|
COMMISSION
MEMBERS
Thomas
Kean
Then let's begin with the chairman of the commission Thomas Kean, former New
Jersey Governor and President of Drew University. When Kean was appointed to
replace severely conflicted Henry Kissinger, he asserted his only constituency
was the students at Drew.
Well, it turns out that is not exactly true. Kean sits on the Board of Directors
of Amerada Hess, one of the world's leading independent oil and gas companies.
The company is coupled with Delta Oil, a Saudi Arabia company in a joint venture
called Delta-Hess. Delta-Hess in turn is a partner in Azerbaijan with a
consortium developing Caspian Sea oil resources.
Delta Oil is owned by the two Saudi families of Khalid bin Mahfouz and Mohammed
Hussein al Amoudi. Both are alleged to be major financial backers of Osama bin
Laden and have been named in a lawsuit by families and survivors of the 9/11
terrorist attacks. Bin Mahfouz is Osama's brother-in-law. His sister married bin
Laden.
Delta-Hess owns 20% of the Azerbaijan consortium. SOCOL, the state owned Oil
Company has 50% and Frontera owns the remaining 30%.
Frontera is headed by Bill White who was Deputy Secretary of Energy in the first
Clinton administration and the architect of Azerbaijans first Caspian Sea
offshore gas and oil consortium. Familiar names among its Board of Directors and
advisors include Lloyd Bentsen, former Senator and Treasury Secretary and John
Deutch, former Director of the CIA.
Kean also is co-chairman of Homeland Security Project, which had significant
input into the drafting of the Office of Homeland Security legislation.
The long-time member of the CFR also forgot to mention his role as general
partner in Quad Ventures LLC. Quad is a limited partnership operating in the
$815 billion education industry whose partners include; Citigroup, J.P. Morgan
Chase, Merrill Lynch Community Development, Wells Fargo bank and insurance
giants Prudential Financial and Wachovia. Top officials in most of those
companies are also CFR members. Both Citigroup and Morgan Chase are deeply
involved in the Enron scandal. Citigroup received a slap on the wrist when found
to have laundered hundreds of millions of dollars in drug money which some
suspect helped fund terrorism.
Lee
Hamilton
Commission vice chairman and former congressman Lee Hamilton was appointed to
replace former senate majority leader George Mitchell (CFR), who like Kissinger
declined to disclose potential conflicts of interest and resigned. Hamilton, a
CFR member since at least 1988, was chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee and the House Select Intelligence Committee.
In 1987, House Speaker Jim Wright (who later resigned in disgrace) appointed
Hamilton to chair a committee investigating the Iran/Contra affair. When a
question was raised about CIA/Contra drug smuggling, the response was release by
Hamilton of a cursory review that concluded there was no truth to the charges.
The CIA recently released a report (that received almost no publicity) admitting
the drug connection.
Jamie Gorelick
Considered one of the fifty most powerful women in the country, CFR member Jamie
Gorelick is currently vice-chair of the giant mortgage lender and insurer Fannie
Mae. From March 1994 until she joined Fannie Mae in May 1997 she was Deputy
Attorney General, the number two spot in Janet Renos Department of Justice.
In May 1995, the Intelligence Community Law Enforcement Policy Board was
established to meet quarterly and discuss mutual concerns of the Attorney
General and Director of Central Intelligence. The board was co-chaired by
Gorelick and DCI George Tenet. Other members included all of the law enforcement
agencies, the Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research and the
Defense Department General Counsel.
This is the same time frame (spring of 1995) in which the Philippine government
apprised the FBI, CIA and State Department of Project Bojinka an Islamic
terrorist plot which included hijacking commercial airlines planes and flying
them into the Pentagon, World Trade Centre towers and, several other buildings.
