Gust Avrakotos

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Gust Avrakotos
Carnegie Institute of Technology
  • University of Pittsburgh
  • Occupation(s)Case officer, Task Force Chief
    EmployerCentral Intelligence Agency
    Known forOperation Cyclone
    AwardsIntelligence Medal of Merit (1988)

    Gust Lascaris Avrakotos (January 14, 1938 – December 1, 2005) was an American case officer and the Afghan Task Force Chief for the Central Intelligence Agency.

    Avrakotos joined the CIA in August 1962 and was posted to Greece in 1963. Following the

    Afghan mujahideen in their war against the Soviets. He acquired arms and ammunition from numerous sources, and worked with Texas representative Charlie Wilson to build a coalition of international supporters to fund, arm and train the mujahideen.[1]

    He left the CIA in 1989 after he had been moved to the CIA's Africa Division, a position of relative obscurity within the organization, after writing a memo opposing the CIA's involvement in the

    contractor
    between 1997 and 2003.

    Avrakotos was little known to the public until 2003 when journalist George Crile published Charlie Wilson's War: The Extraordinary Story of the Largest Covert Operation in History, a history of US involvement in the Soviet–Afghan War.[1] The book was the basis of the film Charlie Wilson's War, released in 2007, in which Avrakotos is portrayed by Philip Seymour Hoffman.

    Early life

    Gust Avrakotos was born on January 14, 1938, in

    Jones and Laughlin Steel mill in Aliquippa to earn money for his studies, but left CIT after two years because of a strain on family finances.[2][4][a]

    After working selling beer and cigarettes to bars frequented by immigrants from

    summa cum laude.[2][4][b] He was interviewed for a position at IBM when one of his professors, Richard Cottam – who had also worked at the CIA – suggested he should meet with an interviewer from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Although the salary was only a third he could have earned at IBM, Avrakotos joined the CIA on August 1, 1962.[7]

    Working at the CIA

    Avrakotos initially felt like an outsider at the CIA, which was heavily reliant on White Anglo-Saxon Protestants from Ivy League universities, and the working class Avrakotos was among the first White ethnic agents. He later said: "Almost everyone was a fucking blue blood in the CIA in 1961 when I came in. They were just beginning to let Jews move up that year. But there still weren't any blacks, Hispanics, or females—just some token Greeks and Polacks."[8] Although he developed friendships with some of the officers in the organization, "he came to loathe a certain type of blue blood with a rage that bordered on class hatred", according to journalist George Crile.[9] Throughout his time with the CIA, his blunt approach and use of obscenities in day-to-day speech irritated many of his superiors.[2]

    Posting to Greece

    Richard Welch, the chief of the CIA station in Athens, who was assassinated in December 1975

    After extensive training for field work, Avrakotos was posted to Greece in 1963. He spent time building relationships in Greek society, including within the military.

    1967 Greek coup d'état and the establishment of a far-right military junta, Avrakotos became the main liaison point for the CIA and the regime.[4]
    He had built strong links with the members of the junta; Crile wrote that the colonels:

    had all started off life as peasants before joining the army, and they felt a kinship with this charismatic, working-class American whose parents had come from Lemnos. They could speak Greek with him. He drank and whored with them, and they knew from the heart that he shared their ferocious anti-Communism.[11]

    Avrakotos lunched with the colonels regularly and socialized with them in the evenings and at weekends. He also provided both officially sanctioned advice, and more practical suggestions that had no official backing: when

    prime minister of Greece, was incarcerated, Avrakotos gave them the official message that Papandreou should be allowed to leave the country for the US, and also unofficially advised them to "shoot the motherfucker because he's going to come back to haunt you".[11][12]

    In December 1975, the CIA chief of station in Athens – and Avrakotos's superior –

    far-left press. With the publicity, his life also came under threat. Several of his friends from the regime of the Colonels were assassinated and Avrakotos had to increase the use of his fieldcraft to ensure he avoided being targeted.[2][14] He ended his tenure in Greece in 1978.[4]

    Return to the US

    On his return to the US, Avrakotos was posted to Boston where he was to recruit visiting foreign businessmen – something he excelled at, according to Crile. Two of the Iranian businessmen he recruited provided real-time information to the CIA on security changes at the Embassy of the United States, Tehran during Operation Eagle Claw.[15]

