The CIA: 70
Years of Organized Crime
On occasion of the CIA’s 70th anniversary, Lars
Schall talked with U.S. researcher Douglas Valentine
about the Central Intelligence Agency. According to
Valentine, the CIA is “the organized crime branch of
the U.S. government”, doing the dirty business for
the rich and powerful.
By Lars Schall and Douglas Valentine
Lars
Schall: 70 years ago, on September 18, 1947, the
National Security Act created the Central
Intelligence Agency, CIA. Douglas, you refer to the
CIA as “the organized crime branch of the U.S.
government.” Why so?
Douglas
Valentine: Everything the CIA does is illegal, which
is why the government provides it with an
impenetrable cloak of secrecy. While mythographers
in the information industry portray America as a
bastion of peace and democracy, CIA officers manage
criminal organizations around the world. For
example, the CIA hired one of America’s premier drug
trafficker in the 1950s and 1960s, Santo Trafficante,
to murder Fidel Castro. In exchange, the CIA allowed
Trafficante to import tons of narcotics into
America. The CIA sets up proprietary arms, shipping,
and banking companies to facilitate the criminal
drug trafficking organizations that do its dirty
work. Mafia money gets mixed up in offshore banks
with CIA money, until the two are indistinguishable.
Drug
trafficking is just one example.
LS:
What is most important to understand about the CIA?
DV: Its
organizational history, which, if studied closely
enough, reveals how the CIA manages to maintain its
secrecy. This is the essential contradiction at the
heart of America’s problems: if we were a democracy
and if we truly enjoyed free speech, we would be
able to study and speak about the CIA. We would
confront our institutionalized racism and sadism.
But we can’t, and so our history remains unknown,
which in turn means we have no idea who we are, as
individuals or as a nation. We imagine ourselves to
be things we are not. Our leaders know bits and
pieces of the truth, but they cease being leaders
once they begin to talk about the truly evil things
the CIA is doing.
LS: A
term of interest related to the CIA is “plausible
deniability”. Please explain.
DV: The CIA
doesn’t do anything it can’t deny. Tom Donohue, a
retired senior CIA officer, told me about this.
Let
me tell you a bit about my source. In 1984, former
CIA Director William Colby agreed to help me write
my book, The
Phoenix Program.
Colby introduced me to Donohue in 1985. Donohue had
managed the CIA’s “covert action” branch in Vietnam
from 1964-1966, and many of the programs he
developed were incorporated in Phoenix. Because
Colby had vouched for me, Donohue was very
forthcoming and explained a lot about how the CIA
works.
Donohue was
a typical first-generation CIA officer. He’d studied
Comparative Religion at Columbia and understood
symbolic transformation. He was a product and
practitioner of Cook County politics who joined the
CIA after World War Two when he perceived the Cold
War as “a growth industry.” He had been the CIA’s
station chief in the Philippines at the end of his
career and, when I spoke to him, he was in business
with a former Filipino Defense Minister. He was
putting his contacts to good use, which is par for
the course. It’s how corruption works for senior
bureaucrats.
Donohue
said the CIA doesn’t do anything unless it meets two
criteria. The first criterion is “intelligence
potential.” The program must benefit the CIA; maybe
it tells them how to overthrow a government, or how
to blackmail an official, or where a report is
hidden, or how to get an agent across a border. The
term “intelligence potential” means it has some use
for the CIA. The second criterion is that it can be
denied. If they can’t find a way to structure the
program or operation so they can deny it, they won’t
do it. Plausible denial can be as simple as
providing an officer or asset with military cover.
Then the CIA can say, “The army did it.”
Plausible
denial is all about language. During Senate hearings
into CIA assassination plots against Fidel Castro
and other foreign leaders, the CIA’s erstwhile
deputy director of operations Richard Bissell
defined „plausible denial“ as “the use of
circumlocution and euphemism in discussions where
precise definitions would expose covert actions and
bring them to an end.”
Everything
the CIA does is deniable. It’s part of its
Congressional mandate. Congress doesn’t want to be
held accountable for the criminal things the CIA
does. The only time something the CIA does become
public knowledge – other than the rare accident or
whistleblower – is when Congress or the President
think it’s helpful for psychological warfare reasons
to let the American people know the CIA is doing it.
