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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend.... -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sully- who wrote (5164)9/22/2004 10:35:37 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
<font size=4>What's 'Illegal'? Kofi Annan Helped Saddam Hussein Steal Food From Babies

<font size=3>By Claudia Rosett
The Wall Street Journal - Opinion Journal
September 22, 2004
<font size=4>
When U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan opined last week to the BBC that the U.S.-led overthrow of Saddam Hussein had been <font color=blue>"illegal,"<font color=black> two words came instantly to my mind: baby food.

No, I'm not comparing Mr. Annan's thoughts to pabulum. He is a smart man, adept enough that even in his BBC moment of condemning the U.S. (perhaps mindful that the U.S. is the U.N.'s chief financial backer) he took the trouble to blur responsibility for his own words, amending his use of "I" to the royal "we." Said Mr. Annan: <font color=blue>"From our point of view, from the charter point of view, it was illegal."<font color=black>

It's unclear exactly whose collective view Mr. Annan thinks he was authorized to express, or under what terms in the U.N. charter he casts himself on some occasions as the hapless servant of the Security Council, and at other times, such as this, as the outspoken chief judge of world law.

But if Mr. Annan wants to discuss right and wrong in Iraq, which seems to be the real issue, then it is time to talk about baby formula. Why? Because Mr. Annan's preferred means of dealing with Saddam was a mix of U.N. sanctions and the U.N. relief program called Oil-for-Food. And the heart and soul of Oil-for-Food was supposed to be the feeding of sick and hungry Iraqi babies--including the purchase by Saddam, under U.N. auspices, of large amounts of baby formula. When Oil-for-Food was launched in 1996, it was advertised by the U.N. as a response to such horrors as pictures of starving Iraqi children and alarming statistics about infant mortality in Iraq, released by one of the U.N.'s own agencies, Unicef.

It was in service of that U.N. mix of sanctions and humanitarian relief that Mr. Annan after visiting with Saddam in Iraq in 1998 returned to New York to report: <font color=blue>"I think I can do business with him."
<font color=black>
And oh what a lot of business the U.N. did. Mr. Annan's Secretariat collected more than $1.4 billion in commissions on Saddam's oil sales, all to supervise the integrity of Saddam's $65 billion in oil sales and $46 billion in relief purchases. The official aim of this behemoth U.N. aid operation was solely to help the people of Iraq, while the U.N. waited for sanctions to weaken Saddam enough so he would be either overthrown from within or forced to comply with U.N. resolutions on disarmament. Instead, Saddam threw out the U.N. weapons inspectors for four years, and, by estimates of the U.S. General Accounting Office, fortified his own regime with at least $10.1 billion grafted and smuggled out of Oil-for-Food.

But of all the abuses of Oil-for-Food committed by Saddam--and not only allowed but in effect approved and covered up by Mr. Annan's U.N.--the most cynical has to have been the trade in baby formula. This was one of Saddam's imports that few even among the U.N.'s critics dared question. Who could be so heartless as to object to food for hungry children? And given the secrecy with which Mr. Annan ran Oil-for-Food (as hapless servant of a Security Council packed with big-time business partners of Saddam, such as France and Russia), no one outside the U.N. except Saddam and his handpicked contractors knew much in any event about Baghdad's traffic in baby formula.

The U.N. insisted that the identities of Saddam's contractors and the terms of his deals remain confidential. Even today, though the names have leaked, many of the vital details of these contracts (such as quantity and quality of goods) remain smothered in the continuing secrecy imposed by the U.N.-authorized investigation into Oil-for-Food, led by former Fed chairman Paul Volcker. And Mr. Volcker, apparently focused mainly on bribery allegations involving officials of the U.N. itself, may never get around to such broader but also important matters as Oil-for-Baby-Food.

But since Saddam's fall, a few windows have opened through which one can glimpse Saddam's U.N.-approved trade in nursery nutrition. Chief among them is a pricing study carried out by the U.S. Defense Department's contract auditing agencies last year, shortly after Saddam's overthrow. Lest anyone suspect the Pentagon of bias, it would of course be handy to draw on other studies as well. But there are none. Mr. Annan's Secretariat, while swimming in cash from its 2.2% commission on Saddam's oil sales, never got around to systematically examining Saddam's contract prices. That was a notable omission, given that Saddam's scam on relief contracts was one of the oldest and simplest in the book: overpaying for goods, using relief funds meant for the Iraqi public; then collecting part of those overpayments in the form of kickbacks.

And when it came to overpricing, which any veteran aid worker should surely recognize as a flashing red sign of probable graft, one of the most roundly abused categories under Oil-for-Food appears to have been the original rationale for the program: food itself.

The Pentagon pricing study looked at a sample of 759 big-
ticket Oil-for-Food contracts still awaiting full delivery
when Saddam fell--a snapshot of the program in its final
years. Among those were 178 contracts for food. Of these
almost 90% were overpriced by an average of about 22%--
more than twice the 10% figure often quoted as Saddam's
standard kickback. In this sample, totaling $2.1 billion
in U.N.-approved grocery shipping by Saddam, the potential
rake-off totaled $390 million.

And within that Oil-for-Food sample shopping spree, the
baby formula deals were estimated to be even more
egregiously overpriced than the average contract for most
other staples.

Compared to the hundreds of baby food and milk contracts in the overall program (many of those with France and Russia) the Pentagon sample was small. The study looked at four baby formula contracts, two originating in Egypt, one in Tunisia and one in Vietnam--totaling $43 million (which in any normal relief program might actually rank not as a small sample, but as a lot of money). But it seems telling that every single one of those four baby-formula contracts appeared <font color=red>"potentially overpriced"<font color=black> by about 26%, for a total of $11 million in potential overpayments. On the biggest of these sample contracts, a $26 million deal between Saddam and a Vietnamese dairy company--approved by the U.N. in October 2002, in the thick of the U.N. debate over going to war to remove Saddam--the estimated overpricing of 26% worked out to well over $5 million on that contract alone.

