Origins of the G.W. Bush-Carlyle-Nazi Axis

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Origins of the G.W. Bush-Carlyle-Nazi Axis

By Alex Constantine

Sunday, March 02, 2003 7:03:53 AM

Even loyal conservatives must admit that George Bush, Jr. is a strange bird. Texans have never truly accepted him as  one of their own. "Like his father," the UK's Observer jeered in 1994, "his home-grown credentials are questioned." In  general, the natives were somewhat uneasy about the occasional bizarre antic - like the first day of a local dove shoot,  highlighted by Bush bagging a protected songbird, not the designated target (Ed Vulliamy, "White Hot Mama fights a  Texan Bush War," Observer, October 2, 1994). "No real Texan would have done that!" barked then Governor Ann  Richards.

But then, in the mid-90s, the Texas political landscape shifted radically, the old order crumbling and a home-grown right-wing mutation plowing through the crust. Democrats had dominated the state since the Civil War, but with  missionary zeal the Christian Right rallied and seized control of the Republican Party, led by the state's Christian  Coalition and Eagle Forum, and went on to demonstrate that any political machine is mutable, even in the deep South.

But Bush still didn't quite fit the ticket, some Texans felt. True, his business was petroleum. But shortly after George, Jr.  joined the board of Harken Oil, BCCI, the international bank that parlayed middle eastern oil profits into political  influence, not to mention engaging in child prostitution and arming Iraq, dropped a number of lucrative drilling contracts  in his lap (Petzinger, Truell & Abramson, 'Family Ties,' Wall Street Journal, December 5, 1991, p. 1). Texans were left  to ponder the question: Why in tarnation was Bush, Jr. in business with the scandal-ridden Shiek Khalifah bin-Salmon  al-Khalifah, the ruling emir of Bahrain? In 1990, the Shiek's name surfaced on a list of primary shareholders in BCCI's  parent company, BCCI Holdings in Luxembourg. Bush had pulled strings to throw the contracts to Harken. In return, Harken Oil helped BCCI investment bankers gain a foothold in the U.S. When the Iraqgate scandal broke, W.  attempted to separate himself from it, blaming a former aide who had gone to work for BCCI and resigned when the  press caught a whiff of the deal.

At the same time, it was clear that Junior had his eye fixed on his father's old eyrie in Washington. W. had been one of  ush, Sr.'s leading advisors, a "lead player," in "the  campaign to oust White House Chief of Staff John Sununu (Pertzinger, Truell & Abramson). He was an old hand at gamesmanship by the time he landed his gubernatorial seat. The W.S. Journal looked into Bush's business dealings and found a "complex pattern" of provocative personal and  financial ties, but Bush refused to respond to questions: "George W. Bush, a managing partner of the Texas Rangers  baseball team, declined to be interviewed," but "he did provide brief responses to written questions through an intermediary." Where was the Texas moralist with an aversion to "even" the vaguest appearance of wrong-doing? In  hiding.

But still exploiting those personal and financial relationships, of course. In March, 1995, the regents of the University of  Texas, at the behest of Governor Bush, invested $10 million with the Carlyle Group, a merchant bank in the District of  Columbia. Carlyle was chaired by Frank Carlucci, Ronald Reagan's secretary of defense and, since 1989, "a darling of  the corporate sector," per the L.A. Times. Carlucci sits on the board of numerous mega-corporations, including Bell  Atlantic, Ashland Oil and the Kaman Corporation. Carlyle's sole outside partner is the Mellon Family. Richard Darmon, economic advisor to Bush, Sr., was on the board. So was James Baker III, former secretary of state. These  investments raised a ruckus in the business press.

Seems G.W. himself had long-standing business ties to the Carlyle Group, a firm bonded financially with the Bin Laden  family of Saudi Arabia. In 1990, he was granted a seat on the board of Carlyle by former Nixon aide/bagman Fred  Malek, a Carlyle advisor (Joe Conason, "Notes on a Native Son," Harper's, February 2000, p. 49).

