Who
Is Richard Armitage
And What Is His Interest In Afghanistan?

The
Man Or The Myth?
Allegations Of Drugs, Arms, And CIA Covert Operations
"....for
the foreseeable future oil will remain an essential commodity.
Greater attention must therefore be given to increasing supplies
of oil in ways that diversify supplies from areas other than the Persian Gulf. The most promising new source of world
supplies is the Caspian
region, which
appears to contain the largest petroleum reserves discovered
since the North Sea. This geopolitical crossroad, which includes
Iran, Russia, and a number of newly-independent states struggling
with post-Soviet modernization and dangers of Islamic extremism,
demands more attention by American policymakers."
AMERICAS NATIONAL INTERESTS
A Report from The Commission on Americas National
Interests, July 2000
Co-authored by Richard Armitage et al [pdf]
| The Armitage Effect Who Is Richard Armitage And What Are His Interests In Central Asia? |
| Who Is Richard Armitage And What Are His Business Interests? |
| Armitage's Central Asian Targets |
| Afghan Route to Caspian Sea Already Lined Up For US Attack by July 2001 |
| Armitage, The ISI and 911 Hijacker Mohammed Atta |
| Armitage following Cheney Strategy for Central Asia |
| What Did Armitage Know About 911? |
| What Did Richard Armitage Do On 911? |
'The Special
Relationship' |
"Honoured
with a KCMG is Richard Armitage, deputy secretary of state under
Colin Powell between 2001 and 2005 and a leading player in rallying
diplomatic support for the Iraq invasion. Mr
Armitage's role in the Iran-contra arms
smuggling
scandal was controversial enough to prevent him becoming army
secretary in 1989.
He worked alongside Oliver North to trade arms to Iran illegally
and siphon profits to the Nicaraguan contra rebels."
For services to the UK: top awards for foreign tycoons, military
and the Corrs
Guardian, 24 April 2006
"H. Ross
Perot has used his vast wealth (estimated at about $2.5 billion
or so) to launch his own private probe into a network of former CIA agents
and military officials.... Among the targets of Perot's current probe are some
whose names have surfaced in connection with Iranscam
[Iran-Contra]. He has been looking into the alleged links between
ex-CIA Agents
Thomas Clines and Theodore Shackley, retired Generals Richard
Secord and John Singlaub, Iranian-born Businessman Albert Hakim
and other former and present Government officials going back to
the early 1960s.
'I think we'll conclude that Admiral Poindexter and Colonel North
were bit players,' he told the Washington Post two weeks ago,
'and the major characters were people who were in the weapons
business for years, some of whom had CIA connections.' A far more
curious target is Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard Armitage....After his appointment in 1981, [Richard] Armitage began working in Southeast Asia to
track down reports of MIAs ['Missing In Action' soldiers] in Viet-Nam; [Ross] Perot
suspected him of not doing enough. Last October, Perot met with Armitage at the Pentagon and bluntly demanded
that he resign. Perot's stated reason was that Armitage had
written, on Pentagon stationery, a glowing character reference
for a Vietnamese woman refugee, Nguyet Thi O'Rourke, who had been
convicted of running a gambling operation in Virginia. Armitage later conceded that using Pentagon
stationery had been 'dumb', but not illegal or improper. At the
meeting, Armitage vigorously denied any implication that he had anything to do with an illicit arms or drug network, Perot then took his case to George Bush [Snr]. The Vice President's office has
confirmed that Perot raised 'what he considered to be evidence of
wrongdoing ' by Armitage. Bush told Perot to go to the 'proper
authorities.' So the billionaire called on FBI Director William
Webster. Perot has also made at least one visit to the White House carrying a pile of documents. Yet he
has received no support from the Reagan Administration. In fact, National Security Adviser Frank Carlucci in January called him in to ask him to
stop pursuing Armitage....."
PEROT'S PRIVATE PROBES
TIME, 4 May 1987
"...From
1989 through 1992 Mr. Armitage filled key diplomatic positions as
Presidential Special Negotiator for the Philippines Military
Bases Agreement and Special Mediator for Water in the Middle
East. President Bush sent him as a Special Emissary to Jordan's
King Hussein during the 1991 Gulf War. In the Pentagon from June
1983 to May 1989, he served as Assistant Secretary of Defense for
International Security Affairs. He represented the Department of
Defense in developing
politico-military relationships and initiatives throughout the
world, spearheaded
U.S. Pacific security policy including the U.S.-Japan and
U.S.-China security relationships, managed all DoD Security
Assistance programs, and provided oversight of policies related
to the law of the sea, U.S.
special operations forces, and counter-terrorism. He played a leading role in
Middle East Security policies. In May 1975 Mr. Armitage came to
Washington as a Pentagon consultant and was posted in Tehran,
Iran until November 1976. Following two years in the private
sector, he took the position as Administrative Assistant to
Senator Robert Dole of Kansas in 1978. In the 1980 Reagan
campaign Mr. Armitage was senior advisor to the Interim Foreign
Policy Advisory Board, which prepared the President-Elect for
major international policy issues confronting the new
administration. From 1981 until June 1983 Mr. Armitage was Deputy
Assistant Secretary of Defense for East Asia and Pacific Affairs
in the Office of the Secretary of Defense..."
[FROM AN APPROVED BIOGRAPHY]
Ambassador Richard Lee Armitage
"It is generally believed that
Mr. Armitage actually served in the Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) till 1978 and from 1976, after a cover resignation from the
CIA, worked for some private companies of the CIA, which were
being used by it for covert actions in Indo-China. His critics had alleged in the
past that he was the author of the idea of using heroin to weaken
the fighting capability of the communists in Indo-China and then
in Afghanistan..."
