Video: Narco-Trafficking Activist and Academic Peter Dale Scott explores the
links between the JFK Assasination and this decades black operation by
the same state mafia mob.
In addition PDS makes the point that at the level of deep politics [a model of suitable complexity and flexibility to handle the veils and simulations of the current geo-political climate] there is no seperation of state, corporations, military etc.
During the video he makes an interesting point regarding the 9/11 commission who went out of the way to state that Bin Laden 'did not profit from drug trafficking' when both PDS and Webster Tarpley have long made the point that groups such as Al Qaeda and the Kosovo Liberation Army are primarily drug running groups. The groups have demonstrated links to Western intelligence agencies and elements of the military industrial complex right up to presidents themselves.
Narco-Trafficking Activist and Academic Peter Dale Scott explores the links between the JFK Assasination and this decades black operation by the same state mafia mob.
“My notion of deep politics… posits that in every culture and
society there are facts which tend to be suppressed collectively,
because of the social and psychological costs of not doing so. Like all
other observers, I too have involuntarily suppressed facts and even
memories about the drug traffic that were too provocative to be
retained with equanimity.”
This piece by P.D.S. is taken from the excellent UK based magazine on deep/para politics: http://lobster-magazine.co.uk
I. The Meta-Group, the Russian 9/11, and Kosovo
Violence
and the Political Requirements of the Global Drug Traffic
In the last three decades, three important
facts have emerged about the international drug traffic. The first is that it
is both huge and growing.
Narcotics are
estimated to be worth between $500 billion and $1 trillion a year, an amount,
according to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan in remarks to a United Nations
General Assembly session in June 2003, that is greater than the global oil and
gas industry, and twice as large as the overall automobile industry.[2]
The second is that it is both worldwide and
above all "highly integrated."[3]
At global drug summits such as the one in Armenia
in 1993, representatives of the Sicilian Mafia, the Brighton Beach
Organizatsiya, and Colombian drug
lords, have worked out a common modus
operandi, with the laundering of dirty money entrusted chiefly to the
lawless Russian banks.[4]
The third important fact, undeniable since
the 1980 U.S. intervention
in Afghanistan,
is that governments with global pretensions will avail themselves, in pursuit
of their own political ends, of the resources, both financial and political, of
the drug traffic. It was striking in the 1980s that the CIA, in its choice of
Afghan mujahedin leaders to back against the Soviet Union,
passed over those with indigenous support in favor of those, notably Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar, who dominated the heroin trade. The result was to enhance
Hekmatyar's power until he became a leading heroin trafficker, not just in Afghanistan
but in the world.[5]
Three more important features of the global
drug traffic have been less noticed; thus although I regard them as facts I
shall refer to them not as facts but as propositions to be tested against
evidence. The first proposition is that the highly integrated drug traffic
industry, in addition to serving the political ends of world powers, has its
own political as well as economic objectives. It requires that in major growing
areas there must be limited state control, a condition most easily reached by
fostering regional rebellion and warfare, often fought by its own private
armies. This is the on-going situation of designed violence in every major
growing area, from Lebanon
to Myanmar, Colombia to Afghanistan.
Once the local power of drug armies was
enough in itself to neutralize the imposition of state authority. But today
there are increasing signs that those at the highest level of the drug traffic
will plot with the leaders of major states to ensure, or even to stage,
violence that serves the power of the state and the industry alike.
Thanks to extensive research in Russia,
we now have initial evidence of a second and even more significant proposition:
There exists on the global level a drug meta-group, able to manipulate the
resources of the drug traffic for its own political and business ends, without
being at risk for actual trafficking. These ends include the creation of
designed violence to serve the purposes of cabals in political power – most
conspicuously in the case of the Yeltsin "family" in the Kremlin, but allegedly,
according to Russian sources, also for those currently in power in the United States.
One piece of evidence for this consists in
a meeting which took place in July 1999 in southern France near Nice, at the villa in
Beaulieu of Adnan Khashoggi, once called "the richest man in the world." Those at
the meeting included a member of the Yeltsin cabal in the Kremlin and four representatives
from the meta-group, with passports from Venezuela,
Turkey, United Arab Emirates and Germany. Between them they
allegedly enjoyed excellent relations with:
1) Ayman al-Zawahiri, the acknowledged mastermind
of 9/11 and senior mentor to Osama bin Laden.
2) Soviet military intelligence.
3) the FARC, the Colombian revolutionary
group that has become increasingly involved in the drug traffic.
4) the Kosovo Liberation Army, a similarly
involved group.
5) (according to a well-informed Russian
source) the CIA.
The third important proposition is that a
meta-group of this scale does not just help government agencies make history. I
hope to show that it, and its predecessors, are powerful enough to help make
history themselves. However they do not do so overtly, but as a hidden Force X
whose presence is not normally acknowledged in the polite discourse of academic
political scientists. On the contrary, as we shall see, references to it are
usually suppressed.
