Thursday, 29 August 2013

Jesse Jackson Goes to Syria



Eddie takes on Jesse Jackson's December Surprise mission to Damascus and his 1984 Presidential Campaign

In 1980, the Reverend Jesse Jackson Jr. paid a visit to Mob-Connected Super-Attorney, Baltimore Oriels owner Edward Bennett Williams, or (as his formidable reputation most frequently preceded him as) "The Man to See".


"When the establishment turned on Jackson, he came to Williams. 

In 1977, Senator Hubert Humphrey had seen a piece on 60 Minutes, describing Jackson's attempts to motivate inner-city youth to get an education. Humphrey urged HEW Secretary Joe Caliphano* [to intervene]...

Jackson gratefully asked Caliphano for a $25,000 grant.

Caliphano told him he needed "a million", and proceeded to give that black leader $6 million..."



... When the Federal Administrators asked to look at Jackson's books early in the Reagan Adminstration, they found chaos. Jackson's organisation, PushExcel was unable to account for a million dollars of the money. The matter was referred to the Justice Department.



Jackson came to Williams, claiming that he was the victim of a vendetta by the Republicans.


Edward Bennett Williams - The Man to See ,
The Bestselling Biography of America's Greatest Trial Lawyer
Evan Thomas, 1992
p.464





With the signature Left-Right flurry, Jesse commences his 1984 Presdiential bid to re-elect Ronald Reagan, taking the Left-handed path of alienating core Democratic voters (Catholics and Jews), pushing the Democratic field to the left, and de facto aligning them with the forces loyal to the PLO (Leftist Geurillas aligned with East Germany and Arabs).

Forcing Democrats to adopt and speak up on the unpopular side of popular wedge issues that otherwise would not feature in that year's election campaign is Jesse's raîson-d'être : just look at what he and Feinstein are constantly doing with Gun Control opportunism.


Lt. Robert O. Goodman is a former A-6 Intruder Naval Flight Officer and graduate of the United States Naval Academy who served as a Bombardier/Navigator. He was shot down over Lebanon on December 4, 1983. 

Goodman was held for over a month, during which the US government made numerous attempts to free him. He had a few visitors, including Ambassador Robert Paganelli who brought him Christmas dinner.


In January 1984, Rev. Jesse Jackson travelled to Libya and Syria along with Rev. Jeremiah Wright and Minister Louis Farrakhan. The mission's peaceful purpose was accomplished, as they secured the release of Goodman, who was essentially a prisoner of war.

U.S. President Ronald Reagan welcomed LT Goodman at the White House January 4, 1984, hours after he and Rev. Jackson arrived back in the U.S.

Reagan said that LT Goodman "exemplified qualities of leadership and loyalty" and said Jackson's "mission of mercy" had "earned our gratitude and our admiration." In turn, Jackson praised Reagan for sending a letter to Syrian President Assad calling for cooperation in bringing peace to Lebanon.


[ibid.]

"...The case was dragging on, producing unflattering newspaper stories at a time when Jackson was trying to raise money for his [1984 and] 1988 Presidential campaign."

However, when when Williams spoke with the Reagan Administration, he found out quite the contrary; they were not only not trying to arrest Jackson, but had favourable opinions of him.

To the extent that they were able to arrange a deal, whereby Jesse would repay $500,000 of the misappropriate million, at $125,000 a year...




Bush & Jackson News Conference
Nov 30, 1988





That verbal-numeric dissonance on Caliphano's part would appear as though it may have created a chronic crisis in  clear communication between the Reverend and his handlers, minders and protectors within the United States Government.

Of that $6 million in federal funding, Jackson (the account ledgers of the PUSH Coalition would have appeared to indicate) misappropriated $1 million for himself, personal and expenditures.

He was presumably still operating on the assumptions and norms underpinning the book-keeping of ministry - a new tailored Sunday suit and a new car qualify as standard deductible personal business expenses under such a system.

Also haircuts.

I believe that one such matter recently contributed to Jesse Jr. and his good lady wife getting nailed by the DA and the State of Illinois, resulting in the 14 years of hard time a piece that they are now doing for the crime.

January 1984
Jesse Jackson's Mission to Damascus


On Dec. 29, 1983, Rev. Jesse Jackson, a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, traveled to Syria to secure the release of a captured American flier, Navy Lt. Robert O. Goodman, Jr. 

Goodman had been shot down over Lebanon while on a mission to bomb Syrian positions in that country

The Reagan White House expressed misgivings about Jackson's trip and his fellow Democratic presidential hopefuls thought he was grandstanding. After meeting with Syrian President Assad, Jackson announced Goodman's release. President Reagan greeted both Jackson and Goodman at the White House on January 4, 1984.