Fred Malek, mind you, was the CREEP deputy director who, prompted by Nixon's trembling belief that "a Jewish  cabal" in the Bureau of Labor Statistics was bent on his destruction, made up a list of Jews in the bureau. Malek was  made deputy director of the Republican National Committee by George Bush, Sr., an old friend. It was Malek who  organized an "ethnic coalition" of Nazis in August 1988, the Heritage Groups Council, that included the likes of Laszlo  Pastor (a Hungarian-American, former fascist Arrowcross death squad officer and junior diplomatic envoy to Berlin  under Hitler), and Father Florian Galdau (a priest, Vatican P-2 member and New York leader of the Iron Guard, a  latter day version of the old SS-run Romanian terror organization).

Once again, the Bush family distanced itself from scandal. The clan pled ignorance, even though Bush, Sr. had cherry- picked Malek for the job. Supposedly, they had fooled everyone, even the conservative National Jewish Coalition,  which boasted In 1992 that "Vice President Dan Quayle, HUD Secretary Jack Kemp, GOP Campaign Manager Fred Malek and a large number of key Senators, Congressmen and candidates for office addressed Jewish delegates and  community leaders at a series of events hosted by the NJC during the Republican convention in Houston last month."  (NJC Bulletin, September 1992). 

On February 2 1990, USA Today's Tom Squitieri wrote that "four key Republican activists, ousted from George Bush's  1988 campaign amid charges of anti-Semitic or pro-fascist links, are back working for the party." These  included Fred Malek and Phil Guarino, another pro-Nazi P2 lodger. George W. Bush ran spin control for his father's  1988 presidential campaign, and when the Nazi scandal broke ever-so-briefly in the media, GW protected his father by  urging the European fascists to resign from the Heritage Council (Citizen's Law Web Site, http://www.citizenslaw.net /bushdynasty_corrupt.htm).

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Inside The Carlyle Group

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New York Times, 3/5/01:

...Traveling with the fanfare of dignitaries, Mr. Bush and Mr. Baker [use] their extensive government contacts to further  their business interests as representatives of the Carlyle Group, a $12 billion private equity firm based in Washington  that has parlayed a roster of former top-level government officials, largely from the Bush and Reagan administrations,  into a moneymaking machine. In a new spin on Washington's revolving door between business and government, where  lobbying by former officials is restricted but soliciting investments is not, Carlyle has upped the ante and taken the  practice global. Mr. Bush and Mr. Baker were accompanied on their trips by former Prime Minister John Major of  Britain, another of Carlyle's political stars. With door-openers of this caliber, along with shrewd investment skills,  Carlyle has gone from an unknown in the world of private equity to one of its biggest players. Private equity, which  nvolves buying up companies in private deals and reselling them, is a high-end business open  only to the very rich.  Over the last decade, the Carlyle empire has grown to span three continents and include investments in most corners of  the world. It owns so many companies that it is now in effect one of the nation's biggest defense contractors and a force  in global telecommunications.

Its blue-chip investors include major banks and insurance companies, billion-dollar pension funds and wealthy investors  from Abu Dhabi to Singapore. In getting business for Carlyle, Mr. Bush has been impressive. His meeting  with the crown prince was followed by a yacht cruise and private dinners with Saudi businessmen. And Mr. Bush led  Carlyle's successful entry into South Korea, the fastest-growing economy in Asia. After his meetings with the prime  minister and other government and business leaders, Carlyle won a tough competition for control of KorAm, one of  Korea's few healthy banks. The steady flow of politicians to lucrative private-sector jobs based on their government  contacts is a familiar Washington tale. But in this case, it is being played out for more dollars, on a global stage, and in the world of private finance, where the minimal government rules prohibiting lobbying by former officials for a given  period are not a factor. These rules say nothing about potential conflicts when former government officials use their connections and insights for financial gain, and they may attract more notice now that George W. Bush is president.  Many of those involved with Carlyle, which invests largely in companies that do business with the government or are  affected by government regulations, have ties to the Oval Office. 

