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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A25406-2003Mar14.html
washingtonpost.com

Connections and Then Some
David Rubenstein Has Made Millions Pairing the Powerful With the Rich

By Greg Schneider
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, March 16, 2003; Page F01

David M. Rubenstein is exasperated, and he blurts something that a quick
look around the room proves is outrageous: "We're not," he nearly shouts,
"that well connected!"

Behind him is a picture of Rubenstein on a plane with then-Gov. George W.
Bush. Across the room, a photo of Rubenstein with the president's father
and mother. Next to that, Rubenstein and Mikhail Gorbachev. Elsewhere:
Rubenstein and Jimmy Carter. On a bookshelf: Rubenstein and the pope.

This is not some honor wall in Rubenstein's office on Pennsylvania Avenue,
this is his wood- paneled den at home in Bethesda. The snapshots are
nearly hidden among books and trinkets and family photos -- the
decorating restraint of the truly, deeply connected.

Rubenstein, after all, is co-founder of the Carlyle Group, an investment
house famous as one of the most well-connected companies anywhere.
Former president George H.W. Bush is a Carlyle adviser. Former British
prime minister John Major heads its European arm. Former secretary of
state James Baker is senior counselor, former White House budget chief
Richard Darman is a partner, former SEC chairman Arthur Levitt is senior
adviser -- the list goes on.

Those associations have brought Carlyle enormous success. Founded in
1987 with $5 million, the Washington-based merchant bank controls nearly
$14 billion in investments, making it the largest private equity manager in
the world. It buys and sells whole companies the way some firms trade
shares of stock.

But the connections also have cost Carlyle, in ways that are hard to
measure. It has developed a reputation as the CIA of the business world --
omnipresent, powerful, a little sinister. Media outlets from the Village
Voice to BusinessWeek have depicted Carlyle as manipulating the levers of
government from shadowy back rooms. "The Iron Triangle," a book about
the company due out next month, promises to take readers into "a world
that few of us can even imagine, full of clandestine meetings [and] quid
pro quo deals."

Last year, then-congresswoman Cynthia McKinney (D-Ga.) even suggested
that Carlyle's and Bush's ties to the Middle East made them somehow
complicitous in the Sept. 11 terror attacks. While her comments were
widely dismissed as irresponsible, the publicity highlighted Carlyle's
increasingly notorious reputation. Internet sites with headlines such as
"The Axis of Corporate Evil" purport to link Carlyle to everything from Enron
to al Qaeda.

"We've actually replaced the Trilateral Commission" as the darling of
conspiracy theorists, says Rubenstein -- who, truth be told, happens to be
a member of the Trilateral Commission.

It didn't help that as the World Trade Center burned on Sept. 11, 2001, the
news interrupted a Carlyle business conference at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel
here attended by a brother of Osama bin Laden. Former president Bush, a
fellow investor, had been with him at the conference the previous day.

But even if you believe the conspiracy theories that Carlyle luminaries are
pulling strings on the company's behalf, there is evidence they haven't
been very good at it lately. The current Bush administration has sloughed
off advice from Baker calling for restraint in the Middle East, where Carlyle
has investors, and from former president Bush on the need for calm on the
Korean peninsula, where Carlyle owns banks. Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld even canceled the $11 billion Crusader howitzer program, a
crucial contract for the Carlyle-owned United Defense company.

Rubenstein resents the suggestion that Carlyle's bigwigs shape public
policy for private gain -- it's what made him erupt in an interview about his
lack of connections. "Do you really think the current president of the
United States would ruin his reputation and potentially hurt the United
States because of his father's business interests? It's ludicrous," he says.
"Do you really think because your father's making speeches in Saudi Arabia
you're going to tilt U.S. policy one way or the other? It's ridiculous, it's
absurd."

Still, he knows why people believe that about Carlyle. He even takes the
blame for it. "I probably failed in conveying the idea that we're not using
this company in an inappropriate way," he says.

Now, bit by bit, Rubenstein wants to change that image. A year ago he
hired his first public relations specialist. Then, in November, he replaced
former defense secretary Frank Carlucci as Carlyle's chairman with a
different type of heavyweight: Louis V. Gerstner Jr., the former chairman
of IBM.

It is Carlyle's first marquee hire from the world of business instead of
government. It's only a step, and Carlyle has a long way to go to overcome
its shadowy reputation. But Rubenstein has experience with
transformation. His own career took a curious twist, as Rubenstein
transformed himself from a young Carter White House policy wonk into a
tycoon whose family safaris with Barbara Bush.

