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Kerry, the Sandinistas, and the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS)
"Covert Cadre: Inside the Institute for Policy Studies"
| 1987
| S. Steven Powell
Posted on 02/11/2004 6:20:50 PM PST by Fedora
click here to read article
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To: hedgie
I remember that, too :) Speaking of which, your reference to CISPES just jogged my memory. Kerry is also mentioned in an old pro-CISPES book, Ross Gelbspan, "Break-Ins, Death Threats and the FBI: The Covert War Against the Central America Movement", Boston: South End Press, 1991, ISBN 0-89608-413-2. The book is of course left-wing propaganda, but taking that FWIW, it has some important info on Kerry on pages 191-193, in a section called "Ollie's Enemies". The bottom of p. 191, while discussing the association of Jack Terrell with a group called the International Center for Development Policy, mentions, "Staff members of the Center, including Terrell, were also working with the staff of Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), which was investigating the involvement of narcotics traffickers in the contra supply network." Pp. 192-193 adds, "It is important to note that Terrell has been a principal witness against supporters of the Nicaraguan resistance. . .Terrell's accusations have formed the basis of a civil suit in the U.S. District Court in Miami and his charges are at the center of Senator Kerry's investigation in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee." Farther down on 193 it says, "Simultaneous with the Bureau's surveillance of McMichael and Terrell, according to documents released by the Iran-Contra Committee, the FBI also conducted brief investigations of three Congressional opponents of Reagan Central America policies. The Bureau conducted probes in May and June of 1986 of Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), Sen. David Durenberger (R-Minn.), and Rep. Lee Hamilton (D-Ind.) to determine whether their opposition to Administration policies in the region was being assisted by intelligence agents of the Nicaraguan government." [Footnote for last quote cites "Boston Globe", March 24, 1988.]
21
posted on
02/11/2004 7:13:12 PM PST
by
Fedora
To: Steven W.
Soros was who I was thinking, too :) I don't know what happened with Christic Institute, either, but I have some stuff on them I archived a couple years ago and my best (hazy) recollection was that some of their members were still active with Liberation Theology types (I believe I found an antiwar/pro-Sandinista Jesuit priest with the last name Sheehan, who I suspected might be a relative of Daniel) opposing US foreign policy during the first Gulf War, lobbying for the lifting of sanctions against Iraq during the 1990s, and--I'd infer--participating in the more recent ANSWER antiwar protests. I figure whatever they're doing now can't be too many degrees moved from ANSWER--and Soros.
22
posted on
02/11/2004 7:21:56 PM PST
by
Fedora
To: mrsmith
Good find! I had overlooked it, but there is a reference to a Gary Porter on page 22 of the book by Powell I was quoting:
"Sen. John Kerry hired a former IPS fellow, Gary Porter, to be his legislative aide. IPS staffer Peter Kornbluh helped arrange an April 1984 trip to Nicaragua for Senators Kerry and Harkin on the eve of the vote on the contra-aid bill."
Page 35 adds, "Key people at IPS also collaborated in establishing Dispatch News Service, a wire service to feed antiwar stories to the mainstream media. . .Gary Porter, a Dispatch Bureau chief, then became a fellow at IPS and then the director of the Indochina Project under the auspices of the Center for International Policy, a Fund for Peace affiliate."
23
posted on
02/11/2004 7:28:58 PM PST
by
Fedora
To: Fedora
Contra bump
To: Fedora; Cincinatus' Wife; Tailgunner Joe
Very interesting. Ping to CW and Tailgunner for a LatAm blast from the past.
25
posted on
02/11/2004 7:38:38 PM PST
by
livius
To: Fedora
I bought a copy of Covert Cadre after hearing Powell interviewed on the Marlin Maddoux show. I still have it.
