Stuff You Should Know - Iran-Contra Affair: Shady in the 80s, Part 2
Episode Date: August 8, 2019As the operation expands it also begins to unravel. Word starts to leak out of the illegal stuff the Reagan administration was up to, Congress and the press investigate and people start to point finge...rs. Spoiler alert – they all got off scot free. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
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Yeah, not just Portland, Maine,
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
Hey and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant
and there's Jerry over there
and this is Stuff You Should Know,
Iran Contra, part two, starting now, go.
Maybe we should do a quick catch-up.
Oh, okay.
Well, we're still going.
You act like I just went to sleep.
You act like I just went to sleep.
No, it's true.
So what's going on here is
the United States, Congress has decided
that we cannot fund the Contras
to fight the Sandinistas in Nicaragua.
Shut off funding.
So the Reagan administration makes a deep covert push
to continue doing so through a bunch of fun and shady ways.
Right, they're fundraising,
they're directly arming the Contras,
they're training them,
doing all sorts of crazy stuff.
Yes, but if you know that this is about Iran Contra
and you're like, what about Iran?
What's going on here?
I haven't heard anything about Iran.
Keep your socks on.
Well, here we go.
This is where Iran enters the picture.
Right, you can take your socks off.
All right, go.
Are your socks on?
I've got on little footy socks, yeah.
I do too, cool.
Oh, Jerry does too, sweet.
It's the way to go.
Jerry has those true footies
where you can't even see them at all.
I can see them.
Mine peek out just a little,
which I'm not a huge fan of.
Oh, check out mine.
Yeah, no see-ims.
No see-ims.
Okay, enter Iran.
We really, that was a great intro and it just went away.
That's right.
So on the other side of the world from Nicaragua,
there was another foreign policy disaster simmering
that Reagan had going.
And it was in the form of Iran.
And specifically, it wasn't even in the form of Iran.
It was in the form of a problem that America had.
Doesn't really have much these days,
but definitely did in the 70s and 80s
where Americans would be taken hostage around the world.
But specifically, almost exclusively by Lebanese terrorists
who were, if not working on behalf of Iran,
were definitely sponsored by Iran.
And regardless of who was president,
the fact that there were hostages being held
by another country and there wasn't anything
we could do about it,
that was a real blemish on the presidency.
It was not a very proud thing to think about for America,
but that was this reality for a while there.
Yeah, so Iran at the time, this is the early 80s.
This is just a few years removed
from the Iranian Revolution of 1979.
And this is where we've talked about it before.
Go look up photos of Iran in the mid-70s, pre-revolution.
And it looks like London in the swing in 60s and 70s.
Very kind of hip place to be.
Iranian Revolution happens.
Fundamentalists take control of the government.
There was previously the Shah of Iran
who was friendly to the West,
friendly to America generally.
And the Ayatollah Khomeini, Khomeini.
I've always heard Khomeini.
Khomeini installed a Islamic theocracy
and bad things started happening pretty quickly.
Yeah, it was about as quick a turn
about face politically and socially as you could imagine.
Yeah, for a whole country.
Yeah, yeah.
But not everyone in the country as we'll learn.
Like the whole country didn't just change overnight.
No, but the Islamic theocracy was in power very much so.
One of the things that happened was
they were not very fond of America or Americans.
And the American embassy was famously stormed.
And 66 Americans working there were taken hostage
and held for more than a year.
Man, that was...
This is stuff I really remember.
Like 440 days or something.
Yeah, 444 days.
Man.
The Iranian hostage crisis.
I remember this as a nine-year-old very clearly.
Really?
Oh yeah.
I have no recollection of it.
Yeah, it was a big deal.
Yellow ribbons and it was on the news constantly.
I remember entering the room and being like,
what does this have to do with rainbow bright?
Turn this newscast.
I even remember...
So what happened was Jimmy Carter did not get
these hostages free during his, I was about to say rain,
but sort of the opposite of who Jimmy Carter was.
That's what everybody thinks of.
During his administration, his iron-fisted reign.
The days of terror.
But within a few days, and that may have cost him the election,
but within a few days of, or hours,
even of Reagan's inauguration, the hostages were freed.
And I remember it as a nine-year-old hearing kids
parroting their parents' conversations.
Like it was really Carter that had him freed.
All the work he did up until then.
And then other kids saying, are you kidding me?
As soon as Reagan got in office,
they knew that they were toast.
And that Reagan wasn't gonna be a Patsy like Carter.
And I was like, what's a Patsy?
Who are these dudes?
No, but I remember very distinctly,
it's weird, like on the playground hearing this stuff.
That's funny.
