-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

TWO (2) ARTICLES:

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_exnews/20000226_xex_clinton_dono
.shtml


 Clinton donor's biowarfare deal

 Trie helped Chinese government to set up
 germ weapons operation

 By Paul Sperry
 Saturday, February 26, 2000
 © 2000 WorldNetDaily.com

 WASHINGTON -- In 1991, when Bill Clinton let on he was
 running for the White House, Arkansas fund-raiser Yah
 Lin "Charlie" Trie tried to develop a sister city
 relationship between Little Rock and Changchun, China --
 a key biowarfare research hub, sources say.

 While visiting the Chinese city, where he eventually
 bought a home, Trie brokered deals to export biotech
 equipment to a Changchun lab suspected of being a
 Chinese army front for the manufacture of agents used in
 biological weapons. Changchun is in Jilin province,
 which borders North Korea. It's also near Harbin,
 China's new propaganda center for biowarfare.

 "During one of his early visits to Changchun, Trie met
 with Zhang Jianming, director of the Changchun
 Biological Products Institute," according to a copy of
 FBI summaries of interviews with Trie obtained by
 WorldNetDaily. The lab, a unit of the Public Health
 Ministry, is run by the Chinese communist government.

 The news of a major Clinton donor transferring dual-use
 biotechnology to China comes as Beijing is "investing
 huge resources" in its biological warfare program, a
 source in China told WND.

 Trie, convicted last year of breaking campaign-finance
 laws, was given no jail time in exchange for his
 cooperation in an ongoing investigation by the Justice
 Department's campaign-finance task force.

 In 1996, he gave close to $1 million to the Clinton-Gore
 reelection effort and Clinton's Legal Expense Trust. His
 money had to be returned. Some gifts were laundered
 through Chinese sources, the FBI report shows.

 Justice has agreed to let Trie testify under a grant of
 immunity before the House Government Reform Committee.
 He's scheduled to appear Wednesday and Thursday.

 Trie formed a close bond with the bio lab chief while in
 Changchun, where Trie and his late wife bought a home
 for $20,000.

 "Trie provided a letter of invitation for Zhang to use
 in obtaining a visa to the United States," the 150-page
 FBI reports says. "Once in the United States, Trie
 accompanied Zhang on his travels."

 Zhang visited Little Rock and, in November 1992 -- after
 Clinton was elected president -- he and Trie set up what
 appears to be a shell company called United Biotech. The
 company had a bank account and a Little Rock address,
 but no business plan or real income. The firm was
 dissolved a year later.

 But in that time, Trie helped Zhang procure a 132-gallon
 "medical fermentation tank" from a New York-based
 manufacturer, according to the FBI.

 "He got them the fermenting equipment to grow the bugs"
 used in germ warfare, a senior Pentagon official told
 WorldNetDaily. Special agents worry that the Chinese
 government may have used the apparent shell company to
 acquire other biotech equipment.

 "Trie was asked if he thought it possible, considering
 the high priority the People's Republic of China gave to
 acquiring advanced biotechnology, that the United
 Biotech corporate name and address may have been used by
 PRC purchasing agents to make purchases (from
 manufacturers) elsewhere in the U.S.," FBI agents said
 in the report. Though Trie denies that happened, United
 Biotech isn't the only trading company he has set up.

 A search of Arkansas secretary of state records for
 DBAs, sole proprietorships and incorporations registered
 under Trie's name turns up no less than six
 import-export or international consulting businesses.
 They include Jesco International Inc., Asian Pacific
 International Inc., Daihatsu International Trading Inc.,
 Premier International Investment Inc. and T&L
 International Inc. At least one, Jesco International,
 traded with China before going out of business.

 According to the FBI report, the 50-year-old Trie had an
 ethnic-Chinese "silent partner" -- Dr. Peter P. Fu --
 who invested in Daihatsu International. An FDA
 toxicologist, Fu met Chinese scientist Zhang in Little
 Rock after Clinton was elected. Fu works for the
 National Center for Toxicological Research in Jefferson,
 Ark., which is about halfway between Little Rock and
 Pine Bluff, Ark.

