No room for doubt, time to let the Truth hang out. Most people have heard of Barry Seal and the CIA. Especially after the American-made movie, but fail to grasp the real scope of the real amount of money drugs and South American volunteers that were transported in and out of the country. Brought here to train for a revolutionary war that was to create a new country governed by democracy in South America that would be back by the United States of America as a foothold to keep communism from growing so close to home. Reagan believed in fighting for America's future. The efforts failed and the volunteer army in training was to be flown back to South America like promised except there was a deal made with Pablo Escobar to accept them into the cartel's drug trade. Due to no one caring enough they were flown to many at a time on five transport planes to the cartels housing location and after capacity was reached they were shot and killed as they ran out the open cargo door. The cartel could not move but 15 30 tops on buses and trucks to the nearest cartel housing some 60 miles away up and down steep mountain roads. It took too long to move them effectively and the operation didn't want to spend weeks flying them one plane at a time. So they were killed at the end of the operation and thought they were flying home free not to be enslaved to the cartel and especially not to find out there was no room for them. There were also South American volunteers leftover in America that were gathered in Arkansas and Oklahoma shot then put into cremation pits and burned to leave no trace of their presence in America. They even used land development machinery to turn the dirt up where they walked erasing their footprints. They were erased. Brought here with the promise of our government to train and back their army to take over new land they thought would be their new nation of democracy. The operation became compromised and Reagan was advised to end the efforts. Not to mention bringing enough cocaine and drugs into the country to start an epidemic in the 1980s he told everyone he was fighting against and even the DEA was left out of the loop till it was a problem they were given to clean up. It changed the American way of life in the 1980s into something that would take the 1990s to bring under control. Even today crack cocaine holds a strong dangerous place in society and is not showing signs of losing any ground in suburban and metropolitan areas. The numbers are down compared to the 1980s and 90s thanks in no small part to the tiresome efforts of the DEA.
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