Nick C.
10-16-2004, 12:19 AM
http://www.guerrillanews.com/war_on_terrorism/doc4763.html
Carlyle's Way New!
F-9/11 target explained
In one of the more ironic twists to come out of Fahrenheit 9/11, the Loews theater group, whose screens are currently showing the anti-Bush opus across the country, was recently bought by the Carlyle Group. The shadowy private investment firm is implicated by Moore as a key part of the insidious web that connects (or once connected) the Bush family to the Saudis, including the bin Laden family.
For most Americans, F-9/11 was the first they'd heard of Carlyle. What is it, who is involved and how does it make its money?
Dan Briody, who is featured in the doc, is the author of The Iron Triangle: Inside the Secret World of the Carlyle Group, as well as the newly released The Halliburton Agenda.
One of the foremost experts on the Carlyle Group, no one can accuse Briody of being a conspiracy theorist. He's a business reporter, formerly of Red Herring, who began following the Carlyle story shortly after 9/11. In our latest Cointel interview, GNN gets the lowdown on Carlyle's shady origins, the cosy relationship between the Military Industrial Complex and current and former elected officials, and why the big media has ignored the story:
GNN: What is the Carlyle Group and how did it start?
Briody: The Carlyle Group gets its name from the Carlyle Hotel in New York City. The founders believed that the name Carlyle portrayed some kind of blue blood, silk stocking air of an old-school kind of investment house and so the Carlyle Group was born from the Carlyle Hotel in New York.
The Carlyle Group actually started through a tax loophole - something called the Great Eskimo Tax Scam, that's what the company calls it today. The Tax Scam was essentially that Eskimo owned companies in Alaska were allowed to sell their losses to profitable companies in exchange for cash. The profitable companies would buy these losses then write them off their taxes and give a fraction of those losses to the Eskimo-owned companies who obviously needed cash. So a guy named Stephen Norris was a tax accountant essentially at Marriott Corporation, looking to exploit this tax loophole for Marriott and in so doing, he needed to find someone who could hook him up with Eskimos - Native Americans in Alaska, and he was able to find a guy by the name of David Rubinstein who was an aide in the Carter administration and who was renowned for his bulky rolodex.
If you needed to find someone or know someone, David Rubinstein was the guy to go to. So Stephen Norris and David Rubinstein hooked up and worked a deal for Marriott and Stephen Norris realized that this was a serious money making opportunity and that he was going to go into working this tax loophole full time, which he did, along with David Rubinstein, and they probably put close to a billion dollars through this tax loophole and took a 1% cut on all the transactions and were able to make a nice little cottage industry out of this tax loophole. The two of them used to meet often at the Carlyle Hotel here in New York and when they decided to incorporate, Norris wanted the company to have a sort of silk stocking air to it. He wanted to have a very blue blood feel to their private equity firm and since they met at the Carlyle Hotel a lot, he decided that should be the new name of the company and then the Carlyle Group was born…
GNN: What direct benefit has been accrued by Carlyle since the war and more specifically talk about what they own and what they are all about?
Briody: The Carlyle Group is a private equity firm, which essentially means that they invest in private companies - they take money from private investors and then invest that money into private companies. They essentially work like a mutual fund would, only instead of buying and selling stocks, they buy and sell companies. So they have different funds and among those funds are industries that are heavily government regulated. So health care, telecommunications and two of the biggies are defense and aerospace. Those are the industries that Carlyle got their start on back in the early 90s. It is what they have built their practice on.
The way that Carlyle is able to succeed at investing in these heavily government regulated industries is they hire ex-politicians - George H. W. Bush, John Major, Frank Carlucci, former secretary of defense under Reagan, James Baker III. These are guys that have access to former heads of state, foreign business leaders, and they enable Carlyle to really get its tentacles out all over the world and do some very serious investing with heavy-hitter investors from all around the world. And it also gains them access to investment opportunities.
After 9/11, Carlyle was set up in a number of defense properties. They owned a company called United Defense - this was probably the biggest boon after 9/11 that Carlyle experienced. United Defense was a company that makes the Bradley fighting vehicles, the Crusader gun system - these are things we have seen on TV a lot since the Iraq war started, and United Defense was able to go public months after September 11 because of the huge increase in defense spending. Carlyle made $270 million on one day in that IPO and then went on to make close to a billion dollars on paper from that transaction over time as the stock price continued to go up. This was an enormous investment for them and it was a huge win.
