Originally posted by: cumhail
Originally posted by: cquark
Originally posted by: Painman
IIRC, Ronald Reagan's words on Iran-Contra:
Originally Posted By: Ronald Reagan
I don't recall.
As for Gen. Poindexter, not sure what became of him.
John Poindexter went into private industry until he got a government appointment in 2002 from Bush II, where he took leadership of the Total Information Awareness project. To show him what TIA would be like, a group of people on the Internet created a page tracking John Poindexter, with satellite photos of his house and much more (they claimed to have his SSN and credit card numbers but would not publish them.) I'm not sure where he is since TIA got renamed and then went underground.
As you note, Poindexter, like other Iran-Contra figures, ended up in this current Bush administration... for a while, at least. Having been pardoned of his crimes by the elder Bush, GWB's administration brought him back to public life as the head of the "Office of Information Awareness" shortly after GWB took office. But then he came up with the wonderful idea of creating a "futures market," based on the stock market's model, wherein you could bet on future terrorist attacks and cash in if you were right. Needless to say, most sane people were appalled, and Poindexter resigned shortly afterwards
Poindexter, of course, was not alone among former Iran-Contra folks to find a new home in the Bush administration. Elliot Abrams, who pled guilty to withholding information from Congress in order to avoid more serious charges and jail term for his actions as an Assistant Secretary of State in the Reagan administration (a moot point, of course, since the elder Bush pardoned him along with others who fell on their swords over Iran-Contra), is also back in action thanks to the current Bush administration as the National Security Council's staff chief for Democracy, Human Rights, and International Operations... ironic, really. Knowing that the senate wouldn't confirm any appointment Abrams might get, he was put into one that doesn't require senate confirmation. But that issue didn't get in the one way of Otto Reich's appointment
To get around the problem of the Senate blocking Otto Reich's appointment as an Assistant Secretary of State, the GWB administration just waited until congress went into recess. His office ran illegal covert efforts to overthrow Nicaragua's government; but damn it, he's the best man for the job and a silly thing like checks and balances shouldn't get in the way of his put back into power, right? Richard Armitage, John Negroponte, Mitch Daniels, all players in the Iran-Contra scandals, also found a home in the current presidential administration. In the time immediately after, of course, Bush could have appointed just about anyone without anyone saying so much as a word. So it's hardly surprising that shadowy figures with favor-debts to be repaid should find their ways back again.
cumhail