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- [12] -> REAGAN AIDES AND THE 'SECRET' GOVERNMENT
-
-
- from THE MIAMI HERALD....SUNDAY JULY 5, 1987....page one:
- by ALFONSO CHARDY, HERALD WASHINGTON BUREAU
-
-
- WASHINGTON -- Some of President Reagan's top advisers have
- operated a virtual parallel government outside the traditional Cabinet
- departments and agencies almost from the day Reagan took office,
- congressional investigators and administration officials have concluded.
- Investigators believe that the advisers' activities extended
- well beyond the secret arms sales to Iran and aid to the contras now under
- investigation.
- Lt. Col. Oliver North, for example, helped draw up a
- controversial plan to suspend the Constitution in the event of a national
- crisis, such as nuclear war, violent and widespread internal dissent or
- national opposition to a U.S. military invasion abroad.
- When the attorney general at the time, William French Smith,
- learned of the proposal, he protested in writing to North's boss, then-
- national security adviser Robert McFarlane.
- The advisers conducted their activities through secret contacts
- throughout the government with persons who acted at their direction but did
- not officially report to them.
- The activities of those contacts were coordinated by the
- National Security Council, the officials and investigators said.
- There appears to have been no formal directive for the
- advisers' activities, which knowledgeable sources described as a parallel
- government.
- In a secret assessment of the activities, the lead counsel for
- the Senate Iran-contra committee called it a "secret government-within-a-
- government."
- The arrangement permitted Reagan administration officials to
- claim that they were not involved in controversial or illegal activities, the
- officials said.
- "It was the ultimate plausible deniability," said a well-
- briefed official who has served the Reagan administration since 1982 and who
- often collaborated on covert assistance to the Nicaraguan contras.
- The roles of top-level officials and of Reagan himself are
- still not clear. But that is expected to be a primary topic when North
- appears before the Iran-contra committees beginning Tuesday. Special
- prosecutor Lawrence Walsh also is believed to be trying to prove in his
- investigation of the Iran-contra affair that government officials engaged in
- a criminal conspiracy.
-
- ADVISERS FORMED SHADOW GOVERNMENT, PROBERS SAY
-
- Much of the time, Cabinet secretaries and their aides were
- unaware of the advisers' activities. When they periodically detected
- operations, they complained or tried to derail them, interviews show.
- But no one ever questioned the activities in a broad way,
- possibly out of a belief that the advisers were operating with presidential
- sanction, officials said.
- Reagan did know of or approve at least some of the actions of
- the secret group, according to previous accounts by aides, friends and high-
- ranking foreign officials.
- One such case is the 1985 visit to Libya by William Wilson,
- then-U.S. ambassador to the Vatican and a close Reagan friend, to meet with
- Libyan leader Col. Moammar Gadhafi, officials said last week. Secretary of
- State George Shultz rebuked Wilson, but the officials said Reagan knew of the
- trip in advance.
- The heart of the secret structure from 1983 to 1986 was North's
- office in the Old Executive Office Building adjacent to the White House,
- investigators believe.
- North's influence within the secret structure was so great, the
- sources said, that he was able to have the orbits of sophisticated
- surveillance satellites altered to follow Soviet ships around the world, call
- for the launching of high-flying spy aircraft on secret missions over Cuba
- and Nicaragua and become involved in sensitive domestic activities.
-
- Many initiatives
-
- Others in the structure included some of Reagan's closest
- friends and advisers, including former national security adviser William
- Clark, the late CIA Director William Casey and Attorney General Edwin Meese,
- officials and investigators said.
- Congressional investigators said the Iran deal was just one of
- the group's initiatives. They say exposure of the unusual arrangement may be
- the legacy of their inquiry.
- "After we establish that a policy decision was made at the
- highest levels to transfer responsibility for contra support to the NSC...,
- we favor examining how that decision was implemented," wrote Arthur Liman,
- chief counsel of the Senate committee, in a secret memorandum to panel
- leaders Sens. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, and Warren Rudman, R-N.H., before
- hearings began May 5.
- "This is the part of the story that reveals the whole secret
- government-within-a-government, operated from the [Executive Office Building]
- by a Lt. Col., with its own army, air force, diplomatic agents, intelligence
- operatives and appropriations capacity," Limon wrote in the memo, parts of
- which were shared with The Herald.
- A spokesman for Liman declined comment but did not dispute the
- memo's existence.