Translation: In late 2002, while Mr. Annan was lobbying against U.S.-led removal of Saddam, he was running a U.N. program in which money meant for baby formula, among other goods, was very likely flowing into the pockets of Saddam and his sons and cronies.

Somehow, that was the kind of problem that Mr. Annan's office managed to miss, although according to a November 2002 statement to the Security Council by Oil-for-Food director Benon Sevan, U.N. staff in Iraq had by then made 1,187,487 total <font color=blue>"observation visits"<font color=black> to ensure the integrity of Oil-for-Food. More than one million of those observation visits were devoted to checking on food and nutrition (and all of them were paid for out of the U.N. Secretariat's 2.2% oil sales commissions from Saddam).

In the same November 2002 statement, Mr. Sevan reported that <font color=blue>"acute malnutrition"<font color=black> was still rampant among young children in Iraq. Mr. Sevan explained that although malnutrition had been halved since Oil-for-Food began (all this was based on Saddam's statistics), it was still double the rate of 1991--a situation Mr. Sevan himself described as <font color=blue>"far from satisfactory."<font color=black> But the solution prescribed by Mr. Annan was not to spot and stop the kickbacks. Rather, while lamenting what he described in Nov. 2002 as the <font color=blue>"dire funding shortfall"<font color=black> of Oil-for-Food, Mr. Annan's solution again and again was to urge more oil sales by Saddam. Which meant, most likely, more resources earmarked to feed babies but diverted to the Baghdad regime (and, by extension, more commissions for the U.N.).

It would be interesting for someone with full access to the contract details -- meaning, I suppose, the UN's own investigation into itself -- to total the scores of Oil-for-Food contracts for baby formula, weaning cereal, milk and so on (much of it bought from Security Council member nations Russia and France), and employ some pricing experts to fill in the rest of the numbers.

But what we know already is that Mr. Annan, whose
Secretariat turned a blind eye to Saddam's food pricing
scams, has never apologized for presiding over the biggest
fraud in the history of relief. He has not used the
word <font color=blue>"illegal."<font color=black> The closest he's come has been to admit
this past March, after much stonewalling, that there may
have been quite a lot of <font color=blue>"wrong-doing"<font color=black>--before turning
over the whole mess over to a U.N. investigation that has
since smothered all details with its own blanket of
secrecy.


Mr. Annan is due to step down next year. If he wants to leave a legacy more auspicious than having presided over Oil-for-Fraud, he might want to devote his twilight time at the U.N. to mending a system in which a U.N. Secretary-General feels free to describe the overthrow of a murderous tyrant as <font color=blue>"illegal,"<font color=black> but no one at the top seems particularly bothered to have presided over that tyrant's theft of food from hungry children. <font size=3>

- Ms. Rosett is a fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies and the Hudson Institute. Her column appears here and in The Wall Street Journal Europe on alternate Wednesdays.

defenddemocracy.org



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)9/22/2004 1:31:28 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
<font size=4>Monumental Rip-Off?

Allegations of Widespread Corruption Involve Saddam Hussein, U.N. Senior Officials

<font size=3>By Brian Ross
ABCNEWS.com

April 20 — <font size=4>At least three senior United Nations officials are suspected of taking multimillion-dollar bribes from the Saddam Hussein regime, U.S. and European intelligence sources tell ABCNEWS.

One year after his fall, U.S. officials say they have evidence, some in cash, that Saddam diverted to his personal bank accounts approximately $5 billion from the United Nations Oil-for-Food program.

In what has been described as the largest humanitarian aid effort ever undertaken, the U.N. Oil-for-Food program began in 1996 to help Iraqis who were suffering under sanctions imposed following the first Gulf War.

The program allowed Iraq to sell limited amounts of oil, under supposedly tight U.N. supervision, to finance the purchase of much-needed humanitarian goods.

Most prominent among those accused in the scandal is Benon Sevan, the Cyprus-born U.N. undersecretary general who ran the program for six years.

In an interview with ABCNEWS last year, Sevan denied any wrongdoing.
<font color=blue>
"Well, I can tell you there have been no allegations about me,"<font color=black> he said. <font color=blue>"Maybe you can try to dig it out."<font color=black> And in a Feb. 10 statement, Sevan challenged those making the allegations to <font color=blue>"come forward and provide the necessary documentary evidence"<font color=black> and present it to U.N. investigators.

But documents have surfaced in Baghdad, in the files of the former Iraqi Oil Ministry, allegedly linking Sevan to a pay-off scheme in which some 270 prominent foreign officials received the right to trade in Iraqi oil at cut-rate prices.
<font color=blue>
"It's almost like having coupons of bonds or shares. You can sell those coupons to other people who are normal oil traders,"<font color=black> said Claude Hankes-Drielsma, a British adviser to the Iraq Governing Council.

Investigators say the smoking gun is a letter to former Iraqi oil minister Amer Mohammed Rasheed, obtained by ABCNEWS and not yet in the hands of the United Nations.

........................................................

The following are the names of some of those listed as receiving Iraqi oil contracts (amounts are in millions of barrels of oil):

Russia
The Companies of the Russian Communist Party: 137 million
The Companies of the Liberal Democratic Party: 79.8 million
The Russian Committee for Solidarity with Iraq: 6.5 million and 12.5 million (two separate contracts)
Head of the Russian Presidential Cabinet: 90 million
The Russian Orthodox Church: 5 million

France
Charles Pasqua, former minister of interior: 12 million
Trafigura (Patrick Maugein), businessman: 25 million
Ibex: 47.2 million
Bernard Merimee, former French ambassador to the United Nations: 3 million
Michel Grimard, founder of the French-Iraqi Export Club: 17.1 million

Syria
Firas Mostafa Tlass, son of Syria's defense minister: 6 million

Turkey
Zeynel Abidin Erdem: more than 27 million
Lotfy Doghan: more than 11 million

