Hell
to Pay
"Depend upon it, Sir,
when a man knows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, it concentrates his mind
wonderfully."
- Samuel Johnson
Some time
just before January 7th, 2001, an asteroid capable of pulverizing a good-sized
nation flashed through the void, passing perilously
close to Earth. Had it struck our planet, the impact would have had global
consequences. The energy of the strike would have been equivalent to the explosion
of a number of large atomic weapons. From the media perspective, it would
have been the biggest story since the extinction of the dinosaurs.
At some point
in the next six months, a small, darkened corner of George W. Bush's consciousness
will wish the thing had hit us. The apocalypse he and his fundamentalist buddies
have been waiting for would have been at hand, and a number of potentially
calamitous questions about to be put to his administration would have been
avoided.
Sadly for
him, the planet spins on. Beneath the unpierced stratosphere, the electronic
beams of news agencies like CNN and the Associated Press have begun to spread
like a widow's web from city to city and house to house. Carried on this invisible
wind are rumors of doom, negligence and greed. Each and every one of these
rumors lead inexorably back to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, which will soon be
issuing significant numbers of visitor passes to lawyers if the pattern holds
much longer.
Whichever
part of the nation that never heard of the energy giant Enron Corporation
has recently been introduced to the company in odious context. The story thus
far is nothing less than astounding: Enron, a company valued in the billions
on Wall Street, suddenly filed for the largest bankruptcy claim in the history
of the known universe. 4,000 employees were abruptly shown the door after
having been barred from dumping the company stock, meant to fund their retirement,
while it was worth something. Meanwhile, Enron executives in the know were
able to dump the stock, back when it was the gold standard on the Street,
for a cool $1 billion.
Apparently,
Enron was ailing for quite a long time. The aforementioned executives were
able to maintain the mirage of financial viability by stuffing the debt into
what are called 'off-balance-sheet partnerships.' In essence, each of the
executives built personal banking bunkers and hid what has been revealed to
be staggering Enron debts within them, keeping fact that the company was hemorrhaging
money off the publicly displayed balance sheets. This maintained the company's
credit rating, and allowed it to continue doing business.
This went
on for four years, which means several things. It means most of the Enron
executives were aware of and/or actively participating in this highly criminal
and irresponsible activity. It means the stockholders, including 4,000 loyal
Enron employees, were lied to. It probably means that the executives knew
the stock value was doomed when they bailed out and cashed in several months
ago. It means they let their employees lose the retirement funds they believed
were growing within their Enron stock portfolios. It means a lot of people
got screwed by a pack of sharp operators who didn't give a damn about anyone
but themselves.
All this
could simply be chalked up as yet another story of corporate greed run amok,
until the umbilical political and financial connections
between Bush and Enron are illuminated. Enron's capo, Kenneth Lay, was
perhaps the best financial friend George W. Bush has ever known. Lay and a
number of Enron employees essentially bankrolled Bush's 2000 Presidential
campaign, going so far as to lend Bush an Enron corporate jet for trips between
whistle stops. Before Bush got White House stars in his eyes, he worked very
closely with Enron on energy policy in Texas.
This close
connection led to the Bush administration's hiring of a number of influential
individuals within Enron's orbit for important government positions:
- Thomas
E. White, Bush's Secretary of the Army, was once Vice-Chairman of Enron Energy
Service, and held millions in Enron stock;
- Presidential
Advisor Karl Rove owned as much as $250,000 in Enron stock;
- Economic
adviser Larry Lindsay leapt straight from Enron to his current White House
job;
- Federal
Trade Representative Robert B. Zoellick did the same;
- SEC Chairman
Harvey Pitts was hand-picked by Kenneth Lay for the position, due to his notorious
aversion to governmental regulation of any kind.
There are
some thirty one Bush administration officials who had a line
item for Enron in their stock portfolio, including Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld. It is fair to say that the woebegone corporation held, and continues
to hold, enormous influence over the day-to-day machinations of Federal government
policy. One wonders if Bush's recent gutting
of the Clean Air Act, a decision designed to improve the fortunes of companies
like Enron, was the brainchild of people with deep connections to the energy
industry.
The trail
of influence left by Enron leads also to the scabrous heart ventricles of
Vice President Dick Cheney, who admitted recently to six
separate meetings with Enron executives while formulating the Bush administration's
energy policy. Cheney, a former executive of the Halliburton Petroleum interest,
was in charge of creating this policy. For reasons soon to be exposed by subpoena,
Cheney refused to detail the specifics of the creation of this policy, which
included the multiple Enron meetings.
The General
Accounting Office was preparing to sue Cheney to reveal this information when
the September 11th attacks took place. Those subpoenas may be dusted off and
mailed
within a month. In the meantime, the Justice Department is preparing a
serious criminal
investigation into the collapse of Enron. The Democratically-controlled
Senate is planning hearings on the matter as well. Columnist Robert Scheer
has referred to the Bush administration's involvement in the Enron debacle
as "Whitewater in spades."
One wonders if "Watergate" would be a more appropriate comparison.
