some
|
||
|
were in Thailand, some were in America. But I don't remember all of
|
||
|
their names and my secretary remembers them so he will give you the
|
||
|
information.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Secretary:
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1965 to 1975 there is one CIA in Laos, his name was Shakley. He was
|
||
|
involved the narcotics business. And we know that Shakley used one
|
||
|
civilian to organize trafficking. His civilian name was Santos
|
||
|
Trafficante. He was the organizer of trafficking for Shakley. This
|
||
|
was financed by Richard Armitage who stayed in Vietnam. After the
|
||
|
Vietnam war Richard Armitage was a prominent trafficker in Bangkok.
|
||
|
This was between 1975 to 1979 he was a very active trafficker in
|
||
|
Bangkok. He was one of the embassy employees. Then after that in 1979
|
||
|
he quit from embassy and then he established a company name the Far
|
||
|
East Trading company. Then he used the name of his company under the
|
||
|
table for drug trafficking. He then used the drug money to support the
|
||
|
Lao anti-communist troops.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bo:
|
||
|
|
||
|
So he used it in arms and munitions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Secretary:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes. This Richard Armitage has a lot of friends in Laos and Thailand.
|
||
|
There is a lot of CIA personnel in Laos. One of the CIA agents is
|
||
|
named Daniel Arnold. This Arnold was a munitions trafficker. There is
|
||
|
another one Jerry Daniels who organized trafficking for Richard
|
||
|
Armitage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Now back at the luncheon with Bo)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the men named by Khun Sa, this is not me naming him. This is
|
||
|
Khun Sa, the drug overlord reading from his records, named Richard
|
||
|
Armitage as being a chief drug trafficker from 1965 through 1979. You
|
||
|
know where Richard Armitage went in 1979? He went to Dole's staff,
|
||
|
then he Reagan's campaign staff and now he is the Assistant Secretary
|
||
|
of Defense right underneath Mr. Carlucci. Richard Armitage has been
|
||
|
responsible for recovery of US prisoners of war way back before we
|
||
|
actually got involved with H. Ross Perot. He is still responsible for
|
||
|
them. What I'm trying to do is find you Khun Sa's letter because it
|
||
|
will say it best. Here it is. Letter from Khun Sa written to the US
|
||
|
Justice department dated 28 Jun 1987. I just want to read you a couple
|
||
|
sentences. "During the period 1965 to 1975, CIA chief in Laos Theodore
|
||
|
Shakley, was in the Drug Business." Now Theodore Shakley would have
|
||
|
been director of intelligence of the CIA if George Bush had not been
|
||
|
appointed to that post. Theodore Shakley was then posted as the deputy
|
||
|
director for covert operations. It said, "Santo Trafficante acted as
|
||
|
his buying and transporting agent while Richard Armitage handled the
|
||
|
financial section with banks in Australia."
|
||
|
|
||
|
All of a sudden the words from Jerry King came back, "Too many
|
||
|
bureaucrats don't want to see American prisoners returned alive." Why?
|
||
|
Couldn't figure it out. Gunboat at midnight in the middle of the
|
||
|
Mekong with Voice of America saying were there to abort our attack.
|
||
|
Walsh and the General recaptured before turnover. Why? Now I'll tell
|
||
|
you why. If this is true it means Richard Armitage and a lot of other
|
||
|
people that are named here are the least men in the world that want to
|
||
|
see Americans come home. Because when American prisoners of war do
|
||
|
come home, whether we bring them home or they drag themselves across
|
||
|
that Mekong river somehow, and report to the US Embassy and aren't
|
||
|
destroyed there. When they do come home, because they will, there will
|
||
|
be one hell of an investigation as to what took the greatest nation in
|
||
|
the world so long to bring home heroes that have been waiting for more
|
||
|
than fifteen years. When that investigation is conducted it will show
|
||
|
as Khun Sa says that these men, these bureaucrats, appointed not
|
||
|
elected, appointed, have broken the faith with you and this country and
|
||
|
its law. Have used their office as a cover to run drugs and arms to
|
||
|
promote covert operations that the United States Congress did not
|
||
|
approve of. Its the parallel government. Now that may be allright,
|
||
|
but I'll tell you something. It's not allright to leave hundreds of
|
||
|
Americans to die alone in the hands of the enemy to a bunch of wimps
|
||
|
that were never there.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When I came back here, I thought I was a lone ranger. I said, "Boy,
|
||
|
I've got this information. Somehow we've got to get it to the proper
|
||
|
authorities and I'm all alone. Well, not so. Guess who shows up in
|
||
|
Time Magazine? H. Ross Perot ... and he's on page 18, May 4th and it
|
||
|
says, "Perot's Private Probes." H. Ross Perot was not in Burma with
|
||
|
me, but I know now where he got his info. Four billion dollars opens a
|
||
|
lot of doors for you. It didn't open a couple of doors, however, as
|
||
|
I'll let you in on this story. H. Ross Perot had gained US agent
|
||
|
investigation reports of Richard Armitage. Perot didn't know I was
|
||
|
over in Burma. He was doing this on his own. This article said he
|
||
|
pinned Richard Armitage. Armitage is a fat broad. Literally. This is
|
||
|
a giant of a man. And demanded that Armitage resign because it says
|
||
|
that H. Ross Perot accused him of being an a drug smuggler and an arms
|
||
|
dealer. That takes pretty big cajones. (laughter) It says that Perot
|
||
|
then went to his friend, George Bush. It says that he gave evidence of
|
||
|
wrong doing by Armitage. I'm quoting. Bush told Perot to go to the
|
||
|
proper authorities. (sounds of shock and dismay by audience) I'm still
|
||
|
reading now. So the billionaire called on William Webster. He's now
|
||
|
head of the CIA. It says that Perot made at least one visit to the
|
||
|
White House carrying a pile of documents, yet he has received no
|
||
|
support from the Reagan administration. In fact Frank Carlucci...
|
||
|
Who's he? He's the secretary of defense. And who was he before?