Indonesia
Megawati Sukarnoputri: 11 million

Spain
Ali Ballout, Lebanese journalist: 8.8 million

Yugoslavia
The Socialist Party: 22 million
Kostunica's Party: 6 million

Canada
Arthur Millholland, president and CEO of Oilexco: 9.5 million

Italy
Father Benjamin, a French Catholic priest who arranged a meeting between the pope and Tariq Aziz: 4.5 million
Roberto Frimigoni: 24.5 million

United States
Samir Vincent: 7 million
Shakir Alkhalaji: 10.5 million

United Kingdom
George Galloway, member of Parliament: 19 million
Mujaheddin Khalq: 36.5 million

South Africa
Tokyo Saxwale: 4 million

Jordan
Shaker bin Zaid: 6.5 million
The Jordanian Ministry of Energy: 5 million
Fawaz Zureikat: 6 million
Toujan Al Faisal, former member of Parliament: 3 million

Lebanon
The son of President Lahoud: 5.5 million

Egypt
Khaled Abdel Nasser: 16.5 million
Emad Al Galda, businessman and Parliament member: 14 million

Palestinian Territories
The Palestinian Liberation Organization: 4 million
Abu Al Abbas: 11.5 million

Qatar
Hamad bin Ali Al Thany: 14 million

Libya
Prime Minister Shukri Ghanem: 1 million

Chad
Foreign minister of Chad: 3 million

Brazil
The October 8th Movement: 4.5 million

Myanmar (Burma)
The minister of the Forests of Myanmar: 5 million

Ukraine
The Social Democratic Party: 8.5 million
The Communist Party: 6 million
The Socialist Party: 2 million
The FTD oil company: 2 million <font size=3>

abcnews.go.com.



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)9/23/2004 10:51:45 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
<font size=4>A DECAYING BODY

The U.N.? Who Cares?

Kofi Annan & Co. might as well move to Brussels or Geneva.
<font size=3>
BY VICTOR DAVIS HANSON
Thursday, September 23, 2004 12:01 a.m.
<font size=4>
These are surreal times. Americans in Iraq are beheaded on videotape. Russian children are machine-gunned in their schools. The elderly in Israel continue to be blown apart on buses. No one--whether in Madrid, Istanbul, Riyadh, Bali, Tel Aviv or New York--is safe from the Islamic fascist, whose real enemy is modernism and Western-inspired freedom of the individual.

Despite the seemingly disparate geography of these continued attacks, we are always familiar with the similar spooky signature: civilians dismembered by the suicide belt, car bomb, improvised explosive device and executioner's blade. Then follows the characteristically pathetic communiqué or loopy fatwa aired on al-Jazeera, evoking everything from the injustice of the Reconquista to some mythical grievance about Crusaders in the holy shrines. Gender equity in the radical Islamic world is now defined by the expendable female suicide bomber's slaughter of Westerners.

In response to such international lawlessness, our global watchdog, the United Nations, had been largely silent. It abdicates its responsibility of ostracizing those states that harbor such mass murderers, much less organizes a multilateral posse to bring them to justice. And yet under this apparent state of siege, President Bush in his recent address to the U.N. offered not blood and iron--other than an obligatory <font color=red>"the proper response is not to retreat but to prevail"<font color=black>--but Wilsonian idealism, concrete help for the dispossessed, and candor about past sins. The president wished to convey a new multilateralist creed that would have made a John Kerry or Madeleine Albright proud, without the Churchillian <font color=purple>"victory at any cost"<font color=black> rhetoric. Good luck.

For years, gay-rights activists and relief workers in Africa have complained that the U.S. did not take the lead in combating the world-wide spread of AIDS. President Bush now offers to spearhead the rescue of the world's infected, with $15 billion in American help in hopes that the world's financial powers--perhaps Japan, China and the European Union--might match or trump that commitment.

Nongovernmental organizations clamor about the unfairness of world trade that left the former Third World with massive debts run up by crooked dictators and complicit Western profiteers. President Bush now talks not of extending further loans to service their spiraling interest payments, but rather of outright grants to clean the slate and thus offer the impoverished a new start.

International women's rights groups vie for the world's attention to stop the shameful international trafficking in women and children, whether as chattel or sexual slaves. The president now pledges to organize enforcement to stop both the smugglers and the predators on the innocent.

For a half century, liberals rightly deplored the old realpolitik in the Middle East, as America and Europe supported autocratic right-wing governments on the cynical premises that they at least promised to keep pumping oil and kept out communists. Now President Bush not only renounces such past opportunism, but also confesses that <font color=red>"for too long, many nations, including my own, tolerated, even excused, oppression in the Middle East in the name of stability."<font color=black> He promises not complacency that ensures continual oppression, but radical changes that lead to freedom.

The Taliban and Saddam Hussein were once the United Nations' twin embarrassments, rogue regimes that thumbed their noses at weak U.N. protestations, slaughtered their own, invaded their neighbors, and turned their outlands into terrorist sanctuaries. Now they are gone, despite either U.N. indifference or veritable opposition to their removal. The United States sought not dictators in their place, but consensual government where it had never existed.

What was the response to Mr. Bush's new multifaceted vision? He was met with stony silence, followed by about seven seconds of embarrassed applause, capped off by smug sneers in the global media. Why so?
<font color=green>
First, the U.N. is not the idealistic postwar organization of our collective Unicef and Unesco nostalgia, the old perpetual force for good that we once associated with hunger relief and peacekeeping. Its membership is instead rife with tyrannies, theocracies and Stalinist regimes. Many of them, like Algeria, Cuba, Iran, Vietnam and Zimbabwe, have served on the U.N.'s 53-member Commission on Human Rights. The Libyan lunocracy--infamous for its dirty war with Chad and cash bounties to mass murderers--chaired the 2003 session. For Mr. Bush to talk to such folk about the need to spread liberty means removing from power, or indeed jailing, many of the oppressors sitting in his audience.
<font color=black>
Second, urging democratic reforms in Palestine, as Mr. Bush also outlined, is antithetical to the very stuff of the U.N., an embarrassing reminder that nearly half of its resolutions in the past half-century have been aimed at punishing tiny democratic Israel at the behest of its larger,more populous--and dictatorial--Arab neighbors. The contemporary U.N., then, has become not only hypocritical, but also a bully that hectors Israel about the West Bank while it gives a pass to a nuclear, billion-person China after swallowing Tibet; wants nothing to do with the two present dangers to world peace, a nuclear North Korea and soon to follow theocratic Iran; and idles while thousands die in the Sudan.

