From: Mark Keesee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

http://desert.net/tw/11-28-96/cover.htm

Tucson Weekly
November 28 - December 4, 1996

Anatomy Of A Cover-up

 The Second Of Two Parts On The U.S. Intelligence
Community's Drug-Dealing Treason.

By Dennis Bernstein
and Robert Knight

EX-LT. COL. OLIVER North likes to boast on his talk show that he's
"the most investigated man on earth." North complains the government
spent tens of millions of dollars to investigate him on various
Iran-contra charges and came up empty handed.

North is half right. Tens of millions were spent on at least a
half-dozen congressional and Justice Department investigations into
various illegal contra activities. But the unfortunate fact is that a
motherlode of evidence was discovered and then dutifully covered up
by Reagan Administration officials, sympathetic pro-contra members of
congress, and CIA infiltrators.

The techniques of cover-up are old and familiar. For the
CIA-contra-cocaine connection they include the narrowly phrased
question, the blind inspector, "national security," selective
prosecution, and sympathetic officials and media "assets." As
multiple hearings and investigations gear up to answer charges raised
most recently by the San Jose Mercury News, it may be useful to
examine how public officials and covert operators collaborate to
suppress such serious information.

Exactly a decade ago, after months of revelations about secret arms
deals with the Iranians to support the contras, congressional leaders
announced an investigation into North's National Security Council
network by the newly formed Iran-Contra Select Committee. But from
its inception, it was clear this investigation would be limited and
sanitized.

For starters, the Democratic chairs of both committees--Sen. Daniel
Inoue and Rep. Lee Hamilton--were falling over one another to assure
the public this would not be "another Watergate." As Inoue told
reporters, the country "isn't ready" for that. Having thus declared
their limits, they turned to an investigator who could limit their
vision.

ENTER THOMAS POLGAR, whom the Democrats hired as senior investigator.
As the former CIA station chief in Vietnam during the fall of Saigon,
Polgar personally witnessed the bitter fruit of 20 years of covert
foreign policy, which he had faithfully chronicled with rosy CIA
cover stories for Congress and millions of skeptical Americans.

>From "The Company's" point of view, Polgar was perfect to guide the
Senate panel. He'd already served as a consultant to George Bush's
task force on terrorism, which included several figures in the
Iran-contra scandal, including Oliver North. And as Saigon station
chief, Polgar worked for Theodore Shackley, a former top CIA official
who facilitated North's arms sales to Iran.

Of the six investigators and 13 lawyers hired by the original
Iran-contra committee, Polgar was the only one with a CIAbackground,
and it was Polgar who was sent to Costa Rica to investigate CIA
involvement in illegal contra operations. According to our own
investigation, interviewing a number of people with whom Polgar spoke
on his visit, it was clear that key evidence was being ignored.

Polgar neglected to interview key suspects and sources, and would
even talk to journalists to find out their "spin" before announcing
his findings. One of the more extraordinary omissions is his failure
to interview CIA and North operative John Hull, who had been
identified by numerous U.S. and Costa Rican officials, as well as
contra and drug operatives, as being involved in drug trafficking.

Back in Washington, Polgar met with former CIA colleague Donald
Gregg, then Vice President George Bush's national security advisor.
As Gregg himself acknowledged in the February 23, 1987, Legal Times,
"He wanted to assure me that the hearings would not be a repeat of
the Pike and Church investigation," a mid-1970s investigation that
exposed the CIA's role in assassination plots and led to huge cuts in
the covert operations budget.

"Polgar felt it proper for an intelligence officer to be an
activist," said Frank Snepp, a former Agency colleague of Polgar's.
"Polgar would filter out information in our reports to cover up
massive corruption and low troop morale," Snepp said. "He would
'Polgarize' it. That's what we called it when Polgar would edit a
report into oblivion."

Even before joining the Select Committee, he had "Polgarized" the
world-famous crash of the CIA plane shot down over Nicaragua in
October 1986 on a contra supply mission, an incident known as
Hasenfus, after the plane's pilot, Eugene Hasenfus. "I think the CIA
is telling the truth," Polgar wrote in the Miami Herald, "that it was
not involved in the flight on which the Hasenfus plane was shot
down."

Polgar was not the only committee staffer with glaring conflicts of
interest. Alabama Senator Jeremiah Denton's staff aide Joel S. Lisker
had previously made efforts to work directly with Oliver North in
support of the contras. A senate aide who requested anonymity
confided to us his astonishment at Lisker's appointment: "How can you
get someone who was actively involved in events and put him in charge
of the investigation? We were told a year ago that this guy was in
the middle of it and is a buddy of North's."

