-Caveat Lector-

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com/dave


http://www.janrainwater.com/cia.htm
Comments, criticisms, suggestions, encouragement?
Write to Jan at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Excerpts from Janette Rainwater's book-in-progress:
>From FDR to Bush:
An Annotated Chronology of the United States, 1932-1992
The Central Intelligence Agency
May 16, 1948

     The body of reporter George Polk is discovered in the Bay of Salonika
with his hands and feet bound and shot through the head. [Following pressure
from the US State Department and the investigating committee's counsel,
General William Donovan, the wartime head of OSS, the predecessor of the
CIA, the Greek government found a suspect and tortured him until he
"confessed" that the crime had been committed by Greek Communists acting on
orders from Moscow.  Polk had been a highly respected journalist whose
dispatches had questioned the honesty and competence of the American-backed
rightist Greek government.   From journalist I. F. Stone: "George Polk is
the first casualty of the Cold War."]1

August 19, 1953

     A CIA coup in Iran overthrows the government of Prime Minister Mohammed
Mossadegh and re-installs Reza Pahlavi as Shah of Iran.  Over 300 people are
killed and many hundreds are wounded in the nine hours of fighting.   [Plans
had been brewing to oust the nationalist Mossadegh ever since he and his
party had passed a bill in 1951 to nationalize the British-owned
Anglo-Iranian Oil Company.   The coup, however, was increasingly proclaimed
in the years following as essential to prevent "the obvious threat of
Russian takeover".2   In actuality, the Soviet government made no effort to
come to the aid of the Iranian communist party  (Tudeh)  which was
frequently opposed to the policies of Mossadegh, a very wealthy landowner.
A July, 1951 Tudeh demonstration had been put down by the Mossadegh
government at the cost of 100 deaths and 500 injuries.  Ironically, the
Truman administration had cautioned the British that toppling the Mossadegh
government could lead to a communist takeover.  The new Eisenhower-Dulles
administration felt differently and, mindful of the strategic border with
the Soviet Union and the importance of oil, bought the British- Kermit
Roosevelt plan.  The final coup was totally an American CIA operation and
cost possibly as much as $19 million.  It would be used as a model for
future stage-managed coups, such as that in Guatemala in 1954.

     The future cost to the people of Iran was incalculable.  Thousands were
executed during the next twenty-five years of the Shah's reign, and the
people became more impoverished.  SAVAK, the secret police created and
trained by the CIA, was described by Amnesty International in 1976 as having
a "history of torture which is beyond belief.  No country in the world has a
worse record in human rights than Iran."3

     The United States got many military installations in Iran, bases for
surveillance flights over Russia, and radar and electronic listening posts
that completed the encirclement of the USSR.  American oil firms gained a
40% interest in the new international consortium for Iranian oil.   The US
would spend over a billion dollars to support the Shah's regime and the
military in Iran. (The CIA distributed about $400 million a year to the
ayatollahs and the mullahs from 1953 until President Carter ordered a stop
in 1977, a move that undoubtedly contributed to the 1978 revolution.)]4

November 19, 1953

     As just another in the CIA Project M-K Ultra's experiments with
mind-altering drugs, Dr. Sydney Gottlieb spikes the cointreau of his
colleague, Dr. Frank Olson,5 with LSD on the final evening of a three-day
scientific retreat.   [Olson became disoriented, hallucinatory, and
psychotic.  A few weeks later, while his Agency escort slept, Olson jumped
to his death from the window of their tenth story New York City hotel room.
The suicide was hushed up and Gottlieb was not reprimanded, but CIA Director
Allen Dulles called a halt to the widespread LSD in-house testing.  In 1976
after some of the Project M-K Ultra story became known to the public,
Congress passed a bill giving Olson's widow a compensation of $750,000.]6

