Vincent Cannistraro

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Vincent Cannistraro, former CIA Counterterrorist Chief of Operations

Vincent Cannistraro is a former Director of Intelligence Programs for the United States National Security Council (NSC) from 1984 to 1987; Special Assistant for Intelligence in the Office of the Secretary of Defense until 1988; and Chief of Operations and Analysis at the CIA's Counterterrorist Center until 1991.[1]

Before 1984, he was an officer with the CIA's Directorate of Operations in the Middle East, Africa, Europe, and Central America.[2][3]

Since leaving the CIA in 1991, after 27 years with the agency, Cannistraro has worked as a consultant on terrorism and security issues for a number of corporate and government clients, including ABC News and the Vatican.[4]

Education and awards

Cannistaro has a B.A. and M.A. from Boston College. In 1989, he received the Secretary of Defense's Award for Meritorious Civilian Service. He has also received the CIA Medal for Distinguished Service.

Professional life

While at the CIA, Cannistraro ran the agency's Central American task force that supervised covert action in the region, including the Nicaraguan Contras (both the left wing guerillas in the South and the right wing contras in the North). He moved to the Reagan NSC by the direction of CIA Latin American Chief Duane Clarridge, who supported Col. Oliver North. [5] The Contra program was transferred in 1984 by President Ronald Reagan to the NSC, [6] and Cannistraro was made Director of Intelligence there later that year.[7] As Director, he was responsible for monitoring the US intelligence community budget. [8] and coordinating the approval process for covert action. He also chaired the Afghanistan Working Group at the White House. [9]

Later, as Chief of Operations and Analysis at the CIA's Counterterrorist Center, Cannistraro led the agency's "investigation" into the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, which resulted in the conviction in 2001 of the Libyan Abdelbaset al-Megrahi. Originally listed as a prosecution witness, Cannistraro was not called to testify at the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing trial.[10]

Cannistraro also linked Iraq with Osama bin Laden when he alleged that Iraqi intelligence agent Farouk Hijazi had invited bin Laden to live in Iraq during a December 1998 meeting in Afghanistan, though he maintained that bin Laden refused the invitation and did not accept support from Saddam Hussein.[11]

He reported on the forged Niger "yellowcake" uranium documents as an attempt by some Bush Administration supporters to link Iraq with nuclear weapons development in order to increase public support for the Iraq war, and on the related disclosure of the identity of CIA agent Valerie Plame.[12]

The front company, Brewster Jennings & Associates, apparently also was used by other CIA officers whose work now could be at risk, according to Cannistraro.

Cannistaro runs IntelligenceBrief, a security and information service for private clients. The Vatican is one such client.

On September 12, 2001, Cannistraro stated that five of the hijackers had entered the United States in Maine from Canada via Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, and/or a remote border point near Jackman, Maine, several hundred kilometres southeast of Quebec City. A Canadian Intelligence officer declared that Cannistraro was wrong. "They didn't hijack Canadian planes, they got through airport security in the U.S., not here."[13]

Seven Lockerbie questions

On 27 April 2010, Patrick Haseldine sent Vincent Cannistraro the following message on Facebook:[14]

