BOMBSHELL: US Promised 'Carpet of
Gold' to Taliban in Exchange for Oil Pipeline, and Blocked
Terror Investigations
According to French investigative reporters Jean-Charles Brisard
and Guillaume Dasquie, Bush representatives met with the Taliban
"several times in Washington, Berlin and Islamabad" to
get a deal to build an oil pipeline through Afghanistan. Bush
promised a "carpet of gold," but the Taliban had to
accept a "national unity" government including the
Northern Alliance. If they refused, Bush vowed to "bury you
under a carpet of bombs." While this
"negotiations" took place, Bush "blocked U.S.
secret service investigations on terrorism," prompting FBI
Investigation's deputy director John O'Neill to resign in July
in protest over the obstruction. O'Neill said "the main
obstacles to investigate Islamic terrorism were U.S. oil
corporate interests and the role played by Saudi Arabia in
it." We demand an investigation! http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/oneworld/20011115/wl/
....demdaily news, 11/17
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Testimony of John Maresca, Vice President, International
Relations, Unocal Corporation, to the Subcommittee on Asia
and the Pacific, US House of Representatives' Committee on
International Relations, 12 February 1998
http://www.house.gov/international_relations/105th/ap/wsap212982.htm
Mr. Chairman, I am John Maresca, Vice President, International
Relations, of Unocal Corporation. Unocal is one of the world's
leading energy resource and project development companies. Our
activities are focused on three major regions - Asia, Latin
America and the US Gulf of Mexico. Today we would like to focus
on three issues concerning Central Asia, its resources and US
policy:
- The need for multiple pipeline routes for Central Asian oil
and gas.
- The need for US support for international and regional efforts
to achieve balanced and lasting political settlements within
Russia, other newly independent states and in Afghanistan. - The
need for structured assistance to encourage economic reforms and
the development of appropriate investment climates in the
region.
In this regard, we specifically support repeal or removal of
Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act.
For more than 2,000 years, Central Asia has been a
meeting ground between Europe and Asia, the site of ancient
east-west trade routes collectively called the Silk Road and, at
various points in history, a cradle of scholarship, culture and
power. It is also a region of truly enormous natural resources,
which are revitalizing cross-border trade, creating positive
political interaction and stimulating regional cooperation.
These resources have the potential to recharge the economies of
neighboring countries and put entire regions on the road to
prosperity.
About 100 years ago, the international oil industry was born in
the Caspian/Central Asian region with the discovery of oil. In
the intervening years, under Soviet rule, the existence of the
region's
oil and gas resources was generally known, but only partially or
poorly developed.
As we near the end of the 20th century, history brings us full
circle. With political barriers falling, Central Asia and the
Caspian are once again attracting people from around the globe
who are seeking ways to develop and deliver its bountiful energy
resources to the markets of the world.
The Caspian region contains tremendous untapped hydrocarbon
reserves, much of them located in the Caspian Sea basin itself.
Proven natural gas reserves within Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan,
Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan equal more than 236 trillion cubic
feet. The region's total oil reserves may reach more than 60
billion barrels of oil - enough to service Europe's oil needs
for 11 years. Some estimates are as high as 200 billion barrels.
In 1995, the region was producing only 870,000 barrels per day
(44 million tons per year [Mt/y]).
By 2010, Western companies could increase production to about
4.5 million barrels a day (Mb/d) - an increase of more than 500
percent in only 15 years. If this occurs, the region would
represent about five percent of the world's total oil
production, and almost 20 percent of oil produced among non-OPEC
countries.
One major problem has yet to be resolved: how to get the
region's vast energy resources to the markets where they are
needed. There are few, if any, other areas of the world where
there can be such a dramatic increase in the supply of oil and
gas to the world market. The solution seems simple: build a
"new" Silk Road. Implementing this solution, however,
is far from simple. The risks are high, but so are the rewards.
