Authors: John Prados
8
. White House, Memorandum, Brent ScowcroftâGerald R. Ford, “Award of the National Security Medal to Lieutenant General Vernon A. Walters,” June 8, 1976, Gerald R. Ford Library, Ford Papers, White House Central Files, Agency Files, box 20, folder “FG 6-2: CIA, 6/1/76â1/20/77.”
9
. CIA, Morning Staff Meeting Notes, June 19, 1972,
Family Jewels Documents
, p. 296.
10
. CIA, Morning Staff Meeting Notes, June 20, 1972,
Family Jewels Documents
, p. 296.
11
. During the Watergate investigations it would be disputed by some whether White House domestic affairs counsel John D. Ehrlich man had actually telephoned Cushman on cooperation with Hunt. It is worth noting that Cushman's reason for mentioning Hunt at the CIA director's staff meeting was to report his phone conversation with Ehrlichman (
Family Jewels Documents
, 286).
12
. Senate Watergate Committee, Senator Howard Baker,
“Minority Report on CIA Involvement,” reprinted in
The Senate Watergate Report
(New York: Dell Books, 1974), 752â755.
13
. Cord Meyer,
Facing Reality: From World Federalism to the CIA
(New York: Harper & Row, 1980), 150.
14
. William E. Colby with Peter Forbath,
Honorable Men: My Life in the CIA
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1978), quoted p. 321.
15
. Robert M. Hathaway and Russell Jack Smith,
Richard Helms as Director of Central Intelligence, 1966â1973
(CIA: Center for the Study of Intelligence/History Staff, 1993; declassified July 2006), 187.
16
. Ronald Reagan, “Remarks on Signing the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986,” November 6, 1986,
Public Papers of the President: Ronald Reagan 1986
, vol. 2, 1521â1522.
17
. Ronald Reagan, “Remarks and an Informal Exchange with Reporters Prior to a Meeting with David Jacobsen,” November 7, 1986,
Public Papers of the President: Ronald Reagan 1986
, vol. 2, 1533â1534. Also see Peter Kornbluh and Malcolm Byrne, eds.,
The Iran-Contra Scandal: The Declassified History
(New York: New Press, 1993), 305, which quotes presidential press secretary Ari Fleischer as commenting that Reagan knew all these statements were false at the time.
18
. Ronald Reagan Diary, entries for November 7, 8/9, 10, 11, and 12, 1986, in Douglas Brinkley, ed.,
The Reagan Diaries: Unabridged
(New York: HarperCollins, 2009), vol. 2, 655â657.
19
. Reagan Diary, November 13, 1986, vol. 2, 657.
20
. Ronald Reagan, “Address to the Nation on Iran Arms,” November 13, 1986,
Public Papers of the President
(
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=36728
[accessed January 20, 2013]). The president's citation of “boatloads” of weapons was actually a veiled reference to the “Danish sailor” reported in his diary. Actually the comment
was
correct, but from the Danish seamen's union, not a sailor, except that the ship had carried weapons to Central America. A second shipment had been en route in October when diverted to a U.S. port because statutes had changed to make it legal for the U.S. military to accept weapons for onward shipment to the
contras
. And on the day of Reagan's speech, the Panamanian-flagged ship
Angelique
departed Setubal, Portugal, for Iran with a shipment of weapons. This was apparently part of an ongoing program of Portuguese arms sales to Iran, not Reagan's Iran-Contra initiative. The Danish sailor would come up again at President Reagan's news conference on November 19.
21
. Ronald Reagan Diary, November 17 and 19, 1986, in Brinkley,
Reagan Diaries
, vol. 2, 658, 659.
22
. Theodore Draper,
A Very Thin Line: The Iran-Contra Affairs
(New York: Hill & Wang, 1991), 482.
23
. Ronald Reagan, “The President's News Conference,” November 19, 1986; and “Statement on the Iran Arms and Contra Aid Controversy,” November 19, 1986, in
Public Papers of the President
(respectively,
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=36748
and
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=36749
[accessed January 20, 2013]).
24
. CIA, Letter, William J. CaseyâRonald Reagan, November 23, 1986, in Lawrence E. Walsh, et al.,
Final Report of the Independent Counsel for Iran/Contra Matters: Investigations and Prosecutions
(United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, August 4, 1993), quoted vol. 1, 215.
25
. Robert M. Gates,
From the Shadows: The Ultimate Insider's Story of Five Presidents and How They Won the Cold War
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996), 402â403. It follows from this, Gates argues, that the notion Casey was running an “Enterprise” with the private benefactors in Central America is incorrect. My view is that the off-the-shelf covert operation was quite real. Unlike for the diversion, there is a huge weight of evidence from North's notebooks, guarded channel CIA (KL-43) communications traffic, and testimony from Iran-Contra figures that Bill Casey was moving pieces around the Central American chessboard in exactly the manner of an active operation.
26
. James McCullough, “Coping with Iran-Contra: Personal Reflections on Bill Casey's Last Month at CIA,”
Studies in Intelligence
, Summer 1995, pp. 27â44.
27
. Gates,
From the Shadows
, 410.
28
. Ibid., 315, 394â395, quoted on 400â401.
29
. David Gries, “Coping with Iran-Contra: Commentary,”
Studies in Intelligence
, Summer 1996,
https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/96unclass/gries.htm
(accessed January 13, 2013).
30
. Lawrence E. Walsh,
Firewall: The Iran-Contra Conspiracy and Cover-up
(New York: W. W. Norton, 1997), 50.
