STAFF MEETING MINUTES OF 16 JUNE 1981

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CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2
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386
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June 16, 1981
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Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 SECRET MEMORANDUM FOR THE RECORD Staff Meeting Minutes of 16 June 1981 Admiral Inman chaired the meeting. noted that a couple of FY 1983 program submissions due but he expects all submissions to be in on schedule. 16 June 1981 are still Fitzwater raised the issue of continuing to answer telephones by office identification rather than by telephone number. Fitzwater said that the DDO has requested that we return to the old system whereby phones were answered with the extension. Admiral Inman asked if there was a need for uniformity throughout the Agency, e.g., whether General Counsel or Legislative Counsel, which have many outside contacts, should not continue to answer the phone with their office designation. Briggs said that a decision should be made soon on this. Admiral Inman said that he is not prepared to make a decision yet but will look at the problem within the context of what we have to do to improve internal cover. He said that this issue would be considered by the Executive Committee. Briggs reported that he had been asked by OMB about the role of the Inspector General within CIA. Briggs thinks that OMB may be considering making the IG position a political appointment. Admiral Inman said he is opposed to this and that only the Director and Deputy Director are political appointments within the Agency. Sporkin told Admiral Inman that he would have a clean version of the draft Executive Order 12036 to him by noon to get his decision about send- ing it to the NSC. Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 ? CONFIDENTIAL announced that the Director will appear before the Senate 25X1 Foreign Relations Committee on 18 June to discuss the Israeli raid against the Iraqi nuclear reactor. said that Hugel is scheduled to brief 25X1 the HPSCI on current findings and the SSCI on the Laos o eration and why the Agency did not inform them about the operation. added that 25X1 Admiral Inman is scheduled to appear before the Senate Appropriations Committee on 23 June and will testify before the House Education and Labor Subcommittee on Postsecondary Education about the foreign language program on 15 July. 25X1 McMahon noted that the IG on SALT long-range planning is having a big impact on NFAC. He said that many requirements are being levied and that essentially what the IG has done is take the Administration back to square one on SALT. McMahon noted that the Director has approved some new priorities for DCID 1/2 and that this will have an impact on NFAC in the future. Hetu reported that the unclassified annual terrorism report has been issued. reported that at the Levinson Seminar which he attended last week, he noted that there is a great deal of anger and frustration among the SIS'ers because of the paycap. It was noted that the Director will discuss this issue with the President and try to redress this problem coincident with the 1 October pay raise. Glerum announced that he is convinced that by the end of fiscal year 1981 the Agency will be at or above ceiling. Hugel initiated a discussion of the New York Times Magazine article of 14 June (attached) on Terpil and Wilson and noted that the Director had asked him to initiate an investigation into the background of this case. In response to Admiral Inman's question Briggs said the IG had conducted a thorough investigation of the case. Admiral Inman noted that he is pressing on with studies of the organi- zational structure within the Agency and that the Director is thinking about how to approach certain management issues. Admiral Inman said that the Director probably will put out some announcements within the next week. Attachment CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Approved For Release2007/10/29 : CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 A.Ti I CLL. APPEAnD ilk. YORK TIMES MAGAZINE ? ? Ore P4GE_IX-----A 14 June 1981 By Seymour N. Hersh ive years ago, two former operatives of the United States Central Intelligence-. Agency? Edwin P. Wilsonl and Frank E. Terpil ? made - a. business deal with Muammar el-Qaddaft . the) ruler of Libya. In essence, :1 come partners- in-. an export-import the former C.I.A.: men,, who had. be- come partners- agreedtaseU_ColonelQaddafi their accumulated years of American , intelligenceagency contacts, experi- ence and expertise. Theirs was a prod.: uct that could not be purchased on the open market. The colonel, who boasts. of supporting terrorism in the Middle. East, Europe and Africa and who has been attempting to set up his own new federation of Arab and Moslem states, was willing -- and able; because of his. vast oil wealth?to pay dearly. As a result, -the two- Americans, ac- cording to Federal investigators, have made millions of dollars aiding Qaddafi in his drive to export terrorism and build his own. Middle Eastern power. - Under cover of their export-import business, Wilson and Terpil are said to have helped Libya set up a manufactur- ing plant for the production of assassi- nation weapons; to have themselves helped Qaddafi plan political assassi- nations ; to have recruited dozens of for- mer Green Berets to teach Libyan sol- diers and Arab terrorists how to handle volatile explosives?how, for example, to turn ashtrays into weapons of terror; . to have illegally shipped arms explo- sives to Libya with the aid of forged and fraudulent State Department export Seymour M. Hersh, a former New York Times reporter, is now at work on a book about Henry Kissinger to be pub- ? to have. involved other ',former C.IA. employees in their .projects.. Information about the Qaddafi con- nection has been known by the Govern- ment Since the fall. of 1978. It was then that-Kevin F. Mulcahy, at the time a. partner. of Wilson and Terpil, ap- ,-proached the C.LA- and the Federal Bureau. of _ Investigation with grave. doubts about. the legality and ethics of company's business dealings with-. :Libya.