DONALD RUMSFELD AND RICHARD ARMITAGE:
Background Notes
South
Asia Analysis Group, 6 June 2002
The Drug Trafficking Allegations
"A drug warlord in Burma accuses
Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard L. Armitage and others of drug trafficking to fund anti-communist
operations, the
Riverside Press-Enterprise reported Thursday...In a three-hour videotape interview smuggled out of Southeast Asia within
the past week, Khun Sa said high-ranking American officials were
involved in drug trafficking between 1965 and at least
1979."
Associated Press 4 June, 1987
"Yesterday
I detailed one of a series of news reports about Richard Armitage, the nominee to be deputy secretary of
state. Syndicated columnist Jack Anderson extensively reported in
1986 about Armitage's alleged connection with a Vietnamese woman.
Armitage had written a letter on behalf of the woman during the
time she was being investigated for participating in an organized
crime gambling ring. That report contributed to Armitage twice
having to withdraw from consideration for high-ranking positions
in the first Bush administration. He simply could not get past
Senate confirmation. But that was not all that helped derail
Armitage back then. As
the Associated Press reported on June 4, 1987, 'A drug warlord in
Burma accuses Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard L. Armitage
and others of drug trafficking to fund anti-communist operations,
the Riverside Press-Enterprise reported Thursday.' The AP story
then stated, 'In a three-hour videotape interview smuggled out of
Southeast Asia within the past week, Khun Sa said high-ranking American
officials were involved in drug trafficking between 1965 and at
least 1979.' This three-hour videotape was made by retired Army Green Beret Lt. Colonel James
'Bo' Gritz
and then smuggled out of Burma. I have seen part of this tape
and it is chilling. It is now being sent to the FBI and to
the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee to be used during
Armitage's confirmation process. Mr. Armitage denied any
involvement in the drug trade. He called the allegations,
according to AP, 'ludicrous and baseless.' He also was never
charged with any crime based on these or other allegations. But
Khun Sa, according to the AP story, 'said Armitage controlled the
finances of the alleged American drug operation.' On the tape,
one of Khun Sa's aides says, 'After the Vietnam War, Richard
Armitage was a prominent trafficker in Bangkok. Between 1975 and
1979 he was a very popular trafficker. He was one of the embassy
employees.' Armitage, in his denial, also denied being an
'embassy employee.' However, he does claim to have worked as a
'consultant' to the Defense Department working on Iran naval
programs. An allegation of participation in 'drug trafficking',
reported by AP, and another allegation of using his Pentagon
office to help an alleged gambler, reported by Jack Anderson. No
wonder he could not be confirmed by the U.S. Senate! Now, however, Colin Powell wants
his 'best friend in the world' in the super-powerful position of
deputy secretary of state. Why, if Armitage was not able to pass
muster 12 years ago, should he make the grade this time?"
Why
Taint the New Bush Administration?
NewsMax, 1 March
2001
| Lt
Col. Bo Gritz Document Index - Click Here Lt Col. Bo Gitz Television Interview July 1988 - Click Here |
"Those who
served in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam War swear that indeed
the CIA actively participated in drug running as an 'off-the-books' way to
finance the secret war in Laos. And, two decades later, similar charges
flew that the CIA used the same playbook in Central America to
finance our support for the
Contras in Nicaragua during a time when Congress refused to fund that
effort. Six weeks
ago here I quoted various newspapers from the mid-1980s that
carried the charge by Burmese Drug War Lord Kun Sa against longtime CIA employee
Richard Armitage - by name - that Armitage was directly involved
in the drug trade and in importing the drugs into the U.S.
Armitage has always denied these reports. Still, he is the only U.S. government
employee I have ever heard of who was specifically fingered by
name in a drug charge. Despite these serious charges and
with no investigation whatsoever - the US Senate last month
confirmed Armitage as deputy secretary of state. Makes you wonder
how serious Washington really is about the War on Drugs,
doesnt it?"
Could
the CIA Be Bringing Drugs Into the USA?
NewsMax, 26 April
2001
"The refusal of the United State
government to accept our 'SIX YEARS DRUGS ERADICATION PLAN'
presented at the Congressional Hearing by Congressman Mr. Lester
Wolff after his visit to Thailand in April 1977, was really a
great disappointment for us. Even after this disappointment, we
continued writing letters to President Carter and President
Reagan forwarding our sincere wish to help and participate in
eradicating drugs. We are really surprised and doubtful as to
"why the US government refuses our participation and help to
make a success of the drugs eradication program.... During the
period (1965 -1975) CIA Chief in Laos, Theodore Shackley was in
the drug business, having contacts with the Opium Warlord Lor
Sing Han and his followers. Santo Trafficante acted as his buying
and transporting agent while Richard Armitage
handled the financial section with the Banks in Australia.
Even after the Vietnam War ended, when Richard Armitage was being posted to the U S Embassy in
Thailand, his dealings in the drug business continued as before.
He was then acting as the US government official concerning with
the drugs problems in South East Asia. After 1979, Richard Armitage resigned from the US Embassy's posting
and set up the 'Far East Trading Company' as a front for his
continuation in the drug trade and to bribe CIA agents in Laosand
around the world. Soon After, Daniel Arnold was made to handle
the drug business as well as the transportation of arms sales.
Jerry Daniels then took over the drug trade from Richard Armitage. For over 10 years, Armitage supported his men in Laos and Thailand
with the profits from his drug trade and most of the cash were
deposited with the banks in Australia which was to be used in
buying his way for quicker promotions to higher positions. Within
the month of July, 1980, Thailand's English newspaper Bangkok
Post: included a news-report that CIA agents were using Australia
as a transit-base for their drug business and the banks in
Australia for depositing, transferring the large sum of money.
Verifications of the news report can be made by the USJustice
Department with Bangkok Post and in Australia."
Letter to US Justice Department 28 June 1987
Khun
Sa -Vice Chairman, THAILAND REVOLUTIONARY COUNCIL ( T.R. C.)
