-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://pages.nyu.edu/~jwb209/otherdocuments.htm
<A HREF="http://pages.nyu.edu/~jwb209/otherdocuments.htm">Other Documents</A>
-----
At site. Sample below.
Om
K
-----

John Stockwell [ex-CIA] Speech Transcript(1986)

"Full Disclosure" Interview with ex-CIA Agent Victor Marchetti (1986)

"Playboy" Interview with ex-CIA Agent Phillip Agee (1988)

Phillip Agee Speech Transcript (1979)

Article Detailing Reagan Campaign's Involvement in Sabotaging Carter's
Hostage Rescue Attempt

Article from "Earth Magazine" Detailing US Tests of VX Gas During the
Vietnam War (1972)

In-Depth Account of Experiences of CIA Station Chief in Tehran During
Hostage Crisis
Enjoy these documents and, as with the others, decide upon their
authenticity for yourself.
=====
from:
http://pages.nyu.edu/~jwb209/Hostages.htm
<A HREF="http://pages.nyu.edu/~jwb209/Hostages.htm">Hostages</A>
-----
The October Surprise



An abridged transcript of a radio documentary program by "The Other Americas

Radio" and broadcast on public radio stations across the nation. Supplemented
by

information presented in the documentary movie "COVERUP, Behind the Iran
Contra

Affair," currently showing at independent movie theaters across the nation,
and

"An Election Held Hostage," from the October 1988 issue of Playboy. Editorial

elaboration is in []'s.

[ed. This program does not purport to prove the allegations presented in it,

that is for a court of law. What it does do is make a compelling case for

furthur investigation.]

Narrator: November 1979: 52 americans were taken hostage in Iran. The american

public was held in suspense while the Carter administration worked to bring
the

hostages home, first in the failed 'Desert 1' rescue attempt, and then through

negotiations with the revolutionary Iranian government. In October of 1980 an

agreement was reached to unfreeze Iran's monetary assets for the safe return
of

the hostages. For some reason, the hostages were not released until January
20,

1981, the day Ronald Reagan was inaugurated as president. In the dawn of the

Reagan era, many, in momentary blindness, neglected to seriously question the

implications of such an event. It is now charged that in the few months before

the 1980 presidential election, the tremors of a covert action against
America,

by americans, was shaking the nation.

Narrator: In this special program we will examine the allegations that members

of the Reagan/Bush campaign cut a secret deal with the revolutionary
government

in Iran before the 1980 election. We will also explore what may have been the

deliberate failure of President Carter's 'Desert 1' hostage rescue mission.

Narrator: Barbara Honegger was a researcher and policy analyst with the

Reagan/Bush campaign in 1980. Subsequently she spent two years in the white

house as a policy advisor to President Reagan. Honegger's investigation into

this issue has revealed a disturbing story of treason, blackmail, and
sabotage.

Honegger: The very possibility that Carter could bring the hostages home was

close to certain to wreck a Reagan bid for the presidency. So the Reagan

campaign took phenomenal secret measures to ensure that the Carter white house

was not successful. Reagan's 1980 campaign manager, William Casey, was

knowledgable, before the fact, of the upcoming Carter Desert 1 rescue attempt
of

April, 1980. Now that is a phenomenal fact, because many of even the highest

level officers in Carter's own CIA were kept in the dark about that very

operation.

Narrator: Historian and author Donald Fried suggests links between the Reagan

campaign and the failed rescue operation.

Fried: Precisely the people in the intelligence community commissioned to

develop some kind of rescue for the hostages, were clearly those elements of
CIA

who were close to Bush and Casey, and demonstrably hostile to Carter.

Narrator: Was the CIA loyal to President Carter, or to candidate Reagan?

Johnathan Marshall is an investigative journalist and co-author, along with

Professor Peter Scott of UC at Berkeley, of the book "The Iran Contra

Connection". Like Fried, Marshall views with suspicion some circumstances

surrounding Carter's rescue attempt.