- Mulcahy, a former C.I.A. em- ployee who had spent six months _inside. the ? Wilson-Terpil . operation, would spend hundreds of hours, over the next few years, providing the Government with firsthand knowledge.. -1Cevirt Mulcahy has now decided to - tell his story publicly for the first time. Hes tired of waiting for this segment of his life to end. He wants to be listed again lathe telephone directory, to hold a driver's license in his own name, to vote, to own property; to stop living as if he?and not Wilson and Terpil? had been indicted for wrongdoing. He feels he is forced now, in effect, to give his testimony in the pages of The New York. Times. The essentials of his accounts have: been. verified where possible through secret documents and in inter-, views with key members of the State Department, the Justice Department, the F.B.I., the United States Attorney's - office in Washington, as well as with Turner, the former head of Central Intelligence, and other high C.I.A.. officials. 0 The Wilson-Terpil case is a story of Americans who meet secretly in bars and board rooms to arrange the illegal sale of electronic-spying equipment and terrorist weapons. and of Americans who train as- sassins abroad. It is a story of an old-boy network of former C.I.A. operatives and past C.I.A. leaders who seem unable to face fully the implications of the case. It tells of a basic inability of the Govern- ment's investigative and law-enforce- meat agencies, disrupted by internal jeal- ousies and feuding, to perform effective- ly. It suggests that a moral climate exists Inside and on the edges of the intelligence community which results in the subver- sion of national goals to personal gain. Ed Wilson was running what amounted to an updated version of the military-industrial complex in which - - former-C.I.A; and military employees have puttheir Government experience, - contacts and knowledge to use for large personal monetary gain, regardless of the damage they will do to their own country. Such men have worked in league with a number of American manufacturers who have specialized in working for the C.I.A. and other intelli- gence agencies in supplying military goods and highly classified technical equipment Questions that should nor- mally be asked ? Are the sales offi- cially authorized? Are they legal? Do -they jeopardize national security? ? are not. Senior Government officials, in recent interviews, acknowledge that American expertise is being trans- ferred abroad in unprecedented fash- ion. The phenomenon, known in the bu- reaucracy as "technology transfer," is one apparent result of the declining mo- rale inside the intelligence community and the increasing profits available. These officials say that nations such as Chile, South Korea, Brazil, Argentina, Taiwan, South Africa, Iraq and Paki- stan have been able to purchase the very latest American equipment and technology in comniunications, mili- tary arms, computer science and nu- clear development ? with or without authorization from the United States Government. The matter was intensively re- rvels, inside the Carter fished by Surnmi App- roved For Release 2.607/10/29 : CIA-RDP84B00130R0 00600010386-2 1,0 Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 411 4.0 ??????P ? ? _ , ? Administration, with little progress. As yet, the Reagan Administration has not addressed the issue. In early May,. the Administration did order the Libyan Government to shut down its offices in Washington, as part of the campaign against international terrorism. But it has not faced the- broader problem ? the export of American weaponry and expertise to terrorists. ? ? - - Before the Federal prosecutors brought their indictments in April 1980 in the Wilson-Terpil case, the file was presented to Philip IL Heymann, then. Assistant Attorney General for the. Criminal Division.. Heymann, who is re- turning this summer to teach at Har- vard Law. School, recalls: "I was shocked by what I saw in the Wilson matter. The notion that there is no con-. trol over an American intelligence offi- cial taking his know-how-and selling it. to the highest bidder seems to ?be in-' sane. If terrorism is to be taken as a, major national problem,"- Heymann says; "we'll have to start at home and draft statutes that would bar the sale of fancy American equipment and fancy American expertise fort terrorist pur- poses- It won't be an. eitscri matter, be- cause it's hard to put_ a lid on-the dis- semination? of information. But this question is exactlyn what. Congress ? ought to be holding hearings on.r" ? ?? ' Federal authorities, in accepting Kevin Mulcahy's story as accurate, ac- knowledge that its implications are deeply disturbing: Qaddatt obviously'. has utilized the materials and expertise of Wilson- and Terpil in his support of such terrorist groups as the Palestine Liberation Organization, *the Red Bri- ? gad es of Italy, the Red Army of Japan, the Baader-Meinhof gang in Germany ' and. the Irish Republican Army_ He is. suspected of having ordered the. mur- der of at least 10 political enemies in Europe and the Middle East; two. months ago, the F.B.I. arrested Eu- gene A. Tafoya of New Mexico, a for- mer Green Beret, and accused him of an attempted asSassination of a Libyan student at Colorado State University. The Libyan is one of a growing number ? outside the country who oppose Qadda- ft's rule. When arrested, Tafoya, who traveled to Libya three times last year, had Ed Wilson's business card in his possession with telephone and telex list- ings in Tripoli, London and Washington for one of Wilson's Swiss-based compa- pies. Tafoya's links to Wilson are still being investigated. Colonel Qaddafi is relentle?Jsly anti- Israel, supports the most extreme fac- tions in Syria and opposes the moderat- ing influences of Jordan's King Hussein and Egypt's Anwar el-Sadat as part of his campaign of political expansion in North Africa. Qaddafrs ambitions were strengthened early this year when he successfully invaded Chad, seizing an area believed to be rich in uranium ore: The war also meant more profit for Wilson, who has established his own trading companrin. Tripoli, known as Meprico; to- supply Qaddaff's army: Libya, relying on its estimated 425 bil- lion in annual oil revenues, is a major purchaser of Soviet arms, and more than 5,000 Warsaw Pact military advis- ers are- believed ta be on. duty with frvaddafi's 60,009-man army. - ? ?