-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.goldensextant.com/commentary17.html#anchor26707
Click Here: <A
HREF="http://www.goldensextant.com/commentary17.html#anchor26707";>commentary17
</A>
-----
MPEG COMMENTARY - Page 17
 What's New
CURRENT MPEG COMMENTARY


June 8, 2001. BIS-Gold Price Fixing Case: Update on the Battle of the Briefs
On May 25, 2001, the Department of Justice moved for leave to file reply
memoranda on behalf of Secretary O'Neill and Chairman Greenspan. On May 29,
the Bank for International Settlements filed a similar motion. All three
motions were accompanied by the proposed memoranda, which are posted at
www.zealllc.com/howedef.htm. On May 31, I filed a Qualified Opposition to
Reply Memoranda of the DOJ and BIS, which included a request that my
opposition be accepted as a surreply if the reply memoranda were allowed. On
June 4, the court granted leave to file the DOJ memoranda, denied leave to
file the BIS memorandum, and denied leave to file a surreply. Meanwhile, on
June 1, J. P. Morgan Chase and Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank also filed
motions for leave to file accompanying reply memoranda. Citigroup joined in
and adopted these memoranda on June 5. All these documents, too, are or soon
will be posted at Zeal LLC. Today, June 8, I filed an Opposition to Reply
Memoranda of the Bullion Banks.
The legal argument made at the end of that opposition is dramatized in the
following two charts, courtesy of Mike Bolser:



May 28, 2001. The Last Train Out
Because Rick made the last train out of Paris, he lived to fight another day,
and in the interim provided grist for a great movie, Casablanca. Those were
years when prescient men and women all over Europe were running for the
proverbial last train out, sometimes just a few steps ahead of the Gestapo.
Some made it, as in The Sound of Music. Some did not, among them Natalie
Jastram Henry in Herman Wouk's The Winds of War. Some chose to stay in place
and await their fate. But most only dimly understood, if at all, the historic
currents about to redirect their lives. Only later did they appreciate that
of all the trains then chugging over the Continent, some were vehicles of
escape to freedom and life while others bore their passengers to unbelievable
depravity and death.
It is human nature to think that tomorrow will be much like today, that
history progresses in a more or less linear fashion. Great discontinuities
boggle the mind. My friend Adam Hamilton has just written a piece, Gold
Prepares to Erupt, comparing the current monetary and investment climate to
ancient Pompeii just before its immolation by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius.
Adam concludes: "We are now observing initial pressure-blowoff warning signs
in gold, and the great financial lessons of history coupled with the
immutable laws of free-market economics ensure gold is preparing for a
spectacular price eruption."
Market or volcanic eruptions are notoriously difficult to predict. The forces
that lead to them, however, are somewhat easier to observe. Anyone interested
in gold who has not yet read Frank Veneroso's presentation at the GATA
conference in Durban on May 10, 2001, should do so at once. Gold speaks
primarily through flows of physical metal, gold prices in various world
markets, lease rates, and general conditions in the gold mining industry.
Frank is almost certainly the world's leading authority on gold flows,
including the huge amount of gold that central banks have recklessly loaned
out over the past decade and that now represents an alarmingly large short
physical position overhanging the world financial system.
In recent months my commentaries have been limited by the demands of my
litigation against the gold price fixing cabal. Last Friday government
lawyers for Paul O'Neill, Secretary of the Treasury, and Alan Greenspan,
Chairman of the Federal Reserve, dropped on me some weekend reading
consisting of reply briefs they want to file in response to the opposition
that I filed to their motions to dismiss. I understand that the Bank for
International Settlements may also move for leave to file a reply brief.
These reply briefs, which are not allowed as of right, come more than five
weeks after I filed my opposition. In the appellate courts, reply briefs that
are allowed as of right must usually be filed within two weeks of the
principal brief to which they respond. So I ask myself: What has suddenly
prompted this urge to file reply briefs? Is it just the government moving at
its typical glacial pace, or is something else going on?