Marshall: Brian Copeland, who had had some CIA connections in the past, ran in

the Washington Star, a hypothetical hostage rescue piece, how he would do it,

and it is so remarkably close to the actual mission, and came only a few days

before the mission took place, that there is legitimate room to at least

question whether it was some kind of leak that came out in the form of fiction

to protect him from charges of sabotaging it. He printed a scenario for a
rescue

in the desert, and that story was broadcast on radio Iraq & Iran, and it was

certainly heard in Iran. So the administration's most closely guarded secret
was

in effect foreshadowed by this published scenario.

Narrator: Several years after leaving the white house, Barbara Honegger's

research showed some startling links between the players of the 1980 hostage

rescue operation, and the main players in the Iran-Contra scandal.

Honegger: ... and then of course we have Richard Secord, Oliver North and
Albert

Hakim. Richard Secord was one of the chief planners for the so- called failed

Desert 1 rescue attempt, North was involved in that rescue attempt, in the

mother ship, which was on the Turkish border awaiting the cue from Secord to
fly

in and rescue the hostages, and Albert Hakim was in charge of the ground

operations of the rescue attempt, in particular, obtaining the trucks and
other

vehicles which were going to be needed. Hakim skipped town, left Tehran 24
hours

before the rescue was to take place, and the reason for that, as detailed in
my

research documentation, was that Secord, North and Hakim had no intention of

seeing Desert 1 carry through, and so sabotaged the operation. Narrator: The

hostage rescue team consisted of 8 helicopters, 6 C130 transport planes and 93

delta force commandos. But delta force never made it to Tehran. Only 5 of the
8

helicopters reached the site of Desert 1 in operable condition. According to

General Samuel Wilson, who investigated the many failures of the rescue
mission,

the pentagon's review panel found negligence on a level surprising even to
those

hardened to military incompetence. This is only one of many strange facts

surrounding the rescue mission. Honegger takes us back to Tehran during the

rescue attempt:

Honegger: There were a number of interesting incidences which occurred in
Tehran

that night. The 53'rd hostage, Cynthia Dwyer, who was in Iran and who had not

yet been taken hostage, told Reverend Moore, an american minister who was
there

and interviewing her at the time by phone, that the CIA had sabotaged the
rescue

attempt. She told him that immediately after the so-called aborted failure.
And

we also know from Rev. Moore that a Mullah who was at a prayer meeting heard a

siren that went off in Tehran that night, and stood up and said, 'God is
great,

God is good, your helicopters have just crashed in the desert.' There are a

number of other reasons and independent sources we have for a sabotage, but it

was definitely sabotage and there was advance, multiple failure planning.

Narrator: The failed rescue mission left 8 men dead and 3 helicopters in the

desert filled with classified documents which fell into the Iranian's hands.

Narrator: The possibility of Carter's success in bringing the 52 hostages home

sent tremors through the Reagan/Bush campaign headquarters. Honegger was
working

for the campaign at the time:

Honegger: Richard Wirthland, who was the campaign's pollster, had determined

that an 'october surprise', which was a successful attempt by Carter to
release

the hostages and bring them home before the election, would be the death knell

to a Reagan/Bush presidency. That was determined by Reagan and Bush's pollster

in march of 1980, which, not coincidentally, was one month before the
sabotaged

Desert 1 rescue mission. Marshall: The Reagan people were extremely concerned

about what they termed 'The October Surprise', and Reagan's campaign manager,

William Casey, later to become the head of the CIA, was running what he termed

an 'intelligence operation' against the Carter camp. This first came out when

David Stockman revealed that Reagan had prepared for his TV debates with
Carter

using a stolen briefing book. We know now that the espionage operation was
much

broader than just stealing briefing books. It included former military
officers,

CIA people, FBI agents and the like, who tapped into the Carter camp, into the

intelligence bureaucracy, to find out whether this october surprise would

actually happen, because if it did, it would have cost Reagan the election.

