| 
			  
			
 PART II
 How the 
			Drug Empire Works
 
 
			
			Introduction
 
 The basis of this investigation
 
 In the following pages we will take the reader from the 
			opium-growing mountains of the Far East's Golden Triangle, to the 
			offices of opium wholesalers in the expatriate Chinese districts of 
			Bangkok, Rangoon, and Singapore; we will take him through the bonded 
			warehouses, shipping lines and air freight companies of old-line 
			British trading companies who control the Chinese expatriate 
			wholesalers; we will lead him through the maze of financial 
			channels that fund the Far East's opium trade, to the august portals 
			of Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation and other top British 
			banks who control the financing topdown; we will take him across the 
			Pacific to the ports of entry for heroin into the United States, to 
			the skyscraper offices of the Canadian banks and corporations who 
			finance, ship, and protect the heroin en route to the United States; 
			and, finally, we will guide the reader down the family trees of the 
			Canada-based Zionist financiers, to their contact-points in the 
			world of organized crime and heroin distribution. When this is done, 
			we will have reconstructed the Annual Report of Dope, Incorporated, 
			including balance sheet,
			board of directors, senior operating officers, table of organization, and subsidiaries.
 
 At the conclusion, the reader will know and understand more 
			about the personnel and operations of illegal drugs — the world's
			biggest business since the days of opium-pusher Adam Smith — 
			than the law enforcement authorities of the United States and 
			other countries knew until recently. In the files of these agencies,
			in the minds of solitary investigators, and, to a surprising extent,
			in the public record itself, the pieces of the puzzle have existed 
			for 
			years.
 
			  
			Fitting them together into a single picture is the task of
			this investigation. But the puzzle is not a jigsaw game, in which
			the picture is assembled by fitting the pieces together side-by-side. As a first approximation, it would be better for the reader to
			imagine a set of clear plastic overlays, each of which contains 
			part of the picture; laid one on top of the other, they complete the
			puzzle. 
 The different overlays of this puzzle are these:
 
				
					
					
					The detailed record assembled by American and other
			investigators of the mechanics of the opium trade from the Golden Triangle down to opium's ports of departure to the rest of the
			world; 
					
					Pinpointed identification of opium wholesalers, largely in 
					the Chinese expatriate community, including the names of 
					leading bankers; 
					
					A comprehensive profile of British finance in the Far East,
			revolving around the Hong Kong financial center and its leading 
			bank, the Hong Kong and Shanghai, including the web of British
			ties to the Chinese expatriate banking community throughout the 
			area; 
					
					An exhaustive grid of the British control over means of laundering dirty money in the hundreds of billions of dollars, including "offshore" banking, gold, and diamonds;
					
					
					A grid of the huge quantity of 
					public record material showing the integration of British Far East and dirty money financial]
			operations worldwide with the top level of British foreign policymaking, centered in the Royal Institute of International Affairs;
					
					
					The similar public record of 
					evidence of strategic agreement between Great Britain and the Maoist People's Republic of
			China, going back to negotiations between British opium-runners and 
					Mao Tse-tung, under the auspices of the Royal Institute of 
			International Affairs; 
					
					Twenty years of official 
					documentation — from American, Japanese, Taiwanese, and 
					Soviet sources — that the People's Re-public of China grows 
					and exports opium not only to earn foreign exchange, but to 
					fund secret intelligence operations, through Chinese expatriates;
					
					
					A comprehensive grid of the intimate links between all these 
			elements — British old-line opium-runners, British dirty money 
			operations, Chinese expatriate overseas operations, British-Chinese 
			policy agreement — with the "Canadian" connection to American 
			organized crime; 
					
					The international web of the British-centered "Zionist lobby," 
			and its special function in gold and diamond-related dirty money 
			operations, laundering of dirty money, financing of international 
			terrorism, and financial control of the Canada-U.S. drug channels;
					
					
					Lastly, a gridding that 
					demonstrates that the leading controllers of the opium war against the United States are not only 
			connected by interlocking directorates and other business ties but 
			by ties of "blood" that constitute this web under one family.
					 
			The resulting picture is comprehensive: the entire mass of detailed, documented evidence fits together into a single picture, 
			stretching from the present day back through the British origins of 
			the opium trade in the time of Adam Smith. 
 The Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank and related companies finance the 
			opium trade. In this, they are acting as designated agents of the 
			British monarchy, through the Royal Institute of International 
			Affairs. Not only do they control the expatriate Chinese legmen of 
			the opium trade, but they do so as part of an agreement negotiated 
			between Mao Tse-tung and the Royal Institute of International 
			Affairs, by the Hong Kong and Shanghai's leading representatives!
 
 The gold and diamonds side of the dirty money laundering operations, 
			under the immediate control of Britain's Zionist Hofjuden (Court 
			Jews), is part of the same machine. Through the highest circles of 
			British policy, all the important branches of the
			drug machine — the Chinese connection, the old-line British opium 
			traders, the dirty "offshore" banking sector, and the Zionist 
			Hofjuden — run Canada from the top.
 
 From there the trail leads directly into the American crime 
			syndicate, through the Hofjuden Bronfman family.
 
 The world illegal drug traffic is not only the world's biggest 
			swindle and subversive agency: it is controlled by a single group
			of evil men whose names and organizational affiliations are all 
			printed below, and whose intimate ties of ownership, family, and 
			political collaboration go back 200 years. We know their names 
			and addresses, and know how to mop them up.
 
			  
			
			Back to Contents 
			 
			  
			 
 Banking and the World's Biggest Business
 
 Assembled as one picture, the hard evidence available from the Drug 
			Enforcement Administration and other law enforcement bodies leaves 
			only one possible conclusion: The drug "industry" is run as a single 
			integrated world operation, from the opium poppy to the nickel bag 
			of heroin sold on an inner-city street corner. Not only is illegal 
			drug traffic under the control of a single world network, but 
			opiates traffic in particular is without doubt the best-controlled 
			production and distribution system of any commodity in international 
			trade, illegal or legal. De Beers' Central Selling Organization's 85 
			percent control of world diamond wholesaling — an example not 
			irrelevant to the drug trade — pales by comparison to the orderly 
			marketing arrangements for heroin demonstrated by the hardest 
			figures available.
 
 Investigators are daunted by the fact that the solution to the 
			problem is so damned obvious. Imagine Edgar Allan Poe's fictional 
			purloined letter, photographically enlarged to 8 by 20 feet, and 
			used as wallpaper; then, imagine the French police attempting to 
			find it with magnifying glasses.
 
 When we speak of the drug-related illegal economy — for drugs 
			are the pivot on which most other illegal activity turns — we are
			talking of a $200 billion per year business, the biggest business in
			the world. That is net, not gross, annual sales of drugs, plus 
			related illicit payments.
 
 How can such activity avoid sticking out wildly, especially in 
			areas of concentration such as the Far East? Because the British 
			monarchy organized most of the Far East to conform to the drug 
			traffic! How can $200 billion in illegal payments get through the
			international banking system past the eyes of law enforcement 
			authorities? The answer is: the Anglo-Dutch "offshore" banking 
			system. This and related precious metals and gems trade were 
			designed around illegal money in the first place!
 
 Mere consideration of the obvious — or what will quickly become obvious when the evidence of the public record is assembled below — gives the financial specialist the equivalent of an 
			inner-ear disorder. The financial world, remember, is one in which the stock market will do flips over a measly few hundred
			million dollars' difference in the weekly reported figures for the
			American money supply. Although most of the necessary evidence has long been available, both investigators and the public
			prefer to see world drug traffic and related illegal activity as a
			montage of movie villains: Far Eastern warlords, free-lance 
			smugglers, jowly gangsters, and corrupt politicians. Such individuals figure into the world drug traffic, but as the arms and
			legs of a top-down operation, under the immediate control of the 
			British and allied monarchies.
 
 The most striking single fact for this conclusion is that the price
			series for heroin at retail level in major American cities show virtually total uniformity. Law enforcement records show that,
			within the acceptable range of 3 to 6 percent purity at the street
			level, the price of heroin has been constant between widely disparate distribution points during the past ten years.
 
			  
			Arrests of
			local distribution chains, internecine warfare among drug-traffickers, interdiction of smuggling routes, the virtual elimination of the Turkish opium supply after 1972, the scouring of Asian
			and European transit points, and local changes in political and 
			growing conditions in the Golden Triangle growing area, all have 
			failed to have any effect on the single world heroin price! The few
			exceptions prove the rule, and consist mainly of sharp temporary 
			drops in some local retail prices, attributed to occasional 
			free-lance supply through returning Vietnam War veterans and the 
			like. (1) 
 
			
			Where does it go?
 
 Closely related to the striking uniformity of inner-city heroin 
			prices at retail level in the United States is the gigantic discrepancy between known levels of opium production for illegal purposes 
			and consumption by the world's addict population. Fairly reliable 
			statistical data are available for both. Within great margins of 
			fluctuation depending on weather, enforcement, and other conditions, 
			available supply exceeds demand by roughly a factor often.
 