"I returned
to Burma with two other American witnesses, Lance Trimmer, a
private detective from San Francisco, and Barry Flynn from
Boston. Gen Khun Sa identified some of those in government
service he says were dealing in heroin and arms sales. We video taped this second
interview and I turned copies over in June 1987, to the Chairman
of the Select Committee on Intelligence; Chairman of the House on
Foreign Affairs Task Force on Narcotics Control; Co-Chairman,
Senate Narcotics Committee; Senator Harry Reid, NV;
Representative James Bilbray, NV; and other Congressional
members. Mister Richard Armitage, Assistant Secretary of Defense
for International Security Affairs, is one of those USG officials
implicated by Khun Sa. Nothing was done with this evidence that
indicated that anyone of authority, including yourself, had
intended to do anything more than protect Mr. Armitage..... Please answer why a respected
American Citizen like Mister H. Ross Perot can bring you a pile
of evidence of wrongdoing by Armitage and others, and you,
according to TIME magazine (May 4, page 18), not only offer him
no support, but have your Secretary of Defense, Frank Carlucci
tell Mr. Perot to 'stop pursuing Mr. Armitage'. Why Sir, will you
not look into affidavits gathered by The Christic Institute
(Washington, D.C.), which testify that Armitage not only
trafficked in heroin, but did so under the guise of an officer
charged with bringing home our POWs..... in May 1987, Gen Khun
Sa, in his jungle headquarters, named Richard Armitage as a key
connection in a ring of heroin trafficking mobsters and USG
officials.... I am enclosing some documentation that supports the
charges made. Chief is a letter from Khun Sa to the U.S. Justice
Department dated 28 June 1987, wherein Richard Armitage is named
along with Theodore Shackley (your former Deputy Director CIA
from Covert Operations) and others...."
Lt Colonel Bo Gritz to George Bush Snr
Letter - 1 February 1988
"What I
want to tell you very quickly is something that I feel is more
heinous than the Bataan death march. Certainly it is of more
concern to you as Americans than the Watergate. What I'm talking
about is something we found out in Burma - May 1987. We found it
out from a man named Khun Sa. He is the recognized overlord of
heroin in the world. Last year he sent 900 tons of opiates and
heroin into the free world. This year it will be 1200 tons. On
video tape he said to us something that was most astounding: that
US government officials have been and are now his biggest
customers, and have been for the last twenty years..... The
Christic Institute's charges ...... were featured briefly in the
Iran-Contra hearings during Jack Brooks' questioning of Richard
Secord..... Why
hasn't Mr. Armitage been investigated? When we came back I was told by
telephone in Bangkok, 'Bo, if you don't erase and forget
everything that you have done, you're going to get hurt.' I was
told, 'Everybody loves you. Nobody wants to hurt you. No one
wants to put a war hero in jail, but if you don't cooperate
you're going to hurt the government.'... We did go before
congress. You know who runs the drug task force in the house of
representatives? Lawrence Smith. He is a democrat from 'Miami
Vice' Florida and his staff told me before I came up, 'Bo, you
better be well-heeled-for-bear because the people who keep the
chairman in office are more prone to promote drugs than they are
to fight them.' When I got up there Lawrence Smith would not
allow any members of the task force to view the video tapes that
we brought from Khun Sa in Burma.'.... He ended the hearing by
saying, 'I don't think there is any substantive evidence here
that would indicate any further investigation need be made.' He
never called H. Ross Perot. He never called the Christic
Institute. ' "
Bo Gritz, Video Transcript
A NATION BETRAYED, Part 1 and Part 2
"The last
time a Republican administration was put together, there were
only two political appointees who didn't make it through the
confirmation process. One was John Tower, the elder President
Bush's ill-fated pick to head the Defense Department. The other
was Richard L.
Armitage.
Armitage, who served as an assistant secretary of defense under
President Reagan, was to be the new administration's secretary of
the Army. Before his nomination could come to a vote, however, he
withdrew his name, citing the traditional need to spend more time
with his family.... Perhaps more relevant was the draft of an
article of mine that had just been shown by a right-wing
Republican senator to a top Pentagon official. Co-authored by
Richard Ryan, this article never appeared in print, but the
threat that it would soon be published apparently convinced
Armitage and the administration that the confirmation process
would not be worth the trouble. The article was about Armitage's
relationship with a woman named Nguyet Thi O'Rourke, a Vietnamese
immigrant convicted of running a gambling operation in Northern
Virginia.... We
were interested in Armitage because of his prominent role in the Christic Institute lawsuit. The lawsuit--which was
eventually thrown out of court, with sanctions that crushed the
nonprofit law firm--alleged that members of the secret Contra
resupply effort like Richard Secord were part of a long-standing
'Secret Team' of military and intelligence operatives that had
been involved in various illegal activities going back at least
to 1959. According to the Christic
Institute's affidavit, Armitage was a key player in this team,
helping to funnel drug
profits
from Laos and Thailand into assassination programs in Vietnam and
Iran.... Armitage
also attended a Pentagon meeting in August 1986 in which Oliver
North outlined the covert activities in support of the Contras
that he had been supervising through the National Security
Council. Armitage denied remembering anything about this meeting
as well....The withdrawal of Armitage's nomination as Army
secretary was by no means an exile. He went on to become a sort
of trouble-shooter for the first Bush administration, serving as
a special liaison to the Philippines and the Middle East. After
the breakup of the Soviet Union, he oversaw U.S. aid programs to
the former Soviet republics as a special ambassador."