|
||
|
Deputy directory of Central Intelligence. Frank Carlucci called him in
|
||
|
to ask him to stop persueing Armitage. Talk about insulation! And
|
||
|
when four billion dollars cant even get your foot in the door even
|
||
|
though the man is a good Texan from Houston. Tell me there's no
|
||
|
cover-up here.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now H. Ross was working on his own. He didn't know what Khun Sa had
|
||
|
told us. Khun Sa doesn't have a television or a telephone. He doesn't
|
||
|
know who Richard Armitage is. He doesn't give a damn. All he knows is
|
||
|
the people who are on his records that he's dealt with. This affadavit
|
||
|
though by a man by the name of Daniel Sheehan ... and you'll recognize
|
||
|
Sheehan's name if you don't know him already by the Silkwood case. He
|
||
|
jumped on Kerr-Magee (sp?). Kerr-Magee is pretty powerful. But they
|
||
|
won the Silkwood case there in Oklahoma and have done a few other
|
||
|
things.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(switch to a talk-show interview with Daniel Sheehan)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sheehan:
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's little doubt at all that President Reagan was involved in a
|
||
|
conspiracy to violate the Neutrality Act. He's been directly ordered
|
||
|
by the United States Congress not to mount this military operation
|
||
|
against Nicaragua. They've cut off all funds for him to do so, but he
|
||
|
went to Saudi Arabia and various private citizens to raise the money in
|
||
|
total violation of the Federal Neutrality Act. They're engaged in
|
||
|
violations of the arms-export control act. They're engaged in
|
||
|
violations of the Federal Racketeering Act. There is a whole federal
|
||
|
racketeering syndicate that they like to refer to as The Enterprise.
|
||
|
Richard Secord referred to it as. But what it is in fact, Jim, is the
|
||
|
off-the-shelf, stand-alone, self-financing, covert operations capacity
|
||
|
that Oliver North talked about Bill Casey wanting to set up. Fact is,
|
||
|
that it has been set up. Its been operating for many years now. Out
|
||
|
from under the control of any president. Out from under the control of
|
||
|
the director of central intelligence. Out from under the supervision
|
||
|
of any intelligence committee. Its run by Theodore Shakley, the former
|
||
|
director of covert operations worldwide by the CIA under George Bush
|
||
|
when George Bush was the director of the Central Intelligence Agency in
|
||
|
1976. And this crowd has set up the off-the-shelf operation and is
|
||
|
carrying out not only a partnership with the drug dealers from Central
|
||
|
America and from Southeast Asia, but also carrying out a major
|
||
|
political assasination program which was participated in by William
|
||
|
Buckley who was the Beirut section chief for the CIA who was kidnapped
|
||
|
in March of 1984 and who was the subject of all the real negotiations
|
||
|
for the sale of the TOW missiles to Iran. It was not a sale to open
|
||
|
any openings to the moderates in Iran, nor was it in fact a negotiation
|
||
|
to negotiate for the general release of hostages. It was initiated
|
||
|
solely and exclusively to obtain the release of William Buckley because
|
||
|
he knew about the whereabouts of the off-the-shelf operation. It was a
|
||
|
criminal enterprise and they feared that if the American people found
|
||
|
out about that there would be a huge constitutional scandal and the
|
||
|
President of the United States would be impeached.
|
||
|
|
||
|
You have to remember that the head of the Justice Department, Edwin
|
||
|
Meese, used to be the chief of staff at the White House that ran all
|
||
|
these meetings where they were setting up these plans. This was no
|
||
|
great surprise to Edwin Meese who came before us on November 25th, 1986
|
||
|
and said, "Oh my gosh, look at this. There seems to be some sale of
|
||
|
TOW missiles to Iran going on here." He knew perfectly well what was
|
||
|
going on here. And there is a very technical phrase in the law that
|
||
|
refers to what they're doing. It's called a Big Fat Lie.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(poor edit here going back to Bo at luncheon)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Bo:
|
||
|
|
||
|
(referring to The Christic Institue, I presume)
|
||
|
|
||
|
If they're telling the truth in this case, then we should look at the
|
||
|
evidence they have. I've been told by my friends in the Central
|
||
|
Intelligence that they are, "funded by the KGB." Well, when they tell
|
||
|
me that and it's because Christic is talking bad about the government,
|
||
|
it makes me think that maybe somebody higher up has told them, "hey..
|
||
|
go tell 'em that they're being funded by the KGB." I don't know too
|
||
|
much more than that, but I do know ironically enough, can H. Ross
|
||
|
Perot, General Khun Sa and the Christic, three different totally
|
||
|
separate entities come up with the same information if its not true?
|
||
|
|
||
|
This affadavit though by Daniel Sheehan ... there's his signatures
|
||
|
swearing that it is the truth. He has uncovered information ... I just
|
||
|
want to read you a couple of sentences. Its says here that, "One of
|
||
|
the officers in the US embassy in Thailand, one Mort Abromowitz (he was
|
||
|
the Ambassador as a matter of fact), came to know of Armitage's
|
||
|
involvement in the secret handling of opium funds and called there to
|
||
|
be initiated a internal state department heroin smuggling investigation
|
||
|
directed against Richard Armitage." It says, "Armitage was a target of
|
||
|
embassy personnel complaints to the effect that he was utterly failing
|
||
|
to perform his duties on behalf of American MIA's." And Armitage
|
||
|
reluctantly resigned as DOD special consultant on MIA's at the end of
|
||
|
1977. It says, "From 1977 to 1979 Armitage remained in Bangkok opening
|
||
|
and operating a business named the Far East Trading Company." It says
|
||
|
that, "This company was in-fact merely a front for secret operations
|
||
|
conducting opium money out of Southeast Asia to Tehran, Iran and the
|
||
|
Nugen-Hand Bank." It goes on ...
|
||
|
|
||
|
There's three fingers now. One, twelve-thousand miles from here from
|
||
|
an infamous warlord who doesn't even know Armitage, other than for the
|
||
|
fact that he is the bagman. H. Ross Perot gaining it from government
|
||
|
testimony of agents investigating. But have you ever seen Armitage
|
||
|
indicted? But if you look at these reports the agents have been farmed
|
||
|
out. Anyone who comes up with a report of investigation against
|
||
|
Armitage gets reassigned or retired. You'll recognize some of this.
