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http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/sunday/commentary/la-op-phillips11jan11,1,59
027

The Barreling Bushes

Four generations of the dynasty have chased profits through cozy ties with
Mideast leaders, spinning webs of conflicts of interest
By Kevin Phillips

Kevin Phillips' new book, "American Dynasty: Aristocracy, Fortune and the
Politics of Deceit in the House of Bush," has just been published by Viking
Penguin.

January 11, 2004

WASHINGTON - Dynasties in American politics are dangerous. We saw it with the
Kennedys, we may well see it with the Clintons and we're certainly seeing it
with the Bushes. Between now and the November election, it's crucial that
Americans come to understand how four generations of the current president's
family have embroiled the United States in the Middle East through CIA
connections, arms shipments, rogue banks, inherited war policies and personal
financial links.

As early as 1964, George H.W. Bush, running for the U.S. Senate from Texas, was
labeled by incumbent Democrat Ralph Yarborough as a hireling of the sheik of
Kuwait, for whom Bush's company drilled offshore oil wells. Over the four
decades since then, the ever-reaching Bushes have emerged as the first U.S.
political clan to thoroughly entangle themselves with Middle Eastern royal
families and oil money. The family even has links to the Bin Ladens - though not
to family black sheep Osama bin Laden - going back to the 1970s.

How these unusual relationships helped bring about 9/11 and then distorted the
U.S. response to Islamic terrorism requires thinking of the Bush family as a
dynasty. The two Bush presidencies are inextricably linked by that dynasty.

The first family member lured by the Middle East's petroleum wealth was George
W. Bush's great-grandfather, George H. Walker, a buccaneer who was president of
Wall Street-based W.A. Harriman & Co. In the 1920s, Walker and his firm
participated in rebuilding the Baku oil fields only a few hundred miles north of
current-day Iraq. As senior director of Dresser Industries (now part of
Halliburton), Walker's son-in-law Prescott Bush (George W. Bush's grandfather)
became involved with the Middle East in the years after World War II. But it was
George H.W. Bush, the current president's father, who forged the dynasty's
strongest ties to the region.

George H.W. Bush was the first CIA director to come from the oil industry. He
went on to became the first vice president - and then the first president - to
have either an oil or CIA background. This helps to explain his persistent bent
toward the Middle East, covert operations and rogue banks like the Abu
Dhabi-based Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI), which came to be
known by the nickname "Bank of Crooks and Criminals International." In each of
the government offices he held, he encouraged CIA involvement in Iran, Pakistan,
Afghanistan and other Middle Eastern countries, and he pursued policies that
helped make the Middle East into the world's primary destination for arms
shipments.

Taking the CIA helm in January 1976, Bush cemented strong relations with the
intelligence services of both Saudi Arabia and the shah of Iran. He worked
closely with Kamal Adham, the head of Saudi intelligence, brother-in-law of King
Faisal and an early BCCI insider. After leaving the CIA in January 1977, Bush
became chairman of the executive committee of First International Bancshares and
its British subsidiary, where, according to journalists Peter Truell and Larry
Gurwin in their 1992 book "False Profits," Bush "traveled on the bank's behalf
and sometimes marketed to international banks in London, including several
Middle Eastern institutions."

Once in the White House, first as vice president to Ronald Reagan and later as
president, George H.W. Bush was linked to at least two Middle East-centered
scandals. It's never been entirely clear what Bush's connection was to the
Iran-Contra affair, in which clandestine arms shipments to Iran, some
BCCI-financed, helped illegally fund the operations of the anti-Sandinista
Contra rebels in Nicaragua. But in 1992, special prosecutor Lawrence E. Walsh
asserted that Bush, despite his protestations, had indeed been "in the loop" on
multiple illegal acts.

Much clearer was Bush's pivotal role, both as vice president and president, in
"Iraqgate," the hidden aid provided by the U.S. and its military to Saddam
Hussein's Iraq in its high-stakes war with Iran during the 1980s. The U.S. is
known to have provided both biological cultures that could have been used for
weapons and nuclear know-how to the regime, as well as conventional weapons. As
ABC-TV broadcaster Ted Koppel put it in a June 1992 "Nightline" program after
the 1991 Persian Gulf War: "It is becoming increasingly clear that George [H.W.]
Bush, operating largely behind the scenes through 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."

During these years, Bush's four sons - George W., Jeb, Neil and Marvin - were
following in the family footsteps, lining up business deals with Saudi, Kuwaiti
and Bahraini moneymen and cozying up to BCCI. The Middle East was becoming a
convenient family money spigot.

Eldest son George W. Bush made his first Middle East connection in the late
1970s with James Bath, a Texas businessmen who served as the North American
representative for two rich Saudis (and Osama bin Laden relatives) - billionaire
Salem bin Laden and banker and BCCI insider Khalid bin Mahfouz. Bath put $50,000
into Bush's 1979 Arbusto oil partnership, probably using Bin Laden-Bin Mahfouz
funds.

In the late 1980s, after several failed oil ventures, the future 43rd president
let the ailing oil business in which he was a major stockholder and chairman be
bought out by another foreign-influenced operation, Harken Energy. The Wall
Street Journal commented in 1991, "The mosaic of BCCI connections surrounding
Harken Energy may prove nothing more than how ubiquitous the rogue bank's ties
were. But the number of BCCI-connected people who had dealings with Harken - all
since George W. Bush came on board - likewise raises the question of whether
they mask an effort to cozy up to a presidential son."

