#11 Bush Appoints Former Criminals to Key Government Roles
http://www.projectcensored.org/stories/2003/11.html
Sources:
The Nation
May 7th 2001
Title: "Bush's Contra Buddies"
Author: Peter Kornbluh
In These Times
06 August 2001
Title: "Public Serpent; Iran-Contra Villain Elliott Abrams is Back in Action"
Author: Terry Allen
Extra
September/October 2001
Title: "Scandal? What Scandal?"
Author: Terry Allen
The Guardian
08 February 2002
Title: "Friends of Terrorism"
Duncan Campbell
18 February 2002
"No More Mr. Scrupulous Guy"
Author: John Sutherland
Washingtonian
April 2002
Title: "True or False: Iran-Contra's John Poindexter is Back at the Pentagon"
Author: Michael Zuckerman
Corporate Media Coverage:*
NY Times A-3, August 1, 2001
LA Times, A-18, January 12, 2002 & September 30, 2001
Baltimore Sun, September 7, 2001
* Note: while a number of corporate media news paper mentioned the story in short briefs or on single individuals. A full look at the issue was ignored by most of the U.S. press.
Faculty evaluator: Francisco Vazquez
Student researchers: David Immel, Joshua Travers, Chris Salvano
Since becoming President, George Bush has brought back into government service men who were discredited by criminal involvement in the Iran-Contra affair, lying to Congress, and other felonies while working for his father George Bush senior and Ronald Reagan.
In February 2001, John Poindexter was appointed to head the new Information Awareness Office (IAO), an offshoot of the Pentagon based Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). After serving as Reagan's National Security Advisor, John Poindexter was charged and found guilty of conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and the destruction of evidence as he played a central role in the Iran-Contra affair. Costa Rica has officially declared Poindexter to be a drug trafficker, and has barred him from entering the country.
Poindexter's new job at IAO will supply federal agents with "instant" analysis of private e-mail and telephone conversations. As the vice president of Syntek Technologies, Poindexter helped develop the Orwellian "Project Genoa" for the IAO. Genoa will gather information about electronic conversations, financial transactions, passport tracking, airline ticket sales, phone records and satellite surveillance into a matrix from which "useful information" will be made available to federal authorities.
Elliot Abrams was recently appointed to the National Security Council (NSC) as director of its Office for Democracy, Human Rights, and International Relations. In 1991, Abrams plead guilty to withholding evidence from Congress regarding his role in the Iran-Contra affair. As Reagan's Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs he used to oversee US foreign policy in Latin America, and was active in covering up some of the worst atrocities committed by the US-sponsored Contras. According to congressional records, under Abram's watch, the Contras "raped, tortured, and killed unarmed civilians, including children," and that "groups of civilians, including women and children, were burned, dismembered, blinded and beheaded." George Bush senior subsequently pardoned him.
John Negroponte, the new ambassador to the UN, served under Reagan as ambassador to Honduras from 1981-1985. He is known for his role in the cover up of human rights abuses by CIA trained paramilitaries throughout the region. Coincidentally, Honduran exiles associated with the paramilitary forces that had been living in the US, were exported to Canada prior to Negroponte's Senate confirmation hearing, thus rendering their testimony unavailable.
Otto Reich has been appointed as Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs (which includes Latin America). The Bush administration used a "recess appointment" during January 2002 to side step the Senate confirmation hearing otherwise required of the appointment. Democrat opposition to Reich's nomination had been predicted.
In the '80s, Reich was head of the office for Public Diplomacy, which was censured by Congress for "prohibited covert propaganda activities" after influencing the media to favorably cover the Reagan administration's position. That office is now defunct. He also helped terrorist Orlando Bosch gain entry into the US after being imprisoned in Venezuela for bombing a Cuban airliner, killing its 73 passengers. Bosch spent time in a US prison for attacking a Polish merchant vessel bound for Cuba. Thirty countries have refused Bosch asylum because of his criminality.
Update by Author Terry Allen:
It seemed like a good news story to me and my editors, Joel Bleifuss and Jim Naureckas: No sooner did Bush take office than he breathed new life into the corpse of the us-vs-them, good-vs-evil world view that had thrived during the cold war. The resurrection was embodied in three Reagan-era retreads. These veterans of the US "dirty" war against Central America were complicit in crimes against humanity, democracy, or both. It also seemed like news that Congress was rolling over and bleating weak objections, while most of the media regurgitated snippets of old news.
Bush nominees Otto Reich and Elliot Abrams had been convicted by Congress for relatively trivial aspects of policies that killed thousands and devastated the civil and political life of Central America; John Negroponte had lied about US knowledge and sponsorship of grave human rights abuses in Honduras, and gotten away with it. In writing the story, I relied on extensive Nexis-Lexis research, interviews, and my experience covering the Iran-contra scandals and reporting from Central America during the wars. I cited all my sources in the pieces.