Yeah, like little nine-year-olds.
I definitely didn't hear this when I was a kid,
but I remember hearing later on as a grown-up,
still in the rainbow bright,
that it was Reagan's campaign was somehow in touch
with Iran.
Yeah.
And that they brokered this,
it also got them to wait to release the hostages
until after Reagan was in office.
But the timing was not at all.
Hours after his inauguration, there was no accident.
It's a little fishy, you know what I mean?
But whether it was, that's funny,
that I'm sure somebody's parents were like,
yeah, it's because they were so scared of Reagan,
they knew that they better release these guys.
That's totally not the case
because there were other hostages taken
by other, by actual Lebanese terrorists
who were probably sponsored by Iran.
And they were held throughout Reagan's presidency.
Yeah, and that's sort of a big part of this,
the second half of this story,
was the fact that that was very embarrassing for Reagan.
He didn't like hostages being held on his watch.
No, but he had campaigned against negotiating with terrorists
under any circumstances.
So he's stuck now.
Yeah, because he's basically saying,
if you get taken hostage, I mean, you're on your own.
We'll use our rhetoric and whatever we can
to influence you being released,
but we're not going to negotiate for your release.
That's just the way it is.
And that's a longstanding American policy.
And it makes sense because if you negotiate with terrorists,
then that's just gonna lead to more kidnappings
because they know that you're open for business.
Like anywhere in the world,
there was a kidnapping of TWA flight 847,
very, very famous one.
You know, the picture of like the pilot
leaning out of the cockpit and the guy's picture
with the gun behind him.
That was 847.
And that was, I mean, I remember that one.
That was probably nine then.
And that was just scary
because they were flying all over the place.
You had no idea what was gonna happen.
People were being beaten on the plane.
One Navy guy was beaten in,
shot and his body thrown out on the tarmac.
Yeah, the 80s, like it seems comparatively tame now
in a lot of ways compared to the things that used to go on.
Thank McDonald's.
Hi, Jackings and kidnappings and hostages.
It's like, the 80s were nuts.
They were nuts, but...
Pac-Man, you know, Pac-Man fever.
Pac-Man?
Rap and Rodney, it was crazy.
Right, is that Rodney Piper?
No, Rap and Rodney Dangerfield, his big hit.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Rap and Rodney, yeah.
No respect.
What about the icky shuffle?
That was a little crazy.
Was that 80s?
Sure.
Late 80s.
I guess so.
Okay, I got one for you.
The bears, what was their thing?
Oh, the Super Bowl shuffle.
The Super Bowl shuffle, right?
Yeah.
That was pretty 80s.
I think they were 84.
Yeah, we're putting, you know, my band every year plays,
for sure, one gig at Decatur's Porchvest.
And every year we try to do a theme,
and this year we're doing 80s sort of new wave.
And I jokingly suggested Pac-Man fever,
the end, Rap and Rodney.
Are you guys gonna do it?
No, songs are terrible.
Do you have a synth player playing with you?
I bought Emily a keyboard and she's learning.
Awesome.
She's gonna be like, wait, hold on, hold on.
I hope not.
That's cool, man.
No, she's practicing.
I've heard her do that.
She played piano when she was a kid,
so it's not the biggest stretch.
I've heard that one, her do that one Blondie song,
she just brought the house down.
Yeah, one way or another.
We might bring that back, cause that's 80s.
Yeah.
Or was that 70s?
It was so close on the cusp.
I seriously doubt anybody's gonna throw
a beer can at you for it.
Anyway, Porchvest, everyone.
I'll publicize it in October.
Nice.
So Reagan's hands are tied in every way possible,
cause he can't negotiate with terrorists.
The only option is to send in a covert Delta Force team.
Which they, Carter tried that and it didn't work.
It doesn't always work.
You could lose your own men.
And I think that's what happened in Carter's case, right?
Yeah, for sure.
So what he can do though, without anyone knowing,
is totally negotiate with terrorists.
Yeah, just as long as the American public doesn't know.
Sure.
Yeah, and that's what happened.
And he followed that Reagan playbook
where it's like, okay, I said this,
well, if I just changed this one little part,
it makes it all fine.
That's right.
Again, as long as the American public doesn't know.
So while Reagan said, America will never negotiate
with hostages, they didn't say Israel will never negotiate
with terrorists for hostages.
Right.
So actually Israel had a long standing policy
of negotiating with terrorists.
They would kidnap people from the other side
and then they'd be like, all right,
I'll give you five guys, I've only got two.
Let me kidnap a few people.
Okay, now I have five.
Like there would be negotiations
for hostage exchanges all the time.
