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Kissinger resigns as head of September 11 probe
By Patrick Martin
16 December 2002
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The resignation of Henry Kissinger, only two weeks after he
was appointed by President Bush to head the bipartisan commission
investigating the September 11 terrorist attacks, underscores
the extraordinary degree of resistance in official Washington
to any effort to organize an inquiry into the role of the US military
and intelligence apparatus in those events.
More than 15 months have passed since nearly 3,000 innocent
people were incinerated in the World Trade Center and the Pentagon,
and not a single official has been held responsible for what is
by all accounts the greatest security failure in US history. As
the stonewalling intensifies, more and more people will be compelled
to draw the conclusion that the Bush administration has something
to hide.
The former secretary of state sent a letter to the White House
which bitterly attacked suggestions that he might face a conflict
of interest as head of the investigation because of the numerous
international clients, including both giant American corporations
and Persian Gulf princes, who pay lucrative fees to his consulting
firm, Kissinger Associates.
The Bush administration initially sought to exempt Kissinger
from the financial disclosure requirements normally required of
high government officials, on the grounds that he was appointed
by the president, not Congress, and was serving part-time without
a federal salary. But after protests from representatives of the
families of victims of September 11, congressional Democrats and
Republicans said that Kissinger would have to follow the usual
disclosure procedure.
Kissinger Associates, a privately held company founded by the
former Nixon aide, does not disclose even the identity of its
clients, let alone the nature of the ventures for which it provides
consulting services. Press accounts have identified a few of Kissingers
corporate paymasters, including ExxonMobil, ITT, American Express,
Anheuser-Busch, Coca-Cola and H.J. Heinz.
In his letter to Bush, Kissinger denied that there was any
conflict between the interests of his clients and a full investigation
into September 11, but expressed the fear that the controversy
would quickly move to the consulting firm I have built and own.
To liquidate Kissinger Associates cannot be accomplished
without significantly delaying the work of the commission,
he said. I have, therefore, concluded that I cannot accept
the responsibility of the chairmanship.
Kissinger stepped down on Friday, December 13, two days after
the man selected as vice-chairman of the commission, former Democratic
Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, also withdrew, claiming
that the work of the commission could not be part-time and that
he could not afford to leave his New York law firm for the duration
of the 18-month probe.
Mitchell left the Senate in 1994 and became a traveling troubleshooter
for the Clinton administration, dealing with such foreign policy
crises as Northern Ireland and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
While the difficult and protracted nature of these conflicts apparently
did not deter Mitchell, the pitfalls of an investigation into
September 11 did.
House and Senate Democrats immediately named former congressman
Lee Hamilton to replace Mitchell, but the White House has not
yet named a successor to Kissinger. Only one of the five Republican
slots on the commission has been finalized: former Senator Slade
Gorton of Washington state.
Bushs nomination of Kissinger was part of a long-drawn-out
campaign of stonewalling and resistance to any serious investigation
into the worst terrorist attack in US history. From September
11 on, the White House opposed any investigation at all, then
agreed to a tightly controlled and limited probe by the House
and Senate intelligence committees, whose members have close relations
to the CIA and FBI.
Only under public pressure from the families of the victims
of the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, especially
around the time of the first anniversary of the tragedy, did the
White House back down and give verbal assurances that an official
bipartisan commission would be established. The administration
tried to renege on this agreement almost immediately, and fought
successfully to remove language requiring such an investigation
from the text of the legislation establishing the Department of
Homeland Security.
The White House only agreed to back a congressional resolution
establishing the bipartisan commission after Democrats conceded
on two major points which gave the Bush administration effective
veto over the commissions findings: Bush was to appoint
the chairman of the commission, and six votes out of ten were
required for issuing any subpoena, insuring that the five Republican
members could block subpoenas of Bush administration officials
if the White House so directed.
This last provision was slightly softened by giving two Republican
senators who were early backers of the bipartisan commission,
Richard Shelby of Alabama and John McCain of Arizona, a role in
selecting one of the Republican members. They put forward the
name of former senator Warren Rudman of New Hampshire, but Senate
Republican Trent Lott has refused to nominate Rudman because he
is considered too critical of the role of the CIA and FBI before
September 11.
In selecting Kissinger, the Bush administration aimed to install
as chairman and leader of the inquiry an individual who could
be relied on to conduct a cover-up of the role of the US government
before and on September 11. What are 3,000 dead American civilians
to a man responsible for prolonging the Vietnam War for seven
years, at the cost of 30,000 American lives and perhaps a million
Vietnamese?
Kissinger is synonymous not only with Vietnam, but with bloody
and illegal operations by the US military and intelligence services
all over the world: the secret bombing of Cambodia, the CIA-backed
military coup in Chile, and close relations with barbaric military
dictatorships from Indonesia to Pakistan to Greece and throughout
Latin America.
It appears that a critical moment for Kissinger came last Wednesday
when a delegation from the families of victims of September 11
came to his New York office to discuss the conflict of interest
issue. In the course of the meeting, they gave him a list of questions
they wanted the bipartisan commission to answer. According to
a spokesman for the group, these questions included:
* Why did the Immigration and Naturalization Service allow
so many of the hijackers into the country to attend flight school?
* Why did the nations air defense command have no planes
in the air on September 11 to protect New York and Washington
once the attacks had begun?
* How many hijackers were on the CIAs terrorist watch
list, and if any of them were known to intelligence agents, why
were the FBI and the Federal Aviation Administration not notified?
It must have been clear to Kissinger that he would face unprecedented
public scrutiny as he attempted to carry out the job of whitewashing
the performance of the US government before and on September 11.
It is impossible to raise such questions seriously, let alone
answer them, without calling into question the preposterous claim
by the Bush administrationparroted endlessly and uncritically
by the mediathat the suicide hijackings took the US government
completely by surprise. Far more likely is that the events of
September 11 were permitted, or even directly authorized, at a
high level within the US government, to provide a catalytic event
to trigger a worldwide program of American military aggression.
By themselves, the conflict of interest charges which Kissinger
faced have explosive implications. Kissinger was a pioneer in
the grubby business of converting a foreign policy portfolio into
millions of dollars in fees as an international consultant,
with much of this money flowing in from companies doing business
in the Middle East.
Among those who have followed in his footsteps are former President
George H.W. Bush, the current presidents father, who made
millions as a representative for the Carlyle Group, the private
investment firm whose major investors for many years included
the wealthy bin Laden family of Saudi Arabia.
Bush reportedly shut down an ongoing US investigation of the
bin Laden family when he took office, and members of the family
living in the United States were hurriedly flown back to Saudi
Arabiawith the approval of the Bush administrationwithin
days of September 11.
Kissinger is wanted in several European and Latin American
countries on charges relating to the death squads and military
coups he supported during his tenure as national security adviser
and secretary of state from 1969 to 1976. Any serious investigation
into September 11 could place many of the current leaders of the
US government in similar legal and political jeopardy.
See Also:
Bush picks Kissinger to head
official probe: new stage in the September 11 cover-up
[28 November 2002]
One year after the terror
attacks: still no official investigation into September 11
[12 September 2002]
Was the US government alerted
to September 11 attack?
A four-part series
[16 January 2002]
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