A LETTER TO THE EDITOR
So Agca was gone, heading out on the
long road to Rome via most countries in Europe. Before he absconded,
he left one clue to his future wanderings. He sent a letter to
Milliyet, Ipekci’s old paper, warning that he planned
another assassination.
This time he said he would kill Pope
John Paul II, who was scheduled to visit Turkey within the week. His
purpose was to meet and reconcile with , the Patriarch of the Greek
Orthodox Church at his headquarters in Istanbul. Ankara and Ephesus
were also on the pontiff’s itinerary.
The major works of nonfiction (which in
this case are largely works of fiction) that deal with the attempted
assassination of John Paul II glide over this point very gingerly.
They don’t like to make too much of the fact that Agca had fixated
on the pope long before he reached Bulgaria through the impenetrable
curtain of communism.
John Paul II |
If these conspiracy theorists had to
face reality, then their theories of Bulgarian-Russian involvement
suffered a body blow. Almost fatal, but not quite. If Agca wanted
with all his heart to kill John Paul II before he had a single
sit-down with the KGB, then all their carefully gathered sheaves of
propaganda tended to fall loose in their hands.
Not that it bothered them. They were
simply in a hurry to put the truth behind them before moving on to
more interesting, and grand, theories of state-sponsored terrorism.
And the state most responsible, of course, was our archenemy, the
Soviet Union.
The two main disseminators of the
commies-did-it theory were Claire Sterling and Paul Henze. Both were
hired by Reader's Digest to write about the assassination, and
both turned their articles into book-length books that could turned
into film in an assassin’s minute.
They hit the talk shows like a tag-team
who could bail each other out whenever the bullshit rose to dangerous
levels around their ears. Their warped versions of the truth were
disseminated by so many public means, and so many hidden means
including the vast informal network of ex-intelligence officers, that
no other versions were ever considered by the mainstream media. Henze
and Sterling were so close that Sterling’s Reader's Digest article
in 1982 was called “The Plot to Kill the Pope.” Henze, without
blinking, called his 1983 study in deep background on the
assassination The Plot to Kill the Pope.
Those two were sympatico in every way.
Sterling had been plugged into the world of terror networks by the
CIA and other Western intelligence agencies like a 110-watt bulb into
a 220-volt socket. Henze was a virtual polymath of terror, having
been the CIA station chief in Ankara when some of the worst
depredations of the seventies were taking place. Henze had known
Ipekci and even visited him a couple of weeks before his death. Who
was better qualified to speak of the subject of Turkey and terrorism
than the man who knew them first hand?
Paul (The Man) Henze |
And who was more to be believed than
the man who had made anti-communist propaganda his life’s work?
We might want to rephrase that. A
better question should be: What hand did Henze have in furthering
right-wing terror networks in Turkey? There’s a lot of suggestive
evidence that he might have been in it up to his curly beard.
But the best question for the
contemporary audience should undoubtedly be this: Were Paul and
Claire sleeping together?
We’ll let that one go for the next
time.
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