Ghost (12 page)

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Authors: Fred Burton

BOOK: Ghost
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“I need to talk to Ollie. Can you dial this number for me?”

There’s a connection between Oliver North and Terry Waite?

I look at the number. It is a direct White House line. I glance down at the STU-III and wonder what I should do next. Something doesn’t smell right here. Why is Waite tied in with the NSC? Is Waite the administration’s go-between with Hezbollah? I thought he was only working on behalf of the archbishop of Canterbury. I bring my eyes up and study Waite. He looks anxious and tense, like something’s wrong. He’s trying to cover that up with a low-key, matter-of-fact approach.

Wheels within wheels, that’s how the Dark World works.

I dial the White House number. It rings twice before an NSC official answers it with a hurried “Hello.”

I begin slowly. “Yes, this is Agent Burton in Wiesbaden.”

He waits a beat before responding. “Go ahead, Burton.”

“I have Terry Waite here with me, and he wants to talk to Ollie.”

Another pause. The phone makes all those odd background electronic noises. Finally, I hear the NSC official say, “Ollie’s en route from Beirut, but let me talk to Waite.”

I hand the STU-III to Terry Waite. Oakley and I start to leave to give Waite some privacy, but he waves to us to stay. “What’s going on?” he asks into the phone. Standing next to Waite, I can hear the man’s voice on the other end but I can’t hear what he’s saying. Waite goes green. By the time he finishes the conversation, he looks like he’s seasick. He thanks us and hurries from the room.

Oakley and I exchange
What just happened?
glances.

I pick up the STU-III’s receiver. I still have to call the office and report what we know about Buckley’s death. Gleason answers my call and listens silently as I relate Jacobsen’s story. When I finish, my boss says, “Okay, Fred. Keep your head down. Bad things are happening.”

“Okay. I will.”

“When you get back, the FBI wants to talk to you.”

The line goes dead, but Gleason’s final words linger. Am I in some sort of trouble?

I return to Jacobsen’s hospital room. The mood is somber, and everyone is fatigued. After a spell, it is clear that Jacobsen and the other agents are done in and we’ll need to pick it up in the morning. A little small talk ensues before the group disperses for the evening. As we leave, one of the other agents takes me aside in the hall and asks, “Have you heard?”

“Have I heard what?”

“A paper in Beirut ran a story about an arms deal.”

“Arms deal? Between who?”

“Us and Iran.”

“What?”

“Yeah. We gave them antitank weapons. They gave us hostages.”

“That can’t be true.”

The agent shakes his head. “The press is going crazy. I just heard that Ollie North and Robert McFarlane were in Iran in May.”

Oh my God.

thirteen

SHIPWRECK

By the time I return to Andrews Air Force Base, a media tempest has engulfed Washington. Every hour, more details of the secret negotiations between the United States and Iran are revealed on the news. The sordid mess grows steadily worse. The Iranians confirm the negotiations publicly. Locked in a bloody World War I–style conflict with Iraq, the Iranians are desperate for modern weapons that can break the frontline stalemate. They don’t seem to realize how devastating these revelations are in the West.

We made a deal with the devil. Terry Waite was just the cover for the real negotiations, ones that treated each hostage as capital that the Iranians and Hezbollah could use to buy TOW missiles. No wonder Hezbollah grabbed three more Americans in September and October. They weren’t bargaining chips at all. They were currency.

My stomach is twisted in knots. I haven’t slept. We bargained with the enemy. There are few countries the American people despise more than Iran. The embassy hostage crisis six years ago filled our nation with a collective hate for Iran that was only inflamed by Beirut I and II and the barracks bombing. Dead marines, stolen honor, our prestige in tatters. That’s what Iran has done to us. And now we’ve been caught selling them missiles that will help sustain their war effort. There’s talk of a congressional investigation. Already, the FBI has unleashed its hounds. Everyone’s scrambling to save their own skins. I wonder if my career will end before it really begins. Six months on the job, and I’m already on the edge of the storm. Was it worth it to get the hostages out? Do the ends justify the means here? I don’t know. I struggle with this all afternoon as I review the paperwork that had piled up while I was gone.

Neither Father Jenco nor David Jacobsen had any idea why they were released until the story broke on the major networks. I can’t even imagine Father Jenco’s reaction. He must be horrified that his life was traded for weapons that surely will kill countless Iraqi soldiers.

Ignorance of the drama playing out over my head may save me. I don’t know anything. I’ll have nothing to offer when I’m interviewed. All I can do is tell them what I know. And what I know is nothing—nothing beyond Terry Waite’s suspicious phone call from the commo room in Wiesbaden.

Waite must be reeling as well. He’s been negotiating with his contacts in good faith. Now it turns out that Ollie was using him as nothing but legitimate cover. He’s been used, and his reputation has taken a huge hit. Before I left Wiesbaden, I heard he was going to return to Beirut and try to repair the damage to his reputation. I hope he doesn’t do that. Hezbollah shows little mercy.