Narrator: Was the CIA loyal to Carter, or to Casey? In the wake of the
Watergate

scandal and the findings of CIA abuses by the Church committee in the mid
'70s,

Carter's new CIA chief, Stansfield Turner, removed around 600 people from
their

jobs in covert operations. This made for a very demoralised intelligence

network. Congressional investigations have since revealed that active duty CIA

officers were working with the Reagan/Bush campaign. Peter Scott, co-author of

"The Iran Contra Connection:" Scott: When all these covert operators were
fired

in the 1970's, they didn't just start opening restaraunts or working in

bookstores. They were people who were very skilled in covert manipulation of

political processes, and they essentially ganged up to find and elect a

candidate who would put them back in the covert operations business, and
Reagan

and Bush were only too eager to be that kind of candidate.

[ From the Playboy article: Shortly after the Shah was deposed, Carter chewed

out the CIA for misinterpreting the unrest in Iran. He chastised the Director
of

CIA, Stansfield Turner, and reorganized or fired much of the Middle East

division. Relations between the white house and CIA grew increasingly hostile.

"There was no doubt that the CIA was more Republican and didn't like
Democrats,"

says admiral Turner. "And I'm certain that many hoped a Republican would
return

to the white house." "The Carter administration had made a serious mistake,"

noted Charlie Beckwith, the colonel in charge of the Desert 1 rescue team. "A

lot of the old whores -- guys with lots of street sense and experience -- left

the agency." (and went to work for the Reagan campaign, the article alleges) ]

Narrator: In october of 1980, Casey decided to create the october surprise

working group.

Honegger: Richard Allen was head of the october surprise working group. It met

every morning to try to come up with ways to try to prevent Carter from
bringing

the hostages home. We do know from published accounts, in the Knight Ridder

papers across the country, that Richard Allen met with Robert McFarlane and an

alleged emmissary from Khomeni's regime in Washington in early october of 1980

to discuss a deal to delay the release of the hostages until after the 1980

election. There is no question that that meeting happened, Allen and McFarlane

have acknowledged that it did.

Narrator: McFarlane told reporters that the Iranian that approached him was

referred to the Reagan/Bush campaign, but was later judged to be a fraud and

dismissed. According to Allen, allegations of a secret deal are absolute

baloney. Honegger: Allen and McFarlane deny that any deal was cut, but the
bulk

of the evidence shows that that's not the case. For instance, Allen, in late

november of 1986 on the Mcneil-Leherer news hour, referred to a deal between

Reagan and Iran. He was being interviewed at the time, and he was referring to

the very first day that Reagan was president. Allen recalled for the audience

that he had told Reagan that there was a 53'rd hostage, Cynthia Dwyer, who had

not been released, and Reagan responded, 'You get the Iranians on the phone
for

me, and I'm going to tell them that our deal is off unless she is released.'

Well, you would have expected the interviewer to have jumped up and said,
'Just

a minute, sir, what deal was that?' Now the reason that that had to have been,

in my studied opinion, a deal between Reagan and Khomeni, made before Reagan
was

president, is because at the time that Reagan made that phone call to the

Iranians, all of Carter's deals with Khomeni had been consumated. So, when

Reagan referred to a deal with the Iranians, he had to have been referring to
a

separate deal.

Narrator: Because Iran's arsenal was comprised of US supplied weapons, they
were

dependent on US spare parts and ammunition to fight their war with Iraq. On

October 22, during lengthy negotiations between the Carter white house and
Iran,

the Iranian's persistent demand for US weapons was suddenly dropped. The

Iranians no longer linked the release of the hostages to obtaining military

spare parts from the US. Iran's president at the time, Bani-Sadr, explains
why,

although facing war with Iraq, Iranian negotiators no longer demanded these

essential military supplies:

(voice of Bani-Sadr, translator over-dubbed:) It is now very clear that there

were two separate agreements, one the official agreement with Carter in
Algeria,

the other, a secret agreement with another party, which, it is now apparent,
was

Reagan. They made a deal with Reagan that the hostages should not be released

until after Reagan became president. So, then in return, Reagan would give
them

arms. We have published documents which show that US arms were shipped, via

Israel, in March, about 2 months after Reagan became president.

Narrator: During this interview in Paris, the former Iranian president gave

copies of the weapons contracts to the Other Americas Radio. Bani- Sadr then

went on to charge, that former CIA men, including Casey and Gorbanifar, had

collaborated in engineering this treasonous deal.

