-Caveat Lector-

an excerpt from:
The Great Heroin Coup - Drugs, Intelligence, & International Fascism
Henrik Kruger
Jerry Meldon, Translator
South End Press©1980
Box 68 Astor Station
Boston, MA 02123
ISBN 0-89608-0319-5
240pps - one edition - out-of-print
Orginally published in Danish
Smukke Serge og Heroien
Bogan 1976
--[13]--

THIRTEEN
THE FATEFUL DAYS: A CHRONOLOGY OF THE HEROIN COUP

"We have turned the corner on heroin," declared a proud Richard Nixon after
the massacre of the Corsican Mafia. But shutting off the pipeline of heroin
from Marseilles did not produce the shortage he predicted. Except for a brief
period in 1973, the supply increased, tremendously. By 1975 the heroin glut
far surpassed even that of the Corsican heyday of the late sixties. According
to a 1977 report of the House Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse, heroin
addiction had doubled in four years. One year later New York's special
narcotics prosecutor, Sterling Johnson, Jr. stated: "There is more dope on
the streets now than at any time since the late sixties and early seventies,
when we had an epidemic going. We've got another epidemic, and more
critical."[1]

When the heroin flow from Marseilles was shut off in 1972-73, two new sources
of supply immediately filled the vacuum. Southeast Asia -Laos, Burma and
Thailand -suddenly produced vast amounts of white no. 4 heroin, the type that
supposedly could only be produced by Marseilles chemists. The high quality
heroin went primarily to the 40 percent of all U.S. heroin addicts who were
living in New York, and who were accustomed to Marseilles heroin. The other
new source was Mexico. But its product, the less pure "brown sugar," served
mainly to regulate the market and to generate new customers.

The remarkable switch from Mirkey-Marseilles-U.S.A. to Southeast
Asia-Mexico-U.S.A. shifted billions of dollars and the power that comes with
it. Such a market revolution could not have happened without astute planning
and direction, which demanded political savvy and political cooperation. The
plans for this tremendous heroin coup were on somebody's drawing board before
Nixon and Georges Pompidou met in early 1970. They were made long before
Attorney General John Mitchell and French Justice Minister Raymond Marcellin
met in Paris on 26 February 1971, when they signed the antinarcotics
agreement that led to the eradication of the Corsican drug Mafia. Most
probably they were in place by 1968.

The occurrence of such a conspiratorial heroin coup is, of course, a
hypothesis. In the following chapters I will trace the logic and the
likelihood of its having transpired.

Involved in one way or another in the planning, the execution, or both, were:
President Nixon and part of the White House staff; Meyer Lansky's corporate
gangster syndicate-in particular its Cuban exile wing run by Florida capo
Santo Trafficante, Jr.; the Cuba/China lobby; ultrareactionary forces in
Southeast Asia, primarily the Kuomintang Chinese on Taiwan and in the Golden
Triangle; and intelligence and law enforcement factions of the CIA and
BNDD/DEA.

It was, needless to say, not a willful conspiracy of all the above. But we
can assert with reasonable certainty that the CIA, Trafficante, and other
mafiosi, certain Southeast Asians, and some people in the White House must
have been in the know.

The plan took three years to execute. Though the major maneuvers began in
1970, one could detect the opening skirmishes soon after Nixon's election
victory in 1968:

* Henry Kissinger put pressure on Paraguay to extradite Auguste Ricord, the
main Corsican supplier of narcotics to the U.S. market.[2] Paraguay's
President Alfredo Stroessner at first chose to ignore that pressure.[3]

* In 1968 the Mafia's premier heroin importer, Santo Trafficante, Jr.,
travelled to Southeast Asia to check out possibilities for a new supply
network involving Chinese opium merchants.[4] When he made the trip, the
Corsican Mafia was supplying Trafficante with all the no. 4 heroin he could
sell.

* Nixon and Pompidou met in January 1970 to restore close Franco-American
partnership. It was a crucial step in the destruction of the French narcotics
apparatus that controlled 80 percent of the heroin trade.

* At the start of July 1970, White House staffer Egil Krogh proposed
Operation Heroin, a major action against the narcotics smugglers. His idea
was approved.

