http://www.onlinejournal.com/Special_Reports/Dowbenko051601/dowbenko051601.htm
l




Drug czar's dirty secret: John Walters and the Iran-Contra drug connection


By Uri Dowbenko
 

May 16, 2001—John P. Walters, appointed "Drug Czar" by President George Bush
Jr., is uniquely qualified for his new job. He was actually involved in the
Iran-Contra Drug Trafficking Cover-up.


In a recent interview, whistle-blower Al Martin, who testified before the
congressional Kerry Committee and the Alexander Committee about Iran-Contra,
stated that "when Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams went to Panama
to have a meeting with [former Panamanian ruler] Noriega, he took along
Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, Michael Kozak, and John Walters, who at
that time had been appointed special advisor to the State Department's Office
of Inter-American Affairs."


Martin says, "They went down to smooth things over with Noriega, who was
complaining that he wasn't getting a big enough piece of the pie for allowing
Panama to be used as a trans-shipping point for drugs and weapons. We were
complaining that he wasn't keeping up his end of the bargain, making
facilities secure for the storage of drugs and weapons. His G-2 was pilfering
a lot of materiel. Meanwhile Noriega was complaining that he wasn't getting a
big enough slice of the pie."
 

"This came soon after Oliver North had ripped Noriega off for $5 million
dollars in that boat deal with Donald Aronow [See Chapter 18 of "The
Conspirators" by Al Martin]. He was still upset about Ollie taking his money.
So the three of them went down to have a discussion. They met at the
Intercontinental Hotel in Panama on December 10 to smooth things out."


 "Noriega was promised a bigger cut of the pie, when he said he wasn't making
enough money," Martin continues. "He claimed there were a lot of people on
his end within G-2 that had to be paid. Abrams tried to tell him that
everybody was not getting the cut they had. The price of cocaine was falling
so rapidly because we were importing so much of the stuff. Consequently the
whole pie had become smaller than before. And that's what John Walters was
all about. Now he's appointed 'drug czar,' which is not only ironic, it's
absolutely laughable."


 "When he went down to meet with Noriega, John Walters was the 'special
advisor.' His father Vernon Walters got him the position. His father is very,
very loyal to the Bush Cabal and had been for years. You don't see Vern much
anymore. Vernon Walters was one of the original post-war Military-Industrial
Complexers."


A little family history—the father of John Walters is US Army Lieutenant
General Vernon A. Walters, the deputy director of the CIA from 1972 to 1976
during the Nixon administration.


When the Watergate scandal erupted, Walters was very adept at covering the
CIA's liabilities. After all, Agency fingerprints were all over the Watergate
burglary, and the prime players—the Cubans, Hunt and McCord—were all CIA
agents or assets. Later, according to "Silent Coup" author Len Colodny, his
old friend General Alexander Haig was instrumental in getting Walters the job
of translator for the secret Paris talks between Henry Kissinger and the
North Vietnamese. Walters was also the acting Director of Central
Intelligence in 1973 (between James Schlesinger's and William Colby's
directorship). Later Vernon Walters was appointed Ambassador-at-Large by
President Reagan.


In his book "The Conspirators," Al Martin describes the real reason why the
price of cocaine kept falling in the mid 1980s. In a chapter called
"Classified Illegal Operations Cordoba and Screw Worm," he describes how
Oliver North planned to distribute "more cocaine into the United States than
ever imagined before. 'Operation Screw Worm' was the last and the largest. It
envisioned a tremendous expansion of 'authorized' narcotics trafficking."


Martin writes, "North had set up the time in May 1986 of the first biweekly
policy and planning session of the FDN and this absolutely astounded me. Fred
Ikley was there. Donald Gregg himself was there. The usual cast of
characters, Manuel Diaz, Nestor Sanchez."


 "North envisioned an increase of 50,000 kilograms a month which absolutely
astounded me," Martin continues.


 "Jeb Bush [the current governor of Florida], I think, correctly voiced
concerns that had already come into play that the Agency [CIA] was dealing in
so much cocaine that its street value was becoming depressed. This had
already happened. In 1985, cocaine was commanding $30,000 per kilogram. By
1986, it had dropped to $15,000 per kilogram and was continuing to drop."


 "But North felt it was important to raise the revenues, so there was going
to be a tremendous increase in importation," writes Martin. (P.65, "The
Conspirators" by Al Martin; 2001; $14.95; National Liberty Press LLC; Order
Line: 877–776–9004; Website: Al Martin Raw http://www.almartinraw.com)


The appointment of John P. Walters as head of the White House Office of
National Drug Control Policy makes him the perfect "Drug Czar." His previous
job was Deputy Director for Supply Reduction, the No.2 position under William
Bennett in George Bush Sr.'s administration.


According to the Washington Post, "Walters stresses the importance of
criminal penalties for drug users and openly opposes the use of marijuana for
medical purposes."


What makes Walters uniquely qualified, however, is his intimate knowledge of
how to cover up US Government drug trafficking. And, of course, he has vowed
to continue the pretense of the Phony War on Drugs.


And here's the context. According to the Department of Justice, there is $500
billion to $1 trillion of money laundering a year in the United States.
Financing the federal deficit and keeping the stock market buoyed actually
depends on the daily reinvestment of laundered monies. A large percentage of
that depends on the cash flow from the high-margin profits of narcotics
trafficking, government contract fraud, the burgeoning for-profit prison
industry and its concomitant slave labor market—all key components of the
Phony War on Drugs."


With his "hands-on experience" in Iran-Contra drug trafficking, the
appointment of John Walters as George Bush's new "drug czar" is a fitting
crown for a man who knows what it takes to keep the flow of drugs moving into
the country—and the necessary cash flow moving through Wall Street.


By the way, the AP story is ironically headlined—"Bush's choice for drug czar
vows to help addicts." (May 11, 2001)
Who knows? Maybe John Walters will make the price of cocaine drop again.




Reply via email to