-Caveat Lector-

THE POWs, THE CIA & DRUGS - UGLIER TRUTHS BEHIND THE
SARIN GAS STORIES
by Michael C. Ruppert © 7/23/98
http://www.sightings.com/political/sarincia.htm

© COPYRIGHT 1998 Michael C. Ruppert. ALL RIGHTS
RESERVED. Permission to reprint or excerpt only if the
following appears: "Reprinted by permission, Michael
C. Ruppert & From The Wilderness at www.copvcia.com."

Did the CIA order the use of Sarin gas to kill
American defectors in Southeast Asia? The answer to
that question opens a black hole of ugly truths about
U.S. foreign policy and covert operations. Those
truths all lead to a central reality, which is that
covert and paramilitary operations, as conducted by
the U.S. Government, do not exist without drug
trafficking. Equally tragic is the fact that drugs are
a main reason why POWs didn't come home. The irony on
the tragedy is that drugs were also used to fund
several sabotaged covert missions to rescue them.

The recent CNN reports on Operation Tailwind
(referenced in the last issue of From The Wilderness),
their retraction and the object lessons made of CNN
Producer April Oliver and Peter Arnett point to much
uglier and deeper truths about CIA covert operations
than the fact that CIA used nerve gas to kill
defectors and deserters in Southeast Asia. As From The
Wilderness will show, there is a high probability that
Sarin gas was used not only against defectors, but
also against unwilling prisoners of war whom the
government had decided would be a major embarrassment
if they came home alive. Testimony and evidence exists
to show that Sarin was in Laos at the time and that it
was used at or near known POW camps in Laos. If true,
those facts would shed a whole new light on the CNN
stories.

Those stories, flawed in their presentation, not only
hinted at an ongoing feud between elements of the Navy
and CIA, but came dangerously close to far more
devastating truths about the CIA's involvement in the
abandonment and murder of US servicemen left behind
after Vietnam. Those truths undeniably lead back to
the drug trade, the Central Intelligence Agency and
the covert operatives who have destroyed American
democracy.

How does one tie the convoluted pieces together in a
coherent manner? And, doing that, how does one stomach
wanton betrayal of loyal Americans and values which
are the foundation of any government's legitimacy? A
government derives its right to exist from its mandate
to protect its own people, especially those who risk
life to serve it. What legitimacy then, does a
government have which betrays and then sentences to
death those who stood in the font lines of its
exercise of power?

First, let's address the issue of whether or not CIA,
MACV-SOG and elements in the Pentagon wanted POW's
dead or, at minimum, to ensure that they never came
home?

Many of the ugliest truths about deliberate U.S.
abandonment or ordered extermination of POWs are
extremely well documented in Monika Jensen-Stevenson's
1990 bestseller, Kiss The Boys Goodbye (Dutton).
Stevenson, a former Emmy award winning Producer for
CBS News' 60 Minutes, produced mountains of eyewitness
statements, documents, and even admissions from Ronald
Reagan and other White House officials as well as from
intelligence experts in the Pentagon and the National
Security Council showing that: the U.S. knowingly left
POWs behind in Southeast Asia in 1973; the U.S.
government sabotaged at least a half dozen rescue
attempts with high probabilities for success; and
that, the U.S. government ordered covert operatives to
"liquidate" live POWs if sighted.

On Pages 318-323, Stevenson described a failed 1981
POW rescue mission involving the perennial "covert
source" (and often hard to fathom) Scott Barnes who
wrote a book about the mission entitled BOHICA (Bend
Over Here It Comes Again). After passing polygraph and
truth serum exams Barnes recounted how he had been
issued atropine (nerve gas antidote) injectors as a
prelude to entering areas in Laos where POW camps were
known to exist. He also states that, once in the
region, he was ordered to "liquidate the merchandise."
"Merchandise" was the code word for POWs. (NOTE:
Atropine was issued to U.S. troops in the Persian Gulf
war to counter anticipated Sarin attacks by Iraq).

If Barnes' statement was not enough, his return from
the mission was immediately followed by the alleged
violent suicide of Army chemical warfare and Sarin gas
expert General Bobby Robinson. Local police doubted
the suicide findings of the military.

