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| John Dominis/Getty Images |
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As a young warrior in the jungles of Laos, Vang Pao(1961) led guerrilla
troops. Now 78, the former general is accused in a weapons plot to
overthrow the Communist government there. |
By Jane Futcher
Early last year, at a popular Thai
restaurant in Sacramento just a few blocks from the state capitol, a
trim, 60-year-old retired Army lieutenant colonel named Harrison Jack
met Steve Hoffmaster, a former Navy SEAL, for the first time. A
seemingly pleasant guy in his 40s, Hoffmaster described himself as a
part-time arms dealer, and said he was following up on a call that Jack
had made to a private defense contractor in Arizona about buying
hundreds of AK-47s for a group of insurgents halfway around the world.
Now, as they sat together at the restaurant amid an array of
gold-painted Buddhas, Hoffmaster promised to get Jack everything he
wanted--and more.
That conversation, along with as many as 30 others both in person and
over the phone, serves as a road map to an astonishing and thoroughly
implausible plot to overthrow the Communist government of Laos--a
government toward which the United States is officially neutral,
despite its deplorable record of abuse of the native Hmong. These
fiercely independent people, who still live in the mountain jungles of
Laos and who, historically, have had little to do with the lowland Lao,
are now said to number less than 15,000. They are also said to be the
target of a brutal military campaign that can be traced back to the
1960s, when the Hmong sided with the Americans in a CIA-supported
"secret" war against both the Laotian and North Vietnamese Communists.
One of the most charismatic figures in that war was Gen. Vang Pao, who
for 13 years commanded an army of Hmong irregulars. Today, at age 78,
the former general lives in Orange County, where he is still a revered
figure. "Gen. Vang Pao is George Washington to this community," says
Blong Xiong, a Hmong activist who serves on Fresno's city council.
However, as Jack's remarks to Hoffmaster over the coming months would
suggest, Vang Pao never completely let go of the idea of someday
returning to Laos. In fact, at their first meeting in Sacramento, Jack
told Hoffmaster he worked directly for Vang Pao, who wanted, along with
other Hmong leaders in the immigrant community, to promote free and
democratic elections in their home country.
Hoffmaster asked if the leaders were "willing to use force to try to get it." "Preferably not," was Jack's response.
Eventually, Jack asked Hoffmaster for 125 M-16 rifles, smoke grenades,
ammunition, and two Stinger missiles, all to be delivered to "staging
areas" or "safe houses" in Thailand. But that was just the beginning of
a deal that would grow to $9.8 million and include 24 special-ops
mercenaries to blow up key buildings in Vientiane, the Laotian capital,
and a 5 percent "finder's fee" for Jack.
Then, on June 4, 2007, the negotiations--all surreptitiously
taped--came to an abrupt end when, just before dawn, federal agents
armed with guns and warrants surrounded Jack's home and the homes of
ten Hmong exiles, mostly in central California.
Needless to say, Hoffmaster--not his real name--wasn't the friendly
arms dealer he said he was. Rather, he was a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms (ATF) agent working on a sting operation dubbed "Tarnished
Eagle."
Among those arrested that Monday morning were Jack's 34-year-old
confidante, Lo Cha Thao, an ambitious commercial pilot and political
consultant from Clovis; Youa True Vang, 60, the founder of the Hmong
International New Year's festival in Fresno; Hue Vang, 39, a former
Clovis police officer and director of the United Lao Council for Peace,
Freedom and Reconstruction; and Lo Thao, 53, of Stockton, the president
of United Hmong International, a Fresno-based charity also known as the
Supreme Council of the 18 Hmong clans. For the Hmong community, though,
the most shocking arrest was that of Gen. Vang Pao.
The defendants, held without bail for five and a half weeks, were
charged with conspiracy to violate the U.S. Neutrality Act; conspiracy
to kill, kidnap, maim, and injure people in a foreign country;
conspiracy to receive and possess missile systems designed to destroy
aircraft; and two other weapons-related felonies. In all, the charges
could put them behind bars for the rest of their lives.