-?att ? -; fernier teigh-lipeed-e061011.3314C2- 110313 and computer-technology expert In the C.I.A., Kevin Mulcahy was no in- nocent when he came forward about the way the export-import business had worked. He had gone into business with Wilson and Terpil ata high guaranteed Income . Within three months,-Mulcahy reaT3 zed . that, his partners were rou- tinely selling restricted military and m rn ir-AtirITIS _gear. Be _himself of- fered. to sell such sophisticated equip. meat as- second-generation computer systems and coded communications machinery-Mulcahy did not hesitate in his talks- with the authorities to ac- knowledge his own role in questionable activities, which included the sale of embargoed ammunition to South Af- rica. In allot thesedealings, he says, he believed or wanted no believe that Wit- -son and. Terpil weresomehow partof a /covert C.I.A. operation- . ? . Today-, Mulcahy is an angry and frus- trated man. He believes his life is in danger, a belief shared by Federal offi- cials; and he is deeply disturbed by what he regards as a monumental lack of resolve; competence and communi- cation within the Federal Government in handling the case. It took nearly four years to indict Wilson and Terpil in Washington, on charges that include Megal export of explosives, failing to register as a foreign Agent, and con- spiracy and solicitation to commit mur- der. Despite fugitive warrants, the Government has been tumble to appre- hend them at a time when their travels. In and about Europe, the Middle East, Africa and the United States have been observed by many people. Last winter, more than six months after his indict- ment, Wilson was seen by a business friend in Blackie's House of Beef, a Washington restaurant, with a group of his former employees; it is not }mown how he entered the country. Mulcahy, meanwhile, has been forced to lead a life of furtiveness. "I've bad five years of indecision, contradiction and waiting for the day that this chapter of my life ends," ? he says. "The Government keeps telling me, 'We're on top of it; we're on top of it' " Yet Wilson and Terpil remain at large, and many of their operations, which clearly seem to be working against the interests of their own country and, indeed, world peace, are believed to be continuing at this moment. Kevin Mulcahy, now 38, grew up vin- tage Americana in suburban Washing- ton: altar boy, Eagle Scout, varsity basketball, class vice president He was a son of Donald V. Mulcahy, a 28- year-career senior official of the C.I.A., four of whose six children were also employed by the agency. Kevin, the oldest child, began working full-time for the C.I.A. in 1963, after serving as in airborne radio operator in the Navy. He became a communications and computer expert and worked on highly classified programs that he will not talk about today. In-1968, he resigned ?firTm the agency to take a position in the electronics industry. There followed a succession of increasingly responsible jobs in the computer industry, a serious drinking problem that drove him into Alcoholics Anonymous, and a painful divorce. By the fall of 1974. Mulcahy had come to grips with his alcoholism and, having left the computer industry, began working in Virginia as a counselor in a drug- and alcohol-treatment center. By. 1975, he was trying to set up a se:ies of halfway houses anikwas scrambling for Federal grants. Mulcahy rented a house by chance from a Barbara Wil- son ? Edwin P. Wilson's wife. Mulcahy became friendly with her and eventu- ally was invited to dinner at the Wil- sons' newly purchased, luxurious 1,500. acre farm in Upperville, Va. Ed Wilson, now 52, was well known inside the C.I.A. as a skilled and trustworthy operative. Wilson, who began his ex- port-import business in the early 1970's while working as a consultant bra top- secret Navy intelligence- unit, had played a rote in the Bay of Pigs and other undercover operations in his long c.r.A. career as a contract agent. MW- cahy was impressed. Approved For Release 2007/10/29: C1A-RDP84B00130R- 0006-00010386-2 Cra - L xj, rv Approved For Release 2007/10/29 : CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 _. -s1 ? - ? . 0 ' over dinner, Wilson made It clear, with the people he was: doing busines-S-4 CLA.-:was deePIT involved in its still that he knew pretty much all there was with to impress theor that he-was stillf:. controversiat Phoenix . assassinatiorr to know about Kevin Mulcahy, about- C.LA.," Mulcahy says. "He would sag..- program.-He? later .served In his former employment with the C.I.A. gest. he was still under deep colier."4 whert the C.I.A. was- assignedthe tasil: and his current work with teen-agers. A Often on Friday nights, Wilson made W of interfering with the. Government of:, few months later, Wilson made an offer - a point to go drinking at bars in subur.4 Salvador Allende Gossens.. .: . :7- T Mulcahy would not refuse: If Mulcahy ban Virginia known to be after-hoursi ?,. Wilsonarrsuigedn meeting at Shack.4 would join his. arms-sales business in hangonts for C.I.A. officials-on duty at ley's home. ar few nights. later after Washington and. remain for one year,. --the agency's headquarters. in McLean sir work?bringing along Mulcahy and an he could then have as a bonus. a nine. Mulcahy, the new partner; began going': Ameriaan. FlarryRastatter, one of Ter-, bedroom farmhouse Wilson also owned: along. "Lthought he was agency," Mul.? pirs business. associates who had. just. and use it as a halfway house for trou-. cahy says of Wilson. t1 had =question; ,returnedfrom a business trip to Egypt.: bled youths. Mulcahy's guaranteed: in my mindr .- ? ? , .::' 7' ::.., .;.:.7.::'". li Turkey. and Irato...:Rastatter had ob.7. $50,000 annual income would be supple- -.?A few days after the new partnership tained?sorne..information. from Savalc.'; merited by commissions and expenses.'. -was formed', Mulcahy discovered sales" the:Iranian.; internal; police-, :and ,was "I had no suspicions at all about the ,orders showing. that Wilson ancl.Terpiii :!willing to-pasS it along:to the C.LA.; job," Mulcahy recalls, and be began. ? ? werein- the process of selling machines ,Shackley? was introduced by Wilson t&. working hard- "I was putting in 18- guns and silencers-to an arms dealer in ' i.Mulcaliyand?recalted knowing his fa-; hours a day at first, dealing with 10,000 ?Zambia.. He was bothered by thesale of! . _ther.whis eirnectthe-National 'Intern... suppliers and. inquiries about canned . me silencers for hekoew they had onlr :-gence Medakthe agency's highest. re-:- I food.. Parachutes ?any kind of equiP7c. one purpose? killing without drawing . -ward? before retirement'. There was- from maChi-n-ei-to .airt:i.Sif' : f attention to the killer: He-telephoned . -tallt abouL military- and. Intelligence There was no- reason for suspicion in . the F.B.I.: and: later showed copies of :needs ittlrati; Turkey and Libya. Wit. those weeks." Most of the business was' .the sales orders to agentsin the Bureau,. -son: told Shackliy. that: he and Terpil aboveboard 'and involved' the sale- or of 'Alcohol,. Tobacco. anct-L. Firearm* : were planning to travel to Tripoli and. highly technical equipment.' Mulcahy: :(B.A.T.F%); one of whose functionsitisi ,meet with- Qaddaft.. "By now I'm eon- was responsible for arranging export li-. -to monitor illegaLarms? deals and re:. '.vinced that thewhole thing is an agency ceases, international letters. of credit' porton impendingsaks-He alsoaskeik : front.'