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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Don Hurst who wrote (398110)4/24/2003 10:42:08 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Enron and Clinton Corrupt Bedfellows
Charles R. Smith
Thursday, April 24, 2003

The leftist attempt to paint the Enron bankruptcy as a Bush scandal includes a badly made-for-TV movie produced by CBS called "The Crooked E." The spin in the fictional world of Hollywood was that the Bush administration, wooed by Enron dollars, helped the corrupt executives steal from the poor and working class heroes.

If you followed this spin, it was clear that Enron had no contact with the U.S. government prior to George W. Bush coming into office. According to CBS, Enron simply did not exist prior to George W. Bush.

Yet the CBS TV sit-com and its leftist spin flopped like a dead fish when confronted by facts. Enron and Bill Clinton were the best of bedfellows in corruption.

The U.S Commerce Department has been forced to release over 3,000 pages of documents detailing the long list of corrupt deals, trips and government candy doled out to Enron by President Clinton.

Greek Gray Davis

For example, in 1999 Gov. Gray Davis of California led a $200,000 trade trip to Europe that was very high on the Enron list. Davis tripped on California taxpayer expense with his wife in ancient Greece, lobbying on behalf of Enron Wind for the "Greek Wind Project."

The project in Greece was so important that Davis also took his good friend, major DNC donor and Sacramento developer Angelo K. Tsakopoulos. Tsakopoulos and his family are million-dollar contributors to the Democratic National Committee or Democrat candidates including Davis, Bill Clinton, Al Gore and Hillary Clinton. Tsakopoulos also spent time as a guest in the White House Lincoln bedroom.

According to documents forced from the U.S. Commerce Department, Enron Wind noted that Davis and Tsakopoulos were tripping to Greece with some very unusual comments:

"Best man at my Greek wedding," noted one handwritten comment next to a Los Angeles Times article on Tsakopoulos attached to documents from the U.S. Embassy in Athens.

"Major Clinton donor – may be on Clinton trip to Greece."

Enron considered the trade trip so important that it also included a 22-page briefing paper addressed to Gov. Davis detailing the "Greek Wind Project Permitting Issue." Interestingly, the same briefing paper made its way into the commercial section of the U.S. Embassy in Athens.

"An issue has arisen which seems to have some negative implications for follow-on investment in the renewable energy sector," states the Enron document.

"Namely on 4 August 1999, a decree was issued by the Ministry of Development which changes the procedure for obtaining future construction licenses for wind projects on the island of Crete and certain other islands. The decree would have a negative impact on a $30 million project Enron Wind was about to begin construction on in Crete, the Chronos (pronounced Honos) project."

The 1999 documents are part of a long string of heavy lobbying efforts that the Clinton administration carried out to convince the Greeks to buy Enron Wind products for Crete.

For example, a 1998 document prepared for the U.S. ambassador to Greece noted, "The company [Enron] was given an installation license last year, but construction was held up while an archeological study was performed. In the interim, the licenses lapsed and Enron's request for a renewal has not been answered."

"Enron should send more high-level visitors to Greece to underscore the importance of this market," states the 1998 memo to the U.S. ambassador to Greece.

Enron – NATO – Croatia

Enron also pushed the limits inside the former Yugoslavia. Commerce Secretary Ron Brown worked on an Enron contract in Croatia just prior to his death in 1996. Brown's death did place the project on hold but only for a short period of time.

In 1997, Enron executives flew to Croatia with Clinton Commerce Secretary Mickey Kantor. The trade trip took place just after Enron executives made a $100,000 donation to the DNC. As a result, Enron struck a deal with the Croatian government to build a power station and run it for 20 years at a highly inflated price of nearly $200 million above market prices.

However, tapes of the Enron negotiations with Croatian officials show the U.S. energy company had promised more than electricity at higher than normal cost. According to the Financial Times, Croatia hoped the Enron deal would secure political favors inside the Clinton administration, including a state visit to Washington and membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO).