"The simple fact of the matter is that the law of the United States,
going back nearly to the founding of the Republic, is that private
citizens cannot lawfully undertake [hostile] actions in foreign
countries," observed McGregor W. Scott, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern
District of California, whose office worked closely with the ATF on the
sting operation. "In other words, foreign policy is the province
exclusively of the federal government. It is not the province of
private citizens. And these folks--of their own volition-developed a
plan, contacted persons who could help them carry out the plan, and
took very real steps in furtherance of that plan, all of which is in
violation of federal law."
As news of the arrests spread, the tens of thousands of Hmong whose
families had come to the United States via refugee camps in Thailand,
mostly under the Refugee Act of 1980, expressed shock and disbelief.
Who could have authorized such a sting? they asked. Was the Bush
administration trying to curry favor and good trade relations with the
government of Laos--human rights be damned? And if the motive wasn't
political, why didn't the Justice Department simply pick up the phone
and call Jack or the general to explain that sending arms to Laos was
against the law? That might have nipped the whole scheme in the bud,
saved hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars, and freed the ATF to
pursue
real terrorists. But, of course, that's not the way sting operations work.
"The arrest of General Vang Pao is unjust because half of his people
died for this country during the Vietnam War," says Pobtusa Thao, a
37-year-old Hmong nurse who lives in Sacramento. "No matter what he
did, they cannot put this guy in jail and lock him up until he dies."
Philip Smith, the director of Lao Veterans of America in Washington,
D.C., whose wife is Hmong, goes further. "I feel very strongly that the
U.S. government should immediately drop the case," he says. "It's a
farce, a horrible farce."
Defending Vang Pao pro bono is John Keker, the San Francisco trial
lawyer who has represented such high-profile clients as investment
banker Frank Quatronne, plaintiffs lawyer Bill Lerach, and former Black
Panther Eldridge Cleaver. A former Marine platoon sergeant himself,
Keker was wounded in Vietnam but knew little about Hmong history and
politics before the general's family sought him out. "I think the whole
case is a result of a deeply foolish undercover agent and a deeply
foolish U.S. Attorney's office that permitted this agent to run wild,"
he says. "If this case ever goes before a jury, they'll jump out of the
jury box and chase the prosecutors down the street for having brought
it."
Even U.S. Attorney Scott says he takes "no joy" in prosecuting this
case. "In my many years as a prosecutor, there's a certain satisfaction
and almost elation when you're able to bring charges against some very
violent or notorious criminals," he confides. "In this case I can't say
that. It's an unfortunate set of circumstances."
By the time of his arrest, Jack, who served two tours of duty in
Vietnam, had launched a number of businesses, some of them more
marginal than others. At one point he sold bottled water at traditional
Hmong festivals and celebrations. He also worked with troubled Hmong
kids and struggling Hmong refugees, consulted with the state on
military base closures, and planned joint military-civilian natural
disaster responses for the National Guard. And he founded HERO--the
Hmong Emergency Relief Organization--a humanitarian group for which he
hoped to raise $200,000 by putting together an air show in Fresno.
According to the indictment, Jack's interest in supplying arms to the
Hmong dates back at least to November 2006--two months before he met
Hoffmaster at the Thai restaurant--when he asked about purchasing 500
AK-47 machine guns. The prosecution also alleges that, after several
conversations with Hoffmaster, Jack and the Hmong exiles began to
consider far-more-powerful weapons, including shoulder-mounted Stinger
missiles for shooting down Laotian helicopters.
During the period leading up to the arrests, though, Hoffmaster spoke
directly with Vang Pao only once. That was during a February 2007
luncheon, which included seven other Hmong leaders. According to the
prosecution's transcripts, the general said only a few words to the
agent during that meeting, and he made no mention of an arms deal or a
coup plot. However, after the lunch, the agent announced that he had a
"surprise" waiting for the group, then led them to his parked
recreational vehicle. Inside, he displayed some of the heavy metal he
had to offer: AK-47 and M-16 machine guns, C-4 explosives, light
antitank rockets, grenade launchers, and Claymore mines.
It was an impressive arsenal, and with the easy financing Hoffmaster
promised--not to mention the mercenary soldiers--the vague outlines of
a plan to take the Laotian capital by storm began to take shape.
