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In reply to the discussion: CIA on Trial in Virginia for Planting Nuke Evidence in Iran [View all]Octafish
(55,745 posts)25. It's good for Booz Allen's owners at Carlyle Group.
They make a killing off war, setting them up, and then selling arms to both sides, and then in the rebuild afterward. It's a living.
The ex-presidents' club
Oliver Burkeman and Julian Borger
Wednesday 31 October 2001 11.31 EST
It is hard to imagine an address closer to the heart of American power. The offices of the Carlyle Group are on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington DC, midway between the White House and the Capitol building, and within a stone's throw of the headquarters of the FBI and numerous government departments. The address reflects Carlyle's position at the very centre of the Washington establishment, but amid the frenetic politicking that has occupied the higher reaches of that world in recent weeks, few have paid it much attention. Elsewhere, few have even heard of it.
This is exactly the way Carlyle likes it. For 14 years now, with almost no publicity, the company has been signing up an impressive list of former politicians - including the first President Bush and his secretary of state, James Baker; John Major; one-time World Bank treasurer Afsaneh Masheyekhi and several south-east Asian powerbrokers - and using their contacts and influence to promote the group. Among the companies Carlyle owns are those which make equipment, vehicles and munitions for the US military, and its celebrity employees have long served an ingenious dual purpose, helping encourage investments from the very wealthy while also smoothing the path for Carlyle's defence firms.
But since the start of the "war on terrorism", the firm - unofficially valued at $3.5bn - has taken on an added significance. Carlyle has become the thread which indirectly links American military policy in Afghanistan to the personal financial fortunes of its celebrity employees, not least the current president's father. And, until earlier this month, Carlyle provided another curious link to the Afghan crisis: among the firm's multi-million-dollar investors were members of the family of Osama bin Laden.
The closest the Carlyle Group has previously come to public attention was last May, when a Seoul-based employee called Peter Chung was forced to resign from his £100,000-a-year job after sending an email to friends - subsequently forwarded to thousands of others - boasting of his plans to "fuck every hot chick in Korea over the next two years". The more business-oriented activities of Carlyle's staff have been conducted much more quietly: since it was founded in 1987 by David Rubenstein, a policy assistant in Jimmy Carter's administration, and two lawyer friends, the firm has been dispatching an array of former world leaders on a series of strategic networking trips.
Last year, George Bush Sr and John Major travelled to Riyadh to talk with senior Saudi businessmen. In September 2000, Carlyle hired speakers including Colin Powell and AOL Time Warner chair Steve Case to address an extravagant party at Washington's Monarch Hotel. Months later, Major joined James Baker for a function at the Lanesborough Hotel in London, to explain the Florida election controversy to the wealthy attendees.
CONTINUED...
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2001/oct/31/september11.usa4
As you know, Rex, since that was published (and most all of the people the private company spy on don't know) the Carlyle Group came into possession of Booz Allen Hamilton, the NSA's go-to company. No wonder the rich keep getting richer and the wars never ever stop.
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Mr. Sterling was a malcontent trying to get his memoirs published after being fired.
msanthrope
Jan 2015
#5
First, you've made a primary and incorrect assumption that what Mr Sterling did
msanthrope
Jan 2015
#10
many disagree with you about whether the activities of government were proper or legal
bigtree
Jan 2015
#11