Unocal envisions the creation of a Central Asian Oil Pipeline
Consortium. The pipeline would become an integral part of a
regional oil pipeline system that will utilize and gather oil
from existing pipeline infrastructure in Turkmenistan,
Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Russia.
The 1,040-mile-long oil pipeline would begin near the town of
Chardzhou, in northern Turkmenistan, and extend southeasterly
through Afghanistan to an export terminal that would be
constructed on the Pakistan coast on the Arabian Sea. Only about
440 miles of the pipeline would be in Afghanistan.
This 42-inch-diameter pipeline will have a shipping capacity of
one million barrels of oil per day. Estimated cost of the
project - which is similar in scope to the Trans Alaska Pipeline
- is about US$2.5 billion.
There is "considerable international and regional political
interest" in this pipeline. A recent study for the World
Bank states that the proposed pipeline from Central Asia across
Afghanistan and Pakistan to the Arabian Sea would provide more
favorable netbacks to oil producers through access to higher
value markets than those currently being accessed through the
traditional Baltic and Black Sea export routes.
.....Posted by BernieW,11/15
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Surprise!
It’s also a dirty war for oil
The truth: How hard it is to hide — and that’s bad news
for the Bush administration.
America’s so-called “New War” in Afghanistan is fueled by
public perception that our primary goal is to emerge victorious
from a struggle to the death with terrorists who despise
American freedoms, and the battle begins by destroying the Al-Queda
terrorist network and its supporters. The secondary goal of the
war is purportedly liberating the people of Afghanistan from
their brutal Taliban rulers. End of story — you can keep
waving that flag.
But that’s only 2/3 of the story, there’s yet another goal;
one that has received sparse attention and mostly in the foreign
or alternative press: Access to oil deposits in central Asia.
While Afghanistan itself is relatively oil-poor, its neighbors
in the Caspian region are quite the opposite. To quote Dick
Cheney in 1998, back when he was just a humble oil baron: “I
can’t think of a time when we’ve had a region emerge as
suddenly to become as strategically significant as the
Caspian.” Given the unimpeachable integrity of the Bush
administration, I’m sure it’s just a coincidence that:
n Cheney used to serve on the Kazakhstan Oil Advisory Board with
executives from Chevron and Texaco.
n The Federal Trade Commission announced that it had approved a
merger between Chevron and Texaco only days before the bombs
began to fall on Afghanistan. The resulting company,
ChevronTexaco, will have a 45 percent interest in Kazakhstan’s
huge Tengiz oil field near its border with Afghanistan (ExxonMobil
has a 25 percent interest).
n Bush the Elder, also cozy with Texas oilmen, is a member of
the $12 billion private equity firm the Carlyle Group, which
invests heavily in defense contractors, according to journalist
Nina Burleigh in an 10/11 article for tompaine.com. This worries
Charles Lewis, who works for the Center for Public Integrity in
Washington D.C. Lewis told Burleigh that “in a really peculiar
way, George W. Bush could, some day, benefit financially from
his own administration’s decisions, through his father’s
investments. And that to me is a jaw-dropper.”
These “coincidences” are relevant to the current conflict in
Afghanistan, and not just because of its proximity to an
oil-rich region. Afghanistan occupies a critical strategic
position in a grand plan for U.S. oil companies to control
Caspian oil.
For years, U.S. oil interests have drooled over the prospects of
building a $4 billion, 1,000-mile long pipeline across
Afghanistan that would pump Caspian oil to Karachi, Pakistan,
thereby allowing U.S. firms to sell it in the lucrative South
Asian market. All that is needed is a ruling government in
Afghanistan friendly to U.S. corporate interests, not
necessarily the Afghan people; that is why U.S. firms — and
recently even the U.S. government —were warming up to the
Taliban right up until Sept. 11.