... Mulcahy recalls. "I thought Ed and shipping, and also for determining'. ? about his new partner m The authorities! ...was in bed with the C.LA," Some Fed; ' which. manufacturers' ..:-? - equipment.- ? said that the sale to Zambia was legalt Aral-officials say they are-still itivesti; would meet .the specifications of the-and that they had no derogatoryinfor4 ;gating Shack erspersonat and fizian- order-. . .. - . .- . ?.:-.-1,::::,,: ?-?-?-?':.-'::,.?:', ..--',?:?'::`, ? , mation about WilsonandTerpil-in,their" .:;cial involvenientwithNirelson. Shackle)* ? Mulcahy obviously gniSed MUsten, in: files. ,.1 said to rnysilf,:tbrisi,:thls hen-. ::.has. acknoWledged. to. Federal author'- the early spring of 1978, Wilson walked - got to be an- agency- operation.':."-Mnl -7: Aiesithatthe meeting described by Mul- him to another office- a- few. blocks': cahY recalls.- !"These guys-are buYin&l. ',;calloy as. well as- other meetings with away, in downtown. Washington, and In-- and selling silencers, and the-.-F.R.r., i- :;.-Wilson did take place, but Shackley in.. traduced him to Frank Terpil. now.41,..-. and B.A.T.F. give them the O/C:So rm.:: 'isisted that at no time did WiLsortreceive Terpil had served about seven years as-I' feeling pretty goOd: rd gone to theFect.1 *any authorit7 or. sanctiorr from the a communications technician for the-. . ex-al authorities;: shown . them: docu-; cCLA- for his work in Libya. He-said his C.I.A. but was forced to resign: in 1971 merits and they said Wilson and Tempi:4 '.:contactiwithYrdson were solely for the- - .. . ,:-. _after a series of embarrassing private- were-clean."... purposeaf obtaining any stray bits of escapades, Including an attempt to - ? ;.inteWgence WilSCU might have picked: smuggle contraband liquor into India. . , ? . . ? -., up:Nilson and Shackley had worked to.- : Unlike-Wilson, who mingled easily and - Wilson's:contacts seemed ineichaust.; :gether in 1960-on theBay of Pigs opera- effortlessly with senior C.LA. officials, ible. Ed Wilson was friendly, as Mul.4-:. ;dom.,: Shackley,; in an interview, con; - corporate -executives -and -important tally and. Federal investigators- were i :firmed Mulcahrs account of. the meet-, members of Congress, the Brooklyn- later-to learn, with many senior legisla.i ingancl said that he, like Mulcahy, was:_ - born Terpil was a street...1.9#.4-atur who. tors, 'including Senators- Strom Thur-i tmaware then-of Wilsnt's plans for sup- had been arrested twice for illegal trat...... mond of-South Carolina and the. late:. *porting- Qaddafi's terrorist program. ..fic1441.,,,,* in arms. Mulcahy knew nothing .Ta...s. L.:McClellan of Artansas and; Shackley said his purpose in talking to. . about Terpil except that he had worked . Representative Silvio 0:: Conte of Ma's:: ;unison and Rastatter was to collect in.' overseas for the C.LA.-. , ... sachusetts?-? He could: telephone a con.4. formation front non-C.I.A. sources. "I ? The three men agreed to set up a new tact in . the - Internal Revenue Service ..i .taliced to them solely not to be a captive company,: to be known as Inter-Tech.. and. within 15 minutes have intimate-' of the system." he said. "Wilson was a nology Inc., forthe specific purpose of- ? financjal details on a potential custom...! .guy who knew about a lot of things. He ? selling 'high-speed communications ! er. He was able, with a telephone call teiT. ? was a good contact." gear and computers to foreign coun-.! , -Washington's police- headquarters, -to--j f -..After the Shackley meeting. Mulcahy- tries. The equipment was legally pur-- obtain. registration information on a..-:' .was brought into the Libyan operation. chased from American companies. , local automobile license plate.But . - Muammar el-Qaddafi had-placed a pur- Each man was to bea one-third partner' sometime in late May of 1976, Wilson:: chase. with Wilson and Terpil for of Inter-Technology, which, it turns ?: went a step further: He telephoned , ? . hundreds of thousands of timers capa-; out, was one of scores of Wilson-Terpil. Theodore G. Shackley, a. prominent.' .ble of detiyongaetini: explosives companies scattered in corporate i .C.I.A. official who was than serving as . .e.Wgarisnantlide: records throughout the United States the assistant to the-deputy director for ..Terpa .-clid not ten MUlcahY; hOWe'Ver, and Europe. . clandestine operations ? one of- -the -- there-al purpose of the devices; instead If Mulcahy had any doubts about his ? most powerful posts in the agency.- . he- was led to believe that Qaddafi new job, he suppressed them by belie-v..' Shackley was renowned for his tough- ? needed them to clear mines from har- ing ? or wanting to believe ? that Ed' ness and efficiency as a station chief W.- i hors and battlefields by safely blowing ? Wilson was still linked to the C.I.A. "Ed . Laos and in South Vietnam during the . , them, up. The mines. so Mulcahy was would paradehis contacts in the C.I.A. height of the Vietndro War, when the - - . 172< 9- Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 i'ii?W I int& ELYIE Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 tol& had been left from. the 1973 Ara Israeli war. The timers- were to demonstrated to.Qaddah'ssenior mi tarp- and intelligence aides that June Libya, and Wilson and Terpil had find an ininiediatemanufactuer. well They decided to exploit a long-time CIA- contractor. the American.. Electroni Laboratories of Colmar. Pa., and Falls Church. Va., which had routinely been providing the agency with some of i most highly classified electronics ancl. communications ger.. -1: ? ? American Electrmdc-was a logical. *starting place. In May1976,.Wilson had visited the company's plant in Falls Church irrarr effort to-persuade its offV? cers-torretaio hirfirm. to represent its- 'products around-. the' world:. Wilsore? brought. Mulcahy!: and -Terpil, to the meeting, as well asan active C.LC.I.A.:: em- ployee, Petry- E.-Loomis:an: agent asas..signed to the-Far East WhOWaS operat-e. ing under cover for an, aircraft compa-- ny. One of. Loomis functions was to serveasalialsorsofficerbetween C.LA- , headquartersand its overseas stations;:': hewas responsible for establishing per. - sanal relationshipswith senior military and Government" officials la the Far East. Loomis added.. credibilityrk in. Wil son's pitch. !ITerpil, was there to ix6;. press them with his contacts in the P,fic14... die ast,:_? was the -r-e- for Europe and Lopraiit forl the Far East. I was there because it: was told to them that I was ex-C.I.A. and. would remain orz-site? and ble while the others traveled.". ? 