Torture is a good example. After 9/11, and up until
and through the invasion of Iraq, the American
people wanted revenge. They wanted to see Muslim
blood flowing, so the Bush administration let it
leak that they were torturing evil doers. They
played it cute and called it “enhanced
interrogation,” but everyone understood
symbolically. Circumlocution and euphemism.
Plausible denial.
LS: Do
the people at the CIA know that they’re part of “the
organized crime branch of the U.S. government”? In
the past, you’ve suggested related to the Phoenix
program, for example: “Because the CIA
compartmentalizes itself, I ended up knowing more
about the program than any individual in the CIA.”
DV:
Yes, they do. I talk at length about this in my
book The
CIA as Organized Crime.
Most people have no idea what cops really do. They
think cops give you a speeding ticket. They don’t
see the cops associating with professional criminals
and making money in the process. They believe that
when a guy puts on a uniform, he or she becomes
virtuous. But people who go into law enforcement do
so for the trill of wielding power over other
people, and in this sense, they relate more to the
crooks they associate with than the citizens they’re
supposed to protect and serve. They’re looking to
bully someone and they’re corrupt. That’s law
enforcement.
The
CIA is populated with the same kind of people, but
without any of the constraints. The CIA officer who
created the Phoenix program, Nelson Brickham, told
me this about his colleagues: “I have described the
intelligence
service as a socially acceptable way of expressing
criminal tendencies. A guy who has strong criminal
tendencies but is too much of a coward to be one,
would wind up in a place like the CIA if he had the
education.” Brickham described CIA officers as
wannabe mercenaries “who found a socially acceptable
way of doing these things and, I might add, getting
very well paid for it.”
It’s
well known that when the CIA selects agents or
people to run militias or secret police units in
foreign nations, it subjects its candidates to
rigorous psychological screening. John Marks in The
Search for the Manchurian Candidate told
how the CIA sent its top psychologist, John Winne,
to Seoul to “select the initial cadre” for the
Korean CIA. “I set up an office with two
translators,” Winne told Marks, “and used a Korean
version of the Wechsler.” CIA shrinks gave the
personality assessment test to two dozen military
and police officers, “then wrote up a half-page
report on each, listing their strengths and
weaknesses. Winne wanted to know about each
candidate’s ability to follow orders, creativity,
lack of personality disorders, motivation – why he
wanted out of his current job. It was mostly for the
money, especially with the civilians.”
In this
way, the CIA recruits secret police forces as assets
in every country where it operates, including
occupied Iraq and Afghanistan. In Latin America,
Marks wrote, “The CIA…found the assessment process
most useful for showing how to train the
anti-terrorist section. According to results, these
men were shown to have very dependent psychologies
and needed strong direction.”
That
“direction” came from the CIA. Marks quoted one
assessor as saying, “Anytime the Company spent money
for training a foreigner, the object was that he
would ultimately serve our purposes.” CIA officers
“were not content simply to work closely with these
foreign intelligence agencies; they insisted on
penetrating them, and the Personality Assessment
System provided a useful aid.”
What’s less
well known is that the CIA’s executive management
staff is far more concerned with selecting the right
candidates to serve as CIA officers than it is about
selecting agents overseas. The CIA dedicates a huge
portion of its budget figuring how to select,
control, and manage its own work force. It begins
with instilling blind obedience. Most CIA officers
consider themselves to be soldiers. The CIA is set
up as a military organization with a sacred chain of
command that cannot be violated. Somebody tells you
what to do, and you salute and do it. Or you’re out.
Other
systems of control, such as “motivational
indoctrination programs”, make CIA officers think of
themselves as special. Such systems have been
perfected and put in place over the past seven
decades to shape the beliefs and responses of CIA
officers. In exchange for signing away their legal
rights, they benefit from reward systems – most
importantly, CIA officers are immune from
prosecution for their crimes. They consider
themselves the Protected Few and, if they
wholeheartedly embrace the culture of dominance and
exploitation, they can look to cushy jobs in the
private sector when they retire.
The CIA’s
executive management staff compartments the various
divisions and branches so that individual CIA
officers can remain detached. Highly indoctrinated,
they blindly obey on a “need to know” basis. This
institutionalized system of self-imposed ignorance
and self-deceit sustains, in their warped minds, the
illusion of American righteousness, upon which their
motivation to commit all manner of crimes in the
name of national security depends. That and the fact
that most are sociopaths.