March 17, 1960

     President Eisenhower secretly approves Operation Pluto, a CIA plan to
create a Cuban government in exile and to train Cuban exiles in Guatemala as
a paramilitary force for an invasion of Cuba to take place possibly before
the November elections.  DDE stresses the need for secrecy and specifies
that only two or three Americans should have actual contact with the Cuban
mercenaries.   [Vice-President Richard Nixon was the project's action
officer within the White House with his assistant for National Security
Affairs, Lieut. Col. Robert Cushman.  When the plans were not ready in time,
candidate Nixon suspected a deliberate delay by "liberals" in the CIA to
ensure a victory for John Kennedy in the November election.]7

January 20, 1964

     KGB Colonel Yuri Nosenko, in Geneva for the disarmament negotiations,
defects to the United States.   [He brought with him some extremely valuable
information:---  details of how the Soviets had bugged the US Embassy in
Moscow and the names of more than twenty Soviet agents in the United States.
All of this was investigated and verified.  However, the CIA found a third
item hard to believe:---  the KGB dossier on Lee Harvey Oswald indicated
that there was no Soviet involvement in the assassination of JFK but that
Oswald could have been a hit man for a consortium of right-wing American
millionaires. Nosenko was subjected to polygraphs, isolation chambers, more
polygraphs, LSD, forced listening to endless loops of noise, and food
deprivation in an effort to demonstrate that he was a KGB plant, or at least
a KGB dupe.  Finally, after nearly four years of this brutal treatment  (and
no resolution of the mystery)  he was released and allowed to live in the
United States under a new name.] 8

June 23, 1971

     Daniel Ellsberg appears on CBS-TV news and discloses that he is the
"leaker" of the Pentagon Papers and urges that Americans take responsibility
to end the hostilities in Indochina which have caused the deaths of one to
two million people in the last quarter-century.   [Former hawk Ellsberg had
become disillusioned while running a CIA "pacification" program in the
1960s.  Back home and working at the Rand Corporation think tank with a high
security clearance, he methodically photocopied the relevant Pentagon
documents over a period of months.]10

January 18, 1973

     The trial of Daniel Ellsberg for leaking the Pentagon Papers begins.
[During the course of the trial the public learned that the CIA had
massively underestimated enemy strength before the 1970 invasion of
Cambodia.  Upon learning that H .L. Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy, already
convicted for the Watergate break-in, had also burgled the office of
Ellsberg's psychiatrist, Judge Matthew Byrne, Jr. declared a mistrial and
dismissed all charges against Ellsberg.   Judge Byrne also accused the Nixon
administration of  "gross misconduct", revealing that mid-trial Nixon's
special assistant for domestic affairs, John Ehrlichman, had offered him the
job of director of the FBI.] 11

May 9, 1973

     The Director of Central Intelligence James Schlesinger, infuriated by
the recent press disclosures of CIA misconduct of which he had been unaware,
orders his covert chief, William Colby, to compile a list of any
"questionable activities" by the CIA, past and present.   [The resulting
693-page report described Operation Chaos (the domestic spying program),
drug experiments, assassination plots, illegal mail-openings, the
surveillance and wiretapping of selected American journalists, contacts with
Watergate figures, etc., a list that Agency operatives called "the
Skeletons" and the press later dubbed "the family jewels".]12

December 22, 1974

     Headline in the New York Times: "Huge CIA Operation Reported in U.S.
Against Anti-War Forces, Other Dissidents in Nixon Years".   [Seymour Hersh,
the Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist who had revealed the My
Lai massacres and the bombing of Cambodia, reported:  "The Central
Intelligence Agency , directly violating its charter, conducted a massive
illegal domestic intelligence operation during the Nixon Administration
against the antiwar movement and other dissident groups in the United
States, according to well-placed government sources."  The CIA, forbidden to
operate within the United States, had opened files on 10,000 American
citizens and conducted illegal wiretaps, break-ins and mail openings under
its "Operation Chaos".  This was the beginning of a flood of information to
the public about the darker doings of the CIA and would result in the
establishment of three investigative groups: the Rockefeller Commission, the
"Pike Committee" in the House of Representatives and the "Church Committee"
in the Senate.]13

