home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT1434>
- <title>
- July 01, 1991: Espionage:Con Man or Key to a Mystery?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 01, 1991 Cocaine Inc.
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 24
- ESPIONAGE
- Con Man or Key to a Mystery?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Ari Ben-Menashe adds fuel to the allegations that William Casey
- crafted a deal in 1980 to delay the release of the American
- hostages held by Tehran
- </p>
- <p>By NANCY GIBBS -- Reported by Ron Ben-Yishai/Tel Aviv, Dan
- Goodgame and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> It is especially hard to solve a mystery if all the
- people who actually know the truth are either accomplished
- liars, adamantly mute, or already dead. Such a conundrum is
- facing investigators who are still trying to unravel the
- Iran-contra scandal and other baroque plots that American
- officials may have hatched in the Middle East over the past
- decade. Last week, as yet more charges came to light, there was
- no shortage of fingerprints, plot twists or stool pigeons. But
- there was a desperate shortage of certainty, perhaps because
- when truth is stranger than fiction, the two are harder to
- separate.
- </p>
- <p> There are a handful of people who could plausibly answer
- the frightening questions that date back to 1980. Did Reagan
- campaign officials conspire with Iran to delay the release of
- the hostages until after the election? For how long did U.S.
- officials secretly help supply weapons to Iran? Were they also
- helping the Iraqis to illegally acquire missile parts and
- chemical weapons? If they were willing, Ronald Reagan, George
- Bush and Iranian President Hashemi Rafsanjani could probably
- answer; if they were still alive, former CIA Director William
- Casey, Israeli counterterrorism expert Amiram Nir and Ayatullah
- Ruhollah Khomeini could.
- </p>
- <p> And so can I, claims Ari Ben-Menashe, a former Israeli
- intelligence officer who clings like kudzu to every new
- conspiracy theory that sprouts in the thicket of conflicting
- tales. Since the others aren't talking, even his wild charges
- get a wide audience. He was among the first to leak the details
- of secret U.S. arms sales to Iran back in 1986. He is one of the
- sources behind the stories about a purported "October surprise"
- hostage deal in the 1980 campaign. And now he has told Senate
- investigators that between 1986 and 1988 the Reagan
- Administration was secretly supporting shipments of arms --
- including chemical weapons -- to Iraq, despite pleas and
- complaints from Israel about the dangers that Baghdad posed to
- its neighbors.
- </p>
- <p> As charges mount that the Reagan Administration
- consistently violated both the law and its own stated policies,
- the Senate Intelligence Committee seems compelled to at least
- hear out even the most outlandish tales that come its way. The
- lawmakers must decide whether to recommend confirmation of White
- House deputy for national security affairs Robert Gates as the
- new CIA director. Ben-Menashe's claims have provided another
- wrinkle, since he charges that Gates, while serving on Jimmy
- Carter's NSC staff and then as Casey's deputy at the CIA,
- participated in illegal operations.
- </p>
- <p> Over Memorial Day weekend, Ben-Menashe arrived in
- Washington bearing allegations about Gates that went far beyond
- his handling of the Iran-contra scandal. Ben-Menashe charges
- that Gates was present at three 1980 meetings between William
- Casey, then manager of Reagan's election campaign, and Iranian
- officials in Madrid, at which they allegedly discussed delaying
- the release of the 52 American hostages in Iran in return for
- shipments of arms through Israel. Ben-Menashe also claims that
- Gates attended a final meeting in October in Paris, which
- included not only Casey but the vice-presidential candidate and
- former CIA chief, George Bush. President Bush has repeatedly
- denied being present at that meeting, calling the charges
- "bald-faced lies."
- </p>
- <p> Ben-Menashe did not stop there. He told Senate
- investigators that during the Iran-Iraq war, the CIA secretly
- helped ship weapons to Iraq, including missile parts and
- chemical arms. At the time, the U.S. was officially embargoing
- arms sales to Iraq, but privately tilted toward Baghdad out of
- fear that an Iranian victory could spread Islamic fundamentalism
- throughout the region. Ben-Menashe now belatedly portrays Gates
- as a central figure in the secret arms sales and describes
- meetings in Tel Aviv, Santiago and Kansas City at which the
- transfers were discussed.
- </p>
- <p> In response to the charges, Gates sent over to the
- Intelligence Committee a foot-high stack of travel documents and
- work logs covering the period of August 1980 to the present,
- which White House officials say prove beyond question that he
- could not have been at the secret meetings that Ben-Menashe says
- he attended. Committee investigators went over to the White
- House to check secondary and tertiary records. They showed that
- on many of the dates, Gates was attending government meetings
- or had other ironclad alibis.
