Please send as far and wide as possible.

Thanks,

Robert Sterling
Editor, The Konformist
http://www.konformist.com

http://www.konformist.com/botm/volume04/botm0201.htm

Beast of the Month - April 2001
Marc Rich, Fugitive Financier and Klinton Pardon Recipient

"I yam an anti-Christ..."
John Lydon (aka Johnny Rotten) of The Sex Pistols, "Anarchy in the UK"


The stock market is crashing.  The economy is nose-diving.
California can't keep its lights on.  The environment appears
doomed.  And we're not even 100 days into the "presidency" of Shrub
Bush, who appears to enjoy fiddling while Rome burns.

Ah, makes you almost appreciate the reign of Bill Klinton.

Almost.

Lest one begins to have delusions that Klinton was some sort of great
man (like the recent bizarre deification of Ronald Reagan), in his
final moments, Slick Willie managed to give the public a farewell
gift to leave him by that has left a bitter taste in most people's
mouths.

The last-minute pardon of fugitive financier Marc Rich (The
Konformist Beast of the Month) has become the most controversial
presidential pardon since Richard Nixon.  The controversy is
deserved.  Along with his partner Pincus Green in the oil business,
Rich was indicted in 1983 with on 50 felony counts, including charges
of racketeering, mail and wire fraud, conspiracy and, most
significant, tax evasion of the incredible sum of $48 million.
Rather than face the charges, Rich fled to Switzerland, where he
couldn't be extradited.  He continued to live a luxurious life,
wheeling and dealing in international commodities markets, including
trades with apartheid South Africa.  He hired top-ranking officials
from Democratic and Republican administrations to represent him, and
relied on his ex-wife to lavish money on Democrats during the Klinton
years, including the chief pecker himself.  The investments appear to
have paid off.  Now, eighteens years after his indictment, he has
been given a get-out-of-jail card.

What makes the case of Marc Rich so unusual is that many liberals,
who usually come rushing to the defense of Klinton every time he
becomes a "victim" to another right-wing attack, have been loathe to
stand by their man this time.  The reason for this may have something
to do with the fact that, at even face value, the pardon of Rich
appears quite sleazy, a favor done in exchange for campaign
contributions.  Meanwhile, more progressive elements (who never have
been fans of the President) have even greater issues with the
pardon.  As columnists Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman have
pointed out in, Rich played a central role in one of the highest
profile union-busting efforts the United States has seen in recent
decades.  According to Mokhiber and Weissman:

In the early 1990s, Marc Rich was the power-behind-the-scenes at the
Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation (RAC) facility in Ravenswood, West
Virginia, site of one of the most embittered U.S. labor-management
disputes of recent decades...  The Ravenswood plant, which had been
owned by Kaiser Aluminum for four decades, passed into the ownership
of RAC in 1988. The union discovered that, behind a convoluted
corporate ownership smokescreen, stood one man with a controlling
interest in RAC: Marc Rich.


To break the union, RAC locked out its 1,700 workers and hired
scabs.  The night of the lockout, the company brought in a goon squad
security force equipped with riot gear, clubs, tear gas and video
cameras used to constantly monitor the workers' pickets.

Mokhiber and Weissman both believe it was unlikely that Rich
initially new anything about the actions by RAC.  But about four
months into the conflict, the union had uncovered the Rich connection
and called on him to end the lockout.  The lockout lasted another 16
months.

With this kind of history, you'd think the right wing would actually
embrace the guy.  Indeed, the Rich pardon seems another strange
example of how Klinton's biggest enemies are those on the right whose
agenda Klinton has advanced so well.  But since the Rich pardon
allows the right to bash Billy again, Rich's image as a swine has
been embraced by conservatives out of pure pragmatism.

Pragmatic it may be, but the image is deserved.  Indeed, the Rich
case merely fits the entire package of last minute pardons, most of
which seem to be favors for the politically connected.  Consider the
following examples, courtesy of Sam Smith and The Progressive Review:

Roger Clinton: conspiracy to distribute cocaine.  Bill's half-brother.

Tom Bhakta: tax evasion.  His family gave $5,000 to Hillary's
campaign.

Almon Glenn Braswell: Vitamin peddler convicted of mail fraud and
perjury.  Hillary's brother Hugh Rodham lobbied for pardon.