When Taliban troops rolled into Kabul in 1996, the California
firm Unocal began wooing Taliban leaders until “long after the
movement’s bloody brutality and ties to terrorism became the
commonest knowledge” according to a story by Michael Daly in
last Sunday’s New York Daily News. Daly goes on to describe in
detail how Unocal flew Taliban Mullahs to the United States and
entertained them lavishly. When Bill Clinton sent cruise
missiles into Al-Queda training camps in 1998, Unocal suspended
its plans for a trans-Afghanistan pipeline.
“Lest anyone think the company had taken a moral stand, a
spokesman insisted that Unocal had not been influenced by
protests over its dealings with the Taliban. The real reason was
that oil had dropped to a paltry $12 a barrel,” explains Daly.
Clinton’s cruise missile adventure was a setback for Unocal
but, as a Sept. 29 article in the Toronto Star elaborates,
right-wingers in Washington still saw a lot of money to be made
in a U.S./Taliban partnership. With the Bush administration’s
arrival in Washington, there was talk of returning to the good
old days between 1994 and 1997 when “American policy toward
the Taliban was driven by fear of Iran and support of Unocal.”
These suggestions were bolstered by concern in right-wing policy
circles that isolating the Taliban would force companies to
transport Caspian oil through Russia, thereby increasing
Russia’s influence in the world unnecessarily. When the
Taliban banned opium production in 2000, the U.S. gave $43
million in aid to Afghanistan through the United Nations and
independent aid agencies. U.S. Secretary of State Collin Powell
even suggested publicly that the U.S. should reconsider its
economic sanctions against Afghanistan.
There are two direct implications of this information to the
events that are unfolding before our eyes on CNN. The first
implication is that access to oil might be the reason why our
government refuses to enter into good-faith negotiations with
the Taliban for bin Laden — even if doing so will cause
thousands or even millions of Afghans to starve in the harsh
Central Asian winter that starts in two weeks (see my 10/17/01
column).
The second implication of the “oil angle” is that it
contradicts the administration’s position that this war is a
struggle between good and evil, indeed for America’s very
existence. But, as Mark Danner observed in a 10/16/01 op-ed
piece in The New York Times, “Unfortunately, as we know from
the last quarter-century or more, political support thus
purchased tends to be built on emotion and brittle and weak. In
the days and hours following the next terrorist Spectacular, or
the next, Americans may well begin to ask themselves why exactly
they are being targeted and what exactly it is they are risking
their lives for.”
Bush had better hope Danner is wrong. When this war turns into
what some commentators fear will be “Vietnam with snow,” and
dead 19-year olds start coming home en-masse, I doubt most
Americans (or at least American students) will decide the war is
an acceptable price to pay just so they can continue driving
gas-guzzling SUVs.
....Nick Woomer, nwoomer@umich.edu.
http://www.themichigandaily.com/articles.php?uniqid=20011031e2
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Dear Fellow NRDC Member,
It is understandable that we Americans feel an almost reflexive need for unanimity in trying times like these. As a nation, we are rightly consumed with responding to the terrorist attacks on September 11th. But, at some point -- and I think we're beginning to get there -- we need to take a long-term view even as we are reacting to the current crisis. Really important domestic issues facing us before all of this happened -- education, energy and the environment, health care -- still have the same dimension and consequence. But we have to recognize that it's much more difficult to discuss and debate them in the aftermath of Sept. 11th. Unfortunately, disagreement is sometimes characterized as unpatriotic during times such as these and open, thoughtful discourse is somewhat muted. The gravity of the current situation is not lost on any of us and we all want to do what's right to insure our national security. It is with this in mind that I felt compelled to write you today.
A handful of determined U.S. senators, encouraged by the White House, are arguing that national security requires the Senate to rush a pro-oil energy bill into law. They have vowed to hold up normal Senate business and attach the bill to every piece of legislation that comes to the Senate floor. So far they have failed in what The Boston Globe is calling "oil opportunism." But with President Bush, himself, now calling for rushed passage of this disastrous bill, intense pressure is building on Senate leaders to succumb to the emotions of the moment. Using our national tragedy as an opportunity to advance the narrow interests of the oil lobby would not be in the best interest of the public. This bill, already passed by the House, would not only open the Arctic Refuge to oil rigs, it would also pave the way for energy companies to exploit and destroy pristine areas of Greater Yellowstone and other gems of our natural heritage. As important, it would do nothing to address energy security.
