.* OPINIoN Sage 4 Monday, October 9,1989 The Michigan Daily Inside the CIA: guns for drugs a John Stockwell is an ex-Marine and former Central Intelligence Agency field case of- ficer. In his thirteen years with the agency, he served in the Congo, Vietnam, and was the director of the secret war in Angola. The University Activities Committee will sponsor a talk by Stockwell on Tuesday, "October 10 at 8:00 pm in the Union Ballroom. Tickets are $3.00 and are available at 'the Union ticket office. The following comments were taken from an interview with David Barsamian. Transcripts and cassette copies of the entire 1814 Spruce, Boulder CO, 80302. interview are available from Barsamian, "Clearly we have a guy who's working for us who has access to our vehicles to use them to smuggle heroin into Saigon," and I proposed that we do a thorough investi- gation and have him arrested. My boss took me for a ride and said, "John, you don't want to do that." I said, "Wait minute. My office is being used to smug- gle heroin and I'm not supposed to no- tice?" His explanation was, "Well, you don't know that there was heroin in that jeep." "I'm sure there was, and we can in- vestigate and prove it." "Well, you're not a policeman [sic] in this country. You have no license. You have no charter. You have no authority to do any investigation. happens to be the general who's a friend of the Vice President back in the United States, so that's his dirty laundry, just leave it at that and don't ask questions." There are pilots who have testified to flying guns to Central America and com- ing back to the United States with plane- loads of drugs. One of them said, extraor- dinarily enough, that he landed at Home- stead Air Force Base in Florida. Gary Betzner is the pilot. This is all doc- umented by Leslie Cockburn and Peter Dale Scott [in the books Out of Control and The Iran/Contra Connection]. Not only did he testify about this planeload and how much money he got for it, but -1 - J 'You mentioned stories linking the agency with drug smuggling. Why would the agency risk disgrace by being linked with drugs? It just doesn't track. It does track but you have to analyze it a bit. It goes back before the 1960s. The OSS [Office of Strategic Services], the 'agency's predecessor in World War II, got "Lucky Luciano out of prison and set him ip in Italy to reactivate the Mafia and run 4ctivities into France against the Germans. The network they established evolved into the French connection, the pipeline of her- ein into the United States. The Southeast kAsia connection is thoroughly documented now. There at at least a half a dozen solid ,books out, including some by Air "America pilots. The CIA had the Civil Air 'Transport, which became Air America, which was the world's largest airline at one point flying arms for the Kuomintang from Nationalist China and Taiwan into Communist China from the islands of Quemoy and Matsu, flying arms in and then flying back from Thailand and Burma with heroin. The French have this historic tradition of dealing drugs, dating back to colonial times when they built heroin factories in Saigon and gave the villagers quotas of opium they had to smuggle. By the post- war 1950s the French intelligence service overlapped the Corsican Mafia. They were 4flying in their pacification war Laos, up- *country in Vietnam, and in North Viet- namese. They had their little airports and their planes. They were flying in arms and flying out heroin, and of course the Mafia was taking the heroin. The U.S. stepped in to replace the French after the battle of Dien Bien Phu and used its Air America planes flying into the same airstrips to keep the flow of arms and heroin going. They even put into Laos an agricultural adviser to teach the people how to grow the grass more effectively. This is mass- ive, it went on a long time, and eventually it stimulated the creation of the Golden Triangle, a major source of heroin in the world for a long time. Take my own case, to make the exam- ple crystal clear. In 1973 and 1974 I'm as- signed upcountry in Tay Ninh in Vietnam. This is definitely on one of the pipelines of heroin flowing from the mountains right through my province. Everyone knew it. Opium houses were illegal but nobody enforced the law. ARVN [South Vietnam's army] generals were known to patronize these houses. If you wanted you could easily buy the stuff on the streets in Bangkok. One day I caught my office manager racing from Tay Ninh to Saigon in my jeep. He didn't have permission to take the jeep. I flagged him down. He roared past. I tried to chase him and he outran me. He was about to crash he was so desperate to get away. I did a little in- vestigation and found he was a wealthy man who did not need our little salary and that he took trips to Saigon regularly with our jeeps when no one was looking. So I went and reported to my boss. I said, 'There are pilots who have testified to flying guns to Central America and coming back to the United States with planeloads of drugs. One of them said, extraordinarily enough, that he landed at Homestead Air Force Base in Florida.' commanders. So early on they seized into this thing, with Noriega providing air strips in Panama from