iran-contra
entry · 1985–1987 · status: archived · 11 convictions, 0 sentences served
summary
Iran-Contra was a parallel covert operation run out of the Reagan-era National Security Council that violated two separate U.S. laws simultaneously: an arms embargo against Iran and the Boland Amendments prohibiting U.S. funding of Nicaraguan Contra rebels. Senior officials sold ~2,000 anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles to Iran (ostensibly to free U.S. hostages held in Lebanon), then diverted the proceeds to fund the Contras. The operation ran 1985–1986 and was exposed in November 1986 after a U.S. supply plane was shot down over Nicaragua and Lebanese newspaper Al-Shiraa published the story.
the architecture
- The arms-for-hostages leg. Israel served as intermediary. Beginning August 1985, U.S. weapons were shipped to Iran via Israeli intermediaries. Reagan signed the finding authorizing the program. Hostages were released — but kidnappers in Lebanon promptly took new ones, defeating the operation's stated purpose.
- The Contra funding leg. Profits from the inflated arms-sale prices were diverted to a Swiss bank account controlled by NSC staffer Lt. Col. Oliver North to purchase weapons for the Contras — funding Congress had explicitly prohibited.
- The Vice Chair of the House investigating committee was Dick Cheney. Cheney drafted the minority report defending the executive branch's authority to conduct such operations. He returned to government in 2001 as Vice President; many of the Iran-Contra principals (Elliott Abrams, John Poindexter, Otto Reich) returned to government with him.
the principals + outcomes
- Lt. Col. Oliver North (NSC) — convicted on three felony counts (1989); convictions vacated on appeal because of immunized congressional testimony.
- Adm. John Poindexter (National Security Advisor) — convicted on five counts; convictions vacated on appeal.
- Robert McFarlane (former NSA) — pled guilty to four misdemeanors. Pardoned by President George H.W. Bush, December 1992.
- Caspar Weinberger (Defense Secretary) — indicted on five felony counts. Pardoned by President George H.W. Bush four days before trial, December 24, 1992.
- Elliott Abrams (Asst. Sec. of State) — pled guilty to two misdemeanors. Pardoned by Bush 1992. Returned to government under George W. Bush (2001) and Trump (2019).
- Total convictions: 11. Total prison time served by Reagan-era principals: 0.
the cover-up + the pardons
Independent Counsel Lawrence Walsh's final report (1993) concluded that President Reagan had likely known about the diversion, that Vice President George H.W. Bush had been "fully informed" of the arms sales (despite his "out of the loop" public statements), and that the December 1992 pardons "completed the Iran-Contra cover-up." Walsh's investigation was discontinued before it could pursue Bush at trial.
why this matters to PRIOR
Iran-Contra is a foundational case study in the receipt-suppression apparatus. Eleven convictions. Zero served sentences. Senior officials of one administration violated two separate federal statutes and the next administration extinguished the legal consequences before they could land. The mechanism — pardon-as-finishing-move — has not retired. It remains available to every subsequent administration when prosecutions accumulate against its allies.
"two illegal programs run from the white house. eleven convictions. zero served sentences."