 The federal lab, on a 496-acre campus, conducts
 experiments in biochemical toxicology, genetic
 toxicology, neurotoxicology, microbiology and molecular
 epidemiology, its website says. Some pathology labs do
 studies of "microorganisms multiplying and producing
 infections."  The center has an active lab-to-lab
 scientific exchange program with a medical institution
 in China. And in 1993, it hosted an "international group
 of inspectors interested in Biological Weapons Treaty
 issues."

 Trie told FBI agents he didn't think Fu, 58, had any
 ties to Beijing. At that, agents produced one of Fu's
 business cards "indicating that Dr. Fu has ties with two
 institutions managed by the PRC government."

 The biotech equipment transfer opens up a new and
 dangerous front in the mushrooming Chinagate scandal, in
 which China's People's Liberation Army spies conspired
 with Clinton-Gore bagmen to illegally sway the election
 and influence White House trade and military policy. The
 PLA is frantically trying to modernize its weapons
 systems, and needs U.S. military technology to do it.

 Despite the Clinton administration's portrayal of China
 as a benign "strategic partner," Beijing has targeted
 Taiwan -- and its military ally by law, the U.S. -- for
 missile attack. It's also threatening information
 warfare, or IW, such as hacking into U.S. computers to
 create chaos and shorting communications with electronic
 pulses.

 A former Brookings Institution defense analyst who's now
 a consultant in Beijing warns that Americans are
 worrying about the wrong kind of unconventional warfare.
 Biowarfare, not IW, is the real threat, he says.

 "Americans have focused on the computer virus attack
 stuff because that's particularly interesting to us, but
 the Chinese have actually invested huge resources into
 uninhibited biotech," the Beijing source said. "They may
 be picking up some Soviet research into biowarfare as
 well."

 He added that the PLA, through its front companies, is
 interested in acquiring U.S. biotech equipment for use
 in "precisely this area."

 In Harbin, just North of Changchun in Manchuria, the
 Chinese government has erected a museum on the former
 grounds of a Japanese biowarfare testing center that
 used Chinese as subjects during WWII, the source says.
 The museum is an important propaganda mill for the new
 Beijing line that the U.S. used biological weapons
 against the Chinese during the Korean War.

 Even though China joined the Biological Weapons
 Convention in 1984, it has violated the pact and
 maintained an offensive germ-warfare program, according
 to a 1997 report by the Arms Control and Disarmament
 Agency. That year, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
 had to concede to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
 that classified reports show Chinese firms have shipped
 biowarfare equipment to Iran.

 Clinton has maintained for years that biowarfare is a
 top national security concern. "We've got to continue to
 meet the new security challenges of the 21st century,
 especially the challenges of terrorism and biological
 and chemical weapons," he said Feb. 8.


 Paul Sperry is Washington bureau chief for WorldNetDaily.

 © 2000 WorldNetDaily.com, Inc.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


http://www.insightmag.com/archive/200002253.shtml


 Trie's Deadly Deals

 By Douglas Burton
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Clinton fund-raiser Charles Trie has admitted to the FBI
 that he conducted a business deal that gave Red China
 equipment capable of producing deadly biological
 weapons.

 Clinton friend and fund-raiser Charles Trie was a
 conduit for illegal donations from Chinese military and
 intelligence operatives to the Democratic National
 Committee and the president's campaign committees. But
 Insight has learned that Trie also was involved -- and
 used Clinton connections -- in facilitating a 1993 sale
 of dual-use medical technology to China that poses a
 significant national-security threat.

 In the course of 17 secret Trie interviews with the FBI
 in 1999 the Clinton confidant revealed an elaborate and
 illegal scheme to funnel large sums into Clinton-Gore
 campaign coffers and the president's legal-defense fund.
 He also confessed to orchestrating the sale of a
 500-liter (130-gallon) medical fermentation device to a
 pharmaceutical plant in China suspected of manufacturing
 chemical and biological agents for military purposes.