|
||
|
This is back to Khun Sa's letter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"After 1979 Richard Armitage resigned from the US embassy's posting
|
||
|
and set up the Far East Trading Company as a front for his continuation
|
||
|
in the drug trade. Soon after Daniel Arnold was made to handle the
|
||
|
drug business as well as the transportation of arms sales. (Daniel
|
||
|
Arnold was a CIA station chief). Jerry Daniels then took over the drug
|
||
|
trade from Richard Armitage."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jerry Daniels was a CIA member. Jerry Daniels died mysteriously in
|
||
|
Bangkok, Thailand. I wonder why.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(cut to segment from Iran-Contra hearings)
|
||
|
(end of part 1)
|
||
|
--
|
||
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
It's the man in the White House, the man under the steeple
|
||
|
Passing out drugs to the American people
|
||
|
I don't believe in anything, nothing is free
|
||
|
They're feeding our people that Government Cheese
|
||
|
|
||
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
(this is part 2 of 2 in a series on alleged cia involvement in drug
|
||
|
trafficking and pow/mia problems)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Narrator:
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Christic Institute's charges against The Enterprise were featured
|
||
|
briefly in the Iran-Contra hearings during Jack Brooks' questioning of
|
||
|
Richard Secord.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Brooks:
|
||
|
|
||
|
... vast array of alleged illegal and corrupt practices beginning as
|
||
|
far back as the 1960's. Did you know about that?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Secord: (somewhat nervously)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of course I know about it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Brooks:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Well, the allegations include the organization of assasination programs
|
||
|
funded by the drug king-pin in Laos and laundering of millions of
|
||
|
dollars skimmed from the sale of military weapons to the Shah of Iran,
|
||
|
and the provision of military services to Somosa, and laundering
|
||
|
Colombian drug money, but anyhow ...
|
||
|
|
||
|
Narrator:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Secord's response was prophetic. Nearly a year later the cased would
|
||
|
be dismissed in a blatantly political move by Judge Lawrence King.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Brooks:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Describe your involvement and transactions with them ...
|
||
|
|
||
|
Secord: (nervously and contemptously)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Can I comment on the suit? The suit, which was filed in May of last
|
||
|
year, is the most outrageous fairy tale anybody has ever read. Nobody,
|
||
|
including the Justice Department, credits it at all. It's being dealt
|
||
|
with. I can only fight on so many fronts at once. I regard that one
|
||
|
as a rather minor threat that will be tossed out of ...
|
||
|
|
||
|
Narrator:
|
||
|
|
||
|
The congressional committees carefully side-stepped these charges as
|
||
|
well as the issue of massive cocaine smuggling by the Contras. But the
|
||
|
media was quick to notice the striking parallels between the liberal
|
||
|
Christic Institute's allegations and conservative Bo Gritz's
|
||
|
discoveries in Burma. Sharing a commitment to the truth, both Sheehan
|
||
|
and Gritz have been outspoken in their charges that The Enterprise has
|
||
|
engaged in assasinations, drug dealing and illegal weapons shipments.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Their activities have well been documented in the mainstream press.
|
||
|
The case of Edwin Wilson is a powerful example of The Enterprise's
|
||
|
blatant disregard for law and congressional restraints. Sentenced to
|
||
|
52 years in prison for providing weapons and explosives to Libya, the
|
||
|
former CIA agent has pointed out that his more-than-willing partners in
|
||
|
those transactions and others were none other than Richard Secord and
|
||
|
Theodore Shakley. According to Wilson, "If I'm guilty, they're guilty.
|
||
|
If I got 52 years for what I shipped, Ollie North ought to get 300
|
||
|
years."
|
||
|
|
||
|
(cut to video clip from BBS NEWSNIGHT. Interview with Edwin Wilson in
|
||
|
prison.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson:
|
||
|
|
||
|
I would like to have the story get out, which is the truth. There has
|
||
|
been such as massive cover-up on this whole group. The group that now
|
||
|
is running the war for the Contras that I felt that the only way I
|
||
|
could somewhat justify my own actions was to have the truth come out.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Interviewer:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Are you saying that Iran-Contra is just the tip of the iceberg?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wilson:
|
||
|
|
||
|
... just the tip of the iceberg.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(cut back to Gritz at luncheon)
|
||
|
|
||
|
I swore to defend this constitution. As a soldier I was brainwashed.
|
||
|
And I wasn't a dumb soldier either. I've got advanced degrees in
|
||
|
college, honors graduating from the Command and General Staff College
|
||
|
of the United States Army, given the high command, served in the
|
||
|
highest level staff positions in the Pentagon. And yet I thought that
|
||
|
as a soldier I was to be apolitical. I was to never question what our
|
||
|
executive branch civilians told us to do. Just do or die. What an
|
||
|
education I got.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Back in 1975-76 I commanded special forces in Latin America. Same time
|
||
|
George Bush was head of the CIA. We knew that Noriega was not only a
|
||
|
drug smuggler then but we knew that he was a communist besides. He was
|
||
|
the intelligence officer under Omar Terrijos (sp?). We, the United
|
||
|
States, payed Noriega three times what we pay our President to be our
|
||
|
friend. I recommended more than ten years ago that we dump him. We
|
||
|
didn't and now were seeing the result of it. My point is George Bush
|
||
|
knew what was going on then. He was head of Central Intelligence. It
|
||
|
was his OK that said pay Noriega hundreds of thousands of dollars every
|
||
|
year. He knew what the intelligence reports were. That Noriega is a
|
||
|
brother to Fidel Castro. Don't ever let him tell you he didn't know.
|
||
|
I think a lot of the truth would come out if we tried General Noriega
|
||
|
because he knows what happened and would be willing to tell what
|
||
|
happened, but there is nobody in the administration that wants to hear
|
||
|
what happened. We know were not going to try him. Thats just a ruse.
|
||
|
Read the newspapers about three months before we indicted him. I saw
|
||
|
where Armitage went down to Panama to warn Noriega, that if he didn't
|
||
|
get under control that we were going to eliminate him. Well, Noriega
|
||
|
has bigger cajones than any bureaucrat that you'll ever meet. He's a
|
||
|
little guy like H. Ross Perot, but he is tougher than Texas cowhide and
|
||
|
he will pull the plug on the Panama Canal if we try to force him out.