26
posted on
02/11/2004 7:49:45 PM PST
by
Abcdefg
To: Fedora
Kerry with Daniel Ortega (and Sen. Harkin) "Heroes of Iran - Contra" (from a leftist site:
http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2004/01/279420.shtml
![](http://portland.indymedia.org/icon/2004/01/279421.jpg)
Senator John Kerry as featured on Democracy Now:
Kerry's audacity cost him. Within weeks of taking office in 1985, he was off to Nicaragua, accompanied by reporters on a 36-hour, self-appointed fact-finding mission with another freshman, Democratic Senator Tom Harkin of Iowa.
Congressional Democrats had accused the White House of exaggerating the communist threat posed by the Sandinista regime. So the two senators were publicly castigated when -- just days after meeting with Daniel Ortega and other leaders of the regime -- the Sandinistas climbed aboard a plane to Moscow to cement their Soviet ties.
Secretary of State George Shultz declared that Kerry and Harkin had been "used" by the Nicaraguans, and he ridiculed them for their naivete in "dealing with the communists." Kerry was called "silly" in the Boston press.
To: edwin hubble
Haven't seen that pic before--nice find.
28
posted on
02/11/2004 7:55:57 PM PST
by
Fedora
To: Fedora
![](http://a1636.g.akamai.net/7/1636/797/ea9d85183a0bf2/graphics.boston.com/globe/nation/packages/kerry/images/day6/body1.jpg)
Kerry Meets Ortega.
Source: http://www.boston.com/globe/nation/packages/kerry/062003.shtml
29
posted on
02/11/2004 7:56:03 PM PST
by
Uncle Miltie
(Mullahs swinging from lamp posts.....)
To: Fedora
Good research. The key is to document his positions. BTW, what was his position on Castro? I wonder how popular it would be in Miami.
To: david horowitz
please continue to sand bag
the full recollection of that era will be so much more fun to read this summer, say...the week before the Republican convention
31
posted on
02/11/2004 8:39:59 PM PST
by
KC Burke
To: Brilliant
I haven't seen anything mentioning his position on Castro per se, but I think documenting that would be a good idea. I'd guess some places to look for quotes might be his old antiwar speeches, his Iran-Contra/BCCI testimony, and the debate during the Clinton administration over sanctions against Cuba. Wasn't Sen. Chris Dodd a key figure there?--wonder if Kerry has co-sponsored anything with Dodd that might shed light on this? Here's one item a quick search on Kerry and Dodd turned up:
http://www.theunionleader.com/doclib/archive/327page3.html Keefe joins Kerry team
JOE KEEFE said a few weeks ago he wished Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd would run for President. Dodd didnt.
So the former state party chairman looked elsewhere and, the Status has learned, his choice is John Kerry adding to the cavalcade of stars the Massachusetts senator has on his New Hampshire bandwagon.
In Keefe, Kerry gains a top-notch strategist and communicator.
When I first met with Sen. Kerry, I told him that I wanted to wait and see what decision Chris Dodd made, Keefe said yesterday. When Chris decided about three weeks ago not to run, I began to think earnestly about it. Full Story
The link says the story is in their archives:
http://www.theunionleader.com/granite_show.html?article=19476 http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=UL&p_theme=ul&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&s_dispstring=allfields(Keefe%20joins%20Kerry%20team)%20AND%20date(2003)&p_field_date-0=YMD_date&p_params_date-0=date:B,E&p_text_date-0=2003&p_field_advanced-0=&p_text_advanced-0=("Keefe%20joins%20Kerry%20team")&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&xcal_useweights=no Published on March 27, 2003, Article 1 of 1 found.
Keefe joins Kerry team
Author: JOHN DiSTASO
Publication: Union Leader, The (Manchester, NH)
Page Number: B3
JOE KEEFE said a few weeks ago he wished Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd would run for President. Dodd didn't.
So the former state party chairman looked elsewhere and, the Status has learned, his choice is John Kerry -- adding to the cavalcade of stars the Massachusetts senator has on his New Hampshire bandwagon.
In Keefe, Kerry gains a top-notch strategist and communicator.
