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Cover-up of Waco massacre unravels as new evidence exposes
FBI lies
By Martin McLaughlin
4 September 1999
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Attorney General Janet Reno confirmed Friday that she would
seek the appointment of an independent investigator to probe charges
of an FBI cover-up of the Waco massacre. Reno made the announcement
at her weekly press conference, following the uncovering of further
evidence that government officials systematically lied about the
circumstances surrounding the 1993 FBI assault on the Branch Davidian
compound in which nearly 80 people were killed.
A raging fire erupted after a US army tank breached the walls
of the compound on the morning of April 19, 1993 and began pumping
CS tear gas into the structure. Only a handful of those inside
escaped alive. Twenty-four of the victims were children. The bloodbath
was the culmination of a two-month siege which began when agents
of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms staged
a provocativeand ill-plannedraid on the Branch Davidian
property outside of the central Texas city, allegedly to serve
a warrant on the group's leader, David Koresh, for possession
of illegal weapons.
The Waco massacre was a defining moment for the Clinton administration,
only three months after Clinton entered the White House. Justice
Department officials pressed for a showdown with Koresh and his
followers, to assert the authority of the state and to avenge
the killing of four BATF agents in the original botched raid (six
Davidians were killed in the same gun-battle). As one FBI spokesman
declared, before the final confrontation began, "We are going
to show them that we control the compound and they are impotent."
Attorney General Reno approved the attack plans and defended
the conduct of the FBI attackers in media interviews and appearances
before multiple congressional inquiries. An official Justice Department
investigationnow revealed to be a whitewashclaimed
that the fire which destroyed the Branch Davidian compound was
an act of mass suicide, ordered by Koresh.
Last week press accounts revealed that FBI agents fired pyrotechnic
tear gas grenades at a storm shelter about 25 yards from the main
building several hours before the fire broke out on April 19,
1993. These reports directly contradicted repeated statements
by Reno, then FBI Director William Sessions and lower-ranking
officials, who all declared that the FBI had used no incendiary
weapons in the course of the assault.
The evidence of the tapes
Then on Wednesday the FBI released an audiotape and videotape
made by a surveillance airplane equipped with an infrared scanner
which was flying above the Branch Davidian compound during the
final hours of the confrontation. The tapes, covering the period
from about 6 a.m. to 8 a.m. on the morning of the attack, record
the conversation between one FBI supervisor, Stephen McGavin,
to the assistant special agent in charge of the hostage rescue
team at Waco, Richard Rogers.
McGavin is heard asking for authorization to use "military
rounds" against the storm shelter, after less powerful tear
gas grenades failed to penetrate the structure's plywood roof.
(Despite its flimsy construction, the structure is regularly referred
to in the media as a "bunker," to preserve the impression
that the Branch Davidians were a military opponent of the US government,
rather than a small religious sect.)
Rogers readily gave his consent, at 7:48 a.m., and two of the
more powerful incendiary devices were employed. A few minutes
later, according to contemporaneous television coverage, the roof
of the storm shelter can be seen in flames. This structure was
connected to the main building by a tunnelwhich was why
the FBI wanted to attack it, to block an escape route.
Nine days later, on April 28, 1993, Rogers sat behind FBI Director
Sessions at a congressional committee hearing at which Sessions
emphatically declared that the FBI had only used "noninflammable"
tear gas and that the grenades used to deliver the gas "will
not start or contribute to a fire." Rogers himself testified
for two days before the committee without disclosing the use of
the military-issue pyrotechnic grenades.
The cover-up included not only denying the use of the grenades,
but concealing the existence of the videotapes. On many occasions
since 1993 FBI officials have categorically denied that any infrared
videotape was taken before 10:42 a.m. on the final day of the
Waco siege. In one lawsuit under the Freedom of Information Act,
FBI officials told a federal judge under oath that there was no
recorded radio traffic during the entire six hours of the final
assault. This judge later accused the FBI of "stonewalling."
A number of important questions are raised by the new evidence:
* Could the flames which erupted from the storm shelter have
spread down the tunnel connecting it to the main wooden structure?
* How many more military-issue pyrotechnic grenades were in
the arsenal of the FBI agents during the final assault? Were any
more of these used?