The BCCI scandal involved a number of powerful individuals. Clark Clifford and
Robert Altman were the top two officers in First American, the new name given
Financial General Bankshares when it was taken over by BCCI (known as the Bank
of Crooks and Criminals International in the corridors of Washington) with the
help of the Jackson Stephens/Lippo Worthen Bank and the Rose Law Firm.
First American is said to have been using the notorious PROMIS software.
When BCCI and First American were exposed, the legal defense team for Clifford
and Altman attracted a bevy of well-known names including Robert Fiske (later
the first 'independent counsel' investigating Whitewater and Vince Foster's
'suicide'), Robert Bennett (later attorney for Bill Clinton), and Jamie Gorelick.
In a somewhat related case in 1978, Financial General Bankshares sued BCCI, two
Jackson Stephens' companies (one was Systematics) and a number of individuals.
Two of the attorneys representing Systematics in the controversy over PROMIS
software were Webster Hubbell and Hillary Rodham.
In 1998, while at Fannie Mae, Gorelick served on Clintons Central Intelligence
National Security Advisory Panel as well as the President's Review of
Intelligence.
Richard
Ben-Veniste
Ben-Veniste is a high-visibility Washington attorney and Democrat power broker.
He was Democrat counsel to the Senate Whitewater investigation where he blocked
inquiries about Webster Hubbell's hiring by the Lippo group and others
administered by Truman Arnold.
According to investigative journalist Daniel Hopsicker, Ben-Veniste then turned
around and defended Arnold (the man he was supposed to be investigating) before
Ken Starr's Whitewater grand jury, for which he was roundly criticized.
Hopsicker also reveals that Arnold had furnished a $2 million airplane to his
friend Wally Hilliard for $1. Hilliard, Hopsicker says, owned the Flight school
in Venice, Florida where four of the Islamic terrorist pilots were trained that
flew the suicide missions on 9/11.
Another of Ben-Venistes clients was Barry Seal, the drug running CIA asset of
Iran/Contra and Mena, Arkansas notoriety. In fact, Hopsicker relates Ben-Veniste
told the Wall Street Journal, "I did my part by launching him (Seal) into
the arms of Vice President Bush who embraced him as an undercover
operative."
Fred Fielding
Fielding is another one who has been around the centres of power for a while on
the Republican side. In the Nixon administration he was a deputy counsel working
under John Dean. In the Watergate scandal he helped his boss (Dean) handle
Howard Hunt's safe full of documents. They wore rubber gloves so as not to leave
fingerprints. Fielding was not one of the twenty or so Nixon associates
(including John Dean) that went to jail over their involvement.
Later Fielding served as White House Counsel to President Reagan. More recently
he was at least partly responsible for getting George W. Bush's political mentor
Karl Rove in hot water over failure to divest his stock in Intel Corporation
valued at over $100,000.
Fielding advised Rove, who was planning to divest all of his stock, to hold onto
it until a 'government certificate of divestiture' could be obtained. The
certificate would have allowed deferral of capital gains taxes on stock sold. .
While he still held the stock, Rove met with Intel executives and Vice President
Chaney at which a proposed merger with a Dutch company was discussed. This was a
breech of administration ethics rules.
Fielding served on the Bush transition team in early 2001. According to Clay
Johnson, Director of Presidential Personnel and Deputy Chief of Staff, the Vice
President asked Fred Fielding, who had been President Reagan's counsel, to come
in and he volunteered to--as soon as we had a Cabinet Secretary-to-be, he would
sit down with that person and they'd have a nice little chat for an hour or two.
And then Fred would tell us whether he was confident that there were no
clearance problems or not. If there was something that he thought might be
problematic, he would explore it further, and maybe they had to go get some
information, whatever. Johnson said the process now takes sixty days.
Jim Thompson
Jim Thompson was the longest serving governor in Illinois history completing
four terms in office leaving in 1991. He is currently chairman of the large
Chicago-based law firm Winston and Strawn. While he was governor, sensational
charges were leveled against him and the law firm by Chicago author and
investigator Sherman Skolnick.