President Reagan applauds Lt. Robert O. Goodman, Jr. during
White House ceremony. Jesse Jackson stands at right.
Photo by Darryl Heikes, USN&WR

Syria Releases Captive U.S. Flier to Rev. Jackson


Reagan Expresses Admiration
Syria Jan. 3 freed captured U.S. flier Navy Lt. Robert O. Goodman Jr. following a dramatic personal appeal by Rev. Jesse Jackson to Syrian President Hafez al-Assad.
The Syrian foreign ministry said Goodman's release was attributable to the "human appeal" of Jackson's mission and also to U.S. demands. President Reagan, who earlier had expressed concern over Jackson's mission to Syria, was quick to praise the Democratic presidential candidate for his success.
Before leaving the U.S., Jackson had received no guarantees from Syria that he would be permitted to meet with President Assad. He had originally planned to leave Syria Jan. 2, but said Jan. 1 that he was extending his visit by one day in order to meet with the president. Jackson said, "We would rather wait here in Syria with the possibility of getting Robert Goodman free than to be back home hoping that it would happen." Jackson added that expressions of opposition in the U.S. Congress to the continued presence of U.S. Marines in Lebanon could be helpful in his meeting with Assad.
Jackson and Assad met on the afternoon of Jan. 2 in a villa outside Damascus. After the meeting, Assad refused to disclose whether Goodman was to be released. Jackson declined to answer reporters' questions, stating, "We're in a very sensitive stage. . . . Our mission of mercy continues. It is not over."
....Following a meeting with Foreign Minister Abdel Halim Khaddam on the morning of Jan. 3, Jackson announced at a news conference that "our prayers have been answered." He disclosed that Goodman was to be released that morning "upon the instructions of President Hafez Assad."....The Syrian foreign ministry said Goodman's release was a response to both Jackson's "human appeal" and the demands of the U.S. government. The ministry described the action as a contribution that would create "circumstances that would facilitate the withdrawal of American troops from Lebanon."
....U.S. diplomatic sources in Syria had previously voiced doubts that Assad would free Goodman without substantial U.S. concessions, if indeed Assad agreed to his release at all.
Goodman and Jackson and his 14-member entourage left Syria later Jan. 3 and arrived at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland early Jan. 4, after a brief stop-over at Rhein-Main Air Base in West Germany.
In interviews in Damascus and on the flight to West Germany, Goodman Jan. 3-4 revealed details of his month in captivity. He said his captors had beaten him on the face and body with their fists during several interrogations that took place in the early days of his imprisonment.
Goodman said the beatings stopped after Red Cross members visited him on the fourth day and that he found the subsequent kind treatment he received "unnerving." Goodman said he had been interrogated about "military things" but that he had kept his answers "very vague."
In a television interview by satellite from Rhein-Main Air Base Jan. 4, Jackson said he believed Assad released Goodman because holding him would be "a major impediment" to a U.S. withdrawal from Lebanon. He urged President Reagan to "communicate with Mr. Assad directly" on the Middle East crisis....
In an interview, Jackson alluded to the New Hampshire Democratic primary due to take place in February when he said, "It is poetic justice that Lt. Goodman is from Portsmouth, New Hampshire." Jackson said, "There are political consequences in every moral act. . . . There was risk in this mission, and there will be reward."
Goodman was greeted at Andrews Air Force Base by his wife and two children, his mother and his two brothers. Several hundred Jackson campaign workers and supporters were also on hand to welcome the party home. Goodman told them he appreciated the mail--some 60,000 pieces--he had received while in captivity.
Reagan Thanks Assad, Jackson
President Reagan Jan. 3 sent a letter to President Assad thanking him for freeing Goodman. He also said of Jackson's mission, "You can't quarrel with success."
White House officials earlier had cautioned that Jackson's trip could stand in the way of the administration's efforts to free Goodman.
Reagan said Syria's action presented "an opportune moment" for the U.S. and Syria "to put all the issues on the table."
White House spokesman Larry Speakes said Jan. 3 that Reagan had spoken to Goodman and Jackson by telephone that morning and that the President had told Jackson, "I have been praying for you. I couldn't be happier."
Although the mission had no immediate repercussions in Lebanon, Pentagon officials disclosed Jan. 5 that the U.S. aircraft carrier Independence had begun an eight-day port call in Naples. The move was portrayed as a normal rotation of forces, but it marked the first time since November 1983 that the U.S. had not had two aircraft carriers off the Lebanese coast, and U.S. officials told the Washington Post that it would not have been approved unless there had been some lessening of tensions in Lebanon.
Airman Welcomed at White House
President Reagan met with Jackson and Goodman at the White House Jan. 4, hours after they arrived back in the U.S.
Reagan praised Goodman for "exemplifying qualities of leadership and loyalty" and said Jackson's "mission of mercy" had "earned our gratitude and our admiration." In turn, Jackson praised Reagan for sending a letter to Syrian President Assad calling for cooperation in bringing peace to Lebanon. He said the action proved that "we have the capacity to save this generation from disaster."
Before making his public statement, Reagan met with Jackson privately. According to Larry Speakes, Reagan told Jackson that he had not replied to telephone calls Jackson made to him before leaving for Syria because of "initial misgivings" about his mission. Speakes said Reagan believed that the mission would have a better chance of success if the President "kept hands off" and showed that Jackson was not acting as an emissary for the U.S.
White House officials cited in the Washington Post Jan. 4 said Reagan's gestures aimed at showing that he bore no resentment for Jackson's success in bringing about what the administration had been unable to achieve. They said Jackson's success would hurt other Democratic presidential hopefuls more than it would harm Reagan.
© 2003 Facts On File News Services