    With the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979, Avrakotos saw an opportunity for the war to become the Soviet version of America's Vietnam War. He had his assistant, John Terjelian, write a report outlining the possibility of such an outcome. After three years working in Boston, he was relocated to the agency's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, from where he was sent on various assignments. Some members of staff gave him the nickname Dr. Dirty because the missions he would undertake were sensitive and difficult. He was concerned that he had been typecast in the position of an officer who undertakes such dirty work, and was delighted to be assigned as station chief in Helsinki, Finland. He undertook a Finnish-language course in preparation for his role, but before he could be posted, a change in the CIA hierarchy led to the posting being canceled because Avrakotos was considered too unpolished.[16]

    In September 1981, he was told of this decision by William Graver, the head of the European Division. Avrakotos told his superior to go and fuck himself, and walked out of the meeting. When later summoned to Graver's office to apologize, Avrakotos repeated the insult and again walked out.[17] To avoid dismissal or censure, Avrakotos had a friend in the Latin American division find a job for him, still working at Langley, then avoided all areas of the building where he was likely to meet any of the superiors who would have started disciplinary proceedings.[18]

    Work with the South Asia Operations Group

    Charlie Wilson meeting with a member of the mujahideen while visiting Afghanistan

    The position in the Latin American division was only temporary and in late 1982, Avrakotos soon found a position with the agency's

    First World War-era Lee–Enfield rifles.[20] He was sent to the United Kingdom to procure the ammunition, and also assisted in Britain's covert operations to the mujahideen, providing MI6 with the money and equipment they needed.[21]

    He traveled to Egypt to obtain bicycles and wheelbarrows that were rigged as bombs and purchased sniper rifles; although it was illegal for him, as a member of the CIA, to sell these to foreigners, he reclassified them as "individual defensive devices ... long-range, night-vision devices with scopes".[4] He also advised US Special Forces instructors training the mujahideen to use irregular warfare methods against the Soviets, telling the trainers: "Teach the mujahideen how to kill: pipe bombs, car bombs. But don't ever tell me how you’re doing it in writing. Just do it."[22]

    In 1983, Congressional funding to the CIA for use in Afghanistan was $15 million.[23] That year, Texas representative Charlie Wilson persuaded the Appropriations Committee[1] to provide an additional $40 million for CIA activity in the country; $17 million was specifically earmarked for anti-helicopter weapons. In early 1984, Avrakotos met with Wilson and—against CIA regulations—asked for an additional $50 million to aid the mujahideen. Wilson ensured the money was made available.[24][c]

    Michael G. Vickers in 2008

    In around 1984, Avrakotos appointed Michael G. Vickers from the CIA's paramilitary group to Operation Cyclone to revamp the strategy for the mujahideen.[26] Vickers urged them to drop the Lee-Enfield in favor of a mix of weapons like the AK-47 and 14.5mm heavy machine guns, and to introduce new tactics, training, and logistics.[27] Funding for Operation Cyclone rose year-on-year and by 1985, $250 million was provided to the CIA. This amount was half their operational budget.[24][d] That year the operation received a big boost, after a $300 million Navy program was canceled and the funds were transferred to the CIA operation.[28][e]

    Since the late 1970s, the CIA had been sending the weapons for the mujahideen through the Pakistan

    Inter Services Intelligence.[29] During the 1980s, Avrakotos aided Wilson in persuading officials from Egypt, Israel and Saudi Arabia to increase support and funding for the operation; the Saudis pledged to secretly match all CIA spending toward the mujahideen. Nations including the UK, Egypt, China and Israel provided weapons to fight the Soviets.[30][24] Crile observes the international situation was unique: Pakistan provided training facilities, arms and advisors; Saudi Arabia and the US provided hundreds of millions of dollars, the UK, Egypt, China and Israel provided weapons; support of differing types came from numerous Muslim countries and the intelligence services of the UK, France, Canada, Germany, Singapore and others gave support.[31]

    In 1986, Avrakotos was concerned about a plan by Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North, a staff member of the National Security Council to trade arms in exchange for hostages – the Iran–Contra affair.[32][f] Avrakotos considered North part of a "lunatic fringe" following a reckless agenda that would go wrong for the CIA. He wrote a memo to the CIA management, outlining his concerns about North's activities and questioning the legality and morality of the organization's actions, but as Iran-Contra had presidential support, his intervention was deemed unwelcome, and Avrakotos was moved to the CIA's Africa Division.[4][35][36]