October 13, 1976

     CIA Director George Bush, disobeying the orders of the Attorney
General, notifies former directors Richard Helms and John McCone that the
federal grand jury investigating CIA activities in Chile and the Caribbean
might call them as witnesses and offers CIA help in preparing their
testimony.   [Bush saved the necks of seventy current and former CIA agents
by his refusal to turn their CIA records over to the Justice Department.
This loyalty was rewarded in his campaign for the Republican nomination in
1980 and in the subsequent Reagan-Bush election campaign.  Some of their
"dirty tricks" included the theft of President Carter's briefing book for
the television debate, disinformation about Carter's brother Billy and
Libya, and the insertion of spies into Carter's National Security
Council.]14

February 11, 1982

    Attorney General William French Smith exempts the CIA from its legal
requirement to report on drug smuggling by any of its assets or clients.
["Reportable offenses" which the agency was still required to reveal
included assault, homicide, kidnapping, illegal immigration, perjury, visa
violations, possession of firearms, bribery, obstruction of justice, etc.
Two months earlier President Reagan had authorized covert CIA assisstance to
the Nicaraguan contras.  Canny CIA Director William Casey, remembering the
heroin tie-in with the Vietnam War, undoubtedly anticipated that these new
guerrilla  allies would be using the cocaine trade to finance their
operations and finagled a secret agreement to have the CIA relieved of its
obligation to "add narcotics violations to the list of reportable
non-employee crimes" according to documents released in 1998.  Tons of
cocaine were brought into the United States in the 1980s by contras and
their drug lord allies with the CIA denying both knowledge and
complicity.]15

December 12, 1985

     256 US servicemen returning from their duty as part of a "peacekeeping
force" in the Middle East die in the worst aviation disaster in US military
history when their plane crashes in Gander, Newfoundland.   [White House
spokesman Larry Speakes said it was an "accident" caused by ice on the
wings; there was no investigation of the crash.  However, the Islamic Jihad,
a terrorist group, claimed responsibility.  Investigator Joe Conason
believes the Islamic Jihad sabotaged the plane with a bomb as the result of
the Reagan administration having welshed on an arms deal with Iran.  On
November 25th the CIA airline, St. Lucia Airways, had delivered a shipment
of missiles different from the ones ordered.  Iranian Prime Minister
Rafsanjani wrote to Reagan that Iran had been cheated and demanded
restitution.  Oliver North, according to the Iran-Contra documents, warned
about the likelihood of reprisals for "leading them on".  But on December
10th Reagan and his National Security Council decided to abandon all
dealings with Iran.  The plane that crashed belonged to the CIA company, Air
Arrow, which also was flying weapons to the contras in Nicaragua.
Responsible investigation of this crash would likely have revealed the
covert sale of arms to Iran nearly a year before the scandal was finally
revealed.]16

August 4, 1986

     Vice President George Bush in a meeting with Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak asks him to pass on military advice to Iraq's Saddam Hussein:---  he
should use his Air Force more aggressively.   [This was a ploy thought up by
CIA Director William Casey who reasoned that if Saddam could be persuaded to
be less cautious with his well-equipped Air Force, then Iran would be forced
to ask the US for more missiles.  The US could then demand the release of
more hostages.  Casey briefed Bush before his July 25th departure for the
Middle East, enjoining him to pass messages to Saddam by both Mubarak and
King Hussein of Jordan.  The advice was taken within a few days and for
several weeks Iraqi planes bombed oil refineries and other installations
deep within Iran.  About this time CIA officials in Iraq gave Saddam
equipment that would receive intelligence information from satellites to
help him assess the effects of his bombing runs.]17

December 15, 1986

     CIA Director William Casey is stricken during a routine medical
examination at his office at CIA headquarters and rushed to Georgetown
University Hospital.   [There he underwent surgery for a brain tumor which
left him incapacitated and unable to speak or communicate.  He had been
scheduled to testify to Congress on the Iran-Contra scandal the following
day.   Few people knew that he was being treated for prostate cancer.] 18

