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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (misc.activism.progressive Auto-Poster)
- Subject: THE OCTOBER SURPRISE: Aug. '91: Congress to Investigate...
- Message-ID: <1992Aug22.062122.22423@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Originator: daemon@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Organization: misc.activism.progressive on UseNet ; ACTIV-L@UMCVMB
- Date: Sat, 22 Aug 1992 06:21:22 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 133
-
-
- House Minority Leader Bob Michel immediately denounced the
- investigation when the Congressional Democratic leaders made their
- announcement. ``I think we're going to be wasting an awful lot of
- money on a charade here,'' he said. ``People back home don't give
- two hoots about it, what happened 10 years ago. Jimmy Carter lost
- the election.''
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- Not that we want a white-wash investigation for
- fear of public reaction to this scale of Treason...
-
- Foley said Monday that both he and Mitchell ``accept the statement
- of President Bush that he neither participated in or had any
- knowledge of such contacts, of such alleged contacts.'' White
- House
-
- ...but pre-judgements like this certainly don't hurt
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
-
- [From PeaceNet's oct.surprise confernece]
- ******************************************************************
- Subject: CONGRESS TO INVESTIGATE 'OCTOBER'
- ******************************************************************
- /* Written 10:32 am Aug 6, 1991 by christic in cdp:christic.news */
- /* ---------- "CONGRESS TO INVESTIGATE `OCTOBER'" ---------- */
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- SENATE AND HOUSE WILL INVESTIGATE `OCTOBER SURPRISE' ALLEGATIONS
-
- Christic Institute, Tuesday, August 6, 1991
-
- Senate and House committees will investigate charges that Ronald
- Reagan's Presidential campaign negotiated secretly with Iran to
- keep American hostages in captivity until after the 1980 election.
-
- The House Foreign Affairs Committee and the Senate Foreign
- Relations Committee will organize separate investigations, House
- Speaker Thomas S. Foley and Senate Majority Leader George J.
- Mitchell announced on Monday.
-
- The two leaders said they had ``no conclusive evidence of
- wrongdoing,'' but that ``the seriousness of the allegations and the
- weight of circumstantial information compel an effort to establish
- the facts.''
-
- The New York Times reported that Congressional officials said the
- investigation would begin in earnest after Labor Day.
-
- The House and Senate panels will both have the power to subpoena
- witnesses and documents. The two groups have not decided how they
- will coordinate their separate investigations or if joint public
- hearings will be conducted at a later stage.
-
- [Evidence of the alleged 1980 negotiations is examined in a new
- video, ``Playing Politics with American Lives,'' distributed by the
- Christic Institute. It includes highlights of a mid-June
- Congressional symposium featuring investigative journalists,
- political analysts and representatives of a group of formal
- hostages who have demanded an investigation. Details on this
- resource are included in a separate posting to this news group.]
-
- The White House has been sending out mixed messages on the prospect
- of a formal investigation. President Bush has ridiculed the
- charges, but said last month he would welcome an inquiry. ``The
- President has always said that if there is legitimate evidence and
- a real reason for an investigation, then they ought to get to the
- bottom of it,'' White House Press Secretary Marlin Fitzwater told
- reporters on Monday. ``But if it's just a political witch hunt of
- some kind, then it's foolish.''
-
- House Minority Leader Bob Michel immediately denounced the
- investigation when the Congressional Democratic leaders made their
- announcement. ``I think we're going to be wasting an awful lot of
- money on a charade here,'' he said. ``People back home don't give
- two hoots about it, what happened 10 years ago. Jimmy Carter lost
- the election.''
-
- House Speaker Foley reportedly was reluctant to go ahead with an
- investigation of charges that the Republicans, in effect, ``stole''
- the 1980 election from the Democrats. However, Foley said he became
- ``convinced that these persistent rumors which have gone for so
- long and have occupied the attention of the news media both here
- and abroad indicate that the inquiry should be taken.''
-
- The Washington Post reported today that the speaker was
- ``eventually worn down by other House Democrats and the emotional
- pressure created by eight of the former hostages, who came to
- Washington in June and called for a congressional investigation.''
-
- Foley said Monday that both he and Mitchell ``accept the statement
- of President Bush that he neither participated in or had any
- knowledge of such contacts, of such alleged contacts.'' White House
- sources have circulated three conflicting alibis about George
- Bush's activities on Oct. 19, 1980, when some sources have charged
- he was in Paris for a meeting with Iranian officials.
-
- The House investigation will be coordinated by a bipartisan working
- group chaired by Rep. Lee H. Hamilton, Democrat of Indiana, who
- co-chaired the Congressional probe of the Iran-contra scandal. He
- is chair of the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Europe and
- the Middle East. Members of Hamilton's working group will be
- announced in September.
-
- The Senate's investigation will be led by Sen. Terry Sanford,
- Democrat of North Carolina, who chairs the Foreign Relations
- Subcommittee on Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs. Other members
- of the subcommittee are Democrats Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New
- York, Charles S. Robb of Virginia, Paul Sarbanes of Maryland and
- Harris Wofford of Pennsylvania, and Republicans James Jeffords of
- Vermont, Larry Pressler of South Dakota and Frank Murkowski of
- Alaska.
-
- According to today's edition of the Washington Post, Democratic
- leaders were warned by lawyers that an investigation will be
- complicated. Many 1980 campaign records no longer exist and Iranian
- officials who reportedly participated in the hostage negotiations
- may be unwilling to cooperate with an investigation in the United
- States. The chief figure accused of direct involvement in the
- secret talks--former Reagan campaign Chair and C.I.A. Director
- William J. Casey--died in 1987.
-
- The Post reported that the investigating committees are expected to
- seek documents from the Reagan Library, the Secret Service and
- Casey's family.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
- Andrew Lang 151251507 CHRISTIC telex
- Christic Institute christic PeaceNet
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