"His ideology was compatible with mine -- dedicated to human rights, civil
rights, environmental quality, better education," Carter says in an
interview. "I have been truly amazed by what David has done since the
White House years."

Midlife Croesus

Carlyle, in its early days, was a far humbler creature than it is now. In fact,
the company's first successful venture sounds like something from a spam
e-mail. Rubenstein had discovered a legal loophole allowing Native
Americans in Alaska to sell their tax losses, and he did a brief, brisk
business connecting Eskimos with corporations in search of a write- off.
Congress quickly closed the loophole, and Carlyle moved on in search of
companies to buy. It made an abortive stab at the Chi-Chi's restaurant
chain, and bought the Caterair International airline food service -- putting
George W. Bush on the board, but later selling it at a huge loss.

The whole venture was something of a midlife crisis for Rubenstein, who
had read somewhere that people rarely start businesses after they are in
their late thirties. He had been treading water in a Washington law office,
and through old friend Ed Mathias, then of Legg Mason, hooked up with a
few other men of similar age looking to get into something new.

What they started was a private equity firm, aimed at using money from
rich people or institutions to buy companies, run them for a while and sell
them, hopefully at a profit. Carlyle was named for the swanky-sounding
New York hotel, but that city's elite derided the little company for being
based in a financial backwater like Washington.

Rubenstein craved legitimacy, so he paid attention when a former law
partner passed on the tip that a big name in government, Carlucci, was
about to leave office and was looking for opportunities. Rubenstein
resolved to hire him.

"He was a person of some prominence. We were a 10-person firm, we
thought hiring a person who was better known than we were might help
us get our calls returned more. It was nothing more nefarious than that, or
more intelligent than that," Rubenstein says.

It worked. Carlucci is one of the world's great networkers. He got insight
into business deals all over the country by serving on a long list of
corporate boards. With his Pentagon background, he pushed Carlyle to
buy defense contractors at a time when such companies were out of favor
with investors. When the defense industry later consolidated, Carlyle
minted money by selling its pieces to the dominant new corporations.

Carlucci became chairman, and Rubenstein realized he had hit on a
winning formula: If you put powerful people next to rich people, some of
the power rubs off on the rich guys and some of the money rubs off on
the powerful guys. Rubenstein began hiring other statesmen like a football
owner stocking his team with stars, and the company steered its
investments into government-regulated industries.

He got Baker, the former secretary of state, in a twofer with Darman, the
former White House budget director. Former FCC chairman William Kennard
signed on to oversee telecommunications and media investing. Former SEC
chairman Levitt is helping Carlyle find companies to buy and advising on
corporate ethics. Baker helped land Bush, whose primary function is to
give speeches for Carlyle that attract wealthy foreigners in places where
the former president is especially revered, such as Asia.

After Bush speaks, Rubenstein and others close in to get the wowed
attendees to entrust them with their riches.

The company has rewarded its faithful with a 36 percent average annual
rate of return. It has done so through deals such as its $165 million
purchase of Magnavox Electronic Systems in 1993, which it sold two years
later for $370 million. Or its 1997 purchase of United Defense for $180
million. Four years later -- just before Rumsfeld canceled its Crusader
howitzer program -- Carlyle took United Defense public and sold about half
the stock for $588 million.

Such deals are the province of co-founders Daniel D'Anielo, who runs daily
operations, and William Conway, who oversees investments. Rubenstein is
the people person. He travels 300 days a year recruiting investors, visiting
employees, scouting for opportunities. He is a Jew who sips tea in Arabian
palaces, the son of a Baltimore postal worker who buys pinstripe suits -- all
alike -- in London.

His role would suggest some- one with a chamber-of-commerce smile, a
two-handed handshake. Rubenstein is not that guy. "I'm a pretty serious
person," he says, cataloguing the sins he avoids: "I don't drink alcohol, I
don't smoke, I don't play golf."

At 53, he manages to look boyish even though his hair has gone white. His
eyebrows are still dark, à la Steve Martin, and his mannerisms -- the palms-
up shrug, the fast blinking when he makes a point -- evoke a less-hyper
Woody Allen.

One of the most complicated things about Rubenstein is his sense of
humor, which is pervasive but so bone-dry and understated that it's almost
sneaky. When he greets someone for the first time with the stony-faced
line "You were promised lunch, but the truth is, we don't actually have any
lunch," the effect is off-putting and then amusing, a kind of barbed-wire
charm.