 Approximately 700 tons annually are produced and transported out of 
			the world's largest opium-growing area, the Golden Triangle. (2) 
			Seven hundred tons of raw opium, in the form of balls of opium gum, 
			are the equivalent of about 70 tons of refined heroin. In practice 
			less than half this amount is refined into heroin; the remainder is 
			sold in the form of either opium or morphine base, largely for 
			smoking purposes, and largely to an addict population in the 
			orient itself. However, by all estimates of the American addict 
			population, approximately three tons per year of refined heroin are 
			more than sufficient to meet annual consumption "requirements." 
			About that much again is required to maintain all other heroin 
			addicts in the noncommunist advanced sector.
 
 DEA and other official sources affirm the cited production figures 
			through direct monitoring of opium shipments and other sophisticated 
			intelligence methods. Consumption and sales are obviously limited by 
			the possible size and financial resources of the addict population 
			in the advanced sector. To use a rough example: If the full 30,000 
			kilograms of annual Golden Triangle heroin production obtained the 
			full street price for heroin, the total retail value would be about 
			$150 billion. But most estimates of annual illegal purchases of 
			retail heroin are under $15 billion.
 
 In short, most of it is never sold, because production capacity is
			enormous relative to the market's absorption capacity. 
			What happens to the rest of the heroin? Only a small portion of 
			the total comes into the hands of law enforcement agencies, 
			whose capture of a few pounds of heroin is a matter for celebration. We still must account for tens of tons. The law enforcement records indicate that the drug is warehoused in huge stockpiles against contingencies and to prevent oversupply on the market.
 
			  
			For example, during the height of the crackdown on
			Southeast Asia heroin traffic in 1972 (immediately after U.S. 
			troops withdrew), a single refinery captured by Thai police had on hand a stockpile of 3,000 kilograms, roughly one-tenth of
			Southeast Asian production. At the time, 21 refineries were 
			known to be operational in the area. (3). 
 
			
			MARKET ANALYSIS
 
 The law enforcement record shows that Dope, Incorporated 
			does its best to avoid mishaps through careful research — on the 
			streets of American cities — which is transmitted back to the 
			poppy fields. Meo tribesmen in the Burmese or Yunnan Province
			mountains foothills do not plant what they feel like, but what they
			are told to plant. This facet of the production cycle is well known
			to law enforcement investigators. If for some reason the market 
			research is off, chaos will ensue, as it did in 1972, when the 
			Golden 
			Triangle yielded a bumper harvest, after wholesalers told poppy-growing peasants to increase their acreage by 50 to 100 percent.
 
 The wholesalers counted on the continuing exponential expansion 
			of heroin consumption among American soldiers in Vietnam. 
			Nixon pulled the rug out from under them by pulling the troops 
			out, leaving the world heroin market in an unprecedented state of
			oversupply.
 
 Reckless price-cutting and competition for sales outlets in this 
			case might have provoked serious consequences for Dope, 
			Incorporated were it not for "government regulatory intervention." The Thai government stepped in and sold 22 tons of opium
			to the United States. The opium was burned in a public ceremony
			attended by giggling Thai officials, thus restoring "equilibrium"
			to the market. (In any case, the Thais were only repeating the 
			action of the Imperial Chinese in 1839, who purchased and burned 
			more than 3,000 tons of opium to the great relief of oversupplied 
			British traders, who sent special fleets to India to bring 
			additional opium back to get the Imperial Government's attractive 
			price.)
 
 Once world illegal opiates traffic comes under scrutiny as an 
			integrated, centralized "monopoly," the discrepancy between the huge 
			oversupply and relatively restricted demand presents no further 
			difficulties. We are looking at an "industry" based on the same 
			principles as the world diamond cartel controlled by De Beers, or 
			the so-called "club" among leading pharmaceuticals manufacturers.
 
			  
			Diamond production capacity is so large relative to the absorption 
			capacity of the world market that De Beers' Central Selling 
			Organization, running 85 percent of world diamond wholesale trade, 
			limits availability in order to obtain essentially the price it 
			wants. Pharmaceuticals are, ironically, an even better example. 
			Since the knowledge to manufacture most of the commonly used 
			prescription drugs is widespread among the pharmaceuticals 
			companies, and since the costs of production are insignificant 
			compared to the retail prices of most drugs, elaborate legal 
			arrangements are necessary to prevent a price collapse.  
			  
			Notoriously, 
			the profits of the pharmaceuticals industry owe not to chemists but 
			to patent lawyers. 
 
			
			How big an industry?
 
 Heroin trade is the ideal commodity cartel; its price is more reliably controlled than that of crude oil, and its world volume of 
			sales, at roughly $25 billion for heroin alone and considerably more 
			for smoking-opium and other derivatives, is substantially higher 
			than that of most of the commodities UNCTAD is presently considering 
			for cartelization. A couple of comparisons are in order. At the 
			recent world gold price of $225 per troy ounce, annual 
			world gold mining production (outside the Soviet Union) yields less 
			than $7 billion. During 1977, after an unprecedented price run-up, 
			world diamond output was under $5 billion.
 
 Allowing for the relative ease with which a large dollar value of
			heroin may be transported — the drug is worth at street level 366 
			times its weight in gold (4) — the worth of the drug trade is still 
			boggling. It is even more boggling when the retail value in the 
			United States and other OECD countries of non-opiate illegal drugs 
			comes into the picture. For example, the Colombia marijuana crop 
			officially estimated for this year alone carries a retail value of 
			$40 billion. (5) Since marijuana smoking is so widespread in the 
			OECD countries, there probably exists a much larger market in 
			dollar terms than the relatively restricted market among heroin 
			addicts.
 
 Beyond such examples, no accurate data exist. The best that can be 
			stated is that the total world cash flow of illegal drug traffic 
			certainly exceeds $100 billion, and almost certainly does not exceed 
			$200 billion.
 
 The $100 to $200 billion figure includes heroin, opium, morphine, 
			marijuana, cocaine, so-called hallucinogens, and abuse of 
			otherwise-legal prescription drugs. It does not include the proceeds of other drug-related illegal activities, including gambling, 
			theft, prostitution, smuggling, arms traffic, and so forth. It is 
			almost meaningless to assign a total figure to the size of the 
			world's illegal economy. It can only be stated confidently that the 
			illegal economy, whose cornerstone is illegal drug traffic, exceeds 
			the gross national product of most of the OECD countries! That is an 
			extremely conservative projection of the hard data available.
 
 To put the matter another way: all international traffic in 
			controlled substances, including drugs, and also including means of 
			barter for drugs — gold, diamonds, armaments, and so forth — the 
			$200 billion international narcotics trade is bigger than the world 
			oil trade. "DOPEC" is bigger than OPEC. World trade volume is a mere 
			trillion dollars.
 
 
			
			Where does the money go?
 
 The question that emerges now is,
 
				
				"How is it possible that $200 
			billion and up in dirty money, crisscrossing international borders, can remain outside the control of the law?"
				 
			
			Again, only one 
			possible answer can be admitted: a huge chunk of international 
			banking and related financial operations have been created solely 
			to manage dirty money. More than that, this chunk of international 
			banking enjoys the sovereign protection of more than a few 
			governments. 
 These conclusions are obvious. If the entire resources of the largest private bank in the world, roughly $70 billion, had no other 
			use but the financing of illegal world drug traffic and related 
			illegal activity, those resources would be insufficient. If the 
			members of the New York Clearinghouse, the richest group of 
			commercial banks in the world, applied their entire $150 billion 
			lending volume to the illegal economy, the volume might just be 
			sufficient.
 
 In the following sections of this report, the Anglo-Dutch banking 
			operations that control illegal drug and related trade are 
			documented in detail. Below, we will demonstrate through several 
			chains of evidence that this is the only possible banking network 
			that could handle the requisite volume of illegal traffic.
 
			  
			
			The 
			Anglo-Dutch oligarchy's banking operations have the following 
			qualifications :  
				
					
					
					They have run the drug trade for a century and a half.
					
					
					They 
			dominate those banking centers closed off to law enforcement 
			agencies. 
					
					Almost all such "offshore," unregulated banking centers are under 
			the direct political control of the British and Dutch monarchies 
			and their allies. 
					
					They dominate all banking at the heart of the narcotics traffic; the 
					Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank, created in 1864 to finance the 
			drug trade, is exemplary.
					
					They control world trade in gold and diamonds, a necessary aspect 
			of "hard commodity" exchange for drugs. 
					
					They subsume — as documented below — the full array of 
			connections to organized crime, the prodrug legislative lobby in the 
			USA, and all other required elements of distribution, protection, 
			and legal support.  
			 THE OFFSHORE COVERUP
 
 Financial specialists, who have lived too long with the smell of the 
			West Indies backwaters to mind it any longer, will choke on 
			the above assertion. The general reader, by contrast, only needs to 
			know a few facts in order to realize that something is wrong. All 
			the offshore international banking operations — including the clean 
			side — are such a speculative whirlpool that virtually the entire 
			deposit base changes hands every week. Hundreds of billions of 
			dollars, including at least a hundred billion in the offshore 
			centers and further hundreds of billions elsewhere, circle the world 
			through teletyped bank transfers.
 