It’s a
self-regulating system too. As FBN Agent Martin Pera
explained, “If you’re successful because you can
lie, cheat, and steal, those things become tools you
use in the bureaucracy.”
LS: Can
you tell us please what’s behind a term you like to
use, the “Universal Brotherhood of Officers”?
DV: The
ruling class in any state views the people it rules
as lesser beings to be manipulated, coerced, and
exploited. The rulers institute all manner of
systems – which function as protection rackets – to
assure their class prerogatives. The military is the
real power in any state, and the military in every
state has a chain of command in which blind
obedience to superiors is sacred and inviolable.
Officers don’t fraternize with enlisted men because
they will at some point send them to their deaths.
There is an officer corps in every military, as well
as in every bureaucracy and every ruling class in
every state, which has more in common with military
officers, top bureaucrats, and rulers in other
states, than it does with the expendable,
exploitable riff raff in its own state.
Cops are
members of the Universal Brotherhood of Officers.
They exist above the law. CIA officers exist near
the pinnacle of the Brotherhood. Blessed with fake
identities and bodyguards, they fly around in
private planes, live in villas, and kill with
state-of-the-art technology. They tell army generals
what to do. They direct Congressional committees.
They assassinate heads of state and murder innocent
children with impunity and with indifference.
Everyone to them, but their bosses, is expendable.
LS: In
your opinion, it is the “National Security
Establishment’s deepest, darkest secret” that it is
involved in the global drug trade. How did this
involvement come about?
DV: There
are two facets to the CIA’s management and control
of international drug trafficking, on behalf of the
corporate interests that rule America. It’s
important to note that the US government’s
involvement in drug trafficking began before the CIA
existed, as a means of controlling states, as well
as the political and social movements within them,
including America. Direct involvement started in the
1920s when the US helped Chiang Kai-shek’s
Nationalist regime in China support itself through
the narcotics trade.
During
World War II, the CIA’ predecessor, the OSS,
provided opium to Kachin guerrillas fighting the
Japanese. The OSS and the US military also forged
ties with the American criminal underworld during
the Second World War, and would thereafter secretly
provide protection to American drug traffickers whom
it hired to do its dirty work at home and abroad.
After the
Nationalists were chased out of China, the CIA
established these drug traffickers in Taiwan and
Burma. By the 1960’s, the CIA was running the drug
trade throughout Southeast Asia, and expanding its
control worldwide, especially into South America,
but also throughout Europe. The CIA supported its
drug trafficking allies in Laos and Vietnam. Air
Force General Nguyen Cao Ky, while serving in 1965
as head of South Vietnam’s national security
directorate, sold the CIA the right to organize
private militias and build secret interrogation
centers in every province, in exchange for control
over a lucrative narcotic smuggling franchise.
Through his strongman, General Loan, Ky and his
clique financed both their political apparatus and
their security forces through opium profits. All
with CIA assistance.
The risk of
having its ties to drug traffickers in Southeast
Asia exposed, is what marks the beginning of the
second facet – the CIA’s infiltration and
commandeering of the various government agencies
involved in drug law enforcement. Senior American
officials arranged for the old Bureau of Narcotics
to be dissolved and recreated in 1968 within the
Justice Department as the Bureau of Narcotics and
Dangerous Drugs. The CIA immediately began
infiltrating the highest levels of the BNDD for the
purpose of protecting its drug trafficking allies
around the world, especially in Southeast Asia. The
CIA’s Counter-Intelligence Branch, under James
Angleton, had been in liaison with these drug
agencies since 1962, but in 1971 the function was
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passed
to the CIA’s operations division. In 1972, CIA
officer Seymour Bolten was appointed as the CIA
director’s Special Assistant for the
Coordination of Narcotics. Bolten became an
advisor to William Colby and later DCI George
H.W. Bush. By 1973, with the establishment of
the DEA, the CIA was in total control of all
foreign drug law enforcement operations and was
able to protect traffickers in the US as well.
In 1990 the CIA created its own
counter-narcotics center, despite being
prohibited from exercising any domestic law
enforcement function.