WHILE BOTH POLGAR and Lisker clearly proved effective in helping
suppress the dirtier aspects of the Iran contra affair, a key actor
in the cover-up was the House Select Committee chair Lee Hamilton.

It was Hamilton who drafted a letter to Costa Rican President Oscar
Arias threatening a chill in relations if the Costa Rican attorney
general proceeded to indict and prosecute long-time CIA asset and
North operative John Hull, point man of the contra "southern front."
Hull had been identified by at least four eye-witnesses as being
present on land he controlled in Costa Rica when large quantities of
cocaine were loaded onto planes bound for the U.S. But Oliver North
invoked national security, writing in his NSC notebooks of a "need to
protect Hull."

On behalf of Congress, Hamilton wrote to Arias that he hoped Costa
Rica would be handling Hull's case "in a manner that will not
complicate U.S.-Costa Rican relations."

Hull was ultimately indicted, but a DEA agent smuggled him out of
Costa Rica. Hull, North and every U.S. official working with them
were deemed "persona non grata" by Costa Rican authorities. Hull
never appeared before the Iran-contra committee, and to this day, has
never been indicted in this country.

EVEN BEFORE THE joint Iran-Contra committees were formed, three other
committees were already examining charges that Lt. Col. Oliver
North's secret contra arms network was funded by illegal drug sales
with the knowledge of the Central Intelligence Agency.

The House Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control, chaired by
Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., had already conducted important
preliminary research on contra supporters suspected of drug
activities. Rangel had asked Customs to do a background check on 38
individuals or companies associated with the contras to see if any
had ever been suspected or investigated for drug trafficking. On June
23, 1986, Customs Commissioner William Rosenblatt responded,
confirming in a letter to Rangel that "for 24 of the 38 individuals
or companies we asked them to check, there is 'positive' information
on the Customs computer indicating previous (drug-related) interest
in these people or companies. This initial check provides information
that warrants further investigation about possible tie-ins between
the contras, the individuals carrying out the contra supply mission
and drug smuggling activities."

The Narcotics Committee requested further information from the
Justice Department and the DEA, but neither cooperated, prompting a
frustrated Rangel to declare, "I am shocked and dismayed that
Attorney General Meese would have the DEA gagged."

THE HOUSE JUDICIARY Subcommittee on Crime had also discovered what
chairman William Hughes, D-N.J., called "a whole host of issues with
regard to potential official involvement in certain aspects of
gun-running and narcotics trafficking between Florida and Central and
South America." But like Rangel, Hughes was also stonewalled by the
Justice Department. "There would appear to be substance to the
allegations," Hughes said during a 1987 press conference, "that the
Justice Department either attempted to slow down or abort one of the
ongoing criminal investigations."

By far the most aggressive of the three congressional committees was
John Kerry's Subcommittee on Narcotics, Terrorism and International
Operations. His aggressiveness paid off, as Kerry was finding
significant evidence of contra-connected drug smuggling. Among the
scores of witnesses called to testify was convicted drug smuggler
George Morales.

Morales, who had passed a lie detector test, gave detailed testimony
that four contras and "southern front" coordinator Hull were involved
in an arms and drugs operation between 1984 and 1985--during which
time Congress had refused to fund the contras. Morales said contra
leaders Adolfo (Popo) Chamorro, Gerardo Duran, Marcos Aguado and
Octaviano Cesar participated in the operation. He said Cesar and
Aguado, claiming to represent the CIA, approached him after a 1983
drug indictment and promised "they would take care of the legal
problems" in exchange for his help in arming the contras, who used
his fleet of planes for the transshipment of weapons and cocaine.

BEFORE KERRY WENT public with his findings, he had attempted to get
the Justice Department to act on what he considered compelling
evidence of U.S. involvement in illegal activities including contra
drug trafficking. On September 26, 1986, Kerry met with Assistant
U.S. Attorney William Weld, the head of the Justice Department's
criminal division.

According to minutes of the meeting prepared by Kerry aide Jonathan
Winer, Kerry described his committee's findings "that we had learned
a lot about neutrality violations, gun running, and drug smuggling
involving the contras and the infrastructure which supports them."

Kerry handed Weld an 11-page "proffer," a sworn statement from
FBIinformant Wanda Palacio that directly implicated the CIA in drug
trafficking. According to the minutes, Kerry asked Weld to read the
statement and left the room. According to Winer, who stayed in the
room with Weld, he "read about a half page and chuckled. I asked him
why. He said, 'This isn't the first time today I've seen allegations
about CIA agents' involvement in drugs.'

