Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy,talk.politics.guns From: [l v c] at [cbgbcs.cb.att.com] (Larry Cipriani) Subject: Re: (SM) Nazi Propaganda and Gun Control (fwd) Date: Tue, 3 Jan 1995 04:50:13 GMT CIA-NCBH Connection? By NEAL KNOX Washington, D.C. (Dec. 19) -- The curious connection between President Nixon's CIA and the two leading anti-gun organizations, reported in my new "Guns & Ammo" column, has caused an uneasy stir among the CIA-hating hard left. Particularly in the Nixon years, the left was convinced that the CIA was trying to take over the country. In October 1973, when President Nixon ordered the "Watergate" special prosecutor fired, an almost hysterical acquaintance told me Nixon was ready to mobilize the CIA and Army and declare himself dictator. Even if the President had such notions, and I never thought he did, American citizens would not have tolerated an overthrow of the Constitution, and were adequately armed to make such a coup impossible -- which is exactly what the framers of the Bill of Rights had in mind when they guaranteed the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms. But just for the sake of discussion, if someone within the White House or the CIA had given serious thought to a "bloodless coup," and been thwarted by the existence of an armed populace, would they perhaps have tried to do something about removing that roadblock? However we might speculate upon that question, the fact is that during the next few months both of the leading anti-gun organizations were formed -- and a principle player in the formation of both was one Edwin O. Welles, who had just "retired" from the CIA. As noted in Handgun Control Inc. Chairman Nelson Shields' book, ex-CIA agent Welles was the first chairman of the National Council to Control Handguns (later renamed HCI). Further, according to Rev. Jack Corbett, who founded the National Coalition to Ban Handguns under the auspices of the United Methodist Church, Welles was a "guiding light" to NCBH -- an ostensibly competing organization. During 1974 (the year both groups were formed) I had several telephone conversations/debates with Dr. Corbett. Once when he was stymied by my recitation of facts that refuted his anti-gun arguments, Corbett handed the phone to Welles -- to my utter astonishment. What particularly puzzled me about that conversation is that ex-CIA Agent Welles didn't seem the sort of zealot that would help form not one but two anti-gun organizations. Years later I learned, through a mutual acquaintance, that at the time he started HCI and helped form NCBH he owned two handguns (which he supposedly buried in his back yard) and a Sharps-Borchardt rifle. What brought this puzzle to mind was a fundraiser for NCBH hosted at his Georgetown home last September by the man President Nixon appointed as CIA Director, William Colby. The "Liberals" love the NCBH about as much as they hate the CIA, so the linkage of the two caused some puzzlement around Washington. Colby told a "Washington Post" gossip columnist that he had been "quietly working with NCBH for the past several years," and that he had "learned of the dangers of handguns during his years at the CIA" -- from September 4, 1973 to January 30, 1976. ----- -- Larry Cipriani, [l v cipriani] at [att.com] The steady state of disks is full. -- Ken Thompson