* U.S. Mafia capos held a summit July 4-16 at the Hotel Sole in Palermo,
Sicily. There they decided to pour money into Southeast Asia and transform it
into the main source of heroin.[5]

* On 23 July 1970 Richard Nixon approved the Huston Plan to establish an
espionage group that would supercede existing intelligence and enforcement
agencies. The super-group was to be steered from the White House, thus giving
the president effective control over all intelligence -including domestic
spying on U.S. citizens. The plan fell through, mostly due to the opposition
of J. Edgar Hoover. However, the White House continued to develop the plan
under cover of its fast-growing, media-hyped narcotics campaign.

* In August 1970 the Corsicans, apparently informed of the outcome of the
Palermo meeting weeks earlier, called their Southeast Asian connections to an
emergency meeting at Saigon's Continental Hotel. Thereafter two loads of
morphine base would be sent to Marseilles each month.[6] However, the
shipments were continually sabotaged, and rarely arrived at their destination.

*Another major development in 1970 was the implementation of Nixon's
Vietnamization program, through which the controls in Vietnam were returned
to the CIA. The program pumped a fortune into South Vietnam, much of it
pocketed by officials. Investigations of endemic corruption among non-coms
and senior U.S. Army personnel led to a Hong Kong office run by a lieutenant
of drug czar Trafficante.[7]

* Pure no. 4 heroin appeared in Saigon in 1970, creating an epidemic of
addiction among GIs. All previously available heroin had been of the coarse
form that could only be smoked. The new heroin wave was hushed up.

There were two other significant developments in 1970: (1) to end persistent
rivalry among customs, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Bureau of
Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (BNDD), Nixon named the BNDD the sole U.S.
representative on drug matters; and (2) the Mafia dispatched the notorious
Tomasso Buscetta to Brazil to prepare a takeover of narcotics smuggling upon
Auguste Ricord's extradition to the U.S.

* On 26 February 1971 France and the United States signed the definitive
agreement for a combined assault on heroin. Within days Ricord was sentenced i
n absentia. On April 6 Roger Delouette was picked up in New York. As detailed
in chapter ten, after that the Corsican network collapsed quickly.

* On 27 May 1971 Congressmen Morgan Murphy and Robert Steele issued their
report, The World Heroin Problem. Among their sensational findings was that
some 15 percent of the GIs in Vietnam were addicted to heroin. The causes
were easy to identify. Most obvious was the sudden appearance of enormous
quantities of no. 4 heroin. Fourteen-year old girls sold 90 percent pure
heroin for peanuts. Pushers stuffed it into soldiers' pockets free of charge.
Add to that the crackdown that effectively eliminated marijuana and hash from
the barracks.

* On the day the Murphy-Steele report was issued, Nixon, John Erlichman, and
Krogh agreed to secretly budget $100 million for a covert BNDD kidnaping and
assassination program. Before that the White House had asked BNDD director
John Ingersoll to draft a plan for "clandestine law enforcement" that would
include assassination of major traffickers.[8]

* Days later Nixon set up a special narcotics action and intelligence group
right in the White House. In the same period the Special Investigation Unit
(the infamous Plumbers) set up shop in Room 16 of the Executive Office
Building. The two groups overlapped, and several of their members were
associates of Mafia kingpin Trafficante.

* On 17 June 1971 Nixon, on television, declared war on narcotics: "If we
cannot destroy the drug menace in America, then it will destroy us. I am not
prepared to accept this alternative."

* On 30 June 1971 the United States and Turkey signed an agreement that would
halt Turkish opium cultivation. In return the U.S. handed the Turkish
government $30 million.

* On 1 July 1971 Nixon advisor Charles Colson recruited former CIA agent
Howard Hunt as a White House consultant.[9] Hunt and Gordon Liddy would work
out of Room 16 on narcotics intelligence, one of Hunt's specialties.