Not that there weren't reservations. In fact, at one point Jack asked a
friend to run a background check on Hoffmaster. (The results of that
check weren't disclosed in the transcripts provided by the
prosecution.) Also around then, Lo Cha Thao sought the advice of a
former Wisconsin state senator named Garry George, who had been a
friend to Hmong causes and who, according to the prosecution, was
serving a four-year federal prison sentence for "public
corruptionrelated charges." George told Lo Cha Thao that if the arms
dealer would agree to be paid overseas, he was probably legitimate.
Hoffmaster readily agreed to take payment in Bangkok--as long as Jack
and Lo Cha Thao could quickly provide him with a detailed weapons
order, delivery dates, locations, well-marked maps, and specific orders
for his mercenaries.
The scheme the defendants ultimately came up with--code-named Operation
POPCORN, for "Political Opposition Party's Coup Operations to Rescue
the Nation"--would be surprisingly easy and nearly bloodless, according
to Lo Cha Thao: During the first week of June, with Hmong clan leaders
in Laos ready to strike, Lo Cha Thao and the others would fly to
Bangkok, where the weapons would be distributed. Hoffmaster's
mercenaries would land near Vientiane at dawn to blow up eight key
government buildings, then "melt" into the jungle half an hour later.
As the buildings toppled, the ruling elite would quickly flee the
country, the disgruntled (if not bribed) Lao military would change
allegiance almost instantly, and university students would join the
rebellion as well. In short order, the Communist rulers of the Lao
People's Democratic Republic would be replaced with a democratically
elected government, quite possibly led by Lo Cha Thao himself.
"Lo [Cha Thao] is not a [U.S.] citizen," Jack told the undercover agent
in March, "and neither is General Vang Pao. And the reason is, they
can't go back to Laos being U.S. citizens and expect to run things when
they take it back over." (In fact, Vang Pao is a U.S. citizen, and Lo
Cha Thao has legal resident status.)
"Wow," the undercover agent responded.
Gen. Vang Pao is a stout, bald man with military bearing and a dazzling
smile that can still light up a room, even though he now has health
problems (he suffers from both diabetes and heart disease). In fact,
early in his incarceration at the Sacramento County Jail he had to be
rushed to the UC Davis Medical Center after complaining of chest pains.
Two other defendants also were hospitalized during their
incarcerations--Seng Vue, 68, who suffered a stroke, and Chong Yang
Thao, 54, who was treated for "stroke-like" symptoms.
Ultimately, though, when on July 13, 2007, U.S. Magistrate Dale A.
Drozd ordered Vang Pao and nine other defendants released on bail after
39 days in custody, it had nothing to do with their health. Rather,
Drozd concluded that the defendants weren't as dangerous as the
prosecution had claimed. (Several days later, he released the eleventh
defendant, Lo Cha Thao, as well.) Under the original terms of their
release, all were to be under electronically monitored home detention
and could communicate only with family members, their physicians, and
their lawyers. But the conditions of their bail have since been
loosened substantially, and they are freer to move around.
Last April Vang Pao made a court-approved public appearance at a gala
honoring Hmong veterans who had served in the CIA's secret war in
Southeast Asia. Several hundred Hmong from across the state filled
Fresno's Veterans Memorial Auditorium that day, and nearly half lined
up to kneel at Vang Pao's feet and wind strands of white yarn around
his wrist--a traditional Hmong blessing of good fortune, health, and
prosperity. Several others also received the blessing, including two
American veterans and both of Vang Pao's wives. (He is legally married
to only one, of course, but in parts of Southeast Asia polygamy is
still a common practice.)
Addressing the attentive crowd through a translator, the general seemed
genuinely touched. "I want to take the time to thank each of you for
the love you have bestowed on me and my family during this time of
crisis," he said. "I will remember that as long as I live life in the
world."
Vang Pao began his storied military career as a teenager, carrying
messages during World War II for the Free French resistance in
Indochina. Later, he trained as an officer for the Royal Lao Army to
fight alongside the French against Hanoi's Viet Minh invasion of his
country. He rose quickly through the ranks, and by the early 1960s,
with American troops starting to pour into the region, he had achieved
enough prominence to become the CIA's point man in Laos. A brilliant
tactician and military strategist, he and his soldiers--some as young
as ten years old--kept the Communists at bay until U.S. forces pulled
out of Laos in June 1973.