Secret Agent Man
Iran-Contra operative Richard Armitage is now Colin Powell's No.2
In TheseTimes, 5 March 2001
"During the battles in Laos and
Vietnam, enterprising fellows discovered that in the Golden
Triangle the junction of Burma, Laos and Thailand
poppy plants (raw material for opium and heroin) were growing
abundantly. And it became equally clear that the drugs would
bring in a nice profit for those clever enough to export them to
eager customers in the US. The vehicles of choice were the
coffins and body bags of the fallen US military. After the
Vietnam War, profits became just one of the official goals of the
drug trade. The other goal: use the profits for destabilization
and war activities in targeted Third World countries.
Enter Lieutenant Colonel James 'Bo' Gritz a 30-year
military veteran and the most decorated Green Beret commander of
the Vietnam era. Gritz was awarded 62 citations for valor, five
silver stars, eight bronze stars, two purple hearts and a
presidential citation. The feature films Rambo, Uncommon Valor
and Missing in Action were based in part upon his real-life
military experiences. According to tapes produced by the
now-defunct The Other Americas Radio based in Santa Barbara, CA,
Gritz had been asked by National Security Council staffer Tom
Harvey to resign from his commission and, as a private citizen,
go back into the jungles of Vietnam to search for American POWs
and MIA soldiers. Gritz did so. But what he found was a heroin
highway and a nation betrayed by high-level American officials
involved in narcotics trafficking. He discovered Gen. Khun Sa, drug lord of
the Golden Triangle. 'The US government was his best customer,'
Gritz reported. The drug lord told Gritz that he would like to
stop dealing in drugs and stop the flow of heroin into the US,
but that 'he'd need help from the US government.' 'Drug
suppression money came through alright, and it went into paving a
road in the jungles so they could bring out the heroin in ten-ton
trucks,' Gritz said disgustedly. 'The whole POW situation was
being undermined by US government officials involved in drug
trafficking. US government officials are Khun Sa's biggest drug
customers, and have been for the last 20 years. 'We have a
Constitution that says that the laws will be made by the
Congress, enforced by the executive branch, interpreted by the
judicial branch. But
in reality we have an executive branch that has for more than a
20 years operated in what Ollie North called a parallel
government. 'When the Congress says no, it makes no
difference. They're gonna do it anyway. And it is special
intelligence top secret. Why? Not because the Communists
don't know what were doing. It's to keep it a secret from you:
the public. You're not capable of making those kinds of
decisions, according to those in parallel government. The reason
I know...I was there. I've been a product of parallel government
myself.' 'The CIA used drugs to fund covert operations in Laos,'
Gritz said. 'The money that would not be appropriated by a
liberal Congress was appropriated anyway. And you know who we
used for distribution? Santos Trafficante, old friend of the CIA
and mobster out of Cuba and Florida. We lost the war!
Fifty-eight-thousand Americans were killed. Seventy-thousand
became drug casualties. In the Sixties and Seventies you saw an
infusion of drugs into America like never before.' When
Gritz returned from the Golden Triangle in December 1986 with
information about the involvement of high-level US officials in
large-scale drug trafficking in Southeast Asia, Tom Harvey and
his superiors in the White House were not pleased. Harvey told
Gritz that White House had no interest in stopping the flow of
drugs coming in from the Golden Triangle into the free
world. Gritz had come away with a list of key Washington
players who were part of the Khun Sa network. But when he got back to
the US, he was called by a 'friend.' He was told to expunge the
list of drug trade connections in the MIA files, and that should
he talk, he would find himself up on charges, with 'witnesses'
ready to testify against him. Gritz went public. He mentioned Ted Shackley,
who used civilians to organize the drugs, and Richard Armitage,
who handled the finances in the banks of Australia. As the official in the US
government responsible for MIAs, Armitage failed in his official
duties and resigned in 1977. Armitage is now Deputy Secretary of
State under Colin Powell, despite his known connections to the
Iran-Contra and other scandals."
The Truth Behind America's Love Affair with the War on Drugs
Chicago Media Watch, February
2002
"Much of the opium profits from CIA
involvement with drug
traffickers in the Golden Triangle were laundered
through the Nugan
Hand Bank in Australia. A network of high-ranking
U.S. military officers and intelligence officers had links to the
Nugan-Hand Bank, which was charged by an Australian commission of
investigation with narcotics trafficking, gun-running, money
laundering, and massive fraud (Kwitny, 1987, New York Times,
March 8, 1987). In his investigation of the Nugan- Hand Bank,
Jonathan Kwitny charges that the bank laundered billions of dollars, helped finance
the heroin trade in the Golden Triangle and engaged in tax fraud
and theft (Kwitny, 1987: 76). Who were the officers of this
'heroin' bank? The president of Nugan-Hand was retired U.S.
Admiral Earl F. Yates. Its legal counsel was former CIA director William Colby...."
CRJ
875: Crime and Public Policy
Module 9: State-Organized Crime
as a Case Study Of Criminal Policy
Gary W. Potter, Professor, Criminal Justice and Police Studies
The Department of Criminal Justice and Police Studies
Eastern Kentucky University
"While we
usually think of corruption in relation to police officers on the
street and local prosecutors, the drug war has managed to offer incentives for corruption that
reach to the very highest levels of the United States government. It is indeed ironic that the very
agencies of government who are beating the drums loudest in the
war on drugs have also established an infamous record of
accepting assistance from and providing logistical support to some of the
largest drug trafficking syndicates in the world."
CRJ 875: Crime and Public
Policy
Module
5: The Failure of Drug Control Policies
Gary W. Potter, Professor, Criminal Justice and Police Studies
Eastern Kentucky University
Drugs And The Bogus 'War Against
Terrorism' |
"Readers
over the age of 40 might recall that in the late 1980s, there was
a fierce fight pitting the Reagan and Bush I administrations
against a few gutsy Democrats in Congress--Senator John Kerry among them--who were trying to
investigate allegations that supporters of the Reagan-backed
contra rebels in Central America were involved in drugrunning.
