
October-December 1996 Issue
By Ted Sampley
U.S. Veteran Dispatch
Obscured in a maze of billion dollar conglomerate deals and huge foreign
contributions to the Democratic Party is the reason why four-star Admiral
Charles Larson lied January 18, 1994, when he reported Hanoi's cooperation on
the POW/MIA issue was "excellent across all fronts."
Larson was in Vietnam as senior U.S. military commander of all U.S. Forces in
the Pacific and Indian Ocean areas. His U.S. stamp of approval for Hanoi came
at a time when powerful business interests were pressuring President Clinton to
betray the POW/MIA families and lift a 19 year-old U.S. imposed economic
embargo against Vietnam.
During his 1992 drive to unseat President Bush, candidate Clinton, in a
desperate attempt to attract the veteran's vote, made a campaign promise to the
POW/MIA families. Clinton promised that "if elected," he would
"make the resolution of the POW/MIA issue a real priority" and
"would not lift the embargo" until Hanoi made a full, good-faith
accounting of the missing U.S. servicemen. POW/MIA family members and veterans
were stunned by Larson's unequivocal support for Hanoi. They could not
understand why a four-star Admiral would his "missing men" and
kow-tow to the communists. The families knew that other than a handful of
artifacts and human bone fragments, there had been no POW/MIA cooperation on
the part of the Vietnamese. They knew Hanoi was refusing to explain what
happened to U.S. POWs known to have been alive in communist Vietnamese hands
during and after the war, but never released. The National Alliance of POW/MIA
Families called Larson's statement "a smoke screen and a sell-out."
The National League of POW/MIA Families complained that the families were
continuing to be victimized by Hanoi's "calculated" withholding of
POW/MIA information. Bill Bell, former Chief of the U.S. Office of POW/MIA
Affairs in Hanoi, said "anyone who claims that Vietnam's cooperation is
superb or excellent is either a fool or they have a hidden agenda."
Larson's glowing assessment of Hanoi was the cover Clinton needed to block
criticism when less than two months later, he gave the business lobby what it
wanted and welshed on his MIA promise by lifting the embargo. Amazingly, from
the time Clinton made the promise in 1992 until 1994 when he broke it, only two
Americans had been accounted for by Vietnam.
Communist Party officials pocket MIA funds
To add insult to injury, against that backdrop of political duplicity and
manipulation, evidence of misuse of U.S. POW/MIA funds by the Communist Party
of Vietnam began to surface. Larson's comptroller in Hawaii had pumped millions
of cold hard U.S. tax dollars allocated for the POW/MIA search into Vietnam's
Communist Party bank account in Hanoi, much of which, it was discovered, had
ended up in the pockets of high ranking communist officials. No one from the
Clinton administration protested.
U.S. policy for sale
There is a provable link between Clinton's decision to remove the Vietnam trade
embargo and foreign contributions to the Democratic National Committee, the
most obvious from an Indonesian couple living in the United States.
Ariel and Soraya Wiriadinata, now in Jakarta, gave $425,000 to the Democratic
committee. They obviously did not have the means to make such a donation on
their own. The Wiriadinata's lived in a modest house in suburban Virginia,
Ariel worked as a landscape architect and his wife as a homemaker. Her father
was the late Hashim Ning, a business partner of Mochtar Riady, the head of an
Indonesian corporation called the Lippo Group.
Lippo is an "empire" with billions in assets. It is a family
controlled conglomerate of "overseas Chinese" built on banking, real
estate, securities, insurance, the financing of infrastructure projects and oil
exploration. The group was started in the 1960s in Jakarta by Mochtar Riady.
His parents had immigrated from China's Fujian Province to Indonesia. Lippo
aggressively pursues business in the Pacific Rim and the United States. It has
a partnership with the Charlotte, North Carolina based First Union Corp., one
of the biggest banks in the United States.
