STATESIDE: Just how far can you push the rules and get away with it?

With CHARLIE HARPER

JOAN and her friend Marilyn were in her New York City kitchen, warding off the unseasonable chill outside with steaming mugs of coffee. They were talking about the world’s current number one bogeyman.

“Hey Mar, I have to say, I’m starting to wonder why the CIA doesn’t just figure out a way to get rid of Vladimir Putin. People all around the world think the American spy agency can do whatever it wants to do. It has money, secret support from various Congressional committees in Washington, and relationships secured with money or dirty tricks all around the world.

“I wish Joe Biden would just give them the word to kidnap or otherwise remove Putin from his Kremlin throne. Maybe even assassinate him. This guy is pushing the world toward what they used to call mutual assured destruction. Surely some of those clever government lawyers can concoct a rationale for removing Putin. Tell me I’m wrong here.”

Marilyn looked over at her friend. “I assume you’re serious, Joanie.” Joan nodded affirmatively. “And that you’re asking me because I used to work in Washington.” Another positive shake of the head.

“OK. Here’s why the CIA doesn’t just go into Russia and take out Putin. It would be illegal, immoral and ultimately unwise. And it probably wouldn’t work anyway.” Here’s what Marilyn told her friend.

This is a story that goes back over 50 years. In February 1976, then-President Gerald Ford issued a document called Executive Order 11905, which prohibited any member of the US government from engaging or conspiring to engage in any political assassination anywhere in the world.

Ford’s order came largely as the result of a truly blue-ribbon Senate panel that had investigated American government involvement in several assassination plots under Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson that had come to light and embarrassed Washington. Those plots came to light partly as the result of the Watergate investigation into political skulduggery by Richard Nixon and his staff. That misbehaviour included spying on anti-war Americans by the CIA, which violated the agency’s charter.

That Senate select committee included some of the giants of the Senate. The chair was Frank Church, a confirmed internationalist and Democrat from Idaho. His vice-chair was the redoubtable John Tower of Texas, a Republican hawk who was the first Republican Senator from Texas in over 90 years when he won a special election to succeed Vice President-elect Lyndon Johnson in 1961. Other members included future and past presidential candidates Howard Baker of Tennessee, Barry Goldwater of Arizona, Gary Hart of Colorado and Walter Mondale of Minnesota.

In its report, the committee said it “needs no more information to be convinced that a flat ban against assassination should be written into law. We condemn assassination and reject it as an instrument of American policy. Surprisingly, however, there is presently no statute making it a crime to assassinate a foreign official outside the United States.”

The committee’s report offered many of the first public details of US Government involvement in assassination plans against five foreign leaders. The first of these was Patrice Lumumba, the first Prime Minister of what is now the central African nation called the Democratic Republic of Congo that has also been called Zaire and emerged as independent from Belgian colonial rule in 1960. As the UN and other Western nations tried to get accustomed to the end of centuries of European domination in Africa, Lumumba’s fierce personality and friendliness with the USSR caught the eye of American CIA director Allen Dulles.

The Senate committee found that “it is clear that the Director of Central Intelligence, Allen Dulles, authorized an assassination plot. There is, however, no evidence of United States involvement in bringing about the death of Lumumba at the hands of Congolese authorities.”

Next on the prospective American hit list was someone closer to home. Fidel Castro’s successful Cuban revolution alarmed Dulles and other Eisenhower administration hawks and American uneasiness about Castro continued under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. The 1975 Senate committee reported that “we have found concrete evidence of at least eight plots involving the CIA to assassinate Fidel Castro from 1960 to 1965. The proposed assassination devices ran the gamut from high-powered rifles to poison pills, poison pens, deadly bacterial powders, and other devices which strain the imagination.”

Later, Castro is reported to have said that “if surviving assassinations were an Olympic event, I would win the gold medal.”

