Omslagafbeelding van de show Unresolved

Unresolved

Podcast door IScann Group

Engels

Geschiedenis & Religie

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Over Unresolved

Unresolved, a Signal & Fracture investigation series by IScann Group, explores the gaps between the official narrative of government scandals and the open-source documentation that accompanies them. Season 1 features the Iran-Contra Affair. The National Security Archive (nsarchive.gwu.edu) maintains the most comprehensive publicly accessible Iran-Contra document collection, including ongoing releases from FOIA litigation. Walsh's Final Report — the most important and least-read document in the Iran-Contra record — is available in full through their collection.

Alle afleveringen

16 afleveringen

aflevering The Iran-Contra Affair: Episode 15 - What's Still in the Dark artwork

The Iran-Contra Affair: Episode 15 - What's Still in the Dark

Significant portions of the Iran-Contra documentary record remain classified, redacted, or under seal. In 2017, documents that had already been released were reclassified. Walsh's investigative files remain sealed at the National Archives. The NSA's intercepts from the period have never been part of the public record. This finale examines the full shape of what's missing: the immunity trap that foreclosed the most important prosecutions, the structural origins of the three major investigations and what those origins determined about what each could find, the careers that continued in the absence of legal consequences, and the operational precedents that predated Iran-Contra and outlasted it. The prevailing account treats Iran-Contra as a chapter that closed. This episode examines the evidence that it didn't. Sources: * Walsh, Final Report (1993) — the essential document for the series; full text at the National Security Archive * National Security Archive, Iran-Contra collection and ongoing FOIA litigation updates at nsarchive.gwu.edu * Alfred McCoy, The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in the Global Drug Trade (1991 expanded edition) * United States v. Oliver North, 910 F.2d 843 (D.C. Cir. 1990) — court decision vacating North's conviction * United States v. John Poindexter, 951 F.2d 369 (D.C. Cir. 1991) — court decision vacating Poindexter's conviction * Ethics in Government Act of 1978, 28 U.S.C. §§ 591–599 — the statutory basis for Walsh's appointment; lapsed 1999 * Harold Koh, The National Security Constitution (1990) * Joseph Trento, Prelude to Terror (2005) — Safari Club and institutional continuity Opening clip: Former ABC News correspondent John Martin and Wilson Center NOW host John Milewski, 2016

20 mrt 2026 - 31 min
aflevering The Iran-Contra Affair: Episode 14 - The Longer Shadow artwork

The Iran-Contra Affair: Episode 14 - The Longer Shadow

A persistent allegation has shadowed the Iran-Contra affair since it broke: that representatives of Ronald Reagan's 1980 presidential campaign secretly negotiated with Iranian officials to delay the release of the fifty-two American hostages until after the election — denying Jimmy Carter the breakthrough his administration had spent months working to achieve. A House task force investigated in 1992 and found no credible evidence. But the task force operated under significant structural constraints, and in 2023 the FBI declassified a document referencing a contemporaneous informant's account of a 1980 Paris meeting that changed the evidentiary picture in ways the mainstream account has not fully examined. This episode applies the same credibility framework the series has built across fourteen episodes to its most contested question — and is honest about where the evidence runs out. Sources: * House Task Force on the October Surprise Allegations, Joint Report (1993) — available via the National Security Archive * Gary Sick, October Surprise: America's Hostages in Iran and the Election of Ronald Reagan (1991) — the most rigorous case for the allegation * Algiers Accords (January 19, 1981) — primary source; available via the Avalon Project at Yale Law School * FBI declassified document (2023) — contemporaneous informant report; available via reporting linked in show notes * Walsh, Final Report (1993) — relevant Casey sections; National Security Archive Opening clip: Rep. Lee H. Hamilton, 1992

19 mrt 2026 - 30 min
aflevering The Iran-Contra Affair: Episode 13 - The Vice President's Diary artwork

The Iran-Contra Affair: Episode 13 - The Vice President's Diary

George H.W. Bush maintained throughout the Iran-Contra period that he was "out of the loop." On Christmas Eve 1992, six weeks after losing the presidential election, he pardoned six Iran-Contra figures — including Caspar Weinberger, whose trial was weeks away and whose diaries contained entries about what senior officials had said and known. Two weeks after the pardons, investigators learned that Bush had been keeping a personal audio diary throughout the scandal period, which had not been disclosed to investigators for six years. This episode examines the meetings record, the diary, the Weinberger connection, and what the independent counsel — a Republican appointed by Republican judges, with no political interest in overstating — said publicly about what the pardons accomplished. Sources: * Walsh, Final Report (1993) — Bush knowledge findings and pardon analysis; National Security Archive * Walsh public statement, December 24–25, 1992 — available via the National Security Archive * George H.W. Bush diary (released portions) — discussed in Walsh's report; National Security Archive * Weinberger diaries (relevant excerpts entered into the record) — National Security Archive * Bush pardon proclamations (December 24, 1992) — available via the National Archives at archives.gov * Harold Koh, The National Security Constitution (1990) Opening clip: Dan Rather, CBS News and Vice President George H.W. Bush

18 mrt 2026 - 30 min
aflevering The Iran-Contra Affair: Episode 12 - The Sultan's Money artwork

The Iran-Contra Affair: Episode 12 - The Sultan's Money

When Congress cut off Contra funding, the administration didn't stop the operation. It found other sources — and the mechanism it used to extract those sources raises a constitutional question that the official Iran-Contra account has consistently underweighted. This episode examines the third-country solicitation network: the Saudi contributions, the Brunei transfer that went to the wrong Swiss account due to a transposed digit, and the Taiwan channel that ran through intelligence relationships and left the thinnest documentary trail. It examines what Lawrence Walsh identified as the most serious constitutional violation in the entire affair — more serious, in his assessment, than the arms sales — and the historical precedent that makes the network something other than an improvisation under pressure. Sources: * Walsh, Final Report (1993) — third-country solicitation chapters; National Security Archive * Report of the Congressional Committees (1987) — Brunei solicitation and Abrams testimony sections; National Security Archive * National Security Archive, Saudi channel document collection at nsarchive.gwu.edu * Harold Koh, The National Security Constitution (1990) — the most serious treatment of the constitutional dimensions of Iran-Contra * Joseph Trento, Prelude to Terror (2005) — Safari Club and Casey's institutional background * National Security Archive, Angola/Clark Amendment documentation at nsarchive.gwu.edu Opening clip: Attorney General Edwin Meese, 1986

17 mrt 2026 - 26 min
aflevering The Iran-Contra Affair: Episode 11 - The Propaganda Machine artwork

The Iran-Contra Affair: Episode 11 - The Propaganda Machine

While the Contra supply operation was running, the Reagan administration operated a domestic communications effort — the Office of Public Diplomacy, housed in the State Department and run with NSC coordination — that the Comptroller General of the United States subsequently found had conducted prohibited covert propaganda activities targeting American journalists, members of Congress, and the public. This episode examines what S/LPD actually did, what the Comptroller General's finding established as a matter of law, and the dual function the operation served: sustaining public and congressional support for the Contra program while it was running, and pre-positioning the public to receive the scandal when it broke. The domestic propaganda dimension of Iran-Contra is one of its most constitutionally significant features and one of its least examined. Sources: * U.S. Comptroller General, Prohibited Covert Propaganda Activities (1987) — the primary legal finding; available via the National Security Archive * Report of the Congressional Committees (1987) — S/LPD findings; National Security Archive * National Security Archive, S/LPD document collection at nsarchive.gwu.edu Opening clip: KXAS-TV, 1986

16 mrt 2026 - 29 min
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