mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
580 lines
37 KiB
HTML
580 lines
37 KiB
HTML
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
|
|
<head>
|
|
<title>handbank</title>
|
|
<link rel="stylesheet" href="../CSSstyle.css"/>
|
|
<!--Fill in your link line for CSS and JS in the XSLT here! -->
|
|
</head>
|
|
<body>
|
|
<h1 id="title-index">Politics-Conspiracies-Project</h1>
|
|
<nav id="menu">
|
|
<a href="../index.html">
|
|
<div class="button">Home</div>
|
|
</a>
|
|
<a href="../fulltext2.html">
|
|
<div class="button">Fulltext</div>
|
|
</a>
|
|
<a href="../analysis.html">
|
|
<div class="button">Analysis</div>
|
|
</a>
|
|
<a href="../gallery.html">
|
|
<div class="button">Gallery</div>
|
|
</a>
|
|
<a href="../methods.html">
|
|
<div class="button">Methods</div>
|
|
</a>
|
|
<a href="../about.html">
|
|
<div class="button">About</div>
|
|
</a>
|
|
<a href="../GitHub.html">
|
|
<div class="button">GitHub <img alt="github icon"
|
|
src="https://logos-download.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/GitHub_logo.png"
|
|
width="15"/>
|
|
</div>
|
|
</a>
|
|
</nav>
|
|
<h2>handbank</h2>
|
|
<p>Article 6208 of alt.conspiracy:
|
|
Path: bilver!tarpit!peora!masscomp!usenet.coe.montana.edu!decwrl
|
|
!uunet!sun-barr!cronkite.Central.<span class="LOC">Sun</span>.COM!jethro!finess.Corp.<span class="LOC">Sun</span>.COM
|
|
!rburns
|
|
From: rburns@finess.Corp.<span class="LOC">Sun</span>.COM (Randy Burns)
|
|
Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
|
|
Subject: Nugan Hand Bank--More Grist for the Mill
|
|
Keywords: bank CIA corruption
|
|
7691@jethro.Corp.<span class="LOC">Sun</span>.COM
|
|
Date: 13 Dec 91 23:08:26 GMT
|
|
Sender: news@jethro.Corp.<span class="LOC">Sun</span>.COM
|
|
Lines: 523</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
|
|
Article: "Crimes of <span class="NORP">Patriots</span>," by Jonathan Kwitny
|
|
Date: 23 Jan 90 22:55:31 GMT</p>
|
|
<p>By popular email demand: more Conspiracy basics, reproduced out of
|
|
further boredom from MOTHER JONES, Aug/Sept 1987.</p>
|
|
<p>Says MoJo:</p>
|
|
<p>Jonathan Kwitny is an investigative reporter for the WALL STREET
|
|
JOURNAL. This article is adapted from his book, THE CRIMES OF PATRIOTS:
|
|
A TRUE TALE OF DOPE, DIRTY MONEY, AND THE CIA (W.W. Norton & Co.).</p>
|
|
<p>Congressional hearings provide us with daily glimpses into a shadowy
|
|
world of arms dealers, middlemen, retired military officers, and spooks.
|
|
The details of secret arms shipments to Iran and money transfers to the
|
|
contras have provoked expressions of shock and outrage about the
|
|
"privatization" of foreign policy and the president's obsession with
|
|
covert activity, as if these were inventions of the Reagan
|
|
administration. They weren't.</p>
|
|
<p>The need, cited by the past eight presidents, to pursue a perpetual and
|
|
largely secret global war against an ever-expanding Soviet empire has
|
|
justified gross violations of American law for 40 years. What is new in
|
|
1987 is that a window suddenly has been opened on this shadow world
|
|
before the spooks who inhabit it could completely take over.</p>
|
|
<p>What we are seeing today is not an aberration; the aberration is only
|
|
that we are seeing it, and what we are seeing is still not most of it.</p>
|
|
<p>To fight their perpetual war, successive administrations have required
|
|
an army of men who live in a world of spying and secrecy. Wrapping
|
|
themselves in a cloak of patriotism, they have carried out unlawful acts
|
|
of violence against civilians in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Many
|
|
soldiers in this shadow army also have stretched the cloak of patriotism
|
|
to cover criminal enterprises that turn a hefty profit. Indeed, "the
|
|
enterprise" that has been the focus of this summer's hearings, run by
|
|
Maj. Gen. Richard Secord and his partner, Albert Hakim, is now the
|
|
subject of a criminal investigation.</p>
|
|
<p>The subject of this story is another example of such an enterprise: the
|
|
Nugan Hand Bank -- a mammoth drug-financing, money laundering, tax-evading, investor-fraud operation based in Sydney, Australia. Its
|
|
global operations, spanning six continents, involved enough U.S.