Vol. 123, No. 2, 9 January 1984


An Act of Dubious Diplomacy
Presidential candidates often make high-profile trips abroad, serious-looking junkets meant to convince voters that they know about international affairs and could, if elected, manage foreign policy marvelously. Democratic Contender Jesse Jackson went one step further last week, flying off to Syria in hopes of meeting with ailing President Hafez Assad and winning the freedom of Navy Lieut. Robert Goodman, 27. Goodman's jet was shot down over Lebanon Dec. 4 during a bombing raid against Syrian positions.
For the shrewd Syrians, who invited Jackson after the candidate had asked for Goodman's release, it was a no-lose situation. If they decided to hold on to Goodman, the publicity generated by Jackson's trip would enhance Goodman's value as a Syrian bargaining chip with Washington. If they released him to the populist, relatively pro-Arab Jackson, they could show magnanimity and embarrass the Reagan Administration.
The Administration took a dim view of Jackson's diplomatic gambit. A State Department official said it was bound to "muddy the waters" of U.S. policy. "If he's there milling about," the official said, "we can't accomplish anything. It sends conflicting messages to the Syrians. It's just a political stunt."
....The political stakes for Jackson were well stated by the P.O.W.'s father, Robert Goodman, Sr., a retired Air Force colonel. "Should he be successful," the elder Goodman said, "he will deserve full credit. If the consequences of his actions are that Rob's captivity is prolonged, he should be held responsible."
As he prepared to go, Jackson held press conferences every day, denied that race had anything to do with his trip (Goodman is black), met twice in Washington with Syrian Ambassador Rafic Jouejati, tried unsuccessfully to phone President Reagan and got a 90-minute Middle East briefing at the State Department ....Then he was off, delivering punchy justifications along the way...."We do not choose to fiddle, as it were, while Rome burns."
At last he made it, with two teen-age sons, four campaign aides, an amazing 21 Secret Service men, five American ministers and, he said, "high hopes." Declared Jackson in Damascus: "The ultimate victory would be to get Goodman out, but we've already had an enormous impact. We've put the issue on the front burner."
After a two-hour talk Saturday with Syria's Foreign Minister, Jackson told reporters the Syrians feared that their freeing Goodman would encourage U.S. air missions over Lebanon....
Then Jackson was shuttled to a Damascus military compound. He was the P.O.W.'s second American visitor in a week: Ambassador Robert Paganelli had delivered Goodman a Christmas dinner. Goodman chatted for almost an hour, and seemed exceptionally chipper....Smiling, the navigator-bomber lifted his sweatshirt to show a green T shirt printed with a stylized jet bomber and ATKRON 85, the shortened name of Goodman's aircraft-carrier unit, Attack Squadron 85. When reporters asked what he thought of Jackson's mission, Goodman was careful and correct. "I'm not a politician. I'm a naval officer...Let the people who are responsible for getting me out of here get me out of here."


Vol. 96, No. 2, 16 January 1984
Jesse Jackson Cuts A Wide Swath
Jesse Jackson's coup in winning release by Syria of a downed U.S. flier not only shook up the diplomatic establishment but also promised to echo through domestic politics for months.
In one long-shot gamble, the black civil-rights activist in freeing Navy Lt. Robert Goodman, Jr. ---
Jumped into the front ranks of Democratic candidates for President, at least in terms of visibility.
Insured that he would be a strong influence when Democrats list priorities and appointees if they win back the White House in November.
Made it easier for Democrats to attack President Reagan's foreign policy.
By succeeding in the very foreign-policy area in which critics said he was weakest, Jackson became overnight a credible contender for the White House -- though still an underdog. "The national Democratic Party, which has treated Jackson like a stepchild, will have to wake up and treat him more like a serious candidate," said George Starke, Texas Democratic chairman.
The Baptist minister turned politician attempted to capitalize on his new fame in a rapid series of barnstorming speeches. Telephone calls offering help and money poured in....Jackson added foreign affairs to his usual agenda of social reforms, saying, "Great foreign policy requires great leadership."
Yet skeptics, convinced that Jackson's Syrian triumph will be short-lived, knocked down talk that he might wind up with the vice-presidential nomination. Declared Joe Reed, chairman of the all-black Alabama Democratic Conference: "Jesse can get every political prisoner released in the world, and he can't be elected."
But party officials admitted they will have to listen closely now to Jackson's policy recommendations, because his successful mission to Syria made his grip on as many as 17.6 million potential black voters more secure than ever....
Threatened most of all by Jackson's sudden vault to prominence was the Democratic front-runner for President, Walter Mondale. The former Vice President, who is counting on strong black support, suddenly discovered many blacks in audiences on his Southern tour wearing Jackson buttons. Some blacks pledged to Mondale talked of switching to an uncommitted slate for the national convention.
Mondale and other Democratic contenders who had been largely stymied in their search for a Reagan weakness, seized on Jackson's accomplishment to step up their own criticism of the President's policies in Lebanon and elsewhere abroad.
Not everyone hailed Jackson's actions. The Washington Post and the New York Times, among other newspapers, denounced his mission as a dangerous interference in an extremely volatile situation. Many American Jews took it as further proof that Jackson, who earlier embraced Yassir Arafat of the Palestine Liberation Organization, was pro-Arab and anti-Israel....