Yeah, between Israel and Palestine.
Right, they just knew what they were doing.
So they said, okay, well, if Israel goes to Iran
and says, hey, you know this American over there,
why don't you get them released?
We can help you out with some stuff.
What do you think about this?
Yeah, so earlier when I mentioned the fact that Iran
as a whole cloth did not change overnight as a country,
the government did, but there were still
some plenty of people there that were a little more moderate
in their views and the Reagan administration
had a channel to them.
So he was talking to them, these more moderate factions
and making a little headway and they were like,
by the way, we'll totally give you these hostages
if you give us arms.
Yeah, because Iran was fighting the Iran-Iraq war,
at least half of it.
Yeah, and this is just where stuff is just totally crazy
because we were funding both sides.
At the very least, we were advising both sides.
Well, I mean, we directly gave money to Iraq.
Oh, yeah, you're right.
No, you're right.
We sold them weapons and we provided training
and intelligence and this wasn't secret.
This was like a real deal thing.
We were publicly supporting Iraq,
but then we were secretly arming Iran.
Yeah, I think what they never proved beyond a doubt
was that we went to Saddam Hussein and said,
hey, why don't you go in there and overthrow Iran?
Oh, really?
Yeah, there was never-
Like we started it?
I don't think that was ever,
there was a lot of circumstantial evidence
that that was the case, but never like the smoking gun
that we actually encouraged Saddam Hussein to do so.
Gotcha.
But it's just, man, when you look at how all this played
out over the years, it's just maddening, you know?
Yeah, it's a S show.
Yeah, so Iraq and Iran are fighting,
we're supplying both, playing both sides of the coin.
Right.
And we offered arms to Iran and who are you gonna call?
Israel.
Not Ghostbusters.
Oh, Gorbanafar.
Well, you're gonna call Ollie North.
Oh, yeah, okay.
I would have gotten there eventually.
Yeah, because, okay, so remember,
Ollie North is this total novice when it comes to covert
operations, but by this time-
Well, not anymore, yeah.
Yeah, he's been running the Nicaragua op for years now,
just doing a bang up job of it.
So they're like, well, sure, we'll have him do this
incredibly illegal, super sensitive arm sale to Iran too.
Why don't you come on over here, Ollie?
And Ollie said, well, okay, that's fine,
but I need to go get the lay of the land.
And he actually traveled to Iran with a fake passport
under an assumed name, William P. Good, with a knee.
And when he went, it was dangerous enough
that William Casey, supposedly,
Oliver North later testified, gave him cyanide pills
so that he could take his own life rather than be tortured
by the Iranians if this were, in fact,
like some sort of setup.
Again, right out of a movie.
Yeah.
But Oliver North went to Iran with cyanide pills.
And a fake passport.
Really good.
So everything went great though.
It did.
He didn't need the cyanide pills after all.
He did not.
He dealt with, like you mentioned earlier,
this Iranian businessman named Gorbanafar.
And this guy was 10 shades of shady,
so much so that the CIA wouldn't even deal with him.
No, they issued a burn notice on him in 1983.
Which I don't even know what that is.
That means just he's dead to us.
It's basically stay away.
Okay.
It's putting him on blast to all the other
intelligence agencies in the world.
Gotcha.
Persona non grata.
CIA won't even deal with this guy.
And so Ali North is like, yeah, I'll deal with this guy.
All right.
So with his help, Oliver North set up a deal where,
and it's so simple to look at, like Israel,
you give them your missiles
and then we'll just replace those missiles for you
with our missiles.
So we're not giving the missiles, you are.
And because no American explicitly said to Iran,
hey, we're doing this so that you guys
will get these hostages released.
It wasn't an arms for hostages deal.
And so Reagan's vowed to never negotiate with terrorists
remained intact.
That's right.
508 TOW toe missiles.
What's that stand for?
Tube launched optically tracked wireless guided missile,
which is like, it's like a, the tube launched,
there's a tube and it can be like mounted on the ground,
mounted on a Jeep, it's super portable,
but they are, they'll blow some stuff up.
I think I've seen these.
You have.
So 508 of these made it from Israel to Iran.
And then in very short order, a couple of days later,
one of the hostages, Benjamin Weir,
minister who was held by Lebanese terrorists
for 16 months was released.
So it worked.
It did work.
It was a big deal around the White House too.
But they said, let's try it again.
But this time it seemed a little messy to get Israel involved.
Let's just do this ourselves.
Ali, you think you can handle this?
And he said, sure.
Me and Gorbanaphore have this.
So rather than Israel giving arms to Iran,
Richard Secord got brought in, just like with Nicaragua.
