| Gore's security problems date back even further and are more
 serious than Clinton's. Gore began his relationship with
 his father's close friend and employer, Armand Hammer,
 when he was a small boy.
 
 Hammer, a Soviet paymaster and super-spy, went into
 the bull-breeding business with Gore Sr., placing the
 Tennessee senator on his payroll in 1950 when Gore was
 still in Congress. In return for Hammer's generosity, Gore
 Sr. bailed his mentor, a stock swindler and art forger, out
 of his frequent brushes with the law. He also attempted to
 convince several U.S presidential administrations to cut
 deals that favored Hammer and his Russian masters.
 
 Hammer further rewarded the senator's efforts with an
 insider deal consisting of thousands of shares of Hooker
 Chemical Co. stock, which Hammer's Occidental
 Petroleum was about to acquire. Hooker made things
 like fertilizers and metal-coating chemicals.
 
 One of Hooker's plants was located on Grand Island,
 N.Y., which disposed of its waste and other harmful
 byproducts into an adjacent waterway called the "Love
 Canal."
 
 "Al Gore [who currently controls his late father's stock in
 the company] takes credit for helping cure the 'Love
 Canal' pollution. He should! He helped cause it!" said
 Dan Schaitberger, a former Hooker employee.
 
 Hammer made Gore Sr. executive vice president of
 Occidental Petroleum after Bill Brock soundly defeated
 Gore in his reelection bid in 1970. And Hammer
 subsequently named Gore to a similar position in Island
 Creek Coal Co. after Gore managed to get the fuel
 company out of a long-term contract with the Tennessee
 Valley Authority and to substitute another contract much
 more favorable to Island Creek. The former senator also
 helped paper over a number of toxic waste spills by the
 company.
 
 Hammer also showered his favors on Albert Jr., helping
 underwrite his successful run for Congress in 1976 as
 well as all of his subsequent races. During young Gore's
 abortive 1988 presidential bid, Hammer unsuccessfully
 attempted to persuade Democrat Sen. Paul Simon of
 Illinois to drop out of his home-state's primary in favor of
 Gore. Hammer promised Simon a cabinet position in the
 Gore administration if he did. Shocked, Simon remained
 in the primary and trounced Gore.
 
 Gore accompanied Hammer to Moscow where Hammer
 received a peace prize from an international group of
 anti-nuclear scientists. Gore later praised Hammer at a
 reception in New York for his "patriotism."
 
 But as bad as Gore's compromise with Hammer was, it
 was even worse with former Russian premier Viktor
 Chernomyrdin. The two served on a joint commission
 that was supposed to smooth out relations between the
 U.S. and Russia. The commission was also supposed to
 come to the assistance of American businessmen who
 were threatened with death or beaten by members of the
 Russian mafia. But as WorldNetDaily has reported, Gore
 and his staff largely ignored pleas of Americans who
 were subjected to such brutal treatment.
 
 Between 1993 and 1999, billions of dollars of foreign aid
 intended to help ordinary Russians was instead diverted
 to the pockets of high-ranking officials who ruled Russia
 and members of the Russian mob, or siphoned off and
 deposited in offshore bank accounts to be laundered.
 
 It has also recently come to light that, in 1995, Gore and
 Chernomyrdin signed a secret deal for Russia to build a
 nuclear reactor for Iran. This deal, which has been widely
 reported, also specified that Russia could sell a
 diesel-powered submarine, T-72 tanks and other arms to
 Iran. Arms sent to Iran from Russia since the early 1990s
 include advanced Kilo-class submarines, torpedoes,
 anti-ship mines, and hundreds of tanks and armored
 personnel carriers.
 
 "How in the world can this country trust a man like Al
 Gore who owes his personal fortune to a fully recruited
 Soviet agent, Armand Hammer?" Michael Waller asked.
 "Al Gore Jr. grew up with a Soviet agent, and if he
 (Gore) were to be nominated as an assistant secretary for
 some department, he couldn't be nominated, because he
 is a security risk," he added.
 
 In her forthcoming book, "The Betrayal of Liberty,"
 veteran journalist Anne Williamson recounts an encounter
 she had with Moscow's assistant chief of the KGB during
 Christmas of 1994. Williamson, an expert on
 Soviet-Russian affairs who has written for the Wall Street
 Journal and the New York Times, asked the security
 official whether it was true the KGB had picked up the
 tab for Gore Jr.'s room service orders at the high-toned
 Fairfax Hotel in Washington (where he spent his
 formative years) and his Harvard tuition.
 
 "After a thoughtful pause, the man responded, 'He's not
 our first Harvard graduate, of course, but I do believe
 he's our first St. Albans' (a Washington prep school)
 boy,'" Williamson wrote.
 
 As bad security risks as Waller and Timmerman believe
 Clinton and Gore are, they have another prize candidate,
 Strobe Talbott, the State Department's number two man
 and Clinton's Oxford roommate. Talbott made his
 journalistic bones by tagging along with a well-known
 KGB agent named Victor Louis. Louis leaked Nikita
 Khruschev's diaries and insisted that Talbott, a young
 employee in Time's Moscow bureau, go along with the
 deal. Talbott thus became a member of the magazine's
 inner circle.
 
 Timmerman testified last year to the House International
 Relations Committee that Talbott's support of Russia and
 Boris Yeltsin was unwavering and uncritical in the face of
 mounting evidence of organized corruption. He also said
 that Iran's Shahad and Kosar missile programs would not
 exist without Talbott. The Shahad-3 missiles are now
 deployed in southwestern Iran and are capable of
 targeting Israel with nuclear, chemical or biological
 warheads.
 
 The editor of Middle East Defense News, Timmerman
 said, "Despite having detailed intelligence on Russia's
 involvement with the Iranian missile programs, the U.S.
 government failed to press the Russians in any meaningful
 or effective way. And the official who played the greatest
 role in this disaster was Deputy Secretary of State Strobe
 Talbott. If we had intervened with the Russians when the
 Israelis first came to us in late 1996, the Shahab missile
 would never have been tested successfully two years
 later."
 
 Timmerman, Waller and other Russia intelligence experts
 interviewed by WND, while not labeling Clinton, Gore
 and Talbot out-and-out agents, accused the trio of being
 unduly influenced by Russia and her policies.
 
 "It's not a healthy situation, and I hope the country has
 enough sense to avoid something like this in the future,"
 Waller said.
 
 Related stories:
 
 Gore condoned Russian mafia?
 
 CIA official: Gore compromised by secret past
 
 Gore's, Talbott's Red Russian roots
 
 Related column:
 
 Chernomyrdin bucks Bushwhack
 
 Charles C. Thompson II, a network news veteran and
 former producer of both ABC's "20/20" and CBS's
 "60 Minutes," is the author of "A Glimpse of Hell:
 The Explosion on the U.S.S. Iowa and Its Cover-Up."
 
 An experienced print journalist, Tony Hays' recent
 20-part series on narcotics trafficking received an
 award from the Tennessee Press Association.
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