May 5, 1987

     The joint congressional committee on Iran/Contra opens its televised
hearings with most of the senators and representatives wearing telegenic red
ties.  The first witness, retired General Richard V. Secord, testifies that
he was asked by Lieut. Col. Oliver North in 1984 to work with the National
Security Council's covert program to obtain weapons for the Nicaraguan
contras.  Only $3.5 million of the $12 million in profits from the sale of
arms to Iran found its way to the contras; half of the money was kept by his
Iranian business partner, Albert Hakin, and part went to another
unidentified secret project.  "We believed our conduct was in the
furtherance of the President's policies.... I also understood that this
Administration knew of my conduct and approved it."  [Congress and the
public were denied the opportunity to examine the plan for martial law, the
role of Vice President George Bush or the CIA's connection with cocaine
dealing, thanks to the gavel of Chairman Daniel K. Inouye (D-HI).]19

May 6, 1987

     William Casey dies of pneumonia, never having recovered powers of
communication.   [Security was tight for his funeral at St. Mary's Catholic
Church in Roslyn, Long Island.  Portions of the eulogy made that night's TV
news. Bishop McGann scolded the deceased:  "We opposed and continue to
oppose the violence wrought in Central America by support of the contras.
These are not light matters on which to disagree.  They are matters of life
and death.  And I cannot conceal or disguise my fundamental disagreement on
these matters with a man I knew and respected."  The US Ambassador to the UN
Jeane Kirkpatrick countered the bishop, asserting that Casey had secured a
"special place in heaven" by the priority he put on "supporting Nicaragua's
freedom fighters".  One of several associates not attending the funeral was
retired Air Force General Richard Secord.  The day before he had told the
congressional investigating committee that Casey was a major instigator of
the Iran-Contra operation.20

September 23, 1988

     Richard Brenneke testifies  (in the sentence hearing in Denver of
Heinrich Rupp, who had been convicted of bank fraud) that he and Rupp had
worked for the CIA since 1967, that they had flown planes in Vietnam for Air
America  (a company owned by the CIA), and that Rupp believed his bank
activities were something the CIA had asked him to do.  He further testifies
that Rupp had flown the Reagan-Bush campaign director William Casey
clandestinely to Paris on October 18, 1980 for meetings with representatives
of the Ayatollah Khomeini to negotiate an arms-for-hostages deal  (later
known as the "October Surprise"), and that he---Brenneke--- was present at
the third of these meetings where he helped work out details of the cash and
weapons transactions. 21

December 2-3, 1989

     At the Malta meeting at sea:--  In a private conversation Gorbachev
promises not to use violence in his attempt to retain the Baltic republics
within the Soviet Union and Bush then agrees not "to create any big
problems" by demagoguery or demands for independence for Lithuania, Latvia
and Estonia.  [Part of the Cold War strategy had been to never recognize the
Soviet annexation of the Baltics.  The CIA had spent countless millions
attempting to build a network of agents in those countries to foment
revolution.  If the American public had known of the agreement at Malta, the
hard-liners would have accused Bush of "selling out" the Baltics.]22

May 20, 1990

     With CIA and NSA intelligence reports revealing that Pakistan and India
were on the verge of a nuclear exchange, President Bush sends his top
nuclear expert, Robert Gates, to Islamabad.  Gates warns President Khan and
his top general that Pentagon war games have demonstrated that there is no
way that Pakistan could win a war with India, and that Pakistan need not
expect any help from the US despite the fact that Pakistan had been an ally
of the US in the long, supposedly "covert" war in Afghanistan.  Gates
extracts a promise from the Pakistanis to close down their training camps
for Kashmiri insurgents. [Richard J. Kerr, deputy director of the CIA
described the crisis as "the most dangerous nuclear situation we have ever
faced since I've been in the US government.... far more frightening than the
Cuban missile crisis."   Why did the public know nothing of this at the time
(unlike the hour-by-hour bulletins during the fear-ridden days of the Cuban
crisis)?  Throughout the '80s Reagan administration officials "looked the
other way" as Pakistan developed its nuclear arsenal of six nuclear bombs
with illegal purchases from US vendors of millions of dollars' worth of
restricted materials.  In 1985 Congress passed the Solarz Amendment which
mandated the termination of all military and economic aid to any supposedly
non-nuclear nation that imported or attempted to import nuclear-related
materials from the United States.  It also passed the Pressler Amendment
which required the President to certify each year that Pakistan did not
possess any nuclear weapons; otherwise Pakistan would not be allowed to
continue receiving its very large amount of foreign aid from the United
States.  The Reagan and Bush administrations falsely certified that Pakistan
was nuclear-free in 1987, 1988, and 1989.]23