I'm asking for your immediate help in stopping this legislation. After reading my letter I hope you'll take action at
http://www.savebiogems.org/arctic/index.asp?src=aa0110a and then forward this letter to your friends and colleagues.
Last spring, the Bush administration and some members of Congress said we had to pass the president's oil-friendly energy bill because we were facing the most serious energy crisis since 1973. But here we are, a mere six months later, and the energy crisis has vanished. Due to a slowing economy and falling demand, the prices for gasoline, natural gas and home heating oil have plunged. Meanwhile, the much-feared "summer of blackouts" in California never happened, largely because consumers and businesses made dramatic cuts in energy use by launching the most successful statewide conservation campaign in history.
With no energy crisis to scare us with, the administration and pro-oil senators are now promoting their "Drill the Arctic" plan under the guise of national security and energy independence. Don't buy it. It would take ten years to bring Arctic oil to market, and when it arrives it would never equal more than two percent -- a mere drop in the bucket -- of all the oil we consume each year. Our nation simply doesn't have enough oil to drill our way to energy independence or even to affect world oil prices.
We possess a mere 3 percent of the world's oil reserves, but we consume fully 25 percent of the world's oil supply. We could drill the Arctic Refuge, Greater Yellowstone, and every other wildland in America and we'd still be importing oil, still be paying worldwide prices for domestic oil, and still be vulnerable to wild gyrations in price and supply. As The Atlanta Constitution put it: "Burning through our tiny oil supply faster will not make our country more secure." I'd go further: increasing our dependence on oil, whether that oil comes from the Persian Gulf or the Arctic Refuge, practically guarantees national *insecurity*. And we know that it will bring more habitat destruction, more oil spills, more air pollution, and more global warming. The public health implications will be devastating.
If our nation wants to declare energy independence, then we have no choice but to reduce our appetite for oil. There's no other way. We need to rely on smarter and cleaner ways to power our economy. We have the technology right now to increase fuel economy standards to 40 miles per gallon. If we phased in that standard by 2012 we'd save 15 times more oil than the Arctic Refuge is likely to produce over 50 years. We could also give tax rebates for existing hybrid gas-electric vehicles that get as much as 60 mpg. We could invest in public transit. We could launch an "Apollo Project" to bring fuel cells and hydrogen fuel down to earth, allowing us to begin the mass production of vehicles that emit only water as a by-product. The list goes on and on.
In this climate of national trauma and war, it is up to us -- the people -- to ensure that reason prevails and our natural heritage survives intact. The preservation of irreplaceable wildlands like the Arctic Refuge and Greater Yellowstone is a core American value. I have never been more appreciative of the wisdom of that value than during these past few weeks. When we are filled with grief and unanswerable questions it is often nature that we turn to for refuge and comfort. In the sanctuary of a forest or the vastness of the desert or the silence of a grassland, we can touch a timeless force larger than ourselves and our all-too-human problems. This is where the healing begins. Those who would sell out this natural heritage -- this spiritual heritage -- would destroy a wellspring of American strength. What's worse, their rush to exploit the wildness that feeds our souls won't do a thing to solve our energy problems.
There are plenty of sensible and patriotic ways to guarantee our nation's energy security, but destroying the Arctic Refuge is not one of them. Please tell that to your senators. They urgently need to hear it because the pressure is on to move this pro-oil bill to a vote in the next few weeks. It will take you only a minute to send them an electronic message from NRDC's SaveBioGems website.
Go to http://www.savebiogems.org/arctic/index.asp?src=aa0110a
And please forward this message to your family and friends. Millions of Americans need to know about this cynical attempt to promote the interests of energy companies at the expense of everyone else.