4 ? Loomis, who had been illegally lighting for Wilson for some time, was ! one of dozens *of former. Government employe who had been recruited by- ; Wilson and TerpiL Government investi7,1 gators havelearnerlthatWiLson's tech--1 nique; as. utilized. 1n his approach to.: American. Electronic, was: to seek out ' intelligence and military officials with close relationships, with both vital sup-- pliers and foreign governments.. These men . would be retained to sell goods?:i ranging fromfromcanned foods to weapons,, to those foreign countries. Income tor; his salesmen, as we as for Wilson, was _ ? . _ ? extremely high, in part because the' sales were often contingent on under--; the-table kickbacks to- Wilson's coni.- pany and to foreign officials. No agreement was reached between Wilson and senior officials of American Electronic at their meeting. but Wilson and his associates were able to leave the impression that their work was not only highly profitable but also had been , officially sanctioned by the Govern- ment. /n June, When the 10 prototype timers were needed, another series of ; meetings was set up in a Virginia bar ? involving three of Wilson's employees, b.7alcing Weisenourger; then be,. 'air active?dury CI.A. official,. and. two . employetootArnerican.Electranic? one;.. ? Ut,-.'oftwboszt.-was. another C.LX: official,?, to i the-working under; cover: - 'burger and, the American Electronic" i Men agreed to work privately over the C. weekendto produce 10 prototype timing:, devices- at the inflated, cost of $1,500? each (10 times the actual cost). Federa1! authorities: later concluded that these; men knew that there had. been-no offi-i ? elak .C.LAr., authorization_ for: the job,-4 and that senior officials of American*, _Electronic?had not known of the intien;. lighting. It. was a. project that in: thei 'Months ahead struck Mulcahy as.wildly irostimEeknevr that Many of the:Com-3 panles*: senior official.S..were,"?lewislii ta-nrk he now: says, "yon can bet they ?youldratdetanything ? tt:tasie of. life 1nternationattsalesman4 "and:is was good. In -June,.he irke- to; England toset up an exhibitiotiafek show at Brighton -rOomti Were first. clasi.. So wasthelfozicand?.4 there seemed to be a constantserfeS artier,and partyOniot MulcA-'! ..lry!s.. first customers it the SecuritY?: .ihoviWas a Syrian Company; Abdalialt;! Engineerzn&. which was illterestedf-irg . :purchasing high-speect: commuril tions. equipment ? gear ao:sensitive?,"-, Mulcahy. _thought, that the State'net4 partment would never- perinit itsex . port. -"Frank told me, `Donit. worry4 : about it We-don't need' licenses.lust.; get thesorder;" '1" Mcahriecallszt'llir:? nowitivaitiliViEfulithat Wilsotrandaerf.,; ;.-pil.hada wide Latitude fortheagetieV! ? ;."; Tkeegizioznent_includedencodbrade; 'Tice& and radio monitors capable-of : tracking,: interceptingancFkiterpeetine: encoded signals. There wasa ifleetingi with. representatives- of. the Irish:-Rew publicarrArzny; who wanteciAmerican; ? made M-16 rifles.. Mu l catty learned-that such weapons could be found izz plentkz ful supply; North Vietnam had sold- its; surplus weaports?seizedin huge quan-t; titiesafteritsarrny overran SouthrViet; - =ant in- 1975 to Saniueltummings Interarrnco, the European-based armsf dealer-It was in England. ? cahy says, that Terpil askedftinr if he, : wanted to. earn $5,000 on his mum* flight to Washington. by detouring; tot. Cairo to deliver a "told gun,'.". onewit* no identifying serial number. Mulcahy refused to deliver the weapon, but - .? 'learn ? months later that Qati- t.clafi had provided re:pi' and. !Wilsonr? with- a $1- million con- fi tract to-assassinate Umar dullah Muhayshi. a Libyan de-* fector who had plotted to over- throw Qaddaft's regime: The .,..assassination assignment had- .1been subcontracted. by Wilson- -.;to- three-. anti-Castro Cubans in' ; Miami with whom he had once: ivorked.? irr the C.I.A. "Frank 'Was playing both ends against. . the-middle," Mulc.aby recalls- ,' "He was setting up- an elabor. tate:security system; forrn the: guy* in. Egypt- to protect him while at....the same time trying 1:to bump him oft" and:. Terpil got. along well-and thetwo men ex- changed many,. conftdenceS ? uring,.. their - -trips. together. Frank.tendstotalk a lot; he . pikes to name-drorti" Mulcahy 'What. charg- Frank's ? ? ...batteries., is.. the thrill of. the ?.c.haie; the excitement, being- = the periphery of-power. He thrives on it.' lir tithe, Mul- cahy. said,. he came to realize ...that there was more-truth in ,rerpil's seemingly wild stories harihehad thought, ?. ? Wilson is more discreet. and - ; far moredangerous; Mulcahy 7.said:1?Ect.is devious and am- ning. and: he's living a lie ? !;that he is the-most important lutman, being-'alive t7 'Heir age". . !;anything' to manipulate people_ 'gr_r:.events, to?set them to. come Z?telybrilhla. in the- way he 1.setsdeal u$ puts people to- tgerbteer and, parcels out .infor- E-TO :EA:compartmental- " .izes; 4&.; triii* :Operation. the .;SarrzeiraY the agency does. It allows- tcr play both ends s;.against the middle and come .,out . the .winner..7. If Ed comes ? :Lbook. and,. goes-on trial; he's !--going-to use every pit of infor- imation-, he's ? stored' ' up for years. to get the CJ fir court -'enctput- the agency orzirial in- ''stead-- of Ed WiLern." 1i fact.: - ? -Wilson's:attonney-in-w-ashin&_-.. - :_tonrSeyroour Glanzer; has re- .. ? Peatedly told Federal prosecu- tors that thewhole story of his _ client's involvement in. Libya. Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 ? I) WM' TV Nrrypir Tr11- Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 ? . has notvbeen aired. Glanzer-, in!, xtelepbone interview, refused , to comment. But -the prosecu-i tors have inferred from con-i. versations with. him that his:. defense will be: Wilson is still : at work for the.C.LA. There is no known evidence that this is., the case, however: " Mulcahy- immediately sensed Wilson's. essential'. toughness, but there was niath--: ing unusual aboutsuch men in- side the C.I.A- and it was a characteristic- that. could be.:. admired- MI&I.976':: was. al period of travail for the C.I.A.; which- wasunder attack in thei press for its. illegat domestic' spyingactivities and under in- vestigadon. by the Senate, In- telligence Committee: for its: foreign asiaiiinatiorr efforts. Mulcahylearned, ilioitliafter" joining Wilson and Terpil, that President Ford had _placed se... : vere new* restrictions on clan-. destine C.I.A. activities. Wil- son and Terpil suddenly be- came more legitimate in his eyes: "I thought it was