- A White House official rejected the notion that any of Reagan's
- advisers were operating secretly.
- "The president has constantly expressed his foreign policy
- positions to the public and has consulted with the Congress," the official
- said.
-
- Began in 1980
-
- Congressional investigators and current and former officials
- interviewed -- members of the CIA, State Department and Pentagon -- said they
- still do not have a full record of the impact of the the advisers'
- activities.
- But based on investigations and personal experience, they
- believe the secret governing arrangement traces its roots to the last weeks
- of Reagan's 1980 campaign.
- Officials say the genesis may have been an October 1980
- decision by Casey, Reagan's campaign manager and a former officer in the
- World War II precursor of the CIA, to create an October Surprise Group to
- monitor Jimmy Carter's feverish negotiations with Iran for the release of 52
- American hostages.
- The group, led by campaign foreign policy adviser Richard
- Allen, was founded out of concern Carter might pull off an "October surprise"
- such as a last-minute deal for the release of the hostages before the Nov. 4
- election. One of the group's first acts was a meeting with a man claiming to
- represent Iran who offered to release the hostages to Reagan.
- Allen -- Reagan's first national security adviser-- and another
- campaign aide, Laurence Silberman, told The Herald in April of the meeting.
- they said McFarlane, then a Senate Armed Services Committee aide, arranged
- and attended it. McFarlane later became Reagan's national security adviser
- and played a key role in the Iran-contra affair. Allen and Silberman said
- they rejected the offer to release the hostages to Reagan.
-
- Briefing book theft
-
- Congressional aides now link another well-known campaign
- incident -- the theft of confidential briefing materials from Carter's
- campaign before the Oct. 28, 1980, Carter-Reagan debate -- to the same group
- of advisers.
- They believe that Casey obtained the briefing materials and
- passed them to James Baker, another top Reagan campaign aide, who was White
- House chief of staff in Reagan's first term.
- Once Reagan was sworn in, the group moved quickly to set itself
- up, officials said. Within months, the advisers were clashing with officials
- in the traditional agencies.
- Six weeks after Reagan was sworn in, apparently over State
- Department objections, then-CIA director Casey submitted a proposal to Reagan
- calling for covert support of anti-Sandinista groups that had fled Nicaragua
- after the 1979 revolution.
-
- [THE IRAN-CONTRA CONNECTION:
- NORTH HAD BIG ROLE IN INNER CIRCLE, INVESTIGATORS SAY]
-
- It is still unclear whether Casey cleared the plan with
- Reagan. But In November 1981 the CIA secretly flew an Argentine military
- leader, Gen. Leopoldo Galtieri, to Washington to devise a secret agreement
- under which Argentine military officers trained Nicaraguan rebels, according
- to an administration official familiar with the agreement.
- About the same time, North completed his transfer to the NSC
- from the Marine Corps. Those who worked with North in 1981 remember his
- first assignments as routine, although not unimportant.
- North, they recalled, was briefly assigned to carry the
- "football," the briefcase containing the secret contingency plans for
- fighting a nuclear war, which is taken everywhere the president goes. North
- later widened his assignment to cover national crisis contingency planning.
- In that capacity he became involved with the controversial national crisis
- plan drafted by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
-
- National crisis plan
-
- From 1982 to 1984, North assisted FEMA, the U.S. government's
- chief national crisis-management unit, in revising contingency plans for
- dealing with nuclear war, insurrection or massive military mobilization.
- North's involvement with FEMA set off the first major clash
- between the official government and the advisers and led to the formal letter
- of protest in 1984 from then-Attorney General Smith.
- Smith was in Europe last week and could not be reached for
- comment.
- But a government official familiar with North's collaboration
- with FEMA said then-Director Louis O. Guiffrida, a close friend of Meese's,
- mentioned North in meetings during that time as FEMA's NSC contact.
- Guiffrida could not be reached for comment, but FEMA spokesman
- Bill McAda confirmed the relationship.
- "Officials of FEMA met with Col. North during 1982 to 1984,"
- McAda said. "These meetings were appropriate to Col. North's duties with the
- National Security Council and FEMA's responsibilities in certain areas of
- national security."
- FEMA's clash with Smith occurred over a secret contingency plan
- that called for suspension of the Constitution, turning control of the United
- States over to FEMA, appointment of military commanders to run state and
- local governments and declaration of martial law during a national crisis.
