(WMR) -- According
to an informed source, Dick Cheney, while vice president, amassed a fortune in
cash stolen by U.S. occupation forces in Iraq from Saddam Hussein and some of
his leading officials and advisers.
Sources report to WMR that U.S. troops confiscated �billions�
in currency found stored in aluminum containers in various secret caches in
Baghdad and elsewhere. Our sources report that the seized cash was transferred
to accounts run by Cheney and the money is now being partly used to fund Cheney�s
growing political opposition movement to the Obama administration, including
secretive payments to a �stay behind� group of Cheney loyalists who burrowed
into senior civil service positions from political appointee jobs during the
Bush administration. Cheney�s loyalists are now in key positions to stymie
Obama�s programs and policies within a variety of cabinet departments and
federal agencies.
The recent intelligence about Iraqi cash ending up in
the coffers of American officials is not the first time WMR has reported on the
theft of Iraqi cash by U.S. forces.
On November 14, 2005, WMR reported: �In one of the worst
intelligence fiascoes carried out by the neocon administration of Iraq under
Paul �Jerry� Bremer, Saddam Hussein�s chief money mover and financial adviser
was beaten to death by US interrogators in Tikrit after the U.S. invasion . . .
As Saddam�s chief financial adviser and money mover, Abu Seger [Sa�ad Hassan
Ali], a man who was fluent in American-style English, knew where all the �financial
skeletons� were buried -- details of Halliburton�s involvement with the UN�s
Oil-for-Food program, the purchase by Iraq of VX nerve gas and other WMD
components from US and British sources in the 1980s, and various
counter-intelligence operations run by Saddam against the United States and
Britain. Abu Seger was also one of Saddam�s trusted counter-intelligence agents
. . . After Samara was occupied by US forces, it was discovered that Abu Seger
lived in a home on the Tigris River just 200 yards from the main U.S. military
position in the city. It did not take long for U.S. troops to break down Seger�s
door and haul him off to a detention center. Seger�s wife Sada, an English
teacher, and U.S. military intelligence officers were witnesses to what soon
transpired. U.S. forces discovered $30
million in plastic garbage bags in an armoire in Seger�s bedroom.
Contained in the bags was $14 million
in US currency, $28 million in convertible Iraqi dinars, and $12 million in
euros. Although the money was counted, signed for by two U.S. military witnesses,
and transported to U.S. military headquarters in Samara, it was never seen
again. A knowledgeable source present at the time revealed that the $30 million
was stolen by U.S. authorities in Iraq.�
Amid the other scandals surrounding Cheney, including
his countenance of torture, the theft of cash and his possible
involvement in the murder of Abu Seger may be added to the
former vice president�s rap sheet of crimes perpetrated in Iraq and in the
United States.
Cheney recently built a multi-million dollar home in McLean,
Virginia, a stone�s throw from the CIA headquarters. He also owns luxury houses
in Jackson, Wyoming, and St. Michael�s, Maryland.
Corporate U.S. news media drastically downplayed the amount
of cash stolen from Iraq by U.S. forces and that the maximum amount of cash
discovered in �cottages� was around $760 million, when, in fact, it was much
higher. A handful of U.S. troops were charged with stealing some bundles of
$100 bills. According to the May 28, 2004, Los Angeles Times some of the
troops who admitted to stealing Iraqi cash tried to tell Army Criminal
Investigative Division (CID) investigators that �higher-ups� stole much more,
but their information was ignored.
Previously
published in the Wayne
Madsen Report.
Copyright � 2009 WayneMadenReport.com
Wayne
Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and
nationally-distributed columnist. He is the editor and publisher of the Wayne Madsen Report
(subscription required).