home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- NATION, Page 23MIDDLE EASTThe Sweet Taste of Freedom
-
-
- Two more hostages return, but questions swirl about Terry Waite's
- links to U.S. arms-for-hostages dealings
-
- By JILL SMOLOWE -- Reported by William Mader/London, Lara
- Marlowe/Beirut and Jay Peterzell/Washington
-
-
- The performances by American educator Thomas Sutherland
- and British church envoy Terry Waite as they emerged last week
- from years of captivity testified to the remarkable resiliency
- of the human spirit. Sutherland, 60, who spent most of his
- 2,347 days as a hostage in Lebanon tethered by ankle chains to
- a wall, calmly alternated tales of senseless beatings and
- profound depression with lighthearted quips about Waite, who,
- he reported, "snores awfully loudly." Waite, 52, limping from
- his years in chains, reported, "I was kept in total and complete
- isolation for four years." Yet 1,763 days in windowless cells
- neither dimmed his megawatt smile nor diminished his faith in
- mankind's basic goodness. "I trust the Hizballah," he said of
- the very people whose double-crossing cost almost five years of
- his life.
-
- Waite was referring to his captors' pledge to free by the
- end of November the three remaining American hostages, among
- them journalist Terry Anderson. There seemed great promise that
- the hostage drama was coming to an end. In Lebanon, Hizballah
- said the fate of the remaining Western hostages was no longer
- linked to freedom for 300-odd Arab prisoners held by Israel's
- proxy militia in south Lebanon. An announcement by U.S.
- officials that Washington and Tehran were nearing agreement on
- payment of $275 million owed to Iran for undelivered military
- equipment dating back to 1979 sweetened the prospect of a
- resolution. Both Syria and Iran continued to speed the process
- along in order to gain access to Western economic assistance.
- Still, the time frame remains iffy: Tehran radio said the
- hostages would be home by Christmas.
-
- For Sutherland, it was a bittersweet homecoming. Even as
- he learned that his 88-year-old father-in-law had died just two
- days earlier, he received word that one of his three daughters
- was about to give birth. Sutherland seemed forgiving of his
- captors, allowing, "I don't think they really thoroughly
- understand what they were doing to us, putting those chains back
- on our legs every day." Although he appeared healthy, the
- discovery of an ulcer at week's end delayed his return to the
- U.S.
-
- Britain's hostage ordeal ended with the return of Waite,
- the high-profile envoy of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the
- last British captive in Lebanon. But as bells joyously tolled
- his freedom, the homecoming unleashed feverish speculation
- about the role the U.S. -- and maybe Waite himself -- had played
- in his capture. Did Waite know of Washington's secret arms
- dealings? And was he a willing agent, or an unwitting
- collaborator? Before his capture, Waite denied any knowledge of
- the U.S. arms-for-hostages scheme.
-
- While the Briton began as a globe-trotting negotiator
- acting for the Church of England, his efforts gradually meshed
- with the U.S. campaign. Waite's ties to Lieut. Colonel Oliver
- North, the point man in the doomed U.S. trade-off, are well doc
- umented. Not only did the two men meet at least five times, but
- the U.S. provided Waite with helicopters and other assistance
- during some of his missions. By 1986, the captors had
- intertwined Waite's efforts with the secret U.S. operation: each
- time a weapons shipment was made to Iran, an Iranian official
- would travel to Damascus, and North would signal Waite that the
- time was ripe for him to visit his contacts in Beirut. With
- these pieces in place, a hostage would be released and Waite
- could claim credit.
-
- Waite may not have known of the arms payoff to Iran, but
- plainly he cooperated with the U.S. In a December 1985 memo to
- his superiors, North referred to Waite as "our only access to
- events in Lebanon." Robert Oakley, the former head of the State
- Department's Office for Counter-Terrorism, insists, "He knew our
- efforts were responsible for his results." Waite sometimes
- briefed American officials in Washington. He also relayed
- messages between Hizballah and Washington, in a failed attempt
- to spring the hostages in exchange for assurances that the 17
- Hizballah prisoners held in Kuwait would at least not be
- executed. Even admirers say that the envoy's vanity was as big
- as his heart and that he reveled in the high-level contacts and
- cloak-and-dagger maneuvers.
-
- By the time he made the last of at least five journeys to
- Beirut, his position as a neutral mediator was seriously
- compromised. Leaks emanating from the continuing investigation
- of the Iran-contra affair, linked Waite with the U.S. operation.
- Despite warnings from his own government and church, he made a
- final trip in January 1987, largely to clear his name of the
- Iran-contra taint. Once there, he insisted that he had never
- discussed arms-for-hostages deals with anyone. "If I had," he
- told reporters, "then I would be too afraid and I wouldn't be
- back here now."
-
- As the controversy swirls, the families of the remaining
- hostages gird for what appears to be the final act of their long
- vigil. Yet even as the clouds lifted, a Lebanese Shi`ite who is
- close to the Islamic Jihad kidnappers issued a stern warning.
- "If the U.S. or Israel attacks Islamic Jihad, there will be
- clear, definitive and irreversible revenge through
- assassination," he threatened. "American ambassadors will be
- assassinated in the Middle East or in Europe." And so, on it
- goes.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-