|
||
|
I think Noriega is going to come out the winner (I guess not... ed.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
And by the way, can you imagine what Armitage did? See, Tom Harvey and
|
||
|
Armitage are best friends. They lift weights everyday in the Pentagon
|
||
|
athletic club. I know when we got back from Burma that Harvey rubbed
|
||
|
his hands together and said, "Hey Dick, come on over to the White
|
||
|
House. Bo Gritz just got back from Golden Triangle with information on
|
||
|
POW's from Khun Sa." Can you imagine what happened when Khun Sa said,
|
||
|
"...and I will disclose every government official I've dealt with for
|
||
|
20 years.."? I bet you Dick Armitage involuntarily urinated right
|
||
|
there! (much laughter) And all of a sudden US declares no mercy. Its
|
||
|
a war of words. No president thats ever declared a war on drugs has
|
||
|
ever fought one and I see 'em being fought today. But there's a way to
|
||
|
do it and end-running the Constitution is not the way. But here's what
|
||
|
we've done. You saw Ollie North stand up and become an acclaimed hero.
|
||
|
Now Ollie North is a Marine that I believe has done everything he
|
||
|
thought was right to stem the rising tide of communism. But I want to
|
||
|
give you some facts and you decide for yourself. I think Ollie North
|
||
|
had good intentions but he was manipulated and used.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Have we won the war in Nicaragua? Has the end justified the means
|
||
|
because the planes carrying arms to the Contras came back loaded with
|
||
|
drugs. I submit to you that we have lost. Did we ever intend to win?
|
||
|
|
||
|
(cut to a scene with female reporter interviewing Mike Tulliver (sp?),
|
||
|
a former pilot who flew drug runs.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
The government decided to get into the drug business in order to pay
|
||
|
for the Contras? The American government?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mike Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
As incredulous as it may sound, I believe that they not only decided to
|
||
|
get into it I think that they orchestrated the whole thing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter (narrating):
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mike Tulliver is a pilot who's principle occupation has been smuggling
|
||
|
drugs. He's currently serving a three and one half year sentence in a
|
||
|
federal prison in Miami for a conviction unrelated to the secret
|
||
|
flights he made for the Contras. He says he was approached in 1985 by
|
||
|
long-time CIA operatives to run what they called "supplies."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
You could bring back their cargo without ever having to worry about
|
||
|
interception, arrest, anything like this. Everything was taken care of.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
What kind of cargo are you talking about?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Drugs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
And the same people who you believe set you up with the arms also set
|
||
|
you up with 25,000 pounds of pot?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sure... oh yes ... sure .. in change.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
So what do you do with that 25,000 pounds of pot?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
We take off out of Honduras and we leave.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
To?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
South Florida.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Where in South Florida?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
We landed at Homestead.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Homestead?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Air Force Base.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
With whose clearance?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was given a discreet transponder code to squawk about two hours south
|
||
|
of Miami. I received my instructions from the ground for traffic
|
||
|
separation and told them what my destination was.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
What did you say?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
I told them we were a non-scheduled military flight into Homestead Air
|
||
|
Force Base.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
What happened when you landed?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
We landed about 1:30 - 2:00 in the morning I guess. A little blue
|
||
|
truck came out and met us and it had a little white sign that said,
|
||
|
"FOLLOW ME."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
And you did...
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
And we followed it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
To where?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some area of the field. I have no idea ... I've never been there
|
||
|
before or since.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Where you surprised that you were going to land all of this pot at an
|
||
|
Air Force base?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yeah... I was a little taken aback to be honest with you. I was
|
||
|
somewhat concerned about it. I figured it was a setup or it was a DEA
|
||
|
bust or a sting or something like that.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
And instead nothing happened to you?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
No. A little guy in the pickup truck takes us out and I get in a taxi
|
||
|
cab.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Did you get payed for the flight?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver:
|
||
|
|
||
|
75,000 dollars.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter narrating with video clip of cargo plane at Homestead:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tulliver identifies this as the plane he flew. The plane traces to a
|
||
|
company that was hired by the government to fly humanitarian supplies
|
||
|
to the Contras at the same time Tulliver made his flights.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(cut to clip with George Morales)
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Why would the CIA allow drug planes to come into the United States
|
||
|
loaded with coke from (undecipherable).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Morales:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Money.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter Narrating:
|
||
|
|
||
|
George Morales is a world champion boat racer. He is also a world
|
||
|
reknowned cocaine trafficker whose empire extended from Colombia to
|
||
|
Miami. Morales was indicted for running cocaine in 1984. He says the
|
||
|
CIA used his indictment to pressure him into providing planes, pilots
|
||
|
and three million dollars in cash to the Contras. He too is in federal
|
||
|
prison awaiting sentencing on the '84 charge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
So you're saying that drug planes were allowed into the states as long
|
||
|
as somebody was kicking money into the Contra coffer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Morales:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Definitely.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Is this like just a one-time occurrence? Somebody snuck in?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Morales:
|
||
|
|
||
|
No.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Frequent?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Morales:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Routine?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Morales:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(back to Tulliver)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Believe it or not, the entire business is compartmentalized. I'm like
|
||
|
a Teamster. I'm in transportation. You've got people who are in
|
||
|
loading. You've got people who are in offloading. You've got people
|
||
|
who are in distribution. You've got people who are in sales. It's
|
||
|
like an IBM situation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter narrating again:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gary Betzner was one of George Morale's top pilots. He too is in
|
||
|
federal prison in Miami on an unrelated drug conviction. His sentence
|
||
|
is 15 years. Like Morales and Tulliver he has little to gain from
|
||
|
talking about these drug flights.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Betzner:
|
||
|
|
||
|
I took two loads, small aircraft loads of weapons to John Hull's ranch
|
||
|
in Costa Rica and returned back to Florida with approximately 1000 kilos
|
||
|
of cocaine.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
What exactly was in the plane that you flew from Fort Lauderdale?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Betzner:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Oh there was some C4 explosives, M60 machine guns. It was stacked all
|
||
|
the way to the ceiling.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
How many pounds of weaponry?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Betzner:
|
||
|
|
||
|
I would estimated around 2500 pounds. I understood right away that it
|
||
|
wasn't the private guns that went down that were that important. It
|
||
|
was what was coming back that could buy much larger and better and more
|
||
|
sophisticated weapons. It was unaccounted for cash.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter narrating:
|
||
|
|
||
|
... near heavy security Ramone Rodriguez was brought to capitol hill.