Norfolk, VA, 4 January 1984, Editorial
President Hafez Assad of Syria freed U.S. Navy Lt. Robert O. Goodman, Jr. in return for the extensive media coverage of presidential-aspirant Jesse Jackson's appeal mission to Damascus. Major propaganda victories are rarely gained so easily.
Lt. Goodman's release, after a month of captivity, is welcome for his and his family's sake.
But no one should be misled about why the Rev. Mr. Jackson's pilgrimage to the Middle East succeeded. Damascus scored big points at Washington's expense in the contest for influence in Lebanon.
Mr. Assad -- who sanctioned the massacre of 20,000 to 25,000 of his own people a while back -- could hardly have been moved by moral or humanitarian considerations in releasing the naval officer whose A6-E Intruder jet was shot down Dec. 4 after a U.S. air attack on anti-aircraft installations in Syrian-occupied Lebanon....
That the Rev. Mr. Jackson's presidential campaign benefited from the candidate's free-lance diplomacy is anything but certain. Aiding the Syrian cause while Washington is engaged in a test of wills with Damascus isn't likely to sit well with Americans, not even the many with misgivings about President Reagan's employment of the Marines in pursuit of peace and independence for Lebanon.
....Possibly some television viewers and newspaper readers bought the candidate's unworthy suggestion that Mr. Reagan would have worked harder to win freedom for the imprisoned Goodman if the flier had been white rather than black. But a largely negative reaction to the Jackson initiative is more likely.
The candidate's chumminess with the Syrian president didn't sit well either -- and it reminded many of the reverend's embrace of Yasser Arafat. After all, Mr. Assad is the leader of a government that abetted -- if, in fact, it did not initiate -- the murderous truck-bomb attacks that slaughtered scores of U.S. and French members of the multinational peacekeeping force last Oct. 23....
Again, Lieutenant Goodman's release is welcome news. But that the flier's freedom was gained in a way that enhanced Syria's stature was not.


St. Petersburg, FL, 4 January 1984, Editorial
In announcing his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, Jesse Jackson said: "When history records our deeds, let the record show that we rose to the challenge, answered the call, reclaimed our faith and broke down the walls of partition that too long have divided us."
Jackson rose to the challenge when first he recognized that his personal intervention might break the deadlock with Syria over the imprisonment of Navy Lt. Robert Goodman, Jr., when he acted by going to Damascus, and when he was successful in persuading Syrian President Hafez Assad to release the American airman.
Jackson's bold performance was good for just about everybody involved.
Certainly it was good for the United States. As President Reagan expressed it, all Americans "are delighted that this brave young man will soon be united with his family and that his ordeal is over." There even was a suggestion that this release may have left the door ajar for further peace negotiations when Mr. Reagan said he is sending special envoy Donald Rumsfeld back to the Middle East for additional diplomatic efforts.
....The release vastly enhances Jackson's standing as a Democratic candidate....He put into practice the philosophy he earlier had preached to young blacks that you cannot succeed unless you try, and he scored a sensational personal and diplomatic victory. Jackson carefully kept his efforts free of self-serving political overtones....
Finally, Jackson's success probably will be good for President Reagan. Although there is little doubt that Syria's motives were to embarass Mr. Reagan, events may not turn out that way. Mr. Reagan's political advisers would much prefer that the President enter his re-election campaign without the nagging problem of a hostage in Syria....
....As a matter of general principle...private citizens should leave negotiations with foreign governments to the President and his diplomats. There are exceptions to that rule, of course, and times when the work of private citizens can be most constructive.
However, for a candidate for the presidency to become involved with a foreign government is particularly risky. That can give a foreign power an opportunity to play one segment of domestic politics against another. Jackson took all those risks and nothing harmful to the national interest occurred -- quite the opposite.
As President Reagan said, "You don't argue with success." By obtaining the no-strings-attached release, Jackson's mission was a total success. His status will be elevated further if the administration will try to build upon Syria's humanitarian gesture by finding a way to remove the Marines in Beirut from their position of danger.


