SECORD LED SECRET ANTI-TERROR UNIT, PROBERS SAY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000302540003-8
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 26, 2012
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 8, 1987
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000302540003-8.pdf188.35 KB
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000302540003-8 4 ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE IA VH1LADELeHIA LNQLLKEK 8 March 1987 Secord led secret anti-terror unit, probers say Frank Greve . Inquirer Washington Bureau WASHINGTON ? President Reagan in 1984 authorized an ultra-secret U.S. counterterrorism unit, whose leaders included retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Richard V. Ses_ord_that was intended trbypirss- normal govern- ment controls, according to inter- views and recent government inves- tigations. As a leader of that unit. Secord often dominated White House aide Lt. Col Oliver L. North, who has been generally depicted as the driving force behind the Iran-contra affair, associates of both men and federal investigators say. Memos released by the Tower com- mission show that North frequently communicated with Secord, but rarely curbed, commanded or con- trolled him. More often, the memos show that North simply asked his superiors to support Secord's views and proposals, particularly on trad- ing arms to Iran for American hos- tages. Secord and his business partner. Albert Hakim, were described by the Senate Intelligence Committee as "al- most co-equal lieutenants" with North in the Iran-contra affair. A Pentagon special operations offi- cer who has worked with North and Secord went further. "Hakim had money; Secord had ideas; North got captured," he said. ? Secord, a private citizen with a personal financial stake ? and no public accountability ? thus influ- enced some of the U.S. government's most sensitive national-security deci- sions. Federal investigators have docu- mented that Secord played a large role in the Iran-contra affair: He de- livered arms to Iran, opened Swiss bank accounts for the transactions and supplied weapons to the Nicara- guan rebels. Secord and North have refused to be interviewed and pleaded the Fifth Amendment before the Senate Intel- ligence Committee. White House spokesman Dan Howard said, "Every- thing North and others did is cur- rently under investigation, and we will not be commenting on that." The ultra-secret anti-terrorist task force that Secord helped run was set up to report directly to the National Security Council at the White House, a former Secord associate at the Pen- tagon said. It was intended to take tough, "pro- active" approaches to terrorism, he said, bypassing what Reagan admin- istration officials considered reluc- tant, slow, leak-prone bureaucracies at the State Department, Central In- telligence Agency and Defense De- partment. The Pentagon kept the unit's existence such a secret that its name could not be learned. The idea for such a task force de- veloped in informal discussions among administration officials in 1982 and 1983, the source said. Presi- dent Reagan approved the arrange- ment on April 3, 1984, when he signed a National Security Decision Directive drafted by NSC aide North, according to sources in the Penta- gon. One essential part of the directive authorized the Defense Intelligence Agency ? the Pentagon's version of the CIA ? to employ intelligence agents to collect information con- cerning terrorism. Unlike the CIA, the DIA is not re- quired to report certain sensitive op- erations to Congress. According to the former associate. Secord, a stocky S-foot-9 fighter pilot and veteran air commando, led the anti-terrorist task force as one of "a small group of government employ- ees and consultants ... experienced people from the Middle East and Southeast Asia ... absolutely trust- worthy, low-profile people who won't talk." Secord had retired from the mili- tary the year before, in 1983, and was eager for the new counterterrorism assignment, according to the former Pentagon associate, a Secord loyalist. No longer on active duty, the source now does business with the Penta- gon and asked not to be identified. The Tower commission report of- fers evidence supporting the ac- count, as do interviews with Secord's former Pentagon colleagues and par- ticipants in contra-aid efforts. The report revealed for the first time that Secord, North and North's boss at the time, White House na- tional security adviser John M. Poin- dexter, seriously considered a com- mando raid in Lebanon last June to free hostages held by radical Mus- lims. The raid was conceived as an op- tion if talks and arms trades failed. Secord at one point told the negotia- tors for Iran that they might "pro- vide us with current intelligence of their Ithe hostages'l location," and U.S. commandos would take it from there, the report said. Secord had recruited 40 Druse mili- tiamen with the aid of Israeli govern- ment counterterrorism specialist Amiram Nir, according to a North memo to Poindexter. In a phrasing that implies Secord's authority, North wrote Poindexter that "Dick rates the possibility of success on this operation as 30 percent, but that's better than nothing." In another memo, North wrote that available resources for such an as- sault included "one ISA officer in Beirut," although more could be in- filtrated. The initials ISA probably refer to the