In one reported meeting, Enron's head of international operations, Joseph Sutton, guaranteed that Enron would lobby for the Croatian president to meet Clinton and to seek Clinton's support for Croatia's entry into the WTO, the NATO partnership for peace program and eventually into NATO.

In 1999, Enron Executive Vice President Terence Thorn wrote a personal letter of thanks to President Clinton, carrying out the promised support for Croatia.

"I have good news about an opportunity in a strategically important nation, Croatia. Enron International through the direct involvement of President Franjo Tudjman has successfully concluded negotiations to build a 240 MW natural gas powered plant at Jertovec, Croatia," wrote Thorn to Clinton.

"Our people have come to know Croatia, its people and its President. Through our power project Croatia solidified those ties and welcomed the United States as its largest foreign investor. Croatia is also cooperating with NATO to bring peace to the Balkan region," wrote Thorn.

"President Tudjman's support and perseverance in having a United States company participate in Croatia's economy deserves to be recognized. He would welcome an invitation from you to come to the White House. I respectfully request President Tudjman be invited to visit you in the White House at the earliest possible time," concluded Thorn.

India and Points Beyond

The most infamous Enron project is the troubled Dabhol power plant in India. President Clinton highlighted Enron's problems with its planned $3 billion Dabhol power project in a short "FYI" note to his chief of staff Mack McLarty. McLarty worked with Enron and the U.S. ambassador in New Delhi to keep tabs on the Dabhol project.

Four days before India finally granted approval for the project, Enron donated $100,000 to the DNC.

Many former Clinton administration officials eventually went to work for Enron, including former White House counsel Jack Quinn, former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, former Assistant Treasury Secretary Linda Robertson, former Chair of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Elizabeth Moler, and the former media adviser to Vice President Al Gore, Greg Simon.

The newly released documents show that the Clinton administration worked for Enron in China, Vietnam, South Africa, India, Brazil, Argentina, Mozambique, South Korea, Japan, Belgium, France, Russia, the Philippines, the West Bank and Uzbekistan.

The scandal that became Enron touched more than a few employees and stockholders. It corrupted nation after nation, spreading its wings as part of Bill Clinton's stained legacy.



To: Don Hurst who wrote (398110)4/24/2003 10:45:55 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Clinton Repaid Enron With $1 Billion in Subsidized Loans
Phil Brennan

Democrats have hoped the Enron scandal would tar the Bush administration, but as investigators dig deeper it's the Clinton administration and the Dems who are emerging as the villains of the piece.

The Washington Times reported that the Clinton administration coughed up more than $1 billion in taxpayer-subsidized loans to Enron Corp. just when the energy giant was kicking in almost $2 million for Democrat causes. And as we have previously reported, to help persuade then-President Bill Clinton to push the disastrous Kyoto Protocol, Enron gave $420,000 to Democrats.

Times reporter Patrice Hill writes that, according to the Export-Import Bank and the Overseas Private Investment Corp., the agencies that provided the subsidies, the Clinton administration turned down only one out of 20 Enron projects to build power plants, natural-gas pipelines and other "big-ticket energy facilities" between 1993 and 2000.

Moreover, the Clinton administration, "which lauded Chairman Kenneth L. Lay as an exemplary 'corporate citizen,' granted about $200 million worth of insurance against political risks for nine Enron projects in such politically volatile areas as Argentina, Venezuela and the Gaza Strip, according to documents the agencies provided to the Senate Finance Committee."

"These projects obviously were a tremendous benefit to Enron's operations," Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, ranking minority member of the committee, told the Times. The Reagan and Bush administrations approved not a single loan for Enron between 1985 and 1992 and provided insurance for only one Enron power project in Guatemala in 1992, he noted.

On the other hand, the Clinton administration made three loans between 1994 and 1998 to the now-defunct Dabhol power project in India. Ron Brown, Clinton's commerce secretary, bragged about the approval of the Dabhol loans during a trade mission to India in 1995, while Lay stood by his side.

