The KGB and the Pope: Is the Case Closed Yet?
Back in 2004, while I was living in Sweden, a number of friends advised me to see a BBC-produced, three-part documentary called The Power of Nightmares (PON). In it, filmmaker Adam Curtis made some bold and heterodox claims: al-Qaeda didn't really exist, the current terror threat was more neoconservative invention than reality, and the roots of the current scare-mongering could be found in the intelligence battles of the Cold War. (Incidentally, Curtis made a follow-up film, The Trap: What Happened to Our Dream of Freedom, arguing that free-market economists like James Buchanan and Friedrich Hayek created "a simplistic model of human beings as self-seeking, almost robotic, creatures [leading] to today's idea of freedom.")
The film appealed because it dealt, in part, with a subject I had long been interested in and had written a fair deal about. In part one of PON, Curtis claims that CIA director William Casey cooked the intelligence books after reading a book called The Terror Network, which argued that the Soviets were actively involved in funding and training disparate terror groups across Europe and the Middle East. It was a shaky argument and Curtis seemed to possess only a passing familiarity with much of the source material, evidenced in the film's first cut, when it misidentified the book's author as Michael Ledeen. (It was, in fact, written by Claire Sterling, published by a major, non-ideological publisher, and excerpted in the Sunday New York Times magazine. And speaking of Sterling, make sure to check out this terrific blog post by Jesse Walker, who correctly argues that, far from conspiring to keep Sterling's accusations out of the "liberal media," the book was widely reviewed and publicized by NBC, the Times, and the New Republic, to name but a few.)
Sterling was aggressively supported by Cold Warriors and excoriated by those dubious, for obvious ideological reasons, of Soviet terror connections. One of Sterling's most vocal critics, who features prominently in the film and whose writing was clearly an inspiration for Curtis, is former CIA and State employee Mel Goodman, who dismissed Moscow's connections to groups in the Middle East and Europe as fantasy. Goodman, who's dislike of Bill Casey's deputy Robert Gates led a St. Petersburg Times reporter to conclude that his "visceral hatred" of the current Secretary of Defense "called into question his motives," told author Robert Parry that a 1985 report on the papal assassination plot connecting the operation to Moscow was the nadir of department politicization; the CIA had hit "rock bottom."The Sterlingization of intelligence was complete.
But here's the problem: It is increasingly certain that it was a Soviet operation. Historian Nigel West, author of a number of important books on Soviet intelligence, and the Italian government long ago determined that the KGB, via its proxies in Bulgaria, were deeply involved in the planning and execution of the assassination attempt against Pope John Paul II. Back in 2005, the report produced by an Italian government commission was buttressed by a cache of files found deep in the East German Stasi archives.
And now, Der Spiegel presents further evidence of what we already knew (via this website, and with a hat tip to Jesse Walker):
The German weekly Der Spiegel has published a report indicating that Communist Germany's Ministry for State Security (Stasi) unleashed "one of the largest campaigns of misinformation in its history" in order to deflect investigations into the attempt on the life of John Paul II in 1981 towards Turkish extremists.
According to the ANSA news agency, the article features new documents discovered in German state archives that reveal that the Stasi "tried to help the Bulgarian secret service. The organization enrolled a young Turkish citizen, Ismet Erguen, who began her mission in Berlin in February of 1982.
"The documents show Erguen was involved until 1989, although today she denies ever having been an agent of the Stasi," the news report indicated.
"The head of the foreign information sector of the Stasi, Markus Wolf, who died in 2006 at the age of 83, received a request for help from the Bulgarians in 1981 after the arrest of Ali Agca, as they were concerned that the Western media were focusing on a supposed Soviet-Bulgarian link in the assassination attempt."
Der Spiegel claims that "the purpose was to divert suspicion towards the Gray Wolves, an extreme right-wing Turkish group."
Wolf was satisfied with Erguen's work because even today, "a legend exists according to which it was the Gray Wolves that gave orders to Agca," the newspaper reports.
For material conclusively connecting the KGB to the PFLP, IRA, Red Brigades, Baader-Meinhof, and other guerilla groups, see the two-volumes of Cambridge University historian Christopher Andrew's Mitrokhin archive.
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"For material conclusively connecting the KGB to the PFLP, IRA, Red Brigades, Baader-Meinhof, and other guerilla groups, see the two-volumes of Cambridge University historian Christopher Andrew's Mitrokhin archive."