 No banking reserves are kept on any of this, as insurance against 
			sudden withdrawals; in the United States, by contrast, commercial 
			banks must hold 15 percent of their checking account balances and 4 
			percent of their savings balances on reserve. The "offshore" banks 
			just assume that if they are short of cash, they can borrow what 
			they need on the enormous "interbank" market. This mind-boggling 
			financial procedure involves banks lending funds to each other in 
			order to obtain fractional advantages in interest rates. Perhaps 40 
			percent of the total market is interbank money. Deposit maturities 
			are so short, and money transfers are so rapid, that $50 billion 
			changes hands every business day through the New York banks' 
			Clearinghouse system alone.
 
 The "offshore" banking markets are precisely what the name 
			implies: either Britain's old island colonies refurbished for international banking, or inland feudal relics like Andorra and 
			Liechtenstein. Federal bank regulators will only stare at their 
			shoes when asked what goes on in these places.
 
 In the Cayman Islands, one of the largest offshore centers, the 
			only government is the official "Tax Haven Commission." Law 
			enforcement officers have absolutely no way of getting hold of 
			bank records in such places. Repeatedly, they have identified the
			offshore centers as the place to look for dirty money. They have not 
			been able to, because virtually all the centers are under British political protection (see below).
 
 American banks do a land-office business in the offshore centers, precisely because no reserves are needed, and every dollar
			of deposits can be lent out for interest. Currently American banks
			have over $35 billion in loans booked through Caribbean offshore 
			islands, more than through their offices in London.
 
 Even clean banking operations have moved offshore because present 
			federal banking regulations virtually force them to. The 
			big movement offshore began under the Kennedy Administration, when 
			Anglophile Treasury officials C. Douglas Dillon and Robert V. Roosa 
			railroaded legislation through Congress that taxed loans made to 
			foreigners by American banks. The tax did not apply to loans made 
			offshore, so that is where the bankers went. By the time the 
			Dillon-Roosa legislation was lifted in 1974, the banks were "hooked" 
			through the difference in reserve requirements. In a recent 
			interview in Euromoney magazine, Citibank's chairman Walter Wriston 
			denounced the Dillon-Roosa taxes as a "pure gift to London." (6)
 
 According to the estimates of the 
			
			Bank of International Settlements, the total assets of so-called Group of Ten offshore banking 
			centers, the unregulated islands and enclaves where "bank inspector" 
			is a dirty word, amount to $94.349 billion, or close to $100 
			billion, as of February 1977.
 
			  
			
			The figures break down as follows:  
			 
			The above figures do not show the actual size of the offshore 
			banking centers, because they include only the assets of branches 
			domiciled in the largest ten industrial countries. They do not 
			include such entities as the three large banks in Thailand's 
			capital, Bangkok, which figure prominently in financing Golden 
			Triangle opium production. Nor do they include thousands of smaller, 
			"offshore" finance companies based only in the offshore centers 
			themselves.  
			  
			Expatriate Chinese banks in the Far East, which have 
			long been known to be a key point of contact with illegal drugs and 
			other contraband traffic in the Far East, also do not show up on 
			these tables; there is no available data on these institutions at 
			all. Furthermore, the above table does include a great deal of 
			legitimate banking business which American and other industrial-country banks bring to the "offshore" market for tax and 
			other reasons. However, the round figure of $100 billion is a useful 
			starting point. 
 Another set of figures is provided in the Bank of England's 
			quarterly report, although it contains the same unwanted additions and deletions, and is thus relevant; it shows the large volume of interchange between London, which in major respects functions 
			as the world's biggest "offshore" center, with the previously 
			mentioned outposts for illegal money.
 
			  
			Unfortunately the available 
			figures mix in both British banks' dealings and those of American 
			and other banks which have offices in London.  
			 
			 
 OWNED AND OPERATED BY LONDON
 
 More important than these numbers — which give a meager 
			understanding of the volume of business in the offshore centers and 
			mix in the legitimate business of American and other institutions — 
			is the political control of the unregulated banking centers, With 
			very few exceptions, offshore banking as a whole is under the thumb 
			of the Anglo-Dutch oligarchy.
 
 The British pre-eminence makes the world picture of offshore banking 
			and dirty money more comprehensible. If the world offshore banking 
			sector appears to run as a single operation under British monarchy 
			control, that is because the same group of people who run it also 
			run the opium traffic whose proceeds this banking sector was created 
			to handle.
 
 One index of British muscle is the following breakdown of the 
			offshore banking centers, comparing the number of banks in each 
			center directly attached to the Royal Institute of International 
			Affairs governing bodies with the number of other banks in each 
			center:
 
			 
			London and Switzerland are not normally considered offshore banking 
			centers, although in practice both centers function that way. 
			Although Switzerland has signed a treaty with the United States 
			permitting law enforcement officers to investigate and seize funds 
			relating to illegal narcotics traffic (resulting in one recent $250 
			million seizure), Swiss banks are still notorious depots for dirty 
			money.  
			  
			However, the Swiss side of the operation, typified by Lombard Odier and Edmond de Rothschild's Banque Privee in Geneva, and the 
			Zionist-controlled Baseler Handelsbank is more specialized. Their 
			most important activity is conduiting funds for international 
			terrorism. Most recently, European authorities traced the funding 
			of the 1978 Aldo Moro assassination through Swiss channels back to 
			Israel. 
 London is the largest center for Eurodollar banking under the 
			encouragement of the Bank of England, which permits the foreign 
			branches of U.S. and other banks to hold external accounts in London 
			without reserve requirements, and with minimal inspection. At last 
			count, international banks had $90 billion in assets in London. The 
			Bank of England can do as much or as little as it wants in the way 
			of regulation, under British law.
 
 For self-evident reasons, even the best-protected institutions of 
			the British oligarchy prefer to launder their dirty money through 
			Caribbean, Hong Kong, and similar branch operations, rather than in 
			London itself.
 
 Because the British suppliers of narcotics have ironclad control 
			over offshore bank operations, American organized crime marketers of 
			those narcotics have had a field day in the Cayman Islands and the 
			Bahamas. American drug enforcement authorities know that most of 
			the dirty money arising from the U.S. drug trade and related illegal 
			activities ends up in the Bahamas. There has been, unfortunately, 
			little public heat against the British officials who control the 
			operations.
 
 This level of control reaches the flagrant. For example, the chief 
			of all banking regulation and licensing in the Cayman Islands, a close third behind Hong Kong and Macao in the big 
			league of dirty money, is one Mr. Benbow. Mr. Benbow is a retired official of Britain's National Westminster Bank, which 
			shares two directors, J.A.F. Binny and R.J. Dent, with the 
			Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank.
 
			  
			Benbow got his present job at the 
			recommendation of the British-influenced International Monetary 
			Fund, according to a source at the IMF's Exchange and Stabilization 
			division. Direct British "hands-on" management of the Caribbean 
			offshore operation dates back to the 1940s, when
			E.D. Sassoon, Ltd. of Hong Kong — which had made its fortune from 
			the opium trade over the preceding century — picked up, moved, and 
			became E.D. Sassoon, Ltd. of the Bahamas. 
 Virtually the only one of the offshore centers not under official 
			British control is Panama; not coincidentally, Panama is the only 
			offshore center where American banks strongly outnumber British 
			banks. That is not to say that Panama is clean; on the contrary, 
			most of the funds derived from the Colombian trade in marijuana and 
			cocaine are laundered through Panama, through the three large 
			Colombian banks resident there. However, American banks have a 
			measure of maneuvering room that they do not have in the Cayman 
			Islands or the Bahamas, under the snooping eyes of the British 
			authorities.
 
 West German banking sources believe that the British banks behind 
			Drugs, Incorporated want to move in on Panama and close the gap. The 
			West German sources identify a special feature of the drug-ridden 
			Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank's proposed takeover of a controlling 
			share in New York's $20 billion Marine Midland Bank: Marine Midland 
			is the transactions agent for the central bank of Panama. All of the 
			national accounts clear through Marine Midland. Should the Hong Kong 
			and Shanghai succeed in acquiring the American bank, it would 
			exercise a decisive margin of control over the Panama offshore 
			market, and bring British control over the offshore centers full 
			circle.
 
 Longstanding ties between Marine Midland and Panama were reflected 
			in the fact that a former board member of Marine Midland Bank, 
			Coudert Brothers lawyer Sol Linowitz, negotiated
			the Carter Administration's recent treaty concerning the 
			Panama Canal.
 
 
			  
			FAR EAST CHOKEPOINT 
 The next sections will concentrate on the Far East offshore banking 
			connection to the drug traffic as a model for the world operation, 
			and follow the trail back to the controlling centers in London. 
			British control over the world dirty money operation is no secret, 
			and the British-Canadian-Caribbean connection to organized 
			crime in the United States is so thoroughly documented that no doubt 
			need remain.
 
 However, it is the Far East that acts as a chokepoint for dirty 
			money, in such volume that it dwarfs legitimate economic activity in 
			the region, and in the British Crown Colony of Hong Kong in 
			particular.
 
