Apparently it is not only the Saudis’ oil riches that insulates them from
criticism, but also their calculated distribution of largesse. The Saudis have
contributed to every presidential library in recent decades. Not surprisingly,
former ambassadors to Saudi Arabia from the United States end up being
apologists for the corrupt, despotic Saudi regime. The Saudis have arranged that
American ambassadors to their country not speak Arabic. The American
embassy in Saudi Arabia gets all its information about the reactionary regime
from the rulers.
Some of the Washington politicians who found the Saudi connection lucrative
include Spiro Agnew, Frank Carlucci, Jimmy Carter, Clark Clifford, John
Connally, James Baker, George H. W. Bush, William Simon and Caspar Weinberger.
(17)
Profits before Patriotism
The Bush dynasty has always been comfortable putting profits before
patriotism. Prescott Bush, Bush Senior’s father, extended credit to Adolph
Hitler and supplied him with raw materials during Word War II. The U. S. seized
his assets under the Trading with the Enemy Act, but grandfather Bush found
other ways to replenish the family coffers.
Bush Senior struck it rich in oil and in the defense industry. Mahfouz (yes,
that Mahfouz), Prince Bandar and Prince Sultan (Bandar’s father) were also
heavily invested in the defense industry through their holdings in the Carlyle
Group, where Bush Senior served on the board of directors. Founded in 1987 as a
private investment group with strong connections to the Republican Party
establishment, Carlyle increased its original investment of $130 million to $900
million when it went public in 2001.
"In recent years, Carlyle has been successful both at raising and making
money. It has raised $14 billion in the last five years or so, and its annual
rate of return has been 36 percent. Its 550 investors consist of institutions
and wealthy individuals from around the world including, until shortly after
September 2001, members of the bin Laden family of Saudi Arabia. The family —
which has publicly disavowed links with Osama bin Laden — had been an investor
since 1995." (18)
"As the eleventh largest US defence contractor, Carlyle is involved in
nearly every aspect of military production, including making the big guns used
on US naval destroyers, the Bradley Fighting Vehicle used by US forces during
the Gulf War and parts used in most commercial and military aircraft. United
Defense has joint ventures in Saudi Arabia and Turkey, two of the United States’
closest military allies in the Middle East." (19)
It’s passing strange that even as the hijacked planes smashed into the World
Trade Center, the Carlyle Group was holding its annual investor conference.
Shafig Bin Laden, brother of Osama Bin Laden, attended.
Bush Junior once served as an executive with Caterair, one of hundreds of
companies Carlyle has bought and sold over the past 15 years, but he removed the
record of this period from his resume.
In 1986, Bush Junior, to date a flop as a businessman, joined Harken Energy
Corporation as a director and was awarded 212,000 shares of stock and other
plums.
In 1987, Khalid bin Mahfouz arranged for BCCI investor Abdullah Bakhsh to
purchase 17% of Harken. A Harken official acknowledged that Bush’s White House
connections had everything to do with the appointment. Somehow, the
inexperienced, obscure firm was awarded a prime drilling contract by Bahrain,
and Harken’s stock price soared.
In June 1990, Bush Junior sold his Harken stock for a juicy $848,000,
enabling him to pay off the loan he had assumed on buying shares in the Texas
Rangers. Never mind that the Harken stock promptly tanked when Saddam Hussein
invaded Kuwait, for Abdullah Bakhsh, a major Harken shareholder and an investor
in BCCI, who had purchased 17% of Harken Energy in 1987, got his money’s worth.
By 1990, Bakhsh’s representative on Harken’s board, Talet Othman, began
attending Middle East policy discussions with President Bush Senior.
Now that Bush Junior occupies the White House, Bush Senior receives frequent
CIA briefings (his prerogative as a former president). "In July 2001, Bush
personally contacted Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah to ‘clarify’ his son's Middle
East policies. Also during the summer of 2001, Bush forwarded his son a North
Korea policy plan penned by ‘Asia expert’ and former ambassador to Korea, Donald
Gregg. Gregg is a 31-year CIA veteran and the elder Bush's former national
security adviser whose expertise involved participation in the Vietnam-era
Phoenix Program (death squads), Air America heroin smuggling, ‘pacification’
efforts in El Salvador and Guatemala, the ‘October Surprise,’ and the
Iran-Contra operation (for which Gregg received a Bush pardon in 1992)." (20)
Bush Junior has received more than advice from his father. He has taken on
the team of hustlers and criminals that worked with George Herbert Walker Bush
when he was Vice President and President of the United States of America.
