U.N. names oil companies in Iraq kickback scheme

phoenix80

Banned
U.N. names oil companies in Iraq kickback scheme

Reuters
27-10-05

Oil companies, including one that employed an Iraq weapons supplier, paid hundreds of millions of dollars in illegal kickbacks to Saddam Hussein during the U.N. oil-for-food program, a U.N. report said on Thursday.

Saddam Hussein's government took in $228.8 million (128.3 million pounds) from surcharges in connection with oil contracts, the report said. That was nearly 13 percent of the $1.8 billion in surcharges Iraq received from more than 2,200 foreign companies during the oil-for-food humanitarian program of 1996 to 2003, the report charged.

Intricate webs of companies, individuals, and governments stretching from Europe to Asia took part in paying illicit surcharges to Saddam's government. Russia and France were the countries with the most companies involved in the oil-for-food program.

The bulk of the illicit oil contract payments began when Iraq began levelling surcharges at the end of 2000. The surcharges, which lasted until the end of 2002, caused Iraq's regular customers to balk, the report said.

As a result, a group of four trading companies financed and lifted more than 60 percent of Iraqi crude oil in the market from December 2000 to mid-2001, Phase IX of the oil-for-food program.

Those trading companies were U.S. and Bahamas-based Bayoil, and three Swiss companies: Taurus, Vitol, and Glencore, according to the report.

All of the oil traders, executives and companies have denied knowingly making surcharge payments to Iraq.

Bayoil President David Chalmers and his former business associate, Augusto Giangrandi, used a front company, Italtech, to solicit oil allocations in Iraq, the report said.

Chalmers met Giangrandi, who was involved in selling weapons to Iraq, in the late 1980s. Giangrandi secured cluster bombs for Iraq.

Bayoil eventually paid more than $6 million in surcharges to the Iraqi regime through Al Wasel & Babel General Trading and Al-Hoda International Trading Co.

Jordanian businessman Talal Hussein Abu-Reyaleh, a Glencore agent, paid the surcharges, and Glencore paid him, the report said.

Vitol used Malaysian company Mastek to finance many of its oil deals with Iraq. The report said Iraq's oil marketing company, SOMO, received nearly $10 million of the charges it levied on Mastek in an account at Jordan National Bank in 31 separate payments.

Other companies, Dutch-based Trafigura and French oil services firm Ibex Energy, bribed U.N.-hired inspectors to buy more oil than was authorised under the oil-for-food program, the report from a U.N.-established Independent Inquiry Committee said.

Trafigura on Thursday denied it was knowingly involved in payment of bribes to purchase Iraqi oil.

The oil-for-food program was introduced in 1996 as a way to ease sanctions levied in 1990 against Iraq after it invaded Kuwait. It was designed to allow Baghdad to sell oil to pay for food and medicine for the Iraqi people.

The 500-page report is the final one from the panel, led by former U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, which has investigated the now-defunct program for the past 19 months. The report aims to put into context the manipulation of the program by companies around the world as well as individuals, groups and governments.

Also named was U.S.-based Coastal. French bank BNP-Paribas (BNPP.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) which held the escrow for the program, failed to act against corruption in the program.

"While some elements of the bank's relations to the U.N. remain in dispute, BNP was clearly inhibited from disclosing fully the first-hand knowledge it acquired of the true nature of financial relationships that fostered the payment of illicit surcharges," said the report.

Under the program, Iraq sold a total of $64.2 billion of oil to 248 companies, of which 139 paid illicit surcharges, the report said.

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/new...R761418_RTRUKOC_0_UK-IRAQ-PROBE-COMPANIES.xml

Russia and France were the countries with the most companies involved in the oil-for-food program

Now the answer to the question of why French and Russian govts opposed the war against Saddam is clear!

They, again, didnt care about well being of Iraqis and they just wanted to suck the oil of the nation of Iraq. That is for sure.
 
Italian guy and Phoninx

It simply amazes me how you can misquote me so. Either you dont at all understand what I said, or you are destorting what I said deliberatly to prove your point. Which is really sad.

1. I NEVER DENIED FRANCE WAS INVOLVED. Not once. Point to one place where I said "France is not involved in the UN scam". On the contrary both Ted, MightyMcbeth I, and several others have said France WAS involved, deeply by the looks of it. I just said "so was 65 other countries, so who are you to judge?". Thats it, I can accept France's guilt, and I would wager that both Canadian and Italian companies were on that list as well.

2. Figuring that neither one of you are American citizens, and I am. The national pride arguement is totally ridiculous. The difference between myself and other Americans is that see faults on all sides, I am not norrow minded to think the fault is only on 1 country and nobody else.

Disagree if you wish, but don't destort things I said into things I didnt say.
 
Okay here we go again:

Russia and France were the countries with the most companies involved in the oil-for-food program

We already stated that we are aware of this and we aren't denying this.
But how to fit this in then?

The U.S. Treasury Department failed to adequately monitor U.S. companies that violated U.N. sanctions against Iraq, permitting a Houston-based oil company to avoid scrutiny as it paid Saddam Hussein's government more than $37 million in illegal kickbacks, according to a report released yesterday by Democrats investigating abuses in the U.N. oil-for-food program.

