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From: indri!csd4.milw.wisc.edu!leah!bingvaxu!sunybcs!ugkesslr
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Date: Thu May 4 11:48:48 PDT 1989
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Since the subject was brought up, I'd thought I'd pull up the article
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I have about the whole Iran/Bush/Reagan/Ollie/Hoffman affair. I hope you
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find it interesting.
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The important facts to note are:
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1. The first arms to Iran were sent in the first three months of
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the Reagan administration. Did Ollie get that whole deal together
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that fast? NO! The deal was made before the election - not to release
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the hostages until Regan was in office and we'll ship you all the arms
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you want.
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2. The Iranians were negotiating for arms up until a point before the
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election and then stopped.
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The article that follows expresses the facts much better than I can. Check
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it out and tell me what you think.
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Andy
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(This is excerpted:)
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Please excuse the intrusion, but I believe this is too important to
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confine it to the Poli-Sci list. I'll keep it short.
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You may not have heard of it, but there is a MAJOR political scandal
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attempting to vent itself in this country, and it has to do with George
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Bush. Although bits and pieces have surfaced in the NY Times,
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Wall Street Journal, Washington Post and other major papers, by and large
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it's been too hot for the mainstream press to handle, and too scary for
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congress to address openly. There have been a few brave individuals and
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media organizations willing to piece together the facts and air them,
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however. I have transcribed excerpts from several sources into a short
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(8 page) paper, which could serve as an introduction to the scandal.
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I will mail a copy to anyone who requests it.
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Get the facts before you do something at the polls that you might regret.
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Thanks for your time.
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Edunet: MATHPG1@UMCVMB.MISSOURI.EDU
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Bitnet: MATHPG1@UMCVMB
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The October Surprise
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An abridged transcript of a radio documentary program by "The Other
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Americas Radio" and broadcast on public radio stations across the nation.
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Supplemented by information presented in the documentary movie "COVERUP,
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Behind the Iran Contra Affair," currently showing at independent movie
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theaters across the nation, and "An Election Held Hostage," from the
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October 1988 issue of Playboy. Editorial elaboration is in []'s.
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[ed. This program does not purport to prove the allegations presented in
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it, that is for a court of law. What it does do is make a compelling case
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for furthur investigation.]
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Narrator: November 1979: 52 americans were taken hostage in Iran. The
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american public was held in suspense while the Carter administration worked
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to bring the hostages home, first in the failed 'Desert 1' rescue attempt,
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and then through negotiations with the revolutionary Iranian government.
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In October of 1980 an agreement was reached to unfreeze Iran's monetary
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assets for the safe return of the hostages. For some reason, the hostages
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were not released until January 20, 1981, the day Ronald Reagan was
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inaugurated as president. In the dawn of the Reagan era, many, in
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momentary blindness, neglected to seriously question the implications of
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such an event. It is now charged that in the few months before the 1980
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presidential election, the tremors of a covert action against America, by
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americans, was shaking the nation.
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Narrator: In this special program we will examine the allegations that
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members of the Reagan/Bush campaign cut a secret deal with the
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revolutionary government in Iran before the 1980 election. We will also
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explore what may have been the deliberate failure of President Carter's
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'Desert 1' hostage rescue mission.
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Narrator: Barbara Honegger was a researcher and policy analyst with the
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Reagan/Bush campaign in 1980. Subsequently she spent two years in the
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white house as a policy advisor to President Reagan. Honegger's
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investigation into this issue has revealed a disturbing story of treason,
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blackmail, and sabotage.
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Honegger: The very possibility that Carter could bring the hostages home
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was close to certain to wreck a Reagan bid for the presidency. So the
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Reagan campaign took phenomenal secret measures to ensure that the Carter
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white house was not successful. Reagan's 1980 campaign manager, William
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Casey, was knowledgable, before the fact, of the upcoming Carter Desert 1
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rescue attempt of April, 1980. Now that is a phenomenal fact, because many
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of even the highest level officers in Carter's own CIA were kept in the
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dark about that very operation.
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Narrator: Historian and author Donald Fried suggests links between the
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Reagan campaign and the failed rescue operation.
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Fried: Precisely the people in the intelligence community commissioned to
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develop some kind of rescue for the hostages, were clearly those elements
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of CIA who were close to Bush and Casey, and demonstrably hostile to Carter.