And again, this isn't like years after Nicaragua.
Nicaragua's at full bore and full swing.
Oh, it's still going, yeah.
And Ali North is running both operations simultaneously.
And so the new setup was the Department of Defense
would sell the CIA missiles for 3,700 bucks a pop.
The CIA would sell them to Richard Secord at cost.
And then Secord would sell them to Gorbanaphore
for 10 grand a piece.
And then Gorbanaphore would go sell them to Iran
for whatever he charged Iran for, I can't.
I guarantee it was more than the 10 grand.
And this happened multiple times
over the course of a little over a year.
America secretly transferred 2,000 missiles
and missile parts to Iran in eight shipments.
Yeah, for the release of hostages.
Yeah, ultimately there were three hostages
that got released out of seven
that had been taken hostage total.
Yeah, and didn't you say ultimately
there were three more hostages taken
so they netted out at zero?
At zero.
Yeah.
So, but that was the whole Iran operation.
Yeah, but here's the deal.
This price markup means that that shell company
and those Swiss bank accounts were making a lot of money
and so much so that I think one of them
had at $3 million made an interest alone.
So at some point someone's like,
hey, this is a money making operation now.
Why don't we tie a little bow on all this
and use some of that money to fund the Contras
because you guys are doing both of these things
and you need money, Congress won't give it to you.
Forget the fundraising omelettes.
Right.
We'll just use the money from these illegal arms sales
to fund the Contras.
Yeah, and that's exactly what happened.
So to put it in plain terms,
America illegally and secretly sold missiles to Iran
used the proceeds from those missile sales
to secretly and illegally fund the Contras
to help them overthrow their government down in Nicaragua.
That's what the Reagan administration did.
That's right.
That's why it's called Iran Contra.
That's where they came together.
There was a diversion of funds.
Yeah, and the, I think it was by 1986,
Congress finally got back on board
because of this drumbeat from Reagan
over the years of how much we need to really do this officially
and keep in mind, Congress still didn't know
any of this is going on.
Right.
Secretly.
Yeah.
And then Congress said, all right,
we'll give you $100 million to aid this cause.
And Reagan said, hot diggy dog.
You would think that was the end of all the covert stuff.
It wasn't though.
No.
No, it still continued on,
but now it was legitimized and had even better funding.
But that was not the end of the whole thing.
Like everybody didn't just get to walk away and say,
that was close.
Cause the whole thing started to come apart actually.
Can I say that we take an ad break
and come back and talk about it?
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it.
And now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends, and non-stop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
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Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Okay, Chuck.
So 1986, Congress is back on board.
I think it's worth pointing out
that that's exactly four years after the Democrats
took control of the House in 1982.
So I wonder if the Republicans took control back in 86.
And that's why the funding got turned back
onto the Contras.
I mean, you could solve this.
I like to speculate instead.
So this all might have,
who knows if this ever would have even been found out.
Had it not been for the sharpshooting
of a young Sandinista soldier named Jose Fernando Canales
Alman.
Nice.
In October 5th, 1986, it was a cargo plane,
a C-123 called the Provider,
flying 70 Soviet Kalishnikovs,
100,000 rounds of ammo, rocket grenades and other supplies.
And this is one of those things
where you said they would fly things over
and kick them out the back of the plane.
This is one of those runs.
Yeah, the problem with this particular run though
is that they did this at 2,500 feet in broad daylight.
Yeah, they got a little lazy.
A tad bit.
Or maybe cocky.
I don't even know if it's that.
I think it was more like, this was just work.
It was an everyday job by this time.
They've been doing it for years.
Yeah.
And the operation was just humming along so nicely
that it was almost on autopilot.
Yeah.
So yeah, they did this one supply drop
on October 5th, 1986 in broad daylight.
And there were four crew aboard,
William J. Cooper, Wallace Buzz Sawyer,
Freddie Vilchus, and a guy named Eugene Hossenfuss,
who, and again, this sliding doors thing,
Hossenfuss is the only guy who had a parachute.
He borrowed it from his brother, a skydiver,
because he thought it might be smart to take a parachute.
No one else had parachutes.
Had he not had a parachute,
this may have turned out differently.
It may have, for sure.
He was the only one that survived this plane crash
because he was the only one who borrowed the parachute
from his brother, and he jumped out,
landed, made it safely into the jungle.
And I think he actually survived and invaded
the Sandinistas for maybe a day or something like that
before he was captured.
And when he was captured, they led him out of the jungle
like with a rope around his neck,
just about as big of a prisoner as you can imagine.
Super publicized.
