Date: Tue, 25 Sep 2001 07:26:03 -0400
From: WW <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: [WW]  They're all unsavory
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-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Sept. 27, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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THEY'RE ALL UNSAVORY

In 1995, because of popular disgust with massacres carried
out by U.S. "assets" in Central America, Congress put some
legal restraints on the use of thugs and murderers by the
intelligence community. Now the U.S. government wants to
again openly embrace a foreign policy of dirty tricks.

Since Sept. 11, the knives have been unsheathed. Vice
President Dick Cheney said: "You have to have on payroll
some very unsavory characters. This is a mean, nasty,
dangerous, dirty business. We have to operate in that
arena."

John Negroponte is just the first of the unsavory characters
the Bush administration is officially putting on payroll.

Pressure to openly use criminal elements in the CIA has been
building for some time. In 1998 at the Hoover Institute, a
conservative think tank connected to Stanford University,
former National Intelligence Council Chair John C. Gannon
said, "I think when our nation's interests are involved we
also need to take risks and deal with unsavory people."

Last Oct. 19, the Christian Science Monitor reported that in
recent years the CIA had been unhappy that it was not free
to hire whomever it wished. "Analysts complain that efforts
have been hampered by a 1995 CIA directive that prevents
agents from using informants who have been involved in human
rights abuses--a condition that could apply to almost any
informant within a terrorist ring."

The Monitor continued, quoting Mike Wermuth, a terrorism
expert at the Rand Corp. in Washington, "We've tended to
hamstring ourselves ... by preventing [the use of] unsavory
characters as insiders to infiltrate foreign terrorism
organizations."

Even with restraining legislation in place, U.S. officials
have operated in cahoots with criminals in the Balkans,
Colombia, Afghanistan and elsewhere. They've been dealing
with gangs conducting assassination, rape, drug trafficking
and sex slavery for a long time.

If Cheney has his way, Negroponte won't have to hide his
work with the thieves, murderers, drug smugglers, rapists
and arsonists with whom he worked in the past.

--Heather Cottin

- END -

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