I get home well after midnight. I come through the door of our townhouse feeling dispirited and exhausted. Sharon wakes up and greets me. “I know you were in Germany,” she tells me. “I saw you on CNN when that hostage was released.”

I wish I could tell her everything. I can tell her nothing. Instead, I must keep my silence and face the FBI in the morning.

Sharon soon falls back asleep. I lay in bed, my mind running through all the things that have happened. Periodically, it flits back to the hospital room, and I see Jacobsen, head down, clapping his hands as he described Buckley’s head smacking on the steps outside their apartment prison.

“Thump.”
Clap.
“Thump.”
Clap.
“Thump.” It was a fate no patriot like Buckley should have faced. If only we’d been able to get to them. If only we’d been able to find where Hezbollah had them stashed.
If only…

And what of Hezbollah? What sort of game is Mugniyah playing? All along, his public demands have focused on the Dawa 17. Hezbollah’s hostages would be freed when the Kuwaitis released Mugniyah’s terrorist brother-in-law and his cell. Was that just a cover, too? Was it always about weapons?

Nothing is ever as it appears. Washington is seething right now, and it is axiomatic that D.C. will eat its own in the flame-fest that is sure to follow in the weeks to come.

I just hope I don’t end up as collateral damage.

Morning comes. Tyler Beauregard and I go for our predawn run. It is cold and dark on the street, and my beautiful dog senses my foul mood. She stays close and casts anxious looks my way. She knows something is dreadfully wrong. She doesn’t know what to do but reveals her loyalty to me by refusing to budge from my side. That makes me wonder if true loyalty can really exist outside a man’s relationship with his dog.

A quick shower back at our townhouse and I’m ready to face whatever is to come. I strap my Smith & Wesson into its shoulder holster, throw my coat over one shoulder, and head for my Jetta.

I reach the office before six. Three hours later, the FBI comes calling. I head for a conference room, where an agent greets me with a perfunctory “Hello.” And then the grilling begins. It is obvious from the outset that I don’t know anything about the negotiations. The agent is still thorough. He goes through a list of questions, almost none of which I can answer. I was never in the loop. This time, it looks like my ignorance will save me.

The interview reveals the depth of the machinations at work. A witch hunt is afoot. People will go to jail for this. The search for scapegoats has begun.

By lunchtime, I’m back behind the big blue door. Gleason looks burnt out. Mullen is nowhere to be seen. He’s probably on assignment somewhere. I’m shaky after the grilling. I try to get back to work, but my mind refuses to focus.

The whole deal has the smell of good intentions gone awry. I heard a rumor on the flight home that President Reagan met with Father Jenco’s brother shortly after Hezbollah grabbed the priest. Jenco’s sibling demanded to know what the president was doing to get his brother out of captivity. Reagan tried to assure him that the government was doing everything possible. Jenco’s brother refused to relent; he was like a terrier and he shattered Reagan’s placid façade. When the meeting ended, Reagan told his staff to do whatever it took to get the hostages out.

That is a dangerously broad license for a president to issue, no matter how good his intentions. Now we’ve been embarrassed, and all the globe has born witness to our humiliation. Year after year, we have piously proclaimed that we will not negotiate with terrorists. We’ve totally undermined our international position on that front, and no doubt it will take years to rebuild our credibility.

Still, Ben Weir, Father Jenco, and David Jacobsen are free men because we funneled arms to a rogue nation.

I am a man who lives by a strict code. Life until now has been black and white, right and wrong. There’s no wiggle room. You’re either acting honorably or you’re not. Where does swapping arms for hostages fit into this equation?

I don’t know. Or maybe I do know, but don’t want to face it. My country has made a dreadful mistake. The consequences are sure to be sharp and painful.

As November continues, the crisis spirals into a full-blown scandal. President Reagan addresses the nation and admits we did try to improve relations with Iran by selling them weapons. He denies we got Weir, Jenco, and Jacobsen in return. The press continues digging. More revelations emerge. The Israelis transferred the initial shipments. More than just TOW missiles went to Iran; we also sent them Hawk antiaircraft systems and were negotiating about spare parts for their F-14A Tomcat fleet. They purchased those F-14s in the seventies just before the shah fell.

There is a deeper, darker side to Irangate, as the media is now calling it. The Iranians not only paid for their weapons with our three American citizens, they also forked over millions of dollars in cash. Where did that money go? Some media outlets reported that thirty million dollars is missing, and Oliver North’s fingers are all over the disappearance.

Just before Thanksgiving, Oliver North and his secretary, a blonde named Fawn Hall, get caught shredding documents. Four days later, Attorney General Edwin Meese releases the truth: The money the Iranians paid us was funneled to the Nicaraguan contras. Oliver North was in charge of that operation. Later that day, he is fired from the NSC. His boss, Admiral John Poindexter, resigns. It looks like both will face criminal charges for what they have done. The disaster is complete: arms for hostages for cash funneled to the contras via the NSC. It is a media feeding frenzy extraordinaire.