|
||
|
Ocean Hunter, it appears, is just the beginning (?). Under oath, he
|
||
|
told Senators that the drug connection is much larger. That he'd
|
||
|
handled a direct 10 million dollars in cash contributions from the
|
||
|
Colombian cocaine cartels to the Contras.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rodriguez:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Outside the United States drug dealers are very powerful people. They
|
||
|
have cash. The CIA deals primarily with items outside of the US. If
|
||
|
they're going to deal in foreign country's policies and politics
|
||
|
they're going to run up against or run with the drug dealers. It
|
||
|
cannot be done any other way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Do you have any evidence, any proof, any ideas of whether the large
|
||
|
sums of cash you had delivered to the Contras, whether it actually made
|
||
|
it to the Contras?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rodriguez:
|
||
|
|
||
|
There is no way to trace cash. My guess it that not all of it got
|
||
|
there, but I'm a cynic.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Reporter:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Where would it have ended up?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rodriguez:
|
||
|
|
||
|
I would say that you're gonna find a lot of it in nest eggs, foreign
|
||
|
accounts, waiting for the day when the Contra issue is no longer
|
||
|
popular, when Congress votes it out of existance and they have to do
|
||
|
something else for a living.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(back to Bo at the luncheon)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Point is there are three sources now all saying one little bureaucrat.
|
||
|
Look how bureaucrats fall! You break wind wrong, you're out of here in
|
||
|
an election year. Why hasn't Mr. Armitage been investigated? When we
|
||
|
came back I was told by telephone in Bangkok, "Bo, if you don't erase
|
||
|
and forget everything that you have done, you're going to get hurt." I
|
||
|
was told, "Everybody loves you. Nobody wants to hurt you. No one
|
||
|
wants to put a war hero in jail, but if you don't cooperate you're
|
||
|
going to hurt the government." And I said, "Joe, whose government am I
|
||
|
gonna hurt?" (lots of applause)
|
||
|
|
||
|
I am sick and tired of watching the result of poor politics sending our
|
||
|
soldiers overseas to do something that they were not meant to do. I'm
|
||
|
a fighter, but when we fight we ought to fight to win. And when we
|
||
|
send people we ought to be willing to bring them back again. (much
|
||
|
applause)
|
||
|
|
||
|
We did go before congress. You know who runs the drug task force in
|
||
|
the house of representatives? Lawrence Smith. He is a democrat from
|
||
|
"Miami Vice" Florida and his staff told me before I came up, "Bo, you
|
||
|
better be well-heeled-for-bear because the people who keep the chairman
|
||
|
in office are more prone to promote drugs than they are to fight them."
|
||
|
When I got up there Lawrence Smith would not allow any members of the
|
||
|
task force to view the video tapes that we brought from Khun Sa in
|
||
|
Burma. He asked me, "Colonel, how could a man of your intelligence put
|
||
|
any stock at all in what a drug warlord would say?" I said, "Mr.
|
||
|
Chairman, aren't we dealing with Michael Gorbochev and he's a
|
||
|
communist. But we talk to him because he has the missiles and we want
|
||
|
to reduce them. Khun Sa has all the heroin and if we want to stop it
|
||
|
he's the guy we ought to see." And he says, "What's this business
|
||
|
about a heroin highway? How do we know the Thai's didn't build that
|
||
|
road to attack Khun Sa?" And I said, "Well Chairman, if they did, they
|
||
|
did a heck of a good job because it goes right straight to his
|
||
|
headquarters and nobody is attacking and he his own little customs
|
||
|
houses all along the road where the little bar comes down." He ended
|
||
|
the hearing by saying, "I don't think there is any substantive evidence
|
||
|
here that would indicate any further investigation need be made." He
|
||
|
never called H. Ross Perot. He never called the Christic Institute.
|
||
|
He never allowed the tapes or the letter that Khun Sa wrote because I
|
||
|
found out that video tapes aren't enough. They said, "Well, he didn't
|
||
|
write anything." Then we had a letter with his signature on it under the
|
||
|
Shan seal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Point is Ladies and Gentlemen, there is a parallel government this day
|
||
|
that lives within the United States government. It is a parasite!
|
||
|
Personally, I think we may have lost the Executive Branch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(cut to clip from Iran-Contra hearings with Jack Brooks questioning
|
||
|
Ollie North about executive order rescinding the constitution)
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was particularly concerned Mr. Chairman, because I read in Miami
|
||
|
papers and several others that there had been a plan developed by that
|
||
|
same agency, a contingency plan in the event of an emergency that would
|
||
|
suspend the American constitution and I was deeply concerned about it.
|
||
|
I'm wondering if that was the area in which he had worked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I believe that he was, but I wanted to get his confirmation. (Brooks
|
||
|
tries to continue here and is interrupted by Daniel Inouye, chairman of
|
||
|
the proceeding and senator from Hawaii)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Inouye:
|
||
|
|
||
|
May I most respectfully that that matter not be touched upon at this
|
||
|
stage. If we wish to get into this I'm certain arrangements can be
|
||
|
made during executive session.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(cut to Jack Brook's summary)
|
||
|
|
||
|
... involving the US government in military activity in direct
|
||
|
contradiction of the law, diverting public funds into private pockets
|
||
|
in secret unofficial activities, selling access to the President for
|
||
|
thousand of dollars, dispensing cash and foreign money orders out of a
|
||
|
White House safe, accepting gifts and falsifying papers to cover it up,
|
||
|
altering and shredding national security documents, lying to Congress.