 Insight has obtained copies of the secret depositions
 given by Trie to the FBI's Campaign Finance Task Force
 that, until recently, was thought to have begun shutting
 down operations after skirmishes with the Reno Justice
 Department concerning the scope and direction of the
 long-running investigation. In fact, based on the FBI's
 302 summaries of Trie's lengthy depositions, the task
 force appears significantly to have expanded its
 operations and is zeroing in on key targets involved in
 suspected illegal campaign donations from overseas, most
 notably China and Indonesia.

 Trie, who pleaded guilty to making illegal campaign
 operations and is cooperating with federal authorities,
 has revealed extensive details about the machinery of
 campaign-finance irregularities involving the Democratic
 National Committee, or DNC, and Clinton's political
 operations. He lays bare the elaborate methods he and
 others used to collect and channel illegal contributions
 from Asian-Americans and overseas nationals.

 It is the revelation about the estimated $1 million sale
 of dual-use medical technology to China, however, and
 the involvement of a respected U.S. government scientist
 in a company Trie used to facilitate the sale, that most
 deeply has shocked federal investigators and
 national-security officials contacted by Insight.

 Peter Leitner, a senior Defense Department licensing
 analyst who specializes in export controls of dual-use
 technology, has reviewed Insight's copies of the
 confidential FBI interviews with Trie. Leitner says the
 transfer of the highly sophisticated
 pharmaceutical-grade fermenting machine poses
 significant risks to U.S. security at home and abroad if
 used to make advanced germ-warfare products such as
 anthrax and botulism.

 The evidence of the fermenting machine's sale and
 transfer sometime in 1993 to the Changchun Biological
 Products Institute is alarming, according to Leitner,
 given that the Chinese facility has been flagged by some
 experts as a biological-weapons laboratory run by the
 People's Liberation Army. Leitner tells Insight: "This
 whole affair has the classic earmarks of a Chinese
 military-intelligence operation."

 What the FBI has done with the information newly
 obtained from Trie is not clear. However, Insight has
 learned that Rep. Dan Burton, the Indiana Republican who
 is chairman of the House Government Reform Committee, is
 aware of the new development and has scheduled hearings
 on this and other revelations made to the FBI by Trie.

 Scott Wheeler, an investigative correspondent with the
 TV show American Investigator, has just finished a
 related video documentary, Trading With the Enemy: How
 the Clinton Administration Armed China. He presents a
 Who's Who of military and intelligence officials,
 including former CIA director James Woolsey, discussing
 the ongoing and persistent attempts by Beijing to obtain
 such dual-use technologies from producers in the United
 States.

 Wheeler and Leitner, who appears in the documentary,
 were asked to comment on the FBI summary materials.
 Leitner tells Insight that Trie's export of biotech
 materials to China illustrates "a major diversion of
 U.S. military and technological assets to biowarfare
 plants in China." According to Wheeler: "This is a new
 basis for the congressional oversight committees to
 revisit the federal task-force investigation of
 campaign-finance violations in light of compelling
 evidence that the Reno Justice Department has failed to
 conduct a thorough investigation."

 Trie told the FBI he formed an international-trading
 business in 1991 that "brokered the export of biotech
 machinery and elevator equipment to China." It was this
 company, Daihatsu International Trading Inc., that
 arranged the sale in mid-1992 of the 500-liter
 fermenting machine from Sulzer Biotech Systems in
 Woodbury, N.Y., which, only after Clinton took office in
 January 1993, shipped the equipment from its Swiss
 manufacturing plant to the Chinese facility. How such an
 export could have been cleared for China remains a
 mystery, albeit one about which Chairman Burton will no
 doubt inquire. For the moment, Insight's calls for
 comment from Commerce Undersecretary William Reinsch and
 Commerce Deputy Director of Export Licenses Eileen
 Albanese went unreturned by press time.