logical that the agency.would set it up this way and have their people; on the street freelancing." . During, that summer. Mul- cahy edged closer to the lineof illegality and, . in at least -one case,, crossed it. He recalls that Wilson and Terpil were selling munitions. commtmi.: cations equipment and highly restricted night-vision devicei without preliminary clearance from the Office- of Munitiona Control in- the State Depart- ment and the export control. division in the Commerce Des... pertinent- In one case.. Wilsotit and Terpil purchased a United States Army vehicle equipped . with night-surveillance equip- ment for shipment to Libya, in direct violation of all regula- tions. To avoid- any possible problem, the vehicle was first sent to Canada and. trans- . shipped from there to Tripoli. The risks of such flagrant ac- tivity were high, but so were the rewards. The vehicle cost about $60.000 to purchase in the United States and was sold to the Libyan Government by Wilson and Terpil for $990.000, Federal prosecutors ? later learned. Similarly, Terpil and Wilson provided Qaddafl with hundredsof closely controlled' and sophisticated infrared night-vision devices for M-16 - rifles,. which were primarily' designed for use by snipers in.. warfare. Not all. such.- saleS.: went to Libya...Mulcahy says' . he was directly involved in the Illegal sale of 2;000 rounds of: ammunition to-the South Afri- can Government,. and he used. falsified ...documents. to label., the ammunition' as "plumbing fixtures.' " This and ' other sales, he-sais,. were arranged:: through Sven K. H. Hoffelner,:; an Austrian arms dealer who!: . also: own.% a-'inccessful- group:! of restaurants in London. Hof4 felner had established a close: Iworkingrelationshipiwith Ter-4 . pil by the tirneMulcahy joined , theoperatioir, ' -.I.:In-July 1976; afterhis retunr irons learned that only six-of the 10 timing devices sent to Libya had worked... The deinonstra.:. tion of the devicei was made in. Libya by-John Henry Harper, ? whograd-spent-.-more-than-20:- years as 'a bomb and ordnance technician. for the-C.I.A. and who had.. joined American Electronic after' he- retired.., Two of the timers had failed.i Mulcahy.. was.- tokl; because. Harper- had miswired them.i Libya's reactions to the demon-.- - stration was. puzzling to Mug. cahy: Although-nearly half th&. devices bad failed to work, thet 'fair/anis -were Still. willing_tal order 100,000 far immediate delisreu....A_few_sveeics latere ?Terpil returned from a visit to Libya with an increase irr the; .;:ortier to 300;000. timers: . didn't get suspicious." Mul- cahy recalls. . "until -Frank came' in with the order for 300,000. I knew damn good and - well that there was no way-. - there was a- need for... 300,000; . timers ?there weren't 300,000- mines- in the harbors and deserts from the Six-Day War as well as World War!)." At this point, Mulcahy de:stood that Wilson's story- - about naine-clearing in Libya was false, but he thought it . was shielding a C.I.A. opera- ? neie.si'serVing' as a cover- for tesroristsupport program_ Tbecover story was beginning tOR erede....W12atever conciiiied: Mulcahy.- was. qui, !'etly?Suppressectover the-next :few:weeks.: however:, "I- was _inaptessed br the-money and the-possibility--of ruakinga for-i this:: thii..iC:waS: clear!! that the' senior. ; officers : of' :-American Electronic could not - 'be7. Persuaded to build 300,000; tuners... without thei- Onsieil,;;;;fittv-theLA.--There -wasyet.. another scramble. Thi-e tt*f i manufac- turerwbo-cculd begm.dehver- ing,the timesa.withm.45. days... 'AotherzFrmdazught:ineeting ? yiiiiila1**a**rr:4agecg :-Y04,14*lici,FiTrsebta: 'Communications. of . las:.Terpithildfound- the com-7. vanywhos.e president. Joe I. Halpairiilateragrieci.femanu.; -,factist WO:prototype timers' :,..:within--..3f!day-Si:,At the Friday-. 1-17 p ? tt Was: Williani? ,;,.N1f.eisetalasitgeF.Lthen_a- branch, tOittliFirecalmicaF- Ser? the-group f*Preduchag the ' 'ativeanansandsa de- vices,,llaalrave been: populart ti.i.E...41iy,:thacJanies Bond mov.:i ii*Thoinits q;;;; Clines: then a:. !Seniaz.lafficiaLirr.the pffice=of-Training, also was In! .theben dietiigiit, sitting with:: EctiWg.soth: Mulcahy spent the" night'- table-boppmg-as. the -triantifiFturinig#? were :Workeszr!atirzaClin."Vvis'Weli known insidethe''igericy' foi his. closeness . had played: a...;:srtile: in the"....1149 of sElgs -After Shaildera retire.; :mem:from: the.C.A.A in, 197'3' he-and. Clines.:.viould set up. a . the big_ nioneYz.that -night in,' the' bar.. Mulcahy later learned that the "contract ? with Qaddaff callectibr4,.t4tak payment. of ? $35 mi.11ion? foi.5e000 timers whose cost to supply,he knew,- would. be somewhere ' around, $2.5 million. Even in the inter-, .; Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 6-1 Approved For Release 200771-6/597. CIARDPWIET00130R000600010386-2 ? ? IP ? .. : national-arms business, prof- its like that are not. easy to come by- - . ? Wilson's major concern was time; he had promised: theat Libyans that he-would set up a.! manufacturing, - laboratory *t near Tripoli for the procluctioni of assassination weapons. August. ? Qaddaff, in-. turn, t promised to pay him $1 =Ulla& in cash immediately- upon ar.4 rival of the _firsn batat timers, explbsiveS and otheri, equipment that would be? need-4 ed. Manufa;n:urin& the weal ors themselves in Libya would be no problem;. inan as- .Ioha Harper, who- was: paid::, more than $2,000 a week by Wilson and Tema, agreed. to go to Libya and ben training!' Libyans in the art of disguising ? explcsives in ashtrays, flower.. pots; iseepe; and- ethee-beeee-: bold goods that could he trig- gered by delayed. timing de- vices. Scientific.-__ComtnuniCa-.,: tions came. through., as. its:. promise to deliver the protorn found. a California fi n,3S. Brc' - : and Associates ? of Poncawhich ? agreed:to- supply the chemicals;. alD which were considered defense-articles that could not be exportedwitheu:tzFedi erallicensing. - ? ? ? type timere within 3:9The:Texas company had handled- legitimate-and Sensitive contracts for the- C.I.A., but this one-was different, and the firm's president. JoeHa.lpaiti, knew it: He per-4 ? zonally delivered the timers, hidden in plastic-prescription bottles-for export to Libya, to a motet near C.I.A.