|
|
generals, admirals, CIA directors, and spooks to run a small war. Not
|
|
surprisingly, their activities brought them into contact with men of
|
|
similar military and intelligence backgrounds now facing possible
|
|
indictment for their roles in the Iran-contra affair.</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
Crimes of <span class="NORP">Patriots</span>
|
|
by
|
|
Jonathan Kwitny</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
The cold war strayed into Lithgow, Australia, one <span class="LOC">Sun</span>day morning in a
|
|
Mercedes Benz. Sgt. Neville Brown of the Lithgow Police recorded the
|
|
time as 4 A.M., January 27, 1980. "I was patrolling the Great Western
|
|
Highway south of Bowenfels with Constable First Class Cross," Sergeant
|
|
Brown said. "We saw a 1977 Mercedes sedan parked on the south side of
|
|
the old highway known as '40 Bends.'" It was now three months later,
|
|
and Sergeant Brown was testifying on the first day of a week-long
|
|
inquest at the Lithgow courthouse. Lithgow, a settlement about 90 miles
|
|
inland of Sydney, had been of little previous significance to Western
|
|
Civilization. Consequently, Sergeant Brown was unused to the reporters
|
|
in the courtroom and the television cameras outside. But he maintained
|
|
his official poise under the stern questioning of the big-city lawyers.</p>
|
|
<p>The two officers approached the unfamiliar Mercedes stranded on the old
|
|
two-lane road. "A male person was sitting slumped over toward the
|
|
center of the vehicle," Brown testified. "A .30-caliber rifle was held
|
|
by him, the butt resting in the passenger-side floor well. His left
|
|
hand held the barrel, three or four inches from the muzzle and near the
|
|
right side of his head. His right rested on the trigger."</p>
|
|
<p>Frank Nugan, the autopsy concluded, died of a single gunshot wound.
|
|
Given the moat of undisturbed gore that surrounded his body, there
|
|
seemed to be no way that someone else could have gotten into his car,
|
|
killed him, and left. The facts all pointed to suicide -- a scenario the
|
|
U.S. Central Intelligence Agency would be able to live with. Other
|
|
aspects of Sergeant Brown's testimony, however, were much more
|
|
disturbing to the CIA and others.</p>
|
|
<p>For example, a typed list was found in Nugan's briefcase, containing
|
|
scores of names of prominent Australian political, sports, and business
|
|
personalities. Next to the names were handwritten dollar amounts,
|
|
mostly five-and six-figure sums. Were they the names of debtors?
|
|
Creditors? No one knew yet.</p>
|
|
<p>Sergeant Brown also testified that a calling card was in the wallet
|
|
found in Nugan's right rear pocket. It bore the name of William E.
|
|
Colby, a former CIA director and now a private consultant. Written on
|
|
the back of the card was "what could have been the projected movements
|
|
of someone or other," Brown testified: "From Jan. 27 to Feb. 8, Hong
|
|
Kong at the Mandarin Hotel. 29th Feb.-8th March, Singapore." William
|
|
Colby was in those places at roughly those times.</p>
|
|
<p>Probably the most sensational testimony at the inquest came from Michael
|
|
Hand, Nugan's American partner. Hand identified himself to the court as
|
|
chair-man, chief executive, and 50 percent shareholder of Nugan Hand
|
|
Ltd., "the major operating company of a worldwide group of companies
|
|
with offices throughout the world." Most people still referred to the
|
|
company by the name of its most prominent subsidiary, the Nugan Hand
|
|
Bank.</p>
|
|
<p>Hand's exploits had little to do with banking. A highly decorated
|
|
member of the Green Berets in Vietnam, he went on to become a contract
|
|
agent for the CIA in Vietnam and Laos, training hill tribesmen for
|
|
combat and working closely with the CIA's Air America to see that the
|
|
tribesmen were supplied. Bill Colby had run the program. In 1967 Hand
|
|
migrated to Australia.</p>
|
|
<p>How Michael Hand, just coming off active duty as a U.S. intelligence
|
|
operative in Southeast Asia, happened to hook up with Frank Nugan -- a
|
|
local lawyer and playboy heir to a modest food-processing fortune -- is
|
|
still a mystery. Asked under oath at the inquest, Hand said he couldn't
|
|
remember.</p>
|
|
<p>Although Hand's CIA ties had helped lure the reporters to the courtroom,
|
|
thousands of people were interested in his testimony for other reasons.