Dear Mr Cannistraro,
On 15 March 2010, I asked former FBI agent Richard Marquise two questions:
1. Did the FBI 'establish antecedents' on Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations and UN Commissioner for Namibia, Bernt Carlsson?
2. If so, will you publish the relevant FD402 report in full?
Later in March, I posed a further five questions for Mr Marquise and his Scottish counterpart, Detective Chief Superintendent Stuart Henderson, to answer:
3. Could you please tell us about the previous attack on Bernt Carlsson’s aircraft?
4. Could you please publish DC Crawford’s report on Bernt Carlsson?
5. Does the fact that in December 1988 the diamond mining and trading company De Beers was facing prosecution under the UNCN Decree for illegally exploiting Namibia’s gem diamonds over a 20-year period (estimated value $18.7 billion) make Bernt Carlsson a PA 103 target?
6. Does the fact that in December 1988 the owners of the Rössing Uranium Mine were facing prosecution under the UNCN Decree for illegally exploiting Namibia’s uranium oxide over a 14-year period (estimated value $1.2 billion) make Bernt Carlsson a PA 103 target?
7. Does the fact that the Rössing uranium mine is part-owned by the Iranian government, who were clandestinely receiving shipments of Namibian uranium oxide in 1988-1989, make it likely that Iran targeted Bernt Carlsson on PA 103?
Messrs Marquise and Henderson have so far been slow in answering these seven questions about Pan Am Flight 103's most prominent victim. Since you used to be the CIA's expert on the Lockerbie disaster (1988-90), are you now able to comment on the likelihood that Bernt Carlsson was the terrorists' target?
Regards,
Patrick Haseldine
HM Diplomatic Service
(1971-89)[15]

According to Patrick Haseldine, those seven Lockerbie questions remain unanswered.

References

  1. "Interview with Vincent Cannistraro", PBS Frontline, undated, retrieved April 18, 2006.
  2. Diamond, John. "CIA cuts off more than 1,000 informants, many for criminality", Associated Press, March 2, 1997
  3. Priest, Dana. "The Slowly Changing Face of the CIA Spy; Recruits Eager to Fight Terror Are Flooding In, but Few Look the Part," The Washington Post, August 09, 2002.
  4. "Witness biographies" (pdf), Senate Democratic Policy Committee Hearing, October 24, 2003
  5. Ignatius, David. "Tale of Two White House Aides: Confidence and Motivation; North Viewed as a Can-Do Marine Who Went Too Far in Zealousness." The Washington Post. November 30, (1986): Sec. A1.
  6. Kornbluh, P., and M. Byrne. "The Iran-Contra Scandal: The declassified history." New York: The New Press. (1993): xviii.
  7. "Interview with Vincent Cannistraro", PBS Frontline, undated, retrieved April 18, 2006.
  8. "Walsh draws testimony from NSC officials." United Press International, June 15, (1987)
  9. "About Vincent Cannistraro", Intelligence Brief, Cannistraro's website.
  10. "Cannistraro not called to testify at the Lockerbie trial"
  11. "Analysis: Though Afghanistan has provided Osama bin Laden with sanctuary, it is unclear where he is now," National Public Radio, February 18, 1999
  12. "Witness testimony, Vincent Cannistraro" (pdf), Senate Democratic Policy Committee Hearing, October 24, 2003.
  13. Andrew Mitrovica (2009-04-24). "Former U.S. spy linked 9/11 terrorists to Canada". Toronto Star. Retrieved 2010-06-12.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "Scribunto").
  14. "Vincent Cannistraro on Facebook"
  15. "Seven Lockerbie questions for the FBI, CIA and Scottish Police"

See also

  • "Interview with Vincent Cannistraro", PBS Frontline.
  • "Witness biographies" (pdf), Senate Democratic Policy Committee Hearing, October 24, 2003.
  • "About Vincent Cannistraro", Intelligence Brief, Cannistraro's security and information service.
  • Diamond, John. "CIA cuts off more than 1,000 informants, many for criminality", Associated Press, March 2, 1997.
  • Ignatius, David. "Tale of Two White House Aides: Confidence and Motivation; North Viewed as a Can-Do Marine Who Went Too Far in Zealousness." The Washington Post. November 30, (1986): Sec. A1.
  • Kornbluh, P., and M. Byrne. "The Iran-Contra Scandal: The declassified history." New York: The New Press. (1993): xviii.
  • Priest, Dana. "The Slowly Changing Face of the CIA Spy; Recruits Eager to Fight Terror Are Flooding In, but Few Look the Part," The Washington Post, August 09, 2002.
  • Santos, Lori. "Walsh draws testimony from NSC officials." United Press International, June 15, (1987)
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