- Theodore Shackley
Theodore G. "Ted" Shackley, Jr. (
July 16 ,1927 -December 9 ,2002 ) was an AmericanCIA officer involved in many important and controversial CIA operations during the 1960s and 1970s. He was commonly known as the "Blond Ghost" due to his dislike of being photographed.Overview
Shackley's work included being station chief in
Miami in the early 1960s during the period of theCuban Missile Crisis , as well as theCuban Project (also known as Operation Mongoose), which he directed. He was also said to be the director of the controversial "Phoenix Program " during theVietnam War , as well as the CIA station chief inLaos between 1966-1968, andSaigon station chief from 1968 through February 1972. In 1976, he was appointed Associate Deputy Director for Operations, and was in charge of the CIA's worldwidecovert operations .Shackley is perhaps best known for his involvement in numerous CIA "
Black op erations", such as "Phoenix" and "Mongoose", as well as his alleged involvement in other operations.Shackley died on
December 9 2002 , after struggling withcancer for a long period. He was 75.Biography
Early years
Shackley was born on
July 16 1927 , and raised inWest Palm Beach ,Florida . He enlisted in theU.S. Army onOctober 23 ,1945 atSpringfield, Massachusetts as a private, eventually becoming part of the Allied Occupation Force inGermany on completion ofbasic training . Due to his knowledge of thePolish language (his mother was a Polishimmigrant ), he became arecruit of U.S. Army Counter Intelligence. As an Army recruit he studied at the University of Maryland, and returned to Germany as a 2ndLieutenant in 1951. Again he served as a member of Army Counter Intelligence, where his linguistic skills were used in the recruitment of Polish Agents. It was at this time that he was recruited by the CIA, and in 1953 he was assigned to work under William Harvey at the CIA'sBerlin Station.Miami and the Cuban crisis
Shackley was station chief in
Miami, Florida during the period of (1961 - 1962). While heading the CIA office (known as "JMWAVE ") shortly after theBay of Pigs invasion , Shackley dealt with operations inCuba (alongsideEdward Lansdale ). JM/WAVE employed more than 200 CIA officers, who handled approximately 2,000 Cuban agents. These included the famous "Operation Mongoose" (aka "The Cuban Project "). The aim of this was to "helpCuba overthrow theCommunist regime" (ofFidel Castro Ruz). During this period as Miami Station Chief, Shackley was in charge of around 400 agents and general operatives (as well as a huge flotilla of boats), and his tenure here encompassed the "Cuban Missile Crisis " of October 1962.Vietnam, Laos and the "Phoenix Program"
In 1966, Shackley moved on to the
Vietnam War , becoming the CIA station chief inLaos between 1966-1968, where directed the CIA's secret war of pitting the Hmong villagers againstVietcong who used theHo Chi Minh Trail . He also helped coordinate local army efforts against thePathet Lao andNorth Vietnamese Army in the northern regions of Laos.He then moved on to become station chief for
Vietnam (in what was thenSaigon ) in 1968. Despite popular opinion Shackley did not in fact run thePhoenix Program . This was another assassination campaign incorporating "death squads ", and was aimed atnon-combatant Viet Cong infrastructure , but it is alleged that thousands of civilians were killed who had little or nothing to do with the V.C. After the USBureau of Narcotics ' "Operation Eagle" busted a drug-running scheme in 1970, several of the Cuban-Americans involved in theBay of Pigs came to work for Shackley andDonald Gregg in Vietnam, includingFelix Rodriguez . The Phoenix Program was eventually handed over to the U.S. and South Vietnamese armies, and was subsequently considered by both to be a "failure" and counterproductive in terms of producing negative propaganda. He eventually stayed through February 1972 when he returned toLangley, Virginia .Western Hemisphere Division and Chile
From 1972, Shackley ran the CIA's "
Western Hemisphere Division". One of Shackley's jobs whilst in charge of the CIA's Western Hemisphere Division was to discredit ex-CIA officer turnedKGB , [this is in serious need of sourcing since Agee's Wikipedia page has a KGB source talking about turning him down]Philip Agee who was writing an "expose" on the CIA entitled "Inside The Company". After Shackley's best efforts to discredit Agee, the parts of the book that would have caused most damage to the reputation of the CIA were not included.Deputy Director of Covert Operations
In May 1976, Shackley was made Deputy Director of Covert Operations, serving under director