Salt Lake City, UT, 5 January 1984, Editorial


Beyond elation caused by the surprising return of U.S. Navy airman Robert O. Goodman, Jr. from Syrian captivity, the United States has deep and serious decisions to make about a continued military presence in turbulent Lebanon....[T]he Marines still in Lebanon and Navy planes daily dispatched over that war-torn country should be the Reagan administration's chief, immediate Mideast concern.
Support for the White House enlistment of Navy air, sea and ground units in the international peacekeeping forces now facing crossfire in Lebanon is rapidly evaporating. Two of the other nations participating, France and Italy, have already announced plans to either withdraw or substantially reduce the number of troops they contributed for peacekeeping duties. More crucial than that, however, rising sentiments in Congress, among both Republicans and Democrats, favors removing all U.S. troops as well.
....Last weekend, three former Central Intelligence Agency directors, William Colby, Stansfield Turner and James R. Schlesinger, agreed in separate statements that leaving the Marines in Lebanon under current circumstances is a mistake. Even Mr. Reagan's conservative supporters are becoming critics on this matter....
In fact, U.S. public opinion has never agreed that the Marines should become "sitting ducks" at the Beirut airport. But further, it's futile to think this country would ever condone committing the amount of troops for the time it would take to impose a "peace" worth keeping in Lebanon.
So as the glow of Lt. Goodman's homecoming fades, the administration should be working overtime on a plan for retrieving the rest of U.S. military people from Lebanon. Ultimately, that's what the favorable response to the Rev. Jackson's feat means: It's times to bring all the boys home.

Tiny Rowland





Secretive, ruthless and contemptuous of anything that smacked of "Establishment hypocrisy", Rowland made few concessions to accepted principles of corporate governance, and none at all to public relations. In 1973 his methods were condemned by Edward Heath, the Prime Minister, as "an unpleasant and unacceptable face of capitalism". His later career was marked by a series of vendettas - notably against the Fayed brothers - which he pursued with cold, obsessive fury.

But to an army of small shareholders, well satisfied with their dividends, Rowland was a hero, tarnished only by Lonrho's sharply declining financial performance in the early Nineties. And in Africa he was esteemed hardly less than the heads of state who were his friends and business allies. A colleague interviewed by government inspectors judged him "a sort of tyrant, and part madman to boot, but a brilliant one".

Rowland's association with Lonrho - originally the London & Rhodesia Mining and Land Company - began in 1961. Lonrho was then a modest and almost moribund enterprise. One of the directors, Angus Ogilvy, was asked by Harley Drayton, a leading shareholder, to find someone to rejuvenate the company. He suggested Rowland, who was appointed joint managing director.

The business expanded aggressively, particularly in mining. It diversified out of Rhodesia, where Rowland disliked the racist tone of Ian Smith's regime.

Rowland early established his habit of taking important decisions with little or no consultation with the Lonrho board. By 1970, however, the speed of expansion had begun to overstretch the company's finances, while in South Africa Lonrho executives were accused of fraud. The accountants Peat Marwick were called in to report on the company.

In consequence, Rowland was obliged to bring in outside directors; these included, as chairman, the unmistakeably "Establishment" figure of Sir Basil Smallpeice, formerly of Cunard and BOAC, who wanted to change the company's strategy and to force Rowland to be more open in his methods.

In 1972, Smallpeice attempted to oust Rowland, accusing him of recklessness, intolerance, disloyalty and deceit. But 3,000 shareholders packed an extraordinary general meeting at Central Hall, Westminster, in May 1973, and voted overwhelmingly in Rowland's favour. Smallpeice and his group were jeered, and themselves ejected from the board. The findings of the subsequent Department of Trade inquiry, which censored Lonrho for flouting Rhodesian sanctions, prompted Edward Heath's celebrated condemnation.

But thereafter there was no question of Rowland's power being tempered by independent voices on the board. He once referred to non-executive directors as "Christmas tree decorations".

From drab and anonymous headquarters in Cheapside, he presided as an autocrat over a conglomerate which grew to encompass some 800 businesses: newspapers, vehicle distribution, textiles, mines, hotels and many others. At its peak, in the late Eighties, Lonrho's profits exceeded pounds 270 million.

The core of the company's success remained in Africa. Rowland often spent three weeks in every month there, criss-crossing the continent by private jet. His methods were both robust - he employed a private army to protect plantations in Mozambique - and politically acute. He courted heads of state and, when he saw advantage, rebel leaders. Presidents Kaunda, Banda and later Mugabe were claimed as friends. Unita, in Angola, received his backing, and Oliver Tambo of the ANC had the use of Rowland's aircraft.

Rowland relished backroom influence in high politics, and enjoyed close contacts with the British and American intelligence services. His access to Anwar Sadat is thought to have helped to open the way to the Camp David agreement in 1978. He was rumoured to have had a hand in Lebanese hostage negotiations, and even in Falklands peace manoeuvres.

IF ROWLAND was unrivalled in his grasp of African business and politics, his touch elsewhere was less sure. His long battle for Harrods, for instance, was felt by many to have been a damaging distraction of his energies and an unjustifiable cost to Lonrho.

The saga began in 1977. Rowland had identified retailing as a potential boom sector, and perhaps believed that ownership of Harrods would provide a measure of respectability otherwise denied him in Britain.