There were billboards of him being led around
by Sandinistas, and they started asking him questions.
And he was like, what do you wanna know?
He sang like a canary.
He really did.
He said, this is my 10th supply mission.
I presume that the CIA is running this.
I don't know.
And he would know, this would be something
that he could legitimately guess at, at least,
because he had actually worked on CIA air drops
over Vietnam or Cambodia for Air America
back in the Vietnam War.
Yeah, but he wasn't like, he sings like a canary
because he's not very high up on the totem pole.
Like his job was to get up there and shove this stuff
out of the back of the plane for three grand a month.
Right.
He wasn't even a CIA operator.
He was just a former Marine who had a background
working with Air America years before.
But by this time, by the time he joins on
doing this for the Contras, he was like working
as a construction worker part-time in Wisconsin back home.
So this was like pretty good money.
I think he was getting seven grand in today's dollars
a month for basically kicking AK-47 crates out
the back of a plane over Nicaragua.
Yeah, so he's not the kind of guy
that's gonna take the fall for anyone.
So he's singing like a canary.
Even if he had kept his mouth shut,
it wouldn't have mattered what it sounds like, right?
Yeah, because all the other guys,
including Hassan Fuss, had their wallets on the plane.
They had all their employee ID cards.
And in fact, I don't even think we mentioned in episode one,
that the company that was set up to do these drops
was set up, it's called Southern Air Transport
out of, I guess, Miami.
So they all had their Southern Air Transport ID cards,
which was the CIA front.
Like everybody knew Southern Air Transport
was the CIA front.
So they might as well have had like CIA junior badges
or something in their wallets.
Right, or like Michael Keaton in Out of Sight
when he has the big FBI t-shirt.
I haven't seen that one.
Oh, you haven't seen Out of Sight?
No, is that the one where he-
That's George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez.
Is he a bad guy in it?
No, he's a good guy, but he walks in,
he plays Ray Nicolette who played same character
in Jackie Brown, FBI guy.
Okay.
But it's funny, because he walks in
with an FBI t-shirt on and Dennis Farina
as Jennifer Lopez's dad, and he's a former cop,
and he goes, hey, Ray, let me ask you,
you got one that says undercover?
Dennis Farina, man, class ad.
I mean, you gotta see Out of Sight, that's classic.
All right, I'll check it out.
Like one of the better movies.
I mean, I know exactly the movie you're talking about.
Stephen Soderbergh.
I avoided it like the plague.
It's so good.
Okay.
You would love it.
So Southern Air Transport, CAA Front,
there's also a log book that connected this flight
and all the other flights.
And then Hassan Fuss in his wallet
had a business card to Robert W. Owen.
This is a big one.
Who was working with Oliver North in Washington.
Right, which, so that provided a direct line
between Oliver North and some guys
who were kicking Kalashnikovs
out of the back of a plane over in Nicaragua.
So that was a really big deal
that when this guy got captured
and told the Sandinistas as much as he knew,
because the Sandinistas were like, attention world.
Listen to what we just found out.
The CIA has totally been funding these contra rebels
who are trying to overthrow this sovereign government.
And we think you guys should know about it.
Yeah, and it wasn't like you could totally discount that,
even those from the Sandinistas.
Like Congress and the American media were like, what?
I'm sure Congress was like, wait a minute,
this reeks of like something that has been happening
that we tried to shut down.
Yeah, because remember, even if the CIA
was briefing Congress, it was either Bill Casey
or Dewey Claridge, and they were doing
a really obtuse job of this, keeping Congress at arm's length.
So anytime something like this came out,
almost none of Congress knew the full extent of this.
And it was always inflagrant violation
of whatever Congress wanted,
or whatever Congress had agreed to.
Yeah, and this wasn't like, this was sort of the straw
that broke it all open, or that broke the camels back.
Broke the camels back wide open.
God, that's gross. Poor camel.
Things had been unraveling for a bit.
There was a party in 1985 in Virginia.
I can't wait, I can't wait.
Thrown by Soldier of Fortune magazine.
Can you imagine?
No.
What's that party like?
I don't wanna know.
I can't imagine.
I used to read Soldier of Fortune
when I was in my ninja training as a 10 year old boy.
And even then I was like,
this magazine makes my stomach hurt.
And it's in 1985, can you imagine the amount of blow
being secretly done in the bathroom at that party?
Sure, but also they were making snuff movies
in the living room, and there's no telling
what was going on in Soldier of Fortune.
We can tell you at the very least,
there was a lot of boasting going on,
openly about this contra operation.
And again, this is a time when people don't know
about this stuff.