|
||
|
Now I believe that the American people understand that democracy cannot
|
||
|
survive that kind of abuse.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(back to Bo at luncheon)
|
||
|
|
||
|
I don't think it makes a hoot who you vote for for President. The same
|
||
|
people are gonna run this country. I stand before you today. You
|
||
|
gotta know who I am. I'm an indicted felon because part of that phone
|
||
|
call in Thailand said, "Bo, if you don't erase and forget, if you don't
|
||
|
come to the apartment (that was a safehouse in Washington, DC), you're
|
||
|
gonna be charged with 15 years and your going to serve as a felon and
|
||
|
we're going to bring up aggravated charges and hostile witnesses."
|
||
|
That's not my kind of language. I said, "Friend, that's an insult to
|
||
|
you, me and two hundred years of constitutional government." He said,
|
||
|
"Bo, don't give me that. Bring everything you've got to the
|
||
|
apartment." I said, "Who's going to be there, Joe?" And he said, "You
|
||
|
know me better than that, Bo. It will just be me and Tom Harvey." I
|
||
|
said, "OK, I'll bring this stuff dear citizen. I'll show it to you
|
||
|
then you tell me to erase and forget." When I got to LA with the tapes
|
||
|
he said, "Bo, don't come." He was that much of a friend. He said,
|
||
|
"Don't come. Hide those tapes. Everybody's laying for you." He said,
|
||
|
"But please destroy and forget. That's all the state department wants
|
||
|
you to do because otherwise you're going to jail as a felon." You know
|
||
|
what they charged me with? They did charge me. Misuse of a passport.
|
||
|
Now that is a weeny charge for somebody thats been in clandestine
|
||
|
warfare for more than 30 years. That throws me in league with Jane
|
||
|
Fonda. She was cavorting with the enemy and misusing her passport.
|
||
|
Ollie North and Robert McValium went to Iran on Irish passports so they
|
||
|
could do an illegal arms deal, but nobody has charged them. Thats
|
||
|
because they're cooperating.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Well, I'm not worried about that. The US attorney doesn't know how
|
||
|
hard to take it because I said, "I don't deny I misused a passport. I
|
||
|
misused it many times. Every time in pursuit of US prisoners of war."
|
||
|
You dear citizen, see if you would erase and go back to sleep and
|
||
|
forget. I don't think that you will. In my defense I got a lawyer,
|
||
|
he's the former US attorney for Nevada. He took my case for free other
|
||
|
than all the expenses it cost to bring in witnesses. Were going to use
|
||
|
this court as a forum for prisoners of war and for government in drug
|
||
|
dealing because you know you can't sue the government, but when the
|
||
|
government jumps on you now you can turn it around on them. Thats
|
||
|
exactly what were doing. I got a plea the other day saying, "Bo, just
|
||
|
go ahead and cop a plea it'll be a misdemeanor." No way Jose, were
|
||
|
going all the way with this one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Narrator)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The American Warrior has traveled a long road from the jungles of
|
||
|
Vietnam to the Pentagon to a hostile federal courtroom in Las Vegas,
|
||
|
but the commitment to God, country, honor and decency have never
|
||
|
wavered. It would be far easier to walk away from this battle, but to
|
||
|
do so would be impossible for this soldier.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Interestingly enough, the US attorney prosecuting this case against a
|
||
|
respected dissenting war hero is himself the former road manager for a
|
||
|
well-known 1960's antiwar rock group. The irony is not lost on Las
|
||
|
Vegans, but the issues behind the trial demand nationwide attention.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One can only wonder what the charges will be against Oliver North.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Christic Institue, on the other hand, is facing an uphill battle in
|
||
|
their current appeal of Judge King's dismissal of their racketeering
|
||
|
lawsuit against The Enterprise last June in Miami. As Father Bill
|
||
|
Davis, their chief investigator explains:
|
||
|
|
||
|
(cut to Fr. Bill Davis from The Christic Institute)
|
||
|
|
||
|
This is by far the most important case we've ever done. I think for
|
||
|
the kinds of forces that were up against, as well as for the broader
|
||
|
public policy implications. If this crowd can get away with what they
|
||
|
have been getting away with: the arms dealing, the drug dealing, the
|
||
|
assasination programs and sell it under the guise of some kind of blind
|
||
|
anti-communism, having had the revelations that we've had: the
|
||
|
Hasenfuss flight, the Iran arms deal. If they still get away with it
|
||
|
then I think democracy, at least in this country, is in very very
|
||
|
serious condition. I don't think it will survive. Were either going
|
||
|
to win against these forces, this time or I am not optimistic about the
|
||
|
survival of democracy in this country. I think it's that serious.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Narrator)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The seriousness of Gritz's discoveries during his first mission to the
|
||
|
Golden Triangle, however was brought home immediately after his return.
|
||
|
Scott Weekly, his Operation Lazarus team member and veteran of several
|
||
|
POW recovery missions, was arrested and charged with a federal
|
||
|
violation resulting from the Afghan training program he helped Gritz
|
||
|
conduct. Weekly was a classmate of Oliver North's at Annapolis and has
|
||
|
a PhD in physics. After numerous forays into hostile enemy territory
|
||
|
neither he nor Gritz were prepared for the treachery that awaited them
|
||
|
at home.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Bo filmed in Thailand or thereabouts)
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ambassador level person for the US government in charge of
|
||
|
narcotics control made a statement immediately following the release of
|
||
|
this tape to the White House that the United States would never a agree
|
||
|
to talk with General Khun Sa about drug control because he was such a
|
||
|
black-hearted criminal. I believe that we can show through facts that
|
||
|
have already been established by the US Justice Department and on-going
|
||
|
investigations that there are people currently who saw that tape in the
|
||
|
US government that all that they could to stop this interview right
|
||
|
here for fear they would be exposed. Even to the point where they
|
||
|
arrested Scott Weekly for a minor technicality of transporting
|
||
|
explosives illegally on a commercial airliner.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Very briefly we were training a couple of Afghan freedom fighters
|
||
|
through the knowledge and request of the US state department and other
|
||
|
official agencies. The explosives were procurred for us from Fort
|
||
|
Sill, Oklahoma and were naturally transported, because we were using
|
||
|
them at a remote desert base, by aircraft. There was no danger to the
|
||
|
civilian aircraft. The explosives were C4, plastic, frontline safe.
|
||
|
You could shoot them with a machine gun and they wouldn't go off.