Third, the present secretary-general, Kofi Annan, is himself a symbol of all that is wrong with the U.N. A multibillion dollar oil-for-food fraud, replete with kickbacks (perhaps involving a company that his own son worked for), grew unchecked on his watch, as a sordid array of Baathist killers, international hustlers and even terrorists milked the national petroleum treasure of Iraq while its own people went hungry. In response, Mr. Annan stonewalls, counting on exemption from the New York press on grounds of his unimpeachable liberal credentials. Meanwhile, he prefers to denigrate the toppling of Saddam Hussein as <font color=blue>"illegal,"<font color=black> but neither advocates reinstitution of a "legal" Saddam nor offers any concrete help to Iraqis crafting consensual society. Like the U.N. membership itself, he enjoys the freedom, affluence and security of a New York, but never stops to ask why that is so or how it might be extended to others less fortunate.

Our own problems with the U.N. should now be viewed in a context of ongoing radical change here in the United States, as all the previous liberal assumptions of the past decades undergo scrutiny in our post 9/11 world. There are no longer any sacred cows in the eyes of the American public. Ask Germany and South Korea as American troops depart, Saudi Arabia where bases are closed, and the once beaming Yasser Arafat, erstwhile denizen of the Lincoln Bedroom, as he now broods in his solitary rubble bunker.

Deeds, not rhetoric, are all that matter, as the once unthinkable is now the possible. There is no intrinsic reason why the U.N. should be based in New York rather than in its more logical utopian home in Brussels or Geneva. There is no law chiseled in stone that says any fascist or dictatorial state deserves authorized membership by virtue of its hijacking of a government. There is no logic to why a France is on the Security Council, but a Japan or India is not. And there is no reason why a group of democratic nations, unapologetic about their values and resolute to protect freedom, cannot act collectively for the common good, entirely indifferent to Syria's censure or a Chinese veto.

So Americans' once gushy support for the U.N. during its adolescence is gone. By the 1970s we accepted at best that it had devolved into a neutral organization in its approach to the West, and by the 1980s sighed that it was now unabashedly hostile to freedom. But in our odyssey from encouragement, to skepticism, and then to hostility, we have now reached the final stage--of indifference. Americans do not get riled easily, so the U.N. will go out with a whimper rather than a bang. Indeed, millions have already shrugged, tuned out, and turned the channel on it.
<font size=3>
Mr. Hanson, a military historian, is a senior fellow at Stanford's Hoover Institution.

Copyright © 2004 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)9/26/2004 8:45:24 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Unraveling the U.N. Oil-for-Food Scandal

Saturday, September 25, 2004

NEW YORK — What started as a plan to get humanitarian aid to Iraqis living under Saddam Hussein's regime became what critics call a multi-billion dollar boondoggle: It's the Oil-for-Food (search) program that was run by the United Nations from late 1996 to last year.

For details about how the program operated as well as the investigations taking place to determine what happened to the money, read through this series of recent FOXNews.com articles.

Click on the highlighted headlines below to read the full stories.

Oil-for-Food Scandal Draws Scrutiny to U.N.

The roots of the Oil-for-Food scandal date back to 1991, when a U.N.-backed and U.S.-led coalition expelled Saddam from Kuwait following his hostile takeover of the neighboring country. Although Saddam lost the war, he walked away with important victories — he got to stay in power in Iraq and he ultimately got to pocket millions if not billions of dollars.

Read more here.

Early Warning Not Heeded on Oil-for-Food

The United Nations first tried a series of sanctions to make Saddam bend to its will following the successful 1991 war to oust him from Kuwait. But then it attempted to find a way for Iraqi citizens to get needed medicine and other supplies through the sale of Iraqi oil — an approach that failed.

Possible Saddam-Al Qaeda Link Seen in Oil-for-Food

Buried in some of the United Nations' own confidential documents are clues that a link could have existed between Saddam and the Al Qaeda terror group — clues leading to a locked door in a Swiss lakeside resort.

Read more here.

Did Terrorists Benefit From Oil-for-Food?

U.S. Treasury officials have already identified 11 front companies and nearly 200 Iraqi-controlled firms that they suspect were part of Saddam's secret and illegal network. And they say that's only the tip of the iceberg.

Read more here.

Iraqi People Suffered Under Oil-for-Food

In the Saddam era, Baghdad's Al Rashid Hotel was the main stop on the Oil-for-Food tour. Regime-friendly types would stay there when visiting Baghdad. They'd stop and say hello to Saddam or a crony, snag a voucher good for a load of Iraqi crude and conveniently enough, there were oil traders in the lobby of that hotel who could turn those vouchers into cash.

Read more here.

Watching the U.N. Oil-for-Food Watchdog

The Al Mada weekly in Iraq published a list of the names of some 270 people and organizations that purportedly received Oil-for-Food vouchers from Saddam. One of those names was the same as the last name of the U.N. official who ran the Oil-for-Food program.

Read more here.

foxnews.com



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)9/28/2004 12:43:10 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
LGF - France Advocates Retreat
France? Advocating surrender? Who could imagine?

France seeking to put pullout on agenda.

WASHINGTON — France said Monday that it would take part in a proposed international conference on Iraq only if the agenda included a possible U.S. troop withdrawal, thus complicating the planning for a meeting that has drawn mixed reactions.

Paris also wants representatives of Iraq’s insurgent groups to be invited to a conference in October or November, a call that would seem difficult for the Bush administration to accept.