On Saturday, May 26, GATA chairman Bill Murphy received a second letter from
Lawrence B. Lindsay, Assistant to the President for Economic Policy, and
generally regarded as President Bush's top economic adviser. While Bill has
not revealed publicly the exact contents of the letter, he has revealed its
date: May 30, 2001. A postdated letter from the White House strikes me as a
bit unusual.
These strange emanations from Washington may be nothing more than government
doing what it does best: chasing its own tail. But they could reflect some
more rational purpose that cannot yet be fully discerned. Over the past few
weeks, amidst talk of a Gold Syndicate taking on the Gold Cabal, the gold
market has displayed a decidedly different and more bullish tone. Rumor has
it that the Gold Syndicate includes the Chinese, Middle Eastern interests and
George Soros, who apparently plans to make another billion dollars at the
expense of the Bank of England. Certainly there has been increased media
coverage of GATA, much but not all of it generated by the conference in
Durban. Lease rates have displayed unusual volatility and inversions. The
possibility of a delivery squeeze on the COMEX June gold contract looms ever
larger.
Given the fundamentals of the current international financial picture, gold
looks ready to resume its historic role as the financial asset of last
resort, the only financial asset that is not another's liability. All these
recent straws in the wind sound like the gold train blowing its whistle and
preparing to leave the station. When it does, the dollar-dominated financial
world we have come to assume will change forever. Its great hero, Alan
Greenspan, will take his rightful place in history alongside John Law. Don't
miss the gold train. It is one train that even my FJ1200 superbike can't
catch.
April 19, 2001. BIS-Gold Price Fixing Case: Patriots' Day Filings
By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
Their flag to April's breeze unfurled;
Here once the embattled farmers stood,
And fired the shot heard 'round the world.
--Ralph Waldo Emerson

Today is the 226th anniversary of the shot memorialized in Emerson's Concord
Hymn, a poem composed for the dedication of the battle monument on July 4,
1837. The Battle of Concord was the second engagement of the American
Revolution, following by a few hours the first skirmish in Lexington. Seven
hundred British troops marched on Concord to destroy the colonists' military
stores. It cost the British 273 casualties to 95 for the Americans. More than
sixty years after the event, concerned lest people forget the magnitude of
the stakes and the struggle, Emerson urged: "That memory may their deed
redeem." So today, more less taking Paul Revere's route in the reverse
direction, I traveled from my Middlesex home to the new John Joseph Moakley
United States Courthouse, on the shore of Boston Harbor near the site of the
Boston Tea Party and within sight of the steeple on the Old North Church, to
file the following papers in Reginald H. Howe v. Bank for International
Settlements, et al., No. 00-CV-12485-RCL:


PLAINTIFF'S CONSOLIDATED OPPOSITION TO MOTIONS TO DISMISS

PLAINTIFF'S CONSOLIDATED OPPOSITION, Continued




PLAINTIFF'S AFFIDAVIT




The Statement of Facts in the Consolidated Opposition contains some
interesting new evidence, which may be accessed directly from the following
link: Gold Swaps by the ESF.




March 21, 2001. BIS-Gold Price Fixing Case: Update
The schedule for responses described in my March 9, 2001, status report has
been allowed by the court. Pursuant thereto, on March 15 the Department of
Justice ("DOJ") filed two motions, each with a separate supporting
memorandum, on behalf of the Secretary of the Treasury: (1) to substitute
Paul O'Neill, the current secretary, for former secretary Lawrence H.
Summers; and (2) to dismiss the case both as against the Secretary of the
Treasury in his official capacity and as against Mr. Summers individually.