|
|
They, or their families or their companies, had money invested with
|
|
Nugan Hand. For weeks now, the bank's officers had stalled off
|
|
inquiries from the panicky investors. Finally, from the witness stand,
|
|
Hand let loose the bad news: the company would not be able to pay its
|
|
depositors. Even "secured" deposits would not be paid, since the bonds
|
|
"securing" them were phony. Indeed, Nugan Hand couldn't even pay its
|
|
rent. "The company is insolvent," said Hand.</p>
|
|
<p>Nugan Hand's unpayable claims amounted to some $50 million. Many more
|
|
lost deposits never were claimed for one simple reason: the money had
|
|
been illegal to begin with -- tax cheating or dope payments or the
|
|
wealth of a few Third World potentates. Not money the losers would want
|
|
to account for in open court. The grand total easily could have been in
|
|
the hundreds of millions of dollars.</p>
|
|
<p>One might expect that the police, faced with the mysterious death of the
|
|
head of a large international bank, would take steps to seal off his
|
|
house and office. In the days after Frank Nugan's death, however, the
|
|
police stayed conveniently away, while the company's files were packed
|
|
in cartons, sorted, or fed to a shredder. Present for the ransacking
|
|
was a team of former U.S. military operatives in Southeast Asia, led by
|
|
CIA veteran Michael Hand, and including the president of the Nugan Hand
|
|
Bank, Rear Adm. Earl F. ("Buddy") Yates, and the mysterious puppetmaster
|
|
of Nugan Hand, Maurice ("Bernie") Houghton.</p>
|
|
<p>Prior to becoming president of Nugan Hand Bank in 1977, Admiral Yates, A
|
|
Legion of Honor winner in Vietnam, commanded the aircraft carrier USS
|
|
JOHN F. KENNEDY and served as chief of staff for plans and policy of the
|
|
U.S. Pacific Command. He retired from active service in 1974. Though
|
|
Nugan Hand's main offices were in Sydney and Hong Kong, and though its
|
|
official address was the Cayman Islands (because of the weak regulatory
|
|
laws there), Admiral Yates lived in Virginia <span class="PERSON">Beach</span>, Virginia -- an easy
|
|
hop from Washington, D.C., where he helped maintain a Nugan Hand office.</p>
|
|
<p>Bernie Houghton, a fleshy, gray-haired Texan, had been a camp follower
|
|
of America's Asian wars, always as a civilian, after a few years in the
|
|
Army Air Corps in World War II. He had been to Korea and Vietnam and
|
|
had made a living buying and selling war surplus and supplying the
|
|
"recreational" needs of GIs. Houghton arrived in Australia in January
|
|
1967, eight months before Michael Hand, where he opened the Bourbon and
|
|
Beefsteak Restaurant, the Texas Tavern, and Harpoon Harry's. All three
|
|
establishments, on the seamy side of Sydney, catered to U.S. troops on
|
|
leave from Vietnam.</p>
|
|
<p>Though ostensibly occupied only as a hony-tonk bar impresario, Houghton
|
|
displayed a smooth working relationship with high-ranking military
|
|
officers and CIA and U.S. embassy personnel. Houghton's international
|
|
travels were facilitated whenever he was needed by Australia's secret
|
|
scrutiny agency, ASIO, which also gave him security clearance in 1969.</p>
|
|
<p>Other high-level retired Pentagon and CIA officials associated with
|
|
Nugan Hand included three-star Gen. LeRoy J. Manor, former chief of
|
|
staff for the entire U.S. Pacific Command, who headed the bank's
|
|
Philippine operation; Gen. Edwin Black, former high-ranking intelligence
|
|
official and assistant Army chief of staff for the Pacific, who headed
|
|
the bank's Hawaii office; Gen. Erle Cocke, Jr., former national
|
|
commander of the American Legion, whose consulting office served as
|
|
Nugan Hand's Washington office; Walter <span class="PERSON">McDonald</span>, former deputy director
|
|
of the CIA, who devoted most of his consulting business to Nugan Hand;
|
|
and several top former CIA field men. William Colby, former director of
|
|
the CIA, was the bank's lawyer on a variety of matters.</p>
|
|
<p>Perhaps Nugan Hand Bank's most brazen fraud was the theft of at least $5
|
|
million, maybe more than $10 million, from American civilian and
|
|
military personnel in Saudi Arabia. The man in charge of Nugan Hand's
|
|
Saudi operations was Bernie Houghton, the barkeep with high-level ties
|
|
to U.S. and Australian intelligence.</p>
|
|
<p>It was 1979, the year of OPEC's highest oil prices ever, and Saudi
|
|
Arabia was awash with money. Whole new cities were planned, and
|
|
thousands of American professionals and managers were arriving to
|
|
supervise the hundreds of thousands of newly arriving Asian laborers.</p>
|
|
<p>To get their services, Saudi Arabia had to offer much higher salaries
|
|
than either the Americans or the Asians could earn back home. Most of
|
|
the Americans were going over for a couple of years, braced to suffer
|
|
the isolated, liquorless, sexless Muslim austerity in exchange for the
|
|
big nest eggs they would have when they returned home.</p>
|
|
<p>When they got to Saudi Arabia they faced a problem, however. Every week
|
|
or two they got paid in cash, American or Saudi. And because Muslim law
|
|
forbids the paying or collecting of interest, there were no banks in the
|
|
Western sense of the word. So what to do with all that money?</p>