What's more, Robinson was known to have been involved
in moving Sarin supplies into the region at the time.
Stevenson confirmed this. Sources postulated a cover
story to Stevenson that Robinson had been planting
Sarin gas to blame the Soviets for its use and thus
motivate Congress to increase chemical warfare
budgets. Such operations are not unusual in covert
operations and are hardly grounds for a suicide. As
one source put it to me. "It's much more likely that
Robinson could have exposed the use of his Sarin to
kill Americans and he had to be killed - especially if
he found out what his precious chemical agents were
used for."

Several covert warfare veterans have told me that they
absolutely believe that Sarin was used under CIA
orders against U.S. personnel using deep cover
operatives planted in the "Studies and Observation
Group" which had reverted to Pentagon control after a
1968 turf battle.

The turf battle may have put SOG back under nominal
Pentagon control but it did not stop members of the
shadow government and CIA from infiltrating to protect
the deepest of dirty secrets. The OSS faction in CIA
has no trouble "sheep dipping" people into the
Pentagon or any other U.S. Government agency.

Much of the CNN story fell because the Pentagon found
no records of Sarin use. Experts like Special Forces
Captain John McCarthy, who ran covert ops for CIA
while in Special Forces, were quick to point out that
the records would all be at Langley and not at the
DoD. A CNN electronic bulletin board with more than
2,500 angry responses from veterans pointing out flaws
in the retractions was suddenly removed on July 16.

The can of worms was getting legs that wouldn't go
away. It was starting to walk off into cyberspace.

How big was the POW problem? Informed sources place
the number of American POW's not returned, in spite of
Henry Kissinger's outright lies to the contrary, at
near 2,500. Add to that the large number of defectors
and deserters remaining in the region and the way
these men sometimes became intermingled and we see the
first part of the reasons for betrayal. McCarthy told
>From The Wilderness that in 1968 there were known to
be some 3,000 deserters living in the Saigon suburb of
Cholon alone. Estimates for the whole of Southeast
Asia, including Thailand and Laos rose as high as
8,000 according to other sources. Numbers that high
would again have brought the legitimacy of the
government, and the military into question.

With the signing of the Paris Peace Accords Richard
Nixon, in a secret agreement, promised the Vietnamese
government some $4 billion in aid to guarantee the
return of POW's left behind. This was after
Kissinger's announcement that there were no more POW's
left in Asia. With Watergate and the collapse of the
Nixon Administration the money was never exchanged and
the POW's went from desperate cause to a major
potential embarrassment. So goes the cover story.

The best way to explain the connection with drug
trafficking is to show the correlation in people and
organizations between the two issues.

The names of some of those who have been connected to
CIA drug trafficking by a multitude of sources are:
Ted Shackley (CIA Station Chief in Laos and later
Saigon), Tom Clines (Shackley's deputy), Richard
Secord (Air Force/CIA liaison to Shackley after flying
many missions as a fighter pilot), General Heinie
Aderholt (Chief Air Operations strategist for CIA's
undeclared war in Laos), Richard Armitage (former Navy
officer and covert operations specialist charged with
removing key materiel from Vietnam in 1975), Erich von
Marbod (Defense Department), John Singlaub, William
Casey, William Colby and Oliver North. Other key
figures who turn up throwing monkey wrenches into POW
rescue efforts who have not been connected to drugs
but who turn up in key positions during Iran-Contra or
the Bush Administration are Richard Allen (Reagan
National Security Adviser who helped write the Paris
Peace Accords), Colin Powell (Joint Chiefs Chairman
and National Security Adviser to George Bush) and Col.
Richard Childress, a National Security Council staffer
under Ronald Reagan.

Key institutions connected to CIA drug trafficking
include the Nugan-Hand bank, Hawaii investment firm
BBRDW (Bishop, Baldwin, Rewald, Dilingham and Wong)
and last but not least, the CIA itself.

How do these connect to the POW's?