The DOJ has advised me that it does not represent Mr. Summers personally at
this time, nor is the DOJ currently representing any of the other federal
defendants. In addition, the DOJ has indicated that it does not have any
objection to its court filings being posted online, although as yet it has
not provided electronic copies. However, Adam Hamilton has taken a hard
copies of the DOJ's memoranda, scanned them, and converted both into PDF
format for virtually exact online reproduction. These memoranda may now be
viewed at a special section of Adam's site: www.zealllc.com/howedef.htm.
For a number of reasons, I am not going to comment upon or otherwise discuss
the motions and memoranda filed by the DOJ or any other defendants until I
file my opposition papers on April 30. They will be posted here at The Golden
Sextant as soon after they are filed in court as I can convert them to HTML
format. In the meantime, I intend to do whatever I can to facilitate the
posting at Adam's site of the defendants' memoranda as they are received, and
I extend to Adam and his associates at Zeal LLC my sincere thanks for their
efforts to bring all sides of this case to the public.
March 9, 2001. BIS-Gold Price Fixing Case: Status Report
Because there is some confusion over what is scheduled to happen on March 15,
and also because all parties to the case have filed a joint motion with the
court to establish a slightly modified schedule, I am providing this status
report, which also should help to reduce somewhat my e-mail traffic.
The normal rules of procedure in federal district courts require a defendant
to file a written response to a complaint within a certain time period, which
may vary depending on the type of defendant (e.g., domestic, foreign,
government) and the manner of service. Generally speaking, these responses
may be of two types: (1) an answer to the complaint, addressing by numbered
paragraph each of its allegations, and raising any other defenses or
counterclaims; or (2) a motion to dismiss, raising legal defenses that would
prevent the court from granting any relief even assuming the factual
allegations of the complaint are true. Defendants who file motions to dismiss
are not required to file answers until after their motions to dismiss are
heard and determined. A motion to dismiss must be accompanied at the time of
filing by a brief supporting the motion and citing the legal authorities
therefor. When a motion to dismiss is filed, the plaintiff is allowed time to
file an opposition containing a statement of reasons why the motion should
not be allowed, the defendant required to answer, and the case allowed to
proceed.
It is quite normal for defendants in complex cases to request extensions of
time to respond, and just as normal for plaintiffs to assent to these
requests. This week all parties in my case, including me, filed a joint
motion with the court requesting that the various defendants be allowed until
the following dates to file their responses: March 15 for the Secretary of
the Treasury; March 30 for all other defendants except William J. McDonough;
and April 10 for Mr. McDonough. In addition, the joint motion requests that
the plaintiff be allowed until April 30 to file his oppositions to any
motions to dismiss or other defensive motions filed by the defendants
pursuant to the agreed schedule.
It is my expectation based on discussions with the attorneys for the various
defendants that all of them are planning to file motions to dismiss.
Typically, after the filing of motions to dismiss and the oppositions
thereto, the court will set a hearing date for oral argument on the motions.
At the hearing, the court may rule on the motions, or parts thereof, from the
bench, but normally, especially in a complex case, the court will take the
motions under advisement and issue a written ruling and opinion later. Courts
control their own schedules, which are affected by many different
considerations, so it is not possible to predict with much precision likely
dates for a hearing or a ruling. However, I will continue to post periodic
status reports as appropriate, and I am working on arrangements to make
available online all significant court filings. In any event, my own
oppositions will be posted here at The Golden Sextant, as will notice of any
important court hearings.

February 20, 2001. Hidden Faces of Modern Imperialism: AngloGold, Barrick and
the BIS
Shades of Cecil Rhodes and Alfred Beit. At the Indaba African Mining
Conference in Cape Town, Kelvin Williams of AngloGold, South Africa's largest
gold producer, used his turn at the podium to take a gratuitous swipe at
GATA: "Forget for the moment about the notion of a conspiracy against gold,
and worldwide plots between central bankers here, there and everywhere. We
face a physical overhang of the metal...."