|
|
<p>A claim letter from Tom Rahill, an American working Dhahran, Saudi
|
|
Arabia, described how the operation worked: "Mr. Houghton's
|
|
representatives would visit Aramco (Arabian American Oil Company)
|
|
construction camps in Saudi Arabia shortly after each payday. We
|
|
'investors' would turn over Saudi riyals to be converted at the
|
|
prevailing dollar exchange rate, and receive a Nugan Hand dollar
|
|
certificate...The moneys, we were told, were to be deposited in the
|
|
Nugan Hand Hong Kong branch for investments in various 'secured'
|
|
government bonds." Another claim letter, from a group of 70 American
|
|
workers in Saudi Arabia (who among them lost $1.5 million), says that
|
|
was their understanding as well.</p>
|
|
<p>According to investors, Aramco, Bechtel, and other large U.S. concerns
|
|
boosted the Nugan Hand connection by letting salesmen hold meetings on
|
|
company property and use company bulletin boards. Bernie Houghton "only
|
|
worked in cash," says Linda Geyer, who, along with her husband, a
|
|
plumber on a large construction project, invested and lost $41481 with
|
|
Nugan Hand. "One time he had to have two briefcases." Others remember
|
|
Houghton actually toting away the loot in big plastic bags, slung over
|
|
his shoulder like some reverse Santa Claus.</p>
|
|
<p>By his own admission, Houghton hauled off the intended savings not only
|
|
of private-contract American employees, but also of U.S. Air Force
|
|
personnel stationed in Saudi Arabia. In fact, the record shows that
|
|
Houghton quickly made contact with two colonels he'd known from Vietnam
|
|
War days. One of them, R. Marshall Inglebeck, "showed Mr. Houghton
|
|
around, introduced him, and explained that Mr. Houghton was a banker
|
|
looking for business for Nugan Hand Bank," according to Australian
|
|
investigators. The other was Col. Billy Prim, who served on Admiral
|
|
Yate's staff at the Pacific Command in Vietnam days and introduced
|
|
Houghton to Yates back then. It was at Colonel Prim's house in Hawaii
|
|
that Bernie Houghton would meet Maj. Gen. Richard Secord.</p>
|
|
<p>After word of Nugan Hand's collapse reached the Saudi press in 1980,
|
|
Houghton and some of his banking staff fled the country, several aboard
|
|
the last plane out before the Saudi police came searching for them.
|
|
Depositors say that when they went to the old Nugan Hand office after
|
|
that, they found it occupied and guarded by U.S. Air Force personnel,
|
|
who assured them that everything would be straightened out.</p>
|
|
<p>The claim letter from the 70 investors who lost $1.5 million says, "We
|
|
were greatly influenced by the number of retired admirals, generals, and
|
|
colonels working for Nugan Hand."</p>
|
|
<p>One of the bigger mysteries surrounding Nugan Hand, the answer to which
|
|
may be almost self-evident, concerns its branch in Chiang Mai, Thailand.
|
|
(Indeed, Australian investigators reported that the idea for a Chiang
|
|
Mai branch was suggested to Michael Hand by Murray Stewart Riley, a
|
|
major Australian-U.S. drug trafficker now in prison in Australia.)</p>
|
|
<p>Chiang Mai is the colorful market center for the hill people of
|
|
northwest Thailand. Like few other cities on earth, it is known for one
|
|
thing. More than Detroit is known for cars, or Newcastle for coal, or
|
|
Cognac for brandy, Chiang Mai is known for dope. It is the last outpost
|
|
of civilization before one enters the law-unto-itself opium-growing
|
|
world of the Golden Triangle.</p>
|
|
<p>If it seems strange for a legitimate merchant bank to open an office in
|
|
Chiang Mai, consider this: the Chiang Mai Nugan Hand office was lodged
|
|
on the same floor, in what appears to be the same office suite, as the
|
|
United States Drug Enforcement Agency office. The offices shared a
|
|
common entrance and an internal connecting door between work areas. The
|
|
DEA receptionist answered Nugan Hand's phone and took messages when the
|
|
bank's representatives were out.</p>
|
|
<p>The DEA has provided no explanation for how this came about. Its
|
|
spokespeople in Washington have professed ignorance of the situation,
|
|
and DEA agents in the field have been prevented by the superiors from
|
|
discussing it with reporters.</p>
|
|
<p>The Drug Enforcement Agency has a history of working with the CIA at
|
|
home and abroad; with drug money corrupting the politics of many
|
|
countries, the two agencies' affairs are often intertwined. Was that
|
|
the case with the Nugan Hand office in Chiang Mai?</p>
|
|
<p>It was, according to Neil Evans, an Australian whom Michael Hand chose
|
|
as the bank's chief representative in town. In recent years Evans has
|
|
made daring statements to Australian investigators and television, and
|
|
to the <span class="ORG">CBS</span> EVENING NEWS in the United States. Among other things, he
|
|
has said that Nugan Hand was an intermediary between the CIA and various
|
|
drug rings.</p>
|
|
<p>Much that Evans says appears kooky. He claims to have attended
|
|
important intelligence meetings in Hong Kong and Australia that he
|
|
probably didn't attend, though the meetings may have occurred. But much
|
|
else that he has said has proven to be true.</p>
|
|
<p>In Chiang Mai he was surrounded by people with long backgrounds in U.S.
