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Click Here: <A HREF="aol://5863:126/alt.conspiracy:603460">Oil is well with
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Subject: Oil is well with Bush
From: <A HREF="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>
Date: Sat, Mar 18, 2000 2:35 AM
Message-id: <8avm5b$3rb$[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



                  Oil is well with Bush


                  By Tom Flocco
                  © 2000 WorldNetDaily.com

                  Given the continuing heating oil cost crisis in
                  the Northeast and rising gasoline prices
                  throughout the country coupled with the
                  reported role Kuwait is playing in that process,
                  a report by the Chinese Xinhua News Agency
                  that former President Bush visited Kuwait just
                  seven weeks ago notches a few rungs higher on
                  the "curious" list. This second trip to Kuwait by
                  Bush since his son's presidential aspirations
                  became apparent should start to raise some
                  eyebrows.

                  For while private citizen Bush met with senior
                  Kuwaiti officials according to Xinhua, there was
                  no reporting about the content of the high-level
                  discussions and the former president's January
                  trip was quiet enough to escape notice by U.S.
                  media. Given Kuwait's role in the high fuel
                  prices, one wonders whether oil factored into
                  the conversation.

                  Many American families have faced real
                  home-heating struggles resulting from oil prices
                  having tripled since last year; but now the
                  public is poised for another financial assault as
                  gasoline prices have already surpassed 1991
                  Gulf War levels with oil analysts projecting
                  potential $2.00 per-gallon prices for regular gas
                  by Memorial Day, if not sooner.

                  As recently reported, American oil experts are
                  complaining about Kuwait's strange leadership
                  role in pushing the current round of higher oil,
                  given the financial and human sacrifices
                  Americans have made for Kuwait. Moreover,
                  those with good memories will recount the role
                  President George Bush played as prime mover
                  of the coalition wherein American troops were
                  sent off to save Kuwait from the Iraqi
                  occupation. "That's gratitude for you," said one
                  unidentified expert, quoted in the New York
                  Times.

                  Storm On The Horizon
                  With good cause, the Clinton-Gore
                  administration is worried that skyrocketing oil
                  prices will cause a series of inflationary
                  problems leading to higher interest rates by the
                  Federal Reserve Board, a potential stock market
                  collapse and millions of highly stressed
                  American budgets -- right before the November
                  election. In a March 2 interview with Fox News,
                  former Energy Secretary James Schlessinger
                  said, "oil inventories for summer need to be
                  built now and we are not doing so. I think it
                  could cause trouble (in November) for the party
                  in office if this continues."

                  Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., echoed these
                  sentiments on CNN the same day, saying, "the
                  economy is being thrown off-kilter. OPEC
                  (Organization of Petroleum Exporting
                  Countries) has dilly dallied and we're headed
                  toward $2.00 gas by Memorial Day." However,
                  an examination of news report dates and
                  comment relating to Kuwait's primacy in
                  driving oil higher through OPEC, along with
                  Mr. Bush's visits to Kuwait and a number of
                  other coincidences points to some unanswered
                  political questions.

                  Former President Bush is so popular in Kuwait
                  that, according to Reuters reports, his picture
                  hangs in offices and residential buildings are
                  named after him, and it is common knowledge
                  that Bush is Kuwait's favorite American -- so
                  much so that the Kuwaiti sheikhs would likely
                  do almost anything to repay him for leading the
                  coalition in restoring the ruling class to its
                  former royal trappings of power. The question
                  is whether the small country is more grateful to
                  President Bush personally than to the U.S.
                  soldiers who put their lives on the line in the
                  Gulf.

                  American pocketbooks were greatly affected by
                  high fuel oil and gasoline prices caused by the
                  Gulf War -- which contributed to the economic
                  woes that President Bush refused to
                  acknowledge until it was too late before his
                  election. As a result, the agitated and hurting
                  electorate threw him out of office.

                  However, if the current course of events is
                  maintained, with George Jr. securing the
                  Republican nomination, the governor is clearly
                  the beneficiary of an American public likely to
                  be fed up with higher gasoline prices, grocery
                  bills, interest rates and any other consumer
                  items related to the current Kuwaiti-led push
                  for continued high OPEC oil. And then Al Gore
                  gets to explain the mishandled economy.

                  But reporters aren't asking the former president
                  about the two visits to Kuwait and whether the
                  sheikhs sent signals that they would do
                  anything possible to keep the production cuts in
                  place or at least severely limit any increases for
                  as long as possible to further disgruntle
                  Americans as the November elections edge
                  closer.

                  Oil In The Family
                  Kuwait started making noises on Oct. 13, 1998,
                  when Reuters reported that Oil Minister Sheikh
                  Saud Nasser al-Sabah said it would push for
                  oil-output cuts and "warned OPEC and
                  non-OPEC producers against violations and a
                  production war, stressing that Gulf Arab allies
                  would suffer the least as they could damage the
                  economies of others with their huge reserves
                  and low crude oil production costs."

                  Then, on Nov. 27, 1998, The Dallas Morning
                  News reported that OPEC "decided not to cut
                  oil output further and delayed until March 1999
                  any actions. 'Until March, there will be too much
                  oil, and prices will probably fall because of
                  OPEC's inaction,' said Kuwait's oil minister,
                  Sheikh Saud."