|
||
|
There were no detonating devices with us. Federal agents told Scott
|
||
|
when he was taken into custody that it wasn't a technicality and that
|
||
|
the real target was me. They were under pressure by the US attorney's
|
||
|
office to find out whether or not I was in kahoots with North and
|
||
|
Poindexter since I had traveled to Latin America and to the Middle East
|
||
|
in pursuit of various government associated projects. The fact is and
|
||
|
the truth is that I've had nothing to do with North and Poindexter or
|
||
|
any illegal activities either in South America or the Middle East. Now
|
||
|
the truth is that I believe that elements in the US government are
|
||
|
afraid that they will be exposed for their illegal activities and drug
|
||
|
trafficking. Through that exposure that this will cease and they will
|
||
|
loose their power. If they had tried to put pressure by causing Scott
|
||
|
Weekly even to be ajudged guilty ... because he was told if he would
|
||
|
plead guilty that there would be no problem... that he would be given
|
||
|
probation... that there would be no more pursuit... that it would be
|
||
|
unsupervised probation which would allow him to continue to travel
|
||
|
overseas. In truth, he was sentenced. The fact is that Scott was told
|
||
|
that if he would plead guilty that there would be no further
|
||
|
investigation and that all would go well for him and that if he did not
|
||
|
plead guilty there would be a tether put on all of us so that we would
|
||
|
not be able to travel and at that time we were very very close to
|
||
|
negotiating the release of American prisoners of war. The only reason
|
||
|
that Scott plead guilty was so that other members of the Operation
|
||
|
Lazarus team, myself included, would be free to continue the mission of
|
||
|
liberating US prisoners of war, which is ongoing now.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Narrator Discussing Weekly's case)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Scott Weekly was made to serve fourteen months of a five year sentence
|
||
|
before it was demonstrated that the agents had removed sensitive
|
||
|
documents from his pre-sentencing file which would have exonerated him.
|
||
|
The sentence was simply dismissed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lance Trimmer, a former Green Beret communications specialist with the
|
||
|
Lazarus team, accompanied Gritz to Burma in Weekly's place in May, 1987
|
||
|
where he witnessed Khun Sa naming the US officials involved in drug
|
||
|
trafficking. As a professional private investigator, since returning
|
||
|
he has spearheaded the effort to document and publicize the team's
|
||
|
findings and was instrumental in obtaining Scott Weekly's release from
|
||
|
LongPoke Federal Prison. In the process he has been unjustifiably
|
||
|
arrested and detained three times by the police and federal
|
||
|
authorities.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Narrator introducing Barry Flinn)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Barry Flinn is the Bangkok station chief for Operation Lazarus. In May
|
||
|
of 1987 he served as the cameraman with Colonel Gritz on his second
|
||
|
trip to visit Khun Sa. Also during this time he has made other trips
|
||
|
into ShanLand. On one occasion he accompanied a journalist from
|
||
|
Australia who filmed the proceedings and made this the subject of a
|
||
|
news program in Australia. Barry himself was arrested immediatly upon
|
||
|
his return to Bangkok from ShanLand on the first trip and has been
|
||
|
several times since then as has been Khun Sa.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Khun Sa in interview with Australian journalist .. either he himself or
|
||
|
a translator is speaking... it sounds like Khun Sa himself)
|
||
|
|
||
|
... even if they kill me the opium will still be there. They only use
|
||
|
me as a money tree. Every time they want money, they come and shake
|
||
|
the tree just like a Christmas tree.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Journalist:
|
||
|
|
||
|
...spraying the opium crop with the poison 24-D (or somesuch...Ed.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Narrator Again)
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the problems that Khun Sa pointed out in the news program in
|
||
|
Australia is the extensive use of toxic herbicide spraying over his
|
||
|
territory not to kill the opium plants, but to kill the food crops
|
||
|
which is very very destructive of the culture and the people and
|
||
|
creating a very serious refugee problem.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Khun Sa again...)
|
||
|
|
||
|
We have 300 families in the hills now who have no food. The world body
|
||
|
is doing something against humanity in the Shan state and nobody knows
|
||
|
about it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Bo talks about Khun Sa's offer)
|
||
|
|
||
|
General Khun Sa has extended an offer in writing to turn over to the
|
||
|
United States Government on March 15, 1988 one ton of refined Asian
|
||
|
heroin, that sells for $250,000 per pound to distributors, as a show of
|
||
|
good faith that he would stop 1200 tons of heroin from entering the
|
||
|
free world in 1988. The response of the State Department was, "no
|
||
|
interest."
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Bo talking in Southeast Asian Field)
|
||
|
|
||
|
There are personalities within the United States Government who have,
|
||
|
as early as the early 1960's, trafficked in opium and heroin to finance
|
||
|
assasination programs initially approved by the Central Intelligence
|
||
|
Agency, which didn't work then and aren't working now. If these
|
||
|
assasinations programs spread from Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand
|
||
|
to Iran, to Nicaragua, to Libya and have the potential of continuing to
|
||
|
spread unless some exposure is finally done to eliminate these high
|
||
|
officials.
|
||
|
|
||
|
H. Ross Perot has said as a result of his investigation he has found a,
|
||
|
"snake pit without a bottom." He says that the people involved will do
|
||
|
anything to keep their wrongdoings covered up. He even says that a man
|
||
|
that was responsible for the Phoenix assasination program is now on the
|
||
|
personal staff of George Bush.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Cut to Barry Flinn in Bangkok discussing his trip with Bo.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
My name is Barry Flinn and I live in Bangkok, Thailand. I have been in
|
||
|
Bangkok now for two years. I am a member of Operation Lazarus and I am
|
||
|
the station chief here in Bangkok. My function for Operation Lazarus
|
||
|
is to collect information from my agents in Laos and in Vietnam on
|
||
|
locating live Americans held captive in these two countries. This last
|
||
|
trip Colonel Gritz had asked me to go into ShanLand, a territory of
|
||
|
Burma, to be a witness and a cameraman to record the conversation with
|
||
|
him and General Khun Sa. I agreed to go and I did witness, I did
|
||
|
record the meeting with Lt. Colonel James 'Bo' Gritz and General Khun
|
||
|
Sa. Another member of Operation Lazarus by the name of Lance Trimmer
|
||
|
also accompanied us. In Shanland I did record the meeting and the
|
||
|
facts are as follows: General Khun Sa's people, the secretaries read
|
||
|
from a document written in the Shan language about American officials
|
||
|
dealing in heroin from 1965 to the present. Some of the names he had
|
||
|
given us were a man by the name of Shakley, a man by the name of
|
||
|
Armitage and other American officials involved in drugs. Now my job is
|
||
|
strictly locating POWS. I am not involved with the DEA or any other US
|
||
|
Government agency. I am a private citizen. It makes you angry when
|
||
|
you hear of the drug problems in America. Children taking heroin at
|
||
|
twelve and high officials supplying them the heroin and all the
|
||
|
cover-ups they did in the past, the present and probably in the future.