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Narrator: Was the CIA loyal to President Carter, or to candidate Reagan?
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Johnathan Marshall is an investigative journalist and co-author, along with
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Professor Peter Scott of UC at Berkeley, of the book "The Iran Contra
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Connection". Like Fried, Marshall views with suspicion some circumstances
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surrounding Carter's rescue attempt.
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Marshall: Brian Copeland, who had had some CIA connections in the past, ran
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in the Washington Star, a hypothetical hostage rescue piece, how he would
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do it, and it is so remarkably close to the actual mission, and came only a
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few days before the mission took place, that there is legitimate room to at
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least question whether it was some kind of leak that came out in the form of
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fiction to protect him from charges of sabotaging it. He printed a scenario
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for a rescue in the desert, and that story was broadcast on radio Iraq & Iran,
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and it was certainly heard in Iran. So the administration's most closely
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guarded secret was in effect foreshadowed by this published scenario.
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Narrator: Several years after leaving the white house, Barbara Honegger's
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research showed some startling links between the players of the 1980
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hostage rescue operation, and the main players in the Iran-Contra scandal.
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Honegger: ... and then of course we have Richard Secord, Oliver North and
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Albert Hakim. Richard Secord was one of the chief planners for the so-
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called failed Desert 1 rescue attempt, North was involved in that rescue
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attempt, in the mother ship, which was on the Turkish border awaiting the
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cue from Secord to fly in and rescue the hostages, and Albert Hakim was in
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charge of the ground operations of the rescue attempt, in particular,
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obtaining the trucks and other vehicles which were going to be needed.
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Hakim skipped town, left Tehran 24 hours before the rescue was to take
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place, and the reason for that, as detailed in my research documentation,
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was that Secord, North and Hakim had no intention of seeing Desert 1 carry
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through, and so sabotaged the operation.
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Narrator: The hostage rescue team consisted of 8 helicopters, 6 C130
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transport planes and 93 delta force commandos. But delta force never made
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it to Tehran. Only 5 of the 8 helicopters reached the site of Desert 1 in
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operable condition. According to General Samuel Wilson, who investigated
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the many failures of the rescue mission, the pentagon's review panel found
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negligence on a level surprising even to those hardened to military
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incompetence. This is only one of many strange facts surrounding the
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rescue mission. Honegger takes us back to Tehran during the rescue
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attempt:
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Honegger: There were a number of interesting incidences which occurred in
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Tehran that night. The 53'rd hostage, Cynthia Dwyer, who was in Iran and who
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had not yet been taken hostage, told Reverend Moore, an american minister who
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was there and interviewing her at the time by phone, that the CIA had
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sabotaged the rescue attempt. She told him that immediately after the
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so-called aborted failure. And we also know from Rev. Moore that a Mullah who
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was at a prayer meeting heard a siren that went off in Tehran that night, and
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stood up and said, 'God is great, God is good, your helicopters have just
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crashed in the desert.' There are a number of other reasons and independent
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sources we have for a sabotage, but it was definitely sabotage and there was
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advance, multiple failure planning.
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Narrator: The failed rescue mission left 8 men dead and 3 helicopters in
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the desert filled with classified documents which fell into the Iranian's
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hands.
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Narrator: The possibility of Carter's success in bringing the 52 hostages
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home sent tremors through the Reagan/Bush campaign headquarters. Honegger
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was working for the campaign at the time:
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Honegger: Richard Wirthland, who was the campaign's pollster, had
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determined that an 'october surprise', which was a successful attempt by
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Carter to release the hostages and bring them home before the election,
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would be the death knell to a Reagan/Bush presidency. That was determined
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by Reagan and Bush's pollster in march of 1980, which, not coincidentally,
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was one month before the sabotaged Desert 1 rescue mission.
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Marshall: The Reagan people were extremely concerned about what they termed
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'The October Surprise', and Reagan's campaign manager, William Casey, later
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to become the head of the CIA, was running what he termed an 'intelligence
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operation' against the Carter camp. This first came out when David
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Stockman revealed that Reagan had prepared for his TV debates with Carter
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using a stolen briefing book. We know now that the espionage operation was
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much broader than just stealing briefing books. It included former
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military officers, CIA people, FBI agents and the like, who tapped into the
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Carter camp, into the intelligence bureaucracy, to find out whether this
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october surprise would actually happen, because if it did, it would have
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cost Reagan the election.
