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ADNAN KHASHOGGI: RICHARD PERLE'S "NARCO-TERRORIST"
BUSINESS PARTNER

By Alex Constantine

The House hearings on Iran-contra culminated in 1987
with a report that deftly mentioned Richard Secord's
plan to construct an enterprise of his own in the bulk
manufacture of "opium alkaloids."1 Opium? This curious
detail floated by without comment and eventually
drowned in a flood of perjury and hot air. 

The committee didn't bother to follow up on that one.
Better late than never to ask: "Opium alkaloids ... as
in the base compound for the production of heroin?"
It's doubtful we'll ever know the answer. And the
explanation could be innocent, to be completely fair -
Secord may have invented a cure for peptic ulcers or
sexual impotence ... but heroin would appear the
likeliest explanation ... given the cost of global
conquest these days ...

Even Adnan Khashoggi has financed wars with drug
profits,
the gist of a report written in 1991 at the Pentagon -
declassified in July 2004 by the National Security
Archives in Washington - of 104 "more important
Colombian narco-terrorists contracted by the Colombian
narcotic cartels for security, transportation,
distribution, collection and enforcement of narcotics
operations in both the U.S. and Colombia."

Pablo Escobar is on the list. Colombian President
Alvaro Uribe is also on it.

Uribe, according to the document, is a "Colombian
politician and senator dedicated to collaboration with
the Medellin cartel at high government levels." He was
"linked to a business involved in narcotics activities
in the U.S. His father was murdered in Colombia for
his connection with the narcotic traffickers." He has
"worked for the Medellin cartel," according to the DoD
report, and "is a close personal friend of Pablo
Escobar Gaviria.... He has participated in Escobar's
political campaign to win the position of assistant
parliamentarian to Jorge [Ortega]..."

Adam Isaacson, a scholar at the Center for
International Policy (CIP) in
Washington, cast doubt on the Pentagon's intelligence.
After all, the CIP scholar explained, Adnan
Khashoggi's name was on it, so the list must be in
error...

But the National Security Archives responded that the
document as "accurate and easily verifiable. It is
evident that a significant amount of time and energy
went into compiling this report."

Remember, the word used by the Pentagon to describe
the traffickers listed in the report, including
Khashoggi, was "narco-terrorist." So Richard Perle,
assistant secretary of defense under Bush, a business
partner of Khashoggi's at TriReme Corp., was in
business with a narco-terrorist, according to the
Pentagon's own records. But we'll get to Perle in a
moment.

President Uribe also denied the allegations regarding
himself - not so easy to explain away, however, was
the 1984 seizure of his father's helicopter by
Colombian police on narcotics charges, or his
brother's telephone number, stored in the memory bank
of a cell phone belonging to Escobar.2

Ignoring the Pentagon's own intelligence on the
narco-presidenté, President Bush paid Uribe a call in
August 2003. Anti-war activist-reporter Jim Lobe
reported: "The administration of President George W.
Bush on Monday rallied behind Colombian President
Alvaro Uribe in the face of allegations contained in a
13-year-old Pentagon intelligence report that he was a
close personal friend' of drug lord Pablo Escobar and
had worked for his Medellin drug cartel."

"We completely disavow these allegations about
President Uribe," said State Department spokesman Adam
Ereli. "We have no credible information that
substantiates or corroborates these allegations that
appeared in an unevaluated 1991 report, linking
President Uribe to the narcotics business or
trafficking."

Isaacson said, "It's something the left has been
trying to pin on him for awhile, and this gives them
new ammunition." However, he acknowledged, "in the big
picture, almost everybody in Colombia's ruling class
was mixed up in drugs until [former U.S. President]
Ronald Reagan declared war on drugs in the
mid-1980s."3 Narcotics have fuelled the flames of
revolution and regime change, political assassinations
and bomb plots, the "war on drugs" notwithstanding.