Lonrho began buying shares in Scottish & Universal Trusts, the holding company of Sir Hugh Fraser's family interests and the holder of 29 per cent of the store group House of Fraser, which owned Harrods. When the rest of Scottish & Universal was acquired by Lonrho the next year, City institutions closed ranks against Rowland. The subsequent battle for the House of Fraser was ferocious. Rowland's anger was targeted particularly at the combative Fraser chairman, Professor Roland Smith, and the unfortunate Sir Hugh Fraser - whom he had initially courted as an ally but whom he later helped to ruin by revelations about gambling debts.

When victory seemed to be in sight for Lonrho, the Government blocked the takeover on grounds of national interest. Lonrho's shares were then, according to Rowland, "parked" temporarily with the Fayeds. According to the Egyptian brothers, the shares had been sold to them outright; in any case they used them as a springboard to acquire the House of Fraser before the Government's decision against Lonrho could be reversed.

Rowland responded with a campaign to discredit the Fayeds and their alleged backer, the Sultan of Brunei. This was conducted through the pages of the Observer, which Lonrho had acquired in 1981, and by long, trenchant letters to ministers and public figures.

In 1989 a secret Department of Trade report, highly critical of the Fayed takeover, was leaked by the Observer in a special mid-week edition headlined The Phoney Pharoah. But despite a continuing barrage of litigation, control of the store eluded Rowland. This cast a shadow over his last years.

Rowland never hesitated to flex his proprietorial muscle at the Observer. When he fell out with Daniel arap Moi of Kenya, the paper ran exposes of corruption which named the President. When reporting of atrocities in Matabeleland displeased him, he threatened to sell the paper to Robert Maxwell.

All Rowland's corporate battles had a dark personal edge. "He's a very hard man. He's the sort of enemy no one wants to have," the wife of one adversary remarked.

Rowland's most merciless victory was over the Australian tycoon Alan Bond, whom he at first befriended as a potential "white knight" when Lonrho was being stalked by another predator, Asher Edelman. Bond bought out Edelman's stake, boasted of himself as Rowland's natural successor and continued buying up shares.

Rowland turned on him with savage intensity, publishing a 93-page document claiming that Bond, sustained by a fragile pyramid of borrowings, was technically insolvent. Bond's bankers demanded their money back, and he found himself facing bankruptcy and jail.

BUT IN 1991 serious cracks began to appear in Lonrho's impenetrable facade. The dividend was cut and the share price tumbled. A billion pounds worth of debt forced a shedding of assets. The lucrative Volkswagen Audi franchise was sold and, ever unpredictable, Rowland offered part of his hotel interests to his arch-enemies, the Fayeds.

Most controversially, a pounds 177 million stake in the Metropole Hotels group was sold to the Libyan government, just when the United Nations was considering sanctions against Libya in connection with the Lockerbie bombing. "To me, Gaddafi is a super friend," Rowland explained. "Don't talk to me about morality and proper behaviour. I pay my taxes here. Gaddafi and Lonrho are a perfect fit."

At 75, Rowland continued to defy his critics. The arrangements he made in December 1992 for the eventual sale of his own 15 per cent stake in Lonrho - to a little-known German property developer, Dieter Bock, at a price substantially higher than that which Rowland's loyal band of small investors could hope to obtain - provoked a storm of hostile comment, coupled with speculation whether Bock (whom Rowland had only recently met) was his chosen successor, or was in some way being set up to be "flayed alive" (as one commentator put it) like Alan Bond.

This inscrutability and menace were at the heart of the City's distrust of Tiny Rowland. He in turn trusted only his closest collaborators. Fiercely loyal while they were with him, he was utterly unforgiving if they jumped ship.

Although capable of charm - and of kindness to fallen tycoons like Sir Freddie Laker - he had few friends, always suspecting venal motives. He eschewed the social trappings and foibles which his immense wealth (much of it hoarded in cash deposits) might have brought him. The intrigues of business and power occupied virtually the whole of his existence.

Rowland was born Roland Walter Fuhrop on November 27 1917, in a detention camp in India where his father, a German merchant, and his Anglo-Dutch mother, were held as aliens during the Great War. After the war, the family sought to settle in Britain, but were refused entry. They moved to Hamburg, where Roland joined the Hitler Youth. His father, though, lost his business through his anti-Nazi sentiments, and the family finally succeeded in moving to England.

Roland was sent to Churchers College, at Petersfield. His first job after school was with a firm of shipping agents, for which he travelled widely.

In Berlin in 1939 he was jailed for eight weeks for associating with anti-Nazis, and that year he changed his surname, forming Rowland by inserting his middle initial into the first syllable of his Christian name. The origin of the nickname "Tiny" - with which he signed all official correspondence - doubtless lay in the fact that he was tall and well-built.

His two elder brothers fought in the German army during the Second World War, but Rowland was enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps, and in 1940 served in Norway. However, when his parents were again interned, this time on the Isle of Man, Rowland refused to continue in the RAMC while they were detained.