Other hints of cronyism came in 1990 when inexperienced Harken got a major
contract to drill in the Persian Gulf for the government of Bahrain. Time
magazine reporters Jonathan Beaty and S.C. Gwynne, in their book "The Outlaw
Bank," concluded "that Mahfouz, or other BCCI players, must have had a hand in
steering the oil-drilling contract to the president's son." The web entangling
the Bush presidencies was already being spun.

Second son Jeb Bush, now the governor of Florida, spent most of his time in the
early and mid-1980s hobnobbing with ex-Cuban intelligence officers, Nicaraguan
Contras and others plugged into the lucrative orbit of Miami-area front groups
for the CIA. But he too had some Middle East connections. Two of his business
associates, Guillermo Hernandez-Cartaya and Camilo Padreda, both indicted for
financial dealings, were longtime associates of Middle Eastern arms dealer, BCCI
investor and Iran-Contra figure Adnan Khashoggi. Prosecutors dropped the case
against the two, and a federal judge ordered Padreda's name expunged from the
record. But a few years later Padreda, a former Miami-Dade County GOP treasurer,
was convicted of fraud over a federally insured housing development that Jeb
Bush had helped to facilitate. Jeb Bush also socialized with Adbur Sakhia, the
Miami BCCI branch chief and later its top U.S. official.

Neil Bush, most famous for the scandal surrounding the corrupt practices of
Colorado's Silverado Savings & Loan, where he served as a director during the
1980s, also picked plums from Persian Gulf orchards. In 1993, after his father
left the White House, Neil went to Kuwait with his parents, brother Marvin and
former Secretary of State James A. Baker III. When his father left, Neil stayed
to lobby for business contracts, and after returning home evolved a set of
lucrative relationships with Syrian-American businessman Jamal Daniel. One of
their ventures, Ignite!, an educational software company, also included
representatives of at least three ruling Persian Gulf families.

The Bush family's Middle Eastern commercial focus is further exemplified by
Marvin, the youngest brother of the current president. From 1993 to 2000 he was
a major shareholder, along with Mishal Youssef Saud al Sabah, a member of the
Kuwaiti royal family, in the Kuwait-American Corp., which had holdings in
several U.S. defense, aviation and industrial security companies.

George H.W. Bush's own Persian Gulf relationships kept expanding. While serving
in the Reagan White House during the 1980s, he was known in the Middle East as
"the Saudi vice president," and a New Yorker article last year described the
Saudi ambassador to the U.S. as "almost a member of the [Bush] family." Indeed,
many saw the 1991 Gulf War to expel Iraq from Kuwait as an outgrowth of Bush's
close ties to the oil industry and to Persian Gulf royal families, who felt
threatened by Saddam Hussein's expansionism.

After losing his bid for a second term as president, Bush joined up in 1993 with
the Washington-based Carlyle Group. Under the leadership of ex-officials like
Baker and former Defense Secretary Frank C. Carlucci, Carlyle developed a
specialty in buying defense companies and doubling or quadrupling their value.
The ex-president not only became an investor in Carlyle, but a member of the
company's Asia Advisory Board and a rainmaker who drummed up investors. Twelve
rich Saudi families, including the Bin Ladens, were among them. In 2002, the
Washington Post reported, "Saudis close to Prince Sultan, the Saudi defense
minister . were encouraged to put money into Carlyle as a favor to the elder
Bush." Bush retired from the company last October, and Baker, who lobbied U.S.
allies last month to forgive Iraq's debt, remains a Carlyle senior counselor.

If the 1991 war with Iraq and its aftermath cemented the Bush ties with oil
elites and royalty in the Middle East, it angered Islamic true believers and
radicals. By the late 1990s, many of the Islamic insurgents who had been
mobilized by the CIA and others to chase the Soviets out of Afghanistan were
becoming increasingly anti-American. They found a kinship with Osama bin Laden,
the renegade of his billionaire Saudi family, who was outraged at the U.S.
presence in Saudi Arabia.

When the U.S. launched a second war against Iraq in 2003 but failed to find
weapons of mass destruction that Hussein was purported to have, international
polls, especially those by the Washington-based Pew Center, charted a massive
growth in anti-Bush and anti-American sentiment in Muslim parts of the world -
an obvious boon to terrorist recruitment. Even before the war, some cynics had
argued that Iraq was targeted to divert attention from the administration's
failure to catch Osama bin Laden and stop Al Qaeda terrorism.

Bolder critics hinted that George W. Bush had sought to shift attention away
from how his family's ties to the Bin Ladens and to rogue elements in the Middle
East had crippled U.S. investigations in the months leading up to 9/11. Sen.
Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) complained that even when Congress released the
mid-2003 intelligence reports on the origins of the 9/11 attack, the Bush
administration heavily redacted a 28-page section dealing with the Saudis and
other foreign governments, leading him to conclude, "There seems to be a
systematic strategy of coddling and cover-up when it comes to the Saudis."

There is no evidence to suggest that the events of Sept. 11 could have been
prevented or discovered ahead of time had someone other than a Bush been
president. But there is certainly enough to suggest that the Bush dynasty's many
decades of entanglement and money-hunting in the Middle East have created a
major conflict of interest that deserves to be part of the 2004 political
debate. No previous presidency has had anything remotely similar. Not one.


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