The Times noted that the junket was "one of 11 Clinton trade missions provided at taxpayer expense for corporate executives from Enron and other companies." Moreover, the U.S. Trade and Development Agency, which sponsored the trips, also coughed up $1 million in funding to study Enron energy projects in Russia, Eastern Europe and former Soviet states.

While Democrats go rooting around trying to find any single indication that Lay was somehow in cahoots with the Bush administration, evidence of his links to the Clinton administration is popping up all over the place.

Another Renter of the Lincoln Bedroom

Lay not only was a golfing partner of Clinton, he even slept in the Lincoln Bedroom. Other members of Enron's top executive echelon attended the White House's infamous "coffee klatches" hosted by Clinton, according to published reports.

Lay offered a seat on Enron's board of directors to Robert Rubin, Clinton's Treasury secretary, in 1999 just before he left office, according to an Associated Press report Thursday. It turns out that Rubin, being paid an astonishing $40 million a year by Enron creditor Citigroup, tried to get the Treasury Department to intervene for Enron last fall when the company's credit rating was threatened.

In May 1996, Clinton touted Lay as being a good "corporate citizen" at a White House event because of Enron's alleged enlightened personnel policies, including profit-sharing of Enron stock and generous health and pension benefits. As the Times noted, Enron employees now are suing because those benefits proved as worthless as the bankrupt company's stock.

The Times reported that according to Federal Election Commission records, during the Clinton administration Enron kicked in more than $1 million to the Democrat party, including $600,000 to the Democratic National Committee. Clinton and Vice President Al Gore got contributions of $11,000 and $13,750, respectively, for their presidential campaigns.

Enron made a $100,000 contribution to the DNC just before India gave final approval to Enron's Dabhol project in June 1996. According to the Times, Dabhol, the largest and most expensive capital project ever undertaken in India, was of dubious economic value and never went on line.
After looking at the Dabhol project, the World Bank declared said it was not economically viable and of inordinate benefit to Enron, which had a 65 percent stake in the project. Enron still owes $203 million on an Export-Import Bank loan for the project, which the bank says is covered by guarantees provided by five Indian banks.

Congressional aides told the Times it was not clear what the taxpayers' liability will be for that and other loans now that Enron is bankrupt. The Export-Import Bank said its loans were extended to overseas subsidiaries of Enron and not the bankrupt corporation. The overseas investment agency said its exposure was limited to paying any missed premiums on Enron's political risk insurance.

Top Clinton officials lobbied personally to obtain Indian state guarantees for the Dabhol project after it ran into problems in 1995. White House chief of staff Thomas F. "Mack" McLarty made it a top administration priority to keep the project from failing. The Bush administration has continued efforts to salvage the project. After leaving the White House, McLarty did work for Enron.

Hazel O'Leary, Clinton's energy secretary, led a number of missions to India, and Frank Wisner, Clinton's ambassador to India, was ordered to keep the project afloat. After Wisner left government in 1997, he joined the board of directors of a company then controlled by Enron.
The Clinton administration's ties to Enron don't stop there:

Documents link Enron's fall to Clinton corruption.

Clinton's SEC enabled Enron fiasco.

Rep. Elliot Engel, D-N.Y., has called for an investigation into Clinton's ties to Enron.

Enron figures in Clinton's ties to China.

Enron went to great lengths to woo Gore and his 2000 running mate, Sen. Joe Lieberman.
Yes, Enron certainly is turning out to be a White House scandal – just not the White House the Democrats had hoped
for.



To: Don Hurst who wrote (398110)4/24/2003 10:49:38 AM
From: jlallen  Respond to of 769670
 
Last time I looked..... dimwit....the Constitution requires proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt....I have not heard that Lay, or Skillings have been acquitted or that the investigation has been completed either....