Their other aerospace companies, their other defense properties, their security companies, their biological cleanup companies - all of them scored major contracts after September 11, which improved the fund - the defense and aerospace funds invested in, which are billion dollar funds - $1-2 billion funds - huge private equity funds. The list of benefits is long, but we will never know exactly how much Carlyle made from 9/11 because they are not under any obligation to disclose that information.
They are never going to tell.
GNN: To a certain extent some would say, It's the economy stupid. The reality is we're a global superpower and if you're a former politician, you want to cash in on your prestige and your elevation politically, so you go into the defense industry. Is that something we should just learn to accept?
Briody: I think that our politicians should not be penalized for being public servants. They go into office, they serve us well, and when they leave office, they should be able to enter private enterprise just like anybody else. They are citizens now, this a capitalistic society and they can trade on their expertise… In the case of Carlyle this has been blown out of proportion. When you are talking about an ex-president whose son is the current president, whom he still advises on foreign policy, working for a defense contractor at a time of war, at the time of a very unpopular war that his son pushed very hard and made happen - that's a major, major conflict of interest. That is something that is not illegal but it is something that is unprecedented and it is something that George H. W. Bush should clearly see as undermining the credibility of his son as president, and certainly tarnishing his own reputation in the process.
So when you see something like this happening - yes, our politicians should be able to go into private enterprise and succeed. They should be able to get as rich as they can. That's the way our society works. I have no problem with that. But you have got to use some discretion in the types of businesses you chose to enter, the political nature of those businesses and certainly when you are looking at a situation like Carlyle and you are looking at a highly scandalous situation where a former president is working for a defense contractor while his son is president waging war around the world, that is unacceptable to me and it should be unacceptable to most Americans, and frankly it should be a bigger story.
[GNN- George H.W. Bush resigned as a Carlyle advisor in the fall of 2003]
GNN: What is its reputation globally and how are they perceived in the business community?
Briody: They are called the ex-presidents club by a lot of folks in the international business community. When the head of a foreign business gets a call from George H. W. Bush or John Major it's very difficult to distinguish with whom he is doing business. Am I doing business with the American government or am I doing business with Carlyle or both? And in some cases they don't really care because they are sitting across the table from the president's father, who himself is a former president, and that's enough credibility for them. It makes it very easy to do business with these guys.
GNN: George H. W. Bush has become a very stately man now - he is very likeable in some ways. But he is a man with a huge past, and to what degree do you think it now makes sense that he is involved? I mean is he a person we should be concerned about generally?
Briody: I think the most disconcerting thing about George H. W. Bush working for this company is that Bush Sr. was the head of the CIA for a long time and as such he continues to have access to CIA briefings as do all ex-presidents actually, but very few of them take advantage of this right. Bush Sr. continues to get briefings from the CIA. Now you can imagine what kind of an advantage that could be for a company that does international business especially in the areas of defense and aerospace, but even in telecommunications, health care and other types of international business. It's a huge advantage - an unfair advantage really and certainly some of the other big private equity firms aren't allowed access to this type of information and nor should they be. It kind of creates an un-level playing field when you look at it in that respect. Did Bush Sr. actually use this information to trade on or to benefit the Carlyle Group? Nobody knows and until he starts talking about this issue, we will never know.
GNN: So how many Americans are aware of this story and what has been the penetration of this into the mainstream media, and how is that linked to the similar conflict of interest of Powell and the FCC?
Briody: Unfortunately, the Carlyle story hasn't made the leap onto the front pages or onto the mainstream media TV shows and things like that and I think that the reason behind that is, in some sense, the truth is the hardest thing to believe, and for the American people, no one wants to believe that their former president is trading on decisions that his son is making while he is in office. That's a very difficult thing to believe and the media is in some sense a slave to the American people. They don't want to bring out the story that people don't want to hear. It's going to be very unpopular. They may lose viewers, they may lose advertisers, they may lose their own credibility. This is a disaster. You can't let what people want to hear dictate the news that is going to be told to them because once you start doing that, it's a vicious cycle and you can't get out of it.