Narrator: Shortly after being deposed, while in exile in Paris, the former

president of Iran said he received military intelligence reports which noted

that George Bush and Richard Allen were among those who had met with Iranian

representatives at the hotel Raphael in Paris, to finalize the deal. Honegger:

One of the founders of Hezbollah, the pro-Iran terrorist organization which
has

blown up our marine barracks, and also our emassies in Kuwait and Beruit,
sent a

representative to the paris meeting before the 1980 election, to meet with

Richard Allen [Reagan's first national security advisor], George Bush, Donald

Gregg [at the time, Carter's CIA liaison, later to become Bush's national

security advisor, a position he still holds], [Manucher Gorbanifar and Albert

Hakim, who were and are active in the CIA and international arms trade, and
who

were central figures in the Iran Contra investigation, were also present] and

other officials of the CIA to cut the secret deal with the Reagan campaign to

delay the release of our hostages in exchange for arms, which began being

shipped to Iran in 1981.

[COVERUP claims that this meeting was originally arranged between Iran and

representatives of the Carter administration. It seems that Iran, after

suffering heavy losses in it's war with Iraq, was anxious to get it's hands on

military spare parts and ammunition, and was proposing a hostage release in

exchange. Officially, Donald Gregg was there in his capacity as a
representative

of the Carter white house, but in fact his loyalties lay with his former CIA

boss, George Bush. Thus, instead of arranging for a pre-election hostage

release, they arranged that the hostages not be released until after Reagan
was

in the white house. Carter has kept silent on this issue, although he was

recently confronted by Larry King on his talk show, and acknowledged that he
did

have reports during the campaign that there was a deal between the Iranians
and

the Reagan campaign.]

[The authors of the Playboy article wrote former President Carter regarding

these allegations. The text of Carter's reply follows:

"We have had reports since late summer of 1980 about Reagan campaign officials

dealing with Iranians concerning delayed release of the american hostages. I

chose to ignore the reports. Later, as you know, former Iranian president

Bani-Sadr gave several interviews stating that such an agreement was made

involving Bud McFarlane, George Bush and perhaps Bill Casey. By this time, the

elections were over and the results could not be changed. I have never tried
to

obtain any evidence about these allegations but have trusted that
investigations

and historical records would someday let the truth be known." ]

Narrator: Bani-Sadr said this meeting took place sometime during the last two

weeks of October 1980. We checked the New York Times computer, Nexus, which

revealed no mention of any public appearances by George Bush from October 21
to

the 27, just one week before the 1980 election. Barbara Honegger recalls an

incident that occurred during the same time period of October 21 to 27, when
she

was working at the Reagan Campaign headquarters in Arlington, Virginia:

Honegger: In late october, as part of my job on the writing staff of the

national campaign headquarters, I was required every night to cover the news.
I

went in to the operations center, which was the nerve center, the
communications

center for the Reagan campaign, to cover the 11 oclock news. As I did so, I
was

amazed to see a complete 180 degree shift in the mood, from what it had been

over the previous week or two. Because of the worry about the october
surprise,

the mood had been one of anxiety and tension, and suddenly there was a party

atmosphere. I walked up to a woman who worked for the man who was in charge of

the operations center, and asked what was going on, and she said "Oh, haven't

you heard? We don't have to worry about the october surprise. Dick cut a
deal."

She was standing next to a heavy set gentleman whom I didn't recognize, and I

said "Dick? You mean Dick Allen?" and she then got jabbed in the ribs by the
man

and just said, "Let it go .. Dick cut a deal."

Narrator: A deal with Khomeni? Investigative journalist John Marshall shares

some doubt:

Marshall: There is one logical problem that has to be addressed. It doesn't
rule

the theory out, but to have made a bargain with the Iranians, to delay the

hostage release until after the election, would have given the Iranians on a

silver platter the biggest blackmail card imaginable. If we think of the arms

for hostages deal, that alone caused one of the biggest scandals in recent

american history. That at least was for what you might call a good cause: to

release the hostages early. To delay the release of hostages for domestic

political gain, in return for arms, would have led to not only to impeachment,

but the drawing and quartering of everyone involved.

