From: Mark Keesee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

http://desert.net/tw/11-21-96/cover.htm

Tucson Weekly
November 21 - November 27, 1996

Cover Story: Snow Blind

 The First Of Two Parts On How The Contras Corrupted The U.S. Government.

By Dennis Bernstein
and Robert Knight

WANDA PALACIO WATCHED the Hercules cargo plane roll to a stop on the
tarmac of Baranquilla International Airport, located in the Andean
foothills just off the azure Atlantic waters of Colombia's northern
coast. According to Palacio, the aircraft bore the markings of
Southern Air Transport, a private airline once associated with
retired Vietnam-era Air Force Gen. Richard Secord, who would later
purchase a security fence for the home of contra point man Lt. Col.
Oliver North.

Palacio was in Baranquilla that day to arrange a cocaine deal with
her host, Jorge Luis Ochoa, at the time Colombia's most ambitious
druglord. As she watched two men in green uniforms remove two green
military trunks from the plane, her host explained his
operation:�Ochoa told me the plane was a CIA plane and that he was
exchanging guns for drugs.� The crew, he said, were CIA agents,and
�these shipments came each Thursday from the CIA, landing at dusk.
Sometimes they brought guns, sometimes they brought U.S. products
such as washing machines, gourmet food, fancy furniture or other
items for the traffickers which they could not get in Colombia. Each
time, Ochoa said, they took back drugs.�

In her 1987 sworn testimony before US Sen. John Kerry's Senate
Subcommittee on Narcotics and International Terrorism, Palacio
acknowledged she could not confirm the operation was being conducted
by the CIA. But, she added, �Obviously, what I saw raised many
questions about the source of the U.S. Weapons which I know Ochoa has
obtained.�

That was not the only time such an exchange was witnessed by the
Puerto Rican-born Palacio, a former airline employee whose cocaine
trafficking career lasted as long as her marriage to an upper-class
Colombian whose social circle included �people deeply involved in the
drug trade.� Concerned for the safety of her 4-year-old daughter, she
eventually volunteered to work with the FBI because, she said, �I was
angry about what drugs were doing to the people I knew and to the
United States government itself�.

As an FBI operative, Palacio would later realize the extent of the
damage done to the United States government by the guns-for-drugs
exchanges that permeated the hemisphere during the early- to
mid-1980s. "To my great regret,� she testified, �the Bureau has told
me that some of the people I identified as being involved in drug
smuggling are present or past agents of the Central Intelligence
Agency�.

And according to Palacio's deposition, it was not only the CIA that
was involved with drug smugglers. Palacio stated to Kerry that she
spoke to the FBI about many individuals within the U.S. government
who were involved in illegal drug operations.

�We have extensively discussed drug-related corruption in the United
States, including a regional director of U.S. Customs,a federal
judge, air traffic controllers in the FAA, a regional director of
immigration, and other government officials.�

Wanda Palacio is only one of scores of people to come forward with
first-hand evidence of officially sanctioned transfers of drugs for
covert policy objectives, and Baranquilla is but one of many
transshipment points in the hemisphere--its operations would be
mirrored by the unloading of drugs from secret flights into private
and military airfields for delivery into the streets and suburbs of
America.

CELERINO CASTILLO III is a 15-year veteran of the Drug Enforcement
Agency who observed first-hand such an operation at Ilopango
airport,where drugs were smuggled in a military facility under the
direct control of the CIA and Lt. Col. Oliver North during his heady
days at the National Security Council.

Castillo saw the light 10 years ago, on January 14, 1986, the day he
met then-Vice President George Bush at a Guatemalan embassy
reception. The lead DEA agent in Central America tried to tell Bush
�something funny� was going on at Ilopango. �But he just shook my
hand, smiled and walked away from me,� Castillo recently recalled.
Later that same day, he says, Bush met with Oliver North and contra
leader Adolfo Calero.