|
||
|
Now as a witness I definitely believe these men were involved in the
|
||
|
drug trade. General Khun Sa did say that, after giving us the names,
|
||
|
he wouldn't be surprised if B52 bombers started flying over Shanland to
|
||
|
destroy him and to kill him so that he wouldn't testify to the other
|
||
|
Americans involved in the drug trade.
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I am staying in Bangkok, Thailand to locate POWs and if people are
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interested in more information about the interview with Khun Sa and Lt.
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Colonel James 'Bo' Gritz they know were to find me. The American
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embassy knows were to locate me. Lt. Colonel James 'Bo' Gritz knows
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were to locate me and I'm sure the people involved in the drug trade
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know where to locate me.
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Allright. One more thing. I did here about the Americans Shakley,
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Armitage and other Americans being named it sent a chill up my spine
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and down my back. It made me angry. It made me shocked. I couldn't
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believe it, but it was there: names, files of old papers that the Lao
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agents and the Shan people have on our Americans. Somebody has to do
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something. It will probably all be covered up. I don't know. It's
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not my business. I was only a witness and it will stay with me for the
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rest of my life about the people in our government dealing drugs. It's
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nice to know, isn't it? It's really nice to know...
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(Bo gives summary)
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In summary, the reason that American prisoners of war are not at home
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as we speak, if what Khun Sa, the Christic Institute, and H. Ross Perot
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are saying is true, is because Richard Armitage, the one man
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responsible for their recovery is a heroin smuggler and an arms dealer.
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He has misused his office in order to promote covert operations
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through the sale of heroin and trading in arms that bypasses the US
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Congress. When prisoners come home he will be investigated. His
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wrongdoings and misuse of office will be uncovered and exposed and he
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and the others will fall like a house of cards.
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||
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As an American citizen it is our responsibility to wake up to the
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internal threat, the treachery that threatens literally the life of
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this nation.
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(Bo back at luncheon asks people to swear to do something)
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|
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It's time that we just became Americans. Here is what I would ask you
|
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to do, because you can't just go back to sleep on this thing like we
|
||
|
did on 007, the Korean airline. One is, I would ask that in your mind,
|
||
|
if not physically here today be willing to raise you hand to the square
|
||
|
(?) and swear again before God and witnesses your allegiance to this
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||
|
heavenly banner (points to flag) and to the constitution of the United
|
||
|
States because it will die hermetically sealed in the National Archives
|
||
|
if we don't breath some life back into it. It is hanging by a thread.
|
||
|
The righteous people of this country, doesn't mean Democrat,
|
||
|
Republican, right, left, conservative, liberal, the righteous people of
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||
|
this country need now to stand up and put a shoulder to it to keep it
|
||
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stable. I want you to commit to yourself that you're going to do
|
||
|
something about it. Demand that an investigation be made.
|
||
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|
||
|
(Bo narrating here...)
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||
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|
||
|
Demand a thorough and true investigation of Richard Armitage. Insist
|
||
|
that The Christic Institute's charges go to trial and be heard by a
|
||
|
jury of Americans. That those in our government that represent sewage,
|
||
|
that clog the bureaucracy today might be cleaned out. That the
|
||
|
American way might continue. That our children might grow up in
|
||
|
liberty and freedom with same opportunities that we have had.
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Gritz apparently is willing to run for Congress on the Republican
|
||
|
ticket. Back to the luncheon)
|
||
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|
||
|
In the legislature you need to seek out, identify and draft people that
|
||
|
have the guts to stand up, because if you get the legislature up there
|
||
|
it can be through the people. It can be pulled back from the brink. I
|
||
|
think thats our saving grace. I think that through the legislature we
|
||
|
can do what no one else would have done to Nixon. We can wash him
|
||
|
away, we can wash away, hopefully, it's going to be a hard fight, this
|
||
|
cancer. I stand before you and give you an order. You have got to do
|
||
|
something about this thing. We fought the enemy foreign. Can't we
|
||
|
fight the enemy domestic?
|
||
|
|
||
|
(much applause)
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Ed: If you wish to order the video tape, you can write Bo Gritz at the
|
||
|
address below. I'm not sure how current it is. I highly recommend
|
||
|
that you do order it somehow. Reading about it is one thing, but it's
|
||
|
another thing entirely to see Khun Sa and his men dictating the names
|
||
|
of top US officials to video tape. Many documents that are on the
|
||
|
video are not in my transcription here. They would be too numerous to
|
||
|
transcribe)
|
||
|
|
||
|
(Transcribers disclaimer: The views expressed in this document do not
|
||
|
necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the transcriber. I am only
|
||
|
the messenger. Don't shoot me. Many people know I typed this and if I
|
||
|
were to disappear there would be some serious investigations because
|
||
|
several of my family are good friends with powerful people in the
|
||
|
Media. Doing me harm would only serve to substantiate the validity of
|
||
|
Gritz's claims. Jeez, this sounds paranoid, but if it's true certain
|
||
|
cautions are warranted.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lt. Colonel James 'Bo' Gritz
|
||
|
Box 472-HCR31
|
||
|
Sandy Valley, NV. 89019
|
||
|
|
||
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
It's the man in the White House, the man under the steeple
|
||
|
Passing out drugs to the American people
|
||
|
I don't believe in anything, nothing is free
|
||
|
They're feeding our people that Government Cheese
|
||
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|
||
|
------------------------------------------------------------------
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