"Concerned that he was shrugging off the statement, I said that Wanda
had been told this by the Miami FBI. Weld said he didn't doubt that;
it happened all the time. There were bum agents, former and current
CIA agents; it didn't surprise him." But Weld never acted on the
Palacio statement or any other evidence gathered by Kerry.

According to former Kerry committee counsel Jack Blum's recent
testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee (hearings prompted
by the Mercury News series), Weld not only did not investigate but
put up an "absolute stone wall" between the Justice Department and
the Kerry investigation. "There were stalls, there were refusals to
talk to us, refusals to turn over data...Weld put a very serious
block on any effort to get information."

Miami-based attorney John Mattes, a former federal public defender,
supplied some of the information discussed at the 1986 meeting with
Weld. To this day, Mattes is confounded that Weld chose not to act,
noting that "Weld claims he followed up with an investigation. But
there is, however, no record that while Weld was the chief prosecutor
for the U.S., that so much as one contra-related narcotics trafficker
was brought to justice."

DESPITE THE REAGAN-Bush Justice Department's strategic inaction in
prosecuting contra-connected drug operations, legal actions were
taken against some disillusioned contra supporters who spoke out
against the drugs and corruption. On June 28, 1988, a federal grand
jury in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, handed down two separate
indictments against 13 pro-contra mercenaries for conspiring to
violate the Neutrality Act.

A key target of the indictment was former contra-trainer Jack
Terrell. Months before the Iran-contra scandal erupted, Terrell
voluntarily provided the Miami U.S. Attorney, the FBI, Congress, and
journalists with information about the grittier parts of the illegal
contra network. As an investigator for the International Center for
Development Policy, Terrell prepared an exhaustive "Index of
Participants," which listed the major and minor players in the contra
secret war.

His June 1986 appearance on the now-defunct CBS news-magazine show
West 57th Street prompted National Security Advisor John Poindexter
to deem Terrell a "terrorist threat." In a memo to the President,
Poindexter noted that "Terrell has appeared on various television
documentaries, alleging corruption, human-rights abuses,
drug-running, arms smuggling, and assassination attempts by the
resistance and their supporters.

"Terrell's accusations have formed the basis of a civil law suit in
the U.S. District Court in Miami and his charges are at the center of
Senator (John) Kerry's investigation in the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee," Poindexter wrote in his extraordinary claim that Terrell
might be a foreign agent for the Nicaraguan government, threatening
to assassinate the President.

"This is the ultimate reward you get for talking," Terrell said after
he was indicted. "When you blow the whistle, when you talk against
the policy and start exposing corruption, fraud, gun deals, murder,
conversion of aid for private use, drug dealing, secret illegal
networks, and then the Administration's policy starts falling apart
and people start falling off the wall like Humpty Dumpty, then they
go after you with everything they got."

Oliver North also went after Terrell, writing in a July 25, 1986,
memo to Poindexter that "one of the security officers for Project
Democracy met several times with Terrell and evaluated him as
extremely dangerous."

That security officer, former CIA operative Glen Robinette, wrote in
a July 17, 1986, memo to North that "Terrell may actually possess
enough information--either from first-hand personal knowledge or from
other sources--to be dangerous to our objectives...He is certainly
going to quote names and organizations--known or not known--to show
his great and intimate knowledge of (the) 'secret operation.' "

Eighteen months earlier, Robert Owen, a former aide to then-Senator
Dan Quayle, wrote North a memo dated January 31, 1985, stating,
"Right now Flako (Terrell) knows too much and it would do no one any
good if he went to the press. He has to be finessed out."

At his recent testimony, Jack Blum described just how common it was
to selectively prosecute those who alleged contra or CIA involvement
in the drug trade.

"There was a flip side to this drug problem as well. One of the
favorite techniques of various people in this operation was, whenever
there was someone they didn't like, they would label him a 'drug
trafficker'...So this became a matter of affirmative and negative
use."

Committee chair Arlen Spector declined to probe this line of
testimony, and instead continually questioned Blum on his opinion
regarding the "narrow question" of "whether there are some situations
which may be sufficiently serious to warrant covert activities?"

OTHER "NARROW QUESTIONS" are being applied to discredit the Mercury
News series, with assertions that the contras didn't target "blacks
only" for crack distribution; that there may have been "rogue
agents," but the intelligence community as a whole did not condone
converting drug sales for contra support; and the publication of
paeans to CIA integrity based solely on CIA interviews.

But the broader evidence of a pattern of contra-cocaine operations
presented in Part One, along with the cover-up methods detailed here,
may be useful to the reader in taking a second look at the syndrome
which, during the 1980s, resulted in a secretly sanctioned
contra-related cocaine invasion of the United States.

(C) 1995-97 Tucson Weekly

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