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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Barker, a CIA operative since the Bay of Pigs invasion, was the $100,000 sent in by<br />

Texas CREEP chairman William Liedtke, longtime business partner of <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>. <strong>The</strong><br />

money was sent from Houston down to Mexico, where it was "laundered" to eliminate its<br />

accounting trail. It then came back to Barker's account as four checks totalling $89,000<br />

and $11,000 in cash. A smaller amount,an anonymous $25,000 contribution, was sent in<br />

by Minnesota CREEP officer Kenneth Dahlberg in the form of a cashier's check.<br />

Patman relentlessly pursued the true sources of this money, as the best route to the truth<br />

about who ran the break-in, and for what purpose. CREEP national chairman Maurice<br />

Stans later described the situation just after the burglars were arrested, made dangerous<br />

by "...Congressman Wright Patman and several of his political hatchet men working on<br />

the staff of the House Banking and Currency Committee. Without specific authorization<br />

by his committee, Patman announced that he was going to investigate the Watergate<br />

matter, using as his entry the banking transactions of the Dahlberg and Mexican checks.<br />

In the guise of covering that ground, he obviously intended to roam widely, and he<br />

almost did, but his own committee, despite its Democratic majority, eventually stopped<br />

him." [fn 16]<br />

<strong>The</strong>se are the facts that Patman had established--before "his own committee...stopped<br />

him."<br />

<strong>The</strong> anonymous Minnesota $25,000 had in fact been provided to Dahlberg by Dwayne<br />

Andreas, chief executive of the Archer-Daniels- Midland grain trading company.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Texas $100,000, sent by Liedtke, in fact came from Robert H. Allen, a mysterious<br />

nuclear weapons materials executive. Allen was chairman of Gulf Resources and<br />

Chemical Corporation in Houston. His company controlled half the world's supply of<br />

lithium, an essential component of hydrogen bombs.<br />

On April 3, 1972 (75 days before the Watergate arrests), $100,000 was transferred by<br />

telephone from a bank account of Gulf Resources and Chemical Corp. into a Mexico City<br />

account of an officially defunct subsidiary of Gulf Resources. Gulf Resources' Mexican<br />

lawyer Manuel Ogarrio Daguerre withdrew it and sent back to Houston the package of<br />

four checks and cash, which Liedtke forwarded for the CIA burglars. [fn 17]<br />

Robert H. Allen was Texas CREEP's chief financial officer, while <strong>Bush</strong> partner William<br />

Liedtke was overall chairman. But what did Allen represent? In keeping with its strategic<br />

nuclear holdings, Allen's Gulf Resources was a kind of committee of the main<br />

components of the London-New York oligarchy. Formed in the late 1960's, Gulf<br />

Resources had taken over the New York-based Lithium Corporation of America. <strong>The</strong><br />

president of this subsidiary was Gulf Resources executive vice president Harry D.<br />

Feltenstein, Jr. John Roger Menke, a director of both Gulf Resources and Lithium Corp.,<br />

was also a consultant and director of the United Nuclear Corporation, and a diretor of the<br />

Hebrew Technical Institute. <strong>The</strong> ethnic background of the Lithium subsidiary is of<br />

interest due to Israel's known preoccupation with developing a nuclear weapons arsenal.<br />

Another Gulf Resources and Lithium Corp. director was Minnesotan Samuel H. Rogers,

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