Difference between revisions of "CIA/Drug trafficking/Exposure"
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===''The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia''=== | ===''The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia''=== | ||
{{FA|The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia}} | {{FA|The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia}} | ||
− | [[image:CIA_cooking_your_brain_with_drugs.gif|right|480px|thumbnail|The first two images are a reference to an anti-drug video produced nominally to deter US citizens fro use of recreational drugs.]]In 1972, [[Alfred W. McCoy]] published ''[[The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia]]'', a groundbreaking expose of CIA involvement in the [[heroin]] trade which had burgeoned during the [[Vietnam War]]. | + | [[image:CIA_cooking_your_brain_with_drugs.gif|right|480px|thumbnail|The first two images are a reference to an anti-drug video produced nominally to deter US citizens fro use of recreational drugs.]]In 1972, [[Alfred W. McCoy]] published ''[[The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia]]'', a groundbreaking expose of CIA involvement in the [[heroin]] trade which had burgeoned during the [[Vietnam War]]. McCoy reports that [[Cord Meyer]] lead a [[CIA]] effort to suppress the book, but that it failed since his supervisor, "the distinguished scholar [[Bernhard Dahm]] who was a stranger to this covert nexus", an occurrence which saved McCoy's academic career.<ref>http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/176321/tomgram%3A_alfred_mccoy%2C_the_cia_and_me</ref> |
==Iran-Contra== | ==Iran-Contra== |
Revision as of 11:38, 16 September 2019
CIA/Drug trafficking/Exposure (Exposure) | |
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Drug trafficking by intelligence agencies -- especially the CIA -- is, as of 2019, pretty widely understood to be a part of their modus operandi. This follows decades of research into and publicity about this topic, most notably by Gary Webb who broke the story of CIA Drug trafficking over the early WWW. |
The exposure of the CIA drug trade is ongoing. A trickle of small voices from the 1960s and 70s lead to the limited hangout of "Iran-Contra" and then eventually Gary Webb's Dark Alliance exposure of the late 1990s. Awareness about CIA drug trafficking in the 21st century has grown primarily due to use of the internet.
Contents
Official narrative
These are just unproven allegations (see the Wikipedia page name, as of 2019). If the CIA deals with drug traffickers it is in the pursuit of more important matters such as "national security".
Early publicity
Mort Sahl stated on air to an audience of millions that the CIA was profiting from the world's #1 dope dealer.[1]
The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia
- Full article: The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia
- Full article: The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia
In 1972, Alfred W. McCoy published The Politics of Heroin in Southeast Asia, a groundbreaking expose of CIA involvement in the heroin trade which had burgeoned during the Vietnam War. McCoy reports that Cord Meyer lead a CIA effort to suppress the book, but that it failed since his supervisor, "the distinguished scholar Bernhard Dahm who was a stranger to this covert nexus", an occurrence which saved McCoy's academic career.[2]
Iran-Contra
- Full article: “Iran-Contra”
- Full article: “Iran-Contra”
The events misleadingly dubbed "Iran-Contra" by the corporate media featured large scale drug trafficking centered on a remote airport in Mena, Arkansas. This was orchestrated by a team of deep state actors as Barry Seal, Felix Rodriguez, quite probably on the initiative of George H. W. Bush[citation needed]. Ex-CIA Terry Reed admitted to involvement in training contra pilots, but states that he originally knew nothing of the drug angle until he found tonnes of cocaine moving through his warehouse.[3]
Michael Levine, a 25-year veteran of the Drug Enforcement Administration, stated that:
"I have put thousands of Americans away for tens of thousands of years for less evidence for conspiracy with less evidence than is available against Ollie North and CIA people... I personally was involved in a deep-cover case that went to the top of the drug world in three countries. The CIA killed it."
CNBC-TV, October 8, 1996[4]
Jack Blum, as chief investigator for the Kerry Subcommittee on narcotics and terrorism, he testified before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence about CIA/Drug trafficking that:
"We knew about the connection between the West Coast cocaine trade and the Contras. It was an astonishing case, called the Frogman case. In that case, I believe it was in that case, the United States attorney for San Francisco, a man by the name of Russo Nello, return thirty five thousand dollars of cocaine proceeds - voluntarily - to the Contras. When it had been seized as a proceeds of drug trafficking. We found that absolutely astonishing, I know of no other situation where the Justice Department was so forthcoming in returning seized property." - at 00:22:08 [5][6]
Premature deaths
- Full article: CIA/Drug trafficking/Premature death
- Full article: CIA/Drug trafficking/Premature death
Many people have been killed in an effort to cover up CIA drug trafficking, including pilots and other witnesses who came out and testified. Bo Abbott and Tosh Plumlee have admitted to flying drugs for the CIA by the planeload into USA.[7] Others such as Celerino Castillo and Terry Reed have provided detailed and sworn corroborating testimony. A 1996 affidavit by Chip Tatum claims the same thing and names William Barr, Buddy Young, Felix Rodriguez, Oliver North, Joe Fernandez, Manuel Noriega and Mike Harari. He further claimed that George H. W. Bush, Oliver North and Bill Clinton were in the loop via satellite phone.[8]
Gary Webb
- Full articles: Gary Webb, Dark Alliance
- Full articles: Gary Webb, Dark Alliance
Gary Webb had great success using the WWW to circumvent the CIA's Operation Mockingbird which stifled the reporting of his groundbreaking revelations about CIA cocaine trafficking from South America. He reports that the website on which he published his evidence had over 1,000,000 hits a day from all around the world.
Mega busts
- Full article: 2006 Mexico DC-9 drug bust
- Full article: 2006 Mexico DC-9 drug bust
Various CIA linked planes have been involved in shipping cocaine into US by the ton, most notably the 2006 Mexico DC-9 drug bust ('Cocaine 1') and the crash in 2007 ('Cocaine 2'). (Former) CIA ownership of the planes is certainly telling, as is their use for "extraordinary rendition" but even more clear has been the failure to prosecute, investigate or even report basic details of these events, suggesting that their owners have the de facto ability to control the commercially-controlled media. The most recent of these deep events was Western Global Airlines N545JN, flying cash to South Africa.
Internet
The internet has proved an invaluable medium for circumventing the CIA's control of the corporate media and exposing their control of the global drug trade, enabling Gary Webb in 1998 to get up to a million hits a day in his exposure of Dark Alliance.
An example
Page name | Description |
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2006 Mexico DC-9 drug bust | A DC-9 made an emergency landing and was found to be containing over 5 tonnes of cocaine. The pilot "disappeared", unnamed, and the plane was deregistered and sold within days to an unknown customer in Venezuela. |
References
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bimrN5NCdJk
- ↑ http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/176321/tomgram%3A_alfred_mccoy%2C_the_cia_and_me
- ↑ The Mena Connection
- ↑ http://whatreallyhappened.com/RANCHO/POLITICS/MENA/mena.php#ixzz40Fpk7O5K
- ↑ Mike Ruppert, Senate Select Committee on Intelligence saved at Archive.is
- ↑ https://www.c-span.org/video/?76157-1/cia-alleged-cocaine-sales
- ↑ http://www.unwelcomeguests.net/717
- ↑ http://www.stewwebb.com/Gene_Tatum_Affadavit_19960815.html