Dave Marlett, Editor theconservative@usa.net Number 42

http://www.wilderness-cry.net/tcn
26 October 2000


Quotes:

-- "It is easy to say 'vast right-wing conspiracy'; it is difficult to admit that the Founding Fathers are its founding members."

-- "When Russia fell to the Bolsheviks it was because of the corrupt and incompetent leadership of the Tsar and his cronies. We have all known the Clinton and Gore teams to be corrupt.

With the bombing of the USS Cole, the loss or theft of the "crown jewels" of our nuclear secrets at Los Alamos, the wholesale burning of our Western forests, the plundering of our strategic oil reserves, we now see their incompetence as well.

If you want continuity with corruption and incompetence, you must vote Gore. As Jesse Jackson says, "More with Gore." -- Michael Savage

-- " 'Liar' is just as ugly a word as 'thief,' because it implies the presence of just as ugly a sin in one case as in the other. If a man lies under oath or procures the lie of another under oath, if he perjures himself or suborns perjury, he is guilty under the statute law. Under the higher law, under the great law of morality and righteousness, he is precisely as guilty if, instead of lying in a court, he lies in a newspaper or on the stump; and in all probability, the evil effects of his conduct are infinitely more widespread and more pernicious." --Theodore Roosevelt

-- "So, as we begin, let us take inventory. We are a nation that has a government -- not the other way around. And this makes us special among the nations of the Earth. Our government has no power except that granted it by the people. It is time to check and reverse the growth of government which shows signs of having grown beyond the consent of the governed." -Ronald Reagan, from his First Inaugural Address


McCain Ballistic Over Gore's Russian Arms Deal

Sen. John McCain hit the roof over a New York Times report that Gore signed a secret 1995 deal with Russia's Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin to let Russia keep selling weapons to a Mideast state seen as a terrorism sponsor.

"Making exceptions to a relevant law to permit Russia to sell advanced weapons to a country that meets, in every point, the definition of rogue state shows indefensibly bad judgment," McCain said.

The Gore-Chernomyrdin deal allowed Russia to keep selling the weapons through last December without suffering the normal sanctions - as long as it didn't make any new weapons deals.

Gore spokesman Jim Kennedy insisted the deal didn't violate the law, and said a former State Department official briefed congressional staffers on the deal, but was unable to name anyone who was briefed.

But Mr. Gore's secret Russian deals may not be "fully consistent with U.S. law," said Sen. Gordon H. Smith, Oregon Republican, referring to the Iran-Iraq Arms Non-Proliferation Act of 1992, which he noted "the vice president himself introduced during his years in the Senate."

Mr. Gore's secret deal with Russia to circumvent U.S. laws requiring sanctions for sales of conventional arms to Iran was reported Oct. 13 by the New York Times.

The Washington Times reported Oct. 17 that Mr. Gore had struck a similar deal with Russia covering nuclear sales to Iran, and published excerpts of a letter from Mr. Chernomyrdin stating that terms of the agreement were "not to be conveyed to third parties, including the U.S. Congress."

Mr. Barker and other State Department officials testified before a joint hearing of two Senate Foreign Relations subcommittees that disclosures of Mr. Gore's back-channel agreements with the Russians had undermined diplomacy.

"Classified documents are appearing in the press as photo inserts, and our negotiating strategy with Russia on sensitive national security matters is being compromised by discussing these matters in public," Mr. Barker said. The "aide-memoire" of Mr. Gore's 1995 agreement with Mr. Chernomyrdin, stamped "secret," states that Russia would end conventional arms sales to Iran by Dec. 31, 1999. It also obligates the United States not to impose penalties under "domestic law" for the arms sales.

At yesterday's hearing of the subcommittees on Near East affairs and European affairs, State Department officials said in a prepared statement that provisions of the deals to keep details secret from Congress "had no effect" and did not constitute a secret pact kept from Congress.

The department notified the Russians before and after the letter that Congress would be briefed and were told the Russians agreed. However, the statement also noted that "we agreed that we would do this in a confidential manner as we do for many negotiations."

