First, a few facts: In 1960, George H.W. Bush secretly formed a
partnership between his Zapata-Offshore Oil Company and Permargo, a
Mexican drilling-equipment company that was known as Perforaciones
Marinas del Golfe at the time. Bush’s main partner at Permargo was
Jorge Diaz Serrano, a Mexican national. Both Bush and Serrano were CIA
assets at the time. Bush had placed Zapata-Offshore at the CIA’s
disposal, allowing the Agency to use the company as a conduit to place
counterintelligence people in the Caribbean. Serrano had assisted the
CIA with the logistical aspects of its anti-Castro operations. Through
Bush and Serrano, the CIA gained control of the presidency of Lopez
Portillo and successfully infiltrated Pemex. Portillo became president
of Mexico in 1976, the same year Bush became the director of the CIA.
Bush’s business partner, Diaz Serrano, was Portillo’s most powerful
aide. Portillo went on to make Serrano head of Pemex. In 1983, Diaz was
convicted of defrauding the Mexican government out of $58 million and
was sentenced to ten years in prison. With the introduction of foreign
involvement in Mexico’s oil industry, Pemex might be used as a cover
for intelligence operations once again. But who would be the targets of
such operations?
Deep Oil, Deep Politics
By Paul Collins
It’s a move that is causing fear among the left in Mexico. Mexican
president Felipe Calderon intends to present an energy reform bill to
the Mexican congress that would allow private investment in Pemex,
Mexico’s state-owned oil monopoly (Grillo, no pagination). Calderon
claims foreign oil companies can save Pemex from underinvestment and
mismanagement by increasing Mexico’s technological and operational
capacity, thus allowing the nation to tap its deep-water reserves (no
pagination). According to Calderon, if foreigners are not brought in,
Mexico will not be able to tap its deep-water reserves and the nation
will be importing petroleum in nine years (no pagination). Critics of
Calderon’s plan include 2006 presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez
Obrador and Rep. Alejandro Sanchez of the leftist Democratic Revolution
Party (no pagination). Obrador and Sanchez fear foreign investment will
lead to a predatory form of privatization and Mexicans will lose
control of their own oil industry (no pagination). But the dangers
related to foreign incursions into Mexico’s oil industry go deeper than
the debate between proponents of nationalization and privatization. The
oil industry and the intelligence community have always gone hand in
hand. Pemex is certainly no exception.
Pemex
In 1960, George H.W. Bush secretly formed a partnership between his
Zapata-Offshore Oil Company and Permargo, a Mexican drilling-equipment
company that was known as Perforaciones Marinas del Golfe at the time
(Trento 17). Bush’s main partner at Permargo was Jorge Diaz Serrano, a
Mexican national (17-18). Both Bush and Serrano were CIA assets at the
time. Bush had placed Zapata-Offshore at the CIA’s disposal, allowing
the Agency to use the company as a conduit to place counterintelligence
people in the Caribbean (17). Serrano had assisted the CIA with the
logistical aspects of its anti-Castro operations (18). Through Bush and
Serrano, the CIA gained control of the presidency of Lopez Portillo and
successfully infiltrated Pemex (20). Portillo became president of
Mexico in 1976, the same year Bush became the director of the CIA (20).
Bush’s business partner, Diaz Serrano, was Portillo’s most powerful
aide (20). Portillo went on to make Serrano head of Pemex (20-21). In
1983, Diaz was convicted of defrauding the Mexican government out of
$58 million and was sentenced to ten years in prison (21). With the
introduction of foreign involvement in Mexico’s oil industry, Pemex
might be used as a cover for intelligence operations once again. But
who would be the targets of such operations?
Targets
Three Latin American countries have angered Western factions of the
power elite as of late: Ecuador, Venezuela, and Nicaragua. In April
2007, the World Bank was given its “rejection slip” by Ecuadorean
President Rafael Correa when the bank’s representative to Ecuador,
Eduardo Somensatto, was told to leave the country immediately (Behar,
no pagination). In 2005, when Correa was economic minister, the World
Bank withheld $100 million credit because Ecuador had passed a new law
governing oil funds that the bank disagreed with (no pagination). This
move convinced Correa that the World Bank was in the business of
economic blackmail and motivated him, as president, to do away with
Ecuador’s reliance on the World Bank (no pagination).
Venezuela’ President Hugo Chavez also voiced a desire to pull his
nation out of the IMF and the World Bank (no pagination). Venezuela
paid off its debts to the World Bank five years ahead of schedule and
paid off its debt to the IMF in 1999 (no pagination). In 2006, the
IMF’s offices in Venezuela were closed (no pagination). Chavez and
Correa are certainly not boy scouts, but they correctly identified the
IMF and World Bank as tools of economic warfare and social Darwinism.
Oligarchs in the West are not at all happy with the withdrawal of
Ecuador and Venezuela from their system of economic control.
Nicaragua and Venezuela have also become a major obstacle to plans that
Western factions of the power elite have to invade Iran. Iran and
Venezuela have entered into a partnership with Nicaraguan President
Daniel Ortega (Bensman, no pagination). Iran and Venezuela plan to
finance the construction of a deep-water port at Nicaragua’s Monkey
Point (no pagination). Iran has also set up an embassy in Nicaragua (no
pagination). Should an invasion of Iran take place, Iran could use
Nicaragua as a staging ground for attacks against the United States (no
pagination). Revolutionary Guard operatives and Hezbollah terrorists
are already present in Latin America, and they could be deployed from
Nicaragua should the shooting start (no pagination).
Nicaragua’s President Ortega may have also displeased Western factions
of the power elite by taking a pro-life stance concerning abortion.