Huh? Annual new mine production has peaked at around 2500 tonnes. Annual
demand for gold now exceeds 4500 metric tonnes. Last week, the World Gold
Council reported that demand in the markets it surveys reached almost 900
tonnes in the last quarter of 2000, the highest level of quarterly demand
ever recorded by the WGC. For years now, the ever growing gap between new
mine supply and demand has been filled by a combination of scrap recovery,
official sales and, most importantly, gold borrowed from central banks and
sold into the market, much of it pursuant to hedging programs of producers
like AngloGold. Its continuing policy, restated by Williams at Indaba, is to
hedge mostly through forward sales up to one-half of its production for the
next five years.
With financial and editorial support from "South Africans for a free gold
market," GATA responded to AngloGold's jibe through a full page ad in
Business Day, the principal financial newspaper in South Africa. The ad
pointedly questioned whether AngloGold's role in driving down gold prices
through heavy forward selling should be rewarded by allowing it to purchase
Gold Fields, the country's second largest gold producer, which last week
announced that it had used recent weakness in gold prices to close out its
remaining forward sales.
AngloGold is 53% owned by Anglo American PLC, the international mining and
natural resources conglomerate that also controls Anglo American Platinum,
the largest producer of PGM's outside Russia, and De Beers group, the world
diamond cartel built by Sir Ernest Oppenheimer and his son Harry after the
elder Oppenheimer in 1929 seized control of the corporate empire left by
Cecil Rhodes. See Susan Emerling, "Not forever" (www.salon.com). Anglo
American has recently announced a reorganization of the De Beers companies
amidst reports that De Beers wants to shed the image of a cartel in order to
improve its access to the American market. Once, when asked whether he
preferred diamonds or gold, Sir Harry replied: "Diamonds, every time. People
buy diamonds out of vanity. They buy gold because they are too stupid to
think of any other monetary system which will work." Today gold is a loss
leader for Anglo American -- cheap settings for its more profitable diamonds.
Barrick Gold is also rumored to have designs on Gold Fields, possibly in
conjunction with AngloGold. Barrick is controlled by Canadian financier Peter
Munk through TrizecHahn Corporation, his flagship international real estate
development company. Like AngloGold, Barrick operates an aggressive forward
sales program, including the writing of call options to sweeten the returns
from hedging. This tactic is particularly dangerous absent a high level of
confidence in continued low gold prices. Since 1997, TrizecHahn has reduced
its stake in Barrick from about 16% to under 8%, following earlier large
dispositions of Barrick shares by Horsham, TrizecHahn's predecessor. On a
split-adjusted basis, Barrick's share price peaked at more than twice its
current level in early 1994 and again in early 1996, making all these sales
by Munk's holding companies appear prescient indeed.
As parts of larger corporate empires with their major interests outside gold,
AngloGold and Barrick differ from other gold mining companies in a way that
helps to explain their aggressive hedging policies. The overall profits of
their parent companies, Anglo American and TrizecHahn, are far more dependent
on continued strength in the G-10 economies than on higher gold prices. One
analyst estimates that gold at $600/ounce would add one full percentage point
to the economic growth rate of South Africa, where currently each gold miner
supports an average of 11 to 12 others. But however warranted by
fundamentals, a price increase of this magnitude would unmask the short gold
position of the bullion banks, threatening the very consequences that so
frightened Eddie George, Governor of the Bank of England, in the wake of the
Washington Agreement. See Complaint, paragraph 55.
Accordingly, viewed in the larger context of Anglo American's interests
rather than just AngloGold's, it is not surprising that Kelvin Williams at
Indaba described a shortage of physical gold as a glut, or that he tried to
deflect the blame for low gold prices away from their true source: the G-10
central banks operating a price fixing scheme through the Bank for
International Settlements in an increasingly desperate war against gold.
Leaders of struggling new democratic regimes in the gold producing nations of
Africa should not fall for the G-10's shills. Rather, as African leaders
evaluate the evidence of gold price fixing adduced by the GATA impi, they
should be guided by Thomas Jefferson's remark to James Madison: "Resort is
had to ridicule only when reason is against us." After all, the author of the
Declaration of Independence and the principal draftsman of the Constitution
have a record for democratic nation building that is hard to beat.