Rubenstein also is relentlessly self-deprecating. Being a reporter must be a
fascinating job, he'll say -- "with the exception of this interview." President
Bush would no doubt love to have his advice, he deadpans, "so he could
get inflation to 18 percent" the way Carter did with Rubenstein's help.

He speed-reads 10 newspapers a day and six books a week. Among the
clutter on his coffee table one Saturday afternoon: Gulf Business
magazine, the book "What Went Wrong: Western Impact and Middle Eastern
Response" by Bernard Lewis and "The Lexus and the Olive Tree" by New
York Times columnist Thomas Friedman.

Despite his drive to stay informed, Rubenstein also nurses an image as
someone apart from the modes of the day. He hasn't seen a movie "in a
dozen years." He carries a cell phone for emergencies, but doesn't know
its number. He gets some 200 e-mails daily and responds to them all --
though he writes the responses on a legal pad and has an assistant type
them into the computer.

Rubenstein's only real indulgence is gossip, which he uses both to reward
and to milk his global network of big names. Otherwise, the man has no
diversions. Work is his hobby.

"If I were forced to relax in conventional ways I'm convinced I'd have a
heart attack," he says. "I came from a very modest background, worked
very hard and now I've achieved something -- not a Nobel Peace Prize, not
Bill Gates, but something."

The Wonk Years

An only child, Rubenstein was raised in a working-class Jewish
neighborhood in the Pikesville section of Baltimore. "It was a rigidly
segregated place by religion," he says. But everything changed for him
when he went to Baltimore's enormous City College public high school.

There Rubenstein became friends with a charismatic football star named
Kurt Schmoke, who one day would become the first elected black mayor
of Baltimore. The two were members of the Lancers, a club for boys
founded and still operated by retired Baltimore judge Robert I.H.
Hammerman.

"I didn't think David was a leader in the sense of Kurt being a leader, in the
sense of being president of a class or president of a school," says
Hammerman, who recalls urging the teenage Rubenstein to believe in
himself. "I didn't think David at that time had that in him because he was
too shy and too unsure of himself. . . . He did not have much self-
confidence then, [though] he might feel he always bristled with
confidence, because he certainly bristles with it now."

Rubenstein went on to Duke University and won a scholarship to the
University of Chicago Law School. After a couple of years working at a law
firm in New York City, Rubenstein signed on as legal counsel to the
presidential campaign of Birch Bayh.

When Jimmy Carter won the Democratic presidential nomination in 1976,
Rubenstein won a job crafting domestic policy with campaign adviser
Stuart Eizenstat. The two formed a close working relationship, and after
the election Rubenstein found himself as the president's deputy domestic
policy adviser at the age of only 27.

Intoxicated by the job, Rubenstein made himself indispensable through
sheer labor. "He devoted probably more hours to his work in the White
House than anyone on my staff, so far as I ever knew," Carter says. "He was
a reticent person as far as putting himself forward. He was very modest,
and never claimed credit for successes when they did materialize. . . . And
he never betrayed me."

Newsweek magazine profiled Rubenstein in 1978 as the prototypical hyper-
committed young policy wonk -- eating dinner from a vending machine, all
but sleeping in his office. As the last one out of the West Wing most
nights, Rubenstein would put his and Eizenstat's memos at the top of the
pile in the president's private study, ensuring Carter always knew their
positions. A jealous staffer with the Office of Management and Budget
eventually got a Secret Service agent to sniff out his technique and put
that agency's memo on top, Rubenstein says.

He likes to add that he didn't speak to that staffer for months, but later
married her. Alice Rogoff Rubenstein went on to become an assistant to
Donald Graham, then publisher of The Washington Post, and she later
spent eight years as chief financial officer of U.S. News & World Report.

Rubenstein also recruited his old friend Schmoke to the White House staff.
"All the legends about him and how hard he worked are absolutely
correct," Schmoke says. "He was somebody that I never heard anybody say
anything critical or a bad word about. He was always somebody concerned
about community. . . . He was very much interested in public policy
concerns, and broad societal issues."

Then, to Rubenstein's surprise, Carter failed to win a second term.

Lawyers who had once dangled job offers now didn't return Rubenstein's
calls. He eventually hired on at the firm of Shaw, Pittman, Potts &
Trowbridge, but found that he didn't really enjoy the work. Eizenstat, who
remains a close friend, didn't worry about Rubenstein, because he figured
he would follow a path similar to his own -- practice law, write papers for
think tanks, step in and out of Democratic administrations.

