Here is the complete
Moorer deposition,
ready for download.
It is 415Kb, so be prepared:
Sarin Gas Deposition Text
Originally Posted: 6-23-00,
12:00 noon
Revised: 6-28-00,
6 P.M.
Did John Singlaub
Get His Clock Cleaned?
MOORER DEPOSITION
IN TAILWIND SUITS CONFIRMS ALLEGATIONS OF SARIN USE AGAINST
VIETNAM
DEFECTORS, POWS - INCRIMINATES CIA, KISSINGER
© COPYRIGHT 1998, 1999,
2000 Michael C. Ruppert. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Permission
to reprint or excerpt only if the following appears: "Reprinted
by permission, Michael C. Ruppert & From The Wilderness at
www.copvcia.com."
From The Wilderness has obtained the January 17 deposition of retired Joint
Chiefs Chairman Admiral Thomas Moorer taken in connection
with a "batch" of civil suits filed in the aftermath
of 1997 and 1998 CNN reports relating to a series of 1970
CIA directed missions known as "Tailwind." Those
missions,
as originally, and apparently accurately, reported by CNN involved the use of the poison nerve gas Sarin to kill
American
defectors in Laos.
The Moorer deposition not only confirms all of the aspects
of the original CNN broadcast, it also suggests that former
CNN Producers April Oliver and Jack Smith may have actually
understated the extent of Sarin Gas use by U.S. forces
under
CIA control during the Vietnam war.
On June
7, 1998 CNN aired the Tailwind report as a feature
news segment on the show Newsstand. Reported by CNN veteran
Peter Arnett, the stories stated that the CIA connected
Studies and Observations Group (SOG) had used the lethal
gas during covert operations into Laos.
In particular, the Tailwind story reported that American
defectors were the intended targets of the attacks. Having
commanded SOG from 1966-68, and having maintained close
contact with 1970 SOG Commander Col. John Sadler, Vietnam War
icon General John Singlaub immediately led the charge
to discredit the stories. According to Oliver, Singlaub
has admitted in interrogatories that he periodically visited
with Sadler around the time of the Tailwind missions. Singlaub
is also a former Commander of the U.S. Army's Rocky Mountain
Arsenal where most of the U.S. Sarin supply was produced.
The Tailwind report
came eight months after an initial CNN "Impact" report
(also
produced by Oliver) that featured extensive, lengthy, and
highly consistent on-camera quotes from Singlaub regarding
similar and related missions during the period. The stories
established that the United
States had committed acts
during the Vietnam
era - specifically the use of lethal nerve gas - that would
be considered war crimes under current international law.
Indeed, the United States
has repeatedly bombed civilian and military targets in Iraq in
retaliation for Saddam Hussein's use of the exact same
tactics.
In the wake of the
June
1998 CNN "Tailwind" story Oliver was
sacrificed, crucified,
tarred, feathered and fired after enormous pressure was
brought to bear on the network and TIME magazine
by the
likes of Henry Kissinger and former Joint Chiefs Chairman
Colin Powell. Ted Turner's stock values were saved. Singluab
subsequently sued both Oliver and the network for defamation
and slander. He also demanded a public apology and exoneration. Both
Singlaub and Moorer denied that they had used the gas
or brought it any closer to Southeast Asian operations
than
the island of
Okinawa.
Yet, according to admissions
made by Moorer near the end of the deposition, as much as
300 pounds of the gas were stored at a secret CIA controlled
Thai air/operations base called Nakhorn Phanom or NKP. [The
full text of that deposition, as received by FTW, is available
at the top of this page. Moorer's startling admissions begin
at page/section 0217.]
Relying upon several
exhibits including official memoranda from the Joint Chiefs
bearing classified notations approved by Moorer and meticulously
detailed contemporaneous notes from Oliver describing her
interviews with both Moorer and Singlaub, Oliver's attorney
Roger Simmons secured a basic admission from Moorer, who
served as Joint Chief's Chairman under Richard Nixon, that
the Tailwind missions into Laos were controlled by Henry
Kissinger and the CIA, not the Pentagon. This then invalidated
Moorer's original strident assertions that he had controlled
SOG missions as JCS Chair and had never authorized the
use
of Sarin gas or allowed it into the area of operations.