Sincerely yours,
Robert Redford
=====
BioGems: Saving Endangered Wild Places A project of the Natural Resources Defense Council
http://www.savebiogems.org
.... here's another... Mike K, 11/1
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Nina Burleigh has written for The Washington Post, The Chicago
Tribune, and New York magazine. As a reporter for TIME, she was
among the first American journalists to enter Iraq after the
Gulf War.
Recently I attended one of those legendary
Washington dinner parties, attended by British cosmopolites and
Americans in the know. A few courses in, people were gossiping
about the Bush family's close and enduring friendship with the
Saudi ambassador, Prince Bandar, dean of the diplomatic corps in
Washington. By the end of the evening, everyone was talking about
how the unfolding events were going to affect the flow of oil out
of Central Asia.
I left wondering whether 6,000 Americans might
prove to have died in New York for the royal family of Saud, or
oil, or both. But I didn't have much more than insider dinner
gossip to go on. I get my analysis from the standard all-American
news outlets. And they've been too focused on a) anthrax and
smallpox, or b) the intricacies of Muslim fanaticism, to throw any
reporters at the murky ways in which international oil politics
and its big players have a stake in what's unfolding.
A quick Nexis search brought up a raft of
interesting leads that would keep me busy for 10 years if the
economics of this war was my beat. But only two articles in the
American media since September 11 have tried to describe how Big
Oil might benefit from a cleanup of terrorists and other
anti-American elements in the Central Asia region. One was by
James Ridgeway of the Village Voice. The other was by a Hearst
writer based in Paris and it was picked up only in the San
Francisco Chronicle.
In other words, only the Left is connecting the
dots of what the Russians have called "The Great Game"
-- how oil underneath the 'stans' fits into the new world order.
Here's just a small slice of what ought to provoke deeper research
by American reporters with resources and talent. Start with father
Bush. The former president and ex-CIA director is not unemployed
these days. He's been globetrotting as a member of Washington's
Carlyle Group, a $12 billion private equity firm which employs a
motorcade of former ranking Republicans, including Frank Carlucci,
Jim Baker and Richard Darman. George Bush senior and colleagues
open doors overseas for The Carlyle Group's "access
capitalists."
Bush specializes in Asia and has been in and out
of Saudi Arabia and Kuwait (countries that revere him thanks to
the Gulf War) often on business since his presidency. Baker, the
pin-striped midwife of 'Election 2000' was working his network in
the 'stans' before the ink was dry on Clinton's first inaugural
address. The Bin Laden family (presumably the friendly wing) is
also invested in Carlyle. Carlyle's portfolio is heavy in defense
and telecommunications firms, although it has other holdings
including food and bottling companies.
The Carlyle connection means that George Bush
Senior is on the payroll from private interests that have defense
business before the government, while his son is president. Hmmm.
As Charles Lewis of the Washington-based Center for Public
Integrity has put it, "in a really peculiar way, George W.
Bush could, some day, benefit financially from his own
administration's decisions, through his father's investments. And
that to me is a jaw-dropper."
Why can we assume that global businessmen like
Bush Senior and Jim Baker care about who runs Afghanistan and NOT
just because it's home base for lethal anti-Americans? Because it
also happens to be situated in the middle of that perennial vital
national interest -- a region with abundant oil. By 2050, Central
Asia will account for more than 80 percent of our oil. On
September 10, an industry publication, Oil and Gas Journal,
reported that Central Asia represents one of the world's last
great frontiers for geological survey and analysis, "offering
opportunities for investment in the discovery, production,
transportation, and refining of enormous quantities of oil and gas
resources."
It's assumed we need unimpeded access in the 'stans'
for our geologists, construction workers and pipelines if we are
going to realize the conservation-free, fossil-fueled future
outlined recently by Vice President Cheney. A number of pipeline
projects to carry Central Asia's resources west are already under
way or have been proposed. They would go through Russia, through
the Caucasus or via Turkey and Iran. Each route will be within
easy reach of the Taliban's thugs and could be made much safer by
an American vanquishment of Muslim terrorism.