A
Digression: Drugs, Meta-Groups and the Compradorial Revolution
The question arises whether this is the
only such meta-group in the international drug milieu. My tentative answer is
that there are indeed other focal nodes for organized international drug
trafficking, often above the reach of the law. (The remnants of the dissident
Hekmatyar drug network in Afghanistan
would be a prime example.) What is special about this meta-group is its global
reach, which makes it of especial interest to the CIA and other pro-American
agencies committed to globalization.
A drug meta-group with such broad
connections is not unprecedented. A clear predecessor was the Bank of Credit
and Commerce International (BCCI), a drug-laundering bank which was of use to
CIA Director William Casey precisely because of its corrupt global reach. As a Washington insider said
to two Time reporters covering BCCI,
They were the
only way we could talk to certain folks, and they were the only vehicle
available for some transactions. Who else could wire something together to Saudi Arabia, China,
Israel, and the U.S.?[6]
It is worthy of note that Khashoggi has
enjoyed intimate connections to both, as well as to western intelligence and
western politicians.
The "wiring together" effected by drugs has
helped give a significant boost to the global banking network, particularly in Russia
and southeast Asia. In these areas it has also fostered trade and investment,
bringing businessmen from previous diverse commercial areas into increasing
contact with each other. From this perspective globalization can be seen as a
compradorial revolution: compradorial classes have moved into positions of
power, and in some cases their international networks have been more than a
match for local state power.[6a]
There are three different ways in which
this compradorial revolution has proceeded, and it could be shown that drugs
have often helped supply a base for all three:
1) In some countries (as in Thailand, South
Korea, Taiwan,
and to some extent Indonesia)
these classes have displaced military regimes. Drug-based fortunes clearly
played a major role in the compradorial revolution of Thailand.
2) In some countries compradorial elements
have succeeding in converting (or, depending on your point of view, corrupting)
the cadres of socialist governments. Drugs have played a significant role in
the compradorial embourgeoisement of China,
Laos, and Cambodia, and may have played an indirect role
in the case of Vietnam.
3) Recently – as in the "color revolutions"
of eastern Europe and central Asia – compradorial
elements have helped to oust the remnants of the former Soviet governing
apparatus. I hope in this essay to give preliminary evidence that the global
drug meta-group I have described has played a role in the "color revolutions"
as well.
As to how many drug meta-groups exist in
the world, I believe there are at least two. A second, which we will
not
examine here, oversees the new drug highway from north Myanmar (Burma)
through the entrepreneurial zones of south China,
and manages the international connections necessary to arrange for the
smuggling of heroin and people into Australia and the eastern and
western United States.
The relation of the west to this second or
eastern meta-group is unknown, and in all probability it is highly complex and
ambiguous. It is probably safe to say however that the global reach of the
second meta-group, overseeing the much smaller flow of drugs east from Myanmar,
is less than the first or western meta-group we shall discuss here, overseeing
the far greater flow of drugs west from Afghanistan. (It has been estimated
that by now Afghanistan
supplies from 80 to 90 percent of the global heroin trade.)[7]
The west, and particularly the United States,
have not concealed their interest in the success of globalization and the
"color revolutions." Unfortunately those who sing the praises of both neglect the
terrible social costs of the drug traffic, and the Force X which so often is
the underpinning of the compradorial revolution. Because the drug economy is often
not integrated into the legal one, it tends to foster superwealth and income
disparity. The benefits tend not to be enjoyed by a society as a whole, or even
its middle class. This is even more true when the masters of the drug-traffic
are not indigenous but alien (as is conspicuously the case in eastern Myanmar).[8]
There is an undeniable western face to the dominant
meta-group. One member of the meta-group at the 1999 meeting, Anton Surikov,
had spent time at the London Centre for Defence Studies; and in addition
Surikov had had contacts with at least one senior CIA representative.[9]
(Another member of the meta-group, former Lithuanian Defense Minister Audrius
Butkevicius, was with Surikov at the London Centre.) We shall see that a third
member, Ruslan Saidov, is said to have been paid as a CIA contract agent.
One of the alleged purposes of the meeting at
the villa – but not the only one – was to give the Yeltsin "family" what it supposedly
needed: a Russian 9/11.
The
"Russian 9/11" in 1999: Bombings and Plans for War
Russia has been familiar for some time with charges that the bombings in Moscow in 1999, and an accompanying invasion of Russian
Dagestan that rekindled the ongoing war in neighboring Chechnya, were both planned by
representatives of the Islamist element in the Chechen resistance, in collusion
with a representative of the Russian Kremlin.
Read synoptically, these stories indicate
that the well-connected drug-trafficking meta-group, with connections to both the
Kremlin and the CIA, arranged in advance for the bombings and invasion at the
meeting in July 1999, at a French villa owned by the superrich arms merchant
Adnan Khashoggi. The group allegedly operated with support from Saudi Arabia
and organized global drug trafficking, some of it probably through Kosovo.