which the cocaine and marijuana could be loaded to fly it into the United States. When that became too flagrant they switched to the Enterprise and the Contras. So what happened was that the guards at the base at Homestead had been ordered not to mess with the trucks leaving from these airplanes. And at the other Air National Guard bases across the United States we have testimony before the committees and reported by the major media about DEA officers who would begin to pursue hot leads of Contras who were caught with co- caine in the United States and when the district attorneys tried to prosecute 'they would get a call and be told this is na- tional security, stay out of it. Or there would be pilots they would try to inter- cept, and they would be told here's a phone number, you'd better call it and it was a number at the White House, Ollie North interceding. We have Robert Owen's memos from Costa Rica, warning North that his planes were being used to fly drugs back into the United States. We have published, certified stories that the U.S. attorney in Florida, t1ying to break a big case, was ordered by Ed Meese not to investigate because it was national secu- rity. We have Senator Kerry's outraged statement saying that national security card never be used to cover for drug smuggling. The DEA [Drug Enforcement Authority] is here to look over the shoulder of the Vietnamese. It's their business." "I said, "So bring them in." He said, "No we wouldn't want to do that because the Vietnamese authorities don't want us in- volved at that level in their activities, therefore it wouldn't be appropriate for us to get involved." He said, "You've been sent over here and given a diplomatic passport and given this assignment to gather information about the Communists and that's all you're here for. The Viet- namese have agreed to this. Your govern- ment has sent you here for this purpose. There is nothing else for you to be doing here. Forget the drug issue." I said, "I can- not forget the fact that people are using my vehicles to smuggle drugs." He said, "Just put it out of your mind." I had a choice: I could resign and leave the country and give up my career and pay- checks and miss my child support pay- ments, or I could put crimps in the office manager's style. I passed the word that he was never to borrow a jeep without my express permission and I said we wouldn't give him a jeep for more than a 30-minute period to go buy material when he needed to. And it is similar for pilots flying for. Air America. They land and tell the boss, "Hey, that guy getting off the plane has got two suitcases full of heroin." The boss would give him the pat answer: "Wait a minute, you're hired to fly a plane. You're not a cop. You don't have the authority to arrest him. In addition to which, that guy Cockburn confirmed that there was a plane parked that night with the tail number of Betzner's discription. Planes were flying arms from Home- stead and international bases down into Central America on an almost daily basis, and then coming back empty. The Me- dellin people are sitting down there with endless pressure to find new ways to get their supplies into the United States and here are these empty planes flown by a- moral mercenaries and amoral Contra Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. C, No. 23 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Columbus Day: Nothing to celebrate "The Nicaraguans can't possibly know who we are... we're wearing civilian clothes, and we've specially modified our helicopter!" Life in the Occupied Territories: Resisting Israeli TODAY IS Columbus Day. It is a fed- eral holiday. The Post Office will be closed. Banks will be closed. Flags will be hung. Students in elementary schools will perform skits and draw pictures recreating Columbus' discov- ery of America. Because that is what this holiday is for - to celebrate the man who successfully crossed the stormy seas to discover the New World, the empty expanse of land on which this nation grew and prospered. That, anyway, is what most children in the United States are taught in school; that is the myth perpetuated by the history books and the media. But while schoolchildren are learning about the braxe adventures of the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria, some cru- cial facts are omitted from the story. Columbus did not discover America. In 1492,100 million Native Americans were living in the "New World." The supposedly unsettled, vast expanse contained a greater population than all of Western Europe. (J.Sakai, Settlers, p.6). This, however, did not phase Columbus. Upon meeting the Arawak Indians, who presented him and his sailors with food and gifts, he wrote in . his log, "They do not bear arms and do not know them... They would make fine servants... With fifty men we could subjugate them all and make them do whatever we want." (Howard Zinn, A People's History of the United States, p.1). Intent on navin back those who had Those who did not bring in the quota he demanded were punished by having their hands cut off and bleeding to death. (Zinn, p.4). Much of the information about Columbus comes from Bartolemd de las Casas, a priest who settled on the islands and who transcribed Colum- bus' journal. In his book, History of the Indies, Las Casas offers his own opinion of Columbus' deeds and the example he set for the colonists who followed him. "Endless testimon- ies...prove the mild and pacific temper- ament of the natives... But our work was to exasperate, ravage, kill, mangle and destroy; small wonder, then, if they tried to kill one of us now and then... The admiral [Columbus], it is true, was blind as those who came after him, and he was so anxious to please the King that he committed irreparable crimes against the Indians..." (Zinn, p.6). In two years after Columbus landed, half of the 250,000 Native Americans on the island had been killed. 