Yeah, but you know what happens is like,
you get enough people in enough years,
and people start talking, people start bragging,
and all of a sudden you have a couple of gin and tonics
at a Soldier of Fortune party.
Sure.
And you're like, hey, guess what?
And that's what happened.
Somebody goes, what?
Yeah.
And you go, here it comes.
Yeah, and they dropped the bomb
that what's been going on,
a concerned citizen hears this,
I guess he must have been mistakenly invited
to the Soldier of Fortune party.
I don't know how that guy got invited,
or they just happened to talk to the wrong guy or whatever.
Probably that.
He was like, I am really fearful of my life
for saying something about this,
but I feel like somebody should know.
So he went to a lawyer, a human rights lawyer
named David Sheehan, and he said,
you go tell everybody, you put your life on the line.
And he did, he submitted an affidavit to federal court,
started doing interviews, talking to journalists,
drumming up support, White House was like,
we don't know what you're talking about.
You're a crazy man.
Like this is all 100% made up.
And finally, it took a Lebanese newspaper, Al Shira,
that reported on this deal, this arms for hostage deal,
like in a legitimate newspaper.
Right.
So now both stories have been blown open.
You've got Eugene Hassenfuss captured
and the contra operation is blown open.
And now Al Shira is reporting on the Iran arms
for hostage deal.
And really crazily enough, these two separate arms
of this one scandal came out within a month of each other.
Which is, it's bizarre, but that's what happened.
And now it was like, it's on the table.
The American media knows about it,
Congress knows about it, heads are about to roll.
All right, we'll take our final break
and we'll come back and talk about the aftermath
of Iran Contra.
Well now, when you're on the road,
driving in your truck, wanna learn a thing or two
from Josh and Chuck, it's stuff you should know.
Stuff you should know.
All right.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends and non-stop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's vapor
because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it and popping it back in
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
when questions arise or times get tough
or you're at the end of the road.
Ah, okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass
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If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, God.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so, my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
Yep, we know that, Michael.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
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Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy.
You may be thinking, this is the story of my life.
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If so, tell everybody, yeah, everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen
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Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
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All right, Chuck, you promised after math, let's hear it.
All right, so.
Jerry, Jerry, just LOL.
Everything is exposed.
Oliver North was no longer in business doing his thing.
No, he shut down shop real quick.
He did, but not before, very famously,
he and his very 80s-haired secretary, Fawn Hall.
I forgot, I looked, I was like, Fawn Hall.
I looked her up and as soon as I saw her, I was like, right.
Fawn Hall, you can forget that hair.
She could barely walk through a door.
No, it was ginormous, for sure.
It was so great.
I would be fearful around a shredder if I were her.
But she was not fearful at all.
She and Oliver North spent a day,
they called it a shredding party.
I mean, we will never know the full truth behind this
because of all the evidence that they shredded.
Yep, as far as anyone knows,
Oliver North decided on his own
to shred every document he had on it.
That's right.
And yeah, that's it.
Now it's the official narrative
that has been written into the history book,
which you can just guarantee
is not anywhere near the full story.
Right, so it all comes out.
The Reagan administration start looking around
and they're like, well, who's gonna be the patsy
for this one?
And Oliver North could not escape it.
But they're like, he's small potatoes.
He'll go down.
Well, I think he was even willing to take the fall.
Like he knew he was gonna be the fall guy
and was like, okay, that's part of the job.
Right, but they knew that it had to,
the American public and certainly Congress
wasn't gonna be satisfied with just Oliver North.
Right.
So who did they land on?
So the official line became this, Poindexter,
and I guess McFarlane would have started it,
became fully aware of just how badly
Reagan wanted to help the Contras
and said, I'm gonna do something about this.
And tapped Ollie North and said,
we need to help the Contras out.
Go help them out, figure it out.
And North went off and basically went rogue on his own
and set up this whole operation,
created this entire network with C-Cord,
decided to do the Iranian arms deal,
all this stuff basically on his own.
Right, like Reagan and Bush knew nothing about it.
Nothing about it.
And that the buck stopped at Poindexter, ultimately.
It didn't go any further.
William Casey being CIA, he was basically out of the loop.
That was the official story they came out with.
That's right.
And America went, you're kidding, right?
This is a joke.
Yeah, I mean, I remember these hearings,
even as a little kid watching these
and then watching the news coverage of it.
And like we mentioned,
Oliver North strolling in there with his dress uniform.
And by all accounts, being a pretty standup guy,
like he didn't rat anyone out.
He didn't, but he also, he was like,
there's no way the president didn't know about this.
He said, I don't have any direct evidence
that the president didn't know about it,
but it's my understanding that the president
was fully aware of what was going on.