31
. Oliver North,
Taking the Stand: The Testimony of Lieutenant Colonel Oliver L. North
(New York: Pocket Books, 1987), 507.
32
. Ronald Reagan Diary, August 8, 1987, in Brinkley,
Reagan Diaries
, vol. 2, 762.
33
. Draper,
A Very Thin Line
, 24â25.
34
. Dick Cheney with Liz Cheney,
In My Time: A Personal and Political Memoir
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 2011), 143.
35
. United States Congress (100th Cong., 1st sess.),
Report of the Congressional Committees Investigating the Iran-Contra Affair
(Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1987), 437.
36
. Mark Mazzetti, “CIA Destroyed Tapes of Interrogations,”
New York Times
, December 6, 2007, A1.
37
. George W. Bush,
Decision Points
(New York: Crown Books, 2010), 180.
CHAPTER 10. CLARITY
1
. Harry Howe Ransom,
Can American Democracy Survive Cold War?
(New York: Doubleday & Company, 1963). The citation that follows is to the Anchor Press edition, which appeared in 1964.
2
. Ibid., 166.
INDEX
Abernathy, Thomas,
70
Abrams, Elliott,
308
Abu Ghraib,
152
Abzug, Bella,
50
,
75
,
95â96
,
278
academic conferences, videotapes of,
60
accountability,
332â333
Achille Lauro
,
129
ACLU,
239
“actionable intelligence,”
128
Adams, Sam,
209
Addington, David S.,
103â105
,
152
,
310
,
314
Adkins, Jim,
155
AE/Foxtrot,
114
.
See also
Nosenko, Yuri
Afghanistan: Carter administration covert operations in,
217â218
; covert operations in,
176
; detainee beaten to death,
148
; NSA watch on,
99
; use of drones in,
142
,
178â179
,
181
; U.S. invasion of,
128
,
182
,
268â269
“AfPak” strategy,
184
,
186â187
Agee, Philip: CIA career of,
240â241
; CIA smear campaign against,
248â250
; CIA surveillance of,
51â52
,
243â244
; as critic or villain,
241â242
,
245â247
; donated papers of,
232
; letter in
Marcha
,
243
; passport revoked,
250
; publication of
Inside the Company
,
248â249
; research in Mexico, Cuba, Paris,
242â243
al-Awlaki, Abdulrahman,
187
al-Awlaki, Anwar,
187
Albee, Edward,
75
Alfred A. Knopf,
239
al-Harethi, Qaed Salim Sinan,
182
Allen, Lew,
87â88
,
92
,
94â95
,
278
,
346n31
Allen, Robert S.,
194â195
Allende, Salvador,
170
,
238
,
243
,
327
“Allen-Scott Report,”
195
al-Libi, Ibn al-Shaykh,
131
,
148â149
allies, complicity of U.S.,
317
al-Nashiri, Abd el-Rahim,
143â145
Alpirez, Julio Roberto,
123â125
,
349n16
al Qaeda,
127â128
; 1990s intelligence on,
132
; 2001 roundup of suspected members,
127â128
; Abdulrahman al-Awlaki,
187
; Anwar al-Awlaki,
187
; capture and rendition of al-Libi,
131â132
; escape from Tora Bora,
128
; hunt for bin Laden,
178â179
,
185â186
; Khalid Sheik Mohammed,
134
,
146
; misidentification of CIA operatives as,
181
; NSA watch
on Afghanistan,
99
; Predator drone attacks on,
142
,
181â182
,
185â188
; Saddam Hussein alleged links to,
311
; state of U.S. intelligence on,
132â133
.
See also
Zubaydah, Abu
Al-Shiraa
magazine,
294
American Friends Service Committee/Quakers,
60
,
75
Anderson, Jack,
210â214
The Anderson Papers
,
211
Angleton, James: discussion with Associated Press,
11
; distancing himself from Project Chaos,
41
; and Golitsyn,
114â115
; named in Hersh story,
25
; and Nosenko case,
117
,
119â120
; picking Ober to run Project Chaos,
40
; and Project Lingual,
68
,
73
,
74â77
.
See also
Counterintelligence Staff, CIA
Angola,
216
antiwar protests,
37
,
47â48
,
50
,
84
APEX contracts,
255â256
Applewhite, Edmund,
200â201
Arar, Maher,
148
“armed reconnaissance,”
178
.
See also
drone warfare
Army intelligence, U.S.,
46
,
60
,
84
arrest powers,
119
Ashcroft, John,
105â106
,
135â136
,
147
assassinations: Belin investigation into,
162â166
; Castro,
159
,
165â166
,
168â170
,
220
; Church Committee findings on,
166â173
; executive orders prohibiting,
174â175
; Ford's slip on,
160â165
,
216
,
325
; Kennedy Assassination Records Review Board,
79
,
169
,
229â231
; not included in Family Jewels compilation,
19
; Trujillo,
165
,
171
Associated Press (AP),
10â11
Association of Former Intelligence Officers,
223
Athens News
,
222
Athens Olympics,
150â151
attitude of superiority,
3â4
Awlaki, Abdulrahman al-,
187
Awlaki, Anwar al-,
187
Baer, Robert,
264
Bagley, Tennent H. (“Pete”),
115
,
117â119
,
136
,
348n6
,
349n13
Bamaca Velasquez, Efrain,
123â125
Bamford, James,
231â232
Barnes, Tracy,
198
The Bay of Pigs
(Johnson),
204
Bay of Pigs invasion,
22
,
169
,
197
,
203
,
220
Beacon Press,
209
Bearden, Milt,
264â265
Beecher, William,
214
Belenko, Viktor,
226