One year later, with the Communists closing in, more than 10,000 Hmong
flocked to Vang Pao's key air base at Long Chien, desperate to board
planes that would take them to safety. But there was no evacuation
plan. After the government fell, the Communists promised to abide by a
1973 cease-fire agreement forbidding "acts of revenge and
discrimination" against those who had cooperated with the Americans.
But it wasn't long before the Communists openly declared their intent
to wipe out the Hmong. To escape, thousands of Hmong risked the
dangerous climb over rugged mountains surrounding the Plain of Jarres
region to reach refugee camps across the Mekong River in Thailand (see
"A Grim Picture Gets Grimmer," right). In all, 40 percent of Vang Pao's
40,000-man army was killed, and no doubt many more died trying to
escape.
The story for Vang Pao himself, however, was quite different: Because
of his relationship with the CIA, he was whisked away on a special
flight out of Laos. He had already sent two of his wives and their
children to Thailand; the rest of his family would come later. After
spending a number of harsh, cold winters in Montana, he eventually
ended up in Orange County.
Once in the states, Vang Pao helped create a chain of Lao Family
Community centers to assist the thousands of Hmong refugees who flocked
to America. He also used his influence to mediate clan disputes and to
pressure both the federal and local governments to provide more
services to his people. Most of the refugees were penniless when they
arrived in the United States, spoke no English, and were traumatized by
years of war. Meanwhile, at traditional Hmong festivals and
celebrations, Vang Pao continued to express hope for a return to a
democratic Laos someday. According to news accounts, he even tried to
raise money by offering for sale prospective commissions and political
appointments to the democratically elected government he envisioned.
But Vang Pao seemed to have a major change of heart in 2003, when he
offered to establish economic ties with the Laotian government--at
least implicitly recognizing its rule. The decision set off intense
debate within the Hmong community in America--and it may have led to
the torching of the Minnesota home of one of the general's sons.
Did Vang Pao have another change of heart in 2007, when, as the prosecution alleges, he endorsed Operation POPCORN?
No way, says Keker, his lawyer, who maintains that his client never was
part of any conspiracy to retake Laos. "The general was absolutely
appalled at what Lo Cha [Thao] was even talking about" in early 2007,
Keker says, adding that, "I think Harrison Jack was a seriously deluded
man. The stuff about how they're going to walk into Laos without firing
[a shot] was just ridiculous. It was bar talk. But what's offensive
about it was they arrested a bunch of people who weren't even in the
bar. [Vang Pao and others] didn't have anything to do with [the plot],
and disapproved of it, and thought it was nuts and thought the guys
were nuts. And they were nuts."
While most of the attention naturally has focused on Vang Pao, in the
prosecution's taped conversations it was Lo Cha Thao and Harrison Jack
who did most of the talking.
"Lo Cha does not speak for the general," insists Jane Hamilton-Merritt,
an Asian scholar and former war correspondent who has written a
definitive history of the relationship between the Hmong and the United
States entitled Tragic Mountains
(Indiana University Press, 1993). "[Lo Cha's] never been a soldier,"
she points out. "He's not an officer who fought with the general or
worked with him on past projects."
So what was Lo Cha Thao's role in the alleged arms deal? According to
Lo Cha Thao's own lawyer, Mark Reichel, he's "a hustler and a half,"
though hardly a terrorist.
In fact, to explain Lo Cha Thao's conversations with Hoffmaster,
Reichel suggests that his client thought that the Bush administration
actually wanted his help in overthrowing the Laotian government. And to
underscore the point, Reichel hearkens back to the secret war in Laos,
when Americans gave the Hmong military support that couldn't be
officially acknowledged because it violated the 1962 Geneva Accords,
which affirmed Laos's status as a neutral state. Says Reichel, "The
Hmong know the CIA is capable of black operations all over the world,
in Iran, in Iraq, in Afghanistan. ... Now this guy [Hoffmaster] comes
in and says, 'my agency,' and allows them to refer to him as the Navy
SEAL, and as the military guy. Why would he have pitched that persona
to these people? Because he knew they'd buy it. And he knew he could
expand it. And if you can expand it and make a terrorism case out of
this [for the government], that's victory."