July 10, 1992

     General Manuel Noriega, the longtime dictator of Panama, is sentenced
to 40 years in a U. S. prison, essentially a life sentence for a 58-year-old
man unlikely to get parole.   [He had been found guilty in April on eight
counts of racketeering, conspiracy and cocaine-smuggling.  Noriega, who did
not take the witness stand during the trial, gave a long speech before his
sentencing:--  Bush is "guilty of causing the deaths of innocent people" in
the 1989 invasion of Panama.....There was never any danger to the canal or
to American citizens in Panama.  Panama was invaded because I was an
obstacle to President Bush, who preferred me dead."   He related that he had
been an ally of the United States and cooperated with the CIA from the early
1960s until December, 1986 when he refused to send Panamanian troops to
fight with the contras in Nicaragua against the Sandinistas.  In
retaliation, he said, in February, 1988 the Reagan administration brought a
grand jury indictment against him on criminal drug charges which a few
months later they offered to drop if he would agree to leave Panama.]24

December 24, 1992

     President Bush pardons former Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger
and five other former government officials involved in the Iran-Contra
scandal in a move highly reminiscent of Gerald Ford's pardon of former
president Richard Nixon. (A presidential pardon is an absolute one,
eliminating all past convictions, present charges and even any future
prosecutions for the stated offenses.)   [The Iran-Contra independent
counsel Lawrence E. Walsh immediately denounced the pardons, accusing Bush
of "misconduct" and continuing the coverup.  He further declared that the
president is "the subject now of our investigation" since his discovery on
December 11th that Bush had "illegally withheld documents" from the
investigations--- Bush's own notes taken during Iran-Contra meetings.  There
was rapid public condemnation of the pardon amid suspicion that Bush may
have acted to prevent being called to testify at Weinberger's trial.  The
Grand Jury had indicted Weinberger on June 16th on five felony counts of
perjury, obstruction of a congressional investigation (for concealing and
withholding his relevant notes) and making false statements.   The other
five were:

--- Elliott Abrams, former assistant secretary of state for Inter-American
Affairs, sentenced on November 15, 1991.  He had pled guilty to two counts
of withholding information from Congress, thus avoiding the multi-count
felony count being prepared for the Grand Jury;
--- Duane Clarridge, head of the CIA's Western European division, indicted
November 26, 1991 on seven counts of perjury and false statements to
congressional investigators and scheduled for trial on March 15th;
--- Alan D. Fiers, former chief of the CIA's Central American Task Force,
whose testimony enabled the prosecution to indict Clair George.  For his
cooperation he was allowed to plead guilty to two counts of withholding
information from Congress and sentenced to one hundred hours of community
service;
--- Clair E. George, retired chief of the CIA's worldwide covert operations
division and the highest ranking CIA official prosecuted by the Independent
Counsel, convicted December 9 on two charges of false statements and perjury
and faced a possible five-year sentence before the pardon;
--- Robert C. MacFarlane, former national security advisor to Ronald Reagan
who pleaded guilty to four counts of withholding information from Congress
on March 11, 1988.
Two Iran-Contra participants were not included in the pardons:
--- Oliver L. North, a Marine lieutenant assigned to the National Security
Council staff who was the principal manager of the illegal supply to the
contras, convicted May 6, 1989 on three counts--- destroying documents,
aiding the obstruction of Congress and accepting an illegal gratuity.  Judge
Gesell chose to impose a fine of $100,000 and 1200 hours community service
in an inner-city counseling program rather than a jail sentence!
--- former National Security Advisor John M. Poindexter, convicted April 7,
1990 of five felonies for obstructing and lying to Congress and sentenced to
six months imprisonment on each count, to be served concurrently.   Both men
had their convictions overturned on the grounds that testimony was tainted
by information given to Congress while under immunity in the joint
House-Senate Iran-Contra Hearings.]25
Notes
1. The Nation,  January 28, 1991, pp. 93-95.

