Washington (AFP) - A dramatic leadership struggle in the most powerful US gun-owners organization has resulted in its president Oliver North saying Saturday that he will not serve a second term.
North, who
gained international notoriety as a key figure in the Iran-Contra arms scandal
under President Ronald Reagan, was forced out as president of the influential
National Rifle Association by the group's longtime CEO, Wayne LaPierre.
An NRA
board member, Richard Childress, read a letter from North at the group's annual
convention in which North said his efforts to fight alleged financial
mismanagement in the NRA had led to his ouster.
North, who
became president only last year, alleged in a letter to the NRA's executive
committee that LaPierre had purchased more than $200,000 in personal items and
charged them to a vendor, The Washington Post reported.
North
called for the NRA to establish a committee to review the group's finances.
LaPierre
put a different light on the men's differences, accusing North of issuing a
blunt ultimatum to either "resign or there will be destructive allegations
made against me and the NRA," LaPierre said in a letter published Friday
by the Wall Street Journal.
LaPierre
said the threat "alarmed and disgusted" him.
Amid the
bitter internal spat, the NRA meanwhile has filed a lawsuit against its
advertising agency Ackerman McQueen, complaining of unjustified billings.
Ackerman employs North to host a TV show called "American Heroes."
The firm
called the suit "frivolous (and) inaccurate."
Supported
by Trump
The
leadership struggle has played out in public view at a time when the NRA --
which has long played an outsized role in the gun debate in America -- has
faced mounting political, regulatory and financial challenges.
After
recent years saw some of the worst mass shootings in US history, leading to new
cries for gun control, the pro-gun group's revenues dropped sharply last year.
Regulators
in New York, meantime, have threatened to examine the group's tax-exempt
status.
But
President Donald Trump has thrown his strong support to the group. In 2017 he
became the first US president since Reagan to address the NRA, and he did so
again on Friday at its Indianapolis convention.
North has
long been a popular figure among American conservatives, despite -- or perhaps
because of -- his involvement in the Iran-Contra scandal.
A retired
Marine Corps lieutenant colonel who went to work in the Reagan White House, he
was convicted in 1989 on three charges linked to the Iran-Contra scheme, under
which money from arms sales to Tehran was funneled to rebels in Nicaragua. The
convictions were later overturned.
LaPierre
himself had warm words for North when he was tapped as the group's next
president last year.
"Oliver
North is a legendary warrior for American freedom, a gifted communicator and
skilled leader," LaPierre said in a statement.
"In
these times, I can think of no one better suited to serve as our
president."

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