Later in the deposition,
while reading notes taken by Oliver during her seven hours
of interviews with Moorer and later placed in CNN files,
Simmons elicited agreement from Moorer that he had made
statements to Oliver, and not disputed her findings that:
-
Military staff near the White House and the National Security
Council routinely stole documents from Henry KissingerŐs
briefcase so that they could find out what was really going
on,
- As
many as twenty U.S.
defectors were targeted for elimination by Special Forces
troops assigned to SOG in the Tailwind mission into the
Savan region of Laos
in 1970,
- Sarin
gas was employed in the mission,
- The
mission was successful,
-
Defectors were a routine "high priority" for
execution on
all SOG missions inside Laos,
- As
many as 30 A1E Skyraider pilots at NKP had planes equipped
to dispense Sarin gas and that they had authorization to
do so on both support and search and rescue missions inside Laos,
- Sarin
was routinely used in extractions of downed aircrews
in hostile conditions, and that
- It
had been an option for pilots unable to rescue downed US
aircrews in Laos
before nightfall to dispense Sarin gas on the U.S. aircrews
in order to kill them and prevent them from falling
into "enemy" hands.
FTW routinely
communicates
with several Special Forces and CIA veterans of the era.
We cannot help but note that these particular areas of Laos were
heavily occupied by CIA personnel and CIA mercenaries
including Montangard and Hmong tribesmen actively involved
in the heroin trade on CIA's behalf and with CIA protection.
In a previous issue of FTW (7/98) we reported at length
how and why we believed that evidence existed that CIA
ordered
the deaths of American POWs to prevent their repatriation
and eventual disclosure of CIA criminal activities.
When FTW first
learned
that the Tailwind cases had been settled we also heard
something
else, utter silence from the allegedly offended party who
screamed bloody murder when the stories first aired - John
Singlaub. That suggested to us that April Oliver might
have
emerged victorious. Inasmuch as additional public vindication
was one of the main objectives sought by Singlaub when
he
sued Oliver, the fact that the settlements deny him that
objective only increased our suspicions. Reading the text
of Moorer's deposition then convinced us.
Following the Tailwind
stories I had the opportunity to meet with Oliver several
times in person and was a guest on a radio talk show program
with her. I found her documentation to be meticulous and
unassailable. One of the reasons for this was that, as she
alleged in her counter suit against both Singlaub and CNN,
Singlaub himself had been a confidential source for the
story originally. He had violated that confidentiality agreement
when he initiated suits against her and CNN. Also, Oliver
stated that she had submitted the entire script of the Tailwind
segment to Moorer and secured his approval of the script
before the broadcast. Moorer admitted to that meeting.
Moorer's repeated insistence
under oath that John Singlaub never lied and that anything
he said could always be totally trusted was put to the
test
when Oliver's attorney confronted Moorer with his own confirmation
of statements made by Singlaub that defectors were a high
priority target. A number of people present in the room,
including Singlaub, Singlaub's attorney and what FTW took
to be a CIA handler for Moorer named Rudi Gresham, appeared
to be caught off-guard by the accurate detail contained
in contemporaneous notes taken by Oliver during her interviews
with both Moorer and Singlaub. Those notes had been stored,
apparently unnoticed, in CNN files after the broadcast.
Also at issue in
the
suits was CNN's questionable act of hiring so-called "First
Amendment Champion," attorney Floyd Abrams to represent
Oliver without advising her that he was also representing
the network. CNN rushed into initial agreements
that left
Oliver and associates twisting in the breeze while saving
Ted Turner's bacon in the wake of his fawning public apology
for a crime his vaunted network never really committed
in
the first place. CNN regularly uses military
satellites
for live news feeds and a source inside CNN advised that
the military had threatened to pull the plug if Turner
did
not kill the stories.
FTW is aware of
other
cases like that of Los Angeles air
freight contractor Irwin Rautenberg who have won suits
against the government and the CIA for illegal activities
wherein the essential ingredient for settlement was that
the victor remain absolutely silent about the victory.
[You
haven't heard about that one, have you?] The basic rule
would be something like, "You can fight City Hall
but no
one can ever know that you won because then everyone would
do it."
Coverage of the settlements
of the lawsuits has apparently been limited to brief stories
in the Associated Press and TV Guide. FTW has contacted
Oliver on several occasions but she has steadfastly refused
to discuss or even hint at the nature of the settlements.
However, she has told FTW that her personal life is fine
and that - absolutely apart from the settlements - she and
her husband have just purchased a new car and are have placed
a contract on a six bedroom, five bathroom house in Bethesda,
Maryland where her daughter
will attend public school.
Having been a guest
in April's current home I can only state that the Oliver
family has apparently not suffered as a result of
the settlement. Oliver has not disclosed her future plans
but FTW wishes her and her family all the best.
Ms Oliver adds that
she unequivocally and wholeheartedly stands by her original
stories - as she produced them.
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