* On 25 July 1971 the Asian Peoples Anti-Communist League (APACL) and World
Anti-Communist League (WACL) met in Manila. The two international lobbies for
the Nationalist Chinese, prime bankrollers of international opium and heroin
smuggling, angrily attacked Nixon for his approaching trip to Peking. [10]

In August 1971 the BNDD announced the location in Southeast Asia of
twenty-nine drug refineries, fifteen of them allegedly producing heroin.
Among the largest was one in Vientiane, Laos, which was camouflaged as a
Pepsi Cola plant. Nixon, representing Pepsi's interests in 1965, had promoted
its construction. Though the plant never capped a bottle, it continued to be
subsidized by U.S.A.I.D.[11]

In October 1971 top BNDD analyst John Warner told an interviewer that the
continued flooding of the U.S. heroin market, despite the shutdown of French
supply routes, indicated that more than the previously assumed 5 percent of
U.S. heroin was originating in Southeast Asia.

On 1 November 1971 BNDD agents arrested a diplomat attached to the Philippine
embassy in Laos, and a Chinese journalist from Thailand, attempting to
smuggle forty kilos of heroin into the U.S.A. That same year BNDD agents at
JFK airport arrested the son of Panama's ambassador to Taiwan with fifty
kilos of heroin. Finally, and most dramatically, Parisian police nabbed the
Laotian Prince Chao Sopsaisana attempting to smuggle in sixty kilos.
Sopsaisana, the head Laotian delegate to the APACL, was about to become Laos'
emissary in Paris.[12]

The focus nevertheless remained on the French narcotics traffickers. Nixon
could also produce results in the newly arisen Southeast Asian danger zone,
but those amounted to the smashing of the remnants of the Corsican Mafia and
their Southeast Asian supply network.

Through it all the U.S. supported Marshall Nguyen Cao Ky and other South
Vietnamese politicians known to be making immense profits from the heroin
traffic. When U.S. reporters exposed Ky's narcotics airlift, the CIA station
and U.S. embassy in Saigon issued blanket denials. [13]

In late 1971 BNDD director Ingersoll issued the following statement: "The CIA
has for some time been this Bureau's strongest partner in identifying foreign
sources and routes of illegal trade in narcotics. Liaison between our two
agencies is close and constant in matters of mutual interest. Much of the
progress we are now making in identifying overseas narcotics traffic can, in
fact, be attributed to CIA cooperation." [14]

The catch was that BNDD "progress" and CIA "cooperation" went only as far as
the French Mafia. CIA cooperation on Southeast Asia was another matter. The
agency hindered BNDD agents and kept the press in the dark, while itself
smuggling large quantities of opium via Air America.[15] A notable
discrepancy arose in 1972 between CIA and BNDD estimates of the heroin
traffic. CIA reports had 25 percent of the heroin coming from Mexico, the
rest from Marseilles. The BNDD estimated that Southeast Asia already supplied
30 percent of the heroin on the U.S. market.[16]

* In January 1972 Nixon created, again by decree, the Office for Drug Abuse
Law Enforcement (ODALE) to flush out pushers in thirty-eight cities.
Simultaneously, New York's police narcotics squad was reorganized following
revelations of blatant corruption. ODALE ceased to exist on 1 July 1973 when
it, the BNDD and the narcotics intelligence branches of the Justice
Department and Customs Bureau were merged to become the Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA), which now operates in the U.S. and worldwide.

* On 17 July 1972 James McCord, Frank Sturgis, Bernard Barker, Eugenio
Rolando Martinez, and Virgilio Gonzalez, led by Hunt and Liddy, broke into
the Democrats' Watergate offices in Washington. Of these seven men, four were
from Miami, four were active or former agents of the CIA, four had been
involved in the Bay of Pigs invasion, and three were closely linked to the
Cuban narcotics Mafia.

* The same day Nixon telegrammed Pompidou his congratulations. Two days
earlier, France had closed out a series of raids against the Marseilles
heroin labs. The great heroin coup was well on its way to completion.

On 9 August 1972 Nixon made William C. Sullivan the director of the Office of
National Narcotics Intelligence (ONNI), which would coordinate domestic drug
intelligence. Sullivan had been the president's choice to head the Huston
Plan's aborted super-intelligence agency.[17]

With Egil Krogh executive director of the Cabinet Committee on International
Narcotics Control, covering foreign narcotics intelligence,[18] complete
control over narcotics management was in the president's hands.

* In August 1972 U.S. troops were withdrawn from South Vietnam. The country
was turned over to the CIA and a narcotics trafficking South Vietnamese
government.