50,000 were left in 1515. In 1650 all of the original Arawaks and their descendents were dead. By the end of the 17th century, Spanish colonists following. in Colombus' grand tradition of system- atic genocide had slaughtered enough Native Americans in their colonies to reduce the population from 10 million to 4 million. And by 1900, of the 10 million Native Americans that had once inhabited North America, only 200,000-300,000 descendents sur- vived. (Sakai, p.7). by the PSC Delegation to the Occupied Territories In June of this year all the pharmacies in the West Bank town of Beit Sahour were raided by the Israeli army and all the medicines were confiscated. The confisca- tion took place because everybody in Beit Sahour refused to pay taxes to the occupa- tion authorities. Today, this town does not have adequate access to the necessary medicines. Elias Rishmawi, one of the af- fected pharmacists, explains what hap- pened. Delegation: Why did you stop paying taxes and what happened subsequently? "Well, I stopped paying taxes in January 1988, as everybody did, responding to a call from the Unified leadership. "I should add something important that you should know. Taxation is something legal in most countries. People usually pay taxes to their legally elected govern- ments, and these taxes are spent on ser- vices and the welfare of the people. Now, consider what we have here in Palestine; we have occupation authorities that are not legally elected and they are using taxes to cover the expenses of the occupation. The services that we are getting are really un- believable: more killing, more prisoners, more house demolitions, and the closure of our academic institutions for the last two years - they opened the primary and secondary schools in the last couple of weeks, yes, but they already are starting to close some schools and the rest will, I be- lieve, be closed very shortly. These are the "services" we receive. I don't think that anyone can justify paying taxes for those services. "The cost of water is another example. In the West Bank we pay about $1.00/m3, the [Jewish] settlement five kilometers east of Beit Sahour pays less than $0.50/m3, and Israelis in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv pay about $0.60/m3. You should also know that the Israelis use more than 94% of the water reserves of the West Bank - transferring it to the settle- ments and to Israel - leaving for the West Bank population only 6% of our wa- ter resources for which we pay double the price that they pay. This, as a symbol, is what occupation means. "To continue with the story, last Nanmher the fnnr nhnrmnitc ofRenot taxation with all these documents the judge said that we would have to go to prison for ten 4 days or pay a $2,500 bail and submit the reports to the tax authorities. We immedi- ately refused, and were placed in jail. "According to the law we should have been placed in a West Bank jail, but in- stead they placed us in a Israeli jail in cells among Israeli drug addicts. We were kept there for nine days and then taken again in front of the military judge to determine if we'd go back to prison or to interrogation It was very clear to us the interest of the tax people was not to interrogate us, but rather to keep us in jail in order to impose pressure on us to pay the taxes. The judge admitted this in his verdict because none of us had been interrogated during our stay in prison. Nevertheless, the judge gave us the option to go to jail for another 18 days or to pay a $750 bail. This time he was more clever than the previous time be- cause he did not connect the bail to the4 payment of taxes. After deliberating with our lawyers we were satisfied that the bail was not connected with a condition to pay taxes, but that it was a guarantee for us to reappear in court. The bail was paid by an Israeli friend of mine who was disgusted by the court proceedings. "During the next three months the four of us were subjected to many long interro- gations, but we refused to cooperate in anyd way. Then they declared that they would confiscate our property. We appealed to the High Court in Israel, and on June 22, 1989 the High Court gave the verdict that the tax authorities had no right to confis- cate anything unless they gave us 10 days advance notice. Imagine what happened, four days after the verdict, about 70 sol- diers came to my pharmacy backing ten tax collectors. They confiscated every- thing, that is, medicines, laboratory sup-4 nlies chemicals hv fond hh nrndnrti