Late that afternoon, I close the open files on my desk and stuff them into my safe. I’m done for the day. I’ve got to get away from this craziness before it eats me alive. A half hour later, I’m on the Brandt Place porch, drinking coffee with Fred Davis. I can’t tell him what’s going on, but I suspect he knows.

“I saw you on CNN the other night,” he tells me.

“Yeah, so did my wife.” I take a sip from my cup of joe and start thinking of ways to change the subject.

“Didn’t know you were in Germany.”

I nod my head. “Neither did I until I got off the plane.”

We both laugh. I steer the conversation in a different direction. “I heard there was another Bradford Bishop sighting in Europe.”

Interest flares in Fred’s eyes. “Really?”

“Yeah. Unconfirmed though.”

“He gets around.”

“That he does.” I finish my coffee, place the cup on the table between us, and lean back in my chair.

“What do you think? Is he still alive?”

Fred’s mutt comes over and sits next to his legs, waiting for some attention. Absently, he reaches over and strokes the dog’s head and ears. “I don’t know. I always kind of thought he committed suicide in that national park.”

Growing up in Bethesda, Bradford Bishop was the Lizzie Borden of our generation. While we were still kids, Bishop moved into our neighborhood with his wife, mother, and three boys. The oldest was our age. Bishop worked for the State Department as an assistant director in the special activities and commercial treaties office. He was a quiet man, one who by all reports was thoroughly henpecked by his wife and mother. For years, they had ganged up on him, deriding his achievements and telling him what a failure he was as a human being.

One day in 1976, after getting passed over for a promotion, he came home and murdered his entire family with a ball-peen hammer. He killed his wife first, then his mother when she came back into the house after walking the family dog. Then he killed his boys, one at a time, while they slept in their beds.

That night, he gathered the bodies in the family station wagon and took off. He drove to North Carolina and burned them in the woods. It was three weeks before anyone discovered the family was gone.

The Bethesda–Chevy Chase Rescue Squad responded to the house once a neighbor and police officer discovered blood on the front steps. Inside the house, blood was everywhere—in the living room, on the walls, the bedrooms, and the beds. Sitting around the station house on the weekends, the old-timers would tell us stories of that crime scene. It was a chamber of horrors. One of the boys’ bedrooms was drenched in blood from floor to ceiling.

By the time the bodies in North Carolina were linked to the crime scene in our neighborhood, Bishop was long gone. The station wagon later turned up at a Great Smoky Mountains National Park campground, but there was no sign of Bishop. The station wagon was covered in dried blood. Some of it had pooled and congealed in the spare-tire well.

For years, on slow nights at the station house, we would speculate on what had become of Bradford Bishop, the henpecked bureaucrat turned mass murderer. It led to endless discussions on his whereabouts.

I reach forward and scratch the mutt’s ears. He growls happily and tilts his head my way. I’m glad for this diversion. I’m glad to be thinking about anything other than the hostages and North, and the unfolding national embarrassment that has exposed so much of the Dark World to media scrutiny.

“Well, they never found any evidence that he committed suicide,” I offer. We’ve been over this ground many times before. It is comfortable and it sets me at ease, even if the subject is a gruesome one.

“True, but none of the sightings have ever really been confirmed.”

Being a diplomat, Bishop knew how to travel incognito. I think he’s stayed off the grid all these years by moving frequently and using false identities.

“Well, remember a friend of his spotted him in Sweden back in ’78.”

Fred shakes his head and says, “Tentative at best, just like the one in Italy when that other DOS guy said he saw him in a bathroom.”

We discuss the other possibilities. Some say he defected to the Soviet Union. There’s no evidence of that, and he’s never surfaced in Russia. I don’t buy it. More than likely, he’s living the life of a fugitive, staying one step ahead of the authorities with frequent moves and ID changes.

“Well, someday I’ll look into that case, if I ever get any authority,” I tell Fred.

He looks at me for a moment and says, “Yeah. That one and that other one. You know? Where that Israeli was whacked right in his front yard. What was his name again?”

“Alon. Yosef Alon.”

“That’s right. Alon. Man, Fred, you have a memory for these things.”

I guffaw. “Yeah, but is it a blessing or a curse?”

“Maybe just your purpose.”

The sudden sincerity leaves me silent. I’m not sure how to answer that.

“The old crew responded to Alon’s murder, too.”

“That’s right.” The rescue squad was right on the scene. Alon had been killed only a few blocks from the house I grew up in. He’d been coming home from work that night—he’d been assigned to the Israeli Embassy as an air and naval attaché—when a car rolled up behind him. As he stood in his front yard, gunmen in the car opened fire on him. Five shots hit him. By the time the rescue squad’s old rig arrived on the scene, it was too late. He died in our neighborhood, victim of a professional hit. Media speculation hinted that he’d been assassinated in retaliation for the death of an Arab militant in Paris.

None of us believed that, especially after the killing was so quickly swept under the rug. It has always bothered me, and someday I want to reopen that old case.

Fred Davis gets to his feet and gives me a smile. “When you do get to the bottom of that one, please let me know, okay?”

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