Next on the CIA’s reported hit list was Dominican Republic dictator Rafael Trujillo, who ruled that nation for 30 years until he was assassinated in 1961. The CIA didn’t actually kill Trujillo, whose regional rivalries disrupted America’s “back yard” and unsettled US policymakers as Castro did.

The Senate committee found that “though there is no evidence that the United States instigated any assassination activity against Trujillo, certain evidence tends to link United States officials to the assassination plans.

“The day before the assassination a cable, personally authorized by President Kennedy, was sent to the United States’ Consul General in the Dominican Republic stating that the United States Government, as a matter of general policy, could not condone political assassination, but the same time indicating the United States continued to support the dissidents and stood ready to recognize them in the event they were successful in their endeavour to overthrow Trujillo.”

Further away, South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem and his brother, Ngo Dinh Nhu, were assassinated during a coup by Vietnamese generals on November 2, 1963. The Senate committee reported “evidence before the Committee indicates that the United States government offered encouragement for the coup, but neither desired nor was involved in the assassinations.”

That coup in Saigon was a pivotal event in intensifying American involvement in Vietnam and soon led the US much deeper into its disastrous Vietnam War, which didn’t end until 1975 and nearly tore America apart.

That war’s effects are still being felt today.

Salvador Allende was elected President of Chile in 1970. An avowed socialist-Marxist, he made Washington uneasy. He ruled for three tumultuous years before a military coup toppled him.

The Senate committee found “there is no question that the CIA received a direct instruction from President Nixon on September 15, 1973 to attempt to foment a coup. But the Cold War setting in which these assassination plots took place does not change our view that assassination is unacceptable in our society.”

In its final report, the Senate committee concluded that “such activities (as assassination plots) are almost always eventually revealed. The damage to American foreign policy, to the good name and reputation of the United States abroad, to the American people’s faith and support of our government and its foreign policy is incalculable. This last point - the undermining of the American public’s confidence in its government is the most damaging consequence of all.”

As she finished her history lesson, Marilyn noticed that her friend had forgotten her coffee as she listened.

“Hey, Joanie, want a hot refill?” Joan glanced down, and nodded yes. She was quiet and pensive as Marilyn worked at the kitchen counter.

“Mar, I understand what you’re saying. I had forgotten about all that American mischief back in the day. And I can see why President Ford issued that order. But the CIA and American administrations have boasted, especially since 9/11, about killing foreigners.

“One of them was the leader of a sovereign country, Saddam Hussein in Iraq. What’s with that?”

Marilyn returned to the table with fresh drinks for both.

“That’s true. But the stunning events of September 11, 2001 offered a rationale for widely justifiable and acceptable targeting of bad actors overseas. Congress passed legislation greatly expanding executive branch authority to go after terrorists. The killing of Saddam Hussein was justified and rationalized under the anti-terrorist legislation.

“After 9/11, although there was no explicit reference to the assassination ban, Congressional resolutions were broad enough to authorize actions that otherwise would be prohibited under Ford’s executive order banning assassination. Few objected 11 years ago when a US Navy Seal team killed bin Laden in Pakistan.”

Joan was still puzzled. “But Putin is threatening the whole world!”

“Sure,” Marilyn replied. “He’s an evil man, behaving hatefully. But he has something the others lacked. He has nuclear weapons. What if the CIA tried to kill him and failed?”


Football news:

<!DOCTYPE html>
Kane on Tuchel: A wonderful man, full of ideas. Thomas in person says what he thinks
Zarema about Kuziaev's 350,000 euros a year in Le Havre: Translate it into rubles - it's not that little. It is commendable that he left
Aleksandr Mostovoy on Wendel: Two months of walking around in the middle of nowhere and then coming back and dragging the team - that's top level
Sheffield United have bought Euro U21 champion Archer from Aston Villa for £18.5million
Alexander Medvedev on SKA: Without Gazprom, there would be no Zenit titles. There is a winning wave in the city. The next victory in the Gagarin Cup will be in the spring
Smolnikov ended his career at the age of 35. He became the Russian champion three times with Zenit