To: Don Hurst who wrote (398110)4/24/2003 10:50:50 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Clinton Helped Enron
Brian P. Yates

Every time you turn on the news and hear about Enron Corp. and its bankruptcy, you hear all about how George W. Bush allowed Enron to influence his energy policy. The collapse of Enron is the best thing to ever happen to John McCain, Russ Feingold, Marty Meehan, and Chris Shays. It's given them a pulpit from which to preach from. It's given new life to campaign finance reform. So the Democrats are loving this for several reasons: it's given a huge boost to campaign finance reform supporters, it has given them an example of the eeeevil Republican-caused recession, and they think that they can turn it into President Bush's own personal scandal. Clinton had Monicagate, fine they say, give Bush Enrongate.

Even though they cannot come up with a single bit of evidence to connect Bush or his Administration to Enron...in fact, the Bush Administration REFUSED to help Enron when asked...the Democrats keep trying to connect the Bush Administration to the Enron bankruptcy. Which is why this newest finding is so deliciously interesting. According to The Washington Times, the Clinton Administration gave over $1 billion to Enron's overseas projects. ONE BILLION DOLLARS FOLKS! This is not a hand-out, this is a take-the-whole-damn-cash-drawer. Why haven't we heard this in the news? Simple, the media loves this so-called Bush connection. Folks, watch the news. You won't hear anything about Clinton, but you'll hear all about the "help" Bush gave Enron. Even though he refused to help! Unbelievable.

Between 1993 and 2000, Enron proposed 20 projects to build power plants, natural-gas pipelines, and other facilities all around the world. Clinton and his government cronies financed 19 of these projects. Oh, and remember the Kyoto Treaty that Bush (rightfully) yanked us out of? Well, that treaty was pushed for by Enron, and signed by Clinton. So add another Clinton-tie to the list.

And as for Enron Chairman Kenneth Lay? We've all heard how Bush called Lay "Kenny Boy" and all about how they are such great friends. But get this: Clinton called Lay an exemplary "corporate citizen" at a White House event because of Enron's enlightened personnel policies. And it doesn't stop there. Ken Lay was Bill Clinton's golf partner on numerous occasions, he slept in the Lincoln Bedroom, and attended several of Clinton's coffees along with other Enron executives. And yet we hear about Bush and Lay?!? Give me a break.



