mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-27 00:09:39 -05:00
206 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
206 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
SECRET TEAM OF WEAPONS DEALERS
|
||
by Vince Bielski
|
||
|
||
A "secret team" of former CIA and military officials and
|
||
arms dealers are responsible for the covert weapons shipments to
|
||
Iran and the contras under the direction of fired White House
|
||
aide Lt. Col. Oliver North.
|
||
|
||
Members of the "secret team" came together in the secret war
|
||
against Cuba in 1961, and have since been involved in "political
|
||
assassination" programs in Laos, Vietnam, Chile and now
|
||
Nicaragua.
|
||
|
||
The "secret team," through an association with known Mafia
|
||
leaders, has resorted to opium and cocaine trafficking to
|
||
finance their operations.
|
||
|
||
Edwin Wilson, the ex-CIA operative convicted for selling
|
||
explosives to Libya's Moammar Gadhafi, was an active member.
|
||
|
||
These allegations are part of a lengthy affidavit filed this
|
||
week in a Miami federal court in support of a law suit brought
|
||
by Dan Sheehan, an attorney with the Christic Institute in
|
||
Washington. The suit names 29 alledged operatives in the contras
|
||
arms network as defendants.
|
||
|
||
The suit alleges that the defendants supplied the C-4
|
||
explosives which were used in the May 1984 assassination attempt
|
||
against contra leader Eden Pastora in Nicaragua in which eight
|
||
people were killed and Pastora injured. The plaintiffs, Martha
|
||
Honey and Tony Avirgan, are American journalists who are sueing
|
||
for personal injuries they suffered from the bombing.
|
||
|
||
The Christic Institute, a church funded public interest law
|
||
firm, has taken on controversial cases in the past, such as the
|
||
suit against Kerr McGree Nuclear Corporation on behalf of Karen
|
||
Silkwood. And it was while Sheehan was defending a sanctuary
|
||
worker that he received information which led him
|
||
into the investigation of the contra arms supply opertation.
|
||
|
||
In March 1984, he learned from a member of the Federal
|
||
Emergency Management Agency that FEMA had a highly secret plan to
|
||
"deputize" government and State National Guard personnel for the
|
||
purpose of interning 400,000 undocumented Central
|
||
Americans in detention centers in the event that President Reagan
|
||
launched "Operation Night-train"--a military invasion into
|
||
Central America.
|
||
|
||
The plan also called for the distribution from U.S. military
|
||
bases of hundreds of tons of weapons to be used by newly created
|
||
State Defense Forces, composed of civilians, who would help
|
||
enforce the "State of Domestic National Emergency" during the
|
||
invasion. Sheehan learned from a Louisiana State National Guard
|
||
Colonel that a State Defense Force in Louisiana planned to give
|
||
half of the weapons it received to the contras.
|
||
|
||
In Miami, former U.S. military personnel and active National
|
||
Guard units had organized a para-military organization, called
|
||
Civilian Military Assistance, to arm, train and fight with the
|
||
contras. The group, headed by Tom Posey, obtained "surplus"
|
||
military equipment from the 20th Special Forces Unit of the U.S.
|
||
Army in Alabama, Sheehan learned from a member of the group.
|
||
|
||
In June 1984, Sheehan was informed a man who
|
||
working with the para-military organization in helping arm the
|
||
contras also claimed to be a "personal representative to the
|
||
Contras of...Lt. Col. Oliver North." His name is Robert Owen.
|
||
|
||
One year later, Sheehan began putting this information into
|
||
a law suit when he learned that Posey, Owen and others
|
||
were allegedly involved in the bombing of the Pastora press
|
||
conference which caused physical and personal injury to the two
|
||
American reporters.
|
||
|
||
Sheehans investigation also led him to the discovery of a
|
||
"secret team" of former high ranking U.S. officials and officers
|
||
who oversaw the procurement and shipment of weapons to the
|
||
contras to to Iran. Through Posey, Owen and other they allegedly
|
||
supplied the explosives for the press conference bombing. The
|
||
"secret team" includes former high-ranking CIA officials Theodore
|
||
Shackley and Thomas Clines, ret. Air Force Gen. Richard Secord,
|
||
ex-CIA operative Edwin Wilson, and two arms dealers, Albert Hakim
|
||
(of Los Gatos) and Rafael Quintero, both of whom are U.S.
|
||
citizens.
|
||
|
||
In the affidavit, which cites 79 seperate sources, Sheehan
|
||
said he learned of the "secret team" from a former U.S.
|
||
intelligence officer who worked in Iran, a retired CIA officer,
|
||
and a former Air Force officer.
|
||
|
||
The intelligence officer discussed "the existence of a
|
||
'secret team' of former high-ranking American CIA officials,
|
||
former high-ranking U.S. military officials and Middle Eastern
|
||
arms merchants--who also specialized in the performance of covert
|
||
political assassinations of communists...(and) which carried on
|
||
its own, independent, American foreign policy--regardless of the
|
||
will of Congress,...the President,...or the (CIA)," the affidavit
|
||
reads.
