Thursday, August 19

Did Someone Say "Weak on Terrorism and Did Nothing in the Senate"?

Two words for ya: Bull. Crap.

David Sirota and Jonathan Baskin demonstrate how Kerry busted the terrorists' favorite bank a decade ago.

Turns out Kerry's done more against terrorism as a senator than the Bush Corporation has done as the nation's leadership.

Now shut up.
[In 1988,] John Kerry, then a young senator from Massachusetts, decided to probe the finances of Latin American drug cartels. Over the next three years, Kerry fought against intense opposition from vested interests at home and abroad, from senior members of his own party; and from the Reagan and Bush administrations, none of whom were eager to see him succeed.

By the end, Kerry had helped dismantle a massive criminal enterprise and exposed the infrastructure of BCCI and its affiliated institutions, a web that law enforcement officials today acknowledge would become a model for international terrorist financing. As Kerry's investigation revealed in the late 1980s and early 1990s, BCCI was interested in more than just enriching its clients--it had a fundamentally anti-Western mission. Among the stated goals of its Pakistani founder were to "fight the evil influence of the West," and finance Muslim terrorist organizations. In retrospect, Kerry's investigation had uncovered an institution at the fulcrum of America's first great post-Cold War security challenge.