Subject: Re: CIA Accused Of Iraq Bank Heist//Debunkers make billions$$$!!!
From: "Littlefish" <littlefish_au@yahoo.com>
Date: 24/08/2003, 13:45
Newsgroups: alt.alien.visitors,alt.alien.research,alt.paranet.ufo,alt.paranet.abduct

They used "Promise" to back door the system!

"Sir Arthur C. B. E. Wholeflaffers A.S.A." <nospam@newsranger.com> wrote in
message news:vvU1b.16987$cJ5.2048@www.newsranger.com...
In article <bi75bv$1v23$1@pencil.math.missouri.edu>, Dave Muller says...

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Shortly before U.S. forces began streaming across the Iraqi border,
commencing Persian Gulf War II, the CIA and the Department of Defense,
with a little help from Israel and some Europeans, pulled off a massive
bank heist in Iraq to the tune of several billion dollars.
*CIA Accused Of Bank Heist*

(Exclusive to American Free Press)

By Gordon Thomas
The* CIA* and the* Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)* are accused by*
International Currency Review, the London-based journal*, of mounting a
joint ultra-secret operation to electronically remove an estimated $10
billion out of the Iraqi Central Bank hours before the start of Persian
Gulf War II. The whereabouts of the money is not known.

"We believe it is in a secret CIA fund which will be used to mount
further special services operations, such as tracking down Saddam
Hussein," said the Review's publisher, Christopher Story.

Story is a former financial advisor to Lady Thatcher when she was
Britain's prime minister. In the past 10 years, he has testified before
several congressional committees dealing with financial scandals.

DIA coordinates all intelligence for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. It is
headquartered in the Pentagon.
The report is titled "*The Great Robbery of the Central Bank of Iraq*."
It has been sent to finance ministers of leading nations, the World
Bank, the Bank of England and heads of all other major banks.

The report is bound to cause huge embarrassment to President Bush after
he signed an executive order on March 23, ordering a worldwide hunt for
the hidden assets of Saddam Hussein and his family.

The Review claims that using skilled hackers recruited by the DIA and
key Iraqi bank officials who had been bribed to provide secret access
codes to the Central Bank's accounts for Saddam Hussein and his family,
the money was transferred out of the bank in a high-tech operation.

According to the General Accounting Office (GAO), the investigative
agency of Congress, Saddam was estimated to have accumulated "$6.6
billion between 1997 and 2000 from illegal oil smuggling and from
illicit deals connected with the United Nations oil for food program."

But a substantial portion of that money may have been lifted by the
secret CIA/DIA operation.
The operation, claims the Review, was masterminded by the CIA/DIA out of
a military facility, Redstone Arsenal, in Alabama. It is the base for
U.S. Special Services.

"*The money was laundered through a number of CIA controlled accounts,
including some held in the Discount Bank of Israel, Credit Suisse in
Switzerland and the Dresdner Bank in Germany*," said Story.

He confirmed that Germany's secret service Bundesnachrichtendienst (BND)
is checking with the major German banks on electronic transfers, which
could match the $10 billion.

The Review states in its 25-page report that it had questioned a key
member of the operation. She is identified as "Nelda Rogers, a
debriefing officer with the Defense Intelligence Agency."

"She was in Germany last year when American intelligence officials were
devising covert operations ahead of the long-planned conflict. She has
revealed that a covert operation targeting the Central Bank of Iraq took
place prior to and during the war. The operatives involved were military
'black operations' personnel brought into service for this purpose,"
said Story.

The Review claims that Rogers and a team of ten DIA operatives were
financed through the U.S. Department of Agriculture. They were supported
by CIA agents in Iraq.

"In all, 100 people were involved in the operation," says the report.
"The Department of Agriculture has been consistently used to hide
payments for U.S. covert operations," claimed Story, whose headquarters
are close to Whitehall.
The Review states: "*The U.S. Department of Agriculture is used as a
paymaster for certain DIA 'black operations' because it has
traditionally remained unscrutinized.*"

"Like the Federal Reserve Board and the U.S. Treasury's secret Exchange
Stabilization Fund, the Department of Agriculture is yet another federal
agency which benefits from* a special exemption from rigorous auditing
by the General Accounting Office*."

The Review also states it has testimony from Rogers that the operation
was designed to "purloin the Iraq Central Bank's assets ahead of the
arrival of U.S. troops in Baghdad. This suggests that the operation was
designed for a nefarious purpose, rather than to help use it for the
rebuilding of Iraq."

After interviewing Rogers and "a number of U.S. intelligence
operatives," Story confirmed he received three warnings to stop his
investigation.

"I was told that 19 people are very dead as a result of trying to cover
what you are exposing," Story wrote in an editorial in the Review.

The Review costs $475 a copy and is one of a small group of titles that
Story publishes on financial intelligence for the world banking
community.

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