Skolnick claimed that the First National Bank of Chicago had loaned (Communist)
China billions of dollars to be repaid in gold. When China defaulted on the gold
payments, according to Skolnick, the CIA and bank arranged for massive amounts
of high purity heroin to be smuggled into the U.S. in lieu of the gold payments.
Skolnick alleged shipments came in through Joliet, just south of Chicago, and
were supervised by Thompson and the Winston and Strawn law firm. As with most
claims of CIA involvement in illegal drugs, nothing came of the allegations.
Thompson got caught in the middle of a messy political battle between outgoing
Governor George Ryan and Attorney General Jim Ryan, both Republicans. Ryan was
running against Democrat Rod Blagojevich, the victor and incoming governor. At
the same time AG Ryan was suing Governor George Ryan over the pardoning of death
row inmates.
George Ryan hired former governor Jim Thompson to defend against the lawsuit.
Blagojevich had railed in his campaign against the 26 years of Republican
corruption and mismanagement. That included 12 of the years when Thompson was
governor. To the astonishment of practically everyone, Blagojevich appointed
Thompson to lead his transition team.
John
Lehman
John Lehman is an investment banker who has served in a number of government
positions including as Secretary of the Navy from 1981 to 1987 under President
Reagan. His first government job was as special counsel and senior staff member
to Henry Kissinger on the National Security Council in the Nixon administration.
Lehman currently serves on several boards of directors including those of Ball
Corporation, as chairman of OAO Technology Solutions, Inc. and his own J.F.
Lehman & Company. He is a former chairman of Sperry Marine and investment
banker with Paine Webber. Lehman served 25 years as a naval aviator in the
selected reserves.
Slade Gorton
Slade Gorton is a former senator from the State of Washington. After he lost his
reelection bid in 2000, he joined the Seattle Law firm of Preston, Gates &
Ellis, which specializes in environmental issues.
If jury selection rules were being used, Gorton would probably be dismissed from
consideration for the commission for cause. Two days after the 9/11 attacks he
told a public-television audience there was nothing government intelligence
officials could have done to thwart the attack, according to the Seattle Times.
The Times quotes Gorton as saying, I doubt we can expect to get too much inside
information no matter what we do.
Gorton served two years on the Senate Intelligence Committee. He says that
experience and his personal friendship with Trent Lott were responsible for his
appointment by Lott.
Tim Roemer
Tim Roemer is a moderate Democrat congressman (at least compared to the Democrat
leadership) who is retiring from Congress at the end of this year. He was one of
the prime movers in the House championing creation of the Independent
Commission. He is credited with bringing the organization representing survivors
and families of victims of the 9/11 attacks into the mix of support for the
commission. Roemer is a member of the House Intelligence Committee.
Max Cleland
Max Cleland is a one-term Senator from Georgia who lost his re-election bid this
year in a close contest. He is a triple amputee from wounds received in Vietnam.
At the age of 28, Cleland was the youngest person and first Vietnam veteran
elected to the Georgia State Senate. In 1977, he became the youngest ever head
of the Veterans' Administration when appointed by President Jimmy Carter.
In 1982 Cleland became the youngest person elected as Georgia Secretary of
State. He resigned that position in 1996 to run for the seat being vacated by
retiring U.S. Senator Sam Nunn. He was sworn in as a U.S. Senator in 1997.
Barring (intentional) leaks, we will have to wait another 17 months to see what
the product of the commission will be. By that time the publics attention will
undoubtedly be focused on other things.
********
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed
without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational purposes.)
Permission is granted to reproduce this article in its entirety.
The author is a freelance writer based in Romulus, Michigan. He is a former
newspaper editor and investigative reporter, a retired customs administrator and
accountant, and a student of history and the U.S. Constitution.
If you would like to receive Medium Rare articles directly, please contact the
author at jimrarey@comcast.net.
Original
Link: http://www.rense.com/general33/911med.htm
|