Curt Weldon Timeline
Has Weldon been on the White Hat Team for a long time?
Part 1/
June 18, 1998: Congress formed the Select Committee on U.S. National Security and Military/Commercial Concerns with the People's Republic of China, the "Cox Committee", on which Congressman Curt Weldon served. There were five Republicans and four Democrats on it investigatingthe waivers granted by the Clinton Administration allowing U.S. military contractors to transfer military technology to China, and whether this had risked national security. The only thing is, on the Republican side was Porter Goss, former covert CIA blackops who had worked with GHW Bush, Clinton's buddy.The Committee concluded Beijing had been given U.S. secret weapons designs for over 20 years, including both Republican and Democratic Administrations (including Reagan/Bush, Sr. and Clinton). It listed Government's weapons labs thefts, which included classified information on seven advanced nuclear warheads, including the W-88. It found those had occurred during the Reagan or Bush, Sr., Administrations. China also acquired design information of the neutron bomb. Weldon's involvement got him the Deep State treatment during the coming years, until they engineered a re-election prevention effort. Was Weldon one of the members of a group in a quiet war on the Deep State?
1999: Curt Weldon was the Chair of the Defense Research Subcommittee, supporting agency cooperation in intelligence. Was Weldon trying to establish a way to watch the ABC agencies whom he found to have been operating illegal projects? Also, Weldon worked to improve relations with Russia, and he co-founded the Duma-Congress Study Group, Duma being the Russian parliamentary. Weldon made a report called "A New Time, A New Beginning", for cooperation in eleven areas that included defense and national security, as well as space exploration and scientific research. Sound familiar?
November 4, 1999: Weldon met with the Deputy Secretary of Defense and the Deputy Director of the FBI, giving them a proposal for agency intelligence sharing. The CIA refused.
June, 2003:Congressman Weldon lead a bipartisan Congressional delegation to North Korea to improve relations and for nuclear disarmament of North Korea.
October, 2003: Weldon planned a 10-member Congressional delegation to go to North Korea.It was all set to go when two days before their departure on the 25th, George Bush's White House Chief of Staff, Andrew Card, told Weldon he no longer had the administration's support for it. Weldon wrote a scathing letter to Bush about his national security team, and he determined he would continue his talks with North Korea.
January, 2005: Weldon led a six-member Congressional delegation in a visit to North Korea, stopping also in South Korea, China, Russia and Japan. And btw, Weldon was getting the Deep State treatment of lies and leaks to the press–the way they would do to Trump.