-Caveat Lector-

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_smith/20000927_xcsof_the_secret.shtml

The secret files of Ron Brown

Wen Ho Lee is charged with removing classified material from a
secure area. Despite Lee's guilty plea to a widely public and
much touted case, a former Clinton appointee connected to Al Gore
has admitted to far worse and walked -- without being charged or
even questioned.

In 1996, the former Commerce employee walked into a secure area,
put classified files in a box, and then walked out the door. That
former employee was Ira Sockowitz, then special general counsel
at Commerce. Without authorization, he took 136 files, over 2,000
pages of highly classified materials, and simply walked away.

The Sockowitz files include secret reports on cryptography from
the NSA, a secret report on Russia from the CIA, secret cables
from France, secret documents on U.S.-Russian space launches,
even materials on U.S. efforts to purchase weapon's grade uranium
from Russia. Sockowitz also had the complete biographies on
foreign political leaders in Bosnia, Croatia, India, Turkey, and
Russia. The CIA deemed the material so secret that it tried to
seize Sockowitz's files as soon as it learned what had happened.

The Sockowitz files were discovered only after an anonymous tip
to the public-interest group Judicial Watch in October 1996.
Judicial Watch then deposed Sockowitz, a former New York state
administrative law judge. Sockowitz testified that he was an
"advance person" for the 1992 Clinton-Gore campaign. He was put
on the 1993 inaugural committee at the request of vice president
AI Gore's office.

Gore's office also approved that Sockowitz be appointed as a
Commerce Department special general counsel in November 1993. At
the Commerce Department, Sockowitz worked with John Huang
"vetting" companies that wished to travel with Ron Brown on trade
trips.

John Huang is a central figure in the growing Chinagate scandal.
In 1999, Huang pled guilty to illegal campaign donations to the
1996 Clinton-Gore campaign. Huang also cited his Fifth Amendment
rights over 2,000 times when questioned if he was working as a
spy for Chinese intelligence.

One such mission vetted by Sockowitz and Huang was the now
infamous 1994 trip to China. According to Nolanda Hill the
Clinton-Gore White House demanded the trip take place. Hill, a
former business partner and close friend of the late Commerce
Secretary Ron Brown, has testified that Brown was very nervous
about the deals with China. One such deal included Loral and the
Chinese army.

In 1994 Loral Corp. CEO Bernard Schwartz traveled to China with
Ron Brown and Ira Sockowitz. Despite a failing memory on many
other issues, during a Judicial Watch deposition Sockowitz
claimed he did recall sitting next to Schwartz at a 1994 dinner
in Beijing with Chinese officials. Sockowitz did not mention that
one official sitting next to Schwartz was People's Liberation
Army Lt. Gen. Shen Roujun.

In 1994, Lt. Gen. Shen, was second in command at COSTIND, the
Chinese Commission for Science, Technology and Industry for
National Defense. COSTIND, according to the Government Accounting
Office "oversees development of China's weapon systems and is
responsible for identifying and acquiring telecommunications
technology applicable for military use."

In August 1994, Shen met and consummated a series of satellite
deals with Schwartz and Loral. The Beijing meeting was requested
by Schwartz, arranged by President Clinton and included Commerce
Secretary Ron Brown. The technology obtained from Loral included
advanced rocket guidance and encrypted satellite telemetry
systems.

During 1994, Shen had time to visit the United States. During
that visit, his son, Shen Jun, attended a business lunch with his
father and Frank Taormina of Hughes. Taormina later assisted Shen
Jun in obtaining a job at Hughes. Shen Jun was hired at Hughes in
August of 1994 at the same time Schwartz was visiting with his
father in Beijing. It was no coincidence that a division of Space
Systems/Loral was also considering hiring Shen for a position
that would have allowed him access to classified information.

During the August 1994 trade trip to China, Schwartz also met
with Liu Ju-Yuan the minister of China Aerospace Corporation.
China Aerospace makes both the civilian Long March rocket and the
nuclear tipped CSS missile for the Second Artillery Corps of the
Chinese army. Minister Liu is also the official boss of Chinese
army Col. Liu Chao Ying. Chao contributed thousands of dollars to
the DNC through convicted China-Gate figure Johnny Chung. Col.
Liu's real boss, however, turned out to be Gen. Ji, the military
intelligence director of the People's Liberation Army.

Schwartz lobbied hard to get satellite export controls moved from
State to Commerce. He has given millions to Democrats since 1992,
including recent large donations to Hillary Clinton's New York
senate campaign. Schwartz has also succeeded in obtaining a space
monopoly.

