Pubdate: Sun, 25 Oct 1998 Date: 10/25/1998 Source: New York Times (NY) Author: James Lafferty To the Editor: The level of naivete evident in James Adams's review of "Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion," by Gary Webb, and "Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs and the Press," by Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair (Sept. 27), is shocking. Adams faults Webb, on no fewer than three occasions, for failing to secure confirmation of his charges against the C.l.A. from the C.I.A., or other branches of American intelligence. At one point he complains that "it matters little" to Webb and others "that the C.l.A.'s own inspector general said he found no evidence to support allegations of agency involvement in or knowledge of the drug trafficking in the United States." Is Adams really so unaware of the workings of the C.I.A. or the other branches of American intelligence that he thinks they would confirm Webb's charges? Of course the C.l.A. denies any wrongdoing. Of course "it is difficult to find a single source inside any branch of American intelligence that can support the charge of actual C.l.A. involvement in the smuggling." In point of fact, it should matter little to Webb---and to Adams---that the Central Intelligence Agency has denied involvement in the drug trade. One need only look back to the C.I.A.'s role in Cuba or Vietnam or Chile or Afghanistan or dozens of other countries over the years to understand how truth is discovered in such matters. At first, the C.I.A. always denies the sordid charges. Then, after the passage of many years, investigations are reopened in the light of "new evidence." Finally, the truth comes out and is printed on the back pages of the same newspapers that, when the charges were first denied, carried the denials on their front pages. I would suggest that Adams and the rest of the nation stay tuned. JAMES LAFFERTY Los Angeles