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Speaker Hastert Should Come Clean By Disclosing All Contributions

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  • Speaker Hastert Should Come Clean By Disclosing All Contributions

    Speaker Hastert Should Come Clean
    By Disclosing All Contributions

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The California Courier

    Several important developments have taken place since Vanity Fair magazine
    reported that a Turkish diplomat had talked about arranging for $500,000 in
    small, un-itemized contributions of less than $200 each to House Speaker
    Dennis Hastert in order to block a congressional resolution on the Armenian
    Genocide in Fall 2000.
    A watchdog Group, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Government,
    filed a complaint on August 16 urging federal officials to investigate
    whether Speaker Hastert's campaign did indeed illegally accept campaign
    contributions from foreign nationals.
    According to Vanity Fair, the FBI had wiretapped several Turkish subjects
    or "targets" in the United States who had discussed arranging "for tens of
    thousands of dollars to be paid to Hastert's campaign funds in small
    checks."
    Sibel Edmonds, a Turkish translator working for the FBI, was asked by her
    superiors to review more than 40 recorded conversations of "a senior
    official" at the Turkish Consulate in Chicago as well as members of the
    American-Turkish Council (ATC) and the Assembly of Turkish American
    Associations (ATAA) in Washington, D.C., according to Vanity Fair.
    A spokesman for Speaker Hastert is quoted by Vanity Fair as saying that the
    Speaker has "no affiliation with ATC or other groups reportedly mentioned
    in the wiretaps. He does not know these organizations." ATC and ATAA issued
    separate statements denying the allegations made in the Vanity Fair
    article.
    By claiming that the Speaker "does not know these [Turkish] groups," his
    spokesman is simply undermining Hastert's credibility and giving credence
    to the allegations made against him. A quick search on google reveals that
    the spokesman's assertions are contradicted by the following facts:
    -- The then President of ATC, Lincoln McCurdy, sent a letter to Hastert in
    September of 2000, urging him to block the pending congressional resolution
    on the Armenian Genocide;
    -- ATC paid for several trips to Turkey by the staff of the House
    Republican leadership;
    -- The Turkish-US Business Council (TUBC), the counterpart in Turkey of the
    American Turkish Council, reported on its web site that it hosted the
    Speaker of the House in Turkey in 2002 (he also visited Turkey in 1997 and
    2004);
    -- The Turkish Daily News reported in its Feb. 5, 2005 issue that the TUBC
    "helped create a Turkish caucus in the U.S. Congress" and "lobbied
    successfully with U.S. lawmakers" to increase Turkey's textile quotas and
    obtain the "rejection of the so-called Armenian genocide bill in the U.S.
    Congress;"
    -- Ercument Kilic, the then President of ATAA, wrote a letter to Hastert on
    July 20, 2004, to thank him for blocking yet another Armenian resolution in
    the House. Kilic called Hastert "a national leader and a great statesman."
    It would, therefore, be inconceivable that Speaker Hastert as well as his
    staff would be unaware of ATC and ATAA given these groups' active
    involvement in various congressional issues for several years.
    Back in October 23, 2000, the Turkish newspaper Sabah published an article
    that sounded too bizarre to be taken seriously at the time, but in the
    light of recent revelations, it now merits a second look. Sabah reported
    that in order to persuade Speaker Hastert to block the Armenian Genocide
    resolution, "the Chairman of AIPAC [The American Israel Public Affairs
    Committee] met with Hastert and explained to him 'all the concerns in plain
    English.'" The AIPAC Chairman then reportedly pressured Hastert by telling
    him: "You may well gain a few more Armenian votes, but have you stopped to
    consider how many Jewish votes you will lose by this?"
    Sabah further reported: "Another Jew had come down from Chicago and put the
    squeeze on Hastert because they had financed the Republicans to the tune of
    $10 million or more." Hastert agreed to block the Armenian Genocide
    resolution on condition that Pres. Clinton make such a request in writing.
    Sabah reported that a "Jewish Turk from Istanbul" then contacted former
    Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres who in turn persuaded Clinton to write
    the requested letter. Hastert used Clinton's letter as a cover to pull the
    resolution from the House floor.
    To set the record straight, once and for all, Speaker Hastert should
    itemize and make public all campaign contributions he has received under
    $200, even though he is not legally required to do so.
    Hastert has twice reneged on his promise to allow the Armenian Genocide
    resolution to come to a vote on the House floor. As another such resolution
    is currently pending in the House, it remains to be seen whether the
    Speaker would once again prevent the congressmen from casting their votes
    on this issue? Or, would he again hide behind the President or some other
    official to cover up for his unexplained desire to cater to Turkish
    interests?
    If the Speaker refuses to voluntarily disclose all of his campaign
    contributions, the citizens of this country must pressure him to do so by:
    -- Demanding that there be a joint Congressional hearing on his campaign
    funds (click on www.justacitizen.com <http://www.justacitizen.com> and sign
    the petition calling for such a hearing);
    -- Making a contribution to the National Security Whistleblowers Coalition
    for a newspaper ad campaign concerning the Hastert allegations (click on
    www.nswbc.com <http://www.nswbc.com>);
    -- Making a contribution to the ACLU to support Sibel Edmonds' petition to
    the Supreme Court; and
    -- Making a contribution to the ad campaign to have the Federal Election
    Commission investigate the Hastert campaign contributions (click on
    www.citizensforethics.org <http://www.citizensforethics.org>).
    This issue is not a matter of Armenians vs. Turks. It has more to do with
    upholding the laws of the United States of America, starting with the
    Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives!
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