The Clinton re-election connection
Clinton has a long history with Riady and his son James, a key Lippo official,
because of a bank the Riady's owned in Little Rock, Arkansas, that turned out
to be of great help to Clinton. In 1984, Riady and Jackson Stephens, chairman
of the board of Stephens Group and Stephens Inc., the largest oil and gas
exploration, production organization and banking and investment organization in
the state of Arkansas, bought Worthen Bank in Little Rock. James Riady was
installed there as a Worthen director.
A. Vernon Weaver was the assistant to the chairman of the board of Stephens
Group and Stephens Inc. Weaver established close ties with both Clinton and
former Arkansas Governor, Jim Guy Tucker, in the 1970s and 80's when he was
administrator of the Small Business Administration (SBA). While at the SBA,
Weaver initiated the Certified Bank Program, which transferred administration
of government-guaranteed small business loans from the SBA to certified private
banks. Defaulted loans such as the Whitewater real estate development scheme
and more grandiose projects in the Little Rock area have already led to several
felony convictions in Little Rock, including that of former governor Tucker.
In business with the Red Chinese
In 1984, the Riadys used the Worthen Bank as a vehicle to purchase the Hong
Kong Chinese Bank. John Huang worked there in 1984. He was later assigned head
of Lippo's U.S. affiliate in Los Angeles, California. After Clinton's election,
Huang went to work for the late Commerce Secretary Ron Brown, in a "top
secret" U.S. trade post.
Huang, now the Democratic National Committee's fund-raising vice chairman, is
being questioned in a civil suit for allegedly using U.S. government-sponsored
trade missions under Brown to raise funds for the Democrats. He is suspected of
using the Wiriadinata's to funnel money from the Riady's to help Clinton's 1996
presidential campaign. The Riady's Worthen Bank had made a timely loan to
Clinton's cash-strapped presidential campaign in 1992. In November of 1992,
China Resources Holding Company (Hua Ren Jituan), owned by the Chinese
Communist Party, bought control of Hong Kong Chinese Bank, putting the Riady's
in business with the Red Chinese.
U.S. intelligence officers report Hong Kong's China Resources Holding Company
traditionally holds at least one vice-president position for a communist
"intelligence officer." As a result of meetings Clinton had with the
Riady's in Jakarta in 1994 and other promotional trips made by Ron Brown and
Huang, Lippo signed more than a billion dollars with deals in China, Indonesia,
Vietnam and the United States.
Ron Brown accepts a bribe?
On July 5, 1993, a Washington, D.C. newspaper first published details of an
alleged $700,000 bribe from the government of Vietnam to Brown. The alleged
bribe was in exchange for the Clinton administration to drop U.S. opposition to
Vietnam receiving International Monetary Fund loans and to lift the trade
embargo. Although Brown admitted having met three times with Vietnamese agent
Nguyen Van Hao after initially lying about the meetings to the press, he denied
ever doing business with Hao. The investigation of Secretary Brown was
terminated when he died April 4, 1996 in an air crash while on a business trip
to Bosnia during the International Force (IFOR) operation. What does all this
has to do with the former Pacific Commander, Adm. Larson?
The Admiral wants to be Superintendent
At the time Larson executed his dishonorable task for Clinton, fraudulently
"glorifying" Vietnam's POW/MIA cooperation, he was on the way out as
the Commander of U.S. Forces in the Pacific and looking for a new post that
would accommodate his four-star Flag Officer rank. There was no such assignment
and the only alternative would have been retirement and a substantial reduction
in salary. Larson had some bargaining power and he was not without significant
connections in Washington. He had let it be known that he wanted an
unprecedented second tour-of-duty as Superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy
at Annapolis, Md., but it was only a two-star billet and a three year
assignment. He had served there as the 51st Superintendent, from August 1983 to
August 1986, prior to being promoted to Vice Admiral.
Larson had also gone out of his way to court Sen. Charles Robb (D-VA) who
serves as a point man for the Virginia based Mobil Oil Corp., a company keenly
interested in drilling in the Pacific Basin, especially the area of the
Spratley Islands near the shore of Vietnam. Robb has made numerous trips to
Indonesia aboard Mobil Corp. jets. Larson was also stroking Sen. John Kerry (D,
MA), the former chairman of the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs, who
was also eyeing the enormous potential in Vietnam's budding real estate market
and infrastructure development.