Rather than cooperate in the search for truth, Reagan and Bush I
officials withheld documents from the Democrats. They also
badmouthed the investigations and did all they could to
marginalize these inquiries as nothing but partisan-driven
efforts of conspiracy-minded wingnuts. And, to a degree, the GOP
obstructionists succeeded. The Iran-contra committees stayed away
from the matter. The report produced by Kerry's
subcommittee--which concluded there was evidence that supporters
of the CIA-assisted contras were drug smugglers--received little
media attention. Yet
years later, the CIA's own inspector general released two reports
that acknowledged the CIA had knowingly worked with contra
supporters suspected of drugrunning. Kerry and the others had
been right. But the sly spinners of the Reagan-Bush
administrations had succeeded in preventing the contra drug
connection from becoming a full-blown scandal."
John Bolton: Ally of Drugrunners
David Corn - The Nation, 30 March 2005
"President George Bush is
rapidly putting his own stamp on the US presidency, but his
recent lower-level appointments show that the substance of the
new team in Washington is overwhelmingly from of the era of his
father and Ronald Reagan. The return of the Reaganites is
particularly evident in the areas of foreign and defence policy,
where Mr Bush has just appointed Richard
Armitage deputy secretary of state
under Colin Powell. Mr Armitage is a
Pentagon veteran of the Reagan and Bush Sr era, during which he
played a key role as a Middle East policy expert. His role in the
Iran-contra arms
smuggling scandal was sufficiently
important to force George Bush Sr to withdraw his the nomination
as army secretary in 1989. Mr Armitage
worked closely with Colonel Oliver North in the secret Reagan
White House effort to trade arms to Iran and syphon some of the
profits to Nicaraguan contra
rebels in defiance of an arms ban."
Return of the Reaganites
Guardian, 14 February 2001
Official State Department Biography - click here
"The
appointment of career covert operative and Annapolis graduate
Richard Armitage
as Deputy Secretary of State under Colin Powell only underscores
the clear message that the Bush administration is sending to the
world. Armitage -
better known as 'Armitage
The Executioner'
- was denied a 1989 appointment as Assistant Secretary of State
because of his links to Iran-Contra
and other scandals. He served as Assistant Secretary of Defense
for International Security Affairs in the Reagan years. US
government stipulations in the Oliver North trial specifically
named Armitage
as one of the officials responsible for illegal transfers of
weapons to Iran and the Contras. Activist group Voices from the
Wilderness notes: 'Armitage
has also been routinely exposed as a Bush-era covert functionary
who has been linked to covert operations, drug
smuggling and the expansion of organized crime operations in
Russia, Central Asia and the Far East.' Clearly, the Iran-Contra
team is coming back to power with a vengeance."
War on Other Nations
Chicago Media Watch
"So
who is Richard
Armitage?
None other than a former board member of CACI - the private
contractor that employed four interrogators at Abu Ghraib prison
- interrogators who worked with the 205th Military Intelligence
Brigade there.....Armitages past helps explain why he now
is interfering directly in Australian politics. He was indirectly
connected with the Iran-Contra scandal when he served in the
Reagan administration as Assistant Secretary of Defense for
International Security Affairs. He had direct knowledge of the
diversion of funds, from arms sold to Iran (illegally but
approved by Reagan), that were syphoned through the CIA to the
Contras (illegally but again, approved by Reagan) for
CIA-directed use against the Sandinista government in
Nicaragua.Armitage, like some other officials in the Reagan
administration, did not like the illegality of the whole
operation but they did not come forward with their
knowledge and Armitage, in his Defense position, would
most likely have known most of the details."
Richard Armitage - the connections behind his attack on Latham
Sydney Morning Herald, 10 June 2004
"On March 23, after being
recommended in a unanimous 18-0 vote by the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, former Vietnam-era covert operative and
Contra-era figure Richard Armitage
was confirmed as Deputy Secretary of State in a voice vote on the
Senate Floor. The unchallenged confirmation of a figure who had
previously been investigated by President Reagan's Commission on
Organized Crime (1984) for alleged links to gambling and
prostitution was totally ignored by the major American media.... Armitage,
who was denied a 1989 appointment as Assistant Secretary of State
because of links to Iran-Contra and other scandals, served as
Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs
in the Reagan years. U.S. Government stipulations in the Oliver
North trial specifically named Armitage
as one of the DoD officials responsible for illegal transfers of
weapons to Iran
and the Contras. But Armitage's
dirty past goes much deeper. A Vietnam veteran and graduate of
Annapolis, Armitage's
roots have been thoroughly intertwined with the likes of CIA
veteran Ted Shackley, Richard Secord, Heine Aderholt, Elliot
Abrams, Dewey Clarridge, Edwin Wilson and Tom Clines. All of
these men have been directly linked to CIA covert operations, the
drug trade, the abandonment of U.S. prisoners of War after
Vietnam and/or Iran-Contra. Armitage
has also been routinely discussed in FTW as a Bush-era covert
functionary who has been linked to covert operations, drug
smuggling and the expansion of organized crime operations in
Russia, Central Asia and the Far East."
