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Affidavit by
Peter Dale
Scott, Ph.D. |
THE CIA AND DRUG-TRAFFICKING
BY CONTRA SUPPORTERS
My name
is Peter Dale Scott. I am an author with a doctorate in Political Science
from McGill University. After four years as a diplomat in the Canadian
Foreign Service I taught for thirty-three years at the University of California,
Berkeley.
Four of my books have dealt with the problem
of drug-traffickers who owe their prominence and protection to their involvement
with CIA-backed covert operations. The most relevant of these books is
Cocaine Politics, co-authored with Jonathan Marshall and published
in 1991 by the University of California Press. (Four of the chapters dealt
with the subject of Contras and drug-trafficking, including the California
network of Norwin Meneses.)(1)
At various times I have taken leave from
teaching to conduct full-time research into covert politics. In 1970 I
was a Guggenheim Fellow for a year. In 1973 I took leave again for six
months, for part of which I was a Visiting Fellow at the Center for International
Studies at M.I.T. In 1987 I served in Washington for six months as a Senior
Fellow at, and drug consultant to, the Center for International Development
Policy, gathering information in support of the investigation into Drugs
and Foreign Policy conducted at that time by Senator John Kerry. In that
capacity I consulted with a number of experts in Washington inside and
outside government. I was also a personal eyewitness to the falsity of
a story published in the Washington Post (and subsequently retracted)
which exonerated the Contras from involvement in drug-trafficking.(2)
My researches into U.S. government involvement
with drug-traffickers date back to 1970, when I wrote a book, The War
Conspiracy, about the origins of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War.
I returned to this topic yet again in 1986, when I noticed that certain
Cuban exiles I had already written about, some of them indicted or convicted
drug-traffickers, were involved in the Contra support movement in Costa
Rica.(3)
After twenty-five years of research, I have
come to believe, as I wrote in 1992, that "governments themselves,
and the links they develop with major traffickers, are the key both to
the drug-trafficking problem and to its solution."(4)
The United States Government is by no means the only example of such involvement,
but it is the one with the most deleterious impact on its own citizens.
One can see this impact in the efforts in
the 1980s by the CIA, and later Oliver North, to arrange for extra-governmental
support for the Contras. These arrangements led to documented U.S. government
involvement with, and often support to, top-level drug-traffickers in Mexico,
Honduras, El Salvador, Costa Rica, and Panama, as well as with domestic
traffickers in the states of Florida, Arkansas, Louisiana, Kentucky, Michigan,
Texas, and California. This recurring pattern of involvement with those
who dominated the drug traffic cannot be dismissed as an accidental or
coincidental aberration.
In a few cases, Contras and their supporters
became traffickers after their contact with CIA officers. This was the
case with Ricky Ross's supplier, Danilo Blandon Reyes. The CIA might argue
in its defense that Blandon, and others like him, were not traffickers
at the time contact was made. But one hears recurring reports that such
recruits were given to understand that funds should be raised for the Contras
by any means, which was taken to include drug-trafficking. Blandon has
testified that he heard this from a leading U.S. protege in the Contras,
Enrique Bermudez. Other, more senior Contra officials have claimed to have
heard the same guidance from at least one high-ranked CIA officer.
It is a matter of record that the CIA has
also established contacts with those already known to the U.S. government
as major narcotics traffickers. This was the case with Blandon's supplier,
Norwin Meneses, a highly publicized Contra supporter who had been listed
as a trafficker in DEA records since the 1970s.
Read the rest of
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