How to kill an MIA on paper
Almost immediately upon assuming his responsibility as head of the Select
Committee, Kerry began a personal campaign to remove the POW/MIA question as an
obstacle preventing billions of dollars in trade between the U.S. and Vietnam.
Kerry manipulated, distorted and suppressed evidence allowing MIAs to be
written off as dead when evidence indicated that many were alive and possibly
incarcerated in communist prisons. He and his staff director, Ms. Frances
Zwenig, secretly scripted the testimony of important Department of Defense
witnesses who were appearing before the Select Committee and were supposed to
be the subject of Kerry's investigative efforts. Zwenig, in an unprecedented
action, met with Vietnamese officials in Vietnam and coached them on how to
write off as dead on paper, without any physical evidence, American MIAs. After
Kerry told USA Today, Nov. 24, 1992, that Vietnam should be
"rewarded" for "extraordinary cooperation" in resolving MIA
cases, news wire services reported Vietnam had "awarded" the
"first real estate license" to Kerry's cousin, Stuart Forbes, chief
executive officer of the Boston based Colliers International.
Zwenig, in the meantime, was working as principle author of the Select
Committee Final Report while simultaneously working on Ron Brown's transition
team at the Department of Commerce. The Select Committee had concluded that U.S
prisoners of war were left behind alive in the hands of the communists when the
United States pulled out of the Vietnam War in 1973. That finding was a
blockbuster. Its release should have driven America into indignation. The U.S.
government should have demanded the Vietnamese immediately release all the U.S.
prisoners or provide an explanation of what happened to them. Amazingly, there
was no outcry from an outraged America. Instead, the whole issue of America's
missing servicemen cascaded into a humiliating loss for the POW/MIA families.
From day one, the Select Committee had been salted with "loyal friends of
Hanoi," linked by greed to the powerful corporate lobby. Hanoi's friends,
who dominated the Select Committee, took great pains to carefully fashion its
final report in a manner that obscured the one simple truth the Select
Committee had uncovered.
Instead of declaring forthrightly that communist Vietnam continued to hold in
captivity an unspecified number of live American POWs after the reported
release of all U.S. prisoners during Operation Homecoming in 1973, Zwenig
edited the Senate Select Committee Final Report to read there is "no
conclusive evidence" proving United States prisoners of war still remain
alive in Vietnam. Zwenig had opened the door for normalized trade relations
with Vietnam and a new career for herself. Zwenig now has a six-figure position
as Vice President on the U.S./Vietnam Trade Council, a front organization
established in the U.S., which works closely with Vietnam's Communist Party
State Committee for Investment. The Trade Council is funded by conglomerates
such as Lippo, which lobbies furiously against any U.S. laws perceived as
hindering investment in Vietnam's cheap oil and slave labor market.
Follow the smell of money through the maze
When Weaver served as assistant to the chairman of the board for Stephens Group
in Little Rock and Clinton served there as governor, Weaver also served as
president of Stephens Overseas Services, supervising international operations
in the Pacific Rim. Weaver also served as a member of the Board of Visitors of
the U.S. Naval Academy. Remember earlier the part about there not being a post
for a four-star Admiral and that Larson couldn't be assigned to the U.S. Naval
Academy because it has traditionally been a "two-star" billet? With
backing from "somewhere in the White House," Weaver transformed the
two-star billet U.S. Naval Academy into an unprecedented four-star Admiral
billet with an increased assignment from three to four years.
A four-star in a two-star post
Larson stepped out of the maze bearing a coveted four-star assignment as the
55th Superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis. Will Larson's
investment portfolio may reveal he left the maze with much more.
Three months ago Weaver was appointed by Clinton to be the U.S. Representative
(read Ambassador) to the European Union. The communist Vietnamese are still
refusing to explain what happened to the missing U.S. POWs known to have been
alive in their hands during and after the war. When it is discovered how many
Judas dollars were funneled to the 1996 re-election campaign of Bill Clinton
and from where dollars came, as Paul Harvey might say it, then we will have
"the rest of the story."