Has Representative Curt Weldon always been unhinged? Has he always felt the CIA is out to get him? I don’t know. But I do know that he has been an unremitting critic of the CIA ever since his nephew died in a C-130 crash in Angola back in June 1991. Almost all traces of the incident have disappeared. A Lexis-Nexis search of major papers turned up only one reference to it. A wire search had this brief dispatch from Agence France Presse on June 11, 1991.
Nine people, including four foreigners, were killed when a freight plane chartered by the Angolan airline TAAG crashed on Monday on taking off from Luanda airport, the Portuguese news agency LUSA reported on Tuesday.
A woman survived the crash but was in critical condition, the report said.
LUSA said three of the dead were U.S. nationals and one an Italian.
The Hercules C-130 was owned by Caribbean Air Transport company. It was heading for Cafunfo in the diamond-mining region of Lunda in north-eastern Angola.
The Angolan news agency ANGOP monitored in Lisbon, named the three dead Americans as Flight Captain Robert Snellgrave, mechanic Robert Weldon and load master Chuck Henrichs. The pilot was Stefan Paoletti, an Italian.
To find more information on this incident I had to do some creative googling. I found a good write up in this Arizona Republic article from February 24, 1997. It’s a case study in the corruption of the Bush Crime Family.
Roy Reagan
You see, the C-130 that crashed in Angola belonged to a man named Roy Reagan. You can read about Roy Reagan’s exploits, trial, and eventual victory on appeal (over a technical statute of limitations issue) below:
The problem between Curt Weldon and the CIA arose because of the connections between Roy Reagan and St. Lucia Airlines. It seems Curt’s nephew was flying, as a mechanic, into Angola on secret CIA missions using aircraft that belonged to (or should have belonged to) the U.S. Forestry Service. U.S. Forestry planes were forbidden by statute from operating outside the United States. Weldon, understandably, wanted to understand the nature of his nephew’s trip, but the CIA gave him the run-around. Weldon, a sitting Congressman then as now, took that as a personal insult. St. Lucia airlines is famous for its role in the Iran-Contra affair.
“My original point of contact was General Colin Powell, who was going directly to his immediate superior, Secretary Weinberger,” North testified in 1987. But in their later sworn testimony, Powell and Weinberger continued to insist that they had no idea that 508 missiles had already been shipped to Iran.
By fall 1985, however, the covert supply line was on the verge of exposure. On Nov. 22, 1985, a panicky Oliver North called Duane Clarridge, the CIA’s European Division chief, at home. “Look, I got a problem,” North explained. “And it involves Portugal.”
North needed Clarridge’s help to assure that Portugal would let an Israeli plane carrying HAWK anti-aircraft missiles land in Lisbon. The missiles were then to be transferred to another plane for shipment to Iran.
In his memoirs, A Spy for All Seasons, Clarridge said North lied to him about the plane’s contents, claiming the shipment was oil-drilling equipment. Without further checking, Clarridge said he swung into action.
As European Division chief, he first tried unsuccessfully to persuade the Portuguese to let the El Al plane land. When the Portuguese refused and the plane returned to Israel, Clarridge next arranged for a CIA proprietary, St. Lucia Airlines, to pick up North’s cargo in Israel and fly it to Iran, with a stop in Cyprus, on Nov. 24, 1985.
But Clarridge’s actions touched off a panic inside the CIA, where deputy director John McMahon was furious at the degree of CIA participation. CIA lawyers ruled that Clarridge’s intervention amounted to a covert action needing a formal presidential finding and notification of Congress.
Reagan finally signed an intelligence finding authorizing arms shipments to Iran on Jan. 17, 1986, but still hid it from Congress. That same day, Weinberger handed Powell the job of pulling the missiles from U.S. stockpiles and shipping them to Iran via Israel.
It’s amazing how few people paid a price for Iran-Contra, isn’t it, Mr. Powell? In any case, the connections between Roy Reagan and St. Lucia…
After leaving the Air Force, [Roy] Reagan used a network of contacts to successfully broker former military aircraft on the open market. One C-130 obtained by Reagan in 1986 was sold to Dietrich Reinhardt and Peter Turkelson, both of whom have been identified as CIA operatives by Congressman Curt Weldon (R-PA). Weldon investigated the affair following the crash of this C-130 in Angola while on a CIA mission. Robert Weldon, the congressman’s nephew, died in the crash. Reinhardt had previously owned St. Lucia Airlines, which was used by Oliver North to smuggle missiles to Iran during the embargo.