For many gold bugs, the transition of the BIS from a European ally to an
important tool of official Anglo-American gold bashing is perhaps the most
surprising and disheartening development of the past few years. As reflected
in the transcript of the Federal Open Market Committee's conference call on
July 20, 1994, this transformation stems from the Treaty of Maastricht, which
put the European Monetary Institute followed by the European Central Bank on
track to replace the BIS as the primary vehicle for joint action and
cooperation among European central banks. To avoid being sidelined as
irrelevant, the BIS undertook to reinvent itself as a global financial
institution, an effort which the ever opportunistic Alan Greenspan was only
too pleased to support. As the Fed chairman explained to the FOMC:
Up until the Maastrich Treaty, our relationships with the BIS seemed to be
appropriately constrained to our periodic visits over there to deal with the
G-10 on a consultative basis and to be involved with a number of their
committees, but to have no involvement at all with the actual management of
the BIS. With the advent of the Maastrich Treaty and the development of the
European Monetary Institute, the potential of the BIS being effectively
neutered because of the overlap in jurisdictions of the EMI and the BIS has
led the BIS to move toward a much more global role, one that anticipates
inviting a significant number of non-European members, 10 to 25 as I recall
the range, to become members of the BIS. That would significantly alter its
character from a largely though not exclusively European managed operation to
one which is far more global in nature. It is possible, perhaps probable,
that the BIS as a consequence will become a much larger player on the world
scene. It was our judgment that it would be advisable for us to be involved
in the managerial changes that are about to be initiated rather than to stay
on the sidelines, as we chose to do through all those decades when we did not
want to get involved with a European-type international organization. In
contradistinction to that, we think it is important to be an active player in
the development of this institution to make certain that we as the principal
international financial player have a significant amount to say in the
evolution of the institution. That's the basis upon which this decision has
been made here at the Board, and it was one which we probably would not have
addressed in any meaningful way had not the altered nature of the BIS itself
become imminent.
A few days after this FOMC briefing, the BIS announced that Messrs. Greenspan
and McDonough would assume the two seats on its board reserved for the
American issue, and that the governors of the Bank of Canada and Bank of
Japan had also been elected to the board. Thus, with inclusion of the United
States, the board would henceforth consist of the G-10 countries. As the
International Monetary Fund has already demonstrated, nothing is more
dangerous to economic growth and democratic progress in developing nations
than an obsolete international financial institution cut adrift from the
developed world and left to save itself by trying to help the less developed.
No one ever seems to ask how the developed world developed without these
institutions.
Like the IMF, the BIS sails today on a monetary course for which it was
neither designed nor intended. Article 20 of its Statutes still commands:
"The operations of the Bank for its own account shall only be carried out in
currencies which in the opinion of the Board satisfy the practical
requirements of the gold or gold exchange standard." Among the standing
committees of the BIS is the Committee on Gold and Foreign Exchange,
sometimes referred to as the Committee of Experts on Gold and Foreign
Exchange or the G-10 Committee on Gold and Foreign Exchange. Exactly what
this committee does in the area of gold, including why it has not suggested
amendment or deletion of Article 20, is an obvious subject for discovery in
my lawsuit, as well as for direct inquiry by several gold producing nations
of Africa which are members of the BIS, especially South Africa.
One clue is (or was) available online. Until about two weeks ago, the last
sentence of the first paragraph of the biographical summary for Peter R.
Fisher, head of the New York Fed's markets group, read: "He also is a member
of the bank's Management Committee and serves on the Gold and Foreign
Exchange Committee of the G-10 central banks." On February 6, 2001, this
sentence was deleted while the rest of the biography remained unchanged. (A
"Google" search for "Peter Fisher committee gold" will still turn up a
reference to the missing sentence.) Fisher is widely reported to have played
a major role in the Fed-orchestrated rescue of Long Term Capital Management,
which according to reliable sources was short 300 to 400 tonnes of gold. Hard
to believe that the presumed captain of the Plunge Protection Team has lost
these prestigious committee appointments, and only a few days after a GATA
supporter found his online bio, too.