He was discharged, and detained with his parents. His mother died in detention, and her treatment by the authorities was often cited as a cause of Rowland's hostility to British officialdom.

Thereafter, Rowland took various jobs, including a spell as a porter at Paddington station and as a waiter at the Cumberland Hotel. After the war he sold refrigerators and car radios, and then in 1947 decided to emigrate, first to South Africa and then to Southern Rhodesia. He bought two farms and had interests in gold mines. He acquired the Mercedes franchise for Rhodesia, and became an agent for Rio Tinto Zinc.

When Angus Ogilvy recruited him in 1961, Rowland's own group of businesses, Shepton Estates, was exchanged for 1.5 million shares in Lonrho. The holding was the foundation of a personal fortune estimated to have reached pounds 200 million by the late Eighties.

Always impeccably dressed and tanned, Rowland lived in discreet opulence with mansions in Buckinghamshire and Chester Square. He was fiercely protective of his family's privacy.

He collected African and German expressionist art, and had a penchant for Siamese cats. But very little impinged on his work.

Tiny Rowland married, in 1967, his god-daughter Josie Taylor, the daughter of his farm manager in Rhodesia. They had a son and three daughters.

Maths for Americans



"To initiate a war of aggression, therefore, is not only an international crime; it is the supreme international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole."


Any action by either the UN or NATO on Syria is a mathematical impossibility, and there is zero legal basis for unilateral action.

Therefore it will not happen. 

Anyone who says otherwise is just blowing smoke and is probably either William Hague, French, or an agent of the Mossad.

NATO has fought precisely one war, and that was in circumvention of the UN Security Council and Russia's veto over attacking Serbia in support of German-backed, SAS and CIA-trained Albanian bandits.

The KLA don't even qualify as terrorists, they have no ideology, they were just bandits, plain and simple.

And the result was the closet the World has come to World War III since 1962, when General Wesley Clark ordered his troops to open firm on the two squads of Russian troops that had secured the airport at Pristîna - it was only because his British Army subordinate, General Sir Mike Jackson, told him to go and stuff his order that the world breathed a sigh of relief.

UN Ambassador Samantha Power considers that to have been a successful model for intervention.....

In 1945, the London Charter of the International Military Tribunal defined three categories of crimes, including crimes against peace. This definition was first used by Finland to prosecute the political leadership in the war-responsibility trials in Finland. 

The principles were later known as the Nuremberg Principles.

In 1950, the Nuremberg Tribunal defined Crimes against Peace, in Principle VI, specifically Principle VI(a), submitted to the United Nations General Assembly, as:

(i) Planning, preparation, initiation or waging of a war of aggression or a war in violation of international treaties, agreements or assurances;

(ii) Participation in a common plan or conspiracy for the accomplishment of any of the acts mentioned under (i).



The (so-called) United Nations Security Council






Arithmetic

America = 1

The Anglo-French = 1 + 1 = 2

Russia + China = 1 + 1 = 2

(15 / 2) + 0.5 = 8

BUT -



HOWEVER -

"The Definition of Aggression also does not cover acts by international organisations. The two key military alliances at the time of the definition's adoption, NATO and the Warsaw Pact, were non-state parties and thus were outside the scope of the definition.



The North Atlantic Council





""NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) is an international alliance that consists of 28 member states from North America and Europe. It was established at the signing of the North Atlantic Treaty on 4 April 1949. 

Article Five of the treaty states that if an armed attack occurs against one of the member states, it should be considered an attack against all members, and other members shall assist the attacked member, with armed forces if necessary.

Of the 28 member countries, two are located in North America (Canada and the United States) and 25 are European countries while Turkey is in Eurasia. 

All members have militias, although Iceland does not have a typical army (it does, however, have a military coast guard and a small unit of soldiers for NATO operations). 

Three of NATO's members are nuclear weapons states: France, the United Kingdom, and the United States. 

NATO has 12 original founding member nation states and through April 2009 it has added 16 more member nations."







There are 28 Member States of NATO. They each get 1 vote on the NATO Council.

The NATO Council can vote on collective military action, up to and including pre-emptive / aggressive war on the basis of a simple majority vote in council.

Arithmetic

28 - 1 = 27

28 / 2 = 14

(28 / 2) + 1 = 15




America 
your head's too big 
because
America 
your belly's too big
and I love you 



I just wish you'd stay where
you is 
in
America 

the land of the Free, they said
and of opportunity 
in a Just and a Truthful way
but where the President
is never black, female or gay


and until that day
you've got nothing to say to me
to help me believe 
in
America...









Sir James Goldsmith vs. The New World Order



Tiny Rowlands tries and fails to buy Harrods;

Mohammad Al-Fayedd saves the Pound, Margaret Thatcher and claims Harrods as his reward.

Sorros breaks the Bank of England

In the wake of Lockerbie, Tiny Rowland hooked up with Allan Frankovitch and declares war on the CIA, DEA, MI5, MI6 and the Secret Team.