|
|
intelligence who were working for Nugan Hand. They included Thais who
|
|
until recently had been working in professional or executive jobs at
|
|
U.S. bases or with a CIA airline, and Billy and Gordon Young, sons of
|
|
missionaries, who worked for the CIA during the Vietnam War and who now
|
|
have ties to a SOLDIER OF FORTUNE magazine project. And some very
|
|
wealthy people whom Evans claims to have taken deposits from agree they
|
|
talked often to him and were urged to make deposits.</p>
|
|
<p>There is little doubt that many millions of dollars in deposits from
|
|
numerous Thai citizens were taken out of Thailand; Nugan Hand's
|
|
surviving records establish that. The only question is: Who were the
|
|
depositors?</p>
|
|
<p>When this reporter went to Chiang Mai with a list of local citizens whom
|
|
Evans said he had taken drug money from, the DEA agents on the scene at
|
|
first were eager to make a deal: the list, in exchange for whatever
|
|
nonconfidential information the agents could share about the people on
|
|
it. The agents, all new since Nugan Hand days, went on about how
|
|
curious they had been since they'd arrived in town and heard stories
|
|
about the bank that used to operate across the reception room; they
|
|
wanted to hear more.</p>
|
|
<p>Suddenly a phone call came from an embassy official in Bangkok who
|
|
earlier had impeded my progress in every way possible (such as by
|
|
postponing issuance of standard credentials). The official ordered the
|
|
DEA agents not to talk to me. And that was that.</p>
|
|
<p>The U.S. government stonewalling on the Nugan Hand issue continued all
|
|
the way to Washington. At the Hong Kong office of U.S. Customs, the one
|
|
federal agency that acknowledges it looked even briefly into Nugan Hand,
|
|
senior investigator James Wilkie agreed to an interview. I was waved in
|
|
to find Wilkie seated behind a desk next to a shredding machine and a
|
|
large carton of papers bearing a red horizontal strip, outlining the
|
|
white letters C-L-A-S-S-I-F-I-E-D.</p>
|
|
<p>Wilkie was calmly feeding the documents into the shredder as he spoke,
|
|
taking each batch of shreddings out and putting them through a second
|
|
time.</p>
|
|
<p>"We can't comment on anything that's under investigation or might be
|
|
under investigation," he said.</p>
|
|
<p>Was Nugan Hand under investigation?</p>
|
|
<p>"There wasn't an investigation. We did make some inquiries. We can't
|
|
comment."</p>
|
|
<p>I asked what was being shredded.</p>
|
|
<p>"It's none of your business what's being shredded," Wilkie replied.</p>
|
|
<p>And that, as far as the American voter and taxpayer is concerned, may be
|
|
the whole problem.</p>
|
|
<p>From the time of Frank Nugan's death in 1980, through four wide-sweeping
|
|
investigations commissioned by the Australian government, the Nugan Hand
|
|
Bank scandal has rocked Australian politics and dominated its press. To
|
|
date, the investigations have revealed widespread dealings by Nugan Hand
|
|
with international heroin syndicates and evidence of mammoth fraud
|
|
against U.S. and foreign citizens. But many questions about the bank's
|
|
operations remain unanswered.</p>
|
|
<p>The law in Australia, and in most other countries where Nugan Hand
|
|
dealt, restricts the export of money. Michael Hand himself boasted that
|
|
Nugan Hand moved $1 billion a year through its seemingly magical
|
|
windows. How could the Australian security agencies have let an
|
|
operation of that size break the exchange laws with impunity for so many
|
|
years -- unless, of course, the Australian agencies were cooperating
|
|
with the bank, or had been told that Nugan Hand had a powerful
|
|
government sanction from abroad?</p>
|
|
<p>The U.S. military officers who worked for Nugan Hand told Australian
|
|
investigators they were unaware of the bank's illicit activities. They
|
|
said they had been duped just like the depositors. [Ack! -jpg] But
|
|
could that level of stupidity be ascribed to high officials who only
|
|
recently were responsible for supervising BILLIONS of dollars in U.S.
