9/11 - 3rd collapse - Building 7, page-441

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    this is one of the earliest 9/11 videos and discusses the connection between Wall St, the need for cash & the CIA drug trade, including the need to invade Afghanistan after opium production was ended there in the year 2000

    here, the problem for @Katoom (who gives the impression of believing our political & military leaders are "honorable men") and @Froggy044 is denying the CIA-US-Admin involvement in the drug trade, including during the Vietnam War, Iran-Contra & Afghanistan, which of course was a historic strategy of the British Empire going back to the Opium Wars and airdropping of drugs to Turkish troops in WW1

    Bush lead the CIA and Bush pardoned the Iran-Contra team (who trafficked drugs via Govnr Bill Clinton's state airport)

    for logical minds, all this criminal activity falls into place since the same Mafia are involved, including Cuba, Bay of Pigs, Operation Northwoods (same us of planes as 9/11), assassination of JFK, etc, etc....

    the criminal activities of Harimann, Dulles, Bush, Rockerfeller, Wall St Zionists,  etc, can be traced all the way back to their funding of the Bolshevik Revolution & Hitler, to keep the world of their economic competitors at war




    Indictments[edit]

    • Caspar Weinberger, Secretary of Defense, was indicted on two counts of perjury and one count of obstruction of justice on June 16, 1992. Weinberger received a pardon from George H. W. Bush on December 24, 1992, before he was tried.
    • William Casey, Head of the CIA. Thought to have conceived the plan, was stricken ill hours before he would testify. Reporter Bob Woodward reported Casey knew of and approved the plan.
    • Robert C. McFarlane, National Security Adviser, convicted of withholding evidence, but after a plea bargain was given only two years of probation. Later pardoned by President George H. W. Bush.
    • Elliott Abrams, Assistant Secretary of State, convicted of withholding evidence, but after a plea bargain was given only two years probation. Later pardoned by PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush.
    • Alan D. Fiers, Chief of the CIA's Central American Task Force, convicted of withholding evidence and sentenced to one year probation. Later pardoned by President George H. W. Bush.
    • Clair George, Chief of Covert Ops-CIA, convicted on two charges of perjury, but pardoned by President George H. W. Bush before sentencing.
    • Oliver North, member of the National Security Council convicted of accepting an illegal gratuity, obstruction of a congressional inquiry, and destruction of documents, but the ruling was overturned since he had been granted immunity.
    • Fawn Hall, Oliver North's secretary, was given immunity from prosecution on charges of conspiracy and destroying documents in exchange for her testimony.
    • Jonathan Scott Royster, Liaison to Oliver North, was given immunity from prosecution on charges of conspiracy and destroying documents in exchange for his testimony.
    • National Security Advisor John Poindexter was convicted of five counts of conspiracy, obstruction of justice, perjury, defrauding the government, and the alteration and destruction of evidence. The Supreme Court upheld a lower court ruling that overturned these convictions.
    • Duane Clarridge. An ex-CIA senior official, he was indicted in November 1991 on seven counts of perjury and false statements relating to a November 1985 shipment to Iran. Pardoned before trial by President George H. W. Bush.
    • Richard V. Secord. Ex-major general in the Air Force who organized the Iran arms sales and Contra aid. He pleaded guilty in November 1989 to making false statements to Congress and was sentenced to two years of probation.
    • Albert Hakim. A businessman, he pleaded guilty in November 1989 to supplementing the salary of North by buying a $13,800 fence for North with money from "the Enterprise", which was a set of foreign companies Hakim used in Iran-Contra. In addition, Swiss company Lake Resources Inc., used for storing money from arms sales to Iran to give to the Contras, plead guilty to stealing government property. Hakim was given two years of probation and a $5,000 fine, while Lake Resources Inc. was ordered to dissolve.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran–Contra_affair
    Last edited by ddzx: 22/06/15
 
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