The group's business front, Far West, Ltd.,
is said to have CIA-approved contractual dealings with Halliburton for
geopolitical purposes in the Caucasus, as well as dealings in Iraq with
Diligence LLC, a group with connections to Joe Allbaugh (the FEMA chief in
2001) and to the President's younger brother Neil Bush. The head of Far West recently told a Russian outlet that "a
well-known American corporation... is a co-founder of our agency."[10]
The evidence for this western face of the
group is laid out in an article by a so-called Yuri Yasenev, which is clearly a
compilation of extracts from intelligence reports, on a Russian website.[11]
The article is cited – very selectively – as authoritative by a reputable Hoover
Institution scholar, John B. Dunlop.[12]
But Dunlop completely ignores, one might say, suppresses, Yasenev's case as I
have summarized it above. He uses the article instead to document a more
familiar case: that in 1999 the Yeltsin "family" in the Kremlin dealt with this
same group to create what might be called the "Russian 9/11."
When I say that Dunlop suppresses certain details,
I do not mean to suggest that he does so conspiratorially, or even consciously.
My notion of deep politics, which I have developed elsewhere, posits that in
every culture and society there are facts which tend to be suppressed
collectively, because of the social and psychological costs of not doing so.[13]
Like all other observers, I too have involuntarily suppressed facts and even
memories about the drug traffic that were too provocative to be retained with
equanimity.[14]
The drug traffic is often the beneficiary
of this suppression, which leaves it more free to act without interference. In Deep Politics I referred to the
pervasive influence of a U.S.
government-drug collaboration which I called "Operation X," looking at it from
the perspective of a parapolitical manipulation of the traffic by the
government.[15] I wish
now that I had written of a "Force X," a force which was no longer under total
government control, and indeed could influence government behavior for its own
ends.[16]
Dunlop's thesis is in itself an alarming
one. It is that men of influence in the Kremlin, building on the connections
established by the wealthy oligarch Boris Berezovskii, were able to arrange for
staged violence, in order to reinforce support for an unpopular Russian government.
This staged violence took the form of lethal bombings in the capital and an
agreed-upon incursion by Chechens into Russian Dagestan.
This credible thesis is even more alarming
when we consider that both Khashoggi and Berezovskii have purchased significant
political influence in the West as well. In 2003 Khashoggi was negotiating with Richard
Perle, a member of the Cheney-Rumsfeld clique who at the time was still
Chairman of the U.S. Defense Policy Board, to invest considerable Saudi money
in Perle's company Trireme.[17]
Berezovskii is a shareholder in the software company, Ignite, of President
Bush's delinquent brother Neil Bush.[18]
More significantly, Khashoggi and his
connections have shown in the past their ability to influence, even distort, U.S.
foreign policy, to the detriment of the latter. An important example was the
ill-fated so-called Ghorbanifar initiative during Iran-Contra, to sell arms to the
mullahs in Iran
in exchange for the release of American hostages:
Ghorbanifar was
not acting alone. Although he led us to believe he was using Iranian money, his
forward purchases and bridge deposits were actually being bankrolled by Adnan
Khashoggi [and BCCI]....Khashoggi had an on-and-off relationship with Israel for
many years and evidently had been in the loop as Ghorbanifar's backer from the
very beginning.[19]
Ghorbanifar could never have caused such
embarrassment to the Reagan Administration if he had not been backed by deeper,
hidden forces.
By the "Russian 9/11" I mean the bombings
of Russian apartment buildings in 1999,
accompanied by the pre-arranged (and partly
staged) second Russian invasion of Chechnya. For some time the West
has heard versions of the claim that both events were planned at the time by
Russian intelligence. For example Patrick Cockburn reported as follows in the Independent:
Boris
Kagarlitsky, a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences Institute of Comparative Politics, writing in the weekly
Novaya Gazeta, says that the bombings in
Moscow and
elsewhere were arranged by the GRU (the Russian
military intelligence service). He says they used members of a group
controlled by Shirvani Basayev, brother of the Chechen warlord Shamil Basayev, to plant the bombs. These killed 300
people in Buikask, Moscow
and Volgodonsk in September.[20]
Cockburn's source, Boris Kagarlitskii, also
accused Russian intelligence agents of planting at least one of the bombs.
Boris Kagarlitsky,
a member of the Russian Institute for Comparative Politics, stated: "FSB
officers were caught red-handed while planting the bomb. They were arrested by
the police and they tried to save themselves by showing FSB identity cards."
The first man to enter the basement, Police Inspector Andrei Chernyshev,
related: "It was about 10 in the evening. There were some strangers who were
seen leaving the basement. We were told about the men who came out from the
basement and left the car with a licence number which was covered with paper. I
went down to the basement. This block of flats had a very deep basement which
was completely covered with water. We could see sacks of sugar and in them some
electronic device, a few wires and a clock. We were shocked. We ran out of the
basement and I stayed on watch by the entrance and my officers went to evacuate the
people." Despite the arrest of the FSB officers by the police, they were
quietly released when the secret service's Moscow headquarters intervened. The Observer
reports that the next day, in an attempt to cover-up the discovery, "the FSB in
Moscow
announced that there had never been a bomb, only a training exercise."[21]