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Available
for Media Interviews: IanWilliams@MaximsNews.com
| The MaximsNews Global Pundit
Ian Williams
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The Sound of
Silence:
As in Dogs Not
Barking
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The
MaximsNews Global Pundit is also a journalist,
U.N. Correspondent for The Nation and the past
president of the United Nations Correspondents
Association. IanWilliams@MaximsNews.com
UNITED NATIONS - 11 January 2006 / www.MaximsNews.com/ It
was like hearing the first cuckoo of spring.
MSNBC called recently to see if I would be interested in discussing
the UN's waste, mismanagement and corruption in
handling the Tsunami funds twelve months ago. It was
they suggested, 'The biggest financial scandal since
Oil for Food.'
It was, in fact, deja vu over again. Twelve
months ago, in the immediate aftermath of the
Tsunami, I was being ferried around the studios to
discuss the shock and horror of UN Humanitarian
Affairs chief Jan Egeland calling the US 'mean.'
Mere technical details like the fact that he had
said no such thing did not dam the tidal wave of
indignation bouncing off the walls of the
conservative echo-chamber.
Egeland had actually said that the developed
countries had almost all failed to meet their own
targets of 0.7% of GDP going to Overseas Development
Assistance, which is indisputably true. He did not
specify that of all of them, the US was the meanest,
but I had no compunction about reminding viewers.
In fact the US had offered an initial $30 million at
the time of the Tsunami, which the talking heads all
considered as the height of generosity. As the scale
of the tragedy broke, the administration added
several zeroes to its initial offer. However the
purpose of the show was not to congratulate me on my
prescience, it was to find another excuse to attack
the UN.
In fact, I am somewhat surprised that no one has yet
found a way to link the Hurricane Katrina debacle to
the UN. But somehow the right does not want to
remind people about the New Orleans debacle.
I doubt that we have heard the last of this newly
launched Tsunami canard, not least since Bill
Clinton's position as UN Special Envoy makes it a
double whammy for the right. The UN is always wrong,
it is simply a question of pinning its inherent
wrongness to a topical peg.
However we can draw some comfort. Could it be that
that 'Oil for Food' as a subject has lost its appeal
even for the rabid right?
On one level, this is probably no bad thing, since
the voluminous but vapid Volcker Report finally said
all there was to say, and probably a lot more than
was worth saying, about the alleged scandal.
De minimis Lex non curat, says the old legal
saw, 'The law does not concern itself with trifles.'
If only we could say the same of much of the media,
which of course concerns itself with little else.
For a year every minute item about the Oil For Food
Program has been bellowed breathlessly from the
conservative media.
And suddenly, there is silence. Last month Kojo
Annan, son of Kofi ,was awarded large damages
against the Murdoch-owned London Sunday Times, which
has to admit that its story connecting him to Oil
For Food contracts had no substance. You did not see
the story on Fox, MSNBC, or any of the usual cabal.
In December, the US charged two colonels who had
worked for the 'Coalition Provisional Authority'
with accepting bribes of $200,000 a month for
steering contracts to companies that were seemingly
just shells. They worked with someone whom the
Coalition Provisional Authority hired as comptroller
with a budget of $82 million - despite a previous
felony conviction for fraud.
It did not make the headlines. Senator Norm Coleman
and Congressman Henry Hyde did not call for the
resignation of the chief executive of the
organization involved, one George W. Bush.
And no one mentioned that much of the money involved
presumably came from the $10 billion surplus that
the UN Oil For Food Fund had handed over to the
Development Fund for Iraq, controlled by the CPA.
During its blessedly short life span, the American
dominated CPA spent nearly $20 billion of the $23.34
billion of Iraqi funds it had under its control for
just over a year.
It spent just $300 million of the
US taxpayer funding pledges of $18.4 billion for
Iraq's reconstruction.
At a press conference at the UN on Wednesday 28
December the members of the International Accounting
and Monitoring Board set up by the Security Council
to monitor CPI spending of DFI funds, reinforced the
impression that the Pentagon's efforts to freeze
them out were a waste of effort.
The body bared its
gums and refused to bark at the clear evidence of
gross waste, mismanagement and corruption by the
CPA.
