Ron Paul was right about CIA drug deal

Published time: December 30, 2011 21:30
Edited time: December 31, 2011 01:30
United States, Le Mars: Republican presidential hopeful U.S. Rep Ron Paul looks on during a town hall meeting at the Le Mars Convention Center on December 30, 2011. ( AFPJ Photo / ustin Sullivan)

Texas Congressman Ron Paul has long lobbied against government restrictions on the drug use of American citizens, but in the past the outspoken presidential hopeful has linked the US with narcotics closer than one might imagine.

As early as 1988, Paul was preaching of a relationship between the Central Intelligence Agency and Contras in Nicaragua amid the Iran-Contra scandal that plagued the Reagan administration. That relationship, said Paul, was one built with an intricate drug trade.

According to the GOP frontrunner in the race to the White House, the CIA imported cocaine from the Contras into America and then supplied domestic drug dealers with their loot, a transaction that allowed the Agency to operate its illegal trade with its Latin American neighbors that would have been otherwise impossible to fund with legitimate money.

Instead, said Paul, the CIA used dirty money made by the Agency’s drug deals to help afford the cost of arming the Contras against Sandinistas.

Speaking at a gathering of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, a NORML, Paul told an audience along the campaign trail back during his bid for the presidency in 1988 that the CIA was involved in dealing coke.

Drug trafficking is "a gold mine for people who want to raise money in the underground government in order to finance projects that they can't get legitimately. It is very clear that the CIA has been very much involved with drug dealings," Paul said in the address. "The CIA was very much involved in the Iran-Contra scandals. I'm not making up the stories; we saw it on television. They were hauling down weapons and drugs back. And the CIA and government officials were closing their eyes, fighting a war that was technically illegal."

Danilo Blandón, a former cocaine trafficker pegged by the US government, testified in 1981 that in regards to his own operation, "whatever we were running in LA the profit was going to the Contra revolution." Blandón, from Nicaragua, added that he was outfitted with supplies by the CIA and sold cocaine cheaply to California dealers in order to turn a profit around for the government.

Rumors of the connection have circulated since the Iran-Contra affair though and have gone largely unreported. Paul, however, is no stranger to calling out corrupt government whenever he can. In televised debates of would-be Republican contenders for the GOP nomination this year, Paul has repeatedly gone after Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama for involving America in foreign wars for interests not vested in the American public .In the case of the War on Terror, Paul recently remarked that the Bush administration was full of glee after the September 11 terrorist attacks as it had finally allowed the government a reason to invade.

Comments (64)

John Kinsella 03.01.2012 16:53

Don't worry America they are jamming Mitt Romney down our throats and Mr. Paul who has the best interest in America at heart is being thrown under the bus. Realize we have no more freedom than the Chinese other than we have full internet access. Paul is the only solution at this time and the rest are puppets. Gov't should not govern on plants that grow in the ground. So they are telling us the a plant (cannibis, schroom etc) that grows freely should be controlled? USA in slowly turning into a joke. You will see vast immigration away from the US in the next 10 years

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Question Everything 03.01.2012 03:15

No wonder the poppy fields in Afghanistan are doing so well. Since the US has been financing aerial spraying of illegal drug source crops in Colombia, crop production is at least 3 times higher. I would suspect that instead of herbicide to kill the plants, the spray tanks on the aerial spray planes are loaded with fertilizer and insecticide to increase crop yield. At US public taxpayer expense, of course. No reason to shave the profit margin for the producers.

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John (unregistered) 02.01.2012 14:59

CIA's (and DEA's) involvement in the global drug trade is no news at all.This fact has been denounced& nbsp;and proven beyond any "shadow of a doubt".Just google Gary Webb, Iran Contras, Oliver North, Noriega, etc, and do your own thinking.
You have to realize that the global drug trade is the second largest business on earth (after the weapons trade). The CIA as seized on it, since long  ;ago, in order to enrich some of its leaders and to finance its operations without congressional oversight.The US congress is absolutely&n bsp;aware of this state of things, but systematica lly chooses&nbs p;to "look the other way", as this releaves&n bsp;them from being  ;involved in the agencie's&n bsp;dirty work and, surely, contributes to their "financial well being". Furthermore, any congressman that would openly go against this, with any chance of succeeding, would have is "life expectancy" severely shortened.
The most recent and blatant case of "narco-growth" is that of Afghanistan. It went from small time producer of heroin (poppy), under Taliban rule, to the largest heroin producer on the planet, under American rule. All that heroin has started appearing on Iranian, Russian, European streets.
How can that be?? These poppy fields are very large. Don't the drones "see" them??How does the heroin get from Afghanista n to Berlin, Paris, Moscow or New York, ect?? Does it get their by camel b ack??

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