-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Congress/7727/drugs.htm
<A HREF="http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Congress/7727/drugs.htm">Drugs
and intelligence agencies</A>
-----
Drugs and intelligence agencies

CONTRA-CRACK GUIDE: READING BETWEEN THE LINES

By Jerry Meldon


A year ago, the Big Media cast out the issue of the CIA and contra crack
from the realm of respectable debate. In lengthy front-page articles,
The Washington Post, New York Times and Los Angeles Times deemed an
investigative series by Gary Webb of the San Jose Mercury News flawed
and simplistic. The papers claimed victory when Webb's editor Jerry
Ceppos agreed that the original series wasn't perfect.

Now, the other shoe is falling. The inspectors general of the CIA and
the Justice Department are completing investigations that will clear the
CIA and the Justice Department of wrongdoing. The results of those
investigations were leaked out in mid- December, but scheduled releases
of the actual reports were postponed. The delays meant that the supposed
findings could get major media play without any examination of the
underlying facts.

According to the Justice Department, Attorney General Janet Reno
requested a delay in that report's release for "law- enforcement
reasons." Department officials would not specify what those reasons
were, but apparently there is fear that the report contains information
that might jeopardize an ongoing federal criminal case.

A broader CIA investigation into the question of Nicaraguan contra
connections to the drug trade -- outside CIA control -- continues. But
it is unclear how much information the spy agency will divulge,
especially given the mainstream media's eagerness to put the issue to
rest.

Those, like Webb, who challenged the official orthodoxy on the CIA's
innocence have paid dearly. Webb was pushed into resigning his job, a
purge made official with an announcement by the Mercury News on Dec. 12.
Reached at his home in California, Webb said he is working on a book
about his experiences.

Still, the new government reports whenever issued seem likely to pour
just one more layer of cover-up on top of an already thick foundation.
Over the past half century, the federal government -- and the Washington
news media -- have never accepted what appears as obvious fact to many
outsiders: that CIA covert actions and drug trafficking go together like
horse and carriage, like hand and glove, like Tweedle-Dum and
Tweedle-Dee.
DRUG TRAILS


You might use this article as a guide for reading between the lines of
whatever official words are uttered in the new government reports and
press stories that follow.

The first test will be whether the new government reports face up to the
seamy history. In particular, look for any reference to two
heroin-stained covert operations: in Indochina in the 1960s and '70s and
in Afghanistan in the 1980s. Both were well documented by Alfred McCoy
in his landmark book, The Politics of Heroin.

The second point of reference will be how the reports finesse the
overwhelming evidence of Nicaraguan contra-connected cocaine
trafficking. This unsavory reality was documented ad nauseam in "Drugs,
Law Enforcement and Foreign Policy," a 1989 Senate Foreign Relations
report based on hearings chaired by Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass.

The new reports also might have some difficulty explaining past
admissions by frank senior government officials. Gen. Paul F. Gorman,
head of the U.S. Southern Command, acknowledged in 1984 that
"substantial evidence links drugs, money and arms networks in Central
America. The fact is, if you want to go into the subversion business,
collect intelligence, and move arms, you deal with drug movers."

Gorman knew what he was talking about, situated as he was in Panama
City, next door to Gen. Manuel Noriega, who had been recruited by CIA
director William J. Casey and Lt. Col. Oliver L. North to help the
contras. Noriega, of course, is now incarcerated in federal prison for
drug trafficking.

While Noriega helped the contras from the south, the Honduran military
and other drug-connected friends pitched in from the north. One was Juan
Ramon Matta Ballesteros, whose rap sheet dates back at least to 1970
when he was arrested at Dulles Airport on drug-related charges and was
sentenced to five years in prison. Matta escaped before spending a year
behind bars.

By 1975, Matta had linked Mexican and Colombian traffickers, giving a
major boost to the fledgling cocaine industry. Three years later, Matta
financed a coup d'etat by the military in his native Honduras, a putsch
that transformed the banana republic into a transit point for northbound
white powder.

By 1983, Matta had been identified in a U.S. Customs report as a Class I
DEA violator. He also was linked by the DEA to an airline with the
acronym, SETCO, that was run by "American businessmen dealing with Matta
[and] smuggling narcotics into the United States."

Despite such lineage, SETCO was hired as "the principal company used by
the contras in Honduras to transport supplies and personnel ... from
1983 to 1985," according to the Senate Foreign Relations report. Then,
despite Matta's tie to the 1985 murder of star DEA agent Enrique
Camarena in Guadalajara, Mexico, the State Department in 1986 renewed
SETCO's contract to supply the contras.

Matta is now serving dual life sentences for murder and narcotics
trafficking. You might look his name up in the indexes to the new
government contra-cocaine reports. [For more details from a
non-government source, see Cocaine Politics by Peter Dale Scott and
Jonathan Marshall.]
NARCO-TERRORISTS


Another name worth checking out is that of Syrian-born Manzer Al-Kassar,
who boasts a similar drug resume -- and a relationship with the U.S.
government.

Reader's Digest reported in 1986 that Al-Kassar had supplied arms and
explosives "for terrorist operations in France, Spain and Holland" and
sold "silencer-equipped assassination pistols, rockets and other
weapons" to Libya, Iran, South Yemen and Lebanon." The article also
linked Al-Kassar to heroin deals involving up to 100 kilos (220 pounds).
Two years earlier, the DEA had classified Al-Kassar as a major drug
trafficker.

Yet, when the Reagan administration's Iran-contra operations were
exposed in 1986, the ledgers of Oliver North's "Enterprise" revealed
that it had paid $1.5 million for contra arms shipments to the same
Manzer Al-Kassar. See how that is explained.

Then, there's the more recent case of former Venezuelan Gen. Ramon
Guillen Davila. A year ago, Guillen was indicted on charges of shipping
up to 22 tons of cocaine to the United States between 1987 and 1991.
According to the Miami Herald, Guillen was the CIA's most trusted man in
Venezuela and the senior official collaborating with the CIA on
narcotics control.

Guillen claims the CIA knew all along what he was doing. To date he has
successfully resisted extradition, but an accomplice, Adolfo Romero
Gomez, was convicted in Miami last October on cocaine trafficking
charges. A key witness testified that he overheard Romero and Guillen
discussing deals with the Cali cartel.

You might check, too, to see how the new reports deal with DEA agents
who tried to blow the whistle during the 1980s. Just as the
contra-connected drug trade was heating up, the Reagan administration
closed the DEA office in Honduras. But from Guatemala City, DEA agent
Celerino Castillo III began investigating reports of illegal drug
activity at the Ilopango air base in El Salvador, the home of North's
contra resupply operation.

As Castillo describes in his autobiography, Powder Burns, his reports on
the drug trafficking of contra suppliers were initially ignored. Later,
they were criticized for grammatical errors. Then, he was told to stay
away from El Salvador and threatened with charges of improper conduct.
Finally, after receiving threats against his family, he quit.

Another curiosity -- given the CIA's 50 years of covert activities,
often side by side with drug traffickers -- is the absence of a single
publicly known criminal charge against a CIA officer for succumbing to
the temptation to accept a bribe or to abuse the job's secrecy by aiding
and abetting a drug shipment.

Perhaps, the new government reports -- whenever the American citizenry
is allowed to peruse them -- will explain how the CIA found and
recruited individuals of such exemplary character.

Copyright (c) 1998

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Links:


Not the CIA - Establishment narcotrafficing and general
counter-intelligence site http://www.dcia.com/index.html



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