"A partisan brawl that drags legitimately classified material into the newspapers as photo insets can only benefit Iran and those forces in Moscow most hostile to our objectives," said Joseph DeThomas, a second State Department nonproliferation official.

"If these arrangements are not in place, Iran will be in a position to acquire new weapons and a wide array of sensitive nuclear technology. That will not be in the interests of future administrations of either party or the American people."

But former Secretary of State George P. Shultz said yesterday the sales "upset the strategic balance" in the region and posed a "real threat" to U.S. forces there.

In an interview with reporters arranged by the presidential campaign of Republican George W. Bush, Mr. Shultz also said the deal reflected poorly on Mr. Gore's supposed foreign policy expertise.

"His foreign policy experience is experience with catastrophe," Mr. Shultz said of Mr. Gore. "Somehow the administration decided to make the vice president sort of the point man [with Russia]. I think the whole handling of our relationship with Russia for the past six or seven years has been bad."

Mr. Smith, a subcommittee chairman, said the Gore-Chernomyrdin agreement was not shared with Congress and "raises disquieting questions about the administration's commitment to forging a bipartisan foreign policy." "Such bipartisanship cannot be achieved when the president develops and implements an initiative in secret, and keeps hidden crucial details from the American people and their representatives in Congress," the Oregon Republican said. "When congressmen and senators have to turn to newspapers as opposed to the White House to be fully informed on U.S. foreign policy, this is not right."

"What we do know about the Gore-Chernomyrdin agreement and its implications for our interests abroad is disturbing," he said. "This agreement reportedly may have limited our response to Russia's arms sales to Iran, a country which is a significant sponsor of international terrorism directed against the West and its allies."

Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr., Delaware Democrat, said he views the disclosures about the deals as politically motivated because of the timing so close to Election Day. "I hope this is not going to turn into something that is more political than substantive," Mr. Biden said.

Sen. Sam Brownback, Kansas Republican, said a check of committee records shows the panel never had a briefing "on the existence of a legally binding international agreement with the Russians." Since the 1995 agreement, Mr. Smith noted, Russia delivered an advanced Kilo-class submarine and long-range torpedoes and anti-ship mines.

"It is an understatement to say that the secrecy with which the administration has handled the Gore-Chernomyrdin agreement, and the legalisms employed to justify it over the last week, indeed over the last five years, has fostered a measure of distrust between the executive and legislative branches of government," Mr. Smith said.

Mr. Barker also denied that a January letter from Secretary of State Madeleine K. Albright to Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov, first reported Oct. 17 in The Washington Times, was evidence that U.S. sanctions would have been imposed under U.S. law but for the 1995 deal.

"The fact is that Secretary Albright's letter was intended to deliver a stern warning that failure to abide by the restrictions embodied in the aide-memoire regarding arms sales to Iran could have serious consequences, including the possibility of sanctions," he said.

The State Department officials insisted that Russian arms sales to Iran were not covered by the 1992 law that requires imposing sanctions for transfers of destabilizing weapons to Iran, or a 1996 amendment to another law requiring sanctions for arms transfers to terrorist states.

"It has always been the case that the transfers subject to the aide-memoire do not trigger U.S. sanctions laws," Mr. Barker said. "There were no sanctions to impose. So in fact we have never taken any steps to avoid penalties against the Russians for transfers in the pipeline. That was our conclusion in 1995; it still stands today."

Mr. Barker said breaches of secrecy in the U.S.-Russian deals have put "these understandings . . . at risk."

"Playing this out in public can only have a chilling effect of the ability of any administration - this administration and any future administrations - to continue this process, and could seriously undermine U.S. national security," he said.

Mr. Smith criticized the officials for their failure to brief Congress. "They've used the word that they 'telegraphed' to Congress what it is we were supposed to know," Mr. Smith said. "I hope there is a precedent that comes out of this that 'telegraphing' through the media isn't enough to comply with U.S. law. There are other ways in which this is supposed to happen."

Mr. Brownback said he wants to see the documents that were kept from Congress.