As Station Chief in Laos Ted Shackley ran the single
largest covert operation in CIA's history, a war
financed almost in its entirety on the proceeds of
heroin. That war was fought almost exclusively by
Hmong tribesmen and a Laotian rebel Army under the
command of General Vang Pao, an opium warlord who
derived his entire budget from heroin. Legion are the
stories of CIA's involvement in drug trafficking to
fund that war but one anecdote is telling. Former Air
America pilot Bucky Blair, who flew supply missions to
CIA's Site 85 in Laos, sitting on a remote mountain
top, told me that when he flew in to make his drops he
could "see the poppy fields stretching out for miles
in all directions." Site 85 was overrun in 1968 and
eleven live Americans were captured. Imagine what they
might have told under the intense torture of Pathet
Lao or North Vietnamese interrogators and how that
could have been used as propaganda against an America
already disintegrating under the war? Imagine what
they might have told other POWs they met as they were
moved from camp to camp?

Imagine the damage that might have been done in 1985-6
as some of the most intense rescue efforts were being
mounted and as stories of CIA drug trafficking in
Central America were starting to circulate in the
press and Congress?

Did Air America brief Blair on the opium? "I was
briefed one time and told that we were moving small
amounts of opium for legitimate pharmaceutical uses,"
he answered. The world's supply of pharmaceutical
heroin is less than five percent of total world
production. Shackley's CIA pilots could have supplied
the world for a year in about a month. This does not
take into account the brave testimony of other Air
America pilots like Tosh Plumley and Bo Abbott who
have spoken out directly about Air America's direct
transport of opium in vast quantities over a period of
years.

Shackley and his deputy Clines turn up heavily again
in Iran-Contra connected to Richard Secord and Ollie
North. A former CIA officer told me in 1995 that Ollie
North was leasing office space for his 1995 Senate run
from Shackley's company, Research Associates
International, in Rosslyn, Virginia.

Estimates of live POWs taken in the undeclared
(illegal) war in Laos from POW researchers, families
and military sources rise as high as 600 according to
Stevenson.

In the Reagan Administration, Richard Armitage as an
Assistant Secretary of Defense was the Pentagon's
highest-ranking official in charge of covert warfare,
arms shipments and POW affairs. Colin Powell, in 1995,
referred to Armitage as his white son. Armitage was
linked directly to CIA drug trafficking by, among
others, the POW's champion, Ross Perot.

John Singlaub, who was quoted in the Sarin gas stories
as saying he would have placed a high priority on
killing POW's and defectors because they might have
compromised military secrets, commanded MACV-SOG
during Vietnam and would have had knowledge of SOG
operations targeting Americans. He was also a major
player in Iran-Contra, dispersing weapons purchased
with drug money and engaging in fund raising
activities intended to divert attention away from the
NSC and Oliver North. I am saving North for last.

The documentation for the involvement of Richard
Secord, in Iran-Contra is voluminous and his role in
CIA operations in Laos is equally clear as documented
by letters from POW family members requesting that
Secord be queried about Site 85. Drugs were central to
both wars.

General Heinie Aderholt is a mixed bag. While
undeniably involved in Laos and as a low-profile
operator in Iran-Contra, (connected to the illegal
take-over of Bob Fletcher's Florida toy company to
establish a front for arms shipments), Aderholt chose
to oppose the official line and fight for missing
POW's. He confirmed secret intelligence reports
revealing the existence of live and obtainable POWs in
the region to families and the press.

Bill Colby and Bill Casey need little clarification
except to say the Bill Casey was DCI when many of the
most intense rescue efforts came into being - and
failed. And Colby, who ran the Phoenix Program in
Vietnam, was DCI from 1973-6 and on the Board of
Directors of the Nugan-Hand Bank.

The Nugan-Hand Bank and its successor firm BBRDW were
high rolling investment-banking operations, both of
which laundered covert drug profits for CIA. Some of
those monies were allocated to POW rescue operations
by military elements who refused to abandon their
comrades. It is also well documented, however, that
millions of dollars were collected by scam artists
connected to these firms from hopeful POW families and
supporters for rescues, which never took place. That
money bought nice vacation homes and went to other
unworthy causes.