2.  Countercoup: The Struggle for the Control of Iran (1979) was written by
Kermit Roosevelt, the CIA officer who organized the coup. He gives no
evidence in the book to support his contention that Mossadegh had formed an
alliance with either the Soviet Union or the Tudeh (communist) party.
William Blum, The CIA: Forgotten History, US Global Interventions Since
World War 2, London: Zed Books, 1986, p. 69.

3.  Matchbox, Fall, 1976.

4.  Blum, op. cit., pp. 67-76.

5.  Olson was a biochemist with the Army, working at Fort Detrick.  He had
devised some ingenious methods for the dissemination of lethal agents such
as anthrax and equine encephalitis:-- a lipstick that would kill after
contact with the skin, an aerosol for asthma that would result in pneumonia,
and a cigarette lighter that produced a lethal gas.

6.  Gordon Thomas, Journey into Madness: The True Story of Secret CIA Mind
Control and Medical Abuse, New York: Bantam, 1989, pp. 160-162.

7.  Michael Beschloss, Crisis Years: Kennedy and Krushchev, 1960-63, New
York: Harper/Collins, 1991, p. 1      02;  John M. Newman, Oswald and the
CIA, New York: Carroll and Graf, 1995, pp. 126, 131.

8.  Thomas, op. cit. pp. 260-264;  John Ranelagh, The Agency: The Rise and
Decline of the CIA from Wild Bill Donovan to William Casey, New York: Simon
and Schuster, 1986, pp.404-409.

10.  Fred Emery, Watergate: The Corruption of American Politics and the Fall
of Richard Nixon, New York: Random House, 1994, pp. 42-43.

11.  Ranelagh, op. cit., p. 553.

12.  Ranelagh, op. cit., pp. 562-563;  Kathryn S. Olmsted, Challenging the
Secret Government: The Post-Watergate Investigations of the CIA and FBI,
University of North Carolina Press, 1996. p. 30.

13.  New York Times, December 22, 1974, p. 1.

14.  Warren Hinckle and William W. Turner, Deadly Secrets: The CIA-Mafia War
against Castro and JFK, New York: Thunder's Mouth Press, 1992, pp.
xxxi-xxxii.

15.  The Consortium, June 1, 1998, pp.2-3.

16.  In These Times, November 14-20, 1990.

17.  Murray Waas and Craig Unger, "In the Loop: Bush's Secret Mission", The
New Yorker, November 2, 1992, pp. 64, 76-77.

18.  Mark Perry, Eclipse: The Last Days of the CIA, New York: William
Morrow, 1992, pp. 35-37.

19.  Los Angeles Times, May 6, 1987.

20.  Perry, op. cit., pp. 36-38, 434.

21.  David Armstrong and Alex Constantine, "The Verdict is Treason", Z
Magazine, July-August, 1990.

22.  Michael R. Beschloss and Strobe Talbott, At the Highest Levels: The
Inside Story of the End of the Cold War, Boston: Little, Brown, 1993, pp.
163-164.

23.  Seymour M. Hersh, "On the Nuclear Edge", The New Yorker, March 29,
1993.

24.  Los Angeles Times, July 11, 1992, A1.

25.  Lawrence E. Walsh, Iran-Contra: The Final Report, New York: Random
House, 1994, pp. 102-103, 111-121, 128-136, 234, 247, 263, 362, 414..



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