To: Don Hurst who wrote (398110)4/24/2003 11:04:10 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Clinton agencies assisted Enron rise
By Patrice Hill
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Enron Corp. grew in the 1990s from a small Texas natural gas company to a $50 billion global energy-trading giant — with extensive help from the Clinton administration.
The company's international stature grew remarkably in the 1990s, to a point that Clinton officials sought its help in solving problems big and small, including drumming up support for the global-warming treaty, promoting economic development in the war-torn Middle East and Bosnia and drafting the details of an arcane bankruptcy reform measure.
One key success for the company was getting the administration to propose a new round of world-trade negotiations on energy services, an industry Enron dominated at home and hoped to turn into a trillion-dollar enterprise abroad.
Documents released by the Treasury Department show that President Clinton's trade representative, Charlene Barshefsky, seized upon the idea, offered to her by a coalition of energy companies headed by Enron, and presented it almost verbatim in World Trade Organization negotiations in May 2000. Other nations agreed in March 2001 to start discussions on energy services, with the aim of lowering regulations and other barriers to trade.
With the help of more than $1 billion in subsidized loans and insurance from Clinton agencies, Enron also built dozens of international projects, from a natural gas pipeline in China to clean-burning power facilities in Brazil and the Gaza Strip, according to a top Clinton official. The projects are said to have dovetailed with Mr. Clinton's twin goals of promoting American business overseas and encouraging environmentally friendly energy development.
"The whole world was just waking up and becoming export oriented" in the 1990s, and Enron was on the cutting edge of the globalization wave, said the official, speaking on the condition of anonymity.
"Clinton was a big supporter of companies doing business overseas. He was a huckster for corporate America, and that's how he got big contributions" from companies such as Enron that had global ambitions, the official said.
Enron, its political action committee and its employees contributed more than $1.5 million to Democratic candidates and causes during the Clinton years.
While Enron and Mr. Clinton shared many interests, the official said he was shocked at how successful Enron was with the administration; it won approval for 19 of 20 loan applications it made for its far-flung and often risky international projects. The largest of those, in Dabhol, India, has since failed and may become a liability for U.S. taxpayers.
"They were great pros at working Washington, there's no doubt about it," the official said, ranking Enron among the most formidable corporate lobbying powerhouses with dozens of Washington representatives to push its interests in the 1990s. "The reality is, that's what our democracy begs for. You can't knock the fact that people play that game well."
The Clinton official noted the irony that Enron contributed more to Republican candidates but seemed to get more for its money from Democrats.
"We think it is a function of the government to support American companies and their workers. But conservatives say that's baloney," he said. Despite receiving generous campaign contributions from Enron, the Bush administration denied Enron requests for assistance as it was spiraling toward bankruptcy last fall.
That contrasts with the working relationship Enron had developed with the Clinton administration. One internal Enron document says the Clinton White House sought Enron's assistance in getting China and India to participate in the Kyoto global-warming treaty, mindful that the accord faced a key obstacle in the Senate: Lawmakers were loath to ratify any treaty that left out major developing nations whose greenhouse-gas emissions were projected to soon outstrip the emissions of the United States.
"The administration is concerned about getting China and India into the family of nations committed to" reducing emissions of carbon dioxide through an international-trading regime championed by Enron, said company lobbyist John Palmisano in an October 1996 memo describing how the company was working with the Clinton administration and environmentalists to secure support for the treaty.
Mr. Palmisano said the White House specifically suggested that Enron consider expanding its natural gas business by building clean-energy projects in China, a heavy user of coal, which is the biggest source of carbon emissions. In April 1999, three years later on a trade mission to China, Commerce Secretary William M. Daley announced a first joint venture between Enron and Beijing to build a natural gas pipeline.
It was one of more than a dozen Clinton trade missions in which Enron Chairman Kenneth L. Lay and other company executives accompanied the commerce secretary and touted Enron's international projects.
Enron expected to earn big money from its clean-energy projects under the Kyoto treaty. The accord rewards such projects with "credits" for carbon reductions that Enron expected to be able to resell at a large profit to other companies seeking to comply with the treaty. Enron was positioning itself to be a pioneer in the huge international emissions-trading market envisioned under the treaty.
At the time Mr. Palmisano wrote his 1996 memo, Mr. Clinton and Enron had hopes that other countries would agree to let companies like Enron build projects in Third World nations and then resell the credits they earned to other companies — a provision that would have made the energy giant's projects in China, India, Brazil and other developing countries more lucrative.
Negotiators at subsequent U.N. talks, however, did not agree to authorize such "joint implementation" projects in developing countries, although a provision authorizing such projects in former Soviet bloc states was included in the treaty.
"This means that Enron projects in Russia, Bulgaria, Romania or other Eastern countries can be monitized in part by capturing carbon reductions for sale back in the U.S. or other Western countries," Mr. Palmer said in a December 1997 memo trumpeting the Kyoto treaty as a "victory" for Enron that would drive up its stock price.
"This agreement will do more to promote Enron's business than will almost any other regulatory initiative" because of the premium the treaty places on projects involving natural gas and renewable energies like wind power — another area of expansion for Enron, Mr. Palmisano wrote. "Enron has immediate business opportunities which derive directly from this agreement."
Enron saw the potential to work with Mr. Clinton from the day he was elected, noting in a November 1992 company newsletter that Mr. Clinton's energy and environmental policies would aggressively expand the use of natural gas because it emits only half as much carbon as coal. The newsletter also notes that Al Gore, Mr. Clinton's vice president, was one of the strongest proponents of a global-warming treaty.
By the end of the decade, Enron built on its success by winning Mr. Clinton's approval for its proposal on energy services trade. Enron had evolved from a producer of physical infrastructure like pipelines and power plants into the leading international energy trader, earning most of its money buying and selling intangible financial assets.
Enron got considerable help along the way from Clinton Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers and other top officials by winning regulatory exemptions for its domestic activities.
It hoped to amplify those gains by pushing for the same kind of deregulated markets overseas.
Mr. Lay made a pitch for Enron's vision of a deregulated, global energy market to delegates at the ill-fated world trade talks in Seattle in December 1999. But although those negotiations fell apart amid anti-globalization street protests, Enron's dream of beginning a round of trade talks on energy services survived when talks resumed the next spring.
While Enron's lobbying achievements at times were sublime, the company was no shirker of details when money was involved. It sought — and received — help from the Treasury Department to gain more favorable tax treatment of its overseas energy projects. Enron complained that its efforts to expand overseas were being undermined by obscure provisions of U.S. tax law, and it lobbied both the Clinton and Bush administrations to remove the impediments.
Enron didn't shy away from inserting itself into even the most arcane matters that stood in the way of business.
Documents show that company lawyers provided the Clinton Treasury Department with line-by-line legislative language to be included in the bankruptcy-reform bill to ensure the quick settlement of energy derivative contracts in the event of bankruptcy.
Ironically, the bankruptcy provision never became law, and Enron was unable to take advantage of the procedures when it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Dec. 2.