You think you cannot possibly be further amazed by the persistent idiocy and cowardice of the French government. Then they propose inviting the headchoppers and kidnappers to a conference. And you realize there are depths still unplumbed.



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)10/1/2004 6:45:29 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
.....the committee will also single out certain Security
Council nations as being complicit in the corruption, among
them France, Russia and China. Businesses from these nations,
the memo says, made billions through their involvement with
Saddam’s regime.
....

House Panel to Blast Oil-for-Food Program

Friday, October 01, 2004
By Jonathan Hunt
Fox News

UNITED NATIONS — Congressional investigators have uncovered new evidence of corruption within the U.N. Oil-for-Food program and are expected to unleash a fresh barrage of accusations and criticisms next week, FOX News learned Friday.

A memo, obtained by FOX, was prepared for members of the House subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats and International Relations. The panel, chaired by Rep. Christopher Shays, R-Conn., will hold a hearing on the matter next Tuesday.

The committee will be highly critical of what it says is the lack of transparency about Oil-for-Food, a program the United Nations created in late 1996 to allow the Iraqi government to sell oil so it could buy humanitarian goods. But officials believe billions of dollars were diverted to Saddam Hussein and his associates.

Investigators said the list of oil purchasers was not known and the list of humanitarian providers was not known. Plus they found that not only were internal U.N. audits not released, they continue to be withheld from both member states of the United Nations as well as from the public.

But the committee will also single out certain Security Council nations as being complicit in the corruption, among them France, Russia and China. Businesses from these nations, the memo says, made billions through their involvement with Saddam’s regime.

The committee also has new evidence of how the Iraqi regime abused the program and continued to export oil above and beyond the amounts it should have, thereby generating billions of dollars in extra revenue.


The memo says that in February 2002 the tanker Clovely was loaded with oil by the Iraqis despite that fact that its letters of credit had expired. Officials from Saybolt, the company that was supposed to monitor all Iraqi oil exports, said they tried to stop the loading but they could do nothing because of the limited powers the United Nations gave them.

A Saybolt executive is due to testify at next Tuesday's hearing as well as senior figures from Cotecna, the company that monitored imports into Iraq under Oil-for-Food and BNP Paribas, the French bank that handled most of the scheme's money. U.N. officials will not be there to testify.

A U.N. spokesman said the information cited in the memo has always been in the hands of U.S. government officials. Plus, on Nov. 23 of last year, the United Nations provided the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq with its entire Oil-for-Food database, the spokesman said.

On April 15, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan was quoted as saying that “transparency is the only way to deal with such allegations [Oil-for-Food corruption], and by far the best way to prevent corruption.”

To read a copy of the congressional report, click here (pdf).
foxnews.com

foxnews.com



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)10/2/2004 3:16:34 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Oil-for-food plan sabotaged, report claims

New York Times News Service
Published October 2, 2004

Congressional investigators say France, Russia and China systematically sabotaged the former UN oil-for-food program in Iraq by preventing the United States and Britain from investigating whether Saddam Hussein was diverting billions of dollars.

In a briefing paper given on Friday to members of the House subcommittee investigating the program, the investigators said their review of the minutes of a United Nations Security Council subcommittee meeting showed that the three nations "continually refused to support the U.S. and U.K. efforts to maintain the integrity" of the program.

The program, set up in 1996, was an attempt to keep up international pressure on Hussein to disarm while helping the Iraqi people survive the sanctions imposed after the invasion of Kuwait in 1990.

The briefing paper was prepared by the House Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats and International Relations, before hearings scheduled Tuesday on the scandal-ridden program, the second the subcommittee has held.

Copyright © 2004, Chicago Tribune



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)10/5/2004 7:02:12 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Why isn't the Lamestream Media reporting this!........

Saddam misused oil-food program


By Bill Gertz (Hat tip to KLP)
THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Congressional investigators have uncovered new information showing how Saddam Hussein's government systematically purchased military-related goods for the seven years of the U.N. oil-for-food program.

According to officials involved in ongoing probes, motorcycles bought by Saddam under the United Nations' food program were used by the Fedayeen to attack U.S. forces in Iraq.


"Trucks, pickups, motorcycles and other equipment purchased by Iraqi ministries were pooled and then sent to the Defense Ministry," one official said. "They ordered motorcycles that were used by Fedayeen against us."

The black-hooded guerrillas under Saddam waged commando-type attacks on advancing U.S. troops in spring 2003.

Investigators from the staff of the House International Relations Committee disclosed details of their probe, one of several being carried out by Congress, including new details on Saddam's bribes to U.N. officials and officials of foreign governments.

A second investigation, led by Rep. Christopher Shays, Connecticut Republican and chairman of the Government Reform subcommittee on national security, emerging threats and international relations, has found that Saddam ran the Iraqi side of the food program as a "cash cow" that let him buy weapons with some of the $10 billion he siphoned off, according to a report by the investigators.

Mr. Shays' panel is scheduled to hold a hearing on the report today.

The governments of Russia, France and China also blocked U.S. efforts within the United Nations to stop abuse of the program, which was designed to get food and medicine to Iraqis through limited sales of oil.

"As the program developed, it became increasingly apparent the French, Russians, and Chinese had much to gain from maintaining the status quo," a staff subcommittee memorandum states.

The Shays investigation also concluded that the U.N. officials, including executive director Benon Sevan, also abused the oil-for-food program.

Mr. Sevan was identified in Iraqi Oil Ministry documents as having participated in a scheme by Saddam to issue vouchers to people that let them profit from illicit sales of Iraqi oil. Mr. Sevan has denied accusations that he profited from the program.

The report makes another charge of corruption, about nepotism involving Kojo Annan, the son of U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and a former employee of the Swiss-based company Cotecna.

The report stated that Cotecna, which the United Nations hired to monitor goods entering Iraq under the oil-for-food program, "was guilty of a wide variety of abuses," including overcharging the United Nations and failing to inspect goods entering Iraq.

A U.N. audit revealed that up to $111 million was missing as a result of Cotecna's work in northern Iraq, the report said.