"When I first met with Sen. Kerry, I told him that I wanted to wait and see what
Click for Full Story (1855 words), $2.50
32
posted on
02/11/2004 8:40:53 PM PST
by
Fedora
To: david horowitz
fyi - if you are the real thing
33
posted on
02/11/2004 9:52:23 PM PST
by
piasa
(Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge.)
To: Fedora
Hmmm. Would Gary Porter be this Gareth Porter?
* Professor George McTurnin Kahin : Leftist and supporter of the Khmer Rouge who taught at the South-East Asia Program's (SEAP) at Cornell University, hotbed of revolutionary communist activity in the 1960s and 1970s. Director of the Southeast Asia program at Cornell from 1961 to 1970, and professor of international relations at the University since 1951, became an expert on the Vietnam conflict. One of his students was Gareth Porter, soon to become a leading "scholar" on both Cambodia and Vietnam. Kahin's foreword to Gareth Porter's and George C. Hildebrand's book, Cambodia: Starvation and Revolution (1976), praises it for "what is undoubtedly the best informed and clearest picture yet to emerge of the desperate economic problems brought about in Cambodia largely as a consequence of American intervention, and of the ways in which that country's new leadership has undertaken to meet them."
Porter, who was probably a classmate of Laura Summers, co-authored the most famous book of all Khmer Rouge defenses published.
'Nowhere was the war so brutal, so devoid of concern for human life, or so shattering in its impact on a society as in Cambodia. But while the U.S. government and news media commentary have contrived to avoid the subject of the death and devastation caused by the U.S. intervention in Cambodia, they have gone to great lengths to paint a picture of a country ruled by irrational revolutionaries, without human feelings, determined to reduce their country to barbarism. In shifting the issue from U.S. crimes in Cambodia to the alleged crimes of the Cambodian revolutionary government, the United States has offered its own version of the end of the Cambodian war and the beginning of the new government." --Porter and Hildebrand, 1976
34
posted on
02/11/2004 10:05:19 PM PST
by
piasa
(Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge.)
To: Fedora
Now CISPES is ringing a bell, thanks.
Snip
* Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador (CISPES) : Affiliated with the Communist guerrilla movement in El Salvador. Members include : Angela Sanbrano . Guest speaker at a public forum sponsored by the National Network on Cuba (NNOC) in February 1996 at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles.
35
posted on
02/11/2004 10:09:42 PM PST
by
piasa
(Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge.)
To: Revolting cat!
The Christic Institute declared bankruptcy after losing its frivolous law suit against General Jack Singlaub and others when the Court awarded very large expenses against them for General Singlaub under Rule 11 for, among other things, the legal fees which he incurred. They did not want him to recover and thus went out of business rather than pay what they had been ordered to pay.
36
posted on
02/11/2004 10:10:59 PM PST
by
AmericanVictory
(Should we be more like them, or they like us?)
To: Revolting cat!
The reason for the name was to establish 501(c) credentials by being a "research" group. Thus the donations of the KGB and others could be effectively shifted in part to the U.S. taxpayer. Wonder why the IRS never challenged this? I wonder?
37
posted on
02/11/2004 10:13:45 PM PST
by
AmericanVictory
(Should we be more like them, or they like us?)
To: piasa
> Hmmm. Would Gary Porter be this Gareth Porter?
Sounds like it, when combined with the other reference to Gareth Porter. So Kerry hired the Khmer Rouge's leading apologist to work on his staff *after* Pol Pot's massacres became public knowledge? Wow.
38
posted on
02/11/2004 10:37:54 PM PST
by
Fedora
To: AmericanVictory
Interesting--thanks for the info. I know they lost that lawsuit, didn't know it bankrupted them.
39
posted on
02/11/2004 10:41:08 PM PST
by
Fedora
To: Fedora
40
posted on
02/12/2004 12:07:36 AM PST
by
backhoe
(The 1990's? The Decade of Fraud(s)... the 00's? The Decade of Lunatics...)
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