Intelligence Support Ac- tivity, a secret U.S. counterterrorist commando unit that Secord helped organize in 1980. It was intended to improve U.S. counterterrorist capability after the failed 1980 mission to rescue U.S. hostages in Iran, according to con- gressional testimony. Secord, who had served in Iran between 1975 and 1978, was principal airlift planner for that ill-fated attempt. Indeed, of the roughly 30 former military officers and crewmen who helped airdrop arms to contra rebels last year, at least 13 hadliken part in the attempted rescue of U.S. Embassy hostages in Tehran, according to in- terviews with the crewmen. The ISA was supposedly deacti- vated in 1983, the same year Secord retired. A year later, the New York Times reported that the ISA was pro- viding "both equipment and person- nel to the CIA for its covert opera- tions in Central America." Following his retirement, Secord remained in a position to oversee covert activities. He served as a non- salaried member of the Pentagon Special Operations Policy Advisory Group until October 1985, according to Pentagon records. SOPAG was cre- ated in 1984 as a panel of retired commando generals to advise Noel Koch, then deputy assistant defense secretary in charge of special opera- tions, counterinsurgency and coun- terterrorism. Secord also performed other sensi- tive tasks as a civilian, suggesting a continuing action role in secret counterterrorism operations. In Jan- uary 1986, for example, he served as the CIA's ''purchasing agent" for Iran-bound TOW missiles taken from Pentagon stocks despite resistance by Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger, the Tower report said. In August 1986, the Tower report revealed, Secord turned up in Brus- sels, Belgium, "arranging a pickup for our friends in a certain resist- ance movement" ? probably arms for Afghanistan's anti-communist rebels, according to one former Se- Contmueo Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000302540003-8 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000302540003-8 cord associate at the Pentagon. As early as 1982, the source said, Secord had been ordered to arrange deliv- ery of small arms to the Afghan reb- els via Pakistan. In a recent interview, Koch de- scribed Secord as one of the few people who understand (covert mili- tary action( and are qualified to do it." He said organizers of the Iran- contra affair "were lucky to get him." When it came to retaliating against terrorists and rescuing hostages, Koch said, little was done because the CIA "figured the Pentagon had responsibility for action." But the Pentagon did not want the job either, according to Koch. "The generals were covering their asses," he said. "The people this troubled," Koch said, "were the people with responsi- bility for seeing something get done ? people like Dick (Secordl, wh read the President's promise of 'swift and effective retribution' against ter- rorists and said, 'Let's act.'" Secord was uniquely qualified: He was expert in counterterrorism and covert operations, and his connec- tions in the Middle East were impec- cable. He had served in Iran and had close ties to the royal family of Saudi Arabia, for whom he had helped win from Congress the AWACS early- warning system, the cornerstone of Saudi military security. Until he re- tired, Secord also was the Pentagon's most influential expert on the Iran- Iraq war. Both Secord and Saudi King Fahd feared fallout from the Iran-Iraq war. A victorious Iran might overrun Saudi oil fields near the Persian Gulf, while an Iran on the ropes might launch terrorist attacks against them. Congressional investigators now believe, despite official denials, that the Saudi royal family contributed up to $31 million to aid U.S. efforts against Iranian terrorism and on be- half of anti-communist groups. Several of the retired Air Force officers assembled by Secord to drop arms to the contras were offered some financial help by Saudi inter- ests, according to interviews with officials of firms who said they were encouraged by Saudi leaders to hire the officers. Most of these officers shared a common background. They had worked in the Air Force Office of Special Plans, which reported to Se- cord from 1981 to 1983. In an interview, retired Air Force Maj. Gen. George J. Keegan Jr., for- mer chief of Air Force intelligence, explained, "It was an office set up to facilitate CIA requests to the Air Force for covert air-taxi services. They have missions they conduct around the world, including ex- tremely sensitive missions involving the support of rebel factions, guer- rilla movements and the secret air- lift of arms and personnel, which the White House and/or the CIA desire supported and which are of a nature that cannot be made public." The office's duties, Keegan said, include "responsibility for certain types of covert operations, including foreign military sales that are of a clandestine or covert nature." Ile said it was "sometimes" possi- ble for the office to act on a White House request without notifying the secretary of defense. "We can regret the fact that such business goes on 'til hell freezes over," he observed, "but it is far more effective to carry out and con- duct and implement certain types of limited foreign policy by secret and covert means than it is to wage open war. That's what it boils down to." Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/09/26: CIA-RDP90-00965R000302540003-8