 Trie said he was paid "a commission of $20,000 or
 $30,000." But when federal agents interviewed Sulzer
 officials about the exotic sale sometime last year,
 according to government sources, they appeared more
 interested in whether the sale was part of a quid pro
 quo to funnel illegal monies into the president's
 campaign or to the DNC than whether it was useful to
 expanding Red China's deadly arsenal of biological
 weapons.

 Trie told the FBI that he didn't see the fermenter sale
 as a big deal. What appears to have impressed him is
 that on trips to China he met with high-level
 intelligence, military and business officials, some of
 whom gave him hundreds of thousands of dollars that he
 used to make illegal donations.

 According to Wheeler, Rene Losher, former executive
 director of Sulzer Biotech Systems, has advised
 government investigators that a Swiss engineer was sent
 to Changchun to help install the tank. The buyer was
 Zhang Jiaming, director of the Changchun Biological
 Products Institute. Leitner says the FBI also should
 have been concerned with the likely participation in the
 deal of Peter Fu, a toxicology expert at the U.S. Food
 and Drug Administration's research facility on the
 grounds of the Pine Bluff military arsenal in Arkansas.
 The arsenal originally was established to produce and
 store biological weapons, Leitner says.

 According to the FBI summaries, Trie said Fu and his
 wife, Violetta, were "silent partners" in the formation
 of Trie's Daihatsu International Trading Inc. and
 invested thousands of dollars in start-up capital.
 According to government sources who have seen Trie's
 full FBI interviews, the Fu's gave Trie $40,000 in
 "start-up capital" for this joint venture.

 In fact, Fu tells Insight in an exclusive interview that
 he was not a "partner" with Trie and did not invest
 money in Daihatsu, per se. But he admits that he and his
 wife lent the Tries $40,000 as a favor and that the loan
 was repaid. At the same time, Fu acknowledges that the
 registered mailing address for Daihatsu was Fu's home in
 Little Rock, Ark. "At that time [December 1991],
 Charlie's wife and my wife tried to open a company," Fu
 tells Insight. Mrs. Fu quit the business after a few
 weeks, Fu says. "Violetta felt she was incapable of
 handling the business because of lack of experience and
 lack of language ability." He says he is not aware of
 any business conducted by Daihatsu or United Biotech,
 another trading company registered by Trie during the
 1992 presidential campaign season.

 A summary of Trie's depositions to the FBI reads, in
 part: "Trie acknowledged being a close friend of Dr.
 Peter Fu, a research biochemist who was chief of the
 toxicology branch of an FDA facility near Little Rock,"
 adding that "the Fus withdrew from the partnership in
 1992 or 1993." Trie also told the FBI that Zhang was
 present when Trie formed United Biotech and that Trie
 had introduced Fu to Zhang in Little Rock.

 Fu tells Insight that he may have been introduced to
 Zhang in 1992 but that he couldn't and didn't help them
 in their business. "Charlie brought someone to me who
 wanted to do something for a vaccine for hepatitis. They
 thought I knew something about vaccines, but I do not.
 It's not in my area of research," Fu says.

 The 500-liter fermentation tank transferred to the
 Changchun facility would be prohibited for sale by the
 Department of Defense's Militarily Critical Technologies
 List because it allows the manufacture of large
 quantities of biological agents, such as botulism or
 anthrax bacteria, for military purposes, Leitner says.
 Several 500-liter tanks of this type were discovered in
 Iraq and seized as contraband by U.N. Special Commission
 inspectors in 1991. According to government sources,
 China has listed the Changchun facility on the
 international registry of facilities producing
 biological or chemical agents but claims its only use at
 this time is for the production of pharmaceuticals such
 as hepatitis vaccines.

