Gust Avrakotos

Officer

Birthday January 14, 1938

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2005-12-1, Inova Fairfax Hospital, Fairfax, Virginia, U.S. (67 years old)

Nationality United States

#49176 Most Popular

1938

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.

Gust Avrakotos was born on January 14, 1938, in Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, the son of Oscar, a Greek American soft drink manufacturer from the island of Lemnos, and his wife Zafira.

The couple also had a daughter.

1955

Gust graduated valedictorian from Aliquippa High School in 1955 and attended college at the Carnegie Institute of Technology (CIT); he briefly worked at 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.

1959

After working selling beer and cigarettes to bars frequented by immigrants from eastern and central Europe, Avrakotos had finished paying off the family debts by 1959.

He returned to college at the University of Pittsburgh, and graduated summa cum laude.

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).

1961

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."

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.

Throughout his time with the CIA, his blunt approach and use of obscenities in day-to-day speech irritated many of his superiors.

1962

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

Although the salary was only a third he could have earned at IBM, Avrakotos joined the CIA on August 1, 1962.

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.

1963

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

Following the 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.

Following the 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.

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."

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 Andreas Papandreou, the former 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".

1975

In December 1975, the CIA chief of station in Athens – and Avrakotos's superior – Richard Welch, was gunned down on his doorstep by three members of the 17 November Group, a far-left urban guerrilla terrorist organization after his cover as a member of the CIA was publicized.

Two months later Avrakotos's cover was also blown, and he was pilloried in the Greek 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.

1978

He worked closely with the regime until he returned to a US posting in 1978.

He ended his tenure in Greece in 1978.

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.

1979

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.

1982

He worked for the CIA in the US until late 1982, when he found a position with the CIA's Near East desk, which included oversight of the agency's work in Afghanistan.

The following year he became acting Chief of the South Asia Operations Group, which included involvement in Operation Cyclone, the CIA program to arm and finance 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.

1989

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 Iran-Contra Affair.

1997

After working for defense contractor TRW Inc. and then News Corporation, he returned to the CIA as a contractor between 1997 and 2003.

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.

2007

The book was the basis of the film Charlie Wilson's War, released in 2007, in which Avrakotos is portrayed by Philip Seymour Hoffman.