Coincidentally,
the Draper Laboratory Chairman of the Board since October 2013--a “Principal”
of former Kissinger Associates Vice-Chairman Brent Scowcroft’s Scowcroft Group
named Franklin Miller---previously worked “twenty-two years in the Department of
Defense…and four years as a Special Assistant to President George W. Bush”
before joining The Cohen Group of former U.S. Secretary of Defense William
Cohen for five years, according to The Scowcroft Group’s website. And between
June 2015 and July 2016, Scowcroft Group Principal Miller was paid $71,625 for
being Draper Laboratory’s board chairman, according to Draper Laboratory’s 2015
Form 990 financial filing.
Besides being
Draper Laboratory’s chairman of the board, Scowcroft Group Principal Miller—who
“provides clients both strategic and tactical advice on defense”—has also,
coincidentally, been a member of the Defense Policy Board, the U.S. Strategic
Command Advisory Group and the Council on Foreign Relations. And in addition, he
has, coincidentally, sat on the board of directors of EADS North America (a
subsidiary of Airbus Group that profits from its Pentagon war and homeland
security government contracts), the Sandia Corporation (which develops more
modern nuclear weapons for the Pentagon) and the Atlantic Council of the United
States (whose board of directors and international advisory chairman emeritus
is, coincidentally, Scowcroft Group President and Principal Brent Scowcroft).
After joining
former Nixon Administration Secretary of State Henry Kissinger’s for-profit
Kissinger Associates “consulting”/influence-peddling firm in 1982, Draper Laboratory
board chairman Miller’s business partner at the Scowcroft Group, Brent
Scowcroft, was hired by the government of Kuwait’s Kuwait Petroleum Corporation
[KPC] to sit alongside Ali Jabar Al Ali Al-Sabah on the board of directors of
KPC’s U.S. subsidiary at that time, Santa Fe International; and Scowcroft sat
on the Kuwait government’s Santa Fe International corporate board in 1984, 1985
and 1986, according to Poor’s &
Standard’s Register of Corporations. Yet in the early 1990’s the former
director of Kuwait’s major U.S. subsidiary at that time—Scrowcroft Group
President Scowcroft—was allowed to sit in a White House office as
then-President H.W. Bush I’s National Security Affairs advisor. As the
Scowcroft Group “consulting”/influence-peddling firm’s website notes:
“As
President of The Scowcroft Group…Brent Scowcroft provides clients with
unparalleled strategic advice and assistance…Brent Scowcroft served as the
National Security Advisor to both Presidents Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush,
the only individual in U.S. history appointed to the position under two
different Presidents. From 1982 to 1989, he was Vice Chairman of Kissinger
Associates, Inc., an international consulting firm. In this capacity, he
advised and assisted a wide range of U.S. and foreign corporate leaders on
global joint venture opportunities…His…twenty-nine-year military
career…included… Special Assistant to the Director of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff; and Military Assistant to President Nixon….Out of uniform, General
Scowcroft...formerly served as the Chairman of the Foreign Intelligence Advisory
Board...”
And not
surprisingly, when the Iraqi troops of the now-executed Saddam Hussein marched
into Kuwait on Aug. 2, 1990, it was the presentation of Scowcroft-- the former
member of the corporate board of the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation’s Santa Fe
International U.S. subsidiary-- -- at a National Security Council meeting on
Aug. 3, 1990, “that made clear what the stakes were, crystallized people’s
thinking and galvanized support for a strong response” to the Iraqi military
occupation of Kuwait, according to a Feb. 2, 1991 New York Times article; and,
at this meeting, “Scowcroft stated that..he believed the United States had to
be willing to use force” and “that Saddam had to be toppled…covertly through
the CIA, and be unclear to the world,” according to Bob Woodard’s 1991
book The Commanders. But
after the United States began “to use force” in Iraq in January 1991, U.S. military forces apparently killed around
100,000 Iraqis people in the 1991 Gulf War to restore Al-Sabah family
monarchical rule in Kuwait, while at least 849 U.S. troops were either killed
or wounded in the same war; and during the next 10 years more than 9,600 of the
U.S. soldiers involved in the first Gulf War, who “were often required to enter
radioactive battlefields unprotected and were never warned of the dangers of
Depleted Uranium” weapons, reportedly also died, according to Project
Censored’s Censored 2004 book.
Coincidentally, Draper Laboratory Chairman Miller’s 91-year-old Scowcroft Group business partner also currently is a “Strategy Partner” at Torch Hill Investment Partners, whose for-profit investment portfolio includes stock in Zephyr Photonics, which “is a US-based…photonics company that is focused on providing solutions to the Department of Defense, aerospace, and intelligence markets” that “has developed its unique technology over 60 contracts from US Government agencies…and defense prime contractors,” according to the Torch Hill Investment Partners website.
Coincidentally, Draper Laboratory Chairman Miller’s 91-year-old Scowcroft Group business partner also currently is a “Strategy Partner” at Torch Hill Investment Partners, whose for-profit investment portfolio includes stock in Zephyr Photonics, which “is a US-based…photonics company that is focused on providing solutions to the Department of Defense, aerospace, and intelligence markets” that “has developed its unique technology over 60 contracts from US Government agencies…and defense prime contractors,” according to the Torch Hill Investment Partners website.
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