189 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
189 lines
9.6 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 5 Num. 09
|
|
======================================
|
|
("Quid coniuratio est?")
|
|
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
I neither necessarily agree nor disagree with either all or parts
|
|
of the following. -- Brian Francis Redman, Editor-in-Chief
|
|
|
|
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
|
|
|
|
WHAT IS WHITEWATER REALLY ALL ABOUT?
|
|
By Sherman H. Skolnick
|
|
|
|
The popular press would have us believe that Whitewater was a few
|
|
real estate mistakes of Bill and Hillary Clinton. Totally no more
|
|
than 69 thousand dollars or so. Why the press is kidding us may
|
|
become more clear after considering a few items the press has not
|
|
seen fit to tell us.
|
|
|
|
William Jefferson Clinton deems himself a clever man. Recruited
|
|
by CIA early on, he was in a position to understand counter-
|
|
intelligence and espionage agencies using different financial
|
|
entities as a money laundry to disguise covert action funds.
|
|
|
|
Bill was recruited by Central Intelligence supposedly as a
|
|
travelling student. In Prague, at the time [of] the Soviets'
|
|
bloody seizure from the local communists, Bill stayed at the home
|
|
of the son of a leading communist leader. Those not understanding
|
|
the use of students as spies and counter-spies might simply label
|
|
Clinton as a "Red". Actually, Bill was part of a CIA counter-
|
|
espionage scheme, similar to the role of Allard K. Lowenstein as
|
|
head of the National Student Association in the 1950s.
|
|
Lowenstein's operation, somewhat similar to Bill's, was done with
|
|
foundations acting as conduits for CIA funding. Some journalists,
|
|
like this writer, began confronting Lowenstein with his CIA
|
|
links. While plotting to help Ted Kennedy somehow steal the 1980
|
|
presidential election, Lowenstein was blown away by a so-called
|
|
"lone assassin".
|
|
|
|
Clinton also went to Moscow, again the travelling student with an
|
|
espionage agenda. He accomplished what his bosses at CIA
|
|
considered a brilliant move: Clinton stole a secret transcript of
|
|
a tongue-lashing one Soviet dictator gave to others in their
|
|
ruling elite. Conveyed by Clinton to CIA, this endeared Bill to
|
|
the Rockefellers. After all, CIA's worldwide job has been to
|
|
guard Rockefeller's foreign oil properties.
|
|
|
|
So Clinton's rise to power has to be understood in this context.
|
|
After all, Arkansas is a sizeable state with a small population.
|
|
Is it a secret the Rockefellers own and operate Arkansas?
|
|
Winthrop Rockefeller was Governor of the State a few terms before
|
|
Bill. Worthen Banking Group and the Jackson Stephens family --
|
|
headquartered in Little Rock -- are the largest bond brokers and
|
|
investment bankers outside of Wall Street. They apparently are
|
|
all fronting for the Rockefellers and the American spy shop.
|
|
|
|
Hillary Rodham is a CIA darling as well, in some ways separate
|
|
and apart from "Sludge Willie". In spook parlance, they are a
|
|
"CIA couple". Yes, they are married and had a daughter. Yet, Bill
|
|
and Hillary are part of somewhat separate espionage agendas.
|
|
Hillary understands plenty. She was a key aide during the
|
|
Watergate investigation whitewash of the role of CIA. Put in a
|
|
nutshell, Nixon wanted to become an imperial president by
|
|
blackmailing CIA on their role in the murder of President
|
|
Kennedy. CIA double agents supposedly working for the Nixon
|
|
White House arranged to get themselves caught at the Watergate
|
|
Hotel. Result: the downfall of Nixon, arranged by CIA, and
|
|
Hillary, early in her career, played her part.
|
|
|
|
Hillary went on to become board chairman of a CIA foundation
|
|
instrumental in funding dirty tricks using agents provocateurs.
|
|
The CIA and their use of foundations, like the one later headed
|
|
by Hillary, is a story all by itself. This writer once taught a
|
|
course at a radio/TV broadcast school on the subject of CIA and
|
|
their foundations and how to research and investigate the same.
|
|
|
|
An entity much-used by CIA was the Bank of Credit and Commerce
|
|
International [BCCI]. Foreign espionage agencies, like those of
|
|
France and Israel, likewise used BCCI. The popular press has
|
|
given Americans the false understanding that the rogue bank was a
|
|
purely Arab creature.
|
|
|
|
There are profound reasons why the mass media are fearful of
|
|
pushing too hard on the Clintons. The fall-out would damage a few
|
|
other windows as well.
|
|
|
|
In 1991, four major news organizations had obtained the bribery
|
|
list, showing who BCCI had bribed, worldwide, including the
|
|
United States. By some mystery it was, for thirty days only, a
|
|
public record at the Bank of England. One of these news groups
|
|
corroborated that the list was correct as to the United States.
|
|
According to the details, 108 members of the U.S. House of
|
|
Representatives and 28 U.S. Senators received bribes from BCCI.