There's also lots of oil beneath the turf of our
politically precarious newest best friend, Pakistan. "Massive
untapped gas reserves are believed to be lying beneath Pakistan's
remotest deserts, but they are being held hostage by armed tribal
groups demanding a better deal from the central government,"
reported Agence France Presse just days before September 11. So
many business deals, so much oil, all those big players with
powerful connections to the Bush administration. It doesn't add up
to a conspiracy theory. But it does mean there is a significant
MONEY subtext that the American public ought to know about as
"Operation Enduring Freedom" blasts new holes where
pipelines might someday be buried.
This is Nina Burleigh for TomPaine.com.
....JH, 10/30
(Top)
[Title 17 U.S.C. section 107]
Testimony before the US Congress is circulating on the internet. It pertains to a proposed oil pipeline through Central Asia that is applicable to the current war in Afghanistan.
On February 12, 1998, John J. Maresca, vice president, international relations for UNOCAL oil company, testified before the US House of Representatives, Committee on International Relations. Maresca provided information to Congress on Central Asia oil and gas reserves and how they might shape US foreign policy. UNOCAL's problem? As Maresca said: "How to get the region's vast energy resources to the markets." The oil reserves are in areas north of Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Russia. Routes for a pipeline were proposed that would transport oil on a 42-inch pipe southward thru Afghanistan for 1040 miles to the Pakistan coast. Such a pipeline would cost about $2.5 billion and carry about 1 million barrels of oil per day.
Maresca told Congress then that: "It's not going to be built until there is a single Afghan government. That's the simple answer."
Dana Rohrbacher, California congressman, then identified the Taliban as the ruling controllers among various factions in Afghanistan and characterized them as "opium producers."
Then Rorhbacher asked Maresca: "There is a Saudi terrorist who is infamous for financing terrorism around the world. Is he in the Taliban area or is he up there with the northern people?"
Maresca answered: "If it is the person I am thinking of, he is there in the Taliban area." This testimony obviously alluded to Osama bin Laden.
Then Rorhbacher asked: "... in the northern area as compared to the place where the Taliban are in control, would you say that one has a better human rights record toward women than the other?"
Maresca responded by saying: "With respect to women, yes. But I don't think either faction here has a very clean human rights record, to tell you the truth."
So women's rights were introduced into Congressional testimony by Congressman Rohrbacher as the wedge for UNOCAL to build its pipeline through Afghanistan. Three years later CNN would be airing its acclaimed TV documentary "Under The Veil," which displayed the oppressive conditions that women endure in Afghanistan under the rule of the Taliban (a propaganda film for the oil pipeline?).
Rohrbacher then went on to say that a democratic election should take place in Afghanistan and "if the Taliban are not willing to make that kind of commitment, I would be very hesitant to move foreward on a $2.5 billion investment because without that commitment, I don't think there is going to be any tranquility in that land."
Beginning in 1998 UNOCAL was chastized, particularly by women's rights groups, for discussions with the Taliban, and headed in retreat as a worldwide effort mounted to come to the defense of the Afghani women. This forced UNOCAL to withdraw from its talks with the Taliban and dissolve its multinational partnership in that region. In 1999 Alexander's Gas & Oil Connections newsletter said: "UNOCAL company officials said late last year (1998) they were abandoning the project because of the need to cut costs in the Caspian region and because of the repeated failure of efforts to resolve the long civil conflict in Afghanistan." [Volume 4, issue #20 - Monday, November 22, 1999]
Three days following the attack on the World Trade Centers in New York City, UNOCAL issued a statement reconfirming it had withdrawn from its project in Afghanistan, long before recent events. [www.unocal.com September 14, 2001 statement]
UNOCAL was not the only party positioning themselves to tap into oil and gas reserves in central Asia. UNOCAL was primary member of a multinational consortium called CentGas (Central Asia Gas) along with Delta Oil Company Limited (Saudi Arabia), the Government of Turkmenistan, Indonesia Petroleum, LTD. (INPEX) (Japan), ITOCHU Oil Exploration Co., Ltd. (Japan), Hyundai Engineering & Construction Co., Ltd. (Korea), the Crescent Group (Pakistan) and RAO Gazprom (Russia).