                  Suddenly, Reuters reported, a few days later,
                  former President Bush showed up in Kuwait to
                  meet with his Middle Eastern friends and was
                  received at the airport by Crown Prince and
                  Prime Minister Sheikh Saad al-Abdullah al
                  Sabah. However, no reports were available
                  regarding the subject of the meetings.

                  Since the Gulf War, Bush had visited Kuwait in
                  1993 and again in 1996, but now, in December
                  1998, he could proudly tell the Kuwaiti rulers
                  that his son George W. had just been
                  overwhelmingly reelected governor of Texas
                  and the family was now discussing whether the
                  younger Bush should follow his dad and gear
                  up in early 1999 for a presidential run in 2000.

                  On March 10, 1999, OPEC held one-day talks
                  regarding oil production cuts before the final
                  session later in the month wherein oil minister
                  Sheikh Saud said they had agreed to a
                  "considerable reduction in current production."
                  Then, as Reuters reported, Saud added, "I can
                  describe the current situation as a big step in the
                  right direction." But the Kuwaiti sheikh then
                  took a harder line, saying that "First there must
                  be full compliance with earlier agreed on cuts."

                  That same week, U.S. News and World Report
                  declared Bush "The Man To Beat" in a big
                  magazine spread as reports confirmed that the
                  Texas governor had formed his presidential
                  exploratory committee four months after being
                  reelected so that he could begin to collect
                  contributions and recruit a staff.

                  Later that spring, Sheikh Saud said, "we expect
                  prices to go up further with the start of winter in
                  the northern hemisphere. ... It depends on how
                  severe next winter will be and how far demand
                  will rise." And May 15, 1999, Reuters added that
                  "Kuwait expects additional compliance to boost
                  prices during the summer months."

                  Kuwait's price militancy increased dramatically
                  after the Washington Times reported on July 2,
                  1999, that George W. was "flush with cash and
                  may forgo matching funds," which would free
                  him to raise and spend as much as he wants
                  from individual donors. For just 18 days later
                  on July 20, Reuters reported that Kuwaiti oil
                  minister Sheikh Saud said, "oil exporters were
                  not considering cutting the size or duration of
                  agreed output cuts even if prices rose further. ...
                  The commitment until the end of March (2000) is
                  concrete, withstanding any situation."

                  By September, Kuwait turned up the pressure
                  even more as the U.S. presidential race began to
                  draw closer. Sheikh Saud reiterated its
                  opposition to any increase in oil production and
                  said the production cut agreed upon in March
                  may stay even beyond its expiration date March
                  2000, according to a Reuters report on Sept. 29,
                  1999. But Sheikh Saud wasn't finished as a
                  Hemscott Information Exchange Report out of
                  Kuwait City on Dec. 2, 1999, noted that the oil
                  minister said, "The possibility of extending the
                  cuts beyond their March 2000 term has now
                  become a reality, and I emphasize the word
                  reality."

                  Six weeks later, on Jan. 15, as the Xinhua News
                  Agency reported, former President Bush arrived
                  in Kuwait again and met with senior Kuwaiti
                  officials. That same day Reuters reported that
                  Kuwait's oil minister, Sheikh Saud, said he saw
                  "full agreement" among the six-member Gulf
                  Cooperation Council to extend the cuts when
                  they meet later this month in the Saudi capital.
                  No U.S. reporter has questioned whether former
                  President Bush had influenced the position of
                  the Kuwaiti oil minister a few weeks ago during
                  their meetings.

                  Oil Is Slick
                  There are a number of compelling reasons to
                  consider Kuwait's leadership in the push for
                  higher oil and their desire to limit expected
                  production increases. First would be their
                  budget deficit, which resulted in large part from
                  the reconstruction expenses after the Gulf War,
                  projected at about 22 percent of gross national
                  product -- one of the highest in the Middle East
                  and North Africa region. Higher oil prices
                  would help to draw down that deficit.

                  But higher oil would also repay some old debts
                  to a former president who had come to their aid,
                  only to face being summarily tossed out of
                  office right after his crowning military moment
                  because the economy had gone bad.

                  High oil prices had created the inflationary
                  environment that wrecked Bush's chances for
                  reelection. Now Kuwait could help former
                  President Bush avenge his unfair presidential
                  loss to Mr. Clinton, impede Albert Gore's
                  presidential quest by causing the electorate to
                  become uneasy and distressed about oil-caused
                  economic problems and help their hero's son,
                  George W., crush Mr. Gore -- Clinton's legacy --
                  in November, all while solving their own deficit
                  problem at the same time.

                  How? The Kuwaiti sheikhs need only to
                  convince OPEC to hang tough with the
                  production cuts until summer -- or at least limit
                  the production increases. U.S. citizens would
                  just have to live with high gasoline prices and
                  their concomitant economic consequences for
                  just a few more months and everything would
                  work out fine -- for both Bushes and for Kuwait
                  -- Americans none the wiser.

                  And when the dates, visits and quotes out of
                  Kuwait City are combined, there are just too
                  many reasons to question whether former
                  President Bush may have had some
                  understanding about Kuwait's strong desire to
                  increase oil prices -- if just until Junior was
                  safely elected. However, absent an inquisitive
                  media, the real truth may only be revealed in
                  the quiet conversations between father and son
                  after the inauguration ceremony.



                  Tom Flocco is a teacher and freelance writer
                  who lives in Pennsylvania. His associates,
                  Robin Akers and Mario Calabrese, contributed
                  additional research to this report.


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