Ronald Reagan: Presidency Off the Books

Ronald Reagan: Presidency Off the Books

In the late afternoon of November twenty-first, 1986, Marine Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North and his secretary Fawn Hall stood inside an office a short walk from the Oval Office and fed classified documents into a shredder. They jammed the machine. They smuggled pages out in her boots. They were trying to outrun a federal investigation that was already moving down the hallway toward them.

What they were destroying was the paper trail of what investigators would later call a parallel government, a secret apparatus running an off-the-books foreign policy out of the Reagan White House, in defiance of an act of Congress and in contradiction of every public statement the President of the United States had made about negotiating with terrorists. In this episode of Disturbing History, host Brian unpacks the Iran-Contra affair, the biggest American political scandal since Watergate, and the moment the modern presidency learned how to operate off the books and survive.

This is the story of how the Reagan administration secretly sold American TOW and Hawk missiles to the Islamic Republic of Iran through Israeli intermediaries beginning in August of 1985, despite the President's repeated public claims that the United States would never negotiate with hostage takers. It is also the story of how the same administration funneled the profits from those Iranian arms sales, through Swiss bank accounts controlled by retired Air Force General Richard Secord and Iranian-American businessman Albert Hakim, to support the Contra rebels in Nicaragua, after the United States Congress had passed the Boland Amendments in 1982 and 1984 explicitly prohibiting that exact kind of support.

Two scandals, one architecture, one continuous criminal conspiracy stitched together inside the National Security Council under the direction of Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North, National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane, his successor John Poindexter, and CIA Director William Casey, with the knowledge or willful blindness of President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George H.W. Bush.The episode traces every thread in detail.

It begins with Reagan's carefully constructed public persona of optimism, patriotism, and certainty, the General Electric Theater years, the 1984 reelection landslide, the image of the friendly grandfather that made the country reluctant to believe what was happening underneath. It moves through the 1979 Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua, the rise of Daniel Ortega, the Reagan administration's decision to back the Contras, the CIA mining of Nicaraguan harbors, the World Court case, and Congress's eventual push to cut off funding through the Boland Amendments.

From there, the story crosses the world to Beirut, where CIA station chief William Buckley was kidnapped in March of 1984 and tortured to death by Hezbollah, where journalists like Terry Anderson, clergy like Reverend Benjamin Weir and Father Lawrence Jenco, and academics like Thomas Sutherland and David Jacobsen were taken hostage, and where Reagan's private anguish over American captives became the lever that Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi and Iranian middleman Manucher Ghorbanifar would use to open the secret arms channel.

The epsiode covers the bizarre May 1986 trip to Tehran, when Robert McFarlane traveled under a false passport carrying a Bible inscribed by Ronald Reagan and a chocolate cake shaped like a key. It covers the October 5, 1986 shootdown of the cargo plane carrying Eugene Hasenfus over Nicaragua, the loose thread that began unraveling the entire Enterprise.

We get into the November 3, 1986 Al-Shiraa magazine story out of Lebanon that broke the news of the arms sales, Reagan's failed November 13, 1986 Oval Office denial, Attorney General Edwin Meese's stunning November 25, 1986 announcement of the diversion of funds to the Contras, the Tower Commission report of February 1987, the joint congressional Iran-Contra hearings of summer 1987, Oliver North's six days of televised testimony in his Marine dress uniform, Fawn Hall's defense that sometimes you have to go above the written law, and John Poindexter's claim that the buck stopped with him.

It covers the aftermath. CIA Director William Casey's brain tumor and convenient inability to testify before his death in May of 1987. Independent Counsel Lawrence Walsh's seven-year investigation. The convictions of Oliver North and John Poindexter, later overturned on immunity grounds. The misdemeanor plea by Robert McFarlane. The indictment of Caspar Weinberger. And, on Christmas Eve of 1992, the lame-duck pardons issued by outgoing President George H.W. Bush for Weinberger, McFarlane, Elliott Abrams, and three CIA officials, pardons that ended any chance of a courtroom reckoning over what Bush himself had known as Vice President.