But Walter Mondale's big loss in 1984 soured Rubenstein on politics. And as
he entered his late thirties, he was restless for something to focus all that
intense drive upon. Something that might carry a significant paycheck.

So he took the leap and formed Carlyle. Not long after the firm started up,
Rubenstein met Judge Hammerman for lunch at Duke Zeibert's. "I just want
you to know," he said to his old mentor, "I'm not selling out."

Wealth and Influence

Rubenstein got his payday, and then some. He has lost track of his net
worth, he says, because Carlyle's structure gives him an interest in each of
the firm's 250-plus investments, and those values fluctuate. But it's safe to
say he has many millions.

The Rubensteins remodeled their Georgian-style home in Bethesda --
assessed last year at $1.7 million -- then bought the place next door and
renovated it as a guesthouse. They built a 10,000-square-foot chalet in
Beaver Creek, Colo., and a compound that sleeps 30 on Nantucket.

For all that, Rubenstein spends most of his time on airplanes or in hotels.
He likes to point out that he neither skis nor sails, and visits those getaway
homes maybe one week apiece each year.

"I'm kind of fascinated with his acquisition of houses," says Arthur Levitt,
the former SEC chairman. "I'm not convinced that he likes any of these
houses a great deal. . . . He talks about them, but I certainly don't have
the feeling that he has any commitment to them whatsoever."

Despite his riches, Rubenstein has hung on to the persona of the earnest
staffer laboring to make the marquee names look good. He hates the
spotlight so much, associates say, he'll rearrange place cards at dinner to
get himself off the head table. But what he's really doing is putting big
potential investors next to the guest of honor, softening them up.

One thing that has changed about Rubenstein is his politics. He hasn't let
go of his roots -- his wife, Alice Rogoff Rubenstein, is on the board of the
Carter Center, and the Carters were overnight guests at the Rubensteins'
Nantucket home this summer. But George and Barbara Bush are more
common houseguests. Rubenstein's wife and three children went along on
a safari with Mrs. Bush, and the Rubensteins were among a select group
invited to the former first lady's 75th-birthday party.

"Spending time with them has affected my political views," Rubenstein says.
Rather than Democrat or Republican, he now sees himself as a capital-C
Capitalist. And he says he wants to position his company the same way.

Rubenstein has refused to let Carlyle form its own political action
committee, and he has all but stopped making political donations. Since
1999 Rubenstein has contributed a total of about $2,500 to political
campaigns, all Republican, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Others associated with Carlyle have given far more. From 1999 to 2000,
people affiliated with the firm gave nearly $224,000 to Democratic
candidates and groups and nearly $248,000 to Republicans, according to
the center's numbers. Carlucci and co-founder William Conway are the
company's most generous givers.

Numbers were way down in the post-presidential 2000 to 2001 cycle:
$27,350 to Democrats and $81,285 to Republicans.

Rubenstein says he voted for the current president but did not raise
money for him, and that he has visited this Bush White House only once,
when a friend was involved in staging a Kennedy Center event.

Critics argue that the Carlyle magic can't be gauged by such traditional
standards. "My concern is the influence that Carlyle has that is not
accountable or monitored," says Charles Lewis of the Center for Public
Integrity watchdog group. "This is a company that doesn't register for the
most part in terms of its activities in Washington. It clearly has enormous
influence, I mean astonishing influence."

Even Rubenstein, for all his protests that Carlyle doesn't consciously lobby
the government, concedes that "maybe you get this influence by people
thinking you have it."

How do you measure the impact, Lewis asks, when a company's top
executive -- Carlucci - - chats at a cocktail party with Donald Rumsfeld
about their wrestling days at Princeton? Or when its top adviser is not only
a former president but once changed the diapers of the current
president?

It's not just in Washington that such questions arise. Last year when the
British government decided to privatize its secret technology lab by selling
a stake to Carlyle, commentators and even some of the lab's employees
expressed outrage about the company's ties to former British prime
minister Major and to U.S. power brokers.

Also last year, Carlyle made the seemingly innocuous purchase of a Hong
Kong company that is the world's biggest manufacturer of artificial
Christmas trees. Shareholders in the Chinese company who opposed the
sale pointed out that one of its top executives kept a picture of Major in
his office, implying that once again Carlyle's connections had given it an
unfair advantage.

