HHS Nominee Deep State
Made Man
The games
are being played with people, you knowÉand, and – the young aspiring
people, you know, who I used to work with back in that office – who will,
will say and do what they have to, to move up the ladder.
The man making that statement is Miguel Rodriguez, the just-resigned
lead investigator for Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr, who had been looking
into the gunshot death of Deputy White House Counsel Vincent W. Foster,
Jr. He is talking on the telephone
to Reed Irvine, the head of Accuracy in Media, and he probably doesnÕt realize
that his every word is being recorded.
He had come to the realization that what he had been asked to do was to perform
a cover-up of FosterÕs murder, and he is talking to all the media people he can
think of to try to get the word out, but the entire mainstream press is
ignoring him, and heÕs desperate
As it turned out the cover-up succeeded for all
practical purposes and those who filled the void left by RodriguezÕs premature departure from the cover-up team were duly rewarded by the Deep State for
their contributions to the unworthy cause.
ItÕs not getting a lot of publicity since his
nomination to be the new Secretary of the Department of Health and Human
Services by President Donald Trump, but Alex Azar is
one of those young people who has moved up the ladder
quite smartly. The press mainly
describes him as a drug company executive, which he is, without reminding us of
what I can only describe as his dark past.
Wikipedia only says blandly, ÒFrom 1994 to 1996, he served as an Associate Independent
Counsel for Kenneth W. Starr in the United States Office of the Independent
Counsel, where he worked on the first two years of the investigation into the
Whitewater controversy.Ó
After leaving the Starr team he worked for a
Washington law firm for five years and then, in August of 2001, President
George W. Bush appointed him to be general counsel for Health and Human
Services. Having proven himself to
be a good and loyal soldier who would go along to get along, as they say, he
was in a key position when those mysterious anthrax attacks came along.
Again, Wikipedia reports it blandly: ÒAzar played an important role in responding to the 2001 anthrax attacksÉÓ Since he had already been carefully vetted by
his work on the Starr team, the true perpetrators of the anthrax attacks could
be confident that the important role that Azar would
play did not involve nosing around too much into the actual origins of the
anthrax spores used in the attacks.
But is Azar qualified
to be the head of the cabinet office that has the responsibility for overseeing
the nationÕs health, you might ask.
It depends, I think, on what you mean by ÒqualifiedÓ and in whose eyes
he might be so. If a major false
flag attack of a biological sort is in the works, then I couldnÕt think of a
better ÒqualifiedÓ person than Azar to head up
HHS. Or maybe they just wanted to
make sure that our top health guy would continue to perpetuate the myth that
the CIA-fueled heroin epidemic
that is ravaging the country is really a prescription painkiller ÒopioidÓ
epidemic, even at the expense of scapegoating his buddies in the pharmaceutical
industry.
Oh, you might want to know that heÕs also a 1991
Yale Law School graduate. The
man that Starr chose to replace Rodriguez, Brett Kavanaugh, was just a year ahead
of Azar at Yale Law, but Kavanaugh
had the further pedigree of a Yale undergraduate degree, as well. Yale Skull
and Bones man George W. Bush rewarded Kavanaugh by
making him a federal judge at the ripe old age of 38.
Azar and Kavanaugh
are a couple of Yalies that I missed when I wrote the
following passage in a 1999 article, ÒThe Counsel, the Cop, and the KeysÓ:
We also find in the Foster case, perhaps by
coincidence and perhaps not, a number of Yale products. Both
Clintons, Hamilton, and Williams and Connolly lawyer to the president,
David Kendall, have Yale law degrees, and Whitewater special prosecutor, Robert
Fiske and one of his consulting pathologists, James L. Luke, have Yale
bachelor's degrees.
In a follow-up article, ÒDoes Yale Hold the Key?Ó I listed a few more
Yale products involved in the Foster case that I had missed the first time, and
referenced this telling passage from Yale historian Robin WinksÕ book, Cloak and Gown, Scholars in the Secret War,
1939-1961:
From
Yale's class of 1943 alone, at least forty-two young men entered intelligence
work, largely in the OSS, many to remain on after the war to form the core of
the new CIA. Rightly or wrongly, a historian could, in assessing the link
between the university and the agency, declare in 1984 that Yale had influenced
the CIA more than any other university did. This
generalization was extended by a student journalist into the judgment that for
four decades ÒYale had influenced the Central Intelligence Agency more than any
other institution, giving the CIA the atmosphere of a class reunion.Ó
One didnÕt have to be a Yale product like Azar and these other folks, though, to use the Foster
cover-up as a springboard to bigger and better things. John Bates was also a member of StarrÕs
team, though a good deal older than Azar and Kavanaugh, and President Bush made him a federal judge as
well. Michael Chertoff and Richard
Ben-Veniste were the heads of the staffs of the
Republicans and Democrats, respectively, of the Senate Whitewater Committee,
making sure that things didnÕt stray to far out of bounds, as I show in ÒThe
Counsel, the Cop, and the Keys.Ó Chertoff is a Harvard man. He was the head of the criminal division
of BushÕs Justice Department and the official most responsible for allowing the
Israelis seen filming and apparently celebrating the 9/11 attacks in New York
City to return to Israel. Later
Bush made him his Director of Homeland Security. Ben-Veniste, a
Northwestern Law School product, had been involved in the Watergate
investigation, was a lawyer for the CIA-connected drug smuggler Barry Seal, and
later served on the 9/11 Commission.
The Vince Foster death case, we can see in
retrospect, offers us a very good window into the workings of the Deep State,
and we havenÕt even mentioned the names of such Foster-case players as Christopher Ruddy, David Bossie, Sidney Blumenthal, David Corn, or Peter Baker. Up to now, Alex Azar
had been below my radar. Who knows
what bigger plans our rulers might have for him?
David Martin
November 16, 2017
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