Pubdate: Fri, 5 Feb 1999 Source: Arkansas Times (AR) Contact: http://www.arktimes.com/ Author: Mara Leveritt - Opinion Columnist Copyright: 1998 Arkansas Times Limited Partnership LESS LEWINSKY, MORE BARRY SEAL I consider the trial unfolding in Washington little more than a tawdry spectacle -- bread and circuses, if you will -- distracting us not only from crucial affairs of state, but from a far nastier scandal that could tarnish Democrats and Republicans alike. The bipartisan nature of this ugliness, I suspect, is why no one has made much of a stink of it. To me, what's being avoided while we engage in this silliness is no less than a question of aid for the enemy at a time when we are at war. I would go so far as to use the word treason if this were a formal, military conflict, but the war I speak of is the War on Drugs, so betrayal may have a different meaning. What we do know is that while our nation has been conducting this costly War on Drugs, parts of our own government have seriously obstructed that very effort, helping major, international drug smugglers -- identified by our leaders as the enemy -- by turning a deliberate, blind eye to their activities and allowing them to continue to bring cocaine into the U.S. While we taxpayers have funded the creation of countless, state and federal drug task forces, witnessed the relentless expansion of prisons, and seen thousands doomed to life behind bars through the imposition of mandatory sentences, we also have had to face the reality that these Draconian measures are failing. In November, 1996, the San Jose Mercury-News published a remarkable series of articles by reporter Gary Webb that offered a grim look at this war's history. The gist was that, beginning in 1979, certain elements of the CIA, seeking to help Nicaragua's Contra rebels, developed questionable associations with drug smugglers, some of whom went on to supply the crack epidemic that swept Los Angeles and other cities across America. The CIA issued denials, and the Mercury-News fired Wills, saying he had overstated his case. But many Californians found the allegations credible, and in response to the resulting clamor, the CIA appointed an inspector general to investigate the series' contentions. Months later, the CIA's inspector general reported that, yes, the agency had maintained ties with suspected drug traffickers during the 1980s, though he insisted there was "no information" that the CIA had actively participated in the trafficking of drugs. The release of a second, more detailed report has been repeatedly delayed. Another disturbing bit of history has also come to light. Letters that have recently surfaced between former CIA Director William Casey and William French Smith, a former U.S. attorney general, reveal that in early 1982, the Justice Department released the CIA from its obligation to report suspected violations of U.S. narcotics laws, when the alleged violators were not CIA employees. In other words, while parts of the U.S. government were spending billions on eradication, interdiction and incarceration as tactics in the War on Drugs, the Justice Department secretly arranged for the country's main intelligence arm to legally protect drug smugglers when it chose to. This information is of particular interest here in Arkansas, where many of us have wondered for years how Barry Seal was able to operate his well-documented cocaine-smuggling business, importing, by his own account, millions of dollars worth of cocaine, without any official interference. Seal, who claimed he was working for the CIA, moved his operation to Mena in the spring of 1982 -- apparently, as the ink was drying on the Casey-Smith agreement. All that put him out of business four years later was his murder in Louisiana. The question ever since has been: who was protecting Seal? Two years ago, the CIA acknowledged that it had conducted "training exercises" at Mena while Seal had his headquarters there, and that Seal had indeed worked for the agency, in a "limited" capacity. It took a decade to extract those admissions. We can assume they're but the tip of an iceberg. Republicans will have a lot of explaining to do if questions about the CIA's connections to cocaine ever get the attention they deserve, since much of the questionable activity took place on the Reagan/Bush watch. But Democrats are on the hook too, especially President Clinton, who has yet to offer the least explanation for why Seal was allowed to operate unimpeded in Arkansas for years, even though the nature and scope of Seal's activities were known to the DEA, the FBI, the IRS, the Louisiana State Police, and the Arkansas State Police before Seal landed his first aircraft at Mena. There may be a good explanation for why our prisons were filled with petty drug dealers while people like Seal stayed in business. If so, it's time for us to hear it. If not, then this spectacle known as Monicagate is diverting attention from crimes that truly deserve the adjective "high." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck