Alex Cockburn: The Crooks in the White House

From: Per I Mathisen (per@leftist.net)
Date: 05-07-02


(disse inkompetente personene klarer ikke engang å drive innsidehandel
uten å bli tatt, og de skal liksom klare å skjule tyveri av federal
reserve sine midler siden 1913? - Per)

Wild Justice
Alexander Cockburn

The Crooks in the White House

This is exciting. Will Dick Cheney keel over from his fifth heart attack
before he becomes the first veep since Spiro Agnew to resign in the face of
charges of financial crookery? Or will Bush fire him to divert attention
from his own scummy past? Over the weekend President Dumbo poked his head
above the rubble of the WorldCom scandal and made a stand: "No violation of
the public's trust will be tolerated... Executives who commit fraud will
face financial penalties and, when they are guilty of criminal wrongdoing,
they will face jail time."

Sunday morning brought more ringing pledges to protect the public weal: "If
anybody violates the law, we go after them," SEC chairman Harvey Pitt told
Sam Donaldson on ABC's This Week. In an earlier incarnation Pitt was one of
the guys who successfully lobbied the SEC to make it easier for Arthur
Andersen and the other big accounting firms to cook the books on behalf of
Enron, MCI/WorldCom and others. Bush, flush with campaign contributions from
Enron and MCI/WorldCom ($100,000 last summer), duly signaled his gratitude
by putting Pitt in charge of the SEC, where he put the agency in snooze mode
amid a ripening cloud of scandal involving the biggest names in corporate
America.

But even Pitt couldn't choke off the investigation into Halliburton, one of
the largest oil service companies in the world, headed until July 2000 by
Cheney, who was the company's CEO. The SEC is probing whether Halliburton
reported more than $100 million of disputed costs on big oil contracts as
revenues so that it could prop up its profits while negotiating a merger
with a rival. These accounting shenanigans took place in 1998 on Cheney's
watch, and yes, the accounting firm was Arthur Andersen. Noting Bush's
promise that CEOs who have mismanaged their companies in some fraudulent way
will "have to pay," Donaldson asked Pitt, "Will that be the case in
Halliburton if you find wrongdoing under Mr. Cheney's reign?" Quivering with
integrity, Pitt bravely declared, "I head an independent regulatory agency.
We don't give anyone a pass."

What else could he say? Up till now the Halliburton scandal has been
rumbling along, just under the radar. But now it's nearing Critical Mass. It
may not be long, too, before Dick Cheney announces that on doctor's orders,
and the better to deal with these outrageous accusations of chicanery, he's
stepping down, which is-if you believe friends of Tom Ridge in
Philadelphia-what Cheney was planning to do before 9/11, making way for the
former Pennsylvania governor.

Of course, anyone with a memory longer than the day before yesterday would
have doubled over with laughter at the spectacle of Bush calling for jail
time for corporate crooks. Remember Spectrum? Back in 1986 George W. Bush's
oil company, Spectrum, was about to go belly up, until kind friends folded
it into Harken Energy. Various accounts, including the Daily Enron site
(www.dailyenron.com), narrate that, from being on the threshold of the
debtors' prison, Bush suddenly had $500,000 worth of Harken stock, an
$80,000-a-year salary and a stock option arrangement that allowed him to buy
Harken stock at 40 percent below market value. Bush made more than a million
off Harken, even though the company itself lost a ton of money.

Sound familiar? Here's more, culled from the Daily Enron site. Bush also
borrowed $180,375 from the company-a loan that was later "forgiven," in
accordance with Christ's instructions on the subject of sinners. (In 1989
and 1990 alone-according to the company's Securities and Exchange Commission
filing-Harken's board "forgave" $341,000 in loans to its executives.)

Sure, this is old stuff, just like Whitewater. Now it's spring 1990. Iraq is
menacing Kuwait and thereby casting a shadow over Harken Energy's only
pending contract, a drilling project in Bahrain. Harken's Smith Barney
financial advisers have just issued a bleak assessment of the company's
position and future. Harken sets up a "restructuring board" and Bush is on
it. In June 1990, claiming ignorance of Harken's desperate plight and the
Smith Barney report, Bush sells his 212,140 shares of Harken Energy, banking
$848,560.

The sale falls under the SEC's insider stock sale rule requiring almost
immediate formal notice, but Bush does not report the sale until seven
months later. At the time the SEC is headed by George H.W. Bush's appointee,
Richard Breeden. W sold his Harken stock less than 30 days after his father'
s national security adviser, Brent Scowcroft, sent the President a secret
memo warning that hostilities between Iraq and Kuwait were likely.

As Daily Enron asks, "Did dad share this information with his son? If so, W.
Bush traded on 'non-public' information of an extraordinary nature indeed."

Sure enough, two months after W made his killing, the shit hit the fan in
the Gulf, and Harken's shares went south, losing 25 percent of their value
the day Saddam sent his troops into Kuwait. If Bush hadn't bailed out he'd
have lost nearly $250,000. And they talk about this man restoring "trust" in
the White House?

The Incredible Shrinking President (cont.)

Derisive comments about Bush, particularly on his current role as Ariel
Sharon's errand boy, continue to flow in from foreign shores. In Britain,
last Sunday's Telegraph ran a piece by John Simpson, BBC world affairs
editor, quoting senior civil servants in Whitehall, normally a polite and
forgiving bunch, particularly about the U.S. president, as scathing on the
topic of President Dumbo, describing his policies, particularly on the
Middle East, as "puerile," "absurdly ignorant" and "ludicrous."

Meanwhile the dollar continues to plunge and the stock market dithers around
in the toilet.

I'll say this for the Prez. He's lucky, just like Bill. Of course, under
Bill the country felt it was sharing in the luck, whereas under W it's been
one damn thing after another. Thus far the history of the Bush presidency
has been the history of falling masonry. President Rubble.

But, just like Bill, W has been the huge beneficiary of Terror. With Bill it
was the Oklahoma City bombing. It turned his presidency around. With W it
was 9/11. Without it he'd be a laughingstock inside the national
jurisdiction as well as overseas.

And now he's been lucky that a California court has ruled that the Pledge of
Allegiance runs counter to the Constitution, thereby allowing almost every
politician in the country up to and including W the pleasures of posturing
in front of the flag and declaring unflagging trust in God, who is doing
little short of nothing these days to merit such childish confidence.

Volume 15, Issue 27



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