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Patrick Fitzgerald And The Neocons (Richard Perle)

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No Exit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-21-05 12:08 AM
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Patrick Fitzgerald And The Neocons (Richard Perle)
Patrick Fitzgerald and the NeoCons

Jane Hamsher

www.huffingtonpost.com

As rumors swirl that key NeoCons are frantically speed-dialing their lawyers in PlameGate, it's important to remember that if and when Richard Perle gets handed an indictment from Patrick Fitzgerald he is the only one we know of who will have to ask -- in what case?
In his day job as US Attorney in Chicago, Fitzgerald is also looking into Perle's activities on the board of Hollinger International, one of the country's largest media empires.
His investigation focuses on how exactly big NeoCon chiseler Lord Conrad Black allegedly looted the company of some $540 million.
According to shareholders who are desperately trying to get their money back, Perle both enabled Black's generosity to himself and was also one of the beneficiaries of Black's largesse.

As part of the SEC investigation Perle had received a Wells notice, "a formal warning that the agency's enforcement staff has determined that evidence of wrongdoing is sufficient to bring a civil lawsuit."

Then recently, in his dogged climb to the top of the crap heap upon which Black himself is perched, Fitzgerald managed to flip Chicago Sun-Times publisher David Radler, who has agreed to serve 29 months and turn state's evidence.

(snip)

And to make matters worse, Hollinger's board just censured Perle in an internal company report, and they are reportedly suing him. Fellow board member Henry Kissinger and others settled a $50 million lawsuit with Hollinger shareholders in May, which also delightfully teases that there may criminal charges waiting for that old warmonger, too. But it is Perle who really has his neck in the noose.

(snip)

Please note also the name HENRY KISSINGER--IMO, one of the granddaddies of the neocons.
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shraby Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-21-05 12:31 AM
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1. Fitzgerald is coming at them from all sides!
I'll bet he's enjoying this.
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thebigidea Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-21-05 12:33 AM
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2. except the neocons were always against kissinger's realpolitik
businesswise, i'm sure they had no problems about making money together. But their pseudo-intellectual claptrap is completely at odds with each other - the neocons hate the realists.
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No Exit Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-21-05 01:00 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. To tell you the truth, it's like these guys are always morphing/moving in
and out of various political factions. It's like they follow the power. I mean, look at what Irving Kristol originally was--and look at what his fellow neocons are today. It could be said that Kissinger is not a neocon, but it cannot be said that he has not at times inspired them, or possibly helped them, or, as you said, made money together with some of them, etc.

"Ever since the oil shocks of the 1970s, the United States has steadily been accumulating military muscle in the Gulf by building bases, selling weaponry, and forging military partnerships. Now, it is poised to consolidate its might in a place that will be a fulcrum of the world's balance of power for decades to come. At a stroke, by taking control of Iraq, the Bush administration can solidify a long-running strategic design. "It's the Kissinger plan," says James Akins, a former U.S. diplomat. "I thought it had been killed, but it's back."

Akins learned a hard lesson about the politics of oil when he served as a U.S. envoy in Kuwait and Iraq, and ultimately as ambassador to Saudi Arabia during the oil crisis of 1973 and '74. At his home in Washington, D.C., shelves filled with Middle Eastern pottery and other memorabilia cover the walls, souvenirs of his years in the Foreign Service. Nearly three decades later, he still gets worked up while recalling his first encounter with the idea that the United States should be prepared to occupy Arab oil-producing countries.

In 1975, while Akins was ambassador in Saudi Arabia, an article headlined "Seizing Arab Oil" appeared in Harper's. The author, who used the pseudonym Miles Ignotus, was identified as "a Washington-based professor and defense consultant with intimate links to high-level U.S. policymakers." The article outlined, as Akins puts it, "how we could solve all our economic and political problems by taking over the Arab oil fields bringing in Texans and Oklahomans to operate them." Simultaneously, a rash of similar stories appeared in other magazines and newspapers. "I knew that it had to have been the result of a deep background briefing," Akins says. "You don't have eight people coming up with the same screwy idea at the same time, independently.

"Then I made a fatal mistake," Akins continues. "I said on television that anyone who would propose that is either a madman, a criminal, or an agent of the Soviet Union." Soon afterward, he says, he learned that the background briefing had been conducted by his boss, then-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Akins was fired later that year."

www.motherjones.com

If/when Fitzgerald eliminates some of this rat's nest from the executive branch, unfortunately it will by no means signify the end of these greedy, elitist, warmongers. To neocons, we are all just chattel which is to be used up. (And that viewpoint seemed to be shared by Kissinger in his musings about world "overpopulation".)
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IndianaGreen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Oct-21-05 01:18 AM
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4. Hollinger also owns The Jerusalem Post
and loaded the newspaper with an American neocon editor and correspondents, not to mention the Board in which Perle sat.

The Jerusalem Post was used to sell the PNAC war in Iraq by exploiting Israeli fears about Saddam.
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