from:
http://mega.nu:8080/ampp/
Click Here: <A HREF="http://mega.nu:8080/ampp/">The Architecture of Modern
Political Power</A>
-----
Agency of Fear
Opiates and Political Power in America
By Edward Jay Epstein
Chapter 16 - Bureau of Assassinations


Even in the most enlightened Hollywood films (not to mention Transylvanian
folklore) it is perfectly justifiable to execute vampires summarily-or even
their victims, when they're transformed into vampires-without the benefit of
any legal process, presumably because they embody an evil so easily
transmittable to others and destructive to society that there is no time for
a fair trial. For similar reasons It is generally accepted in more
contemporary dramas for heroin pushers (often cast as updated versions of
Dracula) to be disposed of summarily by extralegal means. In the early
seventies a number of films and television dramas centered around the
execution of pushers by vigilantes reenacting the role of crusaders against
the vampire. For example, in the movie Hit a former CIA agent puts together
an assassination team for the express purpose of murdering a dozen or so
heroin dealers in France, which the film justifies as appropriate action.
The unconventional liquidation of those suspected of participating in the
narcotics business was not limited to films or fiction. When Ingersoll
continued to report that "our enforcement agencies are not getting the top
traffickers," Krogh demanded an explanation. Ingersoll replied that although
his agency was able to identify the top traffickers in foreign nations, the
local police in those countries were unwilling to move against these
wholesale dealers, apparently because they had their protection. The only way
to get immediate results, he suggested defensively, was to assassinate the
traffickers. He assumed, at the time, that such an alternative would be
"completely unthinkable"-at least, that is how he explained it to me two
years later.

Unknown to Ingersoll, the Ad Hoc Committee on Narcotics, also under the aegis
of Egil Krogh, was receiving information that made such an alternative "less
unthinkable." The CIA reported that there were only a handful of kingpin
traffickers in Latin America, who could be eliminated very swiftly. Two new
advisors to Krogh, E. Howard Hunt and G. Gordon Liddy, were also pressing for
unconventional actions. Liddy told William Handley, then our ambassador to
Turkey, that he was for liquidating top traffickers by any means available.
By mid-May, Ingersoll was asked by the White House to prepare a plan for
"clandestine law enforcement"-as if law enforcement could be clandestine.
What Ingersoll suggested was a fund which could be used for various
clandestine activities and "which would be set up along the lines of the
CIA," meaning that only a few Congressmen-the majority and minority members
of the appropriate subcommittees-would know the actual details of the
expenditures of this fund. Ingersoll subsequently explained to me that he
intended to use this fund mainly for "disruptive tactics," such as planting
misinformation among various drug-dealing factions and purposely
misidentifying informants in the hope of inciting some kind of gang warfare.
But at the time, at the White House, at least, assassination was "a very
definite part of the plan," according to Jeffrey Donfeld, who drew up most of
the memoranda concerning the "clandestine law enforcement" program.

The fund also grew in White House planning to assume proportions far beyond
the original plans, according to Ingersoll. A May 27 memorandum for the
president from John Ehrlichman (written by Krogh) noted that one decision the
president would be required to make would concern -$50 million for overseas
operations in the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, for such
clandestine enforcement." Later that week, John Ehrlichman met with President
Nixon. According to Krogh's detailed "Outline of Discussion with the
President on Drugs," the president agreed to "forceful action in [stopping]
international trafficking of heroin at the host country." Specifically, the
memorandum of the meeting noted, "It is anticipated that a material reduction
in the supply of heroin in the U.S. can be accomplished through a $100
million (over three years) fund which can be used for clandestine law
enforcement activities abroad and for which BNDD would not be accountable.
This decisive action is our only hope for destroying or immobilizing the
highest level of drug traffickers." (Emphases added.) Though the word
"assassination" was never used by the president, it is clear from the context
of the "Outline of Discussion" that clandestine operations in the host
country could accomplish the destruction of drug traffickers, who were
assumed to be under the protection of police and politicians abroad. As one
of Krogh's young assistants facetiously explained when I showed him the
outline of the presidential discussion, "one hundred million dollars would
buy a lot of contracts on a lot of major heroin dealers." Ingersoll doubted
that such a "staggering sum" was ever intended to be used for any sort of
narcotics enforcement, but was possibly some sort of clandestine slush fund.
In any case, it was clear that this fund was not meant to be controlled by
the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. (indeed, the $100 million
proposed for unaccountable clandestine activities abroad was more than the
bureau had received in its entire budget in 1970 for overt and legal
law-enforcement activities.) Ehrlichman suggested that an executive order be
issued establishing a "Domestic Council-National Security Council Joint
Action Group" on drugs which, among other things, would "set policies which
relate international considerations to domestic considerations," In the
accompanying decision paper the president tentatively approved the "flexible
law enforcement fund ... for clandestine activities," for which there would
be no accountability. According to Krogh, this would be used for Underworld
contacts and disruptive tactics, with the eventual goal of destroying those
deemed to be heroin traffickers.