|
|
taxpayer funds -- hundreds of thousands of troops and whole fleets of
|
|
aircraft and aircraft carriers -- who specialized in, of all things,
|
|
intelligence?</p>
|
|
<p>Or was it more likely that these men, at least most of them, weren't
|
|
thieves, and that there was some political motive behind their work?</p>
|
|
<p>The presence of former U.S. military and intelligence officers in Nugan
|
|
Hand's executive ranks raises obvious questions about the role of the
|
|
U.S. government. But the CIA, the FBI, and the U.S. Customs Service,
|
|
all of whom have information on Nugan Hand, have refused to release what
|
|
they know to Australian investigators. When an Australian newspaper,
|
|
the NATIONAL TIMES, petitioned the FBI for information on Nugan Hand
|
|
under the Freedom of Information Act, the newspaper was told that it
|
|
could only see 71 of some 151 pages of material in FBI files. When
|
|
these papers arrived they resembled a collection of Rorschach tests,
|
|
with page after page blacked out in heavy ink and bearing the notation
|
|
"B-1," indicating that disclosure would endanger U.S. "national defense
|
|
or foreign policy."</p>
|
|
<p>The fragmentary records left by Nugan Hand and the testimony of some
|
|
peripheral characters in this case suggest there was a political side to
|
|
much of the bank's business -- from negotiations with the Sultan of
|
|
Brunei about ways to protect the sultan's wealth in case of political
|
|
upheaval, to lengthy reports from Nugan Hand's Thai representative
|
|
describing <span class="NORP">Vietnamese</span> troop movements and battle tactics in Cambodia.</p>
|
|
<p>Australia's Joint Task Force on Drug Trafficking released a four-volume
|
|
report on Nugan Hand to Parliament in 1983, which determined that Nugan
|
|
Hand had participated in two U.S. government covert operations; the
|
|
sale of an electronic spy ship to Iran and weapons shipments to southern
|
|
Africa, probably to U.S.-backed forces in Angola.</p>
|
|
<p>Both the Iranian and <span class="NORP">African</span> operations involved Edwin Wilson, a career
|
|
CIA officer, purportedly retired, who was then working as a civilian on
|
|
the staff of a supersecret Navy intelligence operation called Task Force
|
|
157. In 1983, Wilson began serving a 52-year sentence in federal prison
|
|
for supplying tons of plastic explosives, assassination gear, high-tech
|
|
weapons, and trained personnel to Libya. He is also the main link
|
|
between Nugan Hand and key figures in the Iran-contra affair.</p>
|
|
<p>The crowd around Edwin Wilson at the time of Frank Nugan's death in 1980
|
|
included Maj. Gen. Richard Secord, then involved in U.S. military sales
|
|
for the Pentagon worldwide; Thomas <span class="PERSON">Clines</span>, a high-ranking CIA official
|
|
who went on to run a business founded with Wilson money; Ted Shackley,
|
|
deputy chief of the CIA's clandestine services division until his ties
|
|
to Edwin Wilson led to his resignation; and Rafael ("Chi Chi") Quintero,
|
|
a Bay of Pigs veteran who was hired by Wilson in 1976 for an aborted
|
|
plot to assassinate a political opponent of Col. Muammar Qaddafi.
|
|
(Quintero says he backed out when he found out the assassinations were
|
|
not authorized by the CIA.)</p>
|
|
<p>All of these men would later resurface as players in the Iran-contra
|
|
mission: Richard Secord as the man who ran the operation for the White
|
|
House; Thomas <span class="PERSON">Clines</span> as Secord's chief aide; Ted Shackley as a
|
|
consultant to a company that subsequently was used to fund the contras;
|
|
and Chi Chi Quintero as one of the men who supervised the distribution
|
|
of arms shipments to the contras in Central America.</p>
|
|
<p>The 1983 Australian Joint Task Force report listed them all as people
|
|
whose "background is relevant to a proper understanding of the
|
|
activities of the Nugan Hand group and people associated with that
|
|
group." The ties between Wilson and his associates, on the one hand,
|
|
Nugan Hand, on the other, were many:</p>
|
|
<p>* Shortly after Ted Shackley retired from the CIA and went on to a
|
|
career in private business, he began meeting with Michael Hand, the
|
|
former Green Beret and CIA contract agent turned banker. Surviving
|
|
correspondence between the two men indicates that their relationship
|
|
was well established and friendly.</p>
|
|
<p>* Richard Secord told Australian investigators that he had met Bernie
|
|
Houghton in 1972 at the home of Colonel Prim. The task force
|
|
reported that they saw each other occasionally and socially in
|
|
Washington, D.C., Saudi Arabia, and the Netherlands throughout the
|
|
middle and late 1970s.</p>
|
|
<p>* In 1979 Secord introduced Houghton to Thomas <span class="PERSON">Clines</span>. The two men
|
|
then met repeatedly with Ted Shackley in Washington, which eventually
|
|
led to a deal to sell Philippine jeeps to Egypt. (About a year
|
|
later, in June, 1980, when criminal investigations into Nugan Hand
|
|
were getting under way in Australia, Thomas <span class="PERSON">Clines</span> traveled all the
|
|
way to Sydney to accompany Bernie Houghton on his hasty flight out of
|
|
Australia.)</p>
|
|
<p>* Bernie Houghton met repeatedly with Edwin Wilson during this period.