In late August, in the midst of Nixon's reelection campaign, the BNDD
announced the first noticeable heroin shortage on the streets of America.
Nixon's battle with the French Mafia had borne fruit. Soon he would rid the
U.S.A. entirely of the White Death. However, someone had forgotten to mention
that returning GIs had helped triple the U.S. addict population from the 1969
figure of 250,000. In reality, then, the total heroin supply was appreciably g
reater than that prevailing prior to Nixon's campaign against the French.
Americans, however, would reelect Nixon, who cited apparent gains in foreign
affairs and the struggle against the drug plague.

* On 12 August 1972 New York crime families decided at a Staten Island summit
to resume the drug traffic they had supposedly abandoned in the fifties.[19]
Citing "social responsibility," they decried the Cuban and Black Mafias' sale
of heroin in the suburbs to children of "decent people," and vowed that the
drugs would thereafter remain in the ghetto. But the importance of the
families had waned. Others, especially Trafficante's Cuban organization, had
become too strong.

The heroin coup was complete by 1973. The French were out, and new labs,
routes, and buyer networks were in place, with Southeast Asia the main
supplier. That year the U.S. heroin supply did fall noticeably, largely
because part of the plan was about to fall through. South Vietnam, Laos, and
Cambodia were slipping out of U.S. hands, Forcing traffickers and bankrollers
to regroup in safer surroundings, above all in Thailand. [20]

A final item of interest in 1973 was the appearance before a Senate committee
of the international speculator and smuggler Frank Peroff, who had served as
an undercover agent for the DEA against the Cotroni brothers of Montreal. He
testified that the renegade international businessman, Robert Vesco — a major
supporter of Richard Nixon — and his associate Norman Leblanc, were
bankrollers of international heroin trafficking.[21]

pps. 121-128

--[Notes]--

1. B. Herbert: "The Fleetwood Kids," Penthouse, August 1978.

2. L. Gonzalez-Mata: Cygne (Grasset, 1976).

3. Interestingly, CIA agent Fernand Legros arrived that year in Paraguay and
negotiated a weapons deal with the regime of dictator Stroessner- see R.
Peyrefitte: La Vie Extraordinaire de Fernand Legros (Albin Michel, 1976).

4. A.McCoy: The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia (Harper& Row, 1972).
Prior to the publication of this book on 20 August 1972, Cord Meyer, Jr., a
CIA covert operations division leader, visited Harper & Row to demand the
galleys. The publisher refused, subject to receipt of an official CIA
request. When that came the proofs were delivered over McCoy's objections.
The agency returned them with corrections, but the publisher rejected them
and the book was published unaltered.

5. F. Wulff in the Danish Rapport, 14 April 1975.

6. C. Lamour and M.R. Lamberti: Les Grandes Maneuvres de l'0pium
(Editions de Seuil, 1972).

7. McCoy, op. cit.

8. E.J. Epstein: Agency of Fear (Putnam, 1977).

9. E.H. Hunt: Undercover (Berkeley-Putnam, 1974).

10. Documents of the 5th WACL and 17th APACL Conference, Taiwan, November
1971.

11. N.A. C.L.A. Report, October 1972.

12. P.D. Scott: "From Dallas to Watergate," Ramparts, November 1973.

13. McCoy, op. cit.

14. The Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars: The Opium Rail (New
England Free Press, 1971).

15. P.D. Scott: The War Conspiracy (Bobbs-Merrill, 1972).

16. McCoy, op. cit.

17. S. Blumental: "How the FBI Tried to Destroy the Black Panthers," in
Government by Gunplay, S. Blumental and H. Yazijian, Eds. (New American
Library, 1976).

18. P.D. Scott: "From Dallas to Watergate," op. cit.

19. The Newsday Staff: The Heroin Rail (Souvenir Press, 1974).

20. The heroin entrepreneurs had also been unduly optimistic about their
supply. By the start of 1973 they began investing in a new, European market,
while still supplying the U.S. Nonetheless, the slight hitch in Southeast Asia
was rapidly dealt with, and soon the flood of heroin hit Europe like a tidal
wave.

21. L.H. Whittemore: Peroff (Ballantine Books, 1975).

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

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