LS: Is
the war on drugs also a war on blacks? Let me give
you some framework for this question, because John
Ehrlichman, a former top aide to Richard Nixon,
supposedly admitted that: “The Nixon campaign in
1968, and the Nixon White House after that, had two
enemies: the antiwar left and black people. You
understand what I’m saying? We knew we couldn’t make
it illegal to be either against the war or black,
but by getting the public to associate the hippies
with marijuana and blacks with heroin, and then
criminalizing both heavily, we could disrupt those
communities. We could arrest their leaders, raid
their homes, break up their meetings, and vilify
them night after night on the evening news. Did we
know we were lying about the drugs? Of course we
did.” (1) And I can quote from H. R. Haldeman’s
diaries in this respect, of course. In the early
stages of his presidency, more specifically on April
28, 1969, Nixon outlined his basic strategy to his
chief of staff: “[President Nixon] emphasized that
you have to face the fact that the whole problem is
really the blacks. The key is to devise a system
that recognizes this while not appearing to.” (2)
So, is the war on drugs that started under Nixon
also a war on blacks? And if so, what does this tell
us about the United States?
DV: America
is a former slave state and a blatantly racist
society, so yes, the war on drugs, which is managed
by white supremacists, was and is directed against
blacks and other despised minorities as a way of
keeping them disenfranchised. The old Bureau of
Narcotics was blatantly racist: not until 1968 were
black FBN agents allowed to become group supervisors
(Grade 13) and manage white agents.
I
interviewed former FBN Agent William Davis for my
book about the FBN, The
Strength of the Wolf.
Davis articulated the predicament of black agents.
After graduating from Rutgers University in 1950,
Davis, while visiting New York City, heard singer
Kate Smith praising FBN Agent Bill Jackson on a
radio show. “She described him as a black lawyer who
was doing a fine job as a federal narcotic agent,”
Davis recalled, “and that was my inspiration. I
applied to the Narcotics Bureau and was hired right
away, but I soon found out there was an unwritten
rule that Black agents could not hold positions of
respect: they could not become group leaders, or
manage or give direction to whites. The few black
agents we had at any one time,” he said bitterly,
“maybe eight in the whole country, had indignities
heaped upon us.”
Davis told
how Wade McCree, while working as an FBN agent in
the 1930s, created a patent medicine. But McCree
made the mistake of writing to Eleanor Roosevelt to
complain that prosecutors in the South were calling
black agents “niggers.” As a result, the FBN’s
legal staff charge McCree with using FBN facilities
to create his patent medicine. McCree was fired with
the intended ripple effect: his dismissal sent a
clear message that complaints from black agents
would not be tolerated.
In an
interview for The Strength of the Wolf,
Clarence Giarusso, a veteran New Orleans narcotic
agent and its chief of police in the 1970s,
explained to me the racial situation from local law
enforcement’s perspective. “We made cases in Black
neighborhoods because it was easy,” he said. “We
didn’t need a search warrant, it allowed us to meet
our quotas, and it was ongoing. If we found dope on
a Black man we could put him in jail for a few days
and no one cared. He has no money for a lawyer, and
the courts are ready to convict; there’s no
expectation on the jury’s part that we even have to
make a case. So rather than go cold turkey he
becomes an informant, which means we can make more
cases in his neighborhood, which is all we’re
interested in. We don’t care about Carlos Marcello
or the Mafia. City cops have no interest in who
brings the dope in. That’s the job of federal
agents.”
Anyone who
thinks it is any different nowadays is living in a
fantasy world. Where I live, in Longmeadow, MA, the
cops are the first line of defense against the
blacks and Puerto Ricans in the nearby city of
Springfield. About 15 years ago, there was a Mafia
murder in Springfield’s Little Italy section. At the
time, blacks and Puerto Ricans ere moving into the
neighborhood and there was a lot of racial tension.
The local TV station interviewed me about it, and I
said the Al Bruno, the murdered Mafia boss, was
probably an FBI informant. The next day, people I
knew wouldn’t talk to me. Comments were made.
Someone told me Bruno’s son went to the same health
club as me. In a city like Springfield and its
suburban neighborhoods, everyone is related to or
friends with someone in the Mafia.
A few years
before Bruno’s murder, I had befriended the janitor
at the health club I belong to. By chance, the
janitor was the son of a Springfield narcotics
detective. The janitor and I shot pool and drank
beers in local bars. One day he told me a secret his
father had told him. His father told him that the
Springfield cops let the Mafia bosses bring
narcotics into Springfield and in exchange, the
hoods named their black and Puerto Ricans customers.
That way, like Giarusso said above, the cops keep
making cases and the minority communities have a
harder time buying houses and encroaching on the
established whites in their neighborhoods. This
happens everywhere in the US every day.