Carlos Vignali: Offense - cocaine trafficking.  Hugh Rodham lobbied
for him.

Henry Cisneros: lying in independent-counsel probe.  Served in Bill
Clinton's
Cabinet.

John Deutch: security violations.  Served Bill Clinton at CIA.

Robert Clinton Fain and James Lowell Manning: tax charges.  William
Cunningham, Hillary's Senate campaign treasurer, acted as their
lawyer.

Susan McDougal: fraud in Whitewater scandal; refusal to testify
against Bill
Clinton.  Longtime friend and Whitewater partner of the Clintons.

Edward R. Downe Jr.: securities fraud.  Hillary donor.

Richard Riley Jr.: federal drug charges.  Son of Clinton's education
secretary.

Stephen A. Smith and Robert Palmer: charges related to Whitewater.
Smith was former Clinton aide; Palmer worked as appraiser on
Whitewater.

Christopher V. Wade: Whitewater bankruptcy fraud.  One of the
original developers of Clintons' Whitewater.

Harvey Weinig: Helped launder at least $19 million for drug cartel.
A relative, former White House aide David Dreyer, asked Clinton
confidants for clemency.


Apparently, it does pay to be a FOB.  (Provided you don't "commit
suicide.")

Still, is anyone surprised by this?  Take the California "electricity
crisis", which could end in a second if Shrub would reinstitute price
caps.  He hasn't, and coincidentally, the main beneficiaries of his
decision are a cartel of Houston-based energy companies, which have
financed his career.  Or take the work on "bankruptcy reform," which
will make it harder for people to escape from crippling credit card
debts.  There is no public support for the initiative, yet it appears
ready to sail through Congress.  Dubya has promised to sign the bill:
coincidentally, the nation's number one credit card issuer, MBNA, was
Bush's top contributor.

Of course, there may be even more to the curious case of Marc Rich.
In a New York Times article, Klinton, after reminding readers that
George Bush gave last minute pardons of six Iran-contra defendants,
including former Defense Secretary Weinberger (a sleazy move that
oddly caused no outrage or demands for Congressional investigations),
claimed that one of the reasons he issued the pardons of Rich and
Green is he believed that they were unfairly singled out.  As
unsympathetic as Marc Rich is, this appears to be true.  The fact
that his prosecutor was would-be Mussolini Rudy Giuliani raises other
questions about fairness.  He also added that the pardon was strongly
advocated by Israeli officials, including Ehud Barak.  This appears
to be the case as well, and it appears Rich has done services for the
Israeli spy agency Mossad.

Still, if injustice was the only issue, Klinton could've pardoned
many other individuals: Leonard Peltier, Michael Milken and Jonathan
Pollard are three people who failed to make the final cut.  Perhaps
there is something else to this.  The time of his indictment, 1983,
fits very well with the whole Iran-Contra operation: indeed,
according to the October Surprise hypothesis, secret deals between
the CIA and the fundamentalist Iranian government happened as early
as 1980 (and perhaps even earlier.)  His dealings in the oil industry
and his involvement with Mossad and South Africa fit very well with
the operation as well.  This leads to some curious speculation: was
Marc Rich an early fall guy for Iran-Contra, a man who was left
holding the bag because others feared he was a risk?  Somehow we
think that such questions won't be asked by any official
investigation.

In any case, we salute Marc Rich as Beast of the Month.
Congratulations, and keep up the great work, Markie!!!

Sources:

Marc Rich's Hidden History as a Union-Buster
Russell Mokhiber ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) and Robert Weissman
([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Focus on the Corporation, ( http://www.corporatepredators.org )

My Reasons for the Pardons
William Jefferson Clinton, The New York Times (
http://www.nytimes.com )
February 18, 2001

Various Postings
Sam Smith, Progressive Review ( http://www.prorev.com/ )


If you are interested in a free subscription to The
Konformist Newswire,  please visit:

http://www.eGroups.com/list/konformist

Or, e-mail  [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the
subject: "I NEED 2 KONFORM!!!"

(Okay, you can use something else, but it's a kool
catch phrase.)

Visit the Klub Konformist at Yahoo!:
http://clubs.yahoo.com/clubs/klubkonformist




Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/




Reply via email to