"Bill Casey, 67, was managing the Reagan campaign from his corner office on the 53rd floor of the Pan Am building in Midtown Manhattan. Casey soon put in motion a media strategy to inoculate the electorate, planting the suspicion that President Carter was 'playing politics' with the hostages. If the hostages were suddenly released, he wanted voters to think that perhaps Carter had paid too high a price. At the same time, Casey sent a private message to the Iranians that they could get a better deal from a Reagan presidency.
Casey was dabbling in off-the-books private diplomacy. Sending messages to the Iranians through intermediaries like the PLO was a gray area—not exactly kosher. Taking a meeting with a representative of the Ayatollah Khomeini to discuss the hostage crisis would fall into an entirely different category of behavior. Indeed, it could be deemed a blatant violation of the 1799 Logan Act prohibiting private citizens from negotiating disputes with foreign powers.
The Casey story is a disturbing and enduring mystery. President Carter at the time knew nothing of Casey’s backdoor diplomacy."
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