And exploding out from the rainforests of Central America, Sir James Goldsmith, accompanied by his children, Mistresses all his wives declare all-out war on the forces of The New World Order.



On May 1st, 1997, Goldsmith, Rowlands and Fayedd collectively and decisively brought down the British Government, making good on Goldsmith's sworn pledge to roll back the Bilderbergers of the European Union and strike down the march of Neoliberal Globalisation dead in it's tracks.



His party polled a total of some 800,000 votes.

More than a dozen Conservative members were unseated by a margin smaller than the Referendum Party's vote against them.

Fortunately, for the British Establishment, the newly annoited British Prime Minister had been approached and recruited by 5 in 1983 and persuaded to adopt the Left-Hand Path of infiltrating Michael Foot's Parliamentary party team, rather than the more natural and predictible course by forgoing membership of the Alliance that election.....

On July 25th 1997, Sir James died suddenly in Spain, aged 58.

Reports further detailing the cause and manner of death are contradictory and fragmentary.



On August 31st 1997, both Dodi Fayedd and Diana, Princess of Wales, were reported dead whilst on a visit to Paris

Reports further detailing the cause and manner of death are contradictory and fragmentary.
















Wednesday, 28 August 2013

The Ministry of Truth


Why what the NSA does is not unconstitutional.

Artist Brian Springer spent a year scouring the airwaves with a satellite dish grabbing back channel news feeds not intended for public consumption.

The result of his research is SPIN, one of the most insightful films ever made about the mechanics of how television is used as a tool of social control to distort and limit the American public’s perception of reality.

Take the time to watch it from beginning to end and you’ll never look at TV reporting the same again.

Tell your friends about it.

This extraordinary film released in the early 1990s is almost completely unknown.

Hopefully, the Internet will change that.

Using the 1992 presidential election as his springboard, Springer captures the behind-the-scenes maneuverings of politicians and newscasters in the early 1990s. Pat Robertson banters about "homos," Al Gore learns how to avoid abortion questions, George H. W. Bush talks to Larry King about Halcion -- all presuming they're off camera. Composed of 100% unauthorized satellite footage, Spin is a surreal expose of media-constructed reality.

The film documents behind the scenes footage of Larry Agran who unsuccessfully sought the Democratic Party nomination for President. Agran was generally ignored by the media during his candidacy, a topic covered in the documentary. The media did not report his polling numbers even as he met or exceeded the support of other candidates such as Jerry Brown. Party officials excluded him from most debates on various grounds, even having him arrested when he interrupted to ask to participate. When he managed to join the other candidates in any forum, his ideas went unreported.

Spin is a followup of the 1992 film Feed; for which Springer provided much of the raw satellite footage.


"Historical reality", JFK and Operation Mockingbird.... from Spike1138 on Vimeo.



Mainstream Media Admits to 9 11 from Spike1138 on Vimeo.




One of the earliest (and BY FAR, one of the best) Benghazi documentaries, but so much more than that besides,

Raw, ready and totally straight to the heart of the matter, I think this one even predated the FIRST set of Issa Committee Government Oversight Star Chamber Hearings, which places in the last fortnight of September 2012.

Just a couple of corrections to the record that we didn't know then, but then subsequently have learnt
(and which the vast majority of people have now completely forgotten again)

Firstly, this predates the revelation of there in fact being TWO attacks that night, six hours apart, at two locations, around half a mile from one another, under very different circumstances.

Secondly, and far more crucially, Hankey's analysis leads him all the way to the brink of the paradigm leap he almost but never quite makes regarding the central question of his piece :

"Why DOES Mitt Romney want to be President so badly, what is he hiding and what does he really stand for,,,?"

The actual answer, we now know, was: "He doesn't".

Tagg Romney said his father "wanted to be president less than anyone I've met in my life," according to the Boston Globe.

“He had no desire,” the eldest Romney son said. “If he could have found someone else to take his place ... he would have been ecstatic to step aside. He is a very private person who loves his family deeply and wants to be with them, but he has deep faith in God and he loves his country, but he doesn’t love the attention."

The behaviour and actions of Elliot Cohen and other PNAC Veterans, Zionists and NeoLiberal Fascists make it plain - they were runninghim and stetting him up to get utterly screwed once his usefulness to them was once more at an end....

Petraeus, Allen, Gaouette, Ham The Benghazi Story The Media Isn't Telling You from Spike1138 on Vimeo.

"Why doth Treason never prosper...?

...for if it proceeder, none dare call it Treason...."


Russell Brand Destroys the Media from Spike1138 on Vimeo.

Good Lord - what just happened?!!

I feel as if I've just been groped by a nun in a lift...!

Look what he's done to Zbigniew Brezinski's daughter...!!!



Why ONLY Snowden Media Ignoring Second NSA Whistleblower - JAMES CORBETT from Spike1138 on Vimeo.


Woolwich: Mainstream Media End Product from Spike1138 on Vimeo.