Bayoil, a Texas firm indicted by a federal grand jury last month for paying millions of dollars in illegal fees to Iraq, received "minimal attention" from Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) as it managed the import of more than 200 million barrels of Iraqi crude into the United States between 2000 and 2002, according to the report released by Sen. Carl M. Levin (Mich.), the ranking Democrat on the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.

To read the rest, see: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/05/16/AR2005051601369.html

p.s. The firm Bayoil is also mentioned in your article,

Bayoil President David Chalmers and his former business associate, Augusto Giangrandi, used a front company, Italtech, to solicit oil allocations in Iraq, the report said.
But I guess you figured that they were French. It is sometimes so easy to miss a fact like that, isn't it>
 
I forgot to mention that I find it quaint that one of the longest threads is how fed up the US is with the UN. But you quote them when it is convinient for your post. This eclectic use of information is..... well it is just somewhat ironic.
 
Mmarsh, I just pointed out that you said

mmarsh said:
The real reason the French were against Iraq was because they were afraid about muslim extremists hitting back on western targets

While the truth is that France (along with Russia and China) was against the war because they had business with Saddam.

Did I distort anything?
 
Yes, actually you did (perhaps it was unintentional)

I never said it was the ONLY reason, nor did I actually deny or even suggest that France wasnt involved. I specifically more than once said it WAS involved. What I said above was that oil wasn't the real (meaning the "principal" reason), the 'Real' reason was that the French didnt have the stomach for another war.

You and Phoneix just twisted my words to suggest that I was denying the obvious. Even though I specifically stated that I thought France was dirty in this affair.
 
Ok my apologizes then. I'm sorry. I keep begging to differ though: IMO the real (main) reason for France opposing the war was business, not fear.
 
Alright now that we have established that we differ on the motive of France not to enter the war, can we now focus on America's motivesto enter the war?
I can't prove any of it, but I have a really hard time accepting the the US merely did this to help the misfortunes of the oppressed in Iraq. We already know that the biological excuse was bogus, so what about the other motives?
 
I'm sorry Ted this topic has been done so many times before that I don't think anyone is eager to enter it again. I for one have written a lot about it.
 
Hahahahaha that's okay Italian Guy, I'm new here and ready to rumble! I'll have a look-see into the old forums. The ability to switch on thought intregue me a lot.
 
Ted said:
I forgot to mention that I find it quaint that one of the longest threads is how fed up the US is with the UN. But you quote them when it is convinient for your post. This eclectic use of information is..... well it is just somewhat ironic.
agreed
but then they refuse to believe that they have done very little good and continue to ***** n moan, dispite the fact that the USA has continually undermined the UN and then goes and complains when they dont do what they want

they've got the blinkers on
 
Locke said:
Ted said:
I forgot to mention that I find it quaint that one of the longest threads is how fed up the US is with the UN. But you quote them when it is convinient for your post. This eclectic use of information is..... well it is just somewhat ironic.
agreed
but then they refuse to believe that they have done very little good and continue to b**ch n moan, dispite the fact that the USA has continually undermined the UN and then goes and complains when they dont do what they want

they've got the blinkers on

Facts are facts, the UN had to report this data.

Just because one doesn't like the practices and beaurocracy of the UN, doesn't mean they can't use information given from report done on the matter.

The statement itself which the UN was forced to give out, was due to an investigation (read the article more carefully).

Nothing ironic here, except whos really got the blinkers on.
 
Umm, this isn't really anything new, I read an article at the beginning of the war in Iraq, I believe the number of contracts that countries had with Iraq via the Oil for Food Program were as followed. France: 9,000+, Russia: 7,000+, China 2,000+, United Kingdom: 8 (4 under review) United States: 2. Something along those lines. Personally, I was not suprised when I heard this, I remember in middle school talking in Geography about an incident where US Navy Seals boarded a Russian tanker illegally carring Oil from Iraq. Of course I did not understand what that meant at the time, I do however remember thinking "What does that mean? The oil is red, green, black and white? I don't get it." Ah the advantages of being a youth and ignorant of world politics, something nobody truly understands but everyone claims to be an expert.

If nothing else this kills the argument that America Britain are fighting this war for oil because then I can turn around and say that France, Russia and China oppose this war for oil. Back to square one.

I don't even dwell on the oil issue, it is stupid, why waste all that oil to try and get access to the third largest oil supply when we have a monopoly on the first and second largest supplies of oil? (Saudi Arabia and Canada)

To me the reason for war is simple. One of the key themes for establishing the UN was "Never again." referring to the Holocaust, one of the UN's primary goal is to never allow another genocide. The problem is that one can not even say that the UN is losing that fight because they are simply ignoring it. In Asia, Africa and Central America the UN has not even taken a side glance at these instances. How many more times will we say never again? The answer seems simple, a lot! (Please note, the US is just as guilty as all other members of the United Nations, especially the Security Council which, using Rwanda as an examply, held behind the curtains meetings in which they agreed to never mention the word Genocide when discussing the "Incident in Rwanda."
 
The only reason the UN opposed the War, is becuse their aid money was funding the Iraqi Army. They are now IMO at the same level as the Leauge of Nations. They are as incompetent and as corrupt.
 
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