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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Alighieri who wrote (171848)7/11/2003 1:08:46 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578965
 
The coward is pointing the finger to the CIA...this will come back to haunt him. I am willing to bet on that.

Of course..........what else can he do. And G. Tenet is supposed to be a friend. Of course, sending Powell and Rice in yesterday to defend him was almost as embarrassing. And its only going to get worse. In fact, it could get real ugly if Congress starts up with an investigation.

It would appear that the man who would be emperor isn't wearing any clothes.

ted



To: Alighieri who wrote (171848)7/11/2003 1:55:32 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1578965
 
<font color=blue> Did I tell you, I'm writing a book about an American president who starts a war on false pretenses and then, spends billions of taxpayer monies to rebuild the country in his image.

Its called "An American Traitor: A Republican Story!"<font color=black>

ted

*********************************************************

U.S. May Tap Oil for Iraqi Loans

The White House weighs a plan to pledge future revenue to finance postwar reconstruction. Critics question the effort's legitimacy.

By Warren Vieth, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration is considering a provocative idea to pledge some of Iraq's future oil and gas revenue to secure long-term reconstruction loans before a new Iraqi government is in place to sign off on the proposal.

The plan, endorsed by the Export-Import Bank of the
United States and some of America's biggest companies, would help avert a looming cash crunch that has the potential to stall the postwar rebuilding effort. One U.S. official rated the proposal's prospects at 50-50.

But the plan is drawing fire from some administration
officials, lawmakers, policy analysts and prominent
Iraqis who say it would mortgage the Persian Gulf nation's most treasured resource, prevent future leaders from deciding how to spend their oil money and put U.S. taxpayers at risk.


"Iraqis believe their oil should not be touched by
foreigners, that it should remain in the hands of the
Iraqi government and that no one has a right to do anything before an elected government is in place," said Fadhil Chalabi, executive director of the Center for Global Energy Studies in London and a former Iraqi Oil Ministry official.

"As an economist, I believe in what they are proposing.
You couldn't come up with a better formula," Chalabi
said. "But Iraqi politics and the way they look at these
things are not encouraging. It could create problems
later on. Better to wait until a government is formed."

That may be too late, in the view of the plan's
supporters. The Export-Import Bank and an industry
coalition that includes Halliburton Co., Bechtel Group
Inc. and other major companies that are interested in
winning contracts in Iraq are warning that unless steps
are taken soon to secure new funds, the reconstruction
well could run dry.


"Common sense says get Iraq running. How do you
get the country running? By using its own oil revenue
100% for the benefit of the Iraqi people," said
Export-Import Bank Chairman Philip Merrill. "If you
want to wait three or four years, be my guest. But that
means the country is going to be running on the dole of
the United States."

Many experts agree that Iraq is headed for a possible
cash flow crisis as reconstruction costs escalate, initial
funds are depleted and the resumption of oil exports is
delayed due to damage caused by looting and sabotage.

But they part company over whether the U.S.-led occupation administration in Baghdad has the legal or moral authority to pledge future oil revenue as loan collateral before the issue can be debated by elected Iraqis.

"Unless a reconstituted Iraqi government or the U.N. Security Council authorizes the plan, it appears to violate international law," said Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Los Angeles). "We do not have the right, without additional authority, to impose financial obligations on the future government of Iraq."

Waxman, the ranking Democrat on the House Government Reform Committee, has asked the Export-Import Bank, the Pentagon and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to disclose more information about the proposal and the role played by Halliburton and other companies in crafting it.


<font color=red>Opponents of the plan warn that if a future Iraqi government chose to stop making payments on the bligations, U.S. taxpayers could wind up holding the bag.

"We're going to be on the hook, just like U.S. banks were on the hook to Mexico in the early 1980s and U.S. lenders were on the hook to South America in 1990," said independent energy economist Philip K. Verleger Jr.<font color=black>

Although the proposal is under consideration in Washington and Baghdad, the State Department has expressed concern about the preemption of Iraqi decision-making authority and the possibility that a future government might choose to default on the debt.

The Treasury Department has voiced similar reservations, warning that the creation of a new class of debt could complicate U.S. efforts to persuade other countries to write off or restructure Iraq's massive prewar debt burden.

Still, a Treasury official who requested anonymity said the plan has merit and might well win approval. "It's a 50-50 proposition right now," the official said.

