1967-1968 Columbia SDS Vice-Chair Ted Gold |
In his 2016 book, Bad Moon Rising, University of Maryland Professor Arthur Eckstein wrote that the assassination of the leader of Chicago’s Black Panther Party [BPP], Fred Hampton, and BPP member Mark Clark (that was both arranged and carried out by local, state and federal law enforcement agencies) on Dec. 4, 1969 “was shocking and prompted the relatively sober and cautious Ted Gold to opt for total armed struggle (and, eventually, death in the townhouse).” And in footnote 106 on page 281 of his book, Eckstein cited “Toni Hart (Wellman) interview 8/15/14” as his source for what the “Impact on Ted Gold” and Ted’s politics was, of Fred Hampton’s assassination.
The day after Professor Eckstein interviewed her, Toni, who was apparently also once a close woman friend of John “J.J.” Jacobs, (the now-deceased former Columbia SDS member and one of the Weatherman group’s pre-May 1970 leaders), posted on her blog the following text on Aug. 16, 2014:
“The man in the photograph above is James Jesus Angleton, the head of Counterintelligence in the CIA from 1954 until 1974. In 1967, he set up a secret organization inside the CIA called `Operation Chaos.’ Its purpose was to shut down left-wing groups such as the anti-war movement and Students for a Democratic Society (“SDS”). I was in the anti-war movement and SDS at Columbia University. Jim Angleton was my uncle.
“I knew Jim was involved in the operations against us but I did not know the specifics. I do now. Very few people on the left understand Operation Chaos and how brilliant that operation and fellow operations by the FBI and the local police were in the 1960s. We on the left always believed that the intelligence groups were dumb, that they had no idea what we were doing, that they did not influence our activities at all. We were dead wrong. I believe that the CIA, the FBI and the Red Squad (NYPD) were so skilled at their intelligence-gathering they were able to infiltrate key left-wing groups, exacerbate conflicts and shut the student left down, in particular, SDS.
“In this piece, I tell that story. I also tell the story of my uncle, Jim Angleton, because his story is the story of the CIA. And I will add that I was in SDS and the anti-war movement until they became violent. Then, I was gone…
“Jim Angleton was the handsomest man I have ever seen. I met him when I was a kid in Duluth…. Angleton went to work for the CIA when it was founded and, when Allen Dulles became the director in 1953, he appointed Jim head of Counterintelligence…Angleton set up Operation Chaos but he did not run it….OpChaos was set up to spy on, infiltrate and shut down the left…. It was difficult to infiltrate student groups. The operative had to be registered in the school, they had to be part of the radical movement on campus and they had to be believable. However, every group on the left that was not a student group was filled with informants…”
Yet according to a former New York City SDS regional office organizer who met up with Toni sometime before the late March 1968 SDS National Council meeting in Lexington, Kentucky, and worked together with her on writing a position paper related to draft resistance organizing that he presented at that meeting, at that time Toni never mentioned anything about CIA kinships; despite the fact that the SDS chapter at Columbia University had been continually protesting against the Columbia University administration’s policy of allowing the CIA to recruit inside Columbia’s campus buildings since November 1966.
Coincidentally, one reason U.S. government attorneys in October 1973 asked that the 1970 indictments against Weatherman group members be lifted, according to Professor Jeremy Varon’s 2004 Bringing the War Home book, was that “an FBI memo explained that prohibited forms of surveillance by `another government agency’ had been used in preparing the indictments, and that it was therefore `in the best interests of the national security’ not to pursue prosecutions.” The same book also noted that “it appeared that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) or the National Security Agency (responsible for the electronic intercept of foreign communications), or both, had conducted illegal investigations;” and “both agencies, barred from nearly all forms of domestic spying, did not want their operations exposed.” (end of part 3)
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