- The plan did not define national crisis, but it was understood
- to be nuclear war, violent and widespread internal dissent or national
- opposition against a military invasion abroad.
-
- Plan was protested
-
- The official said the contingency plan was written as part of
- an executive order or legislative package that Reagan would sign and hold
- within the NSC until a severe crisis arose.
- The martial law portions of the plan were outlined in a June
- 30, 1982, memo by Guiffrida's deputy for national preparedness programs, John
- Brinkerhoff. A copy of the memo was obtained by The Herald.
- The scenario outlined in the Brinkerhoff memo resembled
- somewhat a paper Guiffrida had written in 1970 at the Army War College in
- Carlisle, Pa., in which he advocated martial law in case of a national
- uprising by black militants. The paper also advocated the roundup and
- transfer to "assembly centers or relocation camps" of at least 21 million
- "American Negroes."
- When he saw the FEMA plans, Attorney General Smith became
- alarmed. He dispatched a letter to McFarlane Aug. 2, 1984 lodging his
- objections and urging a delay in signing the directive.
- "I believe that the role assigned to the Federal Emergency
- Management Agency in the revised Executive Order exceeds its proper function
- as a coordinating agency for emergency preparedness," Smith said in the
- letter to McFarlane, which The Herald obtained. "This department and others
- have repeatedly raised serious policy and legal objections to the creation of
- an 'emergency czar' role for FEMA."
- It is unclear whether the executive order was signed or whether
- it contained the martial law plans. Congressional sources familiar with
- national disaster procedures said they believe Reagan did sign an executive
- order in 1984 that revised national military mobilization measures to deal
- with civilians in case of nuclear war or other crisis.
-
- Orchestrated news leaks
-
- Around the time that issue was producing fireworks with the
- administration, McFarlane and Casey reassigned North from national crisis
- planning to international covert management of the contras. The transfer
- came after North took a personal interest, realizing that neither the State
- Department nor any other government agency wanted to handle the issue after
- it became clear early in 1984 that Congress was moving to bar official aid to
- the rebels.
- The new assignment, plus North's natural organizational
- ability, creativity and the sheer energy he dedicated to the issue, gradually
- led to an expansion of his power and stature within the covert structure,
- officials and investigators believe.
- Meese also was said to have played a role in the secret
- government, investigators now believe, but his role is less clear.
- Meese sometimes referred private American citizens to the NSC
- so they could be screened and contacted for soliciting support for the
- Nicaraguan contras.
- One of those supporters, Philip Mabry of Fort Worth, told The
- Herald earlier this year that in 1983 he was told by fellow conservatives in
- Texas to contact Meese, then White House counselor, if he wanted to help the
- contras. After he contacted Meese's office, Mabry received a letter from
- Meese obtained by The Herald advising him that his name had been given to the
- "appropriate people."
- Shortly thereafter, Mabry said, a woman who identified herself
- as Meese's secretary gave him the name and phone number of another NSC
- secretary who, in turn, gave him North and his secretary, Fawn Hall, as
- contacts.
- Meese's Justice Department spokesman, Patrick Korten, denies
- that Meese was part of North's secret contra supply network and notes that
- Meese does not recall having referred anyone to North on contra-related
- matters.
- In addition to North's role as contra commander and fund-
- raiser, North became secret overseer of the State Department's Office of
- Public Diplomacy, through which the Reagan administration disseminated
- information that cast Nicaragua as a threat to its neighbors and the United
- States.
- An intelligence source familiar with North's relationship with
- that office said North was directly involved in many of the best publicized
- news leaks, including the Nov. 4, 1984, Election Day announcement that Soviet-
- made MiG jet fighters were on their way to Nicaragua.
- McFarlane is now believed to have been the senior
- administration official who told reporters that the Soviet cargo ship
- Bakuriani, en route to Nicaragua from a Soviet Black Sea port, was probably
- carrying MiGs.
- The intelligence official said North apparently recommended
- that the information be leaked to the press on Election Day so it would reach
- millions of people watching election results. CBS and NBC broadcast the
- report that night.
-
- Clark had key role
-
- The leak led to a new clash between the regular bureaucracy and
- the president's advisers. The official State Department spokesman, John
- Hughes, tried hard to play down the report, pointing out that it was unproven
- that the Bakuriani was carrying MiGs. At the same time, employees of the
- Office of Public Diplomacy, acting under North's direction, insisted that the
- crates were inside the ship and that MiGs were still a possibility.