Experts estimate that rebuilding Iraq could cost anywhere from $20 billion to $100 billion over several years. Oil exports are expected to net about $3.5 billion this year and $14 billion in 2004. But some of that money will be needed for other purposes, and coalition officials continue to scale back their export targets as pipeline explosions and power outages constrain production.

The administration has been financing reconstruction from a $7-billion pool of congressional appropriations, international contributions and seized Iraqi assets.
But concern is growing that the rising costs could consume all of the money set aside so far and that initial oil sales will not make up the difference.

"Existing revenues for reconstruction are not adequate to sustain the effort much beyond the end of this year," said Edmund Rice, president of a business group called the Coalition for Employment Through Exports. "The crunch could come in late autumn or after the first of the year. But roughly six months is when they're going to hit the wall on resources."

The oil loan proposal is designed to bridge the funding gap. Under the plan, a portion of Iraq's future oil and gas revenue would be pledged as collateral to repay loans or bonds issued to finance infrastructure improvements. An Iraq
Reconstruction Finance Authority would be established to review projects and arrange the financing.

The industry coalition has proposed using the financing mechanism to raise $3 billion to $4 billion a year for reconstruction work on a project-by-project basis.
The Ex-Im Bank envisions raising $25 billion to $30 billion to boost Iraq's oil production to as much as 5 million barrels a day from its current level of less than 1 million barrels.

Depending on how much money was raised, the plan could wind up claiming anywhere from a small fraction to the lion's share of Iraq's oil revenue over a decade or longer.

The Iraqi reconstruction authority would use the borrowed money to pay contractors for large-scale improvements such as renovating oil wells or building power plants. The loans would be guaranteed by a consortium of export credit agencies, including the Ex-Im Bank and its foreign counterparts. The financing would be reserved for new projects and would be subject to competitive bidding
open to companies from all countries.

"Bechtel and Halliburton would have to rebid on a level playing field with everybody else," said Rice, whose coalition represents 28 companies and two trade groups. Members include such California-based giants as ChevronTexaco Corp., Fluor Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co., Northrop Grumman Corp. and Oracle Corp.

Ex-Im Bank officials believe the U.S.-led occupation already has adequate legal authority to launch the oil loan program. In May, the U.N. Security Council authorized allied officials to disburse Iraqi oil revenue for humanitarian purposes, economic reconstruction, disarmament and "other purposes benefiting the Iraqi people." It did not address the use of future revenue.

Bank officials say there is a precedent for such a plan in the region. In 1948, a similar money-raising authority was established in behalf of the new state of Israel
before an elected government was in place to endorse taking on the financial obligation.

Supporters of the oil loan idea insist that Iraqis should be included in the decision-making process from the start. But until some form of elected government is in place, the only Iraqi officials in a position to participate are
those appointed by allied authorities to staff the various government ministries.

"We're better off to have the Iraqis involved," said Merrill of the Ex-Im Bank. "Should they have control from Day 1? Probably not. Will they have control at the end of the decade? For certain. Where on the curve do they get control? I don't know.

"But they're likely to get there a lot quicker if they've got the money than if they
don't."



To: Alighieri who wrote (171848)7/11/2003 6:16:44 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1578965
 
<font color=orange> Well, at least some of the Brits are coming out of da Nile. Of course, Mr. Blair now has adopted Mr. Bush's doublespeak saying that we're looking for WMD "PROGRAMMES" and not simply WMD. They tack on the word "programmes" or "program" as if we won't know the difference! The arrogance!<font color=black>

ted

***************************************************

Iraq weapons 'unlikely to be found'

Teams of UN weapons inspectors were sent to Iraq before the war

Senior figures inside Whitehall no longer believe weapons of mass destruction are likely to turn up in Iraq, the BBC has learned. The BBC's political editor Andrew Marr says "very senior sources" have virtually ruled out the possibility of finding weapons in Iraq. The development "is of important political significance", he adds.

But Downing Street insists that the prime minister stands by the comments he made to MPs on the Commons liaison committee on Tuesday - that he is convinced that evidence of Iraq's weapons programme will be found. "I have absolutely no doubt at all that we will find evidence of weapons of mass destruction programmes," Mr Blair said at the outset of the hearing. A Downing Street spokesman said: "His (the prime minister) words are clear and they are on the record." The belief that the physical weapons are now going to be found has virtually gone.