Weldon was convinced that the CIA was lying to him about the circumstances of his nephew’s death. And, the truth is, they probably were lying, and they were lying for a whole variety of reasons. The mission in Angola was classified, the plane was being used illegally, and admitting to using the plane would have opened up a vast money laundering scheme that may have involved drug-running and arms trafficking. Letting Weldon in on those types of secrets could have led to serious problems. Weldon was unsympathetic. I would be too, if as a sitting Congressperson I couldn’t get my brother answers about the circumstances of his son’s death.
In my opinion, the whole experience turned Curt Weldon into a paranoid freak with an extreme vendetta against the CIA. I am not totally unsympathetic. However, his behavior has been getting strange lately. First he wrote a bizarre book using Iran-Contra middle man Manucher Ghorbanifar as a source. Ghorbanifar has had a burn notice for being a fabrictor from the CIA since the 1980’s. Then he launched into his whole Able Danger crusade, which seemed to be a campaign to promote the wonders of data mining over the more pedestrian tactics typically pursued at Langley. Then he critized his opponent for choosing to have his daughter’s brain cancer treated in a Washington area hospital instead of in Pennsylvania. And now he is accusing the CIA of actively working to defeat him by supporting Joe Sestak.
So it’s not surprising that as Weldon girds for the most difficult re-election bid during his two decades representing the Philadelphia suburbs, his campaign is alleging that the CIA is probably abetting the opposition. Last month, his campaign manager Michael Puppio Jr. announced that Weldon’s expected Democratic opponent, Joe Sestak, a former Navy vice admiral, had taken campaign contributions from Mary McCarthy, the CIA operative recently fired for allegedly leaking secret information to the media. McCarthy, who was specifically accused of being a source for The Washington Post’s Pulitzer Prize-winning story on secret CIA prisons overseas, has denied that charge through her lawyer.
The media also has raised suspicions in the Weldon camp. The reporter on the Post article, Dana Priest, wrote a piece last year about Weldon’s book that the congressman viewed as critical.
It’s just a question of following the money, says Puppio. “What’s a CIA analyst doing giving money to a partisan political candidate?” he asks. “I’m not sure she violated any laws, but then when that analyst is alleged to have leaked information to a reporter who in turn is extremely critical of Curt Weldon, that raises some big questions.”
The CIA may have screwed Weldon back in 1991. But he has shown every evidence of being insane and unhinged in the last few years.
Sestak spokeswoman Allison Price says her candidate just wants to get back to issues important to the voters. “We have repeatedly urged Curt to address the issues of the campaign,” she says. “We don’t get the conspiracy issues with him. We don’t understand what goes on in Curt’s mind.”
It’s time for Weldon to go.
Also available in orange.
.
An Annotated Chronology of the Events that Have Changed the United States
December 12, 1985 — 256 US servicemen returning from their duty as part of a “peacekeeping force” in the Middle East die in the worst aviation disaster in US military history when their plane crashes in Gander, Newfoundland. [White House spokesman Larry Speakes said it was an “accident” caused by ice on the wings; there was no investigation of the crash.]
However, the Islamic Jihad, a terrorist group, claimed responsibility. Investigator Joe Conason believes the Islamic Jihad sabotaged the plane with a bomb as the result of the Reagan administration having welshed on an arms deal with Iran. On November 25th the CIA airline, St. Lucia Airways, had delivered a shipment of missiles different from the ones ordered. Iranian Prime Minister Rafsanjani wrote to Reagan that Iran had been cheated and demanded restitution.
Charles M Byers: CIA involvement in the crash of the Gander Arrow Air DC-8,
● Oil Business Interests in Cabinda, Angola:
Dick Cheney – Donald Rumsfeld – Condoleezza Rice
● CHEVRON’s Cabinda (Angola) & Condoleezza Rice:
Arrest A. Membe at Peace Talks in The Hague
“But I will not let myself be reduced to silence.”
▼ ▼ ▼ MY DIARY
.
Gander, Newfoundland: The Controversy
Surrounding the Crash of Arrow Air Flight MF1285R
“But I will not let myself be reduced to silence.”
▼ ▼ ▼ MY DIARY
1-You have a Republican who is anti-CIA.
That is a GOOD thing.