One Carlyle insider, while vigorously defending the company's ethics,
concedes that there is often an unsaid component to overseas dealings in
which "certain types of investors" will assume Carlyle's big names mean big
influence. "No matter how much you try to tell them, they think it's like
their system," the source says.

That's also why the Internet hosts a robust strain of Carlyle-bashing. A
British musical act calling itself the Carlyle Group has posted songs online
with titles like "Vast Right-Wing Conspiracy" and "Blinded by the Right." One
Web site offers a "Carlyle Casino" slot machine that uses pictures of Bush,
Baker and Carlucci in place of cherries, bells and bars. Pull the handle,
line up the photos and find out "Who's making billions from the War on
Terror?"

The characterization infuriates some of Carlyle's biggest names. "I say that's
bull[expletive], and you can print it!" snaps Baker. "Somebody would say,
well, you had one of the bin Laden brothers as an investor. Well, that's
exactly right," he says, adding that the bin Ladens are one of the
wealthiest families in the Middle East and have disowned Osama.

Still, to deflect criticism, Rubenstein returned the bin Ladens' $2 million
investment, and said that while Carlyle still has other investors in the
Middle East, it no longer owns any companies there.

But even people who aren't looking for sinister conspiracies have
questioned Rubenstein's approach with Carlyle. Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-
Ohio) was once a junior member of Carter's domestic policy staff and is
amazed by her former colleague's career.

"I sort of saw David as the ultimate public servant. He was so selfless. He
gave all that effort over all that period of time," she says. But now he has
become something else: "I want to use a complimentary word here, I don't
want to say a shadowy figure," Kaptur says. "Kind of a translucent figure."

Using former statesmen such as Bush and Baker to pursue private gain just
seems inherently wrong, she says. "I think that using your public-sector
contacts to aggrandize yourself when you leave . . . creates a view that
the public sector is for sale."

Rubenstein understands the negative way some people view what he's
done. Democrats, especially, "often consider the making of money in this
kind of private-equity business as not as socially significant as working in a
foundation or in government," he says. But he argues that Carlyle has
contributed to the social good: it has created jobs and generated wealth
for investors that include the California Public Employees Retirement
System and other major pension funds.

Former president Carter says he finds no fault in Carlyle's stable of
statesmen. "I think each public official, once leaving office, is as
completely free as all other citizens of the United States to shape their
own careers, within the bounds of ethical proprieties," he says.

But he is quick to add that Carlyle is something "in which, by the way, I
have never been involved at all. I have never been in the commercial life at
all." He did make one speech at a Carlyle conference, he says, but only to
promote the Carter Center.

Times are changing, though. It's no longer valid to assume that Carlyle's
golden roll of all- stars automatically opens doors in certain parts of the
world, says Youssef M. Ibrahim of the Council on Foreign Relations in New
York. "George Bush junior is kind of screwing his father up, slowly but
surely, in terms of securing relationships in the region," Ibrahim says of the
Mideast. The current administration's support for Israel, its hostility toward
Iraq and its rocky dealings with the Saudi royal family have soured business
and political relationships alike, he says.

In that light, it was especially good timing last year when Levitt introduced
Rubenstein to Gerstner. The legendary IBM executive was planning to
retire, and Rubenstein, much as he did 15 years before with Carlucci,
resolved to hire him.

It was past time for Carlyle to work on its image, Rubenstein decided.
Frustrated by the conspiracy theories, burned by the Sept. 11-bin Laden
situation, Rubenstein viewed hiring Gerstner as the beginning of the next
stage for his company.

"Maybe you would say it's an evolution," he says. Political connections got
them started, but now Rubenstein would like Carlyle to take the next step
-- becoming part of the bedrock of American finance, an institution that
outlives its founders, the "Goldman Sachs of private equity."

As for his own future, Rubenstein has been thinking about someday getting
his hand back into an administration. Not as a staffer or appointee -- that
would be too restrictive, he says. No, Rubenstein now understands that if
you want to do something to affect public policy, being the rich buddy of
a sitting president would be the way to do it.

"I'm not as convinced as I once was when my hair was dark and I was 27
that all public- policy achievements are accomplished within government,"
he says. "I can have influence, if I want to, on the outside."

© 2003 The Washington Post Company
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reason and is conducive to the good and benefit of one and all.
Then accept it and live up to it." The Buddha on Belief,
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