We lost Murtha a day or two ago and now Charlie.WSJ wrote:A loose cannon who stretched the boundaries of both U.S. foreign policy and gentlemanly behavior, former U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson helped orchestrate a secret effort to support fighters battling the Soviet army in Afghanistan.
Mr. Wilson, who died Wednesday in a Lufkin, Texas, hospital at age 76, became widely known in recent years thanks to the book and movie about him, "Charlie Wilson's War." Both works detail Mr. Wilson's support for the Central Intelligence Agency's clandestine efforts to arm and train Afghanistan's mujahedeen fighters. In the movie, Tom Hanks played Mr. Wilson.
Mr. Wilson, a tall, gregarious man, represented his East Texas district from 1973 to 1997, and served on the House Appropriations Committee.
Mr. Wilson's penchant for parties got him into scrapes during his congressional career, not the least of which involved allegations that he had used cocaine in 1980 while in a hot tub with two Las Vegas strippers. A Justice Department investigation of the alleged incident was dropped.
But Mr. Wilson's playboy persona masked his success at forging alliances with powerful members of Congress. He used those alliances, and ties forged outside formal channels with operatives in the CIA, to send weapons to the Afghan resistance capable of bringing down Soviet helicopters, according to George Crile's book.
"Charlie was a man of courage and conviction who worked hard, loved his country, and lived life to the fullest," said U.S. Rep. David Obey, (D., Wis.), who served in Congress with Mr. Wilson.
Mr. Wilson was inspired in part by a wealthy Houston socialite, Joanne Herring, an ardent anti-Communist who adopted the cause of the Afghan resistance.
"Charlie's been in my life forever," Ms. Herring said in an interview Wednesday. "He was a great patriot. He did a great job for the world."
Born in 1933 in the East Texas town of Trinity, Mr. Wilson attended the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. He served aboard a destroyer and in the Pentagon. His first run for office came seemingly on a whim. In 1960 while on leave, he entered and won an election to the Texas House of Representatives. His handle became "The Liberal from Lufkin," and he was first elected to the U.S. Congress in 1972—despite it being a landslide year for Republicans.
In Washington, Mr. Wilson had few legislative accomplishments and was known by colleagues as "Good Time Charlie." He liked to yank Rep. Pat Schroeder's chain by calling her "Babycakes." But he did have an interest in overthrowing Communism, and the first time he tried to set U.S. foreign policy, according to Mr. Crile's book, came in the late 1970s, when he tried to arrange for a secret army of ex-CIA employees to support Nicaraguan ruler Anastasio Somoza. That attempt failed, but set a precedent that succeeded a decade later in Asia.
The defeat of the Soviet army in Afghanistan and its retreat in 1988 was a turning point in the Cold War. But some of the mujahedeen fighters later turned on the U.S., harboring Osama bin Laden and others in the al Qaeda terror network.
"We were fighting the evil empire. It would have been like not supplying the Soviets against Hitler in World War II," Mr. Wilson told Time magazine in 2007. "Anyway, who the hell had ever heard of the Taliban then?"
The terrorist attacks of the past decade linked to Afghanistan "pained his heart; he was broken over it," Ms. Herring said. .
This Charlie