Investigators for Rep. Henry J. Hyde, Illinois Republican and chairman of the International Relations Committee, said their panel's probe has uncovered lists of companies favored by Saddam that profited from the illicit oil and humanitarian goods trade.

The panel also uncovered blacklists of firms that were denied lucrative contracts because of suspected links to Israel or because they refused to go along with corruption.

The Hyde investigators said there are signs that Saddam's government used money obtained under the U.N. program to buy arms from Russia and Belarus or on the international black market through middlemen in Jordan and Syria.

The Iraqis obtained cash for Saddam or his agents by adding surcharges of between 5 percent and 15 percent to sales of Iraqi oil permitted by the U.N. program.

"This program was flawed from the start," one official said. "It granted Saddam so much autonomy in picking winners and losers — who got oil contracts, who got humanitarian contracts."

The investigators think that Saddam made about $4 billion through smuggling oil and about $6 billion in corruption related to contracts. The $10 billion estimate is considered a conservative one, the officials said.

The United Nations is conducting its own oil-for-food corruption probe, led by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker.

washtimes.com



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)10/5/2004 11:04:09 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
"And this is the organization without whose support John
Kerry would refuse to take action to protect America's
security."


THE U.N.'S TERROR PROBLEM

NY Post

October 5, 2004 -- Israel is up in arms — and rightly so: The head of the key United Nations agency dealing with the Palestinians has admitted that his organization employs members of the terrorist group Hamas.

Worse yet, he says he has no problem with that.

There's more.
Israeli officials have released an alarming videotape that shows terrorists using an official United Nations vehicle to transport Qassam rockets. (The video was shot from an unmanned Israeli drone over the Jabalya refugee camp in Gaza.)

The same terror-friendly U.N. official — Peter Hansen, the director of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) — insists the tape only shows a stretcher, not a rocket, being loaded into the truck.

(PLO leader Yasser Arafat has chimed in on the dispute with the incredible claim that the easily hidden and transported Qassam missiles, which have become a weapon of choice for groups like Hamas, cause no casualties and "only make noise.")

But Israeli officials are standing by their accusation and demanding a full investigation — and Hansen's immediate firing.

Yesterday, Secretary-General Kofi Annan launched a formal probe. (Meanwhile, the Security Council got set for a special meeting to condemn Israel for its latest military response in Gaza — as always, with not a word about the murderous Palestinian terrorism that preceded it.)

Canada, a major financial backer of UNRWA, is asking for a "clarification" from the United Nations. Washington, another big donor, should go even further and suspend its payments.

The video is damning enough — though it's hardly surprising in light of the United Nations' long and sorry history of one-sided bias against Israel.


Back in October 2000, recall, the United Nations sought to hide a videotape showing the aftermath of three Israeli soldiers being kidnaped along the Lebanese border by terrorists from Hezbollah. Pressed by Israel, the world body finally admitted the tape existed — but refused to release it until the faces of all the terrorists were first obscured.

That was necessary, the United Nations said, in order to protect its own strict "neutrality."

In fact, the U.N. won't even admit that such groups engage in terrorism against Israel.

Which is why UNRWA's Hansen says of the presence of Hamas members on his payroll: "I don't see that as a crime." Hamas, he says, "is a political organization . . . and we do not do political vetting."


All he demands of his staff, says Hansen, "is that they behave in accordance with U.N. standards." And we all know what those standards are.

Israel's U.N. ambassador, Dan Gillerman, has written the secretary-general to charge that "instead of serving the interests of peace, the U.N. enlists in Gaza . . . on the side of terrorists."

And this is the organization without whose support John Kerry would refuse to take action to protect America's security.


nypost.com



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)10/6/2004 2:55:24 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
UN Prepares To Cut And Run Again

Captain Ed

The organization whose approval John Kerry requires for global action in defense of our national security has been urged to run away yet again from Iraq due to the danger of confronting terrorists, the AP has just reported:

<<<Two organizations representing more than 60,000 United Nations staff members urged Secretary-General Kofi Annan on Wednesday to pull all U.N. staff out of Iraq because of the "unprecedented" risk to their safety and security.

In a joint letter to Annan, the staff organizations cited a dramatic escalation in attacks in Iraq and said the United Nations regrettably "has become a direct target, one that is particularly prone to attacks by ruthless extremist terrorist factions."

"Just one staff member is one staff member too many in Iraq," they said. "We ... appeal to your good judgment to ensure that no further staff members be sent to Iraq and that those already deployed be instructed to leave as soon as possible."

Annan pulled all U.N. international staff out of Iraq a year ago, following two bombings at U.N. headquarters in Baghdad and a spate of attacks on humanitarian workers. The first bombing, on Aug. 22, 2003, killed the top U.N. envoy, Sergio Vieira de Mello, and 21 others.

In August, the secretary-general allowed a small U.N. contingent to return to Baghdad and imposed a ceiling of 35 international staffers, but he has been under pressure to increase the number to help Iraq prepare for elections in January.>>>

In fact, that number came under ridicule from John Edwards last night, who claimed that Cleveland needed more than 35 staffers to ensure fair elections, let alone a vast country like Iraq. He's right, of course, but what's his solution? Turning the entire country over to the pusillanimous posturers at Turtle Bay, who bugged out in 2003 because they were stupid enough to hire their former IIS minders as their security contingent instead of relying on American forces. Their mission chief paid for that mistake with his life and the lives of 22 others.


Kofi Annan has yet to respond, but the letter from the worker's unions have this to say about their commitment to a better world for the Iraqi people:

<<<"While we understand that the people of Iraq deserve the support and assistance of the international community, we cannot condone the deployment of U.N. staff to Iraq in view of the unprecedented high level of risk to the safety and security of staff," the letter signed by the two presidents said.>>>

In other words, we'd love to see Iraq as a safe and peaceful country, but we're not going to do any heavy lifting to make it happen. We'd love Iraqis to be free, but only if someone else makes all the bad people go away.