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Narrator: Was the CIA loyal to Carter, or to Casey? In the wake of the
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Watergate scandal and the findings of CIA abuses by the Church committee in
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the mid '70s, Carter's new CIA chief, Stansfield Turner, removed around 600
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people from their jobs in covert operations. This made for a very
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demoralised intelligence network. Congressional investigations have since
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revealed that active duty CIA officers were working with the Reagan/Bush
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campaign. Peter Scott, co-author of "The Iran Contra Connection:"
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Scott: When all these covert operators were fired in the 1970's, they
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didn't just start opening restaraunts or working in bookstores. They were
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people who were very skilled in covert manipulation of political
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processes, and they essentially ganged up to find and elect a candidate who
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would put them back in the covert operations business, and Reagan and Bush
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were only too eager to be that kind of candidate.
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[ From the Playboy article:
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Shortly after the Shah was deposed, Carter chewed out the CIA for
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misinterpreting the unrest in Iran. He chastised the Director of CIA,
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Stansfield Turner, and reorganized or fired much of the Middle East
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division. Relations between the white house and CIA grew increasingly
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hostile. "There was no doubt that the CIA was more Republican and didn't
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like Democrats," says admiral Turner. "And I'm certain that many hoped a
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Republican would return to the white house."
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"The Carter administration had made a serious mistake," noted Charlie
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Beckwith, the colonel in charge of the Desert 1 rescue team. "A lot of the
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old whores -- guys with lots of street sense and experience -- left the
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agency." (and went to work for the Reagan campaign, the article alleges) ]
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Narrator: In october of 1980, Casey decided to create the october surprise
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working group.
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Honegger: Richard Allen was head of the october surprise working group. It
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met every morning to try to come up with ways to try to prevent Carter from
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bringing the hostages home. We do know from published accounts, in the
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Knight Ridder papers across the country, that Richard Allen met with Robert
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McFarlane and an alleged emmissary from Khomeni's regime in Washington in
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early october of 1980 to discuss a deal to delay the release of the
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hostages until after the 1980 election. There is no question that that
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meeting happened, Allen and McFarlane have acknowledged that it did.
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Narrator: McFarlane told reporters that the Iranian that approached him
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was referred to the Reagan/Bush campaign, but was later judged to be a
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fraud and dismissed. According to Allen, allegations of a secret deal are
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absolute baloney.
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Honegger: Allen and McFarlane deny that any deal was cut, but the bulk of
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the evidence shows that that's not the case. For instance, Allen, in late
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november of 1986 on the Mcneil-Leherer news hour, referred to a deal
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between Reagan and Iran. He was being interviewed at the time, and he was
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referring to the very first day that Reagan was president. Allen recalled
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for the audience that he had told Reagan that there was a 53'rd hostage,
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Cynthia Dwyer, who had not been released, and Reagan responded, 'You get
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the Iranians on the phone for me, and I'm going to tell them that our deal
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is off unless she is released.' Well, you would have expected the
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interviewer to have jumped up and said, 'Just a minute, sir, what deal was
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that?' Now the reason that that had to have been, in my studied opinion, a
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deal between Reagan and Khomeni, made before Reagan was president, is
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because at the time that Reagan made that phone call to the Iranians, all
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of Carter's deals with Khomeni had been consumated. So, when Reagan
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referred to a deal with the Iranians, he had to have been referring to a
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separate deal.
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Narrator: Because Iran's arsenal was comprised of US supplied weapons, they
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were dependent on US spare parts and ammunition to fight their war with
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Iraq. On October 22, during lengthy negotiations between the Carter white
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house and Iran, the Iranian's persistent demand for US weapons was suddenly
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dropped. The Iranians no longer linked the release of the hostages to
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obtaining military spare parts from the US. Iran's president at the time,
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Bani-Sadr, explains why, although facing war with Iraq, Iranian negotiators
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no longer demanded these essential military supplies:
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(voice of Bani-Sadr, translator over-dubbed:) It is now very clear that
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there were two separate agreements, one the official agreement with Carter
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in Algeria, the other, a secret agreement with another party, which, it is
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now apparent, was Reagan. They made a deal with Reagan that the hostages
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should not be released until after Reagan became president. So, then in
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return, Reagan would give them arms. We have published documents which
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show that US arms were shipped, via Israel, in March, about 2 months after
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Reagan became president.