Speaking of the New York Fed, after dropping to low or negligible levels from
April through August, withdrawals of gold from earmarked foreign and
international accounts have run at a heavy pace in the months since: 40
tonnes in September, 41 in October, and 44 in November. Added to the heavy
outflows in the first quarter, total withdrawals in the first 11 months of
2000 equal 315 tonnes, or more than the full year totals of 302 tonnes for
1999 and 309 tonnes for 1998. My hunch is that much of this official outflow
is IMF gold deposited with -- and loaned out by -- the BIS. I also suspect
that part of the reason for the compulsory freeze-out of the BIS's private
shareholders is to avoid publication of annual financial reports that might
disclose some of this activity. See, e.g., commentary dated June 11, 2000,
Central Banks vs. Gold: Winning Battles but Losing the War? (This commentary
also contains a chart showing monthly outflows of foreign earmarked gold from
January 1997 through March 2000.)
As shown graphically in a prior commentary, Cycles of Manipulation: COMEX
Option Expiration Days and BOE Auctions, the Bank of England's gold auctions
are on the same bimonthly cycle as COMEX gold options and futures. Don
Lindley reports that immediately following the last auction on January 23,
his "option cube" turned from a bullish bias toward $280/ounce to sharply
bearish, suggesting a decline to $260 or lower. The basic pattern seems to be
that the auctions provide the delta for the bullion banks to write calls,
which traders then use to support bear raids on the futures. In any event,
the timing of the British auctions betrays their true purpose.
In a recent article, NY Strangulation of World Gold Market - 1 Year, Harry
Clawar updates his data on gold price increases overseas and their
cancellation by selling on the COMEX. For the year beginning January 25,
2000, when his study started, net overseas price increases amounted to
$160/ounce, while net decreases in New York equaled $173/ounce. Meanwhile, as
shown in the Gold Market Regression Charts that Mike Bolser continues to
update as new data becomes available, the intuitively contradictory trends of
strong physical demand and shrinking markets for paper gold continue to
manifest themselves. The latter trend is also quite apparent in reduced
turnover and open interest in gold contracts on the TOCOM, which Mike does
not chart.
Richard Russell has been watching markets and writing about them almost since
the day he returned from World War II service in bombers over Europe. His Dow
Theory Letters is among the oldest and most successful investment letters. On
January 24, 2001, he wrote: "I don't, as a rule, believe in manipulation in
the markets, but if there are two areas of manipulation they are (1) gold -
everytime gold sticks it's little yellow head up, someone, somewhere - brings
a hammer down on that poor head. Ouch." Turning to area (2), he continued:
"The Dow and the S&P - watch the last 15 minutes of every session. Someone,
probably a fund or a brokerage house, moves in and buys just enough to move
the Dow up 15 to 25 points and in the same percentages with the S&P."
Linked, coordinated manipulation of gold and stocks poses the danger that
disclosure of rigging in one market will expose it in the other. In that
event, spiking gold with a sinking dollar and a collapsing Dow in an already
slowing economy will be two sides of the same coin. Given egregious
misvaluations of both gold and stocks plus a gargantuan trade deficit with no
historical precedent, the ingredients are at hand for an economic crisis on a
scale not seen since the Great Depression. The scenario from Gold or Dross?
Political Derivatives in Campaign 2000 is looming ever larger.
As the Germans advanced into Poland, W. H. Auden penned September 1, 1939
("As the clever hopes expire / Of a low dishonest decade"). One stanza's
final line ("We must love one another or die") was so misinterpreted and
misused that the poet removed the entire stanza from the 1945 collection of
his works. Lyndon Johnson's 1964 presidential campaign against Barry
Goldwater ran a television spot based on the deleted stanza. Starting with a
young girl pulling petals from a daisy while a voice intoned the countdown,
the ad ended with a nuclear mushroom cloud and the voice misquoting the final
line. After President Johnson put an army of over half a million men into
Vietnam, Auden struck the whole poem from subsequent editions of his works.
