12.04.2016

Danke, Dewey.



 


Duane R. Clarridge,
Brash Spy Who Fought Terror Networks,
Dies at 83

By MARK MAZZETTIAPRIL 10, 2016


 


 

Duane R. Clarridge
was a champion of a brawny United States foreign policy and of the C.I.A.’s clandestine service. CreditDennis Cook/Associated Press

Duane R. Clarridge, a pugnacious American spy who helped found the C.I.A.’s Counterterrorism Center, was indicted and later pardoned for his role in the Iran-contra scandal, and resumed his intelligence career in his late 70s as the head of a private espionage operation in Afghanistan and Pakistan, died on Saturday in Leesburg, Va. He was 83.

His lawyer, Raymond Granger, said the cause was complications of laryngeal and esophageal cancer.

Mr. Clarridge was an unflinching champion of a brawny American foreign policy and of the particular role played by the C.I.A.’s clandestine service — a cadre he likened to a secret army that “marches for the president” and ought to be subjected to as little outside scrutiny as possible.

Mr. Clarridge, widely known by his nickname Dewey, delighted in the role of rogue. He often arrived at work in white Italian suits or safari jackets and bragged to other C.I.A. officers about the brilliant ideas he had conceived while drinking the previous night.

“If you have a tough, dangerous job, critical to national security, Dewey’s your man,” Robert M. Gates, the former director of central intelligence and later defense secretary, was quoted as saying in “Casey,” a 1990 biography of William J. Casey, the Central Intelligence Agency’s chief during the Reagan administration, by Joseph E. Persico. “Just make sure you have a good lawyer at his elbow — Dewey’s not easy to control.”

He spent years overseas as an undercover officer, but perhaps his most consequential effort at the spy agency was the creation of the Counterterrorism Center (then called the Counterterrorist Center) in 1986 after a string of attacks the previous year, including the hijacking of TWA Flight 847 and the massacres at El Al ticket counters in Rome and Vienna carried out by the Abu Nidal Organization.

Up to that point, the C.I.A. had devoted little effort to understanding international terrorism, and Mr. Clarridge persuaded Mr. Casey to create the center with an unusual arrangement: having undercover spies and intelligence analysts working together to try to dismantle terrorist networks. Within a year, C.I.A. operations had significantly weakened the Abu Nidal organization.

Since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the Counterterrorism Center has grown into a behemoth, the heart of a spy agency transformed by years of terrorist hunting.

Mr. Clarridge’s efforts against international terrorism came as he was becoming ensnared by investigations into the Reagan administration’s efforts to use proceeds from secret arms sales to Iran to arm the contras, a Nicaraguan rebel group battling troops of the country’s socialist government, known as the Sandinistas.

Mr. Clarridge had been in charge of the C.I.A.’s covert war in Nicaragua in the early 1980s (he told his colleagues that his idea to mine the harbors of Nicaragua in 1983 came while he was drinking gin at home) and had developed a close relationship with Lt. Col. Oliver North, who was running the Iran-contra operation from his perch at the National Security Council.

According to the final report by Lawrence E. Walsh, the independent counsel investigating the Iran-contra affair, Mr. Clarridge testified that he had no knowledge that cargo ships sent to Iran to help secure the release of American hostages contained any weapons. He also denied trying to solicit money from foreign countries to circumvent a congressional prohibition against financing the contras.

“In both instances,” the report said, “there was strong evidence that Clarridge’s testimony was false.”

He was indicted on a charge of perjury in 1991, three years after he had retired from the agency. President George Bush pardoned him on Christmas Eve 1992, along with five other Iran-contra figures. He had the pardon framed, and he eventually hung it in the front hallway of his home near San Diego so it would be the first thing visitors saw upon entering his house.

But the scandal embittered him, and he used his 1997 memoir, “A Spy for All Seasons,” to settle some old scores. He lamented in the book that the C.I.A. had lost its swagger since the end of the Cold War, becoming a risk-averse organization that was beholden to lawyers and was degenerating “into something resembling the style, work ethic and morale of the post office.”

Duane Ramsdell Clarridge was born in Nashua, N.H., on April 16, 1932. Both of his parents (his father was a dentist and his mother a homemaker) were active in local Republican politics, and the nickname he carried through life had Republican origins. According to his memoir, a neighbor in Nashua began calling him Dewey in 1944 in honor of Thomas E. Dewey, the New York governor who that year ran for president against Franklin D. Roosevelt.

He joined the C.I.A. in 1955, after getting degrees from Brown and Columbia, and served undercover in Nepal, India and Italy before being promoted to run the Latin America division in 1981.

He is survived by a daughter, Cassandra; two sons, Ian and Tarik; and five grandchildren. His first marriage ended in divorce; his second wife, Helga, died before him.

More than two decades after his retirement from the C.I.A., Mr. Clarridge began working as a government contractor when military officials in Kabul hired him and a small team to gather information about militant groups in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Using sources in the region — he identified them only by cover names, such as Waco and Willi — he would turn their field dispatches into reports he sent to the military command by encrypted email.

Mr. Clarridge worked for a security firm hired by The New York Times in December 2008 to assist in seeking the release of a reporter, David Rohde, who had been kidnapped by the Taliban. Mr. Rohde escaped on his own seven months later, but Mr. Clarridge used his role in the episode to promote his spy network to military officials.

