RICHARD
ARMITAGE QUIETLY CONFIRMED
AS DEPUTY SECRETARY OF STATE
FTW - 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 has already begun work at the State Department
and is deeply involved in negotiations over a US spy plane
recently captured by the Chinese government.
The total lack of opposition
to Armitage's appointment indicates an apparent inability
of the US Congress to muster any critical examination of
appointments or policy at a time when an imperiled US economy
and an almost combative Bush Administration is dealing
with mounting economic and political challenges around
the globe.
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.
In
1986 a private dispute between POW activist Ross Perot
and Armitage went public
as photos of Armitage with a topless Vietnamese nightclub
owner Nguyen O'Rourke brought allegations of gambling and
prostitution close to Armitage's doorstep. The stories
went public when TIME and "The Boston Globe" wrote
lengthy stories on the feud in 1986 and 1987. That scandal
arose as a result of 1984 investigations by President Reagan's
Commission on Organized Crime in which the photo and documentation
of gambling charges and prostitution led to direct Armitage's
close association with O'Rourke. Then LAPD Assistant Chief
Jesse Brewer, a former Commanding Officer of this writer,
served on the Reagan Commission.
The
1992 best-seller "Kiss
The Boys Goodbye" by former "60 MINUTES" producer
Monika Jensen-Stevenson details Armitage's role as Reagan
point man on Vietnam POW-MIA issues and describes why Armitage
has earned the enmity of many POW activists. However, in
a 1995 interview with "The Washington Post",
Colin Powell referred to Armitage as his "white son." This,
notwithstanding the fact that the 6 foot, balding, power-lifter,
now 56, can still bench press 300 or more pounds and reportedly "enjoys
killing."
William
Tyree, Special Forces Veteran who has provided much reliable
information
and documentation to FTW in the past said, "Armitage
used to 'sit ambush' on the trails in Laos and Cambodia.
He liked it. Now when Powell, 'the dove,' sits down at
a table with Armitage 'the killer' beside him the message
will be that Armitage can reach across the table and deal
with the other party on the spot." That message will
not go unheard.
Mike Ruppert
Publisher/Editor
"From The Wilderness"
www.copvcia.com
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