Carlyle's Way New!
F-9/11 target explained
In one of the more ironic twists to come out of Fahrenheit 9/11, the Loews theater group, whose screens are currently showing the anti-Bush opus across the country, was recently bought by the Carlyle Group. The shadowy private investment firm is implicated by Moore as a key part of the insidious web that connects (or once connected) the Bush family to the Saudis, including the bin Laden family.
For most Americans, F-9/11 was the first they'd heard of Carlyle. What is it, who is involved and how does it make its money?
Dan Briody, who is featured in the doc, is the author of The Iron Triangle: Inside the Secret World of the Carlyle Group, as well as the newly released The Halliburton Agenda.
One of the foremost experts on the Carlyle Group, no one can accuse Briody of being a conspiracy theorist. He's a business reporter, formerly of Red Herring, who began following the Carlyle story shortly after 9/11. In our latest Cointel interview, GNN gets the lowdown on Carlyle's shady origins, the cosy relationship between the Military Industrial Complex and current and former elected officials, and why the big media has ignored the story:
GNN: What is the Carlyle Group and how did it start?
Briody: The Carlyle Group gets its name from the Carlyle Hotel in New York City. The founders believed that the name Carlyle portrayed some kind of blue blood, silk stocking air of an old-school kind of investment house and so the Carlyle Group was born from the Carlyle Hotel in New York.
The Carlyle Group actually started through a tax loophole - something called the Great Eskimo Tax Scam, that's what the company calls it today. The Tax Scam was essentially that Eskimo owned companies in Alaska were allowed to sell their losses to profitable companies in exchange for cash. The profitable companies would buy these losses then write them off their taxes and give a fraction of those losses to the Eskimo-owned companies who obviously needed cash. So a guy named Stephen Norris was a tax accountant essentially at Marriott Corporation, looking to exploit this tax loophole for Marriott and in so doing, he needed to find someone who could hook him up with Eskimos - Native Americans in Alaska, and he was able to find a guy by the name of David Rubinstein who was an aide in the Carter administration and who was renowned for his bulky rolodex.
If you needed to find someone or know someone, David Rubinstein was the guy to go to. So Stephen Norris and David Rubinstein hooked up and worked a deal for Marriott and Stephen Norris realized that this was a serious money making opportunity and that he was going to go into working this tax loophole full time, which he did, along with David Rubinstein, and they probably put close to a billion dollars through this tax loophole and took a 1% cut on all the transactions and were able to make a nice little cottage industry out of this tax loophole. The two of them used to meet often at the Carlyle Hotel here in New York and when they decided to incorporate, Norris wanted the company to have a sort of silk stocking air to it. He wanted to have a very blue blood feel to their private equity firm and since they met at the Carlyle Hotel a lot, he decided that should be the new name of the company and then the Carlyle Group was born…
GNN: What direct benefit has been accrued by Carlyle since the war and more specifically talk about what they own and what they are all about?
Briody: The Carlyle Group is a private equity firm, which essentially means that they invest in private companies - they take money from private investors and then invest that money into private companies. They essentially work like a mutual fund would, only instead of buying and selling stocks, they buy and sell companies. So they have different funds and among those funds are industries that are heavily government regulated. So health care, telecommunications and two of the biggies are defense and aerospace. Those are the industries that Carlyle got their start on back in the early 90s. It is what they have built their practice on.
The way that Carlyle is able to succeed at investing in these heavily government regulated industries is they hire ex-politicians - George H. W. Bush, John Major, Frank Carlucci, former secretary of defense under Reagan, James Baker III. These are guys that have access to former heads of state, foreign business leaders, and they enable Carlyle to really get its tentacles out all over the world and do some very serious investing with heavy-hitter investors from all around the world. And it also gains them access to investment opportunities.
After 9/11, Carlyle was set up in a number of defense properties. They owned a company called United Defense - this was probably the biggest boon after 9/11 that Carlyle experienced. United Defense was a company that makes the Bradley fighting vehicles, the Crusader gun system - these are things we have seen on TV a lot since the Iraq war started, and United Defense was able to go public months after September 11 because of the huge increase in defense spending. Carlyle made $270 million on one day in that IPO and then went on to make close to a billion dollars on paper from that transaction over time as the stock price continued to go up. This was an enormous investment for them and it was a huge win.
