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MKULTRA EXPERIMENTS @ REDSTONE ARSENAL W/ SS OFFICER WERNER VON BRAUN

Such charges have included the agency's recruitment of Nazi scientists and SS

officers; experiments on unwitting American citizens;

There are certain things you aren't meant to say in public in America: that the

government has used assassination down the years as an instrument of national

policy; and that the CIA's complicity with drug-dealing criminal gangs stretches

from the Afghanistan of today back to the year the agency was founded in 1947.

As he himself wrote in 2001, " To this day, no one has ever been able to show me

a single error of fact in anything I've written about this drug ring, which

includes a 600-page book about the whole tragic mess. "

http://www.freepress.org/columns/display/2/2004/1019

 

Gary Webb and the art of the CIA cover-up

December 15, 2004

 

Gary Webb died from a gunshot wound to the head in his home in Sacramento,

California. It appears to have been self-inflicted.

 

Webb was a great reporter out of Indiana, whose best-known work

exposed the CIA's complicity in the import of cocaine into the United States in

the 1980s, during the U.S. onslaught on the Sandinista government of Nicaragua.

His devastating series, " Dark Alliance, " published in the San Jose Mercury News

in 1996, provoked a series of wild attacks in The New York Times, Los Angeles

Times and Washington Post, purporting to demolish Webb and exonerate the agency.

 

There are certain things you aren't meant to say in public in

America: that the government has used assassination down the years as an

instrument of national policy; and that the CIA's complicity with drug-dealing

criminal gangs stretches from the Afghanistan of today back to the year the

agency was founded in 1947. The use of torture used to be a similar no-no, but

that went by the board this year. Webb stepped over that line and paid for it by

undergoing one of the most unfair batterings in the history of the U.S. press.

As he himself wrote in 2001, " To this day, no one has ever been able to show me

a single error of fact in anything I've written about this drug ring, which

includes a 600-page book about the whole tragic mess. "

 

Down the decades the CIA has approached perfection in one particular

art, which we might term the " uncover-up. " This is a process whereby, with all

due delay, the agency first denies with passion, then concedes in profoundly

muffled tones, charges leveled against it. Such charges have included the

agency's recruitment of Nazi scientists and SS officers; experiments on

unwitting American citizens; efforts to assassinate Fidel Castro; alliances with

opium lords in Burma, Thailand and Laos; an assassination program in Vietnam;

complicity in the toppling of Salvador Allende in Chile; the arming of opium

traffickers and religious fanatics in Afghanistan; the training of murderous

police in Guatemala and El Salvador; and involvement in drugs-and-arms shuttles

between Latin America and the United States.

 

The specific techniques of the uncover-up vary from instance to

instance, but the paradigm is constant, Charges are raised against the CIA. The

agency leaks its denials to favored journalists, who hasten to inform the public

that after intense self-examination, the agency has discovered that it has clean

hands. Then, when the hubbub has died down, the agency issues a report in which,

after patient excavation, the resolute reader discovers that, yes, the CIA did

indeed do more or less exactly what it had been accused of. The accusations are

initially referred to in the CIA-friendly press as " unfounded " or " overblown " or

" unconfirmed, " or -- the final twist of the knife -- " an old story. "

 

Faithful to the " uncover-up " paradigm, the CIA passionately denied

the allegations made by investigators, including Gary Webb, about the agency's

alliance with drug-smuggling Contras, its sponsorship and protection of their

activities in running cocaine into the United States. Then came the solemn

pledges of an intense and far-reaching investigation by the CIA's inspector

general. Inspector General Hitz went to work.

 

Then, on Dec. 18, 1997, stories in the Washington Post by Walter

Pincus and in The New York Times by Tim Weiner appeared simultaneously, both

saying the same thing: Inspector General Hitz had finished his investigation. He

had found " no direct or indirect " links between the CIA and the cocaine

traffickers. As both Pincus and Weiner admitted in their stories, neither of the

two journalists had actually seen the report whose conclusions they were

purporting to relay to their readers.

 

The actual report itself, so loudly heralded, received almost no

examination. But those who took the time to examine the 149-page document -- the

first of two volumes -- found Inspector General Hitz making one damning

admission after another. If one were to look for a spectacularly smoking gun, in

the narrower sense of the phrase, the account of Carlos Cabezas, a drug pilot

who was making drug/arms runs between San Francisco and Costa Rica, is a

suitable candidate. The inspector general's report had to confront the fact that

Cabezas told CIA investigators how he had gone to Costa Rica in the spring of

1982 with money for the Contras. There he met with Horacio Pereira and Troilo

Sánchez, who were Contra leaders and also partners with the Contra/drug smuggler

Norwin Meneses. In the company of these two, Cabezas recalled, was a

curly-haired man who said his name was Ivan Gomez. Pereira identified Gomez to

Cabezas as the CIA's " man in Costa Rica. " Cabezas told the inspector general

that Gomez said he was there to " ensure that the profits from the cocaine went

to the Contras and not into someone's pocket. "

 

The second volume of CIA Inspector General Fred Hitz's

investigation, released in the fall of 1998, disclosed that the CIA had

concealed both from Congress and other government agencies its knowledge that

the Contras had from the very beginning decided to smuggle drugs to support its

operations: " In September 1981, as a small group of rebels was being formed from

former soldiers in the National Guard of the deposed Nicaraguan dictator,

Anastasio Somoza Debayle, a CIA informant reported that the leadership of the

fledgling group had decided to smuggle drugs to the United States to support its

operation. "

 

In that single paragraph just quoted we had four momentous

confessions by the CIA's own inspector general. One: The Contras were involved

in drug running from the very start. Two: The CIA knew the Contras were

smuggling drugs into the United States in order to raise money. Three: This was

a decision not made by profiteers on the fringe of the Contras but by the

leadership. Four: The CIA, even before it got a waiver from the Justice

Department, was concealing its knowledge from the Congress and from other U.S.

government agencies such as the DEA and the FBI. Remember also that the Contra

leadership was handpicked by the CIA, both in the form of its civilian head,

Adolfo Calero, and of its military director, Enrique Bermudez.

 

Hitz anticipated his written report in his verbal testimony to

Congress in May 1998, where he acknowledged the agency's knowledge of

Contra/drug links and also disclosed that in 1982, CIA Director William Casey

had gotten a waiver from Reagan's attorney general, William French Smith,

allowing the CIA to keep secret from other government agencies its knowledge of

drug trafficking by its assets, contractors and other Contra figures.

 

The 1982 waiver shows clearly that the Reagan presidency was

foursquare behind the whole strategy of concealment of what the agency was up

to.

 

Alexander Cockburn is coeditor with Jeffrey St. Clair of the

muckraking newsletter CounterPunch. He is also co-author of the new book " Dime's

Worth of Difference: Beyond the Lesser of Two Evils, " available through

www.counterpunch.com. To find out more about Alexander Cockburn and read

features by other columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web

page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2004 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

 

 

Wednesday, December 15, 2004 7:32 PM

[apfn-1] Gary Webb and the art of the CIA cover-up

 

 

http://www.freepress.org/columns/display/2/2004/1019

 

Gary Webb and the art of the CIA cover-up

December 15, 2004

 

Gary Webb died from a gunshot wound to the head in his home in Sacramento,

California. It appears to have been self-inflicted.

 

 

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