This has been the consistent result of UN leadership over the past decade and more. Under the auspices of the UN, Saddam was allowed to defy resolution after resolution and repeatedly violate the terms of the Safwan cease-fire without any consequences. Indeed, the UN even created a vast program designed to feed his people and allowed the recalcitrant tyrant to steal $10 billion from it without challenge. In Srebrenica, Kosovo, Rwanda, and other places under the UN's so-called protection, as soon as hostilities broke out, blue-helmeted "peacekeepers" ran to the nearest barracks to wait out the violence.

The UN has built a consistent track record of cowardice and corruption. John Kerry feels that such an organization should have the final say on the legitimacy of American security policy. If he believes that the UN will protect Americans any better than they have protected Rwandans, Bosnians, or the Iraqi people, then he is so seriously deluded that his very nomination calls into question the legitimacy of the Democratic Party.



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)10/7/2004 3:16:24 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 35834
 
Duelfer Report: Saddam Bribed Jacques Chirac To Veto War

Captain Ed

In yet another revelation that the French conspired to undermine US and global security, the Duelfer report from the Iraq Survey Group provides evidence that Saddam Hussein had bribed the French to not just sit out the war but to actively undermine any attempts to enforce the UNSC resolutions against Iraq:


<<<SADDAM HUSSEIN believed he could avoid the Iraq war with a bribery strategy targeting Jacques Chirac, the President of France, according to devastating documents released last night.

Memos from Iraqi intelligence officials, recovered by American and British inspectors, show the dictator was told as early as May 2002 that France - having been granted oil contracts - would veto any American plans for war.
>>>

The Scotsman also reports what the American media is blaring to the exclusion of everything else in the ISG final report: Iraq had no stockpiles of WMD. Most mainstream outlets are playing down the finding that Saddam fully intended on restarting his WMD programs as soon as sanctions were removed, making the entire exercise a waste of time:

>>>Saddam was convinced that the UN sanctions - which stopped him acquiring weapons - were on the brink of collapse and he bankrolled several foreign activists who were campaigning for their abolition. He personally approved every one.

To keep America at bay, he focusing on Russia, France and China - three of the five UN Security Council members with the power to veto war. Politicians, journalists and diplomats were all given lavish gifts and oil-for-food vouchers.

Tariq Aziz, the former Iraqi deputy prime minister, told the ISG that the "primary motive for French co-operation" was to secure lucrative oil deals when UN sanctions were lifted. Total, the French oil giant, had been promised exploration rights.

Iraqi intelligence officials then "targeted a number of French individuals that Iraq thought had a close relationship to French President Chirac," it said, including two of his "counsellors" and spokesman for his re-election campaign.
>>>>

The list of the bribed, if not coerced, is long and distinguished. ABC News published an early list of the major players, but the CIA has added a few eye-opening names:

Among the alleged recipients of oil vouchers were Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri, former French Interior Minister Charles Pasqua, Russian ultranationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky and his Liberal Democratic Party, the Russian presidential office, the Russian Foreign Ministry, the Ukraine Community Party, the Ukraine Socialist Party, the son of Lebanese President Emile Lahoud and the Peoples Liberation Front of Palestine. There are also many others.
The only U.N. official on the list is Benon Sevan, the head of the humanitarian program for Iraq, who has been accused previously of receiving an oil voucher and has denied it several times. He is list as a Mr. Sifan, a U.N. official.


As I wrote earlier today, the evidence clearly shows that the UN has become hopelessly corrupt and the "global community" consists of a pack of bribed sell-outs who chose to feed their avarice rather than stand up to a madman. Had we allowed them to continue their efforts, sanctions would have been dropped and Saddam would be ramping up his WMD programs as I write this. Putting our national security in their hands is not just poor judgement, it's a recipe for suicide.



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)10/7/2004 3:43:25 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (5) | Respond to of 35834
 
Roger L Simon

More Important than WMDs

... is the reputation of the United Nations. It is in tatters and the reactionaries (yes, I keep using that word because I want to rub their noses in reality) now in control of my Democratic Party are not facing it. That absolute phony liberal John Kerry keeps advocating cooperation with our "allies" without paying the slightest heed to who our allies really are. According to the latest report:

<<<The top U.S. arms inspector has accused the former head of the $60 billion U.N. oil-for-food program of accepting bribes in the form of vouchers for Iraqi oil sales from Saddam Hussein's government.

The report by Charles Duelfer, head of the Iraq Survey Group, alleges the Iraqi government manipulated the U.N. program from 1996 to 2003 in order to acquire billions of dollars in illicit gains and to import illegal goods, including acquiring parts for missile systems.

The alleged schemes included an Iraqi system for allocating lucrative oil vouchers, which permitted recipients to purchase certain amounts of oil at a profit.

Benon Sevan, the former chief of the U.N. program, is among dozens of people who allegedly received the vouchers, according to the report, which said Saddam personally approved the list.

The secret voucher program was dominated by Russian, French and Chinese recipients, in that order, with Saddam spreading the wealth widely to prominent business men, politicians, foreign government ministries and political parties, the report said.

The report names former French Interior Minister Charles Pasqua, Indonesian president Megawati Sukarnoputri, and the Russian radical political figure Vladimir Zhirinovsky as voucher recipients, for example, and other foreign governments range from Yemen to Namibia.>>>

"Global Test" my fat tuchas. John Kerry does not deserve the vote of any citizen of the United States until he confronts this reality. Any liberals out there should be ashamed of themselves for supporting a man who wants to ratify this viciously corrupt and immoral system. That's not liberalism - unless you consider the Mafia to be liberal.


rogerlsimon.com



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)10/19/2004 12:39:45 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
UN Fails "Global Test"

UN oil for food chief faces inquiry into property deals

BY Damien McElroy and Charles Laurence in New York
TELEGRAPH UK

American prosecutors are preparing charges against Benon Sevan, the former head of the United Nations oil for food programme, who has been accused of accepting millions of dollars in kickbacks from Saddam Hussein's regime.