1:25 Prime Minister Davis’ Contribution to the Speech From The Throne Debate
0:29 Update 2 PMH Technical Outage
22:33 West Grand Bahama and Bimini welcome PM Davis and candidate Kingsley Smith as they arrive in Freeport…
22:33 West Grand Bahama and Bimini in the hundreds welcome PM Davis and candidate Kingsley Smith as they arrive in Freeport…
22:30 Bahamas Flying Ambassadors Continue Halloween Fly-In Series to Abaco
22:20 Youth Minister tells the young, “never settle for your last achievement”: be willing to aspire to something not yet achieved
22:17 ALICIA WALLACE: The country’s real power problem
22:11 John Watling Distillery, Ltd. Expands Reach to the United States
21:53 EDITORIAL: As FTX saga unfolds, we need to hear the full story
20:57 ‘Remediation work has begun’ at a BPL diesel spill in Nicholls Town, Andros
20:54 Bahamas Power and Light signs industrial agreement with the Bahamas Electrical Utility Managerial Union
19:39 Govt spending over $1m to modernise and revamp website
19:32 The FNM ‘is fine just the way we are right now’, says leader on party convention
16:00 Royal Caribbean’s PI club in DEPP construction go-ahead
16:00 Gas leak victim’s damages cut 77%
16:00 FTX Bahamas: ‘Major progress’ in Ray talks
15:34 Female Atlantis worker stabbed at work by fellow employee
13:23 Minnis accuses Gov’t of ‘causing’ EU blacklisting
13:12 Minnis contradicts Wynn on Goodman’s Bay easement
13:07 North Andros ‘to get power relief’ from BPL
3:12 Safaree Shocked By Amara La Negra’s Crude Text About Vonshae’s Child On LHH Miami
2:21 CI Gibson High Achievers Get Cash Gifts from Marathon MP
19:25 Three die from Nassau Village on motorbikes in one week!
16:47 Minister Sweeting visits schools in the Family Islands during Local Government Junior Council elections process
21:22 EDITORIAL The Concept of Democracy
21:17 Life and Legacy of Obie Wilchcombe Honoured — MP’s pay special tribute in HOA
19:55 Former St. Anne’s student Tony Scriven died in an Industrial Accident on Sweetings Cay this morning…
19:55 Former St. Anne’s student and WSc employee Tony Scriven died in an Industrial Accident on Sweetings Cay this morning
18:58 Department of Information Technology arrested in gun raid!
17:28 QUEEN’S COLLEGE HEADBOY Dario Anthony Rahming Jr collapsed and died this morning during a school practise…
2:41 Proprietor of Cedar Crest and Yager Ruby Braithwaite Murdoch Hill passes…
1:40 Obediah Hercules Wilchcombe
0:25 An educator from Eleuthera was charged after being accused of touching a young female student…
0:17 $30m capitalisation approved for Bahamas Development Bank
0:11 Events to be held across the nation for National Youth Month
0:05 Former attorney jailed for 18 months
0:03 Not guilty plea to murder, attempted murder charges
0:02 Man charged with indecent assault
23:51 Another bad accident tonight outside the Killarney Headquarters!!!
23:28 NASTY male charged with sexual intercourse with his two younger siblings ages 6 and 9 – WELL WHAT IS DIS?
22:13 Clubs & Societies: September 29, 2023
21:58 DIANE PHILLIPS: Creative solutions needed to address society’s inequities
21:51 ONE ELEUTHERA FOUNDATION – Planning needed to preserve our distinct Bahamian culture
20:54 RODNEY “EAGLE” ALVIN GREEN
20:49 Melvin Joseph Forbes
20:39 KENNETH “JAKEY BOY” WILLIAMS
20:24 EDITORIAL: By-election discussions reveals respect for Obie
