Letter to House Select Committee on Intelligence. Darryl Robert Schoon
Читать онлайн книгу.by the USSR: Norman Bernard Thirion, International Banking Services to W.A.W. (William A. Wilson). General Abdul Wali to W.A.W., copy, E.T. Barwick, E.T. Barwick Industries, Inc., Georgia, to Prince Bandar Ibn Sultan, copy*.”
Just as fate had unexpectedly given me Norman’s story fifteen years before, fate, now, just as unexpectedly had corroborated Norman’s story regarding his relationship with Reagan’s alleged bagman, Ambassador William A. Wilson. The names in Wilson’s file were familiar to me, told to me by Thirion years before—Roger Hunt was Norman’s attorney and had handled his appeal, General Abdul Wali had been the aide to the former King of Afghanistan, Zahir Shah, who headed the Afghan resistance that was to receive the Saudi money; E.T. Barwick of Atlanta, Georgia, was Thirion’s partner, and Prince Bandar Ibn Sultan received the proposal to fund the Afghan Government-In-Exile on behalf of the Saudi royal family.
William Wilson’s gift to Georgetown University revealed further evidence of Wilson’s participation. In box 2, folder 56 of Wilson’s bequest to Georgetown University, were papers sent by USC Professor Dr. Nake Kamrany to William Wilson and to Saudi Prince Bandar Bin Sultan regarding Afghanistan’s independence from the USSR.
Because Dr. Kamrany had been a central figure in the events recounted by Norman Thirion, I had always been curious about what Dr. Kamrany actually knew. So, two years after Google had unexpectedly provided proof of William Wilson’s participation, I decided in May 2004 to contact Dr. Kamrany directly.
I emailed Dr. Kamrany at the University of Southern California. I said I possessed information provided by Norman Thirion regarding a possible skim of Saudi funds intended for the Afghan resistance. My e-mail got an immediate response. Dr. Kamrany called back and launched into an emphatic denial of Thirion’s assertions.
He asked how I knew Norman and how I got my information. I told Kamrany I had met Norman in prison and was writing a book about my experiences. Kamrany then confirmed he knew Norman Thirion, William Wilson, Perry Morgan, and General Cushman. He did deny, however, any knowledge of Transglobal Productions or about a conspiracy to skim the funds. He did say that General Cushman had mentioned a private venture.
Kamrany also denied knowing Transglobal directors Dr. Jon Speller and Rabbi Morton Rosenthal (Rabbi Rosenthal was the Transglobal director who played a key role in the purchase of captured Soviet Syrian arms from Israel). Kamrany did admit he had seen the Soviet armaments used by the Afghan resistance in Afghanistan and personally had never received an adequate explanation about where the large supply of Soviet arms had come from.
Then Kamrany unexpectedly asked if I knew anyone in the movie business (I was to find out his son had an idea for a movie). It was a question that was to lead to our meeting in person. Rawson Thurber had written and directed a movie that was about to be released. and Marshall Thurber, his father, was my close friend from law school.
The movie, Dodgeball, was opening nationwide June 18th and Marshall had invited friends and family to a private showing in Los Angeles on the 17th. I obtained invitations from Marshall for Dr. Kamrany and his guests to attend.
There, I met Dr. Kamrany and we continued our discussion. After our talk, I had no doubt what Norman had told me was the truth, that Kamrany’s denial of a skim was based only upon his ignorance of its existence. The conversation confirmed that Kamrany had absolutely no knowledge of Transglobal Productions or any inkling of the conspiratorial designs of its principals.
Finally, now, after the revelations of the internet and my meeting with Dr. Kamrany, I was to get some closure to the extraordinary story I had heard during my first year in prison. And with it came a realization that has given me a measure of acceptance and peace: Two thousand years ago, the Pharisees and Publicans were in power. They still are today. A story isn’t going to change anything.
