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THE
CIA, FROM CENTRAL AMERICA TO IRAQ
Negroponte and his U.S. gang for the dirty war
BY
JEAN-GUY ALLARD — Special for Granma International —
“MISTER Bob” Seldon Lady is
a former chief of the CIA station in Milan, where he
was in charge of the 26 agents who were tried in
Italy for kidnapping, torturing and then
disappearing Muslim cleric Osama Moustafa Hassan
Nasr, also known as Abu Omar, in that city in 2003.
To get a better idea of him,
we should recall that Seldon Lady was in Central
America in the 1980s: he was a key element in the
same network, along with John Negroponte, Félix
Rodríguez, Colonel James Steele and Luis Posada
Carriles, that sowed death and terror among the
Sandinistas.
This 52-year-old American,
who was born in Honduras and participated along with
his own father in CIA operations in the dirty war
organized by the CIA in Central America during the
Republican administration of Ronald Reagan, became
part of a Middle East version of Operation Condor
after 2001.
Characterized by kidnappings,
secret prisons, torture and disappearances, the
operation has now culminated in the appointment of
John Negroponte, former ambassador in Baghdad and
former U.S. intelligence czar, as deputy secretary
of state overseeing the Iraq dossier.
The 26 CIA agents who will
go on trial June 8 in Italy also include the former
CIA chief in Rome, Jeff Castelli, and Betnie Medero,
a woman currently supposed to be based in Mexico,
who led the commando; as well as a mysterious
official with the U.S. State Department, Monica
Courtney Adler.
This trial is the first
criminal case in the world regarding the
“extraordinary deliveries” authorized by George W.
Bush after September 11.
Abu Omar was kidnapped from
a Milan street in February 2003, taken to the
Guerzoni military base, and after being placed into
a windowless vehicle, was then transferred to the
U.S. air base in Aviano, from where he was taken to
Ramstein, Germany, with the collaboration of that
country, and from there to Cairo, where he was
tortured in the presence of Robert “Mister Bob”
Seldon Lady himself.
Among the commando members
that carried out the kidnapping is the particularly
interesting case of Betnie Medero.
That 33-year-old woman was
the second secretary of the U.S. embassy in Rome.
She arrived in Italy in
August 2001 with diplomatic credentials, and
according to the Italian newspaper Corriere della
Sera, directed the kidnapping on the ground and
ensured the victim’s transportation to the U.S. base
in Aviano, northern Italy. It is now believed that
she was transferred to Mexico, where she is
associated with the U.S. embassy, according to the
same newspaper.
Monica Courtney Adler,
another defendant in the case, was the State
Department official who years before, under the
Clinton administration, attended to banker Jorge
Castro Barredo, a Cuban-born Venezuelan who
contributed financially to Democratic Party election
campaign funds and was involved in cases of fraud
and money-laundering.
Seldon Lady, the ringleader
of a group created in Tegucigalpa, is an
illustration of the dirty operations of the U.S. spy
agency.
The son of William “Bill”
Lady, a former CIA agent based in Honduras, managed
together with Manuchar Ghorbanifar, an Iranian
businessman, the secret sale of weapons to Iraq,
which along with drug-trafficking operations
directed from within El Salvador by Félix Rodríguez
Mendigutía and Luis Posada Carriles, turned into the
biggest scandal to rock the Reagan administration.
Seldon Lady carried out his
dirty work under the orders of U.S. Marine Colonel
Oliver North, who also directed the operations at
the Ilopango military base for illegally providing
weapons to the Nicaraguan Contra forces.
His activity in Honduras
coincided with the presence in that country of John
Negroponte, notorious for his support as ambassador
to the bloody operations carried out by Battalion
316, which tortured, massacred and disappeared
hundreds of Hondurans.
“Mister Bob” Seldon Lady was
still active in Central America in 1994 when spy
Aldrich Ames uncovered him by revealing his name to
Soviet intelligence forces, according to U.S. media
reports.
His name was associated with
the “Nigergate” scandal, the disinformation
operation for justifying the occupation of Iraq
under the pretext – completely false – that Saddam
Hussein was seeking to buy uranium from Niger. For
that maneuver, his old buddy Manuchar Ghorbanifar
came to his aid, along with Larry Franklin, an
American sentenced last year for spying for Israel.
Seldon Lady fled suddenly
from Italy in June 2005 when he discovered that he
was wanted in that country for the kidnapping of Abu
Omar. Warned, his wife erased all of his computer
files, but police experts were able to recuperate
most of the material.
The reconstructed documents
included several photographs of the victim, taken in
the street 33 days before the crime, and Internet
searches for the shortest route between the
kidnapping scene and Aviano Airport.
Different sources affirm
that Seldon Lady is currently on his way back to
Central America, where he can take care of CIA work
related to Cuba, Venezuela and other progressive
governments in the region.
Argentine writer Stella
Calloni recently compared the illegal CIA operations
in Iraq with a “larger, more sophisticated Operation
Condor.”
This was illustrated by the
case of James Steele, who created the death squads
patronized by John Negroponte, who participated in
the supply operations for the Nicaraguan
counterrevolutionary forces from the Ilopango air
base in El Salvador, directed by Félix Rodríguez y
Posada Carriles.
The unexpected exposure of
the actions carried out by Seldon Lady and his troop
in Italy, with complete disdain for that European
nation’s sovereignty, shows once again how —
according to imperialist intelligence — the dirty
war has no borders.
It is the same CIA gang that
has carried out dirty work in Asia, Africa, Europe
and the Americas — who knows how widespread. That
gang features John Negroponte, the recently-appointed
No. 2 man to Condoleezza Rice in the State
Department. What can be expected of him?
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