To: Don Hurst who wrote (398110)4/24/2003 11:07:17 AM
From: JakeStraw  Respond to of 769670
 
POWER FOR SALE
Clinton 'sweetheart' deal
sped up Enron's collapse
After investing $1 billion in India plant, Lay couldn't get state utility board to pay

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Paul Sperry
© 2002 WorldNetDaily.com

WASHINGTON – A so-called "sweetheart" deal between Enron Corp. and India – brokered with the help of Clinton administration officials during controversial trade junkets in the mid-'90s – ultimately soured and sped the energy giant's collapse, analysts say.

After investing more than $1 billion to help build a huge power plant near Bombay, Enron had problems last year getting paid for power generated by the plant – even after sources say former President Clinton lobbied Indian officials on Enron's behalf during his April visit to India.

Desperate, Enron chairman Kenneth L. Lay on Sept. 14 fired off a letter to Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee threatening legal action to recover claims of up to $5 billion related to the Dabhol Power Co.

A month later, on Oct. 15, Lay called Commerce Secretary Don Evans, pleading for help with the nightmarish project.

The next day, Enron stunned Wall Street by announcing its first loss in more than four years. In the third quarter, the Houston-based company hemorrhaged $618 million.

Enron's once-high-flying stock nose-dived, robbing many of its workers of their retirement nest eggs, and the company filed the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. history.

The gas-fired Dabhol project, which stopped production and construction in May, had been a black mark on Enron's books from the start, analysts say.

"No doubt about it, it was always the trouble child," said Carl Kirst, an analyst with Merrill Lynch Global Securities in Houston.

He says the Indian deal was "one of many factors" that hurt Enron.

"But clearly it was one of the better-known pressure points on the stock," Kirst said in an interview with WorldNetDaily.

Costly boondoggle

Wall Street didn't think much of the deal when it was announced in 1995 by the late Commerce Secretary Ron Brown and Lay during a trade mission to India. The more than $3 billion power-plant project was the single-largest foreign investment ever made in India, which was just opening up its economy to outsiders.

"In the mid-'90s, not many people were venturing into the international-development market like this, certainly not in India," Kirst said. "So there was a good deal of risk built in."

Of the four investors in the project, which is the largest gas-fired plant in the world, Enron put up the biggest stake –"north of $1 billion," Kirst said.

Phase 1 of the project yielded an anemic 7-percent return on investment, he says, contributing roughly under a nickel a year to Enron's earnings per share.

That was bad enough.

But by the time Phase 2, twice as big as Phase 1, was nearly completed, the local Indian electricity board reneged on payments, claiming the power bills were too high. If Phase 2 had come on line, the board would have owed a projected $1 billion-plus a year starting this year. Enron inked a 20-year contract with the state board.

"So here at a net investment of well over $1 billion, Enron almost had Phase 2 completed, but they never got anything for it," Kirst said.