Just as his father did, he invokes executive privilege to hide all evidence
of collusion with the petroleum pashas who have enriched the Bushes and
intimidated the rest of us.
Sandy Tolan, an I.F. Stone Fellow at the Graduate School of Journalism at UC
Berkeley, asserts that what the Bush administration really wants in Iraq is a
remapping of the Mideast. "The plan is, in its way, as ambitious as the 1916
Sykes-Picot agreement between the empires of Britain and France, which carved up
the region at the fall of the Ottoman Empire. The neo-imperial vision, which can
be ascertained from the writings of key administration figures and their
co-visionaries in influential conservative think tanks, includes not only regime
change in Iraq but control of Iraqi oil, a possible end to the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries and newly compliant governments in Syria and
Iran -- either by force or internal rebellion."
The Bushes are carriers of the deny-destroy-and-be-damned virus. Prescott
Bush never apologized for trading with the Nazis. George Bush Senior professed
to know nothing of the drug and arms dealing that funded the bloody, illegal
Iran-Contra operations, although it was common knowledge that he directed them.
He and his sons enriched themselves through shady real estate deals and
financial manipulations that brought down entire banking and savings and loan
institutions. They are all consummate inside traders, looting and leaving ruin
in their wake.
President-Select George Bush is no exception. He has no scruples about
exploiting his office for personal and family gain. The Texas governor who could
joke about frying prisoners in the electric chair will not, as president,
agonize over the decision to send young men and women into battle--or over
denying them medical care when they are injured.
There is irrefutable evidence that highly-placed Saudis aided and supported
the terrorists who murdered over 3000 American citizens on September 11, 2001.
Yet George Bush persists in protecting and colluding with those who sponsor
terrorists. Is this not an an act of treason?
George Bush should be impeached.
Notes:
(1) Jonathan Raban, "Western conceit of nation-building ignores
culture and history of Arabia," Seattle Times, November 24, 2002
(2) Michael Parenti, 9-11 Terrorism Trap: September 11 and
Beyond (2000) City Lights Books, San Francisco
(3) Laura Secor, "Which Islam?," Boston Daily Globe,
December 15, 2002
(4) Wayne Madsen, "Questionable
Ties: Tracking bin Laden's money flow leads back to Midland, Texas,"
(5) "The Press on the BCCI-bin Mahfouz-bin Laden Intelligence
Nexus, " Boston Herald , December 11, 2001
(6) Jonathan Beaty & S. C. Gwynne, The Outlaw Bank: A Wild
Ride Into the Secret Heart of BCCI, (1993) Random House, New York
(7) Daniel Pipes, "Jihad: How Academics Have Camouflaged
Its Real Meaning," December 2, 2002
(8) Jean-Charles Brisard and Guillaume Dasquie, Forbidden Truth:
U.S.-Taliban Secret Oil Diplomacy and the Failed Hunt for bin Laden (2002)
Thunder's Mouth Press/Nation Books, New York
(9) Al Martin, The Conspirators: Secrets of an Iran-Contra
Insider (2002) National Liberty Press, LLC
(10) Center for Cooperative Research, "Hijackers
who were under surveillance before 9/11"
(11) Greg Palast and David Pallister, "FBI and US Spy Agents Say
Bush Spiked Bin Laden Probes Before 11 September," The Guardian, November
7, 2001
(12) Jeff Gerth and Judith Miller, "Saudis Called Slow to Help
Stem Terror Finances," New York Times, November 28, 2002
(13) Dana Priest and Susan Schmidt, "9/11 Panel Criticizes Secrecy
on Saudi Links," Washington Post, December 12 2002
(14) Greg Miller, Greg Krikorian and H.G. Reza, "FBI Looks at
Saudi's Links to 9/11," Los Angeles Times, November 23, 2002
(15) Michael Isikoff, Newsweek, November 22, 2002
(16) Mark Steyn, "Bush and the Saudi Princess"
(17) Daniel Golden, James Bandler and Marcus Walker, Wall
Street Journal, September 27, 2001 Posted at globalresearch.ca 5 October
2001
(18) James Hatfield, "Why would Osama bin Laden want to kill
Dubya, his former business partner?" Online Journal, July 13, 2001
(19) Steve Lohr, "Gerstner to Be Chairman of Carlyle Group,"
New York Times, November 22, 2002
(20) Tim Shorrock uncovers the Bush connection to US defence giant
the Carlyle Group, New Internationalist 347, July 2002
Updates
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