RICHARD ARMITAGE QUIETLY CONFIRMED
AS DEPUTY SECRETARY OF STATE
From The Wilderness Publications, March 2001
"The administration would sell arms to
Iran and divert the proceeds to the Contras. Since both ends of the operation
were highly illegal - Iran was also under a US arms embargo - it
had to be secret.... But ... later the Nicaraguans shot down a
CIA supply plane. A month after that, a Lebanese newspaper
reported Reagan's arms deals with Iran. A frenzy of shredding and
the destruction of emails broke out, and it took a congressional
investigation - during which Poindexter, Elliott Abrams, Caspar
Weinberger, Colin Powell (now [2003] secretary of state) and Richard
Armitage
(now [2003] deputy secretary of state) lied - and a specially
appointed independent counsel to get the full story. By then,
though, as the independent counsel reported, the administration's
web of deceit had achieved its objectives - to protect Reagan,
vice-president George Bush and the rest from the consequences of
their conspiracy. As the independent counsel put it, Poindexter
and North were made 'the scapegoats whose sacrifice would protect
the Reagan administration in its final two years'.... Poindexter,
North and two others were indicted on 23 counts of conspiracy to
defraud the US and Poindexter was convicted on five felony counts
of conspiracy, false statements, destruction and removal of
records and obstruction of Congress. Elliott Abrams later pleaded
guilty to withholding information from Congress. George Bush
senior pardoned him; and Bush junior appointed him director of
the National Security Council's office for democracy, human
rights and international operations and then to his current job
as director of Middle East affairs in the White House. The wars
these men promoted had left 75,000 dead in El Salvador and
30,000-40,000 dead in Nicaragua, not to mention many thousands
dead in Guatemala and Honduras".
Masters of
deceit
Convicted felons
responsible for thousands of deaths are calling the shots at the
White House
Guardian, 7 August 2003
"On
March 23, after being recommended in a unanimous 18-0 vote by the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, former Vietnam-era covert
operative and Contra-era figure Richard Armitage was confirmed as Deputy Secretary of
State in a voice vote on the Senate Floor.... The total lack of
opposition to Armitage's appointment indicates an apparent
inability of the US Congress to muster any critical examination
of appointments... Armitage, who was denied a 1989 appointment as Assistant Secretary of State
because of links to Iran-Contra and other scandals, served as
Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs
in the Reagan years. U.S. Government stipulations in the Oliver
North trial specifically named Armitage as one of the DoD
officials responsible for illegal transfers of weapons to Iran and the Contras.... A Vietnam veteran and graduate
of Annapolis, Armitage's roots have been thoroughly intertwined
with the likes of CIA veteran Ted Shackley, Richard Secord, Heine
Aderholt, Elliot Abrams, Dewey Clarridge, Edwin Wilson and
Tom Clines. All of these men have been directly linked to CIA
covert operations.... "
Richard Armitage Quietly
Confirmed As Deputy Secretary of State
'From The Wilderness', March 2001
"A proposal drafted by Elliott Abrams,
a special assistant to President George W. Bush on the National
Security Council(NSC), arguing for the United States to assert de
facto control of Iraqi oil fields has stunned State Department
officials. It doesn't help that Abrams (right) was convicted of
withholding information from Congress during the Iran-Contra scandal, only to receive a presidential
pardon from the current president's father.... Pentagon sources
say Abrams has the backing of Paul Wolfowitz, the conservative
deputy defense secretary, and the support of the office of
conservative Vice President Dick Cheney. "
Iraqi oil strategy divides state, White House
Insight Magazine, 24 December 2002
| What Was 'Iran-Contra' and 'October Surprise'? - Click Here |
"Years
before George W. Bush entered the White House, and years before
the Sept. 11 attacks set the direction of his presidency, a group
of influential neo-conservatives hatched a plan to get Saddam
Hussein out of power... The group was never secret about its
aims. In its 1998 open letter to Clinton, the group openly advocated
unilateral U.S. action against Iraq.... Of the 18 people who
signed the letter, 10 are now in the Bush administration. As well
as Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz, they include Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage ... "
Were Neo-Conservatives 1998
Memos a Blueprint for Iraq War?
ABC News, 10 March 2003
"Another key
player in the Bush Administration, Deputy Secretary of Defense
Richard Armitage, left his post as an Assistant Secretary of
Defense in the Reagan Administration after a series of scandals
connected to CIA operatives Ed Wilson, Ted Shackley, Richard
Secord and Tom Clines placed him at the brink of criminal
indictment and jail. Shackley and Secord are veterans of Vietnam
operations and have long been linked to opium/heroin smuggling.
The Armitage scandals all focused on the illegal
provision of weapons and war materiel to potential or actual
enemies of the U.S. and to the Contras in Central America. Armitage, a former Navy SEAL, who reportedly enjoyed
combat missions and killing during covert operations in Laos
during the Vietnam War, has never been far from the Bush family's
side. Throughout his career, both in and out of government, he
has been perpetually connected to CIA drug smuggling operations.
Secretary of State Colin Powell, in a 1995 Washington Post story,
called Armitage, 'my white son.' In 1990, then President
Bush dispatched Armitage
to Russia to aid in its 'transition' to capitalism. Armitage's Russian work for Bush has been frequently
connected to the explosion of drug trafficking under the Russian
Mafias, which became virtual rulers of the nation afterwards. In
the early 1990s Armitage
had extensive involvement in Albania at the same time that the
Albanian ally, Kosovo Liberation Army was coming to power and
consolidating its grip, according to The Christian Science
Monitor, on 70% of the world's opium trade. [See FTW Vol. II, No
2 - April 24, 1999] Armitage
and Carlucci are both Board Members of the influential Washington
think tank, the Middle East Policy Council. The connections
continue with Vice President Dick Cheney."
The Best Enemies Money Can
Buy
From the Wilderness Publications, 9 October 2001
"What has happened over the
years to the CIA? They have become a government inside a
government. One problem is that the CIA spies on its own
government. Yes, the CIA places 'agents' in other federal
agencies, and on the staffs of House and Senate committees, to
'keep an eye on things.' Which leads to this serious oversight
problem: Every
congressional committee that oversees intelligence activities has
CIA staff on its staff. That way
Langley can keep track of trouble brewing it its own backyard.
That's like having the fox guarding the chicken coop. This is the biggest - and so far
unreported - scandal in the US today.
Bigger than Enron, bigger than anything else. The very fact that the CIA is an
uncontrollable agency operating outside the Constitution - and
getting away with it - is something that one day is going to blow
open, and cause big trouble. A small - but meaningful - example:
In the mid-1980's, then-Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard Armitage
personally arranged for a uniformed military officer to be
detailed to temporary White House duty. This officer had some
innocuous job description. In reality his assignment was simple:
to spy on the inner workings of the President's Reagan's office.