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Narrator: During this interview in Paris, the former Iranian president
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gave copies of the weapons contracts to the Other Americas Radio. Bani-
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Sadr then went on to charge, that former CIA men, including Casey and
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Gorbanifar, had collaborated in engineering this treasonous deal.
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Narrator: Shortly after being deposed, while in exile in Paris, the former
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president of Iran said he received military intelligence reports which
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noted that George Bush and Richard Allen were among those who had met with
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Iranian representatives at the hotel Raphael in Paris, to finalize the deal.
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Honegger: One of the founders of Hezbollah, the pro-Iran terrorist
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organization which has blown up our marine barracks, and also our emassies
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in Kuwait and Beruit, sent a representative to the paris meeting before the
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1980 election, to meet with Richard Allen [Reagan's first national security
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advisor], George Bush, Donald Gregg [at the time, Carter's CIA liaison,
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later to become Bush's national security advisor, a position he still
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holds], [Manucher Gorbanifar and Albert Hakim, who were and are active in
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the CIA and international arms trade, and who were central figures in the
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Iran Contra investigation, were also present] and other officials of the
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CIA to cut the secret deal with the Reagan campaign to delay the release of
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our hostages in exchange for arms, which began being shipped to Iran in
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1981.
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[COVERUP claims that this meeting was originally arranged between Iran and
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representatives of the Carter administration. It seems that Iran, after
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suffering heavy losses in it's war with Iraq, was anxious to get it's hands
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on military spare parts and ammunition, and was proposing a hostage release
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in exchange. Officially, Donald Gregg was there in his capacity as a
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representative of the Carter white house, but in fact his loyalties lay
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with his former CIA boss, George Bush. Thus, instead of arranging for a
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pre-election hostage release, they arranged that the hostages not be
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released until after Reagan was in the white house. Carter has kept silent
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on this issue, although he was recently confronted by Larry King on his talk
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show, and acknowledged that he did have reports during the campaign that
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there was a deal between the Iranians and the Reagan campaign.]
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[The authors of the Playboy article wrote former President Carter regarding
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these allegations. The text of Carter's reply follows:
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"We have had reports since late summer of 1980 about Reagan campaign
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officials dealing with Iranians concerning delayed release of the american
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hostages. I chose to ignore the reports. Later, as you know, former
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Iranian president Bani-Sadr gave several interviews stating that such
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an agreement was made involving Bud McFarlane, George Bush and perhaps Bill
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Casey. By this time, the elections were over and the results could not be
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changed. I have never tried to obtain any evidence about these allegations
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but have trusted that investigations and historical records would someday
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let the truth be known." ]
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Narrator: Bani-Sadr said this meeting took place sometime during the last
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two weeks of October 1980. We checked the New York Times computer, Nexus,
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which revealed no mention of any public appearances by George Bush from
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October 21 to the 27, just one week before the 1980 election. Barbara
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Honegger recalls an incident that occurred during the same time period of
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October 21 to 27, when she was working at the Reagan Campaign headquarters
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in Arlington, Virginia:
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Honegger: In late october, as part of my job on the writing staff of the
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national campaign headquarters, I was required every night to cover the
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news. I went in to the operations center, which was the nerve center, the
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communications center for the Reagan campaign, to cover the 11 oclock news.
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As I did so, I was amazed to see a complete 180 degree shift in the mood,
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from what it had been over the previous week or two. Because of the worry
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about the october surprise, the mood had been one of anxiety and tension,
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and suddenly there was a party atmosphere. I walked up to a woman who
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worked for the man who was in charge of the operations center, and asked
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what was going on, and she said "Oh, haven't you heard? We don't have to
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worry about the october surprise. Dick cut a deal." She was standing next
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to a heavy set gentleman whom I didn't recognize, and I said "Dick? You
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mean Dick Allen?" and she then got jabbed in the ribs by the man and just
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said, "Let it go .. Dick cut a deal."
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Narrator: A deal with Khomeni? Investigative journalist John Marshall
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shares some doubt:
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Marshall: There is one logical problem that has to be addressed. It
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doesn't rule the theory out, but to have made a bargain with the Iranians,
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to delay the hostage release until after the election, would have given the
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Iranians on a silver platter the biggest blackmail card imaginable. If we
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think of the arms for hostages deal, that alone caused one of the biggest
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scandals in recent american history. That at least was for what you might
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call a good cause: to release the hostages early. To delay the release of
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hostages for domestic political gain, in return for arms, would have led to
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not only to impeachment, but the drawing and quartering of everyone
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involved.