2-You have a new generation ex-military Dem running against him.
I am not totally convinced that the whole “ex”-miliitary/”ex”-CIA/Democratic Party nexus IS such a good thing, but I am open to the possibility that it might be.
The Republican, about whom I know very liittle except that he DOES appear to be batshit crazy on some levels…involvement with the Moonies is enough to convince me of that right there…and that he has the usual Ratpub stench of scandal surrounding him (See his Wikipedia entry for more on those topics.) claims that the CIA is supporting his electoral rival.
Duh.
Why would they not?
He is their enemy.
As is the whole NeoCon/BushCo axis of drivel, apparently.
Remember…the CIA is an equal opportunity employer. It will employ Democrats as WELL as Republicans.
It is an equal opportunity deceiver, too.
BET on it.
Weldon has to go?
Fine.
Sestak will make a better representative?
Probably.
But Weldon is dead RIGHT on the CIA issue. Batshit crazy or not.
As you must know by now, I believe that the most important issue in our culture today is freedom of the press and by extension freedom of the media in general.
Corporate interests have dumbed down this culture through their control of the media for purely bottom line reasons.
BUT THE CIA HAS HELPED, GUIDED AND CONTROLLED THAT DUMBING DOWN FOR ITS OWN TACTICAL AND STRATEGIC PURPOSES.
Equal to the media problem in my eyes is the independence of our intelligence services from active and effective oversight, and the fact (Well…NOT a “fact”, but that is only because they are a secret service. Catch-22. I think that it is a fact. On the evidence. The extensive quacking duck evidence.) that they are messing in internal political campaigns disturbs me much MORE than the existence of one batshit crazy Congressman.
I mean…we have survived HUNDREDS of them. Read Mark Twain if you doubt THAT fact.
I am not sure that we CAN survive rule by Secret Government.
Not al ALL sure.
Better a batshit crazy Congressman than a sane one who is beholden to the CIA.
MUCH better.
Later…
AG
Dietrich Reinhardt? Ruel Gerecht?
What is it with CIA agents having names that make them sound as if they’re third-generation Nazis?
Wait! Could this be the reason, perhaps?:
From ‘San Francisco Bay Guardian’, May 7, 2001
Newly Declassified Files Confirm United States Collaboration with Nazis
by Martin A. Lee
“Honest and idealist … enjoys good food and wine … unprejudiced mind …”
That’s how a 1952 Central Intelligence Agency assessment described Nazi ideologue Emil Augsburg, an officer at the infamous Wannsee Institute, the SS think tank involved in planning the Final Solution. Augsburg’s SS unit performed “special duties,” a euphemism for exterminating Jews and other “undesirables” during the Second World War.
Although he was wanted in Poland for war crimes, Augsburg managed to ingratiate himself with the U.S. CIA, which employed him in the late1940s as an expert on Soviet affairs. Recently released CIA records indicate that Augsburg was among a rogue’s gallery of Nazi war criminals recruited by U.S. intelligence shortly after Germany surrendered to the Allies..
Pried loose by Congress, which passed the Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act three years ago, a long-hidden trove of once-classified CIA documents confirms one of the worst-kept secrets of the Cold War– the CIA’s use of an extensive Nazi spy network to wage a clandestine campaign against the Soviet Union.
The CIA reports show that U.S. officials knew they were subsidizing numerous Third Reich veterans who had committed horrible crimes against humanity, but these atrocities were overlooked as the anti-Communist crusade acquired its own momentum. For Nazis who would otherwise have been charged with war crimes, signing on with American intelligence enabled them to avoid a prison term.
“The real winners of the Cold War were Nazi war criminals, many of whom were able to escape justice because the East and West became so rapidly focused after the war on challenging each other,” says Eli Rosenbaum, director of the Justice Department’s Office of Special Investigations and America’s chief Nazi hunter. Rosenbaum serves on a Clinton-appointed Interagency Working Group committee of U.S. scholars, public officials, and former intelligence officers who helped prepare the CIA records for declassification.
Many Nazi criminals “received light punishment, no punishment at all, or received compensation because Western spy agencies considered them useful assets in the Cold War,” the IWG team stated after releasing 18,000 pages of redacted CIA material. (More installments are pending.)
But hey, a friend of my enemy is, err . . . an enemy of my friend, eh . . . a friend of a friend . . . oh, I’ll get it right one of these times.