* In addition to Rogers and McGavin, how many other FBI officials
were aware of the use of pyrotechnic grenades? (The on-site communications
were being monitored directly by FBI headquarters in Washington.)
* The tape was supposedly discovered by FBI officials on Saturday,
August 28, but Reno and the Justice Department were not notified
for four days. Why the delay? Was the tape altered in any way
during this time?
* What other tapes and records of the events of April 19, 1993
remain in the FBI's secret files? (At least one such tape has
been reported, covering some of the time period after 8 a.m. on
the day of the attack on the Branch Davidians.)
* What was the role of the military at Waco? A report by government
auditors released this week found that the Department of Defense
spent over $1 million in support of the Waco siege, and there
have been claims that soldiers in the Army's elite Delta Force
participated in the assault.
A conflict within the state
The new evidence on Waco has brought the long-running conflict
between the FBI and the Justice Department to the point of open
warfare. Reno declared that she had been lied to by FBI officials
about the use of incendiary grenades at Waco. FBI officials denounced
her decision to order US Marshals into the FBI headquarters to
seize the videotape and a total of four boxes of new Waco material
brought there from the offices of the FBI hostage rescue team
in Quantico, Virginia.
FBI Director Louis Freeh, appointed by Clinton to succeed William
Sessions in the fall of 1993, has established a position of independence,
and even opposition, in relation to the White House and the attorney
general. When the Republican Party won control of Congress in
1994, Freeh moved to establish close relations with former House
Speaker Newt Gingrich and other Republican leaders, distancing
himself from his nominal superiors in the executive branch.
This reached the point, in 1997, where Freeh publicly opposed
Janet Reno's decision not to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate
Democratic Party and White House fundraising in the 1996 election
campaign. Freeh supplied documents to congressional Republicans
who were seeking to use the campaign finance probe for the purpose
later served by the Lewinsky investigationas a means of
destabilizing the Clinton administration. FBI agents assigned
to the Office of Independent Counsel played a major role in the
Starr investigation, which led to Clinton's impeachment and trial.
The Waco massacre has been seized on for years by extreme right-wing
elements, both inside and outside the Republican Party, who have
sought to channel legitimate outrage over this and other repressive
actions by the federal government in a reactionary direction.
This has been assisted by the posture of the Democratic Party
and the representatives of what passes for liberalism in the United
States, who have embraced the law-and-order demagogy of the Republicans
and lined up with the Clinton administration in defending FBI
thuggery.
Significantly, none of those in Washington, Republicans or
Democrats, who now express outrage over Waco, had any criticism
of the conduct of Philadelphia police when they bombed the headquarters
of the black religious group MOVE in 1985, killing eleven people,
including five children, and destroying an entire city block.
The latest Waco revelations serve to undermine both sides in
the factional struggle in official Washington. The Clinton administration
faces another round of hostile congressional hearings as well
as an outside investigation which may provide further details
of the bloody massacre for which Reno and Clinton himself bear
the main responsibility.
But the issue is also something of a double-edged sword for
the congressional Republicans. House Government Operations Committee
Chairman Dan Burton claimed that Reno lied to his committee. But
it was the FBI which directly perpetrated the massacre, and FBI
officials who wrote the script for Reno's testimony. Further exposure
and investigation of Waco threaten to undermine not only FBI Director
Freeh, but his Republican allies.
Moreover, the exposure of FBI officials as brazen liars, and
the spectacle of federal marshals raiding the J. Edgar Hoover
Building as though it were the headquarters of a criminal conspiracyas
it most assuredly is!have the effect of discrediting the
state, and especially its police agencies, among broad layers
of the population, and increasing public distrust of the whole
big business-controlled political system.
See Also:
Ten years since the
Waco massacre
[25 April 2003]
US Special Counsel
Danforth whitewashes Waco massacre
[25 July 2000]
Six-year cover-up cracks
FBI admits use of incendiary grenades at Waco
[27 August 1999]
The political lessons of the
Waco massacre
Reprinted from The International Workers Bulletin--April 26,
1993
The political lessons of the
Waco massacre
Reprinted from The International Workers Bulletin
April 26, 1993
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