Bush's own
dealings within the energy industry carry a disturbingly
familiar echo to the Enron situation: once upon a time, he was a high-ranking
officer of a petroleum interest called Harken Oil. On June 22, 1990, Bush
sold his Harken stock and made $848,560, earning him a 200% profit. One week
later, Harken announced a $23.2 million loss in quarterly earnings and its
stock dropped sharply, losing 60 percent of its value over the next six months.
Bush made a bundle while the other investors lost millions. Harken was Enron
in miniature, and might have served as a warning to the American people if
the press had chosen to pay any attention to it during the 2000 Presidential
campaign.
There is
a school of thought, espoused primarily by Republicans, that any investigation
into potentially dishonorable or illegal actions by the Bush administration
is tantamount to treason. We are at war, undeclared though it may be, and
Bush must be free to prosecute this war vigorously, so as to defend our freedom
and bring the murderers of American civilians to justice. If reports recently
aired on CNN
have any credence, however, Bush and his people may well have to answer for
actions that make the Enron catastrophe look like a jaywalking offense, actions
that led directly to the incredible carnage in New York and Washington, D.C.
In 1998,
during the Clinton administration, the U.S.-based energy concern Unocal canceled
plans to exploit massive natural gas deposits in Turkmenistan. They had
planned to run a pipeline from Turkmenistan to Pakistan, where the natural
gas could have been processed for Asian and Western energy markets. The idea
was scuttled after Clinton ordered the cruise missile bombing of Afghanistan
in response to a terrorist attack upon U.S. embassies in Africa which were
planned and executed by Osama bin Laden. The pipeline would have had to pass
through Afghanistan, and Unocal was given the message in Technicolor by Clinton's
people that Taliban-controlled Afghanistan was not to be given any sort of
financial boon.
Apparently,
the Bush administration found no moral dilemma in dealing with the Taliban
to get to the gas. Immediately upon their arrival in Washington, a vigorous
courtship of the Taliban was undertaken by Bush's people. In fact, if
former U.N. weapons inspector Richard Butler is to be believed, the Bush administration
had a vested interest in strengthening and stabilizing the Taliban regime,
because a stable regime would compel investors to revive the Turkmenistan
natural gas pipeline deal. The Taliban, demon of the moment, was the Bush
administration's idea of a 'stable' government. Stable enough, anyway, to
see the pipeline through.
The connections
between Bush and the Taliban became so close that the Taliban went so far
as to hire an expert on U.S. public relations named Laila Helms, so as to
smooth the way between the two regimes. Meetings between the two nations continued
at a high level, the last of which occurred in August, scant weeks before
the September 11th attacks. All of these actions were taken to exploit the
vast energy reserves in Turkmenistan for the benefit of American energy corporations.
The cozy
relationship between Bush and the Taliban frustrated the investigative efforts
of former Deputy Director of the FBI John O'Neill. O'Neill was the FBI's
chief bin Laden hunter, in charge of the investigations into the bin Laden-connected
bombings of the World Trade Center in 1993, the destruction of an American
troop barracks in Saudi Arabia in 1996, the African embassy bombings in 1998,
and the attack upon the U.S.S. Cole in 2000.
O'Neill quit
the FBI in protest two weeks before the destruction of the World Trade Center
towers. He did so because his investigation was hindered by the Bush administration's
connections to the Taliban, and by the interests of American petroleum companies.
O'Neill was quoted in this book as stating, "The main obstacles to investigating
Islamic terrorism were U.S. oil corporate interests, and the role played by
Saudi Arabia in it." After leaving the FBI, O'Neill took a position as head
of security for the World Trade Center. He died on September 11th, 2001, trying
to save people trapped by the attack, when the towers came down on top of
him. The irony in this, simply, is horrifying.
In essence,
the Federal agent who knew more about bin Laden than any living American was
kept from investigating terrorist threats against this country. He was hindered
because the Bush administration was desperate to cultivate the favor of the
Taliban, who held terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden in great esteem, so
as to gain access to lucrative natural gas deposits in Turkmenistan.
If these
allegations prove true, Bush and his friends allowed this affinity to hamstring
investigations that could have thwarted bin Laden's September plans. If these
allegations prove true, everything since September 11th has been a massive
cover-up operation in which American soldiers and thousands
of Afghan civilians have died. If these allegations prove true, the Bush
administration has the blood of thousands of American civilians on its hands.
If these
allegations carry even the faintest whiff of credibility, George W. Bush and
members of his administration stand in taint of high treason and murder.
On November
7th, 2000, a clear majority of Americans came to the conclusion that George
W. Bush was unfit to govern this nation. For a variety of dark and controversial
reasons, that conclusion was thrown over. Sometime soon, if the media's electronic
web continues to carry these sordid stories of corruption, greed and death,
the American people will come to fully understand the consequences of that
failed election.
It is one
thing to coddle and court a corrupt energy company for political and financial
gain. It is quite another to coddle and court a murderous terrorist-supporting
regime, hindering anti-terrorism investigations in the process, for the purpose
of exploiting valuable natural resources. The former cost a number of people
their retirement funds. The latter has cost thousands of people their lives.
One is criminal. The other is abominable. George W. Bush is deeply implicated
in both. There will be hell to pay.