LS: Is
it ironic to you that the whole drug trade wouldn’t
exist as it does today if the drugs were not illegal
in the first place?
DV: The
outlawing of narcotic drugs turned the issue of
addiction from a matter of “public health” into a
law enforcement issue, and thus a pretext for
expanding police forces and reorganizing the
criminal justice and social welfare systems to
prevent despised minorities from making political
and social advances. The health care industry was
placed in the hands of businessmen seeking profits
at the expense of despised minorities, the poor and
working classes. Private businesses established
civic institutions to sanctify this repressive
policy. Public educators developed curriculums that
doubled as political indoctrination promoting the
Business Party’s racist line. Bureaucracies were
established to promote the expansion of business
interests abroad, while suppressing political and
social resistance to the medical, pharmaceutical,
drug manufacturing and law enforcement industries
that benefited from it.
It takes a
library full of books to explain the economic
foundations of the war on drugs, and the reasons for
America’s laissez faire regulation of the industries
that profit from it. Briefly stated, they profit
from it just like the Mafia profits from it. Suffice
it to say that Wall Street investors in the drug
industries have used the government to unleash and
transform their economic power into political and
global military might; never forget, America is not
an opium or cocaine producing nation, and narcotic
drugs are a strategic resource, upon which all of
the above industries – including the military –
depend. Controlling the world’s drug supply, both
legal and illegal, is a matter of national security.
Read my books for examples of how this has played
out over the past 70 years
LS: Is
the CIA part of the opium problem today in
Afghanistan?
DV: In
Afghanistan, CIA officers manage the drug trade from
their hammocks in the shade. Opium production has
soared since they created the Karzai government in
2001-2 and established intelligence networks into
the Afghan resistance through “friendly civilians”
in the employ of the opium trafficking warlord, Gul
Agha Sherzai. The American public is largely unaware
that the Taliban laid down its arms after the
American invasion, and that the Afghan people took
up arms only after the CIA installed Sherzai in
Kabul. In league with the Karzai brothers, Sherzai
supplied the CIA with a network of informants that
targeted their business rivals, not the Taliban. As
Anand Gopal revealed in No
Good Men Among the Living,
as a result of Sherzai’s friendly tips, the CIA
methodically tortured and killed Afghanistan’s most
revered leaders in a series of Phoenix-style raids
that radicalized the Afghan people. The CIA started
the war as a pretext for a prolonged occupation and
colonization of Afghanistan.
In return
for his services, Sherzai received the contract to
build the first US military base in Afghanistan,
along with a major drug franchise. The CIA arranged
for its Afghan drug warlords to be exempted from DEA
lists. All this is documented in Gopal’s book. The
CIA officers in charge watch in amusement as
addiction rates soar among young Afghan people whose
parents have been killed and whose minds have been
damaged by 15 + years of US aggression. They don’t
care that the drugs reach America’s inner cities,
for all the economic, social, and political reasons
cited above.
The drug
trade also has “intelligence potential”. CIA
officers have an accommodation with the protected
Afghan warlords who convert opium into heroin and
sell it to the Russian mob. It’s no different than
cops working with Mafia drug dealers in America;
it’s an accommodation with an enemy that ensures the
political security of the ruling class. The
accommodation is based on the fact that crime cannot
be eradicated, it can only be managed.
The CIA is
authorized to negotiate with the enemy, but only if
the channels are secure and deniable. It happened
during the Iran Contra scandal, when President
Reagan won the love of the American people by
promising never to negotiate with terrorists, while
his two-faced administration secretly sent CIA
officers to Tehran to sell missiles to the Iranians
and use the money to buy guns for the drug dealing
Contras. In Afghanistan, the accommodation within
the drug underworld provides the CIA with a secure
channel to the Taliban leadership, with whom they
negotiate on simple matters like prisoner exchanges.
The criminal-espionage underworld in Afghanistan
provides the intellectual space for any eventual
reconciliation. There are always preliminary
negotiations for a ceasefire, and in every modern
American conflict that’s the CIA’s job. Trump,
however, is going to prolong the occupation
indefinitely.
The fact
that 600 subordinate DEA agents are in Afghanistan
makes the whole thing plausibly deniable.
LS: Did
the U.S. employ characteristics of the Phoenix
program as a replay in Afghanistan? I ask especially
related to the beginning of “Operation Enduring
Freedom” when the Taliban leaders initially laid
down their weapons.