    Africa Division

    Avrakotos was on the verge of marrying a fellow member of the CIA; his son from his first marriage was also a member of the CIA. Avrakotos realized that if he made a fuss about his sideways move, both of them could suffer professionally.[37] He remained at the Africa desk—a position of relative obscurity within the organization—until 1989, when he left the CIA.[4][38]

    After the CIA

    Avrakotos worked for

    contractor.[4]

    Avrakotos died of a stroke on December 1, 2005, at the Inova Fairfax Hospital, Northern Virginia.[39] His funeral was held at St. Katherine's Greek Orthodox Church, Falls Church, Virginia.[40]

    Personal life; honors; in the media

    Avrakotos was married twice. His first marriage ended in divorce before 1978. His second marriage, to Claudette – who also worked in the CIA – lasted 19 years, from 1986 until his death. Avrakotos and his first wife had a son, Gregory.[2][4][37]

    In 1988, Avrakotos was awarded the Intelligence Medal of Merit,[4] and, in 2015, a bill was introduced into Congress to award him the Congressional Gold Medal.[41]

    Many of those who knew Avrakotos in a non-professional capacity did not know of his work at the CIA, particularly in regard to Afghanistan. That changed in 2003 when Criles published Charlie Wilson's War: The Extraordinary Story of the Largest Covert Operation in History, his history of Operation Cyclone, which brought him into the public eye.[1] The actor and producer Tom Hanks bought the rights to the book, which was the basis of the film Charlie Wilson's War, released in 2007, in which Avrakotos is portrayed by Philip Seymour Hoffman.[4][42]

    Notes and references

    Notes

    1. ^ Both the Coca-Cola Company and PepsiCo had cut prices of their products in the area and Oscar was forced to close his business; Gust began working to pay off residual debts from the business.[5]
    2. ^ His degree was either in economics[2] or mathematics.[6]
    3. ^ $50 million in 1983 equates to approximately $146,909,455 in 2024, according to calculations based on United States Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[25]
    4. ^ $250 million in 1985 equates to approximately $680,228,960 in 2024, according to calculations based on United States Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[25]
    5. ^ $300 million in 1985 equates to approximately $816,274,752 in 2024, according to calculations based on United States Consumer Price Index measure of inflation.[25]
    6. US Congress. The arms shipments were part of a process to free US hostages being held by the Hezbollah, a paramilitary group with ties to the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Israel was to ship weapons to Iran, for the US to resupply them, and for Israel to pay the US.[33][34]

    References

    1. ^ a b c d Spong, John (June 2004). "The Rehabilitation of Charlie Wilson". Texas Monthly. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
    2. ^ a b c d e f g h Tady 2007.
    3. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 44, 46.
    4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Sullivan 2005, p. C08.
    5. ^ a b Crile 2003, p. 47.
    6. ^ Crile 2003, p. 48.
    7. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 48–49.
    8. ^ Crile 2003, p. 41.
    9. ^ Crile 2003, p. 42.
    10. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 51–52.
    11. ^ a b Crile 2003, p. 52.
    12. ^ "Coups Inside NATO: A Disturbing History", Yerepouni Daily News.
    13. ^ Adams 2014, p. 56.
    14. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 53–54.
    15. ^ Crile 2003, p. 57.
    16. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 59–60.
    17. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 60–63.
    18. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 93–94.
    19. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 154, 157.
    20. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 158–159.
    21. ^ Crile 2003, p. 200.
    22. ^ Davis 2007, p. 93.
    23. ^ Crile 2003, p. 165.
    24. ^ a b c Ewans 2005, p. 114.
    25. ^ a b c Clark 2020.
    26. ^ Crile 2003, p. 285.
    27. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 299–300.
    28. ^ Labbe 2008, p. D.1.
    29. ^ Krishnan 2018, p. 60.
    30. ^ Johnson 2008, pp. 115–116.
    31. ^ Crile 2003, p. 408.
    32. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 391–392.
    33. ^ "The Iran-Contra Affair 20 Years On". National Security Archive.
    34. ^ "Reagan's Mixed White House Legacy". BBC.
    35. ^ Crile 2003, pp. 443–444.
    36. ^ Prados 2007, pp. 486–487.
    37. ^ a b Crile 2003, p. 447.
    38. ^ Crile 2003, p. 454.
    39. ^ "Gust Avrakotos", The State.
    40. ^ "Gust Avrakotos", Florida Today.
    41. ^ "Congressional Bills 114th Congress; H. R. 438". US Government Publishing Office.
    42. ^ "Charlie Wilson's War (2007)". AFI Catalog.

    Sources

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