-head-I th-ey?v7 -ere up byl Wilson and Mulcahy; Far znoredifficult were the issues of where to purchasel thevolatile chemical explosives needed I for the production of the a?kca-q-einAtion weapons and. haw, to- slip them into:.:; Libya. The necessary explosives' in-: _eluded TNT mid a variety of lethal plas- tiques ?among them- ItDX, formally known as cyclotrimethylene trinitre:: mine?Which were designated. as Class: ' A explosives by the Department of Transportation and. could not be shipped on passenger and cargo air-., craft. Wilson and Terpii again reached into the ranks of C.I.A. contractors and. One? problem remainedi.; hmirta; get the timers and explosives intaLiby Io early August, 1976. Mulcahy attended a! . meeting: at. the: offices- of!. lir-Tech' nology. irc_Washington- With: eargsi sales manager of -Lufthanse.:Germatt Airlines,. which ha S passenger service !rang. Germany' to Tripolis,: The. sales manager; Walter DoerrcategoricalIY refused to ship. the exPlosiveselegailyt orotherwise, on:a passenger Craft An he refused- to -c.harter-a.special Cargo plane because. of the high risk?:?texplo..., sion-Literthat day; Tema-arranged* ineetingwithieromeSeprower,the61 year-old president of Brower anchAs4 sociates, who :was highlwrespecte$ figure irt hie industry- (and. lateewasi asked- to _advise Congress*Office. TechnologrAssessment cn:a3prciposeck Method of -marking andtrieing.explo styes used-in internationaEterrerisra).t. Brower was shown-.a list or all::: the* - Chemicals. that Inter-Technology. wanted: to- puretraSe operation:: . Brower immediately exclainieiley.1 you don't need: all this stuft ft?* clearance."...! thii.:thpipany; was setting up a Taboratiorile.Tripo14 anddoing some demonstrations.'wori< ::"He didn't say precisely-Yitiet*4PF4. srdoing,"*. Mulcahy recalls;--?eliiiiii.7.-was1 obvious. Wilson went furthe_r;:thanYct. ever hear& in explaining4e-:e9cipe7ot the entire project- Thereal?'_4.2ncii.i. :mous potential for follow-up-pestle* . which removed any hahibi-itees.BrOvieri had-ts:. Mulcahy roarvele42*Nitioi to handle BrowerBreVier hadf never done any businesSwitheida-er these guys before and herh:-henieegree - Ing to- sell and shirr, eXplosives7,-.to Libya." Brower immediatelyraiied his price and demanded partinipainient Ith advance. Wilson and- Terpir-egreect tr:?;? -pay nearly $38,000 on accotm4Muleshil says, and the California Iiiisines-i-mani "called his- plant, -talked td-hfi Peggy, and his plant xnangerandtol them how to pack the cheMiciliS-7,---4- ? ? RDX; the most lethal anti tnisiable- material, was to be placed. inside gallon drums in webbing and the drain*. then were to be filled with a. get sub-; stance. The explosives :Were to be shipped. _ East, to Dulles .-_Airpose; arked as "industrial solvent,"7cdtbe. first available passenger flights,. Mut.; z eahy recalls. Onceat Dulles, they craze -rconsolidated.into one shipping contain- er; along with the timers and the induse. . trial tools and-workbenches needed- to sel ....UP.: the-explosives laboratory in: ?::Libyte:...TheMthey were. forwardedl sEurope. \ trans:shipment by Luft- hansa passenger planes tonipolivrith-. out. knowledge of the airline:. All. of the ceiers involved in-the meeting in Wash.,. !ingtore understood the implications of !.-What theyrivere: doing, Mulcahy Says:. ?The; nitro- 'could have blown if the 1,Planehitartairpocliit."- ?? - . ? V:Browe:r_wai? indicted in Aprii !along with for his.. !role in illegally conspiring to ship the ;explosives with knowledge that they would-be used tor"Idll, Injure- an. in-.. *ttimidates individuals." After- pleading guilty and agreeing to- cooperate with- ' Federak invesalgators, he- was, Aced last. December and sentereced to * . a. five-year prison term, with all h-at: *- fixtiniontbs suspended. . ? .? . ? The- meeting with Brower had, - zolvekthe final.-stumbling block z.2-.4 .....-.;witson,fiew 0- Libya, where he was to - e conclude the- arraiigements for- estab- theweapons- laboratory and to . be on handta insure, the careful ? ? dling-tatilieshipmentof seA- frennthe United. States. Be also: ';,7vioulciterieiVethepromisedmilliore-dol;-? . eperff,frenxt.Qaddarz_. KeiiriMu1c:Filry;.. meanwhile,. flew' tir Ehrope fora meeting in--London. with: 6Terpii and a-group of British arms deal...-. ......iceis:Ilitere.,was...the inevitable-party- -early one balmy .- Sunday:. afternoon, _ Sven: Hoffelner,.' the trade:: ?Pink;tO,. South Africa. z Hoffeinee had: iiteetett..-khirge. and as. it: Was- bef..ng- mieled'alOng akcanal near Oxforti.;-: are. beganri f..Casuat-shapshrits of the revelrY_Teriili; . ? esaWhiscamern; Mulcahy recalled; and.: ".beiserki.:He: got all red. in? the: ..1;ficee-hewasreally? really nervousend? t'toldme-toput thecamera away before: fy..?:!you end up dead.r."....... ' ? Laterthat evening; Terpli explained* .?;._that oneorthe guests on the barge was '?!..;;Carlorr--; Ramirez,'- known.- . to police tehrotightiut.theworld as "the Jackal"' - the international . terrorise- believed, be-re-ssponsibiefor /Aerating-the /97= ' t::0Iympics .....massacre in. ---.Munich.. a- ? ,deadly raid on the Fiumicino Airport in and-mnnerous aircraft hijack- . logs . There- was no photograph of I Ramirez in existence, Terpil told Mul- cahy; the "Wanted" posters on display . . ? ? . Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 g . . ' at airports thrOughout the world con- tained only a composite drawing. Ter- pil also told Mulcahy that Ramirez was living in barrack. No. 3 at the former Wheelus United States Air Force base in Libya. Terpil seemed awed by Rami- rez, who was. accompanied at the party by Sayad Qaddafi-,, chief of Libyan Intel- identified by Terpil as Qadda- ft.'s cousin and the second most power- ; ful than in Libya. ? ?? ? Mulcahy was now in far too-deep anti he knew it.. ? It was late August and. -John Harper: and other Wilson-Terpil- employees' .we at work In .Tripoll setting up the munitions. labeatory--. for terrorist bombs and a training program, for their effmtiveuse.. Wilson and Terpil made it " clear to Mulcahy that they did not want, hira to go to LibyawlefulcahAltept;hiei now grave doubts to himself and comm.; ued on-his business* trip, moving on to Copenhagen and,: another - series. ot _meetings. Terpil returned to Libya, and he and Wilson suddenly dispatched an, ,urgent cable to Copenhagen: Mulcahy_ was to break. off his trip and return to., Washington to open negotiations there. witthe(neJPiami..cpo? ra- don for the purchase of one of its Red- eye gramd-to-air missiles. General Dy-. namics had advertised in trade jour- nals that it had 13 Rediyes for sale to le- gally acceptable buyers. The missile; which could-not be. exported to Libya under the law, is shoulder-launched and las a heat-seeking component that en- ables it to track and destroy aircraft in flight. It had been used extensively and successfully by the Israelis during the 1973 war. "My problem was not to. worry about the paperwork," Mulcahy says. "Terpil and. Wilson had a pilot in Pennsylvania who would fly