Pentagon stops F-14 parts sales amid Iran concerns
By Andrea Shalal-Esa
ReutersReuters
Jan 30, 2007 — WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon on Tuesday said it had stopped selling surplus parts for the F-14 fighter jet, saying it was the "right thing to do," given congressional concerns that some parts could land in the hands of Iran ...
http://www.abcnews.go.com/Politics/wireStory?id=2836390 Congressional concerns means:
Senator Targets Surplus Sales to Iran
Monday January 29, 2007 11:46 PM
By SHARON THEIMER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Democratic senator wants to cut off all Pentagon sales of surplus F-14 parts, saying the military's marketing of the spares ``defies common sense'' in light of their importance to Iran.
Sen. Ron Wyden's bill came in response to an investigation by The Associated Press that found weaknesses in surplus-sale security that allowed buyers for countries including Iran and China to surreptitiously obtain sensitive U.S. military equipment including Tomcat parts ...
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-6379723,00.html Weaknesses means:
Military Surplus Parts Illegally Find Their Way to Iran, U.S. Officials Say
By Sharon Theimer
Associated Press
Monday, January 22, 2007; Page A17
Fighter-jet parts and other sensitive U.S. military gear seized from front companies for Iran and brokers for China have been traced in criminal cases to a surprising source: the Pentagon. In one case, federal investigators said, contraband purchased in Defense Department surplus auctions was delivered to Iran, a country President Bush has branded part of an "axis of evil" ...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/01/21/AR2007012100760.html How could that happen? Let's note an anniversary:
Iran/contra: 20 years later and what it means 2007-01-02 By David Corn
The Nation
It's the 20th anniversary of the Iran-contra scandal. Two decades ago, the public learned about the bizarre, Byzantine and (arguably) unconstitutional actions of high officials in the post-Watergate years. But many Americans did not absorb the key lesson: the Iran/contra vets were not to be trusted. Consequently, most of those officials went on to prosperous careers, with some even becoming part of the squad that has landed the United States in the current hellish mess in Iraq ...
http://www.athensnews.com/issue/article.php3?story_id=26944 Looks like the old gang's been back together for a while:
Cheney Channeled Ghorbanifar (After All)
Over at Tapped, Laura Rozen points out this choice bit from "State of Denial:"
Kay got a cable from the CIA that the vice president wanted him to send someone to Switzerland to meet with an Iranian named Manucher Ghorbanifar.
“I recognize this one,” Kay said when he saw the cable. “This one I’m not going to do.”
Ghorbanifar had been the Iranian middleman in the Reagan administration’s disastrous secret arms-for-hostages deals in the Iran contra scandal. Though he had been a CIA source in the 1970s, the agency had terminated him in 1983 and the next year issued a formal “burn notice” warning that Ghorbanifar was a “talented fabricator.” ...
Kay discovered the latest Ghorbanifar stunt involved Michael Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute, a former NSC colleague of Oliver North who had been involved with Ghorbanifar in the Iran-contra days.
http://www.motherjones.com/mojoblog/archives/2006/10/cheney_channele.html Oh my goodness! This name sounds familiar:
Published on Friday, November 24, 2006 by Consortium News
Gates & the Iran Arms Sales
by Robert Parry
In November 1987, as the Reagan administration was still scrambling to contain the Iran-Contra scandal, then-deputy CIA director Robert M. Gates denied that the spy agency had soft-pedaled intelligence about Iran’s support for terrorism to clear the way for secret U.S. arms shipments to the Islamic regime ...
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/1124-29.htm Could they be
that stupid? Oh, you betcha! :evilgrin: