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BANGKOK, Thailand -- When the CIA's most macabre paramilitary officer
	Tony "Poe" Poshepny demanded and received the hacked-off ears and
	heads of communists in Laos during the Vietnam War, no one predicted
	he would become an exhibit in a new museum in Bangkok's red-light
	zone.
	
	The Patpong Museum, on Patpong Road, also describes why U.S.
	intelligence and military officers, airlines, IBM, and others rented
	buildings alongside sleazy bars packed with prostitutes, especially
	during the Vietnam War which ended in 1975.
	
	"In 1957, we have the American Chamber of Commerce here. We have the
	U.S. Information Service Library here. We have Shell Oil here. Pan Am,
	TWA," the museum's founder and curator Michael Messner said in an
	interview.
	
	The CIA's clandestine Air America secretly flew troops, casualties,
	refugees, ammunition, rice and other supplies in Laos and elsewhere
	and staffed an office here until 1972.
	
	On display is a 1963 letter with an Air America logo from 3 Patpong
	Road informing a pilot's parents that he vanished in Laos when
	communists shot down his plane.
	
	Photos and memorabilia also document Patpong's raunchy bar girls
	including a museum-inspired machine mimicking a woman shooting
	ping-pong balls from her genitals.
	
	Videos briefly flash real women who insert and expel goldfish and
	razor blades inside themselves on stage.
	
	Photos of men and women recently enjoying bondage in a fetish club also appear.
	
	Americans who helped finance Patpong Road comprise the most
	fascinating exhibits.
	
	"When you see there is a [digital] go-go dancer coming alive here in
	the exhibition, and how that directly relates to the Vietnam War and
	all of that, people ask why is it happening in Patpong?" Mr. Messner
	said.
	
	Historic exhibits portray a Chinese immigrant who purchased a banana
	plantation with profits from rice and cement and was awarded a royal
	Thai name, Luang Patpongpanich.
	
	During World War II one of his sons, Udom, studied in the U.S. where
	he was trained by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), a U.S.
	intelligence organization which became the CIA.
	
	Udom was supposed to join the Seri Thai ("Free Thai") insurgency
	against Japan's occupation of Thailand, but the war suddenly ended
	with the U.S. bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
	
	When Udom returned home, he upgraded the plantation and built
	two-story buildings which he rented to his American buddies, including
	from the OSS and CIA.
	
	"Why was the CIA here in Bangkok? They were preparing to fight the
	communists" Mr. Messner said.
	
	"That would be the Vietnam War. When the Vietnam War comes to an end,
	all these people were still here and they don't want to go home, and
	they start businesses.
	
	"Ex-military, ex-intelligence people, some of them chose to stay here
	and they started opening bars."
	
	In the Madrid Bar, still open today, CIA paramilitary officer Jack
	Shirley would sit on a reserved stool, regaling friends about how he
	helped train mercenary Hmong tribesmen in Laos in 1961 to fight Lao
	communists and invading North Vietnamese.
	
	After retiring, Mr. Shirley died in Thailand in 2003. An exhibited
	photo shows him in Lucy's Tiger Den, another Patpong bar, drinking
	with the CIA's infamous Mr. Poe.
	
	The museum describes how Mr. Poe paid Hmong mercenaries to bring him
	enemy ears and heads to prove they killed communists.
	
	"I threw two heads from an airplane, it was a Dornier plane," Mr. Poe,
	laughing, told me in his San Francisco home in 2001 before he died in
	2003.
	
	"The heads landed right in that [Lao] bastard's front door. We were
	flying at 100 feet.
	
	"I had a bunch of heads in my hut and the blood was seeping through
	the floor. It was sticky. And [CIA officer] Bill Lair said, 'Get rid
	of those goddamn heads'," Mr. Poe said.
	
	Poe angrily sent ears in a bag to then-U.S. Ambassador G. McMurtie
	Godley in Laos after being mocked as no threat to the enemy.
	
	"You see cut-off [plastic] ears in a glass box, it kind of makes you
	understand that this was a real war," Mr. Messner said, gesturing
	toward a display.
	
	"A photo of one of those Poe necklaces was given to me by a Thai
	patrol border force soldier in 2007," said Tom Vater, co-author of the
	documentary film, "The Most Secret Place on Earth: America's Covert
	War in Laos."
	
	"We used the image in the film to illustrate just how far beyond rhyme
	and reason the American war in Southeast Asia had become," Mr. Vater
	said in an interview.
	
	The museum also displays anti-communist comic books distributed to
	Thai students decades ago, when Thailand felt threatened by China's
	Mao Zedong and North Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh.
	
	Today, Patpong Road features about 15 go-go bars with strippers
	illicitly offering themselves to passersby, plus restaurants, live
	music, shops and a night bazaar, conveniently located in the heart of
	Bangkok.