The board simply examined 24 sole sourced contracts
that the CPA awarded worth more than five million
dollars. In fact, we discovered during the press
conference, they had paid KPMG to 'audit' 23 of
them, representing some $600 million which it was
suggested was mostly a process of examining American
government audits.
The Pentagon had heavily censored what they provided
to the IAMB until Congressman Henry Waxman posted
their devastating reports on his website.
The biggest sole-sourced contract was Kellogg Brown
Root, the Halliburton subsidiary which walked off
with $1.6 billion. KPMG recused itself from this, so
the IAMB relied on the work of the Special Inspector
General for Iraq as well as the Pentagon audits.
Just consider. The US gave a sole sourced contract
to a subsidiary of the company that had had Vice
President Dick Cheney CEO from which he is still
rolling up deferred compensation.
The audit was
carried out by Stuart Bowen, the Special Inspector
General, appointed by President George W. Bush,
whose lawyer he had been in various forms way back
to his time as Governor of Texas.
Through almost complete media silence about this
ultimate in potential whitewashes, one cannot help
but hear echoes, of the febrile demands for
transparency from the UN, on the need for external
checks. If Kofi Annan had appointed his
own lawyer to conduct the Inquiry that Volcker
actually headed, can you imagine the frothy
indignation?
It also emerges that the IAMB did not examine the
other contracts at all, not even to check the
open-ness and fairness of the bidding, let alone to
see if the money from the Development Fund was in
fact spent on behalf of the Iraqi people as
mandated.
In fact, even Bowen's report managed more
indignation than the IAMB has so far mustered.
Almost the only admonition from the Board has been
to suggest mildly that the US reimburse the $200
million plus that KBR overcharged for fuel supplies
to Iraq. Bowen found a massive $8.8 billion of
Development Fund for Iraq money could not be
accounted for
That was the result of Defense Department Audits
that the Pentagon tried to conceal from the IAMB,
and which were only revealed by Waxman who has
managed far more indignation about it than the
IAMB's public statements display.
Tne cannot help
suspecting that some of the board's five members
have had words with US administration officials.
Even Bowen complained about this one.
As Waxman said back in June, 'there has been a stark
and telling contrast between Congress' approach to
the Oil For Food Program and the DFI.
Five separate
congressional committees have been investigating
U.N. mismanagement of the Oil for Food Program, and
more than a dozen hearings have been held. But
before today there was not a single hearing in
Congress on U.S. mismanagement of the Development
Fund for Iraq,' which, as he points out, is the
successor to the Oil For Food program.
(see http://www.democrats.reform.house.gov/Documents/20050629132455-23867.pdf
)
Waxman reported that the CPA withdrew no less than
$12 billion in cash from the New York Federal
Reserve Bank DFI and flew it to Iraq, comments - no
less than 363 tons of $100 bills, the largest cash
withdrawal in history.
In its final feeding frenzy,
in the last month the CPA took out $4 billion from
the mother of all ATM's in New York including the
largest cash withdrawal in history, $2.4 billion.
In a partial audit of $120 million of the $600
million handed out to US military officials for
local reconstruction, more 80% could not be
accounted for, and $7 million was simply missing.
When I raised the fate of these funds at
Kofi Annan's press conference just before Christmas,
I was later berated by John Bolton's press officer
as an 'apologist for the UN,' as he questioned my
journalistic integrity and accused me of
'blurring the line' between the Oil for Food
kickbacks and what he characterized the CPA's
accounting irregularities.
I told him that I was not
blurring the line. I was drawing a straight line
between them.
If Benon Sevan's $160,000, alleged by the Volcker
Inquiry, is headline news for the best part of the
year, then I think it is a legitimate question to
ask why the CPA's attested multi billion scandal
scarcely merits a paragraph in the back pages.
Or is the profession saying that this is a dog bites
man/man bites dog scenario? That if the UN is
corrupt it is unusual, but massive corruption is too
commonplace in this Bush administration to merit
mention?
I suspect that this is not what the news editors and
producers are saying.
But it would be interesting to
hear an explanation about what news values mandate
that the mote in the UN's eye deserves minute
attention but that the beam in the White House's can
be overlooked.
IanWilliams@MaximsNews.com
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