In today's world, where the imperatives of power and prosperity in the
developed nations regularly trump concern for the less developed, September
1, 1939 -- in lines never changed nor repudiated -- speaks hauntingly to the
G-10 governments and their satellite international financial institutions:
But who can live for long
In an euphoric dream;
Out of the mirror they stare,
Imperialism's face
And the international wrong.

February 12, 2001. South African Gold: Still Prey for the British Lion
Not until eighty years after the war began did Thomas Pakenham publish his
authoritative history, The Boer War (Weidenfeld & Nicholson, 1979; Abacus
paperback edition, 1992, reprinted 2000, to which all page cites refer).
Relying on material largely unavailable earlier, Pakenham emphasizes at the
outset that he uncovered four new themes. Two of them are particularly
relevant today, as is a third point summarized by the heading -- "Milner's
War" -- given to Part 1 of the book.
Cecil Rhodes conceived and funded the notorious Jameson Raid, now generally
perceived as the war's opening battle although it preceded the declaration of
war by almost four years. However, prior historians assumed that Rhodes,
Alfred Beit and Julius Wernher, who collectively controlled the richest gold
mines of the Rand, were not directly involved in causing the war in 1899.
"But directly concerned they were," says Pakenham (p. xvi), who adds (pp.
xvi-xvii): "I have found evidence here of an informal alliance between Sir
Alfred Milner, the British High Commissioner, and the firm of Wernher-Beit,
the dominant Rand mining house. It was this secret alliance, I believe, that
gave Milner the strength to precipitate the war."
The gold mining companies were prepared to endure the certain disruptions and
costs of war to secure two important long term advantages which they expected
a British administration to deliver: (1) more favorable tax treatment than
under President Kruger's Boer government; and (2) a plentiful and reliable
supply of cheap black labor. "What made [the gold mining moguls] such
wonderful allies was that they repeated over and over again the dictum that
there would be no war -- that is, if Britain called Kruger's bluff and sent
out the troops," writes Pakenham (p. 89). He adds (id.): "Possibly Rhodes
believed his own forecasts. But Beit, Wernher and Fitzpatrick knew the Boers.
The despatch of British troops would precipitate war."
The second new theme underlined by Pakenham is that the heaviest burden of
what contemporaries labeled a "white man's war" fell on South Africa's black
and coloured populations. Not that the main protagonists did not suffer
enormously. In men, money and materiel, it was Britain's costliest war since
the defeat of Napoleon, not to be outdone until World War I. Relatively
speaking, the costs to the Boers of their "Second War of Independence" were
even higher. But, says Pakenham (p. xvii): "In general it was the Africans
who had to pay the heaviest price in the war and its aftermath." Adding
insult to injury, in the Treaty of Vereeniging ending the conflict, the
British agreed to a provision postponing the franchise for blacks and
coloureds until after the introduction of self-government, when of course the
local white population would not grant it.
Perhaps the most startling point to emerge from Pakenham's book is that
absent one man, Alfred Milner, British viceroy of South Africa, the war would
never have occurred. Motivated by his belief in Britain's imperial role and a
personal ambition to rank among its heroes, Milner hoodwinked his own
government into waging war over a controversy that it desired to settle by
negotiation and compromise. The public justification for the war -- to secure
the franchise and fair treatment for the Uitlanders, white and mostly British
immigrants who had followed the gold rush into the Transvaal -- was largely a
sham. Worse, with the aid of a few like-minded friends as well as the gold
mining interests, Milner deceived his superiors, including the Colonial
Secretary and the Prime Minister, regarding the actual course and content of
his negotiations with the Boer government. Referring to the war as "Milner's
War" is no exaggeration; it is the simple truth.