The articles, tucked away in small-circulation, independent outlets did not a wit of good in preventing Reich's appointment as the State Department's leader on Latin America, Abrams' appointment as a National Security Council director, or Negroponte's assumption of the post of US ambassador to the UN.
Nor did the stories prevent Bush II from taking up where Bush I and Reagan left off. The coup in Venezuela against Hugo Chavez sports the sticky fingerprints of all three men and the modus operandi of a long line of US-led cold war interventions.
But if these covert ops were tragedy, the Chavez plot was farce. The rapid unraveling of the coup suggested that the Venezuelan plotters would have done better seeking advise from Supreme Court Justice Rehnquist rather than from Reich. It soon became public that Bush officials maintained a web of connections with the conspirators and appeared to have foreknowledge of the plot. Using the same conduit Reagan used to fund the contras, the National Endowment for Democracy, the administration had funneled money to Venezuelan opposition.
According to British media, Abrams gave a nod to the plotters; Otto Reich, a former ambassador to Venezuela, met repeatedly with Pedro Carmona and other coup leaders. The day Carmona seized the presidency, Reich summoned ambassadors from Latin America and the Caribbean to his office and endorsed the new government.
Meanwhile, Negroponte was hard at work at the U.N. enforcing the U.S. unilateralist ultimata. He attempted to undermine the treaty establishing the International Criminal Court to try people accused of genocide, war crimes, etc. Given his history, it's easy to understand his squeamishness at the thought of accountability. Soon after the US "unsigned" the ICC treaty, Negroponte threatened Security Council members with pulling US observers and police from the UN's peacekeeping operations in East Timor-- unless UN (and therefore, US) personnel were excluded from possible prosecution. The move failed.
Otto Reich is also back to his old tricks and cozying up to hard-right Latin American leaders. In an unusual move for such a high-ranking State Department official, he met with Alvaro Uribe less than a week after his election as president of Colombia. The hardliner and the US are in sync in supporting a military solution to that nation's long-standing counterinsurgency.
An anti-Castro ideologue, Reich was quick to accuse Cuba of developing a biological warfare capacity. Before you could ask "Where's the evidence?" his own State Department published a sweeping 177-page report on global terrorism. The Miami Herald wrote that Reich, "appeared initially confused when asked why the report made no mention of Cuba's bio-weapons research."
"Is it an oversight?" asked Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-ND).
"I do not know who publishes that particular document," said Reich.
"It's your department that publishes it," said Dorgan. "This is a State Department publication."
It's deja vu all over again, and while the plot and dialogue are farce, the toll in lost liberties and lives is tragic. Again
http://www.projectcensored.org/stories/2003/11.html
Sources:
The Nation
May 7th 2001
Title: "Bush's Contra Buddies"
Author: Peter Kornbluh
In These Times
06 August 2001
Title: "Public Serpent; Iran-Contra Villain Elliott Abrams is Back in Action"
Author: Terry Allen
Extra
September/October 2001
Title: "Scandal? What Scandal?"
Author: Terry Allen
The Guardian
08 February 2002
Title: "Friends of Terrorism"
Duncan Campbell
18 February 2002
"No More Mr. Scrupulous Guy"
Author: John Sutherland
Washingtonian
April 2002
Title: "True or False: Iran-Contra's John Poindexter is Back at the Pentagon"
Author: Michael Zuckerman
Corporate Media Coverage:*
NY Times A-3, August 1, 2001
LA Times, A-18, January 12, 2002 & September 30, 2001
Baltimore Sun, September 7, 2001
* Note: while a number of corporate media news paper mentioned the story in short briefs or on single individuals. A full look at the issue was ignored by most of the U.S. press.
Faculty evaluator: Francisco Vazquez
Student researchers: David Immel, Joshua Travers, Chris Salvano
Since becoming President, George Bush has brought back into government service men who were discredited by criminal involvement in the Iran-Contra affair, lying to Congress, and other felonies while working for his father George Bush senior and Ronald Reagan.
In February 2001, John Poindexter was appointed to head the new Information Awareness Office (IAO), an offshoot of the Pentagon based Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). After serving as Reagan's National Security Advisor, John Poindexter was charged and found guilty of conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and the destruction of evidence as he played a central role in the Iran-Contra affair. Costa Rica has officially declared Poindexter to be a drug trafficker, and has barred him from entering the country.
Poindexter's new job at IAO will supply federal agents with "instant" analysis of private e-mail and telephone conversations. As the vice president of Syntek Technologies, Poindexter helped develop the Orwellian "Project Genoa" for the IAO. Genoa will gather information about electronic conversations, financial transactions, passport tracking, airline ticket sales, phone records and satellite surveillance into a matrix from which "useful information" will be made available to federal authorities.
