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source:
http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0141/gray.php
Posted
October 11th, 2001 1:45 PM
Legal
Group Blasts Papa Shrub on Bin Laden Link
Bush
Sr. Could Profit From War
by
Geoffrey Gray
Larry
Klayman likes suing the United States government. Over the last
seven years as chairman and general counsel of Judicial Watch, a
public interest law firm in Washington, he has filed over 150 lawsuits
against the feds, including more than 80 against former president
Bill Clinton himself. Called the Ralph Nader of the right, Klayman
has litigation habits considered by some Beltway insiders as wildly
ambitious. Others think he's just plain crazy.
But
now Klayman and Judicial Watch are pawing in disbelief through President
George W. Bush's past business connections with the Saudi-based
Bin Laden family. The firm is demanding that GWB's father, the original
President Bush, immediately resign from his post as a paid senior
adviser to the Carlyle Group, a private Washington equity firm that
according to The New York Times has essentially become the nation's
11th largest defense contractor.
Carlyle's
investors include the Bin Laden family, which has disowned its terrorist
son Osama; Bush Sr.; and former Bush inner guard members Nick Carlucci
and James Baker. Judicial Watch says all involved stand to benefit
from any increase in U.S. defense spending.
"It's
mind-boggling," says Klayman. "This conflict of interest
has now turned into a scandal." With the recent U.S. air strikes
in Afghanistan, Klayman says, the conflict of interest is now "direct."
Klayman
questions why Bush the Younger is not aggressively pursuing Saudi
Arabia, a country known to harbor terrorists. He points to Bush
the Elder's business connections there, like the Saudi-based Bin
Laden family, through Carlyle. "President Bush should not ask,
but demand, that his father pull out of the Carlyle Group,"
says Klayman.
Neither
former president BushÑwho has continued advising his son on handling
the war on terrorismÑnor the Carlyle Group returned calls seeking
comment.
In
a case of "like father, like son," President Bush also
had connections to the Carlyle Group, the Voice has learned. In
the years before his 1994 bid for Texas governor, Bush owned stock
in and sat on the board of directors of Caterair, a service company
that provided airplane food and was also a component of Carlyle.
For his consulting position, Bush was paid $15,000 a year, according
to a Texas insider, and a bonus $1000 for every meeting he attendedÑroughly
$75,000 in total. Reports show Carlyle was also a major contributor
to his electoral fund.
Upon
hearing about the Bush-Bin Laden family connection, other Washington
nonprofits have joined Judicial Watch in expressing their concern.
"Carlyle
is as deeply wired into the current administration as they can possibly
be," Charles Lewis, executive director of the Center for Public
Integrity, told Bushwatch.org. "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. To me, that's a jaw-dropper."
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