FREEDOM FIGHTER

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00806R000100210023-2
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 2, 2010
Sequence Number: 
23
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
August 19, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00806R000100210023-2.pdf106.43 KB
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STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90-00806R000100210023-2 ON PAGE ___ _" WASHINGTON TIMES 19 August 1985 Freedom fighter By Bill Outlaw THE WASHINGTON TIMES Camouflage fatigues and lace. Bullriding, calf-roping and needlepoint. M-16s, and foxholes; evening gowns and waltzing'the night away. "The best man for this job is a woman:' Karen McKay, executive director of the Committee for a Free Afghan- istan, lives these contradictions. A major in the U.S. Army reserves, she has worn her Army uniform to meetings with military personnel and white lace blouses while escorting Afghanistan free- dom fighters. "Some people think I'm a GI Jane Fonda ... or Gloria Steinem in a camouflage," she says of the reaction to a woman who advo- cates women in the military. And now Mrs. McKay, whose weaponry qualifications include expert in the M-14, M-16 and AS, is aiming at former allies at the State Department on behalf of her friends in Afghanistan. In her office, flowers stand in shell casings of rounds spent in Afghanistan. Paintings by Afghan artists and posters depicting free- dom fighters and women and chil- dren in Afghanistan decorate the walls. On small tables by her desk are Soviet military paraphernalia cap- tured in Afghanistan- two armored vests, a gas mask, canteen and belt. A cartoon in the background proudly states "I love to court danger." On the wall behind her are plaques and awards from her 18 years in the Army and her activities with the CFA. There's a certificate from the 82nd Airborne for comple- tion of basic paratrooper training. She wanted to go to paratrooper school. She wanted to fire weapons. She wanted to fight communism and help her country. "I joined the Army to go fight in Vietnam and was told that women were too small and too weak to jump out of airplanes or fire guns," she says. "It's only now that they've come to the realization that we can do as well as the next guy." After the Army said no, she couldn't go, Mrs. McKay waited some 15 years before she finished paratrooper school at the age of 42 despite suffering a broken pelvis that forced her to walk with a cane for nearly a year. "I am one of the few people who can legitimately say they have actu- ally busted their butt for the U.S. Army;" she says. She is qualified to fire 14 weapons. "I can handle a gun as well as a sew- ing needle," she says. She can sling a mean chain saw. "I've also fired all of the Soviet stuff ... including the AKR [new Soviet automatic weapon]" She says she gave the first AKR to U.S. authorities in Pakistan. Before joining the Army, she taught school and rode in Califor- nia's rodeo circuit. Now, she spends much of her free time caring for and riding her horses on her suburban Virginia farm, where she lives with her husband and two children. It's her second marriage. Her first husband was Greek. She lived in Greece for four years, and after that in Israel, where she worked on a doctorate before returning to the United States. Her interest in the Army came from her father, who was killed fighting in World War II. "He died a hero:' she says proudly. If she is different from other women, she doesn't analyze it. "I don't spend time studying my navel ... wondering why it's there. I can be in a foxhole with an M-16 one minute, and in an evening gown that same night waltzing the night away." She knows what she likes and what she believes in. No doubts. She believes in fighting the spread of global communism and helping an oppressed people, which is what the Committee for a Free Afghanistan is all about. She was working for Reed Irvine at Accuracy in Media in January 1981 when two members of the Afghanistan resistance came by and talked about the media's lack of cov- erage of the Afghan resistance bat- tling the Soviet Union since Moscow's invasion of their country in December 1979. "None of us knew there was a war going on in Afghanistan," she recalls. She took the "freedom fighters" around to meet congressional aides, members of Congress and other politicos in Washingtop. The response was encouraging, she recalls, and not long afterward she started the Committee for a Free Afghanistan at the urging of others. It began as a one-woman job, and she had a makeshift office at the American Security Council. Then, she worked out of conservative political leader Paul Weyrich's quar- ters using a "borrowed desk, chair and telephone:' A board of directors included retired U.S. Army Maj. Gen. J. Mil- nor Roberts, executive director of the Reserve Officers Association; David Isby, author of "Weapons and lhctics of the Soviet Army" and a frequent contributor to Soldier of Fortune and Jane's military publica- tions; Col. John Sheffey, head of the National Association of Uniformed Services and Mr. Irvine. Other notables, including numer- ous top military officials and several members of Congress, are listed on the CFAs council of advisers. "At first, it was hard to get people to listen to us:' she says about the early days in 1981. "Afghanistan was a dead horse. When we first started talking about chemical weapons being used in Afghanistan, people laughed at us. When we started talk- ing about Soviets using nerve gas, they laughed. And I understood John the Baptist's problem. You have a message, a mission. You're driven to say something and you haven't got anybody to listen.' As the response began to grow and the CFA began receiving finan- cial support, she moved to an office on Pennsylvania. Avenue in an area "where police didn't even want to go." Times were still difficult, she says, noting there were several sus- Continued Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/09/02 : CIA-RDP90-00806R000100210023-2