20:10 SHERWIN “SHIRE” BRANVILLE BARTLETT
20:08 Campbell applauds draft cannabis bill, says input from farmers necessary
20:02 A Government In Mourning — Veteran Broadcaster and Political Giant Dies
19:58 Bahamian Delegation At 78th UN General Assembly
19:48 THE GOSPEL OF “NO” — Mitchell Rejects ‘No’ on Climate Change and Reparations
19:44 Ferguson Returns As BPSU President
19:43 Port Lucaya Marketplace struggling to attract guests despite cruise passenger numbers
19:39 Mitchell, CARICOM Heads plead for UN Resolution on Haiti
19:33 Tourism Arrivals Reach 6 Million Mark
19:32 EDITORIAL FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS
19:21 Ambassador Jones Remembers Colleague
19:17 Ratheno Octavis Strachan
19:11 Senators Remember Wilchcombe — Wilchcombe Once Held Senator Seat
19:03 Nurse Recruitment Underway Says PHA Managing Director
19:02 No Shortage of Meds, Just Delays Says PHA
19:00 Two Murders One Day Apart — Murder Count Up 3 Notches
18:50 Merrill Eloise Rolle
18:27 UN Fellows Meet President of the 78th Session of the United Nations General Assembly
18:19 Wynn agrees to ‘quashing’ first penthouse approvals
18:15 ‘Lucrative prospects’: ArawakX refutes $2.4m insolvency woes
18:13 Howard Timothy Martin
18:10 AG brands The Bahamas’ insolvency regime ‘a joke’
18:09 Hanna-Martin Denies Cuban Teachers Can’t Speak English
18:05 Thousands Attend British Colonial Job Fair
17:48 Frederick Nigel Bowe
15:34 Grammy winning icon Sting to kick off Bahamas Culinary & Arts Festival presented by Baha Mar
14:58 International Culture, Wine & Food Festival has got next
14:45 Murray comes through for the Smokies
14:35 Wesley Rolle Invitational gets underway today
13:21 FNM claims Saudi loan agreement signed contrary to law
13:10 ‘No politics in wake of Obie’s death’
12:56 Davis is acting minister of social services
12:47 Many farmers excited about the prospect of growing cannabis, Campbell says
12:46 Ferguson unofficial winner of BPSU votes
12:39 Caribbean ‘must be united’ in climate change fight
12:37 In Grenada, PM calls for action on climate change fight
12:31 Bain apologises for Daxon’s message shared about Obie Wilchcombe
12:27 Man accused of molesting his sisters
12:24 INGRAHAM TO FNM: Sit out by-election . . . but party will run after decision by council members
12:18 Court upholds convictions, sentence of Abaco businessman on drugs, firearms charges
12:08 Improving food security 
12:02 A trinity returning home: Richie Adderley, Nathalee Martinborough, Obie Wilchcombe
11:54 The measure of a man 
4:38 Man shot dead in First Street and Poinciana The Grove Tuesday evening…
3:58 Bahamas Harvest Church Hosts Nurses Recognition Luncheon 
3:35 PM DAVIS: “We cannot leave COP28 without Pledges for Loss & Damage”
21:40 U.S. Embassy Selects USG Alumna Lakeisha Rolle to Receive $20,000 to Empower Young Entrepreneurs
20:24 BAHAMAS AND KINGDOM OF SAUDI ARABIA EXECUTE LOAN AGREEMENT FOR FAMILY ISLAND AIRPORT DEVELOPMENT
20:08 STATESIDE: While Biden tries to appear as ‘labour’s best friend’ Trump seems to lose favour
20:00 FRONT PORCH: The neglect and needs of Caribbean and Pacific states
19:17 PHA confirms 145 infections of dengue fever with six hospitalised
19:13 Dr Rolle: PHA dealing with shortage of cancer medicine and nurses
18:13 ‘BISX home makes sense’ for Bahamas carbon credits