If we examine the rescue side of the POW issue we come
across men like retired Green Beret Lt. Colonel Bo
Gritz, Ross Perot and the ubiquitous Oliver North.
Gritz undertook two missions into Southeast Asia, both
of which were connected in one way or another to the
Army's highly secret Intelligence Support Activity
(ISA). In Bo's book, Called To Serve (Lazarus, 1991)
he talks about a period of time in 1979-80 when he was
undercover at Hughes aircraft in Culver City as
preparation for his first mission. So, coincidentally,
was Oliver North - a fact which Bo neglected to
mention. I think I know why. A retired Hughes
executive phoned me in 1997 and described the office
shared by Gritz and North as having a large picture of
a Bengal Tiger on the wall with the caption, "If you
can't sleep with the tigers, stay out of the den." He
also stated, "You could see them out jogging together
every day."

The ISA, which ran Gritz's mission, was created by
Army General Richard Stilwell. It has been repeatedly
linked to drug smuggling by sources including the
daughter of Col. Albert Carone who served as Oliver
North's bagman and bill-payer during the eighties.
Records left behind after Carone's death in 1990 and
eyewitness statements clearly indicate that Carone
handled both drugs and drug money for CIA, North and
the NSC. Carone's personal phone book contains the
home addresses and telephone numbers of William Casey,
Gambino crime boss Pauly Castellano and Stilwell.
Further hard evidence, in the form of CIA and DIA
cable traffic linking to drugs, ISA and DIA operations
surfaces in Gary Webb's Dark Alliance (Seven Stories,
1998). These cables and law enforcement records tie
Scott Weekly to the drug operations of Norwin Menses,
Danillo Blandon and Ricky Ross. Weekly, a firearms
master, is Gritz's self-described best friend and went
on POW missions to Southeast Asia with Gritz.
Coincidentally again, Weekly is an Annapolis classmate
of Ollie North.

I have met Bo Gritz twice through my close friend,
Mrs. Francis Gary (Sue) Powers. That Bo was, and
remains, irrevocably committed to the cause of the
POWs cannot be disputed. That Bo brought back utterly
damning videotaped interviews with opium warlord Khun
Sa in which Khun Sa described the roles of Shackley,
Armitage, Clines, and the CIA in heroin trafficking
also cannot be disputed. That Bo was a leader in
exposing CIA's long standing proprietorship of the
international drug trade also is beyond question. But
these revelations, taken as a whole, leave wide open
the likelihood that, with or without Gritz's
knowledge, his own efforts to rescue POWs, as
sponsored by elements of the Pentagon, were funded by
drug profits. In 1980 the official U.S. Government
policy was that cocaine was less harmful than
marijuana.

[NOTE: I omit here, discussion of Gritz's alleged
white supremacist or racist views because I have never
heard him speak or seen him write such views. I will
say that if Bo believes in or advocates white
supremacy or racism in any form I disagree with him
wholeheartedly.]

Then there is Ross Perot. No man in American history
has been more closely linked to the cause of the POW's
and their families than the Texas billionaire. In late
1986, after funding one rescue mission and spending
years as a thorn in the side of the Reagan
Administration as he battled national security
roadblocks and the outright deception which ultimately
condemned the POW's to death, Ross Perot backed
six-foot, power weight lifter Richard Armitage into a
corner and confronted him with not only the evidence
of Armitage's lying about POW's but his direct
involvement in Vietnamese gambling and CIA drug
trafficking. After going to then Vice President George
Bush, and being summarily dismissed, Perot's efforts
leaked to the Boston Globe and TIME Magazine. Armitage
then lost his almost certain appointment as Secretary
of defense under President George Bush.

I have spoken to Perot twice and I served as the L.A.
County Press Spokesman for his '92 campaign. While I,
like many, was crushed by his conduct in pulling out
of the race, I have absolutely no doubt that Ross
Perot is absolutely unbending in his belief that
illegal drugs cannot be used to serve a good purpose -
anywhere, at any time.

That leaves us with Ollie.

During the Contra years Oliver North contracted with a
small British Security firm, KMS, run by a former SAS
Major named David Walker, to carry out commando raids
against the Sandinistas. AP, the Washington Post and
Congressional hearings all brought out the fact that
Walker's company conducted a few marginally successful
attacks and provided some air logistic support to the
Contras. What was not reported was that North,
according to sources I have found in the last three
months, was using KMS to train mercenaries for a POW
rescue mission inside the Soviet Union. That operation
was funded with drugs and the payments were made in
London, at the St. George Hotel and through channel
island banks by Albert Carone. Sources in Britain and
former members of U.S. Army Special Forces described
to me how North's plan, which involved training of
mercenaries in Morocco and the Ivory Coast, neared
success as, "his people got close enough to touch" the
skilled electronics warfare officers who had been
shipped to Russia for money by Vietnam during the war.
But, inexplicably, they never came out. The British
source added that North, if he had succeeded, "would
have become President of the United States."