And the poor returns from Phase 1 weren't covering the cost of developing Phase 2, he adds.

In short, Enron had a costly boondoggle on its hands, one that was starting to punish its financial statement.

"You can't have over $1 billion of investment on your books and continue to earn only 7 percent, at best, and not open yourself up to write-downs," Kirst said.

The best thing Enron could have done is unload the project, he says.

But Lay couldn't find suitors.

"Enron hoped, ideally, that someone would buy them out at their book value – roughly $1 billion," Kirst said. "That is, shall we say, optimistic at this point."

There have been rumors of buyout offers of between $600 million and $800 million circulating since September, he says. Possible buyers mentioned in the past include Reliance, one of India's largest industrial concerns, and China Light and Power Co.

But nothing has panned out.

It shouldn't come as much of a surprise. The huge project was never popular.

Even back in 1993 – when Indian officials first proposed the idea of converting to gas as a main power source for Maharashtra, one of India's most industrialized states and home to Bombay, the country's financial center – economists were skeptical.

The World Bank, for example, concluded such a project was "not economically viable," warning that the plants would produce power too costly for the state.

The New York Times, moreover, quoted a senior Indian official who said anyone who invested in such a project was "bankrupting yourself knowingly, willingly, deliberately."

So why did Lay press ahead? Political opportunism.

'Sweetheart deal'

On May 19, 1994, Clinton met here with former Indian Prime Minister P.V. Rao. Rao told Clinton that India was interested in opening its centrally controlled economy up to American corporate investors.

Clinton, in turn, instructed then-Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary to lead a delegation of corporate executives to India on a trade mission.

"The mission marked the first official visit to India by a U.S. cabinet secretary in many years," Energy's internal trip report states.

Enron executives joined O'Leary on the July 1994 junket, whereupon they planted the seeds of the ill-fated Dabhol deal.

Then in January 1995, Lay accompanied Brown on the Commerce trade mission that helped seal the deal.

The Clinton administration got two federal export-finance agencies – the Export-Import Bank and the Overseas Private Investment Corp. – to help underwrite the project by kicking in nearly $400 million in loans.

During the final negotiations, Clinton aide Thomas "Mack" McLarty rode herd on the project in Washington for Lay, his old energy-industry buddy.

He tracked the progress of Clinton's ambassador to India, Frank Wisner, who was helping speed the deal along.

Even Clinton pitched in to help his golfing partner, Lay, by sending McLarty memos and articles on the project.

(The ex-president's lobbying for the Enron deal even continued into the Bush administration, sources close to the Dabhol project say, when he visited Indian officials in Mumbai, India, in April. At the time, Enron was fighting the state electricity board for back payments.)

In June 1996, India gave final OK to Lay's project. Four days before the approval, Enron gave $100,000 to Clinton's party.

McLarty and Wisner were not forgotten. Lay snatched up McLarty for Enron when he left the White House. And Wisner got a seat on the board of an Enron subsidiary when he stepped down as ambassador in 1997.

Lay and McLarty have denied the Democratic Party gifts were tied to the Indian deal. And Wisner called "foolishness" any suggestion his board seat was payback for helping Enron close the deal in India.

But in India, local foes of the Dabhol project regarded it as a "sweetheart deal" from the start, and even charged that Enron bribed Indian officials. The charge, which Enron has denied, was never proved.

For his part, Lay blames the recession, not any bad deals he made, for his company's collapse.

Ironically, for all the talk of Lay's cronyism with President Bush, this administration has been relatively hands-off, at least when it comes to aiding Enron in its overseas deals.

No Enron executives got seats on last year's sole Bush administration trade mission, which was to Russia.

And in March, Bush, who held no Enron stock directly in his 1999 financial disclosure, proposed slashing the next fiscal year's budget of the Ex-Im Bank by 25 percent. What's more, he proposed cutting the subsidies of the Overseas Private Investment Corp.

Under the Clinton administration, Enron had benefited famously from both agencies, which support corporate investments abroad.