|
||
|
||
The source said the "secret team" was set up in
|
||
1977 under the supervision of Shackley and Cline, who were then
|
||
with the CIA. Wilson worked with Gadhafi "to secretly train
|
||
Libyan anti-Shah of Iran terrorists in the use of deadly C-4
|
||
explosives," the affidavit reads. Wilson's real purpose was to
|
||
gather intelligence on the anti-Shah terrorist missions, and then
|
||
pass the information to Quintero, "who was responsible for the
|
||
assassination of these Libyan terrorists,"
|
||
|
||
Wilson was convicted for his dealings with Gadhafi, and
|
||
Shackley and Clines resigned under pressure from then-CIA
|
||
director Stansfield Turner. Shackley and Clines then join with
|
||
Secord and Hakim and "went private" continuing to run their
|
||
"secret team," the affidavit reads.
|
||
|
||
This group--initially through the Egyptian-American
|
||
Transport and Service Company--was "responsible for the entire
|
||
supply of weapons...to the Contras," when the CIA wasn't directly
|
||
providing them. They began arming the contras in August 1979,
|
||
after entering "into a formal contractual agreement with
|
||
Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza" despite President Carter's
|
||
order banning the sending of weapons to Somoza, the affidavit
|
||
reads.
|
||
|
||
The CIA took over in 1981, but when the 1984 ban on U.S.
|
||
support went into effect, North reactivated the private
|
||
merchants. Quintero, operating through a Florida based
|
||
corporation named Orca Supply Company--a company earlier set up
|
||
by Edwin Wilson--saw to it that the supplies were delivered to
|
||
the contras through John Hull, a U.S. citizen, who reportedly
|
||
operates a contra base in northern Costa Rica on land he owns.
|
||
Among the delivered weapons were the explosives used in the
|
||
Pastor bombing, the CIA source said.
|
||
|
||
To fund the contras, the "secret team" resorted to the
|
||
foreign military sales scheme used in Iran in which military
|
||
equipment is bought from the U.S. government at the
|
||
manufacturer's cost and sold to Iran at replacement cost. The
|
||
profits are then laundered through front companies.
|
||
|
||
The Examiner reported in July that Secord, partners with
|
||
Hakim in Standford Technology Trading Group International, was
|
||
involved in the 1981 sale of AWACS to Saudi Arabia, in which
|
||
money from that sale financed the contra operation.
|
||
|
||
In another report, the Examiner said the weapons were also
|
||
financed by an elaborate cocaine ring involing Columbia's largest
|
||
cocaine dealers in which the drug moves from Columbia,
|
||
through Hull's land, into the U.S at a level of one ton each
|
||
week.
|
||
|
||
When the Reagan Administration decided to undertake the
|
||
secret sales of arms to Iran in 1985, it was Shackley, Clines,
|
||
Hakim and Secord whom they used to carry out the mission, the
|
||
affidavit reads.
|
||
|
||
BACKGROUND
|
||
|
||
In 1961, Shackley, a CIA station chief in Miami, and his
|
||
deputy Clines, directed the covert war against Cuba. A special
|
||
unit formed to assassinate Castro, supervised by the "Mafia
|
||
Lieutenant Santo Trafficante," included Quintero--and Felix
|
||
Rodreguez and Luis Pasada Carillo--two ex-CIA agent who
|
||
reportedly operate the contras arms network at an El Salvador air
|
||
base. Pasada was involved in the 1976 mid-air bombing
|
||
of a Cuban passenger airliner.
|
||
|
||
After the covert war activists were caught smuggling narcotics
|
||
into the U.S. from Cuba, the operation was shut down, and Shackley
|
||
and Clines were transfered to Laos, where Shackley was made CIA
|
||
Deputy Chief of Station and Clines continued as his deputy.
|
||
|
||
According to the affidavit, Shackley and Clines directed a
|
||
secret program which trained and used Meo tribesmen "to
|
||
secretly assassinated over 100,000 non-combatant village mayors,
|
||
book-keepers, clerks and other civilian bureaucrats in Laos,
|
||
Cambodia and Thailand." The operation was funded by profits from
|
||
an illegal opium trade.
|
||
|
||
A commander the political assassination program was ret.
|
||
Army General John Singlaub, who has said publicly that he is
|
||
helping arm the contras. North, a Marine Corps Major at the time,
|
||
was one of Singlaub's deputies. Also involved with Shackley in
|
||
Laos was Secord, then an Air Force General, the affidavit
|
||
reads.
|
||
|
||
In 1971, Shackley and Clines, from their post the CIA's
|
||
Western Hemisphere operations, directed the "Track II" operation
|
||
in Chile which played a role in the assassination of Chilean
|
||
President Salvador Allende, the affidavit reads.
|
||
|
||
In 1974, the two directed the Phoenix project in Vietnam,
|
||
which carried out the political assassination of some 60,000 non-
|
||
Viet Cong civilians in an attempt to cripple Vietnam's political
|
||
institutions.
|
||
|
||
"With their secret CIA anti-communist extermination program
|
||
coming to a end,...(they) started their own private assassination
|
||
business..."
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
|
||
) started their own private assassination
|
||
business..."
|
||
|
||
----------------------- |