The Sherlock Holmes cliché says, "Once you have
eliminated the impossible, the improbable, no matter
how unlikely, is the answer." The POWs remain, as
unrequited ghosts, an embarrassment of astronomical
dimension to the U.S. government. Any reporter asking
a POW who, what, where, when and how would inevitably
pull the covers on some of the U.S.'s dirtiest
secrets. But more than that the question needs to be
asked, "Did abandoning the POWs serve a purpose in
U.S. foreign policy?" The answer is yes.

In 1993 a former Green Beret officer told me, at the
point of tears, of how he had been ordered in 1968-9
to rendezvous with Russian Spetnatz commandos in the
central highlands of Vietnam. There, under direct
orders from the CIA, he exchanged millions of dollars
in hard U.S. currency for Russian diamonds. This was
at the height of the Vietnam War. Russia's economy
(its ability to support North Vietnam) was on the
brink of collapse. The hard U.S. currency salvaged
Russia's ability to buy needed imports on world
markets.

Bobby Garwood, the heroic Marine who remains the only
POW ever to return alive, told debriefers at DIA of
the amazement the North Vietnamese, struggling with a
stone age economy, had at his ability to assemble a
simple gasoline generator and the power of a light
bulb. He stayed alive because he could fix American
things.

Ted Shackley, in his book The Third Option lays out
detailed blueprints for the survival of the
military-security-industrial state by means of
perpetuation of "low intensity" insurgent wars in
which it might be necessary to arm both sides of a
conflict to keep the military skills sharp and the war
machine going. The fact that major U.S. industrialists
armed and financed every enemy from Adolph Hitler, to
Ho Chi Minh, to Sadam Hussein is well documented and
beyond the scope of this article.

Covert operations in Southeast Asia continued unabated
after the fall of Saigon in Laos, Cambodia and
Thailand. They were all financed by heroin, which
remains the largest source of capital in the region.
Vietnam is now emerging in a world capitalist economy
as a consumer and provider of services. Is it
coincidental that Henry Kissinger's associate and
later Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger was on
the first secret mission to explore rapprochement with
Vietnam? Is it a coincidence that Col. Richard
Childress, who stonewalled POW families for so long,
became a Southeast Asian investment consultant in
1990? Is it a coincidence that President George Bush
dispatched Richard Armitage to the former Soviet Union
as a special economic adviser or that almost
immediately after his arrival there was an explosion
of drug use in Russia?

I think that the POWs were commodities who, as one CIA
source put it to Stevenson, were "Chosen by God to
stay" as a form of plausibly deniable economic
assistance to enemies we needed to keep in place until
other pieces of a larger plan were complete. That
phase of the plan was complete in 1990 when Litton
Chairman Roy Ash's prediction of one world under state
capitalism would come into being. The Soviet Union was
dead and Vietnam.was on its way to becoming a trading
partner. Ash made that prediction in 1972.

So why kill them? If covert operatives could get close
enough to kill POWs then men like Gritz or Jerry
Daniels or Ross Perot could get close enough to rescue
them. Defectors, enjoying freedom of movement could
have surfaced at any time with POW stories as their
imagined ticket back home. And that would have upset
The Plan and revealed the U.S. government to be as
morally bankrupt as the Third Reich.

© COPYRIGHT 1998 Michael C. Ruppert. ALL RIGHTS
RESERVED. Permission to reprint or excerpt only if the
following appears: "Reprinted by permission, Michael
C. Ruppert & From The Wilderness at www.copvcia.com."


Michael C. Ruppert
P.O. Box 6061-350, Sherman Oaks, CA 91413
* (818)788-8791
* (818)981-2847 fax
* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
© COPYRIGHT 1998. MICHAEL C. RUPPERT. ALL RIGHTS
RESERVED.



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