 London has seduced and jostled American banking operations into the 
			Caribbean to such an extent that there is a vast amount of 
			legitimate money mixed in with the proceeds of the drug traffic. 
			However, Hong Kong was set up by the British, literally from bare 
			rock, as a center for the drug trade, and remains to this day purely 
			British, and purely a center for the drug trade. In the Far Eastern 
			example we can "prove" that Britain (and its Peking allies) run 
			every phase of international drug traffic.
 
 
			
			The laundering cycle
 
 The Drug Enforcement Administration and other law enforcement 
			organizations know how the cycle of dirty money in the United States 
			works. The $50 billion retail proceeds of the total drug traffic in 
			the United States are partly recycled into the drug operation in the 
			United States itself, with large "off-take" by each level of the 
			crime machine. The net profits, in cash, are laundered through 
			hotels, restaurants, gambling casinos, and sports events — the 
			"corporate profile" of the Max Jacobs family and other foot-soldiers 
			of the British drug machine.
 
 After the cash is laundered through these nominally legitimate 
			channels, it is transferred to offshore banking operations or their
			equivalent. Then, according to Drug Enforcement Administration 
			officials, the funds take several trips around the world over the
			telex machines of offshore banks, passing through at least a half
 dozen, and usually more, different bank accounts and corporate 
			fronts, from the Caymans to Liechtenstein, from Liechtenstein to 
			the Bahamas, from the Bahamas to a "nonresident corporation" in 
			Canada, from Canada to Panama, and so forth.
 
 At various points in the process, the funds will purchase diamonds, gold, paintings, or similar portable valuables. At a further 
			point, the valuables will be translated back into cash, eliminating 
			even the trace of a bank transfer. For this reason, the use of 
			undercover agents, in place even at fairly high levels in known 
			branches of narcotics trafficking, has a poor record of detecting 
			either the source or ultimate destination of narcotics-related 
			funds.
 
 Once laundered, the proceeds of the drug traffic and related illegal activities divide into three channels.
 
				
				
				First, between 10 and 
			20 percent of the total is recycled back to the opium wholesalers in 
			the Far East and the marijuana wholesalers in the Caribbean and 
			Latin America, constituting the net profits of the wholesale drug 
			trade. 
				
				A second part is invested in expansion of offshore 
			operations, particularly gambling casinos, resorts, and other 
			profitable operations that are also useful for further laundering of 
			dirty money. 
				
				The remainder is reinvested in the United States in 
			"legitimate" racing, gambling, hotels, restaurants, and other 
			business appropriate for cash-laundering and further expansion of 
			the domestic drug traffic.  
			 As noted, Hong Kong and related Far East operations are the 
			chokepoint in the entire traffic, where dirty money is a way of 
			life. We will focus on the Far East, the point of origin of world
			heroin traffic, and work backwards through the maze of Dope, 
			Incorporated fronts and subsidiaries, to arrive at the British-controlled syndicates in the United States. 
 
			
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 From Opium to Dirty Money
 
 The starting point for the drug cash flow is the cash size of the 
			opium and heroin traffic in the Far East itself, before the drugs 
			obtain the stupendous price markups available in Western markets.
 
			  
			 The price pyramid is known to be the following:  
				
				
				Raw opium, the gum of syrup extracted from opium poppies, is 
			produced in the Golden Triangle, the conjunction of the southern 
			border of the People's Republic of China (Yunnan province), and the 
			northern borders of Thailand, Burma, and Laos. The mountainous 
			terrain, largely above 4,000 feet in elevation, provides ideal 
			growing conditions. Mountain peoples, rather than ethnic Chinese 
			(including those in Yunnan province), grow the opium and collect the 
			gum. The merchant purchasing the gum pays roughly $100 a pound, (1) 
			at collection points such as Lashio or Misai in Burma.     
				
				By the time the merchant, typically a Yunnanese, has brought the gum 
			by mule train to the triborder area, e.g. Tachilek or Chiengrai in 
			Thailand, the price has doubled, to $200
			a pound. (2) At this point the opium is either refined into heroin 
			at refineries located in the triborder area itself, or earmarked for 
			the large Far Eastern market for smoking opium and related 
			derivatives. 
 Existing data permit the estimate that a division of an average 
			700-ton crop into 300 tons for heroin refining and 400 tons for 
			opium shipment for Far Eastern smoking purposes is usual. (3)
 
 The $200 pound price at the triborder area is the price paid to the 
			local agent by a wholesaler based either in Bangkok, Rangoon, or 
			Hong Kong. Any distinction among these cities is meaningless. The 
			business structure of the area is under the control of two principal 
			groups that straddle the Far East. The first is the old British 
			banks and trading companies, including the HongShang, Jardine 
			Matheson, Charterhouse Japhet, Swire's, and the Peninsular & Orient 
			Lines. The second, their satellites, is the overseas Chinese 
			networks, under the joint control of London and Peking.
 
 The wholesale value of the 700 tons of annual opium product in the 
			Golden Triangle, prepaid in the triborder area, is roughly $280 
			million. The $280 million figure, compared with the Gross National 
			Product of Thailand, is considerable; it is like $35 billion in 
			terms of the American GNP.
 
 
				
				But this wholesale figure is only a small portion of the cash 
			flow of the Far East drug traffic. The next wholesaler, the Bangkok 
			merchant who buys from the first wholesaler, pays about $1 billion 
			for the equivalent of 700 tons of opium in the form of either raw 
			opium or refined heroin. This is roughly four times what the opium 
			was worth at the first wholesale round. The majority of production 
			is retailed locally at large markups (although the markups are much 
			smaller than in the case of heroin retailed in Western countries).
				
 While no hard estimates are possible, the cash flow in the Far East 
			related to this first phase of opium production alone could not be 
			less than $1 billion. That by itself is 15 percent of the estimated 
			assets of foreign banks in Hong Kong, or 10 percent of estimated 
			bank assets of foreign banks in Singapore, or precisely Thailand's 
			1977 balance of trade deficit!
 
 Measured against the size of economic activity in the regions, there 
			is no possible way to chalk these numbers up in the "Errors and 
			Omissions" column. The cash must go through nominally legitimate 
			channels, in such volume that the nominally legitimate channels — 
			like the HongShang — cannot possibly be unwitting as to the origin.
 
 Even these numbers do not sufficiently reflect the scale of the cash 
			flow derived from crude opium sales alone. It must be added that 
			most of this cash flow is seasonal; virtually all wholesaling must 
			be completed during the two months following the March poppy 
			harvest. Correspondingly, the visible flow of drug-related funds is 
			several times as large during those two months.
 
 
				
				Finally, the wholesale and local retail cash figures presented 
			above exclude what is possibly the largest component of Far Eastern 
			narcotics money: the reflow of funds back to the Far East from sales 
			made in the West. The narcotics wholesaler in Bangkok or Rangoon or 
			Hong Kong with direct contacts with the growers and control of 
			refineries has paid about $2,000 a pound for the refined heroin. 
			Between him and the street corner, the same pound of heroin will 
			undergo three markups of 1,000 percent. Its ultimate retail value 
			(for pure heroin) will be close to $5,000,000 per kilogram, 
			according to official DEA figures, or $2.27 million a pound, with a 
			total of $25 billion for Western sales. 
 What portion of this markup, and, in what quantity, accrues to the 
			Far East wholesaler?
 
				  
				There is no possible way to estimate this. 
			According to the record of arrests of heroin smuggling, a 
			substantial portion of such smuggling is conducted directly through 
			expatriate Chinese channels, like the Hong Kong-to-Vancouver route, 
			(4) and the notorious activities of the China Sailors' Union of Hong 
			Kong.    
				However, it is this markup that pays the wholesaler's 
			out-of-pocket costs, including the original purchase from the 
			highlands merchant, the refining, the huge quantity (perhaps 300 
			tons annually) of acetic anhydride used in heroin refining, 
			security, bribes, transportation, warehousing, and so forth. 
				 
				GOLDEN
 TRIANGLE
 
  Figure 1
 
 
				If the annual profit of the Golden Triangle operators is in the 
			range of $5 billion — or a mere one fifth of the annual retail sales
			of heroin in the West — then the total cash flow in the Far East 
			related to drugs is not $1 billion, as above, but $6 billion. The 
			actual reflow is probably several times that sum. Some of the $5 
			billion may be banked elsewhere than in the Far East.    
				The 
			comparisons to the size of the region's economic activity become all 
			the more grotesque: Thailand's 1976 total exports were only $2 
			billion. Even the $6 billion figure does not include the huge Far 
			Eastern market for opium and heroin consumption. Added in, the 
			retail volume brings the total close to $10 billion — twice Hong 
			Kong's money supply. 
 There is another way to arrive at the same $10 billion figure: the 
			official estimate for bribes paid annually to Hong Kong police is an 
			astonishing $1 billion, more than the annual police budget. From a 
			hard business standpoint, that $1 billion in payoffs is a major part 
			of the overhead cost of both wholesale and retail drug operations in 
			Hong Kong, the area's drug capital. Since the known profit margin in 
			the drug trade is 500 to 1,000 percent, it is fair to state that the 
			$1 billion bribe figure is no more than 10 percent of local drug 
			revenues. If $1 billion is 10 percent of the total, the total is $10 
			billion.
 