Just because CentGas had dissolved does not mean that the involved parties have totally abandoned their interest in building an oil pipeline out of Central Asia. There is also talk of another pipeline thru Iran. India and Pakistan are bidding to be the pipeline terminal ocean port since they would obtain hundreds of millions of dollars in fees.
So, in 1998 Osama bin Laden was identified as the villain behind the Taliban, Afghanistani women the victims of an oppressive Taliban regime, and the stage was set for a future stabilization effort (i.e. a war). Was all this a cover story for a future oil pipeline?
In November 2000, Bruce Hoffman, director of the Rand Institute office in Washington DC, indicated that the next US President would have to face up to the growing threat is Islamic terrorism. Hoffman: "The next administration must turn its immediate attention to knitting together the full range of US counterterrorist capabilities into a cohesive plan." [Los Angeles Times, November 12, 2000]
All that was needed was a triggering event.
.....BernieW, 10/16
Larry Klayman
likes suing the United States government. Over the last seven years as
chairman and general counsel of Judicial Watch, a public interest law firm
in Washington, he has filed over 150 lawsuits against the feds, including
more than 80 against former president Bill Clinton himself. Called the Ralph
Nader of the right, Klayman has litigation habits considered by some Beltway
insiders as wildly ambitious. Others think he's just plain crazy.
But now Klayman and Judicial Watch are pawing in disbelief
through President George W. Bush's past business connections with the
Saudi-based Bin Laden family. The firm is demanding that GWB's father, the
original President Bush, immediately resign from his post as a paid senior
adviser to the Carlyle Group, a private Washington equity firm that according
to The New York Times has essentially become the nation's 11th largest defense
contractor.
Carlyle's investors include the Bin Laden family, which has
disowned its terrorist son Osama; Bush Sr.; and former Bush inner guard
members Nick Carlucci and James Baker. Judicial Watch says all involved stand
to benefit from any increase in U.S. defense spending.
"It's mind-boggling," says Klayman. "This
conflict of interest has now turned into a scandal." With the recent U.S.
air strikes in Afghanistan, Klayman says, the conflict of interest is now
"direct."
Klayman questions why Bush the Younger is not aggressively
pursuing Saudi Arabia, a country known to harbor terrorists. He points to Bush
the Elder's business connections there, like the Saudi-based Bin Laden family,
through Carlyle. "President Bush should not ask, but demand, that his
father pull out of the Carlyle Group," says Klayman.
Neither former president Bush—who has continued advising
his son on handling the war on terrorism—nor the Carlyle Group returned
calls seeking comment.
In a case of "like father, like son," President
Bush also had connections to the Carlyle Group, the Voice has learned.
In the years before his 1994 bid for Texas governor, Bush owned stock in and
sat on the board of directors of Caterair, a service company that provided
airplane food and was also a component of Carlyle. For his consulting
position, Bush was paid $15,000 a year, according to a Texas insider, and a
bonus $1000 for every meeting he attended—roughly $75,000 in total. Reports
show Carlyle was also a major contributor to his electoral fund.
Upon hearing about the Bush-Bin Laden family connection,
other Washington nonprofits have joined Judicial Watch in expressing their
concern.
"Carlyle is as deeply wired into the current
administration as they can possibly be," Charles Lewis, executive
director of the Center for Public Integrity, told Bushwatch.org. "George
Bush is getting money from private interests that have business before the
government, while his son is president. And, in a really peculiar way, George
W. Bush could, some day, benefit financially from his own administration's
decisions, through his father's investments. The average American doesn't know
that. To me, that's a jaw-dropper."
http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0141/gray.php
...BernieW.10/15
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