Another drug runner in this underground empire was
Henry Asher, founder of DataBase [See Khashoggi, part
XI], the ChoicePoint appendage. In a report by the
Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Asher admitted
to smuggling drugs in 1982. Police developed
"corroborating information" that "during 1981 and
1982, Asher piloted five to seven plane loads of
cocaine from Colombia to the United States." Asher
admitted that he had shown "a lack of judgment,"
according to the report. The remorseful millionaire
cooperated with the FBI and agreed to be a federal
"informant." He was freed and went on to set up a
"total awareness" surveillance operation, but we'll
come to that, too ...4

Another drug pilot on contra supply missions was Frank
Moss who, according to the Kerry Report, "has been
under investigation as an alleged drug trafficker
since 1979. Moss has been investigated, although never
indicted, for narcotics offenses by ten different law
enforcement agencies. In addition to flying contra
supply missions through SETCO, Moss formed his own
company in 1985, Hondu Carib, which also flew supplies
to the Contras, including weapons and ammunition
purchased from R.M. Equipment, an arms company
controlled by Ronald Martin and James McCoy. The FDN's
arrangement
with Moss and Hondu Carib was pursuant to a commercial
agreement between the FDN's chief supply officer,
Mario Calero, and Moss, under which Calero was to
receive an ownership interest in Moss' company. The
Subcommittee received documentation that one Moss
plane, a DC-4, N90201, was used to move Contra goods
from the United States to Honduras. On the basis of
information alleging that the plane was being used for
drug smuggling, the Customs Service obtained a court
order to place a concealed transponder on the plane.

"A second DC-4 controlled by Moss was chased off the
west coast of Florida by the Customs Service while it
was dumping what appeared to be a load of drugs,
according to law enforcement personnel. When the plane
landed at Port Charlotte no drugs were found on board,
but the plane's registration was not in order and its
last known owners were drug traffickers. Law
enforcement personnel also found an address book
aboard the plane, containing among other references
the telephone numbers of some Contra officials and the
Virginia telephone number of Robert Owen, Oliver
North's courier. A law enforcement inspection of the
plane revealed the presence of significant marijuana
residue. DEA seized the aircraft on March 16, 1987."5

Cable network opinion-shapers Ann Coulter and David
Corn may insist that the CIA only "looked the other
way" when its assets have been caught moving narcotics
to finance assassinations, foreign coups, etc., but
Khashoggi, Armitage and Asher weren't the only drug
runners in the "family."

William Casey, CIA director under Reagan, created
several large
off-the-shelf' networks to finance illicit covert
operations. The first,
dependent on opium profits, supported the Afghan
Mujhaddin, with the CIA running funds through
Pakistan's ISI and BCCI. The second channel, to
support the Nicaraguan contra war, ran through BCCI,
too. This channel also began with drug proceeds and
ended in hot pockets of the Cold War. The same
organizational chart - of CIA proxy armies funded by
drug proceeds - was evident in KLA operations in
Bosnia, complete with raping, pillaging, bomb-tossing
al Qaeda radicals.6

As a result, these networks, according to Peter Dale
Scott, "have all
aligned the US on the same side as powerful local drug
traffickers. Partly this has been from realpolitik -
in recognition of the local power realities
represented by the drug traffic. Partly it has been
from the need to escape domestic political restraints:
the traffickers have supplied additional financial
resources needed because of US budgetary limitations,
and they have also provided assets not bound (as the
U.S. is) by the rules of war."

The impact of all this trafficking in drugs, of
course, is devastating.
"These facts," Scott writes, "have led to enduring
intelligence networks
involving both oil and drugs, or more specifically
both petrodollars and
narcodollars. These networks, particularly in the
Middle East, have become so important that they
affect, not just the conduct of US foreign policy, but
the health and behavior of the US government, US banks
and corporations, and indeed the whole of US
society."7

-----------------------
NOTES

1) Jefferson Morley, "Iran-Contra's Unasked Questions,
or the Case of the $400,000 Hamburger," Los Angeles
Times, November 29, 1987.

2) Jim Lobe, "Bush Rallies Behind Colombian President,
Despite Drug
Allegations," August 3, 2004.

3) Ibid.

4) Multistate Anti-Terrorism Information Exchange, Jun
2003.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=hank+asher+and+cocaine+and+biography

5) "Selections from the Senate Committee Report on
Drugs, Law Enforcement and Foreign Policy," chaired by
Senator John F. Kerry.
http://www.webcom.com/pinknoiz/covert/contracoke.html#fn39

6) See: Peter Dale Scott, Drugs, Oil, and War; John
Cooley, Unholy Wars.

7) Peter Dale Scott, "Afghanistan, Colombia, Vietnam:
The Deep Politics of Drugs and Oil,"
http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~pdscott/qov.html


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