 Leitner calls Trie's deposition regarding the
 fermentation tank and the involvement of Fu "a
 revelation" that should have been followed up but
 apparently wasn't. "Here we have an FDA guy who is head
 of the toxicology branch of his lab, who gives Trie
 $40,000 and gets introduced to the manager of a
 bioweapons program in China. They gave direct assistance
 to a biological-weapons program, and the FBI did not
 follow up. It's right there on page four of the FBI
 summary. You can't get more blatant than that."

 Asked about these matters, both the FBI and the Justice
 Department declined comment.

 ___________________________________________________


 Trie's Deal-Making Caught on Videotape

 Peter Leitner, a Defense Department expert on dual-use
 technologies, warns that Red China's effort to obtain
 restricted U.S. equipment has been "patient, precise and
 extraordinarily successful." He explains that U.S.-based
 companies frequently have been enlisted to lobby for
 export waivers to transfer single items of dual-use
 technology which, by themselves, appear to be innocuous
 but which, when accumulated and combined with other
 exports, support highly sophisticated military
 production. This not only saves the People's Republic of
 China, or PRC, billions of dollars in research and
 development, it escalates the upgrading of PRC forces,
 says Leitner.

 Leitner, who for years has been criticizing the
 Clinton-Gore relaxation of export controls, teamed with
 Scott Wheeler of TV's American Investigator to produce a
 documentary video, Trading With the Enemy: How the
 Clinton Administration Armed China, which just has been
 released. It includes a segment showing President
 Clinton's friend and fund-raiser Charlie Trie and other
 members of an Arkansas state trade delegation meeting
 with Chinese officials in October 1992, just before the
 presidential election.

 The voice of a man in the room, said to belong to
 Arkansas businessman Carl Bird, tells the Chinese
 officials: "His [Clinton's] policy for China could be
 influenced, certainly by people at this table, a lot
 more than George Bush's."  Then Trie interrupts: "[Bill
 Clinton] wants to invest in China ... so he knows."
 Trie turns back to the Chinese officials, who speak to
 him in excited Mandarin, and then he translates: "He
 says they can set up Bill Clinton with China -- it will
 be a pleasure."

 Trie, meanwhile, was doing other strategic business.
 Daihatsu International Trading Inc., which he says he
 founded with his alleged silent partner Peter Fu of the
 National Center for Toxicology Research at Pine Bluff,
 Ark., received an order for a medical fermenter that
 could be used to produce biological weapons, including
 anthrax. Did the Chinese officials tell Trie the precise
 specifications of the machine needed for their Changchun
 Biological Products Institute in October 1992? According
 to copies obtained by Insight of secret FBI interviews
 with Trie during 1999, that is unclear.

 This much is certain from the deposition summaries: The
 Chinese were very interested not only in the dual-use
 medical device but also in obtaining Trie's help to use
 Chinese and U.S. companies to provide cover for visas
 necessary to get into the United States.

 Leitner tells Insight that the involvement of Peter Fu
 made sense because "Fu is a world-class expert in
 biological weapons. He would have been a tremendous
 consultant for getting just the right specifications,
 just the right machine." In an interview with Insight,
 Fu denies having had a formal role in Daihatsu and says
 he merely loaned Trie a little money as a personal favor
 -- $40,000 worth.

 During the same time period that Trie was working his
 deals with China while on Arkansas trade missions,
 then-governor Bill Clinton was making speeches
 excoriating President Bush for "coddling the dictators"
 in Beijing and putting U.S. business interests ahead of
 human rights.

 The video includes interviews with Rep. Curt Weldon, a
 Pennsylvania Republican who is chairman of the House
 Armed Services subcommittee on Military Research and
 Development; former CIA director James Woolsey, former
 ambassador to China James Lilley; former Clinton
 fund-raiser Johnny Chung; and arms-control expert Gary
 Milhollin -- all of whom give damning portraits of an
 administration hell-bent on risking breaches of national
 security for the sake of trade with the PRC. As
 Milhollin says in one interview: "The motto of the
 Clinton administration has been: When in doubt, ship
 it out."



 Copyright © 2000 News World Communications, Inc.



.

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soap-boxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to