|
|
Part of the scheme involved 6 Chicago commodity brokers, some
|
|
with offices in London. One of them, Capcom, was reportedly
|
|
secretly owned by major officials of one of the largest cable
|
|
companies with purported links to Turner Broadcasting of Atlanta.
|
|
|
|
BCCI wanted to penetrate the American banking scene in a big way.
|
|
They did a thing natural to cynical big business: they bought
|
|
Congress. The details were too shocking for the major news group.
|
|
So a brave journalist turned over the details to this writer and
|
|
his associates who further verified the details and wrote
|
|
exclusive stories in 1991. Reportedly implicated was Wendy Gramm,
|
|
at the time head of the federal agency regulating commodity
|
|
brokers, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. She is the
|
|
wife of Senator Phil Gramm (R., Texas).
|
|
|
|
The strange death of Vincent Foster, jr., Clinton White House
|
|
aide, is bound up with activities of Foster and Hillary to assist
|
|
BCCI to penetrate American business.
|
|
|
|
Records of the House Banking Committee show BCCI was practically
|
|
a twin of another scandal-ridden operation, Banca Nazionale del
|
|
Lavoro [BNL], Italy's largest bank, owned in part by the Vatican.
|
|
The Congressional Committee sought further records of BNL's
|
|
Chicago branch. A Federal judge in Chicago, close to the Bush
|
|
White House, issued an injunction to stop the House Banking
|
|
Committee from using records of BNL Chicago. Involved were huge
|
|
transactions of Saddam Hussein, the Iraqi strongman, and his
|
|
secret, private business partner. In May, 1991, shortly after the
|
|
Persian Gulf War, the case ended up to be heard by a three-judge
|
|
panel in the U.S. Court of Appeals in Chicago. This writer and
|
|
his associates were the only journalists attending the hearing.
|
|
Afterwards, in the back of the courtroom, we did exclusive
|
|
interviews with some of the participants in the case. They
|
|
confirmed what we had heard elsewhere from reliable sources: that
|
|
George Herbert Walker Bush, at the time President, was the
|
|
secret, private business partner in joint ventures with the Iraqi
|
|
dictator. Involved in the bank records were tens of billions of
|
|
dollars of oil kick-backs from various Persian Gulf oil-soaked
|
|
sheikdoms, shared by Bush and his cronies with Saddam Hussein.
|
|
The Iraqi dictator was the bully boy of the Persian Gulf and
|
|
received 25 percent of the proceeds of oil shipped to the West.
|
|
So, when oil was 20 dollars per barrel, Hussein split the 5
|
|
dollar per barrel kick-back with Bush and his bunch. A trillion
|
|
dollars of oil was shipped from the Gulf in the decade, 1980 to
|
|
1990. The corrupt rake-off amounted to 25 billion dollars per
|
|
year, making Saddam Hussein and Bush the richest men on the
|
|
planet.
|
|
|
|
The federal trial judge had ordered the Banking Committee to
|
|
return the records and enjoined their disclosure and use. After
|
|
the appeals court hearing, the Bush Justice Department leaked
|
|
details to certain journalists, that one of the 3-judge panel had
|
|
taken bribes, known to the Justice Department, in eight other
|
|
unrelated cases. In that context, the end result became obvious.
|
|
The appeals court panel ordered the BNL Chicago case to be
|
|
removed from the courthouse, a way of hushing the matter up.
|
|
|
|
The press, other than small publications, will not say a single
|
|
word about the case of Bank Lavoro's Chicago branch. And not a
|
|
single committee of the House or Senate will utter a single word
|
|
about the Chicago mess. Congress and the press have discussed a
|
|
federal case involving BNL's Atlanta branch. Some 5 billion
|
|
dollars was secretly diverted to Iraq -- a paltry sum by
|
|
comparison to BNL Chicago. Disguised as Agriculture Department
|
|
loans, the funds were diverted for Iraq to buy weapons from
|
|
American companies.
|
|
|
|
The press and Congress have omitted some key details about Iraq
|
|
and BNL Atlanta. The deal was arranged and strategized by Hillary
|
|
Rodham Clinton in conjunction with her law partner at the Rose
|
|
Law Firm in Little Rock, namely, [Vince] Foster. Part of the
|
|
Iraqi weapons money reportedly was washed through the banks of
|
|
Clinton's cronies, Jackson Stephens and the Worthen Banking
|
|
Group.
|
|
|
|
[...to be continued...]
|
|
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
I encourage distribution of "Conspiracy Nation."
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
For information on how to receive the new Conspiracy Nation
|
|
Newsletter, send an e-mail message to bigxc@prairienet.org
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
If you would like "Conspiracy Nation" sent to your e-mail
|
|
address, send a message in the form "subscribe conspire My Name"
|
|
to listproc@prairienet.org -- To cancel, send a message in the
|
|
form "unsubscribe conspire" to listproc@prairienet.org
|
|
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
|
|
Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
|
|
pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9
|
|
|