Shouldn't this read:
"For material conclusively connecting the KGB to the PFLP, IRA, Red Brigades, Baader-Meinhof, and ALL other guerilla groups TO EVER EXIST, see the two-volumes of Cambridge University historian Christopher Andrew's Mitrokhin archive."
Its also only rarely been reported the USSR provided start-up funding to The Sons of Liberty and the Washington-Jefferson gang not to mention rigging the election in favor of Evo Morales, Ceasar Chavez and Obama...
In it, filmmaker Adam Curtis made some bold and heterodox claims
Is "bold and heterodox" some kind of code for "delusional"?
I thought Claire Sterling got totally played by Hannibal Lecter. I find it hard to take anything she says seriously now.
Is "bold and heterodox" some kind of code for "delusional"?
I am told that a mid-afternoon nap cleanses the convictions in ideology and sharpens the instincts against heresy.
------
I don't trust people who siesta.
This is a Tom Clancey book- Red Rabbit. Like most of his later stuff, it's terrible, but it put forth the exact same scenario. Tom Clancey must be getting his intelligence from Dick Chaney.
HER NAME IN THAT MOVIE WAS CLARICE.
I think it makes sense that the Soviets wanted him dead, because he had a lot of influence with the Solidarity movement in his native Poland.
God I miss the Soviets.
I mean, really - some of the best years of the republic were spent with that boogeyman-on-a-stick held out in front of us. We made it to the moon and back, fer chrissakes.
Remember when them patriotic types were all over individual freedom and liberty... man.. those were the days.
3gw wins the thread
Even though it's off-topic and irrelevant, this seems like the perfect thread for me to mention I finished a follow up to my previous Lonewacko cartoon at Urkobold.
Yeah, Buchanan and Hayek had this crazy idea that freedom is, you know, freedom.
Also, how did Milton Friedman get left off the list? I thought he was the source of all evil.
As the only atheist who posts here 😉
let me just say that going after Pope John Paul II was a pretty shitty thing to do. It's not like he was advocating the west to attack the Warsaw Pact or was leading legions of mackeral snappers in a holy crusade against godless communism.*
Now there have been pontiffs that deserved assassination, but this guy sure wasn't one of them.
* I ranked him as a pawn on the global chessboard. Yeah he helped bring down the Soviet Block, but the fiasco hurt the Soviets way more than success could possibly have helped them. I hope some KGB colonel got garotted over it.
In the 'Power of Nightmares', the director only made the claim that Al-Qaeda didn't exist BEFORE the US had to make a criminal case against them - BIG difference. Prosecuters were forced to name them.
Monsieur Penguin,
Hil-fucking-larious.
I eagerly await new episodes.
I kept waiting for you to bring it up, but you never did.
So I will.
Al-Zawahiri is probably an FSB agent, and if so, was also an agent at the time of 9/11's planning and execution.
While Litvinenko's revelations might not be as comprehensive and well-document as Mitrokhin's, it would be a mistake to assume that defectors ceased to have anything to add since the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Monsieur Penguin,
Hil-fucking-larious.
Seconded.
I'm drunk in Vegas so I'm not sure whether this is OT or not but my father likes to say that the Cold War ended and we lost.
I didn't understand the major premise of that article, or whether it had one.
In 1985 an Italian court acquitted Bulgarian Sergei Antonov for lack of evidence about his complicity in the attempt on the Pope's life. He died in 2007 a broken man. The Italians reportedly had used psychotropic drugs in order to make him 'confess'...
The relationship between terrorists and us has been exaggerated; they were just some guys living in our neighborhood.
It'd be interesting to cross-check the commenters who deride this information with the ones who think Obama's a pretty fine fellow. I suspect that they correlate pretty closely. I don't have the stomach for that exercise myself.
I don't get it. Why does whether the book was popular or not weigh for or against Casey being inspired by it to cook the books?
I think a lot can be said for the thesis that all terrorists are just called "al-Qaeda" now, regardless of any lack of central leadership. So, in that sense, it's a self-serving invention of neo-conservatives.
Also, wasn't it the First John Paul that actually was (maybe) assassinated by (possibly) the KGB?
Will Covert Action Information Bulletin run a retraction now?
I think a lot can be said for the thesis that all terrorists are just called "al-Qaeda" now, regardless of any lack of central leadership.
Its my impression that a lot of them self-identify as AQ. I also thought that AQ was intended to be a fairly loose network of affiliated sub-groups.
So, in that sense, it's a self-serving invention of neo-conservatives.
Or it could be a loose network of self-identified affiliates.