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- GRAPEVINE, Page 13
-
-
- By SOPHFRONIA SCOTT GREGORY
-
- Sailing the Sea of Lies
-
- Former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral
- William Crowe is angrily denying that he approved a massive "sea
- of lies" cover-up in connection with the 1988 downing of an
- Iranian commercial airliner with 290 people aboard. Crowe, who
- will testify before the House Armed Services Committee next
- week, has already torpedoed a major contention in the conspiracy
- case having to do with a secret war in which the U.S. allegedly
- seized not only the Iranian minelayer Iran Ajr but also "several
- others," including a second vessel, the Rakish. Photos released
- at the time by the Pentagon, however, show that the Rakish and
- the Iran Ajr are actually one and the same. One official says
- no other ships were captured, casting doubt on the secret-war
- charge.
-
- Once Burned, Twice Bold
-
- London's Sunday Times, apparently unfazed by its
- embarrassment over publishing what proved to be faked "diaries"
- of Adolf Hitler nine years ago, seems to be courting trouble
- again. The paper is publishing what it bills as new segments
- from the diaries of Hitler's propaganda chief, JOSEPH GOEBBELS.
- (His description of Kristallnacht: "The sky is blood red. The
- synagogue is burning. Bravo! Bravo!") The controversy this time,
- however, does not revolve around whether the diaries are
- genuine; parts have already been authenticated and published.
- Instead, it centers on the paper's hiring of the pro-Nazi
- revisionist historian David Irving to handle the project. Among
- other things, Irving denies that the Holocaust happened, calling
- the Auschwitz gas chambers "a figment of British propaganda,"
- and claims that Hitler was unfairly vilified for his role in
- World War II atrocities.
-
- No Great Revelations
-
- The U.S. Senate unanimously demanded earlier this month
- that the Bush Administration declassify and make public all
- secret POW/MIA documents now in the Pentagon's possession. But
- what exactly is in them? Insiders who have reviewed the papers
- say anxious families are in for a big disappointment once
- again. All relevant documents were shown to family members long
- ago, and more than 1.3 million pages have already been shown to
- members and staff of the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA
- Affairs without any convincing results. Key sections of some
- internal Pentagon memorandums have already been leaked, and
- although they reflect "sloppy" and "unprofessional" running of
- the mia office, according to individuals charged with studying
- them, they add nothing substantive to the search for surviving
- Americans.
-
- Reach Out and Diss Someone
-
- The opposition research units of the Bush and Clinton
- campaigns, which dig up dirt on their enemies, will act as the
- first lines of offense when the mudslinging starts in earnest.
- Surprisingly, some "oppo" operatives do talk regularly to their
- rivals by telephone. What could they possibly have to discuss?
- "I call to ridicule their pathetic attempts to attack us," says
- one oppo specialist. "Then we trade insults." Nothing like a
- little destructive criticism to get the juices flowing.
-
- HEADCOUNT
-
- Sentenced to 40 years in prison last week, General MANUEL
- NORIEGA is not likely to do his time in a country-club setting.
- But his co-conspirators are being rewarded with light sentences
- and various goodies for testifying against him:
-
-
-
- ROBERTO STRIEDINGER, the Medellin drug cartel's top guy in
- the U.S., will spend five years in a minimum-security facility
- and keep millions of dollars in drug profits and his collection
- of military assault rifles.
-
- DAVID RODRIGO ORTIZ-HERMIDA, a cartel drug pilot, will
- serve just 120 days and then get placed in the federal
- witness-protection program.
-
- DANIEL MIRANDA, who flew drug profits to Panama, will
- serve two years but then will get his pilot's license back,
- along with a U.S. visa.
-
- A REALLY HOT GAME
-
- If Washington Redskins owner Jack Kent Cooke realizes his
- ambition of replacing R.F.K. Stadium with a 78,600-seat arena
- on the Potomac Yard site in Virginia, just south of Washington,
- the football teams that play there may have to wear moonsuits.
- Officials of the Environmental Protection Agency say that after
- years of creosote soaking and casual dumping of chemical wastes
- at the onetime railroad switching station, the area is so
- contaminated it could qualify for Superfund environmental
- treatment.
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