It's unlikely the defendants will be tried before 2010. But if and when
they are brought to trial, the defense will portray the government's
sting operation as designed to ensnare a group of law-abiding refugees.
Keker emphasized this at a bail hearing last year in the U.S. District
Court in Sacramento. "The coup plan was a fantasy," he told Magistrate
Drozd. "They had no weapons, no money. It's like us sitting around
planning an attack in Darfur or something."
But as prosecutor Scott points out, a conspiracy doesn't have to be a
good or smart plan to be a crime: "The legal obligation we have is to
show that there was an agreement between two or more people to launch a
military or naval expedition in a foreign country or to kill, maim or
injure people, or damage property in a foreign country."
Prosecutors also dismiss out of hand any suggestion that the defendants
were illegally entrapped. As Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert M. Twiss
observed, "There's no way a [former] lieutenant colonel in the United
States Army could possibly think that he could buy a single AK-47, let
alone 150 or 200 or 500 AK-47s, from anybody. ... There can't be a
scintilla of possibility that Harrison Jack thought he was engaging in
legitimate activity at this point in time."
No matter how the case ends, the Hmong community will, no doubt,
continue to wonder what the government was thinking when it authorized
Operation Tarnished Eagle. But from a broader perspective, perhaps the
most important question suggested by this case is whether operations
such as Tarnished Eagle send the right signal to our allies abroad,
especially in a time of war.
Philip Smith of the Lao Veterans of America thinks not.
"How can they
trust the CIA or the National Security Council to be sincere if this is
how America treats the Hmong and is treating General Vang Pao?" He
adds, "It has the stench of betrayal that hangs over the Bush
administration, that hangs over the CIA. Is this how America treats its
friends?"
Jane Futcher is a freelance writer based in Mendocino County.
A Grim Picture Gets Grimmer
By Jane Futcher
When the leaders of Hmong advocacy groups in the United States speak of
the military campaign being waged by the Communist government in Laos
against their countrymen, they describe it as nothing short of genocide.
Philip Smith, for one, who heads a group in Washington, D.C., called
Lao Veterans of America, maintains that Lao government forces have
killed some 10,000 ethnic Hmong over the past 14 months. "I think the
best way to characterize it is the Lao government is seeking the final
solution to the Hmong," he says. "They wish to exterminate all those
Hmong who have sought to live independently from the government."
Vaughn Vang, who is director of the Lao Human Rights Council in
Wisconsin, offers a similar assessment. "Currently, there is an all-out
ethnic cleansing war that has been launched by the Lao military to wipe
out the remaining 9,000 to 15,000 unarmed Hmong civilians hiding in the
mountain jungles of Laos," he declared in late January during a
congressional forum in Washington, D.C.
Judging from the eyewitness reports that have trickled out of the
country over the past few months, the embattled Hmong clearly are
suffering. Moreover, there is widespread suspicion that the Laotian
government interpreted the arrest of its old enemy, Gen. Vang Pao, and
other Hmong exiles in California last year as a green light to step up
their attacks against the Hmong, who decades ago threatened to take
over the country.
But both human rights groups and journalists have been banned from the
region, and with so little information to go on it is difficult to
estimate the true scale of the violence. T. Kumar, the director of
advocacy for Asia at Amnesty International, calls the situation "dire"
and notes that the Lao government appears to be trying to starve out
the Hmong. "The situation is bad, there's no doubt about that," he
says. But the actual number of casualties, he adds, "is very difficult
to confirm." So far, at least, his organization has refrained from
using the word genocide.
Meanwhile, across the Mekong River in Thailand, where several thousand
Hmong exiles are living in refugee camps, there is growing concern over
the Thai government's efforts to forcibly send the exiles back to Laos,
where presumably they would be in serious danger. In May, eight U.S.
senators, including Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer of California,
sent a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urging her to
exert U.S. influence on the Thai government to halt such repatriations.
And on June 12 four members of the House of Representatives introduced
a resolution appealing directly to the Thai government to let the
refugees stay. Less than two weeks later, however, a Thai official
announced that the government had sent 800 Hmong back anyway, insisting
that these particular refugees "wanted to go home."