Yeah, what was the deal with this missile supply shipment,
though? That's the one thing I didn't quite get.
So North got rid of all the documents that he could, right?
Well, North didn't have any control over CIA documents.
And at that first missile resupply,
where they were resupplying Israel,
he had a CIA, he basically said, hey, CIA,
do you know anybody I can use to ship these things?
I've got an emergency here.
I need to get these to Israel fast.
And the CIA, being the CIA is still a bureaucracy,
they had to document this event.
So there was a document out there now.
Right, that was not shredded.
Right, that he couldn't get his hands on,
that he couldn't shred.
And so this led to Reagan taking responsibility
or saying, okay, I was aware of this Iran missile deal
by backdating an order to William Casey saying,
I order you not to tell Congress about this,
even though you're supposed to.
So Reagan basically said, I'm paper,
I know about this Iran,
this one missile transfer to Iran,
had no idea about the Contras.
Right, okay.
And at first they started out denying everything.
Oh yeah, like after this, I'll share a story
that we talked about, he went on television,
Reagan did, and denied everything.
He said, all this is just total BS.
Yeah, exactly.
Now let's stop talking about it, everybody.
10 days after that,
Reagan had another press conference
where he talked about the Iran operation
and he acknowledged it but said,
what we're really doing here is just trying
to sort of send a signal to Iran
that we want friendlier relations.
Right, that they were-
And it was not arms for hostage.
Exactly.
And then, so that was 10 days after the first deny.
Right.
And then four months after that,
because the reporting would not stop,
he basically said, okay, yeah,
whatever it started out as,
I admit that it devolved into an arms for hostage deal.
That's right.
Even that, even that admission,
which is the closest he ever came to admitting
responsibility for it,
even that's just total BS and fantasy.
It was from the outset in arms for hostages deal.
The whole thing was set up to get hostages released
and that was it.
So there was no other way to put it.
But he denied that to his dying day.
As far as fallout, point extra resign,
Oliver North was fired.
Casey died in a hospital,
not too long after this whole thing was exposed.
I mean, like weeks.
Yeah.
So the press was all over the president.
He appointed the Tower Commission to look into this.
The president appointed a commission to investigate.
Yeah.
The president's own administration's wrongdoing.
That's right.
And it was determined that Reagan's disengagement
from the management of his White House
created conditions such that it was possible
that he did not know about this.
Which that is the absolute best official finding
he could have hoped for because it basically says,
Reagan didn't know.
He had a rogue guy working for him,
a true believer, a patriot,
but Reagan didn't know about this.
And yeah, he should have had a closer watch
on his executive branch, but he didn't.
What are you gonna do?
Let's get Mr. T in here for a photo op with Nancy.
There was a criminal investigation
and what they were really honing in on
was the $18 million in profits that were made.
And what happened to that money where it went?
14 people were charged.
Oliver North was tried and found guilty on three counts.
One of the counts was for getting
a $16,000 security system installed
in his home courtesy of Secord with that money.
There was a rumor that there was a bounty
on his head from terrorists.
And Secord hooked him up.
Right, now that was a big problem for North
because North's whole bag was, I was following orders
that I assumed were coming from the president, ultimately.
And I was doing it out of my patriotic duty
and a sense of, I was a true believer
that we need to get rid of communism.
And the American public loved it.
They were like, great, make this man a saint.
Congress started to love it too, and he got off,
but that was a real problem because it's saying,
well, you took this gift from funds
from this illicit arms sales.
Right, but it was a gift of a security system
to help protect his family.
So it's not like, it was a gift of 10 pounds of blow
and like, you know.
And a Nicaraguan sex worker
from the Sandinista government.
Exactly, Secord was convicted of one count
of lying to Congress and the investigators.
He basically denied that North received any funds
for many of this, so it's still kind of hinged
on that security system, I guess.
Right, right.
And-
So everybody went to jail forever after that point, right?
No, that's not true at all.
What?
Hakim got two years probation, a $5,000 fine.
Secord got two years probation.
Is that what he got?
Yep, both.
Two years probation.
So the two guys who were actually running the company
that ran this whole thing, each got two years probation.
North's conviction was overturned on a technicality
and President Bush, the senior Bush, on Christmas Eve.
This was Christmas Eve as he was leaving office, right?
Yep.
He issued six pardons, basically led everyone off the hook,
including Casper Weinberger,
who hadn't even gone to trial yet.
No, and neither had Duane Clarridge,
Dewey Clarridge was going to stay in trial too.
Both of them received preemptive pardons.