Regarding Mrs. Albright's letter, Mr. Brownback said: "I see no other way to read [it] except as a blatant admission that this administration concluded a secret agreement with Russia in which it promised to ignore U.S. nonproliferation laws."

A law requiring all international agreements to be transmitted to Congress also "appears to have been broken," Mr. Brownback said.

** TCN NOTE TO McCAIN Et Al: With all of the "silver bullets" littering the by-ways of DC and world politics with CLINTON or GORE inscribed on them, why hasn't one of our heroes picked one up and ended the reign of terror? The answer is becoming more obvious everyday. Politics is about blackmail, not about public service. It is about trying to stay in power, not in doing the right thing.

If there was one statesman left in DC, we would have some hope of returning our government to the people. The fact that so many illegal and anti-American acts can be committed by the Clinton/Gore administration, and be fully acknowledged by outraged "conservatives" is ample proof that there are no statesmen left.

When the political process breaks down, the people stand up. You may wish you had rounded up guns much sooner. --TCN


Clearing Up Some of Gore's "Fuzzy Math"

Recently, the Wall Street Journal noted in an editorial: "The vice president's Social Security plan isn't as bad as it sounds. It's much, much worse." If you think you might be counting on Social Security one day, we recommend you visit this page and enter your age and sex to calculate what an American worker of your same age and sex could expect to receive from Social Security.

Visit -- http://www.heritage.org/socialsecurity/


INDIANAPOLIS BAPTIST TEMPLE PLANNING TO STAY IN CHURCH
AGAINST JUDGE'S ORDERS.

Friday News Notes, October 20, 2000 (David W. Cloud, Fundamental Baptist Information Service, 1701 Harns Rd., Oak Harbor, WA 98277, fbns@wayoflife.org) - The Indianapolis Baptist Temple in Indianapolis, Indiana, is planning to ignore a federal judge's order to vacate their property by noon on November 14. The court ruled that the church property must be seized to pay $6 million in back taxes and fines. Pastor Greg Dixon announced that the church will hold a prayer service at noon that day and stated: "They'll have to bodily remove us from the building. We're going to be here. We're going to take our stand. We're going to practice our faith. And if the federal government is so tyrannical as to shut down a 50-year-old church, then we're in awfully sad condition in this country" (Indianapolis Star, Oct. 19, 2000).


FOR THE RECORD

"No group votes more solidly for the Democrats than blacks -- and no group suffers more as a result than blacks. Political spin makes Democrats the best friends of blacks, the party of civil rights laws, the party of affirmative action and the party of social programs to help the poor in general and blacks in particular. But spin and facts are very different things. The fact is that a higher percentage of Republicans than Democrats voted for the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. ... Democrats can claim credit - if that's the word -- for all the government social programs that have played such a role in the disintegration of families. These programs have done little to reduce poverty. Blacks did more to reduce their own poverty than the government ever has. Between 1940 and 1960, the poverty rate among black families fell from 87% to 47%. Yet there was no major federal civil rights legislation or welfare state programs created during that period. ... As for the first decade of [the Great Society and] affirmative action -- the 1970s -- the poverty rate among blacks fell by only one percentage point...." --Thomas Sowell


HAWGS

After a weekend trip home to Arkansas, Bill Clinton stepped from the helicopter and onto the White House lawn. He was carrying two Arkansas-bred hawgs, one under each arm.

At the bottom of the steps, a young Marine snapped to attention, saluted sharply and said, "Fine looking pigs, sir!"

Clinton turned and glared at the boy. "Son, don't you know I'm from Arkansas? These ain't pigs. They're hawgs."

The Marine shot back, "Marine begs the COMMANDER IN CHIEF'S pardon, SIR! Fine looking hawgs, SIR!" Clinton smiled with pride and the young man relaxed.

The President went on, "Thank you, son. You see this one here?" He lifted up the pig under his right arm. "I got this one for Chelsea." Then he nodded to the hawg on his left. "And this one here, I got for Hillary."

At that the Marine snapped back to attention and said, "OUTSTANDING TRADE, SIR."

TCN

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