The Pentagon canceled the contract in 2010 after the private spying operation was revealed.

But two years later, after Mr. Clarridge had moved into a retirement home in Northern Virginia, he told a reporter that he still had his “network” intact for the future.

In November 2015, Mr. Clarridge was back in the news when The Times identified him as an adviser to Ben Carson, the retired neurosurgeon and Republican candidate for president, who had come under criticism for statements he made about foreign affairs during debates. Asked about the candidate’s foreign policy acumen, Mr. Clarridge was typically impolitic.

“Nobody has been able to sit down with him and have him get one iota of intelligent information about the Middle East,” he said.

10.04.2016


 R.I.P.
  DEWEY
You saved our lifes

 







"AT 1920, APRIL 9, DUANE R. "DEWEY" CLARRIDGE DEPARTED FOR A FAR BETTER PLACE.

HE FOUGHT THE GOOD FIGHT
HE FINISHED THE RACE
HE KEPT THE FAITH

DEWEY SPENT TODAY, SURROUNDED BY FAMILY & FRIENDS. HE HAD ANIMATED MEETINGS WITH OLD COMRADES AND THOSE WHO LOVED HIM.

SHORTLY AFTER ALL BUT IAN & TARIK HAD GONE, DEWEY SLIPPED AWAY AS HIS NURSES WERE CHANGING SHIFT.

FOR THE RECORD:

DEWEY WAS BORN ON 16 APRIL 1932 IN NASHUA, NEW HAMPSHIRE. HE IS SURVIVED BY HIS DAUGHTER CASSANDRA; SONS IAN & TARIK, 5 GRANDCHILDREN AND HIS FIRST WIFE, MARGARET. HE WAS PRECEDED IN DEATH BY HIS SECOND WIFE HELGA.

A SERVICE TO CELEBRATE HIS LIFE AND LEGACY WILL BE HELD AT ST. PETERS CHURCH IN PURCELLVILLE, VA. IN THE DAYS AHEAD.

"SEMPER FIDELIS" IS MORE THAN A SLOGAN FOR U.S. MARINES. "ALWAYS FAITHFUL" IS A WAY OF LIFE."

27.11.2015

 Martin Compart über "UnterGrund"

 Die Sicht des Kenners


“Als ich die maskierten Männer in den grünen Kampfanzügen erkannte und die ölig glänzenden Maschinenwaffen auf uns gerichtet sah, hatte ich die Bestätigung, dass es reiner Wahnsinn ist, so kurz nach einem brüchigen Waffenstillstand die Front zu überschreiten. Wenigstens für einen Mann, der auf der anderen Seite steht.”
So cool fängt UNTERGRUND an, und so cool geht es auch weiter in dieser autobiographischen Schrift, die einmal eine der wenigen deutschen Polit-Thriller auf internationalem Niveau war. Autobiographisch steht Willi Voss´ Buch irgendwo auf demselben Regal wie Ernst von Salomons DIE GEÄCHTETEN oder Jack Blacks YOU CAN´T WIN.
Als ich 1986 zu Bastei-Lübbe ging, lernte ich Willi Voss kennen, der damals für den Verlag schrieb. (siehe auch: https://martincompart.wordpress.com/2013/06/05/noir-fragen-an-willi-voss/
Ich kannte seine beiden Polit-Thriller, die er unter dem Pseudonym E.W.Pless veröffentlicht hatte: GEBLENDET und GEGNER. Es war ganz deutlich, dass der Autor wusste, worüber er geschrieben hatte: Bürgerkrieg im Libanon und der verzweifelte terroristische Kampf der Palästinenser. Wie ich, fuhr Jörg Fauser auch sofort auf GEGNER ab. Und irgendwann haben wir dann zu dritt in Witten und Bergisch-Gladbach ein Wochenende durchgesoffen und gequatscht und gequatscht und gequatscht. Jörg, der immer alles genau wissen wollte, zog Willi alles über seine Erfahrungen im bewaffneten Kampf für die Palästinenser aus der Nase, was er nur ziehen konnte.
Willi
Mit Willi in Spanien.
Und seit 2012 gibt es nun endlich eine überarbeitete Neuausgabe von GEBLENDET unter dem Titel UNTERGRUND, die nun nicht mehr der Roman ist. Hätte Fauser noch gelebt, hätte er bestimmt ein enthusiastisches Nachwort zu diesem authentischen und autobiographischen Nahost-Thriller geschrieben, der in der deutschen Thriller-Literatur (und darüber hinaus) als einzigartiges Monument dasteht. Willi hat alles geschrieben: Polit-Thriller, Conspiracy, Western, Polizei- und Privatdetektivromane. Gut sind sie alle. Aber GEBLENDET und GEGNER entstanden zu einer Zeit, als die Wunden noch frisch waren und er den Pulverdampf noch in der Nase hatte.
Passt gut zur Lektüre von Carlottos DER FLÜCHTLING.
Einen relativ fairen Bericht über Willi als Fatah-Kämpfer und CIA-Agent auf:
http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-90334819.html
http://www.amazon.de/UnterGrund-Willi-Voss/dp/3944223004/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1416849005&sr=1-1&keywords=willi+voss