anywhere. Once he got over the water" ? and:. away from American legal jurisdiction ? "he would change the paper." If the Redeye had been purchased, the pilot would. simply cha. nge the intended re- cipient Listed on- the export license,. from an approved ally, such as those In NATO, for example, to Libya. ' ? Altering the State Department's ex- port license, known officially as the end-user certificate, was considered so . much a normal part of the arms busi- ness by Wilson and Terpil that Mulcahy had been authorized to quote prices 8 percent to 12 percent higher if the sale also required supply of the certificate. -a= vricnr TTMV Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 ? ? - Mulcahy was utin-ieived by Ids SuddeM; assignment and discussed it with an as-i _Societe in Copenhagen? a foreign mil-la tary attache stationed in Denmark whO,: had a reputation for legitimate opera- ?bons. "My friend told me that theonlk reason. Libya..would want one, Redeye. was for use in a terrorist attack," MuI:. ; cahy says:: "We-speculated that- Qad;= daft probably wanted to be thefirst to -shoot down a 74?.. To hit a fully loaded passenger plane in flight would be big4 get than-the destruction ot planes' at L..when terrorists in L97G blew up_ Om* International airliners and held. scores of pa.ssengershostage.. - Mulcahy had a-leisurely dinner and beganwalking thestreets of Copenhag- en. He couldn't sleep. Earecalfedatrip; he andTerpil hadtaken.to a firm.called Defense Apparel:: in- Hartford,: conn..;,,, where ?Terpik discussed the possible- purchase of Up to 100,00& suits- that would protect humans exposed to-radio.- activity. Could the Redeye carry a nu-.' clear warhead? He knew- now he woulc ? never plaCe the Redeye order. - - "T watched- the stmrise come; in C*4 penhagen,"..: Mulcahy recalls,, knew whatL had tor d?--'g et back. to: Washington tast-fhadtei niad.our what 'paperworkexisted"- in the Inter-Tech-J, . nology- offices. he shared with Wilson. !,r. felt. tha t Frank:and Eth, were-:giving Qaddaft_ any--goddamiti thing heasked 2 , imessommenommemesii,,- IIIXT -;.Kevin Mulcahy goes. uixiergroUnd., to save his life. The: Government_ ::drags its feet in the arms-export in- . ?,.:vestigation, while some._,fortner., L:American C.I.A. and militaryinetr, continue exporting the hardware of; terrorisnr ? timers. and: expki? sives; far example and. train- Libyans fcrr assassination. - I Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130R000600010386-2 'Li I:1 Tv - N./ ? ? ? 'FBI:MAN THE CONTACT5'.".. Edwin P. Wilson is invariably de-. ? - prise.ixtasx juterview- upon- being told. picted by former associates as: a of his official listing. "I never knew- t. charming, charismatic, effective,. ? - was. on-- the board,"Gray. said; "I rough-and-ready. 6-foot-4 swashbuck- never was. Invited to; a- board:: meet- ler who excelled in his military and in- Ina' He-acknowledged that her has- - telligence career. But thereal reasons :for his success- as:. an. international weapons dealer are the contacts be- has built up during more than.2.13 years .. of work with United States. Govern- ,. mentinteiligenceservices-- ? _ . TWilsOn went t? work for.the C.I.A_'s - ? Office-of-Security in: 1951 and after : ? serving in theMarinesi became a full-' ? .time C.I.A:.contract employee.43.1955: L.: la the late 60'sf he helped organize a: ? Washington Consultants. International .Inc..:for the- - the Navy.. The-flint's ostensible:Pur- "-; pose-was: to..'conduct export-import. ? operatiort, that- function.- was: a cover fo clasSified... intelligence ? ? - -Over thenextfew yearsAis ? gence- activitieS were combined and mingled with; his private operations. He hired a:- number of -associates, ? many of thernwith military-or intelli- -gence backgrounds. and, according to- ... Federal officialsiLwas: routinely re; ceiving huge kickbacks from- Ameri- can_ manufacturers and foreign gov- ernments ort. procurement con- ,- tracts.: ? ? The men ;working for him were con- vinced .that he was still active in _CLA-. intelligence operations. thought he was reporting directly to the President,!' one former associate 7: recalls- ?Ed still must be sanctioned. ? by the U.S. Government- The people I - met were impressive- All of a suilden - I'm on -a first-name basis with big names in Congress and the Senate. It was always like the Government was ? supporting us." Robert Keith Gray, an influential public4-elations man 7 known for his close ties to the Eisen- hower, Nixon and Reagan Adminis- trations, was among those listed as a member of the board of Consultants International for five years, begin- ning in 1970. However, Gray, who served as co-chairman of Reaga.n'i Inaugural Committee; expressed sur- had a social and business relationship' . with Wilstm;;;whorcr he described: as ' "charming ? ind yer.Y. blooded AmeriCan,"....... 1971; Wilson- dropped-his-C:1;A'. .....connectiont.and.Was: part7 of Task. F0rce157?e?sedet Navy, intelligenci- -'? Unit that eniployed:541-ta 75 agents to monitor and.---collect-;.informatiotr. on- . Soviet shipping. it repo notonly.. on . itetris?::but. also. .watched t for- the covert.. shipment of military -koOdstind.nticlear weaPonif. : 'The unit also waiChaiged,witir the re-4'; sponsibility Of picking up-intelligence- operatives : from-Taiwan and secretly ferryingthem.insida mainland Chins..., . where.. they woulthimplant sensitive seismic monito*-anti-?-radioi. equip- -- ment:-ThOseoperationSqWere;toppect. aften-President-Richard: M Nixon's ? visit to Peking 41972; and C.-LA. aft-. cials were:iastonished to learn. later --that boale-..Of the;sersiiiye. uipunit. ? designed: solely foi..ose_inside China, was appearing for sale in the intenia- tionalarms - .Wilson's first-CS:Al: assignment; 1n . the.50's;: Was:to:infiltrate the Seafar- ,: ers Internationa-Union;,..hrwhicir he was eventually?EippOinted to:a 'number-. of official pOsition.* He; alin-Vias.,.in;". volved in Congressional lobbying on-. behalf- of;the .Union, and apparently. began theaforming his.closes relation; with ft twroher.:of-...influentiak members of Congress.. Wilson became a C.I.A..: specialist Mr niaritime-issuet-: andwas- involved' imthe-procurement - of equipment far:-Clandestine Navy operations. During;the Bay of Pigs, he was assigned-as a paymaster and han- dled procurement-as-'well. He-later served in- Southeast: Asia- and-,Latin- A-Merit:a: ? -.A full accounting of Wilson's con- nections and busineds activities may never. be know. 'He has boasted of having a controlling interest in more than 100 corporations in- the United States and Europe. ?S.M.H. ? I Approved For Release 2007/10/29: CIA-RDP84B00130Ii000600010386-2 ???