For instance, Frank C. Carlucci, a Reagan secretary of defense who as much as anyone is responsible for Carlyle's success, said he met in February with his old college classmate Donald H. Rumsfeld, the secretary of defense, and Vice  President Dick Cheney, himself a defense secretary under former President Bush, to talk about military matters - at a time when Carlyle has several billion-dollar defense projects under consideration.... "Carlyle is as deeply wired into  the current administration as they can possibly be," said Charles Lewis, executive director of the Center for Public   Integrity, a nonprofit public interest group based in Washington. "George Bush is getting money from private interests that have business before the government, while his son is president. And, in a really peculiar way, George W. Bush could, some day, benefit financially from his own administration's decisions, through his father's investments. The average American doesn't know that and, to me, that's a jaw-dropper."

It is difficult to determine exactly how much money the senior Mr. Bush and Mr. Baker have made. Mr. Baker is a  Carlyle partner, and Mr. Bush has the title senior adviser to its Asian activities. With a current market valueof about  3.5 billion on Carlyle's equity and with the firm owned by 18 partners and one outside investor, Mr. Baker's Carlyle  take would be worth about $180 million if each partner held an equal stake. It is not known whether he has more or  ess than the other partners. Unlike Mr. Baker, Mr. Bush has no ownership stake in Carlyle; he is an adviser and an  nvestor and is compensated by obtaining stakes in Carlyle investments. Carlyle executives cited, for example, Mr.   ush's being allowed to put money he earns giving speeches for Carlyle into its investment funds. Mr. Bush generally  receives $80,000 to $100,000 for a speech. He sits on no corporate boards other than Carlyle's. Carlyle also gave the  Bush family a hand in 1990 by putting George W. Bush, who was then struggling to find a career, on the board of a Carlyle subsidiary, Caterair, an airline-catering company....

With $12 billion from investors, Carlyle claims to be the nation's largest private equity fund and makes money by  investing in undervalued companies and reselling at a profit.... The California state pension fund invested $305 million  with Carlyle, and the Texas teachers pension fund - whose board was appointed when George W. Bush was governor  - gave Carlyle $100 million to invest in November. Carlyle also works as a financial adviser to the Saudi  government....Carlyle has done well for its investors, returning an average of 34 percent a year over the last decade, in  line with other private equity funds. It has done this by buying what it knows best - companies that are regulated by the  government. Nearly two-thirds of its investments are in defense and telecommunications companies, which are affected  by shifts in government spending and policy. ...Carlyle has become the nation's 11th largest defense contractor, owning  companies that make tanks, aircraft wings and a broad array of other military equipment. It also owns health care  companies, real estate, Internet companies, a bottling company and even Le Figaro, the French newspaper.... And its access extends well beyond American shores. In Europe, Carlyle has assembled an advisory board that besides Mr.  Major includes Karl Otto P÷hl, former president of German's Bundesbank, and the past or present chairmen of  B.M.W., Hoffman-LaRoche, Nestlé_, LVMH-Moït Hennessy, Louis Vuitton and Aerospatiale, the French Airbus  partner. Carlyle's Asia advisory board, which helps raise money and finds and reviews deals, includes former President  Fidel V. Ramos of the Philippines, the former prime minister of Thailand and the executive director of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority.The former South Korean prime minister Park Tae Joon was also an adviser to Carlyle....

In an office adorned with photographs of Mr. Carlucci and the politically mighty - he sits beneath an Oval Office picture  of himself and Mr. Reagan - Mr. Carlucci makes it clear that his extensive government and global ties are as  fresh as ever. "I know Rumsfeld extremely well," Mr. Carlucci said in an interview. "We've been close friends  throughout the years. We were college classmates."...

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"This new direction of the US economy will generate hundreds of billions of
dollars of surplus profits, which will line the pockets of a handful of large
corporations..."