About the time that he assumed office, President Kennedy remarked that modern
statesmen ought to read Barbara Tuchman's The Guns of August. His successful
handling of the Cuban missile crisis suggests that he profited from his own
advice. Pakenham's The Boer War is similar must reading for anyone concerned
with modern South Africa or today's gold market. Against this history, the
gold price fixing allegations of my Complaint are scarcely far-fetched.
Rather, they read like a new variation on an old theme: the plunder of South
Africa's gold reserves for the primary use and benefit of British and other
outside interests.
The gold cabal orchestrated by top officials of the Clinton administration
and the Blair government, with maestro Alan Greenspan and assistant Eddie
George directing the BIS ensemble, bears uncanny resemblance to the
machinations that brought on the Boer War. Motivated by ambition and greed,
cloaked in deceit, both schemes set political power and private profits as
their ultimate goal. Both required cunning, Machiavellian leadership.
Elements of Milner are readily apparent in Mr. Greenspan, self-described as
"among those of us engaged to replace [the gold standard]," that is, to
create the economic version of alchemy. Reeking of world class hypocrisy, the
IMF gold sales were no more proposed for the benefit of poor countries in
sub-Saharan Africa than the Boer War was prosecuted to secure the franchise
and other democratic rights for the Uitlanders.
When the British lion roared its defiance of Hitler through the mouth of
Winston Churchill, South Africa stood by it notwithstanding painful memories
of the Boer War. But the British lion is not like the African lion from whose
paw Androcles pulled the thorn. Rather, the British lion displays today the
same morality that it seems to have taught its most famous Rhodes scholar,
recently departed from the White House: "What have you done for me lately?"
Speaking at the Indaba African Mining Conference last week, one African
minister warned that democratic governments cannot expect to take permanent
root in developing countries unless they deliver measurably improved living
conditions within reasonable time frames. Nor can they succeed unless they
provide the basic building blocks of republican democracy: the rule of law,
free markets and sound money. Gold mining remains a mainstay of the South
African economy, which dominates that of the whole sub-Saharan region. It is
hard to imagine anything that would do more to stimulate economic growth in
the area than an increase in gold prices from the low levels set by
manipulation to their more natural equilibrium now estimated by some at
around $500/oz.
To most Americans, strong U.S. support both for the new multiracial
government in South Africa and for other African nations trying to move
toward stable democratic regimes appears unquestionably in the national
interest. Few would accept that U.S. policy in the region should be hijacked
by the Fed for the benefit of a few bullion banks, let alone that the Fed and
the Exchange Stabilization Fund should conspire with the BIS and the British
government to manipulate the free market price of gold. On the birthday of
America's Great Emancipator, the new administration in Washington should make
clear that its policies toward South Africa and its neighbors will be
governed by the law, the Constitution and the national interest.
But it would be a mistake to conclude that the future of South Africa or its
gold mining industry rests in the hands of officials in Washington, London,
or elsewhere outside South Africa. It is a nation rich in human as well as
natural resources, and possessed of considerable spiritual resources as well.
More like the United States than Canada or Australia, South Africa never
lived comfortably with the British lion, and completely withdrew from the
Commonwealth in 1961. Its great military battles are its own, not engagements
in foreign lands on behalf of the Crown.
Of all the smaller nations in the world, South Africa is perhaps best
positioned to withdraw from the IMF and reestablish for itself a monetary
system linked to gold. In that event, South Africa's national patrimony would
not be dumped into the world market at low prices rigged by others. Nor would
its currency be battered below any reasonable measure of its purchasing power
parity versus others. Rather, its gold would have to be earned by exports of
goods or services or purchased for investment on capital account. By adopting
a monetary system like that on which most of the developed world developed,
including the United States, South Africa might reasonably look forward to
following a similar path, and, at long last, to extinction of the British
lion on the Rand.

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to