DV:
Afghanistan is a case study of the standard
two-tiered Phoenix program developed in South
Vietnam. It’s guerrilla warfare targeting “high
value” cadre, both for recruitment and
assassination. That’s the top tier. It’s also
psychological warfare against the civilian
population – letting everyone know they will be
kidnapped, imprisoned, tortured, extorted and/or
killed if they can be said to support the
resistance. That’s the second tier – terrorizing the
civilians into supporting the US puppet government.
The US
military resisted being involved in this repugnant
form of warfare (modeled on SS Einsatzgruppen-style
special forces and Gestapo-style secret police)
through the early part of the Vietnam War, but got
hooked into providing soldiers to flesh out Phoenix.
That’s when the CIA started infiltrating the
military’s junior officer corps. CIA officers Donald
Gregg (featured by the revisionist war monger Ken
Burns in his Vietnam War series) and Rudy Enders
(both of whom I interviewed for my book The
Phoenix Program), exported Phoenix to El
Salvador and Central America in 1980, at the same
time the CIA and military were joining forces to
create Delta Force and the Joint Special Operations
Command to combat “terrorism” worldwide using the
Phoenix model. There are no more conventional wars,
so the military, for economic and political reasons,
has become, under the junior officer corps recruited
by the CIA years ago, the de-facto police force for
the American empire, operating out of 700 + bases
around the world.
LS: In
what form and fashion is the Phoenix program alive
today in America’s homeland?
DV:
Karl Marx explained over 150 years ago how and why
capitalists treat workers the same, whether at home
or abroad. As capitalism evolves and centralizes its
power, as the climate degenerates, as the gap
between rich and poor widens, and as resources
become scarcer, America police forces adopt
Phoenix-style “anti-terror” strategies and tactics
to use against the civilian population. The
government has enacted “administrative detention”
laws, which are the legal basis for Phoenix-style
operations, so that civilians can be arrested on
suspicion of being a threat to national security.
Phoenix was a bureaucratic method of coordinating
agencies involved in intelligence gathering with
those conducting “anti-terror” operations, and the
Department of Homeland Security has established
“fusion centers” based on this model around the
nation. Informant nets and psychological operations
against the American people have also proliferated
since 9-11. This is all explained in detail in my
book, The CIA as Organized
Crime.
LS: How
important is mainstream media for the public
perception of the CIA?
DV: It’s
the most critical feature. Guy Debord said that
secrecy dominates the world, foremost as secret of
domination. The media prevents you from knowing how
you’re being dominated, by keeping the CIA’s
secrets. The media and the CIA are same thing.
What FOX
and MSNBC have in common is that, in a free-wheeling
capitalist society, news is a commodity. News
outlets target demographic audience to sell a
product. It’s all fake news, in so far as each media
outlet skews its presentation of the news to satisfy
its customers. But when it comes to the CIA, it’s
not just fake, it’s poison. It subverts democratic
institutions.
Any
domestic Phoenix-style organization or operation
depends on double-speak and deniability, as well as
official secrecy and media self-censorship. The
CIA’s overarching need for total control of
information requires media complicity. This was one
of the great lesson defeat in Vietnam taught our
leaders. The highly indoctrinated and well rewarded
managers who run the government and media will never
again allow the public to see the carnage they
inflict upon foreign civilians. Americans never will
see the mutilated Iraqi, Afghani, Libyan, and Syrian
children killed by marauding US mercenary forces and
cluster bombs.
On the
other hand, falsified portrayals of CIA kidnappings,
torture, and assassinations are glorified on TV and
in movies. Telling the proper story is the key.
Thanks to media complicity, Phoenix has already
become the template for providing internal political
security for America’s leaders.
LS: Is
the CIA an enemy of the American people?
DV: Yes.
It’s an instrument of the rich political elite, it
does their dirty business.
Douglas Valentine
is the author of the non-fictional, historical books
“The Hotel Tacloban”, “The Phoenix Program”, “The
Strength of the Wolf”, “The Strength of the Pack”,
and “The CIA as Organized Crime”.
References.
(1) Dan
Baum: “Legalize
It All – How to win the war on drugs”,
published at Harper’s Magazine in April 2016.
(2) “Haldeman
Diary Shows Nixon Was Wary of Blacks and Jews”,
published at The New York Times on May 18, 1994.
Copyright ©
Lars Schall
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