Castillo went on to gather evidence that was documented in a February
14, 1989, memo to his Guatemala-based DEA supervisor. He detailed how
known traffickers with multiple DEA files used hangars four and five
for drug smuggling and obtained U.S. Visas,despite their background.
According to Castillo, �The CIA owned one hangar, and the National
Security Council ran the other.�

�There is no doubt they were running large quantities of cocaine into
the U.S. To support the contras,� Castillo said in a 1994 interview
with the authors. �We saw the cocaine and we saw boxes full of money.
We're talking about very large quantities of cocaine and millions of
dollars.�

According to Castillo, �My reports contain not only the names of
traffickers, but their destinations, flight paths, tail numbers, and
the date and time of each flight.�

Further evidence of the contra-cocaine connection supporting
Castillo�s accounts was obtained by the authors nearly 10 years ago,
in the form of an internal document of the since-disbanded Select
House Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control. In a syndicated
Newsday article on March 31, 1987, we revealed the contents of the
eight-page June 25, 1986, memorandum which stated clearly that �a
number of individuals who supported the contras and who participated
in contra activity in Texas, Louisiana, California and Florida, as
well as in Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica,have suggested that
cocaine is being smuggled in the U.S. Through the same infrastructure
which is procuring, storing and transporting weapons, explosives,
ammunition and military equipment for the contras from the United
States.�

DRUGS, WEAPONS AND money-laundering have always been tools of the
trade for U.S. Clandestine operations abroad. But never in United
States history has the importation of cocaine risen so dramatically
as it did during the Reagan administration's clandestine war against
the government of Nicaragua, spearheaded by the �contras,�a group of
right-wing expatriate rebels pieced together by the CIA.

The window of opportunity for the CIA-brokered contra-drug alliance
came in 1984, when Congress passed the Boland Amendment to the War
Powers Act. This watershed legislation cut off direct intelligence
and financial aid to the contras. But the Reagan administration
continued the clandestine war (which began with a 1981 executive
order) through the auspices of the National Security Council,which,
by a legal technicality, was not considered an �intelligence� agency.
Enter the Colonel, Oliver North, who directed NSC operations from the
basement of the Executive Office Building.

Under North's stewardship, the $30 million in aid cut off by legal
means was made up through covert means, namely, the sale of weapons
to Iran and the exchange of CIA allies� drug profits for clandestine
sanctions which allowed cocaine to be imported and sold up north,
often in the very same planes which flew weapons south to the contras.

The combination of contras and drug dealers was a marriage made in
heaven, former Narcotics Committee counsel Jack Blum recalled during
recent Congressional hearings. �There were facilities that were
needed for running the war, clandestine air strips,cowboy pilots who
would fly junker airplanes, people who would make arrangements for
the clandestine movement of money.

�Every one of those facilities was a perfect facility for someone in
the drug business. So there were people who were connected very
directly to the CIA who had those facilities, and allowed them to be
used, and indeed, personally profited from their use.�

Blum's dramatic charges are supported by a former high-level
supervisory CIA officer. Alan Fiers, the former chief of the CIA
Central American Task Force, stated in a sworn deposition to the
Congressional Iran-Contra committees that �we knew everybody around
(Southern Front contra leader Eden) Pastora was involved in
cocaine...His staff and friends...were drug smugglers or involved in
drug smuggling.�

According to Miami-based John Mattes, a former federal public
defender and Iran-Contra investigator for John Kerry, �What we
investigated, which is on the record as part of the Kerry Committee
Report, is evidence that narcotics traffickers associated with the
contra leaders were allowed to smuggle over a ton of cocaine into the
United States. Those same contra leaders admitted under oath their
association and affiliation with the CIA.�

DURING HIS RECENT testimony, Blum also raised the issue of Oliver
North's notebooks kept contemporaneously with his contra resupply
effort. Even after North's lawyers were allowed to expurgate the
notebooks, many of the pages made available to investigators still
contain numerous references to contra drug trafficking. For
instance,on July 9, 1984, North wrote that he �went and talked
to(contra leader Frederico) Vaughn, (who) wanted to go to Bolivia to
pick up paste, wanted aircraft to pick up 1,500 kilos. �In another
notebook entry on July 12, 1985, North writes, �$14 million to
finance (arms) came from drugs.�

In a December 1986 interview with the authors, Jesus Garcia,a
Miami-based North network operative said, �It's common knowledge here
in Miami that this whole contra operation was paid for with
cocaine...I actually saw the cocaine and the weapons together under
one roof, weapons that I (later) helped ship to Costa Rica. �

A September 26, 1984. Miami police intelligence report stated that
money supporting the illegal contra training effort in Florida �comes
from narcotics transactions.� This memorandum,written at a time when
now-U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno was the chief state prosecutor
in Florida, has every page stamped �record furnished to George
Kosinsky, FBI.�

On March 16, 1987, U.S. Customs seized a plane from a narcotics
trafficker who was involved with the contras. On that plane they
discovered the address book of Robert Owen, Oliver North's eyes and
ears in Central America. Owen, a former aide to Dan Quayle,met with
Costa Rican-based CIA asset John Hull and Oliver North on many
occasions.