And a lot of people are like,
that was about the shadiest set of pardons
anyone's ever issued.
Because there's a lot of people out there who say,
Bush really walked away from this scot-free,
but there is no way he wasn't even more involved
in this than Reagan was.
Yeah, I mean, George Bush withheld his subpoenaed diary
entries that basically indicated
that he had full knowledge of this the entire time.
Eventually in 1992, independent counsel Lawrence Walsh asked
for these again and Bush said,
I asked you for these diary entries
and Bush was like, I didn't, you did?
I didn't fully understand, it was inadvertent.
Like you asked me for a lot of stuff.
I didn't know you asked me for the diary entries.
And Walsh was really upset and he said,
the Iran Contra cover-up has now been completed
and George Bush is a president
who has such a contempt for honesty
and arrogant disregard for the rule of law.
Yeah, and I mean, the forestalling that the Reagan White House
and then later on the Bush White House did
in allowing these investigations to go forward
and trying to keep Congress at arm's length
after everything came out, it worked
because there were articles of impeachment
introduced in the House against Ronald Reagan
and they managed to stave him off
to where it was like, well,
he's leaving office anyway, forget about it.
This investigation took years and years and years
and then finally when Bush pardoned everybody,
that was it, there was nothing else to do.
Everybody who was involved was off scot-free
and then the fact that Oliver North
had shredded all those documents,
they were all lost to history.
Like the actual truth is lost to history.
Yeah, Reagan, his reputation took a hit, a temporary hit.
For a while there, he went from 63%
in the span of a couple of months
to 43 to 47% depending on which poll you looked at
on his approval rating and he would get it back though.
Despite in the 1990 deposition,
the very, very famous deposition
where Ronald Reagan said, I don't remember
or I don't recall 88 times,
that was very big deal, it was all over the news.
Yeah, it was.
Almost as famous or just as famous
as Bill Clinton's very famous,
depends what your definition of is, is.
Right, exactly.
But Reagan rebounded.
He did, man, to the most popular presidency since FDR, right?
Yeah, upon his exit, his approval rating
had bounced all the way back up to the early 60s.
Mr. Tee famously carried him out of the White House
on his shoulders on his last day in office.
Oh, man.
So that's a Ron Contra, man.
What a story.
Heck of a story.
Where's this movie?
I don't know.
Hopefully we'll get some rights to it after this episode.
I want to play Fawn Hall.
Awesome.
That's great.
You get Jerry to play Fawn Hall.
That'd be great, Jerry.
Well, in the meantime,
while we find a suitable wig for Jerry,
you can find out more about Ron Contra
by going and reading contemporary articles on it.
I'm telling you, it's really awesome.
And since I said that, it's time for Listener Mail.
I'm gonna call this follow-up on the moon landing thing.
Hey, guys, in my opinion, the Apollo missions
and moon landings are the most significant events
in the history of life on Earth.
On the question why the command module
on Lunar Lander were launched separated,
I think the reason was to allow the command module
to be ejected in case of an emergency.
The very top of the Apollo stack
was the launch escape system,
like an ejector seat on steroids.
I imagine they had to keep things as light
and nimble as possible for the LES to be effective.
I don't think you mentioned something
that's really significant.
The Apollo 8 mission was the very first time
humans went to the moon on top of being
the first time we broke free of Earth's gravity.
Like 11, the stakes were incredibly high.
They had to first insert the correct trajectory
to make it to the moon,
then do a burn to enter the orbit around the moon,
then perform another burn to break free
of the moon's gravity and head back toward Earth.
If any piece was not in place,
those astronauts would have spent the rest of their lives
either orbiting the sun or orbiting the moon.
Apollo 8 also gave us the Earthrise photo.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
I've been hearing a lot about Apollo 8 lately too,
so this person is hats off to you.
Jim Lovell was born both Apollo 8 and Apollo 13.
He traveled to the moon twice,
but never had the opportunity to land.
That is so sad.
Signed a space geek, Noah Alloy.
Nice work, Noah Alloy.
Alloy-Loy.
Great name too.
Thanks a lot for getting in touch with us.
We love space geeks.
We love to put you guys in headlocks
and rub your heads with our knuckles
until you go, stop.
It's called a noogie.
Right.
Here on Earth.
That's right.
If you want a noogie from me and Chuck,
send us a space geeky or any kind of geeky thing.
We love that kind of stuff.
You can go on to stuffyoushouldknow.com
and follow our social links,
and you can send us a good old fashioned email.
Wrap it up, spank it on the bottom,
and send it off to StuffPodcast at iHeartRadio.com.
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Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
Bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts
or wherever you listen to podcasts.