Congressional investigators examining alleged corruption in the programme disclosed that Mr Sevan's diplomatic immunity would not prevent an indictment being issued. Mr Sevan has consistently denied any wrongdoing.

Benon Sevan: denial
"We have tried to find out what part he had and we've been working to lift the lid on what he did," said one official on the US Congress International Relations committee. "My understanding is that we can indict him without lifting diplomatic immunity. That's what we did with Noriega."

Gen Manuel Noriega, the Panamanian leader, was indicted in 1988 by a federal grand jury in Miami for drug trafficking. He had allowed the Medellin cartel to launder money and build cocaine laboratories in Panama.

Former officials in Iraq's state oil company, Somo, have alleged to investigators reporting to the International Relations committee that Mr Sevan was "sacked" on Saddam's orders in 2001 for failing to keep promises to campaign on ending sanctions.

"The basic understanding of these officials is that Saddam felt short-changed by this guy who took the money but did not deliver," said one committee staffer.

Mr Sevan had been due to retire this year until a committee was appointed to investigate allegations that he had taken kickbacks from Saddam's regime. In his native Cyprus last week, he denied that he was running away from his accusers.

"These people are digging, digging. That's nothing to do with me," he said from his five-star hotel. "Cyprus is my home. I'm here because I want to be here. I've made my statement and stand by it. It's not for me to comment on anything else."

A spokesman for the Southern district of Manhattan's federal prosecutor's office said it was "too early" to comment on its indictment efforts over Mr Sevan. Officials are, however, examining the diplomat's extensive property portfolio in the United States.

According to records, properties registered in his name include a flat in Manhattan, a house in the Hamptons on Long Island, a house in the nearby district of Rye, and a house on New Jersey's "Gold Coast". The Congressional official said: "It's an issue that he has property in the Hamptons and Manhattan."

A second Congressional official said that the US hoped to recover some of the funds allegedly siphoned off from the now-defunct oil sales programme, which was designed to alleviate shortages of basic goods in Iraq as a result of sanctions.

He said: "Our priority is to recover as much money as we can for Iraq, for various reasons, because they need the money and every dollar they have is a dollar we don't have to put in there."

A CIA report published earlier this month claimed that Mr Sevan was allocated vouchers by Saddam to sell 7.3 million barrels of Iraqi oil through a Panamanian-registered company. Quoting "high-level sources", the report said: "Sevan never received his oil allocation in person. Sevan's vouchers were always picked up by Fakhir Abdul Noor, an Egyptian now residing in Switzerland and connected to the African Middle East Petroleum Co, who would sign documents on Sevan's behalf and pick up his allocation."



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)10/20/2004 7:49:18 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
“Conflicts-of-Interest-R-Us”

NRO

Over at the United Nations "Conflicts-of-Interest-R-Us" world headquarters, there's a new twist on the former Oil-for-Food program for Iraq. Secretary General Kofi Annan has now decided that the U.N.-authorized investigation into Oil-for-Food, the "independent inquiry" headed by former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker, will be funded with money left over in the administrative account of...Oil-for-Food.

In other words, Volcker's investigation, with its $30-million projected budget, will now be funded out of one of the same Oil-for-Food accounts Volcker is supposed to be investigating.

That's bad enough. The other problem with Annan's plan is that all Oil-for-Food money flowed from the oil wells of Iraq and was meant to bring aid to the Iraqi people. Any leftover funds belong by rights to the Iraqis, to serve their needs — not those of the U.N. So why should Annan use the Iraqi people's money to pay for an inquiry into an Iraq-relief program that under U.N. management became the biggest bungle in the history of humanitarian relief?



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)10/26/2004 1:31:34 PM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 35834
 
Resistance met in U.N. oil-for-food probe

Volcker Cites Friction United Nations
, NY, Oct. 26 (UPI) --

The U.N. investigation into Iraq's corrupt oil-for-food program has started running into resistance, the lead investigator told the Financial Times. Paul Volcker said after six months of work, documents found at the Iraqi oil ministry include the names of several prominent politicians in France, Russia and elsewhere who allegedly received illegal Iraqi oil from Saddam Hussein. He said so far investigators have had "good cooperation," but as the web of corruption peels away, "a certain amount of friction" was being encountered. "When you begin to appraise and find out about a particular company that was really corrupt, and the people who may have been behind that, then you will get some resistance, whether by government or otherwise," he said. The U.S. Congress has four congressional committees also investigating, as well as two New York law enforcement agencies, which Volcker said was not working out well. "We'd like to think that they are complementary (to the investigation). But they are not. They are competing," he said.

washingtontimes.com



To: Sully- who wrote (5164)11/9/2004 8:38:09 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (50) | Respond to of 35834
 
Feed the world - or free it?

By Eamonn on Globalization - Adam Smith blog

It's 20 years since Band Aid released "Feed the World" in order to raise money for starvation relief in Africa. But did it do any good?

In individual cases, yes, obviously. But humanitarian aid does not get to the root cause of the problem. Once again we have a crisis, this time on Sudan's western border with Chad, where Sudan's scumbag government and the militias it supports have attacked and killed thousands, simply on the grounds of their ethnicity and religion. There, it's pointless to send food aid because the government simply isn't letting it get to the people who need it.

Adam Smith wrote that to lift a country out of poverty, you need "peace, easy taxes, and a tolerable administration of justice". But our world institutions haven't exactly excelled in bringing those conditions about.

Indeed, what use is a UN where all countries, however vicious, count equally - where even genocidal Sudan can be voted on to the Human Rights Commission? It's time the world's liberal and democratic nations got together: as Brookings scholars Ivo Daalder and James Lindsay wrote in this weekend's Financial Times, we need a formal alliance of democracies. A world body that would make it very plain to tyrannical and genocidal governments that their age has passed, and that would act positively to spread democracy and the virtues of peace and free trade across the planet. For there is no prospect of prosperity until those essential conditions exist.