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- THE WEEK, Page 25NATIONWho's on Trial?
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- The cover-up defense in an Iraqgate trial gets its day in court
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- Throwing out a plea bargain is an unusual step in the U.S.
- court system. But just about everything in the continuing legal
- saga of Christopher Drogoul is unusual. Though Drogoul pleaded
- guilty in June to 60 of 347 counts that he made $4 billion in
- illegal loans to Iraq before Saddam Hussein's invasion of
- Kuwait, a prosecutor announced last week that the government was
- no longer willing to honor that agreement because the defendant
- lied throughout his three-week sentencing hearing.
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- But a trial will also open a Pandora's box of allegations
- by the former Atlanta branch manager of the Italian Banca
- Nazionale del Lavoro and his attorney Bobby Lee Cook. They say
- that senior B.N.L. officials in Rome not only approved the loans
- to Iraq but that the U.S. and Italian governments were aware of
- the transactions. As proof, Drogoul and Cook introduced what
- they claim is an internal bank document written in Italian and
- slipped under Cook's hotel room door last week. The document is
- an executive summary of meetings between bank executives,
- Italian government officials and representatives of the U.S.
- government held in Washington in the spring of 1990, including
- a White House luncheon attended by Italian Ambassador Rinaldo
- Petrignani and Attorney General Richard Thornburgh. If the
- document proves authentic, score one for Drogoul's claims of a
- Bush Administration cover-up of its role in providing loans to
- Iraq just before the Gulf War.
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