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Honegger: In fact we do know, that the Khomeni regime, and Hezbollah in
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particular, has been blackmailing the Reagan administration ever since
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1981. We know from Oliver North's own notes, that profits from the Iranian
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arms sale were going to Hezbollah right from the beginning. Millions of
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dollars worth of profits, and because American hostages were not released
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as a result of those payments, it is clear that in fact those were hush
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money payments, because Hezbollah and the Iranians have been blackmailing
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the Reagan administration, because of what they know about the treasonous
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1980 deal.
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Narrator: Mansur Rafizadeh is a former chief of Savak, the Shah of Iran's
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secret police. He was also a covert agent for the CIA, and was in
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communication with factions in both the US and Iranian governments during
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the hostage crisis:
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Raf: The CIA asked me to get in touch with a powerful source inside of
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Iran, so I took the liberty, before consulting with the CIA, I demand,
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american government wants the hostages to be released, that's the first
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step. The answer came back in a few days. You are wrong. American
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government doesn't want the hostages to be released, or possibly there's a
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government inside of the government, or they're lying to us, or they're
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lying to you. That's not the demand. What else do they want?
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Narrator: George Bush had been director of the CIA during the Ford
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administration, and still had many friends in the agency. Former Savak
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chief Rafizadeh told The Other Americas Radio that secret negotiations
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between Khomeni and CIA elements loyal to the Reagan Bush campaign had
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arranged a deal to keep the hostages in Iran until Reagan was in the white
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house.
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Raf: ....and after the election was done, Khomeni was going to release the
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hostages. Why Khomeni was going to release the hostages, because he doesn't
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understand the system of government, he thinks Reagan is in the white house
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tonight, he's going to put Carter and his family in jail tomorrow morning,
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and, here we go. But as soon as they told him, no no, still Carter is
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president, then, the deal was made to release the hostages exactly, the
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moment Ronald Reagan was president. (questioner: Did this have anything to
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do with promises the Reagan campaign had made?) It was promised for the
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arms. At the time the deal was that the hostages would be released as soon
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as Reagan is in the office, and then they will ship them arms.
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(questioner: And who made that agreement?) CIA. And we learned about that
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agreement also, ahead of time. General Louasi learned that they are going
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to send arms to Khomeni, the deal is made, he told me that. I believe
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that, as much involvement as William Casey had, and Richard Allen had,
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George Bush has too. George Bush is intelligent, he's smart, he knows the
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business. (questioner: he was apparently very popular in the CIA ..) Yes,
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he was very popular in CIA, so I don't believe George Bush was not involved
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in it, no he was involved. The other thing, Khomeni did all the damage to
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Carter, he didn't do any bad thing to Reagan. He released the hostages the
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moment Reagan was president. The hostages were sitting in a plane, there's
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a documentary film from CBS or NBC, anyone can watch it, the guards were
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standing by with a radio. The moment Ronald Reagan was president, they
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signaled the plane, they took off. Why they didn't send them 2 days
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before? Why they didn't wait to the next day to do it? And after, the
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shipment of arms starts from Tel-Aviv. (questioner: and this is in 1981?)
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1981, we are talking, not 1985. And if anyone is going to tell me that the
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government of Israel shipped arms to Iran without the knowledge or
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permission of the american government, I don't believe it.
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Narrator: On July 18, 1981, an Argentine cargo plane crashed on the
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Turkish-Soviet border. It was loaded with weapons in transit from Israel
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to Iran. High level Israeli officials have said that the Reagan
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administration knew and approved of the arms dealings the crash exposed.
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The cargo of spare parts and ammunition were all american made. From
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reports in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal, we know of two
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separate groups of shipments in 1981. The first, as we have already heard,
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was shipped through Israel, with authorization from Reagan administration
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officials. The second group of arms was shipped by an Iranian born arms
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merchant, Cyrus Hashemi. Hashemi had worked for the CIA, beginning in
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1975. He died suddenly of a rare form of acute leukemia in 1986.
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Congressional investigators noted that the CIA has chemical injections and
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sprays that can cause such symptoms. One informant said he was told by US
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customs officials that Hashemi had been 'bumped off' by government agents.