The bulk of the Sockowitz files contain information on a
now-defunct U.S.-Chinese space venture called Iridium, a
competitor of the Loral Globalstar project. Iridium was working
with an international team of leading aerospace and electronic
leaders in Russia and Red China to construct a worldwide
satellite telecommunications network. In 1994, Loral and Schwartz
were behind Iridium with his Globalstar project.

Motorola's Iridium included Russia's Ministry of Atomics,
Khrunichev Space Research and Production Space Center in
Balkonur, and the China Great Wall Industry Group, a company
previously sanctioned for selling M-11 nuclear tipped missiles to
Pakistan.

Created by Motorola in 1987, Iridium has direct ties to Ron Brown
and the Democratic Party. Leo Mondale, a nephew of the former
vice president, was vice president of strategic planning for
Iridium. Mondale and Motorola executive Edward Staino hired four
of Brown's former employees to run Iridium. All of them were
former DNC fund-raisers, and all of them newly armed with
high-level security clearances.

Motorola also hired former White House National Security Council
member Dr. Richard Barth. Dr. Barth, according to now CIA
Director George Tenet, was very important to the Clinton-Gore
satellite export policy. Tenet served in the 1993 White House as
a national security advisor to Clinton and Gore.

"Why are you leaving me?" Tenet asked Barth in a 1993 White House
e-mail obtained using the Freedom of Information Act. "Do you
want my job? my wife? My 1974 Camaro? This place will suck eggs
without you to keep me sane."

Dr. Barth was hired in 1993 by Motorola as a lobbyist for the
Iridium satellite system. "Barthman" was so important to the
Clinton White House that he was allowed to come back as a paid
contract adviser to the White House on the very same policy he
was lobbying for Motorola. In 1994, Barth requested a waiver for
Motorola to export encrypted Iridium satellite radio equipment,
highly sought by the Chinese military, directly to the People's
Republic of China.

"Such a waiver would not reduce NSA's (National Security
Agency's) oversight over all encryption containing exports to
China," noted Barth in the fax addressed to Tenet.

"Current controls remain, only the need to notify Congress of
each sale is removed. We currently have about $100 million worth
of two way radio business tied up by the lack of a waiver for
China and face losing a market of about $500 million. ... Finally
while we now are not yet applying for licenses for encrypted
systems for satellite positioning, we may within months be
applying for such licenses for our Iridium systems."

The Barthman story ends well with a 1995 "thank you" letter to
Ron Brown from Motorola CEO Gary Tooker.

"I am writing to thank you and some key members of the Commerce
Department for your assistance in obtaining the Presidential
waiver for encryption export sales to China," wrote Tooker in a
letter that he copied to Dr. Barth.

However, the Iridium story ends very badly. In 1998, the Iridium
satellite phone consortium topped out at $61 a share. By late
July 1999, the troubled space-phone project run by Motorola
dropped to $6 a share. Nine months after its debut, Iridium went
bankrupt. The space-based phone system is de-orbiting and
destroying the chain of 66 operational satellites, leaving
Loral's Globalstar system with a total monopoly in the market.

Yet, Ron Brown's story also has a bad ending. On Feb. 6, 1996,
Ron Brown met with Wang Jun, chairman of the Chinese army-owned
arms company Poly Technologies. That same day, Wang also attended
a White House coffee with Charlie Trie who also donated several
thousand dollars to the DNC. President Clinton was host for the
coffee. Trie is his old "friend" in the Clinton-Gore White House
spin machine language -- with friend meaning a source of cash.

Nolanda Hill testified that Beijing arms dealer Wang and Brown
discussed lowering satellite export controls. She warned Brown to
stay away from Wang, who travelled the globe on an official
Chinese diplomatic passport. That same day, Feb. 6, 1996,
President Clinton approved the launch of four more U.S.
satellites on Chinese army rockets. Later in 1996, Clinton also
approved the full export of Loral's Globalstar system, including
a complete encrypted satellite telemetry control center to be
constructed outside Beijing.

In April 1996, Brown died in a trade flight to the former
Yugoslavia. Sockowitz also was scheduled to fly with Secretary
Brown but a last minute change forced him to miss that fatal
flight. Instead, immediately after Ron Brown died Sockowitz
walked out of the Commerce Department, unchecked, with over 2,000
pages of secret documents.

The death of the secretary came as a blow to the criminal
investigations of Ron Brown's Commerce Department. It was well
known that a special prosecutor was preparing heavy evidence of
corruption. Brown's death stopped that investigation just before
the 1996 election.

Despite the security breach, the Reno Justice Department and FBI
Director Freeh decided there is no case against Sockowitz. The
Commerce Department's inspector general also decided against a
probe. Sockowitz claimed his reasons for taking the files were
innocent and his claims were taken without question. No federal
law enforcement official has ever questioned Ira Sockowitz.

Related item:

Sockowitz files

http://www.softwar.net/socko.html


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