Their other aerospace companies, their other defense properties, their security companies, their biological cleanup companies - all of them scored major contracts after September 11, which improved the fund - the defense and aerospace funds invested in, which are billion dollar funds - $1-2 billion funds - huge private equity funds. The list of benefits is long, but we will never know exactly how much Carlyle made from 9/11 because they are not under any obligation to disclose that information.
They are never going to tell.
GNN: To a certain extent some would say, It's the economy stupid. The reality is we're a global superpower and if you're a former politician, you want to cash in on your prestige and your elevation politically, so you go into the defense industry. Is that something we should just learn to accept?
Briody: I think that our politicians should not be penalized for being public servants. They go into office, they serve us well, and when they leave office, they should be able to enter private enterprise just like anybody else. They are citizens now, this a capitalistic society and they can trade on their expertise… In the case of Carlyle this has been blown out of proportion. When you are talking about an ex-president whose son is the current president, whom he still advises on foreign policy, working for a defense contractor at a time of war, at the time of a very unpopular war that his son pushed very hard and made happen - that's a major, major conflict of interest. That is something that is not illegal but it is something that is unprecedented and it is something that George H. W. Bush should clearly see as undermining the credibility of his son as president, and certainly tarnishing his own reputation in the process.
So when you see something like this happening - yes, our politicians should be able to go into private enterprise and succeed. They should be able to get as rich as they can. That's the way our society works. I have no problem with that. But you have got to use some discretion in the types of businesses you chose to enter, the political nature of those businesses and certainly when you are looking at a situation like Carlyle and you are looking at a highly scandalous situation where a former president is working for a defense contractor while his son is president waging war around the world, that is unacceptable to me and it should be unacceptable to most Americans, and frankly it should be a bigger story.
[GNN- George H.W. Bush resigned as a Carlyle advisor in the fall of 2003]
GNN: What is its reputation globally and how are they perceived in the business community?
Briody: They are called the ex-presidents club by a lot of folks in the international business community. When the head of a foreign business gets a call from George H. W. Bush or John Major it's very difficult to distinguish with whom he is doing business. Am I doing business with the American government or am I doing business with Carlyle or both? And in some cases they don't really care because they are sitting across the table from the president's father, who himself is a former president, and that's enough credibility for them. It makes it very easy to do business with these guys.
GNN: George H. W. Bush has become a very stately man now - he is very likeable in some ways. But he is a man with a huge past, and to what degree do you think it now makes sense that he is involved? I mean is he a person we should be concerned about generally?
Briody: I think the most disconcerting thing about George H. W. Bush working for this company is that Bush Sr. was the head of the CIA for a long time and as such he continues to have access to CIA briefings as do all ex-presidents actually, but very few of them take advantage of this right. Bush Sr. continues to get briefings from the CIA. Now you can imagine what kind of an advantage that could be for a company that does international business especially in the areas of defense and aerospace, but even in telecommunications, health care and other types of international business. It's a huge advantage - an unfair advantage really and certainly some of the other big private equity firms aren't allowed access to this type of information and nor should they be. It kind of creates an un-level playing field when you look at it in that respect. Did Bush Sr. actually use this information to trade on or to benefit the Carlyle Group? Nobody knows and until he starts talking about this issue, we will never know.
GNN: So how many Americans are aware of this story and what has been the penetration of this into the mainstream media, and how is that linked to the similar conflict of interest of Powell and the FCC?
Briody: Unfortunately, the Carlyle story hasn't made the leap onto the front pages or onto the mainstream media TV shows and things like that and I think that the reason behind that is, in some sense, the truth is the hardest thing to believe, and for the American people, no one wants to believe that their former president is trading on decisions that his son is making while he is in office. That's a very difficult thing to believe and the media is in some sense a slave to the American people. They don't want to bring out the story that people don't want to hear. It's going to be very unpopular. They may lose viewers, they may lose advertisers, they may lose their own credibility. This is a disaster. You can't let what people want to hear dictate the news that is going to be told to them because once you start doing that, it's a vicious cycle and you can't get out of it.