|
|
About the time of Frank Nugan's death, in January 1980, Thomas <span class="PERSON">Clines</span>
|
|
and Chi Chi Quintero dropped by Wilson's Geneva office. There they
|
|
found a travel bag full of documents left by Bernie Houghton.
|
|
According to task force witnesses, Richard Secord's name was
|
|
mentioned as they searched the bag and removed one document. "We've
|
|
got to keep Dick's name out of this," said <span class="PERSON">Clines</span>.</p>
|
|
<p>Several of the men associated with Edwin Wilson came close to federal
|
|
indictment in 1982 in a deal that brought in $71 million in Defense
|
|
Department fees for delivering military equipment to Egypt. The
|
|
shipments were made by Clines's company and were overseen by Secord at
|
|
the Pentagon. According to Wilson, his bookkeeper-girlfriend, and a
|
|
female companion of <span class="PERSON">Clines</span>, profits were to be shared by Secord, <span class="PERSON">Clines</span>,
|
|
Shackley, Wilson, and another Pentagon official, Erich von Marbod. And
|
|
memos from Wilson's lawyer at the time -- first unearthed by Peter Maas
|
|
for his book MANHUNT -- say the profits were to be shared among a
|
|
corporation, apparently controlled by Wilson, and four U.S. citizens.</p>
|
|
<p>But federal prosecutors decided the word of these witnesses might fail
|
|
against the denials of senior Pentagon officials. Besides, the careers
|
|
of Secord and von Marbod seemed -- at least until the Iran-contra affair
|
|
-- to have been effectively derailed. Both had resigned from their
|
|
posts. So instead of indicting the individuals, the prosecutors
|
|
indicted only Clines's company, without saying who, besides <span class="PERSON">Clines</span> and
|
|
an <span class="NORP">Egyptian</span> partner, were thought to be the other investors. (Secord,
|
|
Shackley, and von Marbod denied involvement in the company.)</p>
|
|
<p>
|
|
<span class="PERSON">Clines</span>, on behalf of his company, pleaded guilty to submitting $8
|
|
million in false expense vouchers to the Pentagon, and he and his
|
|
partner agreed to pay more than $3 million in fines and reimbursements.
|
|
That, however, did not dissuade Richard Secord from hiring <span class="PERSON">Clines</span> as his
|
|
deputy in the Iran-contra operation.</p>
|
|
<p>Edwin Wilson, the man who unites all these figures, is the only one who
|
|
went to jail, along with a former assistant, Douglas Schlachter.
|
|
Schlachter agreed to testify about Wilson's dealings, served a brief
|
|
prison term, and then went into the federal witness protection program.
|
|
He also led the Australian Joint Task Force to information about Nugan
|
|
Hand's involvement in the two covert deals in Iran and Southern Africa.</p>
|
|
<p>Schlachter remembered meeting Secord's friend Bernie Houghton in
|
|
Wilson's Washington office with two career CIA officers around the time
|
|
of the spy ship sale. Immigration records show that Houghton then
|
|
traveled to Iran, in March 1975, apparently for the only time in his
|
|
life. And, according to the task force report, he was accompanied by "a
|
|
senior serving member of the U.S. Armed Forces." Immigration records
|
|
also show that Wilson traveled to Iran twice in subsequent months, once
|
|
stopping over first in Sydney. At the time of the spy ship sale, in
|
|
1975, the U.S. military program in Iran was being run by General Secord.</p>
|
|
<p>The Pentagon's reply to all this is simple and straightforward: "Any
|
|
sort of a sale of that sort would have been under the auspices of Naval
|
|
Intelligence Command, and, of course, their activities are classified,"
|
|
a spokesman says. And he won't comment further.</p>
|
|
<p>By 1975, Michael Hand was bored with banking. He told friends he wanted
|
|
to leave his desk and neckties behind for new challenges. He talked of
|
|
places where combat, which he dearly loved to reminisce about, was still
|
|
going on. He left Australia to go fight "communism" in Africa.</p>
|
|
<p>From South Africa and Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), Michael Hand telephoned
|
|
and telexed Nugan Hand's Sydney office with long lists of weapons
|
|
ranging from handguns to machine guns and mortars. A Nugan Hand staffer
|
|
was dispatched from Sydney to discuss these needs directly with Hand.
|
|
The timing of these activities coincides exactly with the CIA's raising
|
|
of arms and men on the black market for covert intervention in Angola's
|
|
civil war.</p>
|
|
<p>Meanwhile, Bernie Houghton held a series of meetings with Edwin Wilson
|
|
at Wilson's Washington office. Wilson then placed Nugan Hand's order
|
|
for 10 million of rounds of ammunition and 3000 weapons. The weapons
|
|
were believed to have been shipped from Boston to a phony destination in
|
|
Portugal. (False documentation filed in Portugal was also used in the
|
|
Iran-contra arms shipments.) Ultimately, according to the task force
|
|
report, the shipment was probably received by Michael Hand in southern
|
|
Africa and then shipped to CIA-supported fighters in Angola.</p>
|
|
<p>The final judgment rendered by the task force shows some naivete about
|
|
how the CIA has actually conducted covert operations over the years.