- To take a closer look, the source said, North requested a high-
- flying SR-71 Blackbird spy aircraft be sent from Beale Air Force Base near
- Sacramento, Calif., to fly over the Nicaraguan port of Corinto while the
- Bakuriani unloaded its cargo. The pictures showed that the Bakuriani
- unloaded helicopters, not MiGs.
- North was not the only adviser who operated outside traditional
- government channels, investigators have concluded.
- Others were known as the RIGLET, a semi-official unit made up
- of North; Alan Fiers, a CIA Central American affairs officer; and Elliott
- Abrams, the current assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs,
- according to Abrams' subordinate Richard Melton. Melton revealed the
- existence of the RIGLET in a deposition given to the Iran-contra committees.
- The name is a diminutive for RIG, which stands for Restricted Interagency
- Group.
- Among the RIGLET's actions was ordering the U.S. ambassador to
- Costa Rica, Lewis Tambs, to assist the contras in setting up a front in
- southern Nicaragua. Tambs, who resigned suddenly last year after his links
- to North were revealed, testified about the instructions to Iran-contra
- investigators.
- But perhaps the key to the parallel government was the role
- played by Reagan's second national security adviser, William Clark. It was
- during Clark's tenure that North began to gain influence in the NSC.
- Clark also recruited several midlevel officers from the
- Pentagon and the CIA to work on a special Central American task force in 1983
- to push aid for El Salvador, a task force member said.
- "Judge Clark was the granddaddy of the system," he said. "I
- was working at the Pentagon on another issue when my boss said that because
- of special circumstances, I was to be reassigned to the task force."
- A former administration official familiar with Clark's
- activities said Clark also had approved contacts between Vatican Ambassador
- Wilson and Libya before Wilson's November 1985 journey, which came after
- McFarlane replaced Clark at the NSC.
- The former official said Wilson also had carried out secret
- missions for the Reagan administration in a Latin American country where
- Wilson reportedly maintained contacts with high-level officials. The source
- asked that the country not be identified because the system is still in place
- and had reduced tensions by circumventing the regular bureaucracies of both
- countries.
- Calls to Wilson's and Clark's offices in California were not
- returned.
-
- -----END-----
-
- ******************************************************************************
- [sidebar:]
-
- SOME SECRET ACTIVITIES
-
- Sources say the parallel government behind the Reagan
- administration engaged in secret actions including:
-
-
- A CONTINGENCY plan to suspend Constitution and impose martial law in United
- States in case of nuclear war or national rebellion.
-
- 1985 VISIT to Libya by William Wilson, then U.S. ambassador to Vatican and
- close Reagan friend, to meet with Libyan leader Col. Moammar
- Gadhafi.
-
- HAVING ROUTES of sophisticated surveillance satellites altered to follow
- Soviet ships around world.
-
- LAUNCHING of spy aircraft on secret missions over Cuba and Nicaragua.
-
- PROPOSAL in 1981 to provide covert support of anti-Sandinista groups that
- fled Nicaragua after Sandinista revolution in 1979.
-
- DISSEMINATION of information that cast Nicaragua as threat to neighbors and
- United States.
-
-
- Before Reagan was elected, campaign aides who became the president's top
- advisers carried out these secret activities:
-
- CREATION in 1980 of October Surprise Group to monitor President Carter's
- negotiations with Iran for release of 52 American hostages.
- Group met with man who claimed to represent Iran and who
- offered to release hostages to Reagan. Offer declined,
- officials say.
-
- ACQUISITION of stolen confidential briefing materials from Carter's campaign
- before Oct. 28, 1980, Carter-Reagan debate.
-
- ******************************************************************************
- [photo captions:]
-
- PRINCIPALS
- William Clark: Allowed bigger North role at NSC.
- William Casey: Kept guard on President Carter
-
- ******************************************************************************
- The above brought to you by Richard Gallyot of SF, CA.:
-
-
- "Perception of reality is sometimes more important than reality itself."
- -Henry Kissenger
-
- "He who controls the past, controls the future.
- He who controls the present, controls the past."
- -O'Brian, the dictator
- in Orwell's 1984
-
- "If you don't like the news, go out and make some of your own."
- -Scoop Nisker
-
- ******************************************************************************
- *********************************************************
-
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