			 
			Back to Contents 
			 
			  
			  
			
			How the Drug Trade is Financed
 
 The chain of financial control of world opium traffic begins in Hong 
			Kong, with billions of dollars in Hong Kong dollar loans to 
			expatriate Chinese operators in the drug-growing regions. These
 
 expatriates include two of Bangkok's best-known bankers, 
			according to American law enforcement files. 
			Hong Kong also provides essential logistical support, 
			including:
 
				
					
					1) Smuggler-sized gold bars, obtainable through 
					Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank subsidiaries2) Diamonds, 
					available through Hong Kong's Anglo-Israeli controlled 
					diamond monopoly
 3) Warehousing facilities, dominated by a subsidiary of the 
					Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank
 
 
			 The Hong Shang 
 Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank is the semi-official central bank for the 
			Crown Colony, regulating general market conditions,
			holding excess deposits of the myriad smaller banks, providing 
			rediscount facilities, and so forth. Clearly, the Hong Kong and 
			Shanghai Bank is also the financial hydra unifying the production, 
			transportation, and distribution of Asia's opium.
 
 Not only does it dominate financial activity in Hong Kong, with 50 
			percent of total banking business on the island, but "bank and 
			government often work closely together," (1) the London Financial 
			Times comments. The Colonial government in Hong Kong makes virtually 
			no statistics on banking activity available.
 
			  
			 Commenting on the $8.3 
			billion figure for Group of Ten bank operations in Hong Kong, the 
			Financial Times notes that,  
				
				"The official figures are also just the 
			tip of an almost certainly greater volume of business, which is 
			conducted by international banks with finance company subsidiaries 
			in Hong Kong, or organized from Hong Kong but routed through 
			entirely offshore accounts in such places as Vila (New Hebrides)." 
			(2)  
			 To be precise, there are 213 deposit-taking finance companies in 
			the Colony, as well as 34 local banks and 104 bank representative 
			offices. Over these squats the Hong Shang. 
 
			 
			The Chinese middleman
 
 The essence of the bank's drug control is its intimate relationship 
			to scores of expatriate Chinese banking families scattered 
			throughout the Far East. The British and Dutch connection to these 
			families dates back to the first East India Company penetration of 
			the region. The central banking role of the HongShang expresses an 
			agreement that grew out of a century of official opium trade and 
			continues through the present.
 
 First, consider the financial and logistical requirements of the 
			trade. Planning for the March opium harvest begins in September. The Bangkok or Hong Kong drug wholesaler must estimate
			the size of his market during the next summer, and, after market 
			research is completed, inform his agents in the triborder area.
			(That market research must come from the United States and other 
			retailers.)
 
			  
			 They, in turn, will communicate to the 
			Yunnanese and other merchants who operate in the poppy-growing high-lands to the north what the market will bear for the next harvest. 
			The merchants then inform the Meo peasants what acreage they may 
			plant. 
 At this point, the wholesaler must consider the following. First, 
			the physical means of payment must be obtained, including American 
			or Soviet armaments, gold in appropriate small-bar or jewelry form, 
			or whatever, and this to the tune of $140 million worth. Golden 
			Triangle peasants can't use American dollars. Thousands of mules and 
			muleteers must be made ready for the treks into the highlands. 
			Bribes must be paid, routes monitored, border conditions observed, 
			smuggling routes secured, contacts opened in the West, and other 
			loose ends secured. The required seed money is in the range of the 
			wholesaler's $2,000 a pound price for refined heroin. (3)
 
 What portion of the investment is made through "internal resources" of the drug wholesalers, and what portion borrowed, is a 
			matter of guesswork. It is known that a very large amount is 
			borrowed seasonally to finance drug wholesaling, largely from 
			expatriate Ch'ao Chou Chinese banking networks. Since the Ch'ao Chou 
			category includes Thailand's most prestigious bankers, who are known 
			to engage in financing drug traffic, very considerable financial 
			resources are at the traffic's disposal. It is a matter of a 200 
			percent annual rate of interest — agreed and no questions asked.
 
 Known "angels" of the narcotics trade include Chen Pi Chen, 
			a.k.a. Chin Sophonpanich, Chairman of the Board of the Bangkok Bank, 
			with $5 billion in assets; and Udane Tejapaibul, former Chairman of 
			the Board of the Bangkok Metropolitan Bank, with $2.4 billion in 
			assets. Significantly, Sophonpanich, whose name is a Thai pseudonym, 
			is a Ch'ao Chou Chinese expatriate. (4)
 
 Such scandalous relationships are not much of a surprise in the 
			region. At the time of the 1973 Thai coup, the premier's son and 
			chief of the narcotics bureau, Narong Kittikachorn, was found to be 
			a prominent investor in drug wholesaling.
 
 The annual credit line that must be extended to drug wholesalers, 
			assuming they finance half their operations through credit, probably 
			comes to about $150 million. Through pure chance, that is the 
			average annual growth of the Bangkok Bank's "Loans and
			Advances" during each of the last ten years. Of course, Chin 
			Sophonpanich competes with many of his Ch'ao Chou colleagues for 
			this lucrative business.
 
 
			 
			THE CH'AO CHOU
 
 Wherever the Ch'ao Chou expatriate banking community has surfaced in 
			leading positions of influence, Peking, British, and opium trade 
			connections are evident. In 1958, the Thai authorities issued a 
			fraud warrant against Bangkok Bank's Sophonpanich. He fled to Peking 
			and remained there until 1965, after which he returned, a deal with 
			the Thai military in hand. According to area sources, Sophonpanich 
			still maintains close contact with the Peking regime.
 
 As one among several Bangkok financiers who finance the drug 
			wholesalers in the volume of $100-200 million per year, Sophonpanich's contacts include several names that have frequently
			appeared on the "Opium Watch List" of American law enforcement agencies: Ying Tsu-li, General Lo, and the brothers
			Hutien-Hsiang and Hutien-Fa, leading refiners of heroin in the
			triborder area.
 
 In addition, area sources report that Sophonpanich has direct
			links to the so-called Triads, the expatriate Chinese secret societies that do most of the legwork in the opium traffic (see Part I).
			Yet, Sophonpanich is actually nothing more than a subcontractor of the 
			Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank, as we now demonstrate.
 
 
			 
			The HongShang-Chinese deal
 
 Bangkok Bank illustrates the way the chain of financing leads back 
			to the HongShang. Its current asset volume is $5 billion, much 
			larger than the savings capacity of the area could justify. Banking 
			sources report that most of its credit-generating capacity comes 
			from rediscounting of the trade paper of the Singapore and Hong 
			Kong financial markets, and mostly with the HongShang itself. Since 
			the HongShang controls 50 percent of Hong Kong deposits and acts as 
			the ultimate rediscount agency
			for the entire colony and much of the rest of Southeast Asia, the 
			dependency of the Bangkok Bank and other Thai banks on the HongShang 
			is virtually total. Most of the Bangkok Bank's lending volume is 
			subcontracted business, controlled by the HongShang.
 
 The British-Chinese expatriate link goes back as long as the British 
			have been in the Far East. The British organized the systematic 
			colonization of tens of thousands of Chinese expatriates 
			throughout the area, and started them out in the lower levels of the 
			business otherwise conducted by the East India companies and their 
			successors. (5)
 
 Even where Britain displaced early overseas Chinese financial 
			interests from positions they had enjoyed in the precolonial period, they left them in local control or in a junior status in such 
			ureas as opium trading, and often virtually restricted them to those 
			areas. As W.J. Cator notes in his book The Economic Position of the 
			Chinese in the Netherlands Indies (6) and Purcell notes in 
			The 
			Chinese in Malaya, (7) Chinese monopolies of opium and alcohol local 
			distribution continued in many Southeast Asian colonies, under the 
			aegis of the colonial authorities, into the first decades of the 
			20th century.
 
 Colonial powers divested Chinese merchants of control of many 
			trading monopolies granted by the precolonial local authorities, hut 
			left them in control of gambling and local drug and alcohol 
			distribution because Chinese secret societies were uniquely equipped 
			to handle them. The secret societies, representing branches of 
			societies operating in southern China, theoretically pursued the aim 
			of their founding — the overthrow of the Manchu Ch'ing Dynasty in 
			Peking.
 
			  
			 But as time wore on and the regime remained in power, the 
			societies abroad became less interested in the politics of their 
			homeland and more the instruments of overseas economic interests. As 
			anthropologist William Skinner notes in his book Chinese Society in 
			Thailand, An Analytical History, (8) the immigrant societies 
			were usually headed by influential monopoly owners — opium traders, 
			keepers of gambling and prostitution houses — who generally used the 
			societies to further the interests of their monopolies. 
 In other economic sectors besides opium, it is common knowledge that 
			overseas Chinese business interests were often 
			employed as compradors, middlemen in the service of colonial banking 
			and trading operations, indispensable due to their knowledge of the 
			local market and their language abilities. The close economic 
			relationships that certain segments of the Chinese business 
			community enjoy with particular British banking interests date from 
			that experience. At every point in the postwar political history of 
			the region, the Chinese expatriate financiers have acted as 
			consistent allies of the British and Dutch.
 
