Here's another story in my archives about the BCCI:
"After becoming President in January, 1989, Senator Prescott Bush's son,
George Herbert Walker Bush - father of our current President - authorized
a series of programs that not only armed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein
but also provided him with technology that assisted in his development of
chemical weapons like Sarin gas, and biological weapons, the George W
Bush claims he still possesses. Apologists for Bush (the elder) say that
after the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s left the region unstable, he was just
trying to establish a new balance of power. Not so. Bush directives and
policies, including relationships with the Bank of Credit and Commerce
International (BCCI), and the Banca Nacional del Lavoro (BNL) were
directly and deliberately responsible for creating the very army the U.S.
fought in 1991.
A story by Russ W. Baker, in the March/April issue of the Colombia
Journalism Review (CJR), provides the most compelling overview of
Iraqgate that I have seen.
"ABC News Nightline opened last June 9 with words to make the heart
stop 'It is becoming increasingly clear,' said a grave Ted Koppel, 'that
George Bush, operating largely behind the scenes throughout the 1980s,
initiated and supported much of the financing, intelligence, and military
help that built Saddam's Iraq into the aggressive power that the United
States ultimately had to destroy.'"
"Why, then, have some of our top papers provided so little coverage?"
Baker poignantly asks.
"The result: Readers who neither grasp nor care about the facts behind
facile imagery like The Butcher of Baghdad and Operation Desert Storm.
In particular, readers who do not follow the story of the Banca Nacional
del Lavoro, which apparently served as a paymaster for Saddam's arms
buildup, and thus became a player in the largest bank-fraud case in U.S.
history.
"Complex, challenging, mind-boggling stories (from Iran-Contra to the
S&L crisis to BCCI) increasingly define our times: yet we don't appear to
be getting any better at telling them."
"Much of what Saddam received from the West was not arms per se, but
so-called dual-use technology -- ultra sophisticated computers, armored
ambulances, helicopters, chemicals, and the like, with potential civilian
uses as well as military applications. We've learned that a vast network of
companies, based in the U.S. and abroad, eagerly fed the Iraqi war
machine right up until August 1990, when Saddam invaded Kuwait.
"And we've learned that the obscure Atlanta Branch of Italy's largest
bank, Banca Nacional del Lavoro, relying partly on U.S.
taxpayer-guaranteed loans, funneled $5 billion to Iraq from 1985 to
1989. Some government-backed loans were supposed to be for
agricultural purposes, but were used to facilitate the purchase of stronger
stuff than wheat. Federal Reserve and Agriculture department memos
warned of suspected abuses by Iraq, which apparently took advantage of
the loans to free up funds for munitions. U.S. taxpayers have been left
holding the bag for what looks like $2 billion in defaulted loans to Iraq.
"In fact, we now know that in February 1990, then Attorney General D ick
Thornburgh [appointed by George H.W. Bush] blocked U.S. investigators
from traveling to Rome and Istanbul to pursue the case."
"As New York Times columnist William Safire argued last December 7,
"Iraqgate is uniquely horrendous: a scandal about the Systematic abuse
of power by misguided leaders of three democratic nations [The U.S.,
Britain, and Italy] to secretly finance the arms buildup of a dictator."
While Democrat Henry Gonzales, Chairman of the House Banking
Committee during the period, stood as the lone voice in the wilderness in
raising alarms about Bush's obvious corruption, the rest of the Congress
sheepishly ignored all the signs demanding immediate action. Gonzales'
voice reportedly fell silent after his empty car was machine-gunned in a
Washington suburb in what passed for a drive-by shooting.
The CJR continues: "Meanwhile, The Village Voice published a major
investigation by free-lancer Murray Waas in its December 18, 1990 issue.
"That American troops could be killed or maimed because of a covert
decision to arm Iraq," Waas wrote, "is the most serious consequence of a
U.S. foreign policy formulated and executed in secret, without the advice
and consent of the American public."
The L.A. Times, on Feb 23, 1992, dug deep enough to find secret
National Security Decision Directives by the Bush Administration in 1989
ordering closer ties with Baghdad and paving the way for $1 billion in
new aid. The Times series, co-authored with Waas, emphasized that,
"buried deep in a 1991 Washington Press piece - that Secretary of State
James Baker, after meeting with Iraqi foreign minister Tariq Aziz in
October 1989, intervened personally to support U.S. government loans
guarantees to Iraq."
Baker's CJR report also noted, "On October 3, the [Wall Street] Journal
reported [BNL official Christopher] Drogoul's assertion that the Director
General of Iraq's Ministry of Industry and Military Production had told
him, "We are all in this together. The intelligence service of the U.S.
government works very closely with the intelligence service of the Iraqi
government." Three weeks later, the Journal reported that [Henry]
Gonzales "produced a phone-book-sized packet of documents" showing
the involvement of U.S. exporting firms. The documents mentioned one
"which designed parts for Iraq's howitzers and was financed through BNL."
In the wake of highly suspicious anthrax outbreaks in Florida, just miles
from where several of the WTC suicides pilots trained, we add one final
note. In his 1998 book "Bringing the War Home" author William Thomas
writes, " Under that same [weapons transfer] program, 19 containers of
Anthrax bacteria were supplied to Iraq in 1988 by the American Type
Culture Collection company, located near Fort Detrick, MD, the site of the
US Army's high security germ warfare labs." http://www.thetip.org/art_61_icle.html
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