Elliot Abrams was recently appointed to the National Security Council (NSC) as director of its Office for Democracy, Human Rights, and International Relations. In 1991, Abrams plead guilty to withholding evidence from Congress regarding his role in the Iran-Contra affair. As Reagan's Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs he used to oversee US foreign policy in Latin America, and was active in covering up some of the worst atrocities committed by the US-sponsored Contras. According to congressional records, under Abram's watch, the Contras "raped, tortured, and killed unarmed civilians, including children," and that "groups of civilians, including women and children, were burned, dismembered, blinded and beheaded." George Bush senior subsequently pardoned him.
John Negroponte, the new ambassador to the UN, served under Reagan as ambassador to Honduras from 1981-1985. He is known for his role in the cover up of human rights abuses by CIA trained paramilitaries throughout the region. Coincidentally, Honduran exiles associated with the paramilitary forces that had been living in the US, were exported to Canada prior to Negroponte's Senate confirmation hearing, thus rendering their testimony unavailable.
Otto Reich has been appointed as Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs (which includes Latin America). The Bush administration used a "recess appointment" during January 2002 to side step the Senate confirmation hearing otherwise required of the appointment. Democrat opposition to Reich's nomination had been predicted.
In the '80s, Reich was head of the office for Public Diplomacy, which was censured by Congress for "prohibited covert propaganda activities" after influencing the media to favorably cover the Reagan administration's position. That office is now defunct. He also helped terrorist Orlando Bosch gain entry into the US after being imprisoned in Venezuela for bombing a Cuban airliner, killing its 73 passengers. Bosch spent time in a US prison for attacking a Polish merchant vessel bound for Cuba. Thirty countries have refused Bosch asylum because of his criminality.
Update by Author Terry Allen:
It seemed like a good news story to me and my editors, Joel Bleifuss and Jim Naureckas: No sooner did Bush take office than he breathed new life into the corpse of the us-vs-them, good-vs-evil world view that had thrived during the cold war. The resurrection was embodied in three Reagan-era retreads. These veterans of the US "dirty" war against Central America were complicit in crimes against humanity, democracy, or both. It also seemed like news that Congress was rolling over and bleating weak objections, while most of the media regurgitated snippets of old news.
Bush nominees Otto Reich and Elliot Abrams had been convicted by Congress for relatively trivial aspects of policies that killed thousands and devastated the civil and political life of Central America; John Negroponte had lied about US knowledge and sponsorship of grave human rights abuses in Honduras, and gotten away with it. In writing the story, I relied on extensive Nexis-Lexis research, interviews, and my experience covering the Iran-contra scandals and reporting from Central America during the wars. I cited all my sources in the pieces.
The articles, tucked away in small-circulation, independent outlets did not a wit of good in preventing Reich's appointment as the State Department's leader on Latin America, Abrams' appointment as a National Security Council director, or Negroponte's assumption of the post of US ambassador to the UN.
Nor did the stories prevent Bush II from taking up where Bush I and Reagan left off. The coup in Venezuela against Hugo Chavez sports the sticky fingerprints of all three men and the modus operandi of a long line of US-led cold war interventions.
But if these covert ops were tragedy, the Chavez plot was farce. The rapid unraveling of the coup suggested that the Venezuelan plotters would have done better seeking advise from Supreme Court Justice Rehnquist rather than from Reich. It soon became public that Bush officials maintained a web of connections with the conspirators and appeared to have foreknowledge of the plot. Using the same conduit Reagan used to fund the contras, the National Endowment for Democracy, the administration had funneled money to Venezuelan opposition.
According to British media, Abrams gave a nod to the plotters; Otto Reich, a former ambassador to Venezuela, met repeatedly with Pedro Carmona and other coup leaders. The day Carmona seized the presidency, Reich summoned ambassadors from Latin America and the Caribbean to his office and endorsed the new government.
Meanwhile, Negroponte was hard at work at the U.N. enforcing the U.S. unilateralist ultimata. He attempted to undermine the treaty establishing the International Criminal Court to try people accused of genocide, war crimes, etc. Given his history, it's easy to understand his squeamishness at the thought of accountability. Soon after the US "unsigned" the ICC treaty, Negroponte threatened Security Council members with pulling US observers and police from the UN's peacekeeping operations in East Timor-- unless UN (and therefore, US) personnel were excluded from possible prosecution. The move failed.
Otto Reich is also back to his old tricks and cozying up to hard-right Latin American leaders. In an unusual move for such a high-ranking State Department official, he met with Alvaro Uribe less than a week after his election as president of Colombia. The hardliner and the US are in sync in supporting a military solution to that nation's long-standing counterinsurgency.
An anti-Castro ideologue, Reich was quick to accuse Cuba of developing a biological warfare capacity. Before you could ask "Where's the evidence?" his own State Department published a sweeping 177-page report on global terrorism. The Miami Herald wrote that Reich, "appeared initially confused when asked why the report made no mention of Cuba's bio-weapons research."
"Is it an oversight?" asked Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-ND).
"I do not know who publishes that particular document," said Reich.
"It's your department that publishes it," said Dorgan. "This is a State Department publication."
It's deja vu all over again, and while the plot and dialogue are farce, the toll in lost liberties and lives is tragic. Again