When Ortega was president back in the 1980s, he was very much in favor
of abortion rights (“Nicaragua brings in abortion ban,” no pagination).
Ortega has since had a change of heart and has adopted the Catholic
Church’s anti-abortion stance and abortion is illegal in Nicaragua (no
pagination). This move flies right in the face of the power elite’s
agenda of depopulation and eugenical regimentation.
None of these countries are lily white. The picture of Chavez, Correa,
and Ortega as populist heroes is one that has been painted by left-wing
romantics with no grip on reality. However, these countries have become
a severe threat to Western factions of the global oligarchical
establishment. The effort to create a New World Order has never been
monolithic. Ecuador, Venezuela, and Nicaragua now have a chip in the
big game. They have become competitors who refuse to be sidelined and
refuse to be subordinates in the emerging world government. They are
now targets.
FARC enters the equation
The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia, or FARC, could provide the
pretext for both covert and overt moves made in Latin America.
Initially, Western factions of the power elite sought an alliance with
FARC. On June 26, 1999, Reuters news service reported that Richard
Grasso, the head of the New York Stock Exchange, flew into a
demilitarized region of Columbia’s southern jungle and savanna and held
face-to-face talks with members of general secretariat of FARC (“NYSE
Chief Meets Top Colombia Rebel Leader,” no pagination). Grasso
discussed “foreign investment and the role of U.S. businesses in
Colombia ” with the representatives of FARC’s high command (no
pagination). It didn’t bother the Western oligarchs in the least that
FARC is involved in narcotics trafficking and kidnapping or that the
group is on the State Department’s list of Foreign Terrorist
Organizations (no pagination). But the FARC declined Grasso’s offers to
investment their money in Wall Street, so now its open season on the
Colombian rebels.
Engaging the FARC militarily would certainly draw the attention of
Ecuador, Venezuela, and Nicaragua. All three countries are sympathetic
towards the revolutionary guerrilla organization. Venezuela’s Hugo
Chavez has refused to join Colombia, the United States , and the
European Union in classifying the FARC as a terrorist group (“Chavez
proposal about the FARC creates deep analysis in Mexican press,” no
pagination). When Raul Reyes, considered to be the number two man in
the FARC’s secretariat, was killed by a Colombian military operation
inside Ecuador, President Rafael Correa referred to the Colombian raid
as a “massacre” and withdrew Ecuador’s ambassador in Bogota, Colombia
(“Ecuador pulls diplomat from Bogota,” no pagination). When Chavez
learned of the Reyes killing, he placed 10 battalions of Venezuelan
troops on the Colombian border and closed Venezuela’s embassy in
Colombia (no pagination). Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega also
condemned the killing of Reyes (“Nicaragua ’s Ortega condemns FARC
commander killing,” no pagination). Ortega has even referred to FARC
chief Manuel Marulanda as a “dear brother” (no pagination).
If the United States were to move against the FARC, it could very well
ignite conflict of both an overt and covert nature with Venezuela,
Ecuador, and Nicaragua. Movement in that direction may have already
begun. Colombian President Alvaro Uribe’s campaign against the FARC is
backed by the United States. The United States might lend a covert and
overt assist to Uribe somewhere not too far down the line. If that were
to happen, Pemex would be an ideal cover for covert operations against
the FARC, Colombia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua. Would covert and overt war
against the FARC and its state sponsors be in the best interests of the
American people? FARC and the states supporting it are certainly no
angels, but it seems that Western factions of the power elite merely
wish to remove some pesky obstacles to establishing their position as
the dominant force in the New World Order. A war would simply support
that agenda.
Bout
If America began making moves militarily in Latin America, the FARC
would prove to be a formidable foe for American soldiers. Who is
responsible for building the Colombian rebels up? Russian arms dealer
Viktor Bout is supposed to have supplied the FARC with 10,000 weapons
between December 1998 and April 1999 (Casey, no pagination). The United
States is currently trying to extradite Bout from Thailand so he can be
tried for attempting to sell millions of dollars of weapons to FARC (no
pagination). The sale would have included 100 surface-to-air missiles
and armor-piercing rockets (no pagination). Bout did business with a
rogue gallery that included the Taliban and al-Qaida (no pagination).
But what many people don’t know is that there is a considerable amount
of evidence that ties Bout to the power elite. In 2004, it was
discovered that the Pentagon, the Coalition Provisional Authority in
Iraq, the Air Force, and the Army Corps of Engineers were permitting
U.S. contractors in Iraq to do business with Bout’s air cargo companies
in spite of the fact that the Treasury Department labeled Bout an arms
dealer and had frozen his assets (Braun, no pagination). One of the
firms doing business with Bout’s network was none other than Kellogg
Brown and Root (KBR), which was, at the time, a subsidiary of the
multinational corporation formerly headed by Vice President Dick Cheney
known as Halliburton (no pagination). Air Bas, a company tied to Bout’s
aviation empire flew supplies into Iraq for KBR at least four times in
October of 2004 (no pagination). Halliburton moved its corporate
headquarters to Dubai at a time when Dubai was Bout’s base of
operations (Grigg, no pagination). The United Nations also did business
with Viktor Bout, using his planes to transport troops into Africa and
East Timor (no pagination).
Why was Viktor Bout allowed to operate for so long? Why was Bout doing
business with those within the hallowed halls of officialdom, those who
we would consider to be legitimate? It seems that Bout’s job was to
create the enemies that the power elite and its prostitutes in
government need to act as a pretext for war. FARC is one of those
enemies. The disease and the cure are created in the same lab.
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