Honegger: In fact we do know, that the Khomeni regime, and Hezbollah in

particular, has been blackmailing the Reagan administration ever since 1981.
We

know from Oliver North's own notes, that profits from the Iranian arms sale
were

going to Hezbollah right from the beginning. Millions of dollars worth of

profits, and because American hostages were not released as a result of those

payments, it is clear that in fact those were hush money payments, because

Hezbollah and the Iranians have been blackmailing the Reagan administration,

because of what they know about the treasonous 1980 deal.

Narrator: Mansur Rafizadeh is a former chief of Savak, the Shah of Iran's
secret

police. He was also a covert agent for the CIA, and was in communication with

factions in both the US and Iranian governments during the hostage crisis:

Raf: The CIA asked me to get in touch with a powerful source inside of Iran,
so

I took the liberty, before consulting with the CIA, I demand, american

government wants the hostages to be released, that's the first step. The
answer

came back in a few days. You are wrong. American government doesn't want the

hostages to be released, or possibly there's a government inside of the

government, or they're lying to us, or they're lying to you. That's not the

demand. What else do they want?

Narrator: George Bush had been director of the CIA during the Ford

administration, and still had many friends in the agency. Former Savak chief

Rafizadeh told The Other Americas Radio that secret negotiations between
Khomeni

and CIA elements loyal to the Reagan Bush campaign had arranged a deal to keep

the hostages in Iran until Reagan was in the white house.

Raf: ....and after the election was done, Khomeni was going to release the

hostages. Why Khomeni was going to release the hostages, because he doesn't

understand the system of government, he thinks Reagan is in the white house

tonight, he's going to put Carter and his family in jail tomorrow morning,
and,

here we go. But as soon as they told him, no no, still Carter is president,

then, the deal was made to release the hostages exactly, the moment Ronald

Reagan was president. (questioner: Did this have anything to do with promises

the Reagan campaign had made?) It was promised for the arms. At the time the

deal was that the hostages would be released as soon as Reagan is in the
office,

and then they will ship them arms. (questioner: And who made that agreement?)

CIA. And we learned about that agreement also, ahead of time. General Louasi

learned that they are going to send arms to Khomeni, the deal is made, he told

me that. I believe that, as much involvement as William Casey had, and Richard

Allen had, George Bush has too. George Bush is intelligent, he's smart, he
knows

the business. (questioner: he was apparently very popular in the CIA ..) Yes,
he

was very popular in CIA, so I don't believe George Bush was not involved in
it,

no he was involved. The other thing, Khomeni did all the damage to Carter, he

didn't do any bad thing to Reagan. He released the hostages the moment Reagan

was president. The hostages were sitting in a plane, there's a documentary
film

from CBS or NBC, anyone can watch it, the guards were standing by with a
radio.

The moment Ronald Reagan was president, they signaled the plane, they took
off.

Why they didn't send them 2 days before? Why they didn't wait to the next day
to

do it? And after, the shipment of arms starts from Tel-Aviv. (questioner: and

this is in 1981?) 1981, we are talking, not 1985. And if anyone is going to
tell

me that the government of Israel shipped arms to Iran without the knowledge or

permission of the american government, I don't believe it.

Narrator: On July 18, 1981, an Argentine cargo plane crashed on the

Turkish-Soviet border. It was loaded with weapons in transit from Israel to

Iran. High level Israeli officials have said that the Reagan administration
knew

and approved of the arms dealings the crash exposed. The cargo of spare parts

and ammunition were all american made. From reports in the New York Times and

Wall Street Journal, we know of two separate groups of shipments in 1981. The

first, as we have already heard, was shipped through Israel, with
authorization

from Reagan administration officials. The second group of arms was shipped by
an

Iranian born arms merchant, Cyrus Hashemi. Hashemi had worked for the CIA,

beginning in 1975. He died suddenly of a rare form of acute leukemia in 1986.

Congressional investigators noted that the CIA has chemical injections and

sprays that can cause such symptoms. One informant said he was told by US

customs officials that Hashemi had been 'bumped off' by government agents.