- </p>
- <p> As for the claim that Bush and Gates were in on the
- October 1980 meetings in Paris, other sources dispute the
- charge. Last week ABC's Nightline and the Financial Times of
- London, acting as an unofficial grand jury, sorted through the
- evidence about the Madrid and Paris meet ings. They found hotel
- records indicating that Iranian arms dealers Jamshid and Cyrus
- Hashemi, the alleged go-betweens for Casey and Tehran, were in
- Madrid when the meetings supposedly occurred. They also reported
- that neither Casey's family nor Republican campaign officials
- could document his whereabouts on the dates in question. But
- Jamshid Hashemi denied that Bush was involved in the Paris
- session.
- </p>
- <p> Chameleons are doomed to have credibility problems, and
- Ben-Menashe is no exception. He is an Iranian-born Jew of Iraqi
- parentage who attended an American school outside Tel Aviv. He
- smokes Marlboros, listens to Mozart and speaks Farsi, Hebrew,
- Arabic and English. He went to work for Israeli intelligence in
- 1974, where his language skills helped him crack the codes of
- intercepted Arabic and Iranian communications. After Iraq
- invaded Iran in 1980, he says he became part of an Israeli team
- to supply Iran with military equipment. By his breathtaking, and
- implausible, account, $82 billion worth of arms were shipped
- over the next few years.
- </p>
- <p> In 1989 he was arrested in California on charges of
- attempting to smuggle C-130 transport planes to Iran. In his
- defense he declared that he had acted on behalf of Israeli
- intelligence -- but Israeli officials at first denied even
- knowing him, and later dismissed him as a lowly translator.
- Ben-Menashe sat in jail without bond for 11 months before he was
- acquitted in a jury trial.
- </p>
- <p> Israeli officials continue to insist that he was never
- more than a desk jockey and that all his accounts of being a
- major player in global intelligence are bogus. "All the work he
- did for us was done in his room while sitting at his word
- processor," says a colonel in Israeli military intelligence who
- was Ben-Menashe's last boss.
- </p>
- <p> In August 1983 his boss wanted to send Ben-Menashe to the
- Israeli military attache's office in Washington to work as a
- translator. He then appeared before a committee for a routine
- job-qualification examination. The committee's report was blunt:
- "It was found that he has serious personality disorders."
- </p>
- <p> Even so, some knowledgeable -- and skeptical -- experts do
- not dismiss Ben-Menashe as a gifted con man. His information,
- with its richness of detail and its grains of truth, was enough
- to win the attention of some journalists and investigators who
- are trying to piece together the truth behind the conspiracy
- theories. Gary Sick, the former Carter White House official
- whose lengthy investigations refocused attention on the
- "October surprise" story in April, admits that he was deeply
- suspicious of Ben-Menashe's tales at first. But one by one, at
- least some of Ben-Menashe's stories have turned out to be
- plausible. Among them: that Casey and the Iranians had met in
- March or April, as ABC News suggested. Previous accounts had the
- meetings taking place months later.
- </p>
- <p> Likewise, investigative reporter Seymour Hersh, who is
- writing a book about Israel's nuclear program, has found some
- of Ben-Menashe's testimony credible. Ben-Menashe claims to have
- operated at one time out of Ayacucho, Peru, where he says his
- job was to protect supplies of minerals essential to Israel's
- nuclear program. At one point, Hersh devised his own test of the
- agent's veracity. He handed Ben-Menashe a list of 10 minerals,
- asking him to pinpoint the critical ones for nuclear-weapons
- production. Ben-Menashe checked three, and they were the right
- ones.
- </p>
- <p> It might be easier to judge Ben-Menashe's credibility if
- anyone could pinpoint his motives. He portrays himself as a
- patriot who was angered at Gates for helping Israel's enemies.
- "I didn't do anything for myself,'' he told TIME. "I did it for
- Israel." He is also in the process of writing his memoirs, so
- he may be looking for some limelight. He says he is frightened
- and bitter at the Israelis for abandoning him.
- </p>
- <p> Ben-Menashe, on balance, appears to be a practiced poseur.
- But his charges will continue to attract attention as long as
- questions linger about the Reagan Administration's bizarre
- dealings with Iran and Iraq. If Casey in fact cut a deal with
- Iran to delay the release of the hostages, the act would verge
- on treason. If no such bargain was ever struck, the reputations
- of innocent men have been smeared. Either way, it is long past
- time to get to the bottom of the mystery.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-