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Honegger: Cyrus Hashemi was murdered by government agents because of his
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knowledge of the 1981 links. And Mr. Hashemi, before he was murdered,
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which was in July 1986 in London England, Hashemi had told collegues and
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associates that the original 1981 shipments were part of necessary
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arrangements and deals to accomplish the delay of the release of the
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original 52 hostages.
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Narrator: Is it a coincidence that other key witnesses to this entire
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affair have died under similarly questionable circumstances? The scandal
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may be bigger than anyone imagines. The alleged deal to prevent Carter's
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re-election in 1980 may be at the root of the contragate scandal.
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According to an Athens newspaper account of tapes made of Robert McFarlane,
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the US had shipped 1.3 billion dollars worth of military equipment to Iran
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by 1986, and a total 5 billion dollars worth was promised. As we have
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heard from former US operative and Savak agent Rafizadeh, these shipments
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began in 1981, when there were no more US hostages left in Iran.
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Raf: They are making remarks all the time that we will disclose the secret
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tapes, the secret information. And I believe that the Reagan
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administration is blackmailed by Khomeni, because they have so much dirt
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going on between them.
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Narrator: Congressman John Conyers has wondered why the Reagan
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administration approved weapons shipments to Iran in early 1981. Conyers is
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probing contacts between Iran and the 1980 Reagan-Bush campaign. The
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charge leveled in this program of unlawful activity by Richard Allen,
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George Bush and others, is one of treason. It requires further
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investigation.
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Honegger: These individuals have had an arrogant contempt for the will of
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the american people as expressed through the congress of the US and the
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laws of the US. I know, having been in this white house, and from my
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research since, that this contempt for the rule of law in this country,
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comes because these people have an erroneous belief that they are serving a
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higher law. [COVERUP states that this "higher law" is the fight against
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communism.]
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[From COVERUP:
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Peter Scott: I think the real issue was that both the administration and
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most of the people in the congressional committees were frightened that the
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real scandals, the contra-drug scandal, for instance, would really threaten
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any future conduct of covert operations that had been handled in the past,
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and so they were trying, very deliberately, to limit the damage, this was
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damage control, look only at the Iran arms sales, and the diversion to the
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contras.
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Honegger: The bottom line is that the Iran Contra committee, and the Walsh
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investigation, because their mandates only took them back to 1984, were in
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and of themselves a coverup. ]
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[ COVERUP claims that even this scandal is really just the tip of the iceberg.
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Oliver North testified during the senate hearings that Casey wanted an 'Off
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the shelf, self financing, independent covert operations capability' outside
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the checks and balances of executive and congressional oversight, for the
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|
purpose of fighting world communism. This independent entity has existed for
|
|
some time, it is claimed, finances itself by international arms and drug
|
|
running, and has it's own cold war agenda and business interests. Many of the
|
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key players, such as Hakim, Gorbanifar and Secord, have strong ties to the US
|
|
and international intelligence communities, which greatly facilitates their
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|
smuggling operations, enabling them to bypass airport customs with ease. The
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well publicised contacts between contra gun runners and the underworld
|
|
probably facilitates the internal distribution and sale of drugs in the US.
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The international arms trade and international drug trade amounts to hundreds
|
|
of billions of dollars annually. These people are in a unique position to ease
|
|
the passage of contraband across international borders, and the few tens of
|
|
millions they skim off the top is easily borne by the market. The real price
|
|
is paid in the steady erosion of our constitution. ]
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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Narrator: The October Surprise was produced by Eric Schwartz,
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Carolyn Soular, and Dale Lewis of The Other Americas Radio. The Other
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|
Americas Radio is a non profit, independent broadcast group based in Santa
|
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Barbara California. For a free catalog of our taped programs please write
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to:
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The Other Americas Radio
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P.O Box 85
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Santa Barbara, CA 93102
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[ COVERUP was produced by The Empowerment Project, a non profit group based
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in California ]
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[ "An Election Held Hostage", by Abbie Hoffman and Johnathan Silvers, was
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published in the October 1988 issue of Playboy ]
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[ Also see the PBS special, "The Secret Government," hosted by Bill
|
|
Moyers, which explores the "Off the shelf, self financing, independent
|
|
covert operations" entity mentioned by North, and traces it back to
|
|
its cold war beginnings. This movie won an Emmy for best documentary
|
|
film. It's quite chilling. ]
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