Get the daily schedule of the senior staff, listen in on as many
conversations as possible, find out what was 'brewing' before
others knew - and then report all of this daily back to Armitage.
A career CIA man, Armitage
wanted to know what was happening at the White House -- so that
the Pentagon and the CIA could be 'ahead of the curve.' Armitage today is Deputy Secretary of
State and may very well have a similar 'operative' placed in the
White House and National Security Council.
This is plain out-and-out wrong. Federal agencies should not be
expending taxpayers' money and human intelligence spying on each
other, instead of spying on our foreign adversaries. But they do.
And that is but the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the
enormous leeway the CIA has --because of the very nature of its'
secretive mission - to do anything it wants. Less well known to
the general public is the extent to which the CIA is also
protected by certain federal judges. These friends of the agency,
strategically placed on the federal bench (some used to work for
the CIA) will always be there to get the CIA off the hook in case
something bad happens."
CIA: THE ENRON OF INTELLIGENCE
AGENCIES
The Idler, 8 February 2002
"The Department of State is
under growing pressure from the Central Intelligence Agency to
destroy its inventory of an official history of U.S. relations
with Greece during the 1960s and to replace it with a new,
sanitized version...The sticking point appears to be a handful of
documents that allude to CIA intervention in the electoral
process in Greece some 35 years ago. ... Director of Central
Intelligence George J. Tenet
has gotten personally involved in the matter, attempting to
enlist the help of Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage
in blocking release of the official history. According to one
source, Mr. Tenet
contacted Mr. Armitage
to discuss the matter as recently as the night of September 10,
at a time when his attention might have been more profitably
directed elsewhere. A State Department official would not confirm
or deny that the September 10 conversation took place."
STATE DEPT MULLS "BOOK
BURNING"
Federation of American Scientists, 21 September 2001
"So what
was the UK's 'national security adviser' doing in America on Sept
11? Was his visit prompted by the terrorist threat that Tony
Blair now confirms 'everybody knew' was being planned? Despite
his de facto status as Blair's special envoy on foreign affairs
and security matters the US State Department appointment
records
show no scheduled meetings for Manning with Secretary Powell
himself during the days immediately prior to the attacks. Those records do, however, show that he was meeting with Deputy
Secretary of State Richard Armitage on September 10th. Armitage
is second in command to Colin Powell who left for a trip to Peru
later that day, meaning that the Bush administration's principal
'dove' was out of the country when the attacks happened. In
Powell's absence 'when the storm breaks [on 911] Richard
Armitage... is at its heart' according to the BBC's Edward
Stourton (Radio 4, 27 August: 'With Us or Against Us'). So who is
Richard Armitage? Described by Stourton as a 'bulldog diplomat', Armitage has had a 'colourful'
previous history. This embraces alleged covert operations with
the CIA, including illegal arms and drug running on behalf of the
US government. Those activities include illicit dealings with
people within what is now know as the 'axis of evil' (see links
at bottom of page). He was also deputy to Dick Cheney when the Vice President was
Secretary of Defense in the previous Bush administration.
However, Armitage's wider interests are especially pertinent to
the situation that had developed in Afghanistan by the summer of
2001. As Armitage himself has publicly
acknowledged
the energy reserves of the Caspian Sea region are of great
strategic importance to America and its allies in the
industrialised world. But they also appear to be of some personal
importance to Armitage himself. A report by the US National
Bureau of Asian Research cites an article in the Washington Times
28 July 1997 which lists Armitage, along with Dick Cheney, as
having business or consulting interests in the Caspian zone. It
is also claimed that Armitage was contracted by US oil and gas
corporation Unocal to work on Central Asia pipeline interests in
1997
when he was head of Armitage Associates (also at Armitage Associates was Peter Watson, previously Director of Asian Affairs at the National Security
Council in the first Bush administration.
Watson was appointed President of the Overseas Private Investment
Corporation (OPIC) by George W. Bush in 2001. OPIC provides political risk insurance and loans
to US companies operating overseas 'because it is in America's
economic and strategic interest'. Since Watson's appointment, in
a deal worth $350 million, Unocal has absorbed nearly the whole of the allocation of an OPIC joint initiative with the
U.S. Export-Import Bank and the U.S. Trade and Development Agency
for US business investment in Indonesia . The allocation had been announced
September 2001. The deal is despite Unocal's human rights record and allegations that State Department
documents
indicate the company's involvement in 'corruption, collusion and
nepotism' in several billion-dollar power plant deals with the
Suharto government. Similar allegations have also been made against Enron). The importance of Afghanistan in
this context was spelt out in evidence given to a congressional hearing in 1998 by Unocal's Vice President for
International Relations, John Maresca: 'Mr. Chairman, the Caspian
region contains tremendous untapped hydrocarbon
reserves......[one] option is to build a pipeline south from
Central Asia to the Indian Ocean. One obvious route south would
cross Iran, but this is foreclosed for American companies because
of U.S. sanctions legislation. The only other possible route is
across Afghanistan, which has of course its own unique
challenges..... From the outset, we have made it clear that
construction of the pipeline we have proposed across Afghanistan
could not begin until a recognized government is in place that
has the confidence of governments, lenders, and our company.....'
Unfortunately efforts by the Bush administration to reach a deal
with the Taliban over the proposed pipeline collapsed in the
summer of 2001. No longer willing to tolerate an impasse the US
government threatened Afghanistan with military action during at
a meeting which the BBC reports took place in
Berlin in July. According to one representative of Pakistan
who attended the meeting a US attack on Afghanistan was already
planned for October. Thanks to the special 'skills' of US
diplomacy, therefore, it seems that the first overt provocation
in the west's new war with the Taliban was made by the US in
Berlin in July 2001, and not by al-Qaeda in New York on Sept 11.