Honegger: Cyrus Hashemi was murdered by government agents because of his

knowledge of the 1981 links. And Mr. Hashemi, before he was murdered, which
was

in July 1986 in London England, Hashemi had told collegues and associates that

the original 1981 shipments were part of necessary arrangements and deals to

accomplish the delay of the release of the original 52 hostages.

Narrator: Is it a coincidence that other key witnesses to this entire affair

have died under similarly questionable circumstances? The scandal may be
bigger

than anyone imagines. The alleged deal to prevent Carter's re-election in 1980

may be at the root of the contragate scandal. According to an Athens newspaper

account of tapes made of Robert McFarlane, the US had shipped 1.3 billion

dollars worth of military equipment to Iran by 1986, and a total 5 billion

dollars worth was promised. As we have heard from former US operative and
Savak

agent Rafizadeh, these shipments began in 1981, when there were no more US

hostages left in Iran.

Raf: They are making remarks all the time that we will disclose the secret

tapes, the secret information. And I believe that the Reagan administration is

blackmailed by Khomeni, because they have so much dirt going on between them.

Narrator: Congressman John Conyers has wondered why the Reagan administration

approved weapons shipments to Iran in early 1981. Conyers is probing contacts

between Iran and the 1980 Reagan-Bush campaign. The charge leveled in this

program of unlawful activity by Richard Allen, George Bush and others, is one
of

treason. It requires further investigation. Honegger: These individuals have
had

an arrogant contempt for the will of the american people as expressed through

the congress of the US and the laws of the US. I know, having been in this
white

house, and from my research since, that this contempt for the rule of law in

this country, comes because these people have an erroneous belief that they
are

serving a higher law.

[COVERUP states that this "higher law" is the fight against communism.]

[From COVERUP:

Peter Scott: I think the real issue was that both the administration and most
of

the people in the congressional committees were frightened that the real

scandals, the contra-drug scandal, for instance, would really threaten any

future conduct of covert operations that had been handled in the past, and so

they were trying, very deliberately, to limit the damage, this was damage

control, look only at the Iran arms sales, and the diversion to the contras.

Honegger: The bottom line is that the Iran Contra committee, and the Walsh

investigation, because their mandates only took them back to 1984, were in and

of themselves a coverup. ]

[ COVERUP claims that even this scandal is really just the tip of the iceberg.

Oliver North testified during the senate hearings that Casey wanted an 'Off
the

shelf, self financing, independent covert operations capability' outside the

checks and balances of executive and congressional oversight, for the purpose
of

fighting world communism. This independent entity has existed for some time,
it

is claimed, finances itself by international arms and drug running, and has
it's

own cold war agenda and business interests. Many of the key players, such as

Hakim, Gorbanifar and Secord, have strong ties to the US and international

intelligence communities, which greatly facilitates their smuggling
operations,

enabling them to bypass airport customs with ease. The well publicised
contacts

between contra gun runners and the underworld probably facilitates the
internal

distribution and sale of drugs in the US.



The international arms trade and international drug trade amounts to hundreds
of

billions of dollars annually. These people are in a unique position to ease
the

passage of contraband across international borders, and the few tens of
millions

they skim off the top is easily borne by the market. The real price is paid in

the steady erosion of our constitution. ]

----------------------------------------------------------------

Narrator: The October Surprise was produced by Eric Schwartz, Carolyn Soular,

and Dale Lewis of The Other Americas Radio. The Other Americas Radio is a non-

profit, independent broadcast group based in Santa Barbara California. For a

free catalog of our taped programs please write to: The Other Americas Radio

P.O Box 85 Santa Barbara, CA 93102

[COVERUP was produced by The Empowerment Project, a non profit group based in

California]

["An Election Held Hostage", by Abbie Hoffman and Johnathan Silvers, was

published in the October 1988 issue of Playboy]

[Also see the PBS special, "The Secret Government," hosted by Bill Moyers,

which explores the "Off the shelf, self financing, independent covert

operations" entity mentioned by North, and traces it back to its cold war

beginnings. This movie won an Emmy for best documentary film. It's quite

chilling.]
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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