|
|
"All things taken into account," the task force report states, "the
|
|
operation is considered likely to have been carried out as a result of
|
|
private entrepreneurial activity as opposed to one officially sanctioned
|
|
and executed by U.S. intelligence authorities."</p>
|
|
<p>For those who haven't paid much attention to CIA style over the years,
|
|
perhaps the main problem in understanding Nugan Hand has been this
|
|
seemingly analytical choice between "private entrepreneurial activity"
|
|
on the one hand and "officially sanctioned" activity on the other. In
|
|
fact, as the Iran-Contra operation clearly shows, the two have never
|
|
been clearly distinguished. In phrasing the choice, one may
|
|
inadvertently rule out what is really the most likely explanation.</p>
|
|
<p>It is possible, in fact customary, for a CIA-related business to be both
|
|
private and for-profit, and yet also have a close, mutually beneficial
|
|
relationship with the agency. The men running such a business are
|
|
employed exactly as if it were a private concern -- which it is. But
|
|
they may have been steered to their jobs by the CIA, and they never
|
|
forget the need to exchange favors.</p>
|
|
<p>According to Victor Marchetti, a former CIA officer who coauthored a
|
|
best-selling book on the agency whose accuracy has never been
|
|
questioned, Nugan Hand seems to fall in the category of an independent
|
|
organization, closely allied with the CIA. "It doesn't seem to be a
|
|
proprietary in the full sense of the word, that is, owned and controlled
|
|
by the agency, nor does it seem to be a simple front organization. It
|
|
seems to be more of an independent organization with former CIA people
|
|
connected with it, and they're in business to make money, but because of
|
|
their close personal relationship with the agency, they will do favors
|
|
for the agency." These favors might include laundering money and
|
|
providing cover for agents, or for any highly secret activity the agency
|
|
is involved in but doesn't want to be connected to. The agency, in
|
|
turn, might use its influence to throw business the company's way, or to
|
|
offer the company protection from criminal investigation.</p>
|
|
<p>CIA men on covert missions do not identify themselves as such. But
|
|
those exposed to the culture of spying learn how to interpret the word
|
|
of members of the spying community, whether active or retired. They
|
|
know, as any Mafia member does, that the business of the organization
|
|
cannot always be identified by an official seal. But it can be
|
|
recognized nonetheless.</p>
|
|
<p>It is in this sense that one must judge what Nugan Hand was, and what
|
|
moral responsibility the United States government has for what Nugan
|
|
Hand did.</p>
|
|
<p>No one has been convicted of a crime for the Nugan Hand Bank's
|
|
activities. Frank Nugan died in his Mercedes -- although gossipy
|
|
newspapers, consumed by the scandal, would occasionally report that he'd
|
|
been spotted in far-flung places. Suspicion grew so wild that in
|
|
February 1981 Australian officials ordered Nugan's body exhumed, just to
|
|
put everyone's mind at ease. Michael Hand fled Australia in June 1980,
|
|
with a false passport and a fake beard, accompanied by another former
|
|
U.S. intelligence operative. His whereabouts are still unknown. Bernie
|
|
Houghton disappeared at roughly the same time (accompanied by Thomas
|
|
<span class="PERSON">Clines</span>). But unlike Hand, Houghton had done most of his stealing
|
|
outside Australia. Once it was clear that the investigations were
|
|
rather toothless, he returned there in October 1981, again as a barkeep,
|
|
with a few years of part-time banking in his past. Admiral Yates,
|
|
General Manor, and the other retired military officers stayed beyond the
|
|
reach of Australian authorities and have never testified under oath.</p>
|
|
<p>The legitimate security interests of the United States certainly require
|
|
a large and efficient intelligence operation. [snort -jpg] But the
|
|
people and organizations that make up what is called the intelligence
|
|
community in the U.S. government have gone far beyond the gathering of
|
|
intelligence. In many cases, the word *intelligence* has been used as a
|
|
cover for covert and unconstitutional acts of war and civil crime.</p>
|
|
<p>The public, here and abroad, knows it, and respect for law itself is
|
|
dissipated. Dope peddlers and weapons smugglers almost universally
|
|
claim to be working for the CIA, and many can prove they really are.
|
|
The connections have prevented prosecution even in cases where the
|
|
crimes themselves were never authorized, and law enforcement is confused
|
|
and corrupted.</p>
|
|
<p>When agents of the United States steal, when they get involved in drug
|
|
deals, how far should the patriotic cloak be granted by national policy
|
|
stretch to cover them? Does it cover an agent who lines his pockets in
|
|
side deals while working in the name of national security? What acts
|
|
lie beyond a presidential directive to do "whatever is necessary"? When
|
|
has license been granted, and when has it simply been taken?</p>
|
|
</body>
|
|
</html>
|