There is, however, an interesting detail that still remains unresolved. When I entered Norman Bernard Thirion into Google’s search engine, I also googled the names of others alleged to have participated in the skim. Transglobal director, Rabbi Morton Rosenthal and Transglobal vice-president Dr. Jon Speller in particular brought up interesting information.
When I googled the name of Dr. Jon Speller, a website connected Dr. Speller not only to Rabbi Rosenthal, but also to a company “Transglobal Resources” co-owned by the two men.
The weblink stated:
“The key link between the ADL [Anti Defamation League] and the Sikh extremists who murdered Prime Minister Gandhi runs through Rabbi Rosenthal a senior ADL employee and head of the league’s Latin American Affairs Division, who is directly linked to the man who ordered the assassination, Dr. Jagjit Singh Chauhan. It also runs through Rosenthal’s longtime intimate political collaborator and sometimes business partner Jon Speller. Speller is widely believed to be a high-level intelligence agent for British intelligence [with] documented links to Israeli, Soviet, and American intelligence services. One year before Mrs. Gandhi’s assassination, Speller sponsored a U.S. visit by Jagjit Singh Chauhan…After Mrs. Gandhi’s death, Rabbi Rosenthal and Speller, operating through a front company they had jointly established called Transglobal Resources, arranged a series of secret meetings in Washington, London, and Quito, Ecuador, which resulted in the Ecuadoran government offering Chauhan a large tract of land on which to establish a Khalistani homeland.”
But, by far the most interesting link occurred when I entered the name Ronald Sablosky into Google’s search engine. When Norman Thirion was fired as Transglobal’s banker, General Cushman replaced Thirion with Ronald Sablosky; and, in 2002, a search on the internet was to connect Ronald Sablosky directly to the office of President Ronald Reagan.
The name Ronald Sablosky led to a Google first page reference to the site of the Presidential Papers of the Ronald Reagan Library. There, in Box 92335 of the litigation files of Jonathan Scharfen, legal advisor to the National Security Council under President Reagan, was the case US v. Ronald Sablosky.
Advised by the Reagan Library to submit a Freedom of Information Act request to review the White House file, I did so in August 2002. I was informed it would take 22-24 months to process the request which included a 30-day notification to the representatives of President Reagan and current President George W. Bush. After processing, remaining national security information would be sent to appropriate agencies for classification review. I was told it may take more than a year for the agencies to notify the Library of their recommendations.
In April 2006, 44 months after the FOIA request was submitted, I have yet to receive the information requested; yet, two interesting changes have occurred. First, googling the name Ronald Sablosky no longer brings up the prominent reference to US v. Sablosky as it did in 2002. Secondly, by cross referencing “reagan” and “scharfen” on Google, I did again locate the case US v. Sablosky, now with the words “farm loan scheme” prominently in parentheses next to it.
What I find curious is that loan fees allegedly charged to farmers was the basis of the indictment used by the federal government to prosecute Norman Thirion in 1984, charges Norman maintained were patently false and designed solely to discredit what Thirion might divulge about the Reagan White House. Did Ronald Sablosky also run afoul of his White House masters, thereby causing National Security Council lawyers to fabricate and institute similar litigation against him?
Perhaps there are other reasons why Jonathan Scharfen, counsel for the powerful National Security Council under President Reagan, would file charges against a Ronald Sablosky regarding a “farm loan scheme”. Perhaps it’s not the same Ronald Sablosky chosen by former CIA Deputy Director and retired Marine Commandant General Robert E. Cushman to negotiate the transfer of the Saudi funds. Perhaps.
Irrespective of what the files eventually do reveal, I am now confident the story confided to me by Norman Thirion is true. I am also confident those in the Reagan inner circle who skimmed the Saudi funds of perhaps hundreds of millions of dollars will never be brought to justice. For other than to preserve the common order, the majority of civil and criminal laws are written to protect the powerful, not to prosecute them.
Quis Custodiat Custodes? The Latin saying is as true today as it was in ancient Rome. Who Will Guard The Guardians? Certainly not you, certainly not I, and certainly