Drawing on the National Security Archive's documentation, the findings of the Tower Commission, the joint congressional hearings, and Lawrence Walsh's final report, this episode lays out the architecture of deniability that defined the Reagan-era national security state. It explains how cutouts, shell companies, third-country donors, private operators, and Swiss bank accounts allowed a President to authorize a policy his own Secretary of State and Secretary of Defense had warned him against.

It examines the psychological gap between Ronald Reagan's public image and the machinery operating beneath it. And it asks the question that hangs over the entire affair and over every presidency that has followed: when an executive branch decides that its mission matters more than the law, what actually constrains it? Brian, drawing on his sixteen years of law enforcement experience, closes the episode with a sober reflection on what Iran-Contra normalized, what it taught future administrations they could get away with, and why a country that quietly accepted the Christmas Eve pardons of 1992 is still living with the consequences today.

This is the Iran-Contra scandal as it actually happened, told in full, with the disturbing details most people have never heard.

Have a forgotten historical mystery, disturbing event, unsolved crime, or hidden conspiracy you think deserves investigation?

Send your suggestions to brian@paranormalworldproductions.com.

Disturbing History is a dark history podcast exploring unsolved mysteries, secret societies, historical conspiracies, lost civilizations, and the shadowy stories buried beneath the surface of the past.

Follow the show and enable automatic downloads so you never miss a deep dive into history’s most unsettling secrets.

Because sometimes the truth is darker than fiction.

Denne episoden er hentet fra en åpen RSS-feed og er ikke publisert av Podme. Den kan derfor inneholde annonser.

Episoder(123)

FDR: The Man Who Could Have Been King

FDR: The Man Who Could Have Been King

He was elected President of the United States 4 times, and a whole generation of Americans grew up unable to remember anyone else in the office. In this episode of Disturbing History, we pull apart th...

17 Jul 1h 23min

The Fair Tax

The Fair Tax

Taxes don't sound like Disturbing History territory, until you learn the trail of blood and power behind them. This episode traces the entire violent history of taxation in America, from the Stamp Act...

15 Jul 1h 15min

The Smithsonian's Strange Phenomena Files

The Smithsonian's Strange Phenomena Files

There's a building in Washington where, for the better part of a century, ordinary Americans mailed in the impossible. Flesh that fell from a clear sky onto a Kentucky farmwife making soap. A swarm of...

12 Jul 1h 1min

Loving the Monster

Loving the Monster

Some nights the well runs dry, and I do what everybody does — I sink into the couch and let Netflix babysit me for a while. That's how I ended up watching The Worst Ex Ever, and that's how I ended up ...

10 Jul 1h 1min

The Rise and Ruin of the FLDS Church

The Rise and Ruin of the FLDS Church

He was the mouthpiece of God to ten thousand followers. To the FBI, he was a face on the Ten Most Wanted list. And to a Nevada state trooper working a dark stretch of Interstate Fifteen, he was just a...

8 Jul 1h 7min

Children Sent Through the Mail

Children Sent Through the Mail

In the winter of nineteen fourteen, a five-year-old girl named May Pierstorff stood on a train platform in Grangeville, Idaho, with fifty-three cents in postage stamps pinned to her coat. Her parents ...

5 Jul 1h 1min

The Poison Bottles America Trusted

The Poison Bottles America Trusted

Before the Food and Drug Administration, before warning labels, before anyone had to prove a medicine was safe or even admit what was inside it, America ran on the bottle.This episode opens the cabine...

3 Jul 59min

Nazi Propaganda & The American Mirror

Nazi Propaganda & The American Mirror

The word propaganda began as something holy. In sixteen twenty-two a committee of cardinals in Rome coined it to mean the spreading of the faith, and in this episode I follow that single word as it cu...

1 Jul 1h 4min

Populært innen Samfunn

rss-spartsklubben
giver-og-gjengen-vg
konspirasjonspodden
aftenpodden
aftenpodden-usa
rss-nesten-hele-uka-med-lepperod
rss-henlagt-andy-larsgaard
popradet
alt-fortalt
wolfgang-wee-uncut
grenselos
rss-dette-ma-aldri-skje-igjen
fladseth
sophie-leser
198-land-med-einar-trnquist
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
rss-siktet
vitnemal
hele-historien
rss-frekvens-med-anine-olsen