-Caveat Lector-

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com
http://www.ioa.com/~davehart


===================


Consortiumnews.com - http://www.consortiumnews.com

The CIA and the Justice Department are withholding documents that could
clarify former President Bush's role in a double homicide in Washington,
D.C., during his days as CIA director.

Most of those documents remain secret despite President Clinton's order to
declassify records that relate to torture and murder during the Chilean
dictatorship of Gen. Augusto Pinochet. The CIA simply has dragged its
heels. The Justice Department is withholding the documents on the grounds
the 23-year-old murder case is still open.

But the few documents that have been released add to the suspicion that
CIA director Bush had advanced knowledge of an international assassination
project called Operation Condor and, after the Washington murders, aided
in the cover-up.

Chilean dissident Orlando Letelier and an American co-worker, Ronni
Moffitt, died when a Chilean assassin blew up Letelier's car as it drove
along Embassy Row in Washington on Sept. 21, 1976.

The documentary record now establishes that Bush's CIA was aware of
Operation Condor -- the international assassination ring -- and knew that
Chilean intelligence was infiltrating the assassin into the United States.
After the murders, Bush's CIA withheld evidence from the FBI and
disseminated a bogus analysis clearing Chile of suspicion.

The full "Bush-Condor" story can be read at http://www.consortiumnews.com

===============

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Title: What's behind the Bush-Pinochet friendship?

Author: Sarah Anderson and Saul Landau

Source: Miami Herald, 1 June 1999
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Former President George Bush is acting strangely these days, as if he may
have something to hide.

On April 12 The London Times reported that Bush had written a letter
supporting former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, whom British
authorities have detained since October while trying to decide whether to
let a Spanish magistrate extradite and try him for crimes against
humanity. The Times quoted Bush's letter to former British Chancellor Lord
Lamont, calling the accusation against Pinochet a travesty against
justice. Britain, Bush concluded, should allow Pinochet to return to
Chile. Why would a former President who spends his time schmoozing at fund
raisers issue an impassioned defense of a notorious Latin American
dictator? Hoping that the full text of the letter might help explain
Bush's actions, we tried to get a copy.

On April 26 Michael Dannenaher, Bush's chief of staff, told us that he,
not Bush, had written said letter and that he would not provide a copy. We
then turned to House International Relations Committee member Rep. Cynthia
McKinney, D-Ga., who also requested a copy. Her aide told us that
Dannenaher gave him a different story: that no letter had been written.
Lamont insists he received a letter from Bush but has yet to comply with
McKinney's request for a copy.

Bush's behavior raises questions about his relationship to Pinochet, whose
17-year regime executed more than 3,190 people. The CIA backed Pinochet's
rise to power in a bloody 1973 coup. Three years later Bush, as head of
the CIA, had access to information that Pinochet headed Operation Condor,
an international network of secret-police agencies established to
eliminate dissidents. CIA officials knew, for example, that Chile had sent
agents to Argentina and Italy to assassinate prominent exiled opponents.
The CIA also knew Pinochet's method for foreign killings because it and
the FBI collaborated in some phases of the Condor operations.

Nevertheless, Bush and other CIA officials reacted like tortoises when a
top-secret cable arrived in June 1976 from US Ambassador to Paraguay
George Landau (no relation to author Saul Landau). The cable advised CIA
Deputy Director General Vernon Walters that Landau had authorized US visas
for two of Chile's covert agents, who were using phony Paraguayan
passports, to visit Washington. Walters was absent, so according to CIA
protocol, only Bush could have signed for the cable. Landau received no
response to his urgent alert.

Pinochet's secret-police chief aborted that mission, then quickly
rescheduled it. Two months later, two other Chilean agents under the same
aliases obtained US visas in Santiago. Upon their arrival, US immigration
officials informed the CIA, but the CIA apparently made no response. To
Pinochet, this may have been an indication that the coast was clear to hit
his target: Orlando Letelier, a former Chilean ambassador to the United
States. On Sept. 21, 1976, Chilean agents detonated a bomb under
Letelier's car as he drove to work at the Institute for Policy Studies in
Washington, DC, An American colleague, Ronni Moffitt, also died in the
attack. Bush promised the FBI full cooperation, but the CIA withheld key
information, including photocopies of the phony passports that Landau had
sent. The agency also appears to have planted stories suggesting
Pinochet's innocence in the affair. FBI investigators later complained
that the CIA delivered thousands of files of leftist suspects, suggesting
that the Chilean left had killed Letelier to create a martyr.

Pinochet's hatred of Letelier was no secret in Washington. Three months
before the assassination, Pinochet had complained to then-Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger that Letelier's influence with the US Congress was
creating problems for him. Months after the murders, the State Department
finally gave the FBI its copy of Landau's files on the covert operatives,
which led to indictments against eight of Pinochet's men.

Given the working relationship between Chile's secret police and the CIA,
Bush may have assumed that Pinochet wouldn't embarrass the Americans with
a high-profile assassination a mile from the White House. Once the deed
was done, did the CIA cover it up?

We can't even get a straight answer from Bush on whether he is supporting
Pinochet today, much less what he might have been doing 23 years ago.
Ironically, Pinochet himself eventually might reveal the truth of his
relationship to the CIA. If his British appeals fail, he might spill
interesting information on the witness stand in Spain.

The absence of sex scandals in Bush's legacy may pale before the stain of
dalliances with an international serial killer.

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