However, the
government documents note that Bush, Harriman, Lievense
and the other UBC stockholders were in fact “nominees,”
or phantom shareholders, for Thyssen and his Holland
bank, meaning that they acted at the direct behest of
their German client.
Seized
On October 20,
1942, under authority of the Trading with the Enemy Act,
the U.S. Congress seized UBC and liquidated its assets
after the war. The seizure is confirmed by Vesting Order
No. 248 in the U.S. Office of the Alien Property
Custodian and signed by U.S. Alien Property Custodian
Leo T. Crowley.
In August,
under the same authority, Congress had seized the first
of the Bush-Harriman-managed Thyssen entities,
Hamburg-American Line, under Vesting Order No. 126, also
signed by Crowley. Eight days after the seizure of UBC,
Congress invoked the Trading with the Enemy Act again to
take control of two more Bush-Harriman-Thyssen
businesses - Holland-American Trading Corp. (Vesting
Order No. 261) and Seamless Steel Equipment Corp
(Vesting Order No. 259). In November, Congress seized
the Nazi interests in Silesian-American Corporation,
which allegedly profited from slave labor at Auschwitz
via a partnership with I.G. Farben, Hitler’s third major
industrial patron and partner in the infrastructure of
the Third Reich.
The documents
from the Archives also show that the Bushes and
Harrimans shipped valuable U.S. assets, including gold,
coal, steel and U.S. Treasury and war bonds, to their
foreign clients overseas as Hitler geared up for his
1939 invasion of Poland, the event that sparked World
War II.
That’s
One Way to Put It
Following the
Congressional seizures of UBC and the other four
Bush-Harriman-Thyssen enterprises, The New York
Times reported on December 16, 1944, in a brief
story on page 25, that UBC had “received authority to
change its principal place of business to 120 Broadway.”
The Times story did not report that UBC had
been seized by the U.S. government or that the new
address was the U.S. Office of the Alien Property
Custodian. The story also neglected to mention that the
other UBC-related businesses had also been seized by
Congress.
Still
No Story?
Since then, the
information has not appeared in any U.S. news coverage
of any Bush political campaign, nor has it been included
in any of the major Bush family biographies. It was,
however, covered extensively in George H.W. Bush:
The Unauthorized Biography, by Webster Tarpley and
Anton Chaitkin. Chaitkin’s father served as an attorney
in the 1940s for some of the victims of the
Bush-Harriman-Thyssen businesses.
The book gave a
detailed, accurate accounting of the Bush family’s long
Nazi affiliation, but no mainstream U.S. media entity
reported on or even investigated the allegations,
despite careful documentation by the authors. Major
booksellers declined to distribute the book, which was
dismissed by Bush supporters as biased and untrue. Its
authors struggled even to be reviewed in reputable
newspapers. That the book was published by a Lyndon
LaRouche’s organization undoubtedly made it easier to
dismiss, but does not change the facts.
The essence of
the story been posted for years on various Internet
sites, including BuzzFlash.com and TakeBackTheMedia.com,
but no online media seem to have independently confirmed
it.
Likewise, the
mainstream media have apparently made no attempt since
World War II to either verify or disprove the
allegations of Nazi collaboration against the Bush
family. Instead, they have attempted to dismiss or
discredit such Internet sites or “unauthorized” books
without any journalistic inquiry or research into their
veracity.
Loyal
Defenders
The
National Review ran an essay on September 1 by
their White House correspondent Byron York, entitled
“Annals of Bush-Hating.” It begins mockingly: “Are you
aware of the murderous history of George W. Bush -
indeed, of the entire Bush family? Are you aware of the
president’s Nazi sympathies? His crimes against
humanity? And do you know, by the way, that George W.
Bush is a certifiable moron?” York goes on to discredit
the “Bush is a moron” IQ hoax, but fails to disprove the
Nazi connection.
The more
liberal Boston Globe ran a column September 29
by Reason magazine’s Cathy Young in which she
referred to “Bush-o-phobes on the Internet” who “repeat
preposterous claims about the Bush family’s alleged Nazi
connections.”
Poles
Tackle the Topic
Newsweek
Polska, the magazine’s Polish edition, published a
short piece on the “Bush Nazi past” in its March 5, 2003
edition. The item reported that “the Bush family reaped
rewards from the forced-labor prisoners in the Auschwitz
concentration camp,” according to a copyrighted
English-language translation from Scoop Media (www.scoop.co.nz).
The story also reported the seizure of the various
Bush-Harriman-Thyssen businesses.
Still Not
Interested
Major U.S.
media outlets, including ABC News, NBC News, The New
York Times, Washington Post,
Washington Times, Los Angeles Times and
Miami Herald, have repeatedly declined to
investigate the story when information regarding
discovery of the documents was presented to them
beginning Friday, August 29. Newsweek U.S.
correspondent Michael Isikoff, famous for his reporting
of big scoops during the Clinton-Lewinsky sexual affair
of the 1990s, declined twice to accept an exclusive
story based on the documents from the archives.
Aftermath
After the
seizures of the various businesses they oversaw with
Cornelis Lievense and his German partners, the U.S.
government quietly settled with Bush, Harriman and
others after the war. Bush and Harriman each received
$1.5 million in cash as compensation for their seized
business assets.
In 1952,
Prescott Bush was elected to the U.S. Senate, with no
press accounts about his well-concealed Nazi past. There
is no record of any U.S. press coverage of the Bush-Nazi
connection during any political campaigns conducted by
George Herbert Walker Bush, Jeb Bush, or George W. Bush,
with the exception of a brief mention in an unrelated
story in the Sarasota Herald Tribune in
November 2000 and a brief but inaccurate account in
The Boston Globe in 2001.
John
Buchanan is a journalist and investigative reporter with
33 years of experience in New York, Los Angeles,
Washington and Miami. His work has appeared in more than
50 newspapers, magazines and books. He can be reached by
e-mail at: jtwg@bellsouth.net.