It is something of an understatement to say that in the history
of international affairs it is not unknown for provocation to
produce response. Given the threat made by the US in July, it
would be reasonable to have expected trouble there onwards. The
intelligence picked up by the British and other governments last
summer would seem to confirm this. This brings us back to Sir
David Manning's meeting in Washington with Armitage on September
10. Presumably
Manning also had other meetings in Washington that day, although
with whom it is not clear. Neither is the purpose of his visit.
Was he in fact passing on specific intelligence information about
the impending terrorist attacks? It is certainly possible. By
coincidence or otherwise Newsweek magazine reported 24 September that on that same day 'a group of
top Pentagon officials suddenly canceled travel plans for the
next morning, apparently because of security concerns.' It would
be interesting to know what, if any, security issues relating to
America where discussed by Manning during his pre-Sept 11
meetings in Washington and whether they involved any specific
intelligence."
'The Special Relationship' -
Armitage And The UK National Security Adviser
What Did
Britain Know About 911?
'Fight Smart',
28 August 2002
"Mr. Armitage, who had spent some years of his career in
the CIA/DIA and holds the highest Pakistani civil decoration that
could be awarded to a foreigner for his role during the Afghan
war of the 1980s, has a large circle of friends in the Pakistani
military and the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI)
Directorate."
MUSHARRAF: FROM CIA WITH LOVE?
South Asia Analysis Group, 28 May 2001
"The
U.S. military's use of private contractors for the sensitive task
of wartime interrogation marks a sharp shift from traditional
practices and is raising difficult issues of accountability as
authorities investigate the alleged role civilian workers played
in the abuse of Iraqi prisoners.... J.P. 'Jack' London, the
chairman and chief executive officer of CACI International Inc. -
an Arlington, Va., company implicated in an internal Army
investigation of abuses in Iraq - acknowledged in a phone
interview yesterday that his company has done interrogation work
for the U.S. government since the mid- to late 1990s.... More
than 90 percent of CACI's business comes from its main customer -
the Pentagon - and other federal agencies, according to reports
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Among the
company's former directors is Richard L. Armitage, who resigned in 2001 to accept an
appointment from President Bush as deputy secretary of
state."
Contractors act as interrogators
Baltimore Sun, 4 May 2004
"Armitage is always one of those characters
who just happen to be standing around when something BAD happens
to America. Never anything good. ALWAYS something BAD. If he was
a sailor, his shipmates would call him a Jonah."
(Internet forum response to
above Baltimore Sun article)
Libertypost.org, 8 May 2004
"When
the [911] storm breaks, Richard Armitage, Vietnam veteran and bulldog
diplomat, is at its heart. The number two at the State
department, he is minding the shop for Colin Powell, who is away
on official business in Peru. [According to Armitage] 'I was seated in this very
room, and my executive assistant came in and said one of the
towers in New York had been hit by an aircraft. I ran in there,
immediately picked up the phone and called to the assistant
secretary for counter-terrorism. Even before the second airplane
went in, I thought it was impossible to have this happen actually
on a clear day and said, 'We've got a problem.' About that
moment, the second aircraft went into the tower, which I watched
on television. Immediately after that, I was told to go to the
operations center here to get on call to the vice-president, and I spent the rest of the day
in the ops center with the vice-president.'"
Richard Armitage, Deputy
Secretary of State
'With Us or Against US', Programme 1,
BBC Radio 4, 20 August 2002
(note: the wording 'and I
spent the rest of the day in the ops center with the
vice-president' was not included in the broadcast radio
transmission or in the transcript of the full programme, but is included in the BBC's unedited transcript of the solo Armitage
interview)
"The
Bush Administration faced deep embarrassment yesterday after
having to admit that its claims for the 'success' of the war on
terrorism were wrong.... The State Departments annual
terrorism report, Patterns of Global Terrorism, said that the
number of attacks last year fell to a 34-year low, down by 45 per
cent since 2001. Fewer people were being killed, injured and
kidnapped, it said, and 'mild' terrorism events with no
fatalities had dwindled from 231 in 2001 to 21 last year. Richard Armitage, General Powells deputy, said
that the report provided 'clear evidence that we are prevailing
in the fight against global terrorism'. In fact, the number of
terror attacks rose sharply during that period to a 20-year high.
The report also failed to show that the worst kind of terrorist
attacks had spread to at least ten countries. The errors were
uncovered after Henry Waxman, a Democratic congressman from
California, asked the Congressional Research Service to check the
facts. Mr Waxman complained that the State Department had refused
to address his concerns three weeks ago. He had told General
Powell at the time: 'This manipulation may serve the
Administrations political interests, but it calls into
serious doubt the integrity of the report.'
US admits false terror
statistics
London Times, 12 June 2004
The US Government, Pakistan, Drugs, Terrorism And The Arms Trade - Click Here
US Sponsored Islamic Terrorism In Yugoslavia - Click Here
| The Armitage Effect Who Is Richard Armitage And What Are His Interests In Central Asia? |
| Who Is Richard Armitage And What Are His Business Interests? |
| Armitage's Central Asian Targets |
| Afghan Route to Caspian Sea Already Lined Up For US Attack by July 2001 |
| Armitage, The ISI and 911 Hijacker Mohammed Atta |
| Armitage following Cheney Strategy for Central Asia |
| What Did Armitage Know About 911? |
| What Did Richard Armitage Do On 911? |
'The Special
Relationship' |
'War On
Terror' - Why They Are Really Doing It
GLOBAL
ENERGY CRISIS LOOMING
Click Here
London Times - 26
January 2004 |
Back To
'The Special Relationship'
Armitage and the UK National Security Adviser
click here