In March of 1989, Costa Rican President and Nobel Peace Prizewinner
Oscar Arias barred Oliver North, John Poindexter, Major Gen. Richard
Secord, former U.S. Ambassador Louis Tambs, and former CIA Costa
Rican Station Chief Jose Hernandez from entry into Costa Rica.

Arias was acting on recommendations by a Costa Rican congressional
commission investigating drug trafficking. The Costa Rican
investigation was triggered by �the quantity and frequency of the
shipment of drugs that passed through� land and secret airstrips
controlled by �southern front� CIA point man John Hull. Hull worked
extensively with North in setting up the �Contra 7� front in Costa
Rica.

In his notebooks, North talked about �the necessity of giving Mr.
Hull protection.� According to the Costa Rican investigation,and
bolstered by other North entries and Blum's testimony, more than a
half dozen drug pilots were provided by General Manuel Noriega based
on requests from North. According to the Costa Rican congressional
commission, �These requests for contra help were initiated by Col.
North to Gen. Noriega. They opened a gate so their henchmen could
utilize Costa Rica for trafficking in arms and drugs.� Hull would
later be indicted by the Costa Rican Attorney General on drug
trafficking charges and ultimately smuggled out to the country by a
U.S. DEA agent.

According to North's notebooks, he met with Noriega twice during a
time when the U.S. Government had documented evidence Gen. Noriega
was involved in the Colombian drug trade.

TESTIFYING IN THE same room where Wanda Palacio testified before the
Kerry committee nearly a decade ago, Blum echoed her observation
about the way law enforcement and other officials looked the other
way when the CIA-backed contras were involved in drug operations.

�What is true is the policy makers absolutely closed their eyes to
the criminal behavior of our allies and supporters in that war. The
policy makers ignored their drug dealing, their stealing,and their
human rights violations,� said Blum. �The policymakers, and I stress
policymakers, allowed them to compensate themselves for helping us in
that war, by remaining silent in the face of their impropriety, and
by quietly undercutting law enforcement and human rights agencies
that might have caused them difficulty�.

During the heyday of the CIA-contra-cocaine connection, between the
passage and repeal of the Boland Amendment, in 1986, every market
indicator of the cocaine glut in America went off-scale. As Wanda
Palacio astutely observed in 1987, �Three years ago (before Boland),
the price of cocaine was $50,000 per kilo. Today it's $20,000 and
sometimes you can get it for $15,000 to$18,000. The market for the
cocaine isn't smaller--so the lower price is a result of having
supply increase even more than demand has�.

Something happened during the contra period in the Americas,and the
evidence of a clandestine program which countenanced the import of
drugs to further political agendas is overwhelming,officially,
anecdotally and statistically. Today the CIA is rightfully being
called on to answer the excellent questions raised by the recent
�Dark Alliance� investigative series in the San Jose Mercury News.

But we would be foolish to believe the agency was alone in its
operations, or that the consequences of a decade of covert
drug-enabling policy began or ends in the crack-infested
neighborhoods of Los Angeles. An entire generation of Americans has
been destabilized,major elements of our government have been diverted
from ethical and legal behavior, and it will likely take the United
States longer to recover from the crack connection than for Nicaragua
to recover from the contra war. We have, in effect, overthrown our
own highest ideals.

Robert Knight was a founding producer, along with Dennis Bernstein,
of the Contragate/Undercurrents investigative news program. Knight's
awards include The George R. Polk Award for Radio Reporting for his
investigative work on Undercurrents. Dennis Bernstein is the
host-producer of a daily public radio news magazine in the San
Francisco area. Knight and Bernstein won The Jesse Meriton White
Award for International Reporting and the National Federation of
Community Broadcasting award for the reporting on the Iran-Contra
affair.

Part Two, appearing in the November 28 Weekly, will detail how covert
officers and public officials continue to conspire in cover-up
tactics to keep the American public in the dark about the full extent
of �dark� operations.

(C) 1995-97 Tucson Weekly

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