Whatever happened to this clandestine fund is not entirely clear. Ingersoll
recalls that the amount appropriated "without accountability" was far less
than the $100 million, three-year program, and was used mainly to buy
informants and information abroad. Egli Krogh recalled in 1973 that after the
secret fund was approved by the president, Ingersoll, who by then had lost
favor with the White House, was no longer trusted to disburse it. Krogh
claimed that the only narcotics assassinations actually carried out were in
Southeast Asia, where the CIA arranged to have various traffickers lured into
traps by their enemies. Krogh's assistants, however, strongly intimated that
a great deal more was done with the program and that it resulted directly in
disrupting the Latin American connection. At the suggestion of Howard Hunt, a
part-time consultant to Krogh on narcotics, Lucien Conein, a CIA colonel of
Corsican origin who had been deeply involved in the coup that resulted in the
assassination of Premier Diem of South Vietnam, was brought into the BNDD as
the head of its strategic intelligence.* That fall, Hunt also approached the
Cuban exile leader Manuel Artimes in Miami and, according to Artimes, asked
him about the possibility of forming a team Of Cuban exile hit men to
assassinate Latin American traffickers still operating outside the bailiwick
of United States law. The idea of assassinations also became quite popularly
applied to the French connection in Marseilles. In September, 1972, for
example, the idea was broached to members of the National Commission on
Marijuana and Drug Abuse during their "heroin trip" through Europe. Dr. J.
Thomas Ungerleider, a member of that commission, reported in a memorandum of
his conversations with BNDD officials:

There was some talk about establishing hit squads (assassination teams), as
they are said to have in a South American country. It was stated that with
150 key assassinations, the entire heroin refining operation can be thrown
into chaos. "Officials" say it is known exactly who is involved in these
operations but can't prove it.

* Ingersoll believed that Conein had access to the files and modus operandi
of Corsicans involved in heroin traffic. At the time he did not suspect that
the White House had placed Conein there for a purpose of its own-although he
considered this a possibility later.
If "150 key assassinations" were actually being considered by the BNDD or
others in the Nixon administration. then the $100 million fund would be more
easily explained. (At the time, Professor Ungerleider and other members of
the commission were being shepherded through Marseilles by BNDD and embassy
officials in what became a regular packaged tour for Congressmen,
journalists, and other VIPs interested in narcotics.)

Meanwhile, back at the BNDD, Colonel Conein was being briefed on
assassination equipment. The now-defunct B. R. Fox Company,  which was then
incorporated in Virginia and which provided such lethal equipment, sent a
salesman to see Colonel Conein and demonstrate a wide range of devices.*
Colonel Conein subsequently denied that any of this equipment was used for
narcotics assassinations, saying, "That stuff is only good a war and who's
got a war?"

* On January 23, 1975, the New York Times printed excerpts from a photostat
of one of the company's spring, 1974, catalogues. Available items included:

Telephone handset insert. Miniature activator with time delay ... use inside
telephone handset. Automatic charge fired at-SEC following lifting of
instrument handpiece.

Cigarette pack-antidisturbance explosive. Electronics and explosive module
packed inside cigarette pack. When the pack is lifted or moved in any manner,
the explosive is set off.

Modified flashlight ... antidisturbance unit. Standard Everready 2D cell
flashlight has antidisturbance electronics concealed inside where batteries
have been removed. Remainder of the batteries have been removed. Remainder of
the battery space is packed with explosive.
Remote-controlled, light-activated sensor. Unit delivers a predetermined
charge from a remote location according to its pre-set code. Use with
explosive for firing upon the occurrence of certain conditions relating to
light intensity.

Booby--trapped, M-16 explosive clip. Use: A mechanically activated electronic
charge circuit is built into a common military item. Upon removal of the
single round in the magazine, either by firing or by hand removal, the
explosive concealed in the magazine is detonated.

Fragmentation ball-anti-disturbance unit. Unit is similar in its operation as
the anti-disturbance flashlight, BRF model FD-2. The exception is in the type
of explosive charge....
Explosive black box modules. . - ' . Flat black finish on metal rectangular
modules. One screw at each end secures top on unit. Top is removed to pack
inside with explosive.

 ** Colonel Conein was used in a character assassination. E. Howard Hunt,
after forging a State Department telegram implicating President Kennedy in
the murder of Diem, showed the forged document to Conein, who then appeared
on an NBC documentary and divulged its contents. (Hunt also briefed the
producer of the program, Fred Freed, on the secret telegram, which shaped the
program in such a way as to imply Kennedy's complicity in the murder.)

 However, in an interview with the Washington Post on June 13, 1976, Conein
acknowledged that he had been brought to the Bureau of Narcotics and
Dangerous Drugs to superintend a special unit which would have the capacity
to assassinate selected targets in the narcotics business.


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

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

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to