Charlie Wilson,
the fun-loving Texas congressman whose 1980s campaign to rid Afghanistan of
Soviet influence was memorably captured in a Hollywood film that bore his name,
died Wednesday. He was 76. Wilson died on 10 February, 2010, of cardiopulmonary
arrest at Memorial Medical Center in his hometown of Lufkin, Texas. He had
collapsed earlier in the day.
Wilson was a
charming, handsome rogue of a congressman who thrived in an era when the media
spotlight shone less brightly on the private lives of elected officials. He
packed his office ranks with young women, dubbed "Charlie's Angels."
His high-flying, hard-partying ways were immortalized by actor Tom Hanks in
2007's "Charlie Wilson's War."
But that film,
like the book by George Crile III that inspired it, also told the seemingly
larger-than-life tale of how an obscure congressman from a rural East Texas
district almost single-handedly engineered a flow of federal funds to support
Afghan resistance fighters against the occupying forces of the Soviet Union
during the 1980s.
That legacy grew
more complicated as the Muslim freedom fighters that Wilson tirelessly
championed evolved into the Taliban, which would ultimately give haven to Al
Qaeda.
Wilson's friend
of 45 years, Buddy Temple, said the figure presented in the film failed to
replicate the man he knew.
"Charlie was
a go-to guy in Congress," Temple said at a news conference Wednesday. The
"idea that he was this playboy who never paid attention to business was
just as wrong as it could be."
Said Rep. David
Obey (D-Wisconsin), who served with Wilson in the House of Representatives:
"Charlie was a man of courage and conviction who worked hard, loved his
country, and lived life to the fullest. "
Charles Nesbitt
Wilson was born June 1, 1933, in the town of Trinity, Texas. He graduated from
the U.S. Naval Academy in 1956 and served four years as an officer. And while
Wilson, a Democrat, would become known as "the liberal from Lufkin"
because of his social views, he was hawkish on military matters. It would prove
to be a winning combination in his moderate congressional district, where he
won 12 terms in the House, from 1973 to 1996.
Before that, he
cut his teeth on Texas politics, holding office in the state House and Senate,
where he unabashedly fought for a progressive agenda and unapologetically lived
an outsized personal life, acquiring a nickname that would follow him to
Washington: "Good Time Charlie."
In the House,
Wilson found his true calling: opposing what he saw as the creeping forces of
Communism worldwide. He became a staunch supporter of the right-wing government
in Nicaragua, threatening to scuttle the Panama Canal Treaty over President
Carter's Nicaragua policy.
But Afghanistan
became his passion after the Soviet Union invaded the country in 1979. During a
fact-finding visit to Pakistan in 1982 -- and at the urging of a wealthy
Houston benefactor, Joanne Herring -- he embraced the cause of the Muslim
rebels he found there. Wilson later said that he was inspired by visiting child
victims of Soviet bombs in Pakistani hospitals near the Afghan border.
Using his seat on
the powerful House Appropriations Defense subcommittee and taking advantage of
the secrecy of the budgets for U.S. covert operations, Wilson -- later with the
assistance of the Central Intelligence Agency -- funneled billions of dollars
in weapons to the resistance. They included shoulder-fired Stinger missiles,
which were used to shoot down Soviet helicopters. The Soviet Union ultimately
abandoned Afghanistan in 1989, and Wilson was decorated by the CIA.
His personal
life, at times, threatened to derail his anti-Communist efforts. In 1983, a
young attorney with the Justice Department, Rudolph Giuliani, said he was
investigating whether Wilson had used cocaine three years earlier while
partying in a Las Vegas hot tub with two showgirls. The department ended up not
pursuing the case. That same year, Wilson was cited for leaving the scene of an
accident after striking another car on a bridge outside Washington.
But while he was
taking care of the mujahedin in Afghanistan, he was also looking after his East
Texas district, sending earmarks and backing the region's timber and oil
interests. He repeatedly won reelection and voters seemed to take no issue with
his indiscretions.
"If my
constituents didn't forgive sloppiness and a certain amount of eccentricity, I
wouldn't be here in the first place," Wilson said in the early 1990s. Wilson
retired from the House in 1996 and became a lobbyist. In 1999 he married Barbara
Albertstadt, a former ballerina. A previous marriage had ended in divorce. He
moved back to Lufkin and underwent a heart transplant in 2007. Earlier this
year, he helped dedicate the new Charlie Wilson Chair for Pakistan Studies at
the University of Texas. Wilson is survived by his wife and a sister.