George H.W. Bush , before officially retiring from the organization in 1979. However, it has been widely reported that in reality he was forced out of the organization by Bush's successor as Director,Stansfield Turner . Turner disapproved of Shackley’s close involvement with agentEdwin P. Wilson and ex-CIA employee,Frank Terpil . Wilson was later convicted in 1982 for selling 22 tons of "Composition 4 "plastic explosive toMuammar al-Gaddafi 'sLibya , and also the charge of exporting guns. The conviction on the explosives charge was reversed onOctober 29 2003 . However, in the midst of this scandal, Shackley was relieved of his deputy directorship in December 1977, and when theJimmy Carter administration announced wide cuts in the CIA's network of officers and informants, Shackley finally left the organization.October Surprise
Despite his retirement in 1979,
controversy continued to surround Shackley over alleged involvement in the alleged "October Surprise " of 1980, and later the "Iran-Contra " affair of the mid eighties.He had hoped to return to the Agency, and according to
Rafael Quintero , during the 1980 presidential campaign, Shackley met Bush almost every week, and his wife, Hazel, also campaigned for Bush.Iran-Contra Affair
On
16 March 1984 ,William Francis Buckley , adiplomat attached to the U.S. Embassy inBeirut was kidnapped by theHezbollah , a fundamentalistShiite group with strong links to the Khomeini regime. Buckley was tortured and it was soon discovered that he was the CIA station chief in Beirut.William Casey asked Shackley for help in obtaining Buckley's freedom. Shackley was horrified when he discovered that Buckley had been captured. Buckley had been a member of Shackley's Secret Team. Three weeks after Buckley's disappearance, PresidentRonald Reagan signed the National Security Decision Directive 138. This directive was drafted byOliver North and outlined plans on how to get the American hostages released fromIran and to "neutralize" terrorist threats from countries such asNicaragua . This new secret counterterrorist task force was to be headed by Shackley’s old friend, GeneralRichard Secord . This was the beginning of the Iran-Contra deal.In November 1985, Shackley traveled to
Hamburg where he met General Manucher Hashemi, the former head of SAVAK's counterintelligence division at the Atlantic Hotel. Also at the meeting on22 November was Manuchehr Ghorbanifar. According to the report of this meeting that Shackley sent to the CIA, Ghorbanifar had "fantastic" contacts with Iran.At the meeting Shackley told Hashemi and Ghorbanifar that the
United States was willing to discuss arms shipments in exchange for the four Americans kidnapped inLebanon . The problem with the proposed deal was that William Francis Buckley was already dead (he had died of aheart attack while beingtorture d).Fact|date=March 2008Shackley recruited some of the former members of his CIA Secret Team to help him with these arm deals. This included
Thomas G. Clines ,Rafael Quintero , Ricardo Chavez and Edwin Wilson of API Distributors. Also involved wasCarl Elmer Jenkins and Gene Wheaton of National Air. The plan was to use National Air to transportweapon s.On
October 5 ,1986 , aSandinista patrol in Nicaragua shot down a C-123Kcargo plane that was supplying the Contras.Eugene Hasenfus , an Air America veteran, survived the crash and told his captors that he thought the CIA was behind the operation. This resulted injournalist s being able to identifyRafael Quintero andFelix Rodriguez as the twoCuban-American s mentioned by Hasenfus. It gradually emerged thatThomas G. Clines ,Oliver North ,Edwin P. Wilson andRichard Secord were also involved in this conspiracy to provide arms to the Contras.Further reading (including sources)
*Theodore Shackley: The Third Option: An American View of Counter-insurgency Operations" McGraw-Hill, (1981) ISBN 0-07-056382-9
*Theodore Shackley: (his autobiography, to be published in April, 2005) describes his career. ISBN 1-57488-915-X
*David Corn: "Blond Ghost: Ted Shackley and the CIA's Crusades" (1994). ISBN 0-671-69525-8External links
* [http://www.historicalmilitaria.com/Obituaries/Shackley.html Historical Militaria obituary for Ted Shackley]
* [http://www.bearcave.com/bookrev/blond_ghost.htm Blond Ghost by David Corn (extensive review of David Corn's Shackley biography)]The Edwin Wilson Affair
* [http://www.fas.org/sgp/jud/wilson102703.pdf Opinion on Conviction (PDF) US District Judges opinion on the Wilson Conviction]
* [http://www.pipeline.com/~rgibson/cialied.html The CIA Lied About Edwin Wilson.]
* [http://www.ericmargolis.com/archives/2003/11/edwin_wilson_am.php Edwin Wilson: America's Man In The Iron Mask.]Operation PBFORTUNE / PBSUCCESS
* [http://www.derechos.org/nizkor/chile/doc/covert.html#E.%20Effects%20of%20Major%20Covert%20Action%20Programs. Covert Action In Chile 1963 - 1973.]
October Surprise
* [http://www.globalsecurity.org/intell/library/congress/1992_cr/h920205-october-clips.htm "Creating a Task Force to Investigate Certain Allegations Concerning the Holding of Americans as Hostages by Iran in 1980" (House of Representatives -
February 5 , 1992).]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.