			  
			 According to standard estimates, 
			Chinese expatriate financiers currently control 60 to 
			80 percent of the economies of Indonesia, Thailand, and Malaysia.
			
 
			 
			REGIONAL CONTROL
 
 What the size of expatriate dependency on the Hong Kong market is 
			can only be guessed. However, the existing financial data show that 
			the Hong Kong financial market is enormously oriented to foreign 
			lending, in roughly the same proportion as the American banking 
			system. One-third of all Hong Kong-dollar denominated loans — 
			excluding the so-called Asia-dollar market
			— are to foreign borrowers. Foreign lending stood at HK $18.47 
			billion in March 1978, against $39 billion in local loans. (There 
			are about 4.6 Hong Kong dollars to one U.S. dollar.) (9)
 
 Since the borrowers' market for Hong Kong, rather than American, 
			dollars is limited to the areas of the Far East still under British 
			financial sway, the HK $18.47 billion figure of overseas loans 
			reflects the immense financial dependency of Burma, Thailand, and 
			Malaysia on Hong Kong. The business is largely conducted through 
			Chinese expatriate family ties. Most of Hong Kong's 250 locally 
			registered finance companies, in fact, are owned by Chinese 
			expatriates.
 
 The scale of expatriate Chinese operations, centered in Hong Kong 
			and dependent on the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank, is gigantic; the 
			overseas Chinese community controls 42 percent of the foreign trade 
			of the Southeast Asian countries, compared to 32 percent of Western 
			business, 18 percent of non-Chinese local firms, and only 8 percent 
			of state-controlled trading companies. (10)
 
			  
			 As of the most recent 
			figures available, Chinese expatriate investments in the area 
			totaled only slightly less than 
			combined American, Western European, and Japanese investments 
			(although recent Japanese expansion in the area may have shifted the 
			proportion somewhat).  
			 
			 The Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank, self-described as "a monument to 
			British finance in Asia," is in full control of the Hong Kong money 
			market (1), on which such Chinese expatriate institutions (2) as the 
			Bank of Bangkok absolutely depend for rediscounting loans, etc. 
			Opium smugglers and wholesalers (3) in turn depend on the expatriate 
			banks to finance their barter-purchase, refining and transport of 
			opium and heroin from the "Golden Triangle" peasants of Southeast 
			Asia and China's Yunnan Province (4).  
			  
			 From seed-money to 
			dirty-money, the proceeds of the drug trade start and finish with 
			the HongShang (a.k.a. Hong Kong & Shangai Bank).  
			 
			 The above figures only give a partial picture of overseas 
			Chinese financier dominance of Southeast Asian economies, 
			because the expatriate Chinese bourgeoisie is overwhelmingly in such 
			strategic sectors as banking, insurance, shipping, warehousing, and other intermediary activities, rather than manufacturing or agriculture. 
 According to one of Stanford University's classic China studies, 
			Thompson and Adloff's Minority Problems in Southeast Asia,
			"Foreign-exchange and other controls (imposed by national 
			governments in the area — ed.) have transformed many of the 
			Chinese into smugglers and black marketeers, and such operations have increased both their wealth and their unpopularity.
 
 Attempts to control the Chinese have almost everywhere run into 
			the bewildering maze of overlapping Chinese organizations 
			which exists in every country of the area, and they have been 
			frustrated by Chinese evasion, ability, and indispensability." (11)
 
 The activities of the corrupted section of the expatriate Chinese
			community in Southeast Asia have provoked a long series of 
			clashes with national authorities — who have not generally been 
			successful in limiting illegal traffic. The one exception is the 
			British possession of Hong Kong, the center of illegal operations in the 
			area, where the smugglers are members of Hong Kong's high society, 
			e.g., Macao gambling overlord Stanley Ho, who made his career 
			smuggling strategic materials from Hong Kong to China via Macao 
			during the Korean War.
 
 Back to Contents
 
			 
			  
			  
			  
			Britain's Gold and Dirty Diamond Operations 
 One feature of the financing chain of the Far Eastern drug 
			traffic—the Asian gold market—is a tipoff of the British (and especially 
			Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank) control over the entire process. 
			It might seem strange to the general reader, but the gold connection 
			was one of a handful of critical clues that led investigators up the 
			whole chain of evidence that will eventually put the management of 
			the HongShang and a few other long-established institutions behind 
			bars.
 
 Vast quantities of gold are absorbed into the Asian drug trade—an 
			inestimable percentage of the 400 to 600 tons of the metal that pass 
			through the orient in a year, mainly through Hong Kong, and mainly 
			through subsidiaries of the HongShang. The trade could not run 
			without it and other precious, portable, untraceable substances—like 
			diamonds.
 
 First of all, peasants of the Golden Triangle poppy fields do not 
			appreciate secret accounts in the Bahamas. Furthermore, since the 
			end of the Vietnam War, and the end of the widespread traffic in 
			contraband and American arms and American dollars, the 
			U.S. dollar in the form of currency is no longer an acceptable 
			medium of exchange. They must be paid in food—which they do not 
			produce themselves—goods, and gold or the equivalent.
 
 Secondly, the People's Republic of China's share of Golden Triangle production is paid almost entirely in gold, shipped in bulk 
			across the Burmese border. (1) PRC gold income on opium production 
			probably absorbs around one-seventh of all gold traded in the orient 
			(judging from data analyzed more closely in Section 6, The Peking 
			Connection). There could be some double counting here, since Peking 
			also sells gold on the Hong Kong market.
 
 Third, and possibly most important, gold cannot be traced, although 
			any bank transfer ultimately can. One bar of gold looks like any 
			other; changing a bank balance into gold or diamonds, and then 
			changing it back into a bank balance, is like crossing a river to 
			avoid bloodhounds.
 
 Gold is so important to the entire business that the metal's price 
			is pegged to the price of raw opium in the Golden Triangle 
			highlands. The dollar's fall in terms of the gold price from $35 an 
			ounce before 1971 to about $225 recently has also dramatically 
			escalated opium wholesale prices. The escalation of the gold price 
			over the past year has been so steady that all the numbers regarding 
			the size of the opium trade may already be gross underestimates.
 
			  
			 One 
			indication of the closeness of the gold-opium relationship is the 
			well-known story that the CIA fieldmen in northern Laos carried both 
			gold and opium, to use as means of payment to the local Me'o 
			population in case of need. 
 
			 
			How illegal gold travels
 
 The American public will be shocked at how openly the Hong Kong and 
			Shanghai Bank uses its monopoly in the Far Eastern gold trade to 
			feed smuggling operations. Prior to the official opening of the Hong 
			Kong gold market in 1974, HongShang openly financed the gold markets 
			of Macao, the flagrantly crime-ridden island that plays "offshore" 
			to Hong Kong's own "offshore" operations. Today the Hong Kong market 
			is run topdown by Sharps Pixley Wardley, a 51-percent owned 
			subsidiary of the HongShang. The Hong Kong market's current daily 
			trading
			volume is in the hundreds of millions of dollars, on a par with 
			London and Zurich.
 
 Apart from Hong Kong, the other route for smuggled gold to the 
			Far East is through the Persian Gulf sheikdom of Dubai. The dominant 
			commercial and gold market force in Dubai is the British Bank of the Middle East, a 100 percent subsidiary of the 
			Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank.
			A 1972 description from one of Britain's best-known experts, 
			Timothy Green of Consolidated Gold Fields, Ltd., (2) is instructive on how the illegal flow of gold travels:
 
				
				"It may indeed sound romantic, but it is a fact that both in 1970
			and 1971 at least 500 tons of gold—that is to say half of all South
			Africa's production, or 40 percent of total gold production in the
			non-communist world—passed through unofficial channels on the 
			way to its ultimate destination."  
			 "Unofficial" channels, as the author proceeds to make clear, 
			means illegal channels. Most of the world's existing gold is held
			by central banks; prior to 1971, gold was the basis of central bank
			reserves. With the advent of the new European Monetary System, gold is again becoming an official monetary reserve. Gold 
			dealings among banks, industrial users such as jewelers, and so 
			forth, are also counted as "official" channels. 
 Apart from the drug traffic and related money-laundering 
			uses, gold smuggling has played a major role in aggravating the 
			payments deficits of Third World countries such as India, where 
			large numbers of private citizens hold gold. However, the Indian 
			government in 1977 opened up direct sales to the Indian population. This largely eliminated India as a haven for gold smuggling
			by making gold available through official channels. Despite this,
			judging from the activity of the Hong Kong market, the proportion of gold running into illegal channels has, if anything,
			increased, and the drug-related proportion of the illegal gold 
			increased as well.
 
 "UNOFFICIAL" MEANS ILLEGAL Green continues:
 
				
				"... these unofficial 
			channels usually start in gold markets such as Beirut (since defunct 
			— ed.), Dubai, Vientiane, Hong Kong and Singapore which I am 
			discussing
			today. Their chief role — their raison d'etre — is as distribution 
			centers for the smuggling; they are entrepots convenient to nations, 
			which for a variety of reasons, forbid the official import of gold 
			for commercial or hoarding uses .... 
 "Dubai has become the largest gold market in the world, except for 
			London and Zurich — no mean achievement for a shiekhdom with a 
			population of around 60,000. Both in 1970 and 1971 Dubai had well 
			over 200 tons of gold — indeed in 1970 the equivalent of a quarter 
			of all South African production found its way along this golden 
			pipeline to India and Pakistan (and further East. Since the 
			beginning of official gold sales by the Indian government, and the 
			reopening of the Hong Kong gold market, Dubai's importance has 
			attenuated somewhat — ed.) . . .
 
 "By contrast to Dubai, a 
				gold market that developed very quickly to meet a special short 
				term need was Vientiane in Laos. The market there really grew 
				with the escalation of the war in South Vietnam. And it grew 
				because it was the nearest and cheapest source of 
			gold. . . . This gold which was bought as a hedge against the 
			constant devaluations of the Vietnamese currency and to hide the 
			vast black market profits made from pilfered American arms and 
			equipment, was paid for almost entirely in cash. (Throughout the 
			1960s and 1970s, pilfered American arms and equipment formed a major 
			part of the barter goods exchanged for opium in the Golden Triangle 
			highlands — ed.).
 
 "Vientiane's short success made some impact on the oldest gold 
			market in the Far East — Hong Kong, or more correctly Hong 
			Kong-Macao, for the two are held together as it were by a golden 
			chain. Hong Kong, as a British Crown Colony, forbids the private 
			holding of gold bullion; only commercial gold of less than 945 
			purity may be traded. To get around this regulation, gold bullion 
			has for more than twenty-five years made a curious sideways shuffle 
			from Hong Kong to Macao and back again. The gold bullion — in 995 
			good delivery bars — that comes into Hong Kong by air from Europe 
			and Australia ... is transferred in Macao, where it is melted down 
			into Chinese 1.5 and 10 tael bars. It then returns, stealthily, to 
			Hong Kong. This traffic has been presided over for may years by the 
			Wong Hong Hon Company which negotiated a series of two-year 
			contracts with the Portuguese authorities in Macao for exclusive rights for the gold traffic. The traffic 
			was financed by the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank," (emphasis added)
 
			 That is, in the testimony of Britain's leading gold expert, the 
			HongShang financed illegal gold trade in Hong Kong itself, prior to 
			the reopening of the Hong Kong gold market, after which the 
			HongShang subsidiary Sharps Pixley Wardley took over the legal 
			trade. 
 
			 
			AN UNDERESTIMATION
 
 Digging into the back archives, it is clear that Consolidated 
			Gold Fields' 40 percent figure for smuggled gold in 1972 represents, if anything, a moderation of past trends. Earlier figures
			are much higher. For example, British author Paul Ferris in The 
			City (3) claimed that in 1951 only 17 percent of all world gold production went through official channels; Ferris's report was
			based on interviews with the London gold pool. "What happens 
			to the gold when it disappears into the economic undergrowth of 
			the East is of no concern to the London bullion dealers," Ferris 
			claimed, but as we will demonstrate, the London bullion dealers 
			know precisely what happens to the gold in the Far East. The 
			London bullion market is merely a subsidiary of Dope, 
			Incorporated.
 
 In the July 22, 1952 issue of The Reporter, an article under the 
			byline of H.R. Reinhart, the then Far East correspondent of the
			Neue Zuercher Zeitung, estimated Asian gold smuggling at $150
			million in that year. At today's gold prices, the figure would be $1
			billion for the same quantity of gold. The account bears impressive credentials, since 1) the Reporter editor at the time was Harlan Cleveland, now a senior official of the Aspen Institute, and
			part of the present drug machine in the U.S.; and 2) the Neue
			Zuercher Zeitung, Switzerland's top daily paper, is linked
			through European aristocratic ties directly to the British 
			monarchy. (4)
 
 Reinhart identified a "Golden Loop, the circuitous path that 
			leads from North Africa to the coast of Red China and back again 
			as far west as India." The center of gold smuggling was the 
			Portuguese-controlled island of Macao, where gold smuggling is 
			legal, and "anyone who dares call a smuggler a smuggler can be sued 
			for libel." Then the gold is smuggled into Hong Kong, and thence to 
			the rest of Asia.
 
 A mere 3 percent of the smuggled gold is seized by Hong Kong 
			authorities, Reinhart noted, even though customs officials receive a 
			20 percent commission on all seizures; presumably, bribes to customs 
			officials are more substantial.
 
 Standard Western and Soviet sources estimate the smugglers' 
			commission at 30-50 percent in such transactions. Soviet economist 
			M.A. Andreyev reports:
 
				
				"According to a Chinese businessman in 
			Singapore, smuggling yields a profit of up to 100 percent on 
			invested capital, which is several times higher than the profit 
			received in the basic branches of the island's economy. In Hong Kong 
			the commission paid to smugglers amounts to from 30 to 50 percent of 
			the cost of the smuggled commodities." (5)  
			 However, if the bribes paid to Hong Kong customs officials are 
			substantial enough to overshadow the 20 percent kickback on seized 
			contraband gold, the bribes must also be in the order of 30 to 50 
			percent. The point is that the gold trade itself would not be 
			profitable, unless it were only a bridge transaction in a much more 
			profitable operation — e.g., narcotics traffic! That is the case.
			
 But as Reinhart reported,
 
				
				"British justice, as dispensed by the 
			magistrates' court in Hong Kong, extends even the benefit of the 
			doubt to a suspected smuggler caught with the goods." 
				 
			 That should 
			not be a surprise at this point; as noted before, it was a matter of 
			public record for a quarter century that Britain's Hong Kong and 
			Shanghai Bank itself financed the gold smuggling! 
 
			 
			PEKING'S GOLD
 
 One further crucial point — whose full importance will only emerge 
			in the following sections — is that the People's Republic of China 
			has been in on the illegal gold market since the 1949 Maoist 
			takeover.
 
 Gold flown into Macao, as noted above, was (before Hong Kong opened 
			up its gold markets in 1949) resmelted into bars of less than 95 
			percent purity, whose trading the Hong Kong authorities 
			hypocritically endorsed. The resmelting, Reinhart reported, was
			the business of the Kan Kuam Tsing Company in Macao. "On the Hong 
			Kong exchange," the Swiss journalist added, "the buyer is not 
			unlikely from the People's Republic of China." Since the PRC buyer 
			wants metal of monetary-reserve purity, above 95 percent, he takes 
			the gold back to the Kan Kuam Tsing Company, and reconverts the gold 
			back to a higher purity level. Reinhart identified the firm Pao 
			San and Co. as a regular vehicle for Peking gold purchases during 
			the early 1950s. (6)
 
			  
			 According to Reinhart, the PRC entered the Hong Kong gold market in 
			1950. Last July's announcement that 13 Communist-owned banks in Hong 
			Kong would be permitted to trade directly in the Hong Kong gold 
			market thus only extends an agreement that has been in force since 
			the founding of the PRC. 
 
			 
			One big gold pool
 
 Apart from a relatively insignificant flow of gold into Hong Kong 
			from mines in Australia and the Philippines — insignificant 
			compared to the 300 tons of gold traded in Hong Kong during 1977 and 
			the 600 tons traded during 1978 (projected) — Hong Kong depends 
			entirely on the London gold pool for its supplies.
 
 
			
			 Figure 3 
  Above map is based on one appearing in the 1977 annual report of 
			Consolidated Gold Fields, Ltd.
 
			The world total of gold in metric 
			tons was only approximately 1,500.  
			Of this, 390 metric tons was 
			distributed from Europe through Dubai and 287mt through China, 
			primarily by British-controlled agencies, most of it ending up in 
			Hong Kong.  
			Another 18mt is directly exported to Hong Kong, for a 
			total of 695mt.  
			The vast proportion of this flow is "unofficial," 
			and is put to use in drug-related dirty-money laundering. (Cf. 
			Figure 5.) 
 
			 Why do London's gold pool operators tolerate this situation? Because 
			the London gold pool is the same operation as the Hong Kong and 
			Shanghai Bank, controlled by the same London families whose 
			drug-running activities go back 150 years. 
 There are two major South African gold producers, Anglo-American and 
			Consolidated Gold Fields (whose gold specialist was quoted above); 
			there is one major South African diamond producer, De Beers, largely 
			owned by Anglo-American; and five major London gold pool firms, who 
			meet every day in the trading room of N.M. Rothschilds at New Court, 
			St. Swithin Street, London, to set the world gold "fixing." 
			Examining these firms individually, we discover such a manifold of 
			connections that it is meaningless to speak of the London and Hong 
			Kong gold markets as anything but branch offices of the same 
			operation.
 
 Hong Kong and Shanghai's own gold-trading outlet is Sharps
			Pixley Wardley, of which they own 51 percent. One of the five
			London gold pool firms, Sharps Pixley, owns the remaining 49
			percent. But Sharps Pixley itself is a fully owned subsidiary of
			the London merchant bank Kleinwort Benson whose deputy 
			chairman is Sir Mark Turner, the chairman of Rio Tinto Zinc.
 
 Rio Tinto Zinc itself was founded a century ago with the opium-trading profits of Jardine Matheson, by a member of the Matheson family; 
			the Mathesons are still large shareholders in the
			HongShang. The Matheson family's heirs, the Keswick family,
			still have their traditional seat on the HongShang board. Sir Mark
			Turner spent World War II at Britain's Ministry of Economic 
			Warfare, which also employed Sir John Henry Keswick, and 
			another HongShang board member, John Kidston Swire.
 
 Hong Kong's second largest bank, the Standard and Chartered 
			Bank, owns a majority share of another member of the London 
			gold pool, Mocatta Metals. Standard and Chartered's predecessor, the 
			Standard Bank, was founded a century ago by Cecil
			Rhodes, of whom we will have much to say later in Section 7.
 
 Standard and Chartered is not only a close collaborator of the HongShang in such matters as the transfer of Red Chinese opium
			money (see Section 6 below) — but is heavily interlocked since the 
			days of the official British opium trade.
 
			 
			
			 Figure 4.  
			
			 British Gold and Diamond Syndicate 
 
			 One of Standard and Chartered's directors is the current Lord
			Inchcape, of Inchcape and Co. and the Peninsular and Orient 
			Steam Navigation, the latter dominating ocean freight in the Far 
			East. Both companies are heavily represented on the HongShang
			board of directors. Inchcape's father wrote the notorious 1923 
			Inchcape Report recommending continued British sponsorship of 
			the opium traffic — despite the outrage of the rest of the League
			of Nations — in order to "protect the revenues" of then-British 
			colonies in the Far East. 
 This example also indicates why the London gold pool's dirty 
			money operations are a worldwide, not merely a Far Eastern, 
			problem. Mocatta Metals, a subsidiary of Standard and Chartered's Mocatta and Goldsmid, operates one of New York's biggest dirty money laundering operations.
 
 Mocatta Metal's current chairman, Dr. Henry Jarecki, has been under 
			investigation for years for illegal activities, although no 
			indictment has yet been handed down. According to European 
			intelligence sources, Jarecki's dirty money operation helps fund the 
			activities of the Mossad, Israel's foreign secret intelligence 
			service, in New York City, including assassination teams.
 
 Jarecki is no small fry: he is a frequent gold columnist for
			British financial publications such as Euromoney, and rated a
			lengthy profile in the September 1978 issue of Fortune magazine. 
			Nonetheless, he is eminently suited for the role of bag-man for 
			Israeli intelligence hit squads. Jarecki began running
			drugs as a small-time pusher on the University of Michigan 
			campus in 1950-51. In 1952, he spent six months in jail for suspected espionage in East Berlin. According to published sources,
			approximately half of Jarecki's present staff of 28 gold traders
			started out in the same Harvard Psychology Department that 
			featured LSD-pushers Dr. Timothy Leary and "Baba Ram Dass"
			in the early 1960s. (7)
 
 Midland Bank stands behind both Standard and Chartered and
			Mocatta and Goldsmid, with a 20 percent ownership of Standard
			and Chartered; it also wholly owns another London gold pool 
			bank, Samuel Montagu. Sir Mark Turner is a director of both 
			Midland Bank and Samuel Montagu. The Montagu family, heavily 
			intermarried with the Rothschilds, Montefiores, and Samuels, is the 
			cream of Britain's Court Jews. One of their protégés is HongShang 
			board member Philip de Zulueta.
 
 N.M. Rothschild and Sons, which opened up operations in Hong Kong in 
			1975 to take advantage of the newly liberalized gold trading laws, 
			and Johnson Matthey, the remaining members of the London gold pool, 
			are also interlocked several times over with both the HongShang and 
			the major South African gold producers, Consolidated Gold Fields and 
			Anglo-American who control between them 90 percent of South Africa's 
			gold output.
			(For further details see Section 7 and 8.)
 
 
			 
			The diamond black market
 
 Second in importance in the money-laundering process is the world 
			diamonds market, worth $5 billion annually at wholesale value, whose 
			single presiding manager is Sir Harry Oppenheimer of De Beers 
			Corporation. Oppenheimer is also the chairman of the larger South 
			African gold producers, Anglo-American. The Anglo-American and De 
			Beers complex runs the Hong Kong side of the money-laundering 
			diamonds operation on two levels — wholesale and retail. De Beers 
			runs 85 percent of the wholesale diamonds market; through his 
			intimate Israeli connections, Oppenheimer also runs the Hong Kong 
			diamond market.
 
 
			 
			WHY DIAMONDS
 
 There are two points of special relevance for diamonds to the 
			international heroin traffic. The first is that, in value relative 
			to size and weight, diamonds are the closest approximation to heroin 
			as a store of value for furtive use. Secondly, the De 
			Beers-controlled international diamond cartel operates according to 
			a pyramidal structure identical to that of the world heroin trade.
 
 The use of expatriate ethnic networks for the dirtier side of the 
			operations is also homologous, except that in the case of diamonds, Jews take the place of Ch'ao Chou Chinese. Not coincidentally, there is almost as little publicly available information 
			on international diamonds trade as on the heroin traffic.
 
 South Africa's largest producer, De Beers, was the 1888 creation 
			of Rothschild legman Cecil Rhodes; in 1929, the company underwent 
			reorganization by Sir Ernest Oppenheimer, of the Anglo-American 
			family. De Beers controls the Central Selling Organization (CSO), 
			which handles 85 percent of international diamond trade.
 
 At ten "sights" each year, 300 clients purchase stones from the 
			CSO. The list of these select clients is secret. Following their 
			purchase by the secret list of clients, the diamonds are sent to 
			cutting 
			centers for further preparation. The two dominant cutting centers are Antwerp and Ashqelon, in Israel. Antwerp's 
			diamond cutting and related trade is financed by the Banque Bruxelles-Lambert, controlled by the Lambert family, the Belgian cousins 
			of the Rothschilds. Israel's (and also New York's) diamond business is financed by 
			Bank Leumi. (8)
 
 Within the individual centers, dealers trade among themselves 
			on such exchanges as the New York Diamond Dealers Club, the 
			Ramat Gan in Tel Aviv, and the Antwerp Diamond Bourse. No
			written records are kept of any transactions on these exchanges; 
			the agreements are sealed with a handshake. No aspects of this 
			trade are available for scrutiny by law enforcement agencies, 
			even under American law, before the diamonds reach the jewelry 
			store level.
 
 Hong Kong's own substantial wholesale diamond market is the 
			virtual monopoly of the Union Bank of Israel; this bank is wholly
			owned by Israel's largest finance house, Bank Leumi. Bank
			Leumi, in turn, is under the control of Barclays Bank, on whose
			board sits Harry Oppenheimer and the Oppenheimer family 
			itself. Bank Leumi's own chairman is Ernst Israel Japhet, of the
			Charterhouse Japhet family whose fortune derived from the
			official British opium trade during the nineteenth century!
 
 Ten times a year, representatives from the Ramat Gan, Tel
			Aviv's diamond exchange, go with Union Bank financing to the
			De Beers Central Selling Organization "sights" in London, and 
			purchase one-third of the world diamond output.
 
 Like the Peking-British-controlled Ch'ao Chou Chinese networks in 
			the Far East, Britain's Zionist financiers are a cult unto 
			themselves, with their own family networks, cults, and language. New 
			York's diamond market consists, at the lower levels, mainly of 
			members of the extremist Hasidic sects resident in the area. This 
			exotic feature of the diamond traffic achieved public notoriety 
			after several unexplained thefts and murders occurred in the diamond 
			trade during 1977.
 
 Although there is an apparent division of labor between the Hofjuden 
			precious metals and precious stones channels of the world dirty 
			money operation, the various firms involved are so closely 
			intermarried, interlocked, and interowned with the major dirty money 
			banks, that the working of the dirty money apparatus is totally 
			integrated.
 
 A case in point is Canada, the dumping ground for all aspects of 
			Dope, Incorporated that feed into the United States. The Bank of 
			Nova Scotia, for example, is both the major gold dealer (and banker 
			for the second largest gold dealer, Noranda Mines), and the major 
			dirty money operator in the Caribbean.
 
 The Nova Scotia is notorious for bribing its way into new branch 
			offices in the Caribbean, violating local currency laws, running 
			flight capital against currency restrictions, "investing" in local 
			businesses known to be intelligence fronts, and so forth. Nova 
			Scotia's branch network in the Caribbean is the largest of any bank 
			in the world, save Barclays which has a similar pedigree. Gold is a 
			specially useful medium for the special case of the Caribbean, where 
			official restrictions make some bank transfers difficult. 
			Conveniently, Nova Scotia leads the Toronto gold market.
 
 The other leading gold market operator in Toronto is Noranda Mines: 
			its